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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67637 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67637)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The History of the Manners and Customs
-of Ancient Greece Volume II (of III), by James Augustus St. John
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The History of the Manners and Customs of Ancient Greece Volume
- II (of III)
-
-Author: James Augustus St. John
-
-Release Date: March 16, 2022 [eBook #67637]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: KD Weeks, Turgut Dincer and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HISTORY OF THE MANNERS
-AND CUSTOMS OF ANCIENT GREECE VOLUME II (OF III) ***
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Transcriber’s Note:
-
-This version of the text cannot represent certain typographical effects.
-Italics are delimited with the ‘_’ character as _italic_. The single
-instance (in French) of a superscript character is rendered as 1^{er}.
-
-Footnotes have been moved to follow the paragraphs in which they are
-referenced.
-
-Minor errors, attributable to the printer, have been 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.
-
-
-
-
- THE HISTORY
- OF THE
- MANNERS AND CUSTOMS
- OF
- ANCIENT GREECE.
-
- BY J. A. ST. JOHN.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- IN THREE VOLUMES.
-
- VOL. II.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- RICHARD BENTLEY, NEW BURLINGTON STREET,
- =Publisher in Ordinary to Her Majesty.=
- 1842.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- Printed by S. & J. BENTLEY, WILSON, and FLEY,
- Bangor House, Shoe Lane.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
- OF THE SECOND VOLUME.
-
- -------
-
- BOOK III.
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- IV. Marriage Ceremonies 1
- V. Condition of Married Women 28
- VI. Toilette, Dress, and Ornaments 50
-
- BOOK IV.
-
- I. Private Dwellings 75
- II. Household Furniture 97
- III. Food of Homeric Times—Meat, Fish, &c. 125
- IV. Poultry, Fruit, Wine, &c. 150
- V. Entertainments 170
- VI. Entertainments (_continued_) 197
- VII. The Theatre 220
- VIII. The Theatre (_continued_) 248
-
- BOOK V.
-
- RURAL LIFE.
-
- I. The Villa and the Farmyard 269
- II. Garden and Orchard 301
- III. Vineyards, Vintage, &c. 335
- IV. Studies of the Farmer 362
- V. The Various Processes of Agriculture 381
- VI. Pastoral Life 401
-
-
-
-
- THE HISTORY
- OF THE
- MANNERS AND CUSTOMS
- OF
- ANCIENT GREECE.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK III.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
- MARRIAGE CEREMONIES.
-
-
-When marriage was determined on, whether love or interest prompted to
-it, the business part of the transaction, which in all countries is
-exceedingly unromantic, was delegated, as in China, to a female
-matchmaker,[1] whose professional duties appear to have been considered
-important. She carried the lovers proposals to the family of his
-mistress, or rather, perhaps, broke the ice and paved the way for him.
-In the earlier ages men, no doubt, performed this delicate office
-themselves, or entrusted it to their parents; as in Homer we find
-Achilles declaring, that his father Peleus shall choose a wife for him.
-Earlier still, if we may credit certain prevalent traditions, men
-dispensed altogether with such preliminaries and lived “more pecudum”
-with the first females who came in their way; a state of barbarism from
-which it is said they were reclaimed by Cecrops.[2] But, to whomsoever
-this fable may trace its origin, it is evidently unworthy of the
-slightest credit. Of times sunk in such an abyss of ignorance no record
-could remain, or even of many succeeding revolutions of manners touching
-close upon the orbit of civilisation. If, however, the tradition arose
-originally out of any real innovation in manners, it may refer to the
-partial abolition of polygamy, which, whether made by Cecrops or not,
-was an important step in the progress of the Greeks towards polished
-life.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- Προμνηστρία. Aristoph. Nub. 41. et Schol. Poll. iii. 41.
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- Athen. xiii. 2. Mr. Mitford defers too much to “the traditions
- received in the polished ages” when, upon the authority of such
- traditions and of such writers as Justin (ii. 6.), he appears to
- conclude that, before the time of Cecrops, the people of Attica were
- in knowledge and civilisation inferior to the wildest savages. Hist,
- of Greece, i. 58. Upon legends and authors of this description no
- reliance can be placed. If society existed, everything “indispensable”
- to society also existed; therefore, if marriage be so, it could not be
- unknown. Besides, how happens it that this same Cecrops who instituted
- marriage did not likewise teach them to sow corn, which, if Egypt was,
- when he left it, a civilised country, must have been as familiar to
- him as matrimony? This most necessary acquisition, however, they were
- left to make many ages afterwards, during the reign of Erechtheus.
- Justin, ii. 6.
-
------
-
-But if Cecrops ever lived, and should not be regarded as a mere
-mythological creation, we must still reject the comparatively modern
-tradition which fetches him from Egypt. Coming from the East, he would
-more probably have instituted polygamy than the contrary. In every point
-of view the tradition is absurd; for it at once represents the people of
-Attica as savages, and as having made considerable advances in the
-science of civil government. They have already emerged from the state of
-patriarchal rule, not by any means the lowest, and have arrived at the
-monarchical period in the history of society—for Cecrops marries the
-daughter of king Actæos—yet have not made the first step in
-refinement,[3] have not passed the barrier dividing the rudest savage
-from even the barbarian,—had not made the discovery that, for the
-preservation of society, children must be cared for and maintained,
-which is impossible until they have other fathers than the community. We
-must, therefore, reject this Cecropian legend, and acknowledge that,
-from the earliest times of which any record remains, the people of
-Hellas married and were given in marriage.
-
------
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- Cf. Goguet, Origine des Lois. iv. 394, where the learned author
- contends most chivalrously for the received theory. Apollodorus,
- however, represents Cecrops as an Autochthon, συμφύες ἔχων σῶμα ἀνδρὸς
- καὶ δράκοντος. iii. 14. 1.—The reason why he was thus said to partake
- of two natures—half-man and half-snake—has been very variously and
- very fantastically explained. Diodorus Siculus, (i. p. 17,) derives
- his title to be considered half a man and half a beast, from his
- being, by choice a Greek, by nature a barbarian. Yet he conceives that
- it was the beast that civilised the man. Others explain διφυὴς
- somewhat differently to mean that he was of gigantic stature and
- understood two languages: διὰ μῆκος σώματος οὑτω καλούμενος, ὅς φήσιν
- ὁ Φιλόχορος, ἢ ὅτι Αἰγυπτίων τὰς δύο γλώσσας ἠπίστατο.—Euseb. No.
- 460.—Eustathius, familiar with the fables of the mythology, turns the
- tables upon Cecrops, and conceives that he may have civilised himself,
- not the Athenians, by settling in Attica. He supposes him ἀπὸ ὄφεως
- εἰς ἀνθρωπὸν ἐλθειν, ἐπειδὴ ἐκεῖνος ἐλθὼν εἰς Ἑλλάδα καὶ τὸν βάρβαρον
- Αἰγυπτιασμὸν ἀφεις, χρηστοὺς ἀναλάβετο τρόπους πολιτικοὺς.—In Dionys.
- Peneg. p. 56.
-
------
-
-Whatever the original practice of the Greeks may have been, traces of
-polygamy long continued discernible in their manners. Heracles
-maintained a seraglio worthy of an Ottoman sultan. His wives, indeed,
-like those of a wandering Brahmin, were scattered at convenient points
-over the country, that, whithersoever he roamed, he might find lodging
-and entertainment; but, as rumours of his different establishments
-travelled about, the jealousy of the ladies was at last excited and
-proved fatal to him. Ægeus, too, and his brother Pallas, old Priam,
-Agamemnon, Theseus, and nearly every public man in the heroic times, are
-represented as possessing a harem. Indeed, to judge by the practice of
-princes, it would seem as if polygamy were the law of every land; so
-habitual is it with them to transgress, in this point, against public
-opinion. A report, still current among certain writers, represents
-Socrates with two wives, the gentle nature of Xantippe encouraging him,
-perhaps, to venture on a second! But even that diligent retailer of
-scandal, Athenæus,[4] rejects this story, which, no doubt, originated
-with some sophist, who owed the philosopher a grudge. If not in the son
-of Sophroniscos, however, at least in Philip of Macedon, the kings of
-heroic times found an exact imitator. This Pellæan fox, though he did
-not, like the Persian monarch, lead about with him an army of concubines
-in his military expeditions, yet, from policy or other motives,
-contracted numerous marriages, as many, perhaps, as Heracles. Satyros
-has bequeathed to us a curious account of his majesty’s matrimonial
-exploits. During his long reign, of from twenty to four-and-twenty
-years, the dishes of one nuptial feast had scarcely time to cool before
-a new one was in preparation. It was nothing but truffles and rich soup
-from June till June. I am unable to furnish a list of all the ladies who
-claimed, through Philip’s diffusive love, to be queens of Macedon; but
-it may be proper to name a few, to show how the morals of his subjects
-must have been improved by his example. The first lady whose landed
-attractions won Philip’s heart was _Andatè_, an Illyrian, by whom he had
-a daughter, called Cynna. To her succeeded _Phila_, sister of Derda and
-Macatè. His next wives were two Thessalian women, _Pherè_ of
-Nikesipolis, mother of Thessalonia, and _Philinna_ of Larissa, mother of
-Aridæos. Had he sought merely the women these might have sufficed; but
-Philip had other views, and, finding marriage a still more expeditious
-method of extending his dominions even than conquest, he forthwith added
-to the list _Olympias_, who brought him the kingdom of Molossia in
-dowry, and, as every one knows, was mother of Alexander. Had the crafty
-prince stopped here, posterity, overlooking his immorality, might have
-applauded his prudence. But, elated by success, he proceeded to augment
-the number of his queens. To Olympias succeeded _Meda_, daughter of
-Cithalas, king of Thrace; and, lastly, _Cleopatra_, sister of
-Hippostratos, and niece of Attalos. By this time he was somewhat
-advanced in years, for Alexander, son of Olympias, approached manhood.
-At the feast given in honour of this new marriage, when the wine had
-circulated, as was customary among Macedonians, Attalos, who had
-probably drunk deep, observed, “At length we shall have legitimate
-princes, not bastards!” Alexander, who was present, in resentment of the
-affront, threw his goblet in the face of Attalos, who saluted him in the
-same way. Upon this, perceiving how matters were likely to proceed,
-Olympias fled to Molossia, Alexander into Illyria. Philip lived to have
-by Cleopatra one daughter, Europa; but, shortly afterwards, at the
-instigation, it is supposed of Olympias and Alexander, was murdered by
-Pausanias.[5]
-
------
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- Deipnosoph. xiii. 2.—Compare the account in Diogenes Laertius, ii. 5.
- 10.—The conduct of Socrates, who married Xantippe to prove the
- goodness of his temper, was imitated, we are told, by a Christian
- lady, who “desired of St. Athanasius to procure for her, out of the
- widows fed from the ecclesiastical corban, an old woman morose,
- peevish, and impatient, that she might by the society of so ungentle a
- person have often occasion to exercise her patience, her forgiveness,
- and charity.”—Jeremy Taylor’s Life of Christ, i. 384.
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- Athen. xiii. 5.
-
------
-
-Ordinary individuals, however, were restrained from the commission of
-such immoralities by the laws, more particularly at Athens, where
-marriage was contemplated with all the reverence due to the great
-palladium of civilisation. As a necessary consequence, celibacy could be
-no other than disreputable, so that, to a man ambitious of public
-honour, the possession of a wife and children was no less indispensable
-than the means of living.[6] Among the Spartans, bachelors were
-delivered over to the tender mercies of the women, and subjected to very
-heavy penalties. During the celebration of certain festivals they were
-seized by a crowd of petulant viragoes, each able to strangle an ox,[7]
-and dragged in derision round the altars of the gods, receiving from the
-fists of their gentle tormentors such blows as the regular practice of
-boxing had taught the young ladies to inflict.[8]
-
- “And ladies sometimes hit exceeding hard.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- Dinarch. in Demosth. § 11. Cf. Poll. viii. 40. Comm. p. 644.
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- Aristoph. Lysistrat. 78, seq.
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- Athen. xiii. 2.
-
------
-
-But we shall be the less inclined to judge uncharitably of this somewhat
-unfeminine custom, if we consider that, in the ancient world, no less
-than in the modern, unmarried and childless women were held but in
-slight esteem. And this feeling, which never for a moment slumbers in
-society, teaches better than the cant of a thousand sentimentalists what
-the true origin of love is.
-
-Of the impediments to marriage arising, among ancient nations, from
-relationship or consanguinity, very little is with certainty known. In
-the heroic ages, all unions excepting those of parents with their
-children appear to have been lawful; for, in the Odyssey, we find the
-six sons of Æolos joined in marriage with their six sisters, the manners
-of the olden times, abandoned on earth, still lingering among the gods.
-
-Iphidamos has to wife his mother’s sister,[9] and Alcinoös, by no means
-a profligate or immoral prince, is united with his brother’s
-daughter;[10] Deiphobos, after Paris’s death, takes possession of
-Helen,[11] and Helenos, the seer, is united in wedlock with Andromache,
-the widow of his brother Hector.[12] But without alleging any further
-examples, we may, from the practice imputed to the gods, among whom
-scarcely any degree of relationship was a bar to marriage, infer that,
-in very early ages, few scruples were entertained upon the subject.
-Later mythologists have even imputed to Zeus an illicit amour with his
-daughter Aphrodite,[13] but libellously, and in contradiction to the
-best ancient authorities.[14] Nature, indeed, has so peremptorily
-prohibited the union of parents with their own children, that positive
-laws forbidding connexions so nefarious, have in all ages been nearly
-unnecessary, though the superstition of the Magi[15] in ancient, and the
-profligacy of popes and princes in modern times, have been accused of
-transgressing these natural boundaries.
-
------
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- Hom. Il. λ. 221, seq.
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- Hom. Odyss. η. 55, seq.
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- Keightley, Mythology, p. 490.
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- Serv. ad Virg. Æn. iii. 297.
-
-Footnote 13:
-
- Virg. Cir. 133.
-
- Sed malus ille puer, quem nec sua flectere mater,
- Iratum potuit, quem nec pater, atque avus idem
- Jupiter.
-
-Footnote 14:
-
- For Valckernaer’s correction of Eurip. Hippol. 536, where for ὁ Δίος
- παῖς, he reads ὄλιγος παῖς, should, I think, be adopted. Diatrib. in
- Eurip. Perd. Dram. xv. p. 159, c. His whole defence of Zeus on this
- _count_ is triumphant. Still the notes of Monk, Beck, Musgrave, and
- the Classical Journal, vi. 80, should be compared.
-
-Footnote 15:
-
- Diog. Laert. Proœm. § 6. To this practice Euripides probably alludes
- in the Andromache, v. 173, sqq., where Hermione describes, with scorn,
- the profligate manners of the barbarians. Catullus, inveighing against
- the impious depravity of a contemporary, observes—
-
- “Nam Magus ex matre et gnato gignatur oportet,
- Si vera est Persarum _impia religio_.”
-
- Epig. lxxxiii. 3, seq. Pope Alexander VI. and the Emperor Shah Jehan
- have, in modern times, been accused of similar crimes. Bayle, Dict.
- Hist. et Crit. Art. Alexandre VI. and Bernier, Voyages, t. i. On the
- prohibited degrees of consanguinity, see Sepulveda, de Ritu Nupt. et
- Dispens. i. § 20, where he says, that the Pope could authorize all
- unions, save those between parents and children. “Et ideo hodiè non
- ligant, nisi quatenus ab ecclesia sunt assumptæ; ac propterea Papa
- dispensare potest cum omnibus personis, nisi cum matre et patre, ut
- matrimonium contrahant.” Card. Cajetan. ap. Sepulved. ub. sup.
-
------
-
-Could we credit the sophist of Naucratis, there was likewise one
-distinguished person[16] among the Athenians who coveted the reputation
-of equal guilt.
-
------
-
-Footnote 16:
-
- Alcibiades. Athen. xii. 48. xiii. 34. Lysias, fr. p. 640.
-
------
-
-The marriage of brothers with their own sisters was, in later ages,
-considered illegal; not so with respect to half sisters by the fathers’s
-side, whom no law forbade men to marry.[17] Still the recorded examples
-of those who availed themselves of this privilege are few; but among
-them we find the great Cimon, son of Miltiades, who, from affection,
-observes Cornelius Nepos, and in perfect conformity with the manners of
-his country, took to wife his sister Elpinice.[18] Plutarch, too, speaks
-of the union as public and legal, but Athenæus[19] characteristically
-insinuates that Elpinice was merely her brother’s mistress. The Spartan
-law took a different view of what constitutes sisterhood. Here the
-father was everything, and therefore with an uterine sister, as no near
-relation, marriage might be contracted.[20] All connexions in the direct
-line of ascent or descent were prohibited; but the prohibition extended
-not to the collateral branches,[21] uncles being permitted to take to
-wife their nieces, and nephews their aunts.
-
------
-
-Footnote 17:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 1353.
-
-Footnote 18:
-
- Corn. Nep. Vit. Cim. i. Plut. Cim. § 4, where we find this lady
- accused of an amour with the painter Polygnotos, who introduced her
- portrait among the Trojan ladies in the Stoa Pœcile.
-
-Footnote 19:
-
- Deipnosophist. xiii. 56. Muretus, Var. Lect. vii. i. discusses the
- question, but without throwing much new light upon it.—Andocides cont.
- Alcibiad. § 9, assigns Cimon’s amour with Elpinice as the cause of his
- banishment. We find, however, Archeptolis, son of Themistocles,
- marrying his half-sister Mnesiptolema. Plut. Themistocl. § 32.
-
-Footnote 20:
-
- Meurs. Themis Attica. i. 14. Philo. De Leg. Spec. ii. Eurip. Orest.
- 545. sqq.
-
-Footnote 21:
-
- Cf. Herod. v. 39. Pausan. iii. 3, 9.
-
------
-
-The precise age at which an Athenian citizen might legally take upon him
-the burden of a family, is said, without proof, though not altogether
-without probability, to have been determined by Solon; for such matters
-were in those ages supposed to come within the legitimate scope of
-legislation.[22] They attributed to the season of youth a much greater
-duration than comports with our notions. It was, in fact, thought to
-extend to the age of thirty-five or thirty-seven, more or less: when
-entering upon the less flowery domain of manhood, men would need the aid
-and consolation of a helpmate. But if there ever existed such a law it
-was often broken,[23] for early marriages, though less common perhaps
-than in modern times, are constantly alluded to both by historians and
-poets. Apprehensions of the too great increase of population already led
-philosophers, even in those early ages, vainly to apply themselves to
-the discovery of checks, which the irresistible impulses of nature
-always render nugatory; and viewing in that light the regulation
-attributed to Solon,[24] they, with some variation, adopt it in their
-political works. Plato,[25] in accordance with Hesiod’s notion, fixes
-for the male, the marriageable age at thirty; but Aristotle, who chose
-on most points to differ from his master, allows his citizens seven
-years more of liberty. For women the proper age, he thought, is about
-eighteen. His reasons are, that the husband and wife will thus flourish
-and decay together; and, their offspring inheriting the bloom and
-highest vigour of their parents, be at once[26] healthy in body and
-energetic in mind.
-
------
-
-Footnote 22:
-
- Censor. de Die Natal. 14.
-
-Footnote 23:
-
- Thus Mantitheos, in Demosthenes, marries at the age of eighteen, in
- obedience to his father’s wishes.—Contr. Bœot. ii. § 1.
-
-Footnote 24:
-
- Aristot. Polit. ii. 7. vii. 14. Gœttling.—Cf. Malthus on Population,
- i. 9, 10.
-
-Footnote 25:
-
- Repub. v. t. vi. p. 237. De Legg. vi. t. vii. p. 452. Hesiod, Opp. et
- Dies, 696. Gœttling.
-
-Footnote 26:
-
- Polit. vii. 16. Hist. Anim. vii. 5, 6. Cf. Tac. de Mor. Germ. 20.
- Just. Instit. t. x. Brisson. de Jur. Nupt. p. 99.
-
------
-
-Winter, more particularly the month of January, thence called Gamelion,
-or the “Nuptial Month,” was regarded as the fittest season[27] of the
-year for the celebration of marriage; and if the north wind happened to
-blow, as at that time of the year it often does, the circumstance was
-supposed to be peculiarly auspicious. For this notion several
-physiological reasons are assigned; as that, during the prevalence of
-that wind, the human frame is peculiarly nervous and full of energy;
-that the spirits are consequently light, and the temper and disposition
-sweet, cheerful, and flexible. Lingering sparks of ancient superstition
-may also have had their share in establishing this persuasion: towards
-that quarter of the heavens, as towards an universal _Kebleh_, all the
-civilised nations of antiquity turned as the home of their gods; in that
-direction point all the openings of the Egyptian pyramids; thither to
-the present moment turn the Chinese and Brahmins when they pray, and in
-the holy tabernacle of the Jews the Table of Shewbread[28] likewise
-faced the north. Attention, too, was paid to the lunar influences; for,
-no other circumstance preventing it, it was usual to fix on the full of
-the moon, when the festival denominated _Theogamia_, or “Nuptials of the
-Gods” was celebrated, in order that religion itself, by its august and
-venerable ceremonies, might appear to sanctify the union of mortals
-effected under its auspices.
-
------
-
-Footnote 27:
-
- Olympiod. in Meteor. c. 6. Meurs. Grec. Fer. v. 240.
-
-Footnote 28:
-
- Exod. xl. 22.
-
------
-
-To this practice there are several allusions in ancient writers.
-Agamemnon, in Euripides, when questioned by his wife respecting the time
-of Iphigenia’s marriage, replies, that it shall take place
-
- “When the blest moon its silvery circle fills.”[29]
-
-And Themis, adjudging Thetis to Peleus, to terminate the contentions of
-the gods, selects the same season for the solemnization of the nuptial
-rites.
-
- “But when next that solemn eve
- Duly doth the moon divide,
- For the chieftain let her leave
- Her lovely virgin zone aside.”[30]
-
------
-
-Footnote 29:
-
- Iphigen. in Aul. 717.
-
-Footnote 30:
-
- Pindar, Isth. Od. viii. 41, seq. Dissen.—Rev. H. F. Cary’s
- translation, admirable for its closeness and spirit, p. 212.
-
------
-
-Most ancient nations, as the Hebrews, Indians, Thracians, Germans, and
-Gauls, regarded women as a marketable commodity; and, in this respect,
-the Greeks of early times perfectly agreed with them, buying and selling
-their females like cattle.[31] But, by degrees, as manners grew more
-polished, this barbarous custom was discontinued, though, in remembrance
-of it, presents were still made both to the father and the bride, even
-in the most civilised periods. We must, nevertheless, beware that we
-infer not too much from these gifts; for equally primitive and prevalent
-was the custom imposing upon fathers the necessity of dowrying their
-daughters.[32] In the case, too, of the husband’s death this matrimonial
-portion devolved to the children, so that if the widow chose,—as widows
-sometimes will,[33]—to embark a second time on the connubial sea, her
-father was called upon to furnish a fresh outfit. But, if the husband
-grew tired of his better half, and would insist on a divorce, or if,
-after his death, the sons were sufficiently unnatural to chase their
-mother from the paternal roof, the right over the entire dowry reverted
-to her.[34]
-
------
-
-Footnote 31:
-
- Aristot. Polit. ii. 6. Tacit. de Mor. Germ. 18. Heracl. Pont. v.
- Θρακων. Leg. Salic. Art. 46. Hist. Gen. des Voy. vi. 144. Cf. Goguet,
- Orig. des Loix, i. 53.
-
-Footnote 32:
-
- In cases where the fathers were unable to dowry them, we find
- daughters growing old in the paternal mansion. Demosth. in Steph. i. §
- 20. Dowries were frequently considerable, amounting sometimes to a
- hundred minæ. § 18.
-
-Footnote 33:
-
- On their anxiety to discover the designs of the Fates in this respect,
- see Schol. Aristoph. Lysist. 597.
-
-Footnote 34:
-
- Goguet, Orig. des Loix, iii. 127, sqq.
-
------
-
-Parties were usually betrothed before marriage by their parents. And
-young women, whose parents no longer survived, were settled in marriage
-by their brothers, grandfathers, or guardians. Husbands on their
-deathbeds sometimes disposed of the hands of their wives, as in the case
-of Demosthenes’ father, who bequeathed Cleobula to Aphobos, whom he
-likewise appointed guardian of his children. In this instance, the widow
-had better have chosen for herself. Aphobos possessed himself of the
-dowry, and consented to fulfil the office of guardian, that he might
-plunder the children; but the marriage he declined. Another example
-occurs in the case of Phormio who, having been slave[35] to an opulent
-citizen, and conducted himself with zeal and fidelity, received at once
-his freedom and the widow of his master. In all serious matters the
-Athenians were a very methodical people, and conducted everything, even
-to the betrothing or marrying of a wife, with an attention to form
-worthy the quaintest citizen of our own great city.
-
------
-
-Footnote 35:
-
- Demosth. pro Phorm. § 8–10.
-
------
-
-Potter observes, with great naïveté, that, before men married, it was
-customary to provide themselves with a house to live in. The custom was
-a good one, and the thrifty old poet of Ascra, undertaking to enlighten
-his countrymen in economics, is explicit on the point—
-
- “First build your house and let the wife succeed:”[36]
-
-which, no doubt, is better advice than if he had said “first marry a
-wife and next consider where you shall put her.” And we find that, even
-among pastoral, young ladies who, in modern poets, make their meat and
-drink of love, and hang up a rag or two of it to preserve them from the
-elements, in antiquity posed their lovers with interrogations about
-comforts. “You are very pressing, my dear Daphnis, and swear you love
-me; but that is not just now the question. Have you a house and harem to
-take me to?”[37]
-
------
-
-Footnote 36:
-
- Opera et Dies, 405.
-
-Footnote 37:
-
- Theocrit. Eidyll. xxvii. 36.
-
------
-
-But prudent as they may be considered, the Athenians were still more
-pious than thrifty. Before the virgin quitted her childhood’s home, and
-passed from the state she had tried, and in most cases, perhaps, found
-happy, to enter into one altogether unknown to her, custom demanded the
-performance, on the day before the marriage, of several religious
-ceremonies eminently significant and beautiful. Hitherto, in the
-poetical recesses of their thalamoi, they had been reckoned as so many
-nymphs attached to the train of the virgin goddess of the woods. About
-to become members of a noviciate more conformable to nature than that of
-the Catholic church, they deemed it incumbent on them to implore their
-Divinity’s permission to transfer their worship from her to Hymen; and,
-the more readily to obtain it, they approached her, in the simplicity of
-their hearts, with baskets full of offerings such as it became them to
-present and her to receive.[38] Nor was Artemis the only deity sought,
-on this occasion, to be rendered auspicious by sacrifice and prayer.
-Offerings were likewise made to the Nymphs, those lovely creations with
-which the fancy of the Greeks peopled the streams and fountains of their
-native land.[39] These rites performed, the future bride was conducted
-in pomp to the citadel, where solemn sacrifice was offered up to Athena,
-the tutelar goddess of the state, with prayers for happiness, peculiarly
-the gift of supreme wisdom.[40] To Hera, also, and the Fates,[41] as to
-the goddesses that watched over the connubial state and rigidly punished
-those who transgressed its sacred laws, were gifts presented, and vows
-preferred; and on one or all of their several altars did the maiden
-deposit a lock of her own hair, in remoter ages, perhaps, the whole of
-it, to intimate that, having obtained a husband, she must preserve him
-by other means than beauty, and the arts of the toilette.[42] At Megara
-the young women devoted their severed locks to Iphinoë. Those of Delos
-to Hecaerga and Ops,[43] while, like the Athenians, the maidens of Argos
-performed this rite in honour of Athena.[44]
-
------
-
-Footnote 38:
-
- Theocrit. Eidyll. ii. 66, ibique Schol.
-
-Footnote 39:
-
- Schol. Pind. Pyth. iv. ap. Meurs. Græc. Fer. p. 238.
-
-Footnote 40:
-
- Suid. v. προτέλεια. t. ii. p. 629. v. Æschyl. Eumen. 799. Cf. Cœl.
- Rhodig. xxviii. 24.
-
-Footnote 41:
-
- Poll. iii. 38. Schol. Pind. Pyth. x. 31. Aristoph. Thesmoph. 982.
- Kust.
-
-Footnote 42:
-
- Poll. iii. 38. ibique Comm. p. 529, seq. Cf. Spanh. Observ. in Callim.
- 149, 507. The youth usually cut off their hair on reaching the age of
- puberty. Athen. xiii. 83.
-
-Footnote 43:
-
- Pausan. i. 43. 4. Callim. in Del. 292. Spanh. Observat. t. ii. p. 503,
- sqq.
-
-Footnote 44:
-
- Stat. Theb. ii. 255, with the ancient commentary of Lutatius.
-
------
-
-Having, by the performance of the above rites and others of similar
-significance, discharged their instant duties to the gods, and impressed
-on their own minds a deep sense of the sacred engagements they were
-about to contract, they proceeded to perform the nuptial ceremonies
-themselves, still intermingling the offices of religion with every
-portion of the transaction. An auspicious day having been fixed upon,
-the relations and friends of both parties assembled in magnificent
-apparel, at the house of the bride’s father, where all the ladies of the
-family were busily engaged in the recitation of prayers and presentation
-of offerings. These domestic ceremonies concluded, the bride,
-accompanied by her paranymph or bridesmaid, was led forth into the
-street by the bridegroom and one of his most intimate friends,[45] who
-placed her between them in an open carriage.[46] Their dresses, as was
-fitting, were of the richest and most splendid kind. Those of the
-bridegroom full, flowing, and of the gayest and brightest colours,[47]
-glittered with golden ornaments, and diffused around, as he moved, a
-cloud of perfume. The bride herself, gifted with that unerring taste
-which distinguished her nation, appeared in a costume at once simple and
-magnificent—simple in its contour, its masses, its folds, magnificent
-from the brilliance of its hues and the superb and costly style of its
-ornaments. She was not, like some modern court dame, a blaze of precious
-stones tastelessly heaped upon each other; but through the snowy gauze
-of her veil flashed the jewelled fillet and coronet-like sphendone
-which, with a chaplet of flowers,[48] adorned her dark tresses; and
-between the folds of her robe of gold-embroidered purple, appeared her
-gloveless fingers, with many rings glittering with gems. Strings of Red
-Sea pearls encircled her neck and arms; pendants, variously wrought and
-dropped with Indian jewels, twinkled in her ears; and her feet, partly
-concealed by the falling robe, displayed a portion of the golden thonged
-sandal, crusted with emeralds, rubies, or pearls. But all these
-ornaments often failed to distract the eye from those which she owed to
-nature. Her luxuriant hair, which in Eastern women often reaches the
-ground:
-
- Her hair in hyacinthine flow,
- When left to roll its folds below,
- As ’midst her maidens in the ball
- She stood superior to them all,
- Hath swept the marble, where her feet
- Gleamed whiter than the mountain sleet,
- Ere from the cloud that gave it birth
- It fell and caught one stain of earth;
-
-her hair, I say, perfumed with delicate unguents,[49] such as nard from
-Tarsos, œranthe from Cypros, essence of roses from Cyrene, of lilies
-from Ægina or Cilicia, fell loosely in a profusion of ringlets over her
-shoulders, while in front it was confined by the fillet and grasshoppers
-of gold.[50] More perishable ornaments, in the shape of crowns of
-myrtle, wild thyme,[51] poppy, white sesame, with other flowers and
-plants sacred to Aphrodite, adorned the heads of both bride and
-bridegroom.[52]
-
------
-
-Footnote 45:
-
- Πάροχος. Suid. v. Ζεῦγος ἡμιονικὸν. t. i. p. 1123, b. Eurip. Helen.
- 722, sqq.
-
-Footnote 46:
-
- This was the usual practice. When the bride was led home on foot she
- was called χαμαίπους a term of disrespect not far removed in meaning
- from our word _tramper_. Poll. iii. 40.
-
-Footnote 47:
-
- Aristoph. Plut. 529, et Schol. Suid. v. βαπτά. t. i. p. 533, b.
-
-Footnote 48:
-
- Eurip. Iphig. in Aul. 905. This chaplet was placed on the bride’s head
- by her mother. Hopfn. in loc.—In Locrensibus usu erat, ut matronæ ex
- lectis floribus nectant coronas. Nam emptagestare serta, vitio
- dabatur. Alex. ab Alexand. p. 58. b.
-
-Footnote 49:
-
- Aristoph. Plut. 529. id. Pac. 862.
-
-Footnote 50:
-
- Thucyd. i. 60.
-
-Footnote 51:
-
- Σισυμβρία. Dioscor. ii. 155.
-
-Footnote 52:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Av. 160. In Bœotia the bride was crowned with a reed
- of wild asparagus, a prickly but sweet plant. Plut. Conjug. Præcept.
- 2. Bion. Epitaph. Adon. 88. On Nuptial Crowns vide Paschal. De
- Coronis, lib. ii. c. 16. p. 126, sqq.
-
------
-
-The relations and friends followed, forming, in most cases, a long and
-stately procession, which, in the midst of crowds of spectators, moved
-slowly towards the temple, thousands strewing flowers or scattering
-perfume in their path, and in loud exclamations comparing the happy pair
-to the most impassioned and beautiful of their nymphs and gods.[53]
-Meanwhile, a number of the bride’s friends, scattered among the
-multitude, were looking out anxiously for favourable omens, and
-desirous, in conjunction with every person present, to avert all such as
-superstition taught them to consider inauspicious. A crow appearing
-singly was supposed to betoken sorrow or separation, whereas, a couple
-of crows,[54] issuing from the proper quarter of the heavens, presaged
-perfect union and happiness. A pair of turtle doves, of all omens, was
-esteemed the best.[55]
-
------
-
-Footnote 53:
-
- Charit. Char. et Callir. Amor. iii. 44.
-
-Footnote 54:
-
- Orus Apollo Hieroglyph. viii. p. 6. b.
-
-Footnote 55:
-
- Meziriac sur les Epitres d’Ovide, p. 190, sqq. Ælian de Animal. Nat.
- iii. 9. Alex. ab Alexand. ii. 5, p. 57, b.
-
------
-
-On reaching the temple, the bride and bridegroom were received at the
-door by a priest, who presented them with a small branch of ivy, as an
-emblem of the close ties by which they were about to be united for ever.
-They were then conducted to the altar,[56] where the ceremonies
-commenced with the sacrifice of a heifer,[57] after which Artemis,
-Athena, and other virgin goddesses, were solemnly invoked. Prayers were
-then addressed to Zeus and his consort, the supreme divinities of
-Olympos;[58] nor, on this occasion, would they overlook the ancient
-gods, Ouranos and Gaia, whose union produces fertility and
-abundance,[59]—the Graces, whose smile shed upon life its sweetest
-charm, and the Fates, who shorten or extend it at their pleasure, were
-next in order adored; and, lastly, Aphrodite, the mother of Love, and of
-all the host of Heaven, the most beautiful and beneficent to
-mortals.[60] The victim having been opened, the gall was taken out and
-significantly cast behind the altar.[61] Soothsayers skilled in
-divination then inspected the entrails, and if their appearance was
-alarming the nuptials were broken off, or deferred. When favourable, the
-rites proceeded as if hallowed by the smile of the gods. The bride now
-cut off one of her tresses, which, twisting round a spindle, she placed
-as an offering on the altar of Athena, while, in imitation of Theseus,
-the bridegroom made a similar oblation to Apollo, bound, as an emblem of
-his out-door life, round a handful of grass or herbs.[62] All the other
-gods, protectors of marriage, were then, by the parents or friends,
-invoked in succession, and the rites thus completed, the virgin’s
-father, placing the hand of the bridegroom in that of the bride, said,
-“I bestow on thee my daughter, that thine eyes may be gladdened by
-legitimate offspring.”[63] The oath of inviolable fidelity was now taken
-by both, and the ceremony concluded with fresh sacrifices.
-
------
-
-Footnote 56:
-
- Theod. Prodrom. de Rhodanth. et Dosicl. Amor. ix.
-
-Footnote 57:
-
- Eurip. Iphig. in Aul. 1113.
-
-Footnote 58:
-
- Poll. iii. 38.
-
-Footnote 59:
-
- Procl. in Tim. t. v, Meziriac. p. 155.
-
-Footnote 60:
-
- Etym. Mag. 220, 53. sqq. Cf. Plut. Conj. Præcept. proœm. t. i. p. 321.
- Tauchnitz.
-
-Footnote 61:
-
- Plut. Conj. Precept. 27. Cœl. Rhodig. xxviii. 21.
-
-Footnote 62:
-
- Meurs. Lect. Att. iii. 6, 106, sqq. Herod. iv. 34.
-
-Footnote 63:
-
- Menand. ap. Clem. Alexand. Stromat. ii. p. 421, a. Heins.
-
------
-
-The performance of rites so numerous generally consumed the whole day,
-so that the shades of evening were falling before the bride could be
-conducted to her future home. This hour, indeed, according to some, was
-chosen to conceal the blushes of the youthful wife.[64] And now
-commenced the secular portion of the ceremony. Numerous attendants,
-bearing lighted torches,[65] ran in front of the procession, while bands
-of merry youths dancing, singing, or playing on musical instruments,
-surrounded the nuptial car. Similar in this respect was the practice
-throughout Greece, even so early as the time of Homer, who thus, in his
-description of the Shield, calls up before our imagination the lively
-picture of an heroic nuptial procession:
-
- “Here sacred pomp and genial feasts delight,
- And solemn dance and Hymeneal rite.
- Along the streets the new-made brides are led,
- With torches flaming, to the nuptial bed.
- The youthful dancers in a circle bound
- To the soft flute and cittern’s silver sound.[66]
- Through the fair streets the matrons, in a row,
- Stand in their porches and enjoy the show.”[67]
-
------
-
-Footnote 64:
-
- Potter, Arch. Græc. ii. 281.
-
-Footnote 65:
-
- Eurip. Helen. 722. Hesiod, Scut. Heracl. 275, seq. where the torches
- are said to be borne by Dmoës.
-
-Footnote 66:
-
- In Hesiod a troop of blooming virgins, playing on the phorminx, lead
- the procession. αἱ δ᾽ ὑπὸ φορμίγγων ἄναγον χορὸν ἱμερόεντα. A band of
- youths follow, playing on the syrinx. See the note of Gœttling on
- Scut. Heracl. 274, p. 117, sqq.
-
-Footnote 67:
-
- Iliad, σ. 490, sqq. Pope’s Translation.
-
-The song on this occasion sung received the name of the “Carriage
-Melody,” from the carriage in which the married pair rode while it was
-chaunted.[68]
-
-Footnote 68:
-
- Ἁρμάτειον μέλος. Leisner, in his notes on Bos (Antiq. Græc. Pars. iv.
- c. ii. § 4.), observes, that in Suidas, Hesychius, and Eustathius (ad
- Il. χ. p. 1380. 5), these words have a different meaning from that
- which, with Bos and Potter (Antiq. Græc. ii. 282), I have adopted. But
- in the passage quoted by Henri de Valois (ad Harpocrat. p. 222), they
- would seem to bear the signification above given them.
-
------
-
-The house of the bridegroom, diligently prepared for their reception,
-was decorated profusely with garlands, and brilliantly lighted up. When,
-among the Bœotians, the lady, accompanied by her husband, had descended
-from the carriage, its axletree was burnt, to intimate that having found
-a home she would have no further use for it.[69] The celebration of
-nuptial rites generally puts people in good temper, at least for the
-first day; and new-married women at Athens stood in full need of all
-they could muster to assist them through the crowd of ceremonies which
-beset the entrances to the houses of their husbands. Symbols of domestic
-labours, pestles, sieves,[70] and so on, met the young wife’s eye on all
-sides. She herself, in all her pomp of dress, bore in her hands an
-earthen barley-parcher.[71] But, to comfort her, very nice cakes of
-sesamum,[72] with wine and fruit and other dainties innumerable,
-accompanied by gleeful and welcoming faces, appeared in the background
-beyond the sieves and pestles. The hymeneal lay,[73] with sundry other
-songs, all redolent of “joy and youth,” resounded through halls now her
-own. Mirth and delight ushered her into the banqueting-room, where
-appeared a boy covered with thorn branches, and oaken boughs laden with
-acorns, who, when the epithalamium chaunters had ceased, recited an
-ancient hymn beginning with the words, “I have escaped the worse and
-found the better.”[74] This hymn, constituting a portion of the divine
-service performed by the Athenians during a festival instituted in
-commemoration of the discovery of corn, by which men were delivered from
-acorn-eating, they introduced among the nuptial ceremonies to intimate,
-that wedlock is as much superior to celibacy as wheat is to mast. At the
-close of the recitation, there entered a troop of dancing girls crowned
-with myrtle-wreaths, and habited in light tunics reaching very little
-below the knee, just as we still behold them on antique gems and vases,
-who, by their varied, free, and somewhat wanton, movements, vividly
-represented all the warmth and energy of passion.
-
------
-
-Footnote 69:
-
- Plut. Quæst. Roman. xx. 19. Valckenaer ad Herodot. iv. 114.
-
-Footnote 70:
-
- Poll. iii. 37.
-
-Footnote 71:
-
- Poll. i. 246.
-
-Footnote 72:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Pac. 834.
-
-Footnote 73:
-
- Athen. xiv. 10. Anac. Od. xviii. Schol. Hom. Il. σ. 493. Pind. Pyth.
- iii. 17. Dissen. Schol. ad v. 27.
-
-Footnote 74:
-
- Suid. v. ἔφυγον κακὸν. t. i. p. 1113, d.
-
------
-
-The feast which now ensued was, at Athens, to prevent useless
-extravagance, made liable to the inspection of certain magistrates. Both
-sexes partook of it; but, in conformity with the general spirit of their
-manners and institutions, the ladies, as in Egypt, sat at separate
-tables.[75] At these entertainments we may infer that, among other good
-things, great quantities of sweetmeats were consumed, since the woman
-employed in kneading and preparing them, and in officiating at the
-nuptial sacrifices, was deemed of sufficient importance to possess a
-distinct appellation, (δημιουργὸς,)[76] while the bride-cake, which
-doubtless was the crowning achievement of her art, received the name of
-Gamelios. The general arrangement of the banquet, however, they
-entrusted to the care of a sort of major-domo, who received the
-appellation of Trapezopoios.[77]
-
------
-
-Footnote 75:
-
- Luc. Conviv. § 8. In the sepulchral grottoes of Eilithyia, in the
- Thebaid, we find a rough fresco representing a marriage-feast, at
- which the men and women sit as described in the text.
-
-Footnote 76:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Pac. 421. Poll. iii. 41. The water of the bath used
- on this occasion by the bride was, according to ancient custom,
- brought from the fountain of Enneakrounos. Etym. Mag. 568, 57, seq.
-
-Footnote 77:
-
- Poll. iv. 41.
-
------
-
-Among the princes and grandees of Macedonia the nuptial banquet differed
-very widely, as might be expected, from the frugal entertainments of the
-Athenians; but as it may assist us in comprehending the changes
-introduced into Hellenic manners by the conquests of Alexander and his
-successors, I shall crave the reader’s permission to lay before him a
-description, bequeathed to us by antiquity, of the magnificent
-banquet[78] given at the marriage of Caranos.
-
------
-
-Footnote 78:
-
- Athen. iv. 2, seq.
-
------
-
-The guests, twenty in number, immediately on entering the mansion of the
-bridegroom, were crowned by his order with golden stlengides,[79] each
-valued at five pieces of gold. They were then introduced into the
-banqueting-hall, where the first article set before them on taking their
-places at the board was, no doubt, exceedingly agreeable, consisting of
-a silver beaker presented to each as a gift, which, when they had
-drained off, they delivered to their attendant slaves, who, according to
-the custom of the country, stood behind their seats with large baskets
-intended to contain the presents to be bestowed on them by the master of
-the feast.[80] There was then placed before every member of the company
-a bronze salver, of Corinthian workmanship, completely covered by a
-cake, on which were piled roast fowls and ducks and woodcocks, and a
-goose, together with other dainties in great abundance. These, likewise,
-followed the beakers into the corbels of the slaves, and were succeeded
-by numerous dishes, of which the guests were expected to partake on the
-spot. Next was brought in a capacious silver tray, also covered by a
-cake, whereon were heaped up geese, hares, kids, other cakes curiously
-wrought, pigeons, turtle-doves, partridges, with a variety of similar
-game, which, likewise, after they had been tasted, I presume, were
-handed to the servants.[81]
-
------
-
-Footnote 79:
-
- Cf. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 578. Ἔστι τι στλεγγὶς, δέρμα κεχρυσωμένον, ὁ
- περὶ τὴν κεφαλὴν φοροῦσι.—Poll. vii. 179.
-
-Footnote 80:
-
- When the host happened to be less rich or generous, people sometimes,
- in the corruption of later ages, endeavoured to steal what they could
- not obtain as a gift. Thus the sophist Dionysodoros is detected in
- Lucian with a cup stuffed into the breast of his mantle.—Conviv. seu
- Lapith. § 46.
-
-Footnote 81:
-
- This singular kind of liberality continued in fashion down to a very
- late period:—καὶ ἃμα εἰς ἐκικόμιστο ἡμῖν τὸ ἐντελὲς ὀνομαζόμενον
- δεῖπνον, μία ὄρνις ἑκάστω, καὶ κρέας ὑὸς, καὶ λαγῶα, καὶ ἰχθὺς ἐν
- ταγήνου, καὶ σησαμοῦντες, καὶ ὅσα ἐν τραγεῖν, καὶ ἐζῆν ἀποφέρεσθαι
- ταῦτα. Luc. Conviv. § 38.
-
------
-
-When the rage of hunger had been appeased, as it must soon have been,
-they washed their hands, after which crowns, wreathed from every kind of
-flower, were brought in, and along with them other golden stlengides,
-equal in weight to the former, were placed, for form’s sake, on the
-heads of the company, before they found their way to the baskets in the
-rear.
-
-While they were still in a sort of delirium of joy, occasioned by the
-munificence of the bridegroom, there entered to them a troop of female
-flute players, singers, and Rhodian performers on the Sambukè,[82] naked
-in the opinion of some, though others reported them to have worn a
-slight tunic. When these performers had given them a sufficient taste of
-their art, they retired to make way for other female slaves, bearing
-each a pair of perfume vases, containing the measure of a cotyla, the
-one of gold, the other of silver, and bound together by a golden thong.
-Of these every guest received a pair. In fact, the princely bridegroom,
-in order, as we suppose, that his friends might share with him the joy
-of his nuptials, bestowed upon every one of them a fortune instead of a
-supper; for immediately upon the heels of the gift above described came
-a number of silver dishes, each of sufficient dimensions to contain a
-large roast pig, laid upon its back, with its paunch thrown open, and
-stuffed with all sorts of delicacies which had been roasted with it,
-such as thrushes, metræ, and becaficoes, with the yolk of eggs poured
-around them, and oysters and cockles. Of these dishes every person
-present received one, with its contents, and, immediately afterwards,
-such another dish containing a kid hissing hot. Upon this, Caranos
-observing that their corbils were crammed, caused to be presented to
-them wicker panniers, and elegant bread-baskets, plaited with slips of
-ivory.[83] Delighted by his generosity, the company loudly applauded the
-bridegroom, testifying their approbation by clapping their hands. Then
-followed other gifts, and perfume vases of gold and silver, presented to
-the company in pairs as before. The bustle having subsided, there
-suddenly rushed in a troop of performers worthy to have figured in the
-feast of the Chytræ,[84] at Athens, and along with them ithyphalli,
-jugglers, and naked female wonder-workers, who danced upon their heads
-in circles of swords, and spouted fire from their mouths. These
-performances ended, they set themselves more earnestly and hotly to
-drink, from capacious golden goblets, their wines, now less mixed than
-before, being the Thasian, the Mendian, and the Lesbian. A glass dish,
-three feet in diameter, was next brought in upon a silver stand, on
-which were piled all kinds of fried fish. This was accompanied by silver
-bread-baskets, filled with Cappadocian rolls, some of which they ate,
-and delivered the rest to their slaves. They then washed their hands,
-and were crowned with golden crowns, double the weight of the former,
-and presented with a third pair of gold and silver vases filled with
-perfume. They by this time had become quite delirious with wine, and
-began a truly Macedonian contest, in which the winner was he who
-swallowed most; Proteas, grandson of him who was boon companion to
-Alexander the Great, drinking upwards of a gallon at a draught, and
-exclaiming—
-
- “Most joy is in his soul
- Who drains the largest bowl.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 82:
-
- The Sambukè was a stringed instrument of triangular form, invented by
- the poet Ibycos. It was sometimes called Iambukè, because used by
- chaunters of Iambic verse.—Suid. in v. t. ii. p. 709, c. d. Poll. iv.
- 59.
-
-Footnote 83:
-
- Casaubon is particular in his explanation of this passage, lest any
- one should fall into the singular mistake of supposing these nuptial
- bread-baskets to have been made with plaited thongs of elephant’s
- hide: “_Lora elephantina_ fortasse aliquis capiat de _corio
- elephanti_: sed ἱμάντας arbitror appellare Hippolochum _virgas
- subtiles ex ebore_, quibus ceu vimine utebantur in contexendis
- panariis istis.”—Animadv. in Athen. t. vii. p. 392.
-
-Footnote 84:
-
- Vid. Animadv. in Athen. t. vii. p. 393. Meurs. Græcia Feriata. i. p.
- 30, seq.
-
------
-
-The immense goblet was then given him by Caranos, who declared, that
-every man should reckon as his own property the bowl whose contents he
-could despatch. Upon this, nine valiant bacchanals started up at once,
-and sought each to empty the goblet before the others, while one unhappy
-wight among the company, envying them their good fortune, sat down and
-burst into tears because he should go cupless away. The master of the
-house, however, unwilling that any should be dissatisfied, presented him
-with an empty bowl.[85]
-
------
-
-Footnote 85:
-
- In like manner, Alexander, son of Philip, when he entertained nine
- thousand persons at a marriage feast at Susa, presented each of them
- with a golden goblet, and paid all their debts, amounting to nearly
- ten thousand talents.—Plut. Alexand. § 70.
-
------
-
-A chorus of a hundred men now entered to chaunt the epithalamium; and
-after them dancing girls, dressed in the character of nymphs and
-nereids.
-
-The drinking still proceeding, and the darkness of evening coming on,
-the circle of the hall appeared suddenly to dilate, a succession of
-white curtains, which had extended all round, and disguised its
-dimensions, being drawn up, while from numerous recesses in the wall,
-thrown open by concealed machinery, a blaze of torches flashed upon the
-guests, seeming to be borne by a troop of gods and goddesses, Hermes,
-Pan, Artemis, and the Loves, with numerous other divinities, each
-holding a flambeau and administering light to the assembled mortals.
-
-While every person was expressing his admiration of this contrivance,
-wild boars of true Erymanthean dimensions, transfixed with silver
-javelins, were brought in on square trays with golden rims, one of which
-was presented to each of the company. To the _bon vivants_ themselves
-nothing appeared so worthy of commendation, as that, when anything
-wonderful was exhibited, they should all have been able to get upon
-their legs, and preserve the perpendicular, notwithstanding they were so
-top-heavy with wine.
-
-“Our slaves,” says one of the guests, “piled all the gifts we had
-received in our baskets; and the trumpet, according to the custom of the
-Macedonians, at length announced the termination of the repast.” Caranos
-next began that part of the potations in which small cups alone figured,
-and commanded the slaves to circulate the wine briskly; what they drank
-in this second bout being regarded as an antidote against that which
-they had swallowed before.
-
-They were now, as might be supposed, in the right trim to be amused, and
-there entered to them the buffoon Mandrogenes, a descendant, it was
-said, of Strato the Athenian. This professional gentleman for a long
-time shook their sides with laughter, and terminated his performances by
-dancing with his wife, an old woman, upwards of eighty.[86] This fit of
-merriment would appear to have restored the edge of their appetites, and
-made them ready for those supplementary dainties which closed the
-achievements of the day. These consisted of a variety of sweetmeats,
-rendered more tempting by the little ivory-plaited corbels in which they
-nestled, delicate cakes from Crete, and Samos, and Attica, in the boxes
-in which they were imported.
-
------
-
-Footnote 86:
-
- If octogenarian dancers were held in admiration in England, it would,
- according to Lord Bacon, be easy to form an army of them; since “there
- is, he says, scarce a village with us, if it be any whit populous, but
- it affords some man or woman of fourscore years of age; nay, a few
- years since there was, in the county of Hereford, a May-game, or
- morrice-dance, consisting of eight men, whose age computed together,
- made up eight hundred years, inasmuch as what some of them wanted of
- an hundred, others exceeded as much.” History of Life and Death, p.
- 20.
-
------
-
-Hippolochos, to whose enthusiasm for descriptions of good cheer, the
-reader is indebted for the above picturesque details, concludes his
-important narrative by observing, that, when they rose to depart, their
-anxiety respecting the wealth they had acquired sobered them completely.
-He then adds, addressing himself to his correspondent Lynceus,
-“Meanwhile you, my friend, remaining all alone at Athens, enjoy the
-lectures of Theophrastus with your thyme, rocket and delicate twists,
-mingling in the revels of the Linnean and Chytrean festivals. For our
-own part we are looking out, some for houses, others for estates, others
-for slaves, to be purchased by the riches which dropped into our baskets
-at the supper of Caranos.”
-
-The marriage feast having been thus concluded, the bride was conducted
-to the harem by the light of flambeaux, round one of which,
-pre-eminently denominated the “Hymeneal Torch,” her mother, who was
-principal among the torch-bearers, twisted her hair-lace,[87] unbound at
-the moment from her head. On retiring to the nuptial chamber the bride,
-in obedience to the laws, ate a quince, together with the bridegroom, to
-signify, we are told, that their first conversation should be full of
-sweetness and harmony.[88] The guests continued their revels with music,
-dancing, and song, until far in the night.[89]
-
------
-
-Footnote 87:
-
- Senec. Thebais, Act. iv. 2, 505.
-
-Footnote 88:
-
- Plut. Conjug. Præcept. i. t. i. p. 321. Meurs. Them. Att. i. 14, p.
- 39. Petit. Legg. Att. vi. i. p. 449.
-
-Footnote 89:
-
- See Douglas, Essay on certain points of resemblance between the
- ancient and modern Greeks, p. 114, and Chandler, Travels, ii. 152.
-
------
-
-At daybreak on the following morning their friends re-assembled and
-saluted them with a new epithalamium, exhorting them to descend from
-their bower to enjoy the beauties of the dawn,[90] which in that warm
-and genial climate are even in January equal to those of a May morning
-with us. On appearing in the presence of their congratulators, the wife,
-as a mark of affection, presented her husband with a rich woollen
-cloak,[91] in part, at least, the production of her own fair hands. On
-the same occasion the father of the bride sent a number of costly gifts
-to the house of his son-in-law, consisting of cups, goblets, or vases of
-alabaster or gold, beds, couches, candelabra, or boxes for perfumes or
-cosmetics, combs, jewel-cases, costly sandals, or other articles of use
-or luxury. And, that so striking an instance of his wealth and
-generosity might not escape public observation, the whole was conveyed
-to the bridegroom’s house in great pomp by female slaves, before whom
-marched a boy clothed in white, and bearing a torch in his hand,
-accompanied by a youthful basket-bearer habited like a canephora in the
-sacred processions.[92] Customs in spirit exactly similar still survive
-among the primitive mountaineers of Wales, where the newly-married
-couple, in the middle and lower ranks of life, have their houses
-completely furnished by the free-will offerings, not only of their
-parents but of their friends. It is, however, incumbent on the
-recipients to make proof in their turn of equal generosity when any
-member of the donor’s family ventures on the hazards of housekeeping.
-
------
-
-Footnote 90:
-
- Theocrit, Eidyll. xviii. 9.
-
-Footnote 91:
-
- Ἀπαυλιστηρία. Poll. iii. 40.
-
-Footnote 92:
-
- Etymol. Mag. 354. 1. sqq. Suid. v. ἐπαυλία, t. i. p. 964, e. sqq.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
- CONDITION OF MARRIED WOMEN.
-
-
-From the spirit pervading the foregoing ceremonies it will be seen, that
-married women enjoyed at Athens numerous external tokens of respect. We
-must now enter the harem, and observe how they lived there. Most,
-perhaps, of the misapprehensions which prevail on this subject arise out
-of one very obvious omission,—a neglect to distinguish between the
-exaggeration and satire of the comic poets, much of which, in all
-countries, has been levelled at women, and the sober truth of history,
-less startling, and therefore, less palatable. To comprehend the
-Athenians, however, we must be content to view them as they were, with
-many virtues and many vices, often sinning against their women, but
-never as a general rule treating them harshly. Indeed, according to no
-despicable testimony, their errors when they erred would appear to have
-lain in the contrary direction.[93]
-
------
-
-Footnote 93:
-
- For example, public opinion regarded it as more atrocious to kill a
- woman than a man.—Arist. Prob. xxix. 11.
-
------
-
-Certainly the mistress of a family at Athens was not placed above the
-necessity of extending her solicitude to the government of her
-household, though too many even there neglected it, degenerating into
-the resemblance of those mawkish, insipid, useless things, without heart
-or head, who often in our times fill fashionable drawing-rooms, and have
-their reputations translated to Doctors’ Commons. Of female education I
-have already spoken, together with the several acts and ceremonies,
-which conducted an Athenian woman to the highest and most honourable
-station her sex can fill on earth. In this new relation she shares with
-her husband that domestic patriarchal sovereignty, pictures of which
-abound in the Scriptures. How great soever might be the establishment,
-she was queen of every thing within doors. All the slaves, male and
-female, came under her control.[94] To every one she distributed his
-task, and issued her commands; and when there were no children who
-required her care, she might often be seen sitting in the recesses of
-the harem, at the loom, encircled, like an Homeric princess, by her
-maids,[95] laughing, chatting, or, along with them, exercising her sweet
-voice in songs,[96] those natural bursts of melody which came
-spontaneously to the lips of a people whose every-day speech resembled
-the music of the nightingale.
-
------
-
-Footnote 94:
-
- She wakes them in the morning.—Aristoph. Lysist. 18. This comic poet
- gives a concise sketch of an Athenian woman’s morning work, which
- rendered their going out difficult at such an hour:—Χαλεπή τε γυναικῶν
- ἔξοδος· ἠ μὲν γὰρ ἡμῶν περὶ τὸν ἀνδρ’ ἐκύπτασεν· ἠ δ᾽ οἰκέτην ἤγειρεν·
- ἡ δὲ παιδίον κατέκλινεν· ἡ δ᾽ ἐλουσεν· ἠ δ᾽ ἐψώμισεν.—Lysist. 16, sqq.
-
-Footnote 95:
-
- Precisely the same picture is presented in the interior of Jason’s
- palace at Pheræ, where we find the tyrant’s mother at work in the
- midst of her handmaidens.—Polyæn. Stratag. vi. i. 5.
-
-Footnote 96:
-
- Plat. de Legg. t. viii. p. 36.—Among the Thracians, and many other
- people, women were employed in agriculture, as they are in England and
- France, as herdswomen and shepherds, and every other laborious
- employment, like men.—Id. ib.
-
------
-
-Xenophon, in that interesting work, the Œconomics, introduces an
-Athenian gentleman laying open to Socrates the internal regulations of
-his family. In this picture, the wife occupies an important position in
-the foreground. She is, indeed, the principal figure around which the
-various circumstances of the composition are grouped with infinite
-delicacy and effect. Young and beautiful she comes forth hesitating and
-blushing at being detected in some slight economical blunders. The
-husband takes her by the hand; they converse in our presence, and while
-the interior arrangements of a Greek house are unreservedly laid open,
-we discover the exact footing on which husband and wife lived at Athens,
-and a state of more complete confidence, of greater mutual affection, of
-more considerate tenderness on the one side, or feminine reliance and
-love on the other, it would be difficult to conceive.
-
-Ischomachos, I admit, is to be regarded as a favourable specimen; he
-unites in his character the qualities of an enterprising and enlightened
-country gentleman, with those of a politician and orator of no mean
-order, and his probity as a citizen infuses an air of mingled grandeur
-and sweetness into his domestic manners. Describing a conversation
-which, soon after their marriage, took place between him and his
-youthful wife, he observes:—“When we had together taken a view of our
-possessions I remarked to her that, without her constant care and
-superintendence, nothing of all she had seen would greatly profit us.
-And taking my illustration from the science of politics, I showed that,
-in well-regulated states, it is not deemed sufficient that good laws are
-enacted, but that proper persons are chosen to be guardians of those
-laws, who not only reward with praise such as yield them due obedience,
-but visit also their infraction with punishment. Now, my love,” said I,
-“you must consider yourself the guardian of our domestic commonwealth,
-and dispose of all its resources as the commander of a garrison disposes
-of the soldiers under his orders. With you it entirely rests to
-determine respecting the conduct of every individual in the household,
-and, like a queen, to bestow praise and reward on the dutiful and
-obedient, while you keep in check the refractory by punishment and
-reproof. Nor should this high charge appear burdensome to you; for
-though the duties of your station may seem to involve deeper solicitude
-and necessity for greater exertion than we require even from a domestic,
-these greater cares are rewarded by greater enjoyments; since, whatever
-ability they may display in the improving or protecting of their
-master’s property, the measure of their advantages still depends upon
-his will, while you, as its joint owner, enjoy the right of applying it
-to whatever use you please. It follows, therefore, that as the person
-most interested in its preservation you should cheerfully encounter
-superior difficulties.”
-
-Having listened attentively to the somewhat quaint discourse of the
-Economist, Socrates felt anxious, as well he might, to learn the result;
-for the lady, expected thus wisely “to queen it,” was as yet but
-fifteen. His faith, however, in womanhood was great; and Xenophon, who
-but reflects from a less brilliant mirror the Socratic wisdom, delivers,
-under the mask of Ischomachos, the mingled convictions both of the
-master and the pupil. The moral beauty of the dialogue, and its truth to
-nature, would have been lost had the lady at all shrunk from the duties
-of her high office. But her ambition was at once awakened. The obscurity
-to which, in the time of Pericles, women were, by the manners of the
-country, condemned, now no longer seemed desirable, and the love of fame
-was urged upon her as a motive to extraordinary exertions.[97] Her reply
-is highly characteristic. Running, with the unerring tact of her sex,
-even in advance of her husband, she desired him to believe that he would
-have formed an extremely erroneous opinion of her character, had he for
-a moment supposed that the care of their common property could ever have
-proved burdensome to her: on the contrary, the really grievous thing
-would have been to require her to be neglectful of it!
-
------
-
-Footnote 97:
-
- That this passion led women to interfere too frequently with politics
- may be inferred from the remark of Theophrastus, that to be versed in
- the science of domestic economy was more honourable to them.—Stob. 85.
- 7. Gaisf.
-
------
-
-Men always conceive they are complimenting a woman when they attribute
-to her a masculine understanding, and they thus, in fact, do place her
-on the highest intellectual level known to them. Socrates adopted this
-style of compliment in speaking of the wife of Ischomachos. And I may
-here remark, that we need no other proof of how differently the
-Athenians felt on the subject of women from the Orientals with whom they
-have been compared, than the mere circumstance of their conversing
-openly with strangers respecting their wives. In the East, a greater
-affront could scarcely be offered a man than to inquire about his female
-establishment. The most an old friend does is to say, “Is your house
-well?”—whereas at Athens, women formed a never-failing theme in all
-companies; which proves them to have been there contemplated in a
-different light. In fact, the sentiments of Ischomachos, every way
-worthy the most chivalrous people of antiquity, could only have sprung
-up in a society where just and exalted notions of female virtue
-prevailed; for, under the word “high-mindedness,” we find him grouping
-every refined and estimable quality which a gentlewoman can possess.
-
-But, perhaps, the reader will not be displeased if we introduce
-dramatically upon the scene an Athenian married pair discussing in his
-presence a question closely connected with domestic happiness. There is
-little risk of exaggeration. The picture is by Xenophon, a writer whose
-subdued and sober colouring is calculated rather to diminish than
-otherwise the poetical features of his subject.
-
-By Heaven! exclaimed Socrates, according to this account, your wife’s
-understanding must be of a highly masculine character.
-
-Nay, but suffer me, answered the husband, to place before you a
-convincing proof of her high-mindedness, by showing how, on a single
-representation, she yielded to me on a subject extremely important.
-
-Proceed, cried the philosopher, (who had not found Xantippe thus
-manageable,) proceed; for, believe me, friend, I experience much greater
-delight in contemplating the active virtues of a living woman, than the
-most exquisite female form by the pencil of Zeuxis would afford me.
-
-Observing, said Ischomachos, that my wife sought by cosmetics[98] and
-other arts of the toilette to render herself fairer and ruddier than she
-had issued from the hands of Nature, and that she wore high-heeled shoes
-in order to add to her stature,—Tell me, wife,[99] I began, would you
-now esteem me to be a worthy participator of your fortunes if,
-concealing the true state of my affairs, I aimed at appearing richer
-than I am, by exhibiting to you heaps of false money, necklaces of
-gilded wood for gold, and wardrobes of spurious for genuine purple?
-
------
-
-Footnote 98:
-
- Xen. Œcon. x. ii. 60. Among the Orientals we find there existed a
- peculiar collyrium for the white of the eye. Bochart, Hieroz, Pt. ii.
- p. 120.
-
-Footnote 99:
-
- Γύναι, a term of greatest endearment among the Greeks, as with the
- French “ma femme.” On this point our language is more sophisticated.
- The practice reprehended by Ischomachos, in the text, was generally
- prevalent in Greece, where certain classes of the community, who could
- afford nothing better, used, when they had painted the rest of their
- skin white, to dye the cheeks with mulberry-juice, and paint the
- eyelids black at the edge. In hot weather, therefore, dusky streamlets
- sometimes flowed from the corners of their eyes; and the roses melted
- from their cheeks, and dropped into their bosoms. They imitated old
- age, too, by covering their hair with white powder. (Athen. xiii. 6.)
- It was likewise, at one time, the fashion to bring forward their curls
- so as to conceal the forehead, as was the practice in France and
- England during a part of the eighteenth century.—Lucian, Dial. Meret.
- i. t. iv. p. 123.
-
------
-
-Nay, exclaimed my wife, interrupting me, put not the injurious
-supposition: it is what you could not be guilty of. For, were such your
-character I could never love you from my soul.
-
-Well, by entering together into the bonds of marriage are we not
-mutually invested with a property in each other’s persons?
-
-People say so.
-
-They say truly: and since this is the case shall I not more sincerely
-evince my esteem for you by watching sedulously over my own health and
-well-being, and displaying to your gaze the natural hues of a manly
-complexion, than if, neglecting these, I presented myself with rouged
-cheeks, eyes encircled by paint, and my whole exterior false and hollow?
-
-Indeed, she replied, I prefer the native colour of your cheeks to any
-artificial bloom, and could never gaze with so much delight into any
-eyes as into yours—bright and sparkling with health.
-
-Then believe no less of me, said I; but be well persuaded that, in my
-judgment, there are no tints so beautiful as those with which nature has
-adorned your cheeks. The same rule indeed holds universally. For, even
-in the inferior creation, every living thing delights most in
-individuals of its own species. And so it is with man whom nothing so
-truly pleases as to behold the image of his own nature mirrored in
-another and a fairer form of humanity. Besides, false beauties, though
-they may deceive the incurious glance of strangers,[100] must inevitably
-be detected by persons living always together. Women necessarily appear
-undisguised when first rising in the morning, before they have undergone
-the renovation of the toilette; and perspiration, or tears, or the
-waters of the bath, will even at other times float away their artificial
-complexions.
-
------
-
-Footnote 100:
-
- Cf. Lucian, Amor. § 42. Aristoph. Nub. 49.
-
------
-
-And what, in the name of all the gods, did she say to that? inquired
-Socrates.
-
-What? replied the husband. Why, that for the future she would abjure all
-meretricious ornaments, and consent to appear decked with that simple
-grace and beauty which she owed to nature.
-
-At Sparta married persons, as in France, occupied separate beds; but
-among the Athenians and in other parts of Greece a different custom
-prevailed. The same remark may be applied to the Heroic Ages. Odysseus
-and Penelope, Alcinoös and Arete, Paris and Helen, occupy the same
-chamber and the same couch. The women in the Lysistrata of Aristophanes
-appealed to this circumstance in justification of their late appearance
-at the female assembly held before day, and Euphiletos in the oration of
-Lysias on Eratosthenes’ murder, who admits us freely into the recesses
-of the harem, confirms this fact, except, that when the mother suckled
-her own child she usually slept with it in a separate bed. At Byzantium
-also the same practice prevailed, as we learn from a very amusing
-anecdote. Python an orator of that city who, like Falstaff, seems to
-have been somewhere about two yards in the waist, once quelled an
-insurrection by a jocular allusion to this part of domestic economy. “My
-dear fellow-citizens,” cried he to the enraged multitude, “you see how
-fat I am. Well! my wife is still fatter than I, yet when we agree one
-small bed will contain us both; but, if we once begin to quarrel, the
-whole house is too little to hold us.”[101]
-
------
-
-Footnote 101:
-
- Athen. xii. 74.
-
------
-
-We have seen above how absolute was the authority of women over their
-household, and this authority likewise extended to their children. The
-father no doubt could exercise, when he chose, considerable influence;
-but as most of his time was spent abroad, in business or politics, the
-chief charge of their early education, the first training of their
-intellect, the first rooting of their morals and shaping of their
-principles devolved upon the mother.[102] There have been writers,
-indeed, to whom this has seemed a circumstance to be lamented. But their
-judgment probably was warped by theory. In the original discipline of
-the mind, great attainments and experience of the world are less needed
-than tact to discern, and patience to apply, those minute incentives to
-action which women discover with a truer sagacity than we do. In this
-task, ever pleasing to a true mother, the aid of nurses, however, was
-usually obtained; nor are we, as Cramer observes, on this account to
-blame the Athenian ladies, so long as they did not, as in after times
-was too much the fashion, consider their whole duty performed when they
-had delivered their children to the nurse.
-
------
-
-Footnote 102:
-
- Xenoph. Œcon. vii. 12. 24. Cf. A. Cramer. de Educ. Puer. ap. Athen. 9.
- This writer acutely remarks, (p. 13,) that the words καὶ αὐτος ὁ πατὴρ
- in Plat. Protag. p. 325. d. show that it was seldom the father meddled
- with the matter. The mother, therefore, from early habit, was held in
- greater love and reverence than the father. Casaub. ad Theoph. Char.
- p. 187.
-
------
-
-It will be evident from what has been said, that an Athenian lady who
-conscientiously discharged her duties was very little exposed to ennui.
-She arose in the morning with the lark, roused her slaves, distributed
-to all their tasks,[103] superintended the operations of the nursery,
-and, on days frequently recurring, went abroad in the performance of
-rites specially allotted to her sex. But, one effect of democracy is to
-confer undue influence upon women.[104] And this influence, where by
-education or otherwise they happen to be luxurious or vain, must
-infallibly prove pernicious to the state. At Athens, the number of this
-class of women, extremely limited in the beginning, augmented rapidly
-during the decline of the republic, and the comic poets substituting a
-part for the whole, invest their countrywomen generally with the
-qualities belonging exclusively to these.—But, the success of such
-writers depending generally on ingenious extravagance and exaggeration,
-we must be on our guard against their insinuations. Their faith in the
-existence of virtue, male or female, has, in all ages, if we are to
-judge by their works, been very lanksided. In their view, if there has
-been one good woman since the world began, it is as much as there has.
-Accordingly when these lively caricaturists describe the female _demos_
-as addicted extravagantly to wine[105] and pawning their wardrobe to
-purchase it—as compelling the men by their intemperance to keep their
-cellars under lock and key, and still defeating them by manufacturing
-false ones—as forming illicit connexions, and having recourse to the
-boldest stratagems in furtherance of their intrigues, we must
-necessarily suppose them to have amused themselves at the expense of
-truth; though that, among the Athenians, there were examples enough of
-women of whom all this might be said, it would be absurd to deny.
-
------
-
-Footnote 103:
-
- Aristoph. Lysist. 18. Plato, who admired the practice, requires his
- airy female citizens to go and do likewise. Καὶ δὴ καὶ δέσποιναν ἐν
- οἰκίᾳ ὑπὸ θεραπαινίδων ἐγείρεσθαί τινων καὶ μὴ πρώτην αὐτὴν ἐγείρειν
- τὰς ἄλλας, αἰσχρὸν λέγειν χρὴ πρὸς αὑτοὺς δοῦλον τε καὶ δούλην καὶ
- παῖδα, καὶ εἴ πως ἦν οἷον τε, ὅλην καὶ πᾶσαν τὴν οἰκίαν. De Legg. vii.
- t. viii. p. 40. Bekk.
-
-Footnote 104:
-
- Cf. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 102.
-
-Footnote 105:
-
- Arist. Lysist. 113, seq. 205.
-
------
-
-We know that where the minds of married dames are fixed chiefly upon
-dress and show their anxiety has often very little reference to their
-husbands. And if it be their object to excite admiration out of doors,
-it is simply as a means to an end, which end, in too many cases, is
-intrigue. Proofs exist that among the Athenian ladies there were numbers
-whose idle lives and luxurious habits produced their natural
-results—loose principles and dissolute manners. The beauty of Alcibiades
-drew them after him in crowds,[106] though we do not read that, like
-another very handsome personage in a modern republic, the son of
-Cleinias found it necessary to carry about a club to defend himself from
-their importunities. They went abroad elaborately habited and adorned
-merely to attract the gaze of men,[107] and having thus sown the first
-seeds of intrigue, they took care to cultivate and bring them to
-maturity. The felicitous invention of Falstaff’s friends, which got him
-safe out of Ford’s house in a buck-basket, was not so new as Shakspeare,
-perhaps, imagined. His predecessors on the Athenian stage had already
-discovered stratagems equally happy among their countrywomen, whose
-lovers we find made their way into the harem wrapped up in straw, like
-carp—or crept through holes made purposely by fair hands in the eaves—or
-scaled the envious walls by the help of those vulgar contrivances called
-ladders.[108]
-
------
-
-Footnote 106:
-
- Xenoph. Memor. i. 2. 24. Ἀλκιβιάδης δ᾽ αὖ διὰ μὲν κάλλος ὑπὸ πολλῶν
- καὶ σεμνῶν γυναικῶν θηρώμενος. κ. τ. λ.
-
-Footnote 107:
-
- Aristoph. Nub. 60. Married ladies occasionally rode out in carriages
- with their husbands. Demosth. cont. Mid. § 44. Even at Sparta we find
- young ladies possessed of their carriages called Canathra, resembling
- in form griffins, or goat-stags, in which they rode abroad during
- religious processions. Plut. Ages. § 19. Cf. Xenoph. Ages. p. 73.
- Hutchin. cum not. et add. p. 89. Athen. iv. 16, cum annot. p. 449.
- Scheffer, de Re Vehic. i. 7. p. 68. The same custom prevailed in
- Thessaly and elsewhere. Athen. xii. 37. Luxurious ladies at Athens
- used to perfume even the soles of their feet. Their lapdogs lived in
- great state, and slept on carpets of Miletos. Athen. xii. 78.
-
-Footnote 108:
-
- Xenarch. ap. Athen. xiii. 24.
-
------
-
-The laws of Athens, however, were more modest than its women. For, from
-the very interference of the laws, it is evident, that the example of
-the Spartan ladies, who enjoyed the privilege of exposing themselves
-indecently, found numerous imitators among the female democracy. To
-repress this unbecoming taste, it was enacted, that any woman detected
-in the streets in indecorous deshabille[109] should be fined a thousand
-drachmæ, and, to add disgrace to pecuniary considerations, the name of
-the offender, with the amount of the fine, was inscribed on a tablet and
-suspended on a certain platane tree in the Cerameicos. However, what
-constituted _indecorous deshabille_ in the opinion of Philippides, who
-procured the enactment of the law, it might be difficult to determine.
-Possibly it may have consisted in the too great exposure of the bosom,
-for the covering of which ladies in remoter ages appear to have depended
-very much on their veils. Thus in the interview of Helen with Aphrodite
-she saw, says the poet, her beautiful neck, desire-inflaming bosom, and
-eyes bright with liquid splendour. Her garments concealed the rest.[110]
-Now, as it was customary for ladies to appear veiled in public, the
-object of the law of Philippides may simply have been to enforce the
-observance of this ancient practice. The magistrates who presided over
-this very delicate part of Athenian police were denominated “Regulators
-of the women,”[111] an office which Sultan Mahmood in our day took upon
-himself. They were chosen by the twenty from among the wealthiest and
-most virtuous of the citizens, and in their office resembled the Roman
-Censors and similar magistrates in several other states.[112]
-
------
-
-Footnote 109:
-
- Ἀκοσμοῦσαι. Harpocrat. v. ὅτι χίλιας. κ. τ. λ. Potter, Arch. Græc. ii.
- 309, understands his law to have meant, women who literally appeared
- _laconically_ in the streets. “Undressed,” is his word. But will
- ἀκοσμοῦσαι which Meursius, Lect. Att. ii. 5, 62, renders by
- “inornatius,” bear such a signification? Κόσμος γυναικῶν does not, as
- Kühn observes, signify _ornamentum mulierum_, nor ἀκοσμοῦσαι
- _inornatius prodeuntes feminæ_; but κόσμος is εὐταξία and ἀκοσμοῦσαι
- means ἀτακτοῦσαι, that is, women who acted in any way whatever
- contrary to decorum and good manners, which persons appearing
- indecently dressed in public unquestionably do.—Ad. Poll. viii. 112.
- p. 763. On the manners of the Tyrrhenian women, Cf. Athen. xii. 14.
- sqq.
-
-Footnote 110:
-
- Il. γ. 396. sqq. Cf. 141.
-
-Footnote 111:
-
- Γυναικόσμοι. Poll. viii. 112.
-
-Footnote 112:
-
- Cf. Arist. Pol. iv. 15. 120.
-
------
-
-The evil influence of women of this description,[113] who, as Milton
-expresses it, would fain at any rate ride in their coach and six, was
-perceived and lamented by the philosophers. To their vain and frivolous
-notions might be traced, in part at least, the love of power, of
-trifling distinctions, of unmanly pleasures, which infected the
-Athenians towards the decline of their republic. By them the springs of
-education were poisoned, and the seeds sown of those inordinate
-artificial desires which convulse and overthrow states. In vain did
-philosophers inculcate temperance and moderation, while the youth were
-imbued with different opinions by their mothers. The lessons of the
-Academy were overgrown and checked in the harem. Such dames no doubt
-would grieve to find their husbands content with little[114] (as was the
-case with Xantippe) and not numbered with the rulers, since their
-consequence among their own sex was thus lessened. They would have had
-them keen worshipers of Mammon, eagerly squabbling and wrangling in the
-law-courts or the ecclesiæ, not cultivators of domestic habits or
-philosophical tranquillity and content: and in conversing with their
-sons would be careful to recommend maxims the reverse of the father’s,
-with all the cant familiar to women of their character.[115]
-
------
-
-Footnote 113:
-
- On the luxurious manners of the Syracusan women see Athen. xii. 20. In
- such disorders may be discovered the first germs of the decay of
- states; on which account prudent statesmen even in oligarchies have
- sought to restrain the licentious manners of women. Thus Fra Paolo:
- “Let the women be kept chaste, and in order to that, let them live
- retired from the world; it being certain that all open lewedness has
- had its first rise from a salutation, from a smile.”—i. § 20. To this
- let us add the opinion of the female Pythagorician Phintys: ἴδια δὲ
- γυναικὸς, τὸ οἰκουρὲν, καὶ ἔνδον μένεν καὶ ἐκδέχεσθαι καὶ θεραπεύεν
- τὸν ἄνδρα. Stob. Florileg., 74. 61. Both the philosophical lady,
- however, and the Venetian monk have their views corroborated by the
- authority of Pericles: τῆς τε γὰρ ὑπαρχούσης φύσεως μὴ χείροσι
- γενέσθαι, ὑμῖν μεγάλη ἡ δόξα, καὶ οἷς ἂν ἐπ’ ἄρσεσι κλέος ᾖ. Thucyd.
- ii. 45. Besides leading a retired life, ladies were likewise expected
- to cultivate the virtue of silence. Soph. Ajax, 293. Hom. Il. ζ. 410.
-
-Footnote 114:
-
- Which, according to Plato, well-educated men generally are. De Repub.
- t. vi. p. 173.
-
-Footnote 115:
-
- Plat. De Repub. viii. 5. t. ii. p. 182. Stallb.
-
------
-
-Our review of female society at Athens would be incomplete were we to
-overlook the Hetairæ who exerted so powerful an influence over the
-morals and destinies of the state. They occupied much the same position
-which the same class of females still do in modern communities,
-cultivated in mind, polished and elegant in manners, but scarcely
-deserving as a body to be viewed in the light in which a very
-distinguished historian has placed them.[116] Their position, however,
-was anomalous, resembling rather that of kings’ mistresses in modern
-times, whose vices are tolerated on account of their rank, than that of
-plebeian sinners whose deficiencies in birth and fortune exclude them
-from good society. There is much difficulty in rightly apprehending the
-notions of the ancients on the subject of these women. At first sight we
-are shocked to find that, during one festival, they were permitted to
-enter the temples in company with modest ladies. But in what Christian
-country are they excluded from church?[117] Again, behold in our
-theatres the matron and the courtezan in the same box, while at Athens
-even foreign women were not suffered to approach the space set apart for
-the female citizens. Nevertheless, though on this point so rigid, they
-were in their own houses permitted occasionally to visit them[118] and
-receive instructions from their lips, as in Turkish harems ladies do
-from the Almè.
-
------
-
-Footnote 116:
-
- Mitford, Hist, of Greece, iii. 4. sqq. It appears not to have been
- common for these women to rear the children they bore, more
- particularly when they were girls. They flew to the practice of
- infanticide that they might remain at liberty. Lucian, Hetair. Diall.
- ii. 5. iv. 124.
-
-Footnote 117:
-
- Besides, from a passage in Lucian it appears that the ladies and the
- hetairæ frequented together the public baths.—Diall. Hetair. xii. 4.
-
-Footnote 118:
-
- Cf. Antiphon. Nec. Venef. § 5.
-
------
-
-It is not permitted here to lift the curtain from the manners of these
-ladies. But their position, pregnant with evil to the state through its
-contaminating influences on the minds of youth, must be comprehensively
-explained before a correct idea can be formed of the internal structure
-of the Athenian commonwealth, of the germs of dissolution which it
-concealed within its own bosom, or the premature blight which an
-unspiritual system of morals was mainly instrumental in producing. No
-doubt the question whether the existence of such a class of persons
-should be tolerated at all, is environed by difficulties almost
-insurmountable. They have always existed and therefore, perhaps, it is
-allowable to infer that they always will exist; but this does not seem
-to justify Solon for sanctioning, by legislative enactments, a
-modification of moral turpitude debasing to the individual, and
-consequently detrimental to the state. To do evil that good may come, is
-as much a solecism in politics as in ethics. On this point I miss the
-habitual wisdom of the Athenian legislator. Lycurgus himself could have
-enacted nothing more at variance with just principles, or more
-subversive of heroic sentiments.
-
-The Hetairæ,[119] recognised by law and scarcely proscribed by public
-opinion, may be said to have constituted a sort of monarchical leaven in
-the very heart of the republic; they shared with the sophists, whom I
-have already depicted, the affections of the lax ambitious youths,
-panting at once for pleasure and distinction, fostered expensive tastes
-and luxurious habits, increased consequently their aptitude to indulge
-in peculation, shared with the unprincipled the spoils of the state, and
-vigorously paved the way for the battle of Chæronea. But if their
-existence was hurtful to the community, so was it often full of
-bitterness to themselves. In youth, no doubt, when beauty breathed its
-spell around them, they were puffed up and intoxicated with the incense
-of flattery[120]—their conversation at once sprightly and learned seemed
-full of charms—their houses spacious as palaces and splendidly adorned
-were the resort of the gay, the witty, the powerful, nay, even of the
-wise—for Socrates did not disdain to converse with Theodota or to imbibe
-the maxims of eloquence from Aspasia. But when old age came on, what
-were they? It then appeared, that the lively repartees and grotesque
-extravagancies which had pleased when proceeding from beautiful lips,
-seemed vapid and poor from an old woman. The wrinkles which deformed
-their features were equally fatal to their wisdom that flitted from
-their dwellings, and became domiciliated with the last beautiful
-importation from Ionia. Thus deserted, the most celebrated Hetairæ
-became a butt for the satire even of the most clownish. The wit wont to
-set the table in a roar scarcely served to defend them against the jests
-of the agora.
-
------
-
-Footnote 119:
-
- Vice is generally superstitious; and these ladies accordingly when
- they lost a lover, instead of attributing it to the superior beauty or
- accomplishments of their rivals, or the common love of novelty of
- mankind, always supposed that enchantments had been employed.—Luc.
- Diall. Hetair. i. t. iv. 124.
-
-Footnote 120:
-
- Statues, for example, were sometimes erected in their honour—Winkelm.
- iv. 3. 7. They were generally well educated, and there were none
- probably who could not read.—Drosè, in Lucian, complaining of the
- philosopher who kept away her lover, observes that his slave came in
- the evening bearing a note from his young master.—Diall. Hetair. x. 2.
- 3.
-
------
-
-“How do you sell your beef?” said Laïs to a young butcher in the
-flesh-market.
-
-“Three obels the _Hag_,” answered the coxcomb.
-
-“And how dare you, said the faded beauty, here in Athens pretend to make
-use of barbarian weights?”
-
-The word in the original signifying an old woman and a Carian weight, it
-suited her purpose to understand him in the latter sense.[121]
-
------
-
-Footnote 121:
-
- Athen. xiii. 43. where the word is κύβδα.—The Turkish practice of
- drowning female delinquents in sacks, is merely an imitation of what
- was performed by a tyrant of old, who disposed of wicked old women in
- this manner.—Idem. x. 60. In France likewise formerly it was customary
- to avoid the scandal of a public trial, for noblemen and gentlemen to
- be examined privately by the king who, when he could satisfy his
- conscience that they were guilty, ordered them to be “without any
- fashion of judgment put in a sack and in the night season, by the
- Marshall’s servants, hurled into a river and so drowned.” Fortescue,
- Laud, Legg. Angl. chap. 35. p. 82. b.
-
------
-
-Worshiped and slighted alternately they adopted narrow and interested
-principles in self-defence. Besides, generally barbarians by birth, they
-brought along with them from their original homes the creed best suited
-to their calling—“Let us eat and drink for to-morrow we die.” They were
-often the lumber of Asia and hence known under the appellation of
-“strange women,” though it is very certain, that many female citizens
-were from time to time enrolled among their ranks, some through the
-pressure of adversity, others from a preference for that kind of life.
-Their education it must be conceded, however, was far more masculine
-than that of other women. They cultivated all the sciences but that of
-morals, and concealed their lack of modesty by the dazzling splendour of
-their wit. Hence among a people with whom intellect was almost
-everything their company was much sought after and highly valued, not
-habitually perhaps by statesmen, but by wits, poets, sophists, and young
-men of fashion.
-
-Many of the _bons mots_ uttered by those ladies have been preserved. One
-day at table Stilpo the philosopher accused Glycera of corrupting the
-manners of youth.
-
-“My friend,” said she, “we are both to blame; for you, in your turn,
-corrupt their minds by innumerable forms of sophistry and error. And if
-men be rendered unhappy, what signifies it whether a philosopher or a
-courtezan be the cause?”
-
-It is to her that a joke, somewhat hackneyed but seldom attributed to
-its real author, was originally due. A gentleman presenting her with a
-very small jar of wine sought to enhance its value by pretending it was
-sixteen years old. “Then,” replied she, “it is extremely little for its
-age.” Gnathena too, another member of the sisterhood, sprinkled her
-conversation with sparkling wit, but too redolent of the profession to
-be retailed. Some of her sayings, however, will bear transplantation,
-though they must suffer by it. To stop the mouth of a babbler who
-observed that he had just arrived from the Hellespont—“And yet,” she
-remarked, “it is clear to me that you know nothing of one of its
-principal cities!” “Which city is that?”—“Sigeion,”[122] (in which there
-appears to be a reference to the word Silence) answered Gnathena.
-Several noisy gallants, who being in her debt sought to terrify her by
-menaces, once saying they would pull her house down, and had pickaxes
-and mattocks ready, “I disbelieve it,” she replied, “for if you had, you
-would have pledged them to pay what you owe me.” A comic poet remarking
-to one of these ladies that the water of her cistern was delightfully
-cold—“It has always been so,” she replied, “since we have got into the
-habit of throwing your plays into it.” The repartee of Melitta to a
-conceited person who was said to have fled ignominiously from the field
-of battle is exceedingly keen. Happening to be eating of a hare which
-she seemed much to enjoy, our soldier, desirous of directing attention
-to her, inquired if she knew what was the fleetest animal in the world.
-“The runaway,” replied Melitta.
-
------
-
-Footnote 122:
-
- Athen. xiii. 47.
-
------
-
-The same taste which induces many persons of rank in our own day to
-marry opera dancers and actresses, in antiquity favoured the ambition of
-the Hetairæ, many of whom rose from their state of humiliation to be the
-wives of satraps and princes. This was the case with Glycera, whom after
-the death of Pythionica, Harpalos sent for from Athens, and domiciliated
-within his royal palace at Tarsos. He required her to be saluted and
-considered as his queen, and refused to be crowned unless in conjunction
-with her. Nay, he had even the hardihood to erect in the city of Rossos,
-a brazen statue to her, beside his own.[123] Herpyllis, one of the same
-sisterhood, won the heart of Aristotle, and was the mother of
-Nicomachos. She survived the philosopher, and was carefully provided for
-by his will.[124] Even Plato, whose genius and virtue are still the
-admiration of mankind, succumbed to the charms of Archæanassa, an
-Hetaira of Colophon, whose beauty, which long survived her youth, he
-celebrated in an epigram still extant.[125]
-
------
-
-Footnote 123:
-
- Athen. xiii. 50.
-
-Footnote 124:
-
- Athen. xiii. 56.—Diog. Laert. v. 12.
-
-Footnote 125:
-
- Diog. Laert. iii. 31.
-
------
-
-Of all these ladies, however, not even excepting Phryne, or the Sicilian
-Laïs,[126] Aspasia[127] has obtained the most widely extended fame. This
-illustrious woman, endowed by nature with a mind still more beautiful
-than her beautiful form, exercised over the fortunes of Athens an
-influence beyond the reach of the greatest queen. Her genius, unobserved
-for some time, by degrees drew around her all those whom the love of
-letters or ambition induced to cultivate their minds. Her house became a
-sort of club-room, where eloquence, politics, philosophy, mixed with
-badinage, were daily discussed, and whither even ladies of the highest
-rank resorted to acquire from Aspasia those accomplishments which were
-already beginning to be in fashion. From her Socrates professed to have
-in part acquired his knowledge of rhetoric, and it is extremely probable
-that he could trace to the habit of conversing with one so gifted by
-nature, so polished by rare society, something of that exquisite
-facility and lightness of manner which characterize his familiar
-dialectics. No doubt, we may attribute something of the reputation she
-acquired to the desire to disparage Pericles. It was thought that by
-appropriating many of his harangues to her they could bring him down
-nearer their own level. She was, in influence and celebrity, the Madame
-Roland of Athens, though living in times somewhat less troubled.
-
------
-
-Footnote 126:
-
- She was a native of Hyccara, but taken prisoner in childhood, and
- carried to Corinth, whence that city has generally the honor of being
- regarded as her birthplace.—Athen. xiii. 54.—Cf. Thucyd. vi. 62. Sch.
- Aristoph. Lysist. 179.
-
-Footnote 127:
-
- Of the younger Aspasia, who had the reputation of being the loveliest
- woman of her time, we have the following sketch in Ælian:—“Her hair
- was auburn, and fell in slightly waving ringlets. She had large full
- eyes, a nose inclined to aquiline, (ἐπίγρυπος) and small delicate
- ears. Nothing could be softer than her skin, and her complexion was
- fresh as the rose; on which account the Phoceans called her Milto, or
- ‘the Blooming’. Her ruddy lips, opening, disclosed teeth whiter than
- snow. She, moreover, possessed the charm on which Homer so often
- dwells in his descriptions of beautiful women, of small, well-formed
- ankles. Her voice was so full of music and sweetness, that those to
- whom she spoke imagined they heard the songs of the Seirens. To crown
- all she was like Horace’s Pyrrha, simplex munditiis, abhorring
- superfluous pomp of ornament.”—Hist. Var. xii. 1. Some persons,
- however, would not have admired the nose of Milto:—thus, the youth in
- Terence (Heauton, v. 5. 17. seq.) “What? must I marry”
-
- “Rufamne illam virginem
- Cæsiam, sparso ore, adunco naso?
- Non possum, pater.”
-
- Aristotle (Rhet. i. 2) does not undervalue the slightly aquiline nose;
- and Plato appears rather to have admired it in men.—Repub. v. § 19. t.
- i. p. 392.—Stallb. where the philosopher calls it the Royal Nose.
-
------
-
-The name of Phryne, though not so celebrated, is still familiar to every
-one, partly, perhaps, through the accusation brought against her in the
-court of Heliæa,[128] by Euthios. She was a native of Thespiæ, but
-established at Athens, and beloved by the orator Hyperides, who
-undertook her defence. His pleading, it may therefore be presumed, was
-eloquent. Perceiving, however, he could make but little impression on
-the judges, he had her called into court, and, as if by accident, bared
-her bosom,[129] the fairness and beauty of which heaving with anguish
-and terror—for it was a matter of life and death—so wrought upon the
-august judges that her acquittal immediately followed. The Heliasts,
-renowned for their upright decisions, were suspected on this occasion of
-undue commiseration, though the charge was probably grounded on some
-frivolous pretence of impiety; and, to prevent the recurrence of similar
-partiality in future, a decree was passed, rendering it illegal thus to
-extort the pity of the court, or, on any account, to introduce the
-accused, whether man or woman, into the presence of the judges. It was
-on her figure that Apelles chiefly relied in painting his Aphrodite
-rising from the sea, as Phryne herself rose before all Greece on the
-beach at Eleusis; and Praxiteles also wrought from the same model his
-Cnidean Aphrodite.[130] This sculptor, who was the rival of Hyperides,
-and, indeed, of all Athens, in the affections of Phryne, permitted her
-one day to make choice for herself from two statues of his own
-workmanship—the Eros and the Satyr. Discovering, by a stratagem, that he
-himself preferred the former, she was guided by his judgment, and
-dedicated the winged god in a temple of her native city. In admiration
-of her beauty, a number of gentlemen erected, by subscription, in her
-honour, a golden statue at Delphi. It was the work of Praxiteles, and
-stood on a pillar of white marble of Pentelicos, between the statues of
-Archidamos, king of Sparta, and Philip, son of Amyntas. The inscription
-ran simply thus:—
-
- “Phryne, of Thespiæ, daughter of Epicles.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 128:
-
- Poseidip. ap. Athen. xiii. 60.
-
-Footnote 129:
-
- Honest old Burton, whom few anecdotes of this description escaped,
- imagines this artifice to have been the only defence he made.—Anatomy
- of Melancholy, ii. 222.
-
-Footnote 130:
-
- Athen. xiii. 59. seq.
-
------
-
-On seeing this statue, Crates, the cynic, exclaimed, “Behold a trophy of
-Hellenic wantonness!”
-
-It is not, of course, among women of this class, that we should expect
-to discover proofs of female truth or enduring attachment. But the human
-heart sometimes triumphs over adverse circumstances.[131] History has
-preserved the memory of more than one act of heroism performed by an
-Hetaira, to show that woman doth not always put off her other virtues,
-though habitually trampling on the one which constitutes for her the
-boundary between honour and infamy.
-
------
-
-Footnote 131:
-
- Athen. xiii. 59.—In the apprehension of Lucian, too, they were
- anything but mercenary; and stripped themselves cheerfully of all
- their personal ornaments to bestow them, like so many sisters, on the
- person they loved.—Diall. Hetair. vii. 1.
-
------
-
-Ptolemy, son of Philadelphos, while commanding the garrison of Ephesos,
-had along with him the courtezan, Irene, who, when his Thracian
-mercenaries rose in revolt, fled along with him to the temple of
-Artemis, where they fell together, sprinkling the altar with their
-blood.[132] Alcibiades, too, of all his friends, found none adhere to
-him in his adversity but an Hetaira, who cheerfully exposed her life for
-his sake; and, when the assassins of Pharnabazos had achieved their
-task, performed, like another Antigone, the last duties over the ashes
-of the man she loved.[133] Other anecdotes might be added equally
-honourable to their feelings and fidelity, but these will sufficiently
-illustrate their character and the estimation in which they were
-generally held.
-
------
-
-Footnote 132:
-
- Athen. xiii. 64.
-
-Footnote 133:
-
- Plut. Alcib. § 39.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
- TOILETTE, DRESS, AND ORNAMENTS.
-
-
-Having now described the condition and influence of women, it will be
-necessary to institute some inquiry into one of the principal means by
-which they achieved and maintained their empire. At first sight,
-perhaps, the disquisition may appear scarcely to deserve all the pains I
-have bestowed upon it; but, as the dress of the ancients is connected on
-the one hand with the progress of the useful arts, as spinning, weaving,
-dyeing, &c., and on the other with the forms and developement of
-sculpture, it can scarcely, when well considered, be reckoned among
-matters of trifling moment. Besides, the costume and ornaments of a
-people often afford important aid towards comprehending the national
-character, constituting, in fact, a sort of practical commentary on the
-mental habits, and tone and principles of morals, prevailing at any
-given period among them.
-
-The raiment of the Grecian women, of which the public generally obtain
-some idea from the remaining monuments of ancient art, may be said to
-have been regulated by the same laws of taste which presided over the
-developement of the national genius in sculpture and painting. Every
-article of their habiliment appeared to harmonise exactly with the rest.
-Nothing of that grotesque extravagance which in some of the fleeting
-vagaries of fashion transforms our modern ladies, with their inflated
-balloon sleeves and painfully deformed waists, into so many whalebone
-and muslin hobgoblins, was ever allowed to disfigure the rich contour of
-a Greek woman. As she proceeded lovely from the hands of nature, her
-pride was to preserve that loveliness. Her garments, accordingly, were
-not fashioned with a view to disguise or conceal her form, but by
-graceful folds, flowing curves, ornaments rich and tastefully disposed,
-to afford as many indications of its matchless symmetry and perfection
-as might be compatible with her sex’s delicacy and the severity of
-public morals. Consequently the art of dress, like every other
-conversant with taste and beauty, reached in Greece its highest
-perfection. A woman draped according to the prevalent fashion in the
-best ages of the Athenian commonwealth, was an object not to be equalled
-for elegance or grace. From the snow white veil which probably shaded
-her countenance and ringlets of auburn or hyacinth, to the sandals of
-white satin and gold that ornamented her small ankle, the eye could
-detect nothing gaudy, affected, or out of keeping. There was
-magnificence without ostentation, brilliance of colours, but a
-brilliance that harmonised with whatever was brought in contact with it;
-the splendour of numerous jewels and trinkets of gold, but no appearance
-of display, or of a wish to dazzle. Everything appeared to stand where
-it did, because it was its proper place.
-
-But in Sparta where there existed little tendency towards art or
-refinement,[134] a costume the antipodes of all this prevailed. That of
-the virgins differed in some respects from that of the matrons, and the
-difference arose out of a peculiar feature of manners, in which, if in
-nothing else, they resembled the English. In several Ionic countries, as
-at present on the continent, girls were previously to marriage guarded
-with much strictness. At Sparta, on the contrary, and among the Dorians
-generally,[135] they were permitted, as in England, to walk abroad in
-company with young men, and, of course, to form attachments at their own
-discretion. In this, too, as in their dress, they only preserved the
-customs of antiquity; for in Homer we find the Trojan ladies making
-anxious inquiries of Hector respecting their relations and friends in
-the field, and going forth from their houses attended only by their
-maids. The married women led more retired lives, and when they went
-abroad fashion required that they should be veiled, as we learn from the
-following apophthegm of Charillos, who being asked why the maidens went
-abroad uncovered while the matrons concealed their faces, replied:
-“Because it is incumbent on the former to find themselves husbands, on
-the latter only to keep those they have.”[136]
-
------
-
-Footnote 134:
-
- Cf. Montaigne, Essais, t. iv. p. 214, seq.
-
-Footnote 135:
-
- See above, chapter ii.
-
-Footnote 136:
-
- Plut. Apophtheg. Lacon. Charill. 2. t. i. p. 161.
-
------
-
-The principal, or, rather, the sole garment of the Dorian maidens was
-the chiton, or himation,[137] made of woollen stuff, and without
-sleeves, but fastened on either shoulder by a large clasp, and gathered
-on the breast by a kind of brooch. This sleeveless robe, which seldom
-reached more than half way to the knee, was moreover left open up to a
-certain point on both sides,[138] so that the skirts or wings, flying
-open as they walked, entirely exposed their limbs, closely resembling
-the shift of the Bedouin women,[139] slit up to the arm-pit, but
-gathered tight by a girdle about the waist. When the girdle was removed
-it reached to the calves of the legs,[140] and would then, but for the
-side-slits, have been quite as becoming as the blue chemise of the
-modern Egyptian women, which is open in front from the neck to the
-waist.[141] When dressed in this single robe, their whole form breathing
-health, and modesty in their countenance, there was no doubt a simple
-elegance in their appearance, little less attractive, perhaps, than the
-exquisite and elaborate _mise_ of an Ionian or an Attic girl. In this
-costume Melissa, daughter of Procles, of Epidaurus, was habited when, as
-she poured out wine to her father’s labourers, Periander, the
-Corinthian,[142] beheld and loved her. The married women, however, did
-not make their appearance in public _en chemise_, but when going abroad
-donned a second garment which seems to have resembled pretty closely
-their husbands’ himatia.[143]
-
------
-
-Footnote 137:
-
- Herod. v. 87. Duris. ap. Schol. Eurip. Hecub. 922. Æl. Dionys. ap.
- Eustath. ad Il. p. 963. 17. ed. Basil. Æl. Var. Hist. i. 18. Cf.
- Spanh. Observ. in Hymn. in Apoll. 32. t. ii. p. 63. Schol. Pind. Nem.
- i. 74.
-
-Footnote 138:
-
- Poll. vii. 54. seq. Mus. Chiaramont. pl. 35. Antich. di Ercol. t. iv.
- tav. 24.
-
-Footnote 139:
-
- Castellan, Mœurs des Ottomans, vi. 47.
-
-Footnote 140:
-
- Schol. Eurip. Hecub. 922.
-
-Footnote 141:
-
- Suidas, however, supposes these garments to have been less becoming
- when the girdle was removed, and adds ἐν Σπαρτῇ δὲ καὶ τάς κόρας
- γυμνὰς φαίνεσθαι.—v. δωριάζειν. t. i. p. 772. Montaigne observes, that
- the ancient Gauls made little use of clothing; and that the same thing
- might be said of the Irish of his time, t. iv. p. 214.—The French
- ladies, also, of his own day, affected a costume in no respect less
- indelicate than that of the Spartan girls: “nos dames, ainsi molles et
- delicates qu’elles sont, elles s’en vont tantôt entre ouvertes jusques
- au nombril.”—Essais, II. xii. t. iv. p. 213.
-
-Footnote 142:
-
- Athen. xiii. 56.
-
-Footnote 143:
-
- Cf. Il. ε. 425.—In the life of Pyrrhus, the difference between the
- dress of married women and that of the virgins is distinctly pointed
- out:—ἀρχομένοις δὲ ταῦτα πράττειν, ἧκον αὐτοις τῶν παρθενῶν καὶ
- γυναικῶν, αἱ μὲν ἐν ἱματίοις, καταζωσάμεναι τοὺς χιτωνίσκους, αἱ δὲ
- μονοχίτωνες, συναργασόμεναι τοῖς πρεσβυτέροις. Plut. Pyrrh. § 27.
-
------
-
-Of the simple wardrobe of a Doric lady, which in ancient times was that
-of all women of Hellenic race, exceedingly little can be said. It is
-altogether different with respect to that of the gentlewomen of Attica,
-where, though inferior in personal beauty to none, the women exhibited
-so much fertility in the matter of dress, that they appeared to depend
-on that alone for the establishment of their empire. For this reason it
-would be vain to pretend to describe all their vestments and ornaments,
-or the arts of the toilette by which they were adapted to their
-purposes. To do so properly would, in fact, require a volume. But all
-that can be crowded into one short chapter shall be given, since I am
-not deterred by any such scruples as formerly arrested the pen of a very
-learned writer, who apprehended that, if he proceeded, he might be
-supposed to have been rummaging the boudoir notes of an Athenian
-lady![144]
-
------
-
-Footnote 144:
-
- Taylor ad Demosth.
-
------
-
-The primary garment,[145] answering to the _chemise_ of the moderns, was
-a white tunic reaching to the ground,[146] in some instances sleeveless,
-and fastened on the shoulders with buttons, in others furnished with
-loose hanging sleeves descending to the wrist, and brought together at
-intervals upon the arm by silver or golden agraffes.[147] It was
-gathered into close folds under the bosom by a girdle,[148] or riband,
-sometimes fastened in front by a knot, sometimes by a clasp.[149] This
-inner robe, made in the earlier ages of fine linen,[150] manufactured in
-Attica, or imported from Tyre, Egypt, or Sidon, came, in after times, to
-be of muslin from Tarentum, or woven at home from Egyptian cotton. The
-use of linen, however, for this purpose was not wholly superseded. A
-very beautiful kind, from the island of Amorgos,[151] one of the
-Cyclades, was often substituted down to a very late period in place of
-the byssos, or fine muslin of Egypt; and this insular fabric,[152]
-whether snow-white or purple, would have rivalled the finest cambric,
-being of the most delicate texture and semi-transparent,[153] like the
-Tarentine and Coan vests of the Roman ladies, the sandyx-coloured Lydian
-robe, or the silken chemises of the Turkish sultanas, described by Lady
-Montague.[154] It is in a tunic of this linen that Lysistrata, in
-Aristophanes, advises the Athenian ladies to appear before their
-husbands in order to give full effect to the splendour of their
-charms.[155]
-
------
-
-Footnote 145:
-
- Athen. xii. 5. 29. Boeckh. i. 141. Aristoph. Lysist. 43. sqq.
-
-Footnote 146:
-
- Ἐκ δὲ λίνου, λινοῦς χιτὼν, ὃν Ἀθηναῖοι ἔφορουν ποδήρη.—Poll. vii. 71.
-
-Footnote 147:
-
- Ælian. V. H. i. 8.
-
-Footnote 148:
-
- On the ζῶνη, Cf. Il. ξ. 181. Odyss. τ. 231. Damm. 988. On the Cestus
- Il. ξ. 214. Aristoph. Lysist. 72. βαθυχζώνοι. Æschyl. Pers. 155. et
- Schol.—Bœttig. Les Furies, p. 34.
-
-Footnote 149:
-
- Achilles Tatius. ii. cap. xi. p. 33, seq. Jacobs.
-
-Footnote 150:
-
- Thucyd. i. 6.
-
-Footnote 151:
-
- Aristoph. Lysist. 150. 735, et Schol.
-
-Footnote 152:
-
- Poll. vii. 75.
-
-Footnote 153:
-
- Aristoph. Lysist. 48. Poll. vii. 57. 74.
-
-Footnote 154:
-
- Works, ii. 191.
-
-Footnote 155:
-
- Aristoph. Lysist. 48.
-
------
-
-Because the Amorginean linen was often, perhaps commonly, dyed purple,
-it has been inferred, that none purely white was produced; but this, as
-Bochart[156] observes, is, probably, a mistake. At all events, it was of
-extraordinary fineness, superior, in the opinion of Suidas,[157] even to
-the byssos and carbasos, or lawn of Cyprus, and appears to have been of
-a thin, gauze-like texture, like the drapery of “woven air” which
-Petronius[158] throws around his female characters.
-
------
-
-Footnote 156:
-
- Chanaan. I. 14. p. 449.
-
-Footnote 157:
-
- Corrected by Bochart, who reads ἔστι δὲ σφόδρα λεπτὸν ὑπὲρ τὴν βύσσον
- ἢ τὴν κάρπασον. Cf. Suid. v. Ἀμοργ. t. i. p. 204. c. Etym. Mag. 85.
- 15.
-
-Footnote 158:
-
- Satyricon. cap. 55. p. 273. Burmann.
-
------
-
-Over the chiton was worn a shorter robe not reaching below the knee, and
-confined above the loins by a broad riband. This also was, in some
-instances, furnished with sleeves, and of a rich purple or saffron
-colour, generally ornamented, like the chiton, with a broad border of
-variegated embroidery. To these, in order to complete the walking-dress,
-was added a magnificent mantle, generally purple, embroidered with gold,
-which, being thrown negligently over the shoulders,[159] floated airily
-about the person, discovering the under garments exquisitely disposed
-for the purpose of displaying all the contours of the form, particularly
-of the waist and bosom. The Athenian ladies being, like our own,
-peculiarly jealous of possessing the reputation of a fine figure, and
-nature sometimes failing them, had recourse to art, and wore what, among
-milliners, I believe, are called _bustles_.[160] I am sorry to be
-obliged to add, that there were, also, mothers at Athens who anticipated
-us in the absurdity of tight lacing, and invented corsets for the
-purpose of compressing the abdomen and otherwise reducing the figures of
-their daughters to some artificial standard which they had already begun
-to set up in defiance of nature.[161] Some women, too, when apprehensive
-of growing fat, would collect on fine wool a quantity of summer dew,
-which they afterwards squeezed out and drank, this liquid having been
-supposed to be possessed of deleterious qualities, more particularly the
-ascending dew.[162]
-
------
-
-Footnote 159:
-
- We find, from ancient monuments, that persons likewise wore over their
- shoulders an article of dress exactly resembling the modern cape or
- tippet.—Mus. Cortonens. tab. 58.
-
-Footnote 160:
-
- Athen. xiii. 23. Alex. Frag. v. 13, seq.
-
-Footnote 161:
-
- Victor. Var. Lect. ii. 6. 32.
-
-Footnote 162:
-
- Plut. Quæst. Nat. § 6. t. v. p. 321.—Coray sur Hippocrate, t. II. p.
- 82, seq.
-
------
-
-Like the eastern ladies of the present day, they seldom went abroad
-without their veil, which was a light fabric of transparent texture,
-white or purple, from Cos, or Laconia. It was thrown tastefully over the
-head, raised in front on the point of the sphendone,[163] as in modern
-Italy by the comb, and hung waving on the shoulders and down the back in
-glittering folds. But this was not the only covering they made use of
-for their head. Those modern writers who have so thought are mistaken,
-since it is clear, both from contemporary testimony and numerous works
-of art still remaining, that very frequently they wore caps or bonnets.
-Several examples occur in Mr. Hope’s work, on the Costumes of the
-Ancients;[164] and Mnesilochos, in Aristophanes, when putting on the
-disguise of a woman for the purpose of being present at the Festival of
-Demeter, like Clodius at that of the Bona Dea, desires to borrow from
-Agathon a net or mitre for the head. “Will you have my night-cap?”
-inquires the poet. “Exactly,” replies Euripides, “that is just what we
-want.”[165]
-
------
-
-Footnote 163:
-
- See an exact representation of it in the Mus. Chiaramont. pl. 8, where
- we likewise find an example of the sleeves closed with agraffes.—Cf.
- pl. 16.
-
-Footnote 164:
-
- Plates. Nos. 98. 108. 131. 162. 172.
-
-Footnote 165:
-
- Aristoph. Thesmoph. 256.
-
------
-
-But we have hitherto scarcely entered upon the list of their wardrobe,
-in enumerating some of the articles of which, I must crave the reader’s
-permission to employ the original terms, our language, in most cases,
-furnishing us with no equivalent. And, first, following the order of
-Pollux, who observes no principle of classification, we have the
-_Epomis_, a robe with sleeves, opposed to the _Exomis_, which had none.
-The _Diploïdion_, an ample cloak, or mantle, capacious enough to be worn
-double. The _Hemidiploïdion_, a more scanty mantle; the _Katastiktos_,
-adorned with flowers or figures of animals, or richly marked with spots,
-the _Katagogis_, the _Epiblema_, or cloak, and the _Peplos_,[166] a word
-of very equivocal character, used to signify a veil or mantle, a
-sofa-carpet, or a covering for a chariot. Generally, it seems to have
-designated a garment of double the necessary size, that, at pleasure, it
-might be put on, or cast, like a cloak, over the whole body, as appears
-from the Peplos of Athena.[167] That the word sometimes was used to
-signify a tunic appears from Xenophon, who says “the peplos being rent
-above, the bosom appeared.”[168] He, however, considers it to have
-formed part of the male costume.
-
------
-
-Footnote 166:
-
- Poll. vii. 49, seq.—The _peploma_ of Pindar (Pyth. ix. 219) is now
- paploma. Wordsworth, Athens and Attica, p. 32. Cf. Iliad. ε. 315.—The
- peplos was sometimes embroidered with figures.—Il. ζ. 289–295.
-
-Footnote 167:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 564. Poll. vii. 50.
-
-Footnote 168:
-
- Poll. vii. 50. Cf. Cyrop. iii. 1. 13.-3. 67. In Homer, Iliad, γ. 385,
- &c. the word, ἑανὸς, signifying a richly-wrought vest or robe, is
- synonymous, as Pollux remarks, with πέπλος vii. 51. This is, likewise,
- the opinion of Buttmann, who, however, supposes it to mean a “flexibly
- soft garment.”—Lexil. Art. 41. Others draw a distinction between ἑανὸς
- and πέπλος, the former, they say, being employed to signify a veil
- unwrought and purely white, the latter, one which was variegated with
- colours and embroidery. Passow considers it to be a mere adjective
- signifying “clear, light,” and says, that εἷμα or ἱμάτιον is always
- understood with it.
-
------
-
-Another article of female dress was the _Zoma_, a short vest fitting
-close to the shape, and adorned at the bottom with fringe, as appears
-from a fragment of Æschylus in the Onomasticon. A character of Menander,
-too, exclaims,—“Don’t you perceive the nurse habited in her Zoma?”—for,
-adds Pollux, it was generally worn by old women. An elegant woollen
-dress, called _Parapechu_, white, but with purple sleeves, was imported
-from Corinth, and would appear to have been much worn by the
-Hetairæ.[169] Other garments seem to have been affected by the middle
-class of citizens, who, being unable to dress in purple,[170] the
-distinguishing colour of the wealthy and the noble, brought into fashion
-the _Paruphes_ and _Paralourges_, robes adorned on either side with a
-purple stripe. As much dignity is supposed to belong to ample drapery,
-our citizen ladies took care not to be sparing of stuff, their dresses
-trailing to the ground, and displaying numerous folds, produced
-purposely at the extremity by a band passing round the edge. These
-garments were generally of linen; but when a lady, in Homer, is said to
-be wrapped in her shining mantle, the poet[171] is supposed to intend a
-fine, light, woollen cloak, like the white burnooses of the Tunisian and
-Egyptian ladies.[172]
-
------
-
-Footnote 169:
-
- Poll. vii. 53. Jam παράπηχυ λήδιον vel ἱμάτιον, collatis Hesychii et
- Pollucis interpretationibus, intelligi videtur dictam fuisse vestem
- albam cui manicæ adpositæ essent purpureæ.—Schweig. ad Athen. xiii.
- 45. t. xii. p. 146.
-
-Footnote 170:
-
- Athen. xiii. 45. Poll. _ubi supra_.
-
-Footnote 171:
-
- Iliad, γ. 141.
-
-Footnote 172:
-
- Poll. vii. 54.
-
------
-
-Several sorts of dresses obtained their appellation from their colours;
-as the _Crocotos_, a saffron robe of ceremony, the _Crocotion_, a
-diminutive of the same; the _Omphakinon_, of the colour of unripe
-grapes, which, though prescriptively appropriated to women, was much
-affected by Alexander the Great. Modern ladies have delighted in
-flea-coloured dresses, and, in like manner, the ancients had theirs of
-asinine hue, called _Killios_, from a Doric name for the ass, and
-afterwards _Onagrinos_,[173] which, if they really resembled the wild
-ass in hue, must have been exceedingly beautiful. There was a scarlet
-robe, with the appellation of _Coccobaphes_, the _Sisys_, a thick heavy
-cloak, likewise called _Hyphandron Himation_, resembling the
-_Amphimallos_, which had a double warp, and was hairy on both
-sides.[174]
-
------
-
-Footnote 173:
-
- Among the Dorians the ass (ὄνος) was called κίλλος, and an ass-driver
- (ὀνηλάτης) κιλλακτὴρ. Poll. vii. 56.
-
-Footnote 174:
-
- Poll. vii. 56, seq.
-
------
-
-Not to extend this list of dresses beyond the patience of a milliner, we
-will now pass on to the principal ornaments for the head,[175] in which
-the Greek ladies evinced extraordinary taste and invention.[176] Among
-these one of the most elegant was the _Ampyx_, a fillet by which they
-confined their hair in front. It sometimes consisted of a piece of gold
-embroidery, the place of which was often supplied by a thin plate of
-pure gold, studded with jewels. Another Homeric ornament, the
-_Kekruphalos_,[177] can only be alluded to as a critical puzzle which
-has baffled all the commentators, in which predicament the _Plekte
-anadesme_[178] also stands; all that we know being, that it found its
-place in the female head-dress, though whether as a mitre or a diadem
-Apollonios is unable to determine. It may possibly have been, under
-another appellation, that graceful wreath or garland, consisting of
-fragrant flowers interwoven or bound together by their stems, described
-among female ornaments by Pollux.[179]
-
------
-
-Footnote 175:
-
- Cf. Winkelmann, iv. 2. 76. Alex. Pædag. ii. 12.
-
-Footnote 176:
-
- Theoc. Eidyll. i. 33. Æmil. Port. Lex. Dor. in voce.
-
-Footnote 177:
-
- Iliad. χ. 469. Heyne in loc. Pollux. v. 95, enumerates the ἄμπυξ among
- female ornaments, but without giving any description of it. Cf. Pind.
- Olymp. vii. 118. Dissen. Comm. ad v. 64. Bœttiger. Pictur. Vascul. i.
- 87.—The κεκρύφαλος, or κροκύφαντος,, which occurs once in the Iliad,
- was a female ornament for the head, unknown to the later Greeks. The
- scholiast describes it as κόσμος τὶς περὶ κεφαλήν; and Damm observes
- that, it was “redimiculam _vel_ reticulam quo mulieres crines
- coërcent.”—1158. Heyne is equally unsatisfactory. The commentators on
- Pollux. v. 95, avoid the subject altogether. Cf. Foës. Œcon. Hippoc.
- p. 202.
-
-Footnote 178:
-
- Iliad, χ. 469. Πλεκτὴ ἀναδέσμη· οἱ μὲν διάδημα, says Apollonios, οἱ δὲ
- μίτραν. Πλὴν κοσμου εἶδος περὶ τὴν κεφαλὴν. This is the basis of
- Hesychius’ article. The Leyden scholia say:—ἀναδέσμη λέγεται, σειρὰ,
- ἥν περὶ τοὺς κροτάφους ἀναδοῦνται· καλεῖται δ᾽ ὑπ’ ἑνίων καλανδάκη.
- (In which Heyne imagines we may detect _calantica_, “a hood, hurlet,
- or coif.”) Κρήδεμνον δὲ πάλιν τὸ μαφόριον.
-
-Footnote 179:
-
- Poll. v. 96. Iliad. σ. 595. In Homer the epithet, however, is not
- πλεκτὴ but καλὴ. Hemsterhuis ad Poll. t. iv. p. 998.
-
------
-
-Another article of the same ambiguous character was the _Pylæon_,
-supposed to have derived its name from φύλον, _a leaf_. Athenæus,[180]
-on a subject of this kind, perhaps, one of the best authorities,
-describes it as the crown which, during certain festivals, the Spartans
-placed upon the head of Hera. Doubtless, however, the most tasteful and
-elegant of this class of female ornaments was the _Kalyx_, a golden
-syrinx or reed, passed like a ring over each several tress to keep it
-separate.[181] Eustathius describes it as a ring resembling a
-full-blown, but not expanded, rose; and this explanation will not be
-inconsistent with that of Hesychius, if we suppose the golden tubes to
-have terminated in the form of that flower. The _Strophion_ was a band
-or fillet[182] with which women confined their hair, as we discover from
-many ancient statues. Parrhasios the artist, who used to bind his
-luxuriant locks with a white strophion, was therefore accused of
-effeminacy.[183] The name, however, appears to have been applied to any
-kind of band, even to the broad belt worn to support the bosom: “My
-strophion being untied the walnuts fell out,” says the girl in
-Aristophanes.[184] There was also an ornament of the same name worn by
-priests.[185]
-
------
-
-Footnote 180:
-
- Deipnosoph. xv. 22. Cf. Poll. v. 96.
-
-Footnote 181:
-
- Cœl. Rhodig. xxvii. 27, imagines it to mean a female head-dress, or a
- parasol. Jungermann. ad Poll. v. 96. Eustath. ad Iliad. β. 401.
-
-Footnote 182:
-
- On a mask, engraved among the Gemm. Antich. of Agostini, we find an
- exact representation of the modern feronet, pl. 24.
-
-Footnote 183:
-
- Athen. xii. 62. Pollux. v. 96.
-
-Footnote 184:
-
- Poll. vii. 67. 95.
-
-Footnote 185:
-
- Plut. Arat. § 58.
-
------
-
-The _Opisthosphendone_,[186] one of the female ornaments enumerated in a
-fragment of Aristophanes, was worn only on the stage. Its proper name
-_sphendone_ it derived from its resemblance to a sling, being broad and
-elevated in front,[187] and terminating in narrow points at the back of
-the head where it was tied. On the comic stage it was sometimes worn for
-sport with the fore part behind.[188] The _Anadesma_[189] was a gilded
-fillet or diadem of gold, used like the _strophion_ for encircling the
-forehead. What was the precise use or form of the _Xanion_, another
-golden ornament fashionable in remote antiquity, could not be
-ascertained in the age of Pollux, who says that many writers supposed it
-to have been a comb. Of this number are Hesychius, Suidas,[190] and
-Phavorinus. But a learned modern conjectures with more probability, that
-it was some talismanic idol worn as a spell against the evil eye.[191]
-In fact it is expressly observed in the Etymologicon Magnum,[192] that
-the Hellenic women reckoned it among their phylacteries.
-
------
-
-Footnote 186:
-
- Clem. Alexand. Pædag. ii. 12. Winkelmann, Histoire de l’Art. iv. 2.
- 75. note 6, and i. 2. 18. See also Cabinet Pio Clement, t. i. pl. 2,
- with the observations of Visconti.
-
-Footnote 187:
-
- Cf. Mus. Chiaramont, pl. 20.
-
-Footnote 188:
-
- Poll. v. 96. vii. 95. Eustath. ad Dion. Perieg, v. 7. Comment. ad
- Poll. iv. 999. On the κάλαμος, named but not described by Pollux, v.
- 96, see Eustath. ad Il. τ. p. 1248. Phavor. et Hesych. _in voce_
- καλαμις. What the ἔντροπον was, Jungermann confesses he does not know;
- nor do I, though it appears probable that it may have been the golden
- or gilt ornament with which the hair when gathered on the top of the
- head was bound together.
-
-Footnote 189:
-
- Damm. 444. Aristoph. Plut. 589. Poll. v. 96.
-
-Footnote 190:
-
- This lexicographer speaks of it as follows:—κτένιον. ὁ φοροῦσιν αἱ
- γυναῖκες ἐν τοῖς ἀναδέμασιν, οἷς κόσμος χρυσοῦς ἐπὶ κεφαλῆς. t. ii. p.
- 252. b.
-
-Footnote 191:
-
- 612, 23, seq.
-
-Footnote 192:
-
- Hemsterhuis. ad Poll. t. iv. p. 1000.
-
------
-
-Of the ear-rings worn by Grecian women the variety was very great. The
-most ancient kind were called _Hermata_, of which mention occurs both in
-the Iliad and the Odyssey.[193] They were usually adorned with three
-emerald drops,[194] for which reason they were by the Athenians
-denominated _Triopia_ or _Triopides_,[195] and by the other Greeks
-_Triopthalma_ or “the triple eye.” By this word, as an ancient
-grammarian informs us, some understood an animal like the beetle,
-supposed to have three eyes, whence a necklace with three hyaline or
-crystal eyes, depending from it in front, was likewise called by the
-same name. Pollux[196] supposed the earrings of Hera to have been
-adorned with three diminutive figures in precious stones, or gold,
-probably of goddesses. The _Diopos_ seems to have been an earring with
-two drops. The _Helix_ appears in Homer[197] rather to mean an earring
-than an armlet, and to have received its name from its circular shape or
-curvature; but the spiral gold rings round the walking-stick of
-Parrhasios are also called _Helices_ by Athenæus.[198] Another name for
-this sort of earring was _Heliktes_.[199] In the Æolic dialect earrings
-were called _Siglai_, in the Doric _Artiala_. A particular kind
-denominated _Enclastridia_ and _Strobelia_, by the comic poets, had gold
-drops in the form of a pine cone.[200] Two very curious kinds of
-earrings were the _Caryatides_, and the _Hippocampia_, the former
-representing in miniature the architectural figures, so called, the
-latter little horses with tails ending in a fish. There were earrings,
-likewise, with drops in the forms of centaurs and other fantastic
-creations.[201]
-
------
-
-Footnote 193:
-
- Il. ξ. 182. Odys. σ. 296. Ælian. Var. Hist. i. 18.
-
-Footnote 194:
-
- Fabri. Thes. v. auris.
-
-Footnote 195:
-
- Damm. 2195, reads τριότταια, and τριοττίδες, in the passage of
- Eustathius, which forms the basis of my text; but Kuhn and Jungermann
- ad Poll. t. iv. p. 1003, correct as above.
-
-Footnote 196:
-
- Onomast. v. 97.
-
-Footnote 197:
-
- Il. σ. 401. Cf. Eustath. ad Odyss. ω. 49.
-
-Footnote 198:
-
- Deipnosoph. xii. 62.
-
-Footnote 199:
-
- Poll. v. 97.
-
-Footnote 200:
-
- Jungermann ad Poll. t. iv. 1001.
-
-Footnote 201:
-
- Poll. v. 95.
-
------
-
-The names and figures of necklaces were scarcely less numerous.[202] A
-jewelled collar fitting tight to the throat formed, under the name of
-_Peritrachelion_, the principal of these ornaments, of which another was
-the _Perideraion_.[203] The _Hypoderaion_ was as its name imports a
-necklace that hung low on the bosom, and the same was the case with the
-_Hormos_.[204] On the _Tantheuristos Hormos_ little information can be
-obtained, for which reason the commentators would alter the text; but
-the most probable conjecture is, that it obtained its appellation from
-the flashing and glancing of the jewels depending from it upon the
-breast.[205] The _Triopis_ was a species of necklace distinguished for
-having three stars or eye-like gems depending from it as drops. This
-being the most fashionable necklace was known under a variety of names,
-as the _Kathema_, and _Katheter_, and _Mannos_ or _Monnos_, among the
-Dorians.[206]
-
------
-
-Footnote 202:
-
- Odyss. σ. 290. Hymn, in Ven. ii. 11, seq. Necklaces of gilded wood.
- Xen. Œcon. x. 3. 61.
-
-Footnote 203:
-
- Plut. Mar. § 17. Bulenger, De Spoliis Bellicis, c. 12.
-
-Footnote 204:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 677.
-
-Footnote 205:
-
- Comment. ad Poll. v. 98 p. 1003.
-
-Footnote 206:
-
- Theocrit. xi. 41. Casaub. Lect. Theocrit. c. 13.
-
------
-
-Of armlets and bracelets there was likewise a great variety. Some worn
-above the elbow were denominated _Brachionia_, others called
-_Pericarpia_, or _Echinoi_ encircled the wrists and were often in the
-form of twisted snakes of gold, which the woman-hater in Lucian would
-have converted into real serpents.[207] The _Psellia_ or chain bracelets
-were much worn; the _Clidones_ adorned the rich and luxurious only. As
-stockings were not in common use, and shoes and sandals frequently
-dispensed with when within doors, fashion required that the feet and
-ankles should not remain unadorned. Ancient writers, accordingly,
-enumerate several kinds of anklets, or bangles, all of gold, and varying
-only in form, the distinction between which I have been unable to
-discover. The _Ægle,_ the _Pede_ and the _Periscelides_ were so many
-ornaments for the instep or ankle.[208]
-
------
-
-Footnote 207:
-
- Amor. § 41.
-
-Footnote 208:
-
- Poll. v. 100. Golden periscelides are enumerated by Longus l. i. among
- the possessions of the young Lesbian girl; and Horace, Epist. i. xvii.
- 56, speaks of the periscelis being snatched away from a courtezan.
- Here Dr. Bentley understands the word to mean _tibialia_, and
- observes,—“delicatulæ fasciolis involvebant sibi crura et femora.” But
- Gesner ad Horat. p. 503, seq. rather supposes “compedes mulierum,” to
- be intended, and he is probably right. Cf. Petron. Sat. c. 67.
-
------
-
-Among the ornaments for the bosom we find the _Ægis_, evidently like the
-ægis of Athena, a sort of rich covering with two hemispherical caps to
-receive the breasts, such as we find worn by the Bayadères of the
-Dekkan. Extending from this on either side, or passing over its lower
-edge was the _Maschalister_, a broad belt which covered the armpits,
-though in Herodotus the word merely signifies a sword-belt.[209]
-
-Like all other delicate and luxurious women, the Grecian ladies
-displayed upon their fingers a profusion of rings, of which some were
-set with signets, others with jewels remarkable for their colour and
-brilliance. To each of these their copious language supplied a distinct
-name.[210] Other female ornaments are spoken of by the comic poets; but
-in their descriptions it is difficult to distinguish satire from
-information. Among these were the _Leroi_, golden drops attached to the
-tunic; the _Ochthoiboi_, which seem to have been a sort of rich tassels;
-the _Helleboroi_, ornaments shaped perhaps like the leaves or flowers of
-that plant; and the _Pompholuges_, which, though left unexplained by the
-commentators, probably signified a large clear kind of bead, as the word
-originally meant a “water-bubble,” which a transparent bead
-resembles.[211]
-
------
-
-Footnote 209:
-
- Cf. Mus. Chiaram. pl. 14. pl. 18.
-
-Footnote 210:
-
- Poll. v. 101. Rhodig. vi. 12.
-
-Footnote 211:
-
- Poll. v. 101. Cf. Schol. Aristoph. Ran. 249. Bergler ad loc. renders
- it by _bulla_, which, among the Romans, signified “a golden ornament
- worn about the neck, or at the breast of children, fashioned like a
- heart, and hollow within, which they wore until they were fourteen
- years old, and then hung up to the household gods.”—Porphyr. in Horat.
- vid. et Fab. Thes. in v.
-
------
-
-The Athenian ladies, likewise, displayed their taste for luxury and
-splendour in their shoes and sandals.[212] Like our own fashionable
-dames, they seldom contented themselves with articles of home
-manufacture, but imported whatever was considered most elegant or
-tasteful from the neighbouring countries. Sometimes, perhaps, the
-fashion only and the name were imported, as in the case of the Persian
-half-boot, fitting tight to the ankle.[213] The same thing may probably
-be said of the Sicyonian slipper. But there was an elegant sandal,
-ornamented with gold, which, down to a very late period, continued to be
-imported from Patara, in Lycia.[214] Snow-white slippers of fine linen,
-flowered with needlework, were occasionally worn; and from many ancient
-statues it would seem, that something very like stockings had been
-already introduced. Short women, desirous of adding, if not a cubit, at
-least a few inches to their stature, adopted the use of _baukides_ with
-high cork heels, and soles of great thickness.[215]
-
------
-
-Footnote 212:
-
- Diog. Laert. ii. 37. c. Sch. Aristoph. Lysist. 417. Wooden shoes were
- worn in Thessaly. With these the women killed Lais in the temple of
- Aphrodite—Athen. xiii. 55. There was a species of shoes peculiar to
- female slaves called peribarides.—Poll. vii. 87. Aristoph. Lysist. 47.
-
-Footnote 213:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 152. See in Antich. di Ercol. t. vi. p. 11, a
- representation of half-boots open in front.
-
-Footnote 214:
-
- Lucian, Diall. Meret. xiv. 3. ἐκ Πατάρων σανδάλια ἐπίχρυσα.
-
-Footnote 215:
-
- Athen. xiii. 23. Poll. vii. 94.
-
------
-
-An Athenian beauty usually spent the whole morning in the important
-business of the toilette.[216] The crowd of maids who attended on these
-occasions appears to have exceeded in number the assistants at similar
-rites in a modern dressing-room, the principle of the division of labour
-having been pushed to its greatest extent. Like Hera, who was said by
-mythologists to renew her virgin charms as often as she bathed in the
-fountain of Canathos,[217] the Attic lady appeared to undergo diurnal
-rejuvenescence under the hands of her maids.[218] Her lovely face grew
-tenfold more lovely by their arts. Clustering in interesting groups
-around her, some held the silver basin and ewer, others the boxes of
-tooth-powder, or black paint for the eyebrows, the rouge pots or the
-blanching varnish, the essence-bottles or the powder for the head, the
-jewel-cases or the mirrors.[219] But on nothing was so much care
-bestowed as on the hair.[220] Auburn, the colour of Aphrodite’s
-tresses[221] in Homer, being considered most beautiful,[222] drugs were
-invented in which the hair being dipped, and exposed to the noon-day
-sun, it acquired the coveted hue, and fell in golden curls over their
-shoulders.[223] Others, contented with their own black hair, exhausted
-their ingenuity in augmenting its rich gloss, steeping it in oils and
-essences, till all the fragrance of Arabia seemed to breathe around
-them. Those waving ringlets which we admire in their sculpture were
-often the creation of art, being produced by curling-irons heated in
-ashes;[224] after which, by the aid of jewelled fillets and golden pins,
-they were brought forward over the smooth white forehead,[225] which
-they sometimes shaded to the eyebrows, leaving a small ivory space in
-the centre, while behind they floated in shining profusion down the
-back. When decked in this manner, and dressed for the harem[226] in
-their light flowered sandals and semi-transparent robes already
-described, they were scarcely farther removed from the state of nature
-than the Spartan maids themselves.
-
------
-
-Footnote 216:
-
- Their perfumes and essences were kept in alabaster boxes from
- Phœnicia, some of which cost no more than two drachmæ.—Lucian, Diall.
- Meret. xiv. 2.
-
-Footnote 217:
-
- Paus. ii. 37, 38.
-
-Footnote 218:
-
- Aristoph. Concion. 732, et Schol.
-
-Footnote 219:
-
- Pignor. de Serv. p. 195.
-
-Footnote 220:
-
- Cf. Suid. v. κομᾷ. t. i. p. 1489. b.
-
-Footnote 221:
-
- See Pashley, i. 247. Pignor. de Serv. 193.
-
-Footnote 222:
-
- “The beautiful colour we call auburn, and which the ancients expressed
- by the term golden, is the most common among the Greeks; and they have
- gilt wire and various other ornaments (among which might yet perhaps
- be recognised the Athenian grasshopper) in ringlets, which they allow
- to float over their shoulders, or bind their hair in long tresses that
- hang upon the back.”—Douglas, Essay, &c. p. 147, seq.
-
-Footnote 223:
-
- This is beautifully described by Lucian:—Γυναικὶ δὲ ἀεὶ πάσῃ ἡ τοῦ
- δαψιλεῖς μὲν ἀπὸ τῶν βοστρύχων τῆς κεφαλῆς ἕλικες, ὑακίνθοις τὸ καλὸν
- ἀνθοῦσιν ὅμοια πορφύροντες· οἱ μὲν, ἐπινώτιοι κέχυνται μεταφρένων
- κόσμος, οἱ δε παρ’ ὦτα καὶ κροτάφους, πολὺ τῶν ἐν λειμῶνι οὐλότερον
- σελίνων· τὸ δ᾽ ἄλλο σῶμα, μηδ᾽ ἀκαρῆ τριχὸς αὐταῖς ὑποφυομένης
- ἠλέκτρου, φάσιν, ἢ Σιδωνίας ὑέλου διαφεγγέστιρον ἀπαστραπται.—Amor. §
- 26.
-
-Footnote 224:
-
- Pignor. de Serv. 194, seq.
-
-Footnote 225:
-
- The young lady, in Lucian, describes thin hair drawn back so as to
- expose the forehead as a great deformity.—Diall. Meret. i.
-
-Footnote 226:
-
- A taste not greatly dissimilar presides over the in-door dress of the
- modern Greek women. “In the gynecæum,” says Chandler, “the girl, like
- Thetis, treading on a soft carpet, has her white and delicate feet
- naked; the nails tinged with red. Her trowsers, which in winter are of
- red cloth, and in summer of fine calico or thin gauze, descend from
- the hip to the ankle, hanging loosely about her limbs, the lower
- portion embroidered with flowers, and appearing beneath the shift,
- which has the sleeves wide and open, and the seams and edges curiously
- adorned with needlework. Her vest is of silk, exactly fitted to the
- form of the bosom and the shape of the body, which it rather covers
- than conceals, and is shorter than the shift. The sleeves button
- occasionally to the hand, and are lined with red or yellow satin. A
- rich zone encompasses her waist, and is fastened before by clasps of
- silver gilded, or of gold, set with precious stones. Over the vest is
- a robe, in summer lined with ermine, and in cold weather with fur. The
- head-dress is a skull-cap, red or green, with pearls; a stay under the
- chin, and a yellow fore-head cloth, She has bracelets of gold on her
- wrists; and, like Aurora, is rosy-fingered, the tips being stained.
- Her necklace is a string of zechins, a species of gold coin, or of the
- pieces called Byzantines. At her cheeks is a lock of hair made to curl
- toward the face; and down her back falls a profusion of tresses,
- spreading over her shoulders.”—ii. 140.
-
------
-
-Contrary to the fashion prevalent in modern times the bosom, however,
-was always closely covered, because being extremely full shaped it began
-very early to lose its firmness and beauty.[227] Earrings, set with
-Red-Sea pearls of great price, depended from their ears, and an
-orbicular crown studded with Indian jewels surmounted and contrasted
-strikingly with their dark locks. Add to these the jewelled throat
-bands, and costly and glittering necklaces. Their cheeks though
-sometimes pale by nature, blushed with rouge,[228] and they even
-possessed the art to superinduce over this artificial complexion that
-peach-like purple bloom which belongs to the very earliest, dewiest dawn
-of beauty. To the tint of the rose they could likewise add that of the
-lily. White paint was in common use,[229] not merely among unmarried
-women, and ladies of equivocal reputation, but with matrons the chastest
-and most prudent in Athens, for we find that pattern of an Attic
-gentlewoman, the wife of Ischomachos, practising after marriage every
-delusive art of the toilette.[230]
-
------
-
-Footnote 227:
-
- Lucian. Amor. § 41. Homer in numerous passages celebrates the deep
- bosoms of his country women, and Anacreon, also, touches more than
- once on the same topic.
-
-Footnote 228:
-
- Anchusa. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vii. 8. 3. Dion. Chrysost. i. 262. Poll.
- vii. 95. Aristoph. Lysist. 46. et Schol. Muret. Not. in Xen. Cyrop. p.
- 743, seq. Xen. Cyrop. i. 3. 2.
-
-Footnote 229:
-
- Poll. v. 101, vii. 95.
-
-Footnote 230:
-
- Xenoph. Œconom. x. 2, 60.
-
------
-
-It by no means follows that all this attention[231] to dress had any
-other object than to please their husbands; for the Turkish Sultanas who
-pass their lives in the most rigid seclusion are no less sumptuous in
-their apparel; but we know that at Athens, as in London, much of this
-care was designed to excite admiration out of doors. For it is highly
-erroneous to transfer to Athens the ideas of female seclusion acquired
-from travellers in the East, where no such rigid seclusion was ever
-known. Husbands, indeed, who had cause, or supposed they had, to be
-jealous, might be put on the rack by beholding the crowds of admirers
-who flocked around their wives the moment they issued into the streets.
-But there was no remedy. The laws and customs of the country often
-forced the women abroad to assist at processions and perform their
-devotions at the shrines of various goddesses.[232]
-
------
-
-Footnote 231:
-
- Cf. Xen. de Vect. iv. 8.
-
-Footnote 232:
-
- Luc. Amor. § 41, seq. Cf. Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p. 339. Aristoph.
- Plut. 1015, et schol. Plut. Vit. x. Orat. Lycurg. In the country, too,
- women went often abroad, and evidently led a very comfortable life;
- their habits, in fact, greatly resembled those of English country
- ladies; the wives of men whose estates lay contiguous freely visiting
- and gossiping with each other. Thus in the action on the damage caused
- by the torrent, we find the wife of Tisias and the mother of Callicles
- discussing the spoiling of the barley and the barley meal, and
- meeting, evidently, as often as they thought proper. In fact, before
- the quarrel, the footpath across the field was clearly well
- worn.—Demosth. in Call. § 7.
-
------
-
-The dress of men included many of the garments worn by women; for
-example, the chiton of which there were several kinds, some with and
-some without sleeves. Among the latter was the _Exomis_,[233] a short
-tunic worn by aged men and slaves, but the name was sometimes applied to
-a garment thrown loosely round the body, and to the chiton with one
-sleeve.[234] Over this in Homeric times was worn as a defence against
-the cold, the _Chlaina_[235] a cloak strongly resembling a highlander’s
-tartan, or the burnoose of the Bedouin Arab. It was, in fact, a square
-piece of cloth, occasionally with the corners rounded off, which,
-passing over the left shoulder, and under the right arm, was again
-thrown over the left shoulder, leaving the spear arm free.[236] This is
-what the poet means where he terms the _Chlaina_ double. It was wrapped
-twice round the breast, and fastened over the left shoulder by a
-brooch.[237] Even this, however, was not deemed sufficient in very cold
-weather, and a cloak of skins sown together with thongs was wrapped
-about the body as a defence against the rain or snow. Some persons
-appear to have worn skin-cloaks all the year round, for we find
-Anaxagoras, in the midst of summer at Olympia, putting on his when he
-foresaw there would be rain.[238] Rustics also appear to have considered
-a tunic and skin-cloak necessary to complete their costume.[239]
-
------
-
-Footnote 233:
-
- Aristoph. Lysist. 662.
-
-Footnote 234:
-
- Poll. vii. 49.
-
-Footnote 235:
-
- If the appearance of a ghost can be regarded as good testimony, it may
- be concluded that the Thessalians wore the chlamys, since Achilles
- when called up by Apollonios of Tyana, presented himself in that
- garment.—Philost. Vit. Apoll. iv. 16.
-
-Footnote 236:
-
- Müll. Dor. ii. 283. Diog. Laert. ii. 47. Clothes were suspended in the
- house on pegs.—Odyss. α. 440.
-
-Footnote 237:
-
- Il. ω. 230. Poll. vii. 49.
-
-Footnote 238:
-
- Diog. Laert. ii. iii. 5. Cum not. Menag. t. ii. p. 49.
-
-Footnote 239:
-
- Dion, Chrysost. i. 231. Reiske. On the dress of the Arcadians, Polyæn.
- Stratagem. iv. 14.
-
------
-
-The Dorian style of dress formed the point of transition from the simple
-elegance of the Homeric period to the elaborate splendour of the
-historic age at Athens. In this mode of clothing, a modern author
-remarks, a peculiar taste was displayed, an antique simplicity “equally
-removed from the splendour of Asiatics, and the uncleanliness of
-barbarians.”[240] They preserved the use of the Homeric chiton, or
-woollen shirt, and over this wore also the _Chlaina_ or _Himation_, in
-the manner described above. To these was added the _Chlamys_, which, as
-the Spartan laws prohibited dyeing, was universally white, and
-denominated _Hololeukos_.[241]
-
------
-
-Footnote 240:
-
- Müller. Hist. Dor. ii. 277. See the picturesque description which
- Hesiod gives of the rustic winter costume of Bœotia. Opp. et Dies,
- 534, sqq. Goettl.
-
-Footnote 241:
-
- Poll. vii. 46.
-
------
-
-It was of Thessalian or Macedonian origin, of an oblong form, the points
-meeting on the right shoulder, where they were fastened with a clasp.
-This garment was not in use in the heroic ages, and the earliest mention
-of it occurs in Sappho;[242] but when once introduced, it quickly grew
-fashionable, at first among the young men, afterwards as a military
-cloak. At Athens it was regarded as a mark of effeminacy, and was
-fastened with a gold or jewelled brooch on the breast.[243]
-
------
-
-Footnote 242:
-
- Σαπφὼ πρώτη γὰρ μέμνηται τῆς χλαμύδος.—Ammonius, p. 147. Valcken.
-
-Footnote 243:
-
- Heliodor. i. and ii.
-
------
-
-The men of Sparta, though less thinly clad than the women, still went
-abroad very scantily covered. Their _Tribon_, a variety of the
-himation,[244] like the cloak of the poor Spanish gentleman, was clipped
-so close that it would barely enclose their persons, like a case, but
-was thick and heavy, and calculated to last. Accordingly, the youth were
-allowed only one of these per annum, so that, in warm weather, it is
-probable that, with an eye to saving it for winter, they exchanged it
-for that more lasting coat with which nature had furnished them.[245] In
-the towns, however, and as often as they thought proper to put on the
-appearance of extreme modesty, the young Spartans drew close their
-cloaks around them so as to conceal their hands,[246] the exhibiting of
-which has always been regarded as a mark of vulgarity. Hence the use of
-gloves, and the affectation of soft white hands in modern times. The
-same notions prevail even among the Turks, who, like Laertes in Homer,
-wear long sleeves to their pelisses for the purpose of defending the
-hand, to have which white and well-shaped is among them a mark of noble
-blood.
-
------
-
-Footnote 244:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 415. Cf. Vesp. 116, 475.
-
------
-
-The Spartans had the good taste to suffer their beards and hair to grow
-long, and were at much pains to render them glossy and shining. Even in
-the field, contrary to the practice at Athens, they preserved this
-natural ornament of their heads, and we find them busy in combing and
-putting it in order on the very eve of battle.[247] It was usually
-parted at the top, and was, in fact, the most becoming covering
-imaginable. But they set little value on cleanliness, and bathed and
-perfumed themselves seldom, being evidently of opinion,[248] that a
-brave man ought not to be too spruce. However, having no object to gain
-by aping the exterior of mendicants, they eschewed the wearing of ragged
-cloaks, which, indeed, was forbidden by law.
-
------
-
-Footnote 245:
-
- Plut. Lyc. § 16. Inst. Lac. § 5.
-
-Footnote 246:
-
- Xenoph. de Rep. Laced. iii. 4. Of Phocion, an imitator of Spartan
- manners, the same thing is related.—Plut Phoc. § 4.
-
-Footnote 247:
-
- Herod. vii. 208, with the notes of Valckenaar and Wesseling.
-
-Footnote 248:
-
- Plut. Instit. Lacon. § 5.
-
------
-
-But the Athenians ran into the opposite extreme. Wealthy, and fond of
-show, they delighted in a style of dress in the highest degree curious
-and magnificent, appearing abroad in flowing robes of the finest linen,
-dyed with purple and other brilliant colours.[249] Beneath these they
-wore tunics of various kinds, which, though the fashion afterwards
-changed, were at first sleeveless, since we find the women, in
-Aristophanes, suffering the hair to grow under their arm-pits to avoid
-being discovered when, disguised as their husbands, they should hold up
-their hands to vote in the assembly.[250]
-
------
-
-Footnote 249:
-
- Thucyd. i. 6. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 167. Tim. Lex. 188. Aristoph.
- Eccles. 332. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 879. Lucian. Amor. § 3.
-
-Footnote 250:
-
- Aristoph. Concion. 60, et Schol.
-
------
-
-Like the women, they affected much variety and splendour in their rings,
-which were sometimes set with a stone with the portrait engraved thereon
-of some friend or benefactor, as Athenion wore on one of his the
-portrait of Mithridates.[251]
-
------
-
-Footnote 251:
-
- Athen. v. 49.—Even slaves were in the habit of wearing rings set with
- precious stones, sometimes of three colours, of which several
- specimens are found in the British Museum. Thus, in Lucian, we find
- Parmenon, the servant of Polemon, with a ring of this kind on his
- little finger.—Diall. Meret. ix. 2. Cf. Hemster. ad Poll. ix. 96. t.
- vi. p. 1193.
-
------
-
-In his girdle and shoes,[252] too, the Athenian betrayed his love of
-splendour. The hair worn long like that of the ladies,[253] was curled
-or braided and built up in glossy masses on the crown of the head, or
-arranged artfully along the forehead by golden grasshoppers.[254] But as
-all this pile of ringlets could not be thrust into the helmet, it was
-customary in time of war to cut the hair short, which the fashionable
-young men reckoned among its most serious hardships. Hats[255] were not
-habitually worn, though on journeys or promenades undertaken during hot
-weather they formed a necessary part of the costume. Above all things
-the Athenian citizen affected extreme cleanliness and neatness in his
-person, and the same taste descended even to the slaves who in the
-streets could scarcely be distinguished by dress, hair, or ornaments,
-from their masters.[256]
-
------
-
-Footnote 252:
-
- Poll. vii. 92, seq.
-
-Footnote 253:
-
- Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p. 329.
-
-Footnote 254:
-
- Athen. xii. 5. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 1328. Nub. 971.
-
-Footnote 255:
-
- It is very clear from a passage in Demosthenes (De Fals. Leg. § 72),
- that hats or caps were sometimes worn in the city. There are those
- indeed who suppose the word to mean a wig; but Brodæus disposes of
- this by inquiring whether sick persons would be likely to go to bed
- with their wigs on as men did with their πιλίδια. Miscell. i. 13.
- However, I must confess their wearing hats in bed is still less
- likely. The Bœotians appeared in winter with caps which covered the
- ears. Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 545. On the form of which, see Theoph.
- Hist. Plant. iii. 9. 6, with the note of Schneid. t. iii. p. 191.
-
-Footnote 256:
-
- Xenoph. de Rep. Athen. i. 10.
-
------
-
-Even the philosophers, after holding out a long time, yielded to the
-influence of fashion, and, lest their profession should suffer, became
-exquisites in its defence. Your truly wise man, says an unexceptionable
-witness in a matter of this kind, has his hair closely shaved, (this was
-an eastern innovation,) but suffers his magnificent beard to fall in
-wavy curls over his breast. His shoes, fitting tight as wax, are
-supported by a net-work of thongs, disposed at equal distances up the
-small of the leg. A chlamys puffed out effeminately at the breast
-conceals his figure, and like a foreigner he leans contemplatively upon
-his staff.[257]
-
------
-
-Footnote 257:
-
- Athen. xi. 120. On the gorgeous dress of the painter Parrhasios. xii.
- 62.
-
------
-
-But the art of dress appears to have received its greatest improvements
-in Ionia, where, according to Democritos, the Ephesian, both the
-garments, at one time in fashion, and the stuffs of which they
-consisted, were varied with a skill and fertility of invention worthy of
-a polished people. Some persons, he says, appeared in robes of a violet,
-others of a purple, others of a saffron colour, sprinkled with dusky
-lozenges. As at Athens, much attention was bestowed on the hair, which
-they adorned with small ornamental figures. Their vests were yellow,
-like a ripe quince, or purple, or crimson, or pure white. Even their
-tunics, imported from Corinth, were of the finest texture, and of the
-richest dyes, hyacinthine or violet, flame-coloured or deep sea-green.
-Others adopted the Persian _calasiris_,[258] of all tunics the most
-superb, and there were those among the opulent who even affected the
-Persian _actœa_, a shawl-mantle of the costliest and most gorgeous
-appearance. It was formed of a close-woven, but light stuff, bedropped
-with golden beads in the form of millet-seed, which were connected with
-the tissue by slender eyes passing through the stuff and fastened by a
-purple thread.[259]
-
------
-
-Footnote 258:
-
- We find mention made of Persian dresses variegated with the figures of
- animals. Philost. Icon. ii. 32.
-
-Footnote 259:
-
- Athen. xii. 29.
-
------
-
-Duris, on the authority of the poet Asios, draws a scarcely less
-extravagant picture of the luxury and magnificence of the Samians, who,
-on certain festivals, appeared in public adorned, like women, with
-glittering bracelets, their hair floating on their shoulders, skilfully
-braided into tresses. The words of Asios preserved in the Deipnosophist
-are as follow: “Thus proceed they to the fane of Hera, clothed in
-magnificent robes, with snowy pelisses, trailing behind them on the
-ground. Glistening ornaments of gold, like grasshoppers, surmount the
-crown of their heads, while their luxuriant tresses float behind in the
-wind, intermingled with golden chains. Bracelets of variegated
-workmanship adorn their arms, as the warrior is adorned by his shield
-thongs.”[260] This excess of effeminate luxury, attended as everywhere
-else by enervating vices, terminated in the ruin of Samos. Similar
-manners in the Colophonians drew upon them a similar fate, and so in
-every other Grecian community; for men never learn wisdom by the example
-of others, but hurry on in the career of indulgence as if in the hope
-that Providence might overlook them, or set aside, in their favour, its
-eternal laws.
-
------
-
-Footnote 260:
-
- Athen. xii. 30.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- BOOK IV.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
- PRIVATE DWELLINGS.
-
-
-The opinion appears to prevail among certain writers, that the private
-dwellings of the Hellenes, or at least of the Athenians, were always
-mean and insignificant.[261] This imaginary fact they account for by
-supposing, that nobles and opulent citizens were deterred from indulging
-in the luxuries of architecture by the form of government and the
-envious jealousy of the common people. But such a view of the matter is
-inconsistent with the testimony of history. At Athens, as everywhere
-else, things followed their natural course. In the early ages of the
-commonwealth, when manners were simple, the houses of the greatest men
-in the state differed very little from those of their neighbours. As
-wealth, however, and luxury increased, together with the developement of
-the democratic principle, individuals erected themselves mansions vying
-in extent and splendour with the public edifices of the state;[262] and
-as the polity degenerated more and more into ochlocracy, the dwellings
-of the rich[263] increased in size and grandeur, until they at length
-outstripped the very temples of the gods. A similar process took place
-at Sparta, where shortly after the Peloponnesian war, the more
-distinguished citizens possessed suburban villas, which seem to have
-been of spacious dimensions and filled with costly furniture.[264]
-
------
-
-Footnote 261:
-
- But even from a fragment of Bacchylides we may infer the magnificence
- of Grecian houses; for the poor man who drinks wine, he says, sees his
- house blazing with gold and ivory:
-
- χρυσῷ δ᾽ ἐλεφαντί τε
- μαρμαίρουσιν οἶκοι.
- Athen. ii. 10.
-
- Men had by this time advanced considerably from the state in which
- they are supposed to have built their huts in imitation of the
- swallow’s nest. Vitruv. ii. 1.
-
-Footnote 262:
-
- Plat. Repub. iv. t. vi. p. 165. Dion Chrysost. i. 262. ii. 459. Dem.
- cont. Mid. § 44.—Lucian. Amor. § 34.
-
-Footnote 263:
-
- Dem. Olynth. iii. § 9. De Rep. Ord. § 10.
-
-Footnote 264:
-
- Xenoph. Hellen. vi. 5. 27.
-
------
-
-Upon these points, however, I dwell, not from any belief that they are
-honourable to the Greek character, but because they are true. It would
-have been more satisfactory to find them preserving, in every period of
-their history, the stern and lofty simplicity of republican manners, far
-outshining in the eyes of the philosopher the palaces of Oriental kings
-glittering with gold and ivory and jewels, insomuch that the cottage of
-Socrates, erected in the humblest style of Athenian domestic
-architecture, would be an object, were it still in existence, of far
-deeper interest to the genuine lover of antiquity than the mansions of
-Meidias or Callias, or even than the imperial abodes of Semiramis,
-Darius, and Artaxerxes.
-
-Nevertheless, wherever there exists opulence, it will exhibit itself in
-the erection of stately dwellings; and accordingly we find that, prior
-even to the Trojan war,[265] commerce and increasing luxury had already
-inspired the Greeks with a taste for splendour and magnificence, which
-displayed itself especially in the architecture and ornaments of their
-palaces and houses of the great.[266]
-
------
-
-Footnote 265:
-
- Cf. Athen. i. 28.
-
-Footnote 266:
-
- Cf. Müll. Dor. ii. 272.
-
------
-
-Homer, minute and graphic in his descriptions, delineates a very
-flattering picture of Greek domestic architecture in his time, when the
-chiefs and nobles had already begun to enshrine themselves in spacious
-edifices, elaborately ornamented with, and surrounded by, all the
-circumstances of pomp known to their age.[267]
-
------
-
-Footnote 267:
-
- Il. β. 657, sqq.
-
------
-
-In those days the greatest men did not disdain to apply themselves to
-agriculture, to have their dwellings surrounded by the signs and
-implements of the pursuit in which they were engaged.[268] And as in
-southern Italy the ancient nobles erected shops in front of their
-palaces or villas, in which the produce of their land was disposed of,
-so in the Homeric houses the same space was occupied by the farm-yard
-enclosed by strong and lofty walls, surrounded by battlements, within
-which were their heaps of manure, harrows, ploughs, carts, and waggons,
-and stacks of hay and corn;[269] and hither, too, in the evening were
-driven in their numerous flocks and herds, to protect them from the
-nightly marauders. The great entrance gates were in the heroic ages
-guarded by ban dogs,[270] which afterwards made way for porters,[271]
-and in still later times were succeeded by eunuchs.[272]
-
------
-
-Footnote 268:
-
- A similar taste prevailed among the Merovingian princes of France:
- “The mansion of the long-haired kings was surrounded with convenient
- yards and stables for the cattle and the poultry; the garden was
- planted with useful vegetables; the various trades, the labours of
- agriculture, and even the arts of hunting and fishing were exercised
- by servile hands for the emolument of the sovereign; his magazines
- were filled with corn and wine, either for sale or consumption, and
- the whole administration was conducted by the strictest maxims of
- private economy.”—Gibbon, Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, ii.
- 356.
-
-Footnote 269:
-
- Hesych. v. αὐλῆς.
-
-Footnote 270:
-
- Feith. Antiq. Hom. iii. 10. p. 242.
-
-Footnote 271:
-
- Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p. 145.
-
-Footnote 272:
-
- Plat. Protag. t. i. p. 159. Cf. Aristid. t. i. p. 518. Jebb.
-
------
-
-Occasionally for the canine doorkeepers were substituted in commercial
-states gold and silver representations, more likely to attract than
-repel thieves; for example, at the entrance to Alcinoös’s palace were
-groups of this description, attributed to the wonder-working
-Hephæstos.[273] A coarse imitation of this practice prevailed among the
-Romans, for we find in Petronius that Trimalchio had his court guarded
-by a painted mastiff, over which in good square characters were the
-words “Beware of the dog.”[274]
-
------
-
-Footnote 273:
-
- Odyss. η. 93.
-
-Footnote 274:
-
- Satyr, c. 29. p. 74. Hellenop.
-
------
-
-Along the walls of this enclosure the cattle-sheds would in remoter ages
-appear to have been ranged, where afterwards stood suites of chambers
-for the domestics, or piazzas, or colonades, to serve as covered walks
-in extremely hot or bad weather. Within, on either side the
-gateway,[275] chiefly among the Dorians, rose a pillar of conical shape,
-sometimes an obelisk, in honour of Apollo or of Dionysos, or, according
-to others, of both, while in the centre was an altar of Zeus Herceios,
-on which family sacrifices were offered up.[276] At its inner extremity
-you beheld a spacious portico, adjoining the entrance to the house,
-where in warm weather the young men often slept. From the descriptions
-of the poet, however, it would appear to have been something more than a
-common portico, resembling rather the porches of our old English houses,
-roofed over and extending like a recess into the body of the house
-itself. In the dwellings of the great, this part of the building,
-adorned with numerous statues, was probably of marble finely polished if
-not sculptured, and being merely a chamber open in front could not in
-those fine climates be by any means an unpleasant bedroom, particularly
-as it usually faced the south and caught the early rays of the sun. Here
-Odysseus[277] slept during his stay with Alcinoös, as did likewise Priam
-and the Trojan Herald while guests of Achilles in his military hut.[278]
-
------
-
-Footnote 275:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 875. Here the Romans sacrificed to Janus, the
- Greeks to Apollo. Macrob. Saturn. l. i. c. 9. Poll. iv. 123. Comm. p.
- 790.
-
-Footnote 276:
-
- Eustath ad Od. χ. 376. p. 790. Cf. Poll. i. 22, seq. Muret. in Plat.
- de Rep. p. 635. Soph. Œdip. Tyr. 16.
-
-Footnote 277:
-
- Odyss. η. 345. Cf. Il. ζ. 243. Hesych. v. πρόδομος.
-
-Footnote 278:
-
- Il. ω. 673, sqq. Cf. Feith. Antiq. Hom. iii. 10. p. 244.
-
------
-
-In this porch were seats of handsome polished stone, as in the palace of
-Nestor at Pylos, which, to render them more shining, would appear to
-have been rubbed with oil.[279] Similar seats are found to this day
-before the houses of the wealthy at Cairo and other cities of the East,
-where in the cool of the evening old men habitually take their station,
-and are joined for the purpose of gossip by their neighbours. In the
-larger towns of Nubia an open space planted with dates, palms, or the
-Egyptian fig-tree, more shady and spreading than the oak, and furnished
-with wooden seats, collects together the elders, who there enjoy what
-the Englishman seeks in his club, and the Greek found in his lesche—the
-pleasure of comparing his opinions with those of his neighbours.
-
-When, in after times, this plain porch had been succeeded by a
-magnificent peristyle or colonnade, the primitive custom of sleeping in
-the open air was abandoned; but here the master of the house with his
-guests took their early walk to enjoy the morning sun. It was customary
-among all ranks at Athens to rise betimes, as it generally is still in
-the warm countries of the South. Socrates and his young friend, the
-sophist-hunter,[280] coming to the house of Callias, soon after
-day-break, find its owner taking the air with several of his guests in
-the colonnade, the young men moving in the train of their elders, and
-making way for them as they turn round to retrace their steps. There was
-usually at Athens a similar peristyle on both sides of the house—one for
-summer the other for winter, and a door generally opened from the
-women’s apartment into that communicating with the garden, where the
-ladies enjoyed the cool air in the midst of laurel copses, fountains,
-and patches of green sward,[281] interspersed with rose-trees,
-violet-beds, and other sweet shrubs and flowers.
-
------
-
-Footnote 279:
-
- Odyss. γ. 406, sqq. Cf. π. 343, seq.
-
-Footnote 280:
-
- Plat. Protag. t. i. p. 160.
-
-Footnote 281:
-
- Plat. Epist. t. viii. p. 403. Athen. v. 25. Poll. ix. 466.
-
------
-
-The town-houses of Homeric times had generally no aulè, but the porch
-opened directly into the street, since it is here that, in the
-description of the shield, we find the women standing to behold the
-dancers and enjoy the music of the nuptial procession.[282] Afterwards,
-as the taste for magnificence advanced, the whole façade of the corps de
-logis[283] was richly ornamented, while the outer gates were purposely
-left open, that the passers-by might witness the splendour of the owner.
-Occasionally, likewise, the great door, leading from the portico into
-the house, was concealed by costly purple hangings,[284] which, being
-passed, you entered a broad passage, having on either side, doors[285]
-leading into the apartments on the ground floor, and conducting to an
-inner court, surrounded by a peristyle, where the gynæconitis,[286] or
-harem, commenced.
-
------
-
-Footnote 282:
-
- Il. σ. 496. Cf. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 93.
-
-Footnote 283:
-
- Hesych. v. ἐνώπια. Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p. 380. Compare the whole
- character of the “Vain Man,” pp. 57–59. Etym. Mag. 346. 10.
-
-Footnote 284:
-
- Athen. v. 25. Hesych. v. αυλεία. Suid. in v. t. i. p. 491. d.
-
-Footnote 285:
-
- “The doors (at Tanjeers) are richly carved, and placed in arches
- shaped like an ace of spades, a form so completely oriental, that
- there is no mistaking its origin; these, when they opened on the
- verandah, were further ornamented with curtains of rich crimson
- silk.”—Napier, Excursions along the Shores of the Mediterranean, i. p.
- 264.
-
-Footnote 286:
-
- Hesych. v. γυναικωνίτις.
-
------
-
-The apartments of palaces displayed, even in very early times, the taste
-of the Greeks for splendour and magnificence. The walls were covered
-with wainscoting inlaid with gold and ivory, as we still find in the
-East whole chambers lined with mother-of-pearl.[287] At first, the gold
-was laid on in thin plates, which, in process of time, led to the idea
-of gilding.[288] Even Phocion, who affected great simplicity and
-plainness, had the walls of his house adorned with laminæ of
-copper,[289] probably in the same style as that subterraneous chamber
-discovered, during the last century, in the excavations made at Rome. It
-appears, too, that, occasionally, the walls of the apartments at Athens,
-as at Herculaneum and Pompeii were decorated with paintings in bright
-colours,[290] probably in the same style, though as much superior in
-beauty and delicacy of execution, as art, in the age of Pericles, was
-superior to art in the days of Nero. Still the paintings discovered in
-the excavated Italian cities,—sometimes[291] grotesque and extravagant,
-as where we behold the pigmies making war upon the cranes, winged
-geniuses at work in a carpenter’s or shoemaker’s shop, or an ass laden
-with hampers of wine, rushing forward to engage a crocodile, whilst his
-master pulls him back by the tail—sometimes rural and elegant,
-consisting of a series of wild landscapes, mountains dotted with
-cottages, sea-shores, harbours, and baths, Nymphs and Cupids angling on
-the borders of lakes, beneath trees of the softest and most exquisite
-foliage,—may enable us to form some conception of the landscapes with
-which Agelarcos[292] adorned the house of Alcibiades.
-
------
-
-Footnote 287:
-
- Lady Montague’s Works, ii. 234.
-
-Footnote 288:
-
- Plin. xxxiii. 18. Cf. Dion. Chrysost. t. i. p. 262. t. ii. p. 259.
- Pignor. de Serv. p. 214.
-
-Footnote 289:
-
- Plut. Phoc. § 18.
-
-Footnote 290:
-
- As, _minium_, Dioscor. v. 109.
-
-Footnote 291:
-
- Antich. di Ercol. t. i. tav. 34. p. 181. tav. 35. p. 187. tav. 36. p.
- 191. tav. 48. pp. 253, 257. t. ii. tav. 39. p. 273. Cf. Poll. x. 34.
-
-Footnote 292:
-
- Andocid. cont. Alcib. § 7.
-
------
-
-The halls and saloons on the ground-floor were paved with marble or
-mosaic work,[293] which often, if we may judge from the specimens left
-us by their imitators, represented pictures of the greatest elegance,
-containing, among other things, likenesses of the loveliest divinities
-of Olympos.[294] These mosaics were wrought with minute shards of
-precious marbles of various colours, interspersed with pieces of
-amber,[295] and, probably, also, of glass, as was the fashion in Italy,
-where whole hyaline floors have been found consisting either of one
-piece or of squares so finely joined together, that the sutures were
-invisible to the naked eye. No mention, I believe, is made in Greek
-authors of lining the walls of apartments with glass, or even of glass
-windows,[296] which, however, were common in the cities of Magna Græcia
-in the age immediately succeeding that of our Saviour. It is extremely
-probable, however, that as the Greeks were as well acquainted as the
-Romans with the properties of the lapis specularis;[297] they likewise
-made use of thin plates of this stone, or talc, or gypsum, as they still
-do in Egypt for window-panes. So much, indeed, seems inferable from a
-passage of Plutarch,[298] as, also, that transparent squares of horn
-were employed for the same purpose, as oyster-shells and oiled paper
-still are in China. Previously, however, the windows[299] (sometimes
-square and situated high in the wall, sometimes reaching from the
-ceiling to the floor) were closed with lattice-work[300] in iron,
-bronze, or wood, over which, in bad weather, blinds of hair-cloth or
-prepared leather were usually drawn.
-
------
-
-Footnote 293:
-
- Plin. xxxvi. 60. Poll. vii. 121. Cf. Sir W. Hamilton, Acc. of Discov.
- at Pomp. p. 7, seq. pl. 5.
-
-Footnote 294:
-
- Galen, in Protrept, § 8. t. i. p. 19.
-
-Footnote 295:
-
- Hom. Eires. 10. p. 199. Franke.
-
-Footnote 296:
-
- See the authorities collected by Nixon, Phil. Trans, t. i. p. 126,
- sqq. Seneca speaks of glass windows as a new invention, Epist. 90. Sir
- William Hamilton, however, in his Account of Discoveries made at
- Pompeii, observes:—“Below stairs is a room with a large bow-window;
- fragments of large panes of glass were found here, shewing that the
- ancients knew well the use of glass for windows.”—p. 13. Cf. Caylus,
- Rec. d’Ant. t. 2. p. 293. Mazois, Pal. de Scaur. p. 97. Castell.
- Villas of the Ancients, p. 4. Vitruv. vii. 3.
-
-Footnote 297:
-
- In lieu of the lapis specularis, they make use in Persia of thin slabs
- of Tabreez marble for the windows of baths, and other buildings
- requiring a soft subdued light.—See Fowler, Three Years in Persia,
- where the growth of this stone is curiously described.—i. 228, sqq.
-
-Footnote 298:
-
- De Plac, Phil. iii. 5, ed. Corsin. Flor. 1750, p. 81. Cf. Plin. Hist.
- Nat. xi. 37.
-
-Footnote 299:
-
- Sir W. Hamilt. Acc. of Discov. at Pomp. p. 7, seq. Antich. di
- Ercolano. t. i. tav. i. p. 1. tav. 3. p. 11. Cf. Schol. Aristoph. Eq.
- 996.
-
-Footnote 300:
-
- Mazois, Pal. de Scaur. p. 98.
-
------
-
-The ceilings at first consisted merely of the beams, rafters, and
-planks, forming the roof, and supporting the layers of earth or straw
-that covered it; but, by degrees, the wood-work was carefully painted,
-and arranged so as to form a succession of coffers and deep sunken
-panels. Sometimes the whole ceiling consisted of chamfered, or fretted
-cedar work,[301] or of cypress wood, or was covered with paintings in
-blue and gold, and supported on columns[302] lofty and deeply fluted for
-the purpose, as has been ingeniously conjectured,[303] of receiving
-spears into the semi-cylindrical cavities thus formed. If this idea be
-well founded, we have a very satisfactory reason of the origin of
-fluting columns, and it appears to be perfectly consistent with Homer’s
-account of Odysseus’s chamber, where a number of lances are spoken of
-standing round a pillar.[304]
-
------
-
-Footnote 301:
-
- Athen. ix. 67. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 353. Cf. Gog. Origine des Loix,
- t. v. p. 443. Poll. Onom. x. 84. Comm. p. 1552. Maz. Pal. de Scau. p.
- 102. Tibull. iii. 3. 16. Luc. de Dea Syr. § 30. Cynic, § 9. Eurip.
- Orest. 1361.
-
-Footnote 302:
-
- Odyss. δ. 45, seq. Luc. Somn. seu Gall. § 29.
-
-Footnote 303:
-
- By Payne Knight, Prolegg. ad Hom. § 47. Cf. Feith. Antiq. Homer, iii.
- 11. 6.
-
-Footnote 304:
-
- Odyss. α. 127, seq.
-
------
-
-The principal apartments, according to the fashion still prevailing in
-the East, were furnished with divans,[305] or broad immovable seats,
-running along the walls, which are now stuffed soft atop with cotton,
-and covered with scarlet or purple, bordered by gold fringe a foot deep.
-In the Homeric age they would appear to have been of carved wood, inlaid
-with ivory and gold, and studded with silver nails.[306] For these
-divans they had a variety of coverings, sometimes skins, at others
-purple carpets, in addition to which they, as now, piled up, as a rest
-for the back or elbow, heaps of cushions, purple above, and of white
-linen beneath.[307] By degrees, these seats became movable and were
-converted into couches or sofas, manufactured of bronze, or silver, or
-precious woods, veneered with tortoiseshell.[308] In the palaces of
-oriental sultans they are sometimes made of alabaster, encrusted with
-jewels. Somewhere in the more retired parts of the Domos were the
-picture-gallery and library, of neither of which have we any exact
-description. The former, however, faced the north, and the latter the
-west. If the libraries of the Greeks at all resembled in form and
-dimensions those found at Pompeii, they were by no means spacious;
-neither, in fact, was a great deal of room necessary, as the manuscripts
-of the ancients stowed away much closer than our modern books,[309] and
-were sometimes kept in circular boxes, of elegant form, with covers of
-turned wood. The volumes consisted of rolls of parchment, sometimes
-purple at the back,[310] or papyrus, about twelve or fourteen inches in
-breadth, and as many feet long as the subject required. The pages formed
-a number of transverse compartments, commencing at the left, and
-proceeding in order to the other extremity, and the reader, holding in
-either hand one end of the manuscript, unrolled and rolled it up[311] as
-he read. Occasionally these books were placed on shelves, in piles, with
-the ends outwards, adorned with golden bosses,[312] the titles of the
-various treatises being written on pendant labels.
-
------
-
-Footnote 305:
-
- Id. η. 95, seq.
-
-Footnote 306:
-
- Id. θ. 65. π. 32.
-
-Footnote 307:
-
- Id. κ. 352, seq.
-
-Footnote 308:
-
- Lucian, Luc. siv. Asin. § 53.
-
-Footnote 309:
-
- Antich. di Ercol. t. ii. tav. 2. p. 13.—Books were preserved from the
- moth by cedar-oil.—Geopon. v. 9.
-
-Footnote 310:
-
- Luc. de Merced. Conduct. § 41.
-
-Footnote 311:
-
- Luc. Imag. § 9.
-
-Footnote 312:
-
- Luc. de Merced. Conduct. 41.
-
------
-
-If we proceed now to the court[313] dividing the Domos from the Thalamos
-we shall perceive, on both sides of the door leading out of the Andron,
-flights of steps ascending to the upper chambers where, in the heroic
-ages, the young men and strangers of distinction usually slept. Thus, in
-the palace of Ithaca, Telemachos had a bed-chamber on the second story,
-whence the poet is careful to observe he enjoyed a good prospect.[314]
-In later times, however, there were, on the ground floor, suites of
-apartments, denominated Xenon, appropriated to the use of guests, who
-there lived freely and at ease as in their own houses.
-
------
-
-Footnote 313:
-
- Similar courts in the houses of Magna Græcia are described as having
- had in the middle a square tank where the rain-water was collected,
- and ran into a reservoir beneath.—Sir W. Hamilt. Acc. of Discov. at
- Pomp. p. 13.
-
-Footnote 314:
-
- Odyss. α. 425. seq.
-
------
-
-At the further extremity of the interior court a steep flight of steps
-led to an elevated basement and doorway, which formed the entrance into
-the thalamos.[315] This part of the house would appear to have been laid
-out in a peculiar manner, consisting, first, of a lofty and spacious
-apartment,[316] where all the females of the family usually sat while
-engaged in embroidery or other needlework.[317] It likewise formed the
-nursery, and, at its inner extremity, in a deep recess, the bed of the
-mistress of the family appears to have stood, on either side of which
-were doors leading to flights of steps into the garden, set apart for
-the use of the women.
-
------
-
-Footnote 315:
-
- Eustath. ad Odyss. χ. p. 776.—These female apartments were sometimes
- hired out and inhabited by men.—Antiph. Nec. Venef. § 3.—Mr.
- Fosbroke’s account is curious:—“The thalamos was an apartment where
- the _mothers of families_ worked in embroidery, in tapestry, and other
- works, _with their wives_, or their friends.”—Encyclop. of Ant. i. 50.
-
-Footnote 316:
-
- Sometimes, at least, roofed with cypress-wood, as we learn from
- Mnesimachos, in his Horsebreeder: βαίν’ ἐκ θαλάμων κυπαρισσορόφων ἔξω,
- Μάνη.—Athen. ix. 67.
-
-Footnote 317:
-
- We find ladies, however, sometimes dining with their children in the
- Aulè.—Demosth. in Ev. et Mnes. § 16.
-
------
-
-It has by many been supposed, that the Thalamos was a chamber
-particularly appropriated to the use of young unmarried ladies; but,
-since we find Helen and Penelope inhabiting the Thalamos, it may be
-presumed that it was common to all the females of the house. Hector, in
-his visit to Paris, finds him in the Thalamos, turning about and
-polishing his arms, as if he meant to use them, while, close at hand,
-are Helen and her maids engaged in weaving or embroidery. The word was
-often used in the same signification as Gynæconitis,[318] or “the
-harem;” and, therefore, when Theocritus[319] speaks of a “maiden from
-the Thalamus,” and Phocylides, with the suspicious caution of a more
-vicious age, advises that young women be kept in “well-locked Thalamoi,”
-it is clear that the female apartments generally are meant. These were,
-in Sparta, called οα̈ (which, as is well known, in the common language
-of Greece, signifies eggs), whence, according to Clearchos,[320] the
-fable which describes Helen proceeding from an egg, because born and
-educated in the chambers so called. Throughout the Iliad and the Odyssey
-we find the poet speaking of this part of the house as inhabited by
-women. Here lived Penelope,[321] far from the brawls of the suitors who
-crowded the halls of the Domos; and here Ares pressed his suit with
-success to Astyoche and Polymela, who both became the mothers of valiant
-sons.[322] From which, among many other circumstances, it is manifest
-that, in those ages, the sexes met easily, even the entrance to the
-harem not being impracticable to a lover.
-
------
-
-Footnote 318:
-
- Hesych, v. γυναίκ. p. 866. Cyrill. Lex. Ms. Bren. Bret. ad Hesych. l.
- c.
-
-Footnote 319:
-
- Eidyll. ii. 136. Phocyl. v. 198.
-
-Footnote 320:
-
- Athen. ii. 50. Cf. Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 68.
-
-Footnote 321:
-
- Odyss. ο. 516.
-
-Footnote 322:
-
- Il. β. 514. π. 184.
-
------
-
-The bedchambers of the young unmarried women appear to have flanked the
-great central hall of the Thalamos, and here the female slaves likewise
-slept, apparently in recesses, near the chamber-doors of their
-mistresses, as we find particularly remarked in the case of Nausicaa and
-her maids. At Athens, the door of communication between the Andron[323]
-and the Gynæconitis was kept carefully barred and locked to prevent all
-intercourse between the male and female slaves, the keys being entrusted
-solely to the mistress of the house.
-
------
-
-Footnote 323:
-
- Cf. Poll. vi. 7. Cœl. Rhodig. xvii. 24.
-
------
-
-As these apartments were less exposed than any other portion of the
-building, and far more carefully guarded, it became customary, as in the
-East it still is, to lay up in the Thalamos, more especially in the dark
-basement story, much valuable property, such as arms, gold, silver, the
-wardrobe of both sexes, and even oil and wine. Among the Romans, or,
-indeed, among the Greeks, of a later age,[324] this step would scarcely
-have been taken, lest the ladies should have grown too assiduous in
-their attention to the skins. But in remoter ages these sordid fears had
-no existence. Accordingly, we find the prudent Odysseus, who
-apprehended, perhaps, the tricks of his domestics, stowing away his
-casks of choice old wine in the Thalamos, doubtless, considering it
-safer there, under the keeping of Euryclea, than it would have been
-anywhere else in the palace.[325]
-
------
-
-Footnote 324:
-
- Plut. Paral. Vit. § 3.
-
-Footnote 325:
-
- Odyss. β. 337, 345. χ. 442. Schol. 459. 466. Poll. vii. 397.
-
------
-
-In later and more civilized ages, the Thalamos was still used for the
-same purposes; for, in the establishment of Ischomachos, a pattern of
-Attic economy, we find that the more valuable portion of the family
-wardrobe, with the plate and other costly utensils, was there deposited.
-Corn, according to the suggestions of common sense, they laid up in the
-driest rooms, wine in the coolest. The apartments into which most
-sunshine found its way were appropriated to such employments and to the
-display of such furniture as required much light.[326] Their
-dining-rooms, where, also, the men usually sat when at home, they
-carefully contrived so as to be cool in summer and warm in winter,
-though, in severe weather, a good fire was often found necessary.[327]
-The same judicious principle commonly regulated the erection of their
-habitations, which were divided into two sets of apartments, suited to
-the two great divisions of the year. As we have already remarked, the
-principal front looked towards the south, that it might catch the rays
-of the wintry sun, whose more vertical summer beams were excluded by
-broad verandahs, or colonnades.
-
------
-
-Footnote 326:
-
- Xen. Memorab. iii. 8, 9.
-
-Footnote 327:
-
- Anaxand. ap. Athen. ii. 29.—So also thought Socrates, who observes,
- that in winter every one will have a fire who can get wood. And,
- though he himself wore the same garments all the year round, he
- considered it, apparently, a judicious practice in others to put on
- warm clothing.—Xen. Œcon. xvii. 3. Sch. Aristoph. Acharn. 716. When
- the dining-room was not furnished with a chimney, braziers were
- kindled outside the door, and carried in when the worst fumes of the
- charcoal had evaporated.—Plut. Symp. vi. 7.
-
------
-
-In what part of the edifice stood the bathing-room (βαλανεῖον, so called
-from its having, in remoter ages, been heated with acorns, βάλανοι)[328]
-I have been unable to discover, though it appears certain that, even so
-far back as the heroic ages, a chamber was always set apart for the
-bath. At first, doubtless, they were content with cold water; but that
-this was soon succeeded by warm water[329] may be conjectured from the
-tradition ascribing the first use of it to Heracles, whence warm baths
-were ever afterwards called the Baths of Heracles.
-
------
-
-Footnote 328:
-
- Etym. Mag. 186, 8. Athen. i. 18. Phot. Bib. 60. b. Hesiod. Frag. 53.
- Baths, at Sparta, were common to both sexes.—Goguet, v. 428. Cf.
- Pashley, Travels. i. 183.
-
-Footnote 329:
-
- Baccius, de Thermis, p. 365. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 1034.
-
------
-
-The form of the Puelos,[330] or vessel in which they bathed, appears
-occasionally to have resembled an Egyptian sarcophagus, and to have been
-sometimes round, and constructed of white or green marble, or glass, or
-bronze, or common stone, or wood,[331] in which case it would seem to
-have been portable. In the baths of Pompeii the marble basins, whether
-parallelogramatic or circular, were of spacious dimensions, and raised
-two or three feet above the pavement. A step for the convenience of the
-bathers extends round it on the inside, and at the bottom are marble
-cushions upon which they rested. In the labra of the Grecian female
-baths rose a smooth cippus in the form of a truncated cone, denominated
-omphalos, on which the ladies sat while chatting with their female
-companions.[332]
-
------
-
-Footnote 330:
-
- Cf. Etymol. Mag. 151, 52, seq. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 1055.
-
-Footnote 331:
-
- Baccius, de Therm. p. 399.
-
-Footnote 332:
-
- Athen. xi. 104.
-
------
-
-When once the warm bath came into use, people employed it to excess,
-bathing as frequently as five or six times a day, and in water so hot as
-to half scald themselves.[333] Immediately afterwards, to prevent the
-skin from chapping, they anointed their bodies with oils and perfumed
-unguents.[334] Occasionally, instead of plunging into the water, they
-sat upright, as is still the custom in the hammāms of the East, while
-the water was poured with a sort of ladle on their head and shoulders.
-
------
-
-Footnote 333:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 1034.
-
-Footnote 334:
-
- Plut. Alexand. § 40.
-
------
-
-The public baths, of which no full description referring to very ancient
-times remains, were numerous in all Hellenic cities, more particularly
-at Athens, where they were surmounted with domes,[335] and received
-their light from above. These establishments were frequented by all
-classes of women who could afford to pay for such luxury, rich, poor,
-honourable, and dishonourable.
-
------
-
-Footnote 335:
-
- Athen. xi. 104.
-
------
-
-The attendants, in later and more corrupt times at least, were men,
-whose sole clothing consisted of a leathern apron about the loins, while
-the ladies, who undressed in the Apodyterion, went through the various
-processes of the bath in the same primitive clothing. It was, however,
-customary for them to enter the water together in crowds,[336] so that
-they kept each other in countenance. Here the matrons who had sons to
-marry studied the form and character of the young ladies who frequented
-the baths; and as all the defects both of person and features were
-necessarily revealed, it was next to impossible for any lady, not
-sufficiently opulent to keep up a bathing establishment in her own
-house, to retain for any length of time an undeserved celebrity for
-beauty. In the baths of the East, the bodies of the bathers are cleansed
-by small bags of camel-hair, woven rough, and passed over the hand of
-the attendant; or with a handful of the fine fibres of the Mekka
-palm-tree combed soft, and filled with fragrant and saponaceous earths,
-which are rubbed on the skin till the whole body is covered with froth.
-Similar means were employed in the baths of Greece, and the whole was
-afterwards cleansed off the skin by gold or silver stlengides, or blunt
-scrapers somewhat curved towards the point.[337]
-
------
-
-Footnote 336:
-
- Victor. ad Aristot. Ethic. p. 214. There was a set of vicious fellows,
- called τρίβαλλοι, who passed their lives disorderly in the
- baths.—Etym. Mag. 765. 55. Aristophanes bestows the name on certain
- barbarian divinities.—Aves. 1528.
-
-Footnote 337:
-
- Xenoph. Anab. i. 2. 10. See one of these stlengides in Zoëga, Bassi
- Rilievi, tav. 29.
-
------
-
-The architectural arrangements of these baths,[338] if we may draw any
-analogy from similar establishments in a later age, were nearly as
-follows:—Entering the building by a lofty and spacious portico, you
-found yourself in a large hall, paved with marble and adorned with
-columns, from which, through a side-door, you passed into the
-Apodyterion, or undressing-room; next, into a chamber where was the cold
-water in basins of porphyry or green jasper; immediately contiguous lay
-the Tepidarium, to which succeeded the Sudarium, a vaulted apartment
-furnished with basins of warm water, and where the heat was excessive;
-from this, moving forward, you successively traversed saloons of various
-degrees of temperature and dimensions, until you found yourself in the
-dressing-room, whither your garments had been carried by your domestic,
-or the attendants on the baths.[339] These establishments were likewise
-provided with water-closets,[340] placed in a retired part of the
-building, and furnished with wooden seats, basin and water-pipe, as in
-modern times.
-
------
-
-Footnote 338:
-
- Cf. Etymol. Mag. 384. 10. Poll. vii. 166, and Plut. Alexand. § 20,
- where he describes the luxurious baths of Darius.
-
-Footnote 339:
-
- Lucian. Hippias. § 5, sqq.
-
-Footnote 340:
-
- Sir W. Hamilton’s Acc. of Discov. at Pompeii, p. 41. Cf. Casaub. ad
- Theoph. Char. p. 269.
-
------
-
-To diminish the chances of being robbed, stealing from a bath was at
-Athens made a capital offence;[341] so that the persons who frequented
-them ran very little risk. The price was usually moderate, though in
-some cities, as for example at Phaselis, they were in the habit of
-doubling their charges to foreigners, which drew from a witty sophist a
-very cutting remark; for his slave disputing with the keeper of the
-bath, and contending that his master ought not to be charged more than
-other persons, the sophist, who overheard the dispute, exclaimed,
-“Wretch, would you make me a ‘Phaselitan for a farthing?’”[342]
-
------
-
-Footnote 341:
-
- Aristot. Problem. xix. 14. Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p. 215.
-
-Footnote 342:
-
- Athen. viii. 45.
-
------
-
-The roofs of the more ancient Greek houses were generally flat,[343] not
-sloping upwards to a point, as was afterwards the fashion.[344] In Egypt
-and Syria, and almost throughout the East, the same taste still obtains;
-and as palm trees, loftier than the buildings, often grow beside the
-walls, and extend their beautiful pendulous branches over a great part
-of the roof, nothing can be more delightful on a mild serene evening
-than to sit aloft on those breezy eminences sipping coffee, gazing over
-the green rice fields, or watching the stars as they put forth their
-golden lamps through the violet skirts of day. But there a parapet
-usually preserves him who enjoys the scene from falling. It was
-otherwise of old in Greece. The roof consisted simply of a number of
-beams laid close together and covered with cement, so that, as was
-proved by the fate of Elpenor,[345] the practice of sleeping there in
-warm weather, quite common throughout the country, was not wholly
-without danger.
-
------
-
-Footnote 343:
-
- Æsch. Agam. 3, sqq. We find, however, an allusion to the pointed roof
- in Iliad. ψ. 712, seq.
-
-Footnote 344:
-
- Antich. di Erc. tav. 3, p. 11.
-
-Footnote 345:
-
- Odyss. κ. 559. Eustath. ad loc. p. 1669, l. 15. Feith. Ant. Hom. iii.
- 10, p. 249.
-
------
-
-On the construction of the kitchen,[346] which in Greek houses was
-sometimes a separate little building erected in the court-yard, our
-information is extremely imperfect. It is certain, however, contrary to
-the common opinion, that it was furnished with a chimney,[347] and that
-the smoke was not permitted to find its way through an aperture in the
-roof. Thus much might be inferred from a passage in the Wasps, when the
-old dicast, in love with the courts of law, is endeavouring to escape
-from the restraint imposed on him by his son, by climbing out through
-the chimney. It is clear that he has got into some aperture, where he is
-hidden from sight, for hearing a noise in the wall, his son Bdelycleon,
-cries out, “What is that?” upon which the old man replies, “I am only
-the smoke.” It is plain, that he would not, like a Hindù Yoghi, be
-balancing himself in the air, otherwise the young man must have beheld
-him sailing up towards the roof. But the matter is set entirely at rest
-by the Scholiast, who observes, that the καπνοδόχη was a narrow channel
-like a pipe through which the smoke ascended from the kitchen. This
-explanation has been confirmed by the discoveries of Colonel Leake,[348]
-who on the rocky slopes of the hill of the Museion and Pnyx, found the
-remains of a house partly excavated in the rock, in which the chimney
-still remained.
-
------
-
-Footnote 346:
-
- Cf. Athen. ix. 22. iii. 60.
-
-Footnote 347:
-
- Cf. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 91. Vesp. 139, 147.
-
-Footnote 348:
-
- Topog. of Athens, p. 361.
-
------
-
-The same convenience, also, existed in the Roman kitchens,[349] though
-they would appear to have been unskilfully constructed in both
-countries, since the cooks complain of the smoke being borne hither and
-thither by the wind, and interfering with their operations. However,
-this may have arisen from the numerous small furnaces which, as in
-France, were ranged along the wall for the purpose of cooking several
-dishes at once. The chimneys having been perpendicular, as in our old
-farm-houses, were furnished with stoppers to keep out the rain in bad
-weather.[350]
-
------
-
-Footnote 349:
-
- Cf. Perrault, sur Vitruv. vi. 9. Mazois, Pal. de Scaur. p. 178. On the
- interior of a Roman house, see Pet. Bellori, Frag. Vet. Rom. p. 31.
-
-Footnote 350:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 148.
-
------
-
-That the kitchens were sometimes not sufficiently airy and comfortable
-may be inferred from the practice of a philosophical cook in Damoxenos,
-who used to take his station immediately outside the door, and from
-thence give his orders to the inferior operatives. Great care was
-nevertheless taken that it should be well lighted, and that the door
-should be so situated as to be as little exposed as possible to whirling
-gusts of wind.[351] From a passage in the Scholiast on the Wasps, and
-the existence of drains in the excavations on the hill of the Museion,
-it is clear that the Athenian houses were furnished with sinks,[352]
-though in the Italian kitchens there seem merely to have been little
-channels running along the walls to carry off the water. The floor, too,
-was constructed in both countries with a view at once to dryness and
-elegance,[353] being formed of several layers of various materials all
-porous though binding, so that it allowed whatever water was spilt to
-sink through instantaneously. The upper layer, about six inches thick,
-consisted of a cement composed of lime, sand, and pounded charcoal or
-ashes, the surface of which, being polished with pumice-stone, presented
-to the eye the appearance of a fine black marble. The roof in early
-times was no doubt of wood,[354] though afterwards it came to be vaulted
-or run up in the form of a cupola. The walls were sometimes decorated
-with rude paintings.[355]
-
------
-
-Footnote 351:
-
- Athen. iii. 60 ix. 22.
-
-Footnote 352:
-
- Leake, Topog. of Ath. p. 361. Yet we find them sometimes throwing the
- water out of the window, crying, Stand out of the way. Schol.
- Aristoph. Acharn. 592.
-
-Footnote 353:
-
- Vitruv. viii. 4.
-
-Footnote 354:
-
- Mazois, Palais de Scaurus, p. 177.
-
-Footnote 355:
-
- Representing, for example, a sacrifice to Fornax. Mazois, p. 177.
-
------
-
-The street-door of a Grecian house, usually, when single, opened
-outwards, but when there were folding doors they opened inwards as with
-us.[356] In the former case it was customary when any one happened to be
-going forth, to knock, or call, or ring a bell, in order to warn
-passengers to make way.[357] These doors were constructed of various
-materials,[358] according to the taste and circumstances of the owner,
-sometimes of oak, or fir, or maple, or elm; and afterwards as luxury
-advanced they were made of cedar, cyprus, or even of citron wood, inlaid
-as in the East, with plates of brass or gold.[359] Mention is likewise
-made of doors entirely composed of the precious metals; of iron also,
-and bronze and ivory.
-
------
-
-Footnote 356:
-
- Cf. Antich. di Ercol. t. i. tav. 34. pp. 175, 181. Sagittar. de Januis
- Veterum. p. 23.
-
-Footnote 357:
-
- Plut. Poplic. § 20.
-
-Footnote 358:
-
- Sagitt. de Jan. Vet. p. 152, seq. Plin. xvi. 40. Theoph. Hist. Plant.
- v. 4. 2. iii. 14. 1. Martial. xiv. 89, ii. 43. Lucian. l. ix. Tertull.
- de Pall. c. 5. Plin. xiii. 15. Ovid. Metamorph. iv. 487.
-
-Footnote 359:
-
- Aristoph. Acharn. 1072.
-
------
-
-The jambs were generally of wood;[360] but likewise sometimes of brass
-or marble. The doors were fastened at first by long bars passing into
-the wall on both sides;[361] and by degrees smaller bolts, hasps,
-latches, and locks and keys succeeded. For example the outer door of the
-Thalamos in Homer was secured by a silver hasp, and a leathern thong
-passed round the handle and tied, perhaps, in a curious knot.[362] Doors
-were not usually suspended on hinges, but turned, as they still do in
-the East, upon pivots inserted above into the lintel and below into the
-threshhold.[363] In many houses there were in addition small half-doors
-of open wood-work,[364] which alone were commonly closed by day, in
-order to keep the children from running out, or dogs or pigs from
-entering. The doors usually consisted of a frame-work, with four or six
-sunken panels, as with us; but at Sparta, so long as the laws of
-Lycurgus prevailed, they were made of simple planks fashioned with the
-hatchet.[365] In the great Dorian capital the custom was for persons
-desirous of entering a house to shout aloud at the door,[366] which, at
-Athens,[367] was always furnished with an elegant knocker.[368]
-Door-handles, too, of costly materials and curious workmanship,[369]
-bespoke even in that trifling matter the taste of the Greeks.
-
------
-
-Footnote 360:
-
- Sagitt. de Jan. Vet. p. 29, sqq.
-
-Footnote 361:
-
- Sagitt. de Jan. p. 67.
-
-Footnote 362:
-
- Odyss. α. 441. Schol. et Eustath. ad loc.—δ. 862. ρ. 186. Cf. Schol.
- Aristoph. Vesp. 155.
-
-Footnote 363:
-
- Sagitt. de Jan. Vet. p. 41.
-
-Footnote 364:
-
- Antich. di Ercol. t. i. tav. 3. p. 11. It should perhaps be remarked,
- that when houses were built on a solid basement the door was sometimes
- approached by a movable pair of steps. Id. ibid. tav. 8. p. 39. tav.
- 43. p. 228.
-
-Footnote 365:
-
- Plut. Lycurg. § 13. Agesil. § 19.
-
-Footnote 366:
-
- Plut. Inst. Lac. § 30. Cf. Theocrit. Eidyll. xxix. 39.
-
-Footnote 367:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 133.
-
-Footnote 368:
-
- Sometimes in form of a crow. Poll. i. 77.
-
-Footnote 369:
-
- See Donaldson’s Collection of Doorways, pl. 8.
-
------
-
-The materials commonly used in the erection of a house were stones and
-bricks. In the manufacture of the latter[370] the ancients exhibited
-more skill and care than we; they had bricks of a very large size, and
-half bricks for filling up spaces, which prevented the necessity of
-shortening them with the trowel. Of these some were simply dried in the
-sun, used chiefly in building the dwellings of the poor.[371] At Utica
-in Africa there were public inspectors of brick-kilns,[372] to prevent
-any from being used which had not been made five years. In several
-cities on the Mediterranean bricks were manufactured of a porous earth,
-which when baked and painted, as it may be conjectured, on the outside,
-were so light that they would swim in water.[373] To diminish the weight
-of bricks, straw was introduced into them in Syria and Egypt, which was
-altogether consumed in the baking. In roofing such of their houses as
-were not terraced they employed slates, tiles, and reed-thatch.[374]
-Possibly, also, the wealthy may have tiled their houses with those
-elegant thin flakes of marble, with which the roofs of temples were
-occasionally covered.
-
------
-
-Footnote 370:
-
- Winkelm. Hist. de l’Art. ii. 544. Cf. Xen. Memor. iii. 17. Cyropæd.
- vi. 3. 25. Plin. xxxv. 14. Polyb. x. 22. Plat. de Repub. t. vi. p. 15.
-
-Footnote 371:
-
- Sanchon. ap. Euseb. Præp. Evang. i. 10. p. 35.
-
-Footnote 372:
-
- Vitruv. ii. 3.
-
-Footnote 373:
-
- Id. ibid. 3. In lieu of these light bricks, pumice stones are now
- frequently used on the shores of the Mediterranean, more particularly
- in turning arches. They are, consequently, cut into parallelopipeds,
- and exported in great quantities from the Lipari islands.—Spallanzani,
- Travels in the Two Sicilies, &c. vol. ii. pp. 298, 302, sqq.
-
-Footnote 374:
-
- Poll. x. 170. Luc. Contemplant. § 6. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 174.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
- HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE.
-
-
-The movables in a Grecian house were divided into classes after a very
-characteristic manner. First, as a mark of the national piety,
-everything used in domestic sacrifices was set apart. The second
-division, placing women immediately after the gods, comprehended the
-whole apparatus of female ornaments[375] worn on solemn festivals. Next
-were classed the sacred robes and military uniforms of the men; then
-came the hangings, bed-furniture, and ornaments of the harem; afterwards
-those of the men’s apartments. Another division consisted of the shoes,
-sandals, slippers, &c., of the family, from which we pass to the arms
-and implements of war, mixed up familiarly in a Greek house with looms,
-cards, spinning-wheels, and embroidery-frames, just, as Homer describes
-them in the Thalamos of Paris at Troy. Even yet we have not reached the
-end of our inventory in mere classification. The baking, cooking,
-washing, and bathing vessels formed a separate class, and so did the
-breakfast and dinner services, the porcelain, the plate of silver and
-gold, the mirrors, the candelabra, and all those curious articles made
-use of in the toilette of the ladies.[376]
-
------
-
-Footnote 375:
-
- This profusion of wearing apparel was laid up in trunks and
- _mallekins_ of wickerwork. The former were called κιβωτοὶ, the latter
- κίσται.—Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p. 233. Clem. Alexand. Pæd. iii.
- Hesych. v. v. κιβωτὸς—κίστη. Mention is also made of presses.—Mazois,
- Pal. de Scaur. p. 120.
-
-Footnote 376:
-
- Xenoph. Œconom. ix. 6, sqq. Aristot. Œconom. i. 6.
-
------
-
-In well-regulated families a second division took place, a separation
-being made of such articles as might be required for daily use, from
-those brought forward only when routs and large parties were given. The
-movables of all kinds having been thus arranged in their classes, the
-next step was to deposit every thing in its proper place.[377] The more
-ordinary utensils were generally laid up in a spacious store-room,
-called _tholos_,[378] a circular building detached from the house, and
-usually terminating in a pointed roof, whence in after ages a
-sharp-crowned hat obtained among the people the name of Tholos. When a
-gentleman first commenced housekeeping, or got a new set of domestics,
-he delivered into the care of the proper individuals his kneading
-troughs, his kitchen utensils, his cards, looms, spinning wheels, and so
-on; and, pointing out the places where all these, when not in use,
-should be placed, committed them to their custody.
-
------
-
-Footnote 377:
-
- Cicero ap. Columell. De Re Rust. xii. 3.
-
-Footnote 378:
-
- Odysseus had a storehouse of this kind in his palace at Ithaca.—Odyss.
- χ. 442, 459, 466.
-
------
-
-Of the holiday, or show articles, more account was made. These, being
-brought forward only on solemn festivals, or in honour of some foreign
-guest, were entrusted to the immediate care of the housekeeper, a
-complete list of everything having first been taken; and it was part of
-her duty, when she delivered any of these articles to the inferior
-domestics, to make a note of what she gave out, and take care they were
-duly returned into her keeping.[379]
-
------
-
-Footnote 379:
-
- Xen. Œconom. ix. 10. 57.
-
------
-
-But the above comprehensive glance over the articles of furniture made
-use of in an Athenian gentleman’s establishment, though it may give some
-notion of the careful and economical habits of the people, affords no
-conception of the splendour and magnificence often found in a Grecian
-house: for, as we have already seen, their opinions are highly erroneous
-who imagine that in the Attic democracy the rich were by any prudential
-or political considerations restrained from indulging their love of
-ostentation by the utmost display they could make of wealth.[380] In
-fact, not content with outstripping their neighbours in the grandeur of
-their dwellings, furniture, and dress, these persons had often the
-ludicrous vanity, when they gave a large party, to excite the envy of
-such dinnerless rogues as might pass, by throwing out the feathers of
-game and poultry before their doors.[381] Indeed, since the Athenians
-exactly resembled other men, the exhibition of magnificence tended but
-too strongly to dazzle them; so that, among the arts of designing
-politicians, one generally was, to create a popular persuasion that they
-possessed the means of conferring important favours on all who obliged
-them.
-
-Footnote 380:
-
- That the sycophants were sometimes troublesome, however, is certain;
- that is to say, in later ages. Speaking of the time of his youth,
- Isocrates says:—Οὐδεὶς οὔτ᾽ ἀπεκρύπτετο τὴν οὐσίαν οὔτ᾽ ὤκνει
- συμβάλλειν. κ. τ. λ.—Areop. § 12. Cf. Bergmann. in loc. p. 362. But
- their persecution must always have been confined to a very few
- individuals, as people generally continued to display whatever they
- possessed down to the final overthrow of the state.
-
-Footnote 381:
-
- Aristoph. Acharn. 398.—_Mitchell._ The learned editor fails to remark
- how little this custom harmonizes with the fears which he imagines
- rich people felt at Athens.
-
------
-
-To proceed, however, with the furniture. Though the principal value of
-many articles arose from the exquisite taste displayed in the design and
-workmanship, the materials themselves, too, were often extremely rare
-and costly. Porcelain, glass, crystal, ivory, amber,[382] gold, silver,
-and bronze, with numerous varieties of precious woods, were wrought up
-with inimitable taste and fancy into various articles of use or luxury.
-Among the decorations of the dining-room was the side-board, which,
-though sometimes of iron, was more frequently of carved wood, bronze, or
-wrought silver, ornamented with the heads of satyrs and oxen.[383] Their
-tables, in the Homeric age, were generally of wood, of variegated
-colours, finely polished, and with ornamented feet. Myrleanos, an
-obscure writer in Athenæus, imagines[384] they were round, that they
-might resemble the disc of the sun and moon; but from the passage in the
-Odyssey,[385] and the interpretation of Eustathius, they may be inferred
-to have been narrow parallelograms,[386] like our own dining-tables. The
-luxury of table-cloths being unknown, the wine spilled, &c., was
-cleansed away with sponges.[387] But the poet had witnessed a superior
-degree of magnificence, for he already, in the Odyssey,[388] makes
-mention of tables of silver. The poor were, of course, content with the
-commonest wood. But as civilisation proceeded, the tables of the wealthy
-became more and more costly in materials, and more elegant in form.
-
------
-
-Footnote 382:
-
- On the attractive power of this substance, see Plat. Tim. t. vii. p.
- 118.
-
-Footnote 383:
-
- Athen. v. 45. Lys. Frag. 46. Orat. Att. t. ii. p. 647.
-
-Footnote 384:
-
- Deipnosoph. xi. 78.
-
-Footnote 385:
-
- α. 111. 138.
-
-Footnote 386:
-
- This is also the opinion of Potter, ii. 376, 377; and Damm. in v.
- τράπεζα, col. 1822.
-
-Footnote 387:
-
- Odyss. τ. 259. Pind. Olymp. i. 26.
-
-Footnote 388:
-
- κ. 354, seq. 361, seq. In the letters attributed to Plato we find
- mention made of silver tables. t. viii. p. 397. Sometimes, also, of
- brass. Athen. ix. 75.
-
------
-
-It grew to be an object of commerce, to import from foreign countries
-the most curious kinds of wood,[389] to be wrought into tables, which
-originally supported on four legs, rested afterwards on three,
-fancifully formed, or on a pillar and claws of ivory, or silver, as with
-us. There was a celebrated species of table manufactured in the island
-of Rhenea;[390] the great, among the Persians, delighted in maple tables
-with ivory feet, and, in fact, the knotted maple appears at one time to
-have been regarded as the most rare and beautiful of woods.[391] But the
-rage for sumptuous articles of furniture of this kind did not reach its
-full height until Roman times, when a single table of citron wood
-
- (Gorgeous feasts
- On citron tables or Atlantic stone)[392]
-
-sometimes cost six or seven thousand pounds sterling. Already, however,
-in the best ages of Greece, their tables were inlaid with silver, brass,
-or ivory, with feet in the form of lions, leopards, or other wild
-beasts.[393]
-
------
-
-Footnote 389:
-
- Plin. Nat. Hist. xvi. 27.
-
-Footnote 390:
-
- Athen. xi. 27.
-
-Footnote 391:
-
- Athen. ii. 31.
-
-Footnote 392:
-
- Paradise Regained, iv. 114, seq. where see Mitford’s curious and
- learned note. ii. 350, seq. and cf. Plin. v. 1. t. ii. p. 259. Hard.
- not. a. 261. xiii. 29. t. iv. p. 746, sqq. Petronius speaks of the
- “citrea mensa,” p. 157. Erhard. Symbol. ad Petron. 709, seq. shows
- that Numidian marble was in use at Rome.
-
-Footnote 393:
-
- Potter, ii. 377.
-
------
-
-In more early times, before the effeminate Oriental habit of reclining
-at meals obtained,[394] the Greeks made use of chairs which were of
-various kinds, some being formed of more, others of less costly
-materials, but all beautiful and elegant in form, as we may judge from
-those which adorn our own drawing-rooms, entirely fashioned after
-Grecian models. The thrones of the gods represented in works of art,
-however richly ornamented, are simply arm-chairs with upright backs, an
-example of which occurs in a carnelian in the Orleans Collection,[395]
-where Apollo is represented playing on the seven-stringed lyre. This
-chair has four legs with tigers’ feet, a very high upright back, and is
-ornamented with a sculptured car and horses. They had no Epicurean
-notions of their deities, and never presented them to the eye of the
-public lounging in an easy chair, which would have suggested the idea of
-infirmity. On the contrary, they are full of force and energy, and sit
-erect on their thrones, as ready to succour their worshipers at a
-moment’s warning. In the Homeric age these were richly carved, like the
-divans, adorned with silver studs, and so high that they required a
-footstool.[396] The throne of the Persian kings was of massive gold, and
-stood beneath a purple canopy, supported by four slender golden columns
-thickly crusted with jewels.
-
------
-
-Footnote 394:
-
- In the Antichita di Ercolano, we have the representation of a very
- handsome armed chair, with upright back, beautifully turned legs, and
- thick and soft cushions, with low footstool, t. i. tav. 29. p. 155.
- Athen. xi. 72.
-
-Footnote 395:
-
- Pierres Gravées, du Cabinet du Duc d’Orleans, t. i. No. 46. Cf. No. 7,
- representing Zeus thus seated.
-
-Footnote 396:
-
- Odyss. η. 162. Il. σ. 390, 422.
-
------
-
-Bedsteads were generally of common wood such as deal,[397] bottomed
-sometimes with planks, pierced to admit air, sometimes with ox-hide
-thongs,[398] which in traversing each other left numerous open spaces
-between them. Odysseus’s bedstead, which the hero was sufficient joiner
-to manufacture with his own hands, was made of olive-wood, inlaid with
-silver, gold, and ivory. Sometimes the bed was supported by a sort of
-netting of strong cord, stretched across the bedstead, and made fast all
-round.[399] Later ages witnessed far greater luxury,—bedsteads of solid
-silver,[400] or ivory embossed with figures wrought with infinite art
-and delicacy,[401] or of precious woods carved, with feet of ivory or
-amber.[402] Occasionally, also, they were veneered with Indian
-tortoiseshell, inlaid with gold.[403] This taste would appear to have
-flowed from the East, where among the kings of Persia still greater
-magnificence was witnessed even in very early times. Thus, speaking of
-the royal feast celebrated at Susa, the Scripture says, there were in
-the court of the garden of the king’s palace “white, green, and blue
-hangings, fastened with cords of fine linen and purple to silver rings,
-and pillars of marble. The beds were of gold and silver, upon a pavement
-of red, and blue, and white, and black marble.” A similar style of
-grandeur is attributed by Hellenic writers to the Persian king, who,
-according to Chares,[404] reclined in his palace on a couch shaded by a
-spreading golden vine, the grape clusters of which were imitated by
-jewels of various colours.
-
------
-
-Footnote 397:
-
- Athen. xi. 48. i. 60. ii. 29. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 468. Cf. Xenoph.
- Memor. ii. 1, 30.
-
-Footnote 398:
-
- This bedstead was called δέμνιον; (Odyss. η. 336, seq.) when heaped
- with soft mattresses it was πυκινὸν λέχος (345); εὐνὴ was the term
- applied to the whole, bed and bedstead. Iliad. ω. 644. Odyss. δ. 297,
- &c. Pind. Nem. i. 3.
-
-Footnote 399:
-
- Odyss. ψ. 189, seq. Schol. ad Il. γ. 448.
-
-Footnote 400:
-
- Plat. de Legg. t. viii. p. 397.
-
-Footnote 401:
-
- Athen. vi. 67. ii. 30.
-
-Footnote 402:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 530.
-
-Footnote 403:
-
- Lucian. Luc., sive Asin. § 53. Bedsteads of solid gold are spoken of
- in scripture.—Esther i. 6. Bochart. Geog. Sac. i. 6. 30.
-
-Footnote 404:
-
- Athen. xii. 9, 55.
-
------
-
-Four-post bedsteads were in use in remoter ages, as appears from a white
-sardonyx in the Orleans Collection,[405] representing the surprisal of
-Ares and Aphrodite, by Hephæstos. There is a low floating vallance
-fastened up in festoons, the tester is roof-shaped, and the pillars
-terminate in fanciful capitals. The figure of an eagle adorns the
-corners of the bedstead below. From a painting on the walls of Pompeii
-we discover, that the peculiar sort of bedstead at present found almost
-universally in France was likewise familiar to the ancients, made
-exactly after the same fashion, and raised about the same height above
-the floor. With regard to the beds themselves they were at different
-times manufactured from very different materials, and those of some
-parts of Greece enjoyed a peculiar reputation. From a phrase in
-Homer,[406] it would appear that, in his times, beds were stuffed in
-Thessaly with very fine grass. Those of Chios and Miletos were
-famous[407] throughout Greece. In other parts of the country, persons of
-peculiar effeminacy slept on beds of sponge.[408] Sicily was famous for
-its pillows, as were also several other Doric countries. At Athens the
-rich were accustomed to sleep upon very soft beds, placed on bedsteads
-considerably above the floor;[409] and sometimes, it has been supposed,
-adorned with coverlets of dressed peacocks’ skins with the feathers
-on.[410]
-
------
-
-Footnote 405:
-
- No. 34.
-
-Footnote 406:
-
- Il. β. 697. δ. 383.
-
-Footnote 407:
-
- Athen. xi. 72.
-
-Footnote 408:
-
- Athen. i. 32.
-
-Footnote 409:
-
- Xen. Mem. ii. 1. 30.
-
-Footnote 410:
-
- Palm. Exercit. in Auct. Græc. p. 191. We find mention in ancient
- authors of certain tribes who went clad in garments covered with the
- feathers of birds. Senec. Epist. 90.
-
------
-
-But the Greeks appear to have consulted their ease, and sunk more
-completely into softness and effeminacy, in proportion as they
-approached the East. Among the Peloponnesians most persons lived hard
-and lay hard; greater refinement and luxury prevailed in Attica; but in
-Ionia and many of the Ægæan isles the great—although there were
-exceptions as in the case of Attalos—fell little short in
-self-indulgence of Median or Persian satraps. Some idea may be formed of
-their habits in this respect from the description of a Paphian prince’s
-bed by Clearchos of Soli.[411] Over the soft mattresses supported by a
-silver-footed bedstead, was flung a short grained Sardian carpet of the
-most expensive kind. A coverlet of downy texture succeeded, and upon
-this was cast a costly counterpane of Amorginian purple. Cushions,
-striped or variegated with the richest purple, supported his head, while
-two soft Dorian pillows[412] of pale pink gently raised his feet. In
-this manner habited in a milk-white chlamys the prince reclined. Their
-bolsters in form resembled our own;[413] but the pillows were usually
-square, as in France, though occasionally rounded off at both ends, and
-covered with richly chequered or variegated muslins. To prevent the fine
-wool or whatever else they were stuffed with from getting into heaps,
-mattresses were sewn through as now, and carefully tufted that the
-packthread might not break through the ticking.[414]
-
------
-
-Footnote 411:
-
- Athen. vi. 37.
-
-Footnote 412:
-
- Athen. ii. 29, sqq.
-
-Footnote 413:
-
- Gitone, Nozze di Ulisse è Penelope, Il Costume, &c. tav. 67.
-
-Footnote 414:
-
- See the mattress on which the statue of Hermaphroditos reclines in the
- Louvre.
-
------
-
-Among the Orientals it is common at present for persons to sleep in
-their day apparel; but even in the heroic ages it was already customary
-in Greece to undress on going to bed. When Agamemnon is roused before
-dawn by the delusive dream, the whole process of the morning toilette is
-described. First, says the poet, he donned his soft chiton which was new
-and very handsome; next his pelisse; after which he bound on his elegant
-sandals and suspended his silver-hilted sword from his shoulder. Thus
-accoutred he issued forth, sceptre in hand, towards the ships.[415]
-
------
-
-Footnote 415:
-
- Il. β. 42, seq.
-
------
-
-In Syria, children luxuriously educated are said to have been rocked in
-their cradles wrapped in coverlets of Milesian wool.[416] The sheep of
-Miletos were, in fact, the Merinos of antiquity; and their wool being
-celebrated for its fineness and softness, it was not only employed in
-manufacturing the best cloths, but also in stuffing the mattresses of
-kings and other great personages who thought much of their ease. And as
-the vulgar imagine they become great by habiting themselves in garments
-similar to those of their princes, like the honest man who sought wisdom
-through reading by Epictetus’ lamp, the stuffs, couches, and coverlets
-of Miletos got into great vogue among the ancients. Virgil, Cicero,
-Servius, Columella, and many other writers speak accordingly of their
-excellence, and their testimonies have, with wonderful industry, been
-collected by the learned Bochart.[417]
-
------
-
-Footnote 416:
-
- Esther i. 6. Lament, iv. 5. Bochart. Geograph. Sac. i. 6. 30.
-
-Footnote 417:
-
- Geog. Sac. i. 6. 28, seq.
-
------
-
-But though Miletos had a reputation for this kind of manufacture, it by
-no means enjoyed a monopoly. The scarlet coverings of Sardis, and the
-variegated stuffs of Cyprus, produced by the famous weaver Akesas and
-his son Helicon,[418] appear in many instances to have obtained a
-preference over all others. Pathymias, too, the Egyptian, distinguished
-himself in the same line.[419]
-
------
-
-Footnote 418:
-
- Eustath. ad Odyss. α. p. 32. 30.
-
-Footnote 419:
-
- Athen. ii. 30.
-
------
-
-All these bed-coverings were commonly perfumed with fragrant
-essences,[420] for which reason the voluptuous poets of antiquity dwell
-with a sort of rapture on the pleasure of rolling about in bed. Ephippos
-exclaims:—
-
- “How I delight
- To spring upon the dainty coverlets;
- Breathing the perfume of the rose, and steeped
- In tears of myrrh!”
-
------
-
-Footnote 420:
-
- In old times the whole bedroom was sometimes perfumed.—Iliad, γ. 382.
-
------
-
-Aristophanes, likewise, and Sophron, the mimographer, make mention of
-these fragrant counterpanes, which were extremely costly, and inwrought,
-according to the latter, with figures of birds.[421] Elsewhere Athenæus
-relates that the Persian carpets contained representations of men,
-animals, and monsters.[422] Their blankets, like our own, were plain
-white; but even so far back as the heroic ages, the upper coverings, as
-being partly designed for show, were of rich and various colours.[423]
-
------
-
-Footnote 421:
-
- Athen. ii. 30. Aristoph. Frag. incert. 2. Brunck.
-
-Footnote 422:
-
- Deipnosoph. xi. 55. Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p. 172.
-
-Footnote 423:
-
- Feith. Antiq. Homer, iii. 8. 4.
-
------
-
-There seems to be good ground for believing, that if the Greeks did not
-borrow their philosophy from the East, they at least derived from them
-many of the vain and luxurious habits which at length rendered that
-philosophy of none effect. No one appears to have paid a single visit to
-Persia, or Syria, or Egypt, without bringing back along with him some
-pestilent new freak in the matter of dress or furniture, wholly at
-variance with republican simplicity. We might adduce numerous anecdotes
-in proof of this. For the present we confine ourselves to the following.
-Among the Persians, renowned in all ages for sensual indulgences, it was
-judged of so much importance to enjoy soft and elegantly arranged beds,
-that in great houses persons were employed who attended only to this. An
-anecdote in illustration has been preserved by Athenæus. Timagoras, or,
-according to Phanias, Entimos of Gortyna, envying Themistocles his
-reception at the court of Persia, undertook himself a toad-eating
-expedition to that country. Artaxerxes, whose ear could tolerate more
-flatterers than one, took the Cretan into favour, and made him a present
-of a superb marquee, a silver-footed bedstead, with costly furniture,
-and, along with them, sent a slave, as a Turkish pasha would send a cook
-or a pipe-lighter, because, in his opinion, the Greeks who prepared
-sleeping-places for so many Persians at Marathon and Platæa, understood
-nothing of bed-making.
-
-Entimos evidently excelled the great Athenian in the arts of a courtier.
-In fact, he was the very prototype of Hajji Baba, and enjoyed even still
-greater influence over the Shah than the illustrious barber’s son of
-Ispahan. Charmed by his cajolery, Artaxerxes invited him to his private
-table, where, usually, none but princes of the blood were admitted,[424]
-an honour, as Phanias assures us, which no other Greek ever enjoyed.
-For, though Timagoras of Athens performed _kou-tou_ before the
-throne,[425] whereby he obtained great consideration among a nation of
-slaves, and was hanged when he got home, he was not invited to
-hob-and-nob with his majesty, but only enjoyed the distinction of having
-certain dishes sent him from the king’s table. To Antalcidas, the
-Spartan, Artaxerxes sent his crown dipped in liquid perfume, an
-agreeable compliment, but which he more than once paid to Entimos, whose
-extraordinary favour at court in the long run, however, awakened the
-envy of the Persians. The canopy of the marquee presented to this Cretan
-was spangled with bright flowers, and, among the other articles of which
-the imperial gift consisted, were a throne of massive silver, a gilded
-parasol, several golden cups crusted with jewels, a hundred maple-tables
-with ivory feet, a hundred goblets of silver, several vases of the same
-precious metal, a hundred female slaves, an equal number of youths, with
-six thousand pieces of gold, besides what was furnished him for his
-daily expenditure.[426]
-
------
-
-Footnote 424:
-
- Very nearly the same customs prevail in Persia at the present day,
- except that the rules of etiquette seem to be still more rigidly
- observed. “It is a general custom with the kings of Persia to eat in
- solitary grandeur. The late Shah, however, would sometimes have select
- portions of his family to breakfast with him.” On which occasion,
- “they used to squat round him in the form of a crescent, of which he
- was the centre, and were all placed scrupulously according to
- rank.”—Fowler, i. 48.
-
-Footnote 425:
-
- Athen. vi. 58. Vales. not. in Maussac. p. 282, where he corrects the
- old reading of the text. Cf. Xenoph. Hellen. vii. 1. 38. Plut. Pelop.
- § 30. Artax. § 22. Valer. Max. vi. 3. extern. 2. Demosth. de Fals.
- Leg. § 42, where the orator accuses Timagoras of having received a
- bribe of forty talents.
-
-Footnote 426:
-
- Athen. ii. 31.
-
------
-
-A gentleman travelling in Ireland witnessed the ingenuity of that
-ready-witted people in applying the same thing to various uses: first,
-he saw the tablecloth, on which he had eaten a good supper, transferred
-as a sheet to his bed, and, next morning, his kind hostess, offering her
-services to put him in the right way, converted the same article into a
-mantle, which she wrapped about her shoulders. The Greeks were almost
-equally ingenious. With them what was a cloak by day became sometimes a
-counterpane at night,[427] in addition, perhaps, to the ordinary
-bed-clothes; for it is clear they loved to be warm, from the somewhat
-reproachful allusion of Strepsiades in the “Clouds” to the five
-_sisyræ_,[428] rolled snugly up in which, his son, Pheidippides, could
-sleep while thoughts of his debts bit the old man like so many bugs, and
-roused him hours before day to consult his ledgers. All kinds of
-stromata were, in Plato’s time, divided into two classes, first,
-coverings for the body, such as cloaks, mantles, and so on; secondly,
-bed-clothes, properly so called.
-
------
-
-Footnote 427:
-
- Xen. Anab. i. 5. 5.
-
-Footnote 428:
-
- Nub. 10. Cf. Av. 122. Concionat. 838. ibique not. Pollux, vii. 382,
- seq. x. 542.
-
------
-
-The walls of their chambers were frequently hung with Milesian tapestry,
-a custom to which Amphis alludes in his Odysseus:
-
- A. Milesian hangings line your walls, you scent
- Your limbs with sweetest perfume, royal myndax[429]
- Piled on the burning censor, fills the air
- With costly fragrance.
-
- B. Mark you that, my friend!
- Knew you before of such a fumigation?[430]
-
-Mention is likewise made among the ancients of purple tapestry,
-inwrought with pearls and gold.[431]
-
------
-
-Footnote 429:
-
- Cf. Poll. vi. 105.
-
-Footnote 430:
-
- Athen. xv. 42. Cf. Meineke. Curæ Crit. in Com. Frag. p. 7.
-
------
-
-Carthage enjoyed celebrity for its manufacture of carpets and variegated
-pillows,[432] a piece of luxury which, as we have seen above, had
-already been introduced in the heroic ages; for Homer, in innumerable
-passages, speaks of rare and costly carpets, and these were not only
-spread over couches and seats, but over the floor likewise.[433] Rolled
-up, they would occasionally appear to have served for pillows. The
-manufacture of carpets had, moreover, been carried to considerable
-perfection, for the poet speaks of some with a soft pile on both sides,
-which were evidently very splendid.[434] Theocritus,[435] too, in his
-Adoniazusæ, enumerates, among the luxuries of the youthful God,
-
- Carpets of purple, _softer far than sleep_,[436]
- Woven in Milesian looms.
-
------
-
-Footnote 431:
-
- Mazois, Pal. de Scaur, p. 103. Tibull. iii. 3, 17, seq. Athen. iv. 29.
-
-Footnote 432:
-
- Athen. i. 49.
-
-Footnote 433:
-
- Il. ι. 200.—The use of mats first prevailed, (Festus, in v. Scirpus.)
- but, as luxury increased, superb carpets were substituted.—Æschyl.
- Agam. 842. Tryphiod. Ἅλωσις Ἴλιου. 343, seq. Hemster. Comm. in Poll.
- viii. 133. p. 287. Cf. Klausen. Comm. in Æschyl. Agam. p. 197, sqq.
-
-Footnote 434:
-
- Il. π. 224. Poll. vi. 2. Synes. Epist. 61.
-
-Footnote 435:
-
- Eidyll, xv. 125.
-
-Footnote 436:
-
- A beautiful simile, which Virgil has imitated—
-
- “Muscosi fontes, et _somno mollior herba_.”—Eclog. vii. 45.
-
- Shakespeare, too, has, without imitation, struck upon a similar
- thought, where the amorous Troilus thus describes himself:—
-
- “But I am weaker than a woman’s tear,
- _Tamer than sleep_, fonder than ignorance.”
- Troilus & Cressida, i. 1.
-
------
-
-But in nothing did the Greeks display a more gorgeous or costly taste
-than in what may be termed their _plate_, which was not only fabricated
-of the rarest materials, but wrought likewise with all the elaborateness
-and delicacy and richness of design within the reach of art. Among the
-Macedonians, after their Eastern conquests, gold plate appears not to
-have been uncommon; for at the grand supper described by Hippolochos in
-his letter to Lynceus, every guest is said to have used it.[437] The
-predilection for this sort of magnificence they acquired in Asia, where,
-at a banquet given to Alexander, the whole dessert was brought in
-tastefully covered with gold-leaf.[438] In the reign of his father,
-Philip, the precious metals were rare in Macedonia. Indeed, that crafty
-old monarch, possessing but one gold cup in the world, had so good an
-opinion of his courtiers that, to prevent their thieving it, he slept
-every night with it under his pillow.[439] Gold was, more early,
-plentiful in Attica. Alcibiades, with tastes and habits unsuited to a
-democracy, carried so far his love of display as to make use of
-thuribles, or censers, and wash-hand basins of pure gold.[440] But the
-ostentatious son of Clinias, though extravagant, was in this respect
-only a type of his nation. Every rich citizen of Athens aimed at the
-same degree of splendour; and, in describing his town-house or favourite
-villa, might, with little alteration, have adopted the language of the
-poet:—
-
- ——“My house within the city
- Is richly furnished with plate and gold,
- Basins and ewers to lave her dainty hands:
- My hangings all of Tyrian tapestry.
- In ivory coffers have I stuffed my crowns;
- In cypress chests my arras, counterpanes,
- Costly apparel, tents, and canopies,
- Fine linen, Turkey cushions bossed with pearl,
- Vallance of Venice, gold in needle-work,
- Pewter and brass, and all things that belong
- To house or housekeeping.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 437:
-
- Athen. iv. 2, sqq. Cf. iii. 100.
-
-Footnote 438:
-
- Athen. iv. 42.
-
-Footnote 439:
-
- Deipnosoph. _ut sup._
-
-Footnote 440:
-
- Athen. ix. 75.
-
------
-
-Socrates, in the Republic, speaking of what the prevailing fashion
-required to be found in a city, makes out a list of good things, not
-much inferior upon the whole to Shakspeare’s,—beds, tables, and other
-furniture; dainties of all kinds; perfumes, unguents, sauces, &c.; to
-which the philosopher adds apparel, shoes, pictures, tapestry, ivory,
-and gold:[441] and these rare materials, as farther on he observes, were
-wrought into utensils for domestic purposes.
-
------
-
-Footnote 441:
-
- Plat. De Rep. i. t. vi. p. 86. Cf. Tim. t. vii. p. 77.
-
------
-
-One of the most plentifully furnished departments of a Greek house was
-the _Kulikeion_, or “cupboard,” usually closed in front with a
-curtain,[442] where they kept their goblets, cups, and drinking-horns,
-under the protection of a statue of Hermes, who, as god of thieves,
-would, it was supposed, be respected by his children. The form and
-workmanship of these materials varied, no doubt, according to the taste
-and means of the possessor; but they were in general distinguished for
-the elegance of their outline, the grace and originality of the
-sculpture, the fineness, delicacy, and minute finish of the execution.
-It is well known, as an able antiquarian[443] has remarked, to what an
-excess the luxury of the table was carried among the ancients, and how
-much they surpassed us in the dimensions, the massiveness, the
-workmanship, the quality, and the variety of their drinking apparatus.
-
------
-
-Footnote 442:
-
- Athen. xi. 3. Poll. x. 122.
-
-Footnote 443:
-
- Le Comte de Caylus, Mem. de l’Acad. des Inscrip, t. xxiii. p. 353.
-
------
-
-Many persons, however, seem chiefly to have valued their plate as a mark
-of their wealth and magnificence; among whom may be reckoned Pythias of
-Phigaleia, who, when dying, commanded the following epitaph to be
-inscribed upon his tomb:—
-
- Here jolly Pythias lies,
- A right honest man, and wise,
- Who of goblets had very great store,
- Of amber, silver, gold,
- All glorious to behold,
- In number ne’er equalled before.[444]
-
------
-
-Footnote 444:
-
- Athen. xi. 14. Among the Egyptians were vases of papyrus. Bochart.
- Geog. Sac. i. 240.
-
------
-
-Amber goblets not being, I believe, in fashion among the modern nations
-of Europe, some doubt may be experienced respecting the veracity of our
-friend of Phigaleia; but the ancients had other gobletary legends to
-bring forward in support of it. Helen,[445] it is said, justly proud of
-her beautiful bosom, dedicated in one of the temples of Rhodes, as a
-votive offering, an amber goblet, exactly of the size and shape of one
-of her breasts, which, had it come down to posterity, might have
-furnished artists with a perfect model of that part of the female form.
-However this may be, the ancients, in remote ages, set a great value on
-their cups, particularly such as were considered heir-looms in the
-family, and laid apart to be used only on extraordinary occasions. Hence
-Œdipos, in the old Cyclic poet, is seized with fierce anger at his son,
-who had, contrary to his will, brought forth his old hereditary goblets
-to be used at an ordinary entertainment.
-
- Then Polyneices of the golden locks,
- Sprung from the Gods, before his father placed
- A table all of silver, which had once
- Been Cadmus’s, next filled the golden bowl
- With richest wine. At this old Œdipos,
- Seeing the honoured relics of his sire
- Profaned to vulgar uses, roused to anger,
- Pronounced fierce imprecations, wished his sons
- Might live no more in amity together,
- But plunge in feuds and slaughters, and contend
- For their inheritance: and the Furies heard.[446]
-
------
-
-Footnote 445:
-
- Bruyerin, De Re Cibaria, l. iii. c. 9. This goblet could by no means
- have been a diminutive one, if Helen resembled her countrywomen
- generally, who were celebrated for their large bosoms:
- βαθύκολποι.—Anacr. v. 14. Bruyerin’s authority is Plin. Hist. Nat.
- xxxii. 23. “Minervæ templum habet Lindos, insula Rhodiorum, in quo
- Helena sacravit calycem ex electro. Adjicit historia, mammæ suæ
- mensura.” This, I suppose, is what Rousseau calls “Cette coupe célèbre
- à qui le plus beau sein du monde servit de moule.”—Nouv. Heloise,
- 1^{re} partie. Lett. 23. t. i. p. 144,—though, I confess, I am not
- acquainted with the authors by whom it has been celebrated. Several
- votive offerings, representing the female breast, may be seen in the
- British Museum, among the Elgin Marbles. But the most curious relic of
- the ancient female form is mentioned in the following passage: “In the
- street just out of the gate of this villa I lately saw a skeleton dug
- out; and by desiring the labourers to remove the skull and bones
- gently, I perceived distinctly the perfect mould of every feature of
- the face, and that the eyes had been shut. I also saw distinctly the
- impression of the large folds of the drapery of the toga, and some of
- the cloth itself sticking to the earth. The city was first covered by
- a shower of hot pumice-stones and ashes, and then by a shower of small
- ashes mixed with water. It was in the latter stratum that the skeleton
- above described was found. In the Museum at Portici a piece of this
- sort of hardened mud is preserved; it is stamped with the impression
- of the breast of a woman, with a thin drapery over it. The skeleton I
- saw dug out was not above five feet from the surface. It is very
- extraordinary that the impression of the body and face should have
- remained from the year 79 to this day, especially as I found the earth
- so little hardened that it separated upon the least touch.”—Sir W.
- Hamilton, Acc. of Discov. at Pompeii, p. 15.
-
-Footnote 446:
-
- Athen. xi. 14.
-
------
-
-Agathocles, tyrant of Sicily, appears to have been an amateur of cups,
-and would sometimes while exhibiting his collection to his friends make
-a good-humoured allusion to his original occupation. “These golden
-vessels,” said he, “have been made out of those earthenware ones which I
-formerly manufactured.”[447] Drinking-bowls in fact made no
-inconsiderable figure in ancient times. They were bestowed as the prizes
-in gymnastic contests, and in Greece men boxed and wrestled for the cup
-as horses run for it in England. Parasites, like the jester of Louis
-XIV., used sometimes to carry home the cups and dishes set before them
-at dinner; but the tables were often turned when the subject gave and
-the prince pocketed the dole.
-
------
-
-Footnote 447:
-
- Athen. xi. 15. Polyb. xii. 15. 6. xv. 35. 2.
-
------
-
-A curious legend has been preserved to us connected with the subject of
-cups. Several princes uniting, in remote times, to send a colony to
-Lesbos, were commanded by an oracle to cast a virgin, during their
-voyage, into the sea, as a sacrifice to Poseidon. Obedience, in those
-superstitious ages, was seldom refused to such injunctions. The maiden
-was precipitated into the waves, but Enallos, one of the chiefs, in whom
-love had quenched the reverence for oracles, immediately plunged in to
-save her. Neither the chief, however, nor the virgin appeared again, and
-the fleet proceeded. The remainder of the tradition may be illustrated
-by an event said to have taken place in the Tonga islands.[448] They
-were probably near some uninhabited isle, and instead of rising to the
-surface of the sea, emerged into a cavern elevated considerably above
-its level, and opening perhaps upon the land. “God tempers the wind to
-the shorn lamb,” says a modern writer, and so Enallos found it. By means
-unrevealed in the ancient narrative, the hero and his bride continued to
-subsist on the rock, and many years afterwards, when the colony was
-already flourishing, he one day presented himself before his old friends
-at Methymna, and entertained them with a very romantic account of his
-residence among the Nereids at the bottom of the sea, where he was
-honoured with the care of Poseidon’s horses when sent out to grass. At
-length, however, getting on the back of a large wave it bore him upwards
-and he escaped from the deep, bearing in his hand a golden cup, the
-metal of which was so marvellously beautiful that in comparison ordinary
-gold appeared no better than brass.[449]
-
------
-
-Footnote 448:
-
- See ariner’s Account, chap. 9.
-
-Footnote 449:
-
- Athen. xi. 15.
-
------
-
-Even the loftiest and least worldly-minded of the Homeric heroes,
-Achilles, set great value on a favourite drinking-cup, which he
-preserved for his own particular use, and for pouring out libations to
-Zeus alone. Priam[450] was careful to include a rare goblet in the
-ransom of Hector’s body, and a similar gift aided in alluring Alcmena
-from the paths of virtue.[451] But the most famous bowl of antiquity was
-that of Heracles, which, more capacious than the barber’s basin in Don
-Quixote, served its illustrious owner in the double capacity of a
-drinking-cup and a canoe; for when he had quenched his thirst, he could
-set his bowl afloat, and, leaping into it, steer to any part of the
-world he pleased. Some, indeed, speak of it as a borrowed article,
-belonging originally to the Sun, and in which the god used nightly to
-traverse the ocean from West to East.[452]
-
------
-
-Footnote 450:
-
- Iliad. ω. 234.
-
-Footnote 451:
-
- Athen. xi. 16.
-
-Footnote 452:
-
- Bentley, Dissert. on Phal. i. 175, sqq.
-
------
-
-To pass, however, over the goblets of mythology. It was fashionable to
-possess plate of this kind finely sculptured with historical arguments;
-and history has preserved the names of Cimon and Athenocles, two artists
-who excelled in this style of engraving. These cups were sometimes of
-silver gilt, sometimes of massive gold crusted with jewels.[453] In
-addition to the two artists named above, we may enumerate Crates,
-Stratonicos, Myrmecides of Miletos, Callicrates the Lacedemonian, and
-Mys, whose “Cup of Heracles,” celebrated in antiquity, had represented
-upon it the storming of Ilion, with this inscription,
-
- Troy’s lofty towers by Grecians sacked behold!
- Parrhasios’ draught, by Mys engraved in gold.[454]
-
-The names by which the ancients distinguished their several kinds of
-goblets are too numerous to be here given. Some were curious—“Amalthea’s
-Horn,” “The Year,” &c. Rustics made use of two-handled wooden bowls in
-which, when thirsty, they drew fresh milk from the cow in the
-fields.[455] There was a big-bellied cup with a narrow neck which being
-shaped like a purse, participated with this very necessary article in
-the name of Aryballos.[456]
-
------
-
-Footnote 453:
-
- Plin. xxxiii. 2. Juven. v. 42. Athen. iv. 29.
-
-Footnote 454:
-
- Athen. xi. 19.
-
-Footnote 455:
-
- Athen. xi. 25, states this from Philetas: but Kayser, in his edition
- of that author’s fragments, seems to have overlooked this passage.
-
-Footnote 456:
-
- Athen. xi. 36. On the Cantharos, see § 48.
-
------
-
-Glass cups of much beauty were manufactured in great abundance at
-Alexandria. Among these was the _Baucalis_, mentioned by Sopater the
-parodist, who says:—
-
- ’Tis sweet in early morn to cool the lips
- With pure fresh water from the gushing fount,
- Mingled with honey in the Baucalis,
- When one o’er night has made too free with wine,
- And feels sharp thirst.[457]
-
------
-
-Footnote 457:
-
- Athen. xi. 28.
-
------
-
-The glass-workers of Alexandria procured earthenware vessels from all
-parts of the world, which they used as models for their cups. Even the
-great sculptor Lysippos did not disdain to employ his genius in the
-invention of a new kind of vase. Having made a collection of vessels of
-many various shapes, and diligently studied the whole, he hit upon a
-form entirely new, and presented the model to Cassander, who having just
-then founded the city of Cassandria, was ambitious of originating an
-invention of this kind. He was desirous, perhaps, of recommending by the
-elegance of his drinking-cups the Mendæan wine exported in great
-quantities from his city.[458]
-
------
-
-Footnote 458:
-
- Athen. xi. 28.
-
------
-
-There was a peculiar kind of cup called Grammateion, from the letters of
-gold chased upon its exterior.[459] Alexis mentions one of this sort in
-the following lines:
-
- A. But let me first describe the cup; ’twas round,
- Old, broken-eared, and precious small besides,
- Having indeed some letters on’t.
-
- B. Yes letters;
- Eleven, and all of gold, forming the name
- Of Saviour Zeus.
-
- A. Tush! no, some other god.[460]
-
------
-
-Footnote 459:
-
- We find in Winkelmann, Hist. de l’Art t. i. p. 23, the representation
- of a glass grammateion, on which are the words: Bibe Vivas Multis
- Annis. See a detailed description of this vase by the Marquis
- Trivulsi, p. 46.
-
-Footnote 460:
-
- Athen. xi. 30.
-
------
-
-A very handsome sort of cup was imported from Sidon. It had two handles,
-and was ornamented with small figures in relief. Drinking-vases were
-also formed from the large horns of the Molossian and Pœonian oxen; and
-these articles were commonly rimmed with silver or gold.[461] Small cups
-were made little account of. There was even one kind of bowl which, for
-its enormous capacity, was called the Elephant.
-
- A. If this hold not enough, see the boy comes
- Bearing the Elephant!
-
- B. Immortal gods!
- What thing is that?
-
- A. A double-fountained cup,
- The workmanship of Alcon; it contains
- Only three gallons.[462]
-
------
-
-Footnote 461:
-
- Theopomp. ap. Athen. xi. 34. 51.
-
-Footnote 462:
-
- Athen. xi. 35.
-
------
-
-A very celebrated cup among the Athenians was the Thericlean,[463]
-originally invented by Thericles, a Corinthian potter, contemporary with
-Aristophanes. This ware was black, highly varnished, with gilt
-edges;[464] but the name came afterwards to be applied to any vessel of
-the same form from whatever materials manufactured. There were
-accordingly Thericlea of gold with wooden stands. The cups of this kind,
-made at Athens, being very expensive, an inferior sort, in imitation,
-was produced at Rhodes, which, as far more economical, had a great run
-among the humbler classes. The Thericlean was a species of deep chalice
-with two handles, and bulging but little at the sides. Theophrastus[465]
-speaks of Thericlea turned from the Syrian Turpentine tree, the wood of
-which being black and taking a fine polish, it was impossible at a
-glance to distinguish them from those of earthenware. The paintings on
-these utensils appear to have been various. Sometimes a single wreath of
-ivy encircled them immediately beneath the golden rim; but it seems
-occasionally to have been covered with representations of animals, which
-gave rise to a forced and false etymology of the name.[466]
-
------
-
-Footnote 463:
-
- Cf. Bentley on the Epist. of Phalaris i. 169–189.
-
-Footnote 464:
-
- Alexis, ap. Athen. xi. 42.
-
-Footnote 465:
-
- Hist. Plant. v. 4. 2. cum not. Schnei. t. iii. p. 426.
-
-Footnote 466:
-
- Athen. xi. 41. ἄλλοι δὲ ἱστοροῦσι, θηρίκλειον ὀνομασθῆναι τὸ ποτήριον
- διὰ τὸ δορὰς θηρίων αὐτῷ ἐντετυπῶσθαι.
-
------
-
-We have already observed, that the use of drinking-horns[467] was not
-unknown to the ancients. In fact, it seems, in very remote ages, to have
-been customary to convert bulls’ horns into cups with very little
-preparation; and the practice of quaffing wine from this rude kind of
-goblet had by some been supposed to have suggested the idea to artists
-of representing Bacchos with horns, and to poets the epithet of the Bull
-Dionysos. He was moreover worshiped at Cyzicos under the form of a bull.
-Afterwards, as taste and luxury advanced, these simple vessels were
-exchanged for horns of silver, which Pindar attributes to the
-Centaurs.[468] Xenophon[469] found drinking-horns among the
-Paphlagonians, and afterwards even in the palace of the Thracian king
-Seuthes. Æschylus speaks of silver horns, with lids of gold, in use
-among the Perrhæbians, and Sophocles, in his Pandora, makes mention of
-drinking-horns of massive gold. Philip of Macedon was accustomed among
-his friends to drink from the common horn. Golden horns were found among
-the inhabitants of Cythera. Horns of silver were in use at Athens; and,
-among the articles enumerated as sold at a public auction, mention is
-made of one of these vessels of a twisted form.
-
------
-
-Footnote 467:
-
- Bœckh. Pub. Econ. of Athens, ii. 254.
-
-Footnote 468:
-
- Pind. Frag. Incert. 44. i. 244. Dissen. Comm. ii. 659. Jacob. Anthol.
- vii. 336. Athen. xi. 51. Cf. Damm. v. κέρας.
-
-Footnote 469:
-
- Anab. vi. 1. 4. vii. 3. 24, seq.
-
------
-
-Mirrors constituted another article of Hellenic luxury. These were
-sometimes of brass,[470] whence the proverb:
-
- As forms by brass, so minds by wine are mirrored.[471]
-
------
-
-Footnote 470:
-
- Xen. Conv. vii. 4. They were sometimes square and washed with silver.
- Caylus, Rec. d’Antiq. t. vi. p. 398. Cf. Cœl. Rhodig. xv. 12, 13.
- Plat. Tim. t. vii. 52, seq. 61. Lucian. Amor. § 39. Ter. Adelph. ii.
- 3. 61. Cicero in Pison. c. 29. Poll. vii. 95. x. 126, 164.
-
-Footnote 471:
-
- Athen. x. 31.
-
------
-
-The best, however, until those of glass came into use, were made of
-silver or of a mixed metal, the exact composition of which is not now
-known. Another kind was fashioned from a species of carbuncle found near
-the city of Orchomenos,[472] in Arcadia. Glass mirrors[473] also came
-early into use, chiefly manufactured, at the outset, by the Phœnicians
-of Sidon. The hand-mirrors were usually circular,[474] and set in costly
-frames. To prevent their being speedily tarnished they were, when not in
-use, carefully enclosed in cases.[475]
-
------
-
-Footnote 472:
-
- Theoph. de Lapid. §. 33.
-
-Footnote 473:
-
- It is to be observed, that before the application of quicksilver in
- the construction of these glasses (which I presume is of no great
- antiquity) the reflection of images by such specula must have been
- effected by their being besmeared behind, or tinged through with some
- dark colour, especially black, which would obstruct the refraction of
- the rays of light. Nixon in Philosoph. Trans, t. iv. p. 602. Cf. Plin.
- xxxvi. 26. § 67.
-
-Footnote 474:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 742.
-
-Footnote 475:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 741.
-
------
-
-There were mirrors, too, of polished silver, fashioned so as to magnify
-immensely the objects they reflected.[476] They invented also large cups
-containing within many diminutive mirrors, so that when any one looked
-into them, his eye was met by a multitude of faces all resembling his
-own.[477] In a temple of Hera in Arcadia, was a mirror fixed in the
-wall, wherein the spectator could at first scarcely, if at all, discern
-his own image, while the throne of the goddess and the statues of the
-other deities ranged around were most brilliantly reflected.[478] Many
-sorts of mirrors appear to have been made for the purpose of playing off
-practical jokes. For example, looking in one of these, a handsome woman
-would find her visage transformed into that of a Gorgon, so as to appear
-terrible even to herself. Others again were so very flattering, that a
-half-starved barber, viewing his figure therein, appeared to be gifted
-with the thewes of a Heracles. Another sort distorted the countenance,
-or inverted it, or showed merely the half.
-
------
-
-Footnote 476:
-
- Plaut. in Mostell. i. 3. 101.
-
-Footnote 477:
-
- Plin. xxxiii. 45. Senec. Quæst. Nat. i. 4.
-
-Footnote 478:
-
- Paus. viii. 37. 7.
-
------
-
-Religion was the nurse of the fine arts, and first gave rise, not only
-to sculpture and painting, but also to those private collections of
-statues and pictures[479] in which we discover the germs of our modern
-galleries[480] and museums. The first step was made towards these when
-the Greek set up the images of his household gods upon his hearth.
-Thence, step by step, he proceeded, improving the appearance, enriching
-the materials, increasing the number of his domestic deities, with which
-niche after niche was filled, till his private dwelling became in some
-sort a temple. The religious feeling, no doubt, made way, in many cases,
-for a passion for show, or a nascent taste for the beautiful; so that
-rude figures in terra-cotta, wood, or stone, were gradually replaced by
-exquisite statues in ivory, gold, or silver,[481] or the fairest marble,
-breathing beauty and life, with eyes of gems, and clothed with majesty
-as with a garment. Hence flowed the passion for mimetic representations
-and all the plastic arts. The gods were transferred from the fireside to
-the temple, to the agora, to the senate-house, to the innumerable
-porticoes everywhere abounding in Greece.[482]
-
------
-
-Footnote 479:
-
- Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 86. Plin. Hist. Nat. vii. 39. xxxv. 36.
- xxxiii. 56.
-
-Footnote 480:
-
- Athen. xi. 3. Menage, Observat. in Diog. Laert. vi. 32. p. 138. a. b.
-
-Footnote 481:
-
- Poll. i. 28.
-
-Footnote 482:
-
- Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 86.
-
------
-
-On their superb candelabra,[483] &c., matter for a curious volume might
-be collected. The lamps in common use,[484] though sometimes very
-beautiful in shape, were of course fictile,[485] such as we find in
-great numbers among the ruins of Greek cities, both in the
-mother-country, and in their Egyptian and other colonies. Sometimes,
-however, they were of bronze, silver, or massive gold. A very beautiful
-specimen in this last metal was found, by Lord Belmore, among the ruins
-of an Egyptian temple, a short time before my visit to the Nile. In many
-houses were magnificent chandeliers, suspended from the ceiling, with
-numerous branches, which filled the apartments[486] with a flood of
-light. The most remarkable article of this kind which I remember was
-that set up as a votive offering to Hestia, in the Prytaneion of
-Tarentum, by Dionysios the Younger, which held as many lamps as there
-are days in the year.[487] Among people of humble condition wooden
-chandeliers, or candlesticks, were in use.[488] In remoter ages they
-burned slips of pine-branches, the bark of various trees, &c., instead
-of lamps. They were acquainted with the use of horn and wicker
-lanterns.[489]
-
------
-
-Footnote 483:
-
- An elegant candelabrum, ornamented with the figure of a twisted
- serpent, and a flight of birds resting here and there on the branches,
- is found in the Mus. Cortonens. tab. 80.—They were sometimes of gilt
- wood.—Winkelmann, i. 34.
-
-Footnote 484:
-
- Poll. ii. 72. vi. 103. x. 115. Soph. Ajax. 285, sqq.
-
-Footnote 485:
-
- Poll. x. 192.—On the brazen ladle (ἀρύταινα) for filling lamps with
- oil, see Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 1087.
-
-Footnote 486:
-
- Athen. xi. 48.
-
-Footnote 487:
-
- Id. xv. 60.
-
-Footnote 488:
-
- Id xv. 61.
-
-Footnote 489:
-
- Id. xv. 59.
-
------
-
-Another kind of decoration of Greek houses we must not overlook,—their
-armour and implements of war,[490] with which the poet Alcæos[491] loved
-to adorn his chambers, though, like Paris, he cared little to make any
-other use of them. “My spacious mansion,” exclaims he, “gleams
-throughout with brazen arms. Even along the ceiling are ranged the
-ornaments of Ares, glittering helmets, surmounted by white nodding
-plumes; greaves of polished brass are suspended on the walls, with
-cuirasses of linen, while, here and there, about my apartments, are
-scattered hollow shields. Elsewhere, you behold scimitars of Chalcis,
-and baldricks, and the short vest which we wear beneath our
-armour.”[492] Besides the articles enumerated by the poet, there were
-shield-cases, sheaths for their spears, quivers curiously adorned,
-feathered arrows, and bows of polished horn, tipped at either end with
-gold.
-
------
-
-Footnote 490:
-
- The custom, also, in Lydia. Herod. i. 34.
-
-Footnote 491:
-
- Alcæi Frag. vi. p. 95. Anacr. ed. Glasg.
-
-Footnote 492:
-
- Κύπασσις of which Pollux furnishes us with an exact description: ὁ δὲ
- κύπασσις, λίνου πεποίητο, σμικρὸς χιτωνίσκος, ἄχρι μέσου μηροῦ, ὡς Ἴων
- φησὶ, βραχὺς λίνου κύπασσις, ἐς μηρὸν μέσον ἐσταλμένος. (vii. 60) That
- is, “the _kupassis_ is a small linen chiton, reaching mid-thigh,
- according to Ion, who says, ‘a short linen kupassis, descending to the
- middle of the thigh.’”
-
------
-
-From these gorgeous and costly commodities the reader, we fear, will be
-reluctant to accompany us into the kitchen, where we must pick our way
-among kneading-troughs, pots and pans, Delphian cutlery[493] and
-honey-jars.[494] But as without these the warriors, as Homer himself
-acknowledges, could make but little use of their weapons, it is
-absolutely necessary we should inquire into their cooking conveniences.
-To commence, however, we must allow[495] Clearchos of Soli, to enumerate
-a few of the articles found among the furniture of this important part
-of the house. There was, first, says he, a three-legged table, then a
-chytra, or earthen pot, which, as in France, was always preferred for
-making soup. It was not, however, of coarse brown ware, as with us; for,
-Socrates, in his conversation with Hippias on the Beautiful, observes
-that, when properly made, round, smooth, and well-baked, the chytra was
-very handsome, particularly that large sort which contained upwards of
-seven gallons. It had two handles, and was evidently glazed.[496] In
-stirring the chytra while boiling, the Attic cook made choice of a ladle
-turned from the wood of the fig-tree, which, it is said, communicated an
-agreeable flavour to the soup, and, in Socrates’s opinion, was
-preferable to one of gold which, being very weighty, might chance to
-crack the pot, spill the broth, and extinguish the fire.[497]
-
------
-
-Footnote 493:
-
- Hesych. v. Δελφικὴ μάχαιρα.
-
-Footnote 494:
-
- Athen. xi. 50, ὀξίνη, a vinegar cruet.—Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 1301. ὑρχη,
- a pickle-jar.—Vesp. 676.
-
-Footnote 495:
-
- Athen. xiv. 60.
-
-Footnote 496:
-
- Plat. Hipp. Maj. t. v. p. 425, sqq.
-
-Footnote 497:
-
- Plat. Opp. t. v. p. 429. seq. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 244.
-
------
-
-There was used in the kitchen a sort of candelabrum, or lamp-stand,
-which Clearchos merely names. Then followed the mortar, the stool, the
-sponge, the cauldron, the kneading-trough, the mug, the oil-flask, the
-rush-basket, the large knife, the cleaver,[498] the wooden platter, the
-bowl, and the larding-pin.[499] Pollux, who had, doubtless, served an
-apprenticeship to Marcus Aurelius’s cook, gives a formidable list of
-culinary utensils, from which we must be content to select the most
-remarkable. First, however, we shall show how important a piece of
-sponge was to an Athenian cook. It often saved him his dinner; for, if
-any of his stewpans, crocks, or kettles, had suffered from the embraces
-of Hephæstos, in other words, had got a hole burnt in them, a bit of
-sponge was drawn into the aperture, and on went the cooking operations
-as before.[500] In some houses culinary utensils were regarded as a
-nuisance, the presence of which was not to be constantly endured, and,
-accordingly, when the master desired to treat his friends, cookey was
-despatched early in the morning to hire pots and kettles of a broker. To
-this custom Alexis alludes in his Exile:
-
- How fertile in new tricks is Chæriphon,
- To sup scot-free and everywhere find welcome!
- Spies he a broker’s door with pots to let?
- There from the earliest dawn he takes his stand,
- To see whose cook arrives; from him he learns
- Who ’tis that gives the feast,—flies to the house,
- Watches his time, and, when the yawning door
- Gapes for the guests, glides in among the first.[501]
-
------
-
-Footnote 498:
-
- See a figure, probably, of that instrument in Mus. Chiaramont. tav.
- 21.
-
-Footnote 499:
-
- Athen. xiv. 60. Poll. x. 95, sqq.—We find mention, also, of the
- cheese-rasp.—Schol. Aristoph. Pac. 251.
-
-Footnote 500:
-
- Aristoph. Acharn. 439. Brunck is vastly scandalised at the idea of the
- Scholiast, that any man should have been so poor in Attica as to be
- driven to mend his pots in the way commemorated in the text; but a
- German commentator, who had looked more into kitchens, is satisfied
- that the practice prevailed, and was perfectly rational. In fact,
- similar contrivances are still resorted to, even in England.
-
-Footnote 501:
-
- Athen. iv. 58.
-
------
-
-But we must not pass over the Pyreion or Trypanon,[502] the clumsy
-contrivance which supplied the place of our lucifers, phosphorus, and
-tinder-boxes. This was a hollow piece of wood, in which another piece
-was turned rapidly till sparks of fire flew out.[503] Soldiers carried
-these fire-kindlers along with them as a necessary part of their kit.
-
-Footnote 502:
-
- Theoph. Histor. Plant. v. 9. 7.
-
-Footnote 503:
-
- Plat. de Rep. iv. t. vi. p. 194. Pollux. x. 146. vii. 113.
-
------
-
-The ordinary fuel of the Greeks consisted chiefly of wood and
-charcoal,[504] (kept in rush or wicker baskets,) though the use of
-mineral coal was not altogether unknown to them.[505] In Attica,
-where wood was always scarce, they economically made use of
-vine-cuttings,[506] and even the green branches of the fig tree with
-the leaves on.[507] The charcoal of Acharnæ, the best probably in
-the country, was sometimes prepared from the scarlet oak.[508] To
-prevent the wood, used in their saloons, halls, and drawing-rooms
-from smoking, it was often boiled[509] in water or steeped in dregs
-of oil. The use of the bellows[510] was known in Hellas from the
-remotest antiquity. They had likewise a kind of osier flap, with a
-handle, and shaped like a fan, which at times supplied the place of
-a pair of bellows.
-
------
-
-Footnote 504:
-
- Cf. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 34, 302, 314. Plat. de Legg. t. viii.
- 116.
-
-Footnote 505:
-
- Theoph. de Lap. § 16.
-
-Footnote 506:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Lysist. 308.
-
-Footnote 507:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 312. Cf. Schol. Vesp. 145, 326.
-
-Footnote 508:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Acharn. 587.
-
-Footnote 509:
-
- Plin. Hist. Nat. xv. 8.
-
-Footnote 510:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 853. Athen. ii. 71.
-
------
-
-There were chopping-blocks[511] both of wood and stone, mortars,[512]
-fish-kettles, frying-pans, and spits of all dimensions,[513] some being
-so diminutive that thrushes and other small birds could be roasted on
-them. Their ends in the heroic ages rested on stone hobs, but afterwards
-andirons were invented, probably of fanciful shape as in modern France.
-Occasionally they would appear to have been manufactured of lead. To
-these we may add the ovens, the bean and barley-roasters, the sieves of
-bronze and other materials, the wine-strainers in the form of colanders,
-the crate for earthern-ware, and the chafing-dish.[514]
-
------
-
-Footnote 511:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 319. Vesp. 238. κρεάγρα a flesh-hook. Sch.
- Eq. 769.
-
-Footnote 512:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 924.
-
-Footnote 513:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 179.
-
-Footnote 514:
-
- Aristoph. Acharn. 34. Cooks’ tables were made of wicker-work or
- olive-wood. Etym. Mag. 298. 36, seq.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
- FOOD OF HOMERIC TIMES—MEAT, FISH, ETC.
-
-
-Having described the implements with which a Greek meal was prepared,
-let us next inquire of what materials it consisted, and how it was
-eaten. There will be no occasion in pursuing this investigation to
-adhere to any very strict method. It will probably be sufficient to make
-a few broad divisions and a flexible outline which we can fill up as the
-materials fall in our way.
-
-What the original inhabitants of Hellas ate might no doubt be
-satisfactorily inferred from the accounts we possess of nations still
-existing in the same state of civilisation. But it is nevertheless
-curious to examine their traditions relating to the subject. Ælian, who
-has preserved many notices of remote antiquity, gives a list of various
-kinds of food, which, as he would appear to think, constituted the
-chief, if not the whole, sustenance of several ancient nations. The
-Arcadians lived, he says, upon acorns; the Argives upon pears, the
-Athenians upon figs;[515] the wild pear-tree furnished the Tirynthians
-with their favourite food; a sort of cane was the chief dainty of the
-Indians; of the Karamanians[516] the date; millet of the Mæotæ and
-Sauromatæ; while the Persians[517] delighted chiefly in cardamums and
-pistachio nuts.[518]
-
------
-
-Footnote 515:
-
- Cf. Plut. Quæst. Græc. 51.
-
-Footnote 516:
-
- Cf. Dion. Perieg. 1082.
-
-Footnote 517:
-
- These people were great eaters, and held none in estimation but those
- who resembled them. Aristoph. Acharn. 74. sqq.
-
-Footnote 518:
-
- Ælian. Var. Hist. iii. 39. Perizonius in his note on this passage
- observes, that ἄπιος and ἀχράς are but different names for the same
- thing, both signifying “the pear,” the former term prevailing among
- the Argives, the latter among the Tirynthians and Laconians. By the
- other Greeks both words were used promiscuously, though ἄπιος was the
- more common. This able commentator objects to the assertion of his
- author, that the Hindoos lived on cane, since they also ate millet,
- rice, &c. But Ælian could really have intended nothing more than that
- the articles he enumerates were in common use among the nations spoken
- of. Otherwise the whole must be regarded as a mere fable. The canes,
- mentioned by Ælian, are those from which sugar has been from very
- remote antiquity extracted.
-
- Quique bibunt tenerâ dulces ab arundine succos.
- Lucan. Pharsal. iii. 237.
-
------
-
-The tradition that while some degree of civilisation already existed in
-the East, many tribes of Hellas still subsisted upon acorns, has given
-rise to much curious disquisition. It is abundantly clear, however, that
-the fruit of our English oak is not what is meant; for, upon this, no
-one who has made the experiment will for one moment imagine that man
-could subsist; but every kind of production comprehended by the Greeks
-under the term “acorn,” (βάλανος). Gerard, an old English botanist,
-enumerates chestnuts among acorns, and Xenophon calls dates “the acorns
-of the palm-tree.” The mast, however, of a tree common in Greece, would,
-as Mitford thinks, afford a not unwholesome nourishment, though he is
-quite right in supposing that it could not have been a favourite food in
-more civilised times.[519] While upon the subject of acorns, this
-ingenious and able writer appears disposed to make somewhat merry with a
-certain project of Socrates. If we rightly comprehend him, which very
-possibly we do not, he means to accuse the philosopher of reducing the
-citizens of his airy republic to very short commons indeed,[520] nothing
-but a little beech-mast, and a few myrtle-berries. This borders strongly
-on the notion of the comic writer, who describes the Athenians as living
-on air and hope. But though abstemious enough, Socrates was not so
-unreasonable as to require even his Utopians to fight and philosophise
-upon a diet so scanty. Before he comes to the mast and the
-myrtle-berries, we find him enumerating wheaten and barley bread, salt,
-olives, cheese, and truffles, together with pulse and all such herbs as
-the fields spontaneously produce. For a dessert he would indulge them
-with figs, chickpeas, and beans, myrtle-berries, and beech-mast, or
-chestnuts roasted in the fire. Plato was aware how the luxurious wits of
-his time would turn up their noses at such primitive diet, and therefore
-brings in Glaucon inquiring,—“If you were founding a polity of swine,
-what other food would you provide for them?”[521] Pausanias remarks,
-however, that acorns long continued to be a common article of food in
-Arcadia,[522] but only those of the fagus.[523]
-
------
-
-Footnote 519:
-
- See Goguet, i. 160, seq.
-
-Footnote 520:
-
- Hist. of Greece, i. 9, note. Cf. Anab. ii. 3.
-
-Footnote 521:
-
- Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 85.
-
-Footnote 522:
-
- Cf. Polluc. i. 234.
-
-Footnote 523:
-
- Paus. viii. 1. 6. Pliny observes that the fruit of the fagus is sweet
- “dulcissima omnium glans fagi.” Hist. Nat. xvii. 6. Cf. Lucian. Amor.
- § 33. Theophrast. Hist. Plant. iii. 8, 2. This Arcadian dainty is
- still eaten in Spain. “In some parts (of Navarre) the mountains are
- girt at their base by forests of chestnut trees or of the Spanish oak
- called _encina_, whose acorn roasted, is as palatable as the
- chestnut.” (A Campaign with Zumalacarregui, i. 40.) The same writer
- observes, that the fruit of the ever-green arbutus, in shape like a
- cherry, though insipid and intoxicating in its effects, is also eaten
- by the omniverous Spaniards, p. 51. See also Laborde’s Itinerary of
- Spain, iv. 80, and Capell Brooke’s Travels, ii. 72.
-
------
-
-If we may credit some writers the ancient inhabitants of Hellas made use
-of food much more revolting than acorns, having been, in fact, cannibals
-who devoured each other. There, no doubt, existed among the Greeks of
-later times traditions of a state of society in which human flesh was
-eaten by certain fierce and lawless individuals, such as Polyphemos, but
-nothing in their literature can authorise us to infer that the practice
-was ever general. Superstition seems on very extraordinary occasions to
-have impelled them into the guilt of human sacrifice, when the
-officiating priests, and, perhaps, some few others, probably tasted of
-the entrails, and Galen had conversed with individuals who had been led
-by mere curiosity to sup on man’s flesh, and found its flavour to
-resemble that of tender beef.[524] But instances of this kind prove
-nothing; for how often does it not happen that mariners are even now
-driven by distressful circumstances to slaughter and eat their
-companions at sea! And yet shall we on this account pass for
-anthropophagi with posterity?
-
------
-
-Footnote 524:
-
- See Bochart. Geog. Sac. i. 309.
-
------
-
-The Greeks, however, were not content with one set of traditions, or
-upon the whole inclined to give currency to the most gloomy. On the
-contrary, their poets casting backward the light of their imagination,
-and kindling up the landscapes of the far past, called up the vision of
-the golden age, when neither the domestic hearth[525] nor the altars of
-the gods were stained with blood, and the fruits of the field,—milk,
-honey, cheese, and butter sufficed to sustain life. But we must escape
-from these shadowy times, and come down to the age of beef and mutton.
-
------
-
-Footnote 525:
-
- Cf. Plat. De Legg. vi. t. vii. p. 471.
-
------
-
-Food is, with great precision, divided by Aristotle into moist and dry,
-that is, into meat and drink.[526] A classification, the credit of
-which, as Feith contends, belongs to Homer.[527] In this poet, bread
-(σίτος), the principal article of provision, is made indiscriminately
-both from wheat and barley, though the latter grain is thought to have
-been first in use.[528] Herodotus found, in the matter of bread, a
-peculiar taste among the Egyptians; barley and wheat they despised,
-though in no country are finer produced than in Egypt; giving, very
-strangely, the preference to the _olyra_, by some supposed to be the
-spelt, but more probably Syrian _dhourra_, ears of which I observed
-sculptured on the interior of the pronaos of Leto’s temple at Esneh.
-Bread, in the Homeric age, was brought to table in a reed basket, the
-use of silver bread-baskets, or trays, not having been then, as Donatus
-thinks, introduced. But in this the learned commentator is mistaken; or,
-if they had no silver trays, at least they had them of brass and gold,
-to match their tables of massive silver.[529]
-
------
-
-Footnote 526:
-
- Problem. x. 56, 58.
-
-Footnote 527:
-
- Iliad. α. 496. β. 432, seq.
-
-Footnote 528:
-
- Iliad. ε. 196, et 341. The scholiast on this verse, observes that,
- before the invention of mills, men used to eat the raw grain. (Cf. on
- Iliad. α. 449, and Etym. Magn. v. οὐλόχυται, 641, 29.) But this is
- merely an absurd conjecture; for they could, at least, have roasted
- the young ear as in the East they still do, while it is full of juice,
- and have eaten it thus with salt, when it is both pleasant and
- nutritive. Besides, some means of reducing the grain to meal appears
- to have been known almost from the beginning.
-
-Footnote 529:
-
- Iliad. λ. 629. Odyss. κ. 355. See, too, Theocrit. Eidyll. xxiv. 135,
- sqq. Virgil. Æneid. i. 705.
-
------
-
-Next to bread, flesh, in the heroic ages, was the greatest stay-stomach,
-particularly beef, kid, mutton, and pork. They had not, however, as yet
-discovered many ways of cooking it. Nearly all their culinary ingenuity
-reduced itself in fact to roasting and boiling, a circumstance which led
-Athenæus,[530] and the president Goguet to look back with great pity and
-concern on these unhappy ages when even princes, generally gourmands,
-were deprived of the supreme felicity of dining on ragouts, soups, and
-boiled brains. Servius,[531] too, and Varro are inclined to participate
-in this feeling of commiseration, and the latter observes, that among
-their own ancestors people were originally compelled to dine on roast
-meat, though in the course of time the arts of boiling and soup-making
-were introduced.[532] With regard to Homer’s heroes, however, our
-sympathies are somewhat relieved by finding, that learned men have
-overrated the extent of their misfortunes. They were not altogether
-ignorant of the art of boiling, as Athenæus himself admits, where he
-mentions the boiled shin of beef which one of the drunken suitors flung
-at Odysseus’s head.
-
------
-
-Footnote 530:
-
- Deipnosoph. i. 15. Origine des Loix, ii. 306. “J’ai dit que la
- simplicité faisoit le caractère distinctif de ses premiers âges. La
- manière dont on se nourissoit alors en fait preuve. On ne voit
- paroître ni sauce ni ragoût, ni même de gibier, dans la description
- que l’Ecriture fait du repas donné par Abraham aux trois anges qui lui
- apparurent dans la vallée de Membré. Ce Patriarche leur sert un veau
- roti, ou, pour mieux dire, grillé; du lait de beurre, et du pain frais
- cuit sous la cendre. Voilà tout le festin. Ce fait montre que les
- repas alors étoient plus solides que délicats. Abraham avoit
- certainement intention de traiter ses hôtes du mieux qu’il lui étoit
- possible, et il faut observer que ce Patriarche possédoit de
- très-grandes richesses en or, en argent, en troupeaux et en esclaves.
- On peut donc regarder le repas qu’il donne aux trois anges, comme le
- modèle d’un festin magnifique, et juger en conséquence quelle étoit de
- son tems la manière de traiter splendidement.”
-
-Footnote 531:
-
- Comm. ad Æneid. i. 710.
-
------
-
-The flesh of young animals was not habitually eaten in those early ages,
-so that in denominating them public devourers of kids and lambs, Priam
-accuses his sons of scandalous luxury.[533] In fact, with the design of
-preventing a scarcity of animal food, a law was enacted at Athens
-prohibiting the slaughter of an unshorn lamb, and from the same motive
-the Emperor Valens forbade the use of veal.[534]
-
------
-
-Footnote 532:
-
- Feith, Antiq. Homer, iii. 1, 3.
-
-Footnote 533:
-
- Il. ω. 262.
-
-Footnote 534:
-
- Hieron adv. Jovian. ii. 75. a. Diosc. ap. Athen. ix. 17. Eustath. ad
- Il. ω. p. 1481. 12. Schweigh, Animad. in Athen. t. vi. p. 96, seq.
-
------
-
-But there was nothing beyond the difficulty of catching it, to prevent
-the Homeric heroes from making free with game, such as venison, and the
-flesh of the wild goat;[535] and from a passage in the Iliad, Feith
-infers, that even birds were not spared.[536] We trust, however, that
-they feathered and cooked them, and did not devour them _au naturel_, as
-certain Hindùs do their sheep, wool and all. The Egyptians had a very
-peculiar taste in ornithophagy, and actually ate some kinds of birds
-quite raw, as they likewise did several species of fish; and this not in
-those early ages when Isis and Osiris had not reclaimed the bogs of the
-Nile, but in times quite modern, when Herodotus travelled in their
-country, and heard their vain priests lay claim to having civilised
-Hellas. Both birds and fish, indeed, underwent a certain sort of
-preparation. Of the latter some were dried in the sun, others preserved
-in pickle, and the same process was applied to ducks, quails, and many
-other species of birds, after which they were eaten raw. We recommend
-the practice to our gourmands, and have no doubt they would find a
-pickled owl or jackdaw, devoured in the Egyptian style, altogether as
-wholesome as diseased goose’s liver. It must not, however, be
-dissembled, that many critics, concerned for the gastronomic reputation
-of the Egyptians, contend that, by the word which we translate “to
-pickle,”[537] Herodotus must have meant some kind of cookery; to which
-Wesseling replies, that, without designing to impugn the taste of those
-gentlemen, he must yet refuse to accept of their interpretation, since
-by observing that they roasted or boiled all other species of birds and
-fish, such as were sacred excepted, the historian evidently intends to
-say, that these were eaten raw. The learned editor might have added,
-that Herodotus uses the same term in treating of the process of
-embalming,[538] and we nowhere learn that the mummies were cooked before
-they were deposited in the tombs.
-
------
-
-Footnote 535:
-
- Od. ι. 185. κ. 180.
-
-Footnote 536:
-
- Iliad. ψ. 852, seq.
-
-Footnote 537:
-
- Προταριχεύειν. Herod. ii. 77, edit. Wessel.
-
-Footnote 538:
-
- Herod. i. 77, seq. ii. 15. ix. 80.
-
------
-
-But to return to the Homeric warriors; it seems extremely[539] probable,
-notwithstanding the opinions of several writers of great authority, both
-ancient and modern, that the demi-gods, and heroes before Troy, admitted
-that effeminate dainty called _fish_ to their warlike tables. At all
-events the common people understood the value of this kind of food,[540]
-and it may safely be inferred that their betters, never slow in
-appropriating delicacies to their own use, soon perceived that fish is
-no bad eating. Hunger would at least reconcile them to the flavour of
-broiled salmon, as we find by the example of Odysseus’s companions, who
-devoured both fish and fowl.[541] This is acknowledged by Athenæus;[542]
-but Plutarch contends, that they could have been driven to it only by
-extreme necessity. At all other times he imagines they temperately
-abstained from food of so exciting a kind,[543] though Homer describes
-the Hellespont as abounding in fish,[544] and more than once alludes to
-the practice of drawing it thence with hook and line.[545] Thus we find
-that angling can trace back its pedigree to the heroic ages; and the
-disciple of the rod as he trudges with Izaak in his pocket through bog
-and mire in search of a good bite, may solace his imagination with
-reminiscences of Troy and the Hellespont. But the good people of those
-days did not wholly rely for a supply of fish on this very tedious and
-inefficient process; they had discovered the use of nets, which Homer
-describes the fisherman casting on the sea shore.[546] Though the poet,
-however, had omitted all allusion to this kind of food, its use might,
-nevertheless, have been confidently inferred, as may that of milk,
-common to all nations, though Homer mentions it only, I believe, in the
-case of the Hippomolgians,[547] and the cannibal Polyphemus, who
-understood also the luxury of cheese.[548] Circe, too, who being a
-goddess may be supposed to have been a connoisseur in dainties, presents
-her paramour Odysseus with a curious mixture, consisting of cheese,
-honey, flour, and wine,[549] very savoury, no doubt, and by old Nestor
-considered of salutary nature, since Hecamedè, at his order, prepares a
-plentiful supply of it for the wounded Machaon. Along with this posset,
-garlic was eaten as a relish.[550]
-
------
-
-Footnote 539:
-
- Plato, among others, remarks that, in the military messes of his
- heroes, Homer introduces neither fish nor boiled meat. De Rep. iii. t.
- vi. p. 141.
-
-Footnote 540:
-
- Odyss. τ. 113.
-
-Footnote 541:
-
- Odyss. μ. 330. sqq.
-
-Footnote 542:
-
- Deipnosoph. i. 47.
-
-Footnote 543:
-
- Plut. Sympos. viii. 8.
-
-Footnote 544:
-
- Il. ι. 360.
-
-Footnote 545:
-
- Il. π. 407.
-
-Footnote 546:
-
- Od. χ. 364, sqq. Eustathius, however, on this passage observes, that
- though nets are spoken of in the Iliad, (ε. 487,) this is the only
- place where the poet distinctly mentions their being used in taking
- fish.
-
-Footnote 547:
-
- Il. ο. 6.
-
-Footnote 548:
-
- Od. ι. 236, 246. Theoc. Eidyll. xi. 35.
-
-Footnote 549:
-
- Od. κ. 234, seq.
-
-Footnote 550:
-
- Il. λ. 623, sqq. This mixture called κυκεὼν, is more than once
- mentioned by Plato—De Rep. iii. t. vi. p. 148.
-
------
-
-Fruits and potherbs, as may be supposed, were already in use.[551]
-Garlic we have mentioned above; and Odysseus, after all his wars and
-wanderings, recalls to mind with a quite natural pleasure the apple and
-pear trees which his father, Laertes, had given him when a boy.[552]
-Alcinoös possessed a fine orchard, where, though the process of grafting
-is supposed to have been then unknown, we find a variety of beautiful
-fruits, as pears, apples, pomegranates, delicious figs, olives, and
-grapes; and in his kitchen-garden were all kinds of vegetables.[553] And
-the shadowy boughs of a similar orchard, covered with golden fruit, wave
-over Tantalos in Hades, but are blown back by the wind whenever the
-wretched old sinner stretches forth his hand towards them.[554] From
-this circumstance Athenæus, with much ingenuity, infers that fruit was
-actually in use before the Trojan war! Apples seem then, as now, to have
-constituted a favourite portion of the dessert, though among the Homeric
-warriors they seem sometimes to have formed a principal part of the
-meal; for Servius[555] describes the primitive repasts as consisting of
-two courses, of which the first was animal food, and apples the second.
-
------
-
-Footnote 551:
-
- Cf. Hom. Il. λ. 629, seq.
-
-Footnote 552:
-
- Od. ω. 339.
-
-Footnote 553:
-
- Od. η. 115, sqq. Plut. Sympos. v. 8.
-
-Footnote 554:
-
- Od. λ. 587, sqq.
-
-Footnote 555:
-
- Ad Æneid. i. 727.
-
-Footnote 556:
-
- Il. ι. 214. In later times it was customary to bruise thyme small, and
- mingle it with salt to give it a finer flavour. Aristoph. Acharn. 772.
- Suid. v. θυμιτίδων ἁλῶν. t. i. p. 1336. b.
-
------
-
-Salt was in great use in the Homeric age, and by the poet sometimes
-called divine.[556] Plato, also, in the Timæos,[557] speaks of salt as a
-thing acceptable to the gods, an expression which Plutarch quotes with
-manifest approbation in a passage where he grows quite eloquent in
-praise of this article, which he denominates the condiment of
-condiments, adding, that of some it was numbered among the Graces.[558]
-By the most ancient Greeks salt was, for this reason, always spoken of
-in conjunction with the table, as in the old proverb, where men were
-advised “never to pass by salt or a table,” that is, not to neglect a
-good dinner.[559] Poor men, who probably had no other seasoning for
-their food, were contemptuously denominated “salt-lickers.”[560] But, in
-Homer’s time, there existed certain Hellenic tribes who had not yet
-arrived at a knowledge of this luxury; among whom, accordingly, even the
-most aristocratic personages were compelled to go without salt to their
-porridge.[561] The poet has, indeed, omitted to mention their names; but
-Pausanias supposes him to have alluded to the more inland clans of
-Epeirots, many of which had not yet, in those ages, acquired a knowledge
-of salt, or even of the sea.[562]
-
------
-
-Footnote 557:
-
- Opera, t. vii. p. 80.
-
-Footnote 558:
-
- Sympos. v. 9.
-
-Footnote 559:
-
- Erasm. Adag. Chil. i. Cent. vi. Adag. 10.
-
-Footnote 560:
-
- Ἅλα λείχειν. Erasm. Adag. iii. vi. 33, or, as Persius expresses it,
- “digito terebrare salinum.” Sat. v. 138.
-
-Footnote 561:
-
- Od. λ. 122.
-
-Footnote 562:
-
- Paus. i. 1. 12.
-
------
-
-It appears to be agreed on all hands, that the primitive races of men
-were mere water-drinkers. Accordingly they had neither poets nor
-inn-keepers, nor excisemen,—three classes of persons who never flourish
-but where wine, or at least beer, is found. Homer more than once alludes
-to this vicious habit of the old world, where, with a sly insinuation of
-contempt,—for he was himself partial to the blood-red wine,—he tells us
-that this or that nation drank, like so many oxen or crocodiles, of the
-waters of such or such a river. Thus, when enumerating the allies of
-Ilion, he describes the Zeleians as those who sipped the black waters of
-the Æsepos.[563] Pindar, too, in the hope of obtaining a reputation for
-sobriety, says, he was accustomed to drink the waters of Thebes, which,
-in his opinion, were very delicious,[564] though Hippocrates would
-unquestionably have been of a totally different way of thinking. The
-Persian, and afterwards the Parthian kings, appear in many cases to have
-entertained a temperate predilection for the water of certain streams,
-of which Milton has given eternal celebrity to one:—
-
- “Choaspes, amber stream,
- The drink of none but kings.”[565]
-
-But evidently through mistake; for though historians pretend that the
-Parthian monarchs would drink of no water save that of the Choaspes, to
-which Pliny[566] adds the Eulæus, it is by no means said that they
-enjoyed a monopoly of those streams. Perhaps our great poet confounded
-the Choaspes with those Golden Waters which, in Athenæus, are said to
-have been wholly reserved for the use of the king and his eldest
-son.[567]
-
------
-
-Footnote 563:
-
- Il. β. 824, seq.
-
-Footnote 564:
-
- Pind. Olymp. vi. 85.
-
-Footnote 565:
-
- Paradise Regained, iii. 288, seq.
-
-Footnote 566:
-
- Hist. Nat. xxxi. 21. “Parthorum reges,” says this writer, “ex Choaspe
- et Eulæo tantum bibunt; et eæ quamvis in longinqua comitatur eos.”
- Hence Tibullus has the following verses in his Panegyric of Messala,
- iv. 1. 142:
-
- “Nec quâ vel Nilus vel _regia lympha_ Choaspes
- Profluit.”
-
- Herod. i. 188. Æl. Var. Hist. xii. 40. Cf. Strabo. 1. xv. c. 3. t.
- iii. p. 318.
-
-Footnote 567:
-
- Athen. xii. 9. Ἀγαθοκλῆς δ᾽, ἐν τρίτῳ Περὶ Κυζίκου, ἐν Πέρσαις φησὶν
- εἶναι καὶ χρυσοῦν καλούμενον ὕδωρ. εἶναι δὲ τοῦτο λιβάδας ἑβδομήκοντα,
- καὶ μηδὲνα πίνειν ἀπ’ αὐτοῦ ἢ μόνον βασιλέα, καὶ τὸν πρεσβύτατον αὐτοῦ
- τῶν παίδων. τῶν δ᾽ ἄλλων ἐάν τις πίῃ, θάνατος ἡ ζημία.
-
------
-
-Wine, however, was invented very early in the history of the world; and
-the virtue of sobriety was born along with it; for, until then, it had
-been no merit to be sober. With whomsoever its use began, wine was well
-known to Homer’s heroes, one of whom speaks of it, in conjunction with
-bread, as the chief root of man’s strength and vigour.[568] Yet the
-warriors of those ages by no means exhibited that selfish parsimony
-which led the Romans to debar their matrons the use of wine.[569] In
-Homer we find women, even while very young, permitted the enjoyment of
-it: for example, Nausicaa and her companions, who, in setting forth on
-their washing excursion, are furnished by the queen herself with a
-plentiful supply of provisions, and a skin of wine.[570] Boys, likewise,
-in the heroic ages, met with similar indulgence; for Phœnix is
-represented permitting Achilles to join him in his potations before the
-little urchin knew how to drink without spilling it over himself.[571]
-This practice, however, is very properly condemned by Plato, who
-considered that no person under eighteen should be allowed to taste of
-wine, and even then but sparingly.[572] After thirty, more discretion
-might, he thought, be granted them; though he recommended sobriety at
-all times, save, perhaps, on the anniversary festival of Dionysos, and
-certain other divinities, when a merry bowl was judged in keeping with
-the other ceremonies of the day.[573]
-
------
-
-Footnote 568:
-
- Iliad, ι. 702. τ. 161.
-
-Footnote 569:
-
- Athen. x. 33.
-
-Footnote 570:
-
- Od. ζ. 77, seq.
-
-Footnote 571:
-
- Iliad. ι. 487.
-
-Footnote 572:
-
- Montaigne, whom few things of this kind had escaped, reads _forty_,
- and thinks that men might lawfully get drunk after that age. Essais,
- ii. 2. t. iii. p. 278.
-
-Footnote 573:
-
- De Legg. ii. t. vii. p. 258, sqq.
-
------
-
-We shall now pass from the primitive aliments of the heroic times to
-those almost infinite varieties of good things which the ingenuity of
-later ages brought into use. The reader, not already familiar with the
-gastronomic fragments of ancient literature, will probably be surprised
-at the omniverous character of the Greeks, to whom nothing seems to have
-come amiss, from the nettle-top to the peach, from the sow’s metra to
-the most delicate bird, from the shark to the small semi-transparent
-aphyæ, caught along the shores of Attica.[574] Through this ocean of
-dainties we shall endeavour to make our way on the following
-plan:—first, it will be our “hint to speak” of the more solid kinds of
-food, as beef, mutton, pork, veal; we shall then make a transition to
-the soups, fowls, and fish; next the fruit will claim our attention;
-and, lastly, the several varieties of wines.
-
-Footnote 574:
-
- Ass’s flesh was commonly eaten by the Athenians. Poll. ix. 48, et
- Comment. t. vi. p. 938, seq. Their neighbours the Persians, however,
- enjoyed one dainty not known, I believe, to the Greeks; that is to
- say, a camel, which, we are told, they sometimes roasted whole. Herod.
- i. 123. Athen. iv. 6. In the opinion of Aristotle the flesh of this
- animal was singularly good: ἔχει δὲ καὶ τὰ κρέα καὶ τὸ γάλα ἥδιστα
- πάντων.—Hist. Anim. vi. 26. It was this passage, perhaps, that first
- induced Heliogabalus to try a camel’s foot, which he appears
- afterwards to have much affected. Lamprid. Vit. Anton. Heliogab. § 19.
- Hist. Aug. Script. p. 195. The same emperor also tried the taste of an
- ostrich, whose eggs anciently constituted an article of food among
- certain nations of Africa. Lucian. de Dipsad. § 7.
-
------
-
-It has already been observed, that in the earliest ages men wholly
-abstained from animal food.[575] Afterwards when they began to cast
-“wolfish eyes” upon their mute companions on the globe, the hog is said
-to have been the first creature whose character emboldened them to make
-free with him. They saw it endued with less intelligence than other
-animals; and, from its stupidity, inferred that it ought to be eaten,
-its soul merely serving during life, as salt, to keep the flesh from
-putrefying.[576] The determining reason, however, appears to have been,
-that they could make no other use of him, since he would neither plough
-like the ox, nor be saddled and mounted like the horse or ass, nor
-become a pleasant companion, or guard the house, like the dog.
-
------
-
-Footnote 575:
-
- Plato, De Legg. vi. t. vii. p. 471.
-
-Footnote 576:
-
- Cicero, De Natura Deorum, ii. 64. Dion. Chrysost. i. 280, cum not.
- Reisk.
-
------
-
-It was long before men in any country slew the ox for food; his great
-utility was his protection, and in some parts of the East the
-well-meaning priesthood at length compassed him round with the armour of
-superstition, which outlasted the occasion, and in India has come down
-in nearly all its strength to our own day. It was otherwise in Greece.
-There common sense quickly dissipated the illusion, which, while it was
-necessary, had guarded the ox, and beef became the favourite food of its
-hardy and active inhabitants, who likewise fed indiscriminately on
-sheep, goats, deer, hares, and almost every other animal, wild or tame.
-
-It has been seen that in remote ages fish did not constitute any great
-part of the sustenance of the Greeks. But public opinion afterwards
-underwent a very considerable change. From having been held in so little
-estimation as to be left chiefly to the use of the poor, in the
-historical ages it became their greatest luxury.[577] And there arose
-among gourmands, those ancient St. Simonians, whose god was their belly,
-a kind of enthusiastic rivalry as to who should be first in the morning
-at the fish-market, and bear away, as in triumph, the largest Copaic
-eels, the finest pair of soles, or the freshest _anthias_.[578] On this
-subject, therefore, our details must be somewhat more elaborate than on
-beef and mutton. And first, we shall take the reader along with us to
-the market, whither it will be advisable that he carry as little money
-as possible, since, according to the comic poets, your Athenian
-fishmonger, not content with being a mere rogue, dealt a little also in
-the assassin’s trade.[579]
-
------
-
-Footnote 577:
-
- The Pythagoreans, however, must be excluded from this category since
- they abstained from fish because they kept perpetual silence like
- themselves.—Athen. vii. 80. Another and a better reason, perhaps, may
- be discovered in a passage of Archestratos, who, observing that the
- sea-dog is delicious eating, proceeds to dispose of the objection that
- it feeds on human flesh, by saying, that all fish do the same. Id.
- vii. 85. From this fact the Pythagoreans esteemed fish-eaters no
- better than cannibals at second-hand.
-
-Footnote 578:
-
- Cf. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 525.
-
-Footnote 579:
-
- Amphis ap. Athen. vi. 5.
-
------
-
-The first thing which a rich gourmand inquired in the morning was, which
-way the wind blew. If from the north, and there was anything like a sea,
-he remained sullenly at home, for no fishing smacks could in that case
-make the Peiræeus;[580] but if the wind sat in any other quarter, out he
-went eagerly and stealthily with a slave and basket[581] at his heels,
-casting about anxious looks to discover whether any other impassioned
-fish-eater had got the start of him on his way to the Agora, who might
-clear the stalls of the best anthias or thunny before he could reach the
-spot.
-
------
-
-Footnote 580:
-
- Athen. viii. 81. Cf. Xenoph. Hellen. v. i. 23.
-
-Footnote 581:
-
- This basket was usually of rushes, in form like a basin, and with a
- handle passing over the top.—Antich. di Ercol. tav. 21. tom. i. p.
- 111.
-
------
-
-The unmoneyed rogue, however, whose ambitious taste soared to these
-expensive dainties, approached the market with a rueful countenance.
-Thus we find a poor fellow describing, in Antiphanes, his morning’s
-pilgrimage in search of a pair of soles:
-
- I once believed the Gorgons fabulous:
- But in the agora quickly changed my creed,
- And turned almost to stone, the pests beholding
- Standing behind the fish stalls. Forced I am
- To look another way when I accost them,
- Lest if I saw the fish they ask so much for,
- I should at once grow marble.[582]
-
------
-
-Footnote 582:
-
- Athen. vi. 4.
-
------
-
-Amphis, another comic poet, supplies us with further details respecting
-the hardships encountered by those who had to deal with fishmongers at
-Athens. Much of his wit is, I fear, intransferable, depending in a great
-measure on the vernacular clipping of Greek common in the market-place.
-But the sense, at least, may perhaps be given:
-
- “Ten thousand times more easy ’tis to gain
- Admission to a haughty general’s tent,
- And have discourse of him, than in the market
- Audience to get of a cursed fishmonger.
- If you draw near and say, How much, my friend,
- Costs _this_ or _that_?—No answer. Deaf you think
- The rogue must be, or stupid; for he heeds not
- A syllable you say, but o’er his fish
- Bends silently like Telephos (and with good reason,
- For his whole race he knows are cut-throats all).
- Another minding not, or else not hearing,
- Pulls by the legs a polypus.[583] A third
- With saucy carelessness replies, ‘Four oboli,
- That’s just the price. For this no less than eight.
- Take it or leave it!’”[584]
-
------
-
-Footnote 583:
-
- Cf. Chandler, ii. 143. Plin. Hist. Nat. ix. 45, seq.
-
-Footnote 584:
-
- Athen. vi. 5.
-
------
-
-Alexis, too, that most comic of comic writers, seems to have imagined,
-that the humour of his pieces would be incomplete without a spice of the
-fishmonger. Commencing, like Amphis, with an allusion to the haughty
-airs of military men, he glides into his subject as follows:—
-
- However, this is still endurable.
- But when a paltry fishfag will look big,
- Cast down his eyes affectedly, or bend
- His eyebrows upwards like a fullstrained bow,
- I burst with rage. Demand what price he asks
- For—say two mullets; and he answers straight
- “Ten obols”—“Ten? That’s dear: will you take eight?”
- “Yes, if one fish will serve you.”—“Friend, no jokes;
- I am no subject for your mirth.”—“Pass on, Sir!
- And buy elsewhere.”—Now tell me is not this
- Bitterer than gall?[585]
-
------
-
-Footnote 585:
-
- Athen. vi. 5.
-
------
-
-But if the reader should be disposed to infer from these testimonies
-that the fishmongering race were saucy only at Athens, he will be in
-danger of falling into error. Throughout the ancient world they were the
-same, and we fear that should any poor devil from Grub-street, or the
-_Quartier Latin_, presume to dispute respecting the price of salmon with
-one of their cockney or Parisian descendants, he would meet with little
-more politeness. At all events their manners had not improved in the
-Eternal city,[586] for it is _a propos_ of the Roman fishfags that
-Athenæus brings forward his examples of like insolence elsewhere. The
-poet Diphilos would appear, like Archestratos, to have travelled in
-search of good fish and civil fishmongers, but his labours were
-fruitless; he might as well have peregrinated the world in the hope of
-finding that island where soles are caught ready-fried in the sea. Such
-at least is the tenour of his own complaint:
-
- Troth, in my greener days I had some notion
- That here at Athens only, rogues sold fish;
- But everywhere, it seems, like wolf or fox,
- The race is treacherous by nature found.
- However, we have one scamp in the agora
- Who beats all others hollow. On his head
- A most portentous fell of hair nods thick
- And shades his brow. Observing your surprise,
- He has his reasons pat; it grows forsooth
- To form, when shorn, an offering to some god!
- But that’s a feint, ’tis but to hide the scars
- Left by the branding iron upon his forehead.
- But, passing that, you ask perchance the price
- Of a sea-wolf—“Ten oboli”—very good.
- You count the money. “Oh not those,” he cries,
- “Æginetan I meant.” Still you comply.
- But if you trust him with a larger piece,
- And there be change to give; mark how the knave
- Now counts in Attic coin, and thus achieves
- A two-fold robbery in the same transaction![587]
-
------
-
-Footnote 586:
-
- Deipnosoph. vi. 4.
-
-Footnote 587:
-
- Athen. vi. 6.
-
------
-
-Xenarchos paints a little scene of ingenious roguery with a comic
-extravagance altogether Shakespearian, and incidentally throws light on
-a curious law of Athens, enacted to protect the citizens against
-stinking fish.[588] The power of invention, he observes—willing to kill
-two birds with one stone—had totally deserted the poets in order to take
-up with the fishmongers; for while the former merely hashed up old
-ideas, the latter were always hitting upon new contrivances to poison
-the Demos:
-
- Commend me for invention to the rogue
- Who sells fish in the agora. He knows
- In fact there’s no mistaking,—that the law
- Clearly and formally forbids the trick
- Of reconciling stale fish to the nose
- By constant watering. But if some poor wight
- Detect him in the fact, forthwith he picks
- A quarrel, and provokes his man to blows.
- He wheels meanwhile about his fish, looks sharp
- To catch the nick of time, reels, feigns a hurt:
- And prostrate falls, just in the right position.
- A friend placed there on purpose, snatches up
- A pot of water, sprinkles a drop or two,
- For form’s sake on his face, but by mistake,
- As you must sure believe, pours all the rest
- Full on the fish, so that almost you might
- Consider them fresh caught.[589]
-
------
-
-Footnote 588:
-
- The longer to preserve fish fresh, the Orientals sometimes cover them
- with a coating of wax. Mullets, caught at Damietta, are sent, thus
- preserved, throughout the Turkish Empire, as well as to different
- parts of Europe. Pococke’s Description of the East.
-
-Footnote 589:
-
- Our readers will probably remember the good old Italian marchioness,
- who having, perhaps, been cajoled, by the blarney of some Hibernian
- peripatetic, into the purchase of a pair of strong-odoured soles,
- recommended to our magistrates the adoption of an ordinance passed, as
- she affirmed, by his grace of Tuscany. In that prince’s territories,
- she assured their worships, the man who has fish to sell, must
- transact business standing on one leg in a bucket of hot water, a
- practice undoubtedly calculated to induce despatch and prevent
- haggling. This Tuscan enactment might evidently have been adopted with
- great advantage at Athens, where, however, legislation proceeded on
- exactly the same principles, and attained in this point an almost
- equal degree of perfection.
-
------
-
-By a law passed at the instance of the wealthy Aristonicos, himself no
-doubt an ichthyophagos, the penalty of imprisonment was decreed against
-all those who, having named a price for their fish, should take less, in
-order that they might at once demand what was just and no more. In
-consequence of this enactment, an old woman or a child might be sent to
-the fish-market, without danger of being cheated. According to another
-provision of this Golden Law, as it is termed by Alexis, fishmongers
-were compelled to stand at their stalls and not to sit as had previously
-been the custom. The comic poet, in the fulness of his charity,
-expresses a hope that they might be all _suspended_ aloft on the
-following year, by which means, he says, they would get a quicker sight
-of their customers, and carry on their dealings with mankind from a
-machine like the gods of tragedy.[590]
-
------
-
-Footnote 590:
-
- Athen. vi. 8.
-
------
-
-In consequence no doubt of the perpetually increasing demand, fish was
-extremely dear at Athens. Accordingly Diphilos, addressing himself to
-Poseidon, who, as god of the sea, was god also of its inhabitants,
-informs him that, could he but secure the tithe of fish, he would soon
-become the wealthiest divinity in Olympos. Among those who distinguished
-themselves in this business in the agora, and apparently became rich, it
-is probable that many were metoiki, such as Hermæos, the Egyptian, and
-Mikion, who, though his country is not mentioned, was probably not an
-Athenian. In proportion as they grew opulent, the gourmands on whom they
-preyed became poor, and doubtless there was too much truth in the satire
-which represented men dissipating their whole fortunes in the
-frying-pan. There were those also it seems who spent their evenings on
-the highway, in order to furnish their daily table with such dainties.
-For this fact we have the satisfactory testimony of Alexis in his
-Heiress:
-
- Mark you a fellow who, however scant
- In all things else, hath still wherewith to purchase
- Cod, eel, or anchovies, be sure i’ the dark
- He lies about the road in wait for travellers.
- If therefore you’ve been robbed o’ernight, just go
- At peep of dawn to th’ agora and seize
- The first athletic, ragged vagabond
- Who cheapens eels of Mikion. He, be sure,
- And none but he’s the thief: to prison with him![591]
-
------
-
-Footnote 591:
-
- Athen. vi. 10. 12.
-
------
-
-They had at Corinth a pretty strict police regulation on this subject.
-When any person was observed habitually to purchase fish, he was
-interrogated by the authorities respecting his means. If found to be a
-man of property they suffered him to do what he pleased with his own;
-but, in the contrary event, he received a gentle hint that the state had
-its eye upon him. The neglect of this admonition was followed, in the
-first place, by a fine, and ultimately, if persevered in, by a
-punishment equivalent to the treadmill.[592] These matters were in
-Athens submitted to the cognizance of two or three magistrates, called
-Opsonomoi, nominated by the Senate.[593] With respect to the purchase of
-this class of viands, everywhere attended with peculiar difficulties, it
-may be said, that the ancients had considerably the advantage of us;
-since in Lynceus of Samos’s “Fish-buyer’s Manual,” they possessed a sure
-guide through all the intricacies of bargaining in the agora.
-
------
-
-Footnote 592:
-
- Diphilos apud Athen. vi. 12.
-
-Footnote 593:
-
- Athen. vi. 72.
-
------
-
-But before we proceed further with this part of our subject, we will
-demand permission of Lynceus to hear what Hesiod has to say of saltfish,
-on which Euthydemos, the Athenian, composed a separate treatise.
-According to this poet, who boldly speaks of cities erected long after
-his death, immense quantities of fish were salted on the Bosporos,
-sometimes entire, as in modern times,[594] sometimes cut into gobbets of
-a moderate size. Among these were the oxyrinchos whose taste proved
-often fatal, the thunny, and the mackerel. The little city of Parion
-furnished the best kolias (a kind of mackerel), and the Tarentine
-merchants brought to Athens pickled orcynos from Cadiz, cut into small
-triangular pieces, in jars.[595] Physicians, indeed, inveighed against
-these relishes; but the gourmands would consult only their palates and
-preferred a short life with pickled thunny to that of Saturn himself on
-beef and mutton.
-
------
-
-Footnote 594:
-
- Herod. iv. 53.
-
-Footnote 595:
-
- Athen. iii. 84.
-
------
-
-But the Hesiod of Euthydemos (a creation probably of his own) is but
-very poor authority compared with Archestratos, who made the pilgrimage
-of the world in search of good cheer, and afterwards, for the benefit of
-posterity, treasured up his experience in a grand culinary epic. In his
-opinion a slice of Sicilian thunny was a rare delicacy, while the
-saperda, though brought from the Pontos Euxinos, he held as cheap as
-those who boasted of it.[596] The scombros, by some supposed to be a
-species of thunny, though others understand by it the common mackerel,
-stood high in the estimation of this connoisseur. He directs that it be
-left in salt three days, and eaten before it begins to melt into
-brine.[597] In his estimation the horaion[598] of Byzantium was likewise
-a great delicacy, which he advises the traveller, who might pass through
-that city, to taste by all means. It seems to have been there what
-macaroni is at Naples.
-
------
-
-Footnote 596:
-
- Athen. iii. 85.
-
-Footnote 597:
-
- Athen. iii. 85. The Scomber Pelamys or mackerel of Pallas, caught in
- the Black Sea, is pickled in casks and not eaten for a twelvemonth.
- Travels in Southern Russia, iv. 242.
-
-Footnote 598:
-
- Poterant ὡραῖα nominari, ut _vere_ vel initio æstatis salita, quo
- tempore minus pinguis totus piscis esset. Schweigh. Animadv. in Athen.
- iii. 85. t. vii. 313. Cf. Plin. Nat. Hist. xxxii. 53. Gesner, De
- Salsamentis.
-
------
-
-Alexis, in one of his comedies, introduces the Symposiarch of an Eranos
-(president of a picnic) accounting with one of the subscribers who comes
-to demand back his ring, and in the course of the dialogue, where
-something like Falstaff’s tavern-bill is discussed, we find the prices
-of several kinds of salt-fish. An omotarichos (shoulder piece of thunny)
-is charged at five chalci; a dish of sea-mussels, seven chalci, of
-sea-urchins, an obol, a slice of kybion, three obols, a conger eel, ten,
-and another plate of broiled fish, a drachma. This comic writer[599]
-rates the fish of the Nile very low, and he is quite right, for they are
-generally muddy and ill-tasted, though the Copts, who have considerable
-experience during Lent, contrive, by the application of much
-Archestratic skill, to render some kinds of them palatable. Sophocles,
-in a fragment of his lost drama of Phineus, speaks of salt-fish embalmed
-like an Egyptian mummy.[600] Stock-fish, as I know to my cost, is still
-a fashionable dish in the Mediterranean, especially on board ship, and
-from a proverb preserved by Athenæus we find it was likewise in use
-among the Athenians.[601]
-
------
-
-Footnote 599:
-
- Ap. Athen. iii. 86. Cf. Herod. ii. 77.
-
-Footnote 600:
-
- Athen. iii. 86.
-
-Footnote 601:
-
- Deipnosoph. iii. 89.
-
------
-
-The passion of this refined people for salt-fish furnished them with an
-occasion of showing their gratitude publicly. They bestowed the rights
-of citizenship on the sons of Chæriphilos, a metoikos who first
-introduced among them a knowledge of this sort of food.[602] A similar
-feeling prompted the Dutch to erect a statue to G. Bukel, the man who
-taught them to salt herrings.[603]
-
------
-
-Footnote 602:
-
- Athen. iii. 90.
-
-Footnote 603:
-
- Goguet, Origine des Loix, i. 254.
-
------
-
-Without enumerating a tenth part of the other species eaten among the
-Greeks, we pass to the shell-fish, of which they were likewise great
-amateurs. Epicharmos, in his marriage of Hebe, supplies a curious list,
-which, however, might be extended almost ad infinitum. Among these were
-immense limpets, the buccinum, the cecibalos, the tethynakion, the
-sea-acorn, the purple fish, oysters hard to open but easy to swallow,
-mussels, sea-snails or periwinkles, skiphydria sweet to taste but
-prickly to touch, large shelled razor-fish, the black conch, and the
-amathitis. The conch was also called tellinè as the same poet in his
-Muses observes. Alcæos wrote a song to the limpet beginning with
-
- “Child of the rock and hoary sea.”[604]
-
------
-
-Footnote 604:
-
- Athen. iii. 30, 31. Cf. Scheigh. Animadv. t. vii. p. 68, sqq.
-
------
-
-Boys used to make a sort of whistle of tortoise and mussel shells. These
-mussels were usually broiled on the coals, and Aristophanes, very
-ingenious in his similes, compares a gaping silly fellow to a mussel in
-the act of being cooked.[605]
-
------
-
-Footnote 605:
-
- Fragm. Babylon. 2. Brunck. Athen. iii. 33.
-
------
-
-Like the sepia, of which excellent pilaus are made at Alexandria, the
-porphyra or purple fish was very good eating, and thickened the liquor
-in which it was boiled.[606] There was a small delicate shell-fish
-caught on the island of Pharos and adjacent coasts of Egypt, which they
-called Aphrodite’s ear,[607] and there is still found on the same coast
-near Canopos a diminutive and beautiful rose-coloured conch called
-Venus’s nipple. On the same shore, about the rise of the Nile, that
-species of mussel called tellinè was caught in great abundance, but the
-best-tasted were said to be found in the river itself. A still finer
-kind were in season about autumn in the vicinity of Ephesos. The
-echinos, or sea-chestnut,[608] cooked with oxymel, parsley, and mint,
-was esteemed good and wholesome eating. Those caught about Cephalonia,
-Icaria, and Achaia were bitterish, those of Sicily laxative; the best
-were the red and the quince coloured. A laughable anecdote is told of a
-Spartan, who being invited to dine where sea-chestnuts were brought to
-table, took one upon his plate, and not knowing how they were eaten put
-it into his mouth, shell and all. Finding it exceedingly unmanageable,
-he turned it about for some time, seeking slowly and cautiously to
-discover the knack of eating it. But the rough and prickly shell still
-resisting his efforts, his temper grew ruffled: crunching it fiercely he
-exclaimed, “Detestable beast! Well! I will not let thee go now, after
-having thus ground thee to pieces; but assuredly I will never touch thee
-again.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 606:
-
- Athen. iii. 30. During their long fasts the modern Greeks also eat the
- cuttle-fish, snails, &c. Chandler, ii. 143.
-
-Footnote 607:
-
- Athen. iii. 35.
-
-Footnote 608:
-
- Athen. iii. 40. The taking of this fish at Sunium is thus described by
- Chandler: “Meanwhile our sailors, except two or three who accompanied
- us, stripped to their drawers to bathe, all of them swimming and
- diving remarkably well; some running about on the sharp rocks with
- their naked feet, as if devoid of feeling, and some examining the
- bottom of the clear water for the Echinus or sea-chestnut, a species
- of shell-fish common on this coast, and now in perfection, the moon
- being nearly at the full.” Vol. ii. p. 8.
-
------
-
-Oysters were esteemed good when boiled with mallows, or monks’
-rhubarb.[609] In general, however, the physicians of antiquity
-considered them hard of digestion. But lest the shelled-fish should
-usurp more space than is their due, we shall conclude with Archestratos’
-list, in which he couples with each the name of the place where the best
-were caught:
-
- For mussels you must go to Ænos; oysters
- You’ll find best at Abydos. Parion
- Rejoices in its urchins; but if cockles
- Gigantic and sweet-tasted you would eat,
- A voyage must be made to Mitylene,
- Or the Ambracian Gulf, where they abound
- With many other dainties. At Messina,
- Near to the Faro, are pelorian conchs,
- Nor are those bad you find near Ephesos;
- For Tethyan oysters, go to Chalcedon;
- But for the Heralds,[610] may Zeus overwhelm them
- Both in the sea and in the agora!
- Aye, all except my old friend Agathon,
- Who in the midst of Lesbian vineyards dwells.[611]
-
------
-
-Footnote 609:
-
- Demet. Scep. ap. Athen. iii. 41.
-
-Footnote 610:
-
- The κήρυξ, ceryx, so called because the Heralds (κήρυκες) used its
- shell instead of a trumpet, when making proclamation of any decree in
- the agora.
-
-Footnote 611:
-
- Athen. iii. 44. Cf. Polluc. vi. 47. The ancients made the most of
- their fish in every way. They were hawked about the streets in
- rush-baskets, as with us.—Athen. vii. 72.
-
------
-
-We have already mentioned the magnificent eels of Lake Copais,[612] in
-Bœotia, a longing for which appears to have been Aristophanes’s chief
-motive for desiring an end to the Peloponnesian war. Next in excellence
-were those caught in the river Strymon, and the Faro of Messina.[613]
-The ellops, by some supposed to be the sword-fish,[614] was found in
-greatest perfection near Syracuse; at least, in the opinion of
-Archestratos; but Varro and Pliny give the preference to that of Rhodes,
-and others to that of the Pamphylian sea.[615] The red mullet, the
-hepsetos, the hepatos, the elacaten, the thunny, the hippouros, the
-hippos, or sea-horse, found in perfection on the shores[616] of
-Phœnicia, the ioulis, the kichlè, or sea-thrush, the sea-boar, the
-citharos, the kordylos, the river cray-fish, the shark, which was eaten
-when young, the mullet, the coracinos, the carp, the gudgeon, the
-sea-cuckoo, the sea-wolf, the latos, the leobatos, or smooth ray, the
-lamprey,[617] the myræna, the anchovy,[618] the black tail, the torpedo,
-the mormyros, the orphos, the onos, the polypus, the crab, the
-sea-perch, the physa, or sea-tench, the raphis, the sea-dog,[619] the
-scaros, the sparos, the scorpios, the salpe, or stock-fish, the synodon,
-the sauros, the scepinos, or halibut, the sciaina, the syagris, the
-sphyræna, the sepia, the tœnia, the skate, the cuttle-fish, the hyca,
-the phagros, the perca cabrilla, the chromis, the gilthead, the
-trichidon, the thratta, and the turbot;[620] such is a list of the fish
-in common use among the Greeks. The species it will be seen has not in
-many cases been ascertained.
-
------
-
-Footnote 612:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Acharn. 845. Lysist. 36. There were in the fountain at
- Arethusa, as we are told by the philosophical Plutarch, eels that
- understood their own names.—Solert. Anim. § 23.
-
-Footnote 613:
-
- Archestratos gives the preference over all other eels to those caught
- in the Faro of Messina. Athen. vii. 53. Very excellent and large eels
- are taken in the lake of Korion, in Crete, according to the testimony
- of Buondelmonte. Pashley, i. 72.
-
-Footnote 614:
-
- On the sword-fish fishery in the Strait of Messina, see Spallanzani’s
- Travels in the Two Sicilies, vol. iv. p. 331, sqq.
-
-Footnote 615:
-
- Athen. vii. 57. Animadv. t. ix. p. 220.
-
-Footnote 616:
-
- The finest prawns were taken at Minturnæ, on the coast of Campania,
- exceeding in size those of Smyrna, and the crabs (ἀστακοὶ) of
- Alexandria.—Athen. i. 12.
-
-Footnote 617:
-
- See on Crassus’s lamprey. Plut. Solert. Animal. § 23.
-
-Footnote 618:
-
- Esteemed a delicacy cooked with leeks. Aristoph. Vesp. 494. Cf.
- Acharn. 901. Av. 76.
-
-Footnote 619:
-
- See Spallanzani’s Travels in the Two Sicilies, vol. iv. p. 343, sqq.
-
-Footnote 620:
-
- Athen. vii. 16–39. Aristot. Hist. Anim. iv. 2–6. viii. 3, 4, 5, 16.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
- POULTRY, FRUIT, WINE, ETC.
-
-
-The reader by this time will, probably, be willing to escape from fish,
-though it would be easy to treat him to many new kinds, and along with
-us take a slice of Greek pheasant, or the breast of an Egyptian quail.
-In other words, he will hear what we have to say on Hellenic poultry.
-Chrysippos, in his treatise on things desirable in themselves, appears
-to have reckoned Athenian cocks and hens among the number, and
-reprehends the people of Attica for importing, at great expense,
-barn-door fowls from the shores of the Adriatic, though of smaller size,
-and much inferior to their own; while the inhabitants of those
-countries, on the other hand, were anxious to possess Attic
-poultry.[621] Matron, the parodist, who furnishes an amusing description
-of an Athenian repast, observes, that excellent wild ducks were brought
-to town from Salamis, where they grew fat in great numbers on the
-borders of the sacred Lake.[622]
-
------
-
-Footnote 621:
-
- Athen. vii. 23.
-
-Footnote 622:
-
- Athen. iv. 23.
-
------
-
-The thrush,[623] reckoned among the greatest delicacies of the ancients,
-generally at grand entertainments formed part of the propoma, or first
-course, and was eaten with little cakes, called ametiskoi. If we may
-credit Epicharmos, a decided preference was given to such as fed on the
-olive. Aristotle divides the thrush into three species, the first and
-largest of which he denominates Ixophagos, or the “mistletoe-eater;” it
-was of the size of a magpie. The second, equal in bigness to the black
-bird, he calls Trichas,[624] and the third, and smallest kind, which was
-named Ilas or Tulas, according to Alexander, the Myndian, went in
-flocks, and built its nest like the swallow.[625] Next in excellence to
-the thrush was a bird known by a variety of names, elaios, pirias,
-sycalis,[626] the beccafico of the moderns, which was thought to be in
-season when the figs were ripe. They likewise ate the turtle and the
-ringdove,[627] which are excellent in Egypt; the chaffinch, to whose
-qualities I cannot bear testimony; and the blackbird. Nor did they spare
-the starling, the jackdaw, or the strouthanion, a small bird for which
-modern languages cannot afford a name. Brains were thought by the
-ancient philosophers an odious and cannibal-like food, because they are
-the fountain of all sensation; but this did not prevent the gourmands
-from converting pigs’ brains into a dainty dish,[628] and their taste
-has maintained its ground in Italy. Partridges, wood-pigeons, geese,
-quails, jays, are also enumerated among the materials of an Hellenic
-banquet.
-
------
-
-Footnote 623:
-
- The solitary sparrow inhabits the cliffs of Delphi, and the
- song-thrush is heard in the pine woods of Parnassus. Above these, when
- the heights of the mountain are covered with snow, is seen the
- Emberiza Nivalis, inhabitant alike of the frozen Spitzbergen, and of
- the Grecian Alp.—Sibthorpe in Walp. Mem. i. 76, seq. Homer is said to
- have written a poem called Ἐπικιχλίδες, because when he sung it to the
- boys they rewarded him with thrushes. In consequence of the estimation
- in which these birds were held κιχλίζω “to feed on thrushes,” came to
- signify “to live luxuriously.”—Payne Knight, Prolegg. ad Hom. p. 8.
-
-Footnote 624:
-
- The red-winged thrush, well known to sportsmen in hard weather.
-
-Footnote 625:
-
- Athen. ii. 68.
-
-Footnote 626:
-
- Arist. Hist. Anim. viii. 3. p. 221. ix. 49. p. 305. Bekk.
-
-Footnote 627:
-
- The turtle and the wood-pigeon are found in the woods and thickets.
- Among the larks, I observed the crested lark to be the most frequent
- species, with a small sort, probably the alauda campestris of Linnæus.
- Blackbirds frequent the olive grounds of Pendeli.—Sibth. in Walp. Mem.
- i. 76.
-
-Footnote 628:
-
- Athen. ii. 69–72.
-
------
-
-Goose’s liver was in extreme request both at Rome and Athens.[629]
-Another dainty was a cock served up with a rich sauce, containing much
-vinegar. Aristophanes speaks of the pheasant in his comedy of the Birds;
-and, again, in the Clouds, Athenæus rightly supposes him to mean this
-bird, where others imagine he alludes to the horses of the Phasis.
-Mnesilochos, a writer of the middle comedy, classes a plucked pheasant
-with _hen’s milk_, among things equally difficult to be met with, which
-shows that the bird had not then become common. It obtained its name
-from being found in immense numbers about the embouchure of the Phasis,
-and the bird was evidently propagated very slowly in Greece and Egypt,
-since we find Ptolemy Philadelphos, in a grand public festival at
-Alexandria, exhibiting it, among other rarities, such as parroquets,
-peacocks, guinea-fowl, and Ethiopian birds in cages.[630]
-
------
-
-Footnote 629:
-
- See the fragment of Eubulos’s Garland-Seller, in Athen. ix. 33.
-
-Footnote 630:
-
- Athen. ix. 38.
-
------
-
-Among the favourite game of the Athenian gourmands was the Attagas,[631]
-or francolin, a little larger than the partridge, variegated with
-numerous spots, and of common tile colour, somewhat inclining to red. It
-is said to have been introduced from Lydia into Greece, and was found in
-extraordinary abundance in the Megaris. Another of their favourites was
-the porphyrion, a bird which might with great advantage be introduced
-into many countries of modern Europe, since it was exceedingly domestic,
-and kept strict watch over the married women, whose _faux pas_ it
-immediately detected and revealed to their husbands, after which,
-knowing the revengeful spirit of ladies so situated, it very prudently
-hung itself. It is no wonder, therefore, that the breed has long been
-extinct, or that the remnant surviving has taken refuge in some remote
-region, where wives require no such vigilant guardians. In the matter of
-eating it agreed exactly with Lord Byron, loving to feast alone, and in
-retired nooks, where none could observe. Aristotle describes this half
-fabulous bird as unwebfooted, of blue colour, with long legs, and red
-beak. The porphyrion was about the size of a cock, and originally a
-native of Libya, where it was esteemed sacred.[632]
-
------
-
-Footnote 631:
-
- No bird appears to have puzzled commentators more than the _attagas_,
- some supposing it to be the _francolin_, or grouse, which is
- Schneider’s opinion; others, as Passow, the _hazel-hen_; others,
- again, as Ainsworth, consider it to have been a delicious bird,
- resembling our wood-cock, or snipe. Mr. Mitchell’s edit. of the
- Acharnæ of Aristophanes, 783.—This learned writer professes not to
- understand what Schneider means by _francolin_. The word in Italian is
- _francolino_, as appears from Bellon. v. 6: Les Italiens ont nommé cet
- oiseau Francolin, que parcequ’il est franc dans ce pays, c’est-à-dire,
- qu’il est defendu au peuple d’en tuer: il n’y a que les princes qui
- aient cette prérogative.—Valmont de Bomare, ii. 739.—Hardouin thinks,
- that the Attagas is the _gallina rustica_, or _gelinotte de bois_,
- which Laveaux explains to be a sort of partridge.—Cf. Dict. Franç. in
- voce, and Plin. Hist. Nat. xi. 68. ed. Franz. Cf. Schol. Aristoph.
- Vesp. 257. This bird was plentiful about Marathon, Pac. 249.
-
-Footnote 632:
-
- Athen. ix. 40. Aristoph. Hist. Anim. i. 17. viii. 6.
-
------
-
-Another bird common in Greece, but now no longer known, was the
-porphyris, by some confounded with the foregoing. Of the partridge,
-common throughout Europe, we need merely remark, that both the gray and
-the red (the _bartavelle_ of the French) were common in Greece.
-
-If we pass from the poultry to puddings and soups,[633] we shall find
-that the Athenians were not ill-provided with these dainties. They even
-converted gruel into a delicacy,[634] and it is said, that the best was
-made at Megara. They had bean soup, flour soup, ptisans made with
-pearl-barley or groats.[635] We hear, also, of a delicately-powdered
-dish or soup which was sprinkled over with fine flour and olives. The
-polphos, evidently _soupe à la julienne_, is said, by some, to have been
-composed of scraped roots, vegetables, and flour. Others take it to mean
-a sort of made-dish, resembling macaroni or vermicelli. Another kind of
-soup was the _kidron_, which, according to Pollux,[636] they made of
-green wheat, roasted and reduced to powder.
-
------
-
-Footnote 633:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 103.
-
-Footnote 634:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 803.—It was thought, also, to deserve a place
- among the offerings to Asclepios, especially by pious old women, who,
- having lost their teeth, could eat nothing else. In lieu of the
- classical name of ἀθάρα, this gruel obtained, in the dialect of the
- common people, the more homely designation of κουρκούτη. Schol. Plut.
- 673.
-
-Footnote 635:
-
- Athen. iii. 101. iv. 30.
-
-Footnote 636:
-
- Onomast. vi. 62.—Made usually from panic seed in Caria.—Schol.
- Aristoph. Pac. 580, et Eq. 803. Cf. Goguet, Origine des Loix, i. 212.
-
------
-
-There was one dish fashionable among the ancient Greeks mistaken by our
-neighbours, the French, for plum-pudding, which is still found in
-perfection in the Levant, where I have many times eaten of it. Julius
-Pollux[637] has preserved the recipe for making it, and we can assure
-our gourmands, that nothing more exquisite was ever tasted, even in the
-best café of the Palais Royal. They took a certain quantity of the
-finest clarified lard, and, mixing it up with milk until it was quite
-thick, added an equal portion of new cheese, yolks of eggs, and the
-finest flour. The whole rolled up tight in a fragrant fig-leaf, was then
-cooked in chicken-broth, or soup made with kid’s flesh. When they
-considered it well done, the leaf was removed and the pudding soused in
-boiling honey. It was then served up hissing-hot. All the ingredients
-were used in equal proportions, excepting the yolks of eggs, of which
-there was somewhat more than of anything else, in order to give firmness
-and consistency to the whole.[638]
-
------
-
-Footnote 637:
-
- Onomast. i. 237. vi. 57, 69.
-
-Footnote 638:
-
- Vid. Schol. Arist. Eq. 949. Acharn. 1066.
-
------
-
-Black puddings, made with blood, suet, and the other materials now used
-were also common at Athens.[639] Mushrooms and snails were great
-favourites; and Poliochos speaks of going out in the dewy mornings in
-search of these luxuries.[640] In spring, before the arrival of the
-swallow, the nettle was collected and eaten, it being then young and
-tender.[641] Leeks, onions, garlic, were in much request, the last
-particularly, which grew in great plenty in the Megarean territory, and
-hence, perhaps, the inhabitants were accounted hot and quarrelsome,
-garlic being supposed to inspire game, even in fighting cocks, to which
-it was accordingly given in great quantities.[642]
-
------
-
-Footnote 639:
-
- Aristoph. Eq. 208.
-
-Footnote 640:
-
- Athen. ii. 19.
-
-Footnote 641:
-
- Aristoph. Eq. 422. Brunck.
-
-Footnote 642:
-
- Aristoph. Pac. 503.
-
------
-
-Among the herbs eaten by his countrymen, Hesiod enumerates the
-mallow,[643] and the asphodel, which are likewise said by Aristophanes
-to have constituted a great part of the food of the early Greeks.
-Gœttling, therefore, not without reason, wonders that Pythagoras should
-have prohibited the use of the mallow. Lupines, pomegranates,
-horse-radish, the dregs of grapes and olives, all of which entered into
-the material of an Attic entertainment, were commonly cried about the
-streets of Athens.[644] But these edible lupines, (θέρμοι) still eaten
-by the Egyptian peasantry and the poor generally throughout the Levant,
-must be distinguished from the common species. An anecdote of Zeno, of
-Cittion, will illustrate the character of this kind of pulse, with which
-the philosopher was evidently familiar. Being one day asked why, though
-naturally morose, he became quite affable when half-seas-over: “I am
-like the lupine,” he replied, “which, when dry, is very bitter, but
-perfectly sweet and agreeable after it has been well soaked.”[645]
-Kidney-beans, too, were in much request, and pickled olives, slightly
-flavoured with fennel.
-
------
-
-Footnote 643:
-
- Cf. Lucian. Amor. § 33.
-
-Footnote 644:
-
- Cf. Arist. Acharn. 166. Eq. 493. Athen. xiii. 22.
-
-Footnote 645:
-
- This is as good as the reply of an English labourer who, being
- reproached for babbling in his drink, replied, “Sir, I am like a
- hedgehog—when I’m wet I open.”
-
------
-
-The radish[646] was esteemed a great delicacy, particularly that of
-Thasos and Bœotia. And the seeds of the ground-pine,[647] still eaten as
-a dessert in Italy, entered, in Greece, also into the list of edible
-fruits.[648] The tree, I am informed, has been introduced into England,
-but I have nowhere seen its fruit brought among pears, walnuts, and
-apples, to table. Hen’s milk has already been spoken of among the good
-things of Hellas;[649] but lest the reader should suspect us of amusing
-him with fables, it should be explained, that the white of an egg was so
-called by Anaxagoras.[650] Eggs of all kinds were much esteemed.
-Sometimes they were boiled hard, and cut in two with a hair; but, many
-writers, confounding ὄα, the berries of the service-tree, with ὠὰ, eggs,
-have imagined that the Athenians, in the capriciousness of their
-culinary taste, actually ate pickled eggs, an idea which stirs to the
-bottom the erudite bile of David Ruhnken.[651] Generally, eggs were
-eaten soft, as with us, or swallowed quite raw. Those of the pea-hen
-were considered the most delicate; next to these, the eggs of the
-chenalopex bergander, or Egyptian goose, and, lastly, those of the hen.
-This, at least, is the opinion of Epicrates and Heracleides, of
-Syracuse, in their treatises on cookery.[652]
-
------
-
-Footnote 646:
-
- Hesiod. Oper. et Dies, 41. ed. Gœttling. Aristoph. Plut. 543.
- Brunck.—Lobeck. Aglaoph. p. 899.
-
-Footnote 647:
-
- The kernels of the stone-pine are brought to table in Turkey. They are
- very common in the kitchens of Aleppo.—Russell ap. Walp. Mem. i. 236.
-
-Footnote 648:
-
- Tim. Lex. Platon. v. στέμφυλα, p. 239. Ruhnken. Athen. ii. 45.
-
-Footnote 649:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 505.
-
-Footnote 650:
-
- Athen. ix. 37.
-
-Footnote 651:
-
- Not. ad Timæi Lex. Plat. p. 189. Cf. Platon. Conviv. Oper. iv. 404.
- Bekk. Athen. ii. 50.
-
-Footnote 652:
-
- Athen. ii. 50.
-
------
-
-As when an entertainment was given the host necessarily expected his
-guests to make a good dinner, they usually commenced the business of the
-day with an antecœnium or whet, consisting of herbs of the sharpest
-taste. At Athens, the articles which generally composed this course were
-colewort, eggs, oysters, œnomel—a mixture of honey and wine—all supposed
-to create appetite.[653] To these even in later times were added the
-mallow and the asphodel, king’s-spear or day-lily, gourds,[654] melons,
-cucumbers. The melons of Greece are still delicious, and famous as ever
-in the Levant. Antioch was celebrated for its cucumbers, Smyrna for its
-lettuces. Mushrooms were always a favourite dish;[655] and they had
-receipts for producing them, which even now, perhaps, may not be wholly
-unworthy of attention.
-
------
-
-Footnote 653:
-
- Potter, Archæol. Græc. iv. 20. Stuck. Antiq. Conviv. iii. 11. Petron.
- Satyr. § 31. 33.
-
-Footnote 654:
-
- The σίκυα or long Indian gourd, so called because the seed was first
- brought from India to Greece. Athen. ii. 53.
-
-Footnote 655:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 189. 191. Eccles. 1092. Theoph. Hist. Plant.
- vii. 13. 8. Dioscor. ii. 200, seq. Athen. xii. 44. 70. Plin. Hist.
- Nat. xix. 11.
-
------
-
-The use, however, of this kind of food was always attended with great
-danger, there being comparatively few species that could be safely
-eaten. Persons were frequently poisoned by them, and a pretty epigram of
-Euripides has been preserved, commemorating a mother and three children
-who had been thus cut off, in the island of Icaros:
-
- Bright wanderer through the eternal way,
- Has sight so sad as that which now
- Bedims the splendour of thy ray,
- E’er bid the streams of sorrow flow?
- Here, side by side, in death are laid
- Two darling boys, their mother’s care;
- And here their sister, youthful maid,
- Near her who nursed and thought them fair.[656]
-
------
-
-Footnote 656:
-
- Athen. ii. 57.
-
------
-
-Diodes, of Carystos, enumerates among wholesome vegetables the red beet,
-the mallow, the dock, the nettle, orach, the bolbos, or truffle, and the
-mushroom, of which the best kinds were supposed to grow at the foot of
-elm and pine trees.[657]
-
------
-
-Footnote 657:
-
- Athen. ii. 57. 59.
-
------
-
-The sion[658] (sium latifolium), another of their vegetables, is a plant
-found in marshes and meadows, with the smallage.[659]
-
------
-
-Footnote 658:
-
- Plin. Hist. Nat. xix. 11. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 191. 199.
-
-Footnote 659:
-
- Dioscorid. ii. 154.
-
------
-
-Another plant, of far greater celebrity, was the Silphion,[660] once
-extremely plentiful in Cyrenaica, as also, though of an inferior
-quality, in Syria, Armenia, and Media, but afterwards so rare as to be
-thought extinct. Besides being used in seasoning soups and sauces, and
-mixed with salt for giving a superior flavour to meat, its juice
-occupied a high place among the materia medica.[661] A single plant was
-discovered in the reign of Nero, and sent to Rome as a present to the
-Emperor. Its seed, according to Pollux,[662] was called magudaris, its
-root silphion, the stem caulos, and the leaf maspeton. Be this as it
-may, it communicated to the sauces in which it was infused a pungent and
-somewhat bitter taste, and was in no favour with Archestratos.[663]
-
------
-
-Footnote 660:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 891.
-
-Footnote 661:
-
- It is called _laser_, Plin. Hist. Nat. xix. 15. Hard. But Philoxenos,
- in his Glossary, writes λάσαριον. Idem. See Dioscorid. iii. 76; and
- Strabo, xi. 13. t. ii. p. 452. Cf. Ezek. Spanh. Diss. iv. De Usu et
- Præstant. Numism. p. 253, sqq. Brotier, in his notes on Pliny,
- observes, on the authority of Le Maire, that the Silphion is still
- found in the neighbourhood of Derné, where it is called _cefie_ or
- _zerra_.
-
-Footnote 662:
-
- Onomast. vi. 67.
-
-Footnote 663:
-
- Ap. Athen. ii. 64.
-
------
-
-We come now to the fruit,[664] and shall begin with that which was the
-pride of Attica, the fig.[665] According to traditions fully credited in
-Athens, figs were first produced on a spot near the city, on the road to
-Eleusis, thence called _Hiera Sukè_, “the sacred fig-tree.”[666] Like
-its men, the figs of Attica were esteemed the best in the world, and to
-secure an abundant supply for the use of the inhabitants it was
-forbidden to export them. As might have been expected, however, this
-decree was habitually contravened, and the informers against the
-delinquents were called sycophants, that is, “revealers of figs,”[667] a
-word which has been adopted by most modern languages to signify
-mean-souled, dastardly persons, such as informers always are. The
-fig-tree of Laconia was a dwarfed species, and its fruit, according to
-Aristophanes,[668] savoured of hatred and tyranny, like the people
-themselves.
-
- There is no kind of fig,
- Whether little or big,
- Save the Spartan, which here does not grow;
- But this, though quite small,
- Swells with hatred and gall,
- A stern foe to the Demos, I trow.[669]
-
-Aristophanes, in Athenæus, speaking of fruit, couples myrtle-berries
-with Phibaleian figs.[670]
-
------
-
-Footnote 664:
-
- Plat. Tim. t. vii. p. 119. Bruyerin. de Re Cib. 1. xi. p. 447, sqq.
-
-Footnote 665:
-
- At present the green fig is esteemed insipid in Greece. Hobhouse,
- Travels, i. 227.
-
-Footnote 666:
-
- Athen. iii. 6. Meurs. Lect. Att. v. 16. p. 274.
-
-Footnote 667:
-
- Athen. iii. 6.
-
-Footnote 668:
-
- Fragm. Γεωργ. iv. t. ii. p. 268. Bekk.
-
-Footnote 669:
-
- Athen. iii. 7.
-
-Footnote 670:
-
- See Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 707.
-
------
-
-According to the ancients, there were certain sorts of fig-trees that
-bore twice, thrice, and even four times, in the year. Sosibios, the
-Laconian, attributing the discovery of the fig to Bacchos, observes,
-that for this reason the god was, at Sparta, worshiped under the name of
-_Sukites_. Andriscos, however, and Agasthenes, relate that this divinity
-obtained the name of Meilichios, “the gracious,” among the Naxians
-because he taught them the use of figs. To eat figs at noon was regarded
-as unwholesome; and they were at all times supposed to be highly
-prejudicial to the voice, for which reason singers should carefully
-eschew them.[671]
-
------
-
-Footnote 671:
-
- Athen. iii. 19.
-
------
-
-The apples of Delphi enjoyed great celebrity, and probably, therefore,
-were mild, since these were thought superior, or at least more
-wholesome, than sharp ones. Quinces they esteemed still more salubrious
-than apples, and, during certain public rejoicings, this fruit, handfuls
-of myrtle-leaves, crowns of roses and violets, were cast before the cars
-of their princes and other great men.[672] The Greeks loved to connect
-something of the marvellous with whatever they admired. To the quince
-they attributed the honour of being a powerful antidote, observing that
-even the Phariac poison, though of extremely rapid operation, lost its
-virulence if poured into any vessel which had held quinces and retained
-their odour.[673] According to Hermon, in his Cretic Glossaries, the
-quince was called Kodumala, in Crete. Sidoüs, a village of Corinthia,
-was famous for its fine apples; and even Corinth itself, the “windy
-Ephyrè” of Homer, produced them in great perfection.
-
- “O where is the maiden, sweeter far
- Than the ruddy fruits of Ephyrè are?
- When the winds of summer have o’er them blown,
- And their cheeks with autumn’s gold have been strown!”[674]
-
------
-
-Footnote 672:
-
- Stesich. ap. Athen. iii. 20.
-
-Footnote 673:
-
- Athen. iii. 21.
-
-Footnote 674:
-
- Antigonos Carystios, ap. Athen. iii. 22.
-
------
-
-Another favourite fruit was the peach, introduced from Persia into
-Greece.[675] The citron, too, though supposed by some not to have been
-known to the ancient inhabitants of Hellas, perfumed in later ages the
-tables of the Greeks with its delicious fragrance. This is the fruit
-which, according to King Juba, was called in Africa “the apple of the
-Hesperides,” a name bestowed by Timachidas on a rich and fragrant kind
-of pear called _epimelis_. The oldest Greek writer who has described the
-citron tree is Theophrastus,[676] who says it was found in Persia and
-Media. Its leaf, he observes, resembled that of the laurel, the
-strawberry tree, or the walnut. Like the wild pear tree, and the
-oxyacanthos, it has sharp, smooth, and very strong prickles. The fruit
-is not eaten, but together with the leaves exhales a sweet odour, and
-laid with cloths in coffers protects them from the moth. The citron
-tree, is always covered with fruit, some ripe and fit to be gathered,
-others green, with patches of gold; and, in the midst of these, are
-other branches covered thick with blossoms. It now forms the fairest
-ornaments of the gardens of Heliopolis, where it shades the Fountain of
-the Sun.
-
------
-
-Footnote 675:
-
- Vict. Var. Lect. p. 892.
-
-Footnote 676:
-
- Hist. Plantarum, iv. 4. 2. The orange attains great perfection in
- Crete. Mr. Pashley speaks of twelve different kinds, and nearly as
- many sorts of lemons. Travels, i. 96, seq.
-
------
-
-Antiphanes observes, in his Bœotian, that it had only recently been
-introduced into Attica:
-
- A. ’Twould be absurd to speak of what’s to eat,
- As if you thought of such things; but, fair maid,
- Take of these apples.
-
- B. Oh, how beautiful!
-
- A. They are, indeed, since hither they but lately
- Have come from the great king.
-
- B. By Phosphoros!
- I could have thought them from the Hesperian bowers,
- Where th’ apples are of gold.
-
- A. There are but three.
-
- B. The beautiful is no where plentiful.[677]
-
------
-
-Footnote 677:
-
- Ap. Athen. iii. 27. Mitford, Hist. Greece, i. 154, note 59, misled by
- Barthelemy (Anacharsis, ch. 59) confounds Antiphanes, the comic poet,
- born B. C. 407 (Clinton, Fast. Hellen. ii. 81) with Antiphon, the
- master of Thucydides, born B. C. 479, and who died in the year 411,
- four years before the birth of Antiphanes.—Clinton, ii. 31, 37.
-
------
-
-Athenæus, after quoting the testimony of poets, relates a curious
-anecdote _à propos_ of citrons, which I shall here repeat: it has,
-probably, some reference to the secret of the Psylli. An opinion, it
-seems, prevailed in Egypt, that a citron eaten the first thing in the
-morning was an antidote against all kinds of poison, whether taken into
-the stomach, or introduced by puncture into the blood, and the notion
-arose out of the following circumstance. A governor of Egypt, in the
-time of the Emperors, had condemned two criminals to be executed, in
-obedience to custom, by the bite of an asp. They were, accordingly, led
-in the morning towards the place of execution, and on the way the
-landlady of an inn, who happened to be eating citrons, compassionating
-their condition, gave them some which they ate. Shortly afterwards they
-were exposed to the hungry serpents, which immediately bit them, but
-instead of exhibiting the usual symptoms followed by death, they
-remained uninjured. At this the governor marvelled much, and at length
-demanded of the soldier who guarded them, whether they had taken
-anything previously to their arrival. Learning what had happened he put
-off the execution to the following day, and ordering a citron to be
-given to one and not to the other, they were once more exposed to the
-bite of the asp. The wretch who had eaten nothing died soon after he was
-bitten, but the other experienced no inconvenience. Similar experiments
-were several times afterwards made by others, until it was at length
-ascertained that this exquisite fruit is really an antidote against
-poisons.[678]
-
------
-
-Footnote 678:
-
- Athen. iii. 28.
-
------
-
-Another fruit of which great use was made, was the damascene plum,
-sometimes confounded with the brabylon. The cherry,[679] introduced into
-Italy by Lucullus, was known to the Greeks[680] at a much earlier
-period, and is described by Theophrastus. The wild service berry,[681]
-the dwarf cherry, the arbutus fruit, and the mulberry, formed part of
-their dessert. Even the blackberry, when perfectly ripe, was not
-disdained.[682] In fact, both the mulberry and blackberry were esteemed
-a preventive of gout, and an ancient writer relates, that this kind of
-fruit having failed during a period of twenty years, that disease
-prevailed like an epidemic, attacking persons of both sexes and all
-ages, and extending its ravages even to the sheep and cattle.
-
------
-
-Footnote 679:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii. 13, 1.
-
-Footnote 680:
-
- It was spoken of by Xenophanes in his treatise περὶ φύσεως. Poll. vi.
- 46. Now this philosopher was born about the 40th Olympiad, 620 B.
- C.—Clinton, Fast. Hellen. ii. sub an. 477.
-
-Footnote 681:
-
- The berry of the cedar, about the same size as that of the myrtle, had
- a pleasant taste, and was commonly eaten.—Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii.
- 12. 3.
-
-Footnote 682:
-
- Athen. ii. 33–37. A dainty of a very peculiar character is sometimes
- seen on the tables of the modern Greeks. “We were served also with
- some φασκομῆλια, or sage apples, the inflated tumours formed upon a
- species of sage, and the effect of the puncture of a cynops.”—Sibth.
- in Walp. Mem. t. i. p. 62. Cf. Sibth. Flor. Græc. t. i. pl. 15.
-
------
-
-Filberts, walnuts, and almonds,[683] deservedly held a high place in the
-estimation of the ancients. Of almonds, the island of Naxos had the
-reputation of producing very excellent ones, and those of Cypros also
-enjoyed considerable reputation. These latter were longer in form than
-the former; like pickled olives they were eaten at the commencement of a
-repast, for the purpose of producing thirst; and bitter almonds were
-considered a preservative against intoxication, as we learn from an
-anecdote of Tiberius’s physician, who could encounter three bottles when
-thus fortified, but easily succumbed if deprived of his almonds. This
-fruit being extremely common in Greece, they had their almond-crackers,
-as we have our nut-crackers, which at Sparta were called _moucerobatos_
-but _amygdalocatactes_ in the rest of Greece.[684]
-
------
-
-Footnote 683:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 11. 2.
-
-Footnote 684:
-
- Athen. ii. 40.
-
------
-
-The larger kind of chestnut, sometimes denominated the “acorns of Zeus,”
-appears to have been introduced into Greece from the countries round the
-Pontos Euxinos, where they were produced in great abundance,
-particularly in the environs of Heraclea. There was, likewise, a sort of
-chestnut imported from Persia, and another from the neighbourhood of
-Sardes, in Lydia. Both these and the walnut were considered
-indigestible; but not so the almond, of which it was thought great
-quantities might be eaten with impunity.[685] The best kinds were
-produced in Thasos and Cypros, and, when freshly gathered, the almonds
-of the south are, undoubtedly, of all fruit, the most delicate. The
-walnuts and chestnuts of Eubœa, in the opinion of Mnestheos, were
-difficult of digestion, but fattening; and no one can have frequented
-the eastern shores of the Mediterranean without observing what an
-important article of food, and how nourishing, they are.[686] The
-pistachio nut, produced from a tree resembling the almond-tree, was
-imported from Syria and Arabia.[687] The _persea_, now no longer known,
-but supposed to be represented on the walls of the Memnonium,[688] at
-Thebes, is, also, said, by Poseidonios, the stoic, to have grown in
-Arabia and Syria, and I brought home a quantity of leaves, preserved in
-an Egyptian coffin, which are, probably, those of this tree. Pears,
-which were brought to table floating in water,[689] and service-berries,
-were grown in great perfection in the island of Ceos, and Bœotia was
-famous for its pomegranates.[690]
-
------
-
-Footnote 685:
-
- Dioscorid. i. 176. Athen. ii. 42. Cf. Hippocrat. de Morb. ii. p. 484.
- Foës.
-
-Footnote 686:
-
- Athen. ii. 43.
-
-Footnote 687:
-
- Athen. xiv. 61.
-
-Footnote 688:
-
- We find that the Persea grew, likewise, in the island of Rhodes, but
- there, though flowers came, it produced no fruit.—Theoph. Hist. Plant.
- iii. 3, 5. For a full description of the tree see iv. 2, 5, and Cf.
- Caus. Plant. ii. 3, 7.—In its original country, Persia, the fruit of
- this tree is said to have been poisonous, for which reason the
- companions of Cambyses carried along with them numerous young trees,
- which they planted in various parts of Egypt, that the inhabitants,
- eating of the fruit, might perish. But, through the influence of soil
- and climate, the nature of the Persea was wholly changed, and, instead
- of a harsh and fatal berry, produced delicious fruit.—Ælian. de Nat.
- Animal. ap. Schneid. ad Theoph. Hist. Plant. iv. 2, 5. t. iii. p.
- 284.—Cf. Athen. xiv. 61.—Schweigh. Animadv. t. xii. p. 585. Plin. xv.
- 13. xvi. 46.
-
-Footnote 689:
-
- Athen. xiv. 63.
-
-Footnote 690:
-
- The best pomegranates, however, were grown in Egypt and
- Cilicia.—Theoph. Caus. Plant. ii. 13. 4.
-
------
-
-Speaking of this fruit, which the Bœotians call _sidè_, Agatharchides
-relates the following anecdote: A dispute arising between the Athenians
-and Bœotians, respecting a spot called _Sidè_, situated on the
-borders, Epaminondas, in order to decide the question, took out a
-pomegranate from under his robe, and demanded of the Athenians, what
-they called it. “_Rhoa_” they replied. “Very good,” said Epaminondas;
-“but we call it _Sidè_, and, as the place derives its name from the
-fruit which grows there in abundance, it is clear the land must belong
-to us.” And it was decided in favour of the Bœotians.[691]
-
------
-
-Footnote 691:
-
- Athen. xiv. 64.
-
------
-
-We have already observed, that the palm-tree flourished and produced
-dates in Greece, particularly in Attica and Delos;[692] but it is clear,
-from a remark of Xenophon, that these dates were small and of an
-inferior quality; for, speaking of the productions of Mesopotamia, he
-says, that they set aside for the slaves such dates as resembled those
-produced in Greece, while the larger and finer kinds,[693] which were
-like amber in colour, they selected for their own use. They were also
-dried, as they still are in the East, to be eaten as a dessert, at other
-seasons of the year. From which we learn, that the black date, which is
-larger and finer than the yellow, was not then cultivated in Persia. But
-neither dates, nor any other fruit, could compare with the grape, which
-is found in perfection in almost every part of Greece, where, as in
-Burgundy and, I presume, in the rest of France, the law regulated the
-period of the vintage, prohibiting individuals from gathering their
-grapes earlier under a heavy penalty.[694] The best kind of grape in
-Attica, like that of the _Clos Vougeot_ in Burgundy, was the
-_Nikostrateios_, supposed to be unrivalled for excellence, though the
-Rhodians pretended, in their _Hipponion_, to possess its equal.[695]
-
------
-
-Footnote 692:
-
- Theoph. Char. pp. 33, 233. Casaub. A very fine palm-tree is at present
- growing in one of the principal streets of Athens.—Blackwood’s
- Magazine, April, 1838.
-
-Footnote 693:
-
- Pollux, i. 73. Herod. i. 28, 172, 193. ii. 156. iv. 172, 183.
-
-Footnote 694:
-
- Plato de Legg. t. viii. p. 106. Bekk. Athen. xiv. 68.
-
-Footnote 695:
-
- Athen. xiv. 68. Cf. Bruyerin. de Re Cibaria, xi. 447, sqq.
-
------
-
-From the grape we pass naturally to wine, which has of itself formed the
-subject of many treatises. It will not, therefore, be expected that we
-should enter into very minute details; though, if we are sparing, it
-will certainly not be for want of materials. D’Herbelot[696] relates an
-oriental tradition which attributes the invention of wine to the ancient
-Persian monarch Giamshid; and Bochart, with some show of ingenuity,
-attributes to Bacchos, the Grecian inventor and god of wine, an origin
-which would confound him with the founder of Babylon.[697] A very
-celebrated wine, called _nectar_, is said to have been produced in the
-neighbourhood of that city.[698] But, according to Theopompos, it was
-the inhabitants of Chios who first planted and cultivated the vine, and
-from them the knowledge was transmitted to the other Greeks.[699]
-
------
-
-Footnote 696:
-
- Biliothèque Orientale, Article Giamschid.
-
-Footnote 697:
-
- Geog. Sacr. I. ii. 13.
-
-Footnote 698:
-
- Chæreas. ap. Athen. i. 58.
-
-Footnote 699:
-
- Athen. i. 47.
-
------
-
-Theophrastus[700] relates that, in the territory of Heraclea, in
-Arcadia, there was a wine which rendered men insane and women
-prolific.[701] In the environs of Cerynia, in Achaia, grew a vine, the
-wine of which blasted the fruit of the womb, nay, the very grapes were
-said to possess a similar quality.[702] At Thasos were two kinds of
-wine, of which the one caused stupefaction, while the other was in the
-highest degree exhilarating.[703] The wine called anthosmias,[704]
-according to Phanias of Eresos, was produced by mixing one part of
-salt-water with fifty parts of wine, and it was considered best when
-made with the grapes of young vines. The comic poets are eloquent in
-praise of the wines of Thasos, particularly of that mixed sort, of most
-agreeable flavour, which was drunk in their Prytaneion.
-Theophrastus[705] gives the recipe for making it. They threw, he says,
-into the jars, a small quantity of flour kneaded with honey, the latter
-to impart a sweet odour to the wine, the former mildness. A similar
-effect was produced by mixing up hard inodorous wine with one which was
-oily and fragrant.[706]
-
------
-
-Footnote 700:
-
- Hist. Plant. ix. 18. 10, seq. In Athenæus, instead of Heraclea, we
- find Heræa, i. 57. Cf. Ælian. Var. Hist. xiii. 6.
-
-Footnote 701:
-
- The same effect was attributed to the waters of a fountain flowing
- near a temple of Aphrodite upon Mount Hymettos.—Chandler, ii. 164.
-
-Footnote 702:
-
- Plin. Hist. Nat. xiv. 18.
-
-Footnote 703:
-
- Athen. i. 57.
-
-Footnote 704:
-
- Ὁ ἀνθέων ὀσμὴν ἔχων οἶνος.—Etym. Mag. 108. 41. Cf. Suid. v. ἀνθοσμίας.
- t. i. p. 289. b. Aristoph. Plut. 808. Ran. 1181.
-
-Footnote 705:
-
- De Odor. 51.
-
-Footnote 706:
-
- Athen. i. 56.—Cydonia, in Crete, is conjectured, by Mr. Pashley, to
- have produced a good wine.—Travels in Crete, i. 23, seq.
-
------
-
-The wines of Cos, Myndos, and Halicarnassos, being thought to temper the
-crudity of rain and well-water, were, therefore, like all others
-containing a quantity of salt-water, in great request at Athens and
-Sicyon, where the springs were harsh. The Mareotic wine[707] was made
-from vineyards on the banks of the lake Mareotis, where the present
-Pasha has his gardens, in the vicinity of Marea, once a place of
-considerable importance, but now a small village. Attempts, however,
-have been made by M. Abro, an Armenian, once more to cover the ancient
-sites with vineyards, several acres of ground being planted with
-cuttings imported from the great nursery grounds at Chambéry, in Savoy.
-
------
-
-Footnote 707:
-
- Athen. i. 59.
-
------
-
-The town of Marea derived its name, according to tradition, from
-Maron,[708] a person who accompanied Bacchos in his military expedition,
-and, in honour of its founder, surrounded itself with the fruit-tree
-most agreeable to that god. The grapes here produced were delicious, and
-the wine, slightly astringent and aromatic, had an exquisite flavour.
-The Mareotic was white, of delicate taste, light, sparkling, and by no
-means heady. The best sort was the Tæniotic, so called from the _tænia_,
-“sandy eminences,” on which the vineyards were situated. This wine, in
-its pure state, had a greenish tinge, like the Johanisberg, and was rich
-and unctuous; but, mingled with water, it assumed the colour of Attic
-honey. By degrees the vine grew to be cultivated along the whole course
-of the Nile,[709] but its produce differed greatly in different places,
-both in colour and quality. Among the best was that of Antylla, a city
-near Alexandria, the revenues arising from which the ancient kings of
-Egypt, and afterwards those of Persia, settled on their queens for their
-girdle. The wines of the Thebaid, particularly those made about Koptos,
-were so extremely light as to be given even in fevers, as, moreover,
-they passed quickly, and greatly promoted digestion.[710]
-
------
-
-Footnote 708:
-
- Idem, i. 60. Horat. Carm. i. 37. 14.
-
-Footnote 709:
-
- The cultivation of the vine appears to have flourished in Egypt down
- to the reign of the Caliph Beamrillah, who commanded all the vineyards
- both in the valley of the Nile and in Syria to be utterly destroyed.
- Maured Allatafet Jemaleddini, p. 7.
-
-Footnote 710:
-
- Athen. i. 60.
-
------
-
-According to Nicander of Colophon, the word οἶνος, “wine,” was derived
-from the name of _Oineus_, who having squeezed out the juice of the
-grape into vases, called it, after his own name, _wine_. Diphilos,[711]
-the comic poet, gives us, however, something better than etymologies in
-that burst of Bacchic enthusiasm in which, in verses fragrant as
-Burgundy, he celebrates the praises of the gift of Dionysos:
-
- “Oh! friend to the wise, to the children of song,
- Take me with thee, thou wisest and sweetest, along;
- To the humble, the lowly, proud thoughts dost thou bring,
- For the wretch who has thee is as blythe as a king:
- From the brows of the sage, in thy humorous play,
- Thou dost smooth every furrow, every wrinkle away;
- To the weak thou giv’st strength, to the mendicant gold,
- And a slave warmed by thee as a lion is bold.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 711:
-
- Idem, ii. 1, where are collected many other etymologies and curious
- fables.
-
------
-
-Nectar, the poetical drink of the gods, was a sort of wine made near
-Olympos in Lydia, by mingling with the juice of the grape a little pure
-honey and flowers of delicate fragrance. Anaxandrides, indeed, regards
-the nectar as the food of the immortals, and ambrosia as their wine; in
-which opinion he is upheld by Alcman and Sappho. But Homer and Ibycos
-take an opposite view of the matter.[712]
-
------
-
-Footnote 712:
-
- Athen. ii. 8.
-
------
-
-Alexis speaks of those who are half-seas-over as much addicted to
-reasoning. Nicænetus[713] considers wine as the Pegasus of a poet,
-mounted on the wings of which like Trygæos on his beetle he soars “to
-the bright heaven of invention.” At the port of Munychia, too, good wine
-was held in high estimation; indeed, the honest folks of this borough,
-with small respect for the water nymphs, paid particular honour to the
-hero _Acratopotes_, that is, in plain English, “one who drinks unmixed
-wine.” Even among the Spartans,[714] in spite of their cothons, and
-black broth, certain culinary artistes set up in the Phydition, or
-common dining-hall, statues in honour of the heroes _Matton_ and
-_Keraon_, that is, the genii of eating and drinking. In Achaia, too,
-much reverence was paid to _Deipneus_, or the god who presides over good
-suppers.[715]
-
------
-
-Footnote 713:
-
- Or Nicarchos. Anthol. Græc. xiii. 29. Athen. ii. 9.
-
-Footnote 714:
-
- Athen. ii. 9.
-
-Footnote 715:
-
- Athen. ii. 9. Cf. x. 9.
-
------
-
-As the Greeks had a marvellous respect for wine they, like the German
-paper enthusiast, almost appeared to imagine it could be made out of a
-stone. They had, accordingly, fig wine,[716] root wine, palm wine, and
-so on; and their made or mixed wines were without number. There was
-scarcely an island or city in the Mediterranean that did not export its
-wines to Athens: they had the Lesbian, the Eubœan, the Peparethian,
-the Chalybonian, the Thasian, the Pramnian, and the Port wine. We have
-already observed, that wine was drunk mixed with flour,[717] and in the
-island of Theræ it was thickened with the yolk of an egg. In the Megaris
-they prepared with raisins or dried grapes[718] a wine called _passon_,
-in taste resembling the Ægosthenic sweet wine, or the Cretan malmsey.
-But, however exquisite the wines themselves, it was not thought enough
-in the summer months unless they were brought to table cooled with ice
-or snow,[719] which was accordingly the practice.
-
------
-
-Footnote 716:
-
- Damm. 2224. βρύτον. Athen. x. 67. Plato de Rep. t. vi. p. 144. Xenoph.
- Anab. p. 54. 138. Cyrop. p. 522. Plin. Hist. Nat. xiii. 4. Diod. Sic.
- ii. 136. On the οἶνος συκίτης vid. Foës. Œcon. Hip. in v. Dioscorid.
- v. 40. Lotus wine. Theoph. Hist. Plant, iv. 3. 1. Herod, iv. 177.
- Athen. vii. 9–13.
-
-Footnote 717:
-
- Plato de Repub. t. vi. p. 144. Bekk. Athen. viii. 1. On the Pramnian
- cf. Athen. 1, 17.
-
-Footnote 718:
-
- Athen. x. 41.
-
-Footnote 719:
-
- Athen. x. 56.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
- ENTERTAINMENTS.
-
-
-Having now gone rapidly through the materials of which Grecian repasts
-consisted, it will next be necessary to describe the manner in which all
-these good things were disposed of, first to maintain the energy of the
-frame, and secondly, for mere pleasure and pastime. Locke, with many
-other modern philosophers, erroneously supposes the Greeks of remote
-antiquity to have been so abstemious as to content themselves with one
-meal per diem. But experience appears to have led all mankind on this
-point to much the same conclusion; viz., that health and comfort require
-men to eat at least thrice in the day,[720] which accordingly was the
-practice of the ancient Greeks, though Philemon and others enumerate
-four repasts. Our own ancestors, before the introduction of tea and
-coffee, appear to have been very well content with beer or ale for their
-morning’s meal, so that we could not pity the Greeks even though it
-should be found that they had nothing better[721] than hot rolls,
-muffins, or crumpets, with strawberries, grapes, pears, and a flask of
-Chian or Falernian. But they soon found the necessity of some warm
-beverage; and though it does not appear how it was prepared, they had a
-substitute for tea,[722] in use at Athens, in Eubœa, in Crete, and, no
-doubt, in all other parts of Greece. This meal, of whatever it
-consisted, was called _acratisma_, or _ariston_, and eaten at break of
-day.[723] Homer’s heroes, whose business was fighting, just snatched a
-hasty meal, and hurried to the field; but at Athens, where people had
-other employments, they breakfasted early, to allow themselves ample
-time for despatching their affairs in the city, if they had any, and
-afterwards at their neighbouring farms or villas.[724] The second
-repast, _deipnon_, or dinner, seems to have been eaten about eleven or
-twelve o’clock: the _hesperisma_,[725] equivalent to our tea, late in
-the afternoon, and the _dorpon_, or supper, the last thing in the
-evening. But of these meals two only were serious affairs, and the
-_hesperisma_ was often dispensed with altogether. In fact, Athenæus, a
-great authority on this subject, considers it perfectly absurd to
-suppose, that the frugal ancients could have thought of eating so often
-as three times in one day.[726]
-
------
-
-Footnote 720:
-
- Æschyl. Palamed. fr. 168. Klausen. Comm. in Agamemnon. p. 136.
-
-Footnote 721:
-
- In modern times a breakfast in the Troad often consists of grapes,
- figs, white honey in the comb, and coffee.—Chandler, i. p. 37.
-
-Footnote 722:
-
- Athen. xi. 26, 50. Pollux, ix. 67, sqq. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 643.
- Cf. Bœckh. Pub. Econ. of Athens, i. 140.
-
-Footnote 723:
-
- Which we may infer from a passage of Aristotle, Hist. Anim. vi. 8.
- where describing the habits of birds, he says, τῶν δὲ φαβῶν ἡ μὲν
- θήλεια ἀπὸ δείλης ἀρξαμένη τὴν τε νύχθ᾽ ὅλην ἐπῳάζει καὶ ἕως
- ἀκρατίσματος ὥρας, ὁ δ᾽ ἄῤῥην τὸ λοιπὸν τοῦ χρόνου.—One of the Homeric
- scholiasts is more explicit:—καὶ τὴν μὲν πρώτην ἐκάλουν ἄριστον, ἣν
- ἐλάμβανον πρωΐας σχεδὸν ἔτι σκοτίας οὔσης.—In Iliad β. 381. Cf. Athen.
- i. 19.
-
-Footnote 724:
-
- Xenoph. Œcon. xi. 14.
-
-Footnote 725:
-
- Philemon, ap. Athen. i. 19. Suid. v. δεῖπνον t. i. p. 671. a. b.
-
-Footnote 726:
-
- Deipnosoph v. 20.—τρισὶ δὲ οὐδέποτε οὔτε μνηστῆρες οὔτε μὴν κύκλωψ
- ἐχρῶντο τροφαῖς.—Schol. Il. β. 381. Yet Athenæus i. 19. speaks in one
- place of a fourth repast in Homeric times.—τῆς δὲ τετάρτης τροφῆς
- οὔτως Ὅμηρος μέμνηται—“σὺ δ᾽ ἔρχεο δειελιήσας.” ὁ καλοῦσι τινες
- δειλινὸν, ὁ ἐστι μεταξὺ τοῦ ὑφ’ ἡμῶν λεγομένου ἀρίστου καὶ δείπνου.
-
------
-
-As the greater includes the less, instead of confining ourselves to the
-ordinary daily dinner of a Greek, we shall in preference describe their
-grand entertainments, introducing remarks on the former by the way.
-These repasts were divided into three classes, the public dinner, the
-pic-nic, and the marriage feast. The last, so far as it had any peculiar
-features, has been described among the circumstances attending
-matrimony. We have, therefore, for the present, to do with two only;
-and, as the Greek contrived to throw much of his ingenuity into all
-matters connected with feasting and merry-making, the discussion of this
-part of our subject should savour strongly of mirth and jollity.
-
-The grand dinner,[727] which they called _eilapinè_, was generally given
-at the expense of an individual, and its sumptuousness knew no limit but
-the means of the host. Other kinds of feasts there were at which all the
-members of a tribe, a borough, or a fraternity, were entertained, not to
-speak for the present of the common tables of the Cretans, Spartans, or
-Prytanes of Athens. We now confine ourselves to those jovial assemblages
-of private citizens whose object in meeting was not so much the dinner,
-though that was not overlooked, as the elevation of animal spirits and
-flow of soul produced by the union of a thousand different
-circumstances.
-
------
-
-Footnote 727:
-
- On the subject of dining see Pollux, vi. 9, seq. with the notes of
- Jungermann, Kuhn, Hemsterhuis. &c.
-
------
-
-When a rich man desired to see his friends around him at his board, he
-delivered to his _deipnocletor_[728] a domestic kept for this purpose, a
-tablet, or as we should say, a card, whereon the names of the persons to
-be invited, with the day and hour fixed upon for the banquet, were
-inscribed. With brothers and other very near relations this ceremony was
-thought unnecessary.[729] They came without invitation. So likewise did
-another class of men, who, living at large upon the public and lighting
-unbidden upon any sport to which they were attracted by the savour of a
-good dinner, were denominated[730] FLIES, and occasionally SHADES or
-PARASITES. There was at one time a law at Athens, which a good deal
-nonplussed these gentlemen. It was decreed, that not more than thirty
-persons should meet at a marriage feast, and a wealthy citizen, desirous
-of “going the whole hog,” had invited the full complement. An honest
-Fly, however, who respected no law that interfered with his stomach,
-contrived to introduce himself, and took his station at the lower end of
-the table. Presently the magistrate appointed for the purpose, entered,
-and espying his man at a glance, began counting the guests, commencing
-on the other side and ending with the parasite. “Friend,” said he, “you
-must retire. I find there is one person more than the law allows.” “It
-is quite a mistake, sir,” replied the Fly, “as you will find if you will
-have the goodness to count again, beginning _on this side_.”[731] Among
-the Egyptians, who shrouded all their poetry in hieroglyphics, _a fly_
-was the emblem of impudence, which necessarily formed the principal
-qualification of a Parasite, and in Hume’s[732] opinion is no bad
-possession to any man who would make his way in the world.
-
------
-
-Footnote 728:
-
- Athen. iv. 70. Aristoph. Concion. 648, et Schol.
-
-Footnote 729:
-
- For a further account of the persons usually invited, see Athen. v. 4.
-
-Footnote 730:
-
- Plut. Sympos. vii. 6. Each guest was also followed by a footman who
- stood behind his master’s chair and waited on him. Casaub. ad Theoph.
- Char. p. 219. To persons of this description the guests delivered the
- presents that were made them, or if they happened to be bad
- characters, what they stole. Athen. iv. 2. Plut. Anton. § 28. Lucian.
- Conviv. seu Lapith. § 46. Rich men then as now were usually haunted by
- flatterers who would pluck off the burrs from their cloaks or the
- chaff which the wind wafted into their beards, and try to screw a joke
- out of the circumstance by saying, they were grown grey! Theoph. Char.
- c. ii. p. 7. If the patron joked, they would stuff their chlamys into
- their mouths as if they were dying of laughter. In the street they
- would say to the person they met, “Stand aside, friend, and allow this
- gentleman to pass!” They would bring apples and pears in their pocket
- for his little ones and be sure to give them in his sight, with great
- praise both of father and children.
-
-Footnote 731:
-
- Athen. vi. 45, seq.
-
-Footnote 732:
-
- Nothing, says this philosopher, carries a man through the world like a
- true genuine natural impudence. Essays, p. 9, quarto.
-
------
-
-Archbishop Potter,[733] in his account of Grecian entertainments,
-observes, upon the authority of Cicero and Cornelius Nepos, that women
-were never invited with the men.[734] But in this, as has been shown in
-the proper place, he was misled by those learned Romans; for, in many
-cities and colonies of Greece, no banquet was given at which they were
-not present. Even at Athens, where women of character thought it
-unbecoming to mingle in the convivial revelries of the men,[735] in
-which wine constantly overleaps the boundaries of decorum, their place
-was supplied by hetairæ, whose polished manners, ready wit, and enlarged
-and enlightened understandings, recommended them to their companions,
-and caused the laxity of their morals to be forgotten.[736] To proceed,
-however, with our feast: it will readily be supposed, that gentlemen
-invited out to dinner were careful to apparel themselves elegantly, to
-shave clean, and arrange their beards and moustachios after the most
-approved fashion of the day. Even Socrates, who cared as little as most
-people for external appearances, bathed, put on a pair of new shoes,
-brushed his chlamys, and otherwise spruced himself up when going to sup
-at Agathon’s with Phædros, Aristophanes, Eryximachos, and other
-exquisites. Even in Homeric times the bath was among the preliminaries
-to dinner, and guests arriving from a distance were attended through all
-the operations of the toilette by female slaves.[737] But this general
-ablution was not considered sufficient. On sitting down to table water
-was again presented to every guest in silver[738] lavers or ewers of
-gold. And since they ate with their fingers, as still is the practice in
-the Levant, it was moreover customary to wash the hands between every
-course,[739] and wipe them,[740] in remoter ages, with soft bread, which
-was thrown to the dogs, and in aftertimes with napkins. The Arcadians,
-however, about whose mountains all the old superstitions of Hellas clung
-like bats, found a very different use for the cakes with which they
-wiped their fingers. They supposed them to acquire some mystic powers by
-the operation, and preserved them as a charm against ghosts.[741]
-
------
-
-Footnote 733:
-
- Antiq. iv. 19.
-
-Footnote 734:
-
- Plato giving directions for a marriage feast, observes, that five male
- and five female friends should be invited; along with these, five male
- and five female relations, who with the bride and bridegroom, with
- their parents, grandfathers, &c., would amount to 28. De Legg. vi. t.
- vii. Schweigh. ad Athen. t. vi. p. 60. Among the ancient Etruscans,
- who, if not Greeks, had many Greek customs, the women reclined at
- table with the men, under the same cover. Athen. i. 42.
-
-Footnote 735:
-
- Isæus, De Pyrrh. Hered. § 2. That among the more simple and
- old-fashioned citizens of Athens, however, men and women, when of the
- same family or clan, dined together, we have the testimony of Menander
- to prove. He introduces one of his characters, apparently a fop,
- observing that it was a bore to be at a family party, where the
- father, holding the goblet in his hand, first made a speech, abounding
- with exhortations: the mother followed, and then the grandmother
- prated a little. Afterwards stood up her father, hoarse with age, and
- his wife, calling him her dearest; while he mean time nodded to all
- present. Athen. ii. 86.
-
-Footnote 736:
-
- Athen. v. 6.
-
-Footnote 737:
-
- Odyss. δ. 48, sqq.
-
-Footnote 738:
-
- Athen. ix. 27. In some luxurious houses wine mingled with spices was
- presented to the guests in lavers for the purpose of washing their
- feet. Plut. Phoc. § 20. In the palace of Trimalchio we find Egyptian
- servants pouring water, cooled with snow, on the hands of the guests.
- Petron. Satyr. p. 76.
-
-Footnote 739:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 412.
-
-Footnote 740:
-
- Rich purple napkins were sometimes used. Sappho in Deipnosoph. ix. 79.
- These articles are still in the Levant elaborately embroidered.
-
-Footnote 741:
-
- Athen. iv. 31.
-
------
-
-But we are proceeding too fast, for the guests are scarcely within
-doors, and our imagination has jumped to the conclusion. To return then.
-Immediately on entering, and when the host had welcomed and shaken hands
-with all, such gentlemen as possessed beards[742] had them perfumed over
-burning censers of frankincense, as ladies have their tresses on
-visiting a Turkish harem. The hands, too, after each lavation, were
-scented.[743] Before sitting down to table, and while the cooks were
-peppering the soup, frying the fish, or giving the roast-meat another
-turn, politeness required the guests to take a stroll[744] in the
-picture-gallery and admire the exquisite taste of their entertainer in
-articles of _virtu_.[745] Here while the scent of the savoury viands
-found its way through every apartment, and set the bowels of the hungry
-parasites croaking, the rogues who had lunched well at home leisurely
-discussed the merits of Zeuxis or Parrhasios, of Pheidias or Polygnotos,
-or opened wide their eyes at the microscopic creations of that Spartan
-artist whose chisel produced a chariot and four that could be hidden
-under the wing of a fly. At length, however, the connoisseurs were
-interrupted in their learned disquisitions by the entrance of Xanthos,
-Davos, or Lydos, with the welcome intelligence that dinner was on the
-table.
-
------
-
-Footnote 742:
-
- Hom. Odyss. γ. 33, seq. Athen. xv. 23. Similar customs still prevail
- in the Levant: “When we visited the Turks we were received with
- cordiality and treated with distinction. Sweet gums were burned in the
- middle of the room to scent the air, or scattered on coals before us
- while sitting on the sofa, to perfume our moustachios and garments,
- and at the door, at our departure, we were sprinkled with rose-water.”
- Chandler, ii. 150.
-
-Footnote 743:
-
- Athen. ix. 77.
-
-Footnote 744:
-
- Cf. Hom. Odyss. δ. 43, sqq.
-
-Footnote 745:
-
- Aristoph. Vesp. 1208. Athen. v. 6, where the splendid roofs and
- ornaments of the court are mentioned. These ornaments, κρεκάδια,
- whatever they were, must have been worth looking at. See the note of
- Casaubon, Animadv. in Athen. t. viii. p. 27, seq. Consult likewise the
- note on Aristophanes in Bekker’s edition, t. iii. p. 606.
-
------
-
-But the appetites of the gourmands had still to encounter another
-trial.[746] The Greeks were above all things a pious people, and
-regarded every banquet, nay, every meal, in the light of a sacrifice, at
-which the first and best portion should be offered as an oblation to the
-gods,[747] with invocations and prayer, after which it was considered
-lawful to attend to their own appetites. An altar, accordingly, of Zeus
-stood in the midst of every dining-room, on which these ceremonies were
-performed, and libations of pure wine poured.[748] This done, the guests
-took their places, in the earlier ages on chairs, but afterwards, when
-they had become familiar with the East, on rich sofas, arranged round
-the board.[749] Occasionally, however, even so late as the age of
-Alexander,[750] princes and other great men chose to adopt the ancient
-custom, and, on one occasion, that conqueror himself entertained four
-hundred of his officers, when seats of wrought silver, covered with
-purple carpets, were provided for all.
-
------
-
-Footnote 746:
-
- Athen. v. 7. Cf. Plat. Symp. t. iv. p. 376, et Xenoph. Conviv. ii. 1.
- Schweigh. Animadv. in Athen. viii. p. 26, seq.
-
-Footnote 747:
-
- Casaubon mentions this as a thing _nota eruditis_. Ad Theoph. Charact.
- p. 232; but we must not on that account pass it over. Alexis
- poetically deplores the miseries of the half-hour before dinner.
- Athen. i. 42.
-
-Footnote 748:
-
- There was in great houses a person whose duty it was to assign each
- guest his place at table, ὀνομακλήτωρ, or nomenclator. Athen. ii. 29.
-
-Footnote 749:
-
- Plin. xxxiii. 51. xxxiv. 8.
-
-Footnote 750:
-
- At most sumptuous entertainments _tasters_ were employed who, as in
- the East, made trial of the dishes before the guests, lest they should
- be poisoned. These persons were called ἐδέατροι and προτένθαι. Athen.
- iv. 71.
-
------
-
-The manner of reclining on the divans was not a little ludicrous. For,
-at the outset, while the appetite was keen, they stretched themselves
-flat upon their stomachs, in order, I presume, to command the use of
-both hands, and putting forward their mouths towards the table looked
-like so many sparrows with their open bills projecting over the nest.
-But this they could conveniently do only when they had a large space to
-themselves. When packed close, as usually they were, one man, the chief
-in dignity, throwing off his shoes,[751] placed himself on the upper end
-of the divan, that is, next the host, reclining on one elbow supported
-by soft cushions. The head of the next man reached nearly to his
-breast,—whence in Scripture, the beloved disciple is said to recline on
-the bosom of Christ,[752]—while the feet of the first extended down
-behind him. The third guest occupied the same position with respect to
-the second, and so on until five individuals sometimes crowded each
-other on the same sofa.
-
------
-
-Footnote 751:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 825.
-
-Footnote 752:
-
- John, xiii. 23. On the cushions, of which there was a great variety,
- see Pollux, vi. 9, where he reckons among them the ὑπηρέσιον, which
- Mitford confounds with the ἄσκωμα, or leathern bags which closed the
- row-port of war-galleys round the oar, to prevent the influx of
- sea-water.
-
------
-
-As the heaven of the poets was but a colossal picture of earth, we may,
-from the practice of the gods, infer what took place among mortals, even
-where supported by no direct testimony. Now, in Homer, we find gods and
-goddesses mingling freely together at the feast. Zeus takes the head of
-the table, next him sits his daughter Athena, while the imperial Hera,
-as Queen of Heaven, takes precedence of all the she Olympians, by
-placing herself at the head of the secondary divinities, directly
-opposite her husband. On one occasion we find Athena, the type of
-hospitality and politeness, yielding up her seat of honour to Thetis,
-because, as an Oceanid, she was somewhat of a stranger in Olympos.[753]
-Potter has discussed, with more learning than perspicuity, the question
-of precedence at table. To render the matter perfectly intelligible
-would require a plan of the dining-room; but wanting this, it may be
-observed, that in Persia the king, or host of whatever rank, sat in the
-middle, while the guests ranged themselves equally on both sides of him.
-
------
-
-Footnote 753:
-
- Iliad, ω. 100.
-
------
-
-In Greece, the bottom of the table was the end next the door. Here no
-one sat, it being left open for the servants to bring in and remove the
-dishes. From this point, on either side, the seats augmented in value,
-and consequently the post of greatest honour was the middle of the other
-extremity.[754] There were those, however, who made no account of these
-matters, but suffered their guests to seat themselves as they pleased.
-This was the case with Timon, who, having invited a very miscellaneous
-party, would not be at the pains to settle the question of precedence
-between them; but a pompous individual of aristocratic pretensions,
-dressed like an actor, arriving late with a large retinue, and surveying
-the company from the door, went away again, observing, there was no fit
-place left for him. Upon which the guests, who, as Plutarch remarks,
-were far gone in their cups, burst into shouts of laughter, and bade him
-make the best of his way home.[755]
-
------
-
-Footnote 754:
-
- Cf. Plut. Conv. Quæst. i. 3. Pet. Ciacon, De Triclin. p. 44.
-
-Footnote 755:
-
- Sympos. i. 2. 1.
-
------
-
-Some persons observed a very different order in arranging their guests,
-grouping those together whom they considered suited by age or temper to
-each other, in order by this contrivance to produce general harmony,—the
-vehement and impetuous being placed beside the meek and gentle, the
-silent beside the talkative, the ripe and full and expansive minds
-beside those who were ready to receive instruction. But very often, as
-at Agathon’s, those sat next each other, who were most intimately
-acquainted or united together by friendship; for thus the greatest
-freedom of intercourse with the brightest sallies of convivial wit were
-likely to be produced.
-
-At length, however, we must imagine the guests in their places and every
-thing in proper train. The servants bring in first one well-covered
-table, then a second, then a third, till the whole room is filled with
-dainties. Brilliant lamps and chandeliers poured a flood of light over
-the crowned heads of the guests, over the piled sweetmeats, over the
-shining dishes, and all the baits with which the appetite is caught.
-Then, on silver pateræ, cakes whiter than snow were served round. To
-these succeeded eggs, pungent herbs, oysters, and thrushes.[756] Next
-several dishes of rich eels, brown and crisp, sprinkled thickly with
-salt, followed by a delicious conger dressed with every rare device of
-cookery, calculated to delight the palate of the gods. Then came the
-belly of a large ray, round as a hoop; dishes, containing, one some
-slices of a sea-dog, another garnished with a sparos, a third with a
-cuttle-fish, or smoking polypus whose legs were tender as a chicken.
-While the sight of these dainties was feasting the eyes of the guests,
-the noses of the experienced informed them of the approach of a
-synodon,[757] which perfumed the passages all the way from the kitchen,
-and, flanked with calamaries, covered the whole table. Shrimps too were
-there in their yellow cuirasses, sweet in flavour as honey, with
-delicious varieties of puff pastry bordered with fresh green
-foliage.[758] The teeth of the parasites watered at the sight. But while
-deeply engaged in the discussion of these good things, in came some
-smoking slices of broiled thunny, a mullet fresh from the fish-kettle,
-with the teats of a young sow cooked _en ragoût_.
-
------
-
-Footnote 756:
-
- Probably also the myttotos, a dish flavoured with garlic and rich
- spices, formed a part of this course. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 173.
- Vesp. 62.
-
-Footnote 757:
-
- Athen. i. 8. vii. 46. 68. 119. Arist. Hist. Anim. v. 5.
-
-Footnote 758:
-
- Pollux, vi. 77.
-
------
-
-Pleasure of all kinds being supposed to promote digestion, female
-singers, flute-players and dancers, were meanwhile exercising their
-several arts for the entertainment of the guests. But as they paid very
-little attention to them till the rage of hunger was appeased, we shall
-imitate their example, and proceed with the gourmandize. One of the
-greatest accomplishments a boon companion could possess, was the power
-to seize with the fingers, and swallow hissing-hot, slices of grilled
-fish or morsels of lamb or veal broiled like kabobs, so as to be
-slightly burnt and cracking externally, while all the juice and flavour
-of the meat remained within. And the acquirement being highly important,
-great pains were taken to become masters of it. For this purpose some
-accustomed themselves daily to play with hot pokers, others
-case-hardened their fingers by repeatedly dipping them in water as hot
-as they could bear, and gargled their throats with the same, while one
-famous gourmand, more inventive than the rest, hit upon the ingenious
-device of wearing metallic fingerlings with which he could have seized a
-kabob even from the gridiron. These proficients in the art of eating, an
-art practised indeed by all, but possessed in perfection by very few,
-enjoyed great advantages over the ignorant and uninitiated. And
-accordingly, when invited out, they generally succeeded in bribing the
-cook to send in all his dishes hot as Phlegethon, that, while the more
-modest and inexperienced guests sat gazing on, they might secure the
-best cuts, and come again before the others could venture on a mouthful.
-
-Among the articles served up in this scorching state were calf’s pluck,
-pig’s harslet, with the chine, the kidneys, and a variety of small
-hors-d’œuvre. To these may be added the head of a sucking-kid which had
-tasted nothing but milk, baked between two dishes well luted together;
-giblets boiled; small, delicate hams with their white sward unbroken;
-pigs’ snouts and feet swimming in white sauce, which the gourmand
-Philoxenos thought a rare invention. Roast kid and lamb’s chitterlings,
-or the same viands boiled, formed a supplement to the dishes above
-enumerated, and were usually done so exactly to a turn, that even the
-gods, Bacchos for example, and Hermes, the parasites of Olympos, might
-have descended expressly to wag their beards over them. But the
-Levantines have always been enamoured of variety in cookery. Lady
-Wortley Montague counted fifty dishes served up in succession at the
-Sultana Hafiten’s table; and this she-barbarian, with all her wealth,
-could never rival the variety of invention of an ancient Eleian or
-Sicilian cook, who usually closed the list of his dainties with hare,
-chickens roasted to the gold-colour celebrated by Aristophanes,
-partridges, pheasants, wood-pigeons or turtle-doves, which your true
-gourmand should eat in the Thebaid, immediately after the close of
-harvest. But the dinner was not yet over. There still remained the
-dessert to be disposed of, consisting of pure honey from the district of
-the silver mines, curdled cream, cheese-tarts, and all that profusion of
-southern fruit of which we have already spoken.[759]
-
------
-
-Footnote 759:
-
- Athen. iv. 28. There was a kind of cheese, apparently much in use,
- imported from Gythion, in Laconia. Lucian. Diall. Hetair. xiv. 2.
-
------
-
-It is a well-known rule among modern gourmands, that no man should utter
-a syllable at table till the first course is removed, and precisely the
-same regulation prevailed among the ancients. Silence, however, was
-sometimes interrupted by the arrival of some wandering buffoon, who,
-after long roaming about in search of a dinner, happened, perhaps, to be
-attracted thither by the wings and feathers ostentatiously scattered
-before the door. This sort of gentry required no introduction: they had
-only to knock and announce themselves to ensure a ready welcome; for
-most men would willingly part with a share of their supper to be made
-merry over the remainder. The Athenian demos was pre-eminently of this
-humour. No king, in fact, ever kept up so large an establishment of
-fools by profession, or, which is much the same thing, of wits,—fellows
-who grind their understandings into pointed jests to tickle the risible
-muscles and expand the mouths of sleek junketters, who esteem nothing
-beyond eating and grinning.
-
-At a feast given by Callias, the famous jester, Philip, a-kin in spirit,
-I trow, to him of Macedon, presented himself in this way, and, on being
-admitted,—“Gentlemen,” said he, “you know my profession and its
-privileges, relying on which I am come uninvited, being a foe to all
-ceremony, and desiring to spare you the trouble of a formal
-invitation.”—“Take your place,” replied the host; “your company was much
-needed, for our friends appear to be plunged up to the chin in gravity,
-and would be greatly benefited by a hearty laugh.”[760]
-
------
-
-Footnote 760:
-
- Xenoph. Conv. i. 13, 14.
-
------
-
-In fact, the heads of the honest people were filled with very serious
-meditations, being all in love, and endeavouring to discover how each
-might excel the other in absurdity. Philip began to fear, therefore,
-that he had carried his jests to a bad market, and, in reality, made
-many vain attempts to kindle the spirit of mirth, and call home the
-imaginations of persons who had evidently suffered them to stray as far
-as the clouds. Aware that success on this point was indispensable to his
-subsistence, the jester grew piqued at the indifference of his hearers,
-and breaking off in the midst of his supper, wrapped up his head in his
-chlamys, and lay down like one about to die. “What, now!” cried Callias.
-“Has any sudden panic seized on thee, friend?”—“The worst possible, by
-Zeus!” replied Philip; “for, since laughter, like justice, has taken its
-leave of earth, my occupation is gone. Hitherto I have enjoyed some
-celebrity in this way, living at the public expense, like the guests of
-the Prytaneion, because my drollery was effective, and could set the
-table in a roar. But it is all over, I see, with me now, for I might as
-soon hope to render myself immortal as acquire serious habits.” All this
-he uttered in a pouting, desponding tone, as if about to shed tears. The
-company, to humour the joke, undertook to comfort him, and the effect of
-their mock condolences, and assurances that they would laugh if he
-continued his supper, was so irresistibly ludicrous, that Autolychos, a
-youthful friend of Callias, was at length unable to restrain his
-merriment; upon which the jester took courage, and apostrophising his
-soul, informed it very gravely, that there would be no necessity for
-them to part company yet.[761]
-
------
-
-Footnote 761:
-
- Xenoph. Conviv. i. 15. 16.
-
------
-
-The Greeks had, properly speaking, no drawing-rooms, so that, instead of
-retreating to another part of the house, they had the tables themselves
-removed immediately after dinner. Libations were then poured out to Zeus
-Teleios, and having sung a hymn to Phœbos Apollo, the amusements of the
-evening commenced. Professional singers and musicians were always hired
-on these occasions. They were female slaves, selected in childhood for
-their beauty and budding talents, and carefully educated by their
-owners.[762] When not already engaged, they stood in blooming bevies in
-the agora, waiting, like the Labourers of Scripture, until some one
-should hire them, upon which they proceeded, dressed and ornamented with
-great elegance, to the house of feasting. But, besides these, there were
-other _artistes_ who contributed to the entertainment of the demos,
-persons that, like our Indian jugglers, performed wonderful feats by way
-of interlude between the regular exhibitions of the damsels from the
-agora.[763]
-
------
-
-Footnote 762:
-
- Cf. Luc. Amor. § 10. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 1058.
-
-Footnote 763:
-
- The Indian jugglers themselves became known to the Greeks in the age
- of Alexander. Ælian. Var. Hist. viii. 7.
-
------
-
-Xenophon introduces into that living picture of Greek manners called the
-Banquet, a company of this kind. Finding Philip’s jokes dull things, he
-brings upon the scene a strolling Syracusan, with a beautiful female
-flute-player, a dancing girl who could perform surpassing feats of
-activity, and a handsome boy, who, besides performing on the cithara,
-was likewise able, on occasion, to sport the toe like his female
-companions.
-
-But, where philosophers were present, amusements of this kind were not
-allowed to occupy their whole attention. Every thing that occurred was
-made a handle for conversation, so that discussions, more or less
-lively, according to the temperament or ability of the interlocutors,
-formed the solid ground-work upon which the flowers of gaiety and
-laughter were spread. It was usual, immediately after supper, to perfume
-the guests, and great was the variety of unguents, essences, and odorous
-oils, made use of by the rich and vain upon these occasions; but when
-Callias proposed conforming to the mode in this particular, Socrates
-objected, observing, that the odour of honourable toil was perfume
-enough for a man.[764] Women, indeed, to whom every thing sweet and
-beautiful naturally belongs, might, he admitted, make use of perfume,
-and they did so most lavishly as we have already shown, when we entered
-their dressing-room and assisted at their toilette.
-
------
-
-Footnote 764:
-
- Xen. Conv. ii. 4.
-
------
-
-The Greeks, however, were careful not to convert their pleasure-parties
-into a mere arena for the exhibition of dialectic power. They from time
-to time glanced at philosophy, but only by the way, in the moments of
-transition from one variety of recreation to another. Their conversation
-was now and then brought to a pause by the rising of dancing girls,[765]
-robed elegantly, as we behold them still on vases and on bas-reliefs, in
-drapery adapted to display all the beauty of their forms. Hoops were
-brought them, and while musicians of their own sex called forth
-thrilling harmonies from the flute, they executed a variety of graceful
-movements, in part pantomimic,—now casting up the hoops, now catching
-them as they fell, keeping time exactly with the cadences of the flute.
-Their skill in this accomplishment was so great, that many were enabled
-to keep up twelve hoops in the air at the same time, while others made
-use of poniards.[766]
-
------
-
-Footnote 765:
-
- Lucian. Amor. § 10.
-
-Footnote 766:
-
- Artemid. Oneirocrit. i. 68. Xen. Conviv. ii. 8.
-
------
-
-When the novelty of this exhibition was worn off a little, other
-different feats followed. A hoop stuck all round with upright swords was
-placed in the midst of the apartment, into which one of the dancing
-girls threw herself head foremost, and while standing on her head
-balanced the lower part of her body round over the naked points, to the
-infinite terror of the spectators. She would then dart forth between the
-swords, and, with a single bound, regain her footing without the
-circle.[767] To add to the entertainment of the company, some
-parasitical buffoon would at times undertake to exhibit his awkwardness
-as a foil to the grace of the dancers, frisking about with the clumsy
-heaviness of a bear, and exaggerating his own ignorance of orchestics to
-excite a laugh. Sometimes the female dancer, like our own fair tumblers,
-would throw back her head till it reached her heels, and then putting
-herself in motion, roll about the room like a hoop.[768] To these, as a
-relief and a change, would succeed, perhaps, a youth with fine rich
-voice, who accompanied himself on the lyre with a song.
-
------
-
-Footnote 767:
-
- Poll. iii. 134.
-
-Footnote 768:
-
- Xen. Conviv. ii. 22.
-
------
-
-But nothing could entirely restrain the Greeks from indulging in the
-pleasure of listening to their own voices. The buzz of conversation
-would soon be heard in different parts of the room, which, when Socrates
-was present, sometimes provoked from him a sarcastic reproof. For
-example, at Callias’s dinner, observing the company broken up into
-knots, each labouring at some particular question in dialectics, and
-filling the apartment with a babel of confused murmurs; “As we talk all
-at once,” said he, “we may as well sing all at once;” and without
-further ceremony he pitched his voice and began a song.[769]
-
------
-
-Footnote 769:
-
- Xen. Conviv. vii. 1.
-
-But when professed jugglers happened to be present, gentlemen were not
-long abandoned to their own resources for amusement. Trick followed
-trick in rapid succession. To the pantomimic dances, and the sword
-circle, succeeded the exhibition of the potter’s wheel, in which a young
-girl seated on this machine, like a little Nubian at a cow’s-tail in a
-_sakia_, was whirled round with great velocity,[770] but retained so
-much self-possession as to be able both to write and to read. These,
-however, were merely sources of momentary wonder. Other amusements
-succeeded capable of exciting superior delight, such for example, as the
-mimetic dance, which, like that of the ghawazi, could tell a whole story
-of love, of adventure, of war, of religious frenzy and enthusiasm,
-transporting by vivid representations the fancy of the spectators to
-warmer or wilder scenes, calling up images and reminiscences of times
-long past, or steeping the thoughts in poetical dreams, filled with the
-caverned nymphs, the merry Seileni, the frisking satyrs, Bacchos, Pan,
-the Hours, the Graces, sporting by moonlit fountains, through antique
-woods, or on the shelled and sand-ribbed margin of the ocean.[771]
-
------
-
-Footnote 770:
-
- Xen. Conviv. vii. 3.
-
-Footnote 771:
-
- Plat. de Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 55. Bekk. Xen. Conv. vii. 5.
-
------
-
-On some occasions a slight dramatic scene was represented. Clearing the
-centre of the banqueting hall, the guests ranged themselves in order as
-at the theatre. A throne was then set up in the open space, and a female
-actor, representing Ariadne, entering, took her seat upon it, decked and
-habited like a bride, and supposed to be in her Thalamos at Naxos.
-Dionysos, who has been dining with Zeus, comes flushed with Olympian
-nectar into the harem to the sound of the Bacchic flute, while the nymph
-who has heard his approaching footsteps makes it manifest by her
-behaviour that her soul is filled with joy, though she neither advances
-nor rises to meet him, but restrains her feelings with difficulty, and
-remains apparently tranquil. The god, drawing near with impassioned
-looks, and dancing all the while, now seats himself, and places the fair
-one on his knee. Then, in imitation of mortal lovers, he embraces and
-kisses her, nothing loth; for, though she hangs down her head, and would
-wish to appear out of countenance, her arms find their way round his
-neck and return his embrace. At this the company, we may be sure,
-clapped and shouted. The god, encouraged by their plaudits, then stood
-up with his bride, and going through the whole pantomime of courtship,
-not coldly and insipidly, but as one whose heart was touched, at length
-demanded of Ariadne if in truth she loved him. Sometimes the mimic scene
-concealed beneath it all the reality of passion. From personating
-enamoured characters, the youthful actor and his partner learned in
-reality to love; and what was amusement to others contained a deep and
-serious meaning for them. This, Xenophon says, was the case with the
-youth and maiden who enlivened the banquet of Callias. Absorbed in the
-earnestness of their feelings, they seem to have forgotten the presence
-of spectators, and instead of a stage representation, gave them a scene
-from real life, where every impassioned look and gesture were genuine,
-and every fiery glance was kindled at the heart.[772]
-
-This, however, may be considered a serious amusement, and something like
-broad farce was necessary to awaken the guests from the reverie into
-which the love scene had plunged them. Jesters were, therefore, put in
-requisition; and, as even they sometimes failed to raise a laugh, their
-more humorous brethren the wits and jesters of the forests, or, in the
-language of mortals, monkeys were called upon to dissipate the clouds of
-seriousness. These were the favourite buffoons of the Scythian
-Anacharsis,—not the Abbé Barthélemy’s,—who said, he could laugh at a
-monkey’s tricks, because his tricks were natural, but that he found no
-amusement in a man who made a trade of it.[773] Nor could Euripides at
-all relish punsters and manufacturers of jokes, whom he considered, with
-some reason, as a species of animal distinct from mankind.
-
- Many there be who exercise their wits
- In giving birth, by cutting jests, to laughter.
- I hate the knaves whose rude unbridled tongues
- Sport with the wise; and cannot for my life
- Think they are men, though laughter doth become them,
- And they have houses filled with treasured stores
- From distant lands.[774]
-
------
-
-Footnote 772:
-
- Xen. Conviv. ix. 1–7.
-
-Footnote 773:
-
- Athen. xiv. 2.
-
-Footnote 774:
-
- Eurip. Fragm. Melanipp. 20.
-
------
-
-But if Euripides found nothing desirable in laughter, there were those
-who had a clean contrary creed, and lamented nothing so much as the loss
-of their risible faculties. On this subject Semos has a story quite _à
-propos_. Parmeniscos, the Metapontine, having descended, he says, into
-the cave of Trophonios, became so extremely grave, that with all the
-appliances, and means to boot, furnished by wealth, and they were not a
-few, he thereafter found himself quite unable to screw up his muscles
-into a smile; which taking much to heart, as was natural, he made a
-pilgrimage to Delphi, to inquire by what means he might rid himself of
-the blue devils. Somewhat puzzled at the strangeness of the inquiry, the
-Pythoness replied,—
-
- Poor mortal unmerry, who seekest to know
- What will bid thy brow soften, thy quips and cranks flow,
- To the house of the mother I bid thee repair—
- Thou wilt find, if she’s pleased, what thy heart covets, there.
-
-Upon this, Parmeniscos hastened homeward, hoping soon to enjoy a good
-laugh as the reward of his industry; but, finding his features remain
-fixed as cast-iron, he began to suspect the oracle had deceived him.
-Some time after, being at Delos, he beheld with admiration the several
-wonders of the island, and, lastly, proceeded to the temple of Leto,
-expecting to find in the mother of Apollo something worthy of so great a
-divinity. But, on entering and perceiving, instead, a grotesque and
-smoky old figure in wood, he burst into an immoderate fit of laughter,
-whereupon the response of the oracle recurred to his mind, and he
-understood it; and, being thus delivered from his infirmity, he ever
-after held the goddess in extremest reverence.[775]
-
------
-
-Footnote 775:
-
- Athen. xiv. 2.
-
------
-
-Even from this story, therefore, it will be seen how highly “broad
-grins” were estimated in antiquity, particularly at Athens, where there
-was a regular “Wits’ Club,” consisting of threescore members, who
-assembled during the Diomeia,[776] in the temple of Heracles. The names
-of several of these jovial mortals have come down to us; Mandrogenes,
-for example, and Strato, Callimedon, who, for some particular quality of
-mind or body, obtained the _sobriquet_ of the _Lobster_, Deinias,
-Mnasigeiton, and Menæchmos. The reputation of these gentlemen spread
-rapidly through the city, and, when a good thing had a run among the
-small wits, it was remarked, that “the Sixty had said _that_.” Or, if a
-man of talent were asked, whence he came, he would answer, “From the
-Sixty.” This was in the time of Demosthenes, when, unhappily, jesters
-were in more request in Athens than soldiers; and Philip of Macedon,
-himself no mean buffoon, learning the excellent quality of their _bon
-mots_, sent them a present of a talent of gold, with a request that, as
-public business prevented his joining the sittings of the club, they
-would make for his use a collection in writing of all their smart
-sayings, which was, probably, the first step towards those repositories
-for stray wit, called “Joe Millers,” that form so indispensable a
-portion of a bon vivant’s library.[777]
-
------
-
-Footnote 776:
-
- Eustath. ad Iliad. δ. p. 337. 53. Etym. Mag. 277. 24. Meurs. Græc.
- Feriat. ii. 96.
-
-Footnote 777:
-
- Athen. xiv. 3.
-
------
-
-But we are all this while detaining the company from their wine, and
-those other recreations which the fertile genius of the Greeks invented
-to make the wheels of life move smoothly. Though the tables, according
-to the fashion of the times, were removed with the solid viands, others
-were brought in to replace them, on which the censers, the goblets, the
-silver or golden ladles for filling the smaller cups, were arranged in
-order.[778] The chairman, or, as he was then called, the king of the
-feast,[779] enjoyed absolute power over his subjects, and could
-determine better than their own palates, how much and how often each man
-should drink. This important functionary was not always identical with
-the entertainer, but sometimes his substitute, sometimes a person chosen
-by lot.[780] Capacious bowls of wine,[781] mingled with water, were
-placed on a sideboard, whence cup-bearers, sometimes of one, sometimes
-of the other sex, but always selected for their youth and beauty,
-filled, with ladles,[782] the goblets of the guests, which, when the
-froth rose above the brim, were, by an obvious metaphor, said to be
-crowned.[783] Among the Doric Greeks, female cup-bearers seem to have
-been always preferred; the Ptolemies of Egypt cherished the same taste;
-and the people of Tarentum, themselves of Doric race, passing
-successively through every stage of luxury, came, at length, to be
-served at table by beautiful young women without a vestige of clothing.
-In most cases, these maidens were slaves, but, in some countries, and
-everywhere, in remoter ages, the performance of such offices was not
-regarded as any way derogatory to persons of noble or princely blood.
-But, whatever might be their birth, beauty of form and countenance
-constituted their chief recommendation. For there is a language in looks
-and gestures, there is a fountain of joy and delight concealed deep in
-the physical structure, and its waters laugh to the eye of intellect,
-and reflect into the hearts of those who behold it a sunniness and
-exhilaration greater than we derive from gazing on the summer sea.
-Hence, Hebe and Ganymede were chosen to minister at the tables of the
-gods, even Zeus himself[784] not disdaining to taste of the pleasures to
-be derived from basking in the irradiations of beauty.
-
------
-
-Footnote 778:
-
- Among the Etruscans these ladles were of bronze, and of extremely
- elegant form, the point ending in a swan’s or duck’s head.
-
-Footnote 779:
-
- The proceedings of this person were governed by a code of laws, the
- making and reformation of which employed the wits of no less
- personages than Xenophanes, Spensippos, and Aristotle. Athen. i. 5.
-
-Footnote 780:
-
- Horat. Od. ii. 7. 25.
-
-Footnote 781:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 1183. Vesp. 1005.
-
-Footnote 782:
-
- Eustath. ad Iliad, γ. p. 333. Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 855.—A specimen
- of these ladles (ἀρύταιναι) occurs in Mus. Chiaramont. pl. 2.
-
-Footnote 783:
-
- Virgil actually wreaths the bowls with garlands.—Æneid. iii.
- 525.—Homer, however, crowns his bowls only with wine.-Il. ε. 471.
-
-Footnote 784:
-
- Homer. Iliad. δ. 2. γ. 232. β. 813. Odyss. ο. 327. Juven. Sat. v. 60.
- Cf. Philo. Jud. de Vit. Contempl. t. ii. p. 479. Mangey.
-
------
-
-When the goblets were all crowned with the nectar of earth, the Master
-of the Feast[785] set the example of good-fellowship by drinking to his
-guests, beginning with the most distinguished.[786] Originally, custom
-required him who drank to the health of another to drain off his cup
-while his comrade did the same; but, in after ages, they sipped only a
-portion of the wine, and, as they still do in the East, presented the
-remainder to their friend. The latter, by the rules of politeness, was
-bound to finish the goblet, or, where the antique fashion prevailed, to
-drink one of equal size.[787] The Macedonians, who, probably, excelled
-the Greeks in drinking, if in nothing else, disdained small cups as
-supplying a very roundabout way to intoxication, and plunged into Lethe
-at once by the aid of most capacious bowls. It was customary, when the
-practice of passing round the goblet had been introduced, for the king
-of the feast to drink to the next man on his right hand, who, in his
-turn, drank to the next, and so on till the bowl had circulated round
-the board. But different customs prevailed in the different parts of
-Greece. At Athens, small cups, like our wine-glasses, were in use; among
-the Chians, Thracians, and Thessalians, nations more prone to sensual
-indulgences, the goblets were of larger dimensions; but, at Sparta,
-where sobriety and frugality long flourished, the practice was to drink
-from diminutive vessels, which, as often as required, were replenished
-by the attendants.[788]
-
------
-
-Footnote 785:
-
- There were certain barbarians, who, to cement their friendships, drank
- wine tinged with each other’s blood.—Athen. xv. 47.
-
-Footnote 786:
-
- Plut. Symp. i. 2. 2. The first cup was drunk to the
- Agathodemon.—Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 85. Athen. xv. 47.
-
-Footnote 787:
-
- Athen. v. 20.
-
-Footnote 788:
-
- Athen. x. 39. Plut. Cleom. § 13.
-
------
-
-Isocrates, in his exhortation to Demonicos, marks the distinction
-between the true and false friend, by observing, that, while the latter
-thinks only of those around him, the former remembers the absent, and
-makes his affection triumph over time and distance. And the Greeks
-generally had this merit. Amid the enjoyments of the festive board, they
-recalled to mind the friends of other days; and, having first performed
-libations to the gods, those best and purest of friends, drank to the
-health and prosperity of former associates, now far removed by
-circumstances,[789] and this they did not in the mixed beverage which
-formed their habitual potations, but in pure wine.[790] There was
-something extremely delicate in this idea, for tacitly it intimated,
-that their love placed the objects of it almost on a level with their
-divinities, in whose honour, also, on these occasions, a small portion
-of the wine was spilt in libations[791] upon the earth. The young, in
-whose hearts a mistress held the first place,[792] drank deeply in
-honour of their beloved, sometimes equalling the number of cups to that
-of the letters forming her name,[793] which, if the custom prevailed so
-early, would account for Ægisthos’s being a sot. Sometimes, however,
-taking the hint from the number of the Graces, they were satisfied with
-three goblets; but, when an excuse for drinking “pottle deep” was
-sought, they chose the Muses for their patrons, and honoured their
-mistresses’ names with three times three.[794] This is the number of
-cheers with which favourite political toasts are received at our public
-dinners, though every one who fills his bumper, and cries “hip, hip,
-hip, hurrah!” on these occasions, is, probably, not conscious that he is
-keeping up an old pagan custom in honour of the Muses.
-
------
-
-Footnote 789:
-
- Theoc. Eidyll. vii. 69.
-
-Footnote 790:
-
- Cicero in Verr. Act. ii. Orat. i. § 26, and Ascon. Pedan. in loc.
-
-Footnote 791:
-
- Antiphon. Acc. Nec. Ven. § 3.—The third libation was in honour of
- Zeus.—Scol. Pind. Isth. vi. 22.
-
-Footnote 792:
-
- Theocrit. Eidyll. xiv. 18, et Schol.
-
-Footnote 793:
-
- Mart. Epig. i. 78.
-
-Footnote 794:
-
- Horat. Od. iii. 19. 11, sqq. Lambinus in loc. p. 143.
-
------
-
-The number four was in no favour at the drinking-table, not because it
-was an even number, for they sometimes drank ten, but because some old
-superstition had brought discredit on it. Our very fox-hunters, however,
-exhibit an inferior capacity to many of the ancients in affairs of the
-bottle, though when it is the poets who perform the feat, we may safely
-consider them to be simply regaling their fancies on “air-drawn”
-goblets, which cost nothing, and leave no head-aches behind them. On
-this subject there is a very pretty song in the Anthology, which Potter,
-following some old edition, completely misrepresents.[795] It deserves
-to be well translated, and I would translate it well if I could. The
-following at least preserves the meaning:
-
- Pour out ten cups of the purple wine,
- To crown Lycidicè’s charms divine;
- One for Euphrantè, young and fair,
- With the sparkling eye and the raven hair.
- Then I love Lycidicè more, you say?
- By this foaming goblet I say ye nay.
- More valued than ten is Euphrantè to me,
- For, as when the heavens unclouded be,
- And the stars are crowding far and nigh
- On the deep deep blue of the midnight sky,
- The moon is still brighter and lovelier far
- Than the loveliest planet or brightest star;
- So, ’mid the stars of this earthly sphere,
- None are so lovely or half so dear
- As to me is Euphrantè young and fair,
- With the sparkling eye and the raven hair.[796]
-
------
-
-Footnote 795:
-
- Antiq. ii. 394, seq.
-
-Footnote 796:
-
- Marc. Argent. ap. Anthol. Græc. v. 110.
-
------
-
-But the Macedonians entertained no respect for poetical goblets: they
-loved to scent their moustachios with the aroma of the real rosy wine
-when it sparkled in the cup,—when it moved itself aright, as the wise
-king of Judah expresses it. Plutarch describes briefly one of their
-drinking-bouts which took place on the evening of the day wherein old
-Kalanos, the Hindù Yoghi, burnt himself alive to escape the colic.
-Alexander, on returning from the funeral pile, invited a number of his
-friends and generals to sup with him, and, proposing a drinking contest,
-appointed a crown for the victor. Prodigious efforts were made by all
-present to achieve so enviable a triumph; but the man who proved himself
-to possess the most capacious interior was Promachos, who is said to
-have swallowed upwards of two gallons. He obtained the prize, which was
-a golden crown, valued at a talent, but died within three days.[797]
-Chares, the Mitylenian, relates the matter somewhat differently.
-According to him, Alexander celebrated funeral games in honour of
-Kalanos, at his barrow, where horseraces and gymnastic contests took
-place,[798] and a poetical encomium was pronounced upon the Yoghi, who,
-like the rest of his countrymen, was, doubtless, a great toper, and
-thence the drinking-match instituted in the evening. Chares says there
-were three prizes; the first, in value, a talent; the second, thirty
-minæ, or about a hundred and twenty pounds sterling; the third, three
-minæ. The number of aspirants is not stated, but thirty-five (Plutarch
-says forty-one) perished in cold shiverings on the spot, and six more
-died shortly after in the tents.[799]
-
------
-
-Footnote 797:
-
- Plut. Alexand. Magn. §§ 69, 70.
-
-Footnote 798:
-
- Ælian. Var. Hist. ii. 41. Periz.
-
-Footnote 799:
-
- Athen. x. 49.
-
------
-
-Numbers have celebrated the military genius of Alexander; but Athenæus
-alone has given him due credit for his truly royal power of drinking.
-Like his father, Philip, who, in his jolly humour, ruffled the Athenian
-dead at Chæronea, where he could safely beard the fallen republicans,
-Alexander delighted to spend his evenings among drunken roysterers,
-whose chief ambition consisted in making a butt of their bowels. One of
-these worthies was Proteas, the Macedonian mentioned by Ephippos, in his
-work on the sepulture of Alexander and Hephæstion. He was a man of iron
-constitution, on which wine, whatever quantity he drank, appeared to
-make no impression. Alexander, knowing this, loved to pledge him in huge
-bowls, such as none, perhaps, but themselves could cope with. This he
-did even at Babylon, where the climate suffers few excesses to be
-indulged in with impunity. Taking a goblet more like a pail than a
-drinking-cup, Alexander caused it to be crowned with wine, which, having
-tasted, he presented the bowl to Proteas. The veteran immediately
-drained it off, to the great amusement of the company, and presently
-afterwards, desiring to pledge the king, he filled it up again, and
-sipping a little, according to custom, passed the bowl to Alexander,
-who, not to be outdone by a subject, forthwith drank the whole. But if
-he possessed the courage, he wanted the physical strength of Proteas:
-the goblet dropped from his hand, his head sank on a pillow, and a fever
-ensued of which the conqueror of Persia, and the rival of Proteas in
-drinking, died in a few days.[800]
-
------
-
-Footnote 800:
-
- Athen. x. 44.
-
------
-
-But to return from these barbarians: as the presence of sober persons
-must always be felt by hard drinkers to be a tacit reproach, it was one
-of the rules of good fellowship, that all such as joined not in the
-common potations should depart. “Drink, or begone!” said the law, and a
-good one in Cicero’s opinion it was, for if men experienced no
-disposition to join in the mirth and enjoyment of the company, what had
-they to do there?[801]
-
------
-
-Footnote 801:
-
- Tuscul. Quæst. ii. 41.
-
------
-
-From the existence of these rules, however, an inference has been drawn
-unfavourable to the Greek character, as if, because some were merry, the
-nation generally must of necessity have been wine-bibbers.[802] But this
-is scarcely more logical than the reasoning of a writer, who, because
-the comic poets speak chiefly of the mirth and lighter enjoyments of the
-Athenians, very gravely concludes that they busied themselves about
-little else. The truth is, that like all ardent and energetic people,
-they threw their whole souls into the affair, whether serious or
-otherwise, in which they happened to be engaged; and besides, while the
-careful and industrious applied themselves to business, there was always
-an abundance of light and trifling people to whom eating and drinking
-constituted a serious occupation.
-
------
-
-Footnote 802:
-
- Potter, ii. 396.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
- ENTERTAINMENTS.
-
-
-The man upon the creations of whose art the principal enjoyments of
-Greek gourmands were based was the cook,[803] whose character and
-achievements ought not perhaps to be entirely passed over. We are,
-indeed, chiefly indebted for our information to the comic poets; but, in
-spite of some little exaggeration, the likeness they have bequeathed to
-us is probably upon the whole pretty exact.
-
------
-
-Footnote 803:
-
- On famous Cooks see Max. Tyr. Dissert. v. 60. 83. Pollux, vi. 70, seq.
- Athen. iii. 60.
-
------
-
-The Athenian cook was a singularly heterogeneous being, something
-between the parasite and the professed jester; he was usually a poor
-citizen, with all the pride of autochthoneïty about him, who considered
-it indispensable to acquire, besides his culinary lore, a smattering of
-many other kinds of knowledge, not only for the purpose of improving his
-soups or ragouts, but in order, by the orations he pronounced in praise
-of himself, to dazzle and allure such persons as came to the agora in
-search of an artist of his class. Of course the principal source of his
-oratory lay among pots and frying-pans, and the wonders effected by his
-art. Philemon hits off with great felicity one of these worthies, who
-desires to convey a lofty opinion of himself,—
-
- “How strong is my desire ’fore earth and heaven,
- To tell how daintily I cooked his dinner
- ’Gainst his return! By all Athena’s owls!
- ’Tis no unpleasant thing to hit the mark
- On all occasions. What a fish had I—
- And ah! how nicely fried! Not all bedevilled
- With cheese, or browned atop, but though well done,
- Looking alive, in its rare beauty dressed.
- With skill so exquisite the fire I tempered,
- It seemed a joke to say that it was cooked.
- And then, just fancy now you see a hen
- Gobbling a morsel much too big to swallow;
- With bill uplifted round and round she runs
- Half choking; while the rest are at her heels
- Clucking for shares. Just so ’twas with my soldiers;
- The first who touched the dish upstarted he
- Whirling round in a circle like the hen,
- Eating and running; but his jolly comrades,
- Each a fish worshiper, soon joined the dance,
- Laughing and shouting, snatching some a bit,
- Some missing, till like smoke the whole had vanished.
- Yet were they merely mud-fed river dabs:
- But had some splendid scaros graced my pan,
- Or Attic glaucisk, or, O saviour Zeus!
- Kapros from Argos, or the conger eel,
- Which old Poseidon exports to Olympos,
- To be the food of gods, why then my guests
- Had rivalled those above. I have, in fact,
- The power to lavish immortality
- On whom I please, or, by my potent art,
- To raise the dead, if they but snuff my dishes!”[804]
-
------
-
-Footnote 804:
-
- Athen. vii. 32.
-
------
-
-This honest fellow, in the opinion of Athenæus, exceeded in boasting
-even that Menecrates of Syracuse, who for his pride obtained the surname
-of Zeus; he was a physician, and used vauntingly to call himself the
-arbiter of life to mankind. He is supposed to have possessed some
-specific against epilepsy; but being afflicted with a vanity at least
-equal to his skill, he would undertake no one’s cure unless he first
-entered into an agreement to follow him round the country ever after as
-his slave, which great numbers actually did. Nicostratos, of Argos, one
-of the persons so restored, travelled in his train habited and equipped
-like Heracles; others personated Asclepios, and Apollo, while Menecrates
-himself enacted in this fantastic masquerade the part of Zeus; and, as
-the actors say, he dressed the character well, wearing a purple robe, a
-golden crown upon his head, sandals of the most magnificent description,
-and bearing a sceptre in his hand.[805]
-
------
-
-Footnote 805:
-
- Athen. vii. 33.
-
------
-
-But whatever might have been the conceit of our Syracusan physician,
-there were those among the cooking race, who certainly lagged not far
-behind him. They usually stunned such as came to hire them with reciting
-their own praises, laying claim to as much science and philosophy as
-would have sufficed to set up two or three sophists. In fact, to take
-them at their word, there was nothing which they did not know, nothing
-which they could not do. Painting they professed to comprehend as
-profound connoisseurs, and, no doubt, the soles they fried tasted all
-the better for the accomplishment. In astronomy, medicine, and geometry,
-they appear to have made a still greater proficiency than Hudibras,
-notwithstanding that—
-
- “In mathematics he was greater
- Than Tycho Brahe, or Erra Pater;
- For he by geometric scale
- Could take the size of pots of ale;
- Discern by sines and tangents strait
- If bread and butter wanted weight;
- And wisely tell what hour o’ the day
- The clock does strike by algebra.”
-
-In all this he was a fool to the Athenian cooks; for, by the help of
-astronomy, they could tell when mackerel was in season, and at what time
-of the year a haddock is better than a salmon. From geometry they
-borrowed the art of laying out a kitchen to the best advantage, and how
-to hang up the gridiron in one place, and the porridge-pot in another.
-To medicine it is easy to see how deeply they must have been indebted,
-since it not only taught them what meats are wholesome, and what not,
-but also enabled them by some sleight of art to diminish the appetite of
-those voracious parasites, who when they dined out appeared to have
-stomachs equal in capacity to the great tun of Heidelberg.[806]
-
------
-
-Footnote 806:
-
- Athen. vii. 37.
-
------
-
-Many individuals, half guests, half parasites, used to extract
-considerable matter for merriment out of the dinner materials, that they
-might render themselves agreeable, and be invited again. Thus Charmos,
-the Syracusan, used to convert every dish served at table into an
-occasion for reciting poetical quotations or old proverbs, and
-sometimes, perhaps, suffered the fish to cool while he was displaying
-his erudition. He had always civil things to say both to shell-fish and
-tripe, so that a person fond of flattery might have coveted to be
-roasted, in order that his shade might be soothed with this kind of
-incense, which even Socrates allowed was not an illiberal enjoyment. It
-was, however, a common custom among parasites to make extracts from the
-poets and carry them in portfolios to the tables of their patrons, where
-they recited all such as appeared to be _à propos_. In this way the
-above Charmos obtained among the people of Messina the reputation of a
-learned man, and Calliphanes,[807] son of Parabrycon,[808] succeeded no
-less ingeniously by copying out the first verses of various poems, and
-reciting them, so that it might be supposed he knew the whole.
-
------
-
-Footnote 807:
-
- Suidas in v. t. i. p. 1361. c.
-
-Footnote 808:
-
- Athen. i. 6. “Sic ut παράσιτος, et παραμασήτης vel παραμασύντης
- convivam denotat invocatum, qui absque symbola ad convivium venit; sic
- nomen παραβρύκων (à verbo βρύκω, mordeo, rodo, deglutio) eumdem habet
- significatum.”—Scheigh. Animadv. t. vi. p. 54.
-
------
-
-Cleanthes, of Tarentum, always spoke at table in verse, so likewise did
-the Sicilian Pamphilos; and these parasites, travelling about with
-wallets of poetry on their backs, were everywhere welcomed and
-entertained, which might with great propriety have been adduced by
-Ilgen[809] among his other proofs of the imaginative character of the
-Greeks.
-
------
-
-Footnote 809:
-
- De Scol. Poes. p. 8.
-
------
-
-Archestratos, the Syracusan, belonged no doubt to this class. He
-composed an epic poem on good eating, which commenced with recommending
-that no company, assembled for convivial enjoyment, should ever exceed
-four,[810] or at most five, otherwise he said they would rather resemble
-a troop of banditti than gentlemen. It had probably escaped him, that
-there were twenty-eight guests at Plato’s banquet. Antiphanes, after
-observing that the parasites had lynx’s eyes to discover a good dinner
-though never invited, immediately adds, that the republic ought to get
-up an entertainment for them, upon the same principle that during the
-games an ox[811] was slaughtered some distance from the course at
-Olympia, to feast the flies, and prevent them from devouring the
-spectators.
-
------
-
-Footnote 810:
-
- Athen. i. 7.
-
-Footnote 811:
-
- Athen. i. 7. This ox was sacrificed to Zeus the Fly-Chaser, in order
- to prevail on him to drive the swarms of insects, by which the
- spectators were incommoded, beyond the Alpheios. Cf. Plin. Nat. Hist.
- x. 40. ix. 34. Pausan. v. 14. i. viii. 26. 7. Ælian. De Nat. Animal.
- v. 17. xi. 8.
-
------
-
-Besides Archestratos, there were several other celebrated gastronomers
-among the ancients. Of these the principal were Timachidas, of Rhodes,
-who wrote a poem in eleven books on good eating,[812] Noumenios, of
-Heraclea, pupil to the physician Dieuches, Metreas, of Pitana, the
-parodist Hegemon, of Thasos, surnamed the _Lentil_, by some reckoned
-among the poets of the old comedy, Philoxenos, of Leucadia, and a second
-Philoxenos, of Cythera, who composed his work in hexameter verse. The
-former, after chaunting the eulogium of the kettle, comes nevertheless
-to the conclusion at last, that superior merit belongs to the
-frying-pan. He earnestly recommended truffles to lovers, but would not
-have them touch the barbel. His anger burst forth with great vehemence
-against those who cut in pieces fish which should be served up whole;
-and, though he admits that a polypus may occasionally be boiled, it was
-much better, he says, to fry it. From this man the Philoxenian cakes
-derived their name; and he it is whom Chrysippos reproaches with half
-scalding his fingers in the warm bath and gargling his throat with hot
-water, in order that he might be able to swallow kabobs hissing from the
-coals.[813] He likewise used, at the houses of his friends, to bribe the
-cooks to bring up everything fiery hot, that he might help himself
-before any one else could touch them. A kindred gourmand, in the poet
-Krobylos, exclaims: “My fingers are insensible to fire like the Dactyls
-of Mount Ida. And ah! how delightful it is to refresh my throat with the
-crackling flakes of broiled fish! Oh I am in fact an oven, not a man!”
-
------
-
-Footnote 812:
-
- Athen. i. 8. Suidas. v. Τιμαχίδας. t. i. p. 899, seq.
-
-Footnote 813:
-
- Athen. i. 9.
-
------
-
-According to Clearchos it was this same Philoxenos, who used to maraud
-about rich men’s houses, followed by a number of slaves laden with wine,
-vinegar, oil, and other seasonings. Wherever he smelled the best dinner
-he dropped in unasked, and slipping slily among the cooks, obtained
-their permission to season the dishes they were preparing, after which
-he took his place among the guests where he fed like a Cyclops. Arriving
-once at Ephesos, by sea, he found, upon inquiry in the market, that all
-the best fish had been secured for a wedding feast. Forthwith he bathed,
-and repairing to the house of the bridegroom, demanded permission to
-sing the Epithalamium. Every one was delighted; they could do no less
-than invite him to dinner. And “Will you come again to-morrow?” inquired
-the generous host. “If there be no fish in the market,” replied
-Philoxenos. It was this gourmand who wished nature had bestowed on man
-the neck of the crane that the pleasure of swallowing might be
-prolonged.[814]
-
------
-
-Footnote 814:
-
- Suid. in v. Φιλοξ. t. ii. p. 1058. c. Athen. i. 10.
-
------
-
-Pithyllos, another parasite, surnamed “the Dainty,” not content with the
-membrane which nature has spread over the tongue, superinduced
-artificially a sort of mucous covering, which retained for a
-considerable time the flavour of what he ate.[815] To prolong his
-luxurious enjoyment as much as possible, he afterwards scraped away this
-curious coating with a fish. Of all ancient gourmands he alone is said
-to have made use of artificial finger-points, that he might be enabled
-to seize upon the hottest morsels. An anecdote so good as to have given
-rise to many modern imitations, is related of Philoxenos, of Cythera.
-Dining one day with Dionysios, of Syracuse, he observed a large barbel
-served up to the prince, while a very diminutive one was placed before
-him. Upon this, taking up the little fish, he held it to his ear and
-appeared to be listening attentively. Dionysios, expecting some humorous
-extravagance, made a point of inquiring the meaning of this movement,
-and Philoxenos replied, that happening just then to think of his
-Galatea,[816] he was questioning the barbel respecting her. But as it
-makes no answer, said he, I imagine they have taken him too young and
-that he does not understand me. I am persuaded, however, that the old
-fellow they have placed before your majesty must know all about it. The
-king, amused by his ingenuity, immediately sent him the larger fish
-which he soon questioned effectually.[817]
-
------
-
-Footnote 815:
-
- Athen. i. 10. Suid. v. Πιθυλλ. t. ii. p. 526. c.
-
-Footnote 816:
-
- Making allusion perhaps to his love for Galatea, the mistress of
- Dionysios. Athen. i. 11. Ælian. Var. Hist. xii. 44. Schol. Aristoph.
- Plut. 290.
-
-Footnote 817:
-
- Athen. i. 11. See another anecdote of this gourmand in Ælian. Var.
- Hist. x. 9.
-
------
-
-But the Athenians were not reduced to depend for amusement at table upon
-the invention of these humble companions. They knew how, when occasion
-required, to entertain themselves, and, in the exuberance of their
-hilarity, descended for this purpose to contrivances almost infantine.
-They posed each other with charades, enigmas, conundrums, and,
-sometimes, in the lower classes of society, related stories of witches,
-lamias, mormos, and other hobgoblins believed in by the vulgar of all
-nations. Among persons engaged in public affairs the excitement of
-political discussion was often, of course, intermingled with their more
-quiet pleasures.[818] But with this we have, just now, nothing to do,
-nor with the enigmas which we shall describe anon. There was another and
-more elegant practice observed by the Greeks at convivial meetings,
-which, though not peculiar to them, has nowhere else, perhaps, prevailed
-to the same extent,—I mean the introduction of music and the singing of
-songs,[819] light, graceful, and instinct with wit and gaiety, to the
-barbitos or the lyre.
-
------
-
-Footnote 818:
-
- Aristoph. Aves. 1189, sqq.
-
-Footnote 819:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 403.
-
------
-
-Among the Greeks, generally, the love of music and poetry seemed to be a
-spontaneous impulse of nature. Almost every act of life was accompanied
-by a song,—the weaver at his loom, the baker at his kneading-trough, the
-reaper, the “spinners and the knitters in the sun,” the drawer of water,
-even the hard-working wight who toiled at the mill, had his peculiar
-song, by the chaunting of which he lightened his labour. The mariner,
-too, like the Venetian gondolier, sang at the oar, and the shepherd and
-the herdsman, the day-labourer and the swineherd, the vintager and the
-husbandman, the attendant in the baths, and the nurse beside the cradle.
-It might, in fact, be said, that from an Hellenic village music arose as
-from a brake in spring. Their sensibilities were tremblingly alive to
-pleasure. There was elasticity, there was balm in their atmosphere, and
-joy and freedom in their souls.—How could they do other than sing?
-
-But, if music and poetry thus diffused their delights over the industry
-of the laborious, it was quite natural that where men met solely for
-enjoyment, these best handmaids of enjoyment should not be absent.
-Accordingly, we find that while the goblet circulated, kindling the
-imagination, and unbending the mind, the lyre was brought in and a song
-called for. Nor was the custom of recent date. It prevailed equally in
-the heroic ages, and, like many other features of Greek manners, derived
-its origin from religion. For, in early times, men rarely met at a
-numerous banquet, except on occasion of some sacrifice, when hymns in
-honour of the gods constituted an important part of the ceremonies. Thus
-Homer, describing the grand expiatory rites by which the Achæan host
-sought to avert the wrath of Apollo, observes, that they made great
-feasts, and celebrated the praises of the god amid their flowing
-goblets.[820]
-
------
-
-Footnote 820:
-
- Iliad, α. 492, sqq. Ilgen, Disq. de Scol. Poes. p. 55.
-
------
-
-Yet, though the theme of those primitive songs may have been at first
-serious, it was, probably, not long before topics better adapted to
-festive meetings obtained the preference. At all events, they soon came
-to be in fashion. The first step appears to have been from the gods to
-the heroes, whose achievements, being sometimes tinged with the
-ludicrous, opened the door to much gay and lively description. And these
-convivial pleasures,[821] so highly valued on earth, were, with great
-consistency, transferred to Olympos, where the immortals themselves were
-thought to heighten their enjoyments by songs and merriment.
-
------
-
-Footnote 821:
-
- Conf. Odyss. θ 72, sqq. α. 154. 350.
-
------
-
-In the ages following, the art of enhancing thus the delights of social
-intercourse, so far from falling into neglect, grew to be more than ever
-cultivated. Even the greatest men, beginning from the Homeric Achilles,
-disdained not to sing. They did not, says a judicious and learned
-writer, consider it sufficient to perform deeds worthy of immortality,
-or to be the theme of poets and musicians, or so far to cultivate their
-minds as to be able to relish and appreciate the songs of others, but
-included music within the circle of their own studies, as an
-accomplishment without which no man could pretend to be liberally
-educated. For this reason it was objected by Stesimbrotos, as a reproach
-to Cimon, that he was ignorant of music, and every other gentlemanly
-accomplishment held in estimation among the Greeks;[822] and even
-Themistocles himself incurred the charge of rusticity, because, when
-challenged at a party, he refused to play on the cithara.[823]
-
------
-
-Footnote 822:
-
- Plut. Cim. § 4. Afterwards, however, we find Cimon represented as
- singing with great skill. § 9.
-
-Footnote 823:
-
- Cicero, Tuscul. Quæst. i. 2. Cf. Ilgen. De Scol. Poes. p. 62.
-
------
-
-A different theory of manners prevailed among the Romans, who, like the
-modern Turks, considered it unbecoming a gentleman to sing. But to the
-Greeks, a people replete with gaiety and ardour, and whose amusements
-always partook largely of poetry, music presented itself under a wholly
-different aspect, and was so far from appearing a mean or sordid study,
-that no branch of education was held in higher honour, or esteemed more
-efficacious in promoting tranquillity of mind, or polish and refinement
-of manners. The lyre is accordingly said, by Homer, to be a divine gift,
-designed to be the companion and friend of feasts, where it proved the
-source of numerous advantages. In the first place, persons too much
-addicted to the bottle found in this instrument an ally against their
-own failing, for, whether playing or listening, a cessation from
-drinking was necessarily effected. Rudeness also and violence, and that
-unbridled audacity commonly inspired by wine, were checked by music,
-which, in their stead, inspired a pleasing exaltation of mind, and joy
-free from all admixture of passion.[824]
-
------
-
-Footnote 824:
-
- Athen. xiv. 24. Ilgen, Disq. De Scol. Poes. p. 64.
-
------
-
-It has already been observed that the convivial song soon divested
-itself of its religious and sombre character; for, as parties are made
-up of persons differing extremely in taste and temperament, it
-necessarily happened that when each was required to sing, much variety
-would be found in the lays, which generally assumed a festive and jocund
-air. Hymns in honour of the gods were more sparingly introduced,[825]
-nor was much stress laid on the praises of heroes;[826] the spirit of
-joviality moulded itself into
-
- Quips and cranks, and wanton wiles;
- Nods and becks, and wreathed smiles.
-
------
-
-Footnote 825:
-
- The hymn, for example, in honour of Pallas was, in all ages, sung.
- Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 954.
-
-Footnote 826:
-
- Of Harmodios, for example, and Aristogeiton. Sch. Aristoph. Acharn.
- 942. See Ilgen, Disq. de Scol. Poes. p. 69.
-
------
-
-Every one poured forth what the whim of the moment inspired,—jokes,
-love-songs, or biting satires, with the freedom and fertility of an
-improvisatore.[827]
-
-These convivial songs were divided by the ancients into several kinds,
-with reference sometimes to their nature, sometimes to the manner in
-which they were chaunted: the most remarkable they denominated Scolia,
-or zig-zag songs,[828] for a reason somewhat difficult of explanation.
-Several of the later Greek writers appear to have been greatly at a loss
-to account for the appellation, which is, no doubt, a singular one; but
-the learning and diligence of Ilgen[829] may be said to have fully
-resolved this curious question. After determining the antiquity of the
-Scolion, which Pindar[830] supposes to have been an invention of
-Terpander, or, at least, the verses of the song, but which Ilgen dates
-as far back as the heroic period, he observes, that the name itself was
-known in very remote ages, since they formed a separate class among the
-works of Pindar, and are mentioned by Aristophanes and Plato,[831] and
-that, like the Cyclic chorus, it arose out of the circumstances under
-which it was sung. For as this chorus was called Cyclic, or circular,
-because chaunted by persons moving in a circle round the altar of
-Bacchos, so the Scolion, or zig-zag song,[832] received its name from
-the myrtle branch, or the cithara, to which it was sung, being passed
-from one guest to another in a zig-zag[833] fashion, just as those who
-possessed the requisite skill happened to sit at table.
-
------
-
-Footnote 827:
-
- Conf. Hom. Hymn. in Herm. 52, sqq. Pind. Olymp. i. 24.
-
-Footnote 828:
-
- Poll. vi. 108, with the notes of Seber and Jungermann, t. v. p. 142.
-
-Footnote 829:
-
- Who has published a collection of these songs, accompanied by very
- interesting and instructive notes. Σκολια· hoc est, Carmina Convivalia
- Græcorum. Jenæ, 1798.
-
-Footnote 830:
-
- Apud Plut. de Musica, § 28.
-
-Footnote 831:
-
- Pind. Fragm. Dissen. t. i. p. 234, with the Commentary, t. ii. p.639,
- sqq. Aristoph. Vesp. 1222, 1240. Acharn. 532. Pac. 1302. Plat. Gorg.
- t. iii. p. 13. Bekk.
-
-Footnote 832:
-
- Suidas, v. σκολίον, t. ii. p. 759, e. sqq. Etym. Mag. 718, 35, sqq.
- Eustath. ad Odyss. η. 276, 49.
-
-Footnote 833:
-
- Mr. Müller, however, disapproves of this etymology. “It is much more
- likely,” he says, “that in the melody to which the scolia were sung,
- certain liberties and irregularities were permitted, by which the
- extempore execution of the song was facilitated.”—History of Greek
- Literature, pt. i. chap. xiii. § 16, seq.
-
------
-
-To render this explanation perfectly intelligible, it will, perhaps, be
-necessary to describe succinctly the whole process of singing in
-company. At first, it has been conjectured, when manners were rude, and
-the language still in its infancy, singing, like dancing, required no
-great art, and was little more than those wild bursts of melody still
-common among the improvisatori of Arabia and other Eastern countries,
-but that from these humble beginnings lyrical poetry took its rise,
-preserving still the freedom of its original state, and rising,
-unshackled by the rigid laws of metre, to heights of sublimity and
-grandeur beyond which no human composition ever soared. By degrees some
-complex forms of verse obtained the preference,—such, for example, as
-those of Sappho and Alcæos,—and fixed and definite laws of metre were
-established.
-
-The Scolion, however, always preserved something of its original
-spontaneous character, at least in appearance, and the same thing may be
-predicated of all their festive lays. But before they gave loose to
-their gaiety, the deep religious sentiment which pervaded the whole
-nation required a pæan, or hymn, to be sung in honour of the gods, and
-in this every person present joined.[834] While thus engaged, each
-guest, it is supposed, held in his hand a branch of laurel, the tree
-sacred to Apollo.[835] To the pæan succeeded another air, which all
-present sang in their turn, holding this time a branch of myrtle,[836]
-which, like the laurel bough mentioned above, was called æsakos, or the
-“branch of song.”[837] The singing commenced with the principal guest,
-to whom the symposiarch or host delivered the Cithara[838] and æsakos,
-demanding a song, which, according to the laws of the table, no one
-could refuse. Having performed his part, the singer was, in turn,
-entitled to call upon his neighbour, beginning on the right hand, and
-delivering to him the Cithara and the myrtle branch. The second, when he
-had sung, handed it then to the third, the third to the fourth, and so
-on until the whole circle of the company had been made. It sometimes
-happened, though not often, that among the guests an individual,
-unskilled in instrumental music, was found, and, in this case, he sang
-without accompaniment, holding the æsakos in his hand.[839]
-
------
-
-Footnote 834:
-
- Plut. Symp. i. 1. Athen. xiv. 24.
-
-Footnote 835:
-
- Hesych. v. ᾄσακος, ap. Ilgen. De Scol. Poes. p. 154.
-
-Footnote 836:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 1339, 1346.
-
-Footnote 837:
-
- Potter, Antiq. ii. 403.
-
-Footnote 838:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 1337, seq.
-
-Footnote 839:
-
- Ilgen, De Scol. Poes. p. 156.
-
------
-
-The poets who had the honour thus to cheer the convivial hours of the
-Greeks were, in remoter times, Simonides and Stesichoros, and, probably,
-Anacreon, with others of the same grade;[840] and, if we may credit
-Aristophanes, songs were also selected from the plays of Æschylus,
-Sophocles, and Euripides, as among ourselves from Shakespeare, Beaumont
-and Fletcher, or Ben Jonson. It may even be inferred that passages from
-Homer himself[841] were sung on these occasions; or, if not sung, they
-were certainly recited by rhapsodists introduced for the purpose into
-the assembly, who, holding a laurel branch while thus engaged, probably
-gave rise to the practice of passing round the myrtle bough. This
-branch, therefore, whether of myrtle or laurel,[842] constituted a part
-of a singer’s apparatus. The latter was originally chosen as sacred to
-Apollo, the patron of music, and because it was also believed to be
-endowed with something of prophetic power, the Pythoness eating its
-leaves before she ascended the tripod, while it was the symbol of
-ever-during song. Instead of the laurel, myrtle was afterwards
-introduced, on account, probably, of its being sacred to Aphrodite,
-whose praises were celebrated in those amatory songs common at feasts.
-It may, likewise, have been considered an emblem of republican virtue,
-since Harmodios and Aristogeiton concealed their swords in a myrtle
-wreath.[843]
-
------
-
-Footnote 840:
-
- Aristoph. Nub. 1358. Conf. Schol. ad Vesp. 1222.
-
-Footnote 841:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 1367.
-
-Footnote 842:
-
- Dresig. de Rhapsodis. p. 7. sqq. ap. Ilgen, De Scol. Poes. p. 157.
- Pind. Isthm. iv. 63.
-
-Footnote 843:
-
- Ilgen, De Scol. Poes. p. 159.
-
------
-
-To proceed, however, with the Scolia. These lays, like the rest, made
-the circle of the company, though not by passing in an unbroken series
-from man to man, but, as has already been said, from one skilful singer
-to another. In fact, the chanting of the scolia was a kind of contest
-which took place when all the other songs were concluded.[844] The
-person who occupied the seat of honour chanted to the Cithara a song
-containing the praises of some mortal or immortal, or the developement
-of some moral precept or erotic subject, which was comprehended in a
-small number of verses. When he had finished, he handed the Cithara and
-myrtle, at his own discretion, to some other among the guests, and the
-person thus challenged, who could not refuse without passing for an
-illiterate clown, must at once take up the same subject, and, without
-delay or premeditation, break forth into a song in the same metre and
-number of verses, if possible; and if unfamiliar with the Cithara, he
-could sing to the myrtle. The second singer now exercised his privilege
-and called upon a third, who was expected to do as he had done; so that
-very often the same idea underwent five or six transformations in the
-course of the evening. When the first argument had thus made the circle
-of the company, he who concluded had the right to start a new theme,
-which received the same treatment as the first; so that sometimes, when
-people were in a singing humour, air followed air, until eight or ten
-subjects had received all the poetical ornaments which the invention of
-those present could bestow upon them.
-
------
-
-Footnote 844:
-
- Athen. xv. 49.
-
------
-
-But to sing without wine would have been insipid. I have said the
-chanting of the scolia was a sort of contest, and, as he who contends
-and obtains the victory looks naturally for a reward, so the successful
-performer aspired to his, which, it must be owned, was not
-inappropriate, consisting of a brimming bowl, called _odos_, or the “cup
-of song,” at once a mark of honour and a reward of skill.[845] All these
-particulars are inferable from the examples of the scolion, which still
-remain; and Aristophanes in the “Wasps,” presents something like an
-outline, though dim and obscure, both of the argument and the mode of
-execution. He imagines a company of jolly fellows,[846] such as Theoros,
-Æschines, Phanos, Cleon, Acestor, and a foreigner of the same kidney,
-and represents them as engaged in performing certain scolia for their
-own entertainment.
-
------
-
-Footnote 845:
-
- Athen. xi. 110.
-
-Footnote 846:
-
- Vesp. 1220.
-
------
-
-But the idea we should form of this kind of song from the very comic
-passage in the “Wasps” differs materially from the theoretic view of
-Ilgen, since Philocleon constantly interrupts his son, terminating each
-sentence for him in a manner wholly unexpected, and of course calculated
-to excite laughter.
-
-But though musical, the Greeks would not imitate the grasshoppers,[847]
-who are said to sing till they starve; but, having accomplished the
-circle above-mentioned, proceeded to other amusements which, though too
-numerous to be described at length, must not be altogether passed over.
-In the heroic ages the discovery had not been made that rest after meals
-is necessary to digestion, which in later times was a received maxim,
-and accordingly we find from the practice of the Phæacians,[848] who, if
-an after-dinner nap had been customary, would certainly have taken it,
-that the men of those times, instead of indulging in indolent repose out
-of compliment to their stomachs, sallied forth to leap, to run, to
-wrestle, and engage in other athletic sports, which by no means appear
-to have impaired their health or their prowess. As civilisation
-advances, however, excuses are found for laying aside the habits of
-violent exercise. Science, in too many cases, fosters indolence and
-pronounces what is fashionable to be wise. But to the race-course and
-the wrestling-ring, sedentary, or at least indoor, pastimes succeed,
-and, instead of overthrowing their antagonists on the palæstra-floor or
-the greensward, men seek to subdue them at Kottabos, or on the
-chess-board, or to ruin them at the card-table or in the billiard-room.
-
------
-
-Footnote 847:
-
- Plato Phædr. t. i. p. 65.
-
-Footnote 848:
-
- Homer. Odyss. θ. 97, sqq. Eustath. p. 295, 43.
-
------
-
-The play of Kottabos,[849] invented in Sicily, soon propagated itself,
-as such inventions do, throughout the whole of Greece, and got into
-great vogue at Athens, where the lively temperament of the people
-inclined them to indulge immoderately in whatever was convivial and gay.
-The most usual form of the game was this,—a piece of wood like the
-upright of a balance having been fixed in the floor or upon a stable
-basis, a small cross-beam was placed on the top of it with a shallow
-vessel like the basin of a pair of scales, at either end.
-
------
-
-Footnote 849:
-
- Athen. xv. 2, sqq. xi. 22, 58, 75.—Suidas, v. κοταβίζειν. t. i. p.
- 1504, b. seq. Etym. Mag. 538. 13, sqq.
-
------
-
-Under each of these vessels stood a broad-mouthed vase, filled with
-water, with a gilt bronze statue, called Manes, fixed upright in its
-centre. The persons who played at the game, standing at some little
-distance, cast, in turn, their wine, from a drinking-cup into one of the
-pensile basins, which descending with the weight, struck against the
-head of the statue, which resounded with the blow. The victor was he who
-spilled least wine during the throw, and elicited most noise from the
-brazen head. It was, in fact, in its origin a species of divination, the
-object being to discover by the greater or less success obtained, the
-place occupied by the player in his mistress’s affections. By an
-onomatopœa the sound created by the wine in its projection was called
-_latax_, and the wine itself _latagè_. Both the act of throwing and the
-cup used were called _ankula_, from the word which expresses the
-dexterous turn of the hand with which the skilful player cast his wine
-into the scales.[850]
-
------
-
-Footnote 850:
-
- Potter, ii. 405, 406.
-
------
-
-Our learned Archbishop Potter, who has not unskilfully abridged the
-account of Athenæus, confounds the above with the _kottabos katactos_,
-another form of the game described both by Pollux and Athenæus.[851] In
-this the apparatus was suspended like a chandelier from the roof. It was
-formed of brass, and a brazen vessel, called the skiff, was placed
-beneath it. The player, standing at a little distance, with a long wand,
-struck one end of the kottabos, which descending came in contact with
-the skiff, or rather the manes within, and produced a hollow sound.
-Occasionally the small vessels at the extremity of the kottabos were
-brought down, as in the former game, by having wine cast into them.
-Another variety required the skiff to be filled with water, upon which
-floated a ball, an instrument like the tongue of a balance, a manes,
-three myrtle boughs, and as many phials. In this the great art consisted
-in striking some one of these with the kottabos, and whoever could sink
-most of them won the game. The prize, on these occasions, was usually
-one of those cakes called _pyramos_[852] or something similar; but
-instead of these it was sometimes agreed, when women were present, that
-the prize should be a kiss, as in our game of forfeits. Another kind of
-kottabos, chiefly practised on those occasions which resembled our
-christenings, when on the tenth day the child received its name, was a
-contention of wakefulness, when the person who longest resisted sleep,
-won the prize. Properly, however, kottabos was the amusement first
-described; and so fashionable did it become, that persons erected
-circular rooms expressly for the purpose, in order that the players
-might take their stand at equal distances from the apparatus which stood
-in the centre.[853]
-
------
-
-Footnote 851:
-
- Pollux. vi. 100, sqq. Athen. xv. 4. Cf. Flor. Christian ad Aristoph.
- Pac. 343.
-
-Footnote 852:
-
- Pollux. vi. 101.
-
-Footnote 853:
-
- Athen. xv. 7.
-
------
-
-It might, without any authority, be presumed that when people met
-together for enjoyment they would derive the greater portion of it from
-conversation, which would, of course, vary and slide
-
- “From grave to gay, from lively to severe,”
-
-according to the character or fluctuating humour of the company. The
-Spartans, like all military people, were grievously addicted to jokes,
-which among them supplied the place of that elegant badinage,
-alternating with profound or impassioned discourse, familiar to the more
-intellectual Athenians. The latter, however, though free from the
-coarseness, possessed more than the mirthfulness of the Dorians, and in
-the midst of their habits of business and application to philosophy,
-knew better than any people how, amidst wine and good-eating, to unbend
-and enjoy the luxury of careless trifling and an unwrinkled brow. While
-some therefore retired to the kottabos-room, which occupied the place of
-our billiard-room, others still sat clustered round the table,
-extracting amusement from each other. Among these of course would be
-found all such as excelled in the art of small talk, who could tell a
-good story or anecdote, scatter around showers of witticisms, or give
-birth to a pun. Some, like the Spartans, had a Welsh passion for
-genealogies, and loved to run back over the history of the “Landed
-Gentry” of old Hellas, to the time of Deucalion or higher; others coined
-their wisdom and experience into fables, for which they exhibited an
-almost Oriental fondness; while the greater number, like the princes in
-the Arabian Nights, exercised their wits in propounding and resolving
-difficult questions, enigmas, charades, anagrams, and conundrums.
-
-But the principal classes into which these contrivances were divided
-were two: _enigmas_ and _griphoi_,[854] the former comprehending all
-those terminating in mere pleasure, the latter such questions and
-riddles as involved within themselves the kernel of wisdom or
-knowledge,[855] supposed to have been a dull and serious affair.
-Casaubon,[856] however, vindicates it stoutly from this charge,
-affirming that in the griphos the _utile_ was mingled with the _dulce_
-in due proportion; so that it must, according to Horace’s opinion, have
-borne away the palm from most literary inventions. In point of
-antiquity, too, the riddle may justly boast; for, if to be old is to be
-noble, it has “more of birth and better blood” even than the hungry
-Dorians of the Peloponnesos, whom Mr. Mitchell prefers, on this account,
-before all nations of Ionic race. Like everything good also it comes
-from the East. The earliest mention of the riddle occurs in the book of
-Judges,[857] where Samson, during his marriage-feast at Timnath,
-perplexes his guests with the following riddle:
-
- “Out of the eater came forth meat, and out of the strong came forth
- sweetness;”
-
------
-
-Footnote 854:
-
- Vid. Clem. Alexan. Protrep. i. 1. Diog. Laert. ii. 33.
-
-Footnote 855:
-
- Pollux. vi. 107.
-
-Footnote 856:
-
- Animadv. in Athen. x. 15. Cf. Scaliger, Poet. iii. 84, where the
- distinction made by Pollux is explained.
-
-Footnote 857:
-
- Chap. xiv. vv. 14. 18. Chytræus, in his note on this passage, has
- several excellent and learned remarks on the subject. Vid. Seber. ad
- Poll. t. v. p. 141.
-
------
-
-To which they, being instructed by his wife, replied:
-
- “What is sweeter than honey? and what is stronger than a lion?”
-
-The word griphos, in its original acceptation, signified a fishing-net,
-and hence by translation was employed to describe a captious or
-cunningly contrived question, in which the wits of people were
-entangled.[858] As the ancients delighted in this sort of intellectual
-trifling they were at the pains to be very methodical about it, dividing
-the riddle into several kinds, which Clearchos of Soli[859] made the
-subject of a separate work. This writer, a sort of Greek D’Israeli,
-defines the griphos to mean “a sportive problem proposed for solution on
-condition, that the discovery of the sense should be attended by a
-reward, and failure with punishment.” His description of the seven
-classes could scarcely be rendered intelligible, and certainly not
-interesting to the modern reader. It will be more to the purpose to
-introduce two or three specimens, prefacing them by a few remarks.
-
------
-
-Footnote 858:
-
- Pollux. vi. 108. Scalig. Poet. iii. 84.
-
-Footnote 859:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 20. Athen. x. 69.
-
------
-
-It has been above observed, that philosophical truths were often wrapped
-up in these sportive problems, which purposely obscured, so as to afford
-but dim and distant glimpses of the forms within, necessarily exercised
-and sharpened the wit and induced keen and persevering habits of
-investigation. The reward also and the penalty had the same tendency. A
-crown, an extra junket, and the applause of the company, cheered the
-successful Œdipos, while the lackwit who beat about the bush without
-catching the owl, had to make wry faces over a cup of brine or pickle.
-Theodectes, the sophist, a man distinguished for the excellence of his
-memory, obtained reputation as a riddle-solver, and denominated such
-questions the “springs of memory.”[860] But whatever the interrogatories
-themselves may have been, the reward, to which their solution often led,
-was rather a source of forgetfulness, consisting of a goblet of wine
-which, when no interpreter could be found, passed to the
-propounder.[861]
-
------
-
-Footnote 860:
-
- Pollux. vi. 108.
-
-Footnote 861:
-
- Etym. Mag. 341, 35, sqq. Suidas. v. γρῖφος, t. i. p. 628, seq.
-
------
-
-The riddle was of course a mine of wealth to the comic poets, who could
-not be supposed to forego the use of so admirable a contrivance to raise
-expectation and beget surprise. But it is clear, from the examples still
-preserved, that they oftener missed than hit. Antiphanes’s griphoi on
-“bringing and not bringing;” on the “porridge-pot;” on a “tart,” &c.,
-are poor things; but the following from the “Dream” of Alexis is good:
-
- A. A thing exists which nor immortal is,
- Nor mortal, but to both belongs, and lives
- As neither god nor man does. Every day,
- ’Tis born anew and dies. No eye can see it,
- And yet to all ’tis known.
-
- B. A plague upon you!
- you bore me with your riddles.
-
- A. Still, all this
- Is plain and easy.
-
- B. What then can it be?
-
- A. SLEEP—that puts all our cares and pains to flight.[862]
-
------
-
-Footnote 862:
-
- Athen. x. 71.
-
------
-
-The following from Eubulos is not amiss:
-
- A. What is it that, while young, is plump and heavy,
- But, being full grown, is light, and wingless mounts
- Upon the courier winds, and foils the sight?
-
- B. The THISTLE’S BEARD; for this at first sticks fast
- To the green seed, which, ripe and dry, falls off
- Upon the cradling breeze, or, upwards puffed
- By playful urchins, sails along the air.
-
-Antiphanes, in his Sappho, introduces a very ingenious riddle, partly
-for the purpose of offering a sarcastic explanation directed against the
-orators:
-
- There is a female which within her bosom
- Carries her young, that, mute, in fact, yet speak,
- And make their voice heard on the howling waves,
- Or wildest continent. They will converse
- Even with the absent, and inform the deaf.[863]
-
------
-
-Footnote 863:
-
- Athen. x. 73.
-
------
-
-The poet introduces the “Lesbian maid,” explaining the riddle, and this
-passage of the Athenian comic writer may be regarded as the original of
-those fine lines in Ovid, which Pope has so elegantly translated:
-
- Heaven first taught LETTERS for some wretch’s aid,
- Some banish’d lover, or some captive maid,
- They live, they speak, they breathe what love inspires,
- Warm from the soul, and faithful to its fires,
- The virgin’s wish without her fears impart,
- Excuse the blush and pour out all the heart,
- Speed the soft intercourse from soul to soul,
- And waft a sigh from Indus to the pole.
-
-By this time, however, the reader will probably be of opinion, that we
-have lingered long enough about the dinner-table and its attendant
-pastimes. We shall therefore hasten the departure of the guests, who
-after burning the tongues of the animals that had been sacrificed, to
-intimate that whatever had been uttered was to be kept secret, offered
-libations to Zeus, Hermes, and other gods, and took their leave, in
-ancient times before sunset; but afterwards, as luxury and extravagance
-increased, the morning sun often enabled them to dispense with
-link-boys. Examples, indeed, of similar perversions of the night occur
-in Homer and Virgil, but always among the reckless or effeminate in the
-palaces of princes, whence, in all ages, the stream of immorality has
-flowed downward upon society to disturb and pollute it. The company
-assembled at Agathon’s, also, sit up all night in Plato; and
-Aristophanes represents drunken men reeling home through the agora by
-daylight.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
- THE THEATRE.
-
-
-It is far from being my purpose to repeat the information which may be
-obtained from a hundred authors on the rise and progress of scenic
-representation in Greece. I shall, on the contrary, confine myself
-chiefly to those parts of the subject which others have either
-altogether neglected, or treated in a concise and unsatisfactory manner.
-It would, nevertheless, be beside my purpose to attempt the clearing up
-of all such difficulties as occur in the accounts transmitted to us of
-the Hellenic drama; and, in fact, notwithstanding the laborious
-investigations into which I have been compelled to enter, I feel that
-there are many points upon which I can throw no new light, and which
-appear likely for ever to baffle the ingenuity of architects and
-scholars.
-
-Dionysos, being a deity connected with agriculture, his worship
-naturally took its rise, and for a long time prevailed chiefly, in the
-country. His festivals were celebrated with merriment; and, the power of
-mimicry being natural to man, the rustics, when congregated to set forth
-the praise of their tutelar god, easily glided into the enactment of a
-farcical show. And dramatic exhibitions at the outset were little
-superior to the feats of Punch, though, so great was their suitableness
-to the national character, that, in the course of time, every town of
-note had its own theatre, as it had of old its own dithyrambic
-bard;[864] and dramatic writers were multiplied incomparably beyond what
-they have been in any other country.
-
------
-
-Footnote 864:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Av. 1404.
-
------
-
-Both tragedy and comedy,[865] properly so called, took their rise in
-Attica, and there only, in the ancient world, flourished and grew up to
-perfection. The theatre, in fact, formed at length a part of the
-constitution, and, probably, the worst part, its tendency being to
-foster personal enmities, to stir the sources of malice, and, while
-pretending to purge off the dross of the passions by the channels of
-sorrow and mirth, to induce habits of idleness and political apathy, by
-affording in the brilliant recesses of a mock world a facile refuge from
-the toils and duties of the real one. Nevertheless, it may be curious to
-open up a view into that universe of shadows wherein the vast creations
-of Æschylus, of Sophocles, of Euripides, of Aristophanes, and Menander
-displayed themselves before the eyes of the Athenians, with a costly
-grandeur and magnificence never equalled save in imperial Rome.
-
------
-
-Footnote 865:
-
- See Bentley, Dissert. on Phal. i. 251.
-
------
-
-It has been already remarked, that to the Dionysiac theatre of Athens
-the architectural speculations of Vitruvius on dramatic edifices apply,
-this building having constituted the model on which similar structures
-were afterwards erected.[866] By carefully studying its details,
-therefore, we shall be enabled to form a tolerably just conception of
-all the theatres once found in Greece, though each, perhaps, may have
-been slightly modified in plan, general arrangement, and decorations, by
-the peculiarities of the site, and the science or taste of its
-architect.
-
------
-
-Footnote 866:
-
- On the form and construction of ancient theatres, see Chandler,
- Travels, &c., who describes the ruins of the theatre of Teos. i. 110;
- of Ephesos, 138; of Miletos, (457 feet in length,) 168; of Myos, 191;
- of Stratonica, 222; of Nysa, built with a blue-veined marble, 245; of
- Laodicea, 262; of Ægina, ii. 16; of Athens, 113; of Eleusis, 215; on
- the theatre of Syracuse, see Antiq. of Athens, &c. Supplementary to
- Stuart, by Cockerel, Donaldson, &c. p. 38.—See a plan of the theatre
- in the grove of Asclepios at Epidauros, pl. 1. p. 53, and another of
- that of Dramysos, near Joannina, pl. 3.—(Compare on the Dionysiac
- Theatre, Leake, Topog. of Athens, p. 53, sqq.)
-
------
-
-The great theatre of Bacchos, partly scooped out of the rock on the face
-of the hill at the south-eastern angle of the Acropolis, stretched
-forth, on solid piers of masonry, a considerable distance into the
-plain, and was capable of containing upwards of thirty thousand people.
-The diameter, accordingly, if it did not exceed, could have fallen
-little short of five hundred feet.[867] For we are not to suppose that,
-while Sparta,[868] and Argos, and Megalopolis, cities comparatively
-insignificant, possessed theatres of such dimensions, Athens,
-incomparably the largest and most beautiful of Hellenic capitals, would
-have been content with one of inferior magnitude.[869]
-
------
-
-Footnote 867:
-
- Even a provincial theatre is compared by the rustic in Dion Chrysostom
- to a large hollow valley, i. 229; what then could the Abbé Dubos be
- thinking of when he wrote, “Il étoit impossible que les altérations du
- visage que le masque cache furent aperçûes distinctment des
- spectateurs, dont plusieurs étoient éloignes _de plus de douze toises_
- du comédien qui récitoit!”—Reflex. Crit. i. 609.
-
-Footnote 868:
-
- Scalig. Poet. i. 21.
-
-Footnote 869:
-
- Colonel Leake, Topog. of Ath. p. 59. Cf. Wordsworth’s Athens and
- Attica, p. 29. The conjecture of Hemsterhuis on the passage of
- Dicæarchos cannot be adopted. The words must apply to the theatre; for
- he says the Parthenon charmed the spectators. But this could not apply
- to the Odeion, which was roofed.
-
------
-
-To determine accurately the various parts of the theatre, and thus affix
-a distinct meaning to every term connected with it, has exercised the
-ingenuity of critics and architects for the last three hundred years,
-still leaving many difficulties to be overcome. I can scarcely hope in
-every case to succeed where they have failed. But the following
-explanation may, perhaps, convey of its interior an idea sufficiently
-exact for all practical purposes.
-
-Supposing ourselves to be standing at the foot of the Katatomè,[870] a
-smooth wall of rock, rising perpendicularly from the back of the theatre
-to the superimpending fortifications of the Acropolis, we behold on
-either hand, surmounted by porticoes, lofty piers of masonry projecting
-like horns down the rocky slope into the plain and united at their
-extremities by a wall of equal height, running in a straight line from
-one point of the horseshoe to the other. The space thus enclosed is
-divided into three principal parts,—the amphitheatre for the spectators,
-the orchestra,[871] filling all the space occupied by the modern pit,
-for the chorus, and the stage, properly so called, for the actors. Each
-of these parts was again subdivided. Looking down still from the
-Katatomè, we behold the benches of white marble, sweeping round the
-whole semicircle of the theatre, descend like steps to the level of the
-orchestra, and intersected at intervals by narrow straight passages
-converging towards a point below.[872] A number of the upper seats, cut
-off, by an open space extending round the whole semicircle, from the
-rest, was set apart for the women. Other divisions were appropriated to
-other classes of the population, as the tier of seats immediately
-overlooking the orchestra to the senators, or dicasts, another portion
-to the youth, another to foreigners and the guests of the state, while
-the remainder was occupied by the dense mass of citizens of all
-ages,[873] with crowns of flowers on their heads.
-
------
-
-Footnote 870:
-
- Poll. iv. 123.
-
-Footnote 871:
-
- Tim. Lex. Platon. in v. ὀρχήστρα. p. 104. Poll. iv. 123.
-
-Footnote 872:
-
- Poll. iv. 123.—The Cunei, for greater convenience, had particular
- marks, numbers, or names to distinguish them: the podium of the
- diazoma of the theatre at Syracuse has an inscription cut on the
- fascia of the cornice to each cuneus.—Antiq. of Ath. &c. Supplem. to
- Stuart, &c., by Cockerel, Kinnaird, Donaldson, &c., p. 38.
-
-Footnote 873:
-
- For the children, see Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 128. Athen. xi. 13. Cf.
- Aristid. t. i. p. 505. Jebb.
-
------
-
-Above the level of the most elevated range of seats, and stretching
-round the whole sweep of the edifice,[874] arose a spacious
-portico,[875] designed to afford shelter to the spectators during the
-continuance of a sudden shower. Another range of porticoes extended
-along the small lawn or grove within the limits of the theatre, at the
-back of the stage, so that there was little necessity for the Athenian
-people to take refuge, as some have imagined, from the weather in the
-public buildings, sacred or civil, in the vicinity.
-
------
-
-Footnote 874:
-
- Vitruv. v. 9. Donaldson, Theatre of the Greeks, p. 139.
-
-Footnote 875:
-
- Among the Romans it was customary to carry along with them, as a
- defence against rain, thick cloaks, rockets, or mandilions. Buleng. de
- Theat. i. 15.—The theatre of Regilla, built by Herodes Atticus in
- honour of his wife, was roofed with cedar.—Philost. Vit. Sophist. ii.
- 1. 5.—In later ages a velarium appears to have been extended over the
- great Dionysiac theatre, as was the custom at Rome.—Wordsworth, Athens
- and Attica, p. 90. Cf. Dion. Cass. xliii. p. 226. a. Hanov. 1606.
-
------
-
-It would appear from an expression in Pollux,[876] that the lower seats
-of the theatre, appropriated to persons of distinction, were covered
-with wood,[877] notwithstanding which, it was usual, in the later ages
-of the commonwealth, for rich persons to have cushions brought for them
-to the theatre by their domestics,[878] together with purple carpets for
-their feet. Theophrastus, accordingly, whom few striking traits of
-manners escaped, represents his flatterer snatching this theatrical
-cushion from the slave, and adjusting and obsequiously smoothing it for
-his patron.[879] To render their devotion to Dionysos still less
-irksome, it was customary to hand round cakes and wine during the
-representation, though, like Homer’s heroes, they were careful to
-fortify themselves with a good meal before they ventured abroad. We are
-informed, moreover, that when the actors were bad there was a greater
-consumption of confectionary, the good people being determined to make
-up in one kind of enjoyment what they lost in another. Full cups,
-moreover, were habitually drained on the entrance and exit of the
-chorus.[880]
-
------
-
-Footnote 876:
-
- Onomast. iv. 122.—To kick the seats with the heel was called
- πτερνοκοπεῖν, which they did when they wanted to drive away an actor,
- id. ibid. Cf. Diog. Laert. ii. 8. 4.
-
-Footnote 877:
-
- On the old wooden theatre see Hesych. v. ἰκρία. Suid. v. ἰκρία, t. i.
- p. 1234. d. Sch. Aristoph. Thesm. 395.—This theatre fell down whilst a
- play of Pratinas was acting.—Suid. v. Πρατίνας, t. ii. 585. d.
-
-Footnote 878:
-
- Upon this practice Dr. Chandler has an ingenious conjecture. After
- attentively viewing the seats of several ancient theatres, and
- “considering their height, width, and manner of arrangement, I am
- inclined to believe that the ancient Asiatics sate at their plays and
- public spectacles, like the modern, with under them, and, it is
- probable, upon carpets.”—Travels, &c. i. 269.
-
-Footnote 879:
-
- Charact. c. ii. p. 10. Casaub.
-
-Footnote 880:
-
- Philoch. Frag. Sieb. p. 85. Aristot. Ethic. Nic. 5. Athen. xi. 13.
-
------
-
-The orchestra, being considerably below the level of the stage, had in
-the middle of it a small square platform, called the Thymele,[881]
-sometimes regarded as a bema on which the leader of the chorus mounted
-when engaged in dialogue with the actors; sometimes as an altar on
-which sacrifice was offered up to Dionysos. That part of the orchestra
-which lay between the Thymele and the stage was denominated the
-Dromos, while the name of Parodoi was bestowed on those two spacious
-side-passages,[882] the one from the east, the other from the west, at
-the extremities of the tiers of seats which afforded the chorus ample
-room for marching in and out in rank and file, in the quadrangular
-form it usually affected.
-
------
-
-Footnote 881:
-
- Etym. Mag. 653. 7. Cf. 458. 30. 743. 30. et Suid. v. σκηνὴ t. ii. p.
- 753, seq. Cf. Thom. Magist. in v. θυμέλη, p. 458, seq. Blancard.
- Scalig. Poet. i. 21. Poll. iv. 123.
-
-Footnote 882:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Acharn. 8. Cf. Vesp. 270.
-
------
-
-At the extremity of the orchestra a pier of masonry called the
-Hyposcenion, adorned with columns and statues, rose to the level of the
-stage, where a most intricate system of machinery and decoration
-represented all that was tangible to sense in the creations of the poet.
-The stage was divided into two parts; first, the Ocribas or
-Logeion,[883] floored with boards, and hollow beneath, for the purpose
-of reverberating the voice; second, the Proscenion,[884] a broader
-parallelogram of solid stonework, necessary to support the vast
-apparatus of machinery and decoration required by the character of the
-Grecian drama. The descent from the stage[885] into the orchestra was by
-two flights of steps situated at either extremity of the Logeion, at the
-point where the Parodoi touched upon the Dromos. Beyond the Proscenion
-arose the Scene,[886] properly so called, the aspect of which was
-constantly varied, to suit the requirements of each successive piece. In
-most cases, however, it represented the front of three different
-edifices, of which the central one, communicating with the stage by a
-broad and lofty portal, was generally a palace. Sometimes, as in the
-Philoctetes, this portal was converted into the mouth of a cavern,[887]
-opening upon the view, amid the rocks and solitudes of Lemnos, while in
-other plays it formed the entrance to the mansion of some private person
-of distinction, but was always appropriated to the principal actor. The
-building on the right assumed in comedy the appearance of an inn,
-through the door of which the second actor issued upon the stage, while
-the portal on the left led into a ruined temple, or uninhabited house.
-In tragedy the right hand entrance was appropriated to strangers, while
-on the left was that of the female apartments, or of a prison.[888]
-
------
-
-Footnote 883:
-
- Plat. Conviv. t. iv. 411. Tim. Lex. v. ὀκρίβας, p. 102. Etym. Mag.
- 620. 52. Poll. iv. 123.
-
-Footnote 884:
-
- Poll. iv. 123.
-
-Footnote 885:
-
- It is impossible to adopt Genelli’s idea on these flights of steps, by
- the injudicious position of which in his plan, he entirely breaks up
- and destroys the beauty of the Hyposcenion, especially as the
- Scholiast on Aristophanes positively states, that they led from the
- Parodoi to the Logeion.—Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 149.
-
-Footnote 886:
-
- On the stage and scenery, see Casalius.—De Trag. et Com. c. i. ap.
- Gronov. Thesaur. t. viii. p. 1603.
-
-Footnote 887:
-
- Cf. Sch. Aristoph. Av. i.
-
-Footnote 888:
-
- Vid. Scalig. de Art. Poet. i. 21.
-
------
-
-Upon the stage, in front of the doors, stood an altar of Apollo Aguieus,
-and a table covered with cakes and confectionary,[889] which appears
-sometimes to have been regarded as the representative of that ancient
-table, on which, in the simplicity of Prothespian times, the solitary
-actor mounted when engaged in dialogue with the chorus.
-
------
-
-Footnote 889:
-
- Poll. iv. 123. Vid. Spanh. ad Callim. t. ii. p. 228, seq.
-
------
-
-When the stage was fitted up for the performance of comedy, there stood
-near the house a painted scene representing a large cattle-shed, with
-capacious double gates, for the admission of waggons and sumpter oxen,
-with herds and droves of asses, when returning from the field. In the
-Akestriæ of Antiphanes,[890] this rustic building was converted into a
-workshop. Beyond each of the side-doors on the right and left were two
-machines,[891] one on either hand, upon which the extremity of the
-periactoi abutted. The scene on the right represented rural landscapes,
-that on the left prospects in the environs of the city, particularly
-views of the harbour. On these periactoi,[892] were represented the
-marine deities riding on the waves, and generally all such objects as
-could not be introduced by machinery. By turning the periactoi on the
-right, the situation was changed, but when both were turned a wholly new
-landscape was placed before the eye. Of the parodoi, or side-passages,
-that on the right led from the fields, from the harbour, or from the
-city, as the necessities of the play required, while those arriving on
-foot from any other part entered by the opposite passage, and,
-traversing a portion of the orchestra, ascended the stage by the flights
-of steps before mentioned.
-
------
-
-Footnote 890:
-
- Scalig. reads Antipho. De Art. Poet. i. 21.
-
-Footnote 891:
-
- Μηχαναὶ for μία. Cf. Annot. Poll. iv. 126.
-
-Footnote 892:
-
- Poll. iv. 126, 130, seq.
-
------
-
-The machinery[893] by which the dumb economy of the play was developed
-consisted of numerous parts, highly complicated and curious. To avoid
-labour, and, perhaps, some tediousness, these might be passed over with
-such a remark as the above, but this would be to escape from
-difficulties not to diminish them. I shall descend to particulars.
-
------
-
-Footnote 893:
-
- Vid. Buleng. De Theat. c. 21.
-
------
-
-First, and most remarkable, was that machine called an Eccyclema,[894]
-much used by the ancients when scenes within-doors were to be brought to
-view. It consisted of a wooden structure, moved on wheels, and
-represented the interior of an apartment. In order to pass forth through
-the doors, it was formed less deep than broad, and rolled forth
-sideways, turning round afterwards, and concealing the front of the
-building from which it had issued. The channels in the floor, which were
-traversed by the wheels, doubtless concealed beneath the lofty basis,
-received the name of Eiscyclema.[895] Sometimes, as in the Agamemnon, it
-presented to view “the royal bathing apartment with the silver laver,
-the corpse enveloped in the fatal garment, and Clytemnestra, besprinkled
-with blood, and holding in her hand the reeking weapon, still standing
-with haughty mien over her murdered victim.”[896] On other occasions a
-throne, a corpse, the interior of a tent, the summit of a building, were
-exhibited; and in the Clouds of Aristophanes the interior of Socrates’
-house was laid open to the spectators, containing a number of masks,
-gaunt and pale, the natural fruit of philosophy.[897] It should be
-remarked that the Eccyclema issued through any of the doors, as the
-piece required the cells of a prison, the halls of a palace, or the
-chambers of an inn, to be placed before the eyes of the audience.
-
------
-
-Footnote 894:
-
- Poll. iv. 127, seq.
-
-Footnote 895:
-
- Poll. iv. 128.
-
-Footnote 896:
-
- Müller, Dissert. on the Eumenid. p. 91.
-
-Footnote 897:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 185.
-
------
-
-That peculiar machine in which the gods made their appearance,[898] or
-such heroes as enjoyed the privilege of travelling through the
-air,—Bellerophon, for example, and Perseus,—stood near the left
-side-entrance, and, in height, exceeded the stone skreen at the back of
-the stage. This, in tragedy, was denominated Mechanè, and Kradè in
-comedy,[899]—in this case resembling a fig-tree, which the Athenians
-called Kradè. The watch-tower, the battlements, and the turret, were
-constructed for the use of those watchmen, such as the old man in the
-Agamemnon, who looked out for signals, or indications of the coming foe.
-The Phructorion[900] was a pharos, or beacon-tower. Another portion of
-the stage was the Distegia, a building two stories high in palaces, from
-the top of which, in the Phœnissœ of Euripides,[901] Antigone beholds
-the army. It was roofed with tiles, (and thence called Keramos,) which
-they sometimes cast down upon the enemy. In comedy, libertines and old
-women, or ladies of equivocal character, were represented prying into
-the street for prey from such buildings.
-
------
-
-Footnote 898:
-
- Ξενοκλῆς ὁ Καρκίνου δοκεῖ μηχανὰς καὶ τερατείας εἰσάγειν ν τοῖς
- δράμασι. Πλάτων Σοφισταῖς· Ξενοκλῆς ὁ δωδεκαμήχανος ὁ Καρκίνου παῖς
- τοῦ θαλαττίου· μηχανοδίφας δὲ εἶπεν αὐτοὺς, ἐπειδὴ πολλάκις ὡς
- τραγῳδοὶ μηχανὰς προσέφερον, ἡνίκα Θεοὺς ἐμιμοῦντο ἀνερχομένους ἢ
- κατερχομένους ἐκ τοῦ οὐρανοῦ ἢ ἄλλοτι τοιοῦτον. Schol. Aristoph. Pac.
- 769.
-
-Footnote 899:
-
- Poll. iv. 129. Etym. Mag. 465. 56. 534. 39.
-
-Footnote 900:
-
- Aristoph. Av. 1161, et Schol. Cf. Herod. ap. Const. in v. φρυκτώριον.
- Poll. iv. 127.
-
-Footnote 901:
-
- Phæn. 688, cum not. et Schol. Bekk. Poll. iv. 127, 129.
-
------
-
-The Keraunoskopeion[902] was a lofty triangular column, which appears to
-have been hollow, and furnished with narrow fissures, extending in right
-lines from top to bottom. Within seem to have been a number of lamps, on
-stationary bases, from which, as the periactos whirled round, sheets of
-mimic lightning flashed upon the stage from behind the scenes.
-
------
-
-Footnote 902:
-
- Poll. iv. 127, 130.
-
------
-
-The construction of the Bronteion,[903] or thunder magazine, I imagine
-to have been nearly as follows:—a number of brazen plates, arranged one
-below another, like stairs, descended through a steep, vaulted passage
-behind the scene, into the bottom of a tower, terminating in a vast
-brazen caldron. From the edge of this, a series of metallic
-apertures,[904] probably spiral, pierced the tower wall, and opened
-without in funnels, like the mouths of trumpets.
-
------
-
-Footnote 903:
-
- Idem, Ibid.
-
-Footnote 904:
-
- These were called ἠχεῖα. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 292.
-
------
-
-When some deity was required to descend to earth in the midst of
-lightning and sudden thunder, the Keraunoskopeion was instantaneously
-put in motion, and showers of pebbles from the sea-shore were hurled
-down the mouth of the Bronteion, and, rolling over the brazen
-receptacles, produced a terrific crash, which, with innumerable
-reverberations, was poured forth by the Echeia upon the theatre.[905]
-
------
-
-Footnote 905:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 292, 294.
-
------
-
-In a lofty gallery called the Theologeion, extending over the marble
-skreen at the back of the stage, appeared the gods, when the drama
-required their presence; and hence, I imagine, the Hebrew colony which
-makes its appearance nightly near the roof of our own theatres have
-obtained the name of gods. Here Zeus, and the other deities of Olympos,
-were assembled in that very extraordinary drama of Æschylus, the
-Psychostasia, or weighing in the balance the souls of Achilles and
-Hector.
-
-They employed in the theatre the machine called a Crane,[906] the point
-of which being lowered, snatched up whatever it was designed to bear
-aloft into the air. By means of this contrivance, Eos, goddess of the
-dawn, descended and bore away the body of Memnon, slain by Achilles
-before Troy. At other times strong cords, so disposed as to resemble
-swings, were let down from the roof, to support the gods or heroes who
-seemed to be borne through the air.
-
------
-
-Footnote 906:
-
- Poll. iv. 130.
-
------
-
-Though by turning the Periactoi three changes of scene could be
-produced, many more were sometimes required, and, when this was the
-case, new landscapes were dropped, like hangings, or slided in frames in
-front of those painted columns. These usually represented views of the
-sea, or mountain scenery, or the course of some river winding along
-through solitary vales, or other prospects of similar character,
-according to the spirit of the drama.
-
-The position of the Hemicycle is more difficult to comprehend. It
-appears to have been a retreating semicircular scene, placed facing the
-orchestra, and masking the marble buildings at the back of the stage,
-when a view was to be opened up into some distant part of the city, or
-shipwrecked mariners were to be exhibited buffeting with the waves. Not
-very dissimilar was the Stropheion,[907] which brought to view heroes
-translated to Olympos, or on the ocean, or in battle slain, where change
-of position with respect to the spectator was produced by the rotatory
-motion of the machine.
-
------
-
-Footnote 907:
-
- Poll. iv. 131.
-
------
-
-The position of the Charonian staircase,[908] by which spectres and
-apparitions ascended from the nether world, is exceedingly difficult to
-be determined; but that it was somewhere on the stage appears to me
-certain, notwithstanding the seeming testimony of Pollux to the
-contrary. The hypothesis which makes the ghosts issue from a door
-immediately beneath the seats of the spectators, and rush along the
-whole depth of the orchestra, among the chorus and musicians, is, at any
-rate, absurd. It must have been somewhere towards the back of the stage,
-near the altar of Loxios, the table of shew-bread and those sacred and
-antique images which in certain dramas were there exhibited. Here,
-likewise, was the trap-door, through which river-gods issued from the
-earth, while the other trap-door, appropriated to the Furies, seems to
-have been situated in the boards of the Logeion, near one of the flights
-of steps leading down into the orchestra.
-
------
-
-Footnote 908:
-
- Id. iv. 132.
-
------
-
-The above synopsis of the machinery and decorations employed by the
-Greeks in their theatrical shows may, possibly, from its imperfection,
-suggest the idea of a rude and clumsy apparatus. But, as the arts of
-poetry, sculpture, painting, and architecture reached in Greece the
-highest perfection, and, as this perfection was coëtaneous with the
-flourishing state of the drama, it is impossible to escape the
-conviction, that the art of scene-painting and the manufacturing of
-stage machinery, likewise, underwent all the improvements of which by
-their nature they are susceptible. For, in the first place, it is not
-easy to suppose, that a people, so fastidious as were the Athenians,
-would have tolerated in the theatre displays of ignorance and want of
-skill which everywhere else they are known to have overwhelmed with
-contempt and derision; more especially as, in the first place, the
-landscapes and objects represented were usually those with which they
-were most familiar, though the fancy of the poet sometimes ventured to
-transport them to the most elevated and inaccessible recesses of Mount
-Caucasus, to the summit of the celestial Olympos, to the palaces and
-harems of Persia, to the wilds of the Tauric Chersonese,[909] or even to
-the dim and dreary regions of the dead. The names, nevertheless, of few
-scene-painters, besides Agatharchos,[910] have come down to us, though
-it is known, that, in their own day, they sometimes divided with the
-poet the admiration of the audience, and, on other occasions, enabled
-poets of inferior merit to bear away the prize from their betters.
-
------
-
-Footnote 909:
-
- Cf. Æsch. Prom. 2.
-
-Footnote 910:
-
- Vitruv. Præfat. lib. vii. Plut. Alcib. § 16.
-
------
-
-The character, however, of stage-scenery differed very widely in
-tragedy, comedy, and satyric pieces,[911] usually consisting, in the
-first, of façades of palaces, with colonnades, architraves, cornices,
-niches, statues, &c.; in comedy, of the fronts or courts of ordinary
-houses, with windows, balconies, porticoes, &c.; while, in the satyric
-drama, the fancy of the painter and decorator was allowed to develope
-before the audience scenes of rural beauty remote from cities, as the
-hollows of mountains shaded with forests, winding valleys, plains,
-rivers, caverns, and sacred groves.
-
------
-
-Footnote 911:
-
- Vitruv. v. 8. Etym. Mag. 763. 27.
-
------
-
-Of the Grecian actors,[912] whose business and profession next require
-to be noticed, too little by far is known, considering the curious
-interest of the subject. Their art, however, would appear to have sprung
-from that of the rhapsodists, who chanted in temples, during religious
-festivals, and afterwards in the theatres, the heroic lays of Greece. To
-a certain extent, indeed, the rhapsodist was himself an actor. His art
-required him to enter deeply into the spirit of the poetry he recited,
-to suit to the passion brought into play the modulations and inflexions
-of his voice, his tone, his looks, his gesture, so as vividly to paint
-to the imagination the picture designed by the poet, and sway the whole
-theatre by the powerful wand of sympathy through all the gradations of
-sorrow, indignation, and joy.[913] By some writers, accordingly, the
-rhapsodist is apparently confounded with the actor, that is, he is
-considered an actor of epics,[914] though in reality his imitations of
-character were partial and imperfect.
-
------
-
-Footnote 912:
-
- Vid. Casal. c. 2.
-
-Footnote 913:
-
- Plat. Ion. t. ii. p. 183, seq. Wolf. Proleg. p. 95. Cf. S. F. Dresig.
- Comment. Lips. 1734. Gillies, Hist. of Greece, vol. i. c. 6.
-
-Footnote 914:
-
- Diod. Sic. xiv. 109. xv. 7.
-
------
-
-Actors formed at Athens part of a guild, or company, called the
-Dionysiac artificers,[915] among whom were also comprehended
-rhapsodists, citharœdi, citharistæ, musicians, jugglers, and other
-individuals[916] connected with the theatre. These persons, though for
-the most part held in little estimation, were yet somewhat more
-respectable than at Rome, where to appear on the stage was
-infamous.[917] Like the rhapsodists, they generally led a wandering
-life, sometimes appearing at Athens,[918] sometimes at Corinth, or
-Sicyon, or Epidauros, or Thebes, after the fashion approved among the
-strollers of our own day. In the course of these wanderings they now and
-then fell in with rare adventures, as in the case of that company of
-comedians which, on returning from Messenia towards the Isthmus, was met
-by king Cleomenes and the Spartan army near Megalopolis.[919] To exhibit
-the superiority of his power and his contempt for the enemy, Cleomenes
-threw up, probably with turf and boards, a temporary theatre, where he
-and his army sat all day enjoying the jokes and wild merriment of the
-stage, after which, he bestowed, as a prize, upon the principal
-performers, the sum of forty minæ, or about one hundred and sixty pounds
-sterling.
-
------
-
-Footnote 915:
-
- Philost. Vit. Soph. ii. 16. Vit. Apoll. Tyan. v. 7. Vandale, Dissert.
- 380, seq.
-
-Footnote 916:
-
- Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p. 121. Athen. v. 49. Animadv. t. viii. p.
- 196.
-
-Footnote 917:
-
- Vandale. Dissert, v. p. 383.
-
-Footnote 918:
-
- Plat. de Rep. viii. t. ii. p. 229, seq. Athen. xiii. 44. In Roman
- times we find an actor travelling from the capital to Seville in
- Spain, where with his lofty cothurni, strange dress, and gaping mask,
- he frightened the natives out of the theatre.—Philost. Vit. Apoll.
- Tyan. v. 9. Cf. Luc. de Saltat. § 27. A taste for the amusements of
- the Grecian stage was diffused far and wide through the ancient world,
- so that we find the princes of Persia and Armenia not only enjoying
- the representation of Greek tragedies, but themselves, likewise, in
- some instances, aspiring to rival the dramatic poets of Hellas. Thus
- Artavasdes, the Armenian prince, is said to have written tragedies, as
- well as histories and orations, some of which still existed in the age
- of Plutarch. The Parthian court was engaged in beholding the Bacchæ of
- Euripides, in which Jason of Tralles was the principal performer, when
- Sillaces brought in the head of Marcus Crassus, upon which both king
- and nobles delivered themselves up to immoderate joy, and the actor,
- seizing upon the Roman’s head, exchanged the part of Pentheus for that
- of his mother, who appears upon the stage bearing a bleeding head upon
- her thyrsus; for this he received a present of a talent from the
- king.—Plut. Crass. § 33. Polyæan. vii. 41. 1.
-
-Footnote 919:
-
- Plut. Cleom. § 12.
-
------
-
-About this period, however, it was usual for the armies of Greece,
-republican as well as royal, to be followed by companies of strollers,
-jugglers, dancing girls, and musicians.[920] Even in the army of
-Alexander, when proceeding on the Persian expedition, the “flatterers of
-Dionysos”[921] were not forgotten; in fact, the son of Philip set a high
-value upon the performances of these gentlemen, and with truly royal
-munificence allowed them to enjoy their full share of the plunder of the
-East. Thus, when Nicocreon, king of Salamis, and Pasicrates, king of
-Soli,[922] played the part of Choregi in Cyprus, in getting up certain
-tragedies there performed for the amusement of Alexander, and the
-actors, Thessalos, and Athenodoros the Athenian, contended for the
-prize; he was piqued at the victory of the Athenian, and, though he
-commended the judges for bestowing the prize on him whom they regarded
-as the best performer, said, he would have given a part of his kingdom
-rather than have beheld Thessalos overcome by a rival.
-
------
-
-Footnote 920:
-
- Plut. ubi supra.
-
-Footnote 921:
-
- Διονυσοκόλακες. Athen. vi. 56.
-
-Footnote 922:
-
- Plut. Alex. § 29.
-
------
-
-Afterwards, when Athenodoros was fined by his countrymen for absenting
-himself from Athens during the Dionysiac festival, evidently contrary to
-the statutes in that case made and provided, Alexander paid the fine for
-his humble friend, though he refused to make application to the people
-for its remission.
-
-An anecdote related of Lycon of Scarphe, also shows the high value set
-by the Macedonian prince upon the amusements of the stage, and the
-influence exercised over his mind by the Dionysiac artificers, though,
-according to Antiphanes, he wanted the taste to discriminate between a
-good play and a bad one. The Scarpheote being one day in want of money,
-as actors sometimes are, introduced into the piece he was performing a
-line of his own making, beseeching the conqueror to bestow on him ten
-talents; Alexander, amused by his extravagance, or captivated perhaps,
-by the flattery which accompanied it, at once granted his request, and
-thus upwards of two thousand four hundred pounds of the public money
-were expended for the momentary gratification of a prince.[923]
-
------
-
-Footnote 923:
-
- Plut. Alex. § 29.
-
------
-
-The philosophers, almost of necessity, thought and spoke of these
-wandering performers with extreme contempt. Plato observes, that they
-went about from city to city collecting together thoughtless crowds,
-and, by their beautiful, sonorous, and persuasive voices, converting
-republics into tyrannies and aristocracies. Aristotle endeavoured to
-account for their evil character and agency.[924] They were worthless,
-he says, because of all men they profited least by the lessons of reason
-and philosophy, their whole lives being consumed by the study of their
-professional arts, or passed in intemperance and difficulties.
-
------
-
-Footnote 924:
-
- Prob. xxx. 10. They were likewise corrupted by their profession,
- since, in female parts, they frequently indulged in immodest gestures,
- as is particularly related of Callipedes. Id. Poet. v. 2. Cf. Macrob.
- Saturnal. l. ii. c. 10.
-
------
-
-Nevertheless, even among them there were different grades, some aiming
-at the higher walks of tragedy and comedy; while others were content to
-declaim rude, low songs, seated on waggons like mountebanks during the
-Lenæan festival.[925] Nor must this fashion be at all regarded as
-Prothespian, since it prevailed down to a very late period. And as in
-every thing the Greeks aimed at excellence and distinction, so even here
-we find that there was a contest between the poets who wrote the comic
-songs sung by these humble performers from their waggons.[926]
-
------
-
-Footnote 925:
-
- Occasionally, as among ourselves, jugglers were introduced upon the
- stage, swallowing swords and performing other fantastic tricks.—Plut.
- Lycurg. § 19.
-
-Footnote 926:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 545.
-
------
-
-The various classes of actors known to the ancients were numerous. Among
-the lower grades were the Magodos, and the Lysiodos,[927] who though
-confounded by some, appear clearly to have been distinct; the former
-personating both male and female characters; the latter female
-characters only, though disguised in male costume. But the songs, and
-every other characteristic of their performances, were the same. The
-spirit of the coarse satirical farces they acted forbids my explaining
-their nature fully.
-
------
-
-Footnote 927:
-
- Athen. iv. 80. v. 47. vi. 61. Cf. Eustath. ad Odyss. ψ. p. 106, sub
- fin.
-
------
-
-There were even several authors who attained a “bad eminence” in this
-department of literature, which especially affected the Ionic dialect,
-as Alexander, the Ætolian,[928] Pyretos of Miletos, a city noted for its
-dissolute characters, and Alexos, who obtained on this account an
-opprobrious sobriquet. The most remarkable, however, of this vicious
-brood would appear to have been Sotades[929] the Maronite, and his son
-Apollonios who wrote a work on his father’s poems. Sotades was probably
-the original imitated by Pietro Aretino, who obtained in modern times a
-like reputation, though timely penitence may have snatched him from a
-similar end. The ancient libeller, enacting the part of Thersites,
-fastened with peculiar delight on the vices of princes, not from
-aversion to their manners, but because such scandal paved the way to
-notoriety. Thus at Alexandria, he covered Lysimachos with obloquy,
-which, when at the court of Lysimachos, he heaped upon Ptolemy
-Philadelphos. His punishment, however, exceeded the measure of his
-offences. Being overtaken in the island of Caunos by Patrocles, one of
-Ptolemy’s generals, the obsequious mercenary caused him to be enclosed
-in a leaden box and cast into the sea.[930]
-
------
-
-Footnote 928:
-
- Suid. v. φλύακες, t. ii. p. 1073. b.
-
-Footnote 929:
-
- Cf. Fabric. Bib. Græc. ii. p. 495, seq.
-
-Footnote 930:
-
- Athen. xiv. 13.
-
------
-
-The Magodos, then, was a wandering farce actor, not unlike the tumbling
-mountebanks one sometimes sees in France and southern Europe. He
-travelled about with an apparatus of drums, cymbals, and female
-disguises, sometimes impersonating women, sometimes adulterers or the
-mean servants of vice; and the style of his dancing and performances
-corresponded with the low walk he selected, being wholly destitute of
-beauty or decorum. It seems necessary, therefore, to adopt the opinion
-of Aristoxenos, who considered the art of the Hilarodos as a serious
-imitation of tragedy; that of the Magodos as a comic parody, brought
-down to the level of the grossly vulgar. The latter art would appear to
-have derived its name from the charms, spells, or magical songs chanted
-by the mountebanks who likewise pretended to develope the secrets of
-pharmaceutics.
-
-Superior in every way to the Magodos and Lysiodos was the
-Hilarodos,[931] who, though a wandering singer like the Italians and
-Savoyards of modern Europe, affected no little state, and was evidently
-treated with some respect. His costume, in conformity with the popular
-taste, displayed considerable magnificence, consisting of a golden
-crown, white stole and costly sandals, though in earlier ages he
-appeared in shoes. He was usually accompanied by a youth or maiden who
-touched the lyre as he sung. The style of his performances was decorous
-and manly. When a crown was given him in token of approbation by the
-audience, it was bestowed on the Hilarodos himself, not on the musician.
-
------
-
-Footnote 931:
-
- Cf. Athen. iv. 57. Salm. Exercit. Plin. p. 76. Voss. Institut. Poet.
- ii. 21. Rhinthon was the inventor of the Hilaro-tragœdi. i. e.
- Tragi-comedy. Suid. v. Ῥίνθων, t. ii. p. 685. b.
-
------
-
-A class of actors existed, also from very remote times, among the
-Spartans. They were called Deikelistæ,[932] and their style of
-performing showed the little value set upon the drama at Sparta. The
-poetry of the piece, if poetry it could be called, was extempore and of
-the rudest description, and the characters were altogether conformable.
-Sometimes the interest of the play turned upon a man robbing an orchard,
-or on the broken Greek of an outlandish physician, whom people respected
-for his gibberish. This weakness, prevalent of course at Athens also, is
-wittily satirised by Alexis in his Female Opium Eater.
-
- “Now if a native
- Doctor prescribe, ‘Give him a porringer
- Of ptisan in the morning,’ we despise him.
- But in some _brogue_ disguised ’tis admirable.
- Thus he who speaks of _Beet_ is slighted, while
- We prick our ears if he but mention _Bate_,
- As if _Bate_ knew some virtue not in _Beet_.”[933]
-
------
-
-Footnote 932:
-
- Schol. Apoll. Rhod. i. 746. Plut. Ages. 21. Athen. xiv. 15. Etym. Mag.
- 260. 42.
-
-Footnote 933:
-
- I have substituted this joke, à la Smollett, “for the miserable joke
- in the original.” Beet, Atticé σευτλίον, became τεύτλιον in the Doric
- brogue. Athen. xiv. 15.
-
------
-
-The Deikelistæ, however, were not confined to Laconia, but, under
-various names were known in most other parts of Greece. Thus, at Sicyon,
-they obtained the appellation of Phallophori, elsewhere they were called
-Autocabdali, or Improvisator; while in Italy, (that is, among the Greek
-colonists,[934]) they were known by the name of Phlyakes.[935] By the
-common people they were called the wise men (σοφίσται), upon the same
-principle that actors in France are known by the name of _artistes_. The
-Thebans, renowned for the havoc they made in the language of Greece,
-denominated them the Voluntaries, alluding proleptically perhaps to the
-“voluntary principle.” Semos, the Delian, draws an amusing picture of
-these Improvisatori. Those performers, he says, who are called
-Autocabdali made their appearance on the stage, crowned with ivy, and
-poured forth their verse extempore. The name of Iambi was afterwards
-bestowed, both on them and their poems. Another class who were called
-Ithyphalli,[936] wore those masks, which on the stage were appropriated
-to drunkards, with crowns of ivy and flowered gloves upon their hands.
-Their chitons were striped with white, and over these, bound by a girdle
-at the loins, they wore a Tarentine pelisse descending to the ankle.
-They entered upon the stage by the great door appropriated to royal
-personages, and, advancing in silence across the stage, turned towards
-the audience and exclaimed,—
-
- “Make way there, a wide space
- Yield to the god;
- For Dionysos has a mind to walk
- Bolt upright through your midst.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 934:
-
- Among the mimics of this part of Italy, the most celebrated was Cleon,
- surnamed the Mimaulos, who dispensed with the use of a mask.—Athen. x.
- 78.
-
-Footnote 935:
-
- Athen. xiv. 15. Cf. Suid. in φλύακες, t. ii. p. 1073. b.
-
-Footnote 936:
-
- Vid. Harpocrat. in v. ἰθύφαλλοι. Mauss. p. 152.
-
------
-
-The Phallophori made their appearance unmasked, shading their face with
-a drooping garland of wild thyme, intermingled with acanthus-leaves, and
-surmounted by an ample crown of ivy, with violets appearing between its
-glossy dark foliage. Their costume was the caunacè. Of these actors,
-some entered through the side-passages, others through the central door,
-advancing with measured tread, and saying,—
-
- “Bacchos, to thee our muse belongs,
- Of simple chant, and varied lays;
- Nor fit for virgin ears our songs,
- Nor handed down from ancient days:
- Fresh flows the strain we pour to thee,
- Patron of joy and minstrelsy!”
-
-After which, skipping forward, they made a halt and showered their
-sarcasms indiscriminately on whomsoever they pleased, while the leader
-of the troop moved slowly about, his face bedaubed with soot.[937]
-
------
-
-Footnote 937:
-
- Athen. xiv. 16.
-
------
-
-The superior classes of performers, whether actors or musicians, seem to
-have been held in much estimation, and to have been still more
-extravagantly paid than in our own day. Thus Amœbæos, the Citharœdos,
-who lived near the Odeion at Athens, received, but at what period of the
-republic is not known, an Attic talent a day, as often as he played in
-public.[938] Music, however, was always in high estimation in Greece,
-where the greatest men, though they did not seek to rival regular
-professors in skill, yet learned to amuse their leisure with it. Thus
-the Homeric Achilles plays on the lyre, the sounds of which could not
-only cure diseases of the mind but of the body. A similar belief existed
-among the Israelites, as we learn from the example of Saul.
-
------
-
-Footnote 938:
-
- Athen. xiv. 17.
-
------
-
-Though talent must have been always respected in an actor, it appears to
-me that anciently they made comparatively little figure, while there
-were great poets to excite admiration. But, afterwards, when dramatic
-literature had sunk very low, the actor usurped the consideration due to
-the poet, as has long been the case in this country. They then contended
-for the prize in the tragic contests,[939] and began to entertain a high
-opinion of their own merits. In fact, the ignorant being better
-calculated to feel than to judge, the actors often obtained the first
-prizes in the games, and were held in higher estimation than the poets
-themselves.[940]
-
------
-
-Footnote 939:
-
- Aristot. Ethic. Nicom. iii. 4.
-
-Footnote 940:
-
- Aristot. Rhet. iii. 1.
-
------
-
-Thus persuaded of their own importance, they gradually exercised over
-the poor devils who composed plays for them, much the same tyranny as
-that in our own age complained of by the poetical servants of the
-theatre. That is, they despotically interfered with the framing of the
-plot, with the succession of the scenes, and procured episodes to be
-introduced, in order that they might show off their peculiar abilities.
-This is evident from a passage in Aristotle’s Politics,[941] where he
-observes that the celebrated actor Theodoros would allow no inferior
-performer to appear before him on the stage, knowing the force of first
-impressions; from which it is evident that the author was compelled to
-yield to his caprice.
-
------
-
-Footnote 941:
-
- Polit. vii. 17.
-
------
-
-Antiquity has preserved the names of many celebrated actors, of whom
-several played a conspicuous though sometimes a dishonourable part in
-the great theatre of the world. Thus Aristodemos, who performed the
-first character alternately with Theodoros, became afterwards a traitor
-and betrayed the state to Philip. Such too was the case with Philocrates
-and Æschines, both actors,[942] and both rogues. Satyros, a comedian of
-the same period, appears to have been a man of high character and
-honour, who in consequence obtained the friendship of Demosthenes. But
-the Garrick of that age seems to have been Theocrines,[943] who by many,
-however, is supposed to have afterwards degenerated into a sycophant.
-Callipedes is chiefly known to us from the anecdote which describes the
-check his vanity received from Agesilaos. Having acquired great
-reputation as a tragic actor, he appears to have considered himself as
-equal at least to any king, and therefore, meeting one day with
-Agesilaos, he ostentatiously put himself forward, mingled with the
-courtiers and took much pains to attract his notice. Finding all these
-efforts useless, his pride was wounded, and going up directly to the
-Spartan, he said,
-
-“Dost thou not know me, king?”
-
-“Why,” replied Agesilaos, “art thou not Callipedes, the
-stage-buffoon?”[944]
-
------
-
-Footnote 942:
-
- Dem. de Fal. Leg. § 58.
-
-Footnote 943:
-
- Dem. de Coron. § 97.
-
-Footnote 944:
-
- Δεικηλίκτας. Plut. Ages. § 21. Apothegm. Lac. Ages. 57.
-
------
-
-The account transmitted to us of Æsopos is somewhat puzzling; he is
-described as one of the actors[945] who performed in the tragedies of
-Æschylus, but is said to have been at the same time a fellow of infinite
-merriment who turned everything into a jest, a sort I suppose of comic
-Macbeth. Œagros obtained celebrity in the part of Niobe,[946] in the
-tragedy of Æschylus or Sophocles; and Aristophanes enumerates among the
-pleasures of Dicasts the power, should such an actor appear before them
-in a court of justice, of requiring him by way of pleading his own
-cause, to give them a few choice speeches of his favourite tragic queen.
-
------
-
-Footnote 945:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 566. Flor. Christ. ad loc. In Plato’s time there
- were few or no actors who excelled at the same time in tragedy and
- comedy. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 123.
-
-Footnote 946:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 579.
-
------
-
-Among the most celebrated actors of antiquity was Polos, a native of
-Ægina, who studied the art of stage-declamation under Archias, known in
-his own age by the infamous surname of Phugadotheras, or the “Exile
-Hunter.”[947] This miscreant it was, who, under the orders of Antipater,
-pursued Demosthenes to the temple of Poseidon in Calauria, where, to
-escape the cruelty of the Macedonians, the orator put a period to his
-own life.
-
------
-
-Footnote 947:
-
- Plut. Dem. § 28. Vit. x. Orat. 8. Another actor obtained the name of
- the Partridge. Athen. iii. 82.
-
------
-
-Polos appears to have risen speedily to that eminence which he
-maintained to the last. A striking anecdote is related of the means by
-which he worked upon his own feelings, in order the more vehemently to
-stir those of his audience. On one occasion,[948] having to perform the
-part of Electra, he took along with him to the theatre an urn containing
-the ashes of a beloved son, whom he had recently lost, and thus, instead
-of shedding, under the mask of the heroic princess, feigned tears over
-the supposed remains of Orestes, he sprinkled the urn which he bore upon
-the stage with the dews of genuine and deep sorrow. He eclipsed in
-reputation all the actors of his time, and was in tragedy what
-Theocrines, in the preceding age, had been in comedy. His salary,
-accordingly, was very great, amounting at one time to half a talent per
-day, out of which, to be sure, he was required to pay the third actor.
-
------
-
-Footnote 948:
-
- Aulus Gellius, vii. 5.
-
------
-
-He must have led, moreover, a life of much temperance, otherwise he
-would scarcely have been able to accomplish what is related of him by
-Philochoros, who says, that, at seventy years of age, a little before
-his death, he performed the principal parts of eight tragedies in four
-days. His devotion to his art did not, however, carry him so far as that
-of the comic poets, Philemon and Alexis, who breathed their last upon
-the stage at the moment that the crown of victory was placed upon their
-heads, and so were literally dismissed for the last time from the scene
-amidst the shouts and acclamations of the admiring multitude.[949] But
-the passion of the Greeks for the arts of imitation did not confine
-itself to the enacting of human character and human feelings. Every
-species of mimicry found its patrons among them. There were, for
-example, persons who, by whistling, could imitate the notes of the
-nightingale; and Agesilaos, being once invited to witness the
-performances of one of these artists, replied somewhat contemptuously,
-“I have heard the nightingale herself.”[950] Others, as Parmenion, could
-counterfeit to perfection the grunt of a pig,[951] though it is
-probable, that actors of smaller dimensions were called upon to perform
-in the comedy of Aristophanes, where the Megarean[952] brings on the
-stage his daughters in a sack, and disposes of them as porkers, having
-first carefully instructed them in the proper style of squeaking. Other
-actors obtained celebrity[953] through their power of imitating by their
-voice the grating or rumbling of wheels, the creaking of axletrees, the
-whistling of winds, the blasts of trumpets, the modulations of flutes,
-or pipes, or the sounds of other instruments. It was customary, too,
-among this class of performers, to mimic, doubtless, in pastoral scenes,
-the bleating of sheep, and the bark of the shepherd’s dog, the neighing
-of horses, and the deep bellowing of bulls. They could imitate,
-moreover, but by what means is uncertain, the pattering of hail-storms,
-the dash and breaking of water in rivers or seas, with other natural
-phenomena. It was customary, likewise, as in modern times, to introduce
-boats and galleys rowed along the mimic waters of the stage, an example
-of which occurs on an Etruscan Chalcidone, where we behold a little
-vessel of extraordinary form, with a mariner at bow and stern, paddled
-along a bank adorned with flowers, while on a platform, occupying the
-boat’s waist, two naked dancers are exhibiting their saltatorial
-powers.[954]
-
------
-
-Footnote 949:
-
- Plut. An. Seni. § 3.
-
-Footnote 950:
-
- Plut. Ages. § 21.
-
-Footnote 951:
-
- Etym. Mag. 607. 25.
-
-Footnote 952:
-
- Acharn. 834.
-
-Footnote 953:
-
- Plut. de Aud. Poet. § 3. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. pp. 125–127. This
- philosopher, it is clear, entertained a less elevated idea of art than
- some modern writers, who define it as follows: “Art is a
- representation (μίμησις), i. e. an energy by means of which a subject
- becomes an object,”—(Müller, cited by Mr. Donaldson, Theatre of the
- Greeks, p. 4,)—in other words, by which a nominative becomes an
- accusative.
-
-Footnote 954:
-
- Mus. Cortonens. tab. 60.
-
------
-
-Very singular figures were also introduced upon the stage, as wasps,
-frogs, and birds, of sufficiently large dimensions to be enacted by men;
-and still stranger personages occasionally made their appearance, as
-where, in a kind of practical parody of the story of Andromeda,[955] a
-whale emerges on the sea beach to snap off an old woman. In another
-drama the transformation of Argos was represented, after which this
-luckless male duenna strutted like a peacock before the audience. Io,
-moreover, was changed into a cow, and Euippe, in Euripides, into a mare.
-What there was peculiar in the appearance of Amymone it is not easy to
-conjecture; but she was, possibly, represented in the act of withdrawing
-the trident of Poseidon from the rock, from which gushed forth three
-fountains. The rivers, and mountains, and cities introduced[956] were,
-doubtless, personifications, such as we still find in many works of art.
-The giants were simply, in all probability, huge figures of men, made to
-stalk about the stage, like elephants, with an actor in each leg; and
-the Indians, Tritons, Gorgons, Centaurs, with other personages of
-terrible or fantastic aspect, owed their existence, perhaps, to masks,
-if we may so speak, representing the whole figures.
-
------
-
-Footnote 955:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 548.
-
-Footnote 956:
-
- See the figure of Alexandria in the Gemme Antiche Figurate of
- Agostini.
-
------
-
-In what form the Seasons, the Pleiades,[957] or the nymphs of Mithakos,
-made their appearance on the stage, we are, I believe, nowhere told,
-though we possess some information respecting the costume and figure of
-those other strange persons of the drama, the Clouds,[958] which came
-floating in through the Parodoi, enveloped, some in masses of white
-fleecy gauze, like vapour, others in azure, or many-tinted robes, or in
-drapery like piled-up flocks of wool, to represent the various aspects
-of the skies; while a hazy atmosphere was probably diffused around them,
-as around the other gods, by the smoke of styrax or frankincense, burnt
-in profusion on the altars of the theatre. Here and there, through these
-piles of drapery, a mask with ruddy pendant nose, like the tail of a
-lobster, peered forth, and a human voice was heard chanting in richest
-cadence and modulation the lively anapæsts of the chorus.
-
------
-
-Footnote 957:
-
- Poll. iv. 142.
-
-Footnote 958:
-
- Vid. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 289. 343. 442.
-
------
-
-In the tragedy of Alcestis, the grim, spectral figure of Death was
-beheld gliding to and fro through the darkness, in front of the palace
-of Admetos, while personifications still, if possible, more strange and
-wild, made their appearance in other dramas,—as Justice, Madness,
-Frenzy, Strength, Violence, Deceit, Drunkenness, Laziness, Envy.[959]
-
------
-
-Footnote 959:
-
- Poll. iv. 141, seq.
-
------
-
-Plato, who entertained peculiar notions[960] respecting the dignity of
-human nature, banished the theatre from his Republic, because he thought
-it unbecoming a brave man, who had political rights to watch over and
-defend, to demean himself by low stage impersonations; and, from his
-account of what he would not have his citizens do, we learn what by
-others was done. Sometimes, he observes, the actor was required to
-imitate a woman, (though this task often devolved upon eunuchs,) whether
-young or old, reviling her husband, railing at and expressing contempt
-for the gods, either puffed up by the supposed stableness of her
-felicity, or stung to desperation by the severity of her misfortunes and
-sorrows. Other female characters were to be represented, toiling, or in
-love, or in the pangs of labour; which shows that there was scarcely an
-act or passage in human life not occasionally imitated on the stage.
-
------
-
-Footnote 960:
-
- De Rep. t. vi. p. 125.
-
------
-
-Slaves of course performed an important part in the mimic world of the
-theatre; and with these, Plato, by some unaccountable association of
-ideas, classes smiths, and madmen, and vagabonds, and low artificers of
-every kind, and the rowers of galleys, and rogues, and cowards, below
-which his imagination could discover nothing in human nature.
-
-But it was these very characters, with their low wit, buffoonery, and
-appropriate actions, that constituted the most effective materials of
-the comic poet, whose creed was, that
-
- Les fous sont ici-bas pour nos menus plaisirs.
-
-They accordingly hesitated at no degree of grotesque buffoonery and
-extravagance, introducing not only low sausage-sellers with their trays
-of black-puddings and chitterlings suspended on their paunches,[961] and
-drunkards lisping, hiccuping, and reeling about the stage,[962] but even
-libertines and profligates carrying on their intrigues in the view of
-the spectators. An example of this kind of scene occurs on an Etruscan
-bronze seal dug up near Cortona, which represents an adulterer in
-conference with his mistress, together with the Leno who brought them
-together.[963]
-
------
-
-Footnote 961:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 150.
-
-Footnote 962:
-
- Athen. x. 33.
-
-Footnote 963:
-
- Mus. Cortonens. tabb. 18, 19. Cf. p. 26, seq. 1750. Rom.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
- THEATRE (_continued_).
-
-
-Into the various questions which have been raised respecting the origin
-and constitution of the chorus it is not my intention to enter. It
-undoubtedly appears, however, to have arisen amid the festivities of the
-vintage, when, after the grapes were brought home and pressed and the
-principal labours of the season concluded,[964] the rustics delivered
-themselves up to wild joy and merriment, chanting hymns and performing
-dances in honour of Dionysos, the protecting god of the vine. At first
-the number of the persons engaged in these dances could not have been
-fixed, since it is probable that all the vintagers, both male and
-female, joined in the sports, as they had previously joined in the
-labour. And this free and unformal character the Dithyrambic or
-Dionysiac chorus must have preserved, as long as it remained a mere
-village pastime. But when afterwards, advancing from one step to
-another, it assumed something of an artificial form and several
-chorusses arose which contended with each other for a prize, the
-performers must have undergone some kind of training,[965] both in
-singing and dancing, and then the number of the individuals constituting
-the chorus was possibly fixed. There appears to be some reason for
-thinking, that these exhibitions were more ancient than the congregation
-of the Athenians in one city, and that originally every tribe had its
-own chorus,[966] since we find that afterwards, when all the inhabitants
-of Attica came to regard themselves as one people, the Choreutæ were
-chosen from every tribe five.
-
------
-
-Footnote 964:
-
- Cf. Ficorini, Degli Masch. Scen. p. 15.
-
-Footnote 965:
-
- On the importance afterwards attached to the training of the chorus,
- see the substance of an inscription in Chandler, ii. 72.
-
-Footnote 966:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Av. 1404. Schneid. de Orig. Trag. Græc. c. i. p. 2. The
- Dithyrambic ode was said to have been invented by Arion at Corinth.
- Schol. Pind. Olymp. xiii. 25, seq. The first choral songs were
- improvisations. Max. Tyr. Dissert. xxi. p. 249.
-
------
-
-By what gradations, however, the village chorus was transformed into the
-Dithyrambic, the Dithyrambic into the Satyric, and the Satyric again
-into the Tragic, it now appears impossible to ascertain; but it seems to
-be quite clear,[967] that in many ancient tragedies the number of the
-chorus was fifty,[968] as, for example, in the “Judgment of the Arms,”
-by Æschylus, in which silver-footed Thetis appeared upon the stage
-accompanied by a train of fifty Nereids.[969] Again, according to
-certain ancient authors,[970] in the Eumenides of Æschylus, the chorus
-of Furies at first amounted to fifty, which, rushing tumultuously, with
-frightful gestures and horrid masks,[971] into the orchestra, struck so
-great a terror into the people, particularly the women[972] and
-children, that their number was afterwards reduced by law. I am aware
-that several distinguished scholars think very differently on this
-subject; some maintaining, that the chorus of Furies always consisted of
-fifteen, while others reduce their number to three. But, though both
-these opinions have been supported with much learning and ingenuity, it
-seems difficult to admit either the one or the other. In the first
-place, since every thing connected with the stage was in a state of
-perpetual fluctuation, since the masks and costume were repeatedly
-altered, since the number of the actors was augmented, since almost
-every arrangement of the theatre, and every characteristic of the
-poetry, underwent numerous modifications; the chorus, also, it is
-probable, submitted to the same alterations or reforms till it settled
-in that tetragonal figure[973] and determinate number which it
-afterwards preserved, as long as the legitimate drama existed in Greece.
-
------
-
-Footnote 967:
-
- Poll. iv. 108. Sch. Aristoph. Acharn. 210.
-
-Footnote 968:
-
- Cf. Schol. ad Æschin. Tim. Orator. Att. t. xii. p. 376. Tzetz. ad
- Lycoph. p. 251, sqq. See also Müller, Dissert. on the Eumenides of
- Æschylus, p. 54. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 587.—“Nous savons que sur les
- Théâtres Grecs les femmes dansaient dans les chœurs.”—Winkel. Mon.
- Ined. iii. p. 86. I have found no proof in any ancient author that
- this was the practice among the Greeks.
-
-Footnote 969:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Acharn. 848.
-
-Footnote 970:
-
- Vit. Æschyl. p. vi.
-
-Footnote 971:
-
- Bœttiger, Furies, p. 2. Poll. iv. 110. Schol. Aristoph. Av. 298. Eq.
- 586.
-
-Footnote 972:
-
- According to Mr. Bœttiger, however, “chez les anciens Atheniens les
- femmes n’ont jamais assisté aux représentations théatrales.”—Furies,
- p. 3, note. But, in addition to the proofs of the contrary,
- accumulated in the preceding book, the reader may consult the
- testimony of Aristides, who severely blames his countrymen for
- allowing their wives and children to frequent the theatres, t. i. p.
- 518, cf. p. 507.—Jebb. He speaks, indeed, more particularly of the
- Smyrniotes; but Smyrna was an Ionian colony.—Herod. i. 149.
-
-Footnote 973:
-
- Cf. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 209.
-
------
-
-In one point of view the history of the chorus is extremely remarkable.
-At first, and for some time, it constituted in itself the whole of the
-spectacle exhibited at the Dionysiac festivals, where its songs and
-dances, accompanied by such rude music as the times afforded, satisfied
-the demands of the popular taste, and were consequently supposed to be
-everything that the god required. By degrees, as experience suggested
-improvements either in the music, in the manner of dancing, or in the
-materials and composition of the odes, the movements, singing, and
-appearance of the Chorus, assumed a more artificial form, which was
-necessarily carried forward many steps in the career of amelioration by
-the institution of rival bodies of Choreutæ, who, from the natural
-principle of emulation, endeavoured to excel each other. Next, a
-detached member of its own body, mounted on a table, enacted the part of
-a stranger or messenger come to announce something which it imported the
-servants of Dionysos to know. This table was doubtless placed directly
-in front of the altar of Bacchos, on the steps of which the leader of
-the chorus was probably mounted in after ages, to hold communication
-with the stranger; and, as this altar ripened through many gradations
-into the Thymele, so the aforesaid table rose through innumerable
-changes into the Logeion. It may be remarked, moreover, that the slope
-of a hill,[974] when any such existed near the village, would naturally
-be chosen on such occasions to afford the peasants an opportunity of
-standing behind each other on ascending levels, and thus, without
-inconvenience, beholding the show; and where such natural aid did not
-present itself, they probably threw up embankments of turf in the
-semicircular form, which experience proved to be most convenient, and,
-out of this rude contrivance, grew those vast and magnificent
-structures, which afterwards constituted one of the noblest ornaments of
-Greece.
-
------
-
-Footnote 974:
-
- Cf. Scalig. Poet, i. 21. Leroy, Ruines des plus beaux Monumens de la
- Grèce, p. 14.
-
------
-
-The single actor, detached in the manner we have said from the Chorus,
-speedily acquired greater importance, and the aid of poetry was called
-in to frame and adorn his recitals; and as, during the songs and dances
-of the Chorus, he necessarily remained idle, the idea soon suggested
-itself that a second actor[975] would be an improvement, upon which
-dialogue and the regular drama sprang into existence.
-
------
-
-Footnote 975:
-
- Cf. Hesych. v. νέμησις ὑποκριτῶν.
-
------
-
-Among the principal duties of the Chorus was the performance of certain
-dances, simple enough at the outset, but, in process of time, refined
-and rendered so intricate by art, that it required no little learning
-and ability to execute all their varied movements with dignity and
-grace. Somewhat to assist the eye and memory, the whole pattern, as it
-were, of the dance seems to have been chalked out on the floor of the
-orchestra;[976] while the greatest possible pains were taken in drilling
-the Choreutæ to open, file off, and wheel through their labyrinthine
-evolutions, without confusion. The manner in which these persons usually
-entered the orchestra, that is to say, ranged in a square body, three in
-front and five deep, or five in front and three deep, has suggested to
-some the notion that they represented a military Lochos;[977] but
-besides that this is inconsistent with their Dionysiac origin, they did
-not always preserve this arrangement, but, on some occasions, came
-rushing in confusedly, while on others they traversed the Parodos in
-Indian file.
-
------
-
-Footnote 976:
-
- This, however, I merely conjecture from the practice of marking with
- lines the station of the chorus. Hesych. v. γραμμαί.
-
-Footnote 977:
-
- When making their exit, it is said they were preceded by a
- flute-player. Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 582. These musicians wore, while
- playing, straps of leather called φορβείαι, bound over their mouth in
- order to regulate the quantity of air transmitted into the pipe. Id.
- ibid. See Burney, Hist. of Music, i. 279.
-
------
-
-The musicians,[978] in the Greek theatre, took their station upon and
-about the steps of the Thymele, which answers as nearly as possible to
-the position of the orchestra in our own theatres. Here, also, stood the
-Rhabduchi,[979] or vergers of the theatre, whose business it was to see
-that order was preserved among the spectators.
-
------
-
-Footnote 978:
-
- Cf. Torrent. in Suet. Domit. Com. p. 390. a. The best auletæ were
- those of Thebes. Dion Chrysost. i. 263.
-
-Footnote 979:
-
- Suidas, v. ῥαβδοῦχοι, t. ii. p. 672. f. Scalig. Poet. i. 21.
-
------
-
-With respect to the dances[980] performed by the Chorus, they were so
-numerous, long, and intricate, that it would be here impossible to
-enumerate and describe the whole. They appear to have conceived the idea
-of representing almost every passion and action in human life by that
-combination of movements and gestures which the term pantomime, borrowed
-from their own language, expresses much better than our word
-dancing.[981] A taste, in some respects similar, still prevails among
-the Orientals, whose Ghawazi and Bayadères, though relying rather upon
-routine and impulse than on the resources of art, perform at festivals
-and marriages, and before the ladies of the harem, little love-pieces
-and pastoral scenes, which evidently belong to the class of mimetic
-dances described by ancient authors.
-
------
-
-Footnote 980:
-
- See Cahusac, Traité Historique de la Dance, ii. i. t. i. p. 61, sqq.
-
-Footnote 981:
-
- It is said that certain ancient poets were called orchestic,—as
- Thespis, Phrynichos, Pratinas, Carcinos,—not only because they adapted
- the subjects of their pieces to the dances of the chorusses, but,
- also, because they instructed in dancing the chorusses of other
- dramatic writers. Athen. i. 39. The above poet, Carcinos, was likewise
- celebrated for being the father of three sons who danced in the tragic
- chorusses, and, from their extremely diminutive stature, obtained the
- name of Quails. Schol. Aristoph. Pac. 761.
-
------
-
-In tragedy, such as it existed in the polished ages of Greece, the
-movements were slow and solemn, and, no doubt, full of dignity. The
-spirit of comedy required brisk and lively, and frequently tolerated,
-audaciously wanton dances; while the Chorus of the Satyric Drama would
-appear to have been rude and clownish rather than indecent, indulging in
-grotesque movements, ludicrous and extravagant gestures, and that rustic
-and farcical style of mimicry which may be supposed to have prevailed
-among the rough peasantry of Hellas.
-
-In classing the various dances, it will, perhaps, be sufficient if we
-divide them into lively and serious,[982] joining with the latter all
-such as attempted to embody a symbol or an allegory.
-
------
-
-Footnote 982:
-
- Hesych. v. ἐμμέλεια. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 532. Poll. iv. 99. Athen.
- xiv. 27, seq. Luc. de Saltat. § 22. 26. Plut. Symposiac. ix. 15. 1.
-
------
-
-In certain dramas of Phrynichos the Chorus represented a company of
-wrestlers,[983] who contrived by the quick, flexible, and varied
-movements of the dance, to imitate all the accidents of the palæstra.
-Sometimes they personated a party of scouts in the active look-out for
-the enemy, each with his right hand curved above the brow: this was one
-form of the Scops.[984] On other occasions the dancer mimicked the
-habits of the Scops, or mocking-owl, twirling about the head, and
-appearing to be absorbed in an ecstasy of imitation, until taken by the
-fowler. The performance of a piece like this, by a numerous Chorus,
-sometimes breaking off into a brisk gallopade, sometimes maintaining the
-same position, jigging, pirouetting, and ducking the crest, must, no
-doubt, have appeared infinitely comic; and yet it could have been
-nothing in comparison with the Morphasmos,[985] in which, not the
-characteristic peculiarities of a single owl, but those of the whole
-animal creation were “taken off.” Thus we may suppose that the Hegemon
-of the Chorus started as a baboon, his next-door neighbour as a hog, a
-third as a lion, a fourth as an ass, and so on, each man accommodating
-his voice to the character he had, pro tempore, assumed, and gibbering,
-grunting, roaring, braying, as he leaped, or gamboled, or bounded, or
-scampered about the orchestra. Anon the frisky foresters were
-transformed into slaves, who would seem to have been introduced to the
-audience pounding something, perhaps onions and garlick, in a mortar.
-
------
-
-Footnote 983:
-
- Suid. v. Φρυνίχου πάλαισμα, t. ii. p. 1092. b. c. d.
-
-Footnote 984:
-
- Poll. iv. 103. Athen. xiv. 27.
-
-Footnote 985:
-
- Poll. iv. 103. Cf. Xenoph. Conviv. vi. 4.
-
------
-
-The Oclasma,[986] a dance borrowed from the Persians, reminds one
-strongly of the performances of the negroes in the interior of Africa,
-the whole Chorus alternately crouching upon its heels, and springing
-aloft, like the frogs of Aristophanes about the fens of Acheron. Not,
-perhaps, un-akin to this, were those three frenzied dances, alluded to
-rather than described by the ancients,—that is to say, the
-Thermaustris,[987] which seems to have consisted of a series of violent
-bounds, like the performances of the Hurons and Iroquois;[988] the
-Mongas, which, from the name, probably represented the friskings and
-caracollings of a jackass; and the Kernophoros,[989] or dance of the
-first-fruits, wherein the Chorus appeared upon the stage, some bearing
-censers, others fruit-baskets, evidently in a character resembling that
-of Bacchanals.
-
------
-
-Footnote 986:
-
- Poll. vi. 99.
-
-Footnote 987:
-
- Pfeiffer. Antiq. Græc. ii. 58. p. 382.
-
-Footnote 988:
-
- Cf. Dodwell, Classical Tour in Greece, vol. i. p. 133, seq.
-
-Footnote 989:
-
- Athen. xiv. 27. Poll. iv. 104.
-
------
-
-To this species of dance belonged, also, the Hecaterides, in which the
-performer interpreted his desires or passion by furious gestures of the
-hands. The Eclactisma was a female dance,[990] requiring the exertion of
-great force and agility, its characteristics consisting in flinging the
-heels backwards above the level of the shoulders. Corresponding, in some
-measure, to the Eclactisma, was the Skistas,[991] in which the dancer
-bounded aloft, crossing his legs several times while in the air. There
-was a dance, evidently of a very extraordinary description, which they
-performed to an air called Thyrocopicon,[992] or “knocking at doors,”
-possibly representing the frolics of such wild youths as anticipated the
-scape-graces of our own day. The Mothon was a loose dance, common among
-sailors; the Baukismos, Bactriasmos, Apokinos, Aposeisis, and
-Sobas,[993] were laughable, but lewd dances,[994] resembling the Bolero
-and Fandango of the Spaniards.[995]
-
------
-
-Footnote 990:
-
- Poll. iv. 10. 2. Aristoph. Vesp. 1492. 1495, et Schol.
-
-Footnote 991:
-
- Poll. iv. 105. See, in the Mus. Cortonens. tab. 60, the representation
- of a group of dancers on a platform in a boat, on the margin of the
- sea.
-
-Footnote 992:
-
- Athen. xiv. 9.
-
-Footnote 993:
-
- Athen. xiv. 27.
-
-Footnote 994:
-
- On the character of the old comedy, which tolerated these dances, see
- Plut. Lucull. § 39. Demet. § 12. Pericl. § 5.
-
-Footnote 995:
-
- Poll. iv. 99.
-
------
-
-The Heducomos was a dance expressive of the outbreaks of joy, and the
-Knismos,[996] represented the pinching, struggling, and quarrels of
-lovers. The Deimalea was a Laconian dance performed by Satyrs and
-Seileni, skipping and jumping about in a circle.[997] Another Spartan
-dance[998] was the Bryallika, of a ludicrous and licentious character,
-performed by women in grotesque masks, whence a courtezan at Sparta was
-denominated, Bryallika. The name of Hypogypones,[999] was bestowed on
-certain performers who imitated old men, flourishing their sticks about
-the stage, as we are informed they did in the play of Simermnos.[1000]
-Akin in spirit to these were the Gypones,[1001] who made their
-appearance in transparent Tarentine robes, and mounted on stilts
-probably in the form of goats’ feet, to give them a resemblance to the
-Ægipanes, worshipped as gods of the woods. A peculiar dance in honour of
-Artemis took its rise in the village of Carya in Laconia, where its
-invention was attributed to Castor and Polydeukes. No description of it,
-so far as I know, has come down to us; but the maidens by whom it was
-performed probably bore, and steadied with one hand, a basket of flowers
-on their heads, thus forming the model of those architectural figures,
-still from them called Caryatides.[1002] The representation of this
-performance was, doubtless, a favourite subject among Spartan artists or
-such as were employed by the Spartans, as may perhaps be fairly inferred
-from the circumstance, that the device on the ring, which, in return for
-a comb, was presented by Clearchus to Ctesias to be shown to his friends
-at Lacedæmon, was a dance of Caryatides.[1003]
-
------
-
-Footnote 996:
-
- Id. ib.
-
-Footnote 997:
-
- Poll. iv. 104.
-
-Footnote 998:
-
- See Müller. ii. 354.
-
-Footnote 999:
-
- Poll. iv. 104.
-
-Footnote 1000:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 534.
-
-Footnote 1001:
-
- Poll. iv. 104.
-
-Footnote 1002:
-
- Vitruv. i. 1.—Poll. iv. 104.
-
-Footnote 1003:
-
- Plut. Artaxerx. § 18.
-
------
-
-Amid the laxity of morals which prevailed in the later ages of Greece,
-the Pyrrhic,[1004] once supposed to be peculiar to warriors, degenerated
-into a dance of Bacchanals, with thyrsi instead of spears, or carrying
-torches in one hand, while with the other they sportively cast light
-reeds at one another. The story told in this mimetic performance
-referred to remote antiquity, and was both curiously and elaborately
-intricate, comprehending all the adventures of Bacchos and his merry
-crew during the Indian expedition, and assuming towards the conclusion a
-tragical form, developing the sad story of Pentheus.[1005]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1004:
-
- Duport. ad Theoph. Char. c. 6. p. 305, sqq. Poll. iv. 99.—Athen. xiv.
- 29. On the Cretan warlike dances Orsites and Epicredios, id. xiv.
- 26.—Luc. de Saltat. § 9.
-
-Footnote 1005:
-
- Athen xiv. 29.
-
------
-
-Among the dances of a grave character are enumerated the Gingra
-performed like the Podismos to slow and solemn music, the Lion and the
-Tetracomos,[1006] a warlike measure performed in honour of Heracles and
-supposed in its origin to have had some connexion with the Tetracomoi of
-Attica, that is, the Peiræeus, Phaleron, Oxypeteones, and
-Thymotadæ.[1007] We read, moreover, of dances in which the performers
-represented certain historic or mythological personages, such as
-Rhodope, Phædra, or Parthenope.[1008]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1006:
-
- Poll. iv. 99.
-
-Footnote 1007:
-
- Poll. iv. 105.
-
-Footnote 1008:
-
- Luc. de Saltat. § 2.
-
------
-
-The Anthema,[1009] or Flower-dance, appears to have been chiefly
-performed in private parties by women, who acted certain characters and
-chanted, as they moved, the following verses:
-
- Where is my lovely parsley, say?
- My violets, roses, where are they?
- My parsley, roses, violets fair,
- are my flowers? Tell me where.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1009:
-
- Athen. xiv. 27.
-
------
-
-The Athenians, however, seem to have imagined that there was nothing in
-nature which might not be imitated in the dance, by the turns and mazes
-of which they accordingly sought to represent the movements of the
-stars.[1010] A similar fancy, if Lucian may be credited, possessed the
-Indian Yoghis, who every morning and evening before their doors saluted
-the sun, at his rising and setting, with a dance resembling his
-own,[1011] which, as that luminary no otherwise dances than by turning
-on its axis, must have been a performance resembling that of the
-whirling derwishes, whose broad symbolical petticoats are meant, I
-presume, to represent the disk of the sun. But the dance most difficult
-of comprehension is that upon which they bestowed the name of κόσμου
-εκπύρωσις,[1012] or the “Conflagration of the World.” Of the figure and
-character of this performance antiquity, I believe, has left us no
-account, though it probably represented, by a train of allegorical
-personages and movements, the principal events which, according to the
-Stoics, are to precede the delivering up of the Universe to fire.[1013]
-Scaliger,[1014] who does not attempt to explain this strange exhibition,
-observes, however, pertinently, that it was a dance in which Nero might
-have figured, his burning of Rome deserving in some sort to be regarded
-as a rehearsal of this piece.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1010:
-
- It may possibly have been in this dance that Eumelos or Arctinos, an
- old Corinthian poet, introduced Zeus himself sporting the toe:—
-
- Μέσσοισιν δ᾽ ὠρχεῖτο πατὴρ ἀνδοῶν τε θεῶν τε. Athen. i. 40.
-
- Cf. Plut. Sympos. ix. 15.
-
-Footnote 1011:
-
- Luc. de Saltat. § 17.
-
-Footnote 1012:
-
- Athen. xiv. 27.
-
-Footnote 1013:
-
- Cf. Lips. Physiolog. Stoic. ii. 22. t. iv. p. 955.
-
-Footnote 1014:
-
- De Poet. i. 18.
-
------
-
-There existed among the Spartans[1015] an elegant dance denominated
-Hormos, or the Necklace, performed by a chorus of youths and virgins who
-moved through the requisite evolutions in a row. The line was headed by
-a young man who executed his part in the firm and vigorous steps proper
-to his age, and which he would afterwards be expected to preserve in the
-field of battle. A maiden immediately followed, but, instead of
-imitating his masculine manner, confined herself to the modest graceful
-paces and gestures of her sex, and this alternation and interweaving, as
-it were, of force and beauty, suggesting the idea of a necklace composed
-of many coloured gems, gave rise to the appellation.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1015:
-
- Luc. de Saltat. § 12.
-
------
-
-The dance of the Crane,[1016] among the Athenians, in some respects
-resembled the above. It was, according to tradition, first invented by
-Theseus, who landing at Delos on his return from Crete, offered
-sacrifice to Apollo and dedicated the statue of Aphrodite which he had
-received from Ariadne, after which he joined the young men and women
-whom he had delivered, in performing a joyous dance[1017] about the
-altar of Horns erected by Apollo, from the spoils of his sister’s bow.
-The Choreutæ, engaged in executing the Geranos, or Crane, formed
-themselves into one long line with a leader in van and rear, and then,
-guided by the design on the floor of the orchestra, described by their
-movements the various mazes and involutions of the Cretan labyrinth,
-until, having traversed all its intricate passages, they emerged at
-once, like their great countryman and his companions, into light and
-safety. Other dances there were, which, however curious they may have
-been, cannot now be described from the scanty materials left us: such
-were the dance of Heralds, or Messengers, the dance of the Lily,[1018]
-the Chitonea, the Pinakides, the dance of the Graces,[1019] and that of
-the Hours, in which the performers floated about with a circle of light
-drapery held over the head by both hands.[1020]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1016:
-
- Poll. iv. 101. Spanh. ad Callim. t. ii. p. 513. Plut. Thes. § 21. Cf.
- Douglas, Essay on some points of Resemblance, &c., p. 123.
-
- “One of the dances still performed by the Athenians has been supposed
- that which was called the Crane, and was said to have been invented by
- Theseus, after his escape from the labyrinth of Crete. The peasants
- perform it yearly in the street of the Frank convent at the conclusion
- of the vintage; joining hands and preceding their mules and asses,
- which are laden with grapes in panniers, in a very curved and
- intricate figure; the leader waving a handkerchief, which has been
- imagined to denote the clue given by Ariadne.” Chandler, ii. 151.
-
-Footnote 1017:
-
- Like the Cyclic Chorus. Vid. Izetzes ad Lycoph. i. p. 251, sqq. Sch.
- Aristoph. Nub. 311.
-
-Footnote 1018:
-
- Athen. iii. 82. xiv. 27.
-
-Footnote 1019:
-
- Poll. iv. 93. Xenoph. Conviv. vii. 5. Plat. De Legg. vii. t. viii. p.
- 55. Cf. Herm. Comment. ad Arist. Poet. xxvii. 3. p. 190, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1020:
-
- Scalig. Poet. i. 18.
-
------
-
-If from the dances we now pass to the Choreutæ,[1021] by whom they were
-performed, we shall find that they generally made their appearance in
-the orchestra with golden crowns upon their heads, and habited in
-gorgeous raiment, frequently interwoven or embroidered with gold.[1022]
-The Chorus, however, like the actors, must have constantly varied its
-costume, to suit the exigencies of the drama; sometimes to perform the
-part of senators, sometimes of Nereids, sometimes of female suppliants,
-sometimes of urn-bearers, sometimes of clouds, or wasps, or birds. When
-in the tragedy of Æschylus they were required to personate the Furies,
-their exterior was the most frightful that can well be imagined,—their
-long but scanty robes consisting, as has been conjectured, of black
-lamb-skins, slit up below and exposing their tawny withered limbs to
-sight, while their blood-stained eyes, livid tongue hanging out, and
-hair like a mass of knotted serpents, easily accredited the belief of
-their being infernal existences. Thus habited, with fingers terminating
-in black claws,[1023] and grasping a burning torch, they burst upon the
-view of the spectators, like so many hideous phantoms conjured up by an
-imagination diseased with terror.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1021:
-
- Cf. Buleng. de Theat. c. 55.
-
-Footnote 1022:
-
- Dem. cont. Mid. § 7, seq. Athen. iii. 62. Animadv. t. vii. p. 215.
-
-Footnote 1023:
-
- Bœttiger, Furies, p. 28, sqq. and pl. ii. Casaub. ad Athen. xii. 2.
- Aristoph. Plut. 423.
-
------
-
-The costume of the actors,[1024] which some modern writers suppose to
-have been extremely monotonous,[1025] was in reality, however, as rich,
-varied, and characteristic as the masks of which we shall presently have
-to speak. Gods, heroes, kings, chiefs, soothsayers, heralds, rustics,
-the hetairæ, and their mothers; gay youths, flatterers, libertines,
-procurers, cooks, satyrs, slaves, &c., had each and all their
-appropriate dresses and ornaments, modified, no doubt, from time to time
-by the change in public taste, and the fancy of the poets. The
-divinities had almost to be wholly framed by the Dionysiac artificers.
-Conceived to be of superhuman stature, it was necessary that the actors
-who represented them should, in the first place, be lifted up on
-Cothurni,[1026] or half-boots, the soles of which were many inches
-high,[1027] their limbs and bodies were enlarged by padding, their arms
-lengthened by gloves, while their countenances, which might be ignoble
-or even ugly, were concealed by masks of exquisite ideal beauty, rising
-above the stately forehead in a mass of curls, which at once
-corresponded with the nobleness of their features and augmented their
-colossal height: add to all this robes of purple, or scarlet, or azure,
-or saffron, or cloth of gold, floating about the person in graceful
-folds, and training along the floor, and we have some faint idea of the
-celestial personages who with gemmed sceptres and glittering crowns made
-their appearance on the Grecian stage.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1024:
-
- On the actors’ wardrobe, see Poll. iv. 113, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1025:
-
- Müller, Dissert. on the Eumenides, p. 100. Mr. Donaldson, Theatre of
- the Greeks, p. 132, adopts this opinion.
-
-Footnote 1026:
-
- Luc. Jup. Tragœd. § 41. Cf. Xen. Cyrop. viii. 8, 17. Poll. ii. 151.
- vii. 62.
-
-Footnote 1027:
-
- See Winkel. Monum. Ined. t. iii. p. 84. c. ix. § 1. Les extrémités des
- Cothurnes étoient ronds et quelquefois un peu aigues; mais on n’en vit
- jamais de carrés, comme aux gravés sur l’estampe, de Vasali. p. 85.
- Cf. Luc. de Saltat. § 27. Their height depended first upon the stature
- of the actor, second, upon that of the character represented.
- Sometimes they were satisfied with attributing four cubits even to the
- heroes.—Aristoph. Ran. 1046. Cf. Athen. v. 27. But the ghost of
- Achilles when it appeared to Apollonios of Tyana, rose five cubits in
- height, and, no doubt, the spectre was careful to accommodate itself
- to public opinion.—Philost. Vit. Apoll. Tyan. iv. 16. Aul. Gell. iii.
- 10. See, also, Scalig. Poet. i. 13. Scaliger relates _à propos_ of the
- Cothurnus a facetious remark of his father: “Italas mulieres
- altissimis soccis usas vidimus; quamvis diminutiva dicant voce
- Socculos. Patris mei perfacetum dictum memini. Ejusmodi uxorum dimidio
- tantùm in lectis frui maritos, alter dimidio cum soccis deposito,” p.
- 53.
-
------
-
-The queens and heroes,[1028] who were constantly beheld grouped in
-converse, or in action, with these sublime dwellers of Olympos, were
-clad in a costume scarcely less majestic; the former, for example, in
-times of prosperity, issued forth from their palaces in white garments,
-with loose sleeves reaching to the elbow, and closed on the upper part
-of the arm by a succession of jewelled agraffes,[1029] their tresses
-confined in front by a golden sphendone, or fillet, crusted with gems,
-while their robes terminated below in long sweeping trains of
-purple.[1030] But when their houses were visited by misfortune, the
-milk-white pelisse was exchanged for one quince-coloured or blue, while
-the purple train was converted into black. The costume of the
-kings,[1031] likewise varied by circumstances, consisted usually of an
-ample robe of purple, or scarlet, or dark green, descending to the feet,
-a rich cloak of cloth of gold, or of some delicate colour, adorned with
-gold embroidery, and a lofty mitre on the head.[1032] When any of these
-characters, as Tydeus or Meleager, was engaged in hunting or war, he
-wore the scarlet or purple mantle called Ephaptis,[1033] which in action
-was wrapped about the left arm. Athenæus, in describing the horsemen of
-Antiochos, observes, that these Ephaptides[1034] were embroidered with
-gold and adorned with the figures of animals. Bacchanals and
-soothsayers, like Teiresias, generally appeared upon the stage in an
-extraordinary garment, denominated Agrenon,[1035] formed of a reticular
-fabric of wool of various colours. Dionysos himself,[1036] in whose
-honour the theatre with all its shows was created, descended from
-Olympos in a saffron-coloured robe compressed below the bosom by a broad
-flowered belt, and bearing a thyrsus in his hand.[1037] This girdle, in
-the case of other gods, or heroes, was sometimes replaced by one of
-gold.[1038] Persons overtaken by calamity, especially exiles, wore
-garments dirty-white, or sad-coloured, or black, or quince-coloured, or
-bluish. The costume of Philoctetes, Telephos, Œneus, Phœnix,
-Bellerophontes, was ragged. The Seileni appeared in a shaggy Chiton, and
-the other personages of the Satyric drama in the skins of fawns, or
-goats, or sheep, or pards, and, sometimes, in the Theraion or Dionysiac
-garment, and a flowered cloak and a scarlet Himation. Old men were
-distinguished by the Exomis,[1039] a white Chiton of mean appearance,
-having no seam or arm-hole on the left side—young men by the
-Campulè,[1040] a scarlet or deep purple Himation,—the parasites by
-bearing the Stlengis and flask (as country people by the Lagobalon) and
-by black or sad-coloured robes, except in the play of the Sicyonians,
-where a person of this class, being about to be married, sported a white
-garment,—the cook by an Himation double and unfulled,—priestesses by
-white robes,—comic old women by such as were quince-coloured or dusky,
-like a cloudy morning sky in autumn,—the mothers of the hetairæ wore a
-purple fillet about the head,—the dresses of young women were white and
-delicate,—of heiresses the same with fringes. Pornoboski wore garments
-of various colours, with flowered cloaks, and carried a straight wand,
-called ἀρéσκος.[1041] There were, likewise, female characters which wore
-the Parapechu and the Symmetria, a chiton reaching to the feet, with a
-border of marine purple.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1028:
-
- Poll. iv. 119.
-
-Footnote 1029:
-
- Cf. Mus. Chiaramont. tavv. 3. 7. 16.
-
-Footnote 1030:
-
- Poll. vii. 60. Bœttiger, Furies, p. 32. Luc. Jup. Tragoed. § 41.
-
-Footnote 1031:
-
- On voit parmi les plus belles peintures d’Herculaneum un de ces
- premiers acteurs, ou protagonistes, avec une large ceinture de couleur
- d’or, une sceptre dans une main, et l’épée au côté.—Winkelmann. Monum.
- Ined. t. iii. p. 84. Pitt. Ercol. i. 4. i. 41.—Plutarch observes,
- that, together with their royal garments, actors assumed the very
- strut of kings.—Vit. Demet. § 18.—Demetrius moreover, is said to have
- resembled a tragic actor, because he went clad in cloth of purple and
- gold, and wore sandals of purple and gold tissue. § 41.
-
-Footnote 1032:
-
- Aristoph. Av. 512, et Schol. Nub. 70. Poll. iv. 115. Suid. v. Ξυστὶς.
- t. ii. p. 264. e.—The actor who personated Heracles made his
- appearance with club and lion’s skin.—Luc. de Saltat. § 27.
-
-Footnote 1033:
-
- Poll. iv. 116, 117. Aristoph. Nub. 71, et Schol. Lysist. 1189.
-
-Footnote 1034:
-
- Deipnosoph. v. 22.
-
-Footnote 1035:
-
- Poll. iv. 117. Hesych. v. ἀγρηνὸν.
-
-Footnote 1036:
-
- Poll. iv. 118.
-
-Footnote 1037:
-
- It behoved the actors, however, to take care of their gold and jewels,
- since it would appear that thieves found their way even to the
- stage.—Aristoph. Acharn. 258.
-
-Footnote 1038:
-
- Poll. iv. 118.
-
-Footnote 1039:
-
- Dion. Chrysost. i. 231. Scalig. Poet. i. 13.
-
-Footnote 1040:
-
- Poll. iv. 119, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1041:
-
- Scalig. Poet. i. 13.
-
------
-
-We now come to the masks,[1042] a subject upon which much has been
-written, though very little has been explained. The primary difficulty
-connected with them is, to determine whether they were so constructed as
-to resemble a speaking-trumpet,[1043] which, by narrowing the stream,
-and compressing, as it were, the particles of the voice, cast it forth
-condensed and corroborated upon the theatre,[1044] which it was thus
-enabled to penetrate and fill, even to its utmost extremities. My own
-opinion, after bestowing much attention upon the subject, is, that the
-mask was in reality so constructed as to communicate additional force
-and intensity to the voice; but whether by roofing or encircling the
-artificial mouth by metallic plates, or thin laminæ of the stone called
-Chalcophonos,[1045] it is now scarcely possible to determine. Be this,
-however, as it may, there existed in some theatres other contrivances
-for conveying and augmenting the volume of the actor’s voice; these were
-the Echeia,[1046] vases generally of metal, finely toned, and arranged
-according to the musical scale, in a succession of domed cells,[1047]
-running in diverging lines up the hollow face of the theatre. They
-rested with one edge upon a smooth and polished pavement, the mouth
-outward, and the external edge reposing on the summit of a small, blunt
-obelisk,[1048] while a low opening in each cell enabled the resonances,
-or echoes, thus created, to issue forth, and fill the air with
-sound,[1049] which, however the fact may be accounted for, produced no
-isolated reverberations, no confusion.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1042:
-
- When actors displeased the audience they were sometimes compelled to
- take off their masks and face those who hissed them, which was
- regarded as a serious punishment. Duport. ad Theoph. Char. p. 308. We
- ought, perhaps, to understand Lucian _cum grano_, when he informs us
- that actors who performed their parts ill were scourged. Piscator, §
- 33. On the derivation of the word _persona_, Aul. Gell. v. 7. Cf.
- Aristoph. Poet. c. 5. Scalig. Poet. i. 13, on the derivation of
- πρόσωπον. Etym. Mag. 691. 1.
-
-Footnote 1043:
-
- Vid. Cassiod. iv. 51. Plin. xlvii. 10. Solin. cxxxvii. Lucian. de
- Saltat. § 27. De Gymnast. § 23. A tragic poet, Hieronymos, exposed
- himself to ridicule by introducing into one of his pieces a mask of
- frightful aspect. Aristoph. Acharn. 390.
-
-Footnote 1044:
-
- Cf. Suid. v. φλοιός. t. ii. p. 1073. Diog. Laert. iv. p. 27.
-
-Footnote 1045:
-
- Plin. xxxvii. 56.
-
-Footnote 1046:
-
- See Burney’s Hist. of Music, i. 153. sqq. Scalig. Poet. i. 21. Antiq.
- of Athens, &c., Supplementary to Stuart, by Cockerell, Kinnaird,
- Donaldson, &c. p. 39.
-
-Footnote 1047:
-
- Vitruv. v. 6. Antiq. of Ath. by Cockerell, Donaldson, &c. p. 39.
- Tectum porticus quod est in summa gradatione, respondet Sienæ
- altitudinem, ut vox crescens æqualiter ad summas gradationes et tectum
- perveniat. Buleng. de Theat. c. 17.
-
-Footnote 1048:
-
- Marinus’s edition of Vitruv. t. iv. tab. 81.
-
-Footnote 1049:
-
- Empty pots were built into the walls of certain public edifices to
- augment the sound of the voice. Aristot. Prob. xi. 8. i. 1. v. 5. The
- orchestra was sometimes strewed with chaff, which was found to deaden
- the voice. 25. Plin. ii. 51.
-
------
-
-The materials wherewith the masks were constructed varied, no doubt,
-considerably in different ages;[1050] but that they were ever
-manufactured of bronze or copper is scarcely credible, if we reflect
-upon the weight of so voluminous an apparatus, covering the entire head
-and neck, composed of either of those metals. Such metallic specimens as
-have come down to us are to be regarded simply as model-masks, or as
-works of art, designed by the statuary as ornaments. The intention, at
-first, of this disguise being to give additional boldness and
-self-confidence to the actor, by concealing from his neighbours the
-shamefacedness which a raw performer would sometimes naturally feel
-while strutting about in imperial robes, and pouring forth the
-_sesquipedalia verba_ of Pelias and Telephos, they were contented to
-cover the face with a piece of linen, having openings for the eyes and a
-breathing-place.[1051] To this appears to have succeeded a mask
-manufactured from the flexible bark of certain trees,[1052] shaped, of
-course, and coloured to resemble the human countenance. The next step
-was to employ wood, some kinds of which, while possessing the advantage
-of extreme lightness, might be wrought with all the delicacy and
-fineness of a statue, while, better than any other material, it would
-receive that smooth and polished enamel by which were represented the
-texture[1053] and complexion of the skin. Specimens of masks of this
-kind have been found among nations in a very rude state; among the
-inhabitants, for example, of Nootka Sound, whose dress, we are
-told,[1054] “is accompanied by a mask representing the head of some
-animal: it is made of wood, with the eyes, teeth, &c., and is a work of
-considerable ingenuity. Of these masks they have a great variety, which
-are applicable to certain circumstances and occasions. Those, for
-example, which represent the head of the otter or any other marine
-animals, are used only when they go to hunt them. In their war
-expeditions, but at no other time, they cover the whole of their dress
-with large bear-skins.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 1050:
-
- Scalig. Poet. i. 14. Poll. iv. 143.
-
-Footnote 1051:
-
- Suid. in θέσπις, p. 1315. d. Poll. x. 167.
-
-Footnote 1052:
-
- Virg. Georg. ii. 387.
-
-Footnote 1053:
-
- Vid. Horat. de Art. Poet. 278. Athen. xiv. 77. Suid. v. χοιρίλλος, t.
- ii. p. 1160. f. Etym. Mag. 376. 47. Poll. iv. 133, sqq. Schol. Soph.
- Œdip. Tyr. 80.
-
-Footnote 1054:
-
- Meare’s Voyage, p. 254.
-
------
-
-But while the above improvements were going on in the national
-theatre,[1055] the rustic drama continued to preserve its original
-simplicity, the actors to prevent their being recognised, shading their
-brows with thick projecting crowns of leaves, and daubing their
-faces[1056] with lees of wine. Thus disguised they chanted their songs
-upon the public roads, sitting in a waggon,[1057] whence the proverb,
-“he speaks as from the waggon,” _i. e._ he is shamelessly abusive, which
-was in fact the case with the comic poets.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1055:
-
- On the Roman Stage the actors appeared in hats up to the age of Livius
- Andronicus. Roscius Gallus was the first who put on a mask, which he
- did on account of his squinting. Ficorini, Masch. Scen. p. 15. On the
- origin of the Mask see Paccichelli De Larvis, Capillamentis, et
- Chirothecis. Neap. 1693.
-
-Footnote 1056:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 29. Scalig. Poet. i. 13.
-
-Footnote 1057:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 545. Nub. 29.—Demosth. De Coron. § 37. Ulp. in. §
- 5.
-
------
-
-The masks were divided into three kinds, the Tragic, the Comic, and the
-Satyric. Those belonging to Tragedy were again subdivided into numerous
-classes, representing every marked variety of character, and every stage
-of human life from childhood to extreme old age. In the highly varied
-range of countenances thus brought into play, the mask-maker enjoyed
-abundant opportunities of exhibiting his skill. The hair, of course, was
-real and adjusted on the mask like a wig,[1058] differently fashioned
-and coloured according to the age, habits, and complexion of the wearer.
-In some cases it was gathered together and piled up on the
-forehead,[1059] in a triangular figure,[1060] adding many inches to the
-actor’s stature; at other times it was combed smoothly downwards, from
-the crown, twisted round a fillet and disposed like a wreath about the
-head as we sometimes find it in the figures of Asclepios and the
-philosopher Archytas. Some characters were represented wholly bald, with
-a garland of vine-leaves or ivy wreathed about the brow,[1061] others
-were simply bald in front, while a third class exhibited a bushy fell of
-hair, something like a lion’s mane. Young ladies displayed a profusion
-of pendant curls, kept in order by the fillet or sphendone, or gathered
-up in nets, or twisted about the head in braided tresses. In
-representing certain characters the eye-sockets were left open, so that
-the actor’s eyes could be seen moving and flashing within;[1062] but on
-other occasions, when the part of a squinter was to be acted by a
-performer who did not squint or vice versa, as in the case of Roscius
-Gallus, the mask-maker must have represented the eyes by glass or some
-other transparent substance, through which the actor could see his way.
-This was necessarily the case in the part of the poet Thamyris,[1063]
-who, like our own Chatterton, had eyes of different colours, one blue,
-the other black, which, as Aristotle informs us, was common among the
-horses of Greece.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1058:
-
- Scalig. Poet. i. 13.—Poll. iv. 133, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1059:
-
- Cf. Thucyd. i. 6, et Schol. Ælian. Var. Hist. iv. 22.
-
-Footnote 1060:
-
- See a beautiful head of Aphrodite with a pole of curls. (ὄγκος) Mus.
- Chiaramont. tav. 27. Cf. a tragic female mask, with the hair bound by
- a fillet, in the Cabinet d’ Orleans, pl. 52.
-
-Footnote 1061:
-
- It may be remarked that persons ridiculed upon the stage were
- introduced with masks exactly resembling their countenances. They
- seized, however, upon the ludicrous features, which any one happened
- to possess, as the eyebrows of Chærephon, and the baldness of
- Socrates. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 147, 224. This applies to living
- characters. The dead were protected from ridicule by the laws. Sch.
- Pac. 631. The Comic mask was said to have been invented by Mason.
- Athen. xiv. 77. The Comte de Caylus, however, attributes the invention
- of masks to the Etruscans. Recueil d’ Antiq. i. 147, seq.
-
-Footnote 1062:
-
- Cic. de Orat. ii. 46. See in Agostini Gemme Antiche, pl. 17, a
- representation of one of these masks. For examples of hideous masks
- see Mus. Florent. t. i. pp. 45–51.
-
-Footnote 1063:
-
- Poll. iv. 141. Dubos, Reflex. Crit. sur la Poes. et sur la Peint. i.
- 603.
-
------
-
-The time of acting, as is well-known, was during the Dionysiac and
-Lenæan festivals, in the spring and autumn.[1064] The theatres being
-national establishments, in the proper sense of the word, were therefore
-open, free of expense, to all the citizens, who were not called together
-as with us by playbills,[1065] but for the most part knew nothing of
-what they were going to see till they were seated in the theatre, and
-the herald[1066] commanded the chorus of such and such a poet to
-advance. Previously to the commencement of the performance the theatre
-was purified by the sacrifice of a young hog, the blood of which was
-sprinkled on the earth.[1067]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1064:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 545. Acharn. 336. Cf. Dem. cont. Mid. § 4, et
- annot. Plut. Vit. x. Rhet. Lycurg.
-
-Footnote 1065:
-
- Winkelmann, however, supposes they had a kind of playbill, Monum.
- Ined. iii. p. 86, founding his opinion upon a misinterpretation of
- Pollux, iv. 131.
-
-Footnote 1066:
-
- Aristoph. Acharn. 10, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1067:
-
- Sch. Æschin. Tim. p. 17. Orator. Att. t. xiii. p. 377. Vales. ad
- Harpoc. 99, 296. Suid. v. καθάρσιον, t. i. p. 1346. a. Poll. viii.
- 104.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- BOOK V.
- RURAL LIFE.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
- THE VILLA AND THE FARMYARD.
-
-
-If we now, for a moment, quit the city and its amusements, and observe
-the tone and character of Hellenic rural life, we shall find, perhaps,
-that there existed in antiquity a still greater contrast between town
-and country than in modern times. From the poetry of Athens, rife with
-sylvan imagery, we, no less than from its history, discover how deeply
-they loved the sunshine and calm and quiet of their fields. The rustic
-population confined to the city during the Peleponnesian war almost
-perished of nostalgia within sight of their village homes. Half the
-metaphors in their language are of country growth. The bee murmurs, the
-partridge whirrs, the lark, the nightingale, the thrush, pour their
-music through the channels of verse and prose. The odours of ripe fruit,
-of new wine “purple and gushing,” the fresh invigorating morning breeze
-from harvest fields, from clover meadows dotted with kine, the scent of
-milk-pails, of honey, and the honey-comb, still breathe sweetly over the
-Attic page, and prove how smitten with home delights the Athenian people
-were,
-
- “With plesaunce of the breathing fields yfed.”
-
-This their manly and healthful taste, however, constantly, in time of
-war, exposed them to the malice of their enemies. For the valleys and
-grassy uplands of Attica, being thickly covered with villas and
-farmhouses,[1068] the first act of an invading army was to lay all those
-beautiful homesteads in ashes. Thus the Persians, in their two
-invasions, destroyed the whole with fire and sword. But the gentlemen,
-immediately on their return, rebuilt their dwellings[1069] with greater
-taste and magnificence, so that, before the breaking out of the
-Peloponnesian war, it is probable that, as a scene of unambitious
-affluence, taste, high cultivation, and rustic contentment, nothing was
-ever beheld to compare with Attica. Here and there, throughout the land,
-perched on rocks, or shaded by trees, were small rustic chapels
-dedicated to the nymphs, or rural gods.[1070] On the mountains, and in
-solitary glens, and wherever springs gushed from the cliffs, caverns
-were scooped out by the hands of the leisurely shepherds,[1071] and
-consecrated by association with mythology. Fountains, also, and
-water-courses, altars, statues,[1072] and sacred groves,[1073] protected
-at once by religion and the laws,[1074] imprinted on the landscape
-features of poetry and elegance.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1068:
-
- Demosth. in Ev. et Mnes. § 15.
-
-Footnote 1069:
-
- Thucyd. ii. 65.
-
-Footnote 1070:
-
- In the neighbourhood of the Isthmus the shepherds of the present day
- often pass the winter months in mountain caverns.—Chandler, ii. p.
- 261.
-
-Footnote 1071:
-
- Theocrit. i. 143, seq.
-
-Footnote 1072:
-
- Cf. Iliad. β. 305, seq.
-
-Footnote 1073:
-
- On the wild olive and other trees, of which these groves were
- composed, the eye of the passenger usually beheld suspended a number
- of votive offerings.—Sch. Aristoph. Ran. 943.
-
-Footnote 1074:
-
- Cf. Plat. Phæd. t. i. p. 9.
-
------
-
-Another cause which, in the eyes of the Athenians, imparted sanctity to
-their lands, was the practice of burying in them their dead. The spot
-selected for this sacred purpose seems usually to have been the orchard,
-where, amid fig-trees and trailing vines,[1075] often near the
-boundaries of the estate, might be seen the ancient and venerable
-monuments of the dead. All Attica, therefore, in their eyes, appeared
-holy as a sepulchre; and, as every one guarded his own ancestral ashes,
-to sell a farm cost a man’s feelings more than in countries where people
-inter those they love in public cemeteries; and this circumstance with
-many would operate like a law of entail.[1076]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1075:
-
- Eurip. Bacch. 10, seq. Cf. Kirch. de Funer. Rom. iii. 17.
-
-Footnote 1076:
-
- Demosth. in Callicl. § 4.
-
------
-
-But it is easy thus to present to the imagination a general picture of
-the country. What we want is to thrust aside the impediments, to
-dissipate the obscurity of two thousand years, and lift the latch of a
-Greek farmhouse, such as it existed in the days of Pericles.
-
-In the first place it was common in Attica to erect country-houses in
-the midst of a grove of silver firs,[1077] which in winter protect from
-cold, and in summer attract the breezes that imitate in their branches
-the sound of trickling runnels, or the distant murmur of the sea.
-Towards the centre of the grove, with a spacious court in front and a
-garden behind, stood the house,[1078] sometimes with flat, sometimes
-with pointed roof, ornamented with a picturesque porch, and surrounded
-with verandahs or colonnades. Occasionally opulent persons had on the
-south front of their houses large citron trees,[1079] growing in pots,
-on either side the door, where they were well watered and carefully
-covered during winter.[1080] In the plainer class of dwellings, numerous
-outhouses, as stables, sheds for cattle,[1081] henroosts, pigstyes, &c.,
-extended round the court, while the back-front, generally in the East
-the principal, opened upon the garden or orchard.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1077:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 406. On the music of the pine-groves, the Schol.
- on Theocritus, i. 1, has an amusing passage: ἡ πίτυς ἐκείνη, ἡδὺ τι
- μελουργεῖ, κατὰ τὸ ψιθύρισμα. κ. τ. λ.
-
-Footnote 1078:
-
- Called in Latin pagus from πηγὴ, a fountain. Serv. ad Virg. Georg.
- 182. See also the note of Gibbon, t. iii. p. 410.
-
-Footnote 1079:
-
- Geop. x. 7. 11. These pots, like those in which the palm-tree was
- cultivated, were pierced at the bottom like our own. Theoph. Hist.
- Plant. iv. 4. 3.
-
-Footnote 1080:
-
- As the orange-tree is still in Lemnos. Walp. Mem. i. 280.
-
-Footnote 1081:
-
- The stalls for cattle were built as often as convenient, near the
- kitchen and facing the east, because when exposed to light and heat
- they became smooth-coated. Vitruv. vi. 9. Cf. Varro. i. 13.
-
------
-
-Much pains was usually taken in selecting the site of a farmhouse,[1082]
-though opinions of course varied according to the peculiar range of
-experience on which they were based. In general such positions were
-considered most favourable as neighboured the sea, or occupied the
-summits or the slopes of mountains,[1083] more especially if looking
-towards the north.[1084] The vicinity of swamps and marshes, and as much
-as possible of rivers, was avoided, together with coombs, or hollow
-valleys, and declivities facing the south or the setting sun. If
-necessitated by the nature of the ground to build near the banks of a
-stream, the front of the dwelling was carefully turned away from it,
-inasmuch as its waters communicated an additional rigour to the winds in
-winter, and in summer filled the atmosphere with unwholesome vapours.
-The favourite exposure was towards the east whence the most salubrious
-breezes were supposed to blow, while the cheerful beams of the sun, as
-soon as they streamed above the horizon, dissipated the dank fogs and
-murkiness of the air. Notwithstanding the warmth of the climate,
-moreover, they loved such situations as were all day long illuminated by
-the sun, whilst every care was taken to fence out the sirocco, a moist
-and pestilential wind, blowing across the Mediterranean from the deserts
-of Africa. In Italy, nevertheless, the farmer often selected for the
-site of his mansion the southern roots of mountains, further defended
-from Alpine blasts by a sweep of lofty woods.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1082:
-
- Geop. ii. 3. Cf. Vitruv. i. 4.
-
-Footnote 1083:
-
- Petatur igitur aer calore et frigore temperatus, quem fere medius
- obtinet collis, quod neque depressus hieme pruinis torpet, aut torret
- æstute vaporibus, neque elatus in summa montium perexiguis ventorum
- motibus, aut pluviis omni tempore anni sævit. Columell. De Re Rust. i.
- 4.
-
-Footnote 1084:
-
- The same opinion is held by Hippocrates, De Morbo Sacro. cap. 7. p.
- 308, ed. Foes. Ὁ Βορέης ὑγιεινότατος ἐστι τῶν ἀνέμων. Cf. Plin. ii.
- 48. Varro. i. 12.
-
------
-
-According to the fashion prevailing in antiquity, farmhouses were built
-high, large, and roomy, though Cato[1085] shrewdly advises, that their
-magnitude should bear some relation to that of the domain, lest the
-villa should have to seek for the farm, or the farm for the villa.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1085:
-
- De Re Rust. 3. “Ita ædifices, ne villa fundum quærat, neve fundus
- villam.” Cf. Colum. De Re Rust. i. 4. It may here by the way be
- observed that, during the flourishing periods of Roman agriculture,
- farms were generally rather small than large. Plin. Hist. Nat. viii.
- 21. Schulz. Antiq. Rustic. § vii.
-
------
-
-Much, however, would depend upon the taste of the individual; but in a
-plain farmhouse more attention appears to have been paid to substantial
-comfort, and something like rough John-Bullism, than to that cold
-finical elegance which certain persons are fond of associating with
-whatever is classical. An Attic farmer of the true old republican school
-was anything but a fine gentleman. He scorned none of the occupations or
-productions by which he lived. On entering his dwelling you found no
-small difficulty in steering between bags of corn,[1086] piles of
-cheeses, hurdles of dried figs[1087] or raisins, while the racks groaned
-with hams[1088] and bacon flitches. If they resembled their
-descendants,[1089] too, even their bedchambers were invaded by some
-species of provisions, for there in the present day you often behold
-long strings of melons suspended like festoons from the rafters. In one
-corner of the ground-floor stood a corbel filled with olive-dregs,
-recently pressed, in another a wool-sack or a pile of dressed
-skins.[1090] Yonder in the room looking into the garden, with the
-honey-suckle twining about the open lattice, were madam’s loom and
-spinning-wheel, and carding apparatus, and work-baskets; and there with
-the lark[1091] might you see her, serene and happy, suckling her young
-democrat, and rocking the cradle of a second with her foot, thriftily
-giving directions the while to Thratta, Xanthia or “the neat-handed”
-Phillis.[1092]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1086:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 45.
-
-Footnote 1087:
-
- Philost. Icon. ii. 26. p. 851.
-
-Footnote 1088:
-
- Cf. Athen. iv. 38.
-
-Footnote 1089:
-
- Walp. Mem. i. 281.
-
-Footnote 1090:
-
- Aristoph. Nub. 45, seq. et Schol.—Schol. Eq. 803.
-
-Footnote 1091:
-
- Plat. De Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 40. Aristoph. Lysist. 18, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1092:
-
- Aristoph. Acharn. 272. Vesp. 824. Pac. 1138. Thesm. 286, seq. Suid. v.
- Θρᾶττα. t. p. 1330. a.
-
------
-
-The kitchen must sometimes have been in fine disorder; geese and ducks
-waddling across the floor, picking up the spilled grain, or snatching
-away the piece of bread and honey which my young master had just put
-down on the stool to play at a game of romps with Thratta. Up in the
-dusky corner there, behind a huge armchair or settle, you may discern a
-very suspicious looking enclosure, from which, at intervals, issues a
-suppressed grunt; it is the pigsty.[1093] But be not offended; the
-practice is classical; and pigs, in my apprehension, are as pleasant
-company as geese and many other animals. Now, that geese were fed even
-about palaces, we have the testimony of Homer, whose Penelope, the _beau
-idéal_ of a good housewife, says—
-
- “Full twenty geese have we at home, that feed
- On wheat in water steeped.”[1094]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1093:
-
- Ἐπὶ τῆς ἑστίας τρέφουσι χοίρους.—Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 844. Lysist.
- 1073, Poll. ix. 16.
-
-Footnote 1094:
-
- Odyss. τ. 536.
-
-Footnote 1095:
-
- Cf. Vict. Var. Lect. p. 891.
-
------
-
-But the whole economy of geese-feeding[1095] has been transmitted to us;
-in the first place, the birds usually preferred were those most
-remarkable for their size and whiteness.[1096] The ancients esteemed the
-variegated, or spotted, as of inferior value. The same rule applied to
-fowls. The chenoboscion,[1097] or enclosure in which the geese were
-kept, was commonly situated near ponds or freshes,[1098] abounding with
-rich grass and aquatic plants. Geese, it was observed, are not nice in
-the article of food, but devour eagerly nearly all kinds of plants,
-though the chick-pea, and the couch-grass, the laurel and the
-laurel-rose,[1099] were by the ancients supposed to be hurtful to them.
-Of their eggs some were hatched by hens, but such as were designed to be
-sitten on by the goose herself, (who, during the period of
-incubation[1100] was fed on barley steeped in water,) were marked by
-writing or otherwise, to distinguish them from the eggs of their
-neighbours, which it was thought she would not be at the pains to hatch.
-For the first ten days after they had broken the shell the young
-goslings were kept within-doors, where they were fed on wheat steeped in
-water, _polenta_ a preparation of barley-meal dried at the fire, and
-chopped cresses. This period over, they were driven out to feed and
-afterwards to water; they who tended them taking great care that they
-should not be stung by nettles, or pricked by thorns, or swallow the
-hair[1101] of pigs or kids, which they imagined to be fatal to them.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1096:
-
- Geop. xiv. 22. Varro. iii. 10. Colum. viii. 14.
-
-Footnote 1097:
-
- Poll. ix. 16. Heresbach. De Re Rust. lib. iv. p. 285. a.
-
-Footnote 1098:
-
- Cf. Pallad. i. 30. Plin. x. 79. Plaut. Trucul. ii. 1. 41.
-
-Footnote 1099:
-
- Ælian. De Nat. Anim. v. 29. This ingenious writer, anxious to remove
- from geese the reputation of folly, relates that, when traversing
- Mount Taurus, conscious of their disposition to cackling, they carry
- stones in their bills, and thus frequently escape the eagles which
- inhabit that lofty ridge of mountains. This the poet Phile undertakes
- to confirm in verse:—
-
- Λίθον δὲ τῷ στόματι μὴ κλάγξῃ στέγων
- Ὅνπερ καλοῦσι Ταῦρον, ἀμείβει πάγον
- Τοὺς ἀετοὺς γὰρ φασὶ τοὺς χηνοσκόπους,
- Ἐκεῖσε δεινῶς ἐλλοχᾷν πρὸ τοῦ ψύχους.
-
- Iamb. De Animal. Proprietat. c. 15. p. 62.
-
-Footnote 1100:
-
- Which according to Aristotle was thirty days.—-Hist. Anim. vii. 6.
-
-Footnote 1101:
-
- Pallad. i. 30. Cavendum est etiam, ne pulli eorum setas glutiant.
-
------
-
-When full-grown geese were intended to be fattened, the custom was, to
-confine them in dark and extremely warm cells.[1102] Their food was
-scientifically varied and regulated, proceeding from less to more
-nutritious, until they were judged fit for the table. At first their
-diet consisted of a preparation composed of two parts _polenta_, and
-four parts bran boiled in water. Of this they were permitted to eat as
-much as they pleased three times a day, and once again at midnight,
-while water was furnished them in abundance. When they had continued on
-this regimen for some time, they were indulged with a more luxurious
-table,—nothing less than the most exquisite dried figs, which, being
-chopped small, and dissolved in water, were served up as a sort of jelly
-for twenty days, after which the pampered animal itself was ready for
-the spit.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1102:
-
- The Quintilian Brothers, ap. Geop. xiv. 22. For the fate of these
- illustrious authors, Maximus and Condianus, see Gibbon, i. 142. “Sint
- calido et tenebroso loco: quæres ad creandas adipes multum conferunt.”
- Colum. viii. 14.
-
------
-
-Occasionally that delicate and humane device, for the practice of which
-Germany has, in modern times, obtained so enviable a celebrity, of
-enlarging preternaturally the dimensions of the liver, was resorted to
-by the ancients,[1103] whose mode of proceeding was as follows: during
-five-and-twenty days, being cooped up as before in a place of high
-temperature, the geese were fed with wheat and barley steeped in water,
-the former of which fattened, while the latter rendered their flesh
-delicately white. For the next five days certain cakes or balls,
-denominated collyria,[1104] the composition of which is not exactly
-known, were given them at the rate of seven per day, after which the
-number was gradually augmented to fifteen, which constituted their whole
-allowance for other twenty days. To this succeeded the most
-extraordinary dish of all, consisting of bolusses of leavened dough,
-steeped in a warm decoction of mallows, by which they were puffed up for
-four days. Their drink, meanwhile, was still more delicious than their
-food, being nothing less than hydromel,[1105] or water mingled with
-honey. During the last six days dried figs, chopped fine, were added to
-their leaven, and the process being thus brought to a conclusion, the
-gourmands for whom they were intended, feasted on the tenderest geese
-and the largest livers in the world. It should be added, however, that
-before being cooked the liver was thrown into a basin of warm water,
-which the _artistes_ several times changed. Geese, adds the ingenious
-gastronomer to whom we are indebted for these details, are, both for
-flesh and liver, much inferior to ganders. The Greeks did not, however,
-like the Romans and the moderns, select young geese for this species of
-culinary apotheosis, but birds of a mature age and of the largest size,
-from two to four years old, which only proves the superior strength and
-keenness of their teeth.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1103:
-
- Eupolis, ap. Athen. ix. 32.
-
-Footnote 1104:
-
- Cf. Suid. v. κολλύρα. t. i. p. 1489. a. Poll. i. 248. Etym. Mag. 526.
- 26. Schol. Aristoph. Pac. 122.
-
-Footnote 1105:
-
- Cf. Dioscor. v. 30.
-
------
-
-Ducks were kept in ponds, carefully enclosed, and, perhaps, covered over
-that they might not fly away. In the centre were certain green
-islets,[1106] planted with couch-grass, which the ancients considered as
-beneficial to ducks as it was hurtful to geese. Their usual food, which
-was cast in the water encircling the islets, consisted of wheat, millet,
-barley, sometimes mixed with grape-stones and grape-skins. Occasionally
-they were indulged with locusts, prawns, shrimps,[1107] and whatever
-else aquatic birds habitually feed on. Persons desirous of possessing
-tame ducks were accustomed to beat about the lakes and marshes[1108] for
-the nest of the wild bird. Giving the eggs to a hen to sit on, they
-obtained a brood of ducklings perfectly domesticated.[1109] Wild ducks
-were sometimes caught by pouring red wine, or the lees of wine, into the
-springs whither they came to drink.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1106:
-
- Geop. xiv. 23. Varro, iii. 11. Ælian. De Nat. Anim. v. 33. Aristot. De
- Hist. Anim. viii. 3. Athen. ix. 52. Phile, De Anim. Proprietat. c. 14.
- p. 59.
-
-Footnote 1107:
-
- Athen. iii. 64. Κουρίδες· καρίδες, ἢ τὰς μικρ`ας ἐγχλώρας, τὰς δὲ
- ἐρυθρὰς καμμάρους. Hesych.
-
-Footnote 1108:
-
- Cf. Philost. Icon. i. 9. p. 776.
-
-Footnote 1109:
-
- Colum. viii. 15. Heresbach. De Re Rust. lib. iv. p. 288. a.
-
------
-
-With respect to barn-door fowl, originally introduced from India and
-Media into Greece, the greatest care appears to have been taken to vary
-and improve the breeds. For this purpose cocks and hens were
-imported[1110] from the shores of the Adriatic, from Italy, Sicily,
-Numidia, and Egypt, while those of Attica were occasionally exported to
-other countries. There appears to have been a prejudice against keeping
-more than fifty fowls[1111] about one farmyard, some traces of which may
-also be discovered in the practice of the Arabs.[1112] The fowl-house
-furnished with roosts,[1113] as with us, was so contrived and situated
-as to receive from the kitchen a tolerable supply of smoke, which was
-supposed to be agreeable to these Median strangers. The food of
-fowls[1114] being much the same all the world over, it is unnecessary to
-observe more than that the green leaves of the Cytisus were supposed to
-render them prolific. To preserve them from vermin, the juice of rue, by
-way I suppose of charm, was sprinkled over their feathers.[1115] The
-proportion of male birds was one to six. Hens were usually put to sit
-about the vernal equinox, during the first quarter of the moon, in nests
-carefully constructed of boards, and strewed with fresh clean straw,
-into which, as a sort of talisman against thunder, they threw an iron
-nail, heads of garlic, and sprigs of laurel.[1116] During the period of
-incubation, the eggs which had previously been kept in bran were turned
-every day.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1110:
-
- Athen. vii. 23. Of these birds the black were esteemed less than the
- white. ix. 15. On the fighting cocks. Plin. x. 24. Æsch. Eum. 864,
- 869. Schol. ad Æsch. Tim. Orat. Attic. t. xii. p. 379. Schol.
- Aristoph. Eq. 492.
-
-Footnote 1111:
-
- Geop. xiv. 7, 9.
-
-Footnote 1112:
-
- Arabian Nights, Story of the Ass, the Ox, and the Labourer, vol. 1. p.
- 23.
-
-Footnote 1113:
-
- Ταῤῥοὶ. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 227.
-
-Footnote 1114:
-
- Beans, however, were eschewed as they were supposed to prevent them
- from laying.—Geoponic. ii. 35. But cocks were suffered to feed on
- them, at least when they belonged to poor men.—Luc. Mycill. § 4.
-
-Footnote 1115:
-
- Dioscor. iii. 52.
-
-Footnote 1116:
-
- Geop. xiv. 7. 11. Colum. viii. 5.
-
------
-
-The other inhabitants of the farmyard were peacocks,[1117] commonly
-confined in beautiful artificial islands provided with elegant sheds;
-pheasants[1118] from the shores of the Black Sea;[1119] guinea-fowls
-from Numidia,[1120] though according to other authors they were
-originally found in Ætolia;[1121] partridges, quails, and the attagas.
-Thrushes were bred in warm rooms with slight perches projecting from the
-walls, and laurel boughs or other evergreens fixed in the corners.[1122]
-Over the clean floor was strewed their food, dried figs, which had been
-steeped in water, and mixed with flour or barley meal, together with the
-berries of the myrtle; the lentiscus, the ivy, the laurel, and the
-olive. They were fattened with millet, panic, and pure water.[1123]
-Other still smaller birds were reared, and fattened in like manner.
-Every farmhouse had, moreover, its columbary and dove-cotes,[1124]
-sometimes so large as to contain five thousand birds. They usually
-consisted of spacious buildings,[1125] roofed over and furnished with
-windows closed by lattice work, made so close that neither a lizard nor
-a mouse could creep through them. In the floor were channels and basins
-of water, in which these delicate birds[1126] might wash and plume
-themselves, and adjoining was a chamber into which such as were required
-for sale, or the table, were enticed. Even jackdaws were kept about
-farmyards, and like common fowls had perches set up for them.[1127]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1117:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 63. Petit. Leg. Att. p. 277. Geop. xiv. 18.
- 1. Athen. xiv. 70. See the poetical description of this bird by Phile:
- De Animal. Proprietat. c. 8. p. 32, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1118:
-
- Geop. xiv. 19. Colum. viii. 12. Pallad. i. 28. Athen. ix. 37, seq.
- Suid. v. φασιανοὶ. t. i. p. 1083. a. b. Aristoph. Nub. 109.
-
-Footnote 1119:
-
- According to Diogenes Laertius, (i. iv. 51) both pheasants and
- peacocks were familiar to the Greeks in the days of Solon.
-
-Footnote 1120:
-
- Athen. xiv. 71. Ælian. De Nat. Anim. v. 27. Aristot. Hist. Anim. vi.
- 2. A number of these birds were kept on the Acropolis of Athens.—Suid.
- v. μελεαγρίδες. t. ii. p. 122. a.
-
-Footnote 1121:
-
- Within the enclosure for these birds pellitory of the wall was
- probably planted, as they loved to roll in and pluck it up.—Theoph.
- Hist. Plant. i. 6. 11.
-
-Footnote 1122:
-
- Cf. Pollux. ii. 24.
-
-Footnote 1123:
-
- Geop. xiv. 24. 5, seq.
-
-Footnote 1124:
-
- The king of Tuban, in Java, had formerly his bed surrounded by cages
- of turtle-doves, which roosted on perches of various coloured
- glass.—Voyage de La Compagnie des Indes, i. 533.
-
-Footnote 1125:
-
- Varro. iii. 7. Columell. viii. 8. Pallad. i. 24.
-
-Footnote 1126:
-
- For the food with which they were supplied, see Geopon. xiv. 1. 5.
- Occasionally when the birds were permitted to fly abroad, their owners
- sprinkled them with unguents, or gave them cumin seed to eat, in order
- that they might attract and bring back with them flights of doves or
- wild pigeons to their cells.—Id. xiv. 3. 1. So also Palladius:
- Inducunt alias, si cumino pascantur assidue, vel hirci alarum balsami
- liquore tangantur, i. 24. Cf. Plin. x. 52.
-
-Footnote 1127:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 129.
-
------
-
-Much pains was taken by the ancients to improve the breed of
-animals.[1128] Polycrates, tyrant of Samos, introduced into that island
-the Molossian and Spartan dogs, goats from Scyros and Naxos, and sheep
-from Attica and Miletos.[1129] The fineness and beauty of Merinos were
-also known to the ancients, who purchased from Spain rams for breeding
-at a talent each, that is, about two hundred and forty-one pounds
-sterling.[1130]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1128:
-
- Cf. Arist. Hist. Anim. vii. 6. 5.
-
-Footnote 1129:
-
- Athen. xii. 57.
-
-Footnote 1130:
-
- Strab. iii. 2. t. i. p. 231.
-
------
-
-Horses were at all times few, and, consequently, dear in Greece; they
-were, therefore, seldom employed in agriculture, but bred and kept
-chiefly for the army, for religious pomps and processions, and for the
-chariot races at Olympia. Originally, no doubt, the horse was introduced
-from Asia, and, up to a very late period, chargers of great beauty and
-spirit, continued to be imported from the shores of the Black Sea.[1131]
-Princes, in the Homeric age, appear to have obtained celebrity for the
-beauty of their steeds, as Laomedon, Tros, and Rhesos; and it was
-customary for them to possess studs of brood mares in the rich pasture
-lands on the sea-shore. That of Priam, for example, lay at Abydos, on
-the Hellespont.[1132]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1131:
-
- Aristoph. Nub. 109. Suid. v. φασιανοὶ. t. ii. p. 1033. b. Thom.
- Magist. v. φασιανοὶ. p. 885. Blancard. Of the commentators on
- Aristophanes, however, some by the word φασιανοὶ understand horses,
- and some pheasants. The probability is, that they imported both, and
- that the poet means to play upon the word.
-
-Footnote 1132:
-
- Iliad. δ. 500.
-
------
-
-The high estimation in which horses[1133] were held in remote antiquity,
-may be gathered from the numerous fables invented respecting them,—as
-that of the centaurs in Thessaly, of the winged courser of
-Bellerophontes, and the Muses, and of the marvellous steeds presented by
-Poseidon to Peleus on his marriage with Thetis. They were reckoned,
-likewise, among the most precious victims offered in sacrifice to the
-gods. Thus we find the Trojans plunging live horses into the whirlpool
-of the Scamander[1134] to deprecate the anger of that divinity. The
-Romans, likewise, in later times, sacrificed horses to the ocean;[1135]
-and, in many parts of Asia, it appears to have been customary in nearly
-all ages, to offer up, as anciently in Laconia,[1136] this magnificent
-animal on the altars of the sun.[1137] Thus, among the Armenians, whose
-breed, though smaller than that of the Persians, was far more spirited,
-this practice prevailed as it still does in Northern India, and
-Xenophon,[1138] a religious man, observes in the Anabasis, that he gave
-his steed, worn down with the fatigues of the march, to be fed and
-offered up by the Komarch, with whom he had been for some days a guest.
-From Homer’s account of Pandarus we may infer, that the possessors of
-fine horses often submitted to great personal inconvenience rather than
-hazard the well-being of their favourites. For this wealthy
-prince,[1139] who possessed eleven carriages and twenty-two steeds, came
-on foot to the assistance of Priam, lest they should not find a
-plentiful supply of provender at Troy.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1133:
-
- See also Iliad, ε. 358. Wolf. Proleg. 80, seq.
-
-Footnote 1134:
-
- Iliad φ. 132.
-
-Footnote 1135:
-
- Fest. v. October, t. ii. p. 521, seq. v. Panibus, p. 555. Lomeier, de
- Lustrat. cap. 23. p. 292, seq. Propert. iv. i. 20, with the note of
- Frid. Jacob, in whose edition it is, v. i. 20.
-
-Footnote 1136:
-
- Pausan. iii. 20. 4. Fest. v. October, t. ii. p. 520, tells us that
- this horse was sacrificed to the winds.
-
-Footnote 1137:
-
- Herod. i. 216. Brisson. de Regn. Pers. ii. 5. The reason why the horse
- was selected as a victim to the sun, was that its swiftness appeared
- to resemble that of the god:—ὡς τακύτατον τῷ τακύτατω. Bochart.
- Hierozoic. pt. i. l. ii. c. 10. Olear. in Philost. Vit. Apoll. Tyan.
- i. 31. p. 29. Justin. i. 10. Suid. v. μίθρου. t. ii. p. 162, f. This
- practice is likewise mentioned by Ovid, (Fast. i. 385, seq.)
-
- Placat equo Persis radiis Hyperiona cinctum,
- Ne detur celeri victima tarda deo.
-
- Cf. Vigenere, Images des Philostrates, p. 773. Par. 1627.
-
-Footnote 1138:
-
- Anab. iv. 5. 35.
-
-Footnote 1139:
-
- Iliad. ε. 192, seq.
-
------
-
-Several countries were famous[1140] for their breed of horses, as
-Cyrene, Egypt, Syria, Phrygia, and the Phasis.[1141] Thessaly, too,
-particularly the neighbourhood of Triccæ, abounded in barbs, as did
-likewise Bœotia. But one of the most remarkable races was that produced
-in Nisæon,[1142] a district of Media, which seems to have been white, or
-of a bright cream colour,[1143] and of extraordinary size and swiftness.
-On one of these Masistios[1144] was mounted during the expedition into
-Greece. Apollo, in an oracle is said to have spoken of the beauty of
-mares, alluding, perhaps, to those of Elis, which were remarkable for
-their lightness and elegance of form; and Aristotle celebrates a
-particular mare of Pharsatis, called Dicæa, which was famous for
-bringing colts resembling their sires.[1145] Among the Homeric chiefs,
-Achilles and Eumelos boasted the noblest coursers, as we learn from a
-picturesque and striking passage in the Catalogue:[1146] “And now, O
-Muse, declare, which of the leaders and their horses were most
-illustrious. Excepting those of Achilles, the finest steeds before Troy
-were those of Eumelos from Pheræ, swift as birds, alike in mane, in age,
-and so equal in size, that a rule would stand level on their backs. They
-were both bred by Apollo in Pieria, both mares, and they bore with them
-the dread of battle. Noblest of all, however, were the coursers of
-Achilles. But he, in his lunar-prowed, sea-passing ships remains
-incensed against Atreides, the shepherd of his people; his myrmidons
-amuse themselves on the sea-shore with pitching the quoit, launching the
-javelin, and drawing the bow; their horses, standing beside the
-chariots, feed upon lotus, trefoil and marsh parsley; and the chariots
-themselves, well covered with hangings, are drawn up in the tents of the
-chiefs, while the soldiers, sighing for the leading of their impetuous
-general, stroll carelessly through the camp without joining in the war.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 1140:
-
- Sch. Pind. Pyth. iv. 1.
-
-Footnote 1141:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 110.
-
-Footnote 1142:
-
- Strab. xi. 13. p. 453. Τούς δὲ Νησαίους ἵππους, οἷς ἐχρῶντο οἱ
- βασιλεῖς ἀρίστοις οὖσι καὶ μεγίστοις. Cf. Herod. i. 189, on the sacred
- horses of Persia.
-
-Footnote 1143:
-
- Suid. v. ἱππος Νισαῖος. t. i. p. 1271. d. who relates that, according
- to some, the breed was found near the Erythrean Sea.
-
-Footnote 1144:
-
- Herod. ix. 20. Cf. Il. ε. 583. δ. 142, seq. In Philostratus we find
- mention made of a black Nisæan mare with white feet, large patch of
- white on the breast, and white nostrils.—Icon. ii. 5. p. 816.
-
-Footnote 1145:
-
- Hist. Anim. vii. 6.
-
-Footnote 1146:
-
- Il. β. 760, sqq.
-
------
-
-The food of the Homeric horses,[1147] was little inferior to that of
-their masters, since, besides the natural delicacies of the meadows,
-they were indulged with sifted barley and the finest wheat.[1148] The
-halter with which, while feeding, they were tied to the manger seems
-usually to have been of leather. Aristotle,[1149] remarks, that horses
-are fattened less by their food than by what they drink, and that, like
-the camel,[1150] they delight in muddy water, on which account they
-usually trouble the stream before they taste it.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1147:
-
- Iliad. θ. 560. Cf. ι. 123, seq. 265, 407. κ. 565, seq.
-
-Footnote 1148:
-
- Il. ε. 196. On an ancient crystal engraved in Buonaroti a man with cap
- and short breeches is represented feeding an ass with corn. Osserv.
- Istorich. sop. alc. Medagl. Antich. p. 345.
-
-Footnote 1149:
-
- Hist. Anim. viii. 10.
-
-Footnote 1150:
-
- Phile applies the same observation to the elephant:
-
- Ὕδωρ δὲ πίνει πλῆθος ἄφθονον πάνυ·
- Πλὴν οὐ καθαρὸν, καὶ διειδὲς οὐ θέλει,
- Ἀλλ’ οὖν ῥυπαρὸν καὶ κατεσπιλωμένον.
-
- Iamb. de Animal. Proprietat. c. 39. p. 56, 165, seq.
-
------
-
-The Greek conception of equine beauty[1151] differed but little from our
-own, since they chiefly loved horses of those colours which are still
-the objects of admiration: as snow-white, with black eyes like those of
-Rhesos, which Plato thought the most beautiful; cream-coloured, light
-bay, chestnut, and smoky grey. They judged of the breeding of a horse by
-the shortness of its coat and the dusky prominence of its veins. As a
-fine large mane greatly augments the magnificent appearance of this
-animal, they were careful after washing to comb and oil it[1152] while
-they gathered up the forelock in a band of gilded leather.[1153] The
-floors of their stables were commonly pitched with round pebbles bound
-tight together by curbs of iron.[1154]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1151:
-
- Geop. xvi. 2. Philost. Icon. i. 28. p. 804. Notwithstanding the
- admiration of the Greeks for horses we do not find that they made any
- attempt to naturalize among them those Shetlands of the ancient world
- which, according to a very grave naturalist, were no larger than rams.
- These diminutive steeds were found in India:—Παρά γε τοῖς ψύλλοις
- καλουμένοις τῶν Ἰνδῶν, εἱσὶ γὰρ καὶ Λιβύων ἕτεροι, ἵπποι γίνονται τῶν
- κριῶν οὐ μείζους. Ælian. de Animal. xvi. 37. Modern writers relate the
- same thing of a certain breed of oxen in India: “Naturalists speak of
- a diminutive breed of oxen in Ceylon, and the neighbourhood of Surat,
- no larger than a Newfoundland dog, which, though fierce of aspect, are
- trained to draw children in their little carts.” Hindoos, i. 23.
-
-Footnote 1152:
-
- Iliad, χ. 281, seq.
-
-Footnote 1153:
-
- Il. ε. 358.
-
-Footnote 1154:
-
- Xenoph. de Re Equest. iv. 4.
-
------
-
-Horses were usually broken[1155] by professed grooms, who entered into a
-written agreement with the owners implicitly to follow their
-directions.[1156] The process was sufficiently simple. They began with
-the year-and-a-half colts,[1157] on which they put a halter when
-feeding, while a bridle was hung up close to the manger, that they might
-be accustomed to the touch of it, and not take fright at the jingling of
-the bit.[1158] The next step was to lead them into the midst of noisy
-and tumultuous crowds in order to discover whether or not they were bold
-enough to be employed in war.[1159] The operation was not completely
-finished till they were three years old. When, on the course or
-elsewhere, horses had been well sweated,[1160] they were led into a
-place set apart for the purpose, and, in order to dry themselves, made
-to roll in the sand. It was customary for owners to mark their horses
-with the Koppa,[1161] or other letter of the alphabet, whence they were
-sometimes called Koppatias, Samphoras, &c.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1155:
-
- Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 158.
-
-Footnote 1156:
-
- Xenoph. de Re Equest. ii. 2. Cf. Œconom. iii. 11. xiii. 7.
-
-Footnote 1157:
-
- Geop. xvi. i. 11.
-
-Footnote 1158:
-
- Xen. de Re Equest. 10. 6. Poll. viii. 184.
-
-Footnote 1159:
-
- The swimming powers of the war-horse were probably augmented by
- exercise, since we find them passing by swimming from Rhegium to
- Sicily. Plut. Timol. § 19. This feat, however, was nothing to that of
- the stags which swam from Syria to Cyprus! Ælian. De Nat. Anim. v. 56.
-
-Footnote 1160:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 32. Cf. 25, 28.
-
-Footnote 1161:
-
- Aristoph. Eq. 601. Nub. 25. Spanh. in loc. Athen. xi. 30.
-
------
-
-The mule and the ass were much employed in rural labours, the former
-both at the cart and the plough, the latter in drawing small tumbrils,
-and in bearing wood[1162] or other produce of the farm to the
-city.[1163] The wild ass[1164] was sometimes resorted to for improving
-the breed of mules, which, in the Homeric age, were found in a state of
-nature among the mountains of Paphlagonia.[1165]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1162:
-
- In carting wood from Mount Ida in the Troad oxen are at present
- substituted for asses, and the bodies of the vehicles they draw, in
- form resembling ancient cars, are constructed of wickerwork. Chandler,
- i. 47.
-
-Footnote 1163:
-
- Lucian. Luc. siv. Asin. § 43. Cf. Artemid. Oneirocrit. ii. 12. p. 97.
-
-Footnote 1164:
-
- Geop. xvi. 21. Varro ii. 6. 3. To account for this care it may be
- observed, that rich men sometimes rode, as they still do in the East,
- on asses superbly caparisoned and adorned with bells. Lucian. Luc.
- sive Asin. § 48.
-
-Footnote 1165:
-
- Il. β. 852.
-
------
-
-But their cares extended even to swine, which, if King Ptolemy may be
-credited, were sometimes distinguished in Greece for their great size
-and beauty. He, in fact, observes in his Memoirs, that in the city of
-Assos he saw a milk-white hog two cubits and a half in length, and of
-equal height; and adds, that King Eumenes had given four thousand
-drachmæ, or nearly two hundred pounds sterling, for a boar of this
-enormous size, to improve the breed of pigs in his country.[1166] So
-that we perceive those great generals, whom posterity usually
-contemplates only in the cabinet or in the battle-field, were, at the
-same time, in their domestic policy, the rivals of the Earls Spencer and
-Leicester. Superstition, among the Cretans, prevented the improvement of
-bacon; for as a sow was said to have suckled the infant Jupiter, and
-defended his helpless infancy, they, in gratitude,[1167] abstained from
-hog’s flesh.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1166:
-
- Athen. ix. 17. Cf. Steph. De Urb. 184. e.
-
-Footnote 1167:
-
- Athen. ix. 18.
-
------
-
-In all farms the care of cattle necessarily formed a principal
-employment. The oxen[1168] were used in ploughing, treading out the
-corn, drawing manure to the fields, and bringing home the produce of the
-harvest. To prevent their being overcome by fatigue while engaged in
-their labours, the husbandmen of Greece had recourse to certain
-expedients, one of which was, to smear their hoofs with a composition of
-oil and terebinth, or wax, or warm pitch:[1169] while, to protect them
-from flies, their coats were anointed with their own saliva, or with a
-decoction of bruised laurel berries and oil.[1170] Their milch cows, in
-the selection of which much judgment was displayed,[1171] were commonly
-fed on cytisus and clover; and, still further to increase their milk,
-bunches of the herb dittany were sometimes tied about their flanks. The
-usual milking-times[1172] were, in the morning immediately after the
-breaking-up of the dawn, and in the evening about the close of twilight;
-though, occasionally, both cows, sheep, and goats were milked several
-times during the day. In weaning calves they made use of a species of
-muzzle,[1173] as the Arabs do in the case of young camels. Their pails,
-like our own, were of wood,[1174] but somewhat differently shaped, being
-narrow above, and spreading towards the bottom. When conveyed into the
-dairy the milk was poured into pans,[1175] on the form of which I have
-hitherto found no information.[1176] That they skimmed their milk is
-evident (whatever they may have done with the cream), from the mention
-of that thin pellicle which is found on it only when skimmed, whether
-scalded or not. “Here, drink this!” said Glycera to Menander, when he
-had returned one day in exceeding ill-humour from the theatre. “I don’t
-like the wrinkled skin,” replied the poet to the lady, whose beauty, it
-must be remembered, was at this time on the wane. “Blow it off,” replied
-she, immediately comprehending his meaning, “and take what is
-beneath.”[1177] Milk, in those warm latitudes, grows sour more rapidly
-than with us; but the ancients observed that it would keep three days
-when it had been scalded, and stirred until cold with a reed or
-ferula.[1178]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1168:
-
- Scheffer, De Re Vehic. p. 80; et vid. Dickenson, Delph. Phænicizant.
- c. 10. p. 116, seq. Heresbach. De Re Rust. p. 236, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1169:
-
- Geop. xvii. 9, with the note of Niclas. Aristoph. Hist. Anim. viii. 7.
- 23. Cato. De Re Rust. 72. Plin. xxviii. 81.
-
-Footnote 1170:
-
- African. ap. Geop. xvii. 11.
-
-Footnote 1171:
-
- Geop. xvii. 2. 8.
-
-Footnote 1172:
-
- Buttm. Lexil. p. 86.
-
-Footnote 1173:
-
- Hesych. v. πύσσαχος.
-
-Footnote 1174:
-
- Eustath. ad Odyss. ε. p. 219. Their milk-cups were sometimes of ivy.
- Eurip. Fragm. Androm. 27. Athen. xi. 53. Macrob. Sat. v. 21. Cf. on
- the milk-pans and cheese-vats, Poll. x. 130; Theocrit. Eidyll. v. 87.
- Milk-pails were sometimes called πέλλαι, ἀμολγοὶ, γαλακτοδόκα, and out
- of these they sometimes drank. Schol. i. 25.
-
-Footnote 1175:
-
- Cf. Il. π. 642, et Schol. Venet. Etym. Mag. 659. 41. Athen. xi. 91.
-
-Footnote 1176:
-
- Even Philostratus, while mentioning these vessels, filled to the brim
- with milk, on which the cream lies rich and shining, omits to furnish
- any hint of their form:—ψυκτῆρες γάλακτος, οὐ λευκοῦ μόνον, ἀλλὰ καὶ
- στιλπνοῦ· καὶ γὰρ στίβειν ἔοικεν, ὑπὸ τῆς ἐπιπολαζούσης αὐτῷ πιμελῆς.
- Icon. i. 31. p. 809.
-
-Footnote 1177:
-
- Athen. xiii. 49.
-
-Footnote 1178:
-
- Geop. xviii. 19. 4.
-
------
-
-The Greeks of classical times appear to have made no use of
-butter,[1179] though so early as the age of Hippocrates they were well
-enough acquainted with its existence and properties.[1180] Even in the
-present day butter is much less used in Greece than in most European
-countries, its place being supplied by fine olive oil. For cheese,
-however, they seem to have entertained a partiality, though it is
-probable that the best they could manufacture would have lost very
-considerably in comparison with good Stilton or Cheshire, not to mention
-Parmasan. It was a favourite food, however, among soldiers in Attica,
-who during war used to supply themselves both with cheese and
-meal.[1181] Their cheese-lope or rennet in most cases resembled our own,
-consisting of the liquid substance found in the ruen of new-born
-animals, as calves, kids, or hares, which was considered superior to
-lamb’s rennet.[1182] Occasionally they employed for the same purpose
-burnt salt or vinegar, fowl’s crop or pepper, the flowers of bastard
-saffron, or the threads which grow on the head of the artichoke. For
-these again, was sometimes substituted the juice of the fig-tree;[1183]
-or a branch freshly cut[1184] was used in stirring the milk while
-warming on the fire. This cheese would seem, for the most part, to have
-been eaten while fresh and soft,[1185] like that of Neufchatel, though
-they were acquainted with various means of preserving it for a
-considerable space of time. Acidulated curds were kept soft by being
-wrapped in the leaves of the terebinth tree, or plunged in oil, or
-sprinkled with salt. When desirous of preserving their cheese for any
-length of time, they washed it in pure water, and, after drying it in
-the sun, laid it upon earthen jars with thyme and summer savory. Some
-other kinds were kept in a sort of pickle, composed of sweet vinegar or
-oxymel or sea-water, which was poured into the jars until it entirely
-penetrated and covered the whole mass. When they wished to communicate a
-peculiar whiteness to the cheese, they laid it up in brine. Dry cheese
-was rendered more solid and sharp-tasted by being placed within reach of
-the smoke. If from age it were hard or bitter, it was thrown into a
-preparation of barley-meal, then soaked in water, and what rose to the
-top was skimmed off.[1186]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1179:
-
- See Beckman. Hist. of Inv. i. 372, seq. Butter is made at present in
- Greece by filling a skin with cream and treading on it. Chandler, ii.
- 245.
-
-Footnote 1180:
-
- Foes, Œconom. Hippoc. v. πικέριον, p. 306.
-
-Footnote 1181:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Pac. 394.
-
-Footnote 1182:
-
- Varro. De Re Rust. ii. 11. 4. Colum. vii. 8. Eustath ad Il. ε. p. 472.
- Hesych. v. ὀπὸς.—Mœris: ὀπὸς Ἀττικοὶ, πυτία Ἕλληνες. p. 205. Cf.
- Aristot. Hist. Anim. iv. 21.
-
-Footnote 1183:
-
- The cheese made in this manner was called ὀπίας. Eurip. Cyclop. 136.
- Athen. xiv. 76. Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 353. Dioscor. i. 183. Plin.
- xxiii. 63. Plut. Sympos. vi. 10.
-
-Footnote 1184:
-
- Geop. xviii. 12. These cheeses were sometimes made in box-wood moulds.
- Colum. vii. 8.
-
-Footnote 1185:
-
- Philostratus describes one of these delicate little cheeses freshly
- made and quivering like a slice of blanc-manger:—καὶ τρυφαλὶς ἐφ᾽
- ἑτέρου φύλλου νεοπαγὴς, καὶ σαλέυουσα. Icon. i. 31. p. 809.
-
-Footnote 1186:
-
- Geop. xviii. 19.
-
------
-
-That the milk-women in Greece understood all the arts of their
-profession may be gathered from the instructions which have been left us
-on the best methods of detecting the presence of water in milk. If you
-dip a sharp rush into milk, says Berytios, and it run off easily, there
-is water in it. And again, if you pour a few drops upon your thumb-nail,
-the pure milk will maintain its position, while the adulterated will
-immediately glide away![1187]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1187:
-
- Geop. xviii. 20.
-
------
-
-Their mode of fattening cattle[1188] was as follows: first they fed them
-on cabbage chopped small and steeped in vinegar, to which succeeded
-chaff and gurgions during five days. This diet was then exchanged for
-barley, of which for nearly a week they were allowed four cotylæ a-day,
-the quantity being then gradually augmented for six other days. As of
-necessity the hinds were stirring early, the cattle began even in winter
-to be fed at cock-crowing; a second quantity of food was given them
-about dawn, when they were watered, and their remaining allowance
-towards evening. In summer their first meal commenced at day-break, the
-second at mid-day, and the third about sunset. They were at this time of
-the year suffered to drink at noon and night of water rendered somewhat
-tepid; in winter it was considerably warmer.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1188:
-
- Geop. xvii. 12. Heresbach. p. 233. a.
-
------
-
-About Mossynos, in Thrace, cattle were sometimes fed upon fish, which
-was likewise given to horses, and even to sheep. Herodotus, who mentions
-a similar fact, calls food of this description χόρτος, “fodder,”[1189]
-though hay or dried straw was, doubtless, its original meaning. The
-provender of cattle in the district about Ænia appears to have been so
-wholesome, that the herds which fed upon it were never afflicted by the
-mange.[1190]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1189:
-
- Herod. v. 16. Athen. vii. 72. Ælian. de Nat. Anim. v. 25. Cf. Sch.
- Aristoph. Pac. 891.
-
-Footnote 1190:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. iv. 14. 3.
-
------
-
-Among the animals domesticated and rendered useful by the Greeks we
-must, doubtless, reckon bees,[1191] which, in the heroic ages, had not
-yet been confined in hives. For, whenever Homer describes them, it is
-either where they are streaming forth from a rock,[1192] or settling in
-bands and clusters on the spring flowers. So, likewise, in Virgil, they
-
- Hunt the golden dew;
- In summer time on tops of lilies feed,
- And creep within their bells to suck the balmy seed.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1191:
-
- Athen. iii. 59. Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 107.
-
-Footnote 1192:
-
- Il. β. 87. μ. 67. Odyss. ν. 106.
-
------
-
-In that Bœotian old savage, Hesiod,[1193] however, we undoubtedly find
-mention of the hive where he is uncourteously comparing women to drones—
-
- As when within their well-roofed hives the bees
- Maintain the mischief-working drones at ease,
- Their task pursuing till the golden sun
- Down to the western wave his course hath run,
- Filling their shining combs, while snug within
- Their fragrant cells, the drones, with idle din,
- As princes revel o’er their unpaid bowls,
- On others’ labours cheer their worthless souls.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1193:
-
- Theogon. 594, seq.—Pro σίμβλοισι, quod præbet R. S., cæteri Mss.
- σμήνεσσι. Schæferus tamen malebat σίμβλοισιν ἐπηρεφέεσι. Gœttling. But
- Goguet, who has considered this passage, does not think that “hives”
- are meant; because, if their use had been known in the times of
- Hesiod, he would not have failed to leave us some directions on the
- subject. Origine des Loix, t. iii. p. 399. Wolff, following in the
- footsteps of Heyne, gets easily over the difficulty by pronouncing the
- whole passage, v. 590–612, spurious. Gœttling, p. 55. Cf. Schol.
- Aristoph. Nub. 937. Phile, de Animal. Proprietat. c. 28. p. 87, seq.
-
------
-
-As the honey of Attica constantly, in antiquity, enjoyed the reputation
-of being the finest in the world,[1194] the management of bees naturally
-formed in that country an important branch of rural economy. The natural
-history, moreover, of the bee was studied with singlar enthusiam by the
-Greeks in general. Aristomachos of Soli, devoted to it fifty-eight
-years, and Philiscos, the Thasian, who passed his life among bees in a
-desert, obtained on that account the name of the Wild Man. Both wrote on
-the subject.[1195]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1194:
-
- The pasturage of Hymettos, however, was, by Pausanias, regarded as
- second to that of the Alazones on the river Halys, where the bees were
- tame, and worked in common in the fields. i. 32. 1.
-
-Footnote 1195:
-
- Plin. Hist. Nat. xi. 9.
-
------
-
-This branch of rural economy was carried to very great perfection in
-Attica. The vocabulary[1196] connected with it was extensive, as every
-separate operation had its technical term, by the study of which,
-chiefly, an insight into their practice is obtained. Thus, from certain
-expressions employed by Aristotle[1197] and Pollux, it seems clear that
-bee-managers, whom we may occasionally call melitturgi, constituted a
-separate division among the industrious classes; and these, instructed
-by constant experience, probably anticipated most of the improvements
-imagined in modern times. For example, instead of destroying the
-valuable and industrious little insects for the purpose of obtaining
-possession of their spoils, they in some cases compelled them by smoke
-to retire temporarily from the hive, whence their treasures were to be
-taken; and in the mining districts about Laureion they understood the
-art, concerning which, however, no particulars are known, of procuring
-the virgin honey pure and unsmoked.[1198]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1196:
-
- Poll. i. 254. Artemid. Oneirocrit. ii. 22. p. 109.
-
-Footnote 1197:
-
- Hist. Anim. v. 22. ix. 40. Etym. Mag. 458. 44.
-
-Footnote 1198:
-
- Τοῦ δὲ μέλιτος, ἀρίστου ὄντος τῶν πάντων τοῦ Ἀττικοῦ, πολὺ βέλτιστὸν
- φάσι τὸ ἐν τοῖς ἀργυρέοις, ὁ καὶ ἀκαπνίστον καλοῦσιν ἀπὸ τοῦ τρόποῦ
- τῆς σκευασίας. Strab. ix. 2. t. ii. p. 246.—Wheler describes the
- modern method observed by the Athenians in taking honey without
- destroying the bee, but in a style so lengthy and uncouth, that I must
- content myself with a reference to his travels. Book vi. p. 412, seq.
-
------
-
-The grounds of a melitturgos or bee-keeper were chosen and laid out with
-peculiar care.[1199] In a sheltered spot, generally on the thymy slope
-of a hill, the hives were arranged in the midst of flowers and
-odoriferous shrubs. And if the necessary kinds had not by nature been
-scattered there, they were planted by the gardener. Experience soon
-taught them what blossoms and flowers yielded the best honey,[1200] and
-were most agreeable to the bees. These, in Attica, were supposed to be
-the wild pear-tree, the bean, clover, a pale-coloured vetch, the syria,
-myrtle, wild poppy, wild thyme, and the almond-tree.[1201] To which may
-be added the rose, balm gentle, the galingale or odoriferous rush, basil
-royal, and above all the cytisus,[1202] which begins to flower about the
-vernal equinox, and continues in bloom to the end of September.[1203] Of
-all the plants, however, affected by the bee, none is so grateful to it
-as the thyme, which so extensively abounds in Attica and Messenia[1204]
-as to perfume the whole atmosphere. In Sicily too, all the slopes and
-crests of its beautiful hills, from Palermo to Syracuse, are invested
-with a mantle of thyme,[1205] and other odoriferous shrubs, which,
-according to Varro, gives the superior flavour to the Sicilian honey.
-Box-wood abounded on mount Cytoros, in Galatia, and in the island of
-Corsica, on which account the honey of the latter country was
-bitter.[1206]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1199:
-
- On the management of bees in Circassia and other countries on the
- Black Sea, see Pallas, Travels in Southern Russia, ii. p. 204.
-
-Footnote 1200:
-
- On the coast of the Black Sea bees sucked honey from the grape. Geop.
- v. 2.
-
-Footnote 1201:
-
- Arist. Hist. Anim. ix. 26, 27.
-
-Footnote 1202:
-
- Geop. xv. 2. 6.
-
-Footnote 1203:
-
- Varro, De Re Rust. iii. 16.
-
-Footnote 1204:
-
- Sibthorpe in Walpole’s Memoirs, t. ii. p. 62. Geop. xv. 2. 5. Speaking
- of Hymettos, Chandler observes, that it produces a succession of
- aromatic plants, herbs, and flowers, calculated to supply the bee with
- nourishment both in winter and summer, ii. p. 143. “Les montagnes (des
- îles) sont couvertes de thym et de lavande. Les abeilles, qui y volent
- par nuées, en tirent un miel qui est aussi transparent que notre
- gelée.” Della Rocca, Traité sur les Abeilles, t. i. 6.
-
-Footnote 1205:
-
- This plant in Greece flowers about midsummer, and those who kept bees
- conjectured whether honey would be plentiful or not, according as it
- was more or less luxuriant. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 2, 3. The wild
- thyme of Greece was a creeping plant which was sometimes trained on
- poles or hedges, or even in pits, the sides of which it speedily
- covered. Id. vi. 7. 5.
-
-Footnote 1206:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii. 15. 5. The honey of modern Crete is esteemed
- of a good quality. Pashley, Travels, vol. i. p. 56.
-
------
-
-In selecting a spot for hives, the ancients observed a rule which I do
-not recollect to have been mentioned by modern bee-keepers, and that was
-to avoid the neighbourhood of an echo,[1207] which by repeating their
-own buzzing and murmuring suggested the idea perhaps of invisible
-rivals. Place them not, says Virgil,[1208]
-
- Near hollow rocks that render back the sound,
- And doubled images of voice rebound.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1207:
-
- Echo, in the mythology, is said to have been beloved of Pan, by which
- she seems tacitly to be connected with the generation of Panic Terrors
- Polyæn. Stratagem. i. 2. 1. Offensive smells are often reckoned among
- the aversions of bees, but I fear without good reason. At least they
- have sometimes been found to select strange places wherein to deposit
- their treasures of sweets. In the book of Judges, chap. xiv. ver. 8,
- seq., it is related that, when Samson, on his way to Timnath, turned
- aside to view the carcass of a young lion which he had a short time
- previously slain, “behold, there was a swarm of bees and honey in the
- carcass of the lion, and he took thereof in his hands and went on
- eating, and came to his father and mother, and he gave them and they
- did eat, but he told not them that he had taken the honey out of the
- carcass of the lion.” Upon this passage the following may serve as a
- note:—“Among this pretty collection of natural curiosities, (in the
- cemetery of Algesiras,) one in particular attracted our attention;
- this was the contents of a small uncovered coffin in which lay a
- child, the cavity of the chest exposed and tenanted by an industrious
- colony of bees. The comb was rapidly progressing, and I suppose,
- according to the adage of the poet, they were adding sweets to the
- sweet, if not perfume to the violet.” Napier, Excursions on the Shores
- of the Mediterranean, v. i. 127.
-
-Footnote 1208:
-
- Georg. iv. 50, with the commentaries of Servius and Philargyrius; and
- Varro, De Re Rust. iii. 16.
-
------
-
-Care was taken to conduct near the hives small runnels of the purest
-water, not exceeding two or three inches in depth with shells or pebbles
-rising dry above the surface, whereon the bees might alight to
-drink.[1209] When of necessity the apiary was situated on the margin of
-lakes or larger streams other contrivances were had recourse to for the
-convenience of the airy labourers.
-
- Then o’er the running stream or standing lake
- A passage for thy weary people make,
- With osier floats the standing water strow,
- Of massy stones make bridges if it flow,
- That basking in the sun thy bees may lie
- And resting there their flaggy pinions dry,
- When late returning home the laden host
- By raging winds is wrecked upon the coast.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1209:
-
- Cf. Geop. xv. 2, 3, 4.
-
------
-
-Their hives were of various kinds and shapes. Some, like the modern
-Circassians, they made with fine wicker-work, of a round form and
-carefully plastered on the inside with clay.[1210] Other hives were
-constructed of bark, especially that of the cork-tree, others of fig,
-oxya, beech, and pine-wood,[1211] others, as now in Spain, of the trunk
-of a hollow tree, others of earthenware, as is the practice in Russia;
-and others again of plaited cane of a square shape, three feet in length
-and about one in breadth, but so contrived that, should the honey
-materials prove scanty, they might be contracted, lest the bees should
-lose courage if surrounded by a large empty space. The wicker-hives were
-occasionally plastered both inside and outside with cow-dung to fill up
-the cavities and smooth the surface.[1212] A more beautiful species of
-hive was sometimes made with the lapis specularis,[1213] which, being
-almost as transparent as glass, enabled the curious owner to contemplate
-the movements and works of the bees.[1214] When finished, they were
-placed on projecting slabs, so as not to touch or be easily shaken.
-There were generally three rows of hives rising above each other like
-Egyptian tombs on the face of the wall, and there was a prejudice
-against adding a fourth.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1210:
-
- Vir. Georg. iv. 34, seq. Varro, iii. 16. Colum. ix. 2–7. Sch.
- Aristoph. Nub. 295. Vesp. 241. Callim. Hymn. i. 50. Cf. Wheler,
- Travels into Greece. Book vi. p. 411.
-
-Footnote 1211:
-
- Geop. xv. 2. 7. Cf. Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii. 10. 1.
-
-Footnote 1212:
-
- Geop. xv. 2. 8. Varro, iii. 16. Colum. ix. 14. Pallad. vii. 8. Cato.
- 81.
-
-Footnote 1213:
-
- Plin. xxi. 47.
-
-Footnote 1214:
-
- At present the hives, we are told, are set on the ground in rows
- enclosed within a low wall. Chandler, ii. 143.
-
------
-
-The fences of apiaries were made high and strong to protect the inmates
-from the inroads of the bears,[1215] which would otherwise have
-overthrown the hives and devoured all the combs.[1216] Another enemy of
-the bee was the Merops,[1217] which makes its appearance about Hymettos
-towards the end of summer.[1218]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1215:
-
- Phile gives a long list of the bees’ foes, which begins as follows:
-
- Ὄφις, δὲ καὶ σφὴξ, καὶ χελιδὼν, καὶ φρύνος,
- Μύρμηξ τε, καὶ σὴς, αἰγιθαλὴς, καὶ φάλαγξ,
- Καὶ σαῦρος ὦχρὸς, καὶ φαγεῖν δεινὸς μέροψ,
- Σμήνει μελισσῶν δυσμενεῖς ὁδοστάται.
-
- Iamb. De Animal. Proprietat. c. 30, p. 104, seq.
-
-Footnote 1216:
-
- Arist. Hist. Anim. viii. 5. Plin. Nat. Hist. viii. 54.
-
-Footnote 1217:
-
- Besides this enemy the bees of America have another still more
- audacious, that is to say, the monkey, which either carries off their
- combs or crushes them for the purpose of dipping his tail in the
- honey, which he afterwards sucks at his leisure. Schneider, Observ.
- sur Ulloa, t. ii. p. 199.—See a very amusing chapter on the enemies of
- the bee in Della Rocca, iii. 219, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1218:
-
- Sibthorpe in Walp. Mem. i. 75. The practice, moreover, of stealing
- hives was not unknown to the ancients. Plat. De Legg. t. viii. p. 104.
-
------
-
-There were, in ancient times, two entrances, one on either hand, and on
-the top a lid, which the Melitturgos could remove when he desired to
-take the honey, or inspect the condition of the bees. The best of these
-lids were made of bark, the worst of earthenware, which were cold in
-winter, and in summer exceedingly hot.[1219] It was considered necessary
-during spring and the succeeding season for the bee-keeper to inspect
-the hives thrice a month, to fumigate them slightly, and remove all
-filth and vermin. He was careful, likewise, to destroy the usurpers if
-there were more than one queen,[1220] since, in Varro’s[1221] opinion,
-they gave rise to sedition; but Aristotle thinks there ought to be
-several, lest one should die, and the hive along with it. Of the queen
-bees there are three kinds, the black, the ruddy, and the variegated;
-though Menecrates, who is good authority, speaks only of the black and
-variegated.[1222] Aristotle, however, describes the reddish queen bee as
-the best. Even among the working insects there are two kinds, the
-smaller, in form round, and variegated in colour, the larger, which is
-the tame bee, less active and beautiful. The former, or wild bee,[1223]
-frequents the mountains, forests, and other solitary places, labours
-indefatigably, and collects honey in great quantities; the latter, which
-feeds among gardens, and in man’s neighbourhood, fills its hive more
-slowly.[1224] With respect to the drones, or males, which the working
-bees generally expel at a certain time of the year, the Attic melitturgi
-got rid of them in a very ingenious manner. It was observed, that these
-gentlemen though no way inclined to work, would yet occasionally, on
-very fine days, go abroad for exercise, rushing forth in squadrons,
-mounting aloft into the air, and there wheeling, and sporting, and
-manœuvring in the sun.[1225] Taking advantage of their absence, they
-spread a fine net over the hive-entrance, the meshes of which, large
-enough to admit the bee, would exclude the drone. On returning,
-therefore, they found themselves, according to the old saying, “on the
-smooth side of the door,” and were compelled to seek fresh
-lodgings.[1226]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1219:
-
- Colum. ix. 6. Della Rocca, however, considers this kind as equal to
- any other, except that it is more fragile. t. ii. p. 17.
-
-Footnote 1220:
-
- Geop. xv. 2. 15.
-
-Footnote 1221:
-
- De Re Rust. iii. 16, 18. Colum. ix. 9. 6. Hist. Anim. v. 19, 22.
- Xenoph. Œconom. vii. 32.
-
-Footnote 1222:
-
- Cf. Geop. xv. 2, 6.
-
-Footnote 1223:
-
- On the humble bee, see Sch. Aristoph. Acharn. 831.
-
-Footnote 1224:
-
- Varro, De Re Rust. iii. 16.
-
-Footnote 1225:
-
- Arist. Hist. Anim. ix. 27.
-
-Footnote 1226:
-
- Arist. Hist. Anim. v. 21. Cf. Xenoph. Œcon. xvii. 14, seq.
-
------
-
-In late springs, or when there is a drought or blight, the bees breed
-very little, but make a great deal of honey, whereas in wet seasons they
-keep more at home, and attend to breeding. Swarms in Greece[1227]
-appeared about the ripening of the olive. Aristotle is of opinion, that
-honey is not manufactured by the bee, but falls perfectly formed from
-the atmosphere, more especially at the heliacal rising or setting of
-certain stars, and when the rainbow appears. He observes, too, that no
-honey is found before the rising of the Pleiades,[1228] which happens
-about the thirteenth of May.[1229] This opinion is in exact conformity
-with the fact, that at certain seasons of the year what is called the
-honey dew descends, covering thick the leaves of the oak, and several
-other trees, which at such times literally drop with honey. On these
-occasions the bees find little to do beyond the labour of conveying it
-to their cells, and, accordingly, have been known to fill the hive in
-one or two days. It has been observed, moreover, that autumn flowers,
-which yield very little fragrance, yield, also, little or no honey. In
-the kingdom of Pontos there was a race of white bees which made honey
-twice a month; and at Themiscyra there were those which built their
-combs both in hives and in the earth, producing very little wax, but a
-great deal of honey.[1230]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1227:
-
- Cf. Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 425. In the island of Cuba, where the tame
- bee was originally introduced by the English, it has been found to
- swarm and multiply with incredible rapidity, each hive sometimes
- sending forth two swarms per month, so that the mountains are
- absolutely filled with them. This rapid increase seems to have taken
- place chiefly in the neighbourhood of the sugar plantations, which
- they were long since supposed to deteriorate by extracting too much
- honey from the cane. Don Ulloa, Memoires Philosophiques, &c., t. i. p.
- 185. In North America where bees are known among the natives by the
- name of the “English Flies,” they betray an invariable tendency for
- migrating southward. Kalm. t. ii. 427. Schneider, Observ. sur Ulloa,
- ii. 198.
-
-Footnote 1228:
-
- Hist. Anim. v. 22. Orion rises on the 9th of July, Gœttling ad Hesiod.
- Opp. et Dies, 598. Arcturus, 18th September. Id. 610.
-
-Footnote 1229:
-
- A similar opinion has been sometimes maintained also by the
- moderns:—“I have heard,” observes Lord Bacon, “from one that was
- industrious in husbandry, that the labour of the bee is about the wax,
- and that he hath known in the beginning of May, honey combs empty of
- honey, and within a fortnight when the sweet dews fall filled like a
- cellar.”—Sylva Sylvarum, 612.
-
-Footnote 1230:
-
- Arist. Hist. Anim. v. 22. In the Crimea wild bees are found in great
- abundance in the clefts and caverns of the mountains.—Pallas, Travels
- in Southern Russia, iii. 324. Among the numerous species of wild bees
- found in America there is one which pre-eminently deserves to be
- introduced into Europe and brought under the dominion of man. This bee
- does not, like the ordinary kind, deposit its honey in combs but in
- separate waxen cells about the size and shape of a pigeon’s egg. As
- the honey of this bee is of an excellent quality, many persons in
- South America have been at the pains to tame its maker, whose labours
- have proved extremely profitable.—Schneider, Observ. sur Ulloa, ii.
- 200.
-
------
-
-When the time of year arrived for robbing the bee, some hives were found
-to produce five, others ten, others fifteen quarts of honey, still
-leaving sufficient for winter consumption.[1231] And in determining what
-quantity would suffice great judgment was required; for if too much
-remained the labourers grew indolent, if too little they lost their
-spirits. However, in this latter case the bee-keepers, having
-ascertained that they were in need of food, introduced a number of sweet
-figs, and other similar fruit into the hive, as now we do moist sugar in
-a split cane. Elsewhere the practice was to boil a number of rich figs
-in water[1232] till they were reduced to a jelly, which was then formed
-into cakes and set near the hive. Together with this, some bee-keepers
-placed honey-water, wherein they threw locks of purple wool, on which
-the bees might stand to drink.[1233] Certain melitturgi, desirous of
-distinguishing their own bees[1234] when spread over the meadows,
-sprinkled them with fine flour. Mention is made of a person who obtained
-five thousand pounds’ weight of honey annually; and Varro[1235] speaks
-of two soldiers who, with a small country house, and an acre of ground
-left them by their father, realised an independent fortune.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1231:
-
- Arist. Hist. Anim. ix. 27. 24. In Attica, the honey was taken about
- the summer solstice; at Rome about the festival of Vulcan, in the
- month of August.—Winkelmann. Hist. de l’Art, i. 65. But commentators
- are not at all agreed respecting the meaning of Pliny, whom this
- writer relies upon. xi. 15. Cf. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 797.
-
-Footnote 1232:
-
- Arist. Hist. Anim. ix. 27. 19. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 752. Cf. Meurs.
- Græc. Ludib. p. 13.
-
-Footnote 1233:
-
- Varro, de Re Rust. iii. 16.
-
-Footnote 1234:
-
- A gentleman in Surrey desirous of knowing his own bees, when he should
- chance to meet them in the fields, touched their wings with vermilion
- as they were issuing from the hive. Being one fine day in summer on a
- visit at Hampstead, he found them thickly scattered among the wild
- flowers on the heath.
-
-Footnote 1235:
-
- De Re Rust. iii. 16.
-
------
-
-Theophrastus, in a fragment[1236] of one of his lost works, speaks of
-three different kinds of honey, one collected from flowers, another
-which, according to his philosophy, descended pure from heaven, and a
-third produced from canes. This last, which was sometimes denominated
-Indian honey, is the sugar of modern times. There appear, likewise, to
-have been other kinds of sugar manufactured from different substances,
-as Tamarisk and Wheat.[1237] The honey-dew, on the production of which
-the ancients[1238] held many extraordinary opinions, was supposed to be
-superior to the nectar of the bee.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1236:
-
- Preserved by Photius. Biblioth. cod. 278. p. 529. b.
-
-Footnote 1237:
-
- Herod. vii. 31. Cf. iv. 194.
-
-Footnote 1238:
-
- On the origin of the honeydew, see the Quarterly Journal of
- Agriculture, No. XLIV. p. 499, sqq.
-
------
-
-Amyntas, in his Stations of Asia, cited by Athenæus, gives a curious
-account of this sort of honey which was collected in various parts of
-the East, particularly in Syria. In some cases they gathered the leaves
-of the tree, chiefly the linden and the oak, on which the dew was most
-abundantly[1239] found, and pressed them together like those masses of
-Syrian figs, which were called _palathè_. Others allowed it to drop from
-the leaves and harden into globules, which, when desirous of using, they
-broke, and, having poured water thereon in wooden bowls called
-_tabaitas_, drank the mixture. In the districts of Mount Lebanon[1240]
-the honey-dew fell plentifully several times during the year, and was
-collected by spreading skins under the trees, and shaking into them the
-liquid honey from the leaves; they then filled therewith numerous
-vessels, in which it was preserved for use. On these occasions, the
-peasants used to exclaim, “Zeus has been raining honey!”
-
------
-
-Footnote 1239:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii. 7. 6. Cf. Hes. Opp. et Dies, 232. seq. Cf.
- Lord Bacon, Sylva Sylvarum. 496.
-
-Footnote 1240:
-
- Schneid. Comm. ad Theoph. Frag. t. iv. p. 822.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
- GARDEN AND ORCHARD.
-
-
-Lord Bacon, who loved to be surrounded by plants and trees and flowers,
-delivers it as his opinion, that the scientific culture of gardens
-affords a surer mark of the advance of civilisation than any improvement
-in the science of architecture, since men, he observes, enjoyed the
-luxury of magnificent palaces before that of picturesque and
-well-ordered garden-grounds. This, likewise, was the conviction of the
-ancient Greeks,[1241] in whose literature we everywhere discover
-vestiges of a passion for that voluptuous solitude which men taste in
-artificial and secluded plantations, amid flower-beds and arbours and
-hanging vines and fountains and smooth shady walks. No full description,
-however, of an Hellenic garden has survived; even the poets have
-contented themselves with affording us glimpses of their “studious walks
-and shades.” We must, therefore, endeavour, by the aid of scattered
-hints, chance expressions, fragments, and a careful study of the natural
-and invariable productions of the country, to work out for ourselves a
-picture of what the gardens of Peisistratos, or Cimon, or Pericles, or
-Epicurus, whom Pliny[1242] denominates the _magister hortorum_, or any
-other Grecian gentleman, must in the best ages have been.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1241:
-
- But see Dr. Nolan on the Grecian Rose, Trans. Roy. Soc. ii. p. 330,
- and Poll. i. 229.
-
-Footnote 1242:
-
- Hist. Nat. xix. 4. Dr. Nolan, p. 330. Nic. Caussin. De Eloquent. xi.
- p. 727, seq. Cic. De Senect. § 17. Ælian. De Nat. Anim. xiii. 18, has
- a brief but interesting description of the garden of the Indian kings,
- with its evergreen groves, fish-ponds, and flights of peacocks,
- pheasants, and parrots, reckoned sacred by the Brahmins. Cf. Xenoph.
- Œconom. iv. 13, where he celebrates the fondness of the Persian kings
- for gardens.
-
------
-
-That portion of the ground[1243] which was devoted to the culture of
-sweet-smelling shrubs and flowers, usually approached and projected
-inwards between the back wings of the house, so that from the windows
-the eye might alight upon the rich and variegated tints of the
-parterres[1244] intermingled with verdure, while the evening and morning
-breeze wafted clouds of fragrance into the apartments.[1245] The lawns,
-shrubberies, bosquets, thickets, arcades, and avenues, were, in most
-cases, laid out in a picturesque though artificial manner, the principal
-object appearing to have been to combine use with magnificence, and to
-enjoy all the blended hues and odours which the plants and trees
-acclimated in Hellas could afford. Protection, in summer, from the sun’s
-rays, is, in those southern latitudes, an almost necessary ingredient of
-pleasure, and, therefore, numerous trees, as the cedar,[1246] the
-cypress, the black and white poplar,[1247] the ash, the linden, the elm,
-and the platane, rose here and there in the grounds, in some places
-singly, elsewhere in clumps, uniting their branches above, and affording
-a cool and dense shade. Beneath these umbrageous arches the air was
-further refrigerated by splashing fountains,[1248] whose waters, through
-numerous fair channels, straight or winding, as the use demanded of them
-required,[1249] spread themselves over the whole garden, refreshing the
-eye and keeping up a perpetual verdure. Copses of myrtles, of roses, of
-agnus-castus,[1250] and other odoriferous shrubs intermingled,
-clustering round a pomegranate-tree, were usually placed on elevated
-spots,[1251] that, being thus exposed to the winds, they might the more
-freely diffuse their sweetness. The spaces between trees were sometimes
-planted with roses,[1252] and lilies, and violets, and golden
-crocuses;[1253] and sometimes presented a breadth of smooth, close,
-green sward, sprinkled with wild-flowers, as the violet and the blue
-veronica,[1254] the pink, and the pale primrose, the golden motherwort,
-the cowslip, the daisy, the pimpernel, and the periwinkle. In many
-gardens the custom was, to plant each kind of tree in separate groups,
-and each species of flower-bed also had, as now in Holland,[1255] a
-distinct space assigned to it; so that there were beds of white
-violets,[1256] of irises, of the golden cynosure,[1257] of hyacinths, of
-ranunculuses, of the blue campanula, or Canterbury bells, of white
-gilliflowers, carnations, and the branchy asphodel.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1243:
-
- Here sometimes were grown both vegetables, as lettuces, radishes,
- parsley, &c., and flowering shrubs, as the wild or rose-laurel, which
- was supposed to be a deadly poison to horses and asses. Lucian. Luc.
- siv. Asin. § 17.
-
-Footnote 1244:
-
- Luc. Piscat. § 6.
-
-Footnote 1245:
-
- Geop. x. 1. 1. xii. 2.
-
-Footnote 1246:
-
- The cedar still grows wild on the promontory of Sunium. Chandler, ii.
- 8.
-
-Footnote 1247:
-
- Sibth. Flor. Græc. t. i. pl. 4.
-
-Footnote 1248:
-
- Plato describes, though not in a garden, a fountain and a plane-tree,
- in language so picturesque and harmonious, that it has captivated the
- imagination of all succeeding writers, many of whom have sought to
- express their admiration by imitating it in their own style:—Ἥ τε γὰρ
- πλάτανος αὕτη μάλ’ ἀμφιλαφής τε καὶ ὑψηλή, τοῦ τε ἄγνου τὸ ὕψος καὶ τὸ
- σύσκιον πάγκαλον, καὶ ὡς ἀγμὴν ἔχει τῆς ἀνθης, ὡς ἄν εὐωδέστατον
- παρέχοι τὸν τόπον· ἥ τε αὖ πηγὴ χαριεστάτη ὑπο τῆς πλατάνου ῥεῖ μάλα
- ψυχροῦ ὕδατος, ὥς τε γε τῷ ποδὶ τεκμήρασθαι· νυμφῶν τε τινων καὶ
- Ἀχελώου ἱερὸν ἀπὸ τῶν κορῶν τε καὶ ἀγαλμάτων ἔοικεν εἶναι· εἰ δ᾽ αὖ
- βούλει, τὸ εὔπνουν τοῦ τόπου ὡς ἀγαπητὸν καὶ σφόδρα ἡδὺ· θερινόν τε
- καὶ λιγυρὸν ὑπηχεῖ τῷ τῶν τεττίγων χορῷ, πάντων δὲ κομψότατον τὸ τῆς
- πόας ὅτι ἐν ἠρέμα προσάντει ἱκανὴ πέφυκε κατακλινέντι τὴν κεφαλὴν
- παγκάλως ἔχειν. Phæd. t. i. p. 8, seq. The prevailing image in this
- passage is thus expressed by Cicero: “Cur non imitamur Socratem illum,
- qui est in Phædro Platonis; nam me hæc tua platanus admonuit, quæ non
- minus ad opacandum hunc locum patulis est diffusa ramis, quam illa
- cujus umbram secutus est Socrates quæ mihi videtur non tam ipsa
- aquula, quæ describitur, quam Platonis oratione crevisse.” De Orat. i.
- 7. The picture is slightly varied by Aristinætos, who introduces it
- into a garden:—Ἡ δὲ πηγὴ χαριεστάτη ὑπὸ τῇ πλατάνῳ ῥεῖ ὕδατος εὖ μάλα
- ψυχροῦ, ὥς γε τῷ ποδὶ τεκμήρασθαι, καὶ διαφανοῦς τοσοῦτον, ὥστε
- συνεπινηχομένων καὶ διὰ διαυγὲς ὑδάτιον διαπλεκομένων ἐπαφροδίτως
- ἀλλήλοις, ἅπαν ἡμῶν φανερῶς ἀποκαταφαίνεσθαι μέλος. Epist. Lib.i.
- Epist. 3. p. 14. On the epithet ἀμφιλαφὴς, which Ruhnken (ad Tim. Lex.
- p. 24) observes was almost exclusively appropriated by the ancients to
- the Plane tree, see Apollon. Rhod. ii. 733. Wellauer. et schol.
-
-Footnote 1249:
-
- Where running water was not to be obtained, they constructed two
- gardens, the one for winter, which depended on the showers, the other
- on a northern exposure, where a fresh, cool air was preserved
- throughout the summer. Geop. xii. 5.
-
-Footnote 1250:
-
- Used by rustics in crowns. Athen. xv. 12. Prometheus was crowned with
- agnus-castus. 13.
-
-Footnote 1251:
-
- Geop. xi. 7. Plin. xv. 18.
-
-Footnote 1252:
-
- Geop. x. 1. 3.
-
-Footnote 1253:
-
- Which delighted particularly in the edges of paths and trodden places.
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 6.1.
-
-Footnote 1254:
-
- Sibth. Flor. Græc. t. i. pl. 5, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1255:
-
- Laing, Notes of a Traveller, p. 6.
-
-Footnote 1256:
-
- Geop. xi. 21, 23, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1257:
-
- Sibth. Flor. Græc. t. i. pl. 79. pl. 203. pl. 334, &c.
-
------
-
-One of the principal causes which induced the Greeks to attend to the
-culture of ornamental shrubs and flowers, was the perpetual use made of
-them in crowns and garlands.[1258] Nearly all their ceremonies, whether
-civil or religious, were performed by individuals wearing certain
-wreaths about their brow. Thus the Spartans, during the Promachian
-festival,[1259] shaded their foreheads with plaited tufts of
-reeds—priests and priestesses, soothsayers,[1260] prophets, and
-enchanters, appeared in their several capacities before the gods in
-temples or sacred groves with symbolical crowns encircling their heads,
-as the priests of Hera, at Samos, with laurel,[1261] and those of
-Aphrodite with myrtle,[1262] while the statues of the divinities
-themselves were often crowned with circlets of these “earthly stars.” In
-the festival of Europa, at Corinth, a crown of myrtle, thirty feet in
-circumference, was borne in procession through the city.[1263] The
-actors, dancers, and spectators of the theatre usually appeared crowned
-with flowers,[1264] as did every guest at an entertainment, while lovers
-suspended a profusion of garlands on the doors of their mistresses, as
-did the devout on the temples and altars of the gods.[1265]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1258:
-
- Πρῶτον μὲν γὰρ ἀφ’ ὧν ζῶσιν οἱ ἄνθρωποι, ταῦτα ἡ γῆ φέρει
- ἐργαζομένοις· καὶ ἀφ’ ὧν τοίνυν ἡδυπαθοῦσι προσεπιφέρει.—Ἔπειτα δὲ ὅσα
- κοσμοῦσι βωμοὺς και ἀγάλματα, καὶ οἷς αὐτοὶ κοσμοῦνται, καὶ ταῦτα μετὰ
- ἡδίστων ὀσμῶν καὶ θεαμάτων παρέχει. κ. τ. λ. Xenoph. Œconom. v. 2,
- seq.
-
- Pliny has a curious passage on the use of crowns among the Romans,
- which Holland has thus translated: “Now when these garlands of flowers
- were taken up and received commonly in all places for a certain time,
- there came soon after into request those chaplets which are named
- Egyptian; and after them, winter coronets, to wit, when the earth
- affordeth no flowers to make them, and these consisted of horn
- shavings dyed into sundry colours. And so in process of time, by
- little and little crept into Rome, also the name of corolla, or as one
- would say, petty garlands; for that these winter chaplets at first
- were so pretty and small: and not long after them, the costly coronets
- and others, corollaries, namely, when they are made of thin leaves and
- plates and latten, either gilded or silvered over, or else set out
- with golden and silvered spangles, and so presented.” xxi. 2. Pollux
- affords a list of the principal flowers used in crowns by the Greeks:
- τὰ δὲ ἐν τοῖς στεφάνοις ἄνθη, ῥόδα, ἴα, κρίνα, σισύμθρια, ἀνεμῶναι,
- ἕρπυλος, κρόκος, ὑάκινθος, ἑλίχρυσος, ἡμεροκαλὲς, ἑλένειον, θρυαλὶς,
- ἀνθρίσκος, νάρκισσος, μελίλωτον, ἀνθεμὶς, παρθενὶς, καὶ τἄλλα ὅσα τοῖς
- ὀφθαλμοῖς τέρψιν, ἠῥισὶν ἡδεῖαν ὄσφρησιν ἔχει. Cratinus enumerates
- among garland flowers, those of the smilax and the cosmosandalon.
- Onomast. vi. 106. Athen. xv. 32. Cf. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 1. 2–6.
- 4. Persons returning from a voyage were sometimes crowned with
- flowers. Plut. Thes. § 22. Soldiers also going to battle. Ages. § 19.
- Cf Philost. Icon. i. 24. p. 799. Plut. Sympos. iii. 1.
-
-Footnote 1259:
-
- Athen. xv. 15.
-
-Footnote 1260:
-
- Id. xv. 16.
-
-Footnote 1261:
-
- Id. xv. 13.
-
-Footnote 1262:
-
- Id. xv. 18.
-
-Footnote 1263:
-
- Id. xv. 22.
-
-Footnote 1264:
-
- Id. xv. 26.
-
-Footnote 1265:
-
- Athen. xv. 9.
-
------
-
-Most of the flowers cultivated, moreover, suggested poetical or
-mythological associations; for the religion of Greece combined itself
-with nearly every object in nature, more particularly with the
-beautiful, so that the Greek, as he strolled through his garden, had
-perpetually before his fancy a succession of fables connected with
-nymphs and goddesses and the old hereditary traditions of his county.
-Thus the laurel recalled the tale and transformation of Daphnè,[1266]
-the object of Apollo’s love—the cypresses or graces of the vegetable
-kingdom,[1267] were the everlasting representatives of Eteocles’
-daughters, visited by death because they dared to rival the goddesses in
-dancing—the myrtle[1268] was a most beautiful maiden of Attica, fairer
-than all her countrywomen, swifter and more patient of toil than the
-youth, who therefore slew her through envy—the pine[1269] was the tall
-and graceful mistress of Pan and Boreas—the mint that of Pluto—while the
-rose-campion sprung from the bath of Aphrodite, and the humble cabbage
-from the tears of Lycurgus, the enemy of Dionysos.[1270]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1266:
-
- Geop. xi. 2. Ovid. Metam. 550.
-
-Footnote 1267:
-
- Geop. xi. 4.
-
-Footnote 1268:
-
- Geop. xi. 6.
-
-Footnote 1269:
-
- Geop. xi. 10. Cf. Plut. Sympos. vol. iii. 1, where he assigns the
- reason why the pine was sacred to Poseidon and Dionysos. The foliage
- of the pine-forests was so dense in Bœotia as to permit neither snow
- nor rain to penetrate through. Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii. 9. 6. The
- shade of such trees, therefore, would be more especially coveted.
-
-Footnote 1270:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 537. Geop. xii. 17. 16.
-
------
-
-It has sometimes been supposed,[1271] that the flower which constitutes
-the greatest ornament of gardens was wholly unknown in the early ages of
-Greece. But this theory, imagined for the purpose of destroying the
-claims of the Anacreontic fragments to be considered genuine,[1272] is
-entirely overthrown by the testimony of several ancient writers, more
-particularly Herodotus,[1273] who speaks of the rose of sixty leaves, as
-found in the gardens of Midas in Thrace, at the foot of the snowy
-Bermios. Elswhere, too, he compares the flower of the red Niliac
-lotus[1274] to the rose; and Stesichoros,[1275] an older poet than
-Anacreon, distinctly mentions chaplets composed of this flower.
-
- Many a yellow quince was there
- Piled upon the regal chair,
- Many a verdant myrtle-bough,
- Many a rose-crown featly wreathed,
- With twisted violets that grow
- Where the breath of spring has breathed.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1271:
-
- By Dr. Nolan. See his paper on the Grecian Rose. Trans. Roy. Soc. of
- Lit. ii. 327, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1272:
-
- Cf. Athen. xv. 11.
-
-Footnote 1273:
-
- Οἱ δὲ, ἀπικόμενοι ἐς ἄλλην γῆν τῆς Μακεδόνιης, οἴκησαν πέλας τῶν κήπων
- τῶν λεγομένων εἶναι Μίδεω τοῦ Γορδίεω. ἐν τοῖσι φύεται αὐτόματα ῥόδα,
- ἕν ἕκαστον ἔχον ἑξήκοντα φύλλα ὀδμῆ δὲ ὑπερφέροντα τῶν ἀλλων· ἐν
- τούτοισι καὶ ὁ Σιληνὸς τοῖσι κήποισι ἥλω, ὡς λέγεται ὑπὸ Μακεδόνων.
- ὑπὲρ δὲ τῶν κήτων οὖρος κέεται, Βέρμιον οὔνομα, ἄβατον ὑπὸ χειμῶνος.
- viii. 138. On the arts and manners of this Midas, who, together with
- Orpheus and Eumolpos was the founder of the Hellenic religion, see J.
- G. Voss. de Idololat. i. 24, and Bouhier, Dissert. sur Herod. ch. 80.
-
-Footnote 1274:
-
- Cf. Theop. Hist. Plant. iv. 87.
-
-Footnote 1275:
-
- Athen. iii. 21. Stesichoros lived before Christ about 632. Clint.
- Fast. Hellen. ii. 5. Crowns of roses are mentioned by Cratinus who was
- born 519 B. C. which shows that roses must have been largely
- cultivated in his time. Athen. xv. 27.
-
------
-
-Homer,[1276] too, it is evident, was familiar with the rose, to whose
-fragrant petals he compares the fingers of the morning, and not, as has
-been imagined, to the blood-red flower of the wild pomegranate
-tree.[1277]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1276:
-
- Il. α. 477. ι. 703. Cf. Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 610. To place the matter
- beyond dispute, Homer speaks of oils rendered fragrant by the perfume
- of the rose:—ῥοδόεντι δὲ χρῖεν ἐλαίῳ. Il. ψ. 186.
-
-Footnote 1277:
-
- Dioscor. i. 154.
-
------
-
-According, moreover, to a tradition preserved to later times, the
-seasons of the year, which in remote antiquity were but three, they
-symbolically represented by a rose, an ear of corn, and an apple.[1278]
-This division is thought to have been borrowed from the Egyptians, in
-whose country, however, the apple was never sufficiently naturalised to
-be taken as an emblem of one of the seasons of the year.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1278:
-
- “Les Egyptiens, selon le département de leur Roy Horus, n’en mettaient
- que trois (saisons): le printemps, l’esté, et l’automne: leur
- attribuans quatre mois à chacune, et les figurans par une rose, une
- espy, et une pomme, ou raisin.” Les Images de Platte Peinture des deux
- Philostrates, par Vigenère, Paris, fol. 1627, p. 555.
-
------
-
-But, at whatever period the rose began to be cultivated, it evidently,
-as soon as known, shared with the violet the admiration of the Athenian
-people, whose extensive plantations of this most fragrant shrub recall
-to mind the rose gardens of the Fayoum, or Serinaghur. The secret,
-moreover, was early discovered of hastening or retarding their maturity,
-so as to obtain an abundant supply through every month in the
-year.[1279] Occasionally, too, numbers of rosebuds were laid among green
-barleystalks, plucked up by the roots, in unglazed amphoræ, to be
-brought forth and made to blow when wanted. Others deposited them
-between layers of the same material on the ground, or dipped them in the
-liquid dregs of olives. Another mode of preserving the rose was
-exceedingly curious,—cutting off the top of a large standing reed, and
-splitting it down a little way, they inserted a number of rosebuds in
-the hollow, and then bound it softly round and atop with papyrus in
-order to prevent their fragrance from exhaling.[1280] How many varieties
-of this flower[1281] were possessed by the ancients it is now, perhaps,
-impossible to determine; but they were acquainted with the common, the
-white, and the moss rose, the last, in Aristotle’s[1282] opinion, the
-sweetest, together with the rose of a hundred leaves,[1283] celebrated
-by the Persian poets. Even the wild rose was not wholly inodorous in
-Greece.[1284] Roses were artificially blanched by being exposed while
-unfolding to powerful and repeated fumigations with sulphur.[1285] The
-roses which grew on a dry soil were supposed to be the sweetest, while
-their fragrance was augmented by planting garlic near the root.[1286] To
-cause them to bloom in January, or in early spring (for even in the most
-southern parts of Greece the rose season only commences in April)[1287]
-various means were resorted to; sometimes, the bushes were watered twice
-a-day during the whole summer; on other occasions, a shallow trench was
-dug at a distance of about eighteen inches round the bush, into which
-warm water was poured morning and evening;[1288] while a third, and,
-perhaps, the surest, method was to plant them in pots, or baskets,
-which, during the winter months, were placed in sheltered sunny spots by
-day,[1289] and carried into the house at night; afterwards, when the
-season was sufficiently advanced, these portable gardens were buried in
-the earth.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1279:
-
- Geop. xi. 18. A species of perpetual rose is said to have been
- recently discovered in France, where “A Parisian florist, we are told,
- has succeeded in producing a new hybrid rose from the Bourbon rose and
- Gloire de Rosomène, the flowers of which he had fertilised with the
- pollen of some Damask and hybrid China roses. The plant is extremely
- beautiful, the colour bright crimson shaded with Maroon purple, and is
- further enriched with a powerful fragrance.” TIMES, March 24th, 1841.
-
-Footnote 1280:
-
- Geop. xi. 18. 12.
-
-Footnote 1281:
-
- Plinius varia genera commemorat, Milesia ardentissimo colore,
- Alabandica albicantibus foliis, Spermonia vilissima, Damascenæ albæ
- distillandis aquis usurpantur. Differunt foliorum multitudine,
- asperitate, lævore, colore, odore.—Heresbachius, de Re Rustica, lib.
- ii. p. 121. a.
-
-Footnote 1282:
-
- Problem. xii. 8. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 6. 5.
-
-Footnote 1283:
-
- Athen. xv. 29. Plin. xxi. 10. Cf. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 6. 4.
-
-Footnote 1284:
-
- As Dr. Nolan seems to suppose. On the Grecian Rose. Transact. Roy.
- Soc. ii. 328. Though Theophrastus states the contrary very distinctly.
- Hist. Plant. vi. 2. 1—6. 4—7. 5. The white rose appears at present to
- be commonly cultivated in Attica.—Chandler, ii. 181.
-
-Footnote 1285:
-
- Geop. xi. 18. 13.
-
-Footnote 1286:
-
- Geop. xi. 18. 1.
-
-Footnote 1287:
-
- Pashley, Trav. i. 8, who observes, that the rose is common in February
- at Malta.
-
-Footnote 1288:
-
- Geop. xi. 18. 5. Plin. xxi. 4. Pallad. iii. 21. 2.
-
-Footnote 1289:
-
- Geop. xi. 18. 4. Cf. xii. 19. 3.
-
------
-
-Another favorite denizen of Hellenic gardens was the lily, which,
-probably, introduced from Suza or from Egypt, beheld the virginal snow
-of its bells compelled, by art, to put on various hues, as deep red and
-purple,[1290]—the former, by infusing, before planting, cinnabar into
-the bulb,—the latter, by steeping it in the lees of purple wine. This
-flower naturally begins to bloom[1291] just as the roses are fading;
-but, to produce a succession of lilies at different seasons, some were
-set near the surface, which grew up and blossomed immediately, while
-others were buried at different depths, according to the times at which
-they were required to flower.
-
-Along with these, about the dank borders of streams or fountains, grew
-the favourite flower of the Athenian people, purple, double, white, and
-gold,[1292]
-
- “The violet dim,
- But sweeter than the lids of Juno’s eyes,
- Or Cytherea’s breath;”[1293]
-
-the pansy,[1294] “freaked with jet;” the purple cyperus, the iris, the
-water-mint,[1295] and hyacinth,[1296] and the narcissus,[1297] and the
-willow-herb, and the blue speedwell, and the marsh-marigold, or, brave
-bassinet, and the jacinth, and early daffodil,
-
- “That come before the swallow dares, and take
- The winds of March with beauty.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 1290:
-
- Geop. xi. 20. Heresbach. de Re Rust. p. 122. b. Theoph. Hist. Plant.
- vi. 6. 4, 8.
-
-Footnote 1291:
-
- Plin. xxi. 13.
-
-Footnote 1292:
-
- Colum. De Cultu Hortorum, x. 102.
-
-Footnote 1293:
-
- Winter’s Tale, iv. 5.
-
-Footnote 1294:
-
- Sibth. Flor. Græc. t. i. tab. 222, tab. 318. Schol. Aristoph. Eq.
- 1320. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 6. 4. The finest violets, crocusses,
- &c., in the ancient world, were supposed to be found in Cyrene. Id.
- vi. 6. 5.
-
-Footnote 1295:
-
- Dioscor. ii. 155.
-
-Footnote 1296:
-
- On the birth of the Hyacinth, see Eudocia in the Anecdota Græca, i.
- 408.
-
-Footnote 1297:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 6. 9. 8. 2. This flower flourishes after the
- setting of Arcturus, about the autumnal equinox.—“We were ferried over
- a narrow stream fringed with Agnus-Castus, into a garden belonging to
- the convent. A number of vernal flowers now blossomed on its banks;
- the garden anemone was crimsoned with an extraordinary glow of
- colouring. The soil which was a sandy loam, was further enlivened with
- the Ixia, the grass-leaved Iris, and the enamel-blue of a species of
- speedwell, not noticed by the Swedish Naturalist.” Sibth. Walp. Mem.
- i. 282, seq.
-
------
-
-A netting of wild thyme[1298] tufted with sweet mint, and
-marjoram,[1299] which, when crushed by the foot, yielded the most
-delicious fragrance, embraced the sunny hillocks, while here and there
-singly, or in beds, grew a profusion of other herbs and flowers, some
-prized for their medicinal virtues, others for their beauty, others for
-their delicate odour, as the geranium, the spike-lavender, the
-rosemary,[1300] with its purple and white flowers, the basil,[1301] the
-flower-gentle, the hyssop, the white privet, the cytisus, the sweet
-marjoram, the rose-campion, or columbine,[1302] the yellow amaryllis,
-and the celandine. Here, too,
-
- “Their gem-like eyes
- The Phrygian melilots disclose,”[1303]
-
-with the balm-gentle, the red, the purple, and the coronal
-anemone,[1304] the convolvulus, yellow, white, pale pink, and blue,
-together with our Lady’s-gloves, the flower of the Trinity,
-southernwood,[1305] and summer-savory,[1306] œnanthe,[1307] gith, the
-silver sage,[1308] Saint Mary’s thistle, and the amaranth, while high
-above all rose the dark pyramidal masses of the rhododendron,[1309] with
-its gigantic clusters of purple flowers.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1298:
-
- This plant was brought from Mount Hymettos, to be cultivated in the
- gardens of Athens. The Sicyonians, likewise, transplanted it to their
- gardens from the mountains of Peloponnesos.—Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi.
- 7. 2.
-
-Footnote 1299:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 7. 4.
-
-Footnote 1300:
-
- Dioscor. iii. 89. Sibth. Flor. Græc. t. i. tab. 14, tab. 192, seq.
- tab. 310, tab. 518, tab. 549. Column. x. De Cult. Hort. 96, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1301:
-
- The basil-gentle was watered at noon, other plants morning and
- evening.—Theoph. Hist. Plant. vii. 5. 2.
-
-Footnote 1302:
-
- Dioscor. iii. 114.
-
-Footnote 1303:
-
- Colum. x. 399, seq. Engl. Trans.
-
-Footnote 1304:
-
- The anemone among other flowers beautifies the fields of Attica, so
- early as the month of February.—Chandler, ii. 211. “Les campagnes et
- les collines sont rouges d’anémones.”—Della Rocca, Traité sur les
- Abeilles, t. i. p. 5.
-
-Footnote 1305:
-
- Cultivated usually in pots, resembling the gardens of Adonis. Theoph.
- Hist. Plant. vi. 7. 3. Thickets of this shrub constitute one of the
- greatest beauties of the islands of the Archipelago. “Les lauriers
- roses, que l’on conserve en France avec tant de soin, viennent à
- l’aventure dans les prairies, et le long des ruisseaux qui en sont
- bordés. Rien n’est plus agréable que de voir ces beaux arbres, de la
- hauteur de douze à quinze pieds, variés de fleurs rouges et blanches,
- se croiser par les branches d’en haut, sur un ruisseau ou sur le lit
- d’une fontaine, et faire un berceau qui dure quelquefois un grand
- quart de lieue.” Della Rocca, Traité Complet sur les Abeilles, t. i.
- p. 6.
-
-Footnote 1306:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 253.
-
-Footnote 1307:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 8. 2.
-
-Footnote 1308:
-
- Sibth. Flor. Græc. t. i. tab. 27.
-
-Footnote 1309:
-
- Known also by the names of νηρίον and ῥοδοδάφνη.—Dioscor. iv. 82.
- Geop. ii. 42. 1.
-
------
-
-How many of the lovely evergreens[1310] that abound in Greece were
-usually cultivated in a single garden, we possess no means of
-ascertaining, though all appear occasionally to have been called in to
-diversify the picture. The myrtle,[1311] whose deep blue berries were
-esteemed a delicacy,[1312] in some places rose into a tree, while
-elsewhere it was planted thick, and bent and fashioned into
-bowers,[1313] which, when sprinkled with its snowy blossoms, combined,
-perhaps, with those of the jasmine, the eglantine, and the yellow tufts
-of the broad-leaved philyrea,[1314] constituted some of the most
-beautiful objects in a Greek paradise. Thickets of the tamarisk,[1315]
-the strawberry-tree,[1316] the juniper, the box, the bay, the styrax,
-the andrachne, and the white-flowered laurel, in whose dark leaves the
-morning dew collects and glistens in the sun like so many tiny mirrors
-of burnished silver, varied the surface of the lawn, connecting the
-bowers, and the copses, and the flower beds, and the grassy slopes with
-those loftier piles of verdure, consisting of the pine tree, the smilax,
-the cedar, the carob, the maple,[1317] the ash, the elm tree, the
-platane,[1318] and the evergreen oak which here and there towered in the
-grounds. In many places the vine shot up among the ranges of elms or
-platanes, and stretched its long twisted arm from trunk to trunk, like
-so many festoons of intermingled leaves and tendrils, and massive
-clusters of golden or purple grapes.[1319] Alternating, perhaps, with
-the lovely favourite of Dionysos, the blue and yellow clematis[1320]
-suspended their living garlands around the stems, or along the boughs of
-the trees, in union or contrast with the dodder, or the honeysuckle, or
-the delicate and slender briony. And, if perchance a silver fir, with
-its bright yellow flowers,[1321] formed part of the group, large pendant
-clusters of mistletoe, the food sometimes of the labouring ox,[1322]
-might frequently be seen swinging thick among its branches. In some
-grounds was probably cultivated the quercus suber,[1323] or cork tree,
-with bark four or five inches thick, triennially stripped off,[1324]
-after which it grows again with renewed vigour. Occasionally, where
-streams and rivulets[1325] found their way through the grounds, the
-black and white poplar, the willow, and the lentiscus, with a variety of
-tufted reeds, crowded about the margin, here and there shading and
-concealing the waters.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1310:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 9. 3.
-
-Footnote 1311:
-
- Cf. Clus. Hist. Rar. Plant. i. 43. p. 65.
-
-Footnote 1312:
-
- Plat. De Rep. t. vi. p. 85. The berry, both of the myrtle and the
- laurel, assumed, we are told, a black colour in the garden of
- Antandros.—Theophrast. Hist. Plant. ii. 2. 6.
-
-Footnote 1313:
-
- Hemsterhuis, Annot. ad Poll. ix. 49. p. 943. Cf. Dion. Chrysost. i.
- 273.
-
-Footnote 1314:
-
- Sibthorp. Flor. Græc. t. i. tab. 2, tab. 367, tab. 374, seq.
-
-Footnote 1315:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 9. 3.
-
-Footnote 1316:
-
- The strawberry-tree is found flourishing in great beauty and
- perfection on Mount Helicon, and its fruit is said to be exceedingly
- sweet.—Chandler, ii. 290.
-
-Footnote 1317:
-
- Sibth. Flor. Græc. tab. 361.
-
-Footnote 1318:
-
- Ἔνθα πλάτανος μὲν ἀμφιλαφής τε καὶ σύσκιος, πνεῦμα δὲ μέτριον, καὶ πόα
- μαλθακὴ, ὥρα θέρους ἐπανθεῖν εἰωθυῖα. Aristænet. Epist. lib. i. Epist.
- 3. p. 13. There was, according to Varro, an evergreen platane tree in
- Crete, i. 7. The same platane is mentioned by Theophrastus, who
- informs us, that it grew beside a fountain in the Gortynian territory
- where Zeus first reclined on landing from the sea with Europa, i. 9.
- 5. Near the city of Sybaris, there is said to have grown a common oak
- which enjoyed the privilege of being undeciduous. Ibid.
-
-Footnote 1319:
-
- Ἄμπελοι δὲ παμμήκεις σφόδρα τε ὑψηλαὶ περιελίττονται κυπαρίττους ὡς
- ἀνακλᾷν ἡμᾶς ἐπὶ πολὺ τὸν αὐχενα πρὸς θέαν τῶν κύκλῳ συναιωρουμένων
- βοτρών, ὧν οἱ μὲν ὀργῶσιν, οἱ δὲ περκάζουσιν οἱ δὲ ὄμφακες, οἱ δὲ
- οἰνάνθαι δοκοῦσιν.—Aristænet. Epist. lib. i. Ep. 3. p. 13, seq.
-
-Footnote 1320:
-
- Sibth. Flor. Græc. tab. 516.
-
-Footnote 1321:
-
- Theophrast. Hist. Plant. i. 13. 1.
-
-Footnote 1322:
-
- Dodwell, ii. 455. Sibth. in Walp. Mem. i. 283. There was a species of
- mistletoe called the Cretan, which found equally congenial the
- climates of Achaia and Media. Theoph. Hist. Plant. ix. 1. 3.
-
-Footnote 1323:
-
- That is to say at a late period, for in the time of Theophrastus it
- would seem not to have been common in Greece, if it had been at all
- introduced. Hist. Plant. iii. 17. 1.
-
-Footnote 1324:
-
- Dodwell, ii. 455.
-
-Footnote 1325:
-
- Even the platane, also, delights in humid places. Theoph. Hist. Plant.
- i. 4. 2. The black poplar was said to bear fruit in several parts of
- Crete. iii. 3. 5.
-
------
-
-Proceeding now into the orchard we find, that, instead of walls, it was,
-sometimes at least, if it touched on the confines of another man’s
-grounds, surrounded by hedges[1326] of black and white thorn, brambles,
-and barberry bushes, as at present[1327] by impenetrable fences of the
-Indian cactus.[1328] On the banks of these hedges, both inside and out,
-were found, peculiar tribes of plants and wild flowers, in some places
-enamelling the smooth close turf, elsewhere flourishing thickly in dank
-masses of verdure, or climbing upwards and interlacing themselves with
-the lofty and projecting thorns, such as the enchanter’s nightshade, the
-euphorbia, the iris tuberosa, the red-flowered valerian, the
-ground-ivy,[1329] the physalis somnifera, with its coral red seeds in
-their inflated calyces,[1330] the globularia, the creeping heliotrope,
-the penny-cress,[1331] the bright yellow scorpion-flower, and the
-broad-leaved cyclamen or our Lady’s-seal, with pink flower, light green
-leaf, veined with white and yellow beneath. The ancient Parthians
-surrounded their gardens with hedges of a fragrant, creeping shrub
-denominated philadelphos or love-brother,[1332] whose long suckers they
-interwove into a kind of network forming a sufficient protection against
-man and beast. In mountainous districts, where rain-floods were to be
-guarded against, the enclosures frequently consisted of walls of loose
-stones,[1333] as is still the case in Savoy on the edge of mountain
-torrents.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1326:
-
- Geop. v. 44. Cf. Artemid. Oneirocrit. ii. 24. p. 112.
-
-Footnote 1327:
-
- Walp. Mem. i. 60.
-
-Footnote 1328:
-
- The cactus, as most travellers will have remarked, flourishes
- luxuriantly in Sicily even among the beds of lava where little else
- will grow; it appears, however, to delight in a volcanic soil.
- Spallanzani, Travels in the Two Sicilies, “i. 209. In the Æolian
- Islands it thrives so well that it usually grows to the height of ten,
- twelve, and sometimes fifteen feet, with a stem a foot or more in
- diameter. The fruits, which are nearly as large as turkeys’ eggs, are
- sweet and extremely agreeable to the palate. It is well-known that the
- fruits grow at the edges of the leaves, the number on each leaf is not
- constant, but they are frequently numerous, as I have counted two and
- twenty on a single leaf.” iv. 97.
-
-Footnote 1329:
-
- Sibth. Flor. Græc. t. i. tab. 29. tab. 157. tab. 185.
-
-Footnote 1330:
-
- Sibth. in Walp. Trav. p. 73, seq. On the seasons of these wild flowers
- see Theoph. Hist. Plant. vii. 9. 2.
-
-Footnote 1331:
-
- Dioscor. ii. 186.
-
-Footnote 1332:
-
- Athen. xv. 29.
-
-Footnote 1333:
-
- Demosth. in Callicl. § 1. 3, seq.
-
------
-
-It was moreover the custom, both in Greece and Italy, to plant, on the
-boundary line of estates, rows of olives or other trees,[1334] which not
-only served to mark the limits of a man’s territory, but shed an air of
-beauty over the whole country. A proof of this practice prevailing in
-Attica, has with much ingenuity[1335] been brought forward from the
-“Frogs,” where Bacchos, addressing the poet Æschylus in the shades,
-observes “It will be all right provided your anger does not transport
-you beyond the olives.” It may likewise be remarked that in
-olive-grounds,[1336] the trees, excepting the sacred ones called
-_moriæ_, were always planted in straight lines, from twenty-five to
-thirty feet[1337] apart, because, in order to ripen the fruit,[1338] it
-is necessary that the wind should be able freely to play upon it from
-all sides. And further because they delight in a warm dry air like that
-of Libya, Cilicia,[1339] and Attica, the best olive-grounds were
-generally supposed to be those which occupied the rapid slopes of hills
-where the soil is naturally stony and light. The oil of the plains was
-commonly coarse and thick.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1334:
-
- Cf. Varro. i. 15. Magii Miscellan. lib. iv. p. 187. b. As the
- cotton-tree in modern times has been supposed not to thrive at a much
- greater distance than twenty miles from the sea; so, among the
- ancients, the olive was supposed not to flourish at a greater distance
- than three hundred stadia. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 2. 4. Both
- opinions are probably erroneous, as the olive-tree is found in
- perfection in the Fayoum, and the cotton-plant in Upper Egypt.
-
-Footnote 1335:
-
- Vict. Var. Lect. p. 874. But the Scholiast (Aristoph. Ran. 1026) gives
- a different though less probable interpretation to the passage.
-
-Footnote 1336:
-
- Cf. Sibth. Flor. Græc. t. i. tab. 3.
-
-Footnote 1337:
-
- Cato. De Re Rusticâ 6. They were sometimes also grafted, we are told,
- on lentiscus stocks. Plut. Sympos. ii. 6. 1.
-
-Footnote 1338:
-
- In Syria and some other warm countries the olive was said to produce
- fruit in clusters. Theophrast. Hist. Plant. i. 11. 4. And when this
- fruit was found chiefly on the upper branches, they augured a
- productive year. id. i. 14. 2. Geop. ix. 2. 4. The ancients
- entertained extraordinary ideas concerning the purity of the olive,
- which they imagined bore more freely when cultivated by persons of
- chaste minds. Thus the olive-grounds of Anazarbos, in Cilicia, were
- thought to owe their extraordinary fertility to the reserved and
- modest manners of the youths who cultivated them. Id. ix. 2. 6.
-
-Footnote 1339:
-
- Geop. ix. 3. 1. Virg. Georg. ii. 179. The heads of olive-stocks when
- freshly planted were covered with clay, which was protected from the
- wet by a shell. Xenoph. Œconom. xix. 14. The pits for the planting of
- the olive and other fruit-trees were of considerable depth and dug
- long beforehand. Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 6. 1.
-
------
-
-Among these olive grounds in summer, the song of the tettix[1340] is
-commonly heard; for this musical insect loves the olive, which, like the
-sant of the Arabian desert, yields but a thin and warm shade.[1341] The
-tettix, in fact, though never found in an unwooded country, as in the
-plains about Cyrene, equally avoids the dense shade of the woods.[1342]
-Here likewise[1343] are found the blackbird, the roller, and three
-distinct species of butcher-bird—the small grey, the ash-coloured, and
-the redheaded.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1340:
-
- Cf. Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 582, seq.
-
-Footnote 1341:
-
- Οὐ γίνονται δὲ τέττιγες ὅπου μὴ δένδρα ἐστιν· διὸ καὶ ἐν Κυρήνη οὐ
- γίνονται ἐν τῷ πεδίῳ, περὶ δὲ τὴν πόλιν πολλοί, μόλιστα δ᾽ οὗ ἐλαῖαι·
- οὐ γὰρ γίνονται παλίν σκίοι. Aristot. Hist. Anim. v. 30. Cf. Phile, de
- Animal. Proprietat. c. 25. p. 81.
-
-Footnote 1342:
-
- In Spain, however, these insects exhibit a somewhat different taste,
- being there found amid the foliage of the most leafy trees. “Every oak
- in the cork-wood near Gibraltar was the abode if not of harmony, at
- least of noise, and the concert kept up amidst the foliage by the
- numerous grass or rather tree-hoppers was quite deafening.” Napier,
- Excursions on the shores of the Mediterranean, ii. p. 2.
-
-Footnote 1343:
-
- Sibth. in Walp. Mem. i. 75.
-
------
-
-In an Attic orchard were most of the trees reared in England, together
-with many which will not stand the rigour of our climate.—The
-apple,[1344] cultivated with peculiar care in the environs of Delphi and
-Corinth; the pear,[1345] the cherry from Cerasos on the southern shore
-of the Black Sea,[1346] which sometimes grew to the height of nearly
-forty feet,[1347] the damascene,[1348] and the common plum. Along with
-these were likewise to be found the quince,[1349] the apricot, the
-peach, the nectarine, the walnut, the chestnut, the filbert, introduced
-from Pontos,[1350] the hazel nut, the medlar, and the mulberry, which,
-according to Menander, is the earliest fruit of the year.[1351] With
-these were intermingled the fig, white, purple, and red, the
-pomegranate,[1352] from the northern shores of Africa, the orange,[1353]
-still planted under artificial shelter at Lemnos, the citron, the
-lemon,[1354] the date-palm,[1355] the pistachio, the almond, the
-service, and the cornel-tree.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1344:
-
- On the cultivation of the apple see Theophrast. Hist. Plant. i. 3. 3.
- Geop. xviii. 18.
-
-Footnote 1345:
-
- Athen. xiv. 63. Etym. Mag. 122. 20.
-
-Footnote 1346:
-
- Geop. x. 41. Plin. xv. 25. Athen. ii. 35.
-
-Footnote 1347:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii. 13. 1.
-
-Footnote 1348:
-
- Etym. Mag. 211. 4, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1349:
-
- Geop. x. 3. 73.
-
-Footnote 1350:
-
- Geop. xiii. 19. Athen. ii. 38.
-
-Footnote 1351:
-
- Athen. ii. 12. Vid. Cœl. Rhodigin. vii. 15. Bochart, Geog. Sac. col.
- 629.
-
-Footnote 1352:
-
- Theophrast. Hist. Plant. i. 3. 3. The fruit of the pomegranate-tree
- lost much of its acidity in Egypt. Id. Hist. Plant. ii. 2. 7.
-
-Footnote 1353:
-
- In Greece the orange-tree and the lemon blossom in June, Chandler, ii.
- 238.
-
-Footnote 1354:
-
- Cf. Chandler, ii. 250.
-
-Footnote 1355:
-
- In Babylonia the palm-tree was by some thought to be propagated by
- off-shoots. Theophrast. Hist. Plant. ii. 2. 2. In Greece, the fruit
- seldom ripened completely. iii. 3. 5.
-
------
-
-As these gardens were arranged with a view no less to pleasure than to
-profit, the trees were planted in lines, which, when sufficiently close,
-formed a series of umbrageous avenues, opening here into the lawn and
-there into the vineyard, which generally formed part of a Greek
-gentleman’s grounds. And such an orchard decked in its summer pride with
-foliage of emerald and fruit, ruddy, purple, and gold, the notes of the
-thrush, the nightingale,[1356] the tettix, with the “amorous thrill of
-the green-finch,”[1357] floating through its boughs, and the perfume of
-the agnus-castus, the myrtle, the rose, and the violet, wafting richly
-on all sides, was a very paradise.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1356:
-
- Ἔτι δὲ τὸ ἔμπνουν τῆς αὔρας λιγυρὸν ὑπηχεῖ τῷ μουσικῷ τῶν τεττίγων
- χορῷ δι᾽ ἥν καὶ τὸ πνίγος τῆς μεσημβρίας ἠπιῶτερον ἐγεγόνει ἡδὺ καὶ
- ἀηδόνει, περὶ πετόμεναι τὰ νάματα, μελωδοῦσιν. ἀλλὰ καὶ τῶν ἄλλων ἡδὺ
- φώνῶν κατηκούομεν ὀρνίθων, ὥσπερ ἐμμελῶς ὁμιλούντων ανθρώποις.
- Aristænet. Epist. lib. i. Ep. 3. p. 17.
-
-Footnote 1357:
-
- “The amorous thrill of the green-finch was now heard distinctly. The
- little owl hooted frequently round the walls of the convent. In the
- river below, otters were frequently taken. On the sides of the banks
- were the holes of the river-crabs; and the green-backed lizard was
- sporting among the grass.” Sibth. in Walp. Trav. p. 76.
-
------
-
-Not unfrequently, common foot-paths traversed these orchards and
-vineyards, in which case the passers-by were customarily, if not by law,
-permitted to pick and eat the fruit,[1358] which seems also from the
-account of our Saviour to have been the practice in Judæa. The contrary
-is the case in modern Europe. In Burgundy and Switzerland, where
-pathways traverse vineyards, it is not uncommon to see the grapes
-smeared with something resembling white lime which children are assured
-is a deadly poison. This, while in the country, I regarded as a mere
-stratagem, intended to protect the vineyards from depredation, though
-there seems after all to be too much reason to believe the nefarious
-practice to exist in several localities. At least two children were
-recently killed at Foix by eating poisoned grapes on the way-side.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1358:
-
- Plat. De Legg. t. viii. p. 107.
-
------
-
-The Greeks placed much of their happiness in spots like those we have
-been describing, as may be inferred from such of their fabulous
-traditions,[1359] as relate to the garden of the Hesperides,[1360] the
-gardens of Midas, with their magnificent roses, and those of
-Alcinoös,[1361] which still shed their fragrance over the pages of the
-Odyssey. From the East, no doubt, they obtained, along with their
-noblest fruit-trees, the art of cultivating them, and, perhaps, that
-sacred tradition of the Garden of Eden, preserved in the Scriptures,
-formed the basis of many a Hellenic legend.[1362] The Syrians acquired
-much celebrity among the ancients for their knowledge of gardening, in
-which, according to modern travellers, they still excel. Of the manner
-of cultivating fruit-trees in the earlier ages very little is known. No
-doubt they soon discovered that some will thrive better in certain soils
-and situations than in others, and profited by the discovery; but the
-art of properly training and grafting trees is comparatively
-modern.[1363]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1359:
-
- Eudoc. Ionia. 434.
-
-Footnote 1360:
-
- Plin. xix. 19. Athen. xi. 39.
-
-Footnote 1361:
-
- Bœttig. Fragm. sur les Jar. des Anciens, in Magaz. Encycloped. Ann.
- vii. t. i. p. 337. Cardinal Quirini, Primordia Corcyræ, c. vii. p. 60,
- sqq.
-
-Footnote 1362:
-
- See in Xenophon a brief description of the gardens of Cyrus. Œconom.
- iv. 21. Upon this passage our countryman, Sir Thomas Browne, has
- written an elaborate treatise.
-
-Footnote 1363:
-
- On the various methods of propagating trees see Theophrast. Hist.
- Plant. ii. 1. 2.
-
------
-
-No mention of it occurs in the Pentateuch, though Moses there gives
-directions how to manage an orchard. For the first three years the
-blossoms were not to be suffered to ripen into fruit, and even in the
-fourth all that came was sacred to the Lord. From the fifth year,
-onward, they might do with it what they pleased. Of these regulations
-the intention was to prevent the early exhaustion of the trees. Homer,
-also, is silent on the practice of grafting, nor does any mention of it
-occur in the extant works of Hesiod, though Manilius[1364] refers to his
-poems in proof of the antiquity of the practice. By degrees, however, it
-got into use;[1365] and, in the age of Aristotle,[1366] was already
-common, as at present almost everywhere, save in Greece,[1367] since no
-fruit was esteemed excellent unless the tree had been grafted. Some few
-of the rules they observed in this process may be briefly noticed.[1368]
-Trees with a thick rind were grafted in the ordinary way, and sometimes
-by inserting the graft between the bark and the wood, which was called
-infoliation.[1369] Inoculation, also, or introducing the bud of one tree
-into the rind of another, was common among Greek gardeners.[1370] They
-were extremely particular in their choice of stocks.[1371] Thus the fig
-was grafted only on the platane[1372] and the mulberry; the mulberry on
-the chestnut,[1373] the beech, the apple, the terebinth, the wild pear,
-the elm, and the white poplar, (whence white mulberries;) the pear on
-the pomegranate, the quince, the mulberry, (whence red pears,) the
-almond, and the terebinth; apples[1374] on all sorts of wild pears and
-quinces, (whence the finest apples called by the Athenians
-Melimela,)[1375] on damascenes, also, and _vice versâ_, and on the
-platane, (whence red apples.)[1376] Another method of communicating a
-blush to this fruit was to plant rose-bushes round the root of the
-tree.[1377] The walnut was grafted on the strawberry-tree only;[1378]
-the pomegranate on the myrtle[1379] and the willow; the laurel on the
-cherry[1380] and the ash; the white peach on the damascene and the
-almond; the damascene on the wild pear, the quince, and the apple;
-chestnuts on the walnut, the beech, and the oak;[1381] the cherry on the
-terebinth, and the peach; the quince on the oxyacanthus; the myrtle on
-the willow; and the apricot on the damascene, and the Thasian
-almond-tree. The vine, also, was grafted on a cherry and a myrtle-stock,
-which produced, in the first case, grapes in spring,[1382] in the
-second, a mixed fruit, between the myrtle-berry and the grape.[1383]
-When the gardener desired to obtain black citrons, he inserted a
-citron-graft into an apple-stock, and, if red, into a mulberry-stock.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1364:
-
- Astronomicon, ii. p. 30. l. 4. Scalig. et not. p. 67.
-
-Footnote 1365:
-
- Cf. Athen. xiv. 68.
-
-Footnote 1366:
-
- De Plantis, ii. 6.
-
-Footnote 1367:
-
- Hobhouse, Travels, i. 227. Thiersch, Etat Actuel de la Grèce, t. i. p.
- 297.
-
-Footnote 1368:
-
- Geop. iii. 3. 9. Clem. Alexand. Stromat. l. vi. Opera, t. ii. p. 800.
- Venet. 1657.
-
-Footnote 1369:
-
- Geop. xii. 75. x. 75. 19.
-
-Footnote 1370:
-
- Geop. x. 77. Colum. v. 11. 1. Pallad. vii. 5. 2. Plin. xvii. 26. Cato.
- 42. Virg. Georg. ii. 73, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1371:
-
- Geop. x. 76.
-
-Footnote 1372:
-
- Introduced by Dionysios the elder into Rhegium, where it attained,
- however, no great size. Theoph. Hist. Plant. iv. 5. 6. The same
- naturalist speaks of two plane trees, the one at Delphi, the other at
- Caphyæ in Arcadia, said to have been planted by the hand of Agamemnon,
- which were still flourishing in his own days, iv. 13. 2. This tree
- attains a prodigious size in Peloponnesos. Chandler, Travels, ii. 308.
- Our traveller was prevented from measuring the stem by the fear of
- certain Albanian soldiers who lay asleep under it; but Theophrastus
- gives us the dimensions of a large platane, at Antandros, whose trunk,
- he says, could scarcely be embraced by four men, while its height
- before the springing forth of the boughs was fifteen feet. Having
- described the dimensions of the tree, he relates a very extraordinary
- fact in natural history, namely, that this platane, having been blown
- down by the winds and lightened of its branches by the axe, rose again
- spontaneously during the night, put forth fresh boughs, and flourished
- as before. The same thing is related of a white poplar in the museum
- at Stagira, and of a large willow at Philippi. In this last city a
- soothsayer counselled the inhabitants to offer sacrifice, and set a
- guard about the tree, as a thing of auspicious omen. Theoph. Hist.
- Plant. iv. 16. 2, seq. Cf. Plin. xvi. 57. In corroboration of the
- narrative of Theophrastus, Palmerius relates, that, during the winter
- of 1624–25, while Breda was besieged by Ambrosio Spinola, he himself
- saw in Brabant an oak twenty-five feet high, and three feet in
- circumference, overthrown by the wind, and recovering itself exactly
- in the manner described by the great naturalist. The vulgar, who
- regarded it as a miracle, preserved portions of its bark or branches
- as amulets.—Excercitationes, p. 598.
-
-Footnote 1373:
-
- Plut. Sympos. ii. 6. 7.
-
-Footnote 1374:
-
- “It is reported,” observes Lord Bacon, “that, in the low countries,
- they will graft an apple scion upon the stock of a colewort, and it
- will bear a great flaggy apple, the kernel of which, if it be set,
- will be a colewort and not an apple.” Sylva Sylvarum, 453.
-
-Footnote 1375:
-
- Geop. x. 20. 1. Varro. i. 59. Mustea (mala) a celeritate mitescendi:
- quæ nunc melimela dicuntur, a sapore melleo.—Plin. xv. 15. Dioscor. i.
- 161.
-
-Footnote 1376:
-
- Plut. Sympos. ii. 6. 1.
-
-Footnote 1377:
-
- Geop. x. 19. 15, cum not. Niclas.
-
-Footnote 1378:
-
- Inseritur vero ex fœtu uncis arbutus horrida. Virg. Georg. ii. 69,
- with the note of Servius.
-
-Footnote 1379:
-
- Plut. Sympos. ii. 6. 1.
-
-Footnote 1380:
-
- Plin. xvii. 14.
-
-Footnote 1381:
-
- Castanea inseritur in se, et in salice, sed ex salice tardius maturat,
- et fit asperior in sapore. Pallad. xii. 7. 22. Cf. Virg. Georg. ii.
- 71. Plutarch speaks of certain gardens on the banks of the Cephissos,
- in Bœotia, in which he beheld pears growing on an oak-stock: ἦσαν δὲ
- καὶ δρύες ἀπίους ἀγαθὰς ἐκφέρουσαι. Sympos. ii. 6. 1.
-
-Footnote 1382:
-
- Geop. x. 41. 3. iv. 12. 5.
-
-Footnote 1383:
-
- Geop. iv. 4.
-
------
-
-Citrons were likewise occasionally grafted on the pomegranate-tree. In
-the present day, the almond, the chestnut, the fig, the orange, and the
-citron, with many other species of fruit-trees, are no longer thought to
-require grafting.[1384]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1384:
-
- Thiersch, Etat Actuel de la Grèce, t. i. p. 298.
-
------
-
-In illustration of the prolific virtue of the Hellenic soil it may be
-mentioned, that young branchless pear-trees, transplanted from Malta to
-the neighbourhood of Athens, in the autumn of 1830, were the next year
-covered thick with fruit, which hung even upon the trunk like hanks of
-onions.[1385]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1385:
-
- Idem. t. i. p. 288. Speaking of the fertility of the islands, Della
- Rocca remarks: “Le terroir y est si bon, et les arbres y viennent si
- vîte, que j’ai vu à Naxie des pépins d’orange de Portugal pousser en
- moins de huit ans de grands orangers, dont les fruits étoient les plus
- délicieux du monde, et la tige de l’arbre si haute, qu’il falloit une
- longue échelle pour y monter.”—Traité Complet des Abeilles, t. i. p.
- 6.
-
------
-
-Notwithstanding the early season of the year at which Gaia distributes
-her gifts in Greece, numerous arts were resorted to for anticipating the
-productions of summer,[1386] though of most of them the nature is
-unknown. It is certain, however, that they possessed the means of
-ripening fruits throughout the winter, either by hothouses or other
-contrivances equally efficacious.[1387] During the festival celebrated
-in honour of the lover of Aphrodite, the seeds of flowers were sown in
-those silver pots, or baskets, called the gardens of Adonis,[1388] and
-with artificial heat and constant irrigation compelled to bloom in eight
-days. Among the modern Hindus corn is still forced to spring up in a few
-days, by a similar process, during the festival of Gouri.[1389] To
-produce rathe figs,[1390] a manure, composed of dove’s dung and pepper
-and oil, was laid about the roots of the tree. Another method was that
-which is still employed under the name of caprification, alluded to by
-Sophocles.[1391] For this purpose care was taken to rear, close at hand,
-several wild fig-trees, from which might be obtained the flies made use
-of in this process,[1392] performed by cutting off bunches of wild figs
-and suspending them amid the branches of the cultivated species,[1393]
-when a fly issuing from the former pricked the slowly ripening fruit and
-accelerated its maturity.[1394] In growing the various kinds of fig they
-were careful to plant the Chelidonian, the Erinean, or wild fig, the
-Leukerinean, and the Phibaleian[1395] on plains. The autumn-royals would
-grow anywhere. Each sort has its peculiar excellence. The following were
-the best: the colouroi, or truncated, the forminion, the diforoi, the
-Megaric, and the Laconian, which would bear abundantly if
-well-watered.[1396] Rhodes was famous for its excellent figs, which were
-even thought worthy to be compared with those of Attica.[1397] Athenæus,
-however, pretends that the best figs in the world were found at Rome.
-There were figs with a ruddy bloom in the island of Paros, the same in
-kind as the Lydian fig.[1398] The Leukerinean produced the white
-fig.[1399]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1386:
-
- On the artificial ripening of dates, Theoph. ii. 8. 4.
-
-Footnote 1387:
-
- Athen. iii. 19. Plut. Phoc. § 3. Xenoph. Vectigal. i. 3.
-
-Footnote 1388:
-
- Ὁ νοῦν ἔχων γεωργός, ὧν σπερμάτων κήδοιτο καὶ ἔγκαρπα βούλοιτο
- γενέσθαι, πότερα σπονδῇ ἂν θέρους εἰς ᾿Αδώνιδος κήπους ἀρῶν χαίροι
- θεωρῶν καλοὺς ἐν ἡμέραισιν ὀκτὼ γιγνομένους.—Plat. Phœd. t. i. p.
- 99. Suid. v. Ἀδώνιδ. κῆπ. t. i. p. 84. b. Theoph. Hist. Plant. v. 7.
- 3. Caus. Plant. i. 12. 2. Eustath. ad Odyss. λ. p. 459. 4.
-
-Footnote 1389:
-
- Tod, Annals of Rajast’han, vol. i. p. 570.
-
-Footnote 1390:
-
- Cf. Athen. iii. 12. Theophrast. Hist. Plant. i. 3. 3. The fruit of the
- Egyptian sycamore, or Pharaoh’s fig-tree, was eaten in antiquity as
- now. Athenæus, who was a native of the Delta, says they used to rip
- open the skin of the fruit with an iron claw, and leave it thus upon
- the tree for three days. On the fourth it was eatable, and exhaled a
- very agreeable odour. Deipnosoph. ii. 36. Theophrastus adds, that a
- little oil was likewise poured on the fruit when opened by the iron.
- De Caus. Plant. i. 17. 9. ii. 8. 4. In Malta figs are still sometimes
- ripened by introducing a little olive oil into the eye of the fruit,
- or by puncturing it with a straw or feather dipped in oil. Napier,
- Excursions along the Shores of the Mediterranean, vol. ii. p. 144. Cf.
- Lord Bacon, Sylva Sylvarum, 446.
-
-Footnote 1391:
-
- Ap. Athen. iii. 10. Cf. Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 8. 1.
-
-Footnote 1392:
-
- Aristot. de Gen. Anim. t. i.
-
-Footnote 1393:
-
- Suid. v. ερινεὸς. t. i. p. 1038. d.
-
-Footnote 1394:
-
- Cf. Tournefort, t. ii. p. 23.
-
-Footnote 1395:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 767
-
-Footnote 1396:
-
- Athen. iii. 7. The Laconian fig-tree was not commonly planted in
- Attica. Frag. Aristoph. Georg. 4. Brunck. This kind of fig requires
- much watering, which was found to deteriorate the flavour of other
- kinds. Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 7. 1.
-
-Footnote 1397:
-
- Athen. iii. 8.
-
-Footnote 1398:
-
- Athen. iii. 9. In the fig-tree orchards of Asia Minor the spaces
- between the trees are sown, as in vineyards, with corn, and the bushes
- are often filled with nightingales.—Chandler, i. 244.
-
-Footnote 1399:
-
- Athen. iii. 10. There was, also, a species which received its name
- from resembling the crow in colour. Sch. Aristoph. Pac. 611. Philost.
- Icon. i. 31. p. 809, where figs are enumerated in his elegant
- description of the Xenia. Cf. Pausan. i. 37. Vitruv.
-
------
-
-The fancy of Hellenic gardeners amused itself with effecting numerous
-fantastic changes in the appearance and nature of fruit. Thus citrons,
-lemons, &c., were made, by the application of a clay mould, to assume
-the form of the human face, of birds and other animals.[1400]
-Occasionally, too, they were introduced, when small, into the neck of a
-bottle provided with breathing holes, the figure of which they assumed
-as they projected their growth into all its dimensions. We are assured,
-moreover, that, by a very simple process, they could produce peaches,
-almonds,[1401] &c., covered, as though by magic, with written
-characters. The mode of operation was this,—steeping the stone of the
-fruit in water for several days, they then carefully divided it, and
-taking out the kernel inscribed upon it with a brazen pen whatever words
-or letters they thought proper. This done, they again closed the stone
-over the kernel, bound it round with papyrus, and planted it; and the
-peaches or almonds which afterwards grew on that tree bore every one of
-them, _mirabile dictu!_ the legend inscribed upon the kernel. By similar
-arts[1402] they created stoneless peaches, walnuts without husks, figs
-white one side, and black the other, and converted bitter almonds into
-sweet.[1403]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1400:
-
- Geop. x. 9. Clus. Rar. Plant. Hist. i. 4.
-
-Footnote 1401:
-
- Geop. x. 14. 60. Pallad. ii. 15. 13.
-
-Footnote 1402:
-
- Geop. x. 16. 53. 76.
-
-Footnote 1403:
-
- Geop. x. 59. Theoph. Hist. Plant. ii. 8. 1. Caus. Plant. i. 9. 1.
- Plin. xvii. 43. Pallad. ii. 15. 1l.
-
------
-
-The rules observed in the planting of fruit-trees were numerous.[1404]
-Some, they were of opinion, were best propagated by seed, others by
-suckers wrenched from the root of the parent stock,[1405] others, again,
-by branches selected from among the new wood on the topmost boughs. A
-rude practice, too, common enough in our own rural districts, appears to
-have been in much favour among them,—bending some long pendant bough to
-the ground, they covered a part of it with heavy clods, allowing,
-however, the extremity to appear above the earth. When it had taken root
-it was severed from the tree and transplanted to some proper situation.
-At other times, the points of boughs were drawn down and fixed in the
-ground, which even thus took root, and sent the juices backwards, after
-which the bough was cut off and a new stock produced. Trees generated by
-this method, as well as those planted during the waning moon,[1406] were
-supposed to spread and grow branchy, while those set during the waxing
-moon attained, though weaker, to a much greater height. It ought,
-perhaps, to be further added, that all seeds and plants were put into
-the ground while the moon was below the horizon.[1407] Those trees which
-it was customary to renew by seed were the pistachio, the filbert, the
-almond, the chestnut, the white peach, the damascene, the pine-tree, and
-the edible pine, the palm, the cypress, the laurel, the ash, the maple,
-and the fig. The apple,[1408] the cherry, the rhamnus jujuba, the common
-nut, the dwarf laurel, the myrtle, and the medlar, were propagated by
-suckers; while the quicker and surer mode of raising trees from boughs
-was frequently adopted in the case of the almond, the pear, the
-mulberry, the citron,[1409] the apple, the olive, the quince,[1410] the
-black and white poplar, the ivy, the jujube-tree, the myrtle, the
-chestnut, the vine, the willow, the box, and the cytisus.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1404:
-
- Geop. x. 3. Cf. Xenoph. Œconom. xix. 3.
-
-Footnote 1405:
-
- Plin. xvii. 13. When a tree was barren, or had lost its strength in
- blooming, they split it at the root, and put a stone into the fissure
- to keep it open, after which it was said to bear well. Theoph. Hist.
- Plant. ii. 7. 6. It was customary, moreover, to wound the trunks of
- almond, pear, and other trees, as the service-tree in Arcadia, in
- order to render them fertile. 1d. ii. 7. 7. The berries of the cornel
- and service-trees were sweeter and ripened earlier wild than when
- cultivated, iii. 2. 1.
-
-Footnote 1406:
-
- The ancients believed that the moon ripens fruit, promotes digestion,
- and causes putrefaction in wood, and animal substances. Athen. vii. 3.
- Cf. Plut. Sympos. iii. 10.
-
-Footnote 1407:
-
- Geop. x. 2. 13.
-
-Footnote 1408:
-
- Cf. Vigenère, Images des Philostrates, p. 48.
-
-Footnote 1409:
-
- “Les orangers et les citronniers perfument l’air par la quantité
- prodigieuse des fleurs dont ils sont chargés, et qui s’épanouissent
- aux premières chaleurs.”—Della Rocca, Traité sur les Abeilles, t. i.
- p. 5.
-
-Footnote 1410:
-
- Originally of Crete. Pashley, i. 27. κοδύμαλον in the ancient dialect
- of the country. Athen. iii. 2.
-
------
-
-But the thrifty people of Hellas seldom devoted the orchard-ground
-entirely to fruit-trees. The custom seems to have been to lay out the
-whole in beds and borders for the cultivation of vegetables, and to
-plant trees, at intervals, along the edges and at the corners. These
-beds, moreover, were often, as with us, edged with parsley and rue;
-whence the proverb,—“You have not proceeded beyond the rue,” for “You
-know nothing of the matter.”[1411]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1411:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 480. Geop. xii. 1. 2.
-
------
-
-The rustics of antiquity, who put generally great faith in spells and
-talismans, possessed an extraordinary charm for ensuring unfailing
-fertility to their gardens; they buried an ass’s head deep in the middle
-of them, and sprinkled the ground with the juice of fenugreek and
-lotus.[1412] Somewhat greater efficacy, however, may be attributed to
-their laborious methods of manuring and irrigation.[1413]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1412:
-
- Geop. xii. 6. Pallad. i. 35. 16.
-
-Footnote 1413:
-
- Lucian. Luc. siv. Asin. § 43.
-
------
-
-The aspect of such a garden differed very little, except perhaps in
-luxuriance, from a similar plot of ground in Kent or Middlesex. Here you
-perceived beds of turnips, or cabbages, or onions; there, lettuces, or
-endive, or succory,[1414] in the process of blanching, or the delicate
-heads of asparagus, or broad-beans, or lentils, or peas, or
-kidney-beans, or artichokes. In the most sunny spots were ranges of
-boxes or baskets for forcing cucumbers.[1415] Near the brooks, where
-such existed, were patches of watermelons,[1416] the finest in the
-world; and here and there, clasping round the trunks of trees,[1417]
-and, suspending its huge leaves and spheres from among the branches, you
-might behold the gourd,[1418] as I have often seen it in the palm-groves
-of Nubia. It may be added, that the pumpkin, or common gourd, was eaten
-by the Greeks,[1419] as it is still in France and Asia Minor.[1420]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1414:
-
- Geop. ii. 37. 40.
-
-Footnote 1415:
-
- These were covered with plates of the lapis specularis, and furnished
- with wheels, that they might the more easily be moved in and out from
- under cover. Colum. De Re Rust. xi. 3. p. 461: see also Castell,
- Villas of the Ancients, p. 4.
-
-Footnote 1416:
-
- These are found growing at present even in the cemeteries. “Des melons
- d’eau qui végètent çà et là sur ces tombes abandonnées, resemblent,
- par leur forme et leur pâleur, à des crânes humains qu’on ne s’est pas
- donné la peine d’ensèvelir.” Chateaub. Itin. i. 27. These fruit are
- considered so innocent in the Levant as to be given to the sick in
- fevers. Chandler, i. p. 77.
-
-Footnote 1417:
-
- Colum. De Cult. Hortor. 234.
-
-Footnote 1418:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Acharn. 494.
-
-Footnote 1419:
-
- Athen. iii. 1.
-
-Footnote 1420:
-
- Chandler, i. 317.
-
------
-
-Lettuces[1421] were blanched by being tied a-top, or being buried up to
-a certain point in sand.[1422] They were, moreover, supposed to be
-rendered more rich and delicate by being watered with a mixture of wine
-and honey, as was the practice of the gourmand Aristoxenos, who having
-done so over-night, used next morning to cut them, and say they were so
-many green cakes sent him by mother Earth.[1423]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1421:
-
- See Strattis’s Invocation to the Caterpillar. Athen. ii. 79. Theoph.
- Hist. Plant. vii. 2. 4. 5. 4.
-
-Footnote 1422:
-
- Geop. xii. 13. 3. Pallad. ii. 14. 2.
-
-Footnote 1423:
-
- Athen. i. 12.
-
------
-
-The Greek gardeners appear to have delighted exceedingly in the
-production of monstrous vegetables. Thus, in the case of the cucumber,
-their principal object appears to have been to produce it without seed,
-or of some extraordinary shape.[1424] In the first case they diligently
-watched the appearance of the plant above ground, and then covering it
-over with fresh earth, and repeating the same operation three times, the
-cucumbers it bore were found to be seedless. The same effect was
-produced by steeping the seeds in sesamum-oil for three days before they
-were sown. They were made to grow to a great length by having vessels of
-water[1425] placed daily within a few inches of their points, which,
-exciting by attraction a sort of nisus in the fruit, drew them forward
-as far as the gardener thought necessary.[1426] They were made,
-likewise, to assume all sorts of forms by the use of light, fictile
-moulds,[1427] as in the case of the citron. Another method was, to take
-a large reed,[1428] split it, and clear out the pith; then introducing
-the young cucumber into the hollow, the sections of the reed were bound
-together, and the fruit projected itself through the tube until it
-acquired an enormous length. It is observed by Theophrastus, that if you
-steep the seeds of cucumbers in milk, or an infusion of honey, it will
-improve their flavour.[1429] They were, moreover, believed to expand in
-size at the full of the moon, like the sea-hedgehog.[1430] A fragrant
-smell was supposed to be communicated to melons[1431] by constantly
-keeping the seed in dry rose-leaves. To preserve the seed for any length
-of time, it was sprinkled with the juice of house-leek.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1424:
-
- Geop. xii. 19. 1, sqq. Pallad. iv. 9. 8.
-
-Footnote 1425:
-
- Plin. xix. 23. Pallad. iv. 9. 8.
-
- At qui sub trichila manantem repit ad undam,
- Labentemque sequens nimio tenuatur amore,
- Candidus, effœtæ tremebundior ubere porcæ.
-
- Colum. x. De Cult. Hortor. 394.
-
-Footnote 1426:
-
- Lord Bacon, having noticed this fact, adds the following sage remark:
- “If you set a stake or prop at a certain distance from it (the vine),
- it will grow that way, which is far stranger than the other: for that
- water may work by a sympathy of attraction; but this of the stake
- seemeth to be a reasonable discourse.” Sylva Sylvarum, 462.
-
-Footnote 1427:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. vii. 3. 5. Plin. Hist. Nat. xix. 24.
-
-Footnote 1428:
-
- Plin. xix. 23.
-
-Footnote 1429:
-
- Cf. Athen. iii. 5.
-
-Footnote 1430:
-
- Athen. iii. 2.
-
-Footnote 1431:
-
- The best melons at present known in Greece are those of Cephalonia,
- which lose their flavour if transplanted. Hobhouse, Trav. &c., i. 227.
- Cf. Chandler, i. p. 14.
-
------
-
-The Megaréans, in whose country melons, gourds,[1432] and cucumbers were
-plentiful, were accustomed to heap dust about their roots during the
-prevalence of the Etesian winds, and found this answer of
-irrigation.[1433] It appears from the following proverb,—“The end of
-cucumbers and the beginning of pompions,”—that the former went out of
-season as the latter came in.[1434]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1432:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 494.
-
-Footnote 1433:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. ii. 7. 5.
-
-Footnote 1434:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Pac. 966.
-
------
-
-To procure a plentiful crop of asparagus, they used to bury the shavings
-of a wild ram’s horn, and well water them.[1435] By banking up the
-stalks, moreover, immediately after cutting the heads, they caused new
-shoots to spring forth, and thus enjoyed a fresh supply throughout the
-year. This plant was probably obtained from Libya,[1436] where it was
-said to attain, in its wild state, the height of twelve, and sometimes
-even of thirty cubits;[1437] and on the slopes of Lebanon, in Syria, it
-has in our own clay been seen from twelve to fifteen feet high.
-
-Footnote 1435:
-
- Geop. xii. 18. 2. Plin. xix. 42. Dioscor. ii. 152. The physician,
- however, modestly professes his unbelief: ἔνιοι δὲ ἱστόρησαν, ὅτι ἐάν
- τις κριοῦ κέρατα συγκόψας κατορύξῃ, φύεται ἀσπάραγος · ἐμοὶ δὲ
- ἀπίθανον.
-
-Footnote 1436:
-
- The asparagus, however, has been found, in modern times, growing wild
- among the ruins of Epidauros. Chandler, ii. 249.
-
-Footnote 1437:
-
- Athen. ii. 62.
-
------
-
-That kind of cabbage which we call savoys was supposed to flourish best
-in saline spots, on which account the gardeners used to sift pounded
-nitre[1438] over the beds where it was sown, as was the practice also in
-Egypt. In and about Alexandria,[1439] however, there was said to be some
-peculiar quality in the earth which communicated a bitter taste to the
-cabbage. To prevent this they imported cabbage-seed from the island of
-Rhodes, which produced good plants the first year, but experienced in
-the second the acrid influence of the soil.[1440] Kumè was celebrated
-for its fine cabbages, which, when full-grown, were of a yellowish green
-colour, like the new leather sole of a sandal. Broccoli and sea-kale and
-cauliflowers would appear to have been commonly cultivated in the
-gardens of the ancients. There was, likewise, among them a sort of
-cabbage supposed to have some connexion with the gift of prophecy;[1441]
-and by this, probably, it was, that certain comic personages used to
-swear, as Socrates by the dog, and Zeno by the caper-bush.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1438:
-
- Geop. ii. 41.
-
-Footnote 1439:
-
- Athen. ix. 9. Suid. v. κράμβη. t. i. p. 1518. b. Cf. Foës. Œconom.
- Hippoc. v. κραμβίων. p. 214. Dioscorid. ii. 146.
-
-Footnote 1440:
-
- Cf. Steph. Byzant. de Urb. p. 488. b.
-
-Footnote 1441:
-
- Cf. Casaub. Animadv. in Athen. ix. 9. t. x. p. 24.
-
------
-
-Radishes[1442] were rendered sweet by steeping the seeds in wine and
-honey, or the fresh juice of grapes: Nicander speaks of preserved
-turnips.[1443] Parsley-seed was put into the earth in an old rag, or a
-wisp of straw,[1444] surrounded with manure, and well-watered, which
-made the plant grow large. Rue they sowed in warm and sunny spots,
-without manure.[1445] It was defended from the cold of winter by being
-surrounded with heaps of ashes,[1446] and was sometimes planted in pots,
-probably to be kept in apartments for the sake of its bright yellow
-flowers,[1447] and because, when smelt, it was said to cure the
-head-ache. The juice of wild rue, mixed with woman’s milk, sharpened the
-sight, in the opinion of the ancients.[1448] The juice of sweet mint,
-which was a garden herb, squeezed into milk,[1449] was supposed to
-prevent coagulation, even should rennet be afterwards thrown into it.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1442:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. vii. 1. 3.
-
-Footnote 1443:
-
- Athen. iv. 11.
-
-Footnote 1444:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. vii. 4. 2. 6. 4. Aristoph. Concion. 355, et
- schol.
-
-Footnote 1445:
-
- Geop. xii. 1.
-
-Footnote 1446:
-
- Geop. xii. 25. 1.
-
-Footnote 1447:
-
- Cf. Sibth. Flor. Græc. tab. 368.
-
-Footnote 1448:
-
- Dioscor. iii. 53. Geop. xii. 25. 4.
-
-Footnote 1449:
-
- Geop. xii. 24.
-
------
-
-Both the root and bean of the nymphæa nelumbo or red lotus,[1450] were
-eaten in Egypt,[1451] where its crimson flowers were woven into crowns
-which diffused an agreeable odour, and were considered exceedingly
-refreshing in the heat of summer.[1452] This plant was by the Greeks of
-Naucratis denominated the melilotus, to distinguish it from the lotus
-with white flowers. Theophrastus[1453] observes, that it grows in the
-marshes to the height of four cubits, and has a striped root and stem.
-This lotus was also anciently found in Syria and Cilicia, but did not
-there ripen. In the environs of Toronè in Chalcidice,[1454] however, it
-was found in perfection in a small marsh.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1450:
-
- The rose-coloured lotus was said by the poet Pancrates to have been
- produced from the blood of the lion slain by the Emperor Adrian.
- Athen. xv. 21.
-
-Footnote 1451:
-
- Athen. iii. 1.
-
-Footnote 1452:
-
- Nicander in Georgicis ap. Athen. iii. 1.
-
- Σπείρειας κύαμον Αἰγύπτιον, ὄφρα θερείης
- Ἅνθεα μὲν στεφάνους ἀνύῃς· τὰ δὲ πεπτηῶτα
- Ἀκμαίου καρποῖο κιβώρια δαινυμένοισιν
- Ἐς χέρας ἠΐθεοισι, πάλαι ποθέουσιν, ὀρέξης
- Ῥίζας δ᾽ ἐν θοίνῃσιν ἀφεψήσας προτίθημι.
-
- See the note of Schweighæuser, t. vii. 10.
-
-Footnote 1453:
-
- Histor. Plant. iv. 10.
-
-Footnote 1454:
-
- It was also found in Thesprotia. Athen. iii. 3.
-
------
-
-The lupin,[1455] and the caper-bush, probably cultivated for the beauty
-of its delicate white flowers,[1456] deteriorated in gardens,[1457] as
-did likewise the mallows,[1458] which, together with the beet, were said
-to acquire in gardens the height of a small tree.[1459] The stem of the
-mallows was sometimes used as a walking stick. Its large pale red flower
-which
-
- Follows with its bending head the sun,[1460]
-
-constituted one of the ornaments of the garden.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1455:
-
- Geop. ii. 39. Apuleius relates that the lupin-flower turned round with
- the sun, even in cloudy weather, so that it served as a sort of rural
- clock. Cf. Plin. xviii. 67.
-
-Footnote 1456:
-
- The caper-bush blossoms in June. Chandler, ii. 275.
-
-Footnote 1457:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 3. 6. Cf. Sibth. Flor. Græc. tab. 488.
-
-Footnote 1458:
-
- Athen. ii. 52.
-
-Footnote 1459:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 9. 2. Cf. vii. 3, 3. Hesiod reckons the mallow
- and the asphodel among edible plants. Opp. et Dies, 41. Gœttling,
- therefore, (in loc.) wonders Pythagoras should have prohibited the
- mallow. Cf. Aristoph. Plut. 543. Suid. v. θύμος. t. 1. p. 1336. e.
- Horat. Od. i. 32. 16.
-
-Footnote 1460:
-
- Colum. de Cult. Hortor. 253. Cardan in his treatise De Subtilitate
- having undertaken to assign the cause why certain flowers bend towards
- the sun, his antagonist, J. C. Scaliger, remarks upon his philosophy
- as follows:—“De floribus, qui ad Solem convertuntur non pessime ais:
- tenue humidum ad Solis calorem, se habere, ut corii ad ignem. Cæterum
- adhuc integra restat quæstio. Rosis enim tenuissimum esse humidum
- testantur omnia. Non convertuntur tamen. Platonici flores quosdam
- etiam Lunæ dicunt esse familiares: qui sane huic Sideri, sicut illi
- suo canant hymnos, sed mortalibus ignotos auribus.” Exercit. 170, § 2.
- “The cause (of the bowing of the heliotrope) is somewhat obscure; but
- I take it to be no other, but that the part against which the sun
- heateth, waxeth more faint and flaccid in the stalk, and thereby less
- able to support the flower.” Bacon, Sylva Sylvarum § 493.
-
------
-
-Besides these the ancients usually cultivated in their grounds two
-species of cistus, one with pale red flowers now called the long rose,
-the other which about midsummer has on its leaves a sort of fatty dew,
-of which laudanum is made;[1461] together with the blue eringo,[1462]
-rocket, cresses, (which were planted in ridges,) bastard parsley,
-penny-royal, anis,[1463] water-mint, sea-onions, monk’s rhubarb,
-purslain, a leaf of which placed under the tongue quenched thirst,
-garden coriander, hellebore, yellow, red, and white, bush origany,[1464]
-with its pink cones, flame-coloured fox-glove, brank-ursine, or bear’s
-foot, admired for its vast pyramid of white flowers, chervil, skirwort,
-the mournful elecampane, giant fennel, dill, mustard and wake-robin,
-which was sown,
-
- Soon as the punic tree, whose numerous grains,
- When thoroughly ripe, a bright red covering hides,
- Itself did with its bloody blossoms clothe.[1465]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1461:
-
- Sibth. Flor. Græc. t. 1. tab. 258, seq.
-
-Footnote 1462:
-
- Colum. x. de Cult. Hortor. 230, sqq. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 235.
-
-Footnote 1463:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 72. 2.
-
-Footnote 1464:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 826, 837.
-
-Footnote 1465:
-
- Colum. x. De Cult. Hortor. 374. English Translation. Theoph. Hist.
- Plant. vii. 12. 1.
-
------
-
-Other garden herbs were the cumin, the seed of which was sown with abuse
-and curses,[1466] the sperage-berry, the dittander, or pepperwort,
-turnips,[1467] and parsnips, (found wild in Dalmatia,)[1468] with
-onions, garlic, and leeks.[1469] For these last Megara was famous, as
-Attica was for honey, which suggested to the Athenians an occasion of
-compliment to themselves,[1470] it having been a saying among them, that
-they were as superior to the Megareans as honey is to garlic and leeks.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1466:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. vii. 3. 3. Cf. Dioscor. iii. 68, seq.
-
-Footnote 1467:
-
- Athen. iv. 11.
-
-Footnote 1468:
-
- Athen. ix. 8.
-
-Footnote 1469:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. vii. 4. 7, 10, 11. Aristoph. Plut. 283, et schol.
- Eq. 675. 494. Vesp. 680. Acharn. 166, 500. Plut. 283.
-
-Footnote 1470:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Pac. 246. 252.
-
------
-
-The cultivation of that species of leek called gethyllis was carried to
-great perfection at Delphi,[1471] where it was an established custom,
-evidently with a view to the improvement of gardening, that the person
-who, on the day of the Theoxenia,[1472] presented the largest vegetable
-of this kind to Leto should receive a portion from the holy table.[1473]
-Polemo, who relates this circumstance says, that he had seen on these
-occasions leeks nearly as large as turnips. The cause of this ceremony
-was said to be, that Leto when great with Apollo longed for a leek.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1471:
-
- Cf. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 675.
-
-Footnote 1472:
-
- This passage has escaped the diligence of Meursius, Græc. Feriat. p.
- 150.
-
-Footnote 1473:
-
- Athen. ix. 13.
-
------
-
-Mushrooms[1474] were sedulously cultivated by the ancients, among whose
-methods of producing them were the following. They felled a
-poplar-tree[1475] and laying its trunk in the earth to rot, watered it
-assiduously, after which mushrooms, at the proper time sprung up.
-Another method was to irrigate the trunk of the fig-tree after having
-covered it all round with dung, though the best kind in the opinion of
-others were such as grew at the foot of elm and pine-trees.[1476] Those
-springing from the upper roots were reckoned of no value.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1474:
-
- Dioscor. ii. 200, seq. Plin. xix. 11.
-
-Footnote 1475:
-
- Athen. ii. 57. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 189, 191. Eccles. 1092. Geop.
- xii. 36.
-
-Footnote 1476:
-
- A similar observation is made in France respecting the truffles, the
- best of which are supposed to grow about the roots and under the
- shadow of the oak. Trollope’s Summer in Western France, ii. 352.
-
------
-
-On other occasions[1477] they chose a light sandy soil accustomed to
-produce reeds, then burning brushwood, &c., when the air was in a state
-indicating rain, this ambiguous species of vegetable started forth from
-the earth with the first shower. The same effect was produced by
-watering the ground thus prepared, though this species was supposed to
-be inferior. In France, the most delicate sort of mushrooms are said to
-proceed from the decayed root of the Eryngium.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1477:
-
- Geop. xii. 41. 2.
-
------
-
-This vegetable appears to have been a favourite dish among the ancients,
-together with the truffle,[1478] eaten both cooked and raw;[1479] and
-the morrille.[1480] That particular kind, called geranion, is the modern
-crane’s bill. The Misu, another sort of truffle,[1481] grew chiefly in
-the sandy plains about Cyrene, and, as well as the Iton,[1482] found in
-the lofty downs of Thrace, was said to exhale an agreeable odour
-resembling that of animal food. These fanciful luxuries, which were
-produced among the rains and thunders[1483] of autumn, continued to
-flourish in the earth during a whole year, but were thought to be in
-season in spring. Truffle-seed was usually imported from Megara, Lycia,
-and Getulia; but in Mytelene the inhabitants were spared this expense,
-their sandy shores being annually sown from the neighbouring coast by
-the winds and showers. It has been remarked, that neither truffles nor
-wild onions were found near the Hellespont.[1484]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1478:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 189.
-
-Footnote 1479:
-
- This was more particularly the case on the Tauric Chersonese.—Theoph.
- Hist. Plant. vii. 13. 8.
-
-Footnote 1480:
-
- Theophrast. Hist. Plant. i. 10. 7.
-
-Footnote 1481:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 6. 13.
-
-Footnote 1482:
-
- Athen. ii. 62.
-
-Footnote 1483:
-
- Plut. Sympos. iv. 2. 1. who relates that the ὕδνα attained to a very
- large size in Elis.
-
-Footnote 1484:
-
- Vid. Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 6. 13.
-
------
-
-What methods the ancients employed for discovering the truffle, which
-grows without stem or leaf in a small cell beneath the surface of the
-earth, I have nowhere seen explained. At present[1485] their existence
-is said to be detected in Greece, not by the truffle hound, but by the
-divining rod. On the dry sandy downs of the Limousin, Gascogne,
-Angoumois, and Perigord, as well as in several parts of Italy,[1486]
-they are collected by the swineherds; for the hogs being extremely fond
-of them utter grunts of joy, and begin to turn up the earth as soon as
-they scent their odour, upon which the herdsmen beat the animals away,
-and carefully preserve the delicacy for the tables of the rich. At other
-times they are discovered in the following manner: the herdsmen stooping
-down, and looking horizontally along the surface of the Landes, observe
-here and there, on spots bare of grass and full of fissures, clouds of
-very diminutive flies hatched in the truffle, and still regaling
-themselves with its perfume. In some parts of Savoy they have been found
-two pounds in weight.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1485:
-
- Walp. Mem. i. 284.
-
-Footnote 1486:
-
- Valmont de Bomare, Dict. D’Hist. Nat. t. ii. p. 21, seq.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
- VINEYARD, VINTAGE, ETC.
-
-
-One of the principal branches of husbandry[1487] in Greece was the
-culture of the vine, probably introduced from Phœnicia.[1488] Long
-before the historical age, however, it had spread itself through the
-whole country, together with several parts of Asia Minor, as may be
-inferred from the language of Homer,[1489] who frequently enumerates
-vineyards among the possessions of his heroes. Like most things the
-origin of which was unknown, the vine furnished the poets and common
-people with the subjects of numerous fables, some of which were reckoned
-of sufficient importance to be treasured up and transmitted to
-posterity. Thus, among the Ozolian Locrians, it was said[1490] to have
-sprung from a small piece of wood, brought forth in lieu of whelps by a
-bitch. Others supposed a spot near Olympia[1491] to have given birth to
-the vine, in proof of which the inhabitants affirmed a miracle was
-wrought annually among them during the Dionysiac festival. They took
-three empty brazen vessels, and having closely covered and sealed them
-in the presence of witnesses, again opened them after some interval of
-time, not stated, when they were found full of wine. According to other
-authorities, the environs of Plinthinè, in Egypt, had the honour of
-being the cradle of Dionysos, on which account the ancient Egyptians
-were by some accused of inebriety, though in the age of Herodotus[1492]
-there would appear to have been no vineyards in the whole valley of the
-Nile. In reality,[1493] the vine appears to be a native of all temperate
-climates, both in the old world and the new, and will even
-flourish[1494] and produce fine grapes in various situations within the
-tropics, where clusters in different stages of ripeness may be observed
-upon its branches at all seasons of the year.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1487:
-
- The importance of this branch of cultivation in some countries may be
- perceived from the fact, that in France it is said to afford
- employment to 2,200,000 families, comprising a population of
- 6,000,000, or nearly one-fifth of the population of the entire
- kingdom. TIMES, Aug. 3, 1838. The quantity of land devoted to the
- culture of the vine was estimated in 1823, at 4,270,000 acres, the
- produce of which amounted to 920,721,088 gallons, 22,516,220_l._
- 15_s._ sterling. Redding, Hist. of Modern Wines, chap. iv. p. 56. In
- the Greek Budget of 1836, the tax on cattle produced 2,100,000
- drachmas, on bees 35,000, olive-grounds 64,776, and on vineyards and
- currant-grounds 58,269.—Parish, Diplomatic History of the Monarchy of
- Greece, p. 175.
-
-Footnote 1488:
-
- Or according to Athenæus, from the shores of the Red Sea. Deipnosoph.
- xv. 17.
-
-Footnote 1489:
-
- Iliad. β. 561. γ. 184. ι. 152, 294. Cf. Pind. Isth. viii. 108.
-
-Footnote 1490:
-
- Paus. x. 38. 1.
-
-Footnote 1491:
-
- Athen. i. 61.
-
-Footnote 1492:
-
- ii. 77.
-
-Footnote 1493:
-
- Cf. Redding History of Modern Wines, chap. i. p. 2. An interesting and
- able work.
-
-Footnote 1494:
-
- Nienhoff in Churchill’s Collection, ii. 264. Barbot. iii. 13. Ulloa,
- Memoires Philosophiques, t. ii. p. 15. Voyages, t. i. p. 487, 491.
-
------
-
-The opinions of Grecian writers respecting the soil best suited to the
-cultivation of the vine, having been founded on experience, generally
-agree with those which prevail in modern times.[1495] They preferred for
-their vineyards the gentle acclivities of hills,[1496] where the soil
-was good, though light and porous, and abounding in springs at no great
-depth from the surface.[1497] A considerable degree of moisture was
-always supposed to be indispensable, on which account, in arid
-situations, large hollow sea-shells, and fragments of sandstone[1498]
-were buried in the soil, these being regarded as so many reservoirs of
-humidity.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1495:
-
- Virg. Georg. ii. 276.
-
-Footnote 1496:
-
- “Quòd colles Bacchus amaret.” Manil. Astronom. ii. p. 31. 6. Scalig.
-
-Footnote 1497:
-
- Geop. v. 1.
-
-Footnote 1498:
-
- Geop. v. 9. 8. Virg. Georg. ii. 348.
-
------
-
-By some the vine was even thought to delight in the rich alluvial soil
-of plains, such as is found in Egypt,[1499] where, in later times, the
-banks of the Nile, from Elephantinè to the sea, seem to have presented
-one vast succession of vineyards.[1500] But superior vines were produced
-on a few spots only, as at Koptos, and in the neighbourhood of Lake
-Mareotis, where showers of sand, pouring in from the desert or the
-sea-shore, diminished the fatness of the ground. With respect to Koptos,
-we possess, however, no precise information,[1501] but are expressly
-told, that the Mareotic vineyards covered a series of sandy swells,
-stretching eastward from the lake towards Rosetta.[1502] On the southern
-confines of Egypt, in the rocky and picturesque island of Elephantinè,
-the vine was said[1503] never to shed its leaves; but as none grow there
-at present, the traveller has no opportunity of deciding this question.
-In Greece the vineyards of the plains were generally appropriated to the
-production of the green grape, the purple being supposed to prefer the
-sides of hills, or even of mountains, provided it were not exposed to
-the furious winds upon their summits. Several sorts of white grape,
-also, as the Psillian, Corcyrean, and the Chlorian, delighted in
-elevated vineyards,[1504] though it was often judged necessary to
-reverse these rules, and compel the hill-nurslings to descend to the
-plains, while those of the plains were in their turn exposed to the
-climate of the mountains.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1499:
-
- Καλλίστη δὲ γῆ καὶ ἑ ὑπὸ τῶν ῥεόντων ποταμῶν χωσθεῖσα, ὅθεν καὶ τὴν
- Αἴγυπτον ἐπαινοῦμεν.—Florent. ap. Geop. v. 1. 4.
-
-Footnote 1500:
-
- Jemaleddin. Maured Allatafet, p. 7. All these vines it will be
- remembered were cut down by order of the Caliph Beamrillah, even in
- the province of the Fayoum. Some vestiges, however, of vineyards were
- here discovered by Pococke. “I observed,” says he, “about this lake
- (Mœris) several roots in the ground, that seemed to me to be the
- remains of vines, for which the country about the lake was formerly
- famous. Where there is little moisture in the air, and it rains so
- seldom, wood may remain sound a great while, though it is not known
- how long these vineyards have been destroyed.” Vol. i. p. 65.
-
-Footnote 1501:
-
- Though with regard to the nature of the wine itself we are told, that
- it was so light as to be given to persons in fevers,—ὁ δὲ κατὰ τὴν
- Θηβαΐδα, καὶ μάλιστα ὁ κατὰ τὴν Κόπτον πόλιν, οὕτως ἐστὶ λεπτὸς, καὶ
- εὐανάδοτος, καὶ ταχέως πεπτικὸς, ὡς τοῖς πυρεταίνουσι διδόμενος μὴ
- βλάπτειν. Athen. i. 60.
-
-Footnote 1502:
-
- Athen. i. 60. Horat. Od. i. 37. 14. Strab. xvii. 1. t. iii. p. 425.
-
-Footnote 1503:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 3. 5. Varro, i. 7.
-
-Footnote 1504:
-
- Geop. v. 1. 15. Cf. Geop. iii. 2. “The shifting of ground is a means
- to better the tree and fruit, but with this caution, that all things
- do prosper best when they are advanced to the better.” Bacon, “Sylva
- Sylvarum,” 439.
-
------
-
-Much judgment was thought to be required in selecting the site of a
-vineyard, though almost everything depended on the climate and general
-configuration of the district in which it was situated. Thus in warm
-countries, as in the Pentapolis of Cyrene, the vineyards sloped towards
-the north; in Laconia, they occupied the eastern face of Mount Taygetos,
-while in Attica and the islands, the hills often appear to have been
-encircled with vines. Upon the whole, however, those were most esteemed
-which looked towards the rising sun and enjoyed, without obstruction,
-the first rays of the morning.[1505] And this also is the case in the
-Côte d’Or, where the best wines, as the Chambertin, the Vin de Beaune,
-and that of the Clos Vougeot, are grown on eastern declivities. In some
-parts of Greece, the vine was strongly affected by the prevalence of
-certain winds, as those of the east and the west in Thessaly, which in
-the forty cold days of winter were attended by frost that killed its
-upper extremities, and sometimes the whole trunk. At Chalcis, in Eubœa
-likewise, the Olympias, a western wind, parched and shrivelled, or, as
-the Greeks express it, burnt up the leaves, sometimes completely
-destroying the shrub itself.[1506] In such situations it was accordingly
-found necessary to protect it by a covering[1507] during the prevalence
-of cold winds. At Methana, in Argolis, when the south-east in spring
-blew up the Saronic gulf,[1508] the inhabitants, to defend them from it,
-spread over their vines the invisible teguments of a spell; which was
-effected in the following manner: taking a milk-white cock, and cutting
-it in halves, two men seized each a part, and then, standing back to
-back, started off in opposite directions, made the tour of the vineyard,
-and, returning whence they had set out, buried the cock’s remains in the
-earth. After this the Libs might blow as it listed, since it possessed
-no power to injure any man’s property within the consecrated
-circle.[1509] The prevalence of the north wind during autumn was
-considered auspicious, as they supposed it to hasten the ripening of the
-fruit.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1505:
-
- Geop. v. 4.1.
-
-Footnote 1506:
-
- Theoph. Caus. Plant. v. 12. 5. Cf. Hist. Plant. iv. 14. 11. And yet
- the neighbourhood of the sea was considered propitious to the vine.
- Geop. v. 5.
-
-Footnote 1507:
-
- Theoph. Caus. Plant. v. 12. 5.
-
-Footnote 1508:
-
- On the prevalence of these winds in winter and spring, together with
- the causes of the phenomenon, see Aristot. Problem. xxvi. 16.
-
-Footnote 1509:
-
- Paus. ii. 34. 2. Chandler, Travels, ii. 248.
-
------
-
-When the husbandman had resolved on the formation of a new vineyard, he
-first, of course, encircled the spot with a hedge[1510] which was made
-both thick and strong for the purpose of repelling the flocks and herds,
-which, as well as goats, foxes, and soldiers, loved to prey upon the
-vine.[1511] His next care was to root up the hazel bush and the
-oleaster, the roots of the former being supposed to be inimical to the
-Dionysiac tree, while the oily bark of the latter rendered it peculiarly
-susceptible of taking fire, by which means vineyards would often appear
-to have been reduced to ashes. So at least says Virgil.[1512]
-
- Root up wild olives from thy laboured lands,
- For sparkling fire from hinds’ unwary hands
- Is often scattered o’er their unctuous rinds,
- And often spread abroad by raging winds;
- For first the smouldering flame the trunk receives,
- Ascending thence it crackles in the leaves;
- At length victorious to the top aspires,
- Involving all the wood in smoky fires.
- But most when driven by winds the flaming storm
- Of the long files destroys the beauteous form;
- In ashes then the unhappy vineyard lies,
- Nor will the blasted plants from ruin rise,
- Nor will the withered stock be green again,
- But the wild olive shoots, and shades th’ ungrateful plain.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1510:
-
- Virg. Georg. ii. 371, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1511:
-
- Aristoph. Eq. 1073, seq. Küst.
-
-Footnote 1512:
-
- Georg. ii. 299, sqq. Dryden’s Translation.
-
------
-
-The next operation[1513] was to trench the ground and throw it into
-lofty ridges, which, by the operation of the summer sun, and the rain
-and winds and frosts of winter, were rendered mellow and genial.
-Occasionally a species of manure, composed[1514] of pounded acorns,
-lentils, and other vegetable substances, was dug in for the purpose of
-giving to the soil the warmth and fertility required by the vine.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1513:
-
- Geop. iii. 4. Cf. Virg. Georg. ii. 259, seq. et Serv. ad loc.
-
-Footnote 1514:
-
- Geop. v. 24.
-
------
-
-The ground having remained in this state during a whole year, its
-surface was levelled, and a series of shallow furrows traced for the
-slips by line, rather close, on rich alluvial plains, but diverging more
-and more[1515] in proportion to the elevation of the site. Generally the
-vine was propagated by slips of moderate length, planted sometimes
-upright or à l’aiguille,[1516] as the phrase is in Languedoc, sometimes
-obliquely,[1517] which was generally supposed to be the better fashion.
-Along with the slip a handfull of grape-stones was usually cast into the
-furrow,[1518] those of the green grape with the purple vine, and those
-of the purple with the green, in order to cause it the sooner to take
-root. With some the practice was always to set two slips together, so
-that if one missed the other might take, and when both grew, the weaker
-was cut off or removed. Several stones,[1519] about the size of the
-fist, were placed round the slip above whatever manure was used, the
-belief being, that they would aid in preventing the root from being
-scorched by the sun in the heats of summer.[1520] Some touched the lower
-point of the slip with cedar oil which prevented it from decaying, and
-likewise by its odour repelled vermin.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1515:
-
- Virg. Georg. ii. 274, seq.
-
-Footnote 1516:
-
- Skippon in Churchill, Collection of Voyages, vi. 730.
-
-Footnote 1517:
-
- Πότερα δὲ ὅλον τὸ κλῆμα ὀρθὸν τιθεὶς πρὸς τὸν οὐρανὸν βλέπον ἡγῇ
- μάλλον ἂν ῥιζοῦσθαι αὐτὸ, ἢ καὶ πλάγιόν τι ὑπὸ τῇ ὑποβεβλημένη γῇ
- θείης ἂν, ὥστε κεῖσθαι ὥσπερ γάμμα ὕπτιον; οὕτω νὴ Δία· πλείονες γὰρ
- ἂν οἱ ὀφθαλμοὶ κατὰ γῆς εἶεν· ἐκ δὲ τῶν ὀφθαλμῶν καὶ ἄνω ὁρῶ
- βλαστάνοντα τὰ φυτὰ. Xenoph. Œconom. xix. 9, seq.
-
-Footnote 1518:
-
- Geop. v. 9. This practice is noticed by Lord Bacon who advises
- gardeners to extend the experiment by laying “good store” of other
- kernels about the roots of trees of the same kind. Sylva Sylvarum, i.
- 35.
-
-Footnote 1519:
-
- Virg. Georg. ii. 348.
-
-Footnote 1520:
-
- A similar remark is made by Lord Bacon: “It is an assured experience,”
- he says, “that an heap of flint or stone laid about the bottom of a
- wild tree, as an oak, elm, ash, &c., upon the first planting, doth
- make it prosper double as much as without it. The cause is for that it
- retaineth the moisture which falleth at any time upon the tree and
- suffereth it not to be exhaled by the sun.” Sylva Sylvarum, 422.
-
------
-
-To produce grapes without stones the lower end of the slip was split,
-and the pith carefully extracted with an ear-pick.[1521] It was then
-bound round with a papyrus leaf, thrust into a sea-onion and thus
-planted. Vines producing medicinal grapes were created by withdrawing
-the pith from the lower part of the slip, but without splitting, and
-introducing certain drugs into the hollow,[1522] closing up the
-extremity with papyrus and thus setting it in the earth. The wine, the
-grape, the leaves, and even the ashes of such a vine were thought to be
-a remedy against the bite of serpents and dogs, though no security
-against hydrophobia. Another mode of producing stoneless grapes was to
-cut short all the branches of a vine already growing, extract the pith
-from the ends of them, and fill up the cavity once a-week with the juice
-of sylphion,[1523] binding them carefully to props that the liquor might
-not escape. A method was also in use of producing green and purple
-grapes on the same cluster.[1524] This was to take two slips as nearly
-as possible of the same size, the one of the white, the other of the
-black grape, and, having split them down the middle, carefully to fit
-the halves to their opposites, so that the buds, when divided, should
-exactly meet. They were then bound tight together with papyrus thread,
-and placed in the earth in a sea-onion,[1525] whose glutinous juice
-aided the growing together of the severed parts. Sometimes instead of
-slips, offshoots removed from the trunk of a large vine, with roots
-attached to them, were used. On other occasions the vine was grafted,
-like any other fruit-tree, on a variety of stocks,[1526] each modifying
-the quality and flavour of the grape. Thus a vine grafted on a
-myrtle-stock,[1527] produced fruit partaking of the character of the
-myrtle-berry. Grafted on a cherry-tree, its grapes underwent a different
-change, and ripened, like cherries, in the spring. As the clay
-encircling the junctures of these grafts grew dry, and somewhat cracked
-in hot summers, it was customary for gardeners to moisten them every
-evening with a sponge dipped in water.[1528]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1521:
-
- Geop. iv. 7. Mention of the stoneless grapes of Persia occurs in many
- travellers, and, by Mr. Fowler, one of the most recent, are enumerated
- under the name of _kismis_, among the choicest fruits of that country.
- Three Years in Persia, vol. i. p. 323. It may here be remarked, that
- certain sorts of vines, among others the Capneion, produced sometimes
- white clusters, sometimes purple. Theophrast. Hist. Plant. ii. 3. 2.
- Cf. de Caus. Plant. v. 3. 1. κ. τ. λ.
-
-Footnote 1522:
-
- Geop. iv. 8.
-
-Footnote 1523:
-
- Geop. iv. 7.
-
-Footnote 1524:
-
- Geop. iv. 14.
-
-Footnote 1525:
-
- It has been remarked also by ancient naturalists that a fig-tree
- planted in a sea-onion, grows quicker and is more free from vermin.
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 5. 5.
-
-Footnote 1526:
-
- Colum. v. 11.
-
- —Adultâ vitium propagine
- Altas maritat populos,
- Inutilesque falce ramos amputans
- Feliciores inserit.
- Horat. Epod. ii. 9, seq.
-
-Footnote 1527:
-
- Geop. iv. 4, seq.
-
-Footnote 1528:
-
- Geop. iv. 12.
-
------
-
-The husbandmen of antiquity were often somewhat fanciful in their
-practices. In order, when forming a nursery,[1529] to coax the young
-plants to grow, the beds to which they were transferred, were formed of
-a stratum of earth brought from the vineyard whence they also were
-taken. Another nicety was to take care, that they occupied precisely the
-same position with respect to the quarters of the heavens[1530] as when
-growing on the parent stock.[1531]
-
- “Besides to plant it as it was they mark
- The heaven’s four quarters on the tender bark,
- And to the north or south restore the side
- Which at their birth did heat or cold abide,
- So strong is custom; such effects can use
- In tender souls of pliant plants produce.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 1529:
-
- Virg. Georg. ii. 265, seq.
-
-Footnote 1530:
-
- Lord Bacon gives this experiment a place in his philosophy, observing,
- that “in all trees when they be removed (especially fruit-trees) care
- ought to be taken that the sides of the trees be coasted (north and
- south) and as they stood before.” Sylva Sylvarum, 471.
-
-Footnote 1531:
-
- Virg. Georg. ii. 270, seq.
-
------
-
-When desirous of extending the plantation in an old vineyard, instead of
-the methods above described, they had recourse to another, which was to
-bend down[1532] the vine branch, and bury it up to the point in the
-earth, where it would take root, and send forth a new vine, and in this
-way a long series of leafy arcades[1533] may sometimes have been formed.
-At the foot of their vines some cultivators were in the habit of burying
-three goats’ horns[1534] with their points downwards, and the other end
-appearing above the soil. These they regarded as so many receptacles for
-receiving and gradually conveying water to the roots, and, consequently,
-an active cause of the vines’ fertility.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1532:
-
- An analogous practice is observed in the pepper gardens of
- Sumatra:—“When the vines originally planted to any of the chinkareens
- (or props) are observed to fail or miss; instead of replacing them
- with new plants, they frequently conduct one of the shoots, or
- suckers, from a neighbouring vine, to the spot, through a trench made
- in the ground, and there suffer it to rise up anew, often at the
- distance of twelve or fourteen feet from the parent stock.” Marsden,
- History of Sumatra, p. 111.
-
-Footnote 1533:
-
- Virg. Georg. ii. 26. Serv. ad loc.
-
-Footnote 1534:
-
- Geop. iv. 2. The nymphs are said to have been the nurses of Bacchos,
- because water supplied moisture to the vine. The explanation of
- Athenæus is forced and cold. ii. 2.
-
------
-
-Respecting the seasons of planting,[1535] opinions were divided, some
-preferring the close of autumn, immediately after the fall of the leaf,
-when the sap had forsaken the branches, and descended to the roots;
-others chose, for the time of this operation, the early spring, just
-before the sap mounted; while a third class delayed it until the buds
-began to swell, and the tokens of spring were evident. To these
-varieties of practice Virgil makes allusion,—
-
- When winter frosts constrain the field with cold,
- The fainty root can take no steady hold;
- But when the golden spring reveals the year,
- And the white bird returns whom serpents fear,
- That season deem the best to plant thy vines;
- Next that, is when autumnal warmth declines,
- Ere heat is quite decayed, or cold begun,
- Or Capricorn admits the winter sun.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1535:
-
- Geop. v. 7, seq. Virg. Georg. ii. 323, sqq.
-
------
-
-But the above were not the only rules observed; for, besides the general
-march of the seasons, they took note of the phases of the moon,[1536]
-whose influence over vegetation all antiquity believed to be very
-powerful. Some planted during the four days immediately succeeding the
-birth of the new moon, while others extended their labours through the
-first two quarters. The act of pruning[1537] was performed when that
-planet was in its wane.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1536:
-
- Geop. v. 10.
-
-Footnote 1537:
-
- Geop. iii. 1.
-
------
-
-There were in Greece[1538] three remarkable varieties of the vine,
-created by difference in the mode of cultivation.[1539] The first
-consisted of plants always kept short, and supported on props, as in
-France; the second of tree-climbers, thence called Anadendrades; the
-third sort enjoyed neither of these advantages,[1540] but being grown
-chiefly in steep and stony places, spread their branches over the earth,
-as is still the fashion in Syra[1541] and other islands of the
-Archipelago.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1538:
-
- Cf. Theoph. Caus. Plant. iv. 3. 6.
-
-Footnote 1539:
-
- The low vines of Asia Minor are now pruned in a very particular
- manner. “As we approached Vourla the little valleys were all green
- with corn, or filled with naked vine-stocks in orderly arrangement,
- about a foot and a half high. The people were working, many in a row,
- turning the earth, or encircling the trunks with tar, to secure the
- buds from grubs and worms. The shoots which bear the fruit are cut
- down again in winter.” Chandler, i. 98.
-
-Footnote 1540:
-
- On the cultivation of the Corinth grape, see Chandler, ii. 339.
-
-Footnote 1541:
-
- Abbé Della Rocca, Traité Complet des Abeilles, i. 203. Lord Bacon, who
- had heard of this manner of cultivating the vine, observes, that in
- this state it was supposed to produce grapes of superior magnitude,
- and advises to extend the practice to hops, ivy, woodbine, &c. Sylva
- Sylvarum, 623.
-
------
-
-Vine-props[1542] appear to have commonly consisted of short reeds,
-which, accordingly, were extensively cultivated both in Hellas and its
-colonies of Northern Africa, where the musical cicada, whose excessive
-multiplication betokened a sickly year, bored through the rind, and laid
-its eggs in the hollow within.[1543] From an inconvenience attending the
-use of this kind of support came the rustic proverb, “The prop has
-defrauded the vine;”[1544] for these reeds sometimes took root, outgrew
-their clients, and monopolized the moisture of the soil.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1542:
-
- Geop. v. 22. 27. Reeds delight in sunny spots, and are nourished by
- the rain. They were cultivated for props, and, if thoroughly smoked,
- the insects called ἶπες were killed, which would otherwise breed in
- them, to the great injury of the vine, v. 53. Plin. xviii. 78. Cf.
- Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 1140. 983. Varro, i. 8. In the island of
- Pandataria the vineyard was filled with traps, to protect the grapes
- from the mice. Id. ib.
-
-Footnote 1543:
-
- Aristoph. Hist. Anim. v. 24. 3.
-
-Footnote 1544:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 1282. Cf. Thom. Magist. v. χάραξ. p. 911, seq.
- Blancard. cum not. Stieber. et Oudendorp. Ammon. v. χάραξ. p. 145,
- with the note of Valckenaer. Liban. Epist. 218. p. 104 seq. Wolf.
-
------
-
-In rich and level lands,[1545] particularly where the Aminian vine[1546]
-was cultivated, the props often rose to the height of five or six feet;
-but in hill-vineyards, where the soil was lighter and less nutritive,
-they were not suffered to exceed that of three feet. Where reeds were
-not procurable, ash-props[1547] were substituted, but they were always
-carefully barked, to prevent cantharides, and other insects hurtful to
-the vine, from making nests in them. Their price would appear to have
-been considerable, since we find a husbandman speaking of having laid
-out a hundred drachma in vine-props.[1548] To prevent their speedily
-decaying they were smeared a-top with pitch, and carefully, after the
-vintage, collected and laid up within doors.[1549]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1545:
-
- Geop. v. 27.
-
-Footnote 1546:
-
- Cf. Geop. iv. 1. Dioscor. v. 6. Virg. Georg. ii. 97. Servius, on the
- authority of Aristotle, relates that the Aminian vines were
- transplanted from Thessaly into Italy. Cf. Pier. ad loc.
-
-Footnote 1547:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 1116. Acharn. 1177. In the Æolian islands the
- vines are supported on a frame-work of poles and trees, over which
- they spread themselves with extraordinary luxuriance. Spallanzani, iv.
- 99.
-
-Footnote 1548:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Pac. 1262.
-
-Footnote 1549:
-
- Virg. Georg. 408, seq.
-
------
-
-A vineyard, consisting wholly of Anadendrades,[1550] most common in
-Attica, presented, in spring and summer, a very picturesque appearance,
-especially when situated on the sharp declivity of a hill.[1551] The
-trees designed for the support of the vines,[1552] planted in straight
-lines, and rising behind each other, terrace above terrace, at intervals
-of three or four and twenty feet, were beautiful in form and varied in
-feature, consisting generally of the black poplar, the ash, the maple,
-the elm,[1553] and probably, also, the platane, which is still employed
-for this purpose in Crete.[1554] Though kept low in some situations,
-where the soil was scanty, they were, in others, allowed to run to
-thirty or forty, and sometimes, as in Bithynia, even to sixty feet in
-height.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1550:
-
- Which were pruned in January (Geop. iii. 1), and esteemed the most
- useful, iv. 1. The solidest and hardest vines were thought to bear the
- least fruit. Theoph. Hist. Plant. v. 4. 1. Cf. Chandler, i. 98.
-
-Footnote 1551:
-
- Dem. in Nicostrat. § 5.
-
-Footnote 1552:
-
- “Vitem viduas ducit ad arbores.”
- Hor. Carm. iv. 5. 30.
-
-Footnote 1553:
-
- Virg. Georg. ii. 361, seq. An amictâ vitibus ulmo. Hor. Epist. i. 16.
- 3.
-
-Footnote 1554:
-
- Pashley, Travels, ii. 22. The oak is now used for the same purpose in
- Asia Minor. Chandler, i. 114.
-
------
-
-The face of the tree along which the vine climbed was cut down sheer
-like a wall, against which the purple or golden clusters hung thickly
-suspended, while the young branches crept along the boughs, or over
-bridges of reeds,[1555] uniting tree with tree, and, when touched with
-the rich tints of autumn, delighting the eye by an extraordinary variety
-of foliage. As the lower boughs of these noble trees were carefully
-lopped away, a series of lofty arches was created, beneath which the
-breezes could freely play, abundant currents of pure air being regarded
-as no less essential to the perfect maturing of the grape[1556] than
-constant sunshine. Sometimes the vine, in its ascent, was suffered to
-wind round the trunk of its supporter, which, however, by the most
-judicious husbandmen, was considered prejudicial, since the profusion of
-ligatures which it threw out in its passage upwards was thought to
-exhaust too much of its strength, to prevent which wooden wedges[1557]
-were here and there inserted between the vine stem and the tree. In
-trailing the branches, moreover, along the boughs, care was taken to
-keep them as much as possible on the upper side, that they might enjoy a
-greater amount of sunshine, and be the more exposed to be agitated by
-the winds.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1555:
-
- Gœttling ad Hesiod. Scut. Heracl. 298.
-
-Footnote 1556:
-
- Another means of augmenting the fertility of the vine is noticed by
- Lord Bacon, whose diligent study of antiquity was at least as
- remarkable as his superior intellect. “It is strange, which is
- observed by some of the ancients, that dust helpeth the fruitfulness
- of trees and of vines by name; insomuch as they cast dust upon them of
- purpose. It should seem that powdring when a shower cometh maketh a
- kind of soiling to the tree, being earth and water finely laid on. And
- they note that countries where the fields and waies are dusty bear the
- best vines.” Sylva Sylvarum, 666.
-
-Footnote 1557:
-
- Geop. iv. 1. 16.
-
------
-
-These Anadendrades,[1558] which were supposed to produce the best and
-most lasting wines, probably, as at present, ripened their produce much
-later than the other sorts of vines on account of the trees by which
-they were shaded. In modern Crete,[1559] where, however, they are never
-pruned, their grapes seldom ripen before November, and sometimes they
-furnish the bazaar of Khania with fresh supplies till Christmas. The
-same is the case also in Egypt.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1558:
-
- These vines were likewise called ἁμαμάξυες. Aristoph. Vesp. 325, et
- Schol. The rustics engaged in pruning them, feeling themselves secure
- in their lofty station, used to pour their rough raillery and
- invectives on the passers-by. Horace, Satir. i. 7. 29, seq.
-
------
-
-Occasionally, too, more especially in Cypros, the Anadendrades grew to
-an enormous size. At Populonium, in Etruria, there was a statue of
-Jupiter carved from a single vine; the pillars of the temple of Hera, at
-Metapontum, consisted of so many vines; and the whole staircase leading
-to the roof of the fane of Artemis, at Ephesos, was constructed with the
-timber of a single vine from Cypros. To render these things credible, we
-are informed, that, at Arambys, in Africa,[1560] there was a vine twelve
-feet in circumference, and modern travellers have found them of equal
-dimensions in other parts of the world.[1561] In France, for example,
-the celebrated Anne, Duc de Montmorenci, had a table made with a single
-slab of vinewood, which, two hundred years afterwards, Brotier[1562] saw
-preserved at the town of Ecouen.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1559:
-
- On the vines of this island cf. Meurs. Cret. c. 9. p. 103.
-
-Footnote 1560:
-
- Bochart. Geog. Sac. Pars Alt. l. i. c. 37. p. 712. Cf. Plin. Hist.
- Nat. v. i.
-
-Footnote 1561:
-
- Tozzeli, Viaggi. t. iv. p. 208.
-
-Footnote 1562:
-
- Not. ad Plin. xiv. i. 1.
-
------
-
-To return, however: the wide spaces between the trees were not in this
-class of vineyards allowed to remain entirely idle, having been
-sometimes sown[1563] with corn, or planted with beans, and gourds, and
-cucumbers, and lentils.[1564] The cabbage[1565] was carefully
-excluded,[1566] as an enemy to Dionysos. In other cases these intervals
-were given up to the cultivation of fruit-trees, such as the
-pomegranate, the apple, the quince, and the olive. The fig-tree was
-regarded as pernicious, though often planted in rows on the outside of
-the vineyard.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1563:
-
- Geop. iv. 1. v. 7, seq.
-
-Footnote 1564:
-
- Barley and other grain are still in modern times sown between the
- vines in Asia Minor. Chandler, i. 114. The same practice has been
- partially introduced into the Æolian islands. Spallanzani, iv. 100.
-
-Footnote 1565:
-
- Suid. v. κράμβη, t. i. p. 1518. b.—παρὰ ἀμπέλω οὐ φυέται Etym. Mag.
- 534. 47.
-
-Footnote 1566:
-
- So was the laurel. Theoph. Caus. Plant. ii. 18. 4.
-
------
-
-Respecting those vines which were cultivated without the aid of
-props,[1567] or trees, we possess little information, except that there
-were such. But, as they are still found in the country, it is probable,
-that the mode of dressing them now prevailing nearly resembles that of
-antiquity. They are generally, in Syria, planted along the steep sides
-of mountains, where they spread and rest upon the stones, and have their
-fruit early ripened by the heat reflected from the earth. Frequently,
-also, they are planted on more level ground, in which case, as soon as
-the grapes acquire any size, the husbandman passes through the vineyard
-with an armful of forked wooden props which he skilfully introduces
-beneath the branches and fixes firmly so as to keep the clusters from
-touching the mould. The reason for adopting this method is the furious
-winds which at certain seasons of the year prevail in many of the
-Grecian islands, preventing the growth of woods and prostrating the fig
-and every other fruit-tree to the earth. The spaces between the lines
-are turned up annually by a peculiar sort of plough[1568] drawn by oxen,
-in front of which a man advances, lifting up the vines and holding them
-aside while they pass. This destroys the weeds, and, at the same time,
-all the upper roots of the vine, which compels it to descend deeper into
-the earth, where it finds a cooler and more abundant nourishment. In
-this respect the practice of the Syrotes closely resembles that of their
-ancestors. Some husbandmen were careful, likewise, while weeding,[1569]
-to remove the larger stones, though they are often supposed, by
-preserving moisture, to do more good than harm.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1567:
-
- This creeping vine, cultivated _sine ridicis_, was common in Spain.
- Varro, i. 8.
-
-Footnote 1568:
-
- Della Rocca, Traité Complet sur les Abeilles, t. i. p. 203, sqq. Cf.
- Thiersch, Etat Actuel de la Grèce, t. i. p. 288. 296. Damm. Nov. Lex.
- Græc. Etym. 1122.
-
-Footnote 1569:
-
- Geop. v. 19.
-
------
-
-It is a peculiar feature in the character of the ancients that they
-loved to attribute to the inferior animals the first hints of various
-useful practices. Thus they maintained it was the ass that, by browsing
-on the extremities of the vine, which only made it bear the more
-luxuriantly, taught them the art of pruning as well perhaps as that of
-feeding on the tendrils and tender branches,[1570] which among them were
-esteemed a delicacy. To manifest their gratitude for this piece of
-instruction they erected at Nauplia,[1571] a marble statue in honour of
-this ill-used quadruped, who has seldom, I fear, from that day to this,
-been so well treated. The rules observed in pruning[1572] resembling
-those still in use, it is unnecessary to repeat them, though it may be
-worth mentioning, that the husbandman, who coveted an abundant vintage,
-was careful to lop his vines[1573] with his brows shaded by an ivy
-crown. They esteemed it a sign of a fruitful year when the fig-tree and
-the white vine put forth luxuriantly in spring,[1574] after which they
-had only to petition the gods against too much rain, or too much
-drought,[1575] and those terrible hailstorms which sometimes devastate
-whole districts. Against this calamity, however, they had a
-preservative, which was to bind an amulet in the shape of a thong of
-seal-hide or eagle’s wing, about one of the stocks,[1576] after which
-the whole vineyard was supposed to be secure from injury. The same
-effect was produced by striking a chalezite stone with a piece of iron
-on the approach of a storm, and by hanging up in the vineyard a picture
-of a bunch of grapes at the setting of the constellation of the
-Lyre.[1577] To repel the ascent of vermin along the trunk it was smeared
-with a thick coat of bitumen,[1578] imported from Cilicia, while to
-preserve the branches from wasps a little olive-oil was blown over
-them.[1579]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1570:
-
- Theoph. Caus. Plant. vi. 12. 9. After the vintage the goat and the
- camel, among the modern Asiatics, are sometimes let into the vineyard
- to browse upon the vine. Chandler, i. 163.
-
-Footnote 1571:
-
- Paus. ii. 38. 3. See, however, another interpretation of the passage
- in the Tale of a Tub, where the author gravely insists, that, by Ass,
- we are to understand a critic. Sect. iii. p. 96.
-
-Footnote 1572:
-
- Cf. Plat. De Rep. t. vi. p. 53. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 166. See an exact
- representation of the pruninghook in the hand of Vertumnus. Mus.
- Cortonens. pl. 36. This instrument was usually put into requisition
- about the vespertinal rising of Arcturus. Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 566,
- sqq.
-
-Footnote 1573:
-
- Geop. v. 24.
-
-Footnote 1574:
-
- Theoph. Caus. Plant. i. 20. 5.
-
-Footnote 1575:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 1117. Küst.
-
-Footnote 1576:
-
- Geop. i. 14. Cf. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 1109. Husbandmen were accustomed
- to nail the heads and feet of animals to the trunks of trees to
- prevent their being withered by the operation of the evil eye. Sch.
- Ran. 943.
-
-Footnote 1577:
-
- Geop. ii. 14.
-
-Footnote 1578:
-
- Theoph. De Lapid. § 49. Schneid. Cf. Sir John Hill, notes, p. 200. It
- was likewise obtained from Seleucia Pieria in Syria. Strab. vii. 5. t.
- ii. p. 106.
-
-Footnote 1579:
-
- Geop. iv. 10.
-
------
-
-While the grapes were growing, the ancients, following in the track of
-nature, supposed them to need shade, since the leaves at that time put
-forth most abundantly, to screen the young fruit from the scorching sun;
-but when they began to don their gold or purple hues, observing the
-foliage shrivel and shrink from about them, in order to admit the warm
-rays to penetrate and pervade the fruit they then stripped the branches
-and hastened the vintage,[1580] plucking moreover the clusters as they
-ripened, lest they should drop off and be lost. But this partial
-gathering of the grapes could only take place in their gardens, or where
-the vine was trained about the house; for in the regular vineyards the
-season of the vintage was regulated by law,[1581] as in Burgundy and the
-south of France, in order to protect the public against the pernicious
-frauds which would otherwise be practised. This, in Attica, usually
-coincided with the heliacal rising of the constellation Arcturus.[1582]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1580:
-
- Xenoph. Œcon. xix. 9.
-
-Footnote 1581:
-
- Plat. De Legg. t. viii. 106. Geop. v. 45.
-
-Footnote 1582:
-
- Cf. Geop. i. 9. 9.
-
------
-
-When the magistrate had declared that the season of the vintage[1583]
-was come, the servants of Bacchos hurried forth to the vine-clad hills,
-converting their labours into a pretext for superabundant mirth and
-revelry. The troops of vintagers, composed of youths and maidens, with
-crowns of ivy on their heads, and accompanied by rural performers on the
-flute or phorminx, moved forward with shout, and dance, and song, to the
-sacred enclosures of Dionysos, surrounded with plaited hedgerows, and
-blue streamlets.[1584] Here, where
-
- “——the showering grapes
- In Bacchanal profusion reel to earth
- Purple and gushing,”
-
-they at once commenced their joyous task. With sharp pruning-hooks[1585]
-they separated the luxuriant clusters, gold or purple, from the vine,
-and piling them in plaited baskets of osier or reed, bore them on their
-shoulders to the wine-press. In this operation, as I have said, both men
-and women joined; but the press was trodden by men only,[1586] who, half
-intoxicated by pleasure,[1587] and the fumes of the young wine, chanted
-loudly their ancient national lays in praise of Bacchos.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1583:
-
- Cf. Plut. Thes. § 22.
-
-Footnote 1584:
-
- Il. σ. 561, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1585:
-
- Scut. Heracl. 291, seq. On the modern modes of gathering the grapes,
- see Redding Hist. of Modern Wines, chap. ii. 26, et seq.
-
-Footnote 1586:
-
- The practice is still the same in the Levant:—“The vintage was now
- begun, the black grapes being spread on the ground in beds exposed to
- the sun to dry for raisins; while in another part, the juice was
- expressed for wine, a man with feet and legs bare, treading the fruit
- in a kind of cistern, with a hole or vent near the bottom, and a
- vessel beneath it to receive the liquor.” Chandler, ii. p. 2.
-
------
-
-The wine-press, which stood under cover, sometimes consisted of two
-upright, and many cross beams,[1588] which, descending with great weight
-upon the grapes squeezed forth all their juices, and these falling
-through a species of strainer,[1589] upon an inclined slab, were poured
-through a small channel formed for the purpose, into a broad open vessel
-communicating with the vat. Into the process of wine-making[1590] it is
-unnecessary to enter. It will be sufficient, perhaps, to say that, when
-made, it was laid up in skins or large earthen jars until required for
-use. The wines of modern Attica and the Morea[1591] are preserved from
-becoming acid by a large infusion of resin.[1592]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1587:
-
- Anacreon, Od. 52. See a representation of the whole process in the
- Mus. Cortonens, pl. 9, where the vintagers are clad in skins; and Cf.
- Zoëga, Bassi Rilievi, tav. 26.
-
-Footnote 1588:
-
- Antich. di Ercol. t. i. tav. 35, p. 187.
-
-Footnote 1589:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Pac. 527.
-
-Footnote 1590:
-
- For the making of the sweet wine (Βίβλινος οἶνος) which resembled,
- perhaps, our Constantia or Malaga, and enjoyed extraordinary favour
- among the ancients Hesiod gives particular directions. Opp. et Dies,
- 611, sqq. Colum. xii. 39. Plin. Hist. Nat. xiv. 8. Pallad. xi. 19.
-
-Footnote 1591:
-
- Sibth. in Walp. Mem. ii. 235. Chandler, ii. 251.
-
-Footnote 1592:
-
- A few drops of the oil which ran from olives without pressing were
- supposed by the ancients to render the wine stronger and more
- lasting.—Geop. vii. 12. 20. On the boiled wine, σίραιον. Cf. Sch.
- Aristoph. Vesp. 878.
-
------
-
-The sports,[1593] which took place during the vintage, were loud and
-frolicsome, and distinguished sometimes for their excessive licence.
-They brought forth a number of wine skins, filled tight, to the village
-green, and there smearing them liberally with oil the staggering rustics
-sought, each in his turn, to leap and stand upon one of them with his
-naked foot.[1594] The missing, slipping, and falling, the awkward figure
-they sometimes made upon the ground, the jokes, and shouts, and laughter
-of the bystanders, mingled with the twanging of rustic instruments, and
-the roar of Bacchanalian songs, constituted the charm of the rural
-Dionysia, out of which, through many changes and gradations, arose, as
-we have seen, the Greek drama. In order without shame to give the freer
-licence to their tongues, they sometimes covered their faces with masks,
-formed with the bark of trees, which, there can be no doubt, led to
-those afterwards employed in the theatre. Sometimes a sort of
-farce[1595] was acted, representing the search of the Athenians for the
-bodies of Icarios and Erygone. The former, according to tradition, was
-the person who taught the inhabitants of Attica the use of wine, with
-which on a certain occasion he regaled a number of shepherds. These
-demi-savages, observing their strength and their reason fail, imagined
-themselves to have been poisoned, and falling, in revenge, upon the
-donor, put him to death. His dog Mœra escaped, and leading Erygone to
-the spot where her father had been murdered, she immediately hung
-herself on the discovery of the corpse. Upon this they were all
-transported to the skies, and changed into so many constellations,
-namely Boötes,[1596] the Dog, and the Virgin, by whose brilliancy we are
-still rejoiced nightly. Soon afterwards the maidens of Attica were
-seized with madness and hung themselves in great numbers, upon which the
-oracle being consulted, commanded the Athenians to make search for the
-bodies of Icarios and Erygone. Being able to discover them nowhere on
-earth, they suspended ropes from the branches of lofty trees, by
-swinging to and fro on which they appeared to be conducting their search
-in the air; but many of these adventurous explorers receiving severe
-falls, they were afterwards contented with suspending to the ropes
-little images after their own likeness, which they sent hither and
-thither in the air as their substitutes.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1593:
-
- Virg. Georg. ii. 580, sqq. Hes. Scut. Heracl. 291, sqq. Cf. Schol.
- Theocrit. i. 48.
-
-Footnote 1594:
-
- See Book ii. chapter 3.
-
-Footnote 1595:
-
- Serv. ad Virg. Georg. ii. 389.
-
-Footnote 1596:
-
- Æl. de Anim. vi. 25.
-
------
-
-But all the produce of the vineyards was not appropriated to the making
-of wine, great quantities of grapes[1597] being preserved for the table,
-or converted into raisins.[1598] The latter were sometimes made by being
-carefully gathered after the full moon, and put out to dry in the sun,
-about ten o’clock in the morning, when all the dew was evaporated. For
-this purpose, there was in every vineyard, garden, and orchard, a place
-called Theilopedon,[1599] which would seem to have been a smooth raised
-terrace, where not grapes only, but myrtle-berries, and every other kind
-of fruit, were exposed to the sun on fine hurdles. Here, likewise, the
-berries of the Palma Christi[1600] were prepared for the making of
-castor oil. Another method was to twist the stem of the cluster[1601]
-and allow the grapes to dry on the vine. They were then laid up in
-vessels among vine leaves, dried also in the sun, covered close with a
-stopper, and deposited in a cold room free from smoke.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1597:
-
- Geop. iv. 15. Cato, 7. Colum. xii. 39. Pallad. 11. 22.
-
-Footnote 1598:
-
- In the warm climate of Asia Minor grapes were sometimes turned into
- raisins, on the stalk, by the sun.—Chandler, i. 77.
-
-Footnote 1599:
-
- Eustath. ad Odyss. η. p. 276. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 51. κρεμάθρα.
- fruit-baskets, 219.
-
-Footnote 1600:
-
- Dioscor. i. 38.
-
-Footnote 1601:
-
- Geop. v. 52. This we find is still the practice in the islands of the
- Archipelago, for the purpose of making sweet wine. M. l’ Abbé della
- Rocca, who mentions it, enumerates at the same time the most delicious
- sorts of grapes now cultivated in Greece—“On peut juger si les vins y
- sont exquis, et si les anciens eurent raison d’appeller Naxie l’île de
- Bacchus. Les raisins y sont monstrueux, et il arrive souvent que dans
- un repas, on n’en sert qu’un seul pour le fruit; mais aussi
- couvre-t-il toute la profondeur d’un grand bassin: les grains en sont
- gros comme nos damas noirs. Il y a dans les îles des raisins de plus
- de vingt sortes: les muscats de Ténédos et de Samos l’emportent sur
- tous les autres; ceux de Ténédos sont plus ambrés; ceux de Samos, plus
- délicats. Les Sentorinois, pour donner une saveur plus exquise à leurs
- raisins, leur tordent la queue lorsqu’ils commencent à mûrir; après
- quelques jours d’un soleil ardent, les raisins deviennent à demi
- flétris, ce qui fait un vin dont ceux de la Cieutat et de
- Saint-Laurent n’approchent pas. Les autres sortes de raisins sont
- _l’aïdhoni_, petit raisin blanc qu’on mange vers la mi-juillet; le
- _samia,_ gros raisin blanc qu’on fait sécher; le siriqui, ainsi nommé
- parce qu’il a le goût de la cerise; _l’ætonychi_, qui a la figure de
- l’ongle d’un aigle, et qui est très savoureux; le malvoisie, le muscat
- violet, le corinthe, et plusieurs autres dont les noms me sont
- échappés.” Traité sur les Abeilles, t. i. p. 6, seq. Speaking of the
- prodigious productiveness of vines, Columella mentions one which bore
- upwards of two thousand clusters, De Re Rust. iii. 3. A vine producing
- a fifth of this quantity has been thought extraordinary in modern
- Egypt: “Il n’est pas croyable combien rapporte un seul pied de vigne.
- Il y en a un dans la maison Consulaire de France, qui a porté 436
- grosses grappes de raisin, et qui en donne ordinairement 300.”—De
- Maillet, Description de l’Egypte, p. 17.* In the Grecian Archipelago,
- however, the vine has been known to yield still more abundantly than
- in Egypt: “On a compté pendant trois ans consécutifs, cent
- trente-quatre grappes de raisin sur une souche; et sur un autre cep de
- vigne planté dans un terrain très-gras, on a compté jusqu’à quatre
- cent quatre-vingts grappes; et l’intendant de l’évêché de notre île
- m’a plus d’une fois assuré qu’on avoit fait soixante-quinze bouteilles
- de vin, avec le raisin d’un seul cep.” Della Rocca, t. i. p. 65.
-
------
-
-To preserve the grapes fresh some cut off with a sharp pruninghook the
-clusters separately, others the branches on which they grew, after
-which, dipping the stem into pitch and removing the damaged grapes with
-a pair of scissors, they spread them in cool and shady rooms, on layers
-of pulse-halm, or hay, or straw.[1602] The halm of lentils was usually
-preferred, because it is hard and dry, and repels mice. On other
-occasions, the branches were kept suspended, having sometimes been
-previously dipped in sweet wine. Grapes were likewise preserved in
-pitched coffers, immersed in dry saw-dust of the pitch tree, or the
-silver fir, or the black poplar, or even in millet flour. Others plunged
-the bunches in boiling sea-water, or if this were not at hand, into a
-preparation of wine, salt, and water, and then laid them up in barley
-straw. Others boiled the ashes of the fig-tree, or the vine, with which
-they sprinkled the bunches. Others preserved grapes by suspending them
-in granaries, where the grain beneath was occasionally moved, for the
-dust rising from the corn settled on the outside of the clusters, and
-protected them from the air. Another method was to boil rain-water to a
-third, and then, after cooling it in the open air, and pouring it into a
-pitched vessel, to fill it with clusters perfectly cleansed. The vessel
-was then covered, luted with gypsum, and laid by in a cold place. The
-grapes in this way remained quite fresh, and the water itself acquiring
-a vinous taste was administered to sick persons in lieu of wine.
-Occasionally, also, grapes as well as apples were kept in honey.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1602:
-
- Geop. iv. 15. 4.
-
------
-
-The most extraordinary, and perhaps the most effectual
-contrivance,[1603] however, was to dig near the vine a pit three feet
-deep, the bottom of which was covered with a layer of sand. A few short
-stakes were then fixed upright in it, and to these a number of vine
-branches laden with clusters were bent down and made fast. The whole was
-then closely roofed over so as completely to keep out the rain, and in
-this way the grapes would remain fresh till spring.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1603:
-
- Geop. iv. 11. Pallad. xii. 12.
-
------
-
-The labours of the vintage being concluded, the husbandman next turned
-his attention to olive gathering and the making of oil. This, in Greece,
-was a matter of great importance. The olives, therefore,[1604] for all
-the better sorts of oil, were picked by hand, and not, as in Italy,
-suffered to fall. When as many were gathered as could conveniently be
-pressed during the following night and day, they were spread loosely on
-fine hurdles, and not heaped up lest they should heat and lose the
-delicacy of their flavour. They were, likewise, cleansed carefully from
-leaves and every particle of wood, these substances, it was supposed,
-impairing the quality and durability of the oil. Towards evening a
-little salt was sprinkled over the olives, which were then put into a
-clean mill,[1605] and so arranged that they could be bruised without
-crushing the stones, from the juice of which the oil contracted a bad
-taste. Having been sufficiently bruised, they were conveyed in small
-vessels to the press, where they were covered with hurdles of green
-willows, upon which, at first, was placed a moderate weight,—for that
-which flows from slight pressure is the sweetest and purest oil, on
-which account it was drawn off in clean leaden vessels,[1606] and
-preserved apart. Greater weight was then added, and the mass having been
-well writhen, the second runnings were laid up in separate vessels. The
-next step was to cause the precipitation of the lees, which was effected
-by mingling with the crude oil a little salt and nitre. It was then
-stirred with a piece of olive-wood, and left to settle, when the amurca
-or watery part sank to the bottom. The pure oil was then skimmed off
-with a shell, and laid up in glass vases, this substance having been
-preferred on account of its cold nature. In default of these,
-pickle-jars, glazed with gypsum, were used, which were deposited in cool
-cellars facing the north.[1607]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1604:
-
- Geop. ix. 19. 2.
-
-Footnote 1605:
-
- The fruit of the terebinth was ground, like the olive, in a mill, for
- the making of oil. The kernels were used in feeding pigs, or for fuel.
- Geop. ix. 18.
-
-Footnote 1606:
-
- Cf. Cato, De Re Rust. 66. This clear pure oil, sometimes rendered
- odoriferous by perfumes, (Il. ψ. 186,) was chiefly employed in
- lubricating the body. Thus we find the virgin in Hesiod anointing her
- limbs with olive-oil to defend herself from the winter’s cold. Opp. et
- Dies, 519, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1607:
-
- Vitruv. vi. 9.
-
------
-
-The Greeks had a variety of other oils besides that procured from the
-olive,[1608] as walnut-oil, oil of terebinth, oil of sesamum, oil of
-violets, oil of almonds, oil of Palma Christi, or castor-oil, oil of
-saffron, oil of Cnidian laurel, oil of datura, oil of lentisk, oil of
-mastic, oil of myrtle, and oil of mustard. They had, likewise,[1609] the
-green and wild-olive oil, and the double-refined oil of Sicyon, together
-with imitations of the Spanish and Italian oils.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1608:
-
- Geop. ix. 18.
-
-Footnote 1609:
-
- Geop. ix. 19, seq. iii. 13. Dioscor. i. 140.
-
------
-
-As fruit of all kinds was in great request among the Greeks, they had
-recourse to numerous contrivances[1610] for ensuring an unfailing supply
-throughout the year. At many of these our gardeners may, perhaps, smile,
-but they were, nevertheless, most of them ingenious, and, probably,
-effectual, though the fruit thus preserved may have been dear when
-brought to market. Into the details of all their methods it will be
-unnecessary to enter: the following were the principal and most curious.
-Walnuts, chestnuts, filberts, &c., were gathered and kept in the
-ordinary way. They understood the art of blanching almonds, which were
-afterwards dried in the sun. Medlars, service-berries, winter-apples,
-and the like, having been gathered carefully, were simply laid up in
-straw, whether on the loft-floor or in baskets. This, likewise, was
-sometimes the case with quinces, which, together with apples and pears,
-were, on other occasions, deposited in dry fig-leaves. For these, in the
-case of pears and apples, walnut-leaves were often substituted,
-sometimes piled under and over them in heaps, at other times wrapped and
-tied about the fruit, the hues and odours of which they were supposed
-greatly to improve.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1610:
-
- Geop. x. 10–70. Cf. Mazois, Pal. de Scaurus, p. 182, seq.
-
------
-
-Citrons,[1611] pomegranates,[1612] apples, quinces, and pears, were
-preserved in heaps of sand, grapestones, oak, poplar, deal, or cedar
-sawdust, sometimes sprinkled with vinegar, chopped straw, wheat, or
-barley, or the seeds of plants, all of which sufficed equally to exclude
-the external air. Another method with apples[1613] was to lay them up
-surrounded with sea-weed in unbaked jars, which were then deposited in
-an upper room free from smoke and all bad smells. When sea-weed was not
-procurable they put each apple into a small separate jar closely covered
-up and luted. These apple-jars were often lined with a coating of wax.
-Figs were, in like manner, preserved green[1614] by being enclosed in so
-many small gourds. Citrons and pomegranates were often suffered to
-remain throughout the winter on the tree, defended from wet and wind by
-being capped with little fictile vases bound tightly to the branches to
-keep them steady. Others enclosed these fruits, as well as apples, in a
-thick coating of gypsum, preventing their falling off by binding the
-stem to the branches with packthread. Nor was it unusual, even when
-gathered, to envelope apples, quinces, and citrons, in a covering of the
-same material, or potter’s clay, or argillaceous earth, mixed with hair,
-sometimes interposing between the fruit and this crust a layer of
-fig-leaves, after which they were dried in the sun. When at the end,
-perhaps, of a whole year the above crust was broken and removed the
-fruit came forth perfect as when plucked from the bough. It is possible,
-therefore, that, in a similar manner, mangoes, mangusteens, and other
-frail and delicate fruit of the tropics, might be brought fresh to
-Europe, and that, too, in such abundance as to make them accessible to
-most persons. To render pears and pomegranates durable, their stems were
-dipped in pitch, after which they were hung up. In the case of the
-latter the fruit itself was sometimes thus dipped; and, at other times,
-immersed in hot sea-water, after which it was dried in the sun. One mode
-of preserving figs was to plunge them in honey so as neither to touch
-each other, nor the vessel in which they were contained; another, to
-cover a pile of them with an inverted vase of glass, or other pellucid
-substance, closely luted to the slab on which it stood. Cherries were
-gathered before sunrise, and put, with summer savory above and below,
-into a jar, or the hollow of a reed, which was then filled with sweet
-vinegar, and closely covered. Mulberries were preserved in their own
-juice, apples and quinces in pitched coffers, wrapped in clean locks of
-wool, pears by being placed in salt[1615] for five days, and afterwards
-dried in the sun, as were also figs, which were strung by the stalks to
-a piece of cord or willow twig, like so many hanks of onions[1616] as
-they are sold in modern times. Elsewhere they were preserved, as dates
-in Egypt, by being pressed together in square masses, like bricks.[1617]
-Damascenes were kept in must or sweet wine, as were also pears, adding
-sometimes a little salt and jujubes, with leaves, above and below. The
-same course was pursued with apples and quinces, which communicated to
-the liquor additional durability and the most exquisite fragrance.
-Quinces, whose sharp effluvia prevented their being placed with other
-fruit, were often put into closely-covered jars, and kept floating in
-wine to which they imparted a delicious perfume. The same custom was
-observed with respect to figs, which were cut off on the bearing branch
-a little before they were ripe, and hung, so as not to touch each other,
-in a square earthen jar. Upon the same principle apples were preserved
-in jars hermetically sealed, which, for the sake of coolness, were
-plunged in cisterns or deep wells.[1618]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1611:
-
- Palladius, iv. 10.
-
-Footnote 1612:
-
- We find mention in modern times of a species of pomegranate, the
- kernels of which are without stones, peculiar apparently to the island
- of Scio. “It is usual to bring them to table, in a plate, sprinkled
- with rose-water.” Chandler, i. 58.
-
-Footnote 1613:
-
- Cf. Philost. Icon. t. 31. p. 809. ii. 2. p. 812.
-
-Footnote 1614:
-
- Ficus virides servari possunt vel in melle ordinatæ, ne se invicem
- tangant, vel singulæ intra viridem cucurbitam clausæ, locis unicuique
- cavatis, et item tessera, quæ secatur, inclusis, suspensa ea
- cucurbita, ubi non sit ignis vel fumus. Pallad. iv. 10.
-
-Footnote 1615:
-
- Cato, 7. Varro. i. 59. Colum. xii. 14.
-
-Footnote 1616:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 755. Sibth. in Walp. Mem. ii. 61.
-
-Footnote 1617:
-
- Phot. ap. Brunckh. ad Aristoph. Pac. 574.
-
-Footnote 1618:
-
- Pallad. iii. 25.
-
------
-
-It may, perhaps, be worth while to mention, in passing, that, like
-ourselves, the ancients possessed the art of extracting perry and
-cider[1619] from their pears and apples; and from pomegranates a species
-of wine which is said to have been of an extremely delicate flavour. The
-Egyptians, also, made wine from the fruit of the lotos.[1620]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1619:
-
- Pallad. iii. 25. Colum. xii. 45.
-
-Footnote 1620:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. iv. 3. i.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
- STUDIES OF THE FARMER.
-
-
-In other branches of rural economy the country gentlemen of Attica
-exhibited no less enthusiasm or skill. Indeed, throughout Greece, there
-prevailed a similar taste. Every one was eager to instruct and be
-instructed; and so great in consequence was the demand for treatises on
-husbandry, theoretical and practical, that numerous writers, the names
-of fifty of whom are preserved by Varro,[1621] made it the object of
-their study. Others without committing the result of their experience to
-writing, devoted themselves wholly to its practical improvement. They
-purchased waste or ill-cultivated lands, and, by investigating the
-nature of the soil, skilfully adapting their crops to it, manuring,
-irrigating, and draining, converted a comparative desert into a
-productive estate.[1622] We can possibly, as Dr. Johnson insists,
-improve very little our knowledge of agriculture by erudite researches
-into the methods of the ancients; though Milton was of opinion, that
-even here some useful hints might be obtained. In describing, however,
-what the Greeks did, I am not pretending to enlighten the present age,
-but to enable it to enjoy its superiority by instituting a comparison
-with the ruder practices of antiquity.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1621:
-
- De Re Rusticâ, i. 1. Cf. Colum. i. 1.
-
-Footnote 1622:
-
- Xenoph. Œconom. xx. 22, sqq.
-
------
-
-Already in those times the men of experience and routine,[1623] had
-begun to vent their sneers against philosophers for their profound
-researches into the nature of soils,[1624] in which, however, they by no
-means designed to engage the husbandman, but only to present him, in
-brief and intelligible maxims, with the fruit of their labours.
-Nevertheless the practical husbandman went to work a shorter way. He
-observed his neighbour’s grounds,[1625] saw what throve in this soil,
-what in the other, what was bettered by irrigation, what in this respect
-might safely be left to the care of Heaven; and thus, in a brief space,
-acquired a rough theory wherewith to commence operations. An
-agriculturist, the Athenians thought, required no recondite erudition,
-though to his complete success the exercise of much good sense and
-careful observation was necessary. Every man would, doubtless, know in
-what seasons of the year he must plough and sow and reap, that lands
-exhausted by cultivation must be suffered to lie fallow, that change of
-crops is beneficial to the soil, and so on. But the great art consists
-in nicely adapting each operation to the varying march of the seasons,
-in converting accidents to use, in rendering the winds, the showers, the
-sunshine, subservient to your purposes, in mastering the signs of the
-weather, and guarding as far as possible against the injuries sustained
-from storms of rain or hail.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1623:
-
- Cf. Plat. De Legg. t. vii. p. 111. t. viii. p. 103.
-
-Footnote 1624:
-
- Xenoph. Œconom. xvi. 1, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1625:
-
- The sight of a rich and thriving neighbour operated likewise as a spur
- to his industry:—
-
- Εἰς ἕτερον γάρ τίς τε ἰδὼν ἔργοιο χατίζων
- Πλούσιον ὅς σπεύδει μέν ἀρόμμεναι ἠδὲ φυτεύειν,
- Οἶκον τ᾽ εὖ θέσθαι· ζηλοῖ δὲ τε γείτονα γείτων
- Εἰς ἄφενον σπεύδοντ᾽ ἀγαθὴ δ᾽
- Ἔρις ἥδε βροτοῖσι.
- Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 21, sqq.
-
------
-
-There was in circulation among the Greeks a small body of precepts,
-addressed more especially to husbandmen, designed to promote the real
-object of civilisation. Quaint, no doubt, and ineffably commonplace,
-they will now appear, but they served, nevertheless, in early and rude
-times, to soften the manners and regulate the conduct of the rustic
-Hellenes. Who first began to collect and preserve them is, of course,
-unknown; they are thickly sprinkled through the works of Hesiod,[1626]
-and impart to them an air of moral dignity which relieves the monotony
-that would otherwise result from a mere string of agricultural maxims.
-The chief aim of the poet seems to be, to promote peace and good
-neighbourhood, to multiply among the inhabitants of the fields occasions
-of joining the “rough right hand,”[1627] to apply the sharp spur to
-industry, and thus to augment the stores, and, along with them, the
-contentment, of his native land. Be industrious, exclaims the poet, for
-famine is the companion of the idle. Labour confers fertility on flocks
-and herds, and is the parent of opulence. He who toils is beloved by
-gods[1628] and men, while the idle hand is the object of their aversion.
-The slothful man envies the prosperity of his neighbour; but glory is
-the reward of virtue. Prudence heaps up that which profligacy
-dissipates. Be hospitable to the stranger, for he who repels the
-suppliant from his door is no less guilty than the adulterer, than the
-despoiler of the orphan, or the wretch who blasphemes his aged parent on
-the brink of the grave: of such men the end is miserable, when Zeus
-rains down vengeance upon them in recompense for their evil actions. Be
-mindful that thou offer up victims to the gods with pure hands and holy
-thoughts,—to pour libations in their temples, adorn their altars, and
-render them propitious to thee in all things. When about to ascend thy
-couch to enjoy sweet sleep, and when the sacred light of the day-spring
-first appears, omit not to demand of heaven a pure heart and a cheerful
-mind, with the means of extending thy possessions, and protection from
-loss. When thou makest a feast, invite thy friends and thy neighbours,
-and in times of trouble they will run to thy assistance half-clad, while
-thy relations will tarry to buckle on their girdles. Borrow of thy
-neighbour, but, in repaying him, exceed rather than fall short of what
-is his due. Rise betimes. Every little makes a mickle. Store is no sore.
-Housed corn breaks no sleep. Drink largely the top and the bottom of the
-jar; be sparing of the middle:[1629] it is niggardly to stint your
-friends when the wine runs low. Do unto others as they do unto
-you.—These seeds of morality are simple, as I have said, and far from
-recondite; but they produced the warriors of Marathon and Platæa, and
-preserved for ages the freedom and the independence of Greece.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1626:
-
- Opp. et Dies, 298, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1627:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Pac. 190.
-
-Footnote 1628:
-
- Καὶ τ᾽ ἐργαζόμενος πολὺ φίλτερος ἀθανάτοισιν.
- Ἔσσεαι ἠδὲ βροτοῖς· μάλα γὰρ στυγέουσιν ἀεργούς.
- Opp. et Dies. 309, seq.
-
-Footnote 1629:
-
- Cf. Plut. Sympos. vii. 3.
-
------
-
-The other branches of an Hellenic farmer’s studies comprehended
-something like the elements of natural philosophy,—the influence of the
-sun and moon, the rising and setting of the stars, the motion of the
-winds, the generation and effects of dews, clouds, meteors, showers and
-tempests, the origin of springs and fountains, and the migrations and
-habits of birds and other animals. In addition to these things, it was
-necessary that he should be acquainted with certain practices, prevalent
-from time immemorial in his country, and, probably, deriving their
-origin from ages beyond the utmost reach of tradition. The source of
-these we usually denominate superstition, though it would, perhaps, be
-more proper to regard them as the offspring of that lively and plastic
-fancy which gave birth to poetry and art, and inclined its possessors to
-create a sort of minor religion, based on a praiseworthy principle, but
-developing itself chiefly in observances almost always minute and
-trifling, and sometimes ridiculous. To describe all these at length
-would be beside my present purpose, which only requires that I mention
-by the way the more remarkable of those connected especially with
-agriculture.
-
-The knowledge of soil was called into play both in purchasing estates
-and in appropriating their several parts to different kinds of culture.
-According to their notions, which appear to have been founded on long
-experience, and in most points, I believe, agree with those which still
-prevail, a rich black mould, deep, friable, and porous,[1630] which
-would resist equally the effects of rain and drought, was, for all
-purposes, the best. Next to this they esteemed a yellow alluvial soil,
-and that sweet warm ground which best suited vines, corn, and trees. The
-red earth, also, they highly valued, except for timber.
-
-Their rules for detecting the character and qualities of the soil appear
-to have been judicious. Good land, they thought, might be known even
-from its appearance, since in drought it cracks not too much, and during
-heavy and continued showers becomes not miry, but suffers all the rain
-to sink into its bosom. That earth they considered inferior which in
-cold weather becomes baked, and is covered on the surface by a
-shell-like incrustation. They judged, likewise, of the virtue of the
-soil by the luxuriant or stunted character of its natural
-productions:[1631] thus they augured favourably of those tracts of
-country which were covered by vast and lofty timber-trees, while such as
-produced only a dwarfed vegetation, consisting of meagre bushes,
-scattered thickets, and hungry grass, they reckoned almost worthless.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1630:
-
- Geop. ii. 9. In these rich loams, particularly on the banks of the
- Stymphalian and Copaic lakes, wheat has been known to yield a return
- of fifty-fold. Thiersch, Etat Act. de la Grèce. t. ii. p. 17.
-
- Other spots, again, return thirty-fold. Sibth. in Walp. Mem. i. 60.
-
-Footnote 1631:
-
- The pitch-pine indicated a light and hungry soil; the cypress, a
- clayey soil. Philost. Icon. ii. 9. p. 775.
-
------
-
-Not content with the testimony of the eye, some husbandmen were
-accustomed to consult both the smell and the taste; for, digging a pit
-of some depth, they took thence a small quantity of earth, from the
-odour of which they drew an opinion favourable or otherwise. But to
-render surety doubly sure, they then threw it into a vase, and poured on
-it a quantity of potable water, which they afterwards tasted, inferring
-from the flavour the fertility or barrenness of the soil. This was the
-experiment most relied on; though many considered that soil sweet which
-produced the basket-rush, the reed, the lotos, and the bramble. On some
-occasions they employed another method, which was, to make a small
-excavation, and then, throwing back the earth into the opening whence it
-had been drawn, to observe whether or not it filled the whole
-cavity:[1632] if it did so, or left a surplus, the soil was judged to be
-excellent; if not, they regarded it as of little value. Soils possessing
-saline qualities were shunned by the ancients, who carefully avoided
-mingling salt with their manure, though lands of this description were
-rightly thought to be well adapted to the cultivation of
-palm-trees,[1633] which they produce in the greatest perfection,[1634]
-as in Phœnicia, Egypt, and the country round Babylon.[1635]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1632:
-
- Geop. ii. 11.
-
-Footnote 1633:
-
- The Grecian husbandman, therefore, when planting palm-trees in any
- other than a sandy soil, sprinkled salt on the earth immediately
- around. Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 6. 2.
-
-Footnote 1634:
-
- Geop. ii. 10.
-
-Footnote 1635:
-
- Xenoph. Anab. ii. 3. 16. The doom-palm, generally, I believe, supposed
- to be peculiar to Upper Egypt and the countries beyond the cataract,
- was anciently cultivated also in Crete. Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 6. 3.
-
------
-
-Another art in which the condition of the husbandman required him to be
-well versed was that of discovering the signs of latent springs,[1636]
-the existence of which it was necessary to ascertain before laying the
-foundation of a new farm. The investigation was complicated, and carried
-on in a variety of ways. First, and most obvious, was the inference
-drawn from plants and the nature of the soil itself; for those grounds,
-they thought, were intersected below by veins of water which bore upon
-their surface certain tribes of grasses and herbs and bushes, as the
-couch-grass, the broad-leaved plantain, the heliotrope, the red-grass,
-the agnus-castus, the bramble, the horse-tail, or shave-grass, ivy,
-bush-calamint, soft and slender reeds,[1637] maiden-hair, the melilot,
-ditch-dock, cinquefoil, or five leaf-grass, broad-leaved bloodwort, the
-rush, nightshade, mil-foil, colt’s-foot or foal’s-foot, trefoil or
-pond-weed, and the black thistle. Spring-heads were always supposed to
-lurk beneath fat and black loam, as, likewise, in a stony soil,
-especially where the rocks are dark and of a ferruginous colour. But in
-argillaceous districts, particularly where potter’s-clay abounds, or
-where there are many pebbles and pumice-stones,[1638] they are of rare
-occurrence.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1636:
-
- Geop. ii. 4, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1637:
-
- Philost. Icon. ii. 9. p. 775.
-
-Footnote 1638:
-
- Spallanzani, in his scientific Travels in the Two Sicilies, describes
- and explains the cause of the rarity of springs in volcanic countries.
- In some districts among the roots of Ætna the female peasants are
- compelled to travel ten miles, at certain seasons of the year, in
- search of water, a jar of which costs, consequently, almost a day’s
- journey. vol. i. p. 299, sqq. In another part of the same work he
- investigates the origin of springs in the Æolian isles, which he
- illustrates by the example of Stromboli. iv. 128. In this island there
- are two fountains, one of slightly tepid water, at the foot of the
- mountain, the other on its slope. “Je recontrai,” observes Monsieur
- Dolomieu, “à moitié hauteur une source d’eau froide, douce, légère et
- très bonne à boire, qui ne tarit jamais et qui est l’unique ressourse
- des habitans lorsque leurs cîternes sont épuisées et lorsque les
- chaleurs ont desséché une seconde source qui est au pied de la
- montagne ce qui arrive tous les étés.” He then adds with reason:
- “Cette petite fontaine dans ce lieu très élevé au milieu des cendres
- volcaniques, est très remarquable, elle ne peut avoir son réservoir
- que dans une pointe de montagne isolée, toute de sable et de pierres
- poreuses, matières qui ne peuvent point retenir l’eau, puisqu’elles
- sont perméables à la fumée.” Voyage aux Iles de Lipari, t. i. p. 120.
- He then endeavours to account for its existence by evaporation. In the
- island of Saline, among the same Æolian group, there is another
- never-failing spring, which, as some years no rain falls in these
- islands during the space of nine months, has greatly perplexed the
- theories of naturalists. Spallanzani conceives, however, that the
- phenomenon may be explained in the usual way: “It appears to me,” he
- says, “extremely probable, that in the internal parts of an island
- which, like this, is the work of fire, there may be immense caverns
- that may be filled with water by the rains; and that in some of these
- which are placed above the spring, the water may always continue at
- nearly the same height.” Travels in the Two Sicilies, vol. iv. p. 136.
-
------
-
-To the above indications they were in most cases careful to add others.
-Ascending ere sunrise to a higher level than the spot under examination,
-they observed by the first rays and before the light thickened, whether
-they could detect the presence of any exhalations, which were held
-unerringly to indicate the presence of springs below. Sometimes
-inquisition was made during the bright and clear noon, when the
-subterraneous retreats of the Naiads were supposed in summer to be
-betrayed by cloudlets of thin silvery vapour, and in the winter season
-by curling threads of steam. In this way the natives of southern Africa
-discover the existence of hidden fountains in the desert.[1639] Swarms
-of gnats flitting hither and thither, or whirling round and ascending in
-a column, were regarded as another sign.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1639:
-
- Le Vaillant, t. viii. p. 162. Even in the southern provinces of
- France, the discovery of hidden springs is an art of no mean
- importance; and the persons who possess it are regarded as public
- benefactors. Thus, as I learn from my friend M. Louis Froment, of the
- department of the Lot, M. Paramelle, a curé having a living in that
- part of the country, is held in high estimation on account of the
- power he possesses of discovering the lurking retreats of
- spring-heads. He is able, from a certain distance, and without the
- least hesitation, to point out the source of living water, determine
- the depth at which it is to be found, say, without ever falling into
- error, what is the quantity and what the quality of the water. Without
- seeking to penetrate the plan, of which he keeps the secret, his
- countrymen avail themselves of the advantages offered to them; and the
- inhabitants of one village, situated on a calcareous tableland, have
- discovered, by the assistance of M. Paramelle, a source in their
- market-place, whilst before they were compelled to seek water at a
- distance of five miles.
-
------
-
-When not entirely satisfied by any of the above means, they had recourse
-to the following experiment:[1640] sinking a pit to the depth of about
-four feet and a half, they took a hemispherical pan or lead basin, and
-having anointed it with oil, and fastened with wax a long flake of wool
-to the bottom, placed it inverted in the pit. It was then covered with
-earth about a foot deep, and left undisturbed during a whole night. On
-its being taken forth in the morning, if the inside of the vessel were
-covered thickly with globules, and the wool were dripping wet, it was
-concluded there were springs beneath, the depth of which they calculated
-from the scantiness or profusion of the moisture. A similar trial was
-made with a sponge covered with reeds.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1640:
-
- Geop. ii. 4.
-
------
-
-Since most streams and rivers take their rise in lofty table-lands or
-mountains, which by the ancients were supposed to be richer in springs
-in proportion to the number of their peaks, it would seem to follow,
-that scarcely any country in Europe should be better supplied with water
-than Greece. Experience, however, shows, that this in modern times is
-not the fact, several rivers supposed to have been of great volume in
-antiquity, having now dwindled into mere brooks, and innumerable
-streamlets and fountains become altogether dry; on which account the
-credit of Greek writers is often impugned, it being supposed that the
-natural characteristics of the country must necessarily be invariable.
-But this is an error. For the existence of springs and rivulets depends
-less perhaps on the presence of mountains than on the prevalence of
-forests, as Democritos[1641] long ago observed. Now, from a variety of
-causes, still in active operation, the ridges and hills and lower
-eminences of modern Greece have been almost completely denuded of trees,
-along with which have necessarily disappeared the well-springs, and
-runnels, and cascades, and rills, and mountain tarns, which anciently
-shed beauty and fertility over the face of Hellas, whose highlands were
-once so densely clad with woods[1642] that the peasants requiring a
-short cut from one valley to another, were compelled to clear themselves
-a pathway with the axe.[1643] To restore to Greece, therefore, its
-waters, and the beauty and riches depending on them, the mountains must
-be again forested, and severe restraint put on the wantonness of those
-vagrant shepherds who constantly expose vast woods to the risk of entire
-destruction for the sake of procuring more delicate grass for their
-flocks.[1644]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1641:
-
- Geop. ii. 6.
-
-Footnote 1642:
-
- Cf. Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 233, where he speaks of swarms of wild bees
- on the slopes of the mountains.
-
- In another passage this poet describes the ravages and devastation of
- a hurricane amid the fountain forests:
-
- Μῆνα δὲ Ληναιῶνα, κάκ᾽ ἤματα, βουδόρα πάντα,
- τοῦτον ἀλεύασθαι, καὶ πηγάδας, αἵτ ἐπὶ γαῖαν
- πνεύσαντος Βορέαο δυσηλεγέες τελέθουσιν,
- ὅστε διὰ Θρῄκης ἱπποτρόφου ἐυρέϊ πόντῳ
- ἐμπνεύσας ὤρινε· μέμυκε δὲ γαῖα καὶ ὕλη.
- πολλὰς δὲ δρῦς ὑψικόμους ἐλάτας τε παχείας
- οὔρεος ἐν βήσσῃς πιλνᾷ χθονὶ πουλυβοτείρῃ
- ἐμπίπτων, καὶ πᾶσα βοᾷ τότε νήριτος ὕλη.
- Opp. et Dies, 504, sqq.
-
- The pine and pitch trees, it is related by Theophrastus, were often
- uprooted by the winds in Arcadia. Hist. Plant. iii. 6. 4.
-
-Footnote 1643:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii. 3. 7. In all countries, small and great, the
- progress of civilisation has been inimical to forests. Thus in the
- little island of Stromboli, containing about a thousand inhabitants,
- attempts were made towards the end of the eighteenth century to
- enlarge the cultivable ground by clearing away the woods. Spallanzani,
- Travels in the Two Sicilies, vol. iv. p. 126, seq. The difficulty of
- extirpating trees is illustrated by Theophrastus who relates that, in
- a spot near Pheneon in Arcadia, a well-wooded tract was overflowed by
- the water and the trees destroyed. Next year, when the flood had
- subsided and the mud dried, each kind of tree appeared in the
- situation which it had formerly occupied. The willow, the elm, the
- pine, and the fir, growing in its own place, doubtless from the roots
- of the former trees. Hist. Plant. iii. 1. 2. Again: the Nessos, in the
- territory of the Abderites, constantly changed its bed, and in the old
- channels trees sprung up so rapidly that, in three years, they were so
- many strips of forest. Id. iii. 1. 5.
-
-Footnote 1644:
-
- Thiersch, Etat Actuel de la Grèce. t. i. p. 276. It is remarked by
- Theophrastus, however, that pine forests, being destroyed by fire,
- shot up again, as happened in Lesbos, on a mountain near Pyrrha. Hist.
- Plant. iii. 9. 4.
-
------
-
-In Attica,[1645] both fields and gardens were chiefly irrigated by means
-of wells which, sometimes, in extremely long and dry summers, failed
-entirely, thus causing a scarcity of vegetables.[1646] The water, we
-find, was drawn up by precisely the same machinery as is still employed
-for the purpose. The invention of these conveniences of primary
-necessity having preceded the birth of tradition, has, by some writers,
-been attributed to Danaos, who is supposed to have emigrated from Egypt
-into Greece. Arriving, we are told, at Argos, he, upon the failure of
-spontaneous fountains, taught the inhabitants to dig wells, in
-consequence of which he was elected chief. But where was Danaos himself
-to have learned this art? He is said to have been an Egyptian, and Egypt
-is a country so entirely without springs, that two only exist within its
-limits, and of these but one was known to the ancients. Of wells they
-had none. Danaos could, therefore, if he was an Egyptian, have known
-nothing of springs or wells; and, if he had such knowledge, he must have
-come from some other land.[1647]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1645:
-
- Cf. Chandler, i. p. 261. The apparatus now used in irrigation by the
- Sciots exactly resembles that of the Egyptian Arabs. Id. i. 315.
-
-Footnote 1646:
-
- Demosth. Adv. Polycl. § 16. On the supply of water to Athens we
- possess little positive information, though we cannot doubt that all
- possible advantage was taken of those pure sources which are still
- found in its neighbourhood. “In no country necessity was more likely
- to have created the hydragogic art than in Attica; and we have
- evidence of the attention bestowed by the Athenians upon their canals
- and fountains in the time of Themistocles, as well as in that of
- Alexander the Great.” Col. Leake, on some disputed points in the
- Topography of Athens. Trans. Lit. Soc. iii. 189. Cf. Aristoph. Av.
- Schol. 998. Plut. Themist. § 31. Arist. Polit. vi. 8. vii. 12. We
- find, from Theophrastus, that there was in his time, an aqueduct in
- the Lyceum with a number of plane trees growing near it. Theoph. Hist.
- Plant. i. 7. 1.
-
-Footnote 1647:
-
- Mitford, i. 33, seq. In Bœotia, Babylonia, Egypt, and Cyrenaica,
- the dew served instead of rain. Theoph. Hist. Plant. viii. 4. 6.
-
------
-
-Where there existed neither wells nor fountains, people were compelled
-to depend on rain-water, collected and preserved in cisterns.[1648] For
-this purpose troughs were in some farm-houses run along the eaves both
-of the stables, barns, and sheep-cotes, as well as of the dwelling of
-the family, while others used only that which ran from the last, the
-roof of which was kept scrupulously clean. The water was conveyed
-through wooden pipes[1649] to the cisterns, which appear to have been
-frequently situated in the front court.[1650] Bad water they purified in
-several ways: by casting into it a little coral powder,[1651] small
-linen bags of bruised barley, or a quantity of laurel leaves, or by
-pouring it into broad tubs and exposing it for a considerable time to
-the action of the sun and air. When there happened to be about the farms
-ponds of any magnitude, they introduced into them a number of eels or
-river crabs, which opened the veins of the earth and destroyed leeches.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1648:
-
- Λακκοὶ. Machon. ap. Athen. xiii. 43.
-
-Footnote 1649:
-
- Geop. ii. 7.
-
-Footnote 1650:
-
- Sir W. Hamilton, Acc. of Discov. at Pompeii, p. 13.
-
-Footnote 1651:
-
- Water was cooled by being suspended in vessels over the mouths of
- wells; and sometimes boiled previously to render the process more
- complete. For, according to the Peripatetics, πᾶν ὕδωρ προθερμανθὲν
- ψύχεται μᾶλλον, ὥσπερ τὸ τοῖς βασιλεῦσι παρασκευαζόμενον, ὅταν ἑψηθῇ
- μέχρι ζέσεως, περισωρεύουσι τῷ ἀγγείῳ χιόνα πολλὴν, καὶ γίνεται
- ψυχρότερον. Plut. Sympos. vi. 4. 1.
-
------
-
-A scarcely less important branch of the farmer’s studies was that which
-related to the weather and the general march of the seasons.[1652] Above
-all things, it behoved him to observe diligently the rising and setting
-of the sun and moon. He was, likewise, carefully to note the state of
-the atmosphere at the disappearance of the Pleiades, since it was
-expected to continue the same until the winter solstice, after which a
-change sometimes immediately supervened, otherwise there was usually no
-alteration till the vernal equinox.[1653] Another variation then took
-place in the character of the weather, which afterwards remained fixed
-till the rising of the Pleiades, undergoing successively fresh mutations
-at the summer solstice and the autumnal equinox. According to their
-observations, moreover, a rainy winter[1654] was followed by a dry and
-raw spring, and the contrary; and a snowy winter by a year of abundance.
-But as nature by no means steadily follows this course, exhibiting many
-sudden and abrupt fluctuations, it was found necessary to subject her
-restless phenomena to a more rigid scrutiny, in order that rules might
-be obtained for foretelling the approach of rain, or tempests, or
-droughts, or a continuance of fair weather. Of these some, possibly,
-were founded on imperfect observation or casual coincidences, or a
-fanciful linking of causes and effects; while others, we cannot doubt,
-sprang from a practical familiarity with the subtler and more shifting
-elements of natural philosophy.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1652:
-
- Geop. i. 2–4. 11. Theophrast. De Signis Pluviarum et de Ventis,
- _passim_. Our own agriculturists, also, were formerly much addicted to
- these studies. Thus, “The oke apples, if broken in sunder about the
- time of their withering, do foreshewe the sequel of the yeare, as the
- expert Kentish husbandmen have observed, by the living things found in
- them: as, if they find an ant, they foretell plentie of graine to
- insue; if a whole worm, like a gentill or maggot, then they
- prognosticate murren of beasts and cattle; if a spider, then (saie
- they) we shall have a pestilence or some such like sickness to followe
- amongst men. These things the learned, also, have observed and noted:
- for Mathiolus, writing upon Dioscorides saith, that before they have
- an hole through them, they conteine in them either a flie, a spider,
- or a worme; if a flie, then warre insueth; if a creeping worme, then
- scarcitie of victuals; if a running spider, then followeth great
- sickness and mortalitie.” Gerrard, Herball, Third Book, c. 29. p.
- 1158. Cf. Lord Bacon, Sylva Sylvarum, 561.
-
-Footnote 1653:
-
- Cf. Hesiod, Opp. et Dies, 486, seq.
-
-Footnote 1654:
-
- Cf. Lord Bacon, Sylva Sylvarum, 675. 812.
-
------
-
-As nothing more obviously interests the husbandman than the seasonable
-arrival and departure of rains, everything connected with them, however
-remotely, was observed and treasured up with scrupulous accuracy. Of all
-the circumstances pre-signifying their approach the most certain was
-supposed to be the aspect of the morning; for if, before sunrise, beds
-of purpurescent clouds[1655] stretched along the verge of the horizon,
-rain was expected that day, or the day after the morrow. The same augury
-they drew, though with less confidence, from the appearance of the
-setting sun,[1656] especially if in winter or spring it went down
-through an accumulation of clouds or with masses of dusky rack on the
-left. Again, if, on rising, the sun looked pale, dull red, or
-spotted;[1657] or, if, previously, its rays were seen streaming
-upwards;[1658] or, if, immediately afterwards, a long band of clouds
-extended beneath it, intersecting its descending beams; or if the orient
-wore a sombre hue; or if piles of sable vapour towered into the welkin;
-or if the clouds were scattered loosely over the sky like fleeces of
-wool;[1659] or came waving up from the south in long sinuous streaks—the
-“mares’ tails” of our nautical vocabulary—the husbandman reckoned with
-certainty upon rain, floods, and tempestuous winds. Among the signs of
-showers peculiar to the site of Athens may be reckoned these following:
-if a rampart of white ground-fogs begirt at night the basis of Hymettos;
-or, if its summits were capped with vapour;[1660] or, if troops of mists
-settled in the hollow of the smaller mount, called the Springless; or,
-if a single cloud rested on the fane of Zeus at Ægina.[1661] The violent
-roaring of the sea upon the beach was the forerunner of a gale, and they
-were enabled to conjecture from what quarter it was to blow, by the
-movements of the waters, which retreated from the shore before a north
-wind; while, at the approach of the sirocco, they were piled up higher
-than usual against the cliffs. Elsewhere, in Attica, they supposed wet
-weather to be foretold by the summits of Eubœa rising clear, sharp, and
-unusually elevated through a dense floor of exhalations, which, when
-they mounted and gathered in blowing weather about the peaks of
-Caphareus,[1662] on the eastern shores of the island, presaged an
-impending storm of five days’ continuance. But here these signs
-concerned rather the mariner than the husbandman, since the cliffs that
-stretched along this coast are rugged and precipitous, and the
-approaches so dangerous that few vessels which are driven on it escape.
-Scarcely are the crews able to save themselves, unless their bark happen
-to be extremely light. Another portent of foul weather was the
-apparition of a circle about the moon, while, by the double reflection
-of its orb north and south, that luminary appeared to be multiplied into
-three. At night, also, if the nubecula,[1663] called the Manger, in the
-constellation of the Crab, shone less luminously, it betokened a similar
-state of the atmosphere. A like inference[1664] was drawn when the moon
-at three days old rose dusky; or, with blunt horns; or, with its rim, or
-whole disk, red; or blotted with black spots; or encircled by two
-halos.[1665]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1655:
-
- Cf. Arato. Prognost. 102, sqq. But, on the other hand, “purus oriens,
- atque non fervens, serenum diem nuntiat.” Plin. Hist. Nat. xviii. 78.
- Aristot. Problem. xxvi. 8.
-
-Footnote 1656:
-
- The sun-sets of the Mediterranean exhibit, as most travellers will
- have observed, a variety of gorgeous phenomena, which, as betokening
- certain states of the atmosphere serve as so many admonitions to the
- husbandman. The sun before going down “assumed,” observes Dr.
- Chandler, “a variety of fantastic shapes. It was surrounded, first,
- with a golden glory of great extent, and flamed upon the surface of
- the sea in a long column of fire. The lower half of the orb soon after
- emerged in the horizon, the other portion remaining very large and
- red, with half of a smaller orb beneath it, and separate, but in the
- same direction, the circular rim approaching the line of its diameter.
- These two, by degrees, united, and then changed rapidly into different
- figures, until the resemblance was that of a capacious punch-bowl
- inverted. The rim of the bottom extending upward, and the body
- lengthening below it, became a mushroom on a stalk with a round head.
- It was next metamorphosed into a flaming caldron, of which the lid,
- rising up, swelled nearly into an orb and vanished. The other portion
- put on several uncircular forms, and, after many twinklings and faint
- glimmerings, slowly disappeared, quite red, leaving the clouds hanging
- over the dark rocks on the Barbary shore finely tinged with a vivid
- bloody hue.” Travels, i. p. 4. Appearances similar, though of inferior
- brilliance and variety, are sometimes witnessed in the Western
- Hemisphere. Describing the beauties of an evening on the Canadian
- shore, Sir R. H. Bonnycastle observes: “First, there was a double sun
- by reflection, each disk equally distinct; afterwards, when the orb
- reached the mark x, a solid body of light, equal in breadth with the
- sun itself, but of great length from the shore, shot down on the sea,
- and remained like a broad fiery golden column, or bar, until the black
- high land hid the luminary itself.” The Canadas in 1841. v. i. p. 34.
-
-Footnote 1657:
-
- Ille ubi nascentem maculis variaverit ortum
- Conditus in nubem, medioque refugerit orbe;
- Suspecti tibi sint imbres.
- Virg. Georg. i. 441, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1658:
-
- Plin. Hist. Nat. xviii. 78. Aratus, Prognost. 137, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1659:
-
- Cf. Plin. xviii. 82. “Si nubes ut vellera lanæ spargentur multæ ab
- oriente, aquam in triduum præsagient;” and Virg. Georg, i. 397:
-
- Tenuia nec lanæ per cœlum vellera ferri.
-
-Footnote 1660:
-
- If the Mounts Parnes and Brylessus appeared enveloped in clouds, the
- circumstance was thought to foretel a tempest. Theoph. de Sign. Pluv.
- iii. 6. Cf. Strabo. ix. 11. t. ii. p. 253.
-
-Footnote 1661:
-
- Pausan. ii. 30. 3. Pind. Nem. v. 10. Dissen.—Müll. Æginetica, § 5. p.
- 19.
-
-Footnote 1662:
-
- Dion. Chrysost. i. 222. Cf. Aristot. Prob. xxvi. 1.
-
-Footnote 1663:
-
- This is explained by Lord Bacon. “The upper regions of the air,” he
- observes, “perceive the collection of the matter of tempest and wind
- before the air here below. And, therefore, the observing of the
- smaller stars is a sign of tempests following.” Sylva Sylvarum, 812.
-
-Footnote 1664:
-
- Similar observations have been made in most countries, as we find from
- the signs of the weather collected by Erra Pater, and translated by
- Lilly, Part iv. § 3–5.
-
-Footnote 1665:
-
- Cf. Seneca. Quæst. Nat. i. c. 2.
-
------
-
-The phenomena of thunder and lightning, likewise, instructed the
-husbandman who was studious in the language of the heavens: thus, when
-thunder was heard in winter or in the morning, it betokened wind; in the
-evening or at noon, in summer, rain; when it lightened from every part
-of the heavens, both. Falling stars[1666] likewise denoted wind or rain,
-originating in that part of the heavens where they appeared.
-
-Among our own rustics the whole philosophy of rainbows has been
-compressed into a couple of distichs:
-
- A rainbow at night
- Is the shepherd’s delight.
- A rainbow in the morning
- Is the shepherd’s warning.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1666:
-
- Aristot. Problem, xxvi. 24. Alexand. Aphrodis. Problem. i. 72. Plin.
- xviii. 80. Virg. Georg. i. 365, sqq.
-
- Sæpe etiam stellas, vento impendente, videbis
- Præcipites cœlo labi, noctisque per umbram
- Flammarum longos à tergo albescere tractus.
-
------
-
-And upon this subject,[1667] the peasants of Hellas had little more to
-say; their opinion having been that, in proportion to the number of
-rainbows, would be the fury and continuance of the showers with which
-they were threatened.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1667:
-
- On the effects of the rainbow the ancients held a curious opinion,
- which Lord Bacon thus expounds:—“It hath been observed by the
- ancients, that where a rainbow seemeth to hang over or to touch, there
- breathed forth a sweet smell. The cause is, for that this happeneth
- but in certain matters which have in themselves some sweetness, which
- the gentle dew of the rainbow doth draw forth, and the like to soft
- showers, for they also make the ground sweet, but none are so delicate
- as the dew of the rainbow where it falleth.” Sylva Sylvarum. 832. His
- Lordship here, as in many other places, adopts the explanation of the
- Peripatetics while he seems to be himself assigning the cause of the
- phenomenon. Aristotle (Problem. 12. 3) enters fully into the subject,
- which appears to have been brought under the notice of philosophers by
- the shepherds who had observed that when certain thickets had been
- laid in ashes the passing of a rainbow over the spot caused a sweet
- odour to exhale from it. The same fact is noticed by Theophrastus, De
- Caus. Plant. 6. 17. 7. Cf. Plin. Hist. Nat. 12. 52. 21. 18. 2. 60. To
- many among the older philosophers that comparatively rare phenomenon,
- the lunar rainbow, was unknown. (Arist. Meteor. iii. 2: νύκτωρ δ᾽ ἀπὸ
- σελήνης ὡς μὲν οἱ ἀρχαῖοι ᾢοντο οὐκ ἐγίγνετο·) but in the time of
- Aristotle it had been observed, and the cause of its pearly whiteness
- investigated. Cf. Meteorol. iii. 4. 5. Senec. Quæst. Nat. i. 2, sqq.
-
------
-
-Other signs of mutation in the atmosphere they discovered in almost
-every part of nature; for example, when bubbles rose on the surface of a
-river they looked for a fall of rain; as also when small land-birds were
-seen drenching their plumage; when the crow was beheld washing his head
-upon the rocky beach,[1668] or the raven flapping his wings, while with
-his voice he imitated amidst his croaking the pattering of drops of
-rain; when the peasant was awakened in the morning by the cry of the
-passing crane,[1669] or the shrill note of the chaffinch within his
-dwelling. Flights of island birds flocking to the continent,[1670]
-preceded drought; as a number of jackdaws and ravens flying up and down,
-and imitating the scream of the hawk, did rain. The incessant shrieks of
-the screech-owl and the vehement cawing of the crow, heard during a
-serene night, foretold the approach of storms. The barn-door fowl and
-the house-dog also played the part of soothsayers, teaching their master
-to dread impending storms by rolling themselves in the dust. Of similar
-import was the flocking of geese with noise to their food, or the
-skimming of swallows along the surface of the water.[1671] Again, when
-troops of dolphins were seen rolling near the shore, or oxen licking
-their fore-hoofs, or looking southwards, or, with a suspicious air,
-snuffing the elements,[1672] or going bellowing to their stalls; when
-wolves approached the homesteads; when flies bit sharp,[1673] or frogs
-croaked vociferously, or the ruddock, or land-toad, crept into the
-water; when the salamander lizard appeared, and the note of the
-green-frog was heard in the trees, the rustic donned his capote, and
-prepared, like Anaxagoras at Olympia,[1674] for a shower. The flight of
-the storm-birds, kepphoi,[1675] was supposed to indicate a tempest from
-the point of the heavens towards which they flew. When in bright and
-windless weather clouds of cobwebs,[1676] floated through the air, the
-husbandman anticipated a drenching for his fields, as also when earthen
-pots and brass pans emitted sparks; when lamps spat; when the wick made
-mushrooms;[1677] when a halo encircled its flame,[1678] or when the
-flame itself was dusky. The housewife was forewarned of coming
-hail-storms, generally from the north, by a profusion of bright sparks
-appearing on the surface of her charcoal fire; when her feet swelled she
-knew that the wind would blow from the south.[1679] Heaps of clouds like
-burnished copper rising after rain in the west portended fine weather;
-as did likewise the tops of lofty mountains, as Athos, Ossa, and
-Olympos, appearing sharply defined against the sky; while an apparent
-augmentation in the height of promontories and the number of islands
-foreshowed wind.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1668:
-
- Cf. Ælian. De Nat. Anim. vii. 7.
-
-Footnote 1669:
-
- Φράζεσθαι δ᾽, εὖτ᾽ ἂν γεράνου φωνὴν ἐπακούσῃς
- ὑψόθεν ἐκ νεφέων ἐνιαύσια κεκληγυίης·
- ἥτ᾽ ἀρότοιο τε σῆμα φέρει, καὶ χείματος ὥρην
- δεικνύει ομβρηροῦ· κραδίην δ᾽ ἔδακ’ ἀνδρὸς ἀβούτεω.
- Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 448, sqq.
-
- To the same purpose, Homer:—Il. γ. 3, sqq.
-
- Ἠΰτε περ κλαγγὴ γεράνων πέλει οὐρανόθι πρὸ,
- αἵτ᾽ ἐπεὶ οὖν χειμῶνα φύγον καὶ ἀθέσφατον ὄμβρον,
- κλαγγῇ ταίγε πέτονται ἐπ’ Ὠκεανοῖο ῥοάων.
-
- And Aristophanes:—(Av. 710, sqq.)
-
- Πρῶτα μὲν ὥρας φαίνομεν ἡμεῖς ἦρος, χειμῶνος, ὀπώρας ·
- Σπείρειν μὲν, ὅταν γέρανος κρώζουσ᾽ ἐς τὴν Λιβύην μεταχωρῇ,
- καὶ πηδάλιον τότε ναυκλήρῳ φράζει κρεμάσαντι καθεύδειν.
-
-Footnote 1670:
-
- All birds which frequent the sea, more particularly those which fly
- high, are observed to seek terra firma at the approach of foul
- weather:—Ἀριστοτέλους ἀκούω λέγοντος, ὅτι ἄρα γέρανοι ἐκ τοὺς πελάγους
- εἰς τὴν γῆν πετόμενοι, χειμῶνος ἀπειλὴν ἰσχουραὶ ὑποσημαίνουσι τῷ
- συνιέντι. Ælian. De Nat. Anim. vii. 7. Before the great earthquake of
- 1783, which shook the whole of Calabria and destroyed the city of
- Messina, the mews and other aquatic birds were observed to forsake the
- sea and take refuge in the mountains. Spallanzani, Travels in the Two
- Sicilies, vol. iv. p. 158.
-
-Footnote 1671:
-
- Aut arguta lacus circumvolitat hirundo. Virg. Georg. i. 377. “Hirundo
- tam juxta aquam volitans, ut penna sæpe percutiat.” Plin. xviii. 87.
-
-Footnote 1672:
-
- Plin. xviii. 88. Virg. Georg. i. 375.—Ælian, De Nat. Anim. vii. 8,
- describes the ox before rain snuffing the earth, and adds: πρόβατα δὲ
- ἐρυττοντα ταῖς ὁπλαῖς τὴν γῆν, ἔοικε σημαίνειν χιεμῶνα.
-
-Footnote 1673:
-
- Cf. Ælian De Nat. Anim. viii. 8.
-
-Footnote 1674:
-
- Diog. Laert. i. 3. 5. Ælian (De Nat. Anim. vii. 8) relates a curious
- anecdote of Hipparchos who, from some change in the goatskin cloak he
- wore, likewise foretold a rain storm to the great admiration of Nero.
-
-Footnote 1675:
-
- Probably the storm-finch observed frequently on the wing flying along
- the Ægean sea, particularly when it is troubled. Sibth. in Walp. Mem.
- i. 76.
-
-Footnote 1676:
-
- Cf. Aristot. Problem. xxvii. 63, where he investigates the causes of
- the phenomenon; and Plin. Nat. Hist. xi. 28.
-
-Footnote 1677:
-
- Vid. Aristoph. Vesp. 262. The Scholiast entertains a somewhat
- different notion:—φασὶν ὅτι ὑετοῦ μέλλοντος γενέσθαι οἱ περὶ τὴν
- θρυαλλίδα τοῦ λύχνου σπινθῆρες ἀποπηδῶσιν, οὓς μύκητας νῦν λέγει, ὡς
- τοῦ λύχνου ἐναντιουμένου τῷ νοτερῷ ἀέρι· καὶ Ἄρατος “ἢ λύχνοιο μύκητες
- ἐγείρονται περὶ μύξαν, νύκτα κατὰ νοτίην.”
-
-Footnote 1678:
-
- Aristot. Meteorol. iii. 4. Seneca, Quæst. Nat. i. 2.
-
-Footnote 1679:
-
- Cf. Aristot. Problem. xxvi. 17.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
- THE VARIOUS PROCESSES OF AGRICULTURE.
-
-
-If we now pass to the actual labours of the farm, and the implements by
-which they were usually carried on, we shall find that the Grecian
-husbandman was no way deficient in invention, or in that ingenuity by
-which men have in all countries sought to diminish their toils. For the
-purpose of procuring at a cheap rate whatever was wanted for the use of
-the establishment,[1680] smiths, carpenters, and potters, were kept upon
-the land or in its immediate neighbourhood; by which means also the
-necessity was avoided of often sending the farm-servants to the
-neighbouring town, where it was observed they contracted bad habits, and
-were rendered more vicious and slothful.[1681] Waggons, therefore, and
-carts, and ploughs, and harrows, were constructed on the spot, though it
-was sometimes necessary perhaps to obtain from a distance the timber
-used for these implements, which was generally cut in winter-time. They
-exhibited much nicety in their choice of wood. Thus they would have the
-poplar or mulberry-tree for the felloes of their wheels; the ash, the
-ilex, and the oxya, for the axle-tree, and fine close-grained maple for
-the yokes of their oxen,[1682] sometimes carved in the form of serpents
-which seemed to wind round the necks of the animals, and project their
-heads on either side.[1683] Their harrows, it is probable, were formed
-like our own. The construction of the plough,[1684] always continued to
-be extremely simple. In the age of Hesiod[1685] it consisted of four
-parts, the handle, the socket, the coulter, and the beam; and very
-little alteration seems afterwards to have been made in its form or
-structure, till the introduction of the wheel-plough, which did not, it
-is believed, occur until after the age of Virgil. The more primitive
-instrument, however, would seem to have consisted originally of two
-parts only, one serving the purpose of handle, socket, and share, the
-other being the beam by which it was fastened to the yoke. In the
-antique implement[1686] the beam was sometimes made of laurel or elm,
-the socket of oak, and the handle of ilex.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1680:
-
- Geop. ii. 49. Illustrating the wretched condition of a tyrant dwelling
- in the midst of a nation that abhors him, Plato draws the picture of a
- man being in a remote part of the country with his wife and children,
- surrounded by a gang of fifty or sixty slaves, with scarcely a free
- neighbour at hand to whom, in case of necessity, he might fly. In what
- terror, he says, must this man live, lest his slaves should set upon
- and murder him, with all his family! De Repub. t. vi. p. 439.
-
-Footnote 1681:
-
- Carts were sometimes roofed with skins. Scheffer, De Re Vehic. p. 246,
- seq. Justin, ii. 2.
-
-Footnote 1682:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. v. 7. 6.
-
-Footnote 1683:
-
- Scheffer, De Re Vehic. p. 114.
-
-Footnote 1684:
-
- Pollux, x. 128. Goguet, Orig. des Lois, i. 189, seq. Pallad. i. 43.
- Colum. ii. 2.
-
-Footnote 1685:
-
- Opp. et Dies, 467, seq. Vid. Gœttl. ad v. 431. Etym. Mag. 173, 16.
- Poll. i. 252. The Syrians used a small plough, with which they turned
- up extremely shallow furrows. Theoph. Hist. Plant. viii. 6. 3.
-
-Footnote 1686:
-
- Hesiod, Opp. et Dies, 435, seq.
-
------
-
-Before mills were invented, the instrument by which they reduced corn
-into flour was a large mortar, scooped out of the trunk of a tree,
-furnished with a pestle upwards of four feet in length, exactly
-resembling that still in use among the Egyptian Arabs. To give the
-pestle greater effect it was fixed above in a cross-bar, seven feet
-long, and worked by two individuals.[1687] By this rude contrivance, it
-is possible to produce flour as fine as that proceeding from the most
-perfect boulting machine. In addition to these they possessed winnowing
-fans, scythes, sickles, pruning-hooks, fern or braken-scythes, saws and
-hand-saws, used in pruning and grafting, spades, shovels, rakes,
-pick-axes, hoes, mattocks,—one, two, and three pronged,—dibbles,
-fork-dibbles, and grubbing-axes.[1688] When rustics were clearing away
-underwood or cutting down brakes, they went clad in hooded skin-cloaks,
-leather gaiters, and long gloves.[1689]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1687:
-
- Idem, 423, seq.
-
-Footnote 1688:
-
- Poll. x. 129. Pallad. i. 51. Brunckh. not. ad Aristoph. Pac. 567. Cf.
- Eurip. Bacch. 344. Sch. Aristoph. Pac, 558, seq. 620. Plat. de Repub.
- t. vi. p. 81. Artemid. Oneirocrit. ii. 24. p. 111. Lutet.
-
-Footnote 1689:
-
- Pallad. i. 43. Colum. i. 8.
-
------
-
-On the subject of manure[1690] the Greeks appear to have entertained
-very just notions, and have left behind them numerous rules for using
-and preparing it. In lean lands which required most the help of art,
-they were still careful to avoid excess in the employment of manure,
-spreading it frequently rather than copiously; for as, left to
-themselves, they would have been too cold, so, when over enriched by
-art, their prolific virtue was thought to be consumed by heat. In
-applying it to plants, they were careful to interpose a layer of earth
-lest their roots should be scorched. Of all kinds of manure they
-considered that of birds the best,[1691] except the aquatic species,
-which, when mixed, however, was not rejected. Most husbandmen set a
-peculiar value on the sweepings of dovecotes,[1692] which, in small
-quantities, were frequently scattered over the fields with the seed.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1690:
-
- Geop. ii. 21, seq. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vii. 5. 1. i. 7. 4. To
- exemplify the importance of manure, it is remarked by this writer,
- that manured corn ripens twenty days earlier than that which wants
- this advantage, viii. 7. 7.
-
-Footnote 1691:
-
- Geop. ii. 21. 4. From a speech of the Earl of Radnor, in the House of
- Lords, May 25, 1841, we learn that our own farmers have begun to make
- experiments with this kind of manure on the lands of Great Britain,
- and that ship-loads of bird’s dung have been imported for the purpose
- from the Pacific. The rocks and smaller islands along the American
- coast are sometimes white with this substance. Keppel, Life of Lord
- Keppel, i. 48.
-
-Footnote 1692:
-
- Geop. xii. 4. 3. v. 26. 3.
-
------
-
-On the preparation of manure-pits they bestowed much attention.[1693]
-Having sunk them sufficiently deep in places abundantly supplied with
-water, they cast therein large quantities of weeds, with all
-descriptions of manure, among which they reckoned even earth itself,
-when completely impregnated with humidity. When they had lain long
-enough to be entirely decayed, they were fit for use. To the above were
-sometimes added wood-ashes, the refuse of leather-dressers, the
-cleansing of stables, and cow-houses, with stubble, brambles, and thorns
-reduced to ashes. In maritime situations sea-weed,[1694] also, having
-been well washed in fresh water, was mingled in large proportion with
-other materials, and, where possible, a channel was made conducting the
-muck and puddle[1695] of the neighbouring road into the pit, which at
-once accelerated the putrescence of the manure and augmented it. The
-Attic husbandmen had a mode of enriching their lands[1696] somewhat
-expensive, and, as far as I know, peculiar to themselves; having sown a
-field, they allowed the corn to spring up and the blade to reach a
-considerable height, upon which they again ploughed it in as a kind of
-sacrifice to the earth. A practice, not altogether unlike, still
-prevails in the kingdom of Naples, where the husbandmen sometimes bury
-their beans and lupins, just before flowering, for manure.[1697]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1693:
-
- Xenoph. Œconom. xx. 10. Cf. Artemid. Oneirocrit. ii. 26. p. 114.
-
-Footnote 1694:
-
- Geopon. ii. 22.
-
-Footnote 1695:
-
- The practice of mingling water with the manure was in great use among
- the ancients, particularly in the island of Rhodes, in the cultivation
- of the palm-trees. Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 6. 3.
-
-Footnote 1696:
-
- Xenoph. Œconom. xvii. 10. Cf. Earl of Aberdeen, Walp. Mem. i. 2.50. In
- such lands the farmers suffered their cattle to eat down the young
- corn to prevent its too great luxuriance. Theoph. Hist. Plant. viii.
- 7. 3.
-
-Footnote 1697:
-
- Swinburne, Letters from the Courts of Europe, i. 144.
-
------
-
-In ploughing there was great variety of practice, and in small farms,
-where the soil was light, they had recourse to what may be denominated
-spade husbandry. Most lands were ploughed thrice; first, immediately
-after the removal of the preceding crop; secondly, at a convenient
-interval of time; and, thirdly,[1698] in the sowing season, when the
-ploughman scattered the grain in the furrows as they were laid open
-while a lad followed at his heels with a hoe breaking the clods and
-covering the seed that it might not be devoured by the birds.[1699]
-Occasionally, in very hot weather, and in certain situations, the farmer
-ploughed all night;[1700] first, out of consideration to the oxen, whose
-health would have suffered from the sun; secondly, to preserve the
-moisture and richness of the soil; and, thirdly, by the aid of the dew,
-to render it more pliable. On these occasions, it was customary to
-employ two pair of oxen and a heavier share in order to produce the
-deeper furrows, and turn up the hidden fat of the earth. In choosing a
-ploughman they took care that he should be tall and powerful,[1701] that
-he might be able to thrust the share deeper into the ground and wield it
-generally with facility: and yet they would not, if possible, that he
-should be under forty years of age, lest, instead of attending to his
-duties, his eye should be glancing hither and thither, and his mind be
-roving after his companions.[1702] When in particular haste to complete
-his task, the ploughman often carried a long loaf under his arm, which,
-like the French peasants, he ate as he went along.[1703] In this
-department of rural labour it may be observed, mules were sometimes
-employed as well as oxen.[1704] Both were directed and kept in order by
-a sharp goad.[1705]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1698:
-
- Cf. Xenoph. Œconom. xvi. 10, seq. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 5. 1.
-
-Footnote 1699:
-
- Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 469, seq.
-
-Footnote 1700:
-
- Geop. ii. 28.
-
-Footnote 1701:
-
- Geop. ii. 2.
-
-Footnote 1702:
-
- Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 443, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1703:
-
- Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 442. “Vide Athenæum, quem Lanzius laudavit, iii.
- p. 114. e. hæc ex Philemone referentem: βλωμιλίους ἄρτους ὀνομάζεσθαι
- λέγει τοὺς ἔχοντας ἐντομάς, οὓς Ῥωμαῖοι, καδράτους λέγουσι. ὀκτάβλωμον
- Spohnius intelligit de servo celeriter edente. Minime verò. Panes
- rustici incisuras suas habent, ut servis omnibus æquas partes
- frangendo possis dirimere. v. Philostrat. Imagg. p. 95. 16. Jacobs.”
- Gœttling in loc. p. 173.
-
-Footnote 1704:
-
- Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 46. Dickinson. Delphi Phœnicizantes, c. 10. p.
- 101, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1705:
-
- Scheffer. de Re Vehic. 186, seq. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 449. The necks
- of these animals, when galled by the yoke, were cured by the leaves of
- black briony steeped in wine. Dioscor. iv. 185.
-
------
-
-As the Greeks well understood the practice of fallowing, their lands
-were then, as now, suffered to regain their strength by lying for a time
-idle;[1706] and it seems to have been as much their custom as it is
-still of their descendants,[1707] for the poor, at least, to roam over
-these fallow grounds, collecting nettles,[1708] mallows, the sow-thistle
-or jagged lettuce,[1709] dandelions, sea-purslain, stoches, hartwort,
-briony sprouts, gentle-rocket, usually found in the environs of towns,
-and about the courts of houses, gardens, and ruins, with other wild
-herbs for salads, or to be eaten as vegetables.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1706:
-
- Xenoph. Œconom. xvi. 13, seq. Cf. Schulz. Antiquitat. Rustic. § 7.
-
-Footnote 1707:
-
- Sibthorpe, in Walp. Mem. v. i. p. 144.
-
-Footnote 1708:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 420. Hesiod alludes to this diet where he
- celebrates the inferiority of the half to the whole:—
-
- Νήπιοι, οὐδὲ ἴσασιν ὅσῳ πλέον ἥμισυ παντός,
- Οὐδ᾽ ὅσον ἐν μαλάχῄ τε καὶ ἀσφοδέλῳ μεγ’ ὄνειαρ.
- Opp. et Dies, 40, seq.
-
- Cf. on the proverb in the first verse, Diog. Laert. i. 4. 2. Aristot.
- Ethic. Nicom. i. 7. Ovid. Fast. v. 718.
-
-Footnote 1709:
-
- Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 4. 8.
-
------
-
-The rules observed in sowing were numerous, and, in many instances, not
-a little curious. As a matter of course, they were careful to adapt the
-grain to the soil:[1710] thus rich plains were appropriated to wheat,
-and in the intervals cropped with vegetables; middling grounds to
-barley;[1711] while poor and hungry spots were given up to lentils,
-vetches, lupins, and such other pulse as were cultivated on a large
-scale. Beans and peas, however, were supposed to thrive best in fat and
-level lands. The principal sowing-time[1712] was in autumn; for, as soon
-as the equinoctial rains had moistened the earth, the sower immediately
-went forth to sow, committing to the ground the hopes of the future
-year. The best time for scattering wheat they placed somewhere in
-November, about the setting of the constellation called the Crown. They
-were careful in this operation to avoid the time when the south
-wind[1713] blew, and, generally, all cold and raw weather, as it
-rendered the earth ungenial, and little apt to fructify that which was
-entrusted to it. Great skill was supposed to be required in scattering
-the seed: in the first place, that it should be equally distributed;
-and, secondly, that none should fall between the horns of the oxen,
-superstition having taught them the belief that such grain, which they
-denominated Kerasbolos,[1714] if it sprang up at all, would produce corn
-which could neither be baked nor eaten. A favourite sowing sieve was
-made of wolf’s-hide, pierced with thirty holes as large as the tips of
-the fingers. In later ages much virtue was supposed to reside in the
-barbarous term Phriel,[1715] which they accordingly wrote on the plough.
-The choice of grains for sowing necessarily afforded much exercise[1716]
-to their ingenuity: seed wheat, they thought, should be of a rich gold
-colour, full, smooth, and solid; barley, white and heavy; both not
-exceeding one year old, for they quickly deteriorated, and, after the
-third year, would not they supposed grow. This, however, was an error,
-since barley has been known to preserve its vitality upwards of two
-thousand years.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1710:
-
- Geop. ii. 12.
-
-Footnote 1711:
-
- A fine kind of barley was cultivated on the plain of Marathon, which
- obtained the name of Achillean, on account, as Dr. Chandler
- conjectures, of its tallness. ii. 184. Attica, in fact, produced the
- best barley known to the ancients. Theoph. Hist. Plant. viii. 8. 2.
-
-Footnote 1712:
-
- Geop. ii. 14.—Ἐπειδὰν ὁ μετοπωρινὸς χρόνος ἔλθῃ, πάντες που οἱ
- ἄνθρωποι πρὸς τὸν θεὸν ἀποβλέπουσιν, ὁπότε βρέξας τὴν γὴν ἀφήσει
- αὐτοὺς σπείρειν. Xenoph. Œconom. xvii. 2. There was a second
- sowing-time in the spring, and a third in summer for millet and
- sesame. Theoph. Hist. Plant. viii. 1. 2, sqq. In Phocis, and other
- cold parts of Greece, they sowed early, that the corn might be strong
- before the winter came on. § 7. In ancient Italy corn was chiefly
- committed to the ground in September and October; though in mild
- seasons the work of sowing went on throughout the winter. Schulze,
- Antiquitates Rusticæ, § 4. p. 6.
-
-Footnote 1713:
-
- Cf. Aristot. Problem, xxvi. 3.
-
-Footnote 1714:
-
- Plat. de Legg. t. viii. p. 119. Tim. Lex. Plat. p. 85. Ruhnk. Plut.
- Sympos. vii. 2.
-
-Footnote 1715:
-
- Geop. ii. 19.
-
-Footnote 1716:
-
- Geop. ii. 16.
-
------
-
-It was customary often to renew seed by sowing the produce of mountains
-on plains; of dry places in moist, and the contrary.[1717] To try the
-comparative value of different qualities of grain[1718] they took a
-sample of each, and sowed the whole in separate patches of the same bed,
-a little before the rising of the Dog-star. If the produce of any of
-these samples withered, through the influence they supposed of Syrius,
-the wheat which it represented was rejected. As corn when committed to
-the earth is exposed to numerous enemies, they had recourse to a variety
-of contrivances for its preservation: to protect it from birds, mice,
-and ants,[1719] they steeped it in the juice of houseleeks, or mixed it
-with hellebore and cypress leaves, and scattered it out of a circle, or
-sprinkled it with water into which river crabs had been thrown for eight
-days, or with powdered hartshorn or ivory. Not satisfied with these
-precautions, they had likewise recourse to scarecrows,[1720] fixing up
-long reeds here and there in the fields, with dead birds suspended to
-them by the feet. This long list of contrivances they closed by a spell:
-taking a live toad, they carried it round the field by night, after
-which they shut it up carefully in a jar, which they buried in the
-middle of the grounds.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1717:
-
- Geop. ii. 17.
-
-Footnote 1718:
-
- Geop. ii. 15.
-
-Footnote 1719:
-
- Geop. ii. 18. “The bunting, the yellow-hammer, and a species of
- Emberiza, nearly related to it, frequent the low bushes in the
- neighbourhood of corn-fields.” Sibth. in Walp. Mem. i. 77.
-
-Footnote 1720:
-
- Among the husbandmen of Asia Minor people are employed to drive away
- the birds as the corn ripens. Chandler, i. 100.
-
------
-
-When the corn began to spring up it was diligently weeded[1721] a first
-and a second time. They would not trust entirely, however, to the
-industry of their hands, but called in to their aid certain
-characteristic enchantments, some two or three of which may be worth
-describing. First, to subdue the growth of choke-weed they planted
-sprigs of rose-laurel, at the corner and in the middle of their fields,
-or set up a number of potsherds, upon which had been drawn with chalk
-the figure of Heracles strangling the lion. But the most effectual of
-all spells, was for a young woman, naked and with dishevelled hair, to
-take a live cock in her hands and bear him round the fields, upon which,
-not only would the choke-weed and the restharrow vanish,[1722] but all
-the produce of the land would turn out of a superior quality.[1723]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1721:
-
- Geop. ii. 24. Cf. Xen. Œconom. xv. 1. 13, seq.
-
-Footnote 1722:
-
- Cf. Schulz. Antiquit. Rustic. § vii.
-
-Footnote 1723:
-
- Geop. ii. 42. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 5. 3.
-
------
-
-As the ancients well understood the value of hay, they took much pains
-in the formation and management of meadows. In the first place, all
-stones, stumps, bushes, and brambles,[1724] were diligently removed,
-together with whatever else might interrupt the free play of the scythe
-in mowing. They avoided, moreover, letting into them their droves of
-hogs, which were found to turn up the soil and destroy the roots of the
-young grass. In moist lands, too, even the larger cattle were excluded,
-as the holes made by their hoofs[1725] in sinking broke up the fine
-level of the turf. Old hay fields, in districts where much rain fell,
-grew in time to be clothed with a coating of moss,[1726] which some
-farmers sought to remove by manuring the ground with ashes; but the more
-scientific agriculturists ploughed them up, and took precisely the same
-steps as in the formation of a new meadow, that is, they sowed the
-ground with beans, turnips, or rape-seed, which, in the second year,
-were succeeded by wheat; on the third it was thoroughly cleared out, and
-sown with hay-seed, mingled with vetches, after which the whole field
-was finely levelled by the harrow.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1724:
-
- Colum. ii. 18. Varro, i. 49.
-
-Footnote 1725:
-
- Cf. Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 489.
-
-Footnote 1726:
-
- Lord Bacon, Sylva Sylvarum, 539.
-
------
-
-The rules observed by them in the regulation of their hay harvest[1727]
-were, first, to mow before the grass or clover was withered, when it
-became less rich and nutritive; second, to beware in making the ricks,
-that it was neither too dry nor too damp, since in the former case it
-was little better than straw, and in the latter was liable to
-spontaneous combustion.[1728] It may be observed further, that
-clover[1729] was usually sown in March or April, and though commonly
-mown six, or at least five, times in the twelve months, did not require
-to be renewed in less than ten years.[1730]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1727:
-
- Much hay was laid up in Eubœa for consumption during the winter
- months.—Dion Chrysost. i. 225.
-
-Footnote 1728:
-
- Colum. ii. 19.
-
-Footnote 1729:
-
- Καὶ τὴν βοτάνην δὲ, τὴν μάλιστα τρέφουσαν τοὺς ἵππους ἀπὸ τοῦ
- πλεονάζειν ἐνταῦθα ἰδίως Μηνδικὴν καλοῦμεν. Strab. xi. 13. t. ii. p.
- 453.
-
-Footnote 1730:
-
- Pallad. v. 1. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 604.
-
------
-
-Harvest usually commenced in Greece about the rising of the
-Pleiades,[1731] when the corn had already acquired a deep gold colour,
-though not yet so ripe as to fall from the ear, which in barley happens
-earlier than in wheat, the grain having no hose.[1732] Among the Romans
-operations were preceded by the sacrifice[1733] of a young sow to Ceres,
-with libations of wine, the burning of frankincense, and the offering of
-a cake to Jove, Juno, and Janus. They, at the same time, addressed their
-prayers to the last-mentioned gods, nearly in the following words:—“O
-father Janus or Jupiter, in making an oblation of this cake I offer up
-my prayers that thou wouldst be propitious to me and my children, my
-house, and my family!”[1734]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1731:
-
- Geop. ii. 25. Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 383. xiv. cal. June. Cf. Plin.
- Hist. Nat. xviii. 69.
-
-Footnote 1732:
-
- Pallad. vii. 2.
-
-Footnote 1733:
-
- The custom with which the modern Greeks hail the approach of summer is
- picturesque and beautiful: “On the first of May at Athens, there is
- not a door that is not crowned with a garland, and the youths of both
- sexes, with the elasticity of spirits so characteristic of a Greek,
- forget or brave their Turkish masters, while with guitars in their
- hands, and crowns upon their heads,
-
- ‘They lead the dance in honour of the May.’”
-
- Douglas, p. 64.
-
-Footnote 1734:
-
- Cato, 134.
-
------
-
-At Athens, as soon as the season for reaping[1735] had come round, those
-hardy citizens who lived by letting out their strength for hire,[1736]
-ranged themselves in bands in the agora, whither the farmers of the
-neighbourhood resorted in search of harvesters. They then, in
-consequence of the hot weather, proceeded half-naked[1737] to the
-fields, where, taking the sickle in hand, and separating into two
-divisions, they stationed themselves at either end of the piece of corn
-to be reaped, and began their work with vigour and emulation, each party
-striving to reach the centre of the field before their rivals.[1738] On
-other occasions they took advantage of the wind,[1739] moving along with
-it, whereby they were supposed to benefit considerably, avoiding the
-beard or chaff which it might have blown into their eyes, and having by
-its action the tall straw bent to their hand.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1735:
-
- The harvest began earlier in Salamis than in the neighbourhood of
- Athens. Theoph. Hist. Plant. viii. 2. 11. Chandler, vol. ii. p. 230.
- In Egypt barley was reaped on the sixth month after sowing, and wheat
- on the seventh. Theoph. Hist. Plant. viii. 2. 7. In Greece, barley
- required seven or eight months to ripen; wheat still more. This latter
- grain came to maturity more speedily in Sicily, and returned
- thirty-fold. § 8. In a district in the island of Rhodes they reaped
- barley twice in the year. § 9. Harvest was thirty days earlier in
- Attica than in the Hellespont. 8. 10. There was a kind of wheat in
- Eubœa which ripened very early; and there was introduced from Sicily
- into Achaia another kind which was fit for the sickle in two months.
- Id. viii. 4. 4. Wheat returned in Babylonia, even to negligent
- husbandmen, fifty-fold, and to such as properly cultivated their
- lands, a hundred-fold. Id. viii. 7. 4.
-
-Footnote 1736:
-
- Dem. De Cor. § 16.
-
-Footnote 1737:
-
- Or perhaps wholly so when they happened to be inhabitants of the warm
- lowlands on the sea-shore and valleys. At least this is the opinion of
- Hesiod who counsels the husbandman, γυμνὸν σπείρειν, γυμνὸν δὲ
- βοωτεῖν, γυμνὸν δ᾽ ἀμάαν, εἴ χ’ ὥρια πάντ᾽ ἐθέλησθα ἔργα κομίζεσθαι
- Δημήτερος. Opp. et Dies, 391, sqq.
-
- Aristophanes alludes to the same custom. Lysist. 1175.
-
- Ἥδη γεωργεῖν γυμνὸς, ἀποδὺς βούλομαι. And Virgil. “Nudus ara, sere
- nudus,” Georg, i. 299, upon which Servius remarks: “Non dicit nudum
- esse debere, quasi aliter non oporteat aut possit; sed sub tanta
- serenitate dicit hæc agenda, ut et amictus possit contemni.” Be this,
- however, as it may, the precept of Hesiod and Virgil is literally
- observed in Egypt, where the rustics often perform their labour stark
- naked.
-
-Footnote 1738:
-
- Il. λ. 67, seq.
-
-Footnote 1739:
-
- Πότερα οὖν τέμνεις, ἔφη, στὰς ἔνθα πνεῖ ἄνεμος, ἢ ἀντίος· οὐκ ἀντίος,
- ἔφην, ἔγωγε· χαλεπὸν γὰρ, οἶμαι, καὶ τοῖς ὄμμασι καὶ ταῖς χερσὶ
- γίγνεται, ἀντιον ἀχύρων καὶ ἀθέρων θερίζειν. Xenoph. Œconom. xviii. 1.
-
------
-
-In many parts of Greece, though the practice was not general, the women
-joined in these labours. The reapers, as they advanced, laid the corn
-behind them in long lines upon the stubble, and were followed by two
-other classes of harvesters, one of whom bound it into sheaves which the
-others bore back and piled up into mows. Of the whole of these
-operations, together with the plenteous feast which interrupted or
-terminated their toils, Homer has left us a graphic picture in the
-Iliad:[1740]
-
- There in a field ’mid lofty corn, the lusty reapers stand,
- Plying their task right joyously, with sickle each in hand.
- Some strew in lines, as on they press, the handfuls thick behind,
- While at their heels the heavy sheaves their merry comrades bind.
- These to the mows a troop of boys next bear in haste away,
- Piling upon the golden glebe the triumphs of the day.
- Among them wrapped in silent joy, their sceptered king appears,
- Beholding, in the swelling heaps, the stores of future years.
- A mighty ox beneath an oak the busy heralds slay,
- With grateful sacrifice to close the labours of the day.
- While near, the husbandman’s repast the rustic maids prepare,
- Sprinkling with flour the broiling cates whose savour fills the air.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1740:
-
- σ. 550, seq.
-
------
-
-In these remote and unsettled times it behoved the rustic to keep a
-sharp look-out on the sheaves left behind him on the field, as there
-were usually prowlers,[1741] lurking amid the neighbouring woods and
-thickets, ready to pounce upon and carry off whatever they saw
-unguarded.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1741:
-
- Ἡμερόκοιτοὶ ἀνδρες, an elegant euphonism for “thieves”. Hesiod. Opp.
- et Dies, 605. Cf. the note of Gœttling on verse 375.
-
------
-
-The implement used in cutting wheat seems always to have been the
-sickle, while in the case of barley and other inferior grains, the
-scythe was commonly employed. In some parts of ancient Gaul, where no
-value was set upon the straw, corn was reaped by a sort of cart,[1742]
-armed in front with scythes, having the edges inclined upwards, which,
-as it was driven along by an ox, harnessed behind, cut off the ears of
-corn, which were received into the tumbril. In this manner the produce
-of a whole field might be got in easily in a day. Reaping among the
-ancient inhabitants of Italy[1743] was performed in three ways: first
-they reaped close, as in Umbria, and laid the handfuls carefully on the
-ground, after which the ears were separated from the straw, and borne in
-baskets to the threshing-floor. Elsewhere, as in Picenum, they made use
-of a ripple or serrated hook, having a long handle with which the ears
-only were cut off, leaving the straw standing to be afterwards collected
-and raked up into mows.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1742:
-
- Pallad. vii. 2.
-
-Footnote 1743:
-
- Varro. i. 50.
-
------
-
-In the neighbourhood of Rome they reaped with the common sickle, holding
-the upper part of the straw in their left hand, and cutting it off in
-the middle. This tall stubble was afterwards mown and carried off to be
-used as fodder or bedding for cattle. In Upper Egypt and Nubia, the
-dhoura stalks are left about two feet in height to support the crop of
-kidney-beans which succeeds next in order. Among the Athenians[1744]
-when the corn grew tall the stubble was suffered to remain to be burned
-for manure; but, when short, the value of the straw led them to reap
-close.
-
-Footnote 1744:
-
- Καὶ ἀκροτομοίης δ᾽ἂν, ἔφη, ἢ παρὰ γῆν τέμνοις; ἢν μὲν βραχὺς ἦ ὁ
- κάλαμος τοῦ σίτου, ἔγωγ’, ἔφην, κάτωθεν ἂν τέμνοιμι, ἵνα ἱκανὰ τὰ
- ἄχυρα μᾶλλον γίγνηται. Ἐὰν δὲ ὑψηλὸς ᾖ, νομίζω ὀρθῶς ἂν ποιεῖν
- μεσοτομῶν, ἵνα μήτε οἱ ἁλοῶντες μοχθῶσι περιττὸν πόνον, μήτε οἱ
- λικμῶντες, ὧν οὐδὲν προσδέονται. Τὸ δὲ ἐv τῇ γῇ λειφθὲν ἡγοῦμαι καὶ
- κατακαυθὲν συνωφελεῖν ἂν τὴν γῆν καὶ εις κοπρον ἐμβληθὲν τὴν κόπρον
- συμπληθύνειν. Xenoph. Œconom. xviii. 2.
-
------
-
-In separating the grain from the straw the ancients made use of horses,
-oxen, and mules, which, passing round and round over the
-threshing-floor, trod out the corn. All the labourer had to do was to
-guide the movements of the cattle, and take care that no part of the
-sheaf remained untrodden.[1745] From a very humane law in the Old
-Testament we learn, that among some nations it was customary to tie up
-the mouths of such animals as they employed in this labour, which was
-forbidden the Israelites: “Thou shalt not,” says the Scripture, “muzzle
-the ox that treadeth out the corn.” Nor was it practised among the
-Greeks in the age of Homer,[1746] whom we find describing the oxen
-bellowing as they made their unwearied round. The threshing-floor, which
-was of a circular form,[1747] stood on a breezy eminence, in the open
-field, where, as at present, in modern Greece, and in the Crimea,[1748]
-a high pole was set up in the centre, to which the cattle were tied by a
-cord determining the extent of the circle they had to describe.[1749]
-The end being nailed, every turn made by the cattle coiled the rope
-about the pole and diminished their range, until, at length, they were
-brought quite close to the centre, after which, their heads were turned
-about, and by moving in an opposite direction the cord was unwound.
-Great pains were taken in the construction of this threshing-floor,
-which was somewhat elevated about the centre, in order, as Varro
-observes, that what rain fell might speedily run off. It was sometimes
-paved with stone, or pitched with flints, but more commonly coated with
-stucco, made level by a roller, and well soaked with the lees of oil
-which at once prevented the growth of weeds and grass, preserved it from
-cracking, and repelled the approach of mice, ants, and moles, to which
-oil-lees are destructive.[1750] Though some authorities advise that it
-should be situated under the master’s, or at least the steward’s, eye,
-it was generally thought advisable to keep it at a distance from the
-house and gardens, since the finer particles of chaff, borne thickly
-through the air, caused ophthalmia, and often blindness,[1751] and
-proved exceedingly injurious to all plants and pulpy fruits, more
-particularly grapes. In some parts of the ancient world, exposed to the
-chances of summer rains, the threshing-floor was covered; and, even in
-Italy, an umbracula,[1752] or shed, was always constructed close at
-hand, into which the corn could be removed in case of bad weather. But
-this in the sunnier climate of Greece was judged unnecessary. In
-obedience to a notion prevalent among Hellenic farmers, the sheaves were
-piled up with the straw towards the south, by which means they believed
-the grain was enlarged and loosened from the hose. When the farmer
-happened to be scant of cattle he made use of a threshing-machine,[1753]
-which consisted of a kind of heavy sledge, toothed below with sharp
-stones or iron. Occasionally, too, the flail[1754] was used, especially
-in the case of such corn as was laid up in the barn and threshed during
-winter.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1745:
-
- Xenoph. Œconom. xviii. 4. The same custom still prevails in Southern
- Europe and in the East. “Corn is trodden out in Granada in
- circular-formed threshing-floors, in the open fields; the animals
- employed are mules or oxen.” Napier, Excursions, &c., i. 156. Again,
- in the Troad, “The oxen or horses being harnessed to a sort of sledge,
- the bottom part of which is armed with sharp flints, are driven over
- the corn, the person who guides the cattle balancing him or herself
- with great dexterity whilst rapidly drawn round in revolving circles.”
- Id. ii. 171. Cf. Fowler, Three Years in Persia, i. 173, and Chandler,
- i. 320. ii. 234.
-
-Footnote 1746:
-
- Iliad, υ. 495, seq. Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 599.
-
-Footnote 1747:
-
- Suid. v. ἁλωὰ t. i. p. 186. c. Philoch. Frag. Siebel. p. 86. Etym.
- Mag. 73. 56, seq. Colum. ii. 20. Geop. ii. 26. Senec. Quæst. Nat. i.
- 2.
-
-Footnote 1748:
-
- Earl of Aberdeen in Walp. Mem. i. 150. Pallas, Trav. in South. Russia,
- vol. iv. p. 148, seq.
-
-Footnote 1749:
-
- Schneid. ad Xenoph, Œcon. xviii. 8.
-
-Footnote 1750:
-
- Varro. de Re Rust. i. 51.
-
-Footnote 1751:
-
- Geop. ii. 26.
-
-Footnote 1752:
-
- Varro. i. 51. Pallad. i. 36.
-
-Footnote 1753:
-
- Mathem. Vett. p. 85. Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii. 8.
-
-Footnote 1754:
-
- Colum. ii. 21.
-
------
-
-In winnowing,[1755] when the breeze served, they simply threw the grain
-up into the air with a scoop, until the wind had completely cleared away
-the chaff. In serene days they had recourse to a winnowing machine,
-which, though turned by the hand, was of great power, as we may judge
-from its being employed in cleansing vetches, and even beans.[1756] To
-receive the chaff, which was too valuable to be lost, pits appear to
-have been sunk all round the threshing-floor, which, for the passage of
-the men and cattle, would appear to have been covered, save in the
-direction of the wind.[1757] When the corn was designed for immediate
-use, one winnowing was deemed sufficient; but that which was intended to
-be laid up in the granary[1758] underwent the operation a second time.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1755:
-
- Plat. Tim. t. vii. p. 65. Xenoph. Œconom. xviii. 8.
-
-Footnote 1756:
-
- Il. ν. 588.
-
-Footnote 1757:
-
- Il. ε. 562.
-
-Footnote 1758:
-
- See on the vessels in which the produce of the harvest was received,
- Pollux. x. 129.
-
------
-
-On the building and preparation of granaries[1759] the ancients bestowed
-great pains. Every means which could communicate to grain firmness and
-durability appears to have been tried by them; and their success was
-answerable to their diligence, for, in their granaries, wheat was
-preserved in perfection fifty, and millet a hundred years.[1760] Their
-methods, however, were various; some laid up their grain in hollow rocks
-and caves, as in Thrace and Cappadocia; others sank deep pits in the
-earth[1761] where they found it to be perfectly free from humidity, as
-in Farther Spain, while others, as in Hither Spain, Apulia, and
-Greece,[1762] erected their granaries on lofty basements fronting the
-East, and with openings towards the north and west winds.[1763] There
-was usually a range of numerous diminutive windows near the roof, to
-supply free vent for the heated air, while the floor, in many cases,
-contained small apertures for the admission of the cool breezes beneath.
-The walls were built with suitable solidity, and having, together with
-the floor, been plastered with rough mortar,[1764] made commonly with
-hair, for which chaff was sometimes substituted, received a coat of fine
-stucco, on the preparation of which much care was bestowed. It was
-generally composed of lime, sand, and powdered marble, moistened with
-the lees of oil, the peculiar flavour and odour of which were supposed
-effectually to repel the approaches of mice,[1765] weevils, and ants.
-Instead of this a common stucco, formed of clay, was often used.
-Occasionally the grain was packed up in baskets or large jars,[1766]
-such, it may be presumed, as those still employed for the purpose in
-Africa, where they are commonly kept in a corner outside the door. Beans
-and other pulse were preserved in oil-jars rubbed with ashes.[1767]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1759:
-
- Cf. Pallad. l. 19. Colum. i. 6. A granary, commonly σιτοφυλακεῖον,
- was, by Menander, in his Eunuch, denominated σιτοβόλιον; among the
- Siciliotes and Greek colonists of Italy ῥογος; as in the Busiris of
- Epicharmos. Poll. ix. 45.
-
-Footnote 1760:
-
- Varro. i. 57.
-
-Footnote 1761:
-
- The same practice is still found in several of the Grecian islands.
- “Ils font dans les champs un trou proportionné à la quantité de bled
- qu’ils y veulent serrer; il est ordinairement de cinq pieds de
- diamètre, sur deux ou trois de profondeur. On en tapisse l’intérieur
- d’environ un demi-pied de paille brisée sous les pieds des bœufs;
- on y serre ensuite le grain, de manière qu’il s’élève par dessus la
- terre, à une hauteur à-peu-près égale à la profondeur du trou; on le
- couvre avec un demi-pied de paille, sur laquelle on met trois ou
- quatre pouces de terre.” Della Rocca, Traité Complet sur les Abeilles,
- t. i. p. 198, seq.
-
-Footnote 1762:
-
- Geop. ii. 27.
-
-Footnote 1763:
-
- Cf. Lord Bacon. Hist. Life and Death, p. 5.
-
-Footnote 1764:
-
- But, according to Theophrastus, corn kept best in granaries
- unplastered with lime. Hist. Plant. viii. 10. 1. In a certain part of
- Cappadocia called Petra, corn would keep fit for sowing forty years,
- and for food sixty or seventy, although in that district cloths and
- other articles decay rapidly. Id. viii. 10. 5.
-
-Footnote 1765:
-
- Among tame animals designed to protect the farmstead from vermin, the
- weasel was sometimes used. Hom. Batrachom. 52. Ovid. Met. ix. 323.
- Luc. Timon. § 21. Perizon. ad Ælian. Var. Hist. xiv. 4. Muncker, ad
- Anton. Liber. 29. Plin. Hist. Nat. xix. 16. Welcker. ad Simon. Amorg.
- p. 43.
-
-Footnote 1766:
-
- From which they carefully cleansed the spider’s webs: ἐκ δ᾽ ἀγγέων
- ἐλάσειας ἀράχνια. Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 475. Cf. 600. A similar method
- still prevails in the islands of the Archipelago when the grain is
- intended for the market: “Ceux qui veulent porter leurs grains à la
- ville, les mettent dans des vases de terre cuite, qu’ils remplissent à
- deux ou trois pouces près; ensuite ils étendent par dessus quelques
- feuilles de figuier sauvage, appelé _orni_, et en Latin _caprificus_;
- enfin ils achèvent de remplir les vases avec de la cendre, et les
- couvrent d’une espèce d’ardoise, mais plus forte et plus épaisse que
- celle dont on se sert en France pour couvrir les maisons.” Della
- Rocca, Traité Complet sur les Abeilles, t. i. p. 200.
-
-Footnote 1767:
-
- Varro. i. 57.
-
------
-
-Before the produce of the new year was carried in, the granaries, having
-been carefully swept, were smeared all over with oil-lees. Various other
-precautions were, likewise, taken to protect the sacred gifts of Demeter
-from depredation, such as drawing on the floor broad lines of
-chalk,[1768] or strewing handfuls of wild origany round the heaps, or
-sprinkling them with the ashes of oaken twigs or dry cow’s dung, or
-sprigs of wormwood and southernwood, or, in greater quantity, the leaves
-of the everlasting. Instead of these, in some cases, they made use of
-powdered clay[1769] or dry pomegranate leaves, rubbed small, and passed
-through a sieve, a chœnix of which was sprinkled over a bushel of corn.
-The favourite plan, however, seems to have been, to spread a layer of
-half-withered fleabane over the floor, on which were poured about ten
-bushels of wheat, then a layer of fleabane, and so on, until the granary
-was full.[1770] Wheat thus layed up was supposed not only to last many
-years, but also to preserve its weight in breadmaking. To render barley
-durable, they strewed over it laurel leaves, or the ashes of laurel
-wood, as, likewise, everlasting, calaminth, and gypsum, or placed a
-tightly-corked bottle of vinegar,[1771] in the middle of the heap. To
-communicate greater plumpness to all kinds of grain, they sprinkled over
-the piles a mixture composed of nitre,[1772] spume of nitre, and fine
-earth, which, likewise, acted as a preservative. To render flour more
-durable, they thrust into it small maple branches, stripped of their
-leaves, or little cakes of salt and cumin.[1773]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1768:
-
- Geop. ii. 29.
-
-Footnote 1769:
-
- This substance was brought from Olynthos and Cerinthos, in Eubœa. It
- is said to have improved the appearance of the wheat, though it
- deteriorated its quality as an article of food. Theoph. viii. 10. 7.
-
-Footnote 1770:
-
- The granaries of the island of Syra, with the contrivance by which
- corn is there preserved at the present day, are thus described by
- Della Rocca:—“Les granges, appelées en Grec θεμονέα, ont communément
- une vingtaine de pieds de long, sur huit à dix de hauteur et de
- largeur. On les remplit jusqu’à la moitié de leur hauteur, de paille
- bien foulée: on pratique un espace de trois ou quatre pieds, que l’on
- remplit de grain. A côté on en forme un autre, que l’on remplit de
- même, et ainsi de suite, selon l’étendue de la grange, et la quantité
- de grain que l’on a; cela fait, par des ouvertures pratiquées dans la
- couverture, on recouvre de paille tout le bled, jusqu’à ce que la
- grange soit exactement remplie. Quand on veut en faire usage, on
- commence par le tas le plus voisin de la porte; on enlève d’abord la
- paille avec beaucoup de précaution: plus on approche, plus cette
- précaution augmente; enfin, pour ôter les derniers brins de paille, on
- se sert d’un balai de millepertuis ou d’autres plantes que l’on fait
- sécher; et si malgré tous ces soins, la surface du monceau de grain
- n’est pas bien nette, on achève d’en enlever toutes les menues pailles
- en la vannant avec un chapeau car les paysans de nos îles portent
- comme ici, dans les champs, des chapeaux ronds de feutre; ils en
- portent aussi de paille, que l’on travaille avec beaucoup de
- délicatesse à Sifanto.” Traité Complet sur les Abeilles. t. i. p. 199,
- seq. Among the tribes of Northern Africa a more complete system of
- preserving grain prevails. “The Arabs, in lieu of granaries, preserve
- all their grain in pits: forty or fifty of these are made, each to
- contain about a thousand bushels: the spot selected is a dry, sandy
- soil, the hole being formed in the shape of a large earthen jug, the
- sides are plastered with mortar about a foot in thickness, and the
- wheat or grain filled up to the mouth, which is left just large enough
- for a man to get in at, and is about three feet below the surface of
- the ground; this is now plastered over also, and filled with the soil
- around to the same level as the surrounding country. The earth taken
- out in forming the pits is removed to a distance, and being scattered
- abroad, in a month or two the grass grows over the surface, and no
- one, unless those who have buried this treasure, would imagine that
- there was anything beneath their feet. The grain thus buried preserves
- for many years. I have eaten bread at the Esmailla made from wheat as
- old as the Sultan, having been buried the year of his birth, and it
- was as good as that made of flour from this year’s crop.” Colonel
- Scott, Journal of a Residence in the Esmailla of Abd-el-Kader. p. 155,
- seq. Mandelslo (lib. ii. c. iii.) found corn-vaults of similar
- construction in the Azores; and most travellers who have visited the
- island of Malta will have observed in the fortifications of Valetta
- that series of curious and beautiful granaries excavated in the form
- of a bottle in the solid rock.
-
-Footnote 1771:
-
- Geop. ii. 30, seq.
-
-Footnote 1772:
-
- Geop. ii. 28.
-
-Footnote 1773:
-
- Geop. ii. 30.
-
------
-
-The fruits of the earth having been thus safely lodged within doors, the
-grateful husbandmen celebrated in honour of their rural gods, Demeter
-and Dionysos, a festival which may, perhaps, be denominated that of the
-Harvest Home. In Attica it took place in the great temple at Eleusis,
-and continued during several days. No bloody sacrifices were on this
-occasion offered up; but, in lieu of them, oblations of cakes and fruit
-with other rustic offerings, designed at once to express their gratitude
-for past blessings, and to render the gods propitious to them in future.
-The first loaf made from the new corn was probably eaten or offered up
-on this day, since it received the name of Thargelos, or Thalusios, from
-Thalusia, the denomination of the festival.[1774]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1774:
-
- Vid. Theoc. Eidyll. vii. 3. Etym. Mag. 444. 13. Athen. xiii. 65. iii.
- 80. Meurs. Græc. Fer. p. 15. p. 142. Dem. adv. Neær. § 27, with the
- authorities collected by Taylor.
-
------
-
-Before we quit the farm, it may be observed, that the ancients kept a
-number of slaves, constituting a kind of rural police, whose occupation
-wholly consisted in guarding the boundaries of estates.[1775] These,
-among the Romans, were denominated rangers, or foresters. There were
-others to whom the care of the fruit was entrusted; and both these
-classes of persons were probably elderly men, remarkable for their
-diligence and fidelity, who were rewarded, by appointment to this more
-easy duty, for their honest discharge in youth of such as were more
-painful and laborious. Boys were sometimes set to keep watch over
-vineyards,[1776] as we may see in the first Eidyll of Theocritus, where
-he gives us a lively sketch of such a guardian plotted against by two
-foxes.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1775:
-
- Such of these as had charge of the timber may be denominated
- wood-reeves, a term which answers very well the Latin Saltuarius. The
- slave-guards of forests, in Crete, were called Ergatones. Hesych. ap.
- Meurs. Cret. p. 190.
-
-Footnote 1776:
-
- Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p. 223, seq. Theocrit. Eidyll. xxv. 27. Cf.
- Feith. Antiq. Hom. iv. i. 276, sqq. Vineyards in Athens still require
- guards. Speaking of his approach to Athens from the Peiræeus, Chandler
- observes:—“In a tree was a kind of couch, sheltered with boughs,
- belonging to a man employed to watch there during the vintage.” ii.
- 27.
-
------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
- PASTORAL LIFE.
-
-
-But within the circle of Hellenic country life[1777] there was a kind of
-parenthetical existence, a remnant of the old nomadic habits, once
-common, perhaps, to the whole race,—I mean the pastoral life, of which
-we obtain so many glimpses through the leafy glades and grassy avenues
-of Greek poetry. No doubt, the fancy of imaginative men, thirsting for a
-degree of simplicity and happiness greater than they find around them in
-cities or villages, is apt to kindle and shed too glorious a light on
-approaching the tranquil solitudes, the pine forests, the mountain
-glens, the hidden lakes, the umbrageous streams that leap and frolic
-down the wild rocks of a country so rife with beauty as Greece.
-Nevertheless, adhering strictly to truth and reality, there is, in such
-regions, much about the pastoral life to delight the mind. In the first
-place, the occupations of an ancient shepherd left him great leisure,
-and he was generally, by habit no less than by inclination, led to prize
-that “dolce far niente” which, in all southern climates, constitutes the
-chief enjoyment of existence.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1777:
-
- The charm of that repose and freedom from care supposed to be tasted
- in the seclusion of the country, appears in all ages to have led to
- the belief, that there is something more natural in fields and forests
- than in cities, though it be quite as necessary that man should have
- dwellings as that he should cultivate the ground. The paradox,
- however, is thus expressed by Varro: Divina natura dedit agros, ars
- humana ædificavit urbes. De Re Rust. iii. 1, which Cowper,
- unconsciously perhaps, has thus translated,
-
- God gave the country, but man made the town.
-
------
-
-And indeed all the world over, repose, both of mind and body, is sweet.
-But not entire repose. Accordingly the Grecian shepherd, whose flocks
-fed tranquilly, whose condition, assured, and pinched by no necessities,
-left him at liberty to consult his own tastes in his recreations, took
-refuge from idleness in music and song.[1778] At first, and perhaps
-always, their lays were rude; but nature, their only teacher, infused
-into them originality and passion, such as we find in the only poet of
-antiquity, save Homer, in whose verses the fragrance of the woods still
-breathes. Whether like Paris and Anchises they kept their own flocks or
-undertook the care for others, they were still on the mountains
-perfectly free. Their education was peculiar. Abroad much after
-dark,[1779] in a climate where the summer nights are soft and balmy
-beyond expression, and where the stars seem lovingly to crowd closer
-about the earth, they necessarily grew romantic and superstitious.[1780]
-Events occurring early in their own lives or handed down to them by
-tradition, long meditated on, were in the end invested with supernatural
-attributes. Under similar circumstances their national religion had
-probably been first formed. They in the same way, in every canton,
-created a local religion.[1781] Their very creed was poetry. Tree, rock,
-mountain, spring, every thing was instinct with divinity, not
-mystically, as in certain philosophical systems, but literally; and, as
-they believed, the immortal race, their invisible companions at all
-hours, could when they pleased put on visibility, or rather remove from
-their eyes the film which prevented their habitually beholding them.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1778:
-
- Travellers find among the modern shepherds of the East much the same
- tastes and habits. “The hills,” observed Dr. Chandler, speaking of
- Lydia, “were enlivened by flocks of sheep and goats, and resounded
- with the rude music of the lyre and of the pipe; the former a stringed
- instrument resembling a guitar, and held much in the same manner, but
- usually played on with a bow.” Chandler, i. p. 85. Cf. Theocrit.
- Eidyll. i. 7. viii. 9.
-
-Footnote 1779:
-
- The same habits still prevail: “We could discern fires on Lesbos as
- before on several islands and capes, made chiefly by fishermen and
- shepherds, who live much abroad in the air, to burn the strong stalks
- of the Turkey wheat and the dry herbage on the mountains.” Chandler,
- i. 11. Cf. p. 320.
-
-Footnote 1780:
-
- Among other things we find them putting the strongest faith in
- dreams—at least we may suppose the fishermen in Theocritus, who lay so
- much stress on the visions of the night, to hold a creed pretty nearly
- akin to that of shepherds. Eidyll. 21. v. 29. sqq.
-
-Footnote 1781:
-
- The gods they principally worshiped were Pan, the Muses, and the
- Nymphs. To the Nymphs and Pan they sacrificed as to gods presiding
- over mountains, where they themselves usually wandered. Pan, moreover,
- was skilled in the pipe, the instrument of their race. The Muses they
- adored as the goddesses of poetry and music. Schol. Theoc. i. 6. In
- verse 12 of the same Eidyll. the Nymphs are spoken of where the office
- of the Muses is in contemplation, which may easily be explained. For
- the Muses are properly the Nymphs of those fountains which inspire
- poets with their lays. Cf. Voss. ad Virg. Eclog. iii. 84. By the
- Lydians the Muses were denominated Nymphs. Schol. Theoc. Eidyll. vii.
- 92. Cf. Eidyll. v. 140. Lyc. Cassand. 274. ibique Schol. et Potter.
- Kiessl. ad Theocrit.
-
------
-
-It is well known that, in the present day, among the nomadic nations of
-Asia, the sons of the chiefs still follow their flocks in the
-wilderness. And this in the heroic ages was likewise the case in
-Greece,[1782] where youths of the noblest families watched over their
-fathers’ sheep and cattle. Thus Bucolion, son of Laomedon, led to
-pasture the flocks of his sire, and, in the solitudes of the Phrygian
-mountains, was met and loved by a nymph.[1783] Two sons also of Priam
-pursued the same occupation;[1784] and thus among the Hebrews, David,
-the son of Jesse, passes his youth in the sheepfold, and his manhood on
-a throne. In this secluded and solitary life the sights and sounds of
-nature became familiar to them, the voice of sudden torrents rushing
-from the mountains,[1785] the roar of lions springing on their folds, or
-the sweet moonlight silvering both mountain and valley. It is with the
-shepherd’s life that Homer connects that noble description of the night
-which Chapman has thus translated:
-
- As when about the silver moon, when air is free from wind,[1786]
- And stars shine clear,[1787] to whose sweet beams high prospects and the
- brows
- Of all steep hills and pinnacles thrust up themselves for shows,
- And even the lonely valleys joy to glitter in their sight,
- When the unmeasured firmament bursts to disclose her light,
- And all the signs in heaven are seen, that glad the shepherd’s heart.
-
-The glimpses of pastoral life, albeit too few, are still frequent in
-Homer, who loves, whenever possible, to illustrate his subject by
-bringing before our minds the image of a shepherd. Thus Hector, lifting
-a large rock, is compared to a shepherd bearing a ram’s fleece.[1788]
-
- As when the fleece, though large yet light, the careful shepherd rears,
- With both hands plunged within its folds, so he the rock uptears.
-
-Footnote 1782:
-
- Lycoph. Cassand. 91, seq. in common with Homer and the other ancient
- poets, represent princes as shepherds. The guarding of flocks was
- then, in fact, a regal occupation. Didymos, ad Odyss. ν. 223,
- observes, that τὸ παλαιὸν καὶ οἱ τῶν βασιλέων παίδες πανάπαλοι (l.
- παναίπολοι) ἐκαλοῦντο, καὶ ἐποίμαινον. Meurs. ad Lycoph. p. 1181.
- Varr. De Re Rust. ii. 1.
-
-Footnote 1783:
-
- Il. ζ. 25. Odyss. ο. 385, seq.
-
-Footnote 1784:
-
- Il. δ. 106.
-
-Footnote 1785:
-
- Iliad. δ. 452, seq. ε. 137. θ, 555.
-
-Footnote 1786:
-
- The following picture by Milton almost seems to be designed to form a
- contrast to the above:
-
- As when from mountain-tops the dusky clouds
- Ascending, while the north wind sleeps, o’erspread
- Heaven’s cheerful face, the lowring element
- Scowls o’er the darken’d landscape snow or shower;
- If chance the radiant sun, with farewell sweet,
- Extend his evening beam, the fields revive,
- The birds their notes renew, and bleating herds
- Attest their joy, that hill and valley rings.
- Parad. Lost, ii. 488, sqq.
-
- Iliad θ. 559, sqq. Here _shepherd_, observes the Scholiast, is used
- for _herdsman_. Ποιμήν εἶπεν ἀντὶ τοῦ βουκόλος διὰ νυκτὸς γὰρ αἱ βόες
- νέμονται, in loc. i. 238.
-
-Footnote 1787:
-
- On this passage Ἀρίσταρχος τὴν κατὰ φύσιν λαμπρὰν λέγει κἂν μὴ
- πλήθουσα ᾖ εἰ γὰρ πληροσέληνος ἦν, ἐκέκρυπτο ἄν μᾶλλον τὰ ἄστρα.
- Schol. Bekker. t. i. 238. Cf. Eustath. in Iliad. θ. t. i. p. 621.
-
-Footnote 1788:
-
- Iliad, μ. 451, seq.
-
------
-
-Again, the Trojan forces following their leader, Æneas, suggest to his
-mind the idea of innumerable flocks bounding after a ram to drink.[1789]
-
- The people followed, as the flock the shaggy ram succeeds,
- Who to the cooling streamlet’s bank the woolly nation leads
- (While swells the shepherd’s heart with joy) from pasture on the meads.
-
-Elsewhere, he describes a troop of hungry wolves attacking the flocks on
-the mountains:—[1790]
-
- As when the hungry wolves, on folds forsaken by the watch,
- Descend, the kids and tender lambs by thievish force to snatch;
- Or when the timid browsing crew are scattered far and wide,
- And seized, by witless shepherds left upon the mountain side.
-
-But, in another place, they are represented contending with a lion by
-night for the body of one of their flock.[1791]
-
- Thus the night-watching shepherds strive, but vainly, to repel
- The angry lion, whom the stings of want and rage impel,
- Upon the carcase fastens he: his heart no fear can quell.
-
-Where the number of the flock required the care of several men a chief
-shepherd ἐπιποιμὴν was appointed to overlook the rest.[1792] Among the
-ancients twenty sheep were thought to require the attention of a man and
-a boy;[1793] but, in modern times, three men and a boy, with four or
-five dogs, are sometimes entrusted with a flock of five hundred, of
-which two-thirds are ewes.[1794] The proportion of rams to ewes is at
-present as four to a hundred.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1789:
-
- Iliad, ν. 491, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1790:
-
- Iliad. π. 354, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1791:
-
- Iliad. σ. 161, seq.
-
-Footnote 1792:
-
- Odyss. μ. 131. The duties of this servant are described by Varro, who
- likewise states the physical qualities required to be found in
- shepherds. Contra, pernoctare ad suum quemque gregem esse omnes sub
- uno magistro pecoris cum esse majorem natu potius quàm alios et
- peritiorem quàm reliquos, quod iis qui ætate, et scientia præstant
- animo æquiore reliquis parent. Ita tamen oportet ætate præstare ut ne
- propter senectutem minus sustinere possit labores. Neque enim senes,
- neque pueri callium difficultatem, ac montium arduitatem, atque
- asperitatem facile ferunt: quod patiendum illis qui greges sequuntur
- præsertim armenticios, ac caprinos quibus rupes ac silvæ ad pabulandi
- cordi. De Re Rust, ii. 10. Cf. Colum. ii. 1.
-
-Footnote 1793:
-
- Geop. xviii. 1. Yet we find mention in Demosthenes of a shepherd with
- a flock of fifty sheep under his care. In Everg. et Mnes. § 15.
-
-Footnote 1794:
-
- Leake, Travels in the Morea, vol. i. p. 17.
-
------
-
-From very remote ages shepherds had learned to avail themselves of the
-aid of dogs,[1795] which in farms were usually furnished with wooden
-collars.[1796] The breed generally employed in this service, in later
-ages at least, was the Molossian,[1797] which, though exceedingly
-powerful and fierce towards strangers, was by its masters found
-sufficiently gentle and tractable. The shepherd’s pipe,[1798] frequently
-made of the donax, or common river-reed,[1799] likewise used in
-thatching cottages, formed a no less necessary accompaniment. Another of
-their instruments of music was the flute crooked at the top, finely
-polished and rubbed with bees’ wax.[1800]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1795:
-
- Plat. de Rep. iv. t. vi. p. 204. Columella describes with poetical
- enthusiasm the character and qualities of the shepherd’s dog, which he
- refuses to class among dumb animals, its bark being, according to him,
- full of meaning: “Canis falso dicitur mutus custos nam quis hominum
- clarius, aut tanta vociferatione bestiam vel furem prædicat quam iste
- latratu? quis famulus amantior domini? quis fidelior comes? quis
- custos incorruptior? quis excubitor inveniri potest vigilantior? quis
- denique ultor aut vindex constantior? Quare vel in primis hoc animal
- mercari tuerique debet agricola, quod et villam et fructus
- familiamque, at pecora custodit.” De Re Rusticâ, 7. 12.
-
-Footnote 1796:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 897.
-
-Footnote 1797:
-
- Aristot. Hist. Animal. ix. 1.
-
-Footnote 1798:
-
- Luc. Bis Accus. § 11.
-
-Footnote 1799:
-
- Plat. Rep. iii. § 10. Stalb.
-
-Footnote 1800:
-
- Theocrit. i. 129. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 132. Mosch. Eidyll. iii. 54.
-
------
-
-As the Arcadians, descendants of the Pelasgians, derived one of their
-principal delights from music,[1801] it is reasonable to infer that the
-ancestral nation, preëminently pastoral, was likewise addicted to this
-science. The feeding of herds and flocks constituted the principal
-occupation of the Proselenoi,[1802] who were little devoted to
-agriculture, as may be inferred from their acorn-eating habits; for no
-nation ever continued to feed on mast after they could obtain bread. A
-report prevailed in the ancient world that the Arcadians were of a
-poetical temperament, to which Virgil alludes in the well-known verses—
-
- Arcades ambo,
- Et cantare pares et respondere parati.
-
-And as improvisatori they may possibly have excelled, though Greece knew
-nothing of an Arcadian literature. However, chiefly after the example of
-Virgil, the poets of modern times have always delighted to convert
-Arcadia into a kind of pastoral Utopia, which is done by Sannazaro,
-Tasso, Guarini, Sir Philip Sydney, Daniel, and many others. Palmerius à
-Grentmesnil[1803] discovers something like the descendants of the
-Arcadians among the Irish, whose pastoral taste for music he conceives
-to be commemorated by the triangular harp in the national insignia.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1801:
-
- Athen. xiv. 22.
-
-Footnote 1802:
-
- Etym. Mag. 690. 11.
-
-Footnote 1803:
-
- “Sic et hodie audio Hibernos, qui pecuariam exercent, musicæ deditos,
- et triangulari cithara (quam vocamus _harpe_) plerumque se oblectare
- solere, unde aiunt insignia regni Hiberniæ fuisse olim et esse adhuc
- tale musicum instrumentum.” Desc. Græc. Ant. p. 61.
-
------
-
-Their usual clothing consisted of diptheræ, or dressed sheepskins,[1804]
-just as at the present day among the Nubian shepherds, whom one may see
-thus clad, roaming through the sandy hollows of the Lybian desert. On
-the inside of these skins the traitor Hermion wrote the letters which
-betrayed the designs of his countrymen to the enemy in Laconia.[1805]
-Others wore goatskin cloaks, which they likewise used as a coverlet at
-night.[1806] Euripides introduces his chorus of satyrs complaining of
-this miserable costume.[1807]
-
- “Much loved Bacchos where dost thou
- Lonely dwell afar,
- Shaking thy gold locks at eve
- Like a blazing star?
- While I thy minister am fain
- To serve this one-eyed Cyclop swain,
- A slave borne down by fortune’s stroke
- In a wretched goatskin cloak.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 1804:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 73. Cf. Vesp. 442. Küst.—Eq. 398. Bekk. Luc.
- Tim. § 8. We find mention also made of a cloak of wolfskin.
- Philostrat. Vit. Sophist. ii. 6.
-
-Footnote 1805:
-
- Suidas. v. διφθέρα. t. i. p. 757. e.
-
-Footnote 1806:
-
- Harless. ad Theocrit. v. 2.
-
-Footnote 1807:
-
- Cyclop. 79, seq.
-
------
-
-And thus simple was ever their appearance in the East. But, as I have
-hinted above, their very great leisure,[1808] the accidents of their
-occupation, and the grand and regular march of natural phenomena in
-those countries, often ripened their intellects beyond what the
-condition of a modern heath-trotter renders credible. Thus, in the
-mountains of Chaldæa, astronomy and all its parasitical sciences took
-birth among the shepherd race. From temperament and circumstances, the
-inhabitants of thinly-peopled tracts, if unvexed by wars, are profoundly
-meditative. What they behold in serene indistraction gradually rouses
-their thoughts, and presenting itself again and again, attended always,
-as the phenomena of the heavens are, by the same accidents, compels them
-to study.[1809]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1808:
-
- Lord Bacon considers the pastoral state preferable in some respects to
- the agricultural:—“The two simplest and most primitive trades of life;
- that of the shepherd (who by reason of his leisure, rests in a place,
- and living in view of heaven, is a lively image of a contemplative
- life) and that of the husbandman; where we see the favour of God went
- to the shepherd and not to the tiller of the ground.”—Advancement of
- Learning, p. 64. Shepherds made libations of milk to the Muses.
- Theocrit. i. 143, seq.
-
-Footnote 1809:
-
- Even yet we find the shepherds of Greece retain some smack of
- classical learning: “After dinner I walked out with a shepherd’s boy
- to herbarise; my pastoral botanist surprised me not a little with his
- nomenclature; I traced the names of Dioscorides, and Theophrastus,
- corrupted, indeed, in some degree by pronunciation, and by the long
- _series annorum_, which had elapsed since the time of these
- philosophers, but many of them were unmutilated, and their virtues
- faithfully handed down in the oral traditions of the country. My
- shepherd boy returned to his fold not less satisfied with some paras
- that I had given him, than I was in finding in such a rustic a
- repository of ancient science.”—Sibth. in Walp. i. 66, seq. There is
- in Sir John Fortescue, De Laudibus Legum Angliæ, translated by Robert
- Mulcaster, in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, a passage describing the
- pastoral habits of our ancestors, and the intellectual superiority
- they engendered, which appears to me so excellent, that I cannot
- resist the temptation to introduce it here:—“England is so fertile and
- fruitefull, that comparing quantity to quantity it surmounteth all
- other landes in fruitefulnesse. Yea, it bringeth forth fruite of
- itselfe, scant provoked by mann’s industrie and labour. For there the
- landes, the fieldes, the groves, and the woodes, doe so aboundantlye
- springe, that the same untilled doe commonly yield to their owners
- more profite then tilled, though else they bee most fruitefull of
- corne and graine. There also are fieldes of pasture inclosed with
- hedges and ditches, with trees planted and growing uppon the same,
- which are a defence to their heardes of sheepe and cattell, against
- stormes and heate of the sunne; and the pastures are commonly watered,
- so that cattell shutte and closed therein have no neede of keeping
- neither by day, nor by night. For there bee no wolves, nor beares, nor
- lyons, wherefore their sheepe lye by night in the fields, unkept
- within their foldes wherewith their land is manured. By the meanes
- whereof, the men of that countrie are scant troubled with any
- painefull labour, wherefore they live more spiritually, as did the
- ancient fathers, which did rather choose to keepe and feede cattell,
- than to disturbe the quietnesse of the minde with care of husbandrie.
- And heereof it cometh, that menne of this countrie are more apte and
- fitte to discerne in doubtfull causes of great examination and triall,
- than are menne whollye given to moyling in the ground; in whom that
- rurall exercise engendereth rudeness of witte and minde.” chap. 29.
-
------
-
-But solitude is less surely the nurse of science than of superstition.
-The leaven, which in populous cities scarcely swells visibly in the
-breast, ferments unrestrainedly in the depths of woods, in the
-high-piled recesses of mountains, in the gloom of caverns, where nature
-invests itself with attributes which address themselves powerfully to
-the heart, and appears almost to hold communion with its offspring.
-Hence the wild mythologies of Nomadic races, which are not loose-hanging
-creeds, to be put off and on like a cloak, but a belief inwrought into
-their souls, a part of themselves, and perhaps the best part, since it
-is from this that springs the whole dignity and poetry of their lives.
-In all countries fables rise in the fields, to flow into and be lost in
-the cities. Observe the wild picture which Plato, in his Academic Dream,
-presents to us of a group of Lydian shepherds. It has all the poetical
-elements of an Arabian tale.
-
-Tradition, he says, represented Gyges the ancestor of Crœsus as a hired
-shepherd, who with many others guarded the imperial flocks in the
-remoter districts of the country. At this time happened a great
-earthquake, attended by floods of rain, which, in the parts where they
-were, opened up a vast chasm in the earth. Gyges arriving alone at the
-mouth of the gap stood amazed at its depth and magnitude, but observing
-a practicable descent went down, and roamed through its subterraneous
-passages. Many marvellous things, according to the mythos, did he there
-see, and among the rest a hollow brazen horse, with doors in its side,
-through which looking in, he beheld a colossal naked corpse, with a
-jewelled ring on its hand. Transferring this to his own finger Gyges
-departed.
-
-Shortly afterwards, still wearing the signet, he went to the assembly of
-shepherds, which met monthly, for the purpose of selecting a person to
-bear the usual report of the flocks to the king. Sitting down among the
-rest he happened to turn the beavil of his ring towards himself, upon
-which he became invisible to his companions,[1810] as he clearly
-discovered from their discourse, which proceeded as if about an absent
-man. Smitten with much wonder he returned the gem to its former position
-and again became visible. He made the experiment over and over and
-always with success; upon which, like another Macbeth, a vast scheme of
-ambition darkly shadowed itself upon his mind, and a crown tinged
-slightly with blood swam before him. It does not, however, appear that
-like the Thane of Cawdor he was perplexed with scruples. He does not
-say,—
-
- “Why do I yield to that suggestion,
- Whose horrid image doth unfix my hair,
- And make my seated heart knock at my ribs,
- Against the use of nature? Present facts
- Are less than horrible imaginings.
- My thought whose murder’s yet but phantasy,
- Shakes so my single state of man, that function
- Is smothered in surmise, and nothing is,
- But what is not.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 1810:
-
- The reader will in this place perhaps remember the dream of Rousseau,
- on the enjoyment which the possession of such a ring would have
- afforded him; when after pushing his speculations as far as they could
- go he determines that he was much better without it.—Rêveries du
- Promeneur Solitaire, iii. 137.
-
------
-
-Gyges, with the ruthless resolution of an Oriental, forms his plan at
-once, and coolly works it out. He procures himself to be elected one of
-the mission to the king, and on arriving at the capital, dishonours the
-queen, murders his master, and ascends the throne.[1811]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1811:
-
- Plat. Rep. ii. § 3. Cf. x. § 12. Stallb. Among the gods similar powers
- were attributed to the helmet of Hades. Thus, in Homer, Athena is
- concealed from Mars by the effect of this enchanted piece of
- armour.—Iliad, ε. 845. Apollod. ii. 4. 2.
-
------
-
-This may be regarded as a specimen of the shepherds’ tales.[1812] But
-they moved for the most part in an atmosphere of superstition, had
-ceremonies of their own, a mythology of their own, and of the whole the
-pervading spirit was love. In communities highly civilised, this passion
-commonly degenerates into a plaything, despised when weak, and
-mischievous when strong. It is otherwise in the early stages of society.
-There, in proportion to their freedom from the aspirations and anxieties
-of ambition, men seek happiness in the cultivation of the affections.
-The society of women is to them all in all. And the evils that infest
-them, disturb their quiet, and engender crime, spring, too, from the
-same bitter-sweet fountain, which flows with honey or gall according to
-the temper of those who drink of it. Consequently, in contemplating the
-pastoral life of Greece, we must beware not to overlook the
-shepherdesses,[1813] those heroines of Bucolic poetry, whose freshness
-and nature still survive in Theocritus, and other fragments of
-antiquity, and may operate as an antidote to that insipid spawn whose
-loves and lamentations affect us like ipecacuanha in modern pastorals.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1812:
-
- To the same class belongs that tradition of a brazen tablet thrown up
- by a fountain in Lycia foretelling the overthrow of the Persian
- monarchy by the Greeks.—Plut. Alexand. § 17.
-
-Footnote 1813:
-
- Cf. Varr. De Re Rust. ii. 10.
-
------
-
-In these latitudes of society, at least, women enjoyed their freedom,
-and the glimpses presented to us of them as they there existed may be
-regarded among the chief charms of Greek poetry. Only, for example,
-observe the picture which Chæremon the Flower Poet, has delineated of a
-bevy of beautiful virgins sporting by moonlight:
-
- “There one reclined apart I saw, within the moon’s pale light,
- With bosom through her parted robe appearing snowy white;
- Another danced, and floating free her garments in the breeze
- She seemed as buoyant as the wave that leaps o’er summer seas.
- While dusky shadows all around shrunk backward from the place,
- Chased by the beaming splendour shed like sunshine from her face:
- Beside this living picture stood a maiden passing fair
- With soft round arms exposed; a fourth with free and graceful air,
- Like Dian when the bounding hart she tracks through morning dew,
- Bared through the opening of her robes her lovely limbs to view.
- And oh! the image of her charms, as clouds in heaven above,
- Mirrored by streams, left on my soul the stamp of hopeless love.
- And slumbering near them others lay, on beds of sweetest flowers,
- The dusky petaled violet, the rose of Paphian bowers.
- The inula and saffron flower, which on their garments cast,
- And veils, such hues as deck the sky when day is ebbing fast;
- While far and near tall marjoram bedecked the fairy ground,
- Loading with sweets the vagrant winds that frolicked all around.”[1814]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1814:
-
- Athen. xiii. 87.
-
------
-
-In the ordinary bucolic poets women to be sure are sketched with a rude
-pencil, though coquettish as queens, of which we have an exemplification
-in the picture on the shepherd’s cup:[1815]
-
- And there, by ivy shaded, sits a maid divinely wrought,
- With veil and circlet on her brows, by two fond lovers sought.
- Both beautiful with flowing hair, both sueing to be heard,
- On this side one, the other there, but neither is preferred.
- For now on this, on that anon, she pours her witching smile,
- Like sunshine on the buds of hope, in falsehood all and guile,
- Though ceaselessly, with swelling eyes, they seek her heart to move,
- By every soft and touching art that wins a maiden’s love.[1816]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1815:
-
- This was the κισσύβιον, a goblet or cup turned of ivy wood. It was
- usually rubbed with wax and polished, for the purpose of bringing out
- the beautiful carving which adorned it. Cf. Etym. Mag. 515. 33.
-
-Footnote 1816:
-
- Theocrit. i. 32, sqq.
-
------
-
-There is here no straining after the ideal. Like Titian’s beauties,
-these shepherdesses are all creatures of this earth, filled with robust
-health, dark-eyed, warm, impassioned, and somewhat deficient in reserve.
-They understand well how to act their part in a dialogue. For every bolt
-shot at them they can return another as keen. Each bower and bosky
-bourne seems redolent of their smiles; their laughter awakens the
-echoes; their ruddy lips and pearly teeth hang like a vision over every
-bubbling spring and love-hiding thicket which they were wont to
-frequent. Hence the charm of Theocritus. And a still stronger charm
-perhaps would have belonged to the pages of him who should have painted
-the shepherd’s life of a remoter age,[1817] when none were above such an
-occupation, which therefore united at once all the dignity of lofty
-independence with the careless freedom of manners and unapprehensive
-enjoyment in which consists the secret source of all the pleasure which
-rustic pictures afford. Most of his creations, though not all, are in
-this respect wanting. Ideas of penury[1818] slip in, and, in the midst
-of rich poetry, check the developement of pleasurable feelings. For the
-musical swains, though apparently ambitious of nought but the reputation
-of song, permit us to discover, that they are but hirelings tending
-flocks not their own. The contrast between persons of this class and
-those who are owners of the sheep they tend, is forcibly pointed out in
-the sacred language of Christ: “I am the good shepherd: the good
-shepherd giveth his life for the sheep. But he that is an hireling and
-not the shepherd and whose own the sheep are not, seeth the wolf coming,
-and leaveth the sheep and fleeth, and the wolf catcheth them and
-scattereth the sheep. The hireling fleeth because he is a hireling, and
-careth not for the sheep. I am the good shepherd and know my sheep and
-am known of mine. As the Father knoweth me even so know I the Father;
-and I lay down my life for the sheep.”[1819] The same affectionate
-tenderness is attributed to shepherds in the prophetic writings: “he
-shall feed his flocks like a shepherd, he shall gather the lambs with
-his arm, and carry them in his bosom, and shall gently lead those that
-are with young.”[1820]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1817:
-
- Though even here we detect the presence of hirelings; for Homer
- observes, that, among the Læstrigons, such shepherds as could do with
- little sleep received double wages. Odyss. κ. 84, seq.
-
-Footnote 1818:
-
- In fact black slaves, from Africa, were sometimes employed as
- shepherds, at least in Sicily. Theoc. i. 24.
-
-Footnote 1819:
-
- John, x. 11, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1820:
-
- Isaiah, xl. 11.
-
------
-
-In the matter of virtues and vices, the shepherds of antiquity were very
-much, no doubt, like other men. Their habits were such as grew naturally
-out of their position. Towards whatever their feelings led them they
-proceeded vehemently, and with that singleness of purpose which belongs
-to men of simple and decided character.[1821] They were too commonly
-creatures of mere impulse. From the peculiar form of their communion
-with nature, which, like the masses of Egyptian architecture, was
-continued and monotonous, they acquired a peculiarity of mental
-temperament, warm, as it were, in parts, and cold in parts. Every
-circumstance around them tended to rouse, pique, and inflame the passion
-of desire and its concomitants; the pairing of their flocks, of the
-birds, of the very wild beasts whose courage or ferocity they dreaded;
-their own leisure combined with the excess of health, the influence of
-climate, the solicitations of opportunity, impelled them into excess;
-and, accordingly, their morals in this respect sank to a low standard,
-and rendered them any thing but models of the golden age. The intellect
-of course was comparatively little cultivated; and there being no other
-check upon the feelings, suicides, murders of jealousy, and other
-evidences of ill-regulated passion would often occur.[1822]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1821:
-
- It has been observed by Gibbon, who had diligently studied the
- pastoral nations of Asia in their general habits and characteristics,
- that ambition and the spirit of conquest are powerfully excited by the
- shepherd’s manner of life. “The thrones of Asia have been repeatedly
- overturned by the shepherds of the north, and their arms have spread
- terror and devastation over the most fertile and warlike countries of
- Europe. On this occasion, as well as on many others, the sober
- historian is forcibly awakened from a pleasing vision and is compelled
- with some reluctance to confess, that the pastoral manners which have
- been adorned with the fairest attributes of peace and innocence are
- much better adapted to the fierce and cruel habits of a military
- life.” Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, iv. 348. Hippocrates in
- his brief but vigorous manner has presented us with a picture of the
- Scythian shepherd’s life in ancient times, (De Aër. et Loc. § 92,
- sqq.) and from modern travellers we find that it differed very little
- from that which they lead at the present day. See the travels of
- Rubriquis in Hakluyt, i. 101, sqq. See also the notes of Coray on
- Hippocrates, t. ii. 280, seq.
-
-Footnote 1822:
-
- Theocritus describes Daphnis dying for love. Eidyll. i. 135.
-
------
-
-But, in proportion as we pierce further back into antiquity, these
-tragical incidents become fewer: not merely because our knowledge of
-those ages is more scanty, but that in ruder times morality is
-comparatively lax, and men’s taste less fastidious. The rigid laws of
-marriage were then little observed. Women passed from husband to husband
-without losing character or caste; and when they produced illegitimate
-offspring attributed the paternity to some god, and scarcely considered
-the circumstance a misfortune. Half the princes of the Homeric age were
-illegitimate; for this is what is always meant by saying they were
-descended from the gods. Æneas was the son of some young woman whom
-Anchises met on the mountains, where he pastured his father’s flocks and
-pretended to have been loved by Aphrodite.[1823] Persons so
-circumstanced were, doubtless, capable of much romance. Nymphs and
-goddesses peopled their imagination, and their imagination let loose its
-brood upon the woods. Poets afterwards, able to infuse a soul into these
-rustic traditions, gave a local habitation and a name to every beautiful
-legend they could collect. Hence that sunny picture, the interview of
-Aphrodite and Anchises amid the lofty recesses, the grassy slopes, the
-sparkling leaping brooks, and old umbrageous forests of Mount Ida.
-Already, however, the force of dress was known, which Montaigne
-afterwards celebrated; for the Homeric bard, about to record an
-interview between the goddess and her shepherd-lover, instead of
-supposing her to have been
-
- “When unadorned, adorned the most,”
-
-describes all the arts of a luxurious toilette.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1823:
-
- Hom. Hymn. ad Ven. 54, sqq.
-
------
-
-The picture, however, of pastoral life which he suggests rather than
-describes, is worked out with strokes of great simplicity. All the other
-herdsmen disperse in the execution of their several duties, leaving
-Anchises alone in the cattle-sheds,[1824] spacious in dimensions, and
-tastefully erected, where he amuses his solitary leisure with the music
-of the cithara. While thus engaged he beholds the approach of the
-goddess,[1825] and is at once struck with her beauty and the splendour
-of her raiment. At the unearthly vision his love is kindled; but the
-poet, skilled in the mysteries of the heart, chastens his passion by
-overmastering feelings of reverence, such as necessarily belong to
-unsophisticated youth. Anchises constitutes, indeed, the _beau idéal_ of
-an heroic shepherd, simple, high-minded, ingenuous, venturous and
-fearless in contests with man or beast, but in his intercourse with
-woman gentle, reverent,
-
- “And of his port as meek as is a maid.”
-
-In fact, the gallant knights of romance seem rather to have been
-modelled after the heroic warriors of Greece, than from any realities
-supplied by the chivalrous ages. The author of the Hymn is careful in
-describing the shepherd’s couch, to insinuate with how great strength
-and courage he was endowed. He reclines, we are told, on skins of bears
-and lions slain by his own hand, though over these there were cast, for
-show, garments of the softest texture.[1826]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1824:
-
- Compare Trollope, Notes on St. John, x. i.
-
-Footnote 1825:
-
- Aleuas, the Thessalian, is said to have been favoured with the visits
- of a very different mistress as he pastured his herds on Mount Ossa,
- near the Hæmonian spring; for a dragon of enormous size, becoming
- enamoured of his beauty and golden hair, frequently approached the
- shepherd with presents of game of her own catching. Having laid her
- gifts at his feet, she would kiss his locks and lick his face with her
- tongue, which, as the fountain was so near it, may be hoped was a work
- of supererogation. Ælian. De Nat. Animal. viii. 11.
-
-Footnote 1826:
-
- Hymn. ad Vener. 158, sqq.
-
------
-
-Throughout this work it has been seen how the influence of climate and
-position concurred in the formation of the Greek character. We may
-ourselves put the doctrine to the proof by observing the effect upon our
-minds of those reflections of landscapes which appear in language; rude
-Boreal scenes exciting the spirit of contention and energy; while the
-soft valleys, groves, and odoriferous gardens of the South produce a
-calm upon our thoughts favourable to the more benevolent emotions.
-Hellenic shepherds, therefore, no other causes preventing, may upon the
-whole be supposed to have been humane.
-
-Indeed, the very curious adventures of a sophist,[1827] in the mountains
-of Eubœa, preserved among the literary wrecks of antiquity, open up to
-our view a picture of pastoral life which, in spite of much rudeness and
-indigence, exhibits the Greek character in its original roughness and
-simplicity, full of kindness, full of gentleness, full of hospitable
-propensities, which would do honour to the noblest Arab Sheikh. And the
-material scene itself, in every feature Grecian, harmonises exactly with
-the moral landscape.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1827:
-
- Dion Chrysostom. Orat. vii. t. i. p. 219, sqq. Phot. 166. a. 24.
-
------
-
-The eastern shores of the island of Negropont, beetled over by Mount
-Caphareus,[1828] and indented by no creeks or harbours, were in
-antiquity infamous for shipwrecks, notwithstanding that they formed the
-principal station of the purple fishers.[1829] Cast away on this coast,
-the sophist Dion, for his eloquence surnamed of the golden-mouth, fell
-in with a pastoral hunter who, entertaining him generously, furnished at
-the same time a complete idea of the rude herdsman, who preserved in the
-vicinity of the highest civilisation known to the old world the
-simplicity of the Homeric Abantes.[1830] Nay, this wild sportsman,
-pursuing with his huge dogs a stag along the cliffs, powerful in limb,
-hale in colour, and with long hair streaming over his shoulders,
-appeared to be the natural descendant of those Heroic warriors.[1831]
-Armed with his hunting-knife, he flays and cuts up the stag upon the
-spot, and taking along with him the skin and choicest pieces of venison
-abandons the remainder on the beach. As they go along he displays the
-knowledge wherewith experience stores the rustic mind. He understands
-the signs of the weather, and from the clouds which cap the summits of
-Caphareus foretells how long the sea will continue unnavigable.[1832]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1828:
-
- On this mountain and the mythological legends attached to it, see
- Virg. Æn. xi. 260, with the note of Servius. Ovid. Metamorph. xiv.
- 472. Cf. Propert. v. 115, sqq. Jacobs. Plin. iv. 21. An ancient
- scholiast, quoted by Morell, thus relates the revenge of Nauplios:
- Ναύπλιος τοῦ υἱέος δὴ τοῦ Παλαμήδους τοῦ φόνου ἀμυνόμενος τοὺς Ἕλλήνας
- τοῦ ἀνέμου αὐτοῖς ἐνστάντος· ἐπεὶ τοῦτον διὰ θαλάττης ἐγέλων. αὐτὸς
- οὗτος τὸν Καφηρέα καταλαβὼν εἶτα νυκτὸς πυρσεύων ἀπὸ τῶν ἐκεῖσε
- πετρωδῶν πάγων, ἠπάτα προσχεῖν, ὡς δή τινι εὐπροσόδῳ ἀκτῆ τοῖς
- ἀποτόμοις κρημνοῖς εἰς βάθος ἐῤῥιζωμένοις καὶ χοιράσι διειλημμένοις.
- καὶ οὕτως ἀπρόοπτως ἀπωλόντο. Schediasm. &c., in Dion. t. ii. p. 580,
- seq. Cf. Strab. viii. 6. t ii. p. 195. Apollodor. ii. i. 5. Orph.
- Argonaut. 204, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1829:
-
- On the purple fisheries of Eubœa, cf. Feder. Morell. Schediasm. &c.,
- in Dion. ii. 576. Reiske. and Aristot. Hist. Animal. v. 15.
-
-Footnote 1830:
-
- A life equally simple is led by the Albanian shepherds of the present
- day. “They live on the mountains, in the vale or the plain, as the
- varying seasons require, under arbours, or sheds, covered with boughs,
- tending their flocks abroad, or milking the ewes and she-goats at the
- fold, and making cheese and butter to supply the city.” Chandler, ii.
- p. 135.
-
-Footnote 1831:
-
- Iliad. β. 541. δ. 464. The long hair of these ancient warriors is thus
- mentioned by the Homeric Scholiast: τὰ ὀπίσω μέρη τῆς κεφαλῆς κομῶντες
- ἀνδρείας χάριν. ἴδιον δὲ τοῦτο τῆς τῶν Εὐβοέων κουρᾶς, τὸ ὄπισθεν τὰς
- τρίχας βαθείας ἔχειν. t. i. p. 83. Bekker.
-
-Footnote 1832:
-
- Cf. Theoph. De Sign. Pluv. i. 22.
-
------
-
-Rude as an American backwoodsman, he was precipitated, by the rare luck
-of meeting with a stranger, into equal inquisitiveness and garrulity. He
-put questions without waiting for an answer. He gossipped of his own
-concerns; explained without being asked the whole economy of his life;
-and exhibited all that enthusiasm of beneficence which belongs to human
-nature when uncorrupted by the thirst of gold. There is a rare truth in
-the description; far too much ever to have graced a sophist’s tale,
-unless nature had supplied the model.
-
-“There are two of us,” says he, “who inhabit together the same rude
-nook, having married sisters, by whom we have both sons and daughters.
-We derive our subsistence principally from the chase, paying but little
-attention to agriculture, since we have no land of our own. Nor were our
-fathers better off in this respect than ourselves; for, though freeborn
-citizens, they were poor, and by their condition constrained to tend the
-herds of another, a man of great property, owning vast droves of cattle,
-numerous horses and sheep, several beautiful estates, with many other
-possessions, and all these mountains as far as you can see. This
-opulence, however, became his ruin. For the emperor, casting a covetous
-eye upon his domains, put him to death, that he might have a pretext for
-seizing on them. Our few beasts went along with our master’s, and the
-wages due to us there was no one to pay.
-
-“Here, therefore, of necessity we remained[1833] where two or three huts
-were left us, with a slight wooden shed in which the calves had been
-housed in the summer nights.[1834] For, during winter, we had been used
-to descend for pasture to the plains where, in the proper season, stores
-of hay were also laid up; but with the re-appearance of summer we
-returned again to the mountains. The spot which had formed our principal
-station now became our fixed dwelling. Branching off on either hand is a
-deep and shady valley, having in the middle a rivulet so shallow as to
-be easily traversed, both by cattle and their young. This stream,
-flowing from a spring hard by, is pure and perennial and cooled by the
-summer wind blowing perpetually up the ravine. The encircling forests of
-oak stretch forth their boughs far above, over a carpet of soft verdure,
-which descends with a gentle slope into the stream, giving birth to a
-few gad-flies,[1835] or any other insect hurtful to herds. Extending
-around are numerous lovely meadows, dotted with lofty trees, where the
-grass is green and luxuriant throughout the year.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 1833:
-
- Had Bernardin de St. Pierre read this when he wrote his Indian
- Cottage?
-
-Footnote 1834:
-
- An equal degree of contentment to that which in this recital we find
- exhibited by the Eubœan herdsmen, is still in our own times displayed
- by the rough peasants of the Lipari islands, in the midst of far
- greater privations:—“It is incredible at the same time how contented
- these islanders are amid all their poverty. Ulysses perhaps cherished
- not a greater love for his Ithaca than they bear to their Eolian rocks
- which, wretched as they may appear, they would not exchange for the
- Fortunate islands. Frequently have I entered their huts which seem
- like the nests of birds hung to the cliffs. They are framed of pieces
- of lava ill-joined together, equally destitute of ornament within and
- without, and scarcely admitting a feeble uncertain light, like some
- gloomy cavern.” Spallanzani, Travels in the Two Sicilies, iv. 147.
-
-Footnote 1835:
-
- The absence of these tormentors of cattle was considered a matter of
- great importance by the ancients. Virgil, where he is giving
- directions respecting the best pastures suited to the youthful mothers
- of the herds, celebrates the exploits of the gadfly:
-
- Saltibus in vacuis pascant, et plena secundum
- Flumina: muscus ubi, et viridissima gramine ripa,
- Speluncæque tegant, et saxea procubet umbra.
- Est lucos Silari circa, ilicibusque virentem
- Plurimus Alburnum volitans, cui nomen asilo
- Romanum est, œstrum Graii vertere vocantes:
- Asper, acerba sonans: quo tota exterrita sylvis
- Diffugiunt armenta; furit mugitibus æther
- Concussus, sylvæque et sicci ripa Tanagri.
- Georg. iii. 143, sqq.
-
- See the note of Philargyrius in loc. Aristot. Hist. Animal, iv. 4. v.
- 19.
-
------
-
-The eloquence of this description, I mean in the original, is not
-unworthy to be compared with that in the Phædrus[1836] which has given
-eternal bloom to the platane-tree and agnus castus on the banks of the
-Ilissos.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1836:
-
- Plat. Opp. t. i. p. 9. To protect from pollution spots shaded by noble
- trees they were accustomed to consecrate them to some god, and to
- erect beneath the overhanging branches statues and altars. Id. ib. In
- Crete the fountains are often shaded still by majestic plane-trees.
- Pashley, ii. 31.
-
------
-
-The conversion of these herdsmen into hunters is narrated by Dion with a
-patient simplicity worthy of Defoe. An air of solitude, snatched from
-Robinson Crusoe’s island, seems to breathe at his bidding over Eubœa.
-The same education operates strange changes both in man and dog; and
-bringing them into hostile contact with wolves, wild boars, stags, and
-other large animals, gives the latter a taste for blood, and renders him
-fierce and destructive. Subsisting by the chase, they pursued it summer
-and winter, following both hares and fallow-deer by their tracks in the
-snow. In their intervals of leisure they strengthened and beautified
-their dwellings, saw their children intermarry and grow up to succeed
-them, without even once approaching any city or even village.
-
-The style of hospitality prevalent among such men in antiquity differs
-very little from that which one would now find in the hut of a
-good-natured Albanian.[1837] Their industry rendered them independent,
-and their independence rendered them generous. By degrees their rustic
-cottages were surrounded by a garden and fruit-trees, their court was
-walled in, and luxuriant vines hung their foliage and purple fruit over
-windows and porch. On the arrival of a stranger, the wife takes her
-station at table beside her husband. Their marriageable daughter, in the
-bloom and beauty of youth, aids her brothers in waiting at table, where
-host and guest recline on highly raised divans of leaves covered with
-the skins of beasts. The young maiden, like a rustic Hebe, pours out the
-wine, dark and fragrant, while the youths served up the dishes and then
-laid out a table for themselves and dined together. And the sophist,
-versed in the courts of satraps and kings, conceived these rude hunters
-of the mountains the happiest and most enviable of mankind.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1837:
-
- Or even in the shed of a Turkish shepherd in Asia Minor. Dr. Chandler
- has a passage illustrative of the hospitality of pastoral tribes,
- which is at once so picturesque and concise that I am tempted to
- transcribe it: “About two in the morning our whole attention was fixed
- by the barking of dogs, which, as we advanced, became exceedingly
- furious. Deceived by the light of the moon we now fancied we could see
- a village, and were much mortified to find only a station of poor
- goatherds without even a shed, and nothing for our horses to eat. They
- were lying wrapped in their thick capotes or loose-coats by some
- glimmering embers, among the bushes in a dale under a spreading tree
- by the fold. They received us hospitably, heaping on fresh fuel and
- producing caimac or sour curds and coarse bread which they toasted for
- us on the coals. We made a scanty meal, sitting on the ground lighted
- by the fire and by the moon, after which sleep suddenly overpowered
- me. On waking I found my companions by my side, sharing in the
- comfortable cover of the Janizary’s cloak which he had carefully
- spread over us. I was now much struck with the wild appearance of the
- spot. The tree was hung with rustic utensils, the she-goats in a pen
- sneezed and bleated and rustled to and fro; the shrubs, by which our
- horses stood, were leafless, and the earth bare; a black cauldron with
- milk was simmering over the fire, and a figure more than gaunt or
- savage close by us was struggling on the ground with a kid whose ears
- he had slit, and was endeavouring to cauterise with a piece of red-hot
- iron.” Chandler, vol. i. 180, seq.
-
------
-
-But a pastoral picture is incomplete without love. The youthful beauty
-of Caphareus, hidden, like another Nouronihar[1838] from the world, is
-accordingly beloved by her cousin, an adventurous hunter like her sire,
-who joins the family circle in the evening, accompanied by his father,
-bringing in his hand a hare as a present to his mistress. The old man
-salutes the guest, the youth offers his present with a kiss, and
-immediately undertakes the office of the girl, who thereupon resumes her
-place beside her mother.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1838:
-
- History of the Caliph Vathek. p. 102.
-
------
-
-Observing this arrangement, the stranger inquires whether she is not
-soon to be married to some wealthy peasant, who might benefit the
-family, upon which the youth and maiden blush, and her father replies,
-
-“Nay, but she will take a husband, humble in rank, and like ourselves a
-hunter,” glancing at the same time at the lover.
-
-“How is it then that you wait?” inquired the stranger. “Do you expect
-him from the village?”
-
-“No,” answered the father, “he is not far off; and so soon as we can fix
-upon a fortunate day the nuptials will be celebrated.”
-
-“And by what do you judge of a fortunate day?”
-
-“The moon must be approaching the full, the weather fair, and the
-atmosphere transparent.”
-
-“And is the youth in reality an able hunter?”
-
-“I am,” said the young man, answering for himself, “in the chase of the
-stag or boar, as you yourself, if you please, shall judge to-morrow.”
-
-“And did you take this hare, my friend?”
-
-“I did,” replied he with a smile, “having set a gin for him by
-night;[1839] the weather being surpassing beautiful, and the moon larger
-than it ever was before.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 1839:
-
- Cf. Philost. Icon. ii. 26, p. 851.
-
------
-
-Upon this both the old men laughed, and the lover abashed held his
-peace.
-
-“But,” observed the father of the maiden, “it is no fault of mine that
-the solemnity is deferred; we only wait at your father’s desire, till a
-victim can be purchased; for a sacrifice must be offered to the gods.”
-
-“With respect to the victim,” interposed the maiden’s younger brother,
-“he has long provided one, and a noble one too, which is now feeding
-behind the cottage.”
-
-“And is it truly so?” demanded the old man.
-
-“It is,” replied the lad.
-
-“And where,” addressing the youth, “did you procure it?” inquired they.
-
-“When we took the wild sow,[1840] which was followed by her litter,”
-answered he, “and the greater number, swifter than hares, made their
-escape; I hit one with a stone, and my companions coming up threw a skin
-over him. This I secured, and exchanged in the village for a young
-domestic pig which has been fatted in a sty behind the house.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 1840:
-
- The wild hog is still one of the most common animals in the forests of
- Greece and Asia Minor. Chandler, i. 77. Even wild bulls occasionally
- make their appearance in the latter country. 176.
-
------
-
-“I now understand,” exclaimed the father, “the cause of your mother’s
-mirth when I would wonder what that grunting could be, and how the
-barley was disappearing so fast.”
-
-“Nevertheless,” observed the young man, “to be properly fatted our
-Eubœan swine require acorns.[1841] However, if you will just step this
-way I will show her to you.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 1841:
-
- To this best and most economical food for hogs, Homer makes allusion
- where he introduces the goddess Circe attending to her sty, which she
- had filled with the transformed companions of Odysseus:
-
- τοῖσι δε Κίρκη
- Πὰρ ῥ’ ἄκυλον, βάλανον τ᾽ ἔβαλεν, καρπόν τε κρανείης
- Ἔδμεναι, οἷα σύες χαμαιευνάδες αἰὲν ἔδουσιν.
- Od. κ. 241, sqq. Cf. ν. 409.
-
- Ælian de Nat. Animal. v. 45, celebrates these Homeric dainties as the
- food of the hog to which he elsewhere adds the fruit of the ash. viii.
- 9.
-
------
-
-Upon which off they went, the boys quite at a run, and in vast glee.
-
-In the meantime, the maiden going into the other cottage, brought forth
-a quantity of split service-berries,[1842] medlars,[1843] and winter
-apples, and bunches of superb grapes, bursting ripe,[1844] and, brushing
-down the table, she spread them out there upon a layer of clean fern.
-Next moment the lads returned bringing in the pig, with much joking and
-shouts of laughter. Then came, too, the young man’s mother, with two of
-his little brothers, and they brought along with them nice white loaves,
-with boiled eggs in wooden salvers, with a quantity of parched peas.
-Having embraced her brother, with his wife and daughter, she sat down
-beside her husband, and said,
-
-“Behold the victim, which my son has long fed for his marriage, and the
-other things also are ready; both the barley-meal and the flour. A
-little wine, perhaps, may be wanting, but even this we can easily
-procure from the village.”
-
-And her son standing near her, fixed his eyes wistfully upon his
-father-in-law.
-
-The latter smilingly observed,—
-
-“All delay now is on the lover’s part, who, perhaps, is anxious to
-fatten his pig.”
-
-“As to her,” said the youth, “she is bursting with fat.”
-
-Upon this the sophist, willing to aid the lover, interposed, and
-remarked,—
-
-“But you must take care lest while the pig is fattening he himself grow
-thin.”
-
-“The stranger’s remark is just,” said his mother; “for already he is
-more meagre than he used to be; and I have of late observed him to be
-wakeful at night, and to go forth from the cottage.”
-
-“Oh! that,” said he, “was when the dogs barked, and I stepped out to see
-what was the matter.”
-
-“Not you!” said his mother,—“but went moping about. Let us, therefore,”
-continued she, “put him to no further trial.”
-
-And throwing her arms about her sister, the maiden’s mother, she kissed
-her; whereupon the latter, addressing her husband, said,—
-
-“Let us grant them their desire.”
-
-To which he agreed; and it was resolved, that the marriage should be
-solemnized in three days, the stranger being invited to remain and
-witness it, which he did.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1842:
-
- Cf. Theoph. Hist. Plant. ii. 2. 10. ii. 7. 7—iii. 6. 5—vi. 3. 11.
-
- Ὄα, ἀκροδρύων εἶδος μήλοις μικροῖς ἐμφερές
-
- Tim. Lec. Platon. in voce with the note of Ruhnken.
-
-Footnote 1843:
-
- On the three kinds of medlars, Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii. 12. 5.
-
-Footnote 1844:
-
- Philost. Icon. i. 31, p. 809. ii. 26, p. 851.
-
------
-
-The above picture of an obscure herdsman’s life in its naked simplicity,
-void of all embellishment, will probably be thought more trustworthy
-than the elaborate descriptions of the poets, notwithstanding that, even
-in these, it is easy to separate the real from the fictitious.
-
-In the estimation of the Greeks the herdsman[1845] commonly ranked
-before the shepherd, and the latter before the goatherd,—for the dream
-of rank pursues mankind even amid the quiet of the fields,—and their
-manners are supposed to have corresponded. Pollux,[1846] however,
-reckons the goatherd next after the herdsman, and again inverts the
-order. Varro, on the other hand, gives precedence to the shepherd as the
-most ancient, the sheep, in his opinion, having been the animal earliest
-tamed.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1845:
-
- Robust persons, with loud voices, were ordinarily chosen for herdsmen,
- while goatherds were selected for their lightness and agility. Geop.
- ii. 1. Shepherds obtained among the Greeks the name of ποιμένες; while
- the keepers of other flocks and herds were termed αἰπόλοι. Schol.
- Theoc. i. 6.
-
-Footnote 1846:
-
- Onomast. i. 249.
-
------
-
-In point of utility the goat, in some parts of the ancient world,
-rivalled the sheep, producing fine hair which was shorn like wool.[1847]
-I may remark, too, in passing, that the large-tailed sheep still common
-in Asia Minor, as well as at the Cape, were anciently plentiful in
-Syria, where, according to the great naturalist,[1848] their tails
-attained a cubit in breadth. In some parts of Arabia another more
-curious breed was found, with tails three cubits in length, to carry
-which they were supplied by the ingenuity of the shepherds with wooden
-carriages.[1849]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1847:
-
- Arist. Hist. Anim. viii. 27. 3. Things manufactured from the hair of
- this animal were called κιλίκια. Etym. Mag. 513. 41.
-
-Footnote 1848:
-
- Arist. Hist. Anim. viii. 27. 3. Speaking of the neighbourhood of
- Smyrna,—The “sheep,” observed Dr. Chandler, “have broad tails, hanging
- down like an apron, some weighing eight, ten, or more pounds. These
- are eaten as a dainty, and the fat, before they are full-grown,
- accounted as delicious as marrow.” Travels, i. 77. Of the broad-tailed
- sheep mentioned by the ancients the most remarkable were those of
- India, where, according to Ctesios, of veracious memory, both they and
- the goats were larger than asses:—τὰ πρόβατα τῶν Ἰνδῶν καὶ αἱ αἶγες
- μείζους ὄνων εἰσί, καὶ τίκτουσιν ἀνὰ τεσσάρων καὶ ἓξ ὡς ἐπὶ τὸ πολύ,
- ἔχουσι δὲ οὐρὰς μεγάλας · διὸ τῶν τοκάδων ἀποτέμνουσιν ἵνα δύνωνται
- ὀχεύεσθαι. Phot. Biblioth. Cod. 72. p. 46. b. Bekker. Ælian. de Nat.
- Animal, iv. 32, relates, without any symptoms of incredulity,
- precisely the same fact; and then adds a circumstance which may keep
- in countenance the Abyssinian story of Bruce respecting the carving of
- a rump-steak from a live cow,—for the Indians, observes Ælian, were in
- the habit of cutting open the tails of the rams, extracting all the
- fat, and then sowing them up again so dexterously that in a short time
- no trace of the incision remained visible.
-
-Footnote 1849:
-
- Herod. iii. 113. Ælian. Hist. Anim. x. 4.
-
------
-
-In most parts of Greece, as well as in the East, it was customary to
-bring home the sheep from pasture towards evening, and shut them up for
-the night in warm and roomy cotes, which were surrounded by wattled
-fences,[1850] strong and high, both to prevent them from leaping over,
-and to exclude the wild beasts which, in remoter ages, abounded in the
-mountains. They were carefully roofed over, and every other precaution
-was taken to render them perfectly dry, the floor being usually pitched
-with stones, and slightly inclined. Their bedding[1851] consisted of
-calaminth and asphodel and pennyroyal and polion (a sort of herb whose
-leaves appear white in the morning, of a purple colour at noon, and blue
-when the sun sets[1852]) and fleabane and southernwood and
-origany,[1853] all which repel vermin. The more completely to effect the
-same purpose, they were, likewise, in the habit of fumigating the cotes
-from time to time, by burning in them several locks of some
-shepherdess’s hair,[1854] together with gum ammoniac, hartshorn, the
-hoofs or hair of goats, bitumen, cassia, fleabane, or calaminth, for the
-smell of which serpents were thought to have a peculiar aversion.[1855]
-Their ordinary food, while in the folds, consisted of green clover and
-cytisus, fenugreek, oaten and barley straw, and vegetable stalks,[1856]
-which were supposed to be improved if sprinkled on the threshing-floor
-with brine, figs blown down by the wind, and dry leaves.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1850:
-
- Bound together, probably, by wild succory or cneoron, as in modern
- times by the withe-wind. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vii. 11. 3. vi. 2. 2.
-
-Footnote 1851:
-
- Geop. xviii. 2.
-
-Footnote 1852:
-
- Plin. xxi. 7.
-
-Footnote 1853:
-
- Dioscor. iii. 32.
-
-Footnote 1854:
-
- Geop. xviii. 2.
-
-Footnote 1855:
-
- Aristoph. Eccles. 644. Geop. xviii. 2.4.
-
-Footnote 1856:
-
- Geop. xviii. 2. Apropos of Cytisus, it is observed by Æschylides, in
- Ælian. de Nat. Animal. xvi. 32, that the rustics of Cios, on account
- of the aridity of the island, possessed few flocks. Those they had,
- however, were fed entirely on the leaves of the cytisus, the fig-tree,
- and the olive, mingled occasionally with the straw and halm of
- vegetables. The lambs reared on this island were of singular beauty,
- and sold at a higher price than those of most other parts. In Lydia
- and Macedonia sheep were sometimes fattened upon fish, which must have
- given the mutton of those countries a somewhat unsavoury odour. Ælian.
- De Nat. Animal. xv. 5. Another favourite food of sheep was the leaves
- of the white nymphæa, the tender shoots of which were eaten by swine,
- while men themselves fed upon the fruit. Theoph. Hist. Plant. iv. 10.
- 7. Children, too, it is said, regarded as a delicacy the stalks of the
- phleos, the typha, and the butomos. The roots of this fruit were given
- as food to cattle. Id. ibid.
-
------
-
-In the short and sharp days of winter,[1857] they were not led forth to
-pasture till both the dew and the hoar frost had disappeared; but in
-summer the shepherds were careful to be a-field with the dawn while the
-dew was still heavy on the grass. In Attica[1858] and the environs of
-Miletus, where was produced the finest and costliest wool in the ancient
-world, the sheep[1859] were protected from rain and dust and brambles
-and whatever else could damage their fleeces[1860] by housings of purple
-leather.[1861] The same practice prevailed also in the Megaris, where
-Diogenes beholding a flock of sheep[1862] thus clad, while the children,
-like those of the Egyptian peasants were suffered to run about naked,
-said, “It is better to be a Megarean’s ram than his son.” Ælian[1863]
-alludes to this saying for the purpose of noticing the ignorance and
-want of education prevalent among the Megareans. We find likewise in
-Plutarch[1864] another version of the anecdote taxing these Dorians with
-avarice and meanness. Augustus imitated the saying of Diogenes and
-applied it to Herod, hearing of whose cruelty to his family, he said,
-“It were better to be Herod’s hog than his son.”[1865] But if the
-Megareans lived poorly they built grandly: so that of them it was said,
-that they ate as if they were to die to-morrow, and built as if they
-were to live for ever.[1866]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1857:
-
- Geop. xviii. 2.
-
-Footnote 1858:
-
- Cf. Athen, v. 60. Hom. Il. β. 305, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1859:
-
- Those of the neighbouring country of Bœotia are now, however, more
- highly valued. “Flocks of sheep whose fleeces were of a remarkable
- blackness were feeding on the plain; the breed was considerably
- superior in beauty and size to that of Attica.” Sibth. in Walp. i. 65.
- To dream of sheep of this colour was regarded by the ancients as
- unlucky. Artemid. Oneirocrit. ii. 12. p. 96. The finest black sheep in
- the ancient world were found in a district of Phrygia in the
- neighbourhood of the cities of Colossè and Laodicea, the wool of which
- not only exceeded that of Miletos in softness, but was of a glossy jet
- colour like that of the raven’s wing. Φέρει δ᾽ ὁ περὶ τὴν Λαοδίκειαν
- τόπος προβάτων ἀρετὰς, οὐκ εἰς μαλακότητας μόνον τῶν ἐρίων, ᾗ καὶ τῶν
- Μιλησίων διαφέρει, ἀλλὰ καὶ εὶς τὴν κοραξὴν χρόαν ὥστε καὶ
- προσοδεύονται χρόαν ὥστε καὶ προσοδεύονται λαμπρῶς ἀπ᾽ αὐτῶν· ὥσπερ
- καὶ οἱ Κολοσσηνοὶ ἀπὸ τοῦ ὁμωνύμου χρώματος πλησίον οἰκοῦντες. Strab.
- xii. 8. t. iii. p. 74. Plin. Nat. Hist. viii. 73. Cf. Chandler,
- Travels in Greece and Asia Minor, i. 262. The country round Abydos
- also was celebrated for its black flocks among which not a single
- white sheep was to be discovered. Ælian de Nat. Animal. 3. 32.
-
-Footnote 1860:
-
- Varro. de Re Rust. ii. 2.
-
-Footnote 1861:
-
- Horace speaks of the “pellites oves Galesi.” Od. ii. 6. 10.
-
-Footnote 1862:
-
- Diog. Laert. vi. 41. The practice is noticed also by Pliny who
- says,—“Ovium summa genera duo, tectum et colonicum; illiud mollius,
- hoc in pascuo delicatius, quippe quum tectum rubis vescatur.
- Operimenta ei ex Arabicis præcipua.” Nat. Hist. viii. 72. Columella
- also mentions these coverings:—“Molle vero pecus, etiam velamen quo
- protegitur, amittit atque id non parvo sumptu reparatur.” vii. 3, seq.
-
-Footnote 1863:
-
- Var. Hist. xii. 56.
-
-Footnote 1864:
-
- De Cupiditate. § 7.
-
-Footnote 1865:
-
- Macrob. Sat. ii. 4.
-
-Footnote 1866:
-
- Tertull. in Apolog. ap. Menag. ad Laert. vi. 41. t. ii. p. 141. b. c.
-
------
-
-Sheep, as most persons familiar with the country will probably have
-observed, are wont in hot summer days to retire during the prevalence of
-the sun’s greatest heat beneath the shade of spreading trees,[1867] at
-which time a green sweep of uplands dotted with antique oaks or
-beeches,[1868] each with its stem encircled by some portion of the flock
-reposing upon their own fleeces, presents a picture of singular beauty
-and tranquillity. The picturesque features of the scene were in old
-times enhanced by the addition of several accompaniments now nowhere to
-be found, consisting of statues, altars, or chapels, erected in honour
-of the rural gods or nymphs.[1869] Fountains, moreover, of limpid
-water[1870] in many places gushed forth from beneath the trees, where
-there were usually a number of seats for the accommodation of the
-shepherds and shepherdesses. In these retreats they generally passed the
-sultry hours of the day, playing on the pastoral flute or the syrinx,
-chanting their wild lays, or amusing each other by the relation of those
-strange legends which inhabited the woods and lonely mountains of
-Greece.[1871] There prevailed among them a superstition against
-disturbing by their music or otherwise that hushed stillness which most
-persons must have observed to characterise the summer noon. At this hour
-of the day the God Pan,[1872] in the opinion of Greek shepherds, took
-his rest after the toils of the chase, reclining under a tree in the
-solitary forest;[1873] and, as he was held to be of a hasty choleric
-disposition, they abstained at that time from piping through fear of
-provoking his anger. The other Gods likewise were believed to enjoy a
-short sleep at this time, as we find in the case of the nymph Aura, in
-the Dionysiacs.[1874]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1867:
-
- Geop. xviii. 2.
-
-Footnote 1868:
-
- Nor in Asia Minor is the shade of trees always deemed sufficient. “We
- came,” says Dr. Chandler, “to a shed formed with boughs round a tree,
- to shelter the flocks and herds from the sun at noon.” Travels, i. 25.
-
-Footnote 1869:
-
- Schol. Theoc. i. 21. Cf. Plat. Phædr. t. i. p. 9.
-
-Footnote 1870:
-
- I cannot resist the temptation to introduce in this place the picture
- in miniature of a Greek landscape from the picturesque and beautiful
- journal of Dr. Sibthorpe: “We dined under a rock, from whose side
- descended a purling spring among violets, primroses, and the starry
- hyacinth, mixed with black Silyrium and different coloured orches. The
- flowering ash hung from the sides of the mountain, under the shade of
- which bloomed saxifrages, and the snowy Isopyrum, with the Campanula
- Pyramidalis; this latter plant is now called χαρισονη; it yields
- abundance of a sweet milky fluid, and was said to promote a secretion
- of milk, a quality first attributed to it under the doctrine of
- signatures. Our guide made nose-gays of the fragrant leaves of the
- Fraxinella; the common nettle was not forgotten as a pot-herb, but the
- Imperatoria seemed to be the favourite salad. Among the shrubs I
- noticed our gooseberry-tree, and the Cellis Australis grew wild among
- the rocks.” Walp. Mem. i. 63.
-
-Footnote 1871:
-
- See Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 582, sqq.
-
-Footnote 1872:
-
- To dream of this god was considered auspicious by shepherds. Artemid.
- Oneirocrit. ii. 42. p. 133.
-
-Footnote 1873:
-
- Schol. Theoc. i. 15. Cal. Hymn. in. Lav. Poll. 72. ibique interp. Nem.
- Eclog. iii. 3. Cf. Hom. Il. τ. 13. Od. ι. 9. The shepherd in the
- Anthology (Jacob. t. ii. no. 227. p. 694) is not so religious as
- Theocritus’ goatherd, for he boldly pipes in the morn and at noon χὡ
- ποιμὴν ἐν ὄρεσσι μεσαμβρινὸν ἀγχόθι παγᾶς συρίσδων. Kiessling. ad
- Theoc. i. 15.
-
-Footnote 1874:
-
- Nonn. xlviii. 258, sqq. Cf. Philost. Icon. ii. 11. et J. B. Carpzov.
- Disp. Phil. De Quiete Dei, p. 16, sqq.
-
------
-
-From a passage in St. John’s gospel it would appear, that the practice
-prevailed among the Oriental shepherds of distinguishing the several
-members of their flocks by separate names: “The sheep hear his voice,
-and he calleth his own sheep by name and leadeth them out. And when he
-putteth forth his own sheep he goeth before them, and the sheep follow
-him, for they know his voice.” We likewise find traces of the same
-custom in Sicily, Crete, and various other parts of Greece, where goats,
-and heifers, and sheep, enjoyed the privilege of a name, as Cynœtha,
-Amalthea, and others. In later times it was judged preferable, that the
-flock should follow their shepherds by the eye, for which reason they
-were accustomed to stuff their ears with wool.[1875] To prevent rams
-from butting, they used to bore a hole[1876] through their horns near
-the roots. Sheep were generally shorn[1877] during the month of May, and
-after the wool had been clipped, they were commonly anointed with wine,
-oil, and the juice of bitter lupins.[1878] In remoter ages the practice
-prevailed of plucking off the wool instead of shearing it; and this
-barbarous method, at once so painful to the sheep and so laborious to
-the shepherd, had not been entirely abandoned in the age of Pliny.[1879]
-It was a rule among the pastoral tribes, that the number of their flocks
-should be uneven.[1880] The shepherds of Greece bestowed the name of
-Sekitai,[1881] (from σηκος an enclosure) upon lambs taken early from the
-ewes, and fed by hand. They were usually kept in a cote apart from the
-other sheep.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1875:
-
- Geop. xviii. 4.
-
-Footnote 1876:
-
- Ferocia ejus cohibetur cornu juxta aurem terebrato. Plin. Nat. Hist.
- vii. 72. Cf. Geopon. viii. 5. To the same purpose writes also
- Columella:—Epicharmus Syracusanus qui pecudum medicinas diligentissime
- conscripsit affirmat pugnacem arietem mitigari terebra secundum
- auriculas foratis cornibus qua curvantur in flexu. Columell. vii. 3.
-
-Footnote 1877:
-
- It is observed by the ancients that long lank wool indicated strength
- in the sheep, curly wool the contrary. Geop. xviii. 1, seq.
-
-Footnote 1878:
-
- Geop. xviii. 8.
-
-Footnote 1879:
-
- Duerat quibusdam in locis vellendi mos. Plin. Nat. Hist, vii. 73.
- Veliæ unde essent plures accepi caussas inquies quod ibi pastores
- palatim ex ovibus ante tonsuram inventam vellere lanam sint soliti, ex
- quo vellera dicuntur. Varr. de Ling. Lat. iv. Cf. De Re Rust. ii. 11.
- Isidor. xix. 27.
-
-Footnote 1880:
-
- Geop. xviii. 2.
-
-Footnote 1881:
-
- Schol. Theoc. i. 9.
-
------
-
-As flocks, in most parts of Greece, were exposed to the rapacity of the
-wolf,[1882] the shepherds had recourse to an extraordinary contrivance,
-to destroy this fierce animal; kindling large charcoal fires in open
-spaces in the woods, they cast thereon the powder of certain diminutive
-fish, caught in great numbers along the grassy shores of Greece,
-together with small slices of lamb and kid. Attracted by the savour
-which they could snuff from a distance, the wolves flocked in great
-numbers towards the fires, round which they prowled with loud howlings,
-in expectation of sharing the prey, the odour of which had drawn them
-thither. Stupified at length by the fumes of the charcoal, they would
-drop upon the earth in a lethargic sleep, when the shepherds coming up
-knocked them on the head.[1883]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1882:
-
- From the relations of travellers it would appear that the method
- observed by the ancient Greeks in ridding themselves of the wolf is no
- longer known to their descendants, though the apprehension of their
- destructiveness and ferocity be as great as ever. Solon, it is well
- known set a price in his laws on the head of a wolf, which appears to
- have varied in different ages; (cf. Plut. Solon. § 23. Schol.
- Aristoph. Av. 369;) but could never have amounted to the sum of two
- talents. Whatever the ancient price may have been, however, it was
- paid by the magistrates; but “the peasant now produces the skins in
- the bazaar or market, and is recompensed by voluntary contributions.”
- Chandler, ii. p. 145. Close by a khan on mount Parnes, which is
- covered with pine trees, Sir George Wheler saw a very curious
- fountain, to which the wolves, bears, and wild boars commonly descend
- to drink. Id. p. 197.
-
-Footnote 1883:
-
- Geop. xviii. 14. Nevertheless, when a wolf bit a sheep without killing
- it, the flesh was supposed to be rendered more tender and delicate, an
- effect which Plutarch attributes to the hot and fiery breath of the
- beast. Sympos. ii. 9.
-
------
-
- END OF THE SECOND VOLUME.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- Printed by S. & J. BENTLEY, WILSON, and FLEY,
- Bangor House, Shoe Lane.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Transcriber’s Note
-
-The printer employed the cursive forms of beta (ϐ) and theta (ϑ),
-sometimes in the same passage with the standard β and θ. These have been
-replaced with the standard forms.
-
-Hyphenated words sometimes also appear without hyphenation, e.g. ‘olive
-grounds’ and ‘olive-grounds’. Where there is a clear preponderance, the
-hyphen has either been retained or removed to following the preference.
-When there was none, they are left as printed.
-
- Comments
-
- 91.10 The original quotation marks (“Wretch, would you make
- me a “Phaselitan for a farthing?”) have been properly
- nested.
-
- 355.n3.64 The asterisk seems to serve no purpose. It might have
- referred to an internal footnote that was never
- printed. It was retained, nonetheless.
-
-Minor punctation errors and inconsistencies in the footnote apparatus
-have been corrected with no further mention here.
-
-Those errors deemed most likely to be the printer’s have been corrected,
-and are noted here. The references are to the page and line in the
-original. Corrections within notes are denoted with ‘n’ and the original
-note number.
-
- 36.n1 καὶ πᾶσαν τὴν ο[ἴκι]/ἰκίαν Replaced.
- 61.15 to have been a comb[.] Added.
- 63.31 The _Ægle[,]_ the _Pede_ and Added.
- 65.11 in Lycia[,/.] Replaced.
- 71.29 ran into the opposite extreme[,/.] Replaced.
- 86.7 signi[ni]fies eggs) Removed.
- 119.20 were most brilliantly reflected[,/.] Replaced.
- 133.8 recal[l]s to mind Inserted.
- 134.n3 Ἅλα[ ]λείχειν Space added.
- 135.n3.10 Profluit.[”] Added.
- 139.30 How much [my,/, my] friend, Transposed.
- 163.31 The walnuts a[u/n]d chestnuts Inverted.
- 164.20 [“]but we call it Added.
- 185.37 roll about the room like a hoop[,/.] Replaced.
- 201.31 to the frying[-]pan Inserted.
- 209.n5.1 Sc[ol/h\. Aristoph. Nub. 1337, seq. Replaced.
- 209.n6.1 Ilgen, De Sc[h]ol. Poes. p. 156. Removed.
- 242.1 the friendship of Demosthenes[.] Added.
- 242.34 the “Exile Hunter.[”] Added.
- 249.n7.2 [‘/“]chez les anciens Atheniens Replaced.
- 257.n5 Μ[ε/έ]σσοισιν Replaced.
- 274.18 whose Penelope, the[ the] _beau idéal_ Removed.
- 286.n8 and out [out ]of these they sometimes Repetition.
- drank.
- 290.n4 following in the foo[t]steps of Heyne Inserted.
- 328.16 found this answer of[ of] irrigation. Removed.
- 355.n3.38 le _samia_[,] gros raisin Added.
- 385.15 hey would not, if po[s]ssible, Removed.
- 423.38 shall judge to-morrow[.]” Added.
- 429.n6.14 non parvo sumptu reparatur.[”] Added.
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The History of the Manners and Customs of Ancient Greece Volume II (of III), by James Augustus St. John</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The History of the Manners and Customs of Ancient Greece Volume II (of III)</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: James Augustus St. John</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: March 16, 2022 [eBook #67637]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: KD Weeks, Turgut Dincer and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HISTORY OF THE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF ANCIENT GREECE VOLUME II (OF III) ***</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>Transcriber’s Note:</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>Footnotes have been collected at the end of each chapter, and are
-linked for ease of reference.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Minor errors, attributable to the printer, have been 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>
-
-<div class='htmlonly'>
-
-<p class='c001'>Any corrections are indicated using an <ins class='correction' title='original'>underline</ins>
-highlight. Placing the cursor over the correction will produce the
-original text in a small popup.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='epubonly'>
-
-<p class='c001'>Any corrections are indicated as hyperlinks, which will navigate the
-reader to the corresponding entry in the corrections table in the
-note at the end of the text.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c002'><span class='large'>THE HISTORY</span> <br />OF THE <br /><span class='xlarge'>MANNERS AND CUSTOMS</span><br />OF<br /><span class='xlarge'>ANCIENT GREECE.</span></h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div><span class='large'>BY J. A. ST. JOHN.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>IN THREE VOLUMES.</div>
- <div class='c000'>VOL. II.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='large'>LONDON:</span></div>
- <div>RICHARD BENTLEY, NEW BURLINGTON STREET,</div>
- <div><span class="blackletter">Publisher in Ordinary to Her Majesty.</span></div>
- <div>1842.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>LONDON:</div>
- <div>Printed by <span class='sc'>S. &amp; J. Bentley</span>, <span class='sc'>Wilson</span>, and <span class='sc'>Fley</span>,</div>
- <div>Bangor House, Shoe Lane.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_iii'>iii</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>CONTENTS <br /> OF THE SECOND VOLUME.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c005' />
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='11%' />
-<col width='80%' />
-<col width='7%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006' colspan='3'>BOOK III.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='small'>CHAPTER</span></td>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c008'>Marriage Ceremonies</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>V.</td>
- <td class='c008'>Condition of Married Women</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_28'>28</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>VI.</td>
- <td class='c008'>Toilette, Dress, and Ornaments</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_50'>50</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006' colspan='3'>BOOK IV.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>I.</td>
- <td class='c008'>Private Dwellings</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_75'>75</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>II.</td>
- <td class='c008'>Household Furniture</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_97'>97</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>III.</td>
- <td class='c008'>Food of Homeric Times—Meat, Fish, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_125'>125</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c008'>Poultry, Fruit, Wine, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_150'>150</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>V.</td>
- <td class='c008'>Entertainments</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_170'>170</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>VI.</td>
- <td class='c008'>Entertainments (<i>continued</i>)</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_197'>197</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>VII.</td>
- <td class='c008'>The Theatre</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_220'>220</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>VIII.</td>
- <td class='c008'>The Theatre (<i>continued</i>)</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_248'>248</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006' colspan='3'><span class='pageno' id='Page_iv'>iv</span>BOOK V.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006' colspan='3'>RURAL LIFE.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>I.</td>
- <td class='c008'>The Villa and the Farmyard</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_269'>269</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>II.</td>
- <td class='c008'>Garden and Orchard</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_301'>301</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>III.</td>
- <td class='c008'>Vineyards, Vintage, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_335'>335</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c008'>Studies of the Farmer</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_362'>362</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>V.</td>
- <td class='c008'>The Various Processes of Agriculture</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_381'>381</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>VI.</td>
- <td class='c008'>Pastoral Life</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_401'>401</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>THE HISTORY</div>
- <div>OF THE</div>
- <div>MANNERS AND CUSTOMS</div>
- <div>OF</div>
- <div>ANCIENT GREECE.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c004'>BOOK III.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c002'>CHAPTER IV. <br /> MARRIAGE CEREMONIES.</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>When marriage was determined on, whether love
-or interest prompted to it, the business part of the
-transaction, which in all countries is exceedingly
-unromantic, was delegated, as in China, to a female
-matchmaker,<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c012'><sup>[1]</sup></a> whose professional duties appear to
-have been considered important. She carried the
-lovers proposals to the family of his mistress, or
-rather, perhaps, broke the ice and paved the way
-for him. In the earlier ages men, no doubt, performed
-this delicate office themselves, or entrusted
-it to their parents; as in Homer we find Achilles
-declaring, that his father Peleus shall choose a wife
-for him. Earlier still, if we may credit certain prevalent
-traditions, men dispensed altogether with such
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>preliminaries and lived <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“more pecudum”</span> with the
-first females who came in their way; a state of barbarism
-from which it is said they were reclaimed
-by Cecrops.<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c012'><sup>[2]</sup></a> But, to whomsoever this fable may
-trace its origin, it is evidently unworthy of the
-slightest credit. Of times sunk in such an abyss
-of ignorance no record could remain, or even of
-many succeeding revolutions of manners touching
-close upon the orbit of civilisation. If, however,
-the tradition arose originally out of any real innovation
-in manners, it may refer to the partial abolition
-of polygamy, which, whether made by Cecrops
-or not, was an important step in the progress of
-the Greeks towards polished life.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But if Cecrops ever lived, and should not be regarded
-as a mere mythological creation, we must
-still reject the comparatively modern tradition which
-fetches him from Egypt. Coming from the East,
-he would more probably have instituted polygamy
-than the contrary. In every point of view the tradition
-is absurd; for it at once represents the people
-of Attica as savages, and as having made considerable
-advances in the science of civil government.
-They have already emerged from the state of patriarchal
-rule, not by any means the lowest, and
-have arrived at the monarchical period in the history
-of society—for Cecrops marries the daughter of king
-Actæos—yet have not made the first step in refinement,<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c012'><sup>[3]</sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>have not passed the barrier dividing the rudest
-savage from even the barbarian,—had not made the
-discovery that, for the preservation of society, children
-must be cared for and maintained, which is
-impossible until they have other fathers than the
-community. We must, therefore, reject this Cecropian
-legend, and acknowledge that, from the earliest
-times of which any record remains, the people of
-Hellas married and were given in marriage.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Whatever the original practice of the Greeks may
-have been, traces of polygamy long continued discernible
-in their manners. Heracles maintained a
-seraglio worthy of an Ottoman sultan. His wives, indeed,
-like those of a wandering Brahmin, were scattered
-at convenient points over the country, that, whithersoever
-he roamed, he might find lodging and entertainment;
-but, as rumours of his different establishments
-travelled about, the jealousy of the ladies was
-at last excited and proved fatal to him. Ægeus, too,
-and his brother Pallas, old Priam, Agamemnon, Theseus,
-and nearly every public man in the heroic
-times, are represented as possessing a harem. Indeed,
-to judge by the practice of princes, it would seem
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>as if polygamy were the law of every land; so habitual
-is it with them to transgress, in this point,
-against public opinion. A report, still current among
-certain writers, represents Socrates with two wives,
-the gentle nature of Xantippe encouraging him, perhaps,
-to venture on a second! But even that diligent
-retailer of scandal, Athenæus,<a id='r4' /><a href='#f4' class='c012'><sup>[4]</sup></a> rejects this story,
-which, no doubt, originated with some sophist, who
-owed the philosopher a grudge. If not in the son
-of Sophroniscos, however, at least in Philip of Macedon,
-the kings of heroic times found an exact imitator.
-This Pellæan fox, though he did not, like
-the Persian monarch, lead about with him an army
-of concubines in his military expeditions, yet, from
-policy or other motives, contracted numerous marriages,
-as many, perhaps, as Heracles. Satyros has
-bequeathed to us a curious account of his majesty’s
-matrimonial exploits. During his long reign, of
-from twenty to four-and-twenty years, the dishes of
-one nuptial feast had scarcely time to cool before
-a new one was in preparation. It was nothing but
-truffles and rich soup from June till June. I am
-unable to furnish a list of all the ladies who claimed,
-through Philip’s diffusive love, to be queens of Macedon;
-but it may be proper to name a few, to
-show how the morals of his subjects must have been
-improved by his example. The first lady whose
-landed attractions won Philip’s heart was <em>Andatè</em>,
-an Illyrian, by whom he had a daughter, called
-Cynna. To her succeeded <em>Phila</em>, sister of Derda and
-Macatè. His next wives were two Thessalian women,
-<em>Pherè</em> of Nikesipolis, mother of Thessalonia,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>and <em>Philinna</em> of Larissa, mother of Aridæos. Had
-he sought merely the women these might have sufficed;
-but Philip had other views, and, finding marriage
-a still more expeditious method of extending
-his dominions even than conquest, he forthwith added
-to the list <em>Olympias</em>, who brought him the
-kingdom of Molossia in dowry, and, as every one
-knows, was mother of Alexander. Had the crafty
-prince stopped here, posterity, overlooking his immorality,
-might have applauded his prudence. But,
-elated by success, he proceeded to augment the
-number of his queens. To Olympias succeeded
-<em>Meda</em>, daughter of Cithalas, king of Thrace; and,
-lastly, <em>Cleopatra</em>, sister of Hippostratos, and niece
-of Attalos. By this time he was somewhat advanced
-in years, for Alexander, son of Olympias,
-approached manhood. At the feast given in honour
-of this new marriage, when the wine had
-circulated, as was customary among Macedonians,
-Attalos, who had probably drunk deep, observed,
-“At length we shall have legitimate princes, not
-bastards!” Alexander, who was present, in resentment
-of the affront, threw his goblet in the face
-of Attalos, who saluted him in the same way. Upon
-this, perceiving how matters were likely to proceed,
-Olympias fled to Molossia, Alexander into Illyria.
-Philip lived to have by Cleopatra one daughter,
-Europa; but, shortly afterwards, at the instigation,
-it is supposed of Olympias and Alexander, was
-murdered by Pausanias.<a id='r5' /><a href='#f5' class='c012'><sup>[5]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Ordinary individuals, however, were restrained
-from the commission of such immoralities by the
-laws, more particularly at Athens, where marriage
-was contemplated with all the reverence due to
-the great palladium of civilisation. As a necessary
-consequence, celibacy could be no other than disreputable,
-so that, to a man ambitious of public
-honour, the possession of a wife and children was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>no less indispensable than the means of living.<a id='r6' /><a href='#f6' class='c012'><sup>[6]</sup></a>
-Among the Spartans, bachelors were delivered over
-to the tender mercies of the women, and subjected
-to very heavy penalties. During the celebration of
-certain festivals they were seized by a crowd of petulant
-viragoes, each able to strangle an ox,<a id='r7' /><a href='#f7' class='c012'><sup>[7]</sup></a> and
-dragged in derision round the altars of the gods,
-receiving from the fists of their gentle tormentors
-such blows as the regular practice of boxing had
-taught the young ladies to inflict.<a id='r8' /><a href='#f8' class='c012'><sup>[8]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“And ladies sometimes hit exceeding hard.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>But we shall be the less inclined to judge uncharitably
-of this somewhat unfeminine custom, if
-we consider that, in the ancient world, no less than
-in the modern, unmarried and childless women were
-held but in slight esteem. And this feeling, which
-never for a moment slumbers in society, teaches
-better than the cant of a thousand sentimentalists
-what the true origin of love is.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Of the impediments to marriage arising, among
-ancient nations, from relationship or consanguinity,
-very little is with certainty known. In the heroic
-ages, all unions excepting those of parents with
-their children appear to have been lawful; for, in
-the Odyssey, we find the six sons of Æolos joined
-in marriage with their six sisters, the manners of
-the olden times, abandoned on earth, still lingering
-among the gods.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Iphidamos has to wife his mother’s sister,<a id='r9' /><a href='#f9' class='c012'><sup>[9]</sup></a> and
-Alcinoös, by no means a profligate or immoral prince,
-is united with his brother’s daughter;<a id='r10' /><a href='#f10' class='c012'><sup>[10]</sup></a> Deiphobos,
-after Paris’s death, takes possession of Helen,<a id='r11' /><a href='#f11' class='c012'><sup>[11]</sup></a> and
-Helenos, the seer, is united in wedlock with Andromache,
-the widow of his brother Hector.<a id='r12' /><a href='#f12' class='c012'><sup>[12]</sup></a> But
-without alleging any further examples, we may, from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>the practice imputed to the gods, among whom
-scarcely any degree of relationship was a bar to
-marriage, infer that, in very early ages, few scruples
-were entertained upon the subject. Later mythologists
-have even imputed to Zeus an illicit amour
-with his daughter Aphrodite,<a id='r13' /><a href='#f13' class='c012'><sup>[13]</sup></a> but libellously, and
-in contradiction to the best ancient authorities.<a id='r14' /><a href='#f14' class='c012'><sup>[14]</sup></a>
-Nature, indeed, has so peremptorily prohibited the
-union of parents with their own children, that positive
-laws forbidding connexions so nefarious, have
-in all ages been nearly unnecessary, though the superstition
-of the Magi<a id='r15' /><a href='#f15' class='c012'><sup>[15]</sup></a> in ancient, and the profligacy
-of popes and princes in modern times, have
-been accused of transgressing these natural boundaries.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Could we credit the sophist of Naucratis, there
-was likewise one distinguished person<a id='r16' /><a href='#f16' class='c012'><sup>[16]</sup></a> among the
-Athenians who coveted the reputation of equal guilt.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>The marriage of brothers with their own sisters
-was, in later ages, considered illegal; not so with respect
-to half sisters by the fathers’s side, whom no
-law forbade men to marry.<a id='r17' /><a href='#f17' class='c012'><sup>[17]</sup></a> Still the recorded examples
-of those who availed themselves of this privilege
-are few; but among them we find the great
-Cimon, son of Miltiades, who, from affection, observes
-Cornelius Nepos, and in perfect conformity with the
-manners of his country, took to wife his sister Elpinice.<a id='r18' /><a href='#f18' class='c012'><sup>[18]</sup></a>
-Plutarch, too, speaks of the union as public
-and legal, but Athenæus<a id='r19' /><a href='#f19' class='c012'><sup>[19]</sup></a> characteristically insinuates
-that Elpinice was merely her brother’s mistress.
-The Spartan law took a different view of
-what constitutes sisterhood. Here the father was
-everything, and therefore with an uterine sister, as
-no near relation, marriage might be contracted.<a id='r20' /><a href='#f20' class='c012'><sup>[20]</sup></a> All
-connexions in the direct line of ascent or descent
-were prohibited; but the prohibition extended not
-to the collateral branches,<a id='r21' /><a href='#f21' class='c012'><sup>[21]</sup></a> uncles being permitted
-to take to wife their nieces, and nephews their
-aunts.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The precise age at which an Athenian citizen
-might legally take upon him the burden of a
-family, is said, without proof, though not altogether
-without probability, to have been determined by
-Solon; for such matters were in those ages supposed
-to come within the legitimate scope of legislation.<a id='r22' /><a href='#f22' class='c012'><sup>[22]</sup></a>
-They attributed to the season of youth a much greater
-duration than comports with our notions. It was, in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>fact, thought to extend to the age of thirty-five or
-thirty-seven, more or less: when entering upon the
-less flowery domain of manhood, men would need
-the aid and consolation of a helpmate. But if there
-ever existed such a law it was often broken,<a id='r23' /><a href='#f23' class='c012'><sup>[23]</sup></a> for
-early marriages, though less common perhaps than
-in modern times, are constantly alluded to both by
-historians and poets. Apprehensions of the too great
-increase of population already led philosophers, even
-in those early ages, vainly to apply themselves to
-the discovery of checks, which the irresistible impulses
-of nature always render nugatory; and viewing
-in that light the regulation attributed to Solon,<a id='r24' /><a href='#f24' class='c012'><sup>[24]</sup></a>
-they, with some variation, adopt it in their political
-works. Plato,<a id='r25' /><a href='#f25' class='c012'><sup>[25]</sup></a> in accordance with Hesiod’s notion,
-fixes for the male, the marriageable age at
-thirty; but Aristotle, who chose on most points to
-differ from his master, allows his citizens seven years
-more of liberty. For women the proper age, he
-thought, is about eighteen. His reasons are, that
-the husband and wife will thus flourish and decay
-together; and, their offspring inheriting the bloom
-and highest vigour of their parents, be at once<a id='r26' /><a href='#f26' class='c012'><sup>[26]</sup></a>
-healthy in body and energetic in mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Winter, more particularly the month of January,
-thence called Gamelion, or the “Nuptial Month,”
-was regarded as the fittest season<a id='r27' /><a href='#f27' class='c012'><sup>[27]</sup></a> of the year for
-the celebration of marriage; and if the north wind
-happened to blow, as at that time of the year it
-often does, the circumstance was supposed to be
-peculiarly auspicious. For this notion several physiological
-reasons are assigned; as that, during the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>prevalence of that wind, the human frame is peculiarly
-nervous and full of energy; that the spirits
-are consequently light, and the temper and disposition
-sweet, cheerful, and flexible. Lingering sparks
-of ancient superstition may also have had their share
-in establishing this persuasion: towards that quarter
-of the heavens, as towards an universal <em>Kebleh</em>, all
-the civilised nations of antiquity turned as the
-home of their gods; in that direction point all the
-openings of the Egyptian pyramids; thither to the
-present moment turn the Chinese and Brahmins
-when they pray, and in the holy tabernacle of the
-Jews the Table of Shewbread<a id='r28' /><a href='#f28' class='c012'><sup>[28]</sup></a> likewise faced the
-north. Attention, too, was paid to the lunar influences;
-for, no other circumstance preventing it,
-it was usual to fix on the full of the moon, when
-the festival denominated <em>Theogamia</em>, or “Nuptials
-of the Gods” was celebrated, in order that religion
-itself, by its august and venerable ceremonies,
-might appear to sanctify the union of mortals
-effected under its auspices.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To this practice there are several allusions in ancient
-writers. Agamemnon, in Euripides, when questioned
-by his wife respecting the time of Iphigenia’s
-marriage, replies, that it shall take place</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“When the blest moon its silvery circle fills.”<a id='r29' /><a href='#f29' class='c012'><sup>[29]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>And Themis, adjudging Thetis to Peleus, to terminate
-the contentions of the gods, selects the same
-season for the solemnization of the nuptial rites.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“But when next that solemn eve</div>
- <div class='line'>Duly doth the moon divide,</div>
- <div class='line'>For the chieftain let her leave</div>
- <div class='line'>Her lovely virgin zone aside.”<a id='r30' /><a href='#f30' class='c012'><sup>[30]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Most ancient nations, as the Hebrews, Indians,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>Thracians, Germans, and Gauls, regarded women as
-a marketable commodity; and, in this respect, the
-Greeks of early times perfectly agreed with them,
-buying and selling their females like cattle.<a id='r31' /><a href='#f31' class='c012'><sup>[31]</sup></a> But,
-by degrees, as manners grew more polished, this
-barbarous custom was discontinued, though, in remembrance
-of it, presents were still made both to
-the father and the bride, even in the most civilised
-periods. We must, nevertheless, beware that we
-infer not too much from these gifts; for equally
-primitive and prevalent was the custom imposing
-upon fathers the necessity of dowrying their daughters.<a id='r32' /><a href='#f32' class='c012'><sup>[32]</sup></a>
-In the case, too, of the husband’s death this
-matrimonial portion devolved to the children, so that
-if the widow chose,—as widows sometimes will,<a id='r33' /><a href='#f33' class='c012'><sup>[33]</sup></a>—to
-embark a second time on the connubial sea, her
-father was called upon to furnish a fresh outfit.
-But, if the husband grew tired of his better half,
-and would insist on a divorce, or if, after his death,
-the sons were sufficiently unnatural to chase their
-mother from the paternal roof, the right over the
-entire dowry reverted to her.<a id='r34' /><a href='#f34' class='c012'><sup>[34]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Parties were usually betrothed before marriage
-by their parents. And young women, whose parents
-no longer survived, were settled in marriage by
-their brothers, grandfathers, or guardians. Husbands
-on their deathbeds sometimes disposed of the hands
-of their wives, as in the case of Demosthenes’ father,
-who bequeathed Cleobula to Aphobos, whom
-he likewise appointed guardian of his children. In
-this instance, the widow had better have chosen for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>herself. Aphobos possessed himself of the dowry,
-and consented to fulfil the office of guardian, that
-he might plunder the children; but the marriage he
-declined. Another example occurs in the case of
-Phormio who, having been slave<a id='r35' /><a href='#f35' class='c012'><sup>[35]</sup></a> to an opulent
-citizen, and conducted himself with zeal and fidelity,
-received at once his freedom and the widow
-of his master. In all serious matters the Athenians
-were a very methodical people, and conducted
-everything, even to the betrothing or marrying
-of a wife, with an attention to form worthy the
-quaintest citizen of our own great city.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Potter observes, with great naïveté, that, before
-men married, it was customary to provide themselves
-with a house to live in. The custom was a
-good one, and the thrifty old poet of Ascra, undertaking
-to enlighten his countrymen in economics,
-is explicit on the point—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“First build your house and let the wife succeed:”<a id='r36' /><a href='#f36' class='c012'><sup>[36]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>which, no doubt, is better advice than if he had
-said “first marry a wife and next consider where
-you shall put her.” And we find that, even among
-pastoral, young ladies who, in modern poets, make
-their meat and drink of love, and hang up a rag or
-two of it to preserve them from the elements, in
-antiquity posed their lovers with interrogations about
-comforts. “You are very pressing, my dear Daphnis,
-and swear you love me; but that is not just now
-the question. Have you a house and harem to take
-me to?”<a id='r37' /><a href='#f37' class='c012'><sup>[37]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But prudent as they may be considered, the Athenians
-were still more pious than thrifty. Before
-the virgin quitted her childhood’s home, and passed
-from the state she had tried, and in most cases, perhaps,
-found happy, to enter into one altogether unknown
-to her, custom demanded the performance, on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>the day before the marriage, of several religious ceremonies
-eminently significant and beautiful. Hitherto,
-in the poetical recesses of their thalamoi, they had
-been reckoned as so many nymphs attached to the
-train of the virgin goddess of the woods. About
-to become members of a noviciate more conformable
-to nature than that of the Catholic church,
-they deemed it incumbent on them to implore their
-Divinity’s permission to transfer their worship from
-her to Hymen; and, the more readily to obtain it,
-they approached her, in the simplicity of their hearts,
-with baskets full of offerings such as it became them
-to present and her to receive.<a id='r38' /><a href='#f38' class='c012'><sup>[38]</sup></a> Nor was Artemis
-the only deity sought, on this occasion, to be rendered
-auspicious by sacrifice and prayer. Offerings
-were likewise made to the Nymphs, those lovely
-creations with which the fancy of the Greeks peopled
-the streams and fountains of their native land.<a id='r39' /><a href='#f39' class='c012'><sup>[39]</sup></a>
-These rites performed, the future bride was conducted
-in pomp to the citadel, where solemn sacrifice
-was offered up to Athena, the tutelar goddess
-of the state, with prayers for happiness, peculiarly the
-gift of supreme wisdom.<a id='r40' /><a href='#f40' class='c012'><sup>[40]</sup></a> To Hera, also, and the
-Fates,<a id='r41' /><a href='#f41' class='c012'><sup>[41]</sup></a> as to the goddesses that watched over the
-connubial state and rigidly punished those who transgressed
-its sacred laws, were gifts presented, and
-vows preferred; and on one or all of their several
-altars did the maiden deposit a lock of her own
-hair, in remoter ages, perhaps, the whole of it, to
-intimate that, having obtained a husband, she must
-preserve him by other means than beauty, and the
-arts of the toilette.<a id='r42' /><a href='#f42' class='c012'><sup>[42]</sup></a> At Megara the young women
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>devoted their severed locks to Iphinoë. Those of
-Delos to Hecaerga and Ops,<a id='r43' /><a href='#f43' class='c012'><sup>[43]</sup></a> while, like the Athenians,
-the maidens of Argos performed this rite in
-honour of Athena.<a id='r44' /><a href='#f44' class='c012'><sup>[44]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Having, by the performance of the above rites and
-others of similar significance, discharged their instant
-duties to the gods, and impressed on their own minds
-a deep sense of the sacred engagements they were
-about to contract, they proceeded to perform the
-nuptial ceremonies themselves, still intermingling the
-offices of religion with every portion of the transaction.
-An auspicious day having been fixed upon,
-the relations and friends of both parties assembled
-in magnificent apparel, at the house of the bride’s
-father, where all the ladies of the family were busily
-engaged in the recitation of prayers and presentation
-of offerings. These domestic ceremonies concluded,
-the bride, accompanied by her paranymph or
-bridesmaid, was led forth into the street by the
-bridegroom and one of his most intimate friends,<a id='r45' /><a href='#f45' class='c012'><sup>[45]</sup></a>
-who placed her between them in an open carriage.<a id='r46' /><a href='#f46' class='c012'><sup>[46]</sup></a>
-Their dresses, as was fitting, were of the richest and
-most splendid kind. Those of the bridegroom full,
-flowing, and of the gayest and brightest colours,<a id='r47' /><a href='#f47' class='c012'><sup>[47]</sup></a>
-glittered with golden ornaments, and diffused around,
-as he moved, a cloud of perfume. The bride herself,
-gifted with that unerring taste which distinguished
-her nation, appeared in a costume at once simple and
-magnificent—simple in its contour, its masses, its
-folds, magnificent from the brilliance of its hues
-and the superb and costly style of its ornaments.
-She was not, like some modern court dame, a blaze
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>of precious stones tastelessly heaped upon each other;
-but through the snowy gauze of her veil flashed the
-jewelled fillet and coronet-like sphendone which, with
-a chaplet of flowers,<a id='r48' /><a href='#f48' class='c012'><sup>[48]</sup></a> adorned her dark tresses; and
-between the folds of her robe of gold-embroidered
-purple, appeared her gloveless fingers, with many
-rings glittering with gems. Strings of Red Sea
-pearls encircled her neck and arms; pendants, variously
-wrought and dropped with Indian jewels,
-twinkled in her ears; and her feet, partly concealed
-by the falling robe, displayed a portion of the golden
-thonged sandal, crusted with emeralds, rubies, or
-pearls. But all these ornaments often failed to distract
-the eye from those which she owed to nature.
-Her luxuriant hair, which in Eastern women often
-reaches the ground:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Her hair in hyacinthine flow,</div>
- <div class='line'>When left to roll its folds below,</div>
- <div class='line'>As ’midst her maidens in the ball</div>
- <div class='line'>She stood superior to them all,</div>
- <div class='line'>Hath swept the marble, where her feet</div>
- <div class='line'>Gleamed whiter than the mountain sleet,</div>
- <div class='line'>Ere from the cloud that gave it birth</div>
- <div class='line'>It fell and caught one stain of earth;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>her hair, I say, perfumed with delicate unguents,<a id='r49' /><a href='#f49' class='c012'><sup>[49]</sup></a>
-such as nard from Tarsos, œranthe from Cypros,
-essence of roses from Cyrene, of lilies from Ægina
-or Cilicia, fell loosely in a profusion of ringlets
-over her shoulders, while in front it was confined by
-the fillet and grasshoppers of gold.<a id='r50' /><a href='#f50' class='c012'><sup>[50]</sup></a> More perishable
-ornaments, in the shape of crowns of myrtle,
-wild thyme,<a id='r51' /><a href='#f51' class='c012'><sup>[51]</sup></a> poppy, white sesame, with other flowers
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>and plants sacred to Aphrodite, adorned the heads
-of both bride and bridegroom.<a id='r52' /><a href='#f52' class='c012'><sup>[52]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The relations and friends followed, forming, in most
-cases, a long and stately procession, which, in the
-midst of crowds of spectators, moved slowly towards
-the temple, thousands strewing flowers or scattering
-perfume in their path, and in loud exclamations
-comparing the happy pair to the most impassioned
-and beautiful of their nymphs and gods.<a id='r53' /><a href='#f53' class='c012'><sup>[53]</sup></a> Meanwhile,
-a number of the bride’s friends, scattered
-among the multitude, were looking out anxiously
-for favourable omens, and desirous, in conjunction
-with every person present, to avert all such as superstition
-taught them to consider inauspicious. A
-crow appearing singly was supposed to betoken sorrow
-or separation, whereas, a couple of crows,<a id='r54' /><a href='#f54' class='c012'><sup>[54]</sup></a> issuing
-from the proper quarter of the heavens,
-presaged perfect union and happiness. A pair of
-turtle doves, of all omens, was esteemed the best.<a id='r55' /><a href='#f55' class='c012'><sup>[55]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On reaching the temple, the bride and bridegroom
-were received at the door by a priest, who presented
-them with a small branch of ivy, as an emblem of
-the close ties by which they were about to be united
-for ever. They were then conducted to the
-altar,<a id='r56' /><a href='#f56' class='c012'><sup>[56]</sup></a> where the ceremonies commenced with the
-sacrifice of a heifer,<a id='r57' /><a href='#f57' class='c012'><sup>[57]</sup></a> after which Artemis, Athena,
-and other virgin goddesses, were solemnly invoked.
-Prayers were then addressed to Zeus and his consort,
-the supreme divinities of Olympos;<a id='r58' /><a href='#f58' class='c012'><sup>[58]</sup></a> nor, on this
-occasion, would they overlook the ancient gods, Ouranos
-and Gaia, whose union produces fertility and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>abundance,<a id='r59' /><a href='#f59' class='c012'><sup>[59]</sup></a>—the Graces, whose smile shed upon life
-its sweetest charm, and the Fates, who shorten or
-extend it at their pleasure, were next in order
-adored; and, lastly, Aphrodite, the mother of Love,
-and of all the host of Heaven, the most beautiful
-and beneficent to mortals.<a id='r60' /><a href='#f60' class='c012'><sup>[60]</sup></a> The victim having been
-opened, the gall was taken out and significantly
-cast behind the altar.<a id='r61' /><a href='#f61' class='c012'><sup>[61]</sup></a> Soothsayers skilled in divination
-then inspected the entrails, and if their appearance
-was alarming the nuptials were broken
-off, or deferred. When favourable, the rites proceeded
-as if hallowed by the smile of the gods.
-The bride now cut off one of her tresses, which,
-twisting round a spindle, she placed as an offering
-on the altar of Athena, while, in imitation of Theseus,
-the bridegroom made a similar oblation to
-Apollo, bound, as an emblem of his out-door life,
-round a handful of grass or herbs.<a id='r62' /><a href='#f62' class='c012'><sup>[62]</sup></a> All the other
-gods, protectors of marriage, were then, by the parents
-or friends, invoked in succession, and the rites
-thus completed, the virgin’s father, placing the hand
-of the bridegroom in that of the bride, said, “I bestow on
-thee my daughter, that thine eyes may
-be gladdened by legitimate offspring.”<a id='r63' /><a href='#f63' class='c012'><sup>[63]</sup></a> The oath
-of inviolable fidelity was now taken by both, and
-the ceremony concluded with fresh sacrifices.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The performance of rites so numerous generally
-consumed the whole day, so that the shades of evening
-were falling before the bride could be conducted
-to her future home. This hour, indeed, according
-to some, was chosen to conceal the blushes of the
-youthful wife.<a id='r64' /><a href='#f64' class='c012'><sup>[64]</sup></a> And now commenced the secular
-portion of the ceremony. Numerous attendants,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>bearing lighted torches,<a id='r65' /><a href='#f65' class='c012'><sup>[65]</sup></a> ran in front of the procession,
-while bands of merry youths dancing, singing,
-or playing on musical instruments, surrounded the
-nuptial car. Similar in this respect was the practice
-throughout Greece, even so early as the time
-of Homer, who thus, in his description of the Shield,
-calls up before our imagination the lively picture of
-an heroic nuptial procession:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Here sacred pomp and genial feasts delight,</div>
- <div class='line'>And solemn dance and Hymeneal rite.</div>
- <div class='line'>Along the streets the new-made brides are led,</div>
- <div class='line'>With torches flaming, to the nuptial bed.</div>
- <div class='line'>The youthful dancers in a circle bound</div>
- <div class='line'>To the soft flute and cittern’s silver sound.<a id='r66' /><a href='#f66' class='c012'><sup>[66]</sup></a></div>
- <div class='line'>Through the fair streets the matrons, in a row,</div>
- <div class='line'>Stand in their porches and enjoy the show.”<a id='r67' /><a href='#f67' class='c012'><sup>[67]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>The song on this occasion sung received the name
-of the “Carriage Melody,” from the carriage in which
-the married pair rode while it was chaunted.<a id='r68' /><a href='#f68' class='c012'><sup>[68]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The house of the bridegroom, diligently prepared
-for their reception, was decorated profusely with garlands,
-and brilliantly lighted up. When, among the
-Bœotians, the lady, accompanied by her husband, had
-descended from the carriage, its axletree was burnt,
-to intimate that having found a home she would have
-no further use for it.<a id='r69' /><a href='#f69' class='c012'><sup>[69]</sup></a> The celebration of nuptial
-rites generally puts people in good temper, at least
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>for the first day; and new-married women at Athens
-stood in full need of all they could muster to assist
-them through the crowd of ceremonies which beset
-the entrances to the houses of their husbands. Symbols
-of domestic labours, pestles, sieves,<a id='r70' /><a href='#f70' class='c012'><sup>[70]</sup></a> and so on,
-met the young wife’s eye on all sides. She herself,
-in all her pomp of dress, bore in her hands an earthen
-barley-parcher.<a id='r71' /><a href='#f71' class='c012'><sup>[71]</sup></a> But, to comfort her, very nice cakes
-of sesamum,<a id='r72' /><a href='#f72' class='c012'><sup>[72]</sup></a> with wine and fruit and other dainties
-innumerable, accompanied by gleeful and welcoming
-faces, appeared in the background beyond the sieves
-and pestles. The hymeneal lay,<a id='r73' /><a href='#f73' class='c012'><sup>[73]</sup></a> with sundry other
-songs, all redolent of “joy and youth,” resounded
-through halls now her own. Mirth and delight
-ushered her into the banqueting-room, where appeared
-a boy covered with thorn branches, and oaken boughs
-laden with acorns, who, when the epithalamium
-chaunters had ceased, recited an ancient hymn beginning
-with the words, “I have escaped the worse and
-found the better.”<a id='r74' /><a href='#f74' class='c012'><sup>[74]</sup></a> This hymn, constituting a portion
-of the divine service performed by the Athenians
-during a festival instituted in commemoration of the
-discovery of corn, by which men were delivered from
-acorn-eating, they introduced among the nuptial ceremonies
-to intimate, that wedlock is as much superior
-to celibacy as wheat is to mast. At the close of the
-recitation, there entered a troop of dancing girls
-crowned with myrtle-wreaths, and habited in light
-tunics reaching very little below the knee, just as
-we still behold them on antique gems and vases, who,
-by their varied, free, and somewhat wanton, movements,
-vividly represented all the warmth and energy
-of passion.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The feast which now ensued was, at Athens, to
-prevent useless extravagance, made liable to the inspection
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>of certain magistrates. Both sexes partook
-of it; but, in conformity with the general spirit of their
-manners and institutions, the ladies, as in Egypt, sat
-at separate tables.<a id='r75' /><a href='#f75' class='c012'><sup>[75]</sup></a> At these entertainments we may
-infer that, among other good things, great quantities
-of sweetmeats were consumed, since the woman employed
-in kneading and preparing them, and in officiating
-at the nuptial sacrifices, was deemed of sufficient
-importance to possess a distinct appellation,
-(δημιουργὸς,)<a id='r76' /><a href='#f76' class='c012'><sup>[76]</sup></a> while the bride-cake, which doubtless
-was the crowning achievement of her art, received the
-name of Gamelios. The general arrangement of the
-banquet, however, they entrusted to the care of a sort
-of major-domo, who received the appellation of Trapezopoios.<a id='r77' /><a href='#f77' class='c012'><sup>[77]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among the princes and grandees of Macedonia the
-nuptial banquet differed very widely, as might be expected,
-from the frugal entertainments of the Athenians;
-but as it may assist us in comprehending the
-changes introduced into Hellenic manners by the
-conquests of Alexander and his successors, I shall
-crave the reader’s permission to lay before him a description,
-bequeathed to us by antiquity, of the magnificent
-banquet<a id='r78' /><a href='#f78' class='c012'><sup>[78]</sup></a> given at the marriage of Caranos.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The guests, twenty in number, immediately on
-entering the mansion of the bridegroom, were crowned
-by his order with golden stlengides,<a id='r79' /><a href='#f79' class='c012'><sup>[79]</sup></a> each valued at
-five pieces of gold. They were then introduced into
-the banqueting-hall, where the first article set before
-them on taking their places at the board was, no
-doubt, exceedingly agreeable, consisting of a silver
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>beaker presented to each as a gift, which, when they
-had drained off, they delivered to their attendant
-slaves, who, according to the custom of the country,
-stood behind their seats with large baskets intended
-to contain the presents to be bestowed on them by
-the master of the feast.<a id='r80' /><a href='#f80' class='c012'><sup>[80]</sup></a> There was then placed before
-every member of the company a bronze salver,
-of Corinthian workmanship, completely covered by a
-cake, on which were piled roast fowls and ducks and
-woodcocks, and a goose, together with other dainties
-in great abundance. These, likewise, followed the
-beakers into the corbels of the slaves, and were succeeded
-by numerous dishes, of which the guests were
-expected to partake on the spot. Next was brought
-in a capacious silver tray, also covered by a cake,
-whereon were heaped up geese, hares, kids, other
-cakes curiously wrought, pigeons, turtle-doves, partridges,
-with a variety of similar game, which, likewise,
-after they had been tasted, I presume, were
-handed to the servants.<a id='r81' /><a href='#f81' class='c012'><sup>[81]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When the rage of hunger had been appeased, as
-it must soon have been, they washed their hands,
-after which crowns, wreathed from every kind of
-flower, were brought in, and along with them other
-golden stlengides, equal in weight to the former,
-were placed, for form’s sake, on the heads of the
-company, before they found their way to the baskets
-in the rear.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>While they were still in a sort of delirium of joy,
-occasioned by the munificence of the bridegroom,
-there entered to them a troop of female flute players,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>singers, and Rhodian performers on the Sambukè,<a id='r82' /><a href='#f82' class='c012'><sup>[82]</sup></a>
-naked in the opinion of some, though others reported
-them to have worn a slight tunic. When these
-performers had given them a sufficient taste of their
-art, they retired to make way for other female slaves,
-bearing each a pair of perfume vases, containing
-the measure of a cotyla, the one of gold, the other
-of silver, and bound together by a golden thong.
-Of these every guest received a pair. In fact, the
-princely bridegroom, in order, as we suppose, that his
-friends might share with him the joy of his nuptials,
-bestowed upon every one of them a fortune
-instead of a supper; for immediately upon the heels
-of the gift above described came a number of silver
-dishes, each of sufficient dimensions to contain
-a large roast pig, laid upon its back, with its paunch
-thrown open, and stuffed with all sorts of delicacies
-which had been roasted with it, such as thrushes,
-metræ, and becaficoes, with the yolk of eggs poured
-around them, and oysters and cockles. Of these
-dishes every person present received one, with its
-contents, and, immediately afterwards, such another
-dish containing a kid hissing hot. Upon this, Caranos
-observing that their corbils were crammed,
-caused to be presented to them wicker panniers,
-and elegant bread-baskets, plaited with slips of ivory.<a id='r83' /><a href='#f83' class='c012'><sup>[83]</sup></a>
-Delighted by his generosity, the company loudly
-applauded the bridegroom, testifying their approbation
-by clapping their hands. Then followed other
-gifts, and perfume vases of gold and silver, presented
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>to the company in pairs as before. The bustle
-having subsided, there suddenly rushed in a troop
-of performers worthy to have figured in the feast
-of the Chytræ,<a id='r84' /><a href='#f84' class='c012'><sup>[84]</sup></a> at Athens, and along with them ithyphalli,
-jugglers, and naked female wonder-workers,
-who danced upon their heads in circles of swords, and
-spouted fire from their mouths. These performances
-ended, they set themselves more earnestly and hotly
-to drink, from capacious golden goblets, their wines,
-now less mixed than before, being the Thasian, the
-Mendian, and the Lesbian. A glass dish, three feet
-in diameter, was next brought in upon a silver stand,
-on which were piled all kinds of fried fish. This
-was accompanied by silver bread-baskets, filled with
-Cappadocian rolls, some of which they ate, and delivered
-the rest to their slaves. They then washed
-their hands, and were crowned with golden crowns,
-double the weight of the former, and presented with
-a third pair of gold and silver vases filled with
-perfume. They by this time had become quite delirious
-with wine, and began a truly Macedonian
-contest, in which the winner was he who swallowed
-most; Proteas, grandson of him who was boon companion
-to Alexander the Great, drinking upwards
-of a gallon at a draught, and exclaiming—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Most joy is in his soul</div>
- <div class='line'>Who drains the largest bowl.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>The immense goblet was then given him by Caranos,
-who declared, that every man should reckon
-as his own property the bowl whose contents he
-could despatch. Upon this, nine valiant bacchanals
-started up at once, and sought each to empty the
-goblet before the others, while one unhappy wight
-among the company, envying them their good fortune,
-sat down and burst into tears because he
-should go cupless away. The master of the house,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>however, unwilling that any should be dissatisfied,
-presented him with an empty bowl.<a id='r85' /><a href='#f85' class='c012'><sup>[85]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A chorus of a hundred men now entered to chaunt
-the epithalamium; and after them dancing girls,
-dressed in the character of nymphs and nereids.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The drinking still proceeding, and the darkness of
-evening coming on, the circle of the hall appeared
-suddenly to dilate, a succession of white curtains,
-which had extended all round, and disguised its
-dimensions, being drawn up, while from numerous
-recesses in the wall, thrown open by concealed
-machinery, a blaze of torches flashed upon the guests,
-seeming to be borne by a troop of gods and goddesses,
-Hermes, Pan, Artemis, and the Loves, with numerous
-other divinities, each holding a flambeau and administering
-light to the assembled mortals.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>While every person was expressing his admiration
-of this contrivance, wild boars of true Erymanthean
-dimensions, transfixed with silver javelins, were
-brought in on square trays with golden rims, one of
-which was presented to each of the company. To
-the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>bon vivants</i></span> themselves nothing appeared so worthy
-of commendation, as that, when anything wonderful
-was exhibited, they should all have been able to get
-upon their legs, and preserve the perpendicular, notwithstanding
-they were so top-heavy with wine.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Our slaves,” says one of the guests, “piled all the
-gifts we had received in our baskets; and the trumpet,
-according to the custom of the Macedonians,
-at length announced the termination of the repast.”
-Caranos next began that part of the potations in
-which small cups alone figured, and commanded the
-slaves to circulate the wine briskly; what they drank
-in this second bout being regarded as an antidote
-against that which they had swallowed before.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>They were now, as might be supposed, in the right
-trim to be amused, and there entered to them the
-buffoon Mandrogenes, a descendant, it was said, of
-Strato the Athenian. This professional gentleman
-for a long time shook their sides with laughter, and
-terminated his performances by dancing with his wife,
-an old woman, upwards of eighty.<a id='r86' /><a href='#f86' class='c012'><sup>[86]</sup></a> This fit of merriment
-would appear to have restored the edge of their
-appetites, and made them ready for those supplementary
-dainties which closed the achievements of the
-day. These consisted of a variety of sweetmeats,
-rendered more tempting by the little ivory-plaited
-corbels in which they nestled, delicate cakes from
-Crete, and Samos, and Attica, in the boxes in which
-they were imported.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Hippolochos, to whose enthusiasm for descriptions
-of good cheer, the reader is indebted for the above
-picturesque details, concludes his important narrative
-by observing, that, when they rose to depart, their
-anxiety respecting the wealth they had acquired
-sobered them completely. He then adds, addressing
-himself to his correspondent Lynceus, “Meanwhile
-you, my friend, remaining all alone at Athens, enjoy
-the lectures of Theophrastus with your thyme,
-rocket and delicate twists, mingling in the revels
-of the Linnean and Chytrean festivals. For our
-own part we are looking out, some for houses, others
-for estates, others for slaves, to be purchased by
-the riches which dropped into our baskets at the
-supper of Caranos.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The marriage feast having been thus concluded,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>the bride was conducted to the harem by the light
-of flambeaux, round one of which, pre-eminently
-denominated the “Hymeneal Torch,” her mother,
-who was principal among the torch-bearers, twisted
-her hair-lace,<a id='r87' /><a href='#f87' class='c012'><sup>[87]</sup></a> unbound at the moment from her head.
-On retiring to the nuptial chamber the bride, in
-obedience to the laws, ate a quince, together with
-the bridegroom, to signify, we are told, that their
-first conversation should be full of sweetness and
-harmony.<a id='r88' /><a href='#f88' class='c012'><sup>[88]</sup></a> The guests continued their revels with
-music, dancing, and song, until far in the night.<a id='r89' /><a href='#f89' class='c012'><sup>[89]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At daybreak on the following morning their friends
-re-assembled and saluted them with a new epithalamium,
-exhorting them to descend from their bower
-to enjoy the beauties of the dawn,<a id='r90' /><a href='#f90' class='c012'><sup>[90]</sup></a> which in that
-warm and genial climate are even in January equal
-to those of a May morning with us. On appearing in
-the presence of their congratulators, the wife, as a mark
-of affection, presented her husband with a rich woollen
-cloak,<a id='r91' /><a href='#f91' class='c012'><sup>[91]</sup></a> in part, at least, the production of her own
-fair hands. On the same occasion the father of the
-bride sent a number of costly gifts to the house of
-his son-in-law, consisting of cups, goblets, or vases
-of alabaster or gold, beds, couches, candelabra, or
-boxes for perfumes or cosmetics, combs, jewel-cases,
-costly sandals, or other articles of use or luxury.
-And, that so striking an instance of his wealth and
-generosity might not escape public observation, the
-whole was conveyed to the bridegroom’s house in
-great pomp by female slaves, before whom marched
-a boy clothed in white, and bearing a torch in
-his hand, accompanied by a youthful basket-bearer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>habited like a canephora in the sacred processions.<a id='r92' /><a href='#f92' class='c012'><sup>[92]</sup></a>
-Customs in spirit exactly similar still survive among
-the primitive mountaineers of Wales, where the newly-married
-couple, in the middle and lower ranks of
-life, have their houses completely furnished by the
-free-will offerings, not only of their parents but of
-their friends. It is, however, incumbent on the recipients
-to make proof in their turn of equal generosity
-when any member of the donor’s family ventures
-on the hazards of housekeeping.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. Προμνηστρία. Aristoph. Nub. 41. et Schol. Poll. iii. 41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. Athen. xiii. 2. Mr. Mitford
-defers too much to “the traditions
-received in the polished
-ages” when, upon the authority
-of such traditions and of
-such writers as Justin (ii. 6.), he
-appears to conclude that, before
-the time of Cecrops, the people
-of Attica were in knowledge and
-civilisation inferior to the wildest
-savages. Hist, of Greece, i. 58.
-Upon legends and authors of this
-description no reliance can be
-placed. If society existed, everything
-“indispensable” to society
-also existed; therefore, if marriage
-be so, it could not be unknown.
-Besides, how happens it that this
-same Cecrops who instituted marriage
-did not likewise teach them
-to sow corn, which, if Egypt was,
-when he left it, a civilised country,
-must have been as familiar to him
-as matrimony? This most necessary
-acquisition, however, they
-were left to make many ages
-afterwards, during the reign of
-Erechtheus. Justin, ii. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. Cf. Goguet, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Origine des Lois</span>.
-iv. 394, where the learned author
-contends most chivalrously for the
-received theory. Apollodorus,
-however, represents Cecrops as
-an Autochthon, συμφύες ἔχων
-σῶμα ἀνδρὸς καὶ δράκοντος. iii.
-14. 1.—The reason why he was
-thus said to partake of two natures—half-man
-and half-snake—has
-been very variously and very
-fantastically explained. Diodorus
-Siculus, (i. p. 17,) derives his
-title to be considered half a
-man and half a beast, from his
-being, by choice a Greek, by nature
-a barbarian. Yet he conceives
-that it was the beast that
-civilised the man. Others explain
-διφυὴς somewhat differently
-to mean that he was of gigantic
-stature and understood two
-languages: διὰ μῆκος σώματος οὑτω
-καλούμενος, ὅς φήσιν ὁ Φιλόχορος,
-ἢ ὅτι Αἰγυπτίων τὰς δύο
-γλώσσας ἠπίστατο.—Euseb. No.
-460.—Eustathius, familiar with
-the fables of the mythology, turns
-the tables upon Cecrops, and
-conceives that he may have
-civilised himself, not the Athenians,
-by settling in Attica. He
-supposes him ἀπὸ ὄφεως εἰς ἀνθρωπὸν
-ἐλθειν, ἐπειδὴ ἐκεῖνος ἐλθὼν
-εἰς Ἑλλάδα καὶ τὸν βάρβαρον
-Αἰγυπτιασμὸν ἀφεις, χρηστοὺς
-ἀναλάβετο τρόπους πολιτικοὺς.—In
-Dionys. Peneg. p. 56.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. Deipnosoph. xiii. 2.—Compare
-the account in Diogenes
-Laertius, ii. 5. 10.—The conduct
-of Socrates, who married Xantippe
-to prove the goodness of his
-temper, was imitated, we are
-told, by a Christian lady, who
-“desired of St. Athanasius to
-procure for her, out of the widows
-fed from the ecclesiastical
-corban, an old woman morose,
-peevish, and impatient, that
-she might by the society of
-so ungentle a person have often
-occasion to exercise her patience,
-her forgiveness, and
-charity.”—Jeremy Taylor’s Life
-of Christ, i. 384.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. Athen. xiii. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r6'>6</a>. Dinarch. in Demosth. § 11. Cf.
-Poll. viii. 40. Comm. p. 644.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r7'>7</a>. Aristoph. Lysistrat. 78, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r8'>8</a>. Athen. xiii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r9'>9</a>. Hom. Il. λ. 221, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r10'>10</a>. Hom. Odyss. η. 55, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r11'>11</a>. Keightley, Mythology, p. 490.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r12'>12</a>. Serv. ad Virg. Æn. iii. 297.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r13'>13</a>. Virg. Cir. 133.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Sed malus ille puer, quem nec sua flectere mater,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Iratum potuit, quem nec pater, atque avus idem</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Jupiter.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r14'>14</a>. For Valckernaer’s correction
-of Eurip. Hippol. 536, where for ὁ
-Δίος παῖς, he reads ὄλιγος παῖς,
-should, I think, be adopted. Diatrib.
-in Eurip. Perd. Dram. xv. p.
-159, c. His whole defence of
-Zeus on this <em>count</em> is triumphant.
-Still the notes of Monk, Beck,
-Musgrave, and the Classical Journal,
-vi. 80, should be compared.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r15'>15</a>. Diog. Laert. Proœm. § 6. To
-this practice Euripides probably alludes
-in the Andromache, v. 173,
-sqq., where Hermione describes,
-with scorn, the profligate manners
-of the barbarians. Catullus,
-inveighing against the impious
-depravity of a contemporary,
-observes—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Nam Magus ex matre et gnato gignatur oportet,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Si vera est Persarum <em>impia religio</em>.”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Epig. lxxxiii. 3, seq. Pope
-Alexander VI. and the Emperor
-Shah Jehan have, in modern
-times, been accused of similar
-crimes. Bayle, Dict. Hist. et Crit.
-Art. Alexandre VI. and Bernier,
-Voyages, t. i. On the prohibited
-degrees of consanguinity, see Sepulveda,
-de Ritu Nupt. et Dispens.
-i. § 20, where he says, that
-the Pope could authorize all unions,
-save those between parents
-and children. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Et ideo hodiè non
-ligant, nisi quatenus ab ecclesia
-sunt assumptæ; ac propterea Papa
-dispensare potest cum omnibus
-personis, nisi cum matre et patre,
-ut matrimonium contrahant.”</span>
-Card. Cajetan. ap. Sepulved. ub.
-sup.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r16'>16</a>. Alcibiades. Athen. xii. 48.
-xiii. 34. Lysias, fr. p. 640.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r17'>17</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 1353.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r18'>18</a>. Corn. Nep. Vit. Cim. i. Plut.
-Cim. § 4, where we find this
-lady accused of an amour with
-the painter Polygnotos, who introduced
-her portrait among the Trojan
-ladies in the Stoa Pœcile.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r19'>19</a>. Deipnosophist. xiii. 56. Muretus,
-Var. Lect. vii. i. discusses the
-question, but without throwing
-much new light upon it.—Andocides
-cont. Alcibiad. § 9, assigns
-Cimon’s amour with Elpinice as
-the cause of his banishment. We
-find, however, Archeptolis, son
-of Themistocles, marrying his
-half-sister Mnesiptolema. Plut.
-Themistocl. § 32.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f20'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r20'>20</a>. Meurs. Themis Attica. i. 14.
-Philo. De Leg. Spec. ii. Eurip.
-Orest. 545. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f21'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r21'>21</a>. Cf. Herod. v. 39. Pausan.
-iii. 3, 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f22'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r22'>22</a>. Censor. de Die Natal. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f23'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r23'>23</a>. Thus Mantitheos, in Demosthenes,
-marries at the age of
-eighteen, in obedience to his
-father’s wishes.—Contr. Bœot. ii.
-§ 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f24'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r24'>24</a>. Aristot. Polit. ii. 7. vii. 14.
-Gœttling.—Cf. Malthus on Population,
-i. 9, 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f25'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r25'>25</a>. Repub. v. t. vi. p. 237. De
-Legg. vi. t. vii. p. 452. Hesiod,
-Opp. et Dies, 696. Gœttling.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f26'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r26'>26</a>. Polit. vii. 16. Hist. Anim.
-vii. 5, 6. Cf. Tac. de Mor. Germ.
-20. Just. Instit. t. x. Brisson.
-de Jur. Nupt. p. 99.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f27'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r27'>27</a>. Olympiod. in Meteor. c. 6.
-Meurs. Grec. Fer. v. 240.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f28'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r28'>28</a>. Exod. xl. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f29'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r29'>29</a>. Iphigen. in Aul. 717.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f30'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r30'>30</a>. Pindar, Isth. Od. viii. 41, seq.
-Dissen.—Rev. H. F. Cary’s translation,
-admirable for its closeness
-and spirit, p. 212.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f31'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r31'>31</a>. Aristot. Polit. ii. 6. Tacit.
-de Mor. Germ. 18. Heracl. Pont.
-v. Θρακων. Leg. Salic. Art. 46.
-Hist. Gen. des Voy. vi. 144. Cf.
-Goguet, Orig. des Loix, i. 53.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f32'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r32'>32</a>. In cases where the fathers
-were unable to dowry them, we
-find daughters growing old in the
-paternal mansion. Demosth. in
-Steph. i. § 20. Dowries were
-frequently considerable, amounting
-sometimes to a hundred minæ.
-§ 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f33'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r33'>33</a>. On their anxiety to discover
-the designs of the Fates in this
-respect, see Schol. Aristoph. Lysist.
-597.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f34'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r34'>34</a>. Goguet, Orig. des Loix, iii.
-127, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f35'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r35'>35</a>. Demosth. pro Phorm. § 8–10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f36'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r36'>36</a>. Opera et Dies, 405.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f37'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r37'>37</a>. Theocrit. Eidyll. xxvii. 36.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f38'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r38'>38</a>. Theocrit. Eidyll. ii. 66, ibique
-Schol.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f39'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r39'>39</a>. Schol. Pind. Pyth. iv. ap.
-Meurs. Græc. Fer. p. 238.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f40'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r40'>40</a>. Suid. v. προτέλεια. t. ii. p.
-629. v. Æschyl. Eumen. 799.
-Cf. Cœl. Rhodig. xxviii. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f41'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r41'>41</a>. Poll. iii. 38. Schol. Pind.
-Pyth. x. 31. Aristoph. Thesmoph.
-982. Kust.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f42'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r42'>42</a>. Poll. iii. 38. ibique Comm. p.
-529, seq. Cf. Spanh. Observ. in
-Callim. 149, 507. The youth
-usually cut off their hair on reaching
-the age of puberty. Athen.
-xiii. 83.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f43'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r43'>43</a>. Pausan. i. 43. 4. Callim. in
-Del. 292. Spanh. Observat. t. ii.
-p. 503, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f44'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r44'>44</a>. Stat. Theb. ii. 255, with the
-ancient commentary of Lutatius.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f45'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r45'>45</a>. Πάροχος. Suid. v. Ζεῦγος
-ἡμιονικὸν. t. i. p. 1123, b.
-Eurip. Helen. 722, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f46'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r46'>46</a>. This was the usual practice.
-When the bride was led home on
-foot she was called χαμαίπους a
-term of disrespect not far removed
-in meaning from our word <em>tramper</em>.
-Poll. iii. 40.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f47'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r47'>47</a>. Aristoph. Plut. 529, et Schol.
-Suid. v. βαπτά. t. i. p. 533, b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f48'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r48'>48</a>. Eurip. Iphig. in Aul. 905.
-This chaplet was placed on the
-bride’s head by her mother.
-Hopfn. in loc.—<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">In Locrensibus
-usu erat, ut matronæ ex lectis
-floribus nectant coronas. Nam
-emptagestare serta, vitio dabatur.</span>
-Alex. ab Alexand. p. 58. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f49'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r49'>49</a>. Aristoph. Plut. 529. id. Pac.
-862.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f50'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r50'>50</a>. Thucyd. i. 60.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f51'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r51'>51</a>. Σισυμβρία. Dioscor. ii. 155.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f52'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r52'>52</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Av. 160.
-In Bœotia the bride was crowned
-with a reed of wild asparagus, a
-prickly but sweet plant. Plut.
-Conjug. Præcept. 2. Bion. Epitaph.
-Adon. 88. On Nuptial
-Crowns vide Paschal. De Coronis,
-lib. ii. c. 16. p. 126, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f53'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r53'>53</a>. Charit. Char. et Callir.
-Amor. iii. 44.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f54'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r54'>54</a>. Orus Apollo Hieroglyph. viii.
-p. 6. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f55'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r55'>55</a>. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Meziriac sur les Epitres
-d’Ovide</span>, p. 190, sqq. Ælian de
-Animal. Nat. iii. 9. Alex. ab
-Alexand. ii. 5, p. 57, b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f56'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r56'>56</a>. Theod. Prodrom. de Rhodanth.
-et Dosicl. Amor. ix.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f57'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r57'>57</a>. Eurip. Iphig. in Aul. 1113.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f58'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r58'>58</a>. Poll. iii. 38.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f59'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r59'>59</a>. Procl. in Tim. t. v, Meziriac.
-p. 155.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f60'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r60'>60</a>. Etym. Mag. 220, 53. sqq. Cf.
-Plut. Conj. Præcept. proœm. t. i.
-p. 321. Tauchnitz.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f61'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r61'>61</a>. Plut. Conj. Precept. 27. Cœl.
-Rhodig. xxviii. 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f62'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r62'>62</a>. Meurs. Lect. Att. iii. 6, 106,
-sqq. Herod. iv. 34.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f63'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r63'>63</a>. Menand. ap. Clem. Alexand.
-Stromat. ii. p. 421, a. Heins.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f64'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r64'>64</a>. Potter, Arch. Græc. ii. 281.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f65'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r65'>65</a>. Eurip. Helen. 722. Hesiod,
-Scut. Heracl. 275, seq. where the
-torches are said to be borne by
-Dmoës.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f66'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r66'>66</a>. In Hesiod a troop of blooming
-virgins, playing on the phorminx,
-lead the procession. αἱ δ᾽ ὑπὸ φορμίγγων
-ἄναγον χορὸν ἱμερόεντα.
-A band of youths follow, playing
-on the syrinx. See the note of
-Gœttling on Scut. Heracl. 274,
-p. 117, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f67'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r67'>67</a>. Iliad, σ. 490, sqq. Pope’s
-Translation.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f68'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r68'>68</a>. Ἁρμάτειον μέλος. Leisner, in
-his notes on Bos (Antiq. Græc.
-Pars. iv. c. ii. § 4.), observes, that
-in Suidas, Hesychius, and Eustathius
-(ad Il. χ. p. 1380. 5), these
-words have a different meaning
-from that which, with Bos and
-Potter (Antiq. Græc. ii. 282), I
-have adopted. But in the passage
-quoted by Henri de Valois
-(ad Harpocrat. p. 222), they
-would seem to bear the signification
-above given them.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f69'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r69'>69</a>. Plut. Quæst. Roman. xx. 19.
-Valckenaer ad Herodot. iv. 114.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f70'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r70'>70</a>. Poll. iii. 37.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f71'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r71'>71</a>. Poll. i. 246.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f72'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r72'>72</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Pac. 834.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f73'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r73'>73</a>. Athen. xiv. 10. Anac. Od.
-xviii. Schol. Hom. Il. σ. 493.
-Pind. Pyth. iii. 17. Dissen. Schol.
-ad v. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f74'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r74'>74</a>. Suid. v. ἔφυγον κακὸν. t. i.
-p. 1113, d.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f75'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r75'>75</a>. Luc. Conviv. § 8. In the sepulchral
-grottoes of Eilithyia, in
-the Thebaid, we find a rough
-fresco representing a marriage-feast,
-at which the men and women
-sit as described in the text.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f76'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r76'>76</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Pac. 421.
-Poll. iii. 41. The water of the
-bath used on this occasion by the
-bride was, according to ancient
-custom, brought from the fountain
-of Enneakrounos. Etym.
-Mag. 568, 57, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f77'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r77'>77</a>. Poll. iv. 41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f78'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r78'>78</a>. Athen. iv. 2, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f79'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r79'>79</a>. Cf. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 578.
-Ἔστι τι στλεγγὶς, δέρμα κεχρυσωμένον,
-ὁ περὶ τὴν κεφαλὴν φοροῦσι.—Poll. vii. 179.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f80'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r80'>80</a>. When the host happened to
-be less rich or generous, people
-sometimes, in the corruption of
-later ages, endeavoured to steal
-what they could not obtain as a
-gift. Thus the sophist Dionysodoros
-is detected in Lucian with a
-cup stuffed into the breast of his
-mantle.—Conviv. seu Lapith.
-§ 46.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f81'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r81'>81</a>. This singular kind of liberality
-continued in fashion down
-to a very late period:—καὶ ἃμα
-εἰς ἐκικόμιστο ἡμῖν τὸ ἐντελὲς
-ὀνομαζόμενον δεῖπνον, μία ὄρνις
-ἑκάστω, καὶ κρέας ὑὸς, καὶ λαγῶα,
-καὶ ἰχθὺς ἐν ταγήνου, καὶ σησαμοῦντες,
-καὶ ὅσα ἐν τραγεῖν, καὶ
-ἐζῆν ἀποφέρεσθαι ταῦτα. Luc.
-Conviv. § 38.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f82'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r82'>82</a>. The Sambukè was a stringed
-instrument of triangular form, invented
-by the poet Ibycos. It
-was sometimes called Iambukè,
-because used by chaunters of
-Iambic verse.—Suid. in v. t. ii.
-p. 709, c. d. Poll. iv. 59.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f83'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r83'>83</a>. Casaubon is particular in his
-explanation of this passage, lest
-any one should fall into the singular
-mistake of supposing these
-nuptial bread-baskets to have
-been made with plaited thongs
-of elephant’s hide: “<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>Lora elephantina</em>
-fortasse aliquis capiat
-de <em>corio elephanti</em>: sed ἱμάντας
-arbitror appellare Hippolochum
-<em>virgas subtiles ex ebore</em>, quibus
-ceu vimine utebantur in contexendis
-panariis istis.”</span>—Animadv.
-in Athen. t. vii. p. 392.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f84'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r84'>84</a>. Vid. Animadv. in Athen. t. vii. p. 393. Meurs. Græcia
-Feriata. i. p. 30, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f85'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r85'>85</a>. In like manner, Alexander,
-son of Philip, when he entertained
-nine thousand persons at
-a marriage feast at Susa, presented
-each of them with a
-golden goblet, and paid all their
-debts, amounting to nearly ten
-thousand talents.—Plut. Alexand.
-§ 70.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f86'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r86'>86</a>. If octogenarian dancers were
-held in admiration in England, it
-would, according to Lord Bacon,
-be easy to form an army of
-them; since “there is, he says,
-scarce a village with us, if it be
-any whit populous, but it affords
-some man or woman of fourscore
-years of age; nay, a few years
-since there was, in the county
-of Hereford, a May-game, or
-morrice-dance, consisting of eight
-men, whose age computed together,
-made up eight hundred
-years, inasmuch as what some
-of them wanted of an hundred,
-others exceeded as much.” History
-of Life and Death, p. 20.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f87'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r87'>87</a>. Senec. Thebais, Act. iv. 2,
-505.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f88'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r88'>88</a>. Plut. Conjug. Præcept. i. t.
-i. p. 321. Meurs. Them. Att. i.
-14, p. 39. Petit. Legg. Att. vi.
-i. p. 449.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f89'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r89'>89</a>. See Douglas, Essay on certain
-points of resemblance between
-the ancient and modern Greeks,
-p. 114, and Chandler, Travels, ii.
-152.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f90'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r90'>90</a>. Theocrit, Eidyll. xviii. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f91'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r91'>91</a>. Ἀπαυλιστηρία. Poll. iii. 40.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f92'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r92'>92</a>. Etymol. Mag. 354. 1. sqq. Suid. v. ἐπαυλία, t. i. p. 964, e. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>
- <h3 class='c002'>CHAPTER V.<br /> CONDITION OF MARRIED WOMEN.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>From the spirit pervading the foregoing ceremonies
-it will be seen, that married women enjoyed at
-Athens numerous external tokens of respect. We
-must now enter the harem, and observe how they
-lived there. Most, perhaps, of the misapprehensions
-which prevail on this subject arise out of one very
-obvious omission,—a neglect to distinguish between
-the exaggeration and satire of the comic poets, much
-of which, in all countries, has been levelled at women,
-and the sober truth of history, less startling, and therefore,
-less palatable. To comprehend the Athenians,
-however, we must be content to view them as they
-were, with many virtues and many vices, often sinning
-against their women, but never as a general
-rule treating them harshly. Indeed, according to
-no despicable testimony, their errors when they erred
-would appear to have lain in the contrary direction.<a id='r93' /><a href='#f93' class='c012'><sup>[93]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Certainly the mistress of a family at Athens was
-not placed above the necessity of extending her solicitude
-to the government of her household, though
-too many even there neglected it, degenerating into
-the resemblance of those mawkish, insipid, useless
-things, without heart or head, who often in our times
-fill fashionable drawing-rooms, and have their reputations
-translated to Doctors’ Commons. Of female
-education I have already spoken, together with the
-several acts and ceremonies, which conducted an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>Athenian woman to the highest and most honourable
-station her sex can fill on earth. In this new relation
-she shares with her husband that domestic patriarchal
-sovereignty, pictures of which abound in the Scriptures.
-How great soever might be the establishment,
-she was queen of every thing within doors. All the
-slaves, male and female, came under her control.<a id='r94' /><a href='#f94' class='c012'><sup>[94]</sup></a>
-To every one she distributed his task, and issued her
-commands; and when there were no children who
-required her care, she might often be seen sitting
-in the recesses of the harem, at the loom, encircled,
-like an Homeric princess, by her maids,<a id='r95' /><a href='#f95' class='c012'><sup>[95]</sup></a> laughing,
-chatting, or, along with them, exercising her sweet
-voice in songs,<a id='r96' /><a href='#f96' class='c012'><sup>[96]</sup></a> those natural bursts of melody which
-came spontaneously to the lips of a people whose
-every-day speech resembled the music of the nightingale.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Xenophon, in that interesting work, the Œconomics,
-introduces an Athenian gentleman laying open to
-Socrates the internal regulations of his family. In this
-picture, the wife occupies an important position in
-the foreground. She is, indeed, the principal figure
-around which the various circumstances of the composition
-are grouped with infinite delicacy and effect.
-Young and beautiful she comes forth hesitating and
-blushing at being detected in some slight economical
-blunders. The husband takes her by the hand; they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>converse in our presence, and while the interior arrangements
-of a Greek house are unreservedly laid
-open, we discover the exact footing on which husband
-and wife lived at Athens, and a state of more
-complete confidence, of greater mutual affection, of
-more considerate tenderness on the one side, or feminine
-reliance and love on the other, it would be difficult
-to conceive.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Ischomachos, I admit, is to be regarded as a favourable
-specimen; he unites in his character the
-qualities of an enterprising and enlightened country
-gentleman, with those of a politician and orator
-of no mean order, and his probity as a citizen infuses
-an air of mingled grandeur and sweetness into
-his domestic manners. Describing a conversation
-which, soon after their marriage, took place between
-him and his youthful wife, he observes:—“When
-we had together taken a view of our possessions
-I remarked to her that, without her constant care
-and superintendence, nothing of all she had seen
-would greatly profit us. And taking my illustration
-from the science of politics, I showed that, in
-well-regulated states, it is not deemed sufficient
-that good laws are enacted, but that proper persons
-are chosen to be guardians of those laws, who
-not only reward with praise such as yield them
-due obedience, but visit also their infraction with
-punishment. Now, my love,” said I, “you must
-consider yourself the guardian of our domestic
-commonwealth, and dispose of all its resources as
-the commander of a garrison disposes of the soldiers
-under his orders. With you it entirely rests
-to determine respecting the conduct of every individual
-in the household, and, like a queen, to
-bestow praise and reward on the dutiful and obedient,
-while you keep in check the refractory by
-punishment and reproof. Nor should this high
-charge appear burdensome to you; for though
-the duties of your station may seem to involve
-deeper solicitude and necessity for greater exertion
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>than we require even from a domestic, these greater
-cares are rewarded by greater enjoyments; since,
-whatever ability they may display in the improving
-or protecting of their master’s property, the measure
-of their advantages still depends upon his
-will, while you, as its joint owner, enjoy the right
-of applying it to whatever use you please. It follows,
-therefore, that as the person most interested
-in its preservation you should cheerfully encounter
-superior difficulties.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Having listened attentively to the somewhat quaint
-discourse of the Economist, Socrates felt anxious,
-as well he might, to learn the result; for the lady,
-expected thus wisely “to queen it,” was as yet but
-fifteen. His faith, however, in womanhood was great;
-and Xenophon, who but reflects from a less brilliant
-mirror the Socratic wisdom, delivers, under the mask
-of Ischomachos, the mingled convictions both of the
-master and the pupil. The moral beauty of the dialogue,
-and its truth to nature, would have been lost
-had the lady at all shrunk from the duties of her
-high office. But her ambition was at once awakened.
-The obscurity to which, in the time of Pericles, women
-were, by the manners of the country, condemned,
-now no longer seemed desirable, and the love of fame
-was urged upon her as a motive to extraordinary
-exertions.<a id='r97' /><a href='#f97' class='c012'><sup>[97]</sup></a> Her reply is highly characteristic. Running,
-with the unerring tact of her sex, even in advance
-of her husband, she desired him to believe that
-he would have formed an extremely erroneous opinion
-of her character, had he for a moment supposed
-that the care of their common property could ever
-have proved burdensome to her: on the contrary,
-the really grievous thing would have been to require
-her to be neglectful of it!</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Men always conceive they are complimenting a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>woman when they attribute to her a masculine understanding,
-and they thus, in fact, do place her on the
-highest intellectual level known to them. Socrates
-adopted this style of compliment in speaking of the
-wife of Ischomachos. And I may here remark, that
-we need no other proof of how differently the Athenians
-felt on the subject of women from the Orientals
-with whom they have been compared, than the mere
-circumstance of their conversing openly with strangers
-respecting their wives. In the East, a greater affront
-could scarcely be offered a man than to inquire about
-his female establishment. The most an old friend
-does is to say, “Is your house well?”—whereas at
-Athens, women formed a never-failing theme in all
-companies; which proves them to have been there
-contemplated in a different light. In fact, the sentiments
-of Ischomachos, every way worthy the most
-chivalrous people of antiquity, could only have sprung
-up in a society where just and exalted notions of
-female virtue prevailed; for, under the word “high-mindedness,”
-we find him grouping every refined and
-estimable quality which a gentlewoman can possess.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But, perhaps, the reader will not be displeased if
-we introduce dramatically upon the scene an Athenian
-married pair discussing in his presence a question
-closely connected with domestic happiness. There
-is little risk of exaggeration. The picture is by Xenophon,
-a writer whose subdued and sober colouring
-is calculated rather to diminish than otherwise the
-poetical features of his subject.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>By Heaven! exclaimed Socrates, according to this
-account, your wife’s understanding must be of a highly
-masculine character.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Nay, but suffer me, answered the husband, to place
-before you a convincing proof of her high-mindedness,
-by showing how, on a single representation, she
-yielded to me on a subject extremely important.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Proceed, cried the philosopher, (who had not found
-Xantippe thus manageable,) proceed; for, believe
-me, friend, I experience much greater delight in contemplating
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>the active virtues of a living woman, than
-the most exquisite female form by the pencil of Zeuxis
-would afford me.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Observing, said Ischomachos, that my wife sought
-by cosmetics<a id='r98' /><a href='#f98' class='c012'><sup>[98]</sup></a> and other arts of the toilette to render
-herself fairer and ruddier than she had issued from
-the hands of Nature, and that she wore high-heeled
-shoes in order to add to her stature,—Tell me, wife,<a id='r99' /><a href='#f99' class='c012'><sup>[99]</sup></a>
-I began, would you now esteem me to be a worthy
-participator of your fortunes if, concealing the true
-state of my affairs, I aimed at appearing richer than
-I am, by exhibiting to you heaps of false money,
-necklaces of gilded wood for gold, and wardrobes of
-spurious for genuine purple?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Nay, exclaimed my wife, interrupting me, put not
-the injurious supposition: it is what you could not be
-guilty of. For, were such your character I could
-never love you from my soul.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Well, by entering together into the bonds of marriage
-are we not mutually invested with a property in
-each other’s persons?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>People say so.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>They say truly: and since this is the case shall I
-not more sincerely evince my esteem for you by
-watching sedulously over my own health and well-being,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>and displaying to your gaze the natural hues
-of a manly complexion, than if, neglecting these, I
-presented myself with rouged cheeks, eyes encircled
-by paint, and my whole exterior false and hollow?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Indeed, she replied, I prefer the native colour of
-your cheeks to any artificial bloom, and could never
-gaze with so much delight into any eyes as into
-yours—bright and sparkling with health.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Then believe no less of me, said I; but be well
-persuaded that, in my judgment, there are no tints
-so beautiful as those with which nature has adorned
-your cheeks. The same rule indeed holds universally.
-For, even in the inferior creation, every living
-thing delights most in individuals of its own species.
-And so it is with man whom nothing so truly pleases
-as to behold the image of his own nature mirrored
-in another and a fairer form of humanity. Besides,
-false beauties, though they may deceive the incurious
-glance of strangers,<a id='r100' /><a href='#f100' class='c012'><sup>[100]</sup></a> must inevitably be detected
-by persons living always together. Women
-necessarily appear undisguised when first rising in
-the morning, before they have undergone the renovation
-of the toilette; and perspiration, or tears, or
-the waters of the bath, will even at other times
-float away their artificial complexions.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And what, in the name of all the gods, did she
-say to that? inquired Socrates.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>What? replied the husband. Why, that for the
-future she would abjure all meretricious ornaments,
-and consent to appear decked with that simple grace
-and beauty which she owed to nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At Sparta married persons, as in France, occupied
-separate beds; but among the Athenians and in
-other parts of Greece a different custom prevailed.
-The same remark may be applied to the Heroic
-Ages. Odysseus and Penelope, Alcinoös and Arete,
-Paris and Helen, occupy the same chamber and the
-same couch. The women in the Lysistrata of Aristophanes
-appealed to this circumstance in justification
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>of their late appearance at the female assembly
-held before day, and Euphiletos in the oration of
-Lysias on Eratosthenes’ murder, who admits us freely
-into the recesses of the harem, confirms this fact,
-except, that when the mother suckled her own child
-she usually slept with it in a separate bed. At
-Byzantium also the same practice prevailed, as we
-learn from a very amusing anecdote. Python an
-orator of that city who, like Falstaff, seems to have
-been somewhere about two yards in the waist, once
-quelled an insurrection by a jocular allusion to this
-part of domestic economy. “My dear fellow-citizens,”
-cried he to the enraged multitude, “you see
-how fat I am. Well! my wife is still fatter than
-I, yet when we agree one small bed will contain
-us both; but, if we once begin to quarrel, the
-whole house is too little to hold us.”<a id='r101' /><a href='#f101' class='c012'><sup>[101]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>We have seen above how absolute was the authority
-of women over their household, and this
-authority likewise extended to their children. The
-father no doubt could exercise, when he chose,
-considerable influence; but as most of his time was
-spent abroad, in business or politics, the chief charge
-of their early education, the first training of their
-intellect, the first rooting of their morals and shaping
-of their principles devolved upon the mother.<a id='r102' /><a href='#f102' class='c012'><sup>[102]</sup></a>
-There have been writers, indeed, to whom this has
-seemed a circumstance to be lamented. But their
-judgment probably was warped by theory. In the
-original discipline of the mind, great attainments
-and experience of the world are less needed than
-tact to discern, and patience to apply, those minute
-incentives to action which women discover with a
-truer sagacity than we do. In this task, ever pleasing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>to a true mother, the aid of nurses, however, was
-usually obtained; nor are we, as Cramer observes, on
-this account to blame the Athenian ladies, so long
-as they did not, as in after times was too much the
-fashion, consider their whole duty performed when
-they had delivered their children to the nurse.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It will be evident from what has been said, that
-an Athenian lady who conscientiously discharged her
-duties was very little exposed to ennui. She arose
-in the morning with the lark, roused her slaves, distributed
-to all their tasks,<a id='r103' /><a href='#f103' class='c012'><sup>[103]</sup></a> superintended the operations
-of the nursery, and, on days frequently recurring,
-went abroad in the performance of rites specially allotted
-to her sex. But, one effect of democracy is
-to confer undue influence upon women.<a id='r104' /><a href='#f104' class='c012'><sup>[104]</sup></a> And this
-influence, where by education or otherwise they happen
-to be luxurious or vain, must infallibly prove
-pernicious to the state. At Athens, the number of
-this class of women, extremely limited in the beginning,
-augmented rapidly during the decline of
-the republic, and the comic poets substituting a
-part for the whole, invest their countrywomen generally
-with the qualities belonging exclusively to these.—But,
-the success of such writers depending generally
-on ingenious extravagance and exaggeration, we
-must be on our guard against their insinuations.
-Their faith in the existence of virtue, male or female,
-has, in all ages, if we are to judge by their
-works, been very lanksided. In their view, if there
-has been one good woman since the world began, it
-is as much as there has. Accordingly when these
-lively caricaturists describe the female <em>demos</em> as addicted
-extravagantly to wine<a id='r105' /><a href='#f105' class='c012'><sup>[105]</sup></a> and pawning their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>wardrobe to purchase it—as compelling the men by
-their intemperance to keep their cellars under lock
-and key, and still defeating them by manufacturing
-false ones—as forming illicit connexions, and having
-recourse to the boldest stratagems in furtherance of
-their intrigues, we must necessarily suppose them to
-have amused themselves at the expense of truth;
-though that, among the Athenians, there were examples
-enough of women of whom all this might
-be said, it would be absurd to deny.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>We know that where the minds of married dames
-are fixed chiefly upon dress and show their anxiety
-has often very little reference to their husbands.
-And if it be their object to excite admiration out
-of doors, it is simply as a means to an end, which
-end, in too many cases, is intrigue. Proofs exist
-that among the Athenian ladies there were numbers
-whose idle lives and luxurious habits produced
-their natural results—loose principles and dissolute
-manners. The beauty of Alcibiades drew them after
-him in crowds,<a id='r106' /><a href='#f106' class='c012'><sup>[106]</sup></a> though we do not read that, like
-another very handsome personage in a modern republic,
-the son of Cleinias found it necessary to carry
-about a club to defend himself from their importunities.
-They went abroad elaborately habited and
-adorned merely to attract the gaze of men,<a id='r107' /><a href='#f107' class='c012'><sup>[107]</sup></a> and
-having thus sown the first seeds of intrigue, they
-took care to cultivate and bring them to maturity.
-The felicitous invention of Falstaff’s friends, which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>got him safe out of Ford’s house in a buck-basket,
-was not so new as Shakspeare, perhaps, imagined.
-His predecessors on the Athenian stage had already
-discovered stratagems equally happy among their
-countrywomen, whose lovers we find made their way
-into the harem wrapped up in straw, like carp—or
-crept through holes made purposely by fair hands
-in the eaves—or scaled the envious walls by the
-help of those vulgar contrivances called ladders.<a id='r108' /><a href='#f108' class='c012'><sup>[108]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The laws of Athens, however, were more modest
-than its women. For, from the very interference
-of the laws, it is evident, that the example of the
-Spartan ladies, who enjoyed the privilege of exposing
-themselves indecently, found numerous imitators
-among the female democracy. To repress this unbecoming
-taste, it was enacted, that any woman detected
-in the streets in indecorous deshabille<a id='r109' /><a href='#f109' class='c012'><sup>[109]</sup></a> should
-be fined a thousand drachmæ, and, to add disgrace
-to pecuniary considerations, the name of the offender,
-with the amount of the fine, was inscribed on a tablet
-and suspended on a certain platane tree in the
-Cerameicos. However, what constituted <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>indecorous
-deshabille</i></span> in the opinion of Philippides, who procured
-the enactment of the law, it might be difficult to
-determine. Possibly it may have consisted in the
-too great exposure of the bosom, for the covering
-of which ladies in remoter ages appear to have depended
-very much on their veils. Thus in the interview
-of Helen with Aphrodite she saw, says the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>poet, her beautiful neck, desire-inflaming bosom, and
-eyes bright with liquid splendour. Her garments concealed
-the rest.<a id='r110' /><a href='#f110' class='c012'><sup>[110]</sup></a> Now, as it was customary for ladies
-to appear veiled in public, the object of the law of
-Philippides may simply have been to enforce the observance
-of this ancient practice. The magistrates
-who presided over this very delicate part of Athenian
-police were denominated “Regulators of the
-women,”<a id='r111' /><a href='#f111' class='c012'><sup>[111]</sup></a> an office which Sultan Mahmood in our
-day took upon himself. They were chosen by the
-twenty from among the wealthiest and most virtuous
-of the citizens, and in their office resembled
-the Roman Censors and similar magistrates in several
-other states.<a id='r112' /><a href='#f112' class='c012'><sup>[112]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The evil influence of women of this description,<a id='r113' /><a href='#f113' class='c012'><sup>[113]</sup></a>
-who, as Milton expresses it, would fain at any
-rate ride in their coach and six, was perceived and
-lamented by the philosophers. To their vain and
-frivolous notions might be traced, in part at least, the
-love of power, of trifling distinctions, of unmanly
-pleasures, which infected the Athenians towards the
-decline of their republic. By them the springs of
-education were poisoned, and the seeds sown of those
-inordinate artificial desires which convulse and overthrow
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>states. In vain did philosophers inculcate
-temperance and moderation, while the youth were
-imbued with different opinions by their mothers.
-The lessons of the Academy were overgrown and
-checked in the harem. Such dames no doubt would
-grieve to find their husbands content with little<a id='r114' /><a href='#f114' class='c012'><sup>[114]</sup></a> (as
-was the case with Xantippe) and not numbered
-with the rulers, since their consequence among their
-own sex was thus lessened. They would have had
-them keen worshipers of Mammon, eagerly squabbling
-and wrangling in the law-courts or the ecclesiæ,
-not cultivators of domestic habits or philosophical
-tranquillity and content: and in conversing
-with their sons would be careful to recommend
-maxims the reverse of the father’s, with all the cant
-familiar to women of their character.<a id='r115' /><a href='#f115' class='c012'><sup>[115]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Our review of female society at Athens would
-be incomplete were we to overlook the Hetairæ
-who exerted so powerful an influence over the morals
-and destinies of the state. They occupied
-much the same position which the same class of
-females still do in modern communities, cultivated
-in mind, polished and elegant in manners, but scarcely
-deserving as a body to be viewed in the light
-in which a very distinguished historian has placed
-them.<a id='r116' /><a href='#f116' class='c012'><sup>[116]</sup></a> Their position, however, was anomalous, resembling
-rather that of kings’ mistresses in modern
-times, whose vices are tolerated on account of their
-rank, than that of plebeian sinners whose deficiencies
-in birth and fortune exclude them from good society.
-There is much difficulty in rightly apprehending
-the notions of the ancients on the subject
-of these women. At first sight we are shocked
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>to find that, during one festival, they were permitted
-to enter the temples in company with modest
-ladies. But in what Christian country are they excluded
-from church?<a id='r117' /><a href='#f117' class='c012'><sup>[117]</sup></a> Again, behold in our theatres
-the matron and the courtezan in the same box,
-while at Athens even foreign women were not suffered
-to approach the space set apart for the female
-citizens. Nevertheless, though on this point
-so rigid, they were in their own houses permitted
-occasionally to visit them<a id='r118' /><a href='#f118' class='c012'><sup>[118]</sup></a> and receive instructions
-from their lips, as in Turkish harems ladies do from
-the Almè.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It is not permitted here to lift the curtain from
-the manners of these ladies. But their position,
-pregnant with evil to the state through its contaminating
-influences on the minds of youth, must
-be comprehensively explained before a correct idea
-can be formed of the internal structure of the
-Athenian commonwealth, of the germs of dissolution
-which it concealed within its own bosom, or the
-premature blight which an unspiritual system of
-morals was mainly instrumental in producing. No
-doubt the question whether the existence of such
-a class of persons should be tolerated at all, is
-environed by difficulties almost insurmountable.
-They have always existed and therefore, perhaps,
-it is allowable to infer that they always will exist;
-but this does not seem to justify Solon for sanctioning,
-by legislative enactments, a modification of moral
-turpitude debasing to the individual, and consequently
-detrimental to the state. To do evil that good
-may come, is as much a solecism in politics as in
-ethics. On this point I miss the habitual wisdom
-of the Athenian legislator. Lycurgus himself could
-have enacted nothing more at variance with just
-principles, or more subversive of heroic sentiments.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>The Hetairæ,<a id='r119' /><a href='#f119' class='c012'><sup>[119]</sup></a> recognised by law and scarcely
-proscribed by public opinion, may be said to have
-constituted a sort of monarchical leaven in the very
-heart of the republic; they shared with the sophists,
-whom I have already depicted, the affections of the
-lax ambitious youths, panting at once for pleasure
-and distinction, fostered expensive tastes and luxurious
-habits, increased consequently their aptitude to indulge
-in peculation, shared with the unprincipled
-the spoils of the state, and vigorously paved the way
-for the battle of Chæronea. But if their existence
-was hurtful to the community, so was it often full
-of bitterness to themselves. In youth, no doubt,
-when beauty breathed its spell around them, they
-were puffed up and intoxicated with the incense of
-flattery<a id='r120' /><a href='#f120' class='c012'><sup>[120]</sup></a>—their conversation at once sprightly and
-learned seemed full of charms—their houses spacious
-as palaces and splendidly adorned were the
-resort of the gay, the witty, the powerful, nay, even
-of the wise—for Socrates did not disdain to converse
-with Theodota or to imbibe the maxims of
-eloquence from Aspasia. But when old age came
-on, what were they? It then appeared, that the
-lively repartees and grotesque extravagancies which
-had pleased when proceeding from beautiful lips,
-seemed vapid and poor from an old woman. The
-wrinkles which deformed their features were equally
-fatal to their wisdom that flitted from their dwellings,
-and became domiciliated with the last beautiful
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>importation from Ionia. Thus deserted, the most
-celebrated Hetairæ became a butt for the satire even
-of the most clownish. The wit wont to set the
-table in a roar scarcely served to defend them
-against the jests of the agora.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“How do you sell your beef?” said Laïs to a
-young butcher in the flesh-market.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Three obels the <em>Hag</em>,” answered the coxcomb.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“And how dare you, said the faded beauty, here
-in Athens pretend to make use of barbarian weights?”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The word in the original signifying an old woman
-and a Carian weight, it suited her purpose to understand
-him in the latter sense.<a id='r121' /><a href='#f121' class='c012'><sup>[121]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Worshiped and slighted alternately they adopted
-narrow and interested principles in self-defence. Besides,
-generally barbarians by birth, they brought along
-with them from their original homes the creed best
-suited to their calling—“Let us eat and drink for
-to-morrow we die.” They were often the lumber
-of Asia and hence known under the appellation of
-“strange women,” though it is very certain, that
-many female citizens were from time to time enrolled
-among their ranks, some through the pressure
-of adversity, others from a preference for that
-kind of life. Their education it must be conceded,
-however, was far more masculine than that of other
-women. They cultivated all the sciences but that
-of morals, and concealed their lack of modesty by
-the dazzling splendour of their wit. Hence among
-a people with whom intellect was almost everything
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>their company was much sought after and highly
-valued, not habitually perhaps by statesmen, but by
-wits, poets, sophists, and young men of fashion.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Many of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>bons mots</i></span> uttered by those ladies
-have been preserved. One day at table Stilpo the
-philosopher accused Glycera of corrupting the manners
-of youth.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“My friend,” said she, “we are both to blame;
-for you, in your turn, corrupt their minds by innumerable
-forms of sophistry and error. And if men be
-rendered unhappy, what signifies it whether a philosopher
-or a courtezan be the cause?”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It is to her that a joke, somewhat hackneyed but
-seldom attributed to its real author, was originally
-due. A gentleman presenting her with a very small
-jar of wine sought to enhance its value by pretending
-it was sixteen years old. “Then,” replied she, “it is
-extremely little for its age.” Gnathena too, another
-member of the sisterhood, sprinkled her conversation
-with sparkling wit, but too redolent of the profession
-to be retailed. Some of her sayings, however, will
-bear transplantation, though they must suffer by it.
-To stop the mouth of a babbler who observed that
-he had just arrived from the Hellespont—“And yet,”
-she remarked, “it is clear to me that you know
-nothing of one of its principal cities!” “Which
-city is that?”—“Sigeion,”<a id='r122' /><a href='#f122' class='c012'><sup>[122]</sup></a> (in which there appears
-to be a reference to the word Silence) answered
-Gnathena. Several noisy gallants, who being in her
-debt sought to terrify her by menaces, once saying
-they would pull her house down, and had pickaxes and
-mattocks ready, “I disbelieve it,” she replied, “for
-if you had, you would have pledged them to pay what
-you owe me.” A comic poet remarking to one of
-these ladies that the water of her cistern was delightfully
-cold—“It has always been so,” she replied,
-“since we have got into the habit of throwing
-your plays into it.” The repartee of Melitta
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>to a conceited person who was said to have fled
-ignominiously from the field of battle is exceedingly
-keen. Happening to be eating of a hare which
-she seemed much to enjoy, our soldier, desirous of directing
-attention to her, inquired if she knew what
-was the fleetest animal in the world. “The runaway,”
-replied Melitta.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The same taste which induces many persons of
-rank in our own day to marry opera dancers and
-actresses, in antiquity favoured the ambition of the
-Hetairæ, many of whom rose from their state of
-humiliation to be the wives of satraps and princes.
-This was the case with Glycera, whom after the
-death of Pythionica, Harpalos sent for from Athens,
-and domiciliated within his royal palace at Tarsos.
-He required her to be saluted and considered as
-his queen, and refused to be crowned unless in
-conjunction with her. Nay, he had even the hardihood
-to erect in the city of Rossos, a brazen
-statue to her, beside his own.<a id='r123' /><a href='#f123' class='c012'><sup>[123]</sup></a> Herpyllis, one of
-the same sisterhood, won the heart of Aristotle, and
-was the mother of Nicomachos. She survived the
-philosopher, and was carefully provided for by his
-will.<a id='r124' /><a href='#f124' class='c012'><sup>[124]</sup></a> Even Plato, whose genius and virtue are still
-the admiration of mankind, succumbed to the charms
-of Archæanassa, an Hetaira of Colophon, whose beauty,
-which long survived her youth, he celebrated in
-an epigram still extant.<a id='r125' /><a href='#f125' class='c012'><sup>[125]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Of all these ladies, however, not even excepting
-Phryne, or the Sicilian Laïs,<a id='r126' /><a href='#f126' class='c012'><sup>[126]</sup></a> Aspasia<a id='r127' /><a href='#f127' class='c012'><sup>[127]</sup></a> has obtained
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>the most widely extended fame. This illustrious
-woman, endowed by nature with a mind still more
-beautiful than her beautiful form, exercised over
-the fortunes of Athens an influence beyond the
-reach of the greatest queen. Her genius, unobserved
-for some time, by degrees drew around her all
-those whom the love of letters or ambition induced
-to cultivate their minds. Her house became a sort
-of club-room, where eloquence, politics, philosophy,
-mixed with badinage, were daily discussed, and
-whither even ladies of the highest rank resorted
-to acquire from Aspasia those accomplishments which
-were already beginning to be in fashion. From her
-Socrates professed to have in part acquired his knowledge
-of rhetoric, and it is extremely probable that
-he could trace to the habit of conversing with one
-so gifted by nature, so polished by rare society,
-something of that exquisite facility and lightness of
-manner which characterize his familiar dialectics.
-No doubt, we may attribute something of the reputation
-she acquired to the desire to disparage Pericles.
-It was thought that by appropriating many of his
-harangues to her they could bring him down nearer
-their own level. She was, in influence and celebrity,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>the Madame Roland of Athens, though living in
-times somewhat less troubled.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The name of Phryne, though not so celebrated, is
-still familiar to every one, partly, perhaps, through
-the accusation brought against her in the court of
-Heliæa,<a id='r128' /><a href='#f128' class='c012'><sup>[128]</sup></a> by Euthios. She was a native of Thespiæ,
-but established at Athens, and beloved by
-the orator Hyperides, who undertook her defence.
-His pleading, it may therefore be presumed, was
-eloquent. Perceiving, however, he could make but
-little impression on the judges, he had her called
-into court, and, as if by accident, bared her bosom,<a id='r129' /><a href='#f129' class='c012'><sup>[129]</sup></a>
-the fairness and beauty of which heaving with anguish
-and terror—for it was a matter of life and
-death—so wrought upon the august judges that her
-acquittal immediately followed. The Heliasts, renowned
-for their upright decisions, were suspected
-on this occasion of undue commiseration, though
-the charge was probably grounded on some frivolous
-pretence of impiety; and, to prevent the recurrence
-of similar partiality in future, a decree was passed,
-rendering it illegal thus to extort the pity of the
-court, or, on any account, to introduce the accused,
-whether man or woman, into the presence of the
-judges. It was on her figure that Apelles chiefly
-relied in painting his Aphrodite rising from the
-sea, as Phryne herself rose before all Greece on the
-beach at Eleusis; and Praxiteles also wrought from
-the same model his Cnidean Aphrodite.<a id='r130' /><a href='#f130' class='c012'><sup>[130]</sup></a> This
-sculptor, who was the rival of Hyperides, and, indeed,
-of all Athens, in the affections of Phryne,
-permitted her one day to make choice for herself
-from two statues of his own workmanship—the
-Eros and the Satyr. Discovering, by a stratagem,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>that he himself preferred the former, she was guided
-by his judgment, and dedicated the winged god in
-a temple of her native city. In admiration of
-her beauty, a number of gentlemen erected, by subscription,
-in her honour, a golden statue at Delphi.
-It was the work of Praxiteles, and stood on a
-pillar of white marble of Pentelicos, between the
-statues of Archidamos, king of Sparta, and Philip,
-son of Amyntas. The inscription ran simply thus:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Phryne, of Thespiæ, daughter of Epicles.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>On seeing this statue, Crates, the cynic, exclaimed,
-“Behold a trophy of Hellenic wantonness!”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It is not, of course, among women of this class,
-that we should expect to discover proofs of female
-truth or enduring attachment. But the human heart
-sometimes triumphs over adverse circumstances.<a id='r131' /><a href='#f131' class='c012'><sup>[131]</sup></a>
-History has preserved the memory of more than
-one act of heroism performed by an Hetaira, to
-show that woman doth not always put off her other
-virtues, though habitually trampling on the one which
-constitutes for her the boundary between honour
-and infamy.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Ptolemy, son of Philadelphos, while commanding
-the garrison of Ephesos, had along with him the
-courtezan, Irene, who, when his Thracian mercenaries
-rose in revolt, fled along with him to
-the temple of Artemis, where they fell together,
-sprinkling the altar with their blood.<a id='r132' /><a href='#f132' class='c012'><sup>[132]</sup></a> Alcibiades,
-too, of all his friends, found none adhere to him in
-his adversity but an Hetaira, who cheerfully exposed
-her life for his sake; and, when the assassins
-of Pharnabazos had achieved their task, performed,
-like another Antigone, the last duties over the ashes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>of the man she loved.<a id='r133' /><a href='#f133' class='c012'><sup>[133]</sup></a> Other anecdotes might be
-added equally honourable to their feelings and fidelity,
-but these will sufficiently illustrate their character
-and the estimation in which they were generally
-held.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f93'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r93'>93</a>. For example, public opinion
-regarded it as more atrocious to
-kill a woman than a man.—Arist.
-Prob. xxix. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f94'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r94'>94</a>. She wakes them in the morning.—Aristoph.
-Lysist. 18. This
-comic poet gives a concise sketch
-of an Athenian woman’s morning
-work, which rendered their going
-out difficult at such an hour:—Χαλεπή
-τε γυναικῶν ἔξοδος· ἠ
-μὲν γὰρ ἡμῶν περὶ τὸν ἀνδρ’
-ἐκύπτασεν· ἠ δ᾽ οἰκέτην ἤγειρεν· ἡ
-δὲ παιδίον κατέκλινεν· ἡ δ᾽ ἐλουσεν·
-ἠ δ᾽ ἐψώμισεν.—Lysist. 16, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f95'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r95'>95</a>. Precisely the same picture is
-presented in the interior of Jason’s
-palace at Pheræ, where we find
-the tyrant’s mother at work in
-the midst of her handmaidens.—Polyæn.
-Stratag. vi. i. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f96'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r96'>96</a>. Plat. de Legg. t. viii. p. 36.—Among
-the Thracians, and
-many other people, women were
-employed in agriculture, as they
-are in England and France, as
-herdswomen and shepherds, and
-every other laborious employment,
-like men.—Id. ib.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f97'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r97'>97</a>. That this passion led women
-to interfere too frequently with
-politics may be inferred from the
-remark of Theophrastus, that to be
-versed in the science of domestic
-economy was more honourable to
-them.—Stob. 85. 7. Gaisf.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f98'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r98'>98</a>. Xen. Œcon. x. ii. 60. Among
-the Orientals we find there existed
-a peculiar collyrium for the
-white of the eye. Bochart, Hieroz,
-Pt. ii. p. 120.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f99'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r99'>99</a>. Γύναι, a term of greatest endearment
-among the Greeks, as
-with the French <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“ma femme.”</span>
-On this point our language is
-more sophisticated. The practice
-reprehended by Ischomachos, in
-the text, was generally prevalent
-in Greece, where certain classes
-of the community, who could
-afford nothing better, used, when
-they had painted the rest of their
-skin white, to dye the cheeks
-with mulberry-juice, and paint
-the eyelids black at the edge. In
-hot weather, therefore, dusky
-streamlets sometimes flowed from
-the corners of their eyes; and the
-roses melted from their cheeks,
-and dropped into their bosoms.
-They imitated old age, too, by
-covering their hair with white
-powder. (Athen. xiii. 6.) It was
-likewise, at one time, the fashion
-to bring forward their curls so as
-to conceal the forehead, as was
-the practice in France and England
-during a part of the eighteenth
-century.—Lucian, Dial.
-Meret. i. t. iv. p. 123.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f100'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r100'>100</a>. Cf. Lucian, Amor. § 42. Aristoph. Nub. 49.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f101'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r101'>101</a>. Athen. xii. 74.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f102'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r102'>102</a>. Xenoph. Œcon. vii. 12. 24.
-Cf. A. Cramer. de Educ. Puer. ap.
-Athen. 9. This writer acutely
-remarks, (p. 13,) that the words
-καὶ αὐτος ὁ πατὴρ in Plat. Protag.
-p. 325. d. show that it was seldom
-the father meddled with the matter.
-The mother, therefore, from
-early habit, was held in greater
-love and reverence than the father.
-Casaub. ad Theoph. Char.
-p. 187.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f103'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r103'>103</a>. Aristoph. Lysist. 18. Plato,
-who admired the practice, requires
-his airy female citizens to go and
-do likewise. Καὶ δὴ καὶ δέσποιναν
-ἐν οἰκίᾳ ὑπὸ θεραπαινίδων ἐγείρεσθαί
-τινων καὶ μὴ πρώτην αὐτὴν
-ἐγείρειν τὰς ἄλλας, αἰσχρὸν λέγειν
-χρὴ πρὸς αὑτοὺς δοῦλον τε
-καὶ δούλην καὶ παῖδα, καὶ εἴ πως
-ἦν οἷον τε, ὅλην καὶ πᾶσαν τὴν
-<a id='corr36.n1'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='οἴκιαν'>οἰκίαν</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_36.n1'><ins class='correction' title='οἴκιαν'>οἰκίαν</ins></a></span>. De Legg. vii. t. viii. p.
-40. Bekk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f104'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r104'>104</a>. Cf. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 102.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f105'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r105'>105</a>. Arist. Lysist. 113, seq. 205.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f106'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r106'>106</a>. Xenoph. Memor. i. 2. 24.
-Ἀλκιβιάδης δ᾽ αὖ διὰ μὲν κάλλος
-ὑπὸ πολλῶν καὶ σεμνῶν γυναικῶν
-θηρώμενος. κ. τ. λ.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f107'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r107'>107</a>. Aristoph. Nub. 60. Married
-ladies occasionally rode out in carriages
-with their husbands. Demosth.
-cont. Mid. § 44. Even
-at Sparta we find young ladies
-possessed of their carriages called
-Canathra, resembling in form
-griffins, or goat-stags, in which
-they rode abroad during religious
-processions. Plut. Ages. § 19.
-Cf. Xenoph. Ages. p. 73. Hutchin.
-cum not. et add. p. 89.
-Athen. iv. 16, cum annot. p. 449.
-Scheffer, de Re Vehic. i. 7. p. 68.
-The same custom prevailed in
-Thessaly and elsewhere. Athen.
-xii. 37. Luxurious ladies at
-Athens used to perfume even the
-soles of their feet. Their lapdogs
-lived in great state, and slept on
-carpets of Miletos. Athen. xii.
-78.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f108'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r108'>108</a>. Xenarch. ap. Athen. xiii. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f109'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r109'>109</a>. Ἀκοσμοῦσαι. Harpocrat. v.
-ὅτι χίλιας. κ. τ. λ. Potter, Arch.
-Græc. ii. 309, understands his
-law to have meant, women who
-literally appeared <em>laconically</em> in
-the streets. “Undressed,” is his
-word. But will ἀκοσμοῦσαι
-which Meursius, Lect. Att. ii.
-5, 62, renders by “<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">inornatius</span>,”
-bear such a signification? Κόσμος γυναικῶν
-does not, as Kühn
-observes, signify <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>ornamentum mulierum</em></span>,
-nor ἀκοσμοῦσαι <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>inornatius
-prodeuntes feminæ</em></span>; but κόσμος is
-εὐταξία and ἀκοσμοῦσαι means
-ἀτακτοῦσαι, that is, women who
-acted in any way whatever contrary
-to decorum and good manners,
-which persons appearing indecently
-dressed in public unquestionably
-do.—Ad. Poll. viii. 112. p. 763.
-On the manners of the Tyrrhenian
-women, Cf. Athen. xii. 14. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f110'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r110'>110</a>. Il. γ. 396. sqq. Cf. 141.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f111'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r111'>111</a>. Γυναικόσμοι. Poll. viii. 112.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f112'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r112'>112</a>. Cf. Arist. Pol. iv. 15. 120.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f113'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r113'>113</a>. On the luxurious manners of
-the Syracusan women see Athen.
-xii. 20. In such disorders may
-be discovered the first germs of
-the decay of states; on which account
-prudent statesmen even in
-oligarchies have sought to restrain
-the licentious manners of women.
-Thus Fra Paolo: “Let the women
-be kept chaste, and in order
-to that, let them live retired
-from the world; it being certain
-that all open lewedness has had
-its first rise from a salutation,
-from a smile.”—i. § 20. To this
-let us add the opinion of the female
-Pythagorician Phintys: ἴδια
-δὲ γυναικὸς, τὸ οἰκουρὲν, καὶ ἔνδον
-μένεν καὶ ἐκδέχεσθαι καὶ θεραπεύεν
-τὸν ἄνδρα. Stob. Florileg., 74. 61.
-Both the philosophical lady, however,
-and the Venetian monk have
-their views corroborated by the
-authority of Pericles: τῆς τε γὰρ
-ὑπαρχούσης φύσεως μὴ χείροσι
-γενέσθαι, ὑμῖν μεγάλη ἡ δόξα, καὶ
-οἷς ἂν ἐπ’ ἄρσεσι κλέος ᾖ.
-Thucyd. ii. 45. Besides leading
-a retired life, ladies were likewise
-expected to cultivate the virtue of
-silence. Soph. Ajax, 293. Hom.
-Il. ζ. 410.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f114'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r114'>114</a>. Which, according to Plato,
-well-educated men generally are.
-De Repub. t. vi. p. 173.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f115'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r115'>115</a>. Plat. De Repub. viii. 5. t. ii.
-p. 182. Stallb.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f116'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r116'>116</a>. Mitford, Hist, of Greece, iii.
-4. sqq. It appears not to have
-been common for these women to
-rear the children they bore, more
-particularly when they were girls.
-They flew to the practice of infanticide
-that they might remain
-at liberty. Lucian, Hetair. Diall.
-ii. 5. iv. 124.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f117'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r117'>117</a>. Besides, from a passage in Lucian
-it appears that the ladies and
-the hetairæ frequented together
-the public baths.—Diall. Hetair.
-xii. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f118'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r118'>118</a>. Cf. Antiphon. Nec. Venef. § 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f119'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r119'>119</a>. Vice is generally superstitious;
-and these ladies accordingly
-when they lost a lover,
-instead of attributing it to the
-superior beauty or accomplishments
-of their rivals, or the
-common love of novelty of mankind,
-always supposed that enchantments
-had been employed.—Luc.
-Diall. Hetair. i. t. iv.
-124.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f120'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r120'>120</a>. Statues, for example, were
-sometimes erected in their honour—Winkelm.
-iv. 3. 7. They
-were generally well educated, and
-there were none probably who
-could not read.—Drosè, in Lucian,
-complaining of the philosopher
-who kept away her lover, observes
-that his slave came in the
-evening bearing a note from his
-young master.—Diall. Hetair. x.
-2. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f121'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r121'>121</a>. Athen. xiii. 43. where the
-word is κύβδα.—The Turkish
-practice of drowning female delinquents
-in sacks, is merely an
-imitation of what was performed
-by a tyrant of old, who disposed
-of wicked old women in this
-manner.—Idem. x. 60. In
-France likewise formerly it was
-customary to avoid the scandal
-of a public trial, for noblemen and
-gentlemen to be examined privately
-by the king who, when he
-could satisfy his conscience that
-they were guilty, ordered them to
-be “without any fashion of judgment
-put in a sack and in the
-night season, by the Marshall’s
-servants, hurled into a river and
-so drowned.” Fortescue, Laud,
-Legg. Angl. chap. 35. p. 82. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f122'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r122'>122</a>. Athen. xiii. 47.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f123'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r123'>123</a>. Athen. xiii. 50.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f124'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r124'>124</a>. Athen. xiii. 56.—Diog. Laert.
-v. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f125'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r125'>125</a>. Diog. Laert. iii. 31.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f126'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r126'>126</a>. She was a native of Hyccara,
-but taken prisoner in childhood,
-and carried to Corinth, whence
-that city has generally the honor
-of being regarded as her birthplace.—Athen.
-xiii. 54.—Cf.
-Thucyd. vi. 62. Sch. Aristoph.
-Lysist. 179.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f127'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r127'>127</a>. Of the younger Aspasia, who
-had the reputation of being the
-loveliest woman of her time, we
-have the following sketch in Ælian:—“Her
-hair was auburn,
-and fell in slightly waving ringlets.
-She had large full eyes, a
-nose inclined to aquiline, (ἐπίγρυπος)
-and small delicate ears.
-Nothing could be softer than her
-skin, and her complexion was
-fresh as the rose; on which account
-the Phoceans called her
-Milto, or ‘the Blooming’. Her
-ruddy lips, opening, disclosed
-teeth whiter than snow. She,
-moreover, possessed the charm
-on which Homer so often dwells
-in his descriptions of beautiful
-women, of small, well-formed
-ankles. Her voice was so full of
-music and sweetness, that those
-to whom she spoke imagined
-they heard the songs of the
-Seirens. To crown all she was
-like Horace’s Pyrrha, simplex
-munditiis, abhorring superfluous
-pomp of ornament.”—Hist. Var.
-xii. 1. Some persons, however,
-would not have admired the nose
-of Milto:—thus, the youth in Terence
-(Heauton, v. 5. 17. seq.)
-“What? must I marry”</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Rufamne illam virginem</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Cæsiam, sparso ore, adunco naso?</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Non possum, pater.”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Aristotle (Rhet. i. 2) does not undervalue
-the slightly aquiline nose;
-and Plato appears rather to have
-admired it in men.—Repub. v. §
-19. t. i. p. 392.—Stallb. where
-the philosopher calls it the Royal
-Nose.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f128'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r128'>128</a>. Poseidip. ap. Athen. xiii.
-60.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f129'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r129'>129</a>. Honest old Burton, whom
-few anecdotes of this description
-escaped, imagines this artifice to
-have been the only defence he
-made.—Anatomy of Melancholy,
-ii. 222.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f130'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r130'>130</a>. Athen. xiii. 59. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f131'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r131'>131</a>. Athen. xiii. 59.—In the apprehension
-of Lucian, too, they
-were anything but mercenary;
-and stripped themselves cheerfully
-of all their personal ornaments
-to bestow them, like so
-many sisters, on the person they
-loved.—Diall. Hetair. vii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f132'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r132'>132</a>. Athen. xiii. 64.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f133'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r133'>133</a>. Plut. Alcib. § 39.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>
- <h3 class='c002'>CHAPTER VI. <br /> TOILETTE, DRESS, AND ORNAMENTS.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Having now described the condition and influence
-of women, it will be necessary to institute
-some inquiry into one of the principal means by
-which they achieved and maintained their empire.
-At first sight, perhaps, the disquisition may appear
-scarcely to deserve all the pains I have bestowed
-upon it; but, as the dress of the ancients is connected
-on the one hand with the progress of the
-useful arts, as spinning, weaving, dyeing, &amp;c., and
-on the other with the forms and developement of
-sculpture, it can scarcely, when well considered, be
-reckoned among matters of trifling moment. Besides,
-the costume and ornaments of a people often
-afford important aid towards comprehending the national
-character, constituting, in fact, a sort of practical
-commentary on the mental habits, and tone
-and principles of morals, prevailing at any given
-period among them.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The raiment of the Grecian women, of which the
-public generally obtain some idea from the remaining
-monuments of ancient art, may be said to have
-been regulated by the same laws of taste which
-presided over the developement of the national genius
-in sculpture and painting. Every article of
-their habiliment appeared to harmonise exactly with
-the rest. Nothing of that grotesque extravagance
-which in some of the fleeting vagaries of fashion
-transforms our modern ladies, with their inflated
-balloon sleeves and painfully deformed waists, into
-so many whalebone and muslin hobgoblins, was
-ever allowed to disfigure the rich contour of a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>Greek woman. As she proceeded lovely from the
-hands of nature, her pride was to preserve that
-loveliness. Her garments, accordingly, were not
-fashioned with a view to disguise or conceal her
-form, but by graceful folds, flowing curves, ornaments
-rich and tastefully disposed, to afford as
-many indications of its matchless symmetry and
-perfection as might be compatible with her sex’s
-delicacy and the severity of public morals. Consequently
-the art of dress, like every other conversant
-with taste and beauty, reached in Greece its
-highest perfection. A woman draped according to
-the prevalent fashion in the best ages of the Athenian
-commonwealth, was an object not to be equalled
-for elegance or grace. From the snow white veil
-which probably shaded her countenance and ringlets
-of auburn or hyacinth, to the sandals of white satin
-and gold that ornamented her small ankle, the eye
-could detect nothing gaudy, affected, or out of keeping.
-There was magnificence without ostentation,
-brilliance of colours, but a brilliance that harmonised
-with whatever was brought in contact with
-it; the splendour of numerous jewels and trinkets
-of gold, but no appearance of display, or of a wish
-to dazzle. Everything appeared to stand where it
-did, because it was its proper place.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But in Sparta where there existed little tendency
-towards art or refinement,<a id='r134' /><a href='#f134' class='c012'><sup>[134]</sup></a> a costume the antipodes
-of all this prevailed. That of the virgins differed
-in some respects from that of the matrons, and
-the difference arose out of a peculiar feature of
-manners, in which, if in nothing else, they resembled
-the English. In several Ionic countries, as
-at present on the continent, girls were previously
-to marriage guarded with much strictness. At
-Sparta, on the contrary, and among the Dorians
-generally,<a id='r135' /><a href='#f135' class='c012'><sup>[135]</sup></a> they were permitted, as in England, to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>walk abroad in company with young men, and, of
-course, to form attachments at their own discretion.
-In this, too, as in their dress, they only preserved
-the customs of antiquity; for in Homer we
-find the Trojan ladies making anxious inquiries of
-Hector respecting their relations and friends in the
-field, and going forth from their houses attended
-only by their maids. The married women led more
-retired lives, and when they went abroad fashion
-required that they should be veiled, as we learn
-from the following apophthegm of Charillos, who
-being asked why the maidens went abroad uncovered
-while the matrons concealed their faces, replied:
-“Because it is incumbent on the former to
-find themselves husbands, on the latter only to
-keep those they have.”<a id='r136' /><a href='#f136' class='c012'><sup>[136]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The principal, or, rather, the sole garment of the
-Dorian maidens was the chiton, or himation,<a id='r137' /><a href='#f137' class='c012'><sup>[137]</sup></a> made
-of woollen stuff, and without sleeves, but fastened
-on either shoulder by a large clasp, and gathered
-on the breast by a kind of brooch. This sleeveless
-robe, which seldom reached more than half way to
-the knee, was moreover left open up to a certain
-point on both sides,<a id='r138' /><a href='#f138' class='c012'><sup>[138]</sup></a> so that the skirts or wings,
-flying open as they walked, entirely exposed their
-limbs, closely resembling the shift of the Bedouin
-women,<a id='r139' /><a href='#f139' class='c012'><sup>[139]</sup></a> slit up to the arm-pit, but gathered tight
-by a girdle about the waist. When the girdle was
-removed it reached to the calves of the legs,<a id='r140' /><a href='#f140' class='c012'><sup>[140]</sup></a> and
-would then, but for the side-slits, have been quite
-as becoming as the blue chemise of the modern
-Egyptian women, which is open in front from the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>neck to the waist.<a id='r141' /><a href='#f141' class='c012'><sup>[141]</sup></a> When dressed in this single
-robe, their whole form breathing health, and modesty
-in their countenance, there was no doubt a simple
-elegance in their appearance, little less attractive,
-perhaps, than the exquisite and elaborate <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>mise</i></span> of
-an Ionian or an Attic girl. In this costume Melissa,
-daughter of Procles, of Epidaurus, was habited
-when, as she poured out wine to her father’s labourers,
-Periander, the Corinthian,<a id='r142' /><a href='#f142' class='c012'><sup>[142]</sup></a> beheld and loved
-her. The married women, however, did not make
-their appearance in public <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>en chemise</i></span>, but when
-going abroad donned a second garment which seems
-to have resembled pretty closely their husbands’
-himatia.<a id='r143' /><a href='#f143' class='c012'><sup>[143]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Of the simple wardrobe of a Doric lady, which
-in ancient times was that of all women of Hellenic
-race, exceedingly little can be said. It is altogether
-different with respect to that of the gentlewomen
-of Attica, where, though inferior in personal beauty
-to none, the women exhibited so much fertility in
-the matter of dress, that they appeared to depend
-on that alone for the establishment of their empire.
-For this reason it would be vain to pretend
-to describe all their vestments and ornaments, or the
-arts of the toilette by which they were adapted to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>their purposes. To do so properly would, in fact,
-require a volume. But all that can be crowded into
-one short chapter shall be given, since I am not
-deterred by any such scruples as formerly arrested
-the pen of a very learned writer, who apprehended
-that, if he proceeded, he might be supposed to have
-been rummaging the boudoir notes of an Athenian
-lady!<a id='r144' /><a href='#f144' class='c012'><sup>[144]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The primary garment,<a id='r145' /><a href='#f145' class='c012'><sup>[145]</sup></a> answering to the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>chemise</i></span>
-of the moderns, was a white tunic reaching to the
-ground,<a id='r146' /><a href='#f146' class='c012'><sup>[146]</sup></a> in some instances sleeveless, and fastened
-on the shoulders with buttons, in others furnished
-with loose hanging sleeves descending to the wrist,
-and brought together at intervals upon the arm by
-silver or golden agraffes.<a id='r147' /><a href='#f147' class='c012'><sup>[147]</sup></a> It was gathered into
-close folds under the bosom by a girdle,<a id='r148' /><a href='#f148' class='c012'><sup>[148]</sup></a> or riband,
-sometimes fastened in front by a knot, sometimes
-by a clasp.<a id='r149' /><a href='#f149' class='c012'><sup>[149]</sup></a> This inner robe, made in the earlier
-ages of fine linen,<a id='r150' /><a href='#f150' class='c012'><sup>[150]</sup></a> manufactured in Attica, or imported
-from Tyre, Egypt, or Sidon, came, in after
-times, to be of muslin from Tarentum, or woven at
-home from Egyptian cotton. The use of linen, however,
-for this purpose was not wholly superseded.
-A very beautiful kind, from the island of Amorgos,<a id='r151' /><a href='#f151' class='c012'><sup>[151]</sup></a>
-one of the Cyclades, was often substituted down to
-a very late period in place of the byssos, or fine
-muslin of Egypt; and this insular fabric,<a id='r152' /><a href='#f152' class='c012'><sup>[152]</sup></a> whether
-snow-white or purple, would have rivalled the finest
-cambric, being of the most delicate texture and
-semi-transparent,<a id='r153' /><a href='#f153' class='c012'><sup>[153]</sup></a> like the Tarentine and Coan vests
-of the Roman ladies, the sandyx-coloured Lydian
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>robe, or the silken chemises of the Turkish sultanas,
-described by Lady Montague.<a id='r154' /><a href='#f154' class='c012'><sup>[154]</sup></a> It is in a tunic of
-this linen that Lysistrata, in Aristophanes, advises
-the Athenian ladies to appear before their husbands
-in order to give full effect to the splendour of
-their charms.<a id='r155' /><a href='#f155' class='c012'><sup>[155]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Because the Amorginean linen was often, perhaps
-commonly, dyed purple, it has been inferred, that
-none purely white was produced; but this, as Bochart<a id='r156' /><a href='#f156' class='c012'><sup>[156]</sup></a>
-observes, is, probably, a mistake. At all events, it
-was of extraordinary fineness, superior, in the opinion
-of Suidas,<a id='r157' /><a href='#f157' class='c012'><sup>[157]</sup></a> even to the byssos and carbasos, or
-lawn of Cyprus, and appears to have been of a thin,
-gauze-like texture, like the drapery of “woven air”
-which Petronius<a id='r158' /><a href='#f158' class='c012'><sup>[158]</sup></a> throws around his female characters.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Over the chiton was worn a shorter robe not
-reaching below the knee, and confined above the
-loins by a broad riband. This also was, in some
-instances, furnished with sleeves, and of a rich purple
-or saffron colour, generally ornamented, like the
-chiton, with a broad border of variegated embroidery.
-To these, in order to complete the walking-dress,
-was added a magnificent mantle, generally
-purple, embroidered with gold, which, being thrown
-negligently over the shoulders,<a id='r159' /><a href='#f159' class='c012'><sup>[159]</sup></a> floated airily about
-the person, discovering the under garments exquisitely
-disposed for the purpose of displaying all the
-contours of the form, particularly of the waist and
-bosom. The Athenian ladies being, like our own,
-peculiarly jealous of possessing the reputation of a
-fine figure, and nature sometimes failing them, had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>recourse to art, and wore what, among milliners, I
-believe, are called <em>bustles</em>.<a id='r160' /><a href='#f160' class='c012'><sup>[160]</sup></a> I am sorry to be obliged
-to add, that there were, also, mothers at Athens
-who anticipated us in the absurdity of tight lacing,
-and invented corsets for the purpose of compressing
-the abdomen and otherwise reducing the figures of
-their daughters to some artificial standard which
-they had already begun to set up in defiance of
-nature.<a id='r161' /><a href='#f161' class='c012'><sup>[161]</sup></a> Some women, too, when apprehensive of
-growing fat, would collect on fine wool a quantity
-of summer dew, which they afterwards squeezed out
-and drank, this liquid having been supposed to be
-possessed of deleterious qualities, more particularly
-the ascending dew.<a id='r162' /><a href='#f162' class='c012'><sup>[162]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Like the eastern ladies of the present day, they
-seldom went abroad without their veil, which was
-a light fabric of transparent texture, white or purple,
-from Cos, or Laconia. It was thrown tastefully over
-the head, raised in front on the point of the sphendone,<a id='r163' /><a href='#f163' class='c012'><sup>[163]</sup></a>
-as in modern Italy by the comb, and hung
-waving on the shoulders and down the back in
-glittering folds. But this was not the only covering
-they made use of for their head. Those modern
-writers who have so thought are mistaken, since it
-is clear, both from contemporary testimony and numerous
-works of art still remaining, that very frequently
-they wore caps or bonnets. Several examples
-occur in Mr. Hope’s work, on the Costumes of
-the Ancients;<a id='r164' /><a href='#f164' class='c012'><sup>[164]</sup></a> and Mnesilochos, in Aristophanes,
-when putting on the disguise of a woman for the
-purpose of being present at the Festival of Demeter,
-like Clodius at that of the Bona Dea, desires
-to borrow from Agathon a net or mitre for the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>head. “Will you have my night-cap?” inquires the
-poet. “Exactly,” replies Euripides, “that is just
-what we want.”<a id='r165' /><a href='#f165' class='c012'><sup>[165]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But we have hitherto scarcely entered upon the
-list of their wardrobe, in enumerating some of the
-articles of which, I must crave the reader’s permission
-to employ the original terms, our language,
-in most cases, furnishing us with no equivalent.
-And, first, following the order of Pollux, who observes
-no principle of classification, we have the
-<em>Epomis</em>, a robe with sleeves, opposed to the <em>Exomis</em>,
-which had none. The <em>Diploïdion</em>, an ample cloak,
-or mantle, capacious enough to be worn double.
-The <em>Hemidiploïdion</em>, a more scanty mantle; the
-<em>Katastiktos</em>, adorned with flowers or figures of animals,
-or richly marked with spots, the <em>Katagogis</em>,
-the <em>Epiblema</em>, or cloak, and the <em>Peplos</em>,<a id='r166' /><a href='#f166' class='c012'><sup>[166]</sup></a> a word of
-very equivocal character, used to signify a veil or
-mantle, a sofa-carpet, or a covering for a chariot.
-Generally, it seems to have designated a garment
-of double the necessary size, that, at pleasure, it
-might be put on, or cast, like a cloak, over the
-whole body, as appears from the Peplos of Athena.<a id='r167' /><a href='#f167' class='c012'><sup>[167]</sup></a>
-That the word sometimes was used to signify a
-tunic appears from Xenophon, who says “the peplos
-being rent above, the bosom appeared.”<a id='r168' /><a href='#f168' class='c012'><sup>[168]</sup></a> He, however,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>considers it to have formed part of the male
-costume.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Another article of female dress was the <em>Zoma</em>, a
-short vest fitting close to the shape, and adorned at
-the bottom with fringe, as appears from a fragment
-of Æschylus in the Onomasticon. A character of Menander,
-too, exclaims,—“Don’t you perceive the nurse
-habited in her Zoma?”—for, adds Pollux, it was generally
-worn by old women. An elegant woollen dress,
-called <em>Parapechu</em>, white, but with purple sleeves, was
-imported from Corinth, and would appear to have
-been much worn by the Hetairæ.<a id='r169' /><a href='#f169' class='c012'><sup>[169]</sup></a> Other garments
-seem to have been affected by the middle class of
-citizens, who, being unable to dress in purple,<a id='r170' /><a href='#f170' class='c012'><sup>[170]</sup></a> the
-distinguishing colour of the wealthy and the noble,
-brought into fashion the <em>Paruphes</em> and <em>Paralourges</em>,
-robes adorned on either side with a purple stripe.
-As much dignity is supposed to belong to ample
-drapery, our citizen ladies took care not to be sparing
-of stuff, their dresses trailing to the ground, and
-displaying numerous folds, produced purposely at the
-extremity by a band passing round the edge. These
-garments were generally of linen; but when a lady,
-in Homer, is said to be wrapped in her shining mantle,
-the poet<a id='r171' /><a href='#f171' class='c012'><sup>[171]</sup></a> is supposed to intend a fine, light, woollen
-cloak, like the white burnooses of the Tunisian and
-Egyptian ladies.<a id='r172' /><a href='#f172' class='c012'><sup>[172]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Several sorts of dresses obtained their appellation
-from their colours; as the <em>Crocotos</em>, a saffron robe of
-ceremony, the <em>Crocotion</em>, a diminutive of the same;
-the <em>Omphakinon</em>, of the colour of unripe grapes,
-which, though prescriptively appropriated to women,
-was much affected by Alexander the Great. Modern
-ladies have delighted in flea-coloured dresses, and, in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>like manner, the ancients had theirs of asinine hue,
-called <em>Killios</em>, from a Doric name for the ass, and
-afterwards <em>Onagrinos</em>,<a id='r173' /><a href='#f173' class='c012'><sup>[173]</sup></a> which, if they really resembled
-the wild ass in hue, must have been exceedingly beautiful.
-There was a scarlet robe, with the appellation
-of <em>Coccobaphes</em>, the <em>Sisys</em>, a thick heavy cloak, likewise
-called <em>Hyphandron Himation</em>, resembling the
-<em>Amphimallos</em>, which had a double warp, and was hairy
-on both sides.<a id='r174' /><a href='#f174' class='c012'><sup>[174]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Not to extend this list of dresses beyond the patience
-of a milliner, we will now pass on to the principal
-ornaments for the head,<a id='r175' /><a href='#f175' class='c012'><sup>[175]</sup></a> in which the Greek
-ladies evinced extraordinary taste and invention.<a id='r176' /><a href='#f176' class='c012'><sup>[176]</sup></a>
-Among these one of the most elegant was the <em>Ampyx</em>,
-a fillet by which they confined their hair in front.
-It sometimes consisted of a piece of gold embroidery,
-the place of which was often supplied by a thin plate
-of pure gold, studded with jewels. Another Homeric
-ornament, the <em>Kekruphalos</em>,<a id='r177' /><a href='#f177' class='c012'><sup>[177]</sup></a> can only be alluded to as
-a critical puzzle which has baffled all the commentators,
-in which predicament the <em>Plekte anadesme</em><a id='r178' /><a href='#f178' class='c012'><sup>[178]</sup></a> also
-stands; all that we know being, that it found its place
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>in the female head-dress, though whether as a mitre
-or a diadem Apollonios is unable to determine. It
-may possibly have been, under another appellation,
-that graceful wreath or garland, consisting of fragrant
-flowers interwoven or bound together by their stems,
-described among female ornaments by Pollux.<a id='r179' /><a href='#f179' class='c012'><sup>[179]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Another article of the same ambiguous character
-was the <em>Pylæon</em>, supposed to have derived its name
-from φύλον, <em>a leaf</em>. Athenæus,<a id='r180' /><a href='#f180' class='c012'><sup>[180]</sup></a> on a subject of this
-kind, perhaps, one of the best authorities, describes it
-as the crown which, during certain festivals, the Spartans
-placed upon the head of Hera. Doubtless, however,
-the most tasteful and elegant of this class of
-female ornaments was the <em>Kalyx</em>, a golden syrinx or
-reed, passed like a ring over each several tress to
-keep it separate.<a id='r181' /><a href='#f181' class='c012'><sup>[181]</sup></a> Eustathius describes it as a ring
-resembling a full-blown, but not expanded, rose; and
-this explanation will not be inconsistent with that of
-Hesychius, if we suppose the golden tubes to have
-terminated in the form of that flower. The <em>Strophion</em>
-was a band or fillet<a id='r182' /><a href='#f182' class='c012'><sup>[182]</sup></a> with which women confined
-their hair, as we discover from many ancient statues.
-Parrhasios the artist, who used to bind his luxuriant
-locks with a white strophion, was therefore accused
-of effeminacy.<a id='r183' /><a href='#f183' class='c012'><sup>[183]</sup></a> The name, however, appears to have
-been applied to any kind of band, even to the broad
-belt worn to support the bosom: “My strophion
-being untied the walnuts fell out,” says the girl in
-Aristophanes.<a id='r184' /><a href='#f184' class='c012'><sup>[184]</sup></a> There was also an ornament of the
-same name worn by priests.<a id='r185' /><a href='#f185' class='c012'><sup>[185]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>The <em>Opisthosphendone</em>,<a id='r186' /><a href='#f186' class='c012'><sup>[186]</sup></a> one of the female ornaments
-enumerated in a fragment of Aristophanes,
-was worn only on the stage. Its proper name <em>sphendone</em>
-it derived from its resemblance to a sling,
-being broad and elevated in front,<a id='r187' /><a href='#f187' class='c012'><sup>[187]</sup></a> and terminating
-in narrow points at the back of the head where it
-was tied. On the comic stage it was sometimes
-worn for sport with the fore part behind.<a id='r188' /><a href='#f188' class='c012'><sup>[188]</sup></a> The
-<em>Anadesma</em><a id='r189' /><a href='#f189' class='c012'><sup>[189]</sup></a> was a gilded fillet or diadem of gold,
-used like the <em>strophion</em> for encircling the forehead.
-What was the precise use or form of the <em>Xanion</em>,
-another golden ornament fashionable in remote antiquity,
-could not be ascertained in the age of Pollux,
-who says that many writers supposed it to have
-been a <a id='corr61.15'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='comb'>comb.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_61.15'><ins class='correction' title='comb'>comb.</ins></a></span> Of this number are Hesychius,
-Suidas,<a id='r190' /><a href='#f190' class='c012'><sup>[190]</sup></a> and Phavorinus. But a learned modern
-conjectures with more probability, that it was some
-talismanic idol worn as a spell against the evil eye.<a id='r191' /><a href='#f191' class='c012'><sup>[191]</sup></a>
-In fact it is expressly observed in the Etymologicon
-Magnum,<a id='r192' /><a href='#f192' class='c012'><sup>[192]</sup></a> that the Hellenic women reckoned it
-among their phylacteries.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Of the ear-rings worn by Grecian women the
-variety was very great. The most ancient kind
-were called <em>Hermata</em>, of which mention occurs both
-in the Iliad and the Odyssey.<a id='r193' /><a href='#f193' class='c012'><sup>[193]</sup></a> They were usually
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>adorned with three emerald drops,<a id='r194' /><a href='#f194' class='c012'><sup>[194]</sup></a> for which reason
-they were by the Athenians denominated <em>Triopia</em>
-or <em>Triopides</em>,<a id='r195' /><a href='#f195' class='c012'><sup>[195]</sup></a> and by the other Greeks <em>Triopthalma</em>
-or “the triple eye.” By this word, as an ancient
-grammarian informs us, some understood an animal
-like the beetle, supposed to have three eyes, whence
-a necklace with three hyaline or crystal eyes, depending
-from it in front, was likewise called by the
-same name. Pollux<a id='r196' /><a href='#f196' class='c012'><sup>[196]</sup></a> supposed the earrings of Hera
-to have been adorned with three diminutive figures
-in precious stones, or gold, probably of goddesses.
-The <em>Diopos</em> seems to have been an earring with two
-drops. The <em>Helix</em> appears in Homer<a id='r197' /><a href='#f197' class='c012'><sup>[197]</sup></a> rather to mean
-an earring than an armlet, and to have received its
-name from its circular shape or curvature; but the
-spiral gold rings round the walking-stick of Parrhasios
-are also called <em>Helices</em> by Athenæus.<a id='r198' /><a href='#f198' class='c012'><sup>[198]</sup></a> Another name
-for this sort of earring was <em>Heliktes</em>.<a id='r199' /><a href='#f199' class='c012'><sup>[199]</sup></a> In the Æolic
-dialect earrings were called <em>Siglai</em>, in the Doric <em>Artiala</em>.
-A particular kind denominated <em>Enclastridia</em>
-and <em>Strobelia</em>, by the comic poets, had gold drops in
-the form of a pine cone.<a id='r200' /><a href='#f200' class='c012'><sup>[200]</sup></a> Two very curious kinds
-of earrings were the <em>Caryatides</em>, and the <em>Hippocampia</em>,
-the former representing in miniature the architectural
-figures, so called, the latter little horses
-with tails ending in a fish. There were earrings,
-likewise, with drops in the forms of centaurs and
-other fantastic creations.<a id='r201' /><a href='#f201' class='c012'><sup>[201]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The names and figures of necklaces were scarcely
-less numerous.<a id='r202' /><a href='#f202' class='c012'><sup>[202]</sup></a> A jewelled collar fitting tight to
-the throat formed, under the name of <em>Peritrachelion</em>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>the principal of these ornaments, of which another
-was the <em>Perideraion</em>.<a id='r203' /><a href='#f203' class='c012'><sup>[203]</sup></a> The <em>Hypoderaion</em> was as its
-name imports a necklace that hung low on the
-bosom, and the same was the case with the <em>Hormos</em>.<a id='r204' /><a href='#f204' class='c012'><sup>[204]</sup></a>
-On the <em>Tantheuristos Hormos</em> little information can
-be obtained, for which reason the commentators
-would alter the text; but the most probable conjecture
-is, that it obtained its appellation from the
-flashing and glancing of the jewels depending from
-it upon the breast.<a id='r205' /><a href='#f205' class='c012'><sup>[205]</sup></a> The <em>Triopis</em> was a species of
-necklace distinguished for having three stars or eye-like
-gems depending from it as drops. This being
-the most fashionable necklace was known under a
-variety of names, as the <em>Kathema</em>, and <em>Katheter</em>, and
-<em>Mannos</em> or <em>Monnos</em>, among the Dorians.<a id='r206' /><a href='#f206' class='c012'><sup>[206]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Of armlets and bracelets there was likewise a
-great variety. Some worn above the elbow were
-denominated <em>Brachionia</em>, others called <em>Pericarpia</em>, or
-<em>Echinoi</em> encircled the wrists and were often in the
-form of twisted snakes of gold, which the woman-hater
-in Lucian would have converted into real serpents.<a id='r207' /><a href='#f207' class='c012'><sup>[207]</sup></a>
-The <em>Psellia</em> or chain bracelets were much
-worn; the <em>Clidones</em> adorned the rich and luxurious
-only. As stockings were not in common use, and
-shoes and sandals frequently dispensed with when
-within doors, fashion required that the feet and
-ankles should not remain unadorned. Ancient
-writers, accordingly, enumerate several kinds of
-anklets, or bangles, all of gold, and varying only
-in form, the distinction between which I have been
-unable to discover. The <em><a id='corr63.31'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Ægle'>Ægle,</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_63.31'><ins class='correction' title='Ægle'>Ægle,</ins></a></span></em> the <em>Pede</em> and the
-<em>Periscelides</em> were so many ornaments for the instep
-or ankle.<a id='r208' /><a href='#f208' class='c012'><sup>[208]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>Among the ornaments for the bosom we find the
-<em>Ægis</em>, evidently like the ægis of Athena, a sort of
-rich covering with two hemispherical caps to receive
-the breasts, such as we find worn by the
-Bayadères of the Dekkan. Extending from this
-on either side, or passing over its lower edge was
-the <em>Maschalister</em>, a broad belt which covered the
-armpits, though in Herodotus the word merely signifies
-a sword-belt.<a id='r209' /><a href='#f209' class='c012'><sup>[209]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Like all other delicate and luxurious women, the
-Grecian ladies displayed upon their fingers a profusion
-of rings, of which some were set with signets, others
-with jewels remarkable for their colour and brilliance.
-To each of these their copious language supplied a
-distinct name.<a id='r210' /><a href='#f210' class='c012'><sup>[210]</sup></a> Other female ornaments are spoken
-of by the comic poets; but in their descriptions it is
-difficult to distinguish satire from information. Among
-these were the <em>Leroi</em>, golden drops attached to the
-tunic; the <em>Ochthoiboi</em>, which seem to have been a
-sort of rich tassels; the <em>Helleboroi</em>, ornaments shaped
-perhaps like the leaves or flowers of that plant; and
-the <em>Pompholuges</em>, which, though left unexplained by
-the commentators, probably signified a large clear
-kind of bead, as the word originally meant a “water-bubble,”
-which a transparent bead resembles.<a id='r211' /><a href='#f211' class='c012'><sup>[211]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Athenian ladies, likewise, displayed their taste
-for luxury and splendour in their shoes and sandals.<a id='r212' /><a href='#f212' class='c012'><sup>[212]</sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>Like our own fashionable dames, they seldom contented
-themselves with articles of home manufacture,
-but imported whatever was considered most elegant
-or tasteful from the neighbouring countries. Sometimes,
-perhaps, the fashion only and the name were
-imported, as in the case of the Persian half-boot,
-fitting tight to the ankle.<a id='r213' /><a href='#f213' class='c012'><sup>[213]</sup></a> The same thing may
-probably be said of the Sicyonian slipper. But there
-was an elegant sandal, ornamented with gold, which,
-down to a very late period, continued to be imported
-from Patara, in <a id='corr65.11'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Lycia,'>Lycia.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_65.11'><ins class='correction' title='Lycia,'>Lycia.</ins></a></span><a id='r214' /><a href='#f214' class='c012'><sup>[214]</sup></a> Snow-white slippers of fine
-linen, flowered with needlework, were occasionally
-worn; and from many ancient statues it would seem,
-that something very like stockings had been already
-introduced. Short women, desirous of adding, if not
-a cubit, at least a few inches to their stature, adopted
-the use of <em>baukides</em> with high cork heels, and soles of
-great thickness.<a id='r215' /><a href='#f215' class='c012'><sup>[215]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>An Athenian beauty usually spent the whole morning
-in the important business of the toilette.<a id='r216' /><a href='#f216' class='c012'><sup>[216]</sup></a> The
-crowd of maids who attended on these occasions appears
-to have exceeded in number the assistants at
-similar rites in a modern dressing-room, the principle
-of the division of labour having been pushed to its
-greatest extent. Like Hera, who was said by mythologists
-to renew her virgin charms as often as she
-bathed in the fountain of Canathos,<a id='r217' /><a href='#f217' class='c012'><sup>[217]</sup></a> the Attic lady
-appeared to undergo diurnal rejuvenescence under the
-hands of her maids.<a id='r218' /><a href='#f218' class='c012'><sup>[218]</sup></a> Her lovely face grew tenfold
-more lovely by their arts. Clustering in interesting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>groups around her, some held the silver basin and
-ewer, others the boxes of tooth-powder, or black
-paint for the eyebrows, the rouge pots or the blanching
-varnish, the essence-bottles or the powder for
-the head, the jewel-cases or the mirrors.<a id='r219' /><a href='#f219' class='c012'><sup>[219]</sup></a> But on
-nothing was so much care bestowed as on the hair.<a id='r220' /><a href='#f220' class='c012'><sup>[220]</sup></a>
-Auburn, the colour of Aphrodite’s tresses<a id='r221' /><a href='#f221' class='c012'><sup>[221]</sup></a> in Homer,
-being considered most beautiful,<a id='r222' /><a href='#f222' class='c012'><sup>[222]</sup></a> drugs were invented
-in which the hair being dipped, and exposed
-to the noon-day sun, it acquired the coveted hue,
-and fell in golden curls over their shoulders.<a id='r223' /><a href='#f223' class='c012'><sup>[223]</sup></a> Others,
-contented with their own black hair, exhausted their
-ingenuity in augmenting its rich gloss, steeping it in
-oils and essences, till all the fragrance of Arabia
-seemed to breathe around them. Those waving ringlets
-which we admire in their sculpture were often
-the creation of art, being produced by curling-irons
-heated in ashes;<a id='r224' /><a href='#f224' class='c012'><sup>[224]</sup></a> after which, by the aid of jewelled
-fillets and golden pins, they were brought forward
-over the smooth white forehead,<a id='r225' /><a href='#f225' class='c012'><sup>[225]</sup></a> which they sometimes
-shaded to the eyebrows, leaving a small ivory
-space in the centre, while behind they floated in
-shining profusion down the back. When decked in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>this manner, and dressed for the harem<a id='r226' /><a href='#f226' class='c012'><sup>[226]</sup></a> in their light
-flowered sandals and semi-transparent robes already
-described, they were scarcely farther removed from
-the state of nature than the Spartan maids themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Contrary to the fashion prevalent in modern times
-the bosom, however, was always closely covered, because
-being extremely full shaped it began very early
-to lose its firmness and beauty.<a id='r227' /><a href='#f227' class='c012'><sup>[227]</sup></a> Earrings, set with
-Red-Sea pearls of great price, depended from their
-ears, and an orbicular crown studded with Indian
-jewels surmounted and contrasted strikingly with their
-dark locks. Add to these the jewelled throat bands,
-and costly and glittering necklaces. Their cheeks
-though sometimes pale by nature, blushed with rouge,<a id='r228' /><a href='#f228' class='c012'><sup>[228]</sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>and they even possessed the art to superinduce over
-this artificial complexion that peach-like purple
-bloom which belongs to the very earliest, dewiest
-dawn of beauty. To the tint of the rose they
-could likewise add that of the lily. White paint
-was in common use,<a id='r229' /><a href='#f229' class='c012'><sup>[229]</sup></a> not merely among unmarried
-women, and ladies of equivocal reputation, but with
-matrons the chastest and most prudent in Athens,
-for we find that pattern of an Attic gentlewoman,
-the wife of Ischomachos, practising after marriage
-every delusive art of the toilette.<a id='r230' /><a href='#f230' class='c012'><sup>[230]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It by no means follows that all this attention<a id='r231' /><a href='#f231' class='c012'><sup>[231]</sup></a>
-to dress had any other object than to please their
-husbands; for the Turkish Sultanas who pass their
-lives in the most rigid seclusion are no less sumptuous
-in their apparel; but we know that at Athens,
-as in London, much of this care was designed to
-excite admiration out of doors. For it is highly
-erroneous to transfer to Athens the ideas of female
-seclusion acquired from travellers in the East, where
-no such rigid seclusion was ever known. Husbands,
-indeed, who had cause, or supposed they had, to be
-jealous, might be put on the rack by beholding the
-crowds of admirers who flocked around their wives
-the moment they issued into the streets. But there
-was no remedy. The laws and customs of the country
-often forced the women abroad to assist at processions
-and perform their devotions at the shrines
-of various goddesses.<a id='r232' /><a href='#f232' class='c012'><sup>[232]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>The dress of men included many of the garments
-worn by women; for example, the chiton of which
-there were several kinds, some with and some without
-sleeves. Among the latter was the <em>Exomis</em>,<a id='r233' /><a href='#f233' class='c012'><sup>[233]</sup></a>
-a short tunic worn by aged men and slaves, but
-the name was sometimes applied to a garment
-thrown loosely round the body, and to the chiton
-with one sleeve.<a id='r234' /><a href='#f234' class='c012'><sup>[234]</sup></a> Over this in Homeric times was
-worn as a defence against the cold, the <em>Chlaina</em><a id='r235' /><a href='#f235' class='c012'><sup>[235]</sup></a> a
-cloak strongly resembling a highlander’s tartan, or
-the burnoose of the Bedouin Arab. It was, in fact,
-a square piece of cloth, occasionally with the corners
-rounded off, which, passing over the left shoulder, and
-under the right arm, was again thrown over the left
-shoulder, leaving the spear arm free.<a id='r236' /><a href='#f236' class='c012'><sup>[236]</sup></a> This is what
-the poet means where he terms the <em>Chlaina</em> double.
-It was wrapped twice round the breast, and fastened
-over the left shoulder by a brooch.<a id='r237' /><a href='#f237' class='c012'><sup>[237]</sup></a> Even
-this, however, was not deemed sufficient in very
-cold weather, and a cloak of skins sown together
-with thongs was wrapped about the body as a defence
-against the rain or snow. Some persons appear
-to have worn skin-cloaks all the year round,
-for we find Anaxagoras, in the midst of summer at
-Olympia, putting on his when he foresaw there
-would be rain.<a id='r238' /><a href='#f238' class='c012'><sup>[238]</sup></a> Rustics also appear to have considered
-a tunic and skin-cloak necessary to complete
-their costume.<a id='r239' /><a href='#f239' class='c012'><sup>[239]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>The Dorian style of dress formed the point of
-transition from the simple elegance of the Homeric
-period to the elaborate splendour of the historic age
-at Athens. In this mode of clothing, a modern
-author remarks, a peculiar taste was displayed, an
-antique simplicity “equally removed from the splendour
-of Asiatics, and the uncleanliness of barbarians.”<a id='r240' /><a href='#f240' class='c012'><sup>[240]</sup></a>
-They preserved the use of the Homeric
-chiton, or woollen shirt, and over this wore also
-the <em>Chlaina</em> or <em>Himation</em>, in the manner described
-above. To these was added the <em>Chlamys</em>, which, as
-the Spartan laws prohibited dyeing, was universally
-white, and denominated <em>Hololeukos</em>.<a id='r241' /><a href='#f241' class='c012'><sup>[241]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It was of Thessalian or Macedonian origin, of an
-oblong form, the points meeting on the right shoulder,
-where they were fastened with a clasp. This
-garment was not in use in the heroic ages, and the
-earliest mention of it occurs in Sappho;<a id='r242' /><a href='#f242' class='c012'><sup>[242]</sup></a> but when
-once introduced, it quickly grew fashionable, at first
-among the young men, afterwards as a military
-cloak. At Athens it was regarded as a mark of
-effeminacy, and was fastened with a gold or jewelled
-brooch on the breast.<a id='r243' /><a href='#f243' class='c012'><sup>[243]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The men of Sparta, though less thinly clad than
-the women, still went abroad very scantily covered.
-Their <em>Tribon</em>, a variety of the himation,<a id='r244' /><a href='#f244' class='c012'><sup>[244]</sup></a> like the
-cloak of the poor Spanish gentleman, was clipped
-so close that it would barely enclose their persons,
-like a case, but was thick and heavy, and calculated
-to last. Accordingly, the youth were allowed only
-one of these per annum, so that, in warm weather, it
-is probable that, with an eye to saving it for winter,
-they exchanged it for that more lasting coat with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>which nature had furnished them.<a id='r245' /><a href='#f245' class='c012'><sup>[245]</sup></a> In the towns,
-however, and as often as they thought proper to put
-on the appearance of extreme modesty, the young
-Spartans drew close their cloaks around them so
-as to conceal their hands,<a id='r246' /><a href='#f246' class='c012'><sup>[246]</sup></a> the exhibiting of which
-has always been regarded as a mark of vulgarity.
-Hence the use of gloves, and the affectation of soft
-white hands in modern times. The same notions
-prevail even among the Turks, who, like Laertes in
-Homer, wear long sleeves to their pelisses for the
-purpose of defending the hand, to have which white
-and well-shaped is among them a mark of noble
-blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Spartans had the good taste to suffer their
-beards and hair to grow long, and were at much
-pains to render them glossy and shining. Even in
-the field, contrary to the practice at Athens, they
-preserved this natural ornament of their heads, and
-we find them busy in combing and putting it in
-order on the very eve of battle.<a id='r247' /><a href='#f247' class='c012'><sup>[247]</sup></a> It was usually
-parted at the top, and was, in fact, the most becoming
-covering imaginable. But they set little
-value on cleanliness, and bathed and perfumed themselves
-seldom, being evidently of opinion,<a id='r248' /><a href='#f248' class='c012'><sup>[248]</sup></a> that a
-brave man ought not to be too spruce. However,
-having no object to gain by aping the exterior of
-mendicants, they eschewed the wearing of ragged
-cloaks, which, indeed, was forbidden by law.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But the Athenians ran into the opposite <a id='corr71.29'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='extreme,'>extreme.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_71.29'><ins class='correction' title='extreme,'>extreme.</ins></a></span>
-Wealthy, and fond of show, they delighted in a
-style of dress in the highest degree curious and
-magnificent, appearing abroad in flowing robes of
-the finest linen, dyed with purple and other brilliant
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>colours.<a id='r249' /><a href='#f249' class='c012'><sup>[249]</sup></a> Beneath these they wore tunics of
-various kinds, which, though the fashion afterwards
-changed, were at first sleeveless, since we find the
-women, in Aristophanes, suffering the hair to grow
-under their arm-pits to avoid being discovered when,
-disguised as their husbands, they should hold up
-their hands to vote in the assembly.<a id='r250' /><a href='#f250' class='c012'><sup>[250]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Like the women, they affected much variety and
-splendour in their rings, which were sometimes set
-with a stone with the portrait engraved thereon of
-some friend or benefactor, as Athenion wore on one
-of his the portrait of Mithridates.<a id='r251' /><a href='#f251' class='c012'><sup>[251]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In his girdle and shoes,<a id='r252' /><a href='#f252' class='c012'><sup>[252]</sup></a> too, the Athenian betrayed
-his love of splendour. The hair worn long
-like that of the ladies,<a id='r253' /><a href='#f253' class='c012'><sup>[253]</sup></a> was curled or braided and
-built up in glossy masses on the crown of the head,
-or arranged artfully along the forehead by golden
-grasshoppers.<a id='r254' /><a href='#f254' class='c012'><sup>[254]</sup></a> But as all this pile of ringlets could
-not be thrust into the helmet, it was customary in
-time of war to cut the hair short, which the fashionable
-young men reckoned among its most serious
-hardships. Hats<a id='r255' /><a href='#f255' class='c012'><sup>[255]</sup></a> were not habitually worn, though
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>on journeys or promenades undertaken during hot
-weather they formed a necessary part of the costume.
-Above all things the Athenian citizen affected
-extreme cleanliness and neatness in his person,
-and the same taste descended even to the slaves who
-in the streets could scarcely be distinguished by dress,
-hair, or ornaments, from their masters.<a id='r256' /><a href='#f256' class='c012'><sup>[256]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Even the philosophers, after holding out a long
-time, yielded to the influence of fashion, and, lest
-their profession should suffer, became exquisites in
-its defence. Your truly wise man, says an unexceptionable
-witness in a matter of this kind, has his
-hair closely shaved, (this was an eastern innovation,)
-but suffers his magnificent beard to fall in wavy
-curls over his breast. His shoes, fitting tight as
-wax, are supported by a net-work of thongs, disposed
-at equal distances up the small of the leg.
-A chlamys puffed out effeminately at the breast conceals
-his figure, and like a foreigner he leans contemplatively
-upon his staff.<a id='r257' /><a href='#f257' class='c012'><sup>[257]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But the art of dress appears to have received its
-greatest improvements in Ionia, where, according to
-Democritos, the Ephesian, both the garments, at one
-time in fashion, and the stuffs of which they consisted,
-were varied with a skill and fertility of invention
-worthy of a polished people. Some persons,
-he says, appeared in robes of a violet, others of a
-purple, others of a saffron colour, sprinkled with
-dusky lozenges. As at Athens, much attention was
-bestowed on the hair, which they adorned with small
-ornamental figures. Their vests were yellow, like
-a ripe quince, or purple, or crimson, or pure white.
-Even their tunics, imported from Corinth, were of
-the finest texture, and of the richest dyes, hyacinthine
-or violet, flame-coloured or deep sea-green.
-Others adopted the Persian <em>calasiris</em>,<a id='r258' /><a href='#f258' class='c012'><sup>[258]</sup></a> of all tunics
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>the most superb, and there were those among the
-opulent who even affected the Persian <em>actœa</em>, a shawl-mantle
-of the costliest and most gorgeous appearance.
-It was formed of a close-woven, but light
-stuff, bedropped with golden beads in the form of
-millet-seed, which were connected with the tissue
-by slender eyes passing through the stuff and fastened
-by a purple thread.<a id='r259' /><a href='#f259' class='c012'><sup>[259]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Duris, on the authority of the poet Asios, draws
-a scarcely less extravagant picture of the luxury
-and magnificence of the Samians, who, on certain
-festivals, appeared in public adorned, like women,
-with glittering bracelets, their hair floating on their
-shoulders, skilfully braided into tresses. The words
-of Asios preserved in the Deipnosophist are as follow:
-“Thus proceed they to the fane of Hera,
-clothed in magnificent robes, with snowy pelisses,
-trailing behind them on the ground. Glistening
-ornaments of gold, like grasshoppers, surmount the
-crown of their heads, while their luxuriant tresses
-float behind in the wind, intermingled with golden
-chains. Bracelets of variegated workmanship adorn
-their arms, as the warrior is adorned by his shield
-thongs.”<a id='r260' /><a href='#f260' class='c012'><sup>[260]</sup></a> This excess of effeminate luxury, attended
-as everywhere else by enervating vices, terminated
-in the ruin of Samos. Similar manners in
-the Colophonians drew upon them a similar fate,
-and so in every other Grecian community; for men
-never learn wisdom by the example of others, but
-hurry on in the career of indulgence as if in the
-hope that Providence might overlook them, or set
-aside, in their favour, its eternal laws.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f134'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r134'>134</a>. Cf. Montaigne, Essais, t. iv.
-p. 214, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f135'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r135'>135</a>. See above, chapter ii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f136'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r136'>136</a>. Plut. Apophtheg. Lacon.
-Charill. 2. t. i. p. 161.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f137'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r137'>137</a>. Herod. v. 87. Duris. ap.
-Schol. Eurip. Hecub. 922. Æl.
-Dionys. ap. Eustath. ad Il. p.
-963. 17. ed. Basil. Æl. Var.
-Hist. i. 18. Cf. Spanh. Observ.
-in Hymn. in Apoll. 32. t. ii.
-p. 63. Schol. Pind. Nem. i. 74.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f138'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r138'>138</a>. Poll. vii. 54. seq. Mus. Chiaramont.
-pl. 35. Antich. di Ercol.
-t. iv. tav. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f139'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r139'>139</a>. Castellan, Mœurs des Ottomans,
-vi. 47.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f140'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r140'>140</a>. Schol. Eurip. Hecub. 922.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f141'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r141'>141</a>. Suidas, however, supposes
-these garments to have been less
-becoming when the girdle was
-removed, and adds ἐν Σπαρτῇ
-δὲ καὶ τάς κόρας γυμνὰς φαίνεσθαι.—v. δωριάζειν. t. i. p. 772.
-Montaigne observes, that the ancient
-Gauls made little use of
-clothing; and that the same thing
-might be said of the Irish of his
-time, t. iv. p. 214.—The French
-ladies, also, of his own day,
-affected a costume in no respect
-less indelicate than that of the
-Spartan girls: <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“nos dames, ainsi
-molles et delicates qu’elles sont,
-elles s’en vont tantôt entre ouvertes
-jusques au nombril.”</span>—Essais,
-II. xii. t. iv. p. 213.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f142'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r142'>142</a>. Athen. xiii. 56.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f143'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r143'>143</a>. Cf. Il. ε. 425.—In the life of
-Pyrrhus, the difference between
-the dress of married women and
-that of the virgins is distinctly
-pointed out:—ἀρχομένοις δὲ
-ταῦτα πράττειν, ἧκον αὐτοις τῶν
-παρθενῶν καὶ γυναικῶν, αἱ μὲν ἐν
-ἱματίοις, καταζωσάμεναι τοὺς
-χιτωνίσκους, αἱ δὲ μονοχίτωνες,
-συναργασόμεναι τοῖς πρεσβυτέροις.
-Plut. Pyrrh. § 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f144'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r144'>144</a>. Taylor ad Demosth.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f145'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r145'>145</a>. Athen. xii. 5. 29. Boeckh. i.
-141. Aristoph. Lysist. 43. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f146'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r146'>146</a>. Ἐκ δὲ λίνου, λινοῦς χιτὼν, ὃν
-Ἀθηναῖοι ἔφορουν ποδήρη.—Poll.
-vii. 71.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f147'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r147'>147</a>. Ælian. V. H. i. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f148'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r148'>148</a>. On the ζῶνη, Cf. Il. ξ. 181.
-Odyss. τ. 231. Damm. 988.
-On the Cestus Il. ξ. 214. Aristoph.
-Lysist. 72. βαθυχζώνοι. Æschyl.
-Pers. 155. et Schol.—Bœttig.
-Les Furies, p. 34.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f149'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r149'>149</a>. Achilles Tatius. ii. cap. xi.
-p. 33, seq. Jacobs.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f150'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r150'>150</a>. Thucyd. i. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f151'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r151'>151</a>. Aristoph. Lysist. 150. 735,
-et Schol.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f152'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r152'>152</a>. Poll. vii. 75.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f153'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r153'>153</a>. Aristoph. Lysist. 48. Poll.
-vii. 57. 74.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f154'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r154'>154</a>. Works, ii. 191.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f155'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r155'>155</a>. Aristoph. Lysist. 48.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f156'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r156'>156</a>. Chanaan. I. 14. p. 449.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f157'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r157'>157</a>. Corrected by Bochart, who
-reads ἔστι δὲ σφόδρα λεπτὸν ὑπὲρ
-τὴν βύσσον ἢ τὴν κάρπασον.
-Cf. Suid. v. Ἀμοργ. t. i. p. 204.
-c. Etym. Mag. 85. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f158'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r158'>158</a>. Satyricon. cap. 55. p. 273.
-Burmann.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f159'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r159'>159</a>. We find, from ancient monuments,
-that persons likewise wore
-over their shoulders an article of
-dress exactly resembling the modern
-cape or tippet.—Mus. Cortonens.
-tab. 58.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f160'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r160'>160</a>. Athen. xiii. 23. Alex. Frag.
-v. 13, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f161'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r161'>161</a>. Victor. Var. Lect. ii. 6. 32.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f162'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r162'>162</a>. Plut. Quæst. Nat. § 6. t. v.
-p. 321.—Coray sur Hippocrate,
-t. II. p. 82, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f163'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r163'>163</a>. See an exact representation
-of it in the Mus. Chiaramont. pl.
-8, where we likewise find an example
-of the sleeves closed with
-agraffes.—Cf. pl. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f164'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r164'>164</a>. Plates. Nos. 98. 108. 131.
-162. 172.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f165'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r165'>165</a>. Aristoph. Thesmoph. 256.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f166'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r166'>166</a>. Poll. vii. 49, seq.—The <em>peploma</em>
-of Pindar (Pyth. ix. 219)
-is now paploma. Wordsworth,
-Athens and Attica, p. 32. Cf.
-Iliad. ε. 315.—The peplos was
-sometimes embroidered with figures.—Il.
-ζ. 289–295.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f167'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r167'>167</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 564.
-Poll. vii. 50.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f168'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r168'>168</a>. Poll. vii. 50. Cf. Cyrop. iii.
-1. 13.-3. 67. In Homer, Iliad,
-γ. 385, &amp;c. the word, ἑανὸς, signifying
-a richly-wrought vest or
-robe, is synonymous, as Pollux remarks,
-with πέπλος vii. 51. This
-is, likewise, the opinion of Buttmann,
-who, however, supposes
-it to mean a “flexibly soft garment.”—Lexil.
-Art. 41. Others
-draw a distinction between ἑανὸς
-and πέπλος, the former, they say,
-being employed to signify a veil
-unwrought and purely white, the
-latter, one which was variegated
-with colours and embroidery.
-Passow considers it to be a mere
-adjective signifying “clear, light,”
-and says, that εἷμα or ἱμάτιον is
-always understood with it.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f169'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r169'>169</a>. Poll. vii. 53. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Jam παράπηχυ
- λήδιον vel ἱμάτιον, collatis
-Hesychii et Pollucis interpretationibus,
-intelligi videtur dictam
-fuisse vestem albam cui manicæ
-adpositæ essent purpureæ.</span>—Schweig.
-ad Athen. xiii. 45.
-t. xii. p. 146.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f170'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r170'>170</a>. Athen. xiii. 45. Poll. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>ubi
-supra</i></span>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f171'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r171'>171</a>. Iliad, γ. 141.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f172'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r172'>172</a>. Poll. vii. 54.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f173'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r173'>173</a>. Among the Dorians the ass
-(ὄνος) was called κίλλος, and an
-ass-driver (ὀνηλάτης) κιλλακτὴρ.
-Poll. vii. 56.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f174'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r174'>174</a>. Poll. vii. 56, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f175'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r175'>175</a>. Cf. Winkelmann, iv. 2. 76.
-Alex. Pædag. ii. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f176'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r176'>176</a>. Theoc. Eidyll. i. 33. Æmil.
-Port. Lex. Dor. in voce.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f177'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r177'>177</a>. Iliad. χ. 469. Heyne in loc.
-Pollux. v. 95, enumerates the
-ἄμπυξ among female ornaments,
-but without giving any description
-of it. Cf. Pind. Olymp. vii.
-118. Dissen. Comm. ad v. 64.
-Bœttiger. Pictur. Vascul. i. 87.—The
-κεκρύφαλος, or κροκύφαντος,,
-which occurs once in the Iliad,
-was a female ornament for the
-head, unknown to the later Greeks.
-The scholiast describes it as κόσμος
-τὶς περὶ κεφαλήν; and Damm
-observes that, it was <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“redimiculam
-<em>vel</em> reticulam quo mulieres
-crines coërcent.”</span>—1158. Heyne
-is equally unsatisfactory. The
-commentators on Pollux. v. 95,
-avoid the subject altogether. Cf.
-Foës. Œcon. Hippoc. p. 202.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f178'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r178'>178</a>. Iliad, χ. 469. Πλεκτὴ ἀναδέσμη·
-οἱ μὲν διάδημα, says Apollonios,
-οἱ δὲ μίτραν. Πλὴν κοσμου
-εἶδος περὶ τὴν κεφαλὴν. This
-is the basis of Hesychius’ article.
-The Leyden scholia say:—ἀναδέσμη
-λέγεται, σειρὰ, ἥν περὶ
-τοὺς κροτάφους ἀναδοῦνται· καλεῖται
-δ᾽ ὑπ’ ἑνίων καλανδάκη.
-(In which Heyne imagines we
-may detect <em>calantica</em>, “a hood,
-hurlet, or coif.”) Κρήδεμνον δὲ
-πάλιν τὸ μαφόριον.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f179'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r179'>179</a>. Poll. v. 96. Iliad. σ. 595.
-In Homer the epithet, however,
-is not πλεκτὴ but καλὴ. Hemsterhuis
-ad Poll. t. iv. p. 998.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f180'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r180'>180</a>. Deipnosoph. xv. 22. Cf. Poll.
-v. 96.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f181'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r181'>181</a>. Cœl. Rhodig. xxvii. 27, imagines
-it to mean a female head-dress,
-or a parasol. Jungermann.
-ad Poll. v. 96. Eustath. ad Iliad.
-β. 401.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f182'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r182'>182</a>. On a mask, engraved among
-the Gemm. Antich. of Agostini,
-we find an exact representation of
-the modern feronet, pl. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f183'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r183'>183</a>. Athen. xii. 62. Pollux. v. 96.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f184'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r184'>184</a>. Poll. vii. 67. 95.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f185'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r185'>185</a>. Plut. Arat. § 58.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f186'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r186'>186</a>. Clem. Alexand. Pædag. ii. 12.
-Winkelmann, Histoire de l’Art. iv.
-2. 75. note 6, and i. 2. 18. See
-also Cabinet Pio Clement, t. i. pl.
-2, with the observations of Visconti.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f187'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r187'>187</a>. Cf. Mus. Chiaramont, pl. 20.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f188'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r188'>188</a>. Poll. v. 96. vii. 95. Eustath.
-ad Dion. Perieg, v. 7. Comment.
-ad Poll. iv. 999. On the κάλαμος,
-named but not described by Pollux,
-v. 96, see Eustath. ad Il.
-τ. p. 1248. Phavor. et Hesych.
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>in voce</i></span> καλαμις. What the
-ἔντροπον was, Jungermann confesses
-he does not know; nor do
-I, though it appears probable that
-it may have been the golden or
-gilt ornament with which the
-hair when gathered on the top of
-the head was bound together.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f189'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r189'>189</a>. Damm. 444. Aristoph. Plut.
-589. Poll. v. 96.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f190'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r190'>190</a>. This lexicographer speaks of
-it as follows:—κτένιον. ὁ φοροῦσιν
-αἱ γυναῖκες ἐν τοῖς ἀναδέμασιν,
-οἷς κόσμος χρυσοῦς ἐπὶ
-κεφαλῆς. t. ii. p. 252. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f191'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r191'>191</a>. 612, 23, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f192'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r192'>192</a>. Hemsterhuis. ad Poll. t. iv.
-p. 1000.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f193'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r193'>193</a>. Il. ξ. 182. Odys. σ. 296.
-Ælian. Var. Hist. i. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f194'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r194'>194</a>. Fabri. Thes. v. auris.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f195'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r195'>195</a>. Damm. 2195, reads τριότταια,
-and τριοττίδες, in the passage of
-Eustathius, which forms the basis
-of my text; but Kuhn and Jungermann
-ad Poll. t. iv. p. 1003,
-correct as above.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f196'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r196'>196</a>. Onomast. v. 97.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f197'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r197'>197</a>. Il. σ. 401. Cf. Eustath. ad
-Odyss. ω. 49.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f198'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r198'>198</a>. Deipnosoph. xii. 62.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f199'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r199'>199</a>. Poll. v. 97.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f200'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r200'>200</a>. Jungermann ad Poll. t. iv.
-1001.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f201'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r201'>201</a>. Poll. v. 95.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f202'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r202'>202</a>. Odyss. σ. 290. Hymn, in
-Ven. ii. 11, seq. Necklaces of
-gilded wood. Xen. Œcon. x. 3.
-61.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f203'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r203'>203</a>. Plut. Mar. § 17. Bulenger,
-De Spoliis Bellicis, c. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f204'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r204'>204</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 677.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f205'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r205'>205</a>. Comment. ad Poll. v. 98 p.
-1003.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f206'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r206'>206</a>. Theocrit. xi. 41. Casaub.
-Lect. Theocrit. c. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f207'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r207'>207</a>. Amor. § 41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f208'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r208'>208</a>. Poll. v. 100. Golden periscelides
-are enumerated by Longus
-l. i. among the possessions of the
-young Lesbian girl; and Horace,
-Epist. i. xvii. 56, speaks of the
-periscelis being snatched away
-from a courtezan. Here Dr.
-Bentley understands the word to
-mean <em>tibialia</em>, and observes,—<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“delicatulæ
-fasciolis involvebant
-sibi crura et femora.”</span>
-But Gesner ad Horat. p. 503,
-seq. rather supposes <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“compedes
-mulierum,”</span> to be intended, and
-he is probably right. Cf. Petron.
-Sat. c. 67.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f209'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r209'>209</a>. Cf. Mus. Chiaram. pl. 14.
-pl. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f210'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r210'>210</a>. Poll. v. 101. Rhodig. vi. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f211'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r211'>211</a>. Poll. v. 101. Cf. Schol. Aristoph.
-Ran. 249. Bergler ad loc.
-renders it by <em>bulla</em>, which, among
-the Romans, signified “a golden
-ornament worn about the neck,
-or at the breast of children,
-fashioned like a heart, and hollow
-within, which they wore until
-they were fourteen years old, and
-then hung up to the household
-gods.”—Porphyr. in Horat. vid. et
-Fab. Thes. in v.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f212'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r212'>212</a>. Diog. Laert. ii. 37. c. Sch.
-Aristoph. Lysist. 417. Wooden
-shoes were worn in Thessaly.
-With these the women killed Lais
-in the temple of Aphrodite—Athen.
-xiii. 55. There was a
-species of shoes peculiar to female
-slaves called peribarides.—Poll.
-vii. 87. Aristoph. Lysist. 47.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f213'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r213'>213</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 152. See
-in Antich. di Ercol. t. vi. p. 11,
-a representation of half-boots open
-in front.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f214'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r214'>214</a>. Lucian, Diall. Meret. xiv. 3.
-ἐκ Πατάρων σανδάλια ἐπίχρυσα.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f215'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r215'>215</a>. Athen. xiii. 23. Poll. vii.
-94.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f216'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r216'>216</a>. Their perfumes and essences
-were kept in alabaster boxes from
-Phœnicia, some of which cost no
-more than two drachmæ.—Lucian,
-Diall. Meret. xiv. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f217'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r217'>217</a>. Paus. ii. 37, 38.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f218'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r218'>218</a>. Aristoph. Concion. 732, et
-Schol.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f219'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r219'>219</a>. Pignor. de Serv. p. 195.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f220'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r220'>220</a>. Cf. Suid. v. κομᾷ. t. i. p.
-1489. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f221'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r221'>221</a>. See Pashley, i. 247. Pignor.
-de Serv. 193.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f222'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r222'>222</a>. “The beautiful colour we
-call auburn, and which the ancients
-expressed by the term
-golden, is the most common
-among the Greeks; and they
-have gilt wire and various other
-ornaments (among which might
-yet perhaps be recognised the
-Athenian grasshopper) in ringlets,
-which they allow to float
-over their shoulders, or bind
-their hair in long tresses that
-hang upon the back.”—Douglas,
-Essay, &amp;c. p. 147, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f223'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r223'>223</a>. This is beautifully described
-by Lucian:—Γυναικὶ δὲ ἀεὶ πάσῃ
-ἡ τοῦ δαψιλεῖς μὲν ἀπὸ τῶν βοστρύχων
-τῆς κεφαλῆς ἕλικες, ὑακίνθοις
-τὸ καλὸν ἀνθοῦσιν ὅμοια
-πορφύροντες· οἱ μὲν, ἐπινώτιοι
-κέχυνται μεταφρένων κόσμος, οἱ
-δε παρ’ ὦτα καὶ κροτάφους, πολὺ
-τῶν ἐν λειμῶνι οὐλότερον σελίνων·
-τὸ δ᾽ ἄλλο σῶμα, μηδ᾽ ἀκαρῆ
-τριχὸς αὐταῖς ὑποφυομένης ἠλέκτρου,
-φάσιν, ἢ Σιδωνίας ὑέλου
-διαφεγγέστιρον ἀπαστραπται.—Amor.
-§ 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f224'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r224'>224</a>. Pignor. de Serv. 194, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f225'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r225'>225</a>. The young lady, in Lucian,
-describes thin hair drawn back
-so as to expose the forehead as a
-great deformity.—Diall. Meret. i.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f226'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r226'>226</a>. A taste not greatly dissimilar
-presides over the in-door dress of
-the modern Greek women. “In
-the gynecæum,” says Chandler,
-“the girl, like Thetis, treading on
-a soft carpet, has her white and
-delicate feet naked; the nails
-tinged with red. Her trowsers,
-which in winter are of red cloth,
-and in summer of fine calico or
-thin gauze, descend from the hip
-to the ankle, hanging loosely
-about her limbs, the lower portion
-embroidered with flowers,
-and appearing beneath the shift,
-which has the sleeves wide and
-open, and the seams and edges
-curiously adorned with needlework.
-Her vest is of silk, exactly
-fitted to the form of the
-bosom and the shape of the
-body, which it rather covers
-than conceals, and is shorter
-than the shift. The sleeves
-button occasionally to the hand,
-and are lined with red or yellow
-satin. A rich zone encompasses
-her waist, and is fastened
-before by clasps of silver
-gilded, or of gold, set with precious
-stones. Over the vest is
-a robe, in summer lined with
-ermine, and in cold weather
-with fur. The head-dress is a
-skull-cap, red or green, with
-pearls; a stay under the chin,
-and a yellow fore-head cloth,
-She has bracelets of gold on
-her wrists; and, like Aurora,
-is rosy-fingered, the tips being
-stained. Her necklace is a
-string of zechins, a species of
-gold coin, or of the pieces called
-Byzantines. At her cheeks is
-a lock of hair made to curl toward
-the face; and down her
-back falls a profusion of tresses,
-spreading over her shoulders.”—ii.
-140.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f227'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r227'>227</a>. Lucian. Amor. § 41. Homer
-in numerous passages celebrates
-the deep bosoms of his country
-women, and Anacreon, also,
-touches more than once on the
-same topic.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f228'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r228'>228</a>. Anchusa. Theoph. Hist.
-Plant. vii. 8. 3. Dion. Chrysost.
-i. 262. Poll. vii. 95. Aristoph.
-Lysist. 46. et Schol. Muret.
-Not. in Xen. Cyrop. p. 743, seq.
-Xen. Cyrop. i. 3. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f229'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r229'>229</a>. Poll. v. 101, vii. 95.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f230'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r230'>230</a>. Xenoph. Œconom. x. 2, 60.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f231'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r231'>231</a>. Cf. Xen. de Vect. iv. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f232'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r232'>232</a>. Luc. Amor. § 41, seq. Cf.
-Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p. 339.
-Aristoph. Plut. 1015, et schol.
-Plut. Vit. x. Orat. Lycurg. In
-the country, too, women went
-often abroad, and evidently led
-a very comfortable life; their
-habits, in fact, greatly resembled
-those of English country ladies;
-the wives of men whose estates
-lay contiguous freely visiting and
-gossiping with each other. Thus
-in the action on the damage
-caused by the torrent, we find
-the wife of Tisias and the mother
-of Callicles discussing the
-spoiling of the barley and the
-barley meal, and meeting, evidently,
-as often as they thought
-proper. In fact, before the quarrel,
-the footpath across the field
-was clearly well worn.—Demosth.
-in Call. § 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f233'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r233'>233</a>. Aristoph. Lysist. 662.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f234'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r234'>234</a>. Poll. vii. 49.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f235'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r235'>235</a>. If the appearance of a ghost
-can be regarded as good testimony,
-it may be concluded that
-the Thessalians wore the chlamys,
-since Achilles when called up by
-Apollonios of Tyana, presented
-himself in that garment.—Philost.
-Vit. Apoll. iv. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f236'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r236'>236</a>. Müll. Dor. ii. 283. Diog.
-Laert. ii. 47. Clothes were suspended
-in the house on pegs.—Odyss.
-α. 440.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f237'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r237'>237</a>. Il. ω. 230. Poll. vii. 49.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f238'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r238'>238</a>. Diog. Laert. ii. iii. 5. Cum
-not. Menag. t. ii. p. 49.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f239'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r239'>239</a>. Dion, Chrysost. i. 231.
-Reiske. On the dress of the Arcadians,
-Polyæn. Stratagem. iv. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f240'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r240'>240</a>. Müller. Hist. Dor. ii. 277.
-See the picturesque description
-which Hesiod gives of the rustic
-winter costume of Bœotia. Opp.
-et Dies, 534, sqq. Goettl.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f241'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r241'>241</a>. Poll. vii. 46.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f242'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r242'>242</a>. Σαπφὼ πρώτη γὰρ μέμνηται
-τῆς χλαμύδος.—Ammonius, p.
-147. Valcken.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f243'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r243'>243</a>. Heliodor. i. and ii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f244'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r244'>244</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 415. Cf.
-Vesp. 116, 475.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f245'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r245'>245</a>. Plut. Lyc. § 16. Inst. Lac.
-§ 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f246'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r246'>246</a>. Xenoph. de Rep. Laced. iii.
-4. Of Phocion, an imitator of
-Spartan manners, the same thing
-is related.—Plut Phoc. § 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f247'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r247'>247</a>. Herod. vii. 208, with the
-notes of Valckenaar and Wesseling.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f248'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r248'>248</a>. Plut. Instit. Lacon. § 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f249'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r249'>249</a>. Thucyd. i. 6. Plat. de Rep. t.
-vi. p. 167. Tim. Lex. 188.
-Aristoph. Eccles. 332. Sch. Aristoph.
-Eq. 879. Lucian. Amor.
-§ 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f250'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r250'>250</a>. Aristoph. Concion. 60, et
-Schol.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f251'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r251'>251</a>. Athen. v. 49.—Even slaves
-were in the habit of wearing rings
-set with precious stones, sometimes
-of three colours, of which
-several specimens are found in
-the British Museum. Thus, in
-Lucian, we find Parmenon, the
-servant of Polemon, with a ring
-of this kind on his little finger.—Diall.
-Meret. ix. 2. Cf. Hemster.
-ad Poll. ix. 96. t. vi. p. 1193.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f252'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r252'>252</a>. Poll. vii. 92, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f253'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r253'>253</a>. Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p.
-329.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f254'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r254'>254</a>. Athen. xii. 5. Sch. Aristoph.
-Eq. 1328. Nub. 971.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f255'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r255'>255</a>. It is very clear from a passage
-in Demosthenes (De Fals. Leg. §
-72), that hats or caps were sometimes
-worn in the city. There
-are those indeed who suppose
-the word to mean a wig; but
-Brodæus disposes of this by
-inquiring whether sick persons
-would be likely to go to bed with
-their wigs on as men did with
-their πιλίδια. Miscell. i. 13.
-However, I must confess their
-wearing hats in bed is still less
-likely. The Bœotians appeared
-in winter with caps which covered
-the ears. Hesiod. Opp. et Dies,
-545. On the form of which, see
-Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii. 9. 6,
-with the note of Schneid. t. iii.
-p. 191.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f256'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r256'>256</a>. Xenoph. de Rep. Athen. i. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f257'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r257'>257</a>. Athen. xi. 120. On the
-gorgeous dress of the painter
-Parrhasios. xii. 62.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f258'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r258'>258</a>. We find mention made of
-Persian dresses variegated with
-the figures of animals. Philost.
-Icon. ii. 32.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f259'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r259'>259</a>. Athen. xii. 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f260'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r260'>260</a>. Athen. xii. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>BOOK IV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c002'>CHAPTER I. <br /> PRIVATE DWELLINGS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>The opinion appears to prevail among certain
-writers, that the private dwellings of the Hellenes,
-or at least of the Athenians, were always mean and
-insignificant.<a id='r261' /><a href='#f261' class='c012'><sup>[261]</sup></a> This imaginary fact they account for
-by supposing, that nobles and opulent citizens were
-deterred from indulging in the luxuries of architecture
-by the form of government and the envious
-jealousy of the common people. But such a view of
-the matter is inconsistent with the testimony of history.
-At Athens, as everywhere else, things followed
-their natural course. In the early ages of the commonwealth,
-when manners were simple, the houses
-of the greatest men in the state differed very little
-from those of their neighbours. As wealth, however,
-and luxury increased, together with the developement
-of the democratic principle, individuals erected themselves
-mansions vying in extent and splendour with
-the public edifices of the state;<a id='r262' /><a href='#f262' class='c012'><sup>[262]</sup></a> and as the polity
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>degenerated more and more into ochlocracy, the dwellings
-of the rich<a id='r263' /><a href='#f263' class='c012'><sup>[263]</sup></a> increased in size and grandeur, until
-they at length outstripped the very temples of the
-gods. A similar process took place at Sparta, where
-shortly after the Peloponnesian war, the more distinguished
-citizens possessed suburban villas, which
-seem to have been of spacious dimensions and filled
-with costly furniture.<a id='r264' /><a href='#f264' class='c012'><sup>[264]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Upon these points, however, I dwell, not from any
-belief that they are honourable to the Greek character,
-but because they are true. It would have
-been more satisfactory to find them preserving, in
-every period of their history, the stern and lofty
-simplicity of republican manners, far outshining in
-the eyes of the philosopher the palaces of Oriental
-kings glittering with gold and ivory and jewels, insomuch
-that the cottage of Socrates, erected in the
-humblest style of Athenian domestic architecture,
-would be an object, were it still in existence, of
-far deeper interest to the genuine lover of antiquity
-than the mansions of Meidias or Callias, or even
-than the imperial abodes of Semiramis, Darius, and
-Artaxerxes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Nevertheless, wherever there exists opulence, it
-will exhibit itself in the erection of stately dwellings;
-and accordingly we find that, prior even to
-the Trojan war,<a id='r265' /><a href='#f265' class='c012'><sup>[265]</sup></a> commerce and increasing luxury had
-already inspired the Greeks with a taste for splendour
-and magnificence, which displayed itself especially
-in the architecture and ornaments of their
-palaces and houses of the great.<a id='r266' /><a href='#f266' class='c012'><sup>[266]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Homer, minute and graphic in his descriptions,
-delineates a very flattering picture of Greek domestic
-architecture in his time, when the chiefs
-and nobles had already begun to enshrine themselves
-in spacious edifices, elaborately ornamented
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>with, and surrounded by, all the circumstances of
-pomp known to their age.<a id='r267' /><a href='#f267' class='c012'><sup>[267]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In those days the greatest men did not disdain
-to apply themselves to agriculture, to have their
-dwellings surrounded by the signs and implements
-of the pursuit in which they were engaged.<a id='r268' /><a href='#f268' class='c012'><sup>[268]</sup></a> And
-as in southern Italy the ancient nobles erected shops
-in front of their palaces or villas, in which the produce
-of their land was disposed of, so in the Homeric
-houses the same space was occupied by the
-farm-yard enclosed by strong and lofty walls, surrounded
-by battlements, within which were their
-heaps of manure, harrows, ploughs, carts, and waggons,
-and stacks of hay and corn;<a id='r269' /><a href='#f269' class='c012'><sup>[269]</sup></a> and hither, too,
-in the evening were driven in their numerous flocks
-and herds, to protect them from the nightly marauders.
-The great entrance gates were in the heroic
-ages guarded by ban dogs,<a id='r270' /><a href='#f270' class='c012'><sup>[270]</sup></a> which afterwards made
-way for porters,<a id='r271' /><a href='#f271' class='c012'><sup>[271]</sup></a> and in still later times were succeeded
-by eunuchs.<a id='r272' /><a href='#f272' class='c012'><sup>[272]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Occasionally for the canine doorkeepers were substituted
-in commercial states gold and silver representations,
-more likely to attract than repel thieves;
-for example, at the entrance to Alcinoös’s palace
-were groups of this description, attributed to the
-wonder-working Hephæstos.<a id='r273' /><a href='#f273' class='c012'><sup>[273]</sup></a> A coarse imitation of
-this practice prevailed among the Romans, for we find
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>in Petronius that Trimalchio had his court guarded
-by a painted mastiff, over which in good square characters
-were the words “Beware of the dog.”<a id='r274' /><a href='#f274' class='c012'><sup>[274]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Along the walls of this enclosure the cattle-sheds
-would in remoter ages appear to have been ranged,
-where afterwards stood suites of chambers for the
-domestics, or piazzas, or colonades, to serve as covered
-walks in extremely hot or bad weather. Within,
-on either side the gateway,<a id='r275' /><a href='#f275' class='c012'><sup>[275]</sup></a> chiefly among the Dorians,
-rose a pillar of conical shape, sometimes an
-obelisk, in honour of Apollo or of Dionysos, or,
-according to others, of both, while in the centre
-was an altar of Zeus Herceios, on which family sacrifices
-were offered up.<a id='r276' /><a href='#f276' class='c012'><sup>[276]</sup></a> At its inner extremity
-you beheld a spacious portico, adjoining the entrance
-to the house, where in warm weather the young men
-often slept. From the descriptions of the poet, however,
-it would appear to have been something more
-than a common portico, resembling rather the porches
-of our old English houses, roofed over and extending
-like a recess into the body of the house itself.
-In the dwellings of the great, this part of the
-building, adorned with numerous statues, was probably
-of marble finely polished if not sculptured,
-and being merely a chamber open in front could
-not in those fine climates be by any means an unpleasant
-bedroom, particularly as it usually faced
-the south and caught the early rays of the sun.
-Here Odysseus<a id='r277' /><a href='#f277' class='c012'><sup>[277]</sup></a> slept during his stay with Alcinoös,
-as did likewise Priam and the Trojan Herald while
-guests of Achilles in his military hut.<a id='r278' /><a href='#f278' class='c012'><sup>[278]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In this porch were seats of handsome polished
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>stone, as in the palace of Nestor at Pylos, which,
-to render them more shining, would appear to have
-been rubbed with oil.<a id='r279' /><a href='#f279' class='c012'><sup>[279]</sup></a> Similar seats are found to
-this day before the houses of the wealthy at Cairo
-and other cities of the East, where in the cool of
-the evening old men habitually take their station,
-and are joined for the purpose of gossip by their
-neighbours. In the larger towns of Nubia an open
-space planted with dates, palms, or the Egyptian
-fig-tree, more shady and spreading than the oak,
-and furnished with wooden seats, collects together
-the elders, who there enjoy what the Englishman
-seeks in his club, and the Greek found in his lesche—the
-pleasure of comparing his opinions with those
-of his neighbours.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When, in after times, this plain porch had been
-succeeded by a magnificent peristyle or colonnade,
-the primitive custom of sleeping in the open air was
-abandoned; but here the master of the house with
-his guests took their early walk to enjoy the morning
-sun. It was customary among all ranks at Athens
-to rise betimes, as it generally is still in the warm
-countries of the South. Socrates and his young
-friend, the sophist-hunter,<a id='r280' /><a href='#f280' class='c012'><sup>[280]</sup></a> coming to the house of
-Callias, soon after day-break, find its owner taking
-the air with several of his guests in the colonnade,
-the young men moving in the train of their elders,
-and making way for them as they turn round to retrace
-their steps. There was usually at Athens a
-similar peristyle on both sides of the house—one
-for summer the other for winter, and a door generally
-opened from the women’s apartment into that
-communicating with the garden, where the ladies
-enjoyed the cool air in the midst of laurel copses,
-fountains, and patches of green sward,<a id='r281' /><a href='#f281' class='c012'><sup>[281]</sup></a> interspersed
-with rose-trees, violet-beds, and other sweet shrubs
-and flowers.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>The town-houses of Homeric times had generally
-no aulè, but the porch opened directly into the street,
-since it is here that, in the description of the shield,
-we find the women standing to behold the dancers
-and enjoy the music of the nuptial procession.<a id='r282' /><a href='#f282' class='c012'><sup>[282]</sup></a> Afterwards,
-as the taste for magnificence advanced, the
-whole façade of the corps de logis<a id='r283' /><a href='#f283' class='c012'><sup>[283]</sup></a> was richly ornamented,
-while the outer gates were purposely left
-open, that the passers-by might witness the splendour
-of the owner. Occasionally, likewise, the great
-door, leading from the portico into the house, was
-concealed by costly purple hangings,<a id='r284' /><a href='#f284' class='c012'><sup>[284]</sup></a> which, being
-passed, you entered a broad passage, having on either
-side, doors<a id='r285' /><a href='#f285' class='c012'><sup>[285]</sup></a> leading into the apartments on the ground
-floor, and conducting to an inner court, surrounded
-by a peristyle, where the gynæconitis,<a id='r286' /><a href='#f286' class='c012'><sup>[286]</sup></a> or harem, commenced.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The apartments of palaces displayed, even in very
-early times, the taste of the Greeks for splendour
-and magnificence. The walls were covered with
-wainscoting inlaid with gold and ivory, as we still
-find in the East whole chambers lined with mother-of-pearl.<a id='r287' /><a href='#f287' class='c012'><sup>[287]</sup></a>
-At first, the gold was laid on in thin plates,
-which, in process of time, led to the idea of gilding.<a id='r288' /><a href='#f288' class='c012'><sup>[288]</sup></a>
-Even Phocion, who affected great simplicity and
-plainness, had the walls of his house adorned with
-laminæ of copper,<a id='r289' /><a href='#f289' class='c012'><sup>[289]</sup></a> probably in the same style as that
-subterraneous chamber discovered, during the last
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>century, in the excavations made at Rome. It appears,
-too, that, occasionally, the walls of the apartments
-at Athens, as at Herculaneum and Pompeii
-were decorated with paintings in bright colours,<a id='r290' /><a href='#f290' class='c012'><sup>[290]</sup></a>
-probably in the same style, though as much superior
-in beauty and delicacy of execution, as art, in
-the age of Pericles, was superior to art in the days
-of Nero. Still the paintings discovered in the excavated
-Italian cities,—sometimes<a id='r291' /><a href='#f291' class='c012'><sup>[291]</sup></a> grotesque and extravagant,
-as where we behold the pigmies making
-war upon the cranes, winged geniuses at work in a
-carpenter’s or shoemaker’s shop, or an ass laden with
-hampers of wine, rushing forward to engage a crocodile,
-whilst his master pulls him back by the tail—sometimes
-rural and elegant, consisting of a series
-of wild landscapes, mountains dotted with cottages,
-sea-shores, harbours, and baths, Nymphs and Cupids
-angling on the borders of lakes, beneath trees of the
-softest and most exquisite foliage,—may enable us
-to form some conception of the landscapes with
-which Agelarcos<a id='r292' /><a href='#f292' class='c012'><sup>[292]</sup></a> adorned the house of Alcibiades.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The halls and saloons on the ground-floor were
-paved with marble or mosaic work,<a id='r293' /><a href='#f293' class='c012'><sup>[293]</sup></a> which often, if
-we may judge from the specimens left us by their
-imitators, represented pictures of the greatest elegance,
-containing, among other things, likenesses of
-the loveliest divinities of Olympos.<a id='r294' /><a href='#f294' class='c012'><sup>[294]</sup></a> These mosaics
-were wrought with minute shards of precious marbles
-of various colours, interspersed with pieces of
-amber,<a id='r295' /><a href='#f295' class='c012'><sup>[295]</sup></a> and, probably, also, of glass, as was the
-fashion in Italy, where whole hyaline floors have
-been found consisting either of one piece or of
-squares so finely joined together, that the sutures
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>were invisible to the naked eye. No mention, I believe,
-is made in Greek authors of lining the walls
-of apartments with glass, or even of glass windows,<a id='r296' /><a href='#f296' class='c012'><sup>[296]</sup></a>
-which, however, were common in the cities of Magna
-Græcia in the age immediately succeeding that of
-our Saviour. It is extremely probable, however,
-that as the Greeks were as well acquainted as the
-Romans with the properties of the lapis specularis;<a id='r297' /><a href='#f297' class='c012'><sup>[297]</sup></a>
-they likewise made use of thin plates of this stone,
-or talc, or gypsum, as they still do in Egypt for
-window-panes. So much, indeed, seems inferable
-from a passage of Plutarch,<a id='r298' /><a href='#f298' class='c012'><sup>[298]</sup></a> as, also, that transparent
-squares of horn were employed for the same
-purpose, as oyster-shells and oiled paper still are
-in China. Previously, however, the windows<a id='r299' /><a href='#f299' class='c012'><sup>[299]</sup></a> (sometimes
-square and situated high in the wall, sometimes
-reaching from the ceiling to the floor) were
-closed with lattice-work<a id='r300' /><a href='#f300' class='c012'><sup>[300]</sup></a> in iron, bronze, or wood,
-over which, in bad weather, blinds of hair-cloth or
-prepared leather were usually drawn.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The ceilings at first consisted merely of the beams,
-rafters, and planks, forming the roof, and supporting
-the layers of earth or straw that covered it; but, by
-degrees, the wood-work was carefully painted, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>arranged so as to form a succession of coffers and
-deep sunken panels. Sometimes the whole ceiling
-consisted of chamfered, or fretted cedar work,<a id='r301' /><a href='#f301' class='c012'><sup>[301]</sup></a> or
-of cypress wood, or was covered with paintings in
-blue and gold, and supported on columns<a id='r302' /><a href='#f302' class='c012'><sup>[302]</sup></a> lofty and
-deeply fluted for the purpose, as has been ingeniously
-conjectured,<a id='r303' /><a href='#f303' class='c012'><sup>[303]</sup></a> of receiving spears into the semi-cylindrical
-cavities thus formed. If this idea be well
-founded, we have a very satisfactory reason of the
-origin of fluting columns, and it appears to be perfectly
-consistent with Homer’s account of Odysseus’s
-chamber, where a number of lances are spoken of
-standing round a pillar.<a id='r304' /><a href='#f304' class='c012'><sup>[304]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The principal apartments, according to the fashion
-still prevailing in the East, were furnished with
-divans,<a id='r305' /><a href='#f305' class='c012'><sup>[305]</sup></a> or broad immovable seats, running along the
-walls, which are now stuffed soft atop with cotton,
-and covered with scarlet or purple, bordered by gold
-fringe a foot deep. In the Homeric age they would
-appear to have been of carved wood, inlaid with
-ivory and gold, and studded with silver nails.<a id='r306' /><a href='#f306' class='c012'><sup>[306]</sup></a> For
-these divans they had a variety of coverings, sometimes
-skins, at others purple carpets, in addition to
-which they, as now, piled up, as a rest for the back
-or elbow, heaps of cushions, purple above, and of
-white linen beneath.<a id='r307' /><a href='#f307' class='c012'><sup>[307]</sup></a> By degrees, these seats became
-movable and were converted into couches or
-sofas, manufactured of bronze, or silver, or precious
-woods, veneered with tortoiseshell.<a id='r308' /><a href='#f308' class='c012'><sup>[308]</sup></a> In the palaces
-of oriental sultans they are sometimes made of
-alabaster, encrusted with jewels. Somewhere in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>more retired parts of the Domos were the picture-gallery
-and library, of neither of which have we any
-exact description. The former, however, faced the
-north, and the latter the west. If the libraries of
-the Greeks at all resembled in form and dimensions
-those found at Pompeii, they were by no means
-spacious; neither, in fact, was a great deal of room
-necessary, as the manuscripts of the ancients stowed
-away much closer than our modern books,<a id='r309' /><a href='#f309' class='c012'><sup>[309]</sup></a> and were
-sometimes kept in circular boxes, of elegant form,
-with covers of turned wood. The volumes consisted
-of rolls of parchment, sometimes purple at the back,<a id='r310' /><a href='#f310' class='c012'><sup>[310]</sup></a>
-or papyrus, about twelve or fourteen inches in breadth,
-and as many feet long as the subject required.
-The pages formed a number of transverse compartments,
-commencing at the left, and proceeding in
-order to the other extremity, and the reader, holding
-in either hand one end of the manuscript, unrolled
-and rolled it up<a id='r311' /><a href='#f311' class='c012'><sup>[311]</sup></a> as he read. Occasionally
-these books were placed on shelves, in piles, with
-the ends outwards, adorned with golden bosses,<a id='r312' /><a href='#f312' class='c012'><sup>[312]</sup></a> the
-titles of the various treatises being written on pendant
-labels.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>If we proceed now to the court<a id='r313' /><a href='#f313' class='c012'><sup>[313]</sup></a> dividing the Domos
-from the Thalamos we shall perceive, on both sides
-of the door leading out of the Andron, flights of
-steps ascending to the upper chambers where, in
-the heroic ages, the young men and strangers of
-distinction usually slept. Thus, in the palace of
-Ithaca, Telemachos had a bed-chamber on the second
-story, whence the poet is careful to observe he enjoyed
-a good prospect.<a id='r314' /><a href='#f314' class='c012'><sup>[314]</sup></a> In later times, however,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>there were, on the ground floor, suites of apartments,
-denominated Xenon, appropriated to the use of guests,
-who there lived freely and at ease as in their own
-houses.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At the further extremity of the interior court a
-steep flight of steps led to an elevated basement and
-doorway, which formed the entrance into the thalamos.<a id='r315' /><a href='#f315' class='c012'><sup>[315]</sup></a>
-This part of the house would appear to
-have been laid out in a peculiar manner, consisting,
-first, of a lofty and spacious apartment,<a id='r316' /><a href='#f316' class='c012'><sup>[316]</sup></a> where all
-the females of the family usually sat while engaged
-in embroidery or other needlework.<a id='r317' /><a href='#f317' class='c012'><sup>[317]</sup></a> It likewise
-formed the nursery, and, at its inner extremity, in a
-deep recess, the bed of the mistress of the family
-appears to have stood, on either side of which were
-doors leading to flights of steps into the garden,
-set apart for the use of the women.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It has by many been supposed, that the Thalamos
-was a chamber particularly appropriated to the use
-of young unmarried ladies; but, since we find Helen
-and Penelope inhabiting the Thalamos, it may be presumed
-that it was common to all the females of the
-house. Hector, in his visit to Paris, finds him in the
-Thalamos, turning about and polishing his arms, as
-if he meant to use them, while, close at hand, are
-Helen and her maids engaged in weaving or embroidery.
-The word was often used in the same
-signification as Gynæconitis,<a id='r318' /><a href='#f318' class='c012'><sup>[318]</sup></a> or “the harem;” and,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>therefore, when Theocritus<a id='r319' /><a href='#f319' class='c012'><sup>[319]</sup></a> speaks of a “maiden
-from the Thalamus,” and Phocylides, with the suspicious
-caution of a more vicious age, advises that young
-women be kept in “well-locked Thalamoi,” it is clear
-that the female apartments generally are meant.
-These were, in Sparta, called οα̈ (which, as is well
-known, in the common language of Greece, <a id='corr86.7'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='signinifies'>signifies</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_86.7'><ins class='correction' title='signinifies'>signifies</ins></a></span>
-eggs), whence, according to Clearchos,<a id='r320' /><a href='#f320' class='c012'><sup>[320]</sup></a> the
-fable which describes Helen proceeding from an egg,
-because born and educated in the chambers so called.
-Throughout the Iliad and the Odyssey we find the
-poet speaking of this part of the house as inhabited
-by women. Here lived Penelope,<a id='r321' /><a href='#f321' class='c012'><sup>[321]</sup></a> far from the
-brawls of the suitors who crowded the halls of the
-Domos; and here Ares pressed his suit with success
-to Astyoche and Polymela, who both became the
-mothers of valiant sons.<a id='r322' /><a href='#f322' class='c012'><sup>[322]</sup></a> From which, among many
-other circumstances, it is manifest that, in those
-ages, the sexes met easily, even the entrance to the
-harem not being impracticable to a lover.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The bedchambers of the young unmarried women
-appear to have flanked the great central hall of the
-Thalamos, and here the female slaves likewise slept,
-apparently in recesses, near the chamber-doors of
-their mistresses, as we find particularly remarked
-in the case of Nausicaa and her maids. At Athens,
-the door of communication between the Andron<a id='r323' /><a href='#f323' class='c012'><sup>[323]</sup></a> and
-the Gynæconitis was kept carefully barred and locked
-to prevent all intercourse between the male and
-female slaves, the keys being entrusted solely to
-the mistress of the house.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As these apartments were less exposed than any
-other portion of the building, and far more carefully
-guarded, it became customary, as in the East
-it still is, to lay up in the Thalamos, more especially
-in the dark basement story, much valuable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>property, such as arms, gold, silver, the wardrobe
-of both sexes, and even oil and wine. Among the
-Romans, or, indeed, among the Greeks, of a later
-age,<a id='r324' /><a href='#f324' class='c012'><sup>[324]</sup></a> this step would scarcely have been taken, lest
-the ladies should have grown too assiduous in their
-attention to the skins. But in remoter ages these
-sordid fears had no existence. Accordingly, we find
-the prudent Odysseus, who apprehended, perhaps,
-the tricks of his domestics, stowing away his casks
-of choice old wine in the Thalamos, doubtless, considering
-it safer there, under the keeping of Euryclea,
-than it would have been anywhere else in the
-palace.<a id='r325' /><a href='#f325' class='c012'><sup>[325]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In later and more civilized ages, the Thalamos
-was still used for the same purposes; for, in the
-establishment of Ischomachos, a pattern of Attic
-economy, we find that the more valuable portion of
-the family wardrobe, with the plate and other costly
-utensils, was there deposited. Corn, according to the
-suggestions of common sense, they laid up in the
-driest rooms, wine in the coolest. The apartments
-into which most sunshine found its way were appropriated
-to such employments and to the display
-of such furniture as required much light.<a id='r326' /><a href='#f326' class='c012'><sup>[326]</sup></a> Their
-dining-rooms, where, also, the men usually sat when
-at home, they carefully contrived so as to be cool
-in summer and warm in winter, though, in severe
-weather, a good fire was often found necessary.<a id='r327' /><a href='#f327' class='c012'><sup>[327]</sup></a>
-The same judicious principle commonly regulated
-the erection of their habitations, which were divided
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>into two sets of apartments, suited to the two great
-divisions of the year. As we have already remarked,
-the principal front looked towards the south, that
-it might catch the rays of the wintry sun, whose
-more vertical summer beams were excluded by broad
-verandahs, or colonnades.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In what part of the edifice stood the bathing-room
-(βαλανεῖον, so called from its having, in remoter ages,
-been heated with acorns, βάλανοι)<a id='r328' /><a href='#f328' class='c012'><sup>[328]</sup></a> I have been unable
-to discover, though it appears certain that,
-even so far back as the heroic ages, a chamber
-was always set apart for the bath. At first, doubtless,
-they were content with cold water; but that
-this was soon succeeded by warm water<a id='r329' /><a href='#f329' class='c012'><sup>[329]</sup></a> may be conjectured
-from the tradition ascribing the first use
-of it to Heracles, whence warm baths were ever
-afterwards called the Baths of Heracles.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The form of the Puelos,<a id='r330' /><a href='#f330' class='c012'><sup>[330]</sup></a> or vessel in which they
-bathed, appears occasionally to have resembled an
-Egyptian sarcophagus, and to have been sometimes
-round, and constructed of white or green marble,
-or glass, or bronze, or common stone, or wood,<a id='r331' /><a href='#f331' class='c012'><sup>[331]</sup></a> in
-which case it would seem to have been portable. In
-the baths of Pompeii the marble basins, whether
-parallelogramatic or circular, were of spacious dimensions,
-and raised two or three feet above the pavement.
-A step for the convenience of the bathers
-extends round it on the inside, and at the bottom are
-marble cushions upon which they rested. In the labra
-of the Grecian female baths rose a smooth cippus in
-the form of a truncated cone, denominated omphalos,
-on which the ladies sat while chatting with their female
-companions.<a id='r332' /><a href='#f332' class='c012'><sup>[332]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When once the warm bath came into use, people
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>employed it to excess, bathing as frequently as five
-or six times a day, and in water so hot as to half
-scald themselves.<a id='r333' /><a href='#f333' class='c012'><sup>[333]</sup></a> Immediately afterwards, to prevent
-the skin from chapping, they anointed their
-bodies with oils and perfumed unguents.<a id='r334' /><a href='#f334' class='c012'><sup>[334]</sup></a> Occasionally,
-instead of plunging into the water, they sat upright,
-as is still the custom in the hammāms of the
-East, while the water was poured with a sort of ladle
-on their head and shoulders.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The public baths, of which no full description referring
-to very ancient times remains, were numerous
-in all Hellenic cities, more particularly at Athens,
-where they were surmounted with domes,<a id='r335' /><a href='#f335' class='c012'><sup>[335]</sup></a> and received
-their light from above. These establishments
-were frequented by all classes of women who could
-afford to pay for such luxury, rich, poor, honourable,
-and dishonourable.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The attendants, in later and more corrupt times
-at least, were men, whose sole clothing consisted of
-a leathern apron about the loins, while the ladies, who
-undressed in the Apodyterion, went through the various
-processes of the bath in the same primitive
-clothing. It was, however, customary for them to
-enter the water together in crowds,<a id='r336' /><a href='#f336' class='c012'><sup>[336]</sup></a> so that they kept
-each other in countenance. Here the matrons who
-had sons to marry studied the form and character of
-the young ladies who frequented the baths; and as
-all the defects both of person and features were necessarily
-revealed, it was next to impossible for any lady,
-not sufficiently opulent to keep up a bathing establishment
-in her own house, to retain for any length of
-time an undeserved celebrity for beauty. In the
-baths of the East, the bodies of the bathers are
-cleansed by small bags of camel-hair, woven rough,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>and passed over the hand of the attendant; or with
-a handful of the fine fibres of the Mekka palm-tree
-combed soft, and filled with fragrant and saponaceous
-earths, which are rubbed on the skin till the whole
-body is covered with froth. Similar means were
-employed in the baths of Greece, and the whole was
-afterwards cleansed off the skin by gold or silver stlengides,
-or blunt scrapers somewhat curved towards the
-point.<a id='r337' /><a href='#f337' class='c012'><sup>[337]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The architectural arrangements of these baths,<a id='r338' /><a href='#f338' class='c012'><sup>[338]</sup></a> if
-we may draw any analogy from similar establishments
-in a later age, were nearly as follows:—Entering
-the building by a lofty and spacious portico, you
-found yourself in a large hall, paved with marble and
-adorned with columns, from which, through a side-door,
-you passed into the Apodyterion, or undressing-room;
-next, into a chamber where was the cold water
-in basins of porphyry or green jasper; immediately
-contiguous lay the Tepidarium, to which succeeded
-the Sudarium, a vaulted apartment furnished with
-basins of warm water, and where the heat was excessive;
-from this, moving forward, you successively traversed
-saloons of various degrees of temperature and
-dimensions, until you found yourself in the dressing-room,
-whither your garments had been carried by
-your domestic, or the attendants on the baths.<a id='r339' /><a href='#f339' class='c012'><sup>[339]</sup></a> These
-establishments were likewise provided with water-closets,<a id='r340' /><a href='#f340' class='c012'><sup>[340]</sup></a>
-placed in a retired part of the building, and
-furnished with wooden seats, basin and water-pipe, as
-in modern times.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To diminish the chances of being robbed, stealing
-from a bath was at Athens made a capital
-offence;<a id='r341' /><a href='#f341' class='c012'><sup>[341]</sup></a> so that the persons who frequented them
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>ran very little risk. The price was usually moderate,
-though in some cities, as for example at Phaselis,
-they were in the habit of doubling their
-charges to foreigners, which drew from a witty sophist
-a very cutting remark; for his slave disputing
-with the keeper of the bath, and contending that
-his master ought not to be charged more than
-other persons, the sophist, who overheard the dispute,
-exclaimed, <a id='corr91.10'></a><a href='#c_91.10'><ins class='correction' title='See comment.'>“Wretch</ins></a>, would you make me a
-‘Phaselitan for a farthing?’”<a id='r342' /><a href='#f342' class='c012'><sup>[342]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The roofs of the more ancient Greek houses were
-generally flat,<a id='r343' /><a href='#f343' class='c012'><sup>[343]</sup></a> not sloping upwards to a point, as
-was afterwards the fashion.<a id='r344' /><a href='#f344' class='c012'><sup>[344]</sup></a> In Egypt and Syria,
-and almost throughout the East, the same taste
-still obtains; and as palm trees, loftier than the
-buildings, often grow beside the walls, and extend
-their beautiful pendulous branches over a great part
-of the roof, nothing can be more delightful on a
-mild serene evening than to sit aloft on those
-breezy eminences sipping coffee, gazing over the
-green rice fields, or watching the stars as they put
-forth their golden lamps through the violet skirts
-of day. But there a parapet usually preserves him
-who enjoys the scene from falling. It was otherwise
-of old in Greece. The roof consisted simply
-of a number of beams laid close together and covered
-with cement, so that, as was proved by the fate
-of Elpenor,<a id='r345' /><a href='#f345' class='c012'><sup>[345]</sup></a> the practice of sleeping there in warm
-weather, quite common throughout the country, was
-not wholly without danger.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On the construction of the kitchen,<a id='r346' /><a href='#f346' class='c012'><sup>[346]</sup></a> which in
-Greek houses was sometimes a separate little building
-erected in the court-yard, our information is
-extremely imperfect. It is certain, however, contrary
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>to the common opinion, that it was furnished
-with a chimney,<a id='r347' /><a href='#f347' class='c012'><sup>[347]</sup></a> and that the smoke was not permitted
-to find its way through an aperture in the
-roof. Thus much might be inferred from a passage
-in the Wasps, when the old dicast, in love
-with the courts of law, is endeavouring to escape
-from the restraint imposed on him by his son, by
-climbing out through the chimney. It is clear that
-he has got into some aperture, where he is hidden
-from sight, for hearing a noise in the wall, his son
-Bdelycleon, cries out, “What is that?” upon which
-the old man replies, “I am only the smoke.” It
-is plain, that he would not, like a Hindù Yoghi,
-be balancing himself in the air, otherwise the young
-man must have beheld him sailing up towards the
-roof. But the matter is set entirely at rest by the
-Scholiast, who observes, that the καπνοδόχη was a
-narrow channel like a pipe through which the smoke
-ascended from the kitchen. This explanation has
-been confirmed by the discoveries of Colonel Leake,<a id='r348' /><a href='#f348' class='c012'><sup>[348]</sup></a>
-who on the rocky slopes of the hill of the Museion
-and Pnyx, found the remains of a house
-partly excavated in the rock, in which the chimney
-still remained.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The same convenience, also, existed in the Roman
-kitchens,<a id='r349' /><a href='#f349' class='c012'><sup>[349]</sup></a> though they would appear to have been
-unskilfully constructed in both countries, since the
-cooks complain of the smoke being borne hither
-and thither by the wind, and interfering with their
-operations. However, this may have arisen from
-the numerous small furnaces which, as in France,
-were ranged along the wall for the purpose of cooking
-several dishes at once. The chimneys having
-been perpendicular, as in our old farm-houses, were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>furnished with stoppers to keep out the rain in bad
-weather.<a id='r350' /><a href='#f350' class='c012'><sup>[350]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That the kitchens were sometimes not sufficiently
-airy and comfortable may be inferred from the practice
-of a philosophical cook in Damoxenos, who used
-to take his station immediately outside the door, and
-from thence give his orders to the inferior operatives.
-Great care was nevertheless taken that it
-should be well lighted, and that the door should
-be so situated as to be as little exposed as possible
-to whirling gusts of wind.<a id='r351' /><a href='#f351' class='c012'><sup>[351]</sup></a> From a passage in the
-Scholiast on the Wasps, and the existence of drains
-in the excavations on the hill of the Museion, it is
-clear that the Athenian houses were furnished with
-sinks,<a id='r352' /><a href='#f352' class='c012'><sup>[352]</sup></a> though in the Italian kitchens there seem
-merely to have been little channels running along
-the walls to carry off the water. The floor, too, was
-constructed in both countries with a view at once
-to dryness and elegance,<a id='r353' /><a href='#f353' class='c012'><sup>[353]</sup></a> being formed of several
-layers of various materials all porous though binding,
-so that it allowed whatever water was spilt to sink
-through instantaneously. The upper layer, about
-six inches thick, consisted of a cement composed of
-lime, sand, and pounded charcoal or ashes, the surface
-of which, being polished with pumice-stone,
-presented to the eye the appearance of a fine black
-marble. The roof in early times was no doubt of
-wood,<a id='r354' /><a href='#f354' class='c012'><sup>[354]</sup></a> though afterwards it came to be vaulted or
-run up in the form of a cupola. The walls were
-sometimes decorated with rude paintings.<a id='r355' /><a href='#f355' class='c012'><sup>[355]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The street-door of a Grecian house, usually, when
-single, opened outwards, but when there were folding
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>doors they opened inwards as with us.<a id='r356' /><a href='#f356' class='c012'><sup>[356]</sup></a> In the
-former case it was customary when any one happened
-to be going forth, to knock, or call, or ring
-a bell, in order to warn passengers to make way.<a id='r357' /><a href='#f357' class='c012'><sup>[357]</sup></a>
-These doors were constructed of various materials,<a id='r358' /><a href='#f358' class='c012'><sup>[358]</sup></a>
-according to the taste and circumstances of the
-owner, sometimes of oak, or fir, or maple, or elm;
-and afterwards as luxury advanced they were made
-of cedar, cyprus, or even of citron wood, inlaid as
-in the East, with plates of brass or gold.<a id='r359' /><a href='#f359' class='c012'><sup>[359]</sup></a> Mention
-is likewise made of doors entirely composed of
-the precious metals; of iron also, and bronze and
-ivory.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The jambs were generally of wood;<a id='r360' /><a href='#f360' class='c012'><sup>[360]</sup></a> but likewise
-sometimes of brass or marble. The doors were fastened
-at first by long bars passing into the wall on both
-sides;<a id='r361' /><a href='#f361' class='c012'><sup>[361]</sup></a> and by degrees smaller bolts, hasps, latches,
-and locks and keys succeeded. For example the
-outer door of the Thalamos in Homer was secured
-by a silver hasp, and a leathern thong passed round
-the handle and tied, perhaps, in a curious knot.<a id='r362' /><a href='#f362' class='c012'><sup>[362]</sup></a>
-Doors were not usually suspended on hinges, but
-turned, as they still do in the East, upon pivots
-inserted above into the lintel and below into the
-threshhold.<a id='r363' /><a href='#f363' class='c012'><sup>[363]</sup></a> In many houses there were in addition
-small half-doors of open wood-work,<a id='r364' /><a href='#f364' class='c012'><sup>[364]</sup></a> which
-alone were commonly closed by day, in order to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>keep the children from running out, or dogs or pigs
-from entering. The doors usually consisted of a
-frame-work, with four or six sunken panels, as with
-us; but at Sparta, so long as the laws of Lycurgus
-prevailed, they were made of simple planks fashioned
-with the hatchet.<a id='r365' /><a href='#f365' class='c012'><sup>[365]</sup></a> In the great Dorian capital the
-custom was for persons desirous of entering a house
-to shout aloud at the door,<a id='r366' /><a href='#f366' class='c012'><sup>[366]</sup></a> which, at Athens,<a id='r367' /><a href='#f367' class='c012'><sup>[367]</sup></a> was
-always furnished with an elegant knocker.<a id='r368' /><a href='#f368' class='c012'><sup>[368]</sup></a> Door-handles,
-too, of costly materials and curious workmanship,<a id='r369' /><a href='#f369' class='c012'><sup>[369]</sup></a>
-bespoke even in that trifling matter the
-taste of the Greeks.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The materials commonly used in the erection of
-a house were stones and bricks. In the manufacture
-of the latter<a id='r370' /><a href='#f370' class='c012'><sup>[370]</sup></a> the ancients exhibited more
-skill and care than we; they had bricks of a very
-large size, and half bricks for filling up spaces,
-which prevented the necessity of shortening them
-with the trowel. Of these some were simply dried
-in the sun, used chiefly in building the dwellings of
-the poor.<a id='r371' /><a href='#f371' class='c012'><sup>[371]</sup></a> At Utica in Africa there were public
-inspectors of brick-kilns,<a id='r372' /><a href='#f372' class='c012'><sup>[372]</sup></a> to prevent any from being
-used which had not been made five years. In several
-cities on the Mediterranean bricks were manufactured
-of a porous earth, which when baked and
-painted, as it may be conjectured, on the outside,
-were so light that they would swim in water.<a id='r373' /><a href='#f373' class='c012'><sup>[373]</sup></a> To
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>diminish the weight of bricks, straw was introduced
-into them in Syria and Egypt, which was altogether
-consumed in the baking. In roofing such of their
-houses as were not terraced they employed slates,
-tiles, and reed-thatch.<a id='r374' /><a href='#f374' class='c012'><sup>[374]</sup></a> Possibly, also, the wealthy
-may have tiled their houses with those elegant
-thin flakes of marble, with which the roofs of temples
-were occasionally covered.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f261'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r261'>261</a>. But even from a fragment of
-Bacchylides we may infer the
-magnificence of Grecian houses;
-for the poor man who drinks wine,
-he says, sees his house blazing
-with gold and ivory:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>χρυσῷ δ᾽ ἐλεφαντί τε</div>
- <div class='line'>μαρμαίρουσιν οἶκοι.</div>
- <div class='line in10'>Athen. ii. 10.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Men had by this time advanced
-considerably from the state in
-which they are supposed to have
-built their huts in imitation of
-the swallow’s nest. Vitruv. ii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f262'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r262'>262</a>. Plat. Repub. iv. t. vi. p. 165.
-Dion Chrysost. i. 262. ii. 459.
-Dem. cont. Mid. § 44.—Lucian.
-Amor. § 34.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f263'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r263'>263</a>. Dem. Olynth. iii. § 9. De
-Rep. Ord. § 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f264'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r264'>264</a>. Xenoph. Hellen. vi. 5. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f265'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r265'>265</a>. Cf. Athen. i. 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f266'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r266'>266</a>. Cf. Müll. Dor. ii. 272.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f267'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r267'>267</a>. Il. β. 657, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f268'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r268'>268</a>. A similar taste prevailed
-among the Merovingian princes
-of France: “The mansion of
-the long-haired kings was surrounded
-with convenient yards
-and stables for the cattle and
-the poultry; the garden was
-planted with useful vegetables;
-the various trades, the labours
-of agriculture, and even the
-arts of hunting and fishing were
-exercised by servile hands for
-the emolument of the sovereign;
-his magazines were filled with
-corn and wine, either for sale
-or consumption, and the whole
-administration was conducted
-by the strictest maxims of private
-economy.”—Gibbon, Decline
-and Fall of the Roman Empire,
-ii. 356.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f269'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r269'>269</a>. Hesych. v. αὐλῆς.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f270'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r270'>270</a>. Feith. Antiq. Hom. iii. 10.
-p. 242.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f271'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r271'>271</a>. Casaub. ad Theoph. Char.
-p. 145.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f272'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r272'>272</a>. Plat. Protag. t. i. p. 159. Cf.
-Aristid. t. i. p. 518. Jebb.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f273'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r273'>273</a>. Odyss. η. 93.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f274'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r274'>274</a>. Satyr, c. 29. p. 74. Hellenop.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f275'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r275'>275</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 875.
-Here the Romans sacrificed to
-Janus, the Greeks to Apollo.
-Macrob. Saturn. l. i. c. 9. Poll.
-iv. 123. Comm. p. 790.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f276'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r276'>276</a>. Eustath ad Od. χ. 376. p.
-790. Cf. Poll. i. 22, seq. Muret.
-in Plat. de Rep. p. 635. Soph.
-Œdip. Tyr. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f277'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r277'>277</a>. Odyss. η. 345. Cf. Il. ζ.
-243. Hesych. v. πρόδομος.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f278'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r278'>278</a>. Il. ω. 673, sqq. Cf. Feith.
-Antiq. Hom. iii. 10. p. 244.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f279'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r279'>279</a>. Odyss. γ. 406, sqq. Cf. π.
-343, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f280'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r280'>280</a>. Plat. Protag. t. i. p. 160.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f281'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r281'>281</a>. Plat. Epist. t. viii. p. 403.
-Athen. v. 25. Poll. ix. 466.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f282'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r282'>282</a>. Il. σ. 496. Cf. Sch. Aristoph.
-Nub. 93.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f283'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r283'>283</a>. Hesych. v. ἐνώπια. Casaub.
-ad Theoph. Char. p. 380. Compare
-the whole character of the
-“Vain Man,” pp. 57–59. Etym.
-Mag. 346. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f284'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r284'>284</a>. Athen. v. 25. Hesych. v.
-αυλεία. Suid. in v. t. i. p. 491. d.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f285'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r285'>285</a>. “The doors (at Tanjeers) are
-richly carved, and placed in
-arches shaped like an ace of
-spades, a form so completely
-oriental, that there is no mistaking
-its origin; these, when
-they opened on the verandah,
-were further ornamented with
-curtains of rich crimson silk.”—Napier,
-Excursions along the
-Shores of the Mediterranean, i.
-p. 264.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f286'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r286'>286</a>. Hesych. v. γυναικωνίτις.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f287'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r287'>287</a>. Lady Montague’s Works,
-ii. 234.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f288'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r288'>288</a>. Plin. xxxiii. 18. Cf. Dion.
-Chrysost. t. i. p. 262. t. ii. p. 259.
-Pignor. de Serv. p. 214.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f289'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r289'>289</a>. Plut. Phoc. § 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f290'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r290'>290</a>. As, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>minium</i></span>, Dioscor. v. 109.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f291'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r291'>291</a>. Antich. di Ercol. t. i. tav. 34.
-p. 181. tav. 35. p. 187. tav. 36.
-p. 191. tav. 48. pp. 253, 257. t.
-ii. tav. 39. p. 273. Cf. Poll. x.
-34.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f292'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r292'>292</a>. Andocid. cont. Alcib. § 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f293'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r293'>293</a>. Plin. xxxvi. 60. Poll. vii.
-121. Cf. Sir W. Hamilton, Acc.
-of Discov. at Pomp. p. 7, seq. pl. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f294'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r294'>294</a>. Galen, in Protrept, § 8. t. i.
-p. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f295'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r295'>295</a>. Hom. Eires. 10. p. 199.
-Franke.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f296'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r296'>296</a>. See the authorities collected
-by Nixon, Phil. Trans, t. i. p.
-126, sqq. Seneca speaks of glass
-windows as a new invention,
-Epist. 90. Sir William Hamilton,
-however, in his Account of
-Discoveries made at Pompeii,
-observes:—“Below stairs is a
-room with a large bow-window;
-fragments of large panes of
-glass were found here, shewing
-that the ancients knew well
-the use of glass for windows.”—p.
-13. Cf. Caylus, Rec.
-d’Ant. t. 2. p. 293. Mazois,
-Pal. de Scaur. p. 97. Castell.
-Villas of the Ancients, p. 4.
-Vitruv. vii. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f297'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r297'>297</a>. In lieu of the lapis specularis,
-they make use in Persia of thin slabs
-of Tabreez marble for the windows
-of baths, and other buildings
-requiring a soft subdued light.—See
-Fowler, Three Years in
-Persia, where the growth of this
-stone is curiously described.—i.
-228, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f298'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r298'>298</a>. De Plac, Phil. iii. 5, ed. Corsin.
-Flor. 1750, p. 81. Cf. Plin.
-Hist. Nat. xi. 37.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f299'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r299'>299</a>. Sir W. Hamilt. Acc. of Discov.
-at Pomp. p. 7, seq. Antich.
-di Ercolano. t. i. tav. i. p. 1.
-tav. 3. p. 11. Cf. Schol. Aristoph.
-Eq. 996.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f300'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r300'>300</a>. Mazois, Pal. de Scaur. p. 98.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f301'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r301'>301</a>. Athen. ix. 67. Plat. de Rep.
-t. vi. p. 353. Cf. Gog. Origine
-des Loix, t. v. p. 443. Poll.
-Onom. x. 84. Comm. p. 1552.
-Maz. Pal. de Scau. p. 102. Tibull.
-iii. 3. 16. Luc. de Dea
-Syr. § 30. Cynic, § 9. Eurip.
-Orest. 1361.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f302'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r302'>302</a>. Odyss. δ. 45, seq. Luc.
-Somn. seu Gall. § 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f303'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r303'>303</a>. By Payne Knight, Prolegg.
-ad Hom. § 47. Cf. Feith. Antiq.
-Homer, iii. 11. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f304'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r304'>304</a>. Odyss. α. 127, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f305'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r305'>305</a>. Id. η. 95, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f306'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r306'>306</a>. Id. θ. 65. π. 32.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f307'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r307'>307</a>. Id. κ. 352, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f308'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r308'>308</a>. Lucian, Luc. siv. Asin. § 53.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f309'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r309'>309</a>. Antich. di Ercol. t. ii. tav. 2. p.
-13.—Books were preserved from
-the moth by cedar-oil.—Geopon.
-v. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f310'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r310'>310</a>. Luc. de Merced. Conduct. §
-41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f311'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r311'>311</a>. Luc. Imag. § 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f312'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r312'>312</a>. Luc. de Merced. Conduct.
-41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f313'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r313'>313</a>. Similar courts in the houses
-of Magna Græcia are described
-as having had in the middle a
-square tank where the rain-water
-was collected, and ran into a
-reservoir beneath.—Sir W. Hamilt.
-Acc. of Discov. at Pomp.
-p. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f314'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r314'>314</a>. Odyss. α. 425. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f315'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r315'>315</a>. Eustath. ad Odyss. χ. p. 776.—These
-female apartments were
-sometimes hired out and inhabited
-by men.—Antiph. Nec.
-Venef. § 3.—Mr. Fosbroke’s account
-is curious:—“The thalamos
-was an apartment where
-the <em>mothers of families</em> worked
-in embroidery, in tapestry, and
-other works, <em>with their wives</em>,
-or their friends.”—Encyclop.
-of Ant. i. 50.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f316'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r316'>316</a>. Sometimes, at least, roofed
-with cypress-wood, as we learn
-from Mnesimachos, in his Horsebreeder:
-βαίν’ ἐκ θαλάμων
-κυπαρισσορόφων ἔξω, Μάνη.—Athen.
-ix. 67.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f317'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r317'>317</a>. We find ladies, however,
-sometimes dining with their children
-in the Aulè.—Demosth. in
-Ev. et Mnes. § 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f318'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r318'>318</a>. Hesych, v. γυναίκ. p. 866.
-Cyrill. Lex. Ms. Bren. Bret. ad
-Hesych. l. c.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f319'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r319'>319</a>. Eidyll. ii. 136. Phocyl. v.
-198.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f320'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r320'>320</a>. Athen. ii. 50. Cf. Sch. Aristoph.
-Vesp. 68.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f321'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r321'>321</a>. Odyss. ο. 516.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f322'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r322'>322</a>. Il. β. 514. π. 184.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f323'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r323'>323</a>. Cf. Poll. vi. 7. Cœl. Rhodig.
-xvii. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f324'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r324'>324</a>. Plut. Paral. Vit. § 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f325'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r325'>325</a>. Odyss. β. 337, 345. χ. 442.
-Schol. 459. 466. Poll. vii. 397.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f326'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r326'>326</a>. Xen. Memorab. iii. 8, 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f327'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r327'>327</a>. Anaxand. ap. Athen. ii. 29.—So
-also thought Socrates, who
-observes, that in winter every one
-will have a fire who can get
-wood. And, though he himself
-wore the same garments all the
-year round, he considered it, apparently,
-a judicious practice in
-others to put on warm clothing.—Xen.
-Œcon. xvii. 3. Sch.
-Aristoph. Acharn. 716. When
-the dining-room was not furnished
-with a chimney, braziers
-were kindled outside the door,
-and carried in when the worst
-fumes of the charcoal had evaporated.—Plut.
-Symp. vi. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f328'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r328'>328</a>. Etym. Mag. 186, 8. Athen.
-i. 18. Phot. Bib. 60. b. Hesiod.
-Frag. 53. Baths, at Sparta, were
-common to both sexes.—Goguet,
-v. 428. Cf. Pashley, Travels. i.
-183.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f329'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r329'>329</a>. Baccius, de Thermis, p. 365.
-Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 1034.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f330'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r330'>330</a>. Cf. Etymol. Mag. 151, 52,
-seq. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 1055.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f331'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r331'>331</a>. Baccius, de Therm. p. 399.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f332'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r332'>332</a>. Athen. xi. 104.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f333'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r333'>333</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 1034.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f334'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r334'>334</a>. Plut. Alexand. § 40.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f335'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r335'>335</a>. Athen. xi. 104.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f336'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r336'>336</a>. Victor. ad Aristot. Ethic. p.
-214. There was a set of vicious
-fellows, called τρίβαλλοι, who
-passed their lives disorderly in
-the baths.—Etym. Mag. 765. 55.
-Aristophanes bestows the name
-on certain barbarian divinities.—Aves.
-1528.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f337'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r337'>337</a>. Xenoph. Anab. i. 2. 10. See
-one of these stlengides in Zoëga,
-Bassi Rilievi, tav. 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f338'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r338'>338</a>. Cf. Etymol. Mag. 384. 10.
-Poll. vii. 166, and Plut. Alexand.
-§ 20, where he describes the luxurious
-baths of Darius.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f339'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r339'>339</a>. Lucian. Hippias. § 5, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f340'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r340'>340</a>. Sir W. Hamilton’s Acc. of
-Discov. at Pompeii, p. 41. Cf.
-Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p.
-269.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f341'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r341'>341</a>. Aristot. Problem. xix. 14.
-Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p. 215.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f342'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r342'>342</a>. Athen. viii. 45.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f343'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r343'>343</a>. Æsch. Agam. 3, sqq. We
-find, however, an allusion to the
-pointed roof in Iliad. ψ. 712,
-seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f344'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r344'>344</a>. Antich. di Erc. tav. 3,
-p. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f345'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r345'>345</a>. Odyss. κ. 559. Eustath. ad
-loc. p. 1669, l. 15. Feith. Ant.
-Hom. iii. 10, p. 249.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f346'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r346'>346</a>. Cf. Athen. ix. 22. iii. 60.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f347'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r347'>347</a>. Cf. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 91.
-Vesp. 139, 147.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f348'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r348'>348</a>. Topog. of Athens, p. 361.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f349'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r349'>349</a>. Cf. Perrault, sur Vitruv. vi.
-9. Mazois, Pal. de Scaur. p.
-178. On the interior of a Roman
-house, see Pet. Bellori,
-Frag. Vet. Rom. p. 31.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f350'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r350'>350</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 148.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f351'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r351'>351</a>. Athen. iii. 60 ix. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f352'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r352'>352</a>. Leake, Topog. of Ath. p. 361.
-Yet we find them sometimes
-throwing the water out of the
-window, crying, Stand out of the
-way. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn.
-592.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f353'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r353'>353</a>. Vitruv. viii. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f354'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r354'>354</a>. Mazois, Palais de Scaurus,
-p. 177.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f355'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r355'>355</a>. Representing, for example,
-a sacrifice to Fornax. Mazois,
-p. 177.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f356'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r356'>356</a>. Cf. Antich. di Ercol. t. i. tav.
-34. pp. 175, 181. Sagittar. de
-Januis Veterum. p. 23.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f357'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r357'>357</a>. Plut. Poplic. § 20.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f358'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r358'>358</a>. Sagitt. de Jan. Vet. p. 152,
-seq. Plin. xvi. 40. Theoph. Hist.
-Plant. v. 4. 2. iii. 14. 1. Martial.
-xiv. 89, ii. 43. Lucian. l. ix.
-Tertull. de Pall. c. 5. Plin. xiii.
-15. Ovid. Metamorph. iv. 487.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f359'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r359'>359</a>. Aristoph. Acharn. 1072.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f360'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r360'>360</a>. Sagitt. de Jan. Vet. p. 29, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f361'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r361'>361</a>. Sagitt. de Jan. p. 67.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f362'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r362'>362</a>. Odyss. α. 441. Schol. et
-Eustath. ad loc.—δ. 862. ρ. 186.
-Cf. Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 155.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f363'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r363'>363</a>. Sagitt. de Jan. Vet. p. 41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f364'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r364'>364</a>. Antich. di Ercol. t. i. tav. 3.
-p. 11. It should perhaps be remarked,
-that when houses were
-built on a solid basement the
-door was sometimes approached
-by a movable pair of steps. Id.
-ibid. tav. 8. p. 39. tav. 43.
-p. 228.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f365'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r365'>365</a>. Plut. Lycurg. § 13. Agesil.
-§ 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f366'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r366'>366</a>. Plut. Inst. Lac. § 30. Cf.
-Theocrit. Eidyll. xxix. 39.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f367'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r367'>367</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 133.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f368'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r368'>368</a>. Sometimes in form of a crow.
-Poll. i. 77.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f369'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r369'>369</a>. See Donaldson’s Collection of
-Doorways, pl. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f370'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r370'>370</a>. Winkelm. Hist. de l’Art.
-ii. 544. Cf. Xen. Memor. iii.
-17. Cyropæd. vi. 3. 25. Plin.
-xxxv. 14. Polyb. x. 22. Plat.
-de Repub. t. vi. p. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f371'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r371'>371</a>. Sanchon. ap. Euseb. Præp.
-Evang. i. 10. p. 35.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f372'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r372'>372</a>. Vitruv. ii. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f373'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r373'>373</a>. Id. ibid. 3. In lieu of these
-light bricks, pumice stones are
-now frequently used on the shores
-of the Mediterranean, more particularly
-in turning arches. They
-are, consequently, cut into parallelopipeds,
-and exported in great
-quantities from the Lipari islands.—Spallanzani,
-Travels in the
-Two Sicilies, &amp;c. vol. ii. pp. 298,
-302, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f374'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r374'>374</a>. Poll. x. 170. Luc. Contemplant. § 6. Schol. Aristoph.
-Nub. 174.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>
- <h3 class='c002'>CHAPTER II. <br /> HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The movables in a Grecian house were divided
-into classes after a very characteristic manner. First,
-as a mark of the national piety, everything used in
-domestic sacrifices was set apart. The second division,
-placing women immediately after the gods,
-comprehended the whole apparatus of female ornaments<a id='r375' /><a href='#f375' class='c012'><sup>[375]</sup></a>
-worn on solemn festivals. Next were classed
-the sacred robes and military uniforms of the men;
-then came the hangings, bed-furniture, and ornaments
-of the harem; afterwards those of the men’s
-apartments. Another division consisted of the shoes,
-sandals, slippers, &amp;c., of the family, from which we
-pass to the arms and implements of war, mixed up
-familiarly in a Greek house with looms, cards, spinning-wheels,
-and embroidery-frames, just, as Homer
-describes them in the Thalamos of Paris at Troy.
-Even yet we have not reached the end of our inventory
-in mere classification. The baking, cooking,
-washing, and bathing vessels formed a separate
-class, and so did the breakfast and dinner services,
-the porcelain, the plate of silver and gold, the
-mirrors, the candelabra, and all those curious articles
-made use of in the toilette of the ladies.<a id='r376' /><a href='#f376' class='c012'><sup>[376]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In well-regulated families a second division took
-place, a separation being made of such articles as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>might be required for daily use, from those brought
-forward only when routs and large parties were
-given. The movables of all kinds having been
-thus arranged in their classes, the next step was
-to deposit every thing in its proper place.<a id='r377' /><a href='#f377' class='c012'><sup>[377]</sup></a> The
-more ordinary utensils were generally laid up in a
-spacious store-room, called <em>tholos</em>,<a id='r378' /><a href='#f378' class='c012'><sup>[378]</sup></a> a circular building
-detached from the house, and usually terminating
-in a pointed roof, whence in after ages a
-sharp-crowned hat obtained among the people the
-name of Tholos. When a gentleman first commenced
-housekeeping, or got a new set of domestics,
-he delivered into the care of the proper individuals
-his kneading troughs, his kitchen utensils,
-his cards, looms, spinning wheels, and so on; and,
-pointing out the places where all these, when not
-in use, should be placed, committed them to their
-custody.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Of the holiday, or show articles, more account
-was made. These, being brought forward only on
-solemn festivals, or in honour of some foreign guest,
-were entrusted to the immediate care of the housekeeper,
-a complete list of everything having first been
-taken; and it was part of her duty, when she delivered
-any of these articles to the inferior domestics,
-to make a note of what she gave out, and take care
-they were duly returned into her keeping.<a id='r379' /><a href='#f379' class='c012'><sup>[379]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But the above comprehensive glance over the articles
-of furniture made use of in an Athenian gentleman’s
-establishment, though it may give some notion
-of the careful and economical habits of the people,
-affords no conception of the splendour and magnificence
-often found in a Grecian house: for, as we
-have already seen, their opinions are highly erroneous
-who imagine that in the Attic democracy the rich
-were by any prudential or political considerations
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>restrained from indulging their love of ostentation
-by the utmost display they could make of wealth.<a id='r380' /><a href='#f380' class='c012'><sup>[380]</sup></a>
-In fact, not content with outstripping their neighbours
-in the grandeur of their dwellings, furniture,
-and dress, these persons had often the ludicrous vanity,
-when they gave a large party, to excite the envy of
-such dinnerless rogues as might pass, by throwing out
-the feathers of game and poultry before their doors.<a id='r381' /><a href='#f381' class='c012'><sup>[381]</sup></a>
-Indeed, since the Athenians exactly resembled other
-men, the exhibition of magnificence tended but too
-strongly to dazzle them; so that, among the arts of
-designing politicians, one generally was, to create a
-popular persuasion that they possessed the means of
-conferring important favours on all who obliged them.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To proceed, however, with the furniture. Though
-the principal value of many articles arose from the exquisite
-taste displayed in the design and workmanship,
-the materials themselves, too, were often extremely
-rare and costly. Porcelain, glass, crystal, ivory, amber,<a id='r382' /><a href='#f382' class='c012'><sup>[382]</sup></a>
-gold, silver, and bronze, with numerous varieties
-of precious woods, were wrought up with inimitable
-taste and fancy into various articles of use or luxury.
-Among the decorations of the dining-room was the
-side-board, which, though sometimes of iron, was more
-frequently of carved wood, bronze, or wrought silver,
-ornamented with the heads of satyrs and oxen.<a id='r383' /><a href='#f383' class='c012'><sup>[383]</sup></a> Their
-tables, in the Homeric age, were generally of wood,
-of variegated colours, finely polished, and with ornamented
-feet. Myrleanos, an obscure writer in Athenæus,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>imagines<a id='r384' /><a href='#f384' class='c012'><sup>[384]</sup></a> they were round, that they might
-resemble the disc of the sun and moon; but from
-the passage in the Odyssey,<a id='r385' /><a href='#f385' class='c012'><sup>[385]</sup></a> and the interpretation
-of Eustathius, they may be inferred to have been narrow
-parallelograms,<a id='r386' /><a href='#f386' class='c012'><sup>[386]</sup></a> like our own dining-tables. The
-luxury of table-cloths being unknown, the wine spilled,
-&amp;c., was cleansed away with sponges.<a id='r387' /><a href='#f387' class='c012'><sup>[387]</sup></a> But the poet
-had witnessed a superior degree of magnificence, for
-he already, in the Odyssey,<a id='r388' /><a href='#f388' class='c012'><sup>[388]</sup></a> makes mention of tables
-of silver. The poor were, of course, content with the
-commonest wood. But as civilisation proceeded, the
-tables of the wealthy became more and more costly
-in materials, and more elegant in form.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It grew to be an object of commerce, to import
-from foreign countries the most curious kinds of
-wood,<a id='r389' /><a href='#f389' class='c012'><sup>[389]</sup></a> to be wrought into tables, which originally
-supported on four legs, rested afterwards on three,
-fancifully formed, or on a pillar and claws of ivory,
-or silver, as with us. There was a celebrated species
-of table manufactured in the island of Rhenea;<a id='r390' /><a href='#f390' class='c012'><sup>[390]</sup></a>
-the great, among the Persians, delighted in maple
-tables with ivory feet, and, in fact, the knotted
-maple appears at one time to have been regarded
-as the most rare and beautiful of woods.<a id='r391' /><a href='#f391' class='c012'><sup>[391]</sup></a> But
-the rage for sumptuous articles of furniture of this
-kind did not reach its full height until Roman
-times, when a single table of citron wood</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16'>(Gorgeous feasts</div>
- <div class='line'>On citron tables or Atlantic stone)<a id='r392' /><a href='#f392' class='c012'><sup>[392]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>sometimes cost six or seven thousand pounds sterling.
-Already, however, in the best ages of Greece,
-their tables were inlaid with silver, brass, or ivory,
-with feet in the form of lions, leopards, or other
-wild beasts.<a id='r393' /><a href='#f393' class='c012'><sup>[393]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In more early times, before the effeminate Oriental
-habit of reclining at meals obtained,<a id='r394' /><a href='#f394' class='c012'><sup>[394]</sup></a> the
-Greeks made use of chairs which were of various
-kinds, some being formed of more, others of less
-costly materials, but all beautiful and elegant in
-form, as we may judge from those which adorn our
-own drawing-rooms, entirely fashioned after Grecian
-models. The thrones of the gods represented in
-works of art, however richly ornamented, are simply
-arm-chairs with upright backs, an example of which
-occurs in a carnelian in the Orleans Collection,<a id='r395' /><a href='#f395' class='c012'><sup>[395]</sup></a>
-where Apollo is represented playing on the seven-stringed
-lyre. This chair has four legs with tigers’
-feet, a very high upright back, and is ornamented
-with a sculptured car and horses. They had no
-Epicurean notions of their deities, and never presented
-them to the eye of the public lounging in
-an easy chair, which would have suggested the idea
-of infirmity. On the contrary, they are full of force
-and energy, and sit erect on their thrones, as ready
-to succour their worshipers at a moment’s warning.
-In the Homeric age these were richly carved, like
-the divans, adorned with silver studs, and so high
-that they required a footstool.<a id='r396' /><a href='#f396' class='c012'><sup>[396]</sup></a> The throne of the
-Persian kings was of massive gold, and stood beneath
-a purple canopy, supported by four slender
-golden columns thickly crusted with jewels.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>Bedsteads were generally of common wood such as
-deal,<a id='r397' /><a href='#f397' class='c012'><sup>[397]</sup></a> bottomed sometimes with planks, pierced to
-admit air, sometimes with ox-hide thongs,<a id='r398' /><a href='#f398' class='c012'><sup>[398]</sup></a> which
-in traversing each other left numerous open spaces
-between them. Odysseus’s bedstead, which the hero
-was sufficient joiner to manufacture with his own
-hands, was made of olive-wood, inlaid with silver,
-gold, and ivory. Sometimes the bed was supported
-by a sort of netting of strong cord, stretched across
-the bedstead, and made fast all round.<a id='r399' /><a href='#f399' class='c012'><sup>[399]</sup></a> Later
-ages witnessed far greater luxury,—bedsteads of
-solid silver,<a id='r400' /><a href='#f400' class='c012'><sup>[400]</sup></a> or ivory embossed with figures wrought
-with infinite art and delicacy,<a id='r401' /><a href='#f401' class='c012'><sup>[401]</sup></a> or of precious woods
-carved, with feet of ivory or amber.<a id='r402' /><a href='#f402' class='c012'><sup>[402]</sup></a> Occasionally,
-also, they were veneered with Indian tortoiseshell,
-inlaid with gold.<a id='r403' /><a href='#f403' class='c012'><sup>[403]</sup></a> This taste would appear to have
-flowed from the East, where among the kings of
-Persia still greater magnificence was witnessed even
-in very early times. Thus, speaking of the royal
-feast celebrated at Susa, the Scripture says, there
-were in the court of the garden of the king’s
-palace “white, green, and blue hangings, fastened
-with cords of fine linen and purple to silver
-rings, and pillars of marble. The beds were of
-gold and silver, upon a pavement of red, and
-blue, and white, and black marble.” A similar
-style of grandeur is attributed by Hellenic writers
-to the Persian king, who, according to Chares,<a id='r404' /><a href='#f404' class='c012'><sup>[404]</sup></a> reclined
-in his palace on a couch shaded by a spreading
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>golden vine, the grape clusters of which were
-imitated by jewels of various colours.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Four-post bedsteads were in use in remoter ages,
-as appears from a white sardonyx in the Orleans
-Collection,<a id='r405' /><a href='#f405' class='c012'><sup>[405]</sup></a> representing the surprisal of Ares and
-Aphrodite, by Hephæstos. There is a low floating
-vallance fastened up in festoons, the tester is roof-shaped,
-and the pillars terminate in fanciful capitals.
-The figure of an eagle adorns the corners of the
-bedstead below. From a painting on the walls of
-Pompeii we discover, that the peculiar sort of bedstead
-at present found almost universally in France
-was likewise familiar to the ancients, made exactly
-after the same fashion, and raised about the same
-height above the floor. With regard to the beds
-themselves they were at different times manufactured
-from very different materials, and those of
-some parts of Greece enjoyed a peculiar reputation.
-From a phrase in Homer,<a id='r406' /><a href='#f406' class='c012'><sup>[406]</sup></a> it would appear that, in
-his times, beds were stuffed in Thessaly with very
-fine grass. Those of Chios and Miletos were famous<a id='r407' /><a href='#f407' class='c012'><sup>[407]</sup></a>
-throughout Greece. In other parts of the country,
-persons of peculiar effeminacy slept on beds of sponge.<a id='r408' /><a href='#f408' class='c012'><sup>[408]</sup></a>
-Sicily was famous for its pillows, as were also several
-other Doric countries. At Athens the rich were accustomed
-to sleep upon very soft beds, placed on
-bedsteads considerably above the floor;<a id='r409' /><a href='#f409' class='c012'><sup>[409]</sup></a> and sometimes,
-it has been supposed, adorned with coverlets
-of dressed peacocks’ skins with the feathers on.<a id='r410' /><a href='#f410' class='c012'><sup>[410]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But the Greeks appear to have consulted their
-ease, and sunk more completely into softness and
-effeminacy, in proportion as they approached the
-East. Among the Peloponnesians most persons lived
-hard and lay hard; greater refinement and luxury
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>prevailed in Attica; but in Ionia and many of the
-Ægæan isles the great—although there were exceptions
-as in the case of Attalos—fell little short in
-self-indulgence of Median or Persian satraps. Some
-idea may be formed of their habits in this respect
-from the description of a Paphian prince’s bed by
-Clearchos of Soli.<a id='r411' /><a href='#f411' class='c012'><sup>[411]</sup></a> Over the soft mattresses supported
-by a silver-footed bedstead, was flung a short
-grained Sardian carpet of the most expensive kind.
-A coverlet of downy texture succeeded, and upon
-this was cast a costly counterpane of Amorginian
-purple. Cushions, striped or variegated with the
-richest purple, supported his head, while two soft
-Dorian pillows<a id='r412' /><a href='#f412' class='c012'><sup>[412]</sup></a> of pale pink gently raised his feet.
-In this manner habited in a milk-white chlamys the
-prince reclined. Their bolsters in form resembled
-our own;<a id='r413' /><a href='#f413' class='c012'><sup>[413]</sup></a> but the pillows were usually square, as
-in France, though occasionally rounded off at both
-ends, and covered with richly chequered or variegated
-muslins. To prevent the fine wool or whatever
-else they were stuffed with from getting into
-heaps, mattresses were sewn through as now, and
-carefully tufted that the packthread might not break
-through the ticking.<a id='r414' /><a href='#f414' class='c012'><sup>[414]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among the Orientals it is common at present for
-persons to sleep in their day apparel; but even in
-the heroic ages it was already customary in Greece
-to undress on going to bed. When Agamemnon
-is roused before dawn by the delusive dream, the
-whole process of the morning toilette is described.
-First, says the poet, he donned his soft chiton which
-was new and very handsome; next his pelisse; after
-which he bound on his elegant sandals and suspended
-his silver-hilted sword from his shoulder. Thus
-accoutred he issued forth, sceptre in hand, towards
-the ships.<a id='r415' /><a href='#f415' class='c012'><sup>[415]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>In Syria, children luxuriously educated are said to
-have been rocked in their cradles wrapped in coverlets
-of Milesian wool.<a id='r416' /><a href='#f416' class='c012'><sup>[416]</sup></a> The sheep of Miletos were, in
-fact, the Merinos of antiquity; and their wool being
-celebrated for its fineness and softness, it was not
-only employed in manufacturing the best cloths, but
-also in stuffing the mattresses of kings and other
-great personages who thought much of their ease.
-And as the vulgar imagine they become great by
-habiting themselves in garments similar to those of
-their princes, like the honest man who sought wisdom
-through reading by Epictetus’ lamp, the stuffs,
-couches, and coverlets of Miletos got into great vogue
-among the ancients. Virgil, Cicero, Servius, Columella,
-and many other writers speak accordingly of
-their excellence, and their testimonies have, with
-wonderful industry, been collected by the learned
-Bochart.<a id='r417' /><a href='#f417' class='c012'><sup>[417]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But though Miletos had a reputation for this kind
-of manufacture, it by no means enjoyed a monopoly.
-The scarlet coverings of Sardis, and the variegated
-stuffs of Cyprus, produced by the famous weaver Akesas
-and his son Helicon,<a id='r418' /><a href='#f418' class='c012'><sup>[418]</sup></a> appear in many instances to
-have obtained a preference over all others. Pathymias,
-too, the Egyptian, distinguished himself in the
-same line.<a id='r419' /><a href='#f419' class='c012'><sup>[419]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>All these bed-coverings were commonly perfumed
-with fragrant essences,<a id='r420' /><a href='#f420' class='c012'><sup>[420]</sup></a> for which reason the voluptuous
-poets of antiquity dwell with a sort of rapture
-on the pleasure of rolling about in bed. Ephippos
-exclaims:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in20'>“How I delight</div>
- <div class='line'>To spring upon the dainty coverlets;</div>
- <div class='line'>Breathing the perfume of the rose, and steeped</div>
- <div class='line'>In tears of myrrh!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>Aristophanes, likewise, and Sophron, the mimographer,
-make mention of these fragrant counterpanes,
-which were extremely costly, and inwrought, according
-to the latter, with figures of birds.<a id='r421' /><a href='#f421' class='c012'><sup>[421]</sup></a> Elsewhere
-Athenæus relates that the Persian carpets contained
-representations of men, animals, and monsters.<a id='r422' /><a href='#f422' class='c012'><sup>[422]</sup></a> Their
-blankets, like our own, were plain white; but even
-so far back as the heroic ages, the upper coverings, as
-being partly designed for show, were of rich and various
-colours.<a id='r423' /><a href='#f423' class='c012'><sup>[423]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There seems to be good ground for believing, that
-if the Greeks did not borrow their philosophy from
-the East, they at least derived from them many of the
-vain and luxurious habits which at length rendered
-that philosophy of none effect. No one appears to
-have paid a single visit to Persia, or Syria, or Egypt,
-without bringing back along with him some pestilent
-new freak in the matter of dress or furniture, wholly
-at variance with republican simplicity. We might
-adduce numerous anecdotes in proof of this. For the
-present we confine ourselves to the following. Among
-the Persians, renowned in all ages for sensual indulgences,
-it was judged of so much importance to
-enjoy soft and elegantly arranged beds, that in great
-houses persons were employed who attended only to
-this. An anecdote in illustration has been preserved
-by Athenæus. Timagoras, or, according to Phanias,
-Entimos of Gortyna, envying Themistocles his reception
-at the court of Persia, undertook himself a toad-eating
-expedition to that country. Artaxerxes, whose
-ear could tolerate more flatterers than one, took the
-Cretan into favour, and made him a present of a
-superb marquee, a silver-footed bedstead, with costly
-furniture, and, along with them, sent a slave, as a
-Turkish pasha would send a cook or a pipe-lighter,
-because, in his opinion, the Greeks who prepared
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>sleeping-places for so many Persians at Marathon and
-Platæa, understood nothing of bed-making.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Entimos evidently excelled the great Athenian
-in the arts of a courtier. In fact, he was the very
-prototype of Hajji Baba, and enjoyed even still greater
-influence over the Shah than the illustrious barber’s
-son of Ispahan. Charmed by his cajolery, Artaxerxes
-invited him to his private table, where, usually,
-none but princes of the blood were admitted,<a id='r424' /><a href='#f424' class='c012'><sup>[424]</sup></a> an
-honour, as Phanias assures us, which no other Greek
-ever enjoyed. For, though Timagoras of Athens
-performed <em>kou-tou</em> before the throne,<a id='r425' /><a href='#f425' class='c012'><sup>[425]</sup></a> whereby he
-obtained great consideration among a nation of slaves,
-and was hanged when he got home, he was not invited
-to hob-and-nob with his majesty, but only
-enjoyed the distinction of having certain dishes sent
-him from the king’s table. To Antalcidas, the Spartan,
-Artaxerxes sent his crown dipped in liquid perfume,
-an agreeable compliment, but which he more
-than once paid to Entimos, whose extraordinary favour
-at court in the long run, however, awakened
-the envy of the Persians. The canopy of the marquee
-presented to this Cretan was spangled with
-bright flowers, and, among the other articles of which
-the imperial gift consisted, were a throne of massive
-silver, a gilded parasol, several golden cups crusted
-with jewels, a hundred maple-tables with ivory feet,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>a hundred goblets of silver, several vases of the same
-precious metal, a hundred female slaves, an equal
-number of youths, with six thousand pieces of gold,
-besides what was furnished him for his daily expenditure.<a id='r426' /><a href='#f426' class='c012'><sup>[426]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A gentleman travelling in Ireland witnessed the
-ingenuity of that ready-witted people in applying the
-same thing to various uses: first, he saw the tablecloth,
-on which he had eaten a good supper, transferred
-as a sheet to his bed, and, next morning, his
-kind hostess, offering her services to put him in the
-right way, converted the same article into a mantle,
-which she wrapped about her shoulders. The Greeks
-were almost equally ingenious. With them what
-was a cloak by day became sometimes a counterpane
-at night,<a id='r427' /><a href='#f427' class='c012'><sup>[427]</sup></a> in addition, perhaps, to the ordinary
-bed-clothes; for it is clear they loved to be
-warm, from the somewhat reproachful allusion of
-Strepsiades in the “Clouds” to the five <em>sisyræ</em>,<a id='r428' /><a href='#f428' class='c012'><sup>[428]</sup></a> rolled
-snugly up in which, his son, Pheidippides, could
-sleep while thoughts of his debts bit the old man
-like so many bugs, and roused him hours before
-day to consult his ledgers. All kinds of stromata
-were, in Plato’s time, divided into two classes, first,
-coverings for the body, such as cloaks, mantles, and
-so on; secondly, bed-clothes, properly so called.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The walls of their chambers were frequently hung
-with Milesian tapestry, a custom to which Amphis
-alludes in his Odysseus:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A. Milesian hangings line your walls, you scent</div>
- <div class='line'>Your limbs with sweetest perfume, royal myndax<a id='r429' /><a href='#f429' class='c012'><sup>[429]</sup></a></div>
- <div class='line'>Piled on the burning censor, fills the air</div>
- <div class='line'>With costly fragrance.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>B. Mark you that, my friend!</div>
- <div class='line'>Knew you before of such a fumigation?<a id='r430' /><a href='#f430' class='c012'><sup>[430]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>Mention is likewise made among the ancients of
-purple tapestry, inwrought with pearls and gold.<a id='r431' /><a href='#f431' class='c012'><sup>[431]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Carthage enjoyed celebrity for its manufacture of
-carpets and variegated pillows,<a id='r432' /><a href='#f432' class='c012'><sup>[432]</sup></a> a piece of luxury
-which, as we have seen above, had already been
-introduced in the heroic ages; for Homer, in innumerable
-passages, speaks of rare and costly carpets,
-and these were not only spread over couches and
-seats, but over the floor likewise.<a id='r433' /><a href='#f433' class='c012'><sup>[433]</sup></a> Rolled up, they
-would occasionally appear to have served for pillows.
-The manufacture of carpets had, moreover, been carried
-to considerable perfection, for the poet speaks
-of some with a soft pile on both sides, which were
-evidently very splendid.<a id='r434' /><a href='#f434' class='c012'><sup>[434]</sup></a> Theocritus,<a id='r435' /><a href='#f435' class='c012'><sup>[435]</sup></a> too, in his
-Adoniazusæ, enumerates, among the luxuries of the
-youthful God,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Carpets of purple, <em>softer far than sleep</em>,<a id='r436' /><a href='#f436' class='c012'><sup>[436]</sup></a></div>
- <div class='line'>Woven in Milesian looms.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>But in nothing did the Greeks display a more gorgeous
-or costly taste than in what may be termed
-their <em>plate</em>, which was not only fabricated of the rarest
-materials, but wrought likewise with all the elaborateness
-and delicacy and richness of design within
-the reach of art. Among the Macedonians, after
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>their Eastern conquests, gold plate appears not to
-have been uncommon; for at the grand supper described
-by Hippolochos in his letter to Lynceus, every
-guest is said to have used it.<a id='r437' /><a href='#f437' class='c012'><sup>[437]</sup></a> The predilection for
-this sort of magnificence they acquired in Asia, where,
-at a banquet given to Alexander, the whole dessert
-was brought in tastefully covered with gold-leaf.<a id='r438' /><a href='#f438' class='c012'><sup>[438]</sup></a> In
-the reign of his father, Philip, the precious metals
-were rare in Macedonia. Indeed, that crafty old
-monarch, possessing but one gold cup in the world,
-had so good an opinion of his courtiers that, to prevent
-their thieving it, he slept every night with it
-under his pillow.<a id='r439' /><a href='#f439' class='c012'><sup>[439]</sup></a> Gold was, more early, plentiful in
-Attica. Alcibiades, with tastes and habits unsuited
-to a democracy, carried so far his love of display as
-to make use of thuribles, or censers, and wash-hand
-basins of pure gold.<a id='r440' /><a href='#f440' class='c012'><sup>[440]</sup></a> But the ostentatious son of
-Clinias, though extravagant, was in this respect only
-a type of his nation. Every rich citizen of Athens
-aimed at the same degree of splendour; and, in describing
-his town-house or favourite villa, might, with
-little alteration, have adopted the language of the
-poet:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in6'>——“My house within the city</div>
- <div class='line'>Is richly furnished with plate and gold,</div>
- <div class='line'>Basins and ewers to lave her dainty hands:</div>
- <div class='line'>My hangings all of Tyrian tapestry.</div>
- <div class='line'>In ivory coffers have I stuffed my crowns;</div>
- <div class='line'>In cypress chests my arras, counterpanes,</div>
- <div class='line'>Costly apparel, tents, and canopies,</div>
- <div class='line'>Fine linen, Turkey cushions bossed with pearl,</div>
- <div class='line'>Vallance of Venice, gold in needle-work,</div>
- <div class='line'>Pewter and brass, and all things that belong</div>
- <div class='line'>To house or housekeeping.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Socrates, in the Republic, speaking of what the
-prevailing fashion required to be found in a city,
-makes out a list of good things, not much inferior
-upon the whole to Shakspeare’s,—beds, tables, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>other furniture; dainties of all kinds; perfumes, unguents,
-sauces, &amp;c.; to which the philosopher adds
-apparel, shoes, pictures, tapestry, ivory, and gold:<a id='r441' /><a href='#f441' class='c012'><sup>[441]</sup></a>
-and these rare materials, as farther on he observes,
-were wrought into utensils for domestic purposes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>One of the most plentifully furnished departments
-of a Greek house was the <em>Kulikeion</em>, or “cupboard,”
-usually closed in front with a curtain,<a id='r442' /><a href='#f442' class='c012'><sup>[442]</sup></a> where they
-kept their goblets, cups, and drinking-horns, under
-the protection of a statue of Hermes, who, as god
-of thieves, would, it was supposed, be respected by
-his children. The form and workmanship of these
-materials varied, no doubt, according to the taste and
-means of the possessor; but they were in general distinguished
-for the elegance of their outline, the grace
-and originality of the sculpture, the fineness, delicacy,
-and minute finish of the execution. It is well
-known, as an able antiquarian<a id='r443' /><a href='#f443' class='c012'><sup>[443]</sup></a> has remarked, to what
-an excess the luxury of the table was carried among
-the ancients, and how much they surpassed us in the
-dimensions, the massiveness, the workmanship, the
-quality, and the variety of their drinking apparatus.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Many persons, however, seem chiefly to have valued
-their plate as a mark of their wealth and magnificence;
-among whom may be reckoned Pythias of
-Phigaleia, who, when dying, commanded the following
-epitaph to be inscribed upon his tomb:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>Here jolly Pythias lies,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>A right honest man, and wise,</div>
- <div class='line'>Who of goblets had very great store,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Of amber, silver, gold,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>All glorious to behold,</div>
- <div class='line'>In number ne’er equalled before.<a id='r444' /><a href='#f444' class='c012'><sup>[444]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Amber goblets not being, I believe, in fashion
-among the modern nations of Europe, some doubt
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>may be experienced respecting the veracity of our
-friend of Phigaleia; but the ancients had other gobletary
-legends to bring forward in support of it. Helen,<a id='r445' /><a href='#f445' class='c012'><sup>[445]</sup></a>
-it is said, justly proud of her beautiful bosom, dedicated
-in one of the temples of Rhodes, as a votive
-offering, an amber goblet, exactly of the size and
-shape of one of her breasts, which, had it come down
-to posterity, might have furnished artists with a perfect
-model of that part of the female form. However
-this may be, the ancients, in remote ages, set a great
-value on their cups, particularly such as were considered
-heir-looms in the family, and laid apart to be
-used only on extraordinary occasions. Hence Œdipos,
-in the old Cyclic poet, is seized with fierce anger at
-his son, who had, contrary to his will, brought forth
-his old hereditary goblets to be used at an ordinary
-entertainment.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>Then Polyneices of the golden locks,</div>
- <div class='line'>Sprung from the Gods, before his father placed</div>
- <div class='line'>A table all of silver, which had once</div>
- <div class='line'>Been Cadmus’s, next filled the golden bowl</div>
- <div class='line'>With richest wine. At this old Œdipos,</div>
- <div class='line'>Seeing the honoured relics of his sire</div>
- <div class='line'>Profaned to vulgar uses, roused to anger,</div>
- <div class='line'>Pronounced fierce imprecations, wished his sons</div>
- <div class='line'>Might live no more in amity together,</div>
- <div class='line'>But plunge in feuds and slaughters, and contend</div>
- <div class='line'>For their inheritance: and the Furies heard.<a id='r446' /><a href='#f446' class='c012'><sup>[446]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Agathocles, tyrant of Sicily, appears to have been
-an amateur of cups, and would sometimes while exhibiting
-his collection to his friends make a good-humoured
-allusion to his original occupation. “These
-golden vessels,” said he, “have been made out of those
-earthenware ones which I formerly manufactured.”<a id='r447' /><a href='#f447' class='c012'><sup>[447]</sup></a>
-Drinking-bowls in fact made no inconsiderable figure
-in ancient times. They were bestowed as the prizes
-in gymnastic contests, and in Greece men boxed and
-wrestled for the cup as horses run for it in England.
-Parasites, like the jester of Louis XIV., used
-sometimes to carry home the cups and dishes set
-before them at dinner; but the tables were often
-turned when the subject gave and the prince pocketed
-the dole.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A curious legend has been preserved to us connected
-with the subject of cups. Several princes
-uniting, in remote times, to send a colony to Lesbos,
-were commanded by an oracle to cast a virgin,
-during their voyage, into the sea, as a sacrifice
-to Poseidon. Obedience, in those superstitious ages,
-was seldom refused to such injunctions. The maiden
-was precipitated into the waves, but Enallos, one of
-the chiefs, in whom love had quenched the reverence
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>for oracles, immediately plunged in to save her. Neither
-the chief, however, nor the virgin appeared again,
-and the fleet proceeded. The remainder of the tradition
-may be illustrated by an event said to have
-taken place in the Tonga islands.<a id='r448' /><a href='#f448' class='c012'><sup>[448]</sup></a> They were probably
-near some uninhabited isle, and instead of
-rising to the surface of the sea, emerged into a
-cavern elevated considerably above its level, and
-opening perhaps upon the land. “God tempers the
-wind to the shorn lamb,” says a modern writer, and
-so Enallos found it. By means unrevealed in the
-ancient narrative, the hero and his bride continued
-to subsist on the rock, and many years afterwards,
-when the colony was already flourishing, he one
-day presented himself before his old friends at Methymna,
-and entertained them with a very romantic
-account of his residence among the Nereids at the
-bottom of the sea, where he was honoured with the
-care of Poseidon’s horses when sent out to grass.
-At length, however, getting on the back of a large
-wave it bore him upwards and he escaped from the
-deep, bearing in his hand a golden cup, the metal
-of which was so marvellously beautiful that in comparison
-ordinary gold appeared no better than brass.<a id='r449' /><a href='#f449' class='c012'><sup>[449]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Even the loftiest and least worldly-minded of the
-Homeric heroes, Achilles, set great value on a favourite
-drinking-cup, which he preserved for his own
-particular use, and for pouring out libations to Zeus
-alone. Priam<a id='r450' /><a href='#f450' class='c012'><sup>[450]</sup></a> was careful to include a rare goblet
-in the ransom of Hector’s body, and a similar gift
-aided in alluring Alcmena from the paths of virtue.<a id='r451' /><a href='#f451' class='c012'><sup>[451]</sup></a>
-But the most famous bowl of antiquity was that of
-Heracles, which, more capacious than the barber’s
-basin in Don Quixote, served its illustrious owner in
-the double capacity of a drinking-cup and a canoe;
-for when he had quenched his thirst, he could set
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>his bowl afloat, and, leaping into it, steer to any part
-of the world he pleased. Some, indeed, speak of it
-as a borrowed article, belonging originally to the
-Sun, and in which the god used nightly to traverse
-the ocean from West to East.<a id='r452' /><a href='#f452' class='c012'><sup>[452]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To pass, however, over the goblets of mythology.
-It was fashionable to possess plate of this kind finely
-sculptured with historical arguments; and history has
-preserved the names of Cimon and Athenocles, two
-artists who excelled in this style of engraving. These
-cups were sometimes of silver gilt, sometimes of massive
-gold crusted with jewels.<a id='r453' /><a href='#f453' class='c012'><sup>[453]</sup></a> In addition to the
-two artists named above, we may enumerate Crates,
-Stratonicos, Myrmecides of Miletos, Callicrates the
-Lacedemonian, and Mys, whose “Cup of Heracles,”
-celebrated in antiquity, had represented upon it the
-storming of Ilion, with this inscription,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Troy’s lofty towers by Grecians sacked behold!</div>
- <div class='line'>Parrhasios’ draught, by Mys engraved in gold.<a id='r454' /><a href='#f454' class='c012'><sup>[454]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>The names by which the ancients distinguished
-their several kinds of goblets are too numerous to
-be here given. Some were curious—“Amalthea’s
-Horn,” “The Year,” &amp;c. Rustics made use of two-handled
-wooden bowls in which, when thirsty, they
-drew fresh milk from the cow in the fields.<a id='r455' /><a href='#f455' class='c012'><sup>[455]</sup></a> There
-was a big-bellied cup with a narrow neck which
-being shaped like a purse, participated with this
-very necessary article in the name of Aryballos.<a id='r456' /><a href='#f456' class='c012'><sup>[456]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Glass cups of much beauty were manufactured in
-great abundance at Alexandria. Among these was
-the <em>Baucalis</em>, mentioned by Sopater the parodist, who
-says:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>’Tis sweet in early morn to cool the lips</div>
- <div class='line'>With pure fresh water from the gushing fount,</div>
- <div class='line'>Mingled with honey in the Baucalis,</div>
- <div class='line'>When one o’er night has made too free with wine,</div>
- <div class='line'>And feels sharp thirst.<a id='r457' /><a href='#f457' class='c012'><sup>[457]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>The glass-workers of Alexandria procured earthenware
-vessels from all parts of the world, which they
-used as models for their cups. Even the great
-sculptor Lysippos did not disdain to employ his genius
-in the invention of a new kind of vase. Having
-made a collection of vessels of many various shapes,
-and diligently studied the whole, he hit upon a form
-entirely new, and presented the model to Cassander,
-who having just then founded the city of Cassandria,
-was ambitious of originating an invention of this
-kind. He was desirous, perhaps, of recommending
-by the elegance of his drinking-cups the Mendæan
-wine exported in great quantities from his city.<a id='r458' /><a href='#f458' class='c012'><sup>[458]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There was a peculiar kind of cup called Grammateion,
-from the letters of gold chased upon its
-exterior.<a id='r459' /><a href='#f459' class='c012'><sup>[459]</sup></a> Alexis mentions one of this sort in the
-following lines:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A. But let me first describe the cup; ’twas round,</div>
- <div class='line in3'>Old, broken-eared, and precious small besides,</div>
- <div class='line in3'>Having indeed some letters on’t.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>B. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yes letters;</div>
- <div class='line in3'>Eleven, and all of gold, forming the name</div>
- <div class='line in3'>Of Saviour Zeus.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Tush! no, some other god.<a id='r460' /><a href='#f460' class='c012'><sup>[460]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>A very handsome sort of cup was imported from
-Sidon. It had two handles, and was ornamented with
-small figures in relief. Drinking-vases were also
-formed from the large horns of the Molossian and
-Pœonian oxen; and these articles were commonly
-rimmed with silver or gold.<a id='r461' /><a href='#f461' class='c012'><sup>[461]</sup></a> Small cups were made
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>little account of. There was even one kind of bowl
-which, for its enormous capacity, was called the Elephant.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A. If this hold not enough, see the boy comes</div>
- <div class='line in3'>Bearing the Elephant!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>B. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Immortal gods!</div>
- <div class='line in3'>What thing is that?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A double-fountained cup,</div>
- <div class='line in3'>The workmanship of Alcon; it contains</div>
- <div class='line in3'>Only three gallons.<a id='r462' /><a href='#f462' class='c012'><sup>[462]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>A very celebrated cup among the Athenians was
-the Thericlean,<a id='r463' /><a href='#f463' class='c012'><sup>[463]</sup></a> originally invented by Thericles, a
-Corinthian potter, contemporary with Aristophanes.
-This ware was black, highly varnished, with gilt
-edges;<a id='r464' /><a href='#f464' class='c012'><sup>[464]</sup></a> but the name came afterwards to be applied
-to any vessel of the same form from whatever
-materials manufactured. There were accordingly
-Thericlea of gold with wooden stands. The cups
-of this kind, made at Athens, being very expensive,
-an inferior sort, in imitation, was produced at Rhodes,
-which, as far more economical, had a great run among
-the humbler classes. The Thericlean was a species
-of deep chalice with two handles, and bulging but
-little at the sides. Theophrastus<a id='r465' /><a href='#f465' class='c012'><sup>[465]</sup></a> speaks of Thericlea
-turned from the Syrian Turpentine tree, the
-wood of which being black and taking a fine polish,
-it was impossible at a glance to distinguish them
-from those of earthenware. The paintings on these
-utensils appear to have been various. Sometimes
-a single wreath of ivy encircled them immediately beneath
-the golden rim; but it seems occasionally to
-have been covered with representations of animals,
-which gave rise to a forced and false etymology of
-the name.<a id='r466' /><a href='#f466' class='c012'><sup>[466]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>We have already observed, that the use of drinking-horns<a id='r467' /><a href='#f467' class='c012'><sup>[467]</sup></a>
-was not unknown to the ancients. In fact,
-it seems, in very remote ages, to have been customary
-to convert bulls’ horns into cups with very little
-preparation; and the practice of quaffing wine from
-this rude kind of goblet had by some been supposed
-to have suggested the idea to artists of representing
-Bacchos with horns, and to poets the epithet of the
-Bull Dionysos. He was moreover worshiped at
-Cyzicos under the form of a bull. Afterwards, as
-taste and luxury advanced, these simple vessels were
-exchanged for horns of silver, which Pindar attributes
-to the Centaurs.<a id='r468' /><a href='#f468' class='c012'><sup>[468]</sup></a> Xenophon<a id='r469' /><a href='#f469' class='c012'><sup>[469]</sup></a> found drinking-horns
-among the Paphlagonians, and afterwards even
-in the palace of the Thracian king Seuthes. Æschylus
-speaks of silver horns, with lids of gold, in use
-among the Perrhæbians, and Sophocles, in his Pandora,
-makes mention of drinking-horns of massive
-gold. Philip of Macedon was accustomed among
-his friends to drink from the common horn. Golden
-horns were found among the inhabitants of Cythera.
-Horns of silver were in use at Athens; and, among
-the articles enumerated as sold at a public auction,
-mention is made of one of these vessels of a twisted
-form.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mirrors constituted another article of Hellenic
-luxury. These were sometimes of brass,<a id='r470' /><a href='#f470' class='c012'><sup>[470]</sup></a> whence
-the proverb:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>As forms by brass, so minds by wine are mirrored.<a id='r471' /><a href='#f471' class='c012'><sup>[471]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>The best, however, until those of glass came into
-use, were made of silver or of a mixed metal, the exact
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>composition of which is not now known. Another
-kind was fashioned from a species of carbuncle found
-near the city of Orchomenos,<a id='r472' /><a href='#f472' class='c012'><sup>[472]</sup></a> in Arcadia. Glass
-mirrors<a id='r473' /><a href='#f473' class='c012'><sup>[473]</sup></a> also came early into use, chiefly manufactured,
-at the outset, by the Phœnicians of Sidon.
-The hand-mirrors were usually circular,<a id='r474' /><a href='#f474' class='c012'><sup>[474]</sup></a> and set in
-costly frames. To prevent their being speedily tarnished
-they were, when not in use, carefully enclosed
-in cases.<a id='r475' /><a href='#f475' class='c012'><sup>[475]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There were mirrors, too, of polished silver, fashioned
-so as to magnify immensely the objects they reflected.<a id='r476' /><a href='#f476' class='c012'><sup>[476]</sup></a>
-They invented also large cups containing within
-many diminutive mirrors, so that when any one looked
-into them, his eye was met by a multitude of faces
-all resembling his own.<a id='r477' /><a href='#f477' class='c012'><sup>[477]</sup></a> In a temple of Hera in
-Arcadia, was a mirror fixed in the wall, wherein
-the spectator could at first scarcely, if at all, discern
-his own image, while the throne of the goddess and
-the statues of the other deities ranged around were
-most brilliantly <a id='corr119.20'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='reflected,'>reflected.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_119.20'><ins class='correction' title='reflected,'>reflected.</ins></a></span><a id='r478' /><a href='#f478' class='c012'><sup>[478]</sup></a> Many sorts of mirrors
-appear to have been made for the purpose of playing
-off practical jokes. For example, looking in one
-of these, a handsome woman would find her visage
-transformed into that of a Gorgon, so as to appear
-terrible even to herself. Others again were so very
-flattering, that a half-starved barber, viewing his
-figure therein, appeared to be gifted with the thewes
-of a Heracles. Another sort distorted the countenance,
-or inverted it, or showed merely the half.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Religion was the nurse of the fine arts, and first
-gave rise, not only to sculpture and painting, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>also to those private collections of statues and pictures<a id='r479' /><a href='#f479' class='c012'><sup>[479]</sup></a>
-in which we discover the germs of our modern
-galleries<a id='r480' /><a href='#f480' class='c012'><sup>[480]</sup></a> and museums. The first step was
-made towards these when the Greek set up the
-images of his household gods upon his hearth.
-Thence, step by step, he proceeded, improving the
-appearance, enriching the materials, increasing the
-number of his domestic deities, with which niche
-after niche was filled, till his private dwelling became
-in some sort a temple. The religious feeling,
-no doubt, made way, in many cases, for a
-passion for show, or a nascent taste for the beautiful;
-so that rude figures in terra-cotta, wood, or
-stone, were gradually replaced by exquisite statues
-in ivory, gold, or silver,<a id='r481' /><a href='#f481' class='c012'><sup>[481]</sup></a> or the fairest marble,
-breathing beauty and life, with eyes of gems, and
-clothed with majesty as with a garment. Hence
-flowed the passion for mimetic representations and
-all the plastic arts. The gods were transferred from
-the fireside to the temple, to the agora, to the
-senate-house, to the innumerable porticoes everywhere
-abounding in Greece.<a id='r482' /><a href='#f482' class='c012'><sup>[482]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On their superb candelabra,<a id='r483' /><a href='#f483' class='c012'><sup>[483]</sup></a> &amp;c., matter for a
-curious volume might be collected. The lamps in
-common use,<a id='r484' /><a href='#f484' class='c012'><sup>[484]</sup></a> though sometimes very beautiful in
-shape, were of course fictile,<a id='r485' /><a href='#f485' class='c012'><sup>[485]</sup></a> such as we find in
-great numbers among the ruins of Greek cities, both
-in the mother-country, and in their Egyptian and
-other colonies. Sometimes, however, they were of
-bronze, silver, or massive gold. A very beautiful
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>specimen in this last metal was found, by Lord
-Belmore, among the ruins of an Egyptian temple, a
-short time before my visit to the Nile. In many
-houses were magnificent chandeliers, suspended from
-the ceiling, with numerous branches, which filled
-the apartments<a id='r486' /><a href='#f486' class='c012'><sup>[486]</sup></a> with a flood of light. The most
-remarkable article of this kind which I remember
-was that set up as a votive offering to Hestia, in
-the Prytaneion of Tarentum, by Dionysios the
-Younger, which held as many lamps as there are
-days in the year.<a id='r487' /><a href='#f487' class='c012'><sup>[487]</sup></a> Among people of humble condition
-wooden chandeliers, or candlesticks, were in
-use.<a id='r488' /><a href='#f488' class='c012'><sup>[488]</sup></a> In remoter ages they burned slips of pine-branches,
-the bark of various trees, &amp;c., instead of
-lamps. They were acquainted with the use of horn
-and wicker lanterns.<a id='r489' /><a href='#f489' class='c012'><sup>[489]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Another kind of decoration of Greek houses we
-must not overlook,—their armour and implements
-of war,<a id='r490' /><a href='#f490' class='c012'><sup>[490]</sup></a> with which the poet Alcæos<a id='r491' /><a href='#f491' class='c012'><sup>[491]</sup></a> loved to adorn
-his chambers, though, like Paris, he cared little to
-make any other use of them. “My spacious mansion,”
-exclaims he, “gleams throughout with brazen
-arms. Even along the ceiling are ranged
-the ornaments of Ares, glittering helmets, surmounted
-by white nodding plumes; greaves of polished
-brass are suspended on the walls, with cuirasses
-of linen, while, here and there, about my
-apartments, are scattered hollow shields. Elsewhere,
-you behold scimitars of Chalcis, and baldricks,
-and the short vest which we wear beneath our
-armour.”<a id='r492' /><a href='#f492' class='c012'><sup>[492]</sup></a> Besides the articles enumerated by the
-poet, there were shield-cases, sheaths for their spears,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>quivers curiously adorned, feathered arrows, and bows
-of polished horn, tipped at either end with gold.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>From these gorgeous and costly commodities the
-reader, we fear, will be reluctant to accompany us
-into the kitchen, where we must pick our way among
-kneading-troughs, pots and pans, Delphian cutlery<a id='r493' /><a href='#f493' class='c012'><sup>[493]</sup></a>
-and honey-jars.<a id='r494' /><a href='#f494' class='c012'><sup>[494]</sup></a> But as without these the warriors,
-as Homer himself acknowledges, could make but
-little use of their weapons, it is absolutely necessary
-we should inquire into their cooking conveniences.
-To commence, however, we must allow<a id='r495' /><a href='#f495' class='c012'><sup>[495]</sup></a> Clearchos
-of Soli, to enumerate a few of the articles found
-among the furniture of this important part of the
-house. There was, first, says he, a three-legged
-table, then a chytra, or earthen pot, which, as in
-France, was always preferred for making soup. It
-was not, however, of coarse brown ware, as with
-us; for, Socrates, in his conversation with Hippias
-on the Beautiful, observes that, when properly made,
-round, smooth, and well-baked, the chytra was very
-handsome, particularly that large sort which contained
-upwards of seven gallons. It had two
-handles, and was evidently glazed.<a id='r496' /><a href='#f496' class='c012'><sup>[496]</sup></a> In stirring the
-chytra while boiling, the Attic cook made choice
-of a ladle turned from the wood of the fig-tree,
-which, it is said, communicated an agreeable flavour
-to the soup, and, in Socrates’s opinion, was preferable
-to one of gold which, being very weighty,
-might chance to crack the pot, spill the broth, and
-extinguish the fire.<a id='r497' /><a href='#f497' class='c012'><sup>[497]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There was used in the kitchen a sort of candelabrum,
-or lamp-stand, which Clearchos merely names.
-Then followed the mortar, the stool, the sponge,
-the cauldron, the kneading-trough, the mug, the oil-flask,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>the rush-basket, the large knife, the cleaver,<a id='r498' /><a href='#f498' class='c012'><sup>[498]</sup></a>
-the wooden platter, the bowl, and the larding-pin.<a id='r499' /><a href='#f499' class='c012'><sup>[499]</sup></a>
-Pollux, who had, doubtless, served an apprenticeship
-to Marcus Aurelius’s cook, gives a formidable
-list of culinary utensils, from which we must be content
-to select the most remarkable. First, however,
-we shall show how important a piece of sponge was
-to an Athenian cook. It often saved him his dinner;
-for, if any of his stewpans, crocks, or kettles,
-had suffered from the embraces of Hephæstos,
-in other words, had got a hole burnt in them, a
-bit of sponge was drawn into the aperture, and on
-went the cooking operations as before.<a id='r500' /><a href='#f500' class='c012'><sup>[500]</sup></a> In some
-houses culinary utensils were regarded as a nuisance,
-the presence of which was not to be constantly endured,
-and, accordingly, when the master desired to
-treat his friends, cookey was despatched early in
-the morning to hire pots and kettles of a broker.
-To this custom Alexis alludes in his Exile:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>How fertile in new tricks is Chæriphon,</div>
- <div class='line'>To sup scot-free and everywhere find welcome!</div>
- <div class='line'>Spies he a broker’s door with pots to let?</div>
- <div class='line'>There from the earliest dawn he takes his stand,</div>
- <div class='line'>To see whose cook arrives; from him he learns</div>
- <div class='line'>Who ’tis that gives the feast,—flies to the house,</div>
- <div class='line'>Watches his time, and, when the yawning door</div>
- <div class='line'>Gapes for the guests, glides in among the first.<a id='r501' /><a href='#f501' class='c012'><sup>[501]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>But we must not pass over the Pyreion or Trypanon,<a id='r502' /><a href='#f502' class='c012'><sup>[502]</sup></a>
-the clumsy contrivance which supplied the
-place of our lucifers, phosphorus, and tinder-boxes.
-This was a hollow piece of wood, in which another
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>piece was turned rapidly till sparks of fire flew out.<a id='r503' /><a href='#f503' class='c012'><sup>[503]</sup></a>
-Soldiers carried these fire-kindlers along with them
-as a necessary part of their kit.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The ordinary fuel of the Greeks consisted chiefly
-of wood and charcoal,<a id='r504' /><a href='#f504' class='c012'><sup>[504]</sup></a> (kept in rush or wicker baskets,)
-though the use of mineral coal was not altogether
-unknown to them.<a id='r505' /><a href='#f505' class='c012'><sup>[505]</sup></a> In Attica, where wood was always
-scarce, they economically made use of vine-cuttings,<a id='r506' /><a href='#f506' class='c012'><sup>[506]</sup></a>
-and even the green branches of the fig tree
-with the leaves on.<a id='r507' /><a href='#f507' class='c012'><sup>[507]</sup></a> The charcoal of Acharnæ, the
-best probably in the country, was sometimes prepared
-from the scarlet oak.<a id='r508' /><a href='#f508' class='c012'><sup>[508]</sup></a> To prevent the wood,
-used in their saloons, halls, and drawing-rooms from
-smoking, it was often boiled<a id='r509' /><a href='#f509' class='c012'><sup>[509]</sup></a> in water or steeped in
-dregs of oil. The use of the bellows<a id='r510' /><a href='#f510' class='c012'><sup>[510]</sup></a> was known
-in Hellas from the remotest antiquity. They had
-likewise a kind of osier flap, with a handle, and
-shaped like a fan, which at times supplied the place
-of a pair of bellows.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There were chopping-blocks<a id='r511' /><a href='#f511' class='c012'><sup>[511]</sup></a> both of wood and
-stone, mortars,<a id='r512' /><a href='#f512' class='c012'><sup>[512]</sup></a> fish-kettles, frying-pans, and spits of
-all dimensions,<a id='r513' /><a href='#f513' class='c012'><sup>[513]</sup></a> some being so diminutive that thrushes
-and other small birds could be roasted on them.
-Their ends in the heroic ages rested on stone hobs,
-but afterwards andirons were invented, probably of
-fanciful shape as in modern France. Occasionally
-they would appear to have been manufactured of
-lead. To these we may add the ovens, the bean
-and barley-roasters, the sieves of bronze and other
-materials, the wine-strainers in the form of colanders,
-the crate for earthern-ware, and the chafing-dish.<a id='r514' /><a href='#f514' class='c012'><sup>[514]</sup></a></p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f375'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r375'>375</a>. This profusion of wearing
-apparel was laid up in trunks
-and <em>mallekins</em> of wickerwork.
-The former were called κιβωτοὶ,
-the latter κίσται.—Casaub. ad
-Theoph. Char. p. 233. Clem.
-Alexand. Pæd. iii. Hesych. v.
-v. κιβωτὸς—κίστη. Mention is
-also made of presses.—Mazois,
-Pal. de Scaur. p. 120.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f376'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r376'>376</a>. Xenoph. Œconom. ix. 6, sqq.
-Aristot. Œconom. i. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f377'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r377'>377</a>. Cicero ap. Columell. De Re
-Rust. xii. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f378'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r378'>378</a>. Odysseus had a storehouse
-of this kind in his palace at
-Ithaca.—Odyss. χ. 442, 459,
-466.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f379'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r379'>379</a>. Xen. Œconom. ix. 10. 57.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f380'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r380'>380</a>. That the sycophants were
-sometimes troublesome, however,
-is certain; that is to say, in later
-ages. Speaking of the time of
-his youth, Isocrates says:—Οὐδεὶς
-οὔτ᾽ ἀπεκρύπτετο τὴν οὐσίαν
-οὔτ᾽ ὤκνει συμβάλλειν. κ. τ. λ.—Areop.
-§ 12. Cf. Bergmann. in
-loc. p. 362. But their persecution
-must always have been confined
-to a very few individuals,
-as people generally continued to
-display whatever they possessed
-down to the final overthrow of
-the state.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f381'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r381'>381</a>. Aristoph. Acharn. 398.—<cite>Mitchell.</cite>
-The learned editor fails
-to remark how little this custom
-harmonizes with the fears which
-he imagines rich people felt at
-Athens.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f382'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r382'>382</a>. On the attractive power of
-this substance, see Plat. Tim. t.
-vii. p. 118.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f383'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r383'>383</a>. Athen. v. 45. Lys. Frag.
-46. Orat. Att. t. ii. p. 647.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f384'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r384'>384</a>. Deipnosoph. xi. 78.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f385'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r385'>385</a>. α. 111. 138.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f386'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r386'>386</a>. This is also the opinion of
-Potter, ii. 376, 377; and Damm.
-in v. τράπεζα, col. 1822.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f387'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r387'>387</a>. Odyss. τ. 259. Pind. Olymp.
-i. 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f388'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r388'>388</a>. κ. 354, seq. 361, seq. In
-the letters attributed to Plato we
-find mention made of silver tables.
-t. viii. p. 397. Sometimes, also,
-of brass. Athen. ix. 75.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f389'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r389'>389</a>. Plin. Nat. Hist. xvi. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f390'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r390'>390</a>. Athen. xi. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f391'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r391'>391</a>. Athen. ii. 31.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f392'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r392'>392</a>. Paradise Regained, iv. 114,
-seq. where see Mitford’s curious
-and learned note. ii. 350, seq. and
-cf. Plin. v. 1. t. ii. p. 259. Hard.
-not. a. 261. xiii. 29. t. iv. p. 746,
-sqq. Petronius speaks of the
-“citrea mensa,” p. 157. Erhard.
-Symbol. ad Petron. 709, seq.
-shows that Numidian marble was
-in use at Rome.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f393'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r393'>393</a>. Potter, ii. 377.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f394'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r394'>394</a>. In the Antichita di Ercolano,
-we have the representation of a
-very handsome armed chair, with
-upright back, beautifully turned
-legs, and thick and soft cushions,
-with low footstool, t. i. tav. 29.
-p. 155. Athen. xi. 72.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f395'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r395'>395</a>. Pierres Gravées, du Cabinet
-du Duc d’Orleans, t. i. No. 46.
-Cf. No. 7, representing Zeus thus
-seated.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f396'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r396'>396</a>. Odyss. η. 162. Il. σ. 390, 422.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f397'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r397'>397</a>. Athen. xi. 48. i. 60. ii. 29.
-Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 468. Cf.
-Xenoph. Memor. ii. 1, 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f398'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r398'>398</a>. This bedstead was called
-δέμνιον; (Odyss. η. 336, seq.)
-when heaped with soft mattresses
-it was πυκινὸν λέχος (345);
-εὐνὴ was the term applied to the
-whole, bed and bedstead. Iliad.
-ω. 644. Odyss. δ. 297, &amp;c. Pind.
-Nem. i. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f399'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r399'>399</a>. Odyss. ψ. 189, seq. Schol. ad
-Il. γ. 448.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f400'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r400'>400</a>. Plat. de Legg. t. viii. p. 397.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f401'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r401'>401</a>. Athen. vi. 67. ii. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f402'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r402'>402</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 530.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f403'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r403'>403</a>. Lucian. Luc., sive Asin. §
-53. Bedsteads of solid gold are
-spoken of in scripture.—Esther i.
-6. Bochart. Geog. Sac. i. 6. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f404'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r404'>404</a>. Athen. xii. 9, 55.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f405'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r405'>405</a>. No. 34.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f406'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r406'>406</a>. Il. β. 697. δ. 383.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f407'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r407'>407</a>. Athen. xi. 72.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f408'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r408'>408</a>. Athen. i. 32.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f409'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r409'>409</a>. Xen. Mem. ii. 1. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f410'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r410'>410</a>. Palm. Exercit. in Auct. Græc.
-p. 191. We find mention in ancient
-authors of certain tribes who
-went clad in garments covered
-with the feathers of birds. Senec.
-Epist. 90.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f411'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r411'>411</a>. Athen. vi. 37.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f412'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r412'>412</a>. Athen. ii. 29, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f413'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r413'>413</a>. Gitone, Nozze di Ulisse è Penelope,
-Il Costume, &amp;c. tav. 67.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f414'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r414'>414</a>. See the mattress on which the
-statue of Hermaphroditos reclines
-in the Louvre.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f415'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r415'>415</a>. Il. β. 42, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f416'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r416'>416</a>. Esther i. 6. Lament, iv. 5.
-Bochart. Geograph. Sac. i. 6. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f417'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r417'>417</a>. Geog. Sac. i. 6. 28, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f418'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r418'>418</a>. Eustath. ad Odyss. α. p. 32.
-30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f419'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r419'>419</a>. Athen. ii. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f420'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r420'>420</a>. In old times the whole bedroom
-was sometimes perfumed.—Iliad,
-γ. 382.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f421'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r421'>421</a>. Athen. ii. 30. Aristoph.
-Frag. incert. 2. Brunck.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f422'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r422'>422</a>. Deipnosoph. xi. 55. Casaub.
-ad Theoph. Char. p. 172.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f423'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r423'>423</a>. Feith. Antiq. Homer, iii. 8.
-4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f424'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r424'>424</a>. Very nearly the same customs
-prevail in Persia at the present
-day, except that the rules of
-etiquette seem to be still more
-rigidly observed. “It is a general
-custom with the kings of
-Persia to eat in solitary grandeur.
-The late Shah, however,
-would sometimes have
-select portions of his family to
-breakfast with him.” On which
-occasion, “they used to squat
-round him in the form of a
-crescent, of which he was the
-centre, and were all placed
-scrupulously according to rank.”—Fowler,
-i. 48.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f425'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r425'>425</a>. Athen. vi. 58. Vales. not.
-in Maussac. p. 282, where he corrects
-the old reading of the text.
-Cf. Xenoph. Hellen. vii. 1. 38.
-Plut. Pelop. § 30. Artax. § 22.
-Valer. Max. vi. 3. extern. 2.
-Demosth. de Fals. Leg. § 42,
-where the orator accuses Timagoras
-of having received a bribe
-of forty talents.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f426'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r426'>426</a>. Athen. ii. 31.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f427'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r427'>427</a>. Xen. Anab. i. 5. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f428'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r428'>428</a>. Nub. 10. Cf. Av. 122.
-Concionat. 838. ibique not. Pollux,
-vii. 382, seq. x. 542.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f429'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r429'>429</a>. Cf. Poll. vi. 105.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f430'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r430'>430</a>. Athen. xv. 42. Cf. Meineke.
-Curæ Crit. in Com. Frag. p. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f431'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r431'>431</a>. Mazois, Pal. de Scaur, p.
-103. Tibull. iii. 3, 17, seq.
-Athen. iv. 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f432'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r432'>432</a>. Athen. i. 49.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f433'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r433'>433</a>. Il. ι. 200.—The use of mats
-first prevailed, (Festus, in v.
-Scirpus.) but, as luxury increased,
-superb carpets were substituted.—Æschyl.
-Agam. 842. Tryphiod.
-Ἅλωσις Ἴλιου. 343, seq.
-Hemster. Comm. in Poll. viii.
-133. p. 287. Cf. Klausen.
-Comm. in Æschyl. Agam. p.
-197, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f434'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r434'>434</a>. Il. π. 224. Poll. vi. 2. Synes.
-Epist. 61.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f435'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r435'>435</a>. Eidyll, xv. 125.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f436'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r436'>436</a>. A beautiful simile, which
-Virgil has imitated—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Muscosi fontes, et <em>somno mollior herba</em>.”</span>—Eclog. vii. 45.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Shakespeare, too, has, without
-imitation, struck upon a similar
-thought, where the amorous Troilus
-thus describes himself:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“But I am weaker than a woman’s tear,</div>
- <div class='line'><em>Tamer than sleep</em>, fonder than ignorance.”</div>
- <div class='line in24'>Troilus &amp; Cressida, i. 1.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f437'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r437'>437</a>. Athen. iv. 2, sqq. Cf. iii. 100.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f438'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r438'>438</a>. Athen. iv. 42.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f439'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r439'>439</a>. Deipnosoph. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>ut sup.</i></span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f440'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r440'>440</a>. Athen. ix. 75.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f441'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r441'>441</a>. Plat. De Rep. i. t. vi. p. 86.
-Cf. Tim. t. vii. p. 77.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f442'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r442'>442</a>. Athen. xi. 3. Poll. x. 122.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f443'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r443'>443</a>. Le Comte de Caylus, Mem.
-de l’Acad. des Inscrip, t. xxiii. p.
-353.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f444'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r444'>444</a>. Athen. xi. 14. Among the
-Egyptians were vases of papyrus.
-Bochart. Geog. Sac. i. 240.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f445'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r445'>445</a>. Bruyerin, De Re Cibaria, l.
-iii. c. 9. This goblet could by no
-means have been a diminutive
-one, if Helen resembled her countrywomen
-generally, who were
-celebrated for their large bosoms:
-βαθύκολποι.—Anacr. v. 14.
-Bruyerin’s authority is Plin. Hist.
-Nat. xxxii. 23. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Minervæ templum
-habet Lindos, insula Rhodiorum,
-in quo Helena sacravit
-calycem ex electro. Adjicit historia,
-mammæ suæ mensura.”</span>
-This, I suppose, is what Rousseau
-calls <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Cette coupe célèbre à qui le
-plus beau sein du monde servit
-de moule.”</span>—Nouv. Heloise,
-1<sup>re</sup> partie. Lett. 23. t. i. p. 144,—though,
-I confess, I am not acquainted
-with the authors by
-whom it has been celebrated. Several
-votive offerings, representing
-the female breast, may be seen
-in the British Museum, among
-the Elgin Marbles. But the most
-curious relic of the ancient female
-form is mentioned in the following
-passage: “In the street just
-out of the gate of this villa I
-lately saw a skeleton dug out;
-and by desiring the labourers
-to remove the skull and bones
-gently, I perceived distinctly
-the perfect mould of every feature
-of the face, and that the
-eyes had been shut. I also saw
-distinctly the impression of the
-large folds of the drapery of the
-toga, and some of the cloth itself
-sticking to the earth. The
-city was first covered by a
-shower of hot pumice-stones and
-ashes, and then by a shower of
-small ashes mixed with water.
-It was in the latter stratum
-that the skeleton above described
-was found. In the Museum
-at Portici a piece of this
-sort of hardened mud is preserved;
-it is stamped with
-the impression of the breast
-of a woman, with a thin drapery
-over it. The skeleton I
-saw dug out was not above five
-feet from the surface. It is
-very extraordinary that the impression
-of the body and face
-should have remained from the
-year 79 to this day, especially
-as I found the earth so little
-hardened that it separated upon
-the least touch.”—Sir W. Hamilton,
-Acc. of Discov. at Pompeii,
-p. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f446'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r446'>446</a>. Athen. xi. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f447'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r447'>447</a>. Athen. xi. 15. Polyb. xii.
-15. 6. xv. 35. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f448'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r448'>448</a>. See ariner’s Account, chap. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f449'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r449'>449</a>. Athen. xi. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f450'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r450'>450</a>. Iliad. ω. 234.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f451'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r451'>451</a>. Athen. xi. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f452'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r452'>452</a>. Bentley, Dissert. on Phal. i.
-175, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f453'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r453'>453</a>. Plin. xxxiii. 2. Juven. v. 42.
-Athen. iv. 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f454'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r454'>454</a>. Athen. xi. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f455'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r455'>455</a>. Athen. xi. 25, states this from
-Philetas: but Kayser, in his edition
-of that author’s fragments,
-seems to have overlooked this
-passage.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f456'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r456'>456</a>. Athen. xi. 36. On the Cantharos,
-see § 48.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f457'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r457'>457</a>. Athen. xi. 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f458'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r458'>458</a>. Athen. xi. 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f459'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r459'>459</a>. We find in Winkelmann,
-Hist. de l’Art t. i. p. 23, the representation
-of a glass grammateion,
-on which are the words:
-Bibe Vivas Multis Annis. See a
-detailed description of this vase
-by the Marquis Trivulsi, p. 46.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f460'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r460'>460</a>. Athen. xi. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f461'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r461'>461</a>. Theopomp. ap. Athen. xi. 34.
-51.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f462'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r462'>462</a>. Athen. xi. 35.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f463'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r463'>463</a>. Cf. Bentley on the Epist. of
-Phalaris i. 169–189.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f464'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r464'>464</a>. Alexis, ap. Athen. xi. 42.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f465'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r465'>465</a>. Hist. Plant. v. 4. 2. cum not.
-Schnei. t. iii. p. 426.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f466'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r466'>466</a>. Athen. xi. 41. ἄλλοι δὲ ἱστοροῦσι,
-θηρίκλειον ὀνομασθῆναι τὸ
-ποτήριον διὰ τὸ δορὰς θηρίων αὐτῷ
-ἐντετυπῶσθαι.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f467'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r467'>467</a>. Bœckh. Pub. Econ. of Athens,
-ii. 254.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f468'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r468'>468</a>. Pind. Frag. Incert. 44. i. 244.
-Dissen. Comm. ii. 659. Jacob.
-Anthol. vii. 336. Athen. xi. 51.
-Cf. Damm. v. κέρας.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f469'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r469'>469</a>. Anab. vi. 1. 4. vii. 3. 24, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f470'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r470'>470</a>. Xen. Conv. vii. 4. They were
-sometimes square and washed
-with silver. Caylus, Rec. d’Antiq.
-t. vi. p. 398. Cf. Cœl. Rhodig.
-xv. 12, 13. Plat. Tim. t. vii. 52,
-seq. 61. Lucian. Amor. § 39. Ter.
-Adelph. ii. 3. 61. Cicero in Pison.
-c. 29. Poll. vii. 95. x. 126, 164.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f471'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r471'>471</a>. Athen. x. 31.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f472'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r472'>472</a>. Theoph. de Lapid. §. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f473'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r473'>473</a>. It is to be observed, that before
-the application of quicksilver
-in the construction of these glasses
-(which I presume is of no great
-antiquity) the reflection of images
-by such specula must have been
-effected by their being besmeared
-behind, or tinged through with
-some dark colour, especially black,
-which would obstruct the refraction
-of the rays of light. Nixon
-in Philosoph. Trans, t. iv. p. 602.
-Cf. Plin. xxxvi. 26. § 67.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f474'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r474'>474</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 742.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f475'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r475'>475</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 741.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f476'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r476'>476</a>. Plaut. in Mostell. i. 3. 101.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f477'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r477'>477</a>. Plin. xxxiii. 45. Senec.
-Quæst. Nat. i. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f478'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r478'>478</a>. Paus. viii. 37. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f479'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r479'>479</a>. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 86.
-Plin. Hist. Nat. vii. 39. xxxv.
-36. xxxiii. 56.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f480'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r480'>480</a>. Athen. xi. 3. Menage, Observat.
-in Diog. Laert. vi. 32.
-p. 138. a. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f481'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r481'>481</a>. Poll. i. 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f482'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r482'>482</a>. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 86.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f483'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r483'>483</a>. An elegant candelabrum, ornamented
-with the figure of a
-twisted serpent, and a flight of
-birds resting here and there on
-the branches, is found in the
-Mus. Cortonens. tab. 80.—They
-were sometimes of gilt wood.—Winkelmann,
-i. 34.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f484'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r484'>484</a>. Poll. ii. 72. vi. 103. x. 115.
-Soph. Ajax. 285, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f485'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r485'>485</a>. Poll. x. 192.—On the brazen
-ladle (ἀρύταινα) for filling lamps
-with oil, see Sch. Aristoph. Eq.
-1087.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f486'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r486'>486</a>. Athen. xi. 48.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f487'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r487'>487</a>. Id. xv. 60.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f488'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r488'>488</a>. Id xv. 61.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f489'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r489'>489</a>. Id. xv. 59.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f490'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r490'>490</a>. The custom, also, in Lydia.
-Herod. i. 34.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f491'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r491'>491</a>. Alcæi Frag. vi. p. 95. Anacr.
-ed. Glasg.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f492'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r492'>492</a>. Κύπασσις of which Pollux furnishes
-us with an exact description:
-ὁ δὲ κύπασσις, λίνου πεποίητο,
-σμικρὸς χιτωνίσκος, ἄχρι μέσου
-μηροῦ, ὡς Ἴων φησὶ, βραχὺς λίνου
-κύπασσις, ἐς μηρὸν μέσον ἐσταλμένος.
-(vii. 60) That is, “the <em>kupassis</em>
-is a small linen chiton,
-reaching mid-thigh, according to
-Ion, who says, ‘a short linen
-kupassis, descending to the middle
-of the thigh.’”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f493'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r493'>493</a>. Hesych. v. Δελφικὴ μάχαιρα.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f494'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r494'>494</a>. Athen. xi. 50, ὀξίνη, a vinegar
-cruet.—Sch. Aristoph. Eq.
-1301. ὑρχη, a pickle-jar.—Vesp.
-676.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f495'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r495'>495</a>. Athen. xiv. 60.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f496'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r496'>496</a>. Plat. Hipp. Maj. t. v. p. 425,
-sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f497'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r497'>497</a>. Plat. Opp. t. v. p. 429. seq.
-Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 244.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f498'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r498'>498</a>. See a figure, probably, of that
-instrument in Mus. Chiaramont.
-tav. 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f499'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r499'>499</a>. Athen. xiv. 60. Poll. x. 95,
-sqq.—We find mention, also, of
-the cheese-rasp.—Schol. Aristoph.
-Pac. 251.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f500'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r500'>500</a>. Aristoph. Acharn. 439. Brunck
-is vastly scandalised at the idea
-of the Scholiast, that any man
-should have been so poor in Attica
-as to be driven to mend his
-pots in the way commemorated
-in the text; but a German commentator,
-who had looked more
-into kitchens, is satisfied that
-the practice prevailed, and was
-perfectly rational. In fact, similar
-contrivances are still resorted
-to, even in England.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f501'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r501'>501</a>. Athen. iv. 58.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f502'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r502'>502</a>. Theoph. Histor. Plant. v. 9. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f503'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r503'>503</a>. Plat. de Rep. iv. t. vi. p. 194.
-Pollux. x. 146. vii. 113.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f504'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r504'>504</a>. Cf. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn.
-34, 302, 314. Plat. de Legg. t.
-viii. 116.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f505'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r505'>505</a>. Theoph. de Lap. § 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f506'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r506'>506</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Lysist. 308.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f507'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r507'>507</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 312.
-Cf. Schol. Vesp. 145, 326.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f508'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r508'>508</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Acharn. 587.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f509'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r509'>509</a>. Plin. Hist. Nat. xv. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f510'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r510'>510</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 853.
-Athen. ii. 71.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f511'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r511'>511</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 319.
-Vesp. 238. κρεάγρα a flesh-hook.
-Sch. Eq. 769.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f512'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r512'>512</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 924.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f513'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r513'>513</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 179.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f514'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r514'>514</a>. Aristoph. Acharn. 34. Cooks’
-tables were made of wicker-work
-or olive-wood. Etym. Mag. 298.
-36, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>
- <h3 class='c002'>CHAPTER III. <br /> FOOD OF HOMERIC TIMES—MEAT, FISH, ETC.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Having described the implements with which a
-Greek meal was prepared, let us next inquire of
-what materials it consisted, and how it was eaten.
-There will be no occasion in pursuing this investigation
-to adhere to any very strict method. It will probably
-be sufficient to make a few broad divisions and
-a flexible outline which we can fill up as the materials
-fall in our way.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>What the original inhabitants of Hellas ate might
-no doubt be satisfactorily inferred from the accounts
-we possess of nations still existing in the same state
-of civilisation. But it is nevertheless curious to examine
-their traditions relating to the subject. Ælian,
-who has preserved many notices of remote antiquity,
-gives a list of various kinds of food, which, as
-he would appear to think, constituted the chief, if
-not the whole, sustenance of several ancient nations.
-The Arcadians lived, he says, upon acorns; the Argives
-upon pears, the Athenians upon figs;<a id='r515' /><a href='#f515' class='c012'><sup>[515]</sup></a> the wild
-pear-tree furnished the Tirynthians with their favourite
-food; a sort of cane was the chief dainty of the
-Indians; of the Karamanians<a id='r516' /><a href='#f516' class='c012'><sup>[516]</sup></a> the date; millet of
-the Mæotæ and Sauromatæ; while the Persians<a id='r517' /><a href='#f517' class='c012'><sup>[517]</sup></a> delighted
-chiefly in cardamums and pistachio nuts.<a id='r518' /><a href='#f518' class='c012'><sup>[518]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>The tradition that while some degree of civilisation
-already existed in the East, many tribes of
-Hellas still subsisted upon acorns, has given rise
-to much curious disquisition. It is abundantly clear,
-however, that the fruit of our English oak is not
-what is meant; for, upon this, no one who has
-made the experiment will for one moment imagine
-that man could subsist; but every kind of production
-comprehended by the Greeks under the term
-“acorn,” (βάλανος). Gerard, an old English botanist,
-enumerates chestnuts among acorns, and Xenophon
-calls dates “the acorns of the palm-tree.” The
-mast, however, of a tree common in Greece, would,
-as Mitford thinks, afford a not unwholesome nourishment,
-though he is quite right in supposing that
-it could not have been a favourite food in more
-civilised times.<a id='r519' /><a href='#f519' class='c012'><sup>[519]</sup></a> While upon the subject of acorns,
-this ingenious and able writer appears disposed to
-make somewhat merry with a certain project of
-Socrates. If we rightly comprehend him, which
-very possibly we do not, he means to accuse the
-philosopher of reducing the citizens of his airy republic
-to very short commons indeed,<a id='r520' /><a href='#f520' class='c012'><sup>[520]</sup></a> nothing but
-a little beech-mast, and a few myrtle-berries. This
-borders strongly on the notion of the comic writer,
-who describes the Athenians as living on air and
-hope. But though abstemious enough, Socrates
-was not so unreasonable as to require even his Utopians
-to fight and philosophise upon a diet so scanty.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>Before he comes to the mast and the myrtle-berries,
-we find him enumerating wheaten and barley bread,
-salt, olives, cheese, and truffles, together with pulse
-and all such herbs as the fields spontaneously produce.
-For a dessert he would indulge them with
-figs, chickpeas, and beans, myrtle-berries, and beech-mast,
-or chestnuts roasted in the fire. Plato was
-aware how the luxurious wits of his time would
-turn up their noses at such primitive diet, and therefore
-brings in Glaucon inquiring,—“If you were
-founding a polity of swine, what other food would
-you provide for them?”<a id='r521' /><a href='#f521' class='c012'><sup>[521]</sup></a> Pausanias remarks, however,
-that acorns long continued to be a common
-article of food in Arcadia,<a id='r522' /><a href='#f522' class='c012'><sup>[522]</sup></a> but only those of the
-fagus.<a id='r523' /><a href='#f523' class='c012'><sup>[523]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>If we may credit some writers the ancient inhabitants
-of Hellas made use of food much more
-revolting than acorns, having been, in fact, cannibals
-who devoured each other. There, no doubt,
-existed among the Greeks of later times traditions
-of a state of society in which human flesh was
-eaten by certain fierce and lawless individuals, such
-as Polyphemos, but nothing in their literature can
-authorise us to infer that the practice was ever
-general. Superstition seems on very extraordinary
-occasions to have impelled them into the guilt of
-human sacrifice, when the officiating priests, and,
-perhaps, some few others, probably tasted of the
-entrails, and Galen had conversed with individuals
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>who had been led by mere curiosity to sup on man’s
-flesh, and found its flavour to resemble that of tender
-beef.<a id='r524' /><a href='#f524' class='c012'><sup>[524]</sup></a> But instances of this kind prove nothing;
-for how often does it not happen that mariners are
-even now driven by distressful circumstances to
-slaughter and eat their companions at sea! And
-yet shall we on this account pass for anthropophagi
-with posterity?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Greeks, however, were not content with one
-set of traditions, or upon the whole inclined to give
-currency to the most gloomy. On the contrary,
-their poets casting backward the light of their imagination,
-and kindling up the landscapes of the far
-past, called up the vision of the golden age, when
-neither the domestic hearth<a id='r525' /><a href='#f525' class='c012'><sup>[525]</sup></a> nor the altars of the
-gods were stained with blood, and the fruits of the
-field,—milk, honey, cheese, and butter sufficed to
-sustain life. But we must escape from these shadowy
-times, and come down to the age of beef
-and mutton.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Food is, with great precision, divided by Aristotle
-into moist and dry, that is, into meat and drink.<a id='r526' /><a href='#f526' class='c012'><sup>[526]</sup></a>
-A classification, the credit of which, as Feith contends,
-belongs to Homer.<a id='r527' /><a href='#f527' class='c012'><sup>[527]</sup></a> In this poet, bread (σίτος),
-the principal article of provision, is made indiscriminately
-both from wheat and barley, though the
-latter grain is thought to have been first in use.<a id='r528' /><a href='#f528' class='c012'><sup>[528]</sup></a>
-Herodotus found, in the matter of bread, a peculiar
-taste among the Egyptians; barley and wheat they
-despised, though in no country are finer produced
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>than in Egypt; giving, very strangely, the preference
-to the <em>olyra</em>, by some supposed to be the
-spelt, but more probably Syrian <em>dhourra</em>, ears of
-which I observed sculptured on the interior of
-the pronaos of Leto’s temple at Esneh. Bread, in
-the Homeric age, was brought to table in a reed
-basket, the use of silver bread-baskets, or trays, not
-having been then, as Donatus thinks, introduced.
-But in this the learned commentator is mistaken;
-or, if they had no silver trays, at least they had
-them of brass and gold, to match their tables of
-massive silver.<a id='r529' /><a href='#f529' class='c012'><sup>[529]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Next to bread, flesh, in the heroic ages, was the
-greatest stay-stomach, particularly beef, kid, mutton,
-and pork. They had not, however, as yet discovered
-many ways of cooking it. Nearly all their
-culinary ingenuity reduced itself in fact to roasting
-and boiling, a circumstance which led Athenæus,<a id='r530' /><a href='#f530' class='c012'><sup>[530]</sup></a>
-and the president Goguet to look back with great
-pity and concern on these unhappy ages when even
-princes, generally gourmands, were deprived of the
-supreme felicity of dining on ragouts, soups, and
-boiled brains. Servius,<a id='r531' /><a href='#f531' class='c012'><sup>[531]</sup></a> too, and Varro are inclined
-to participate in this feeling of commiseration, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>the latter observes, that among their own ancestors
-people were originally compelled to dine on roast
-meat, though in the course of time the arts of boiling
-and soup-making were introduced.<a id='r532' /><a href='#f532' class='c012'><sup>[532]</sup></a> With regard
-to Homer’s heroes, however, our sympathies
-are somewhat relieved by finding, that learned men
-have overrated the extent of their misfortunes.
-They were not altogether ignorant of the art of
-boiling, as Athenæus himself admits, where he mentions
-the boiled shin of beef which one of the
-drunken suitors flung at Odysseus’s head.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The flesh of young animals was not habitually
-eaten in those early ages, so that in denominating
-them public devourers of kids and lambs, Priam
-accuses his sons of scandalous luxury.<a id='r533' /><a href='#f533' class='c012'><sup>[533]</sup></a> In fact,
-with the design of preventing a scarcity of animal
-food, a law was enacted at Athens prohibiting the
-slaughter of an unshorn lamb, and from the same
-motive the Emperor Valens forbade the use of
-veal.<a id='r534' /><a href='#f534' class='c012'><sup>[534]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But there was nothing beyond the difficulty of
-catching it, to prevent the Homeric heroes from
-making free with game, such as venison, and the
-flesh of the wild goat;<a id='r535' /><a href='#f535' class='c012'><sup>[535]</sup></a> and from a passage in
-the Iliad, Feith infers, that even birds were not
-spared.<a id='r536' /><a href='#f536' class='c012'><sup>[536]</sup></a> We trust, however, that they feathered
-and cooked them, and did not devour them <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>au naturel</i></span>,
-as certain Hindùs do their sheep, wool and
-all. The Egyptians had a very peculiar taste in
-ornithophagy, and actually ate some kinds of birds
-quite raw, as they likewise did several species of
-fish; and this not in those early ages when Isis
-and Osiris had not reclaimed the bogs of the Nile,
-but in times quite modern, when Herodotus travelled
-in their country, and heard their vain priests
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>lay claim to having civilised Hellas. Both birds
-and fish, indeed, underwent a certain sort of preparation.
-Of the latter some were dried in the sun,
-others preserved in pickle, and the same process
-was applied to ducks, quails, and many other species
-of birds, after which they were eaten raw. We
-recommend the practice to our gourmands, and have
-no doubt they would find a pickled owl or jackdaw,
-devoured in the Egyptian style, altogether as wholesome
-as diseased goose’s liver. It must not, however,
-be dissembled, that many critics, concerned
-for the gastronomic reputation of the Egyptians,
-contend that, by the word which we translate “to
-pickle,”<a id='r537' /><a href='#f537' class='c012'><sup>[537]</sup></a> Herodotus must have meant some kind
-of cookery; to which Wesseling replies, that, without
-designing to impugn the taste of those gentlemen,
-he must yet refuse to accept of their interpretation,
-since by observing that they roasted or
-boiled all other species of birds and fish, such as
-were sacred excepted, the historian evidently intends
-to say, that these were eaten raw. The
-learned editor might have added, that Herodotus
-uses the same term in treating of the process of
-embalming,<a id='r538' /><a href='#f538' class='c012'><sup>[538]</sup></a> and we nowhere learn that the mummies
-were cooked before they were deposited in
-the tombs.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But to return to the Homeric warriors; it seems
-extremely<a id='r539' /><a href='#f539' class='c012'><sup>[539]</sup></a> probable, notwithstanding the opinions
-of several writers of great authority, both ancient
-and modern, that the demi-gods, and heroes before
-Troy, admitted that effeminate dainty called <em>fish</em>
-to their warlike tables. At all events the common
-people understood the value of this kind of
-food,<a id='r540' /><a href='#f540' class='c012'><sup>[540]</sup></a> and it may safely be inferred that their betters,
-never slow in appropriating delicacies to their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>own use, soon perceived that fish is no bad eating.
-Hunger would at least reconcile them to the flavour
-of broiled salmon, as we find by the example of
-Odysseus’s companions, who devoured both fish and
-fowl.<a id='r541' /><a href='#f541' class='c012'><sup>[541]</sup></a> This is acknowledged by Athenæus;<a id='r542' /><a href='#f542' class='c012'><sup>[542]</sup></a> but
-Plutarch contends, that they could have been driven
-to it only by extreme necessity. At all
-other times he imagines they temperately abstained
-from food of so exciting a kind,<a id='r543' /><a href='#f543' class='c012'><sup>[543]</sup></a> though Homer
-describes the Hellespont as abounding in fish,<a id='r544' /><a href='#f544' class='c012'><sup>[544]</sup></a> and
-more than once alludes to the practice of drawing
-it thence with hook and line.<a id='r545' /><a href='#f545' class='c012'><sup>[545]</sup></a> Thus we find that
-angling can trace back its pedigree to the heroic
-ages; and the disciple of the rod as he trudges
-with Izaak in his pocket through bog and mire in
-search of a good bite, may solace his imagination
-with reminiscences of Troy and the Hellespont. But
-the good people of those days did not wholly rely
-for a supply of fish on this very tedious and inefficient
-process; they had discovered the use of nets,
-which Homer describes the fisherman casting on
-the sea shore.<a id='r546' /><a href='#f546' class='c012'><sup>[546]</sup></a> Though the poet, however, had
-omitted all allusion to this kind of food, its use
-might, nevertheless, have been confidently inferred,
-as may that of milk, common to all nations, though
-Homer mentions it only, I believe, in the case of
-the Hippomolgians,<a id='r547' /><a href='#f547' class='c012'><sup>[547]</sup></a> and the cannibal Polyphemus,
-who understood also the luxury of cheese.<a id='r548' /><a href='#f548' class='c012'><sup>[548]</sup></a> Circe,
-too, who being a goddess may be supposed to have
-been a connoisseur in dainties, presents her paramour
-Odysseus with a curious mixture, consisting
-of cheese, honey, flour, and wine,<a id='r549' /><a href='#f549' class='c012'><sup>[549]</sup></a> very savoury, no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>doubt, and by old Nestor considered of salutary nature,
-since Hecamedè, at his order, prepares a plentiful
-supply of it for the wounded Machaon. Along with
-this posset, garlic was eaten as a relish.<a id='r550' /><a href='#f550' class='c012'><sup>[550]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Fruits and potherbs, as may be supposed, were
-already in use.<a id='r551' /><a href='#f551' class='c012'><sup>[551]</sup></a> Garlic we have mentioned above;
-and Odysseus, after all his wars and wanderings,
-<a id='corr133.8'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='recals'>recalls</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_133.8'><ins class='correction' title='recals'>recalls</ins></a></span> to mind with a quite natural pleasure the
-apple and pear trees which his father, Laertes, had
-given him when a boy.<a id='r552' /><a href='#f552' class='c012'><sup>[552]</sup></a> Alcinoös possessed a fine
-orchard, where, though the process of grafting is
-supposed to have been then unknown, we find a
-variety of beautiful fruits, as pears, apples, pomegranates,
-delicious figs, olives, and grapes; and in
-his kitchen-garden were all kinds of vegetables.<a id='r553' /><a href='#f553' class='c012'><sup>[553]</sup></a>
-And the shadowy boughs of a similar orchard, covered
-with golden fruit, wave over Tantalos in
-Hades, but are blown back by the wind whenever
-the wretched old sinner stretches forth his hand
-towards them.<a id='r554' /><a href='#f554' class='c012'><sup>[554]</sup></a> From this circumstance Athenæus,
-with much ingenuity, infers that fruit was actually
-in use before the Trojan war! Apples seem then,
-as now, to have constituted a favourite portion of
-the dessert, though among the Homeric warriors they
-seem sometimes to have formed a principal part of
-the meal; for Servius<a id='r555' /><a href='#f555' class='c012'><sup>[555]</sup></a> describes the primitive repasts
-as consisting of two courses, of which the first
-was animal food, and apples the second.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Salt was in great use in the Homeric age, and by
-the poet sometimes called divine.<a id='r556' /><a href='#f556' class='c012'><sup>[556]</sup></a> Plato, also, in the
-Timæos,<a id='r557' /><a href='#f557' class='c012'><sup>[557]</sup></a> speaks of salt as a thing acceptable to the
-gods, an expression which Plutarch quotes with manifest
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>approbation in a passage where he grows quite
-eloquent in praise of this article, which he denominates
-the condiment of condiments, adding, that of
-some it was numbered among the Graces.<a id='r558' /><a href='#f558' class='c012'><sup>[558]</sup></a> By the
-most ancient Greeks salt was, for this reason, always
-spoken of in conjunction with the table, as in the old
-proverb, where men were advised “never to pass by salt
-or a table,” that is, not to neglect a good dinner.<a id='r559' /><a href='#f559' class='c012'><sup>[559]</sup></a> Poor
-men, who probably had no other seasoning for their
-food, were contemptuously denominated “salt-lickers.”<a id='r560' /><a href='#f560' class='c012'><sup>[560]</sup></a>
-But, in Homer’s time, there existed certain Hellenic
-tribes who had not yet arrived at a knowledge of this
-luxury; among whom, accordingly, even the most aristocratic
-personages were compelled to go without salt
-to their porridge.<a id='r561' /><a href='#f561' class='c012'><sup>[561]</sup></a> The poet has, indeed, omitted to
-mention their names; but Pausanias supposes him to
-have alluded to the more inland clans of Epeirots,
-many of which had not yet, in those ages, acquired
-a knowledge of salt, or even of the sea.<a id='r562' /><a href='#f562' class='c012'><sup>[562]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It appears to be agreed on all hands, that the primitive
-races of men were mere water-drinkers. Accordingly
-they had neither poets nor inn-keepers, nor
-excisemen,—three classes of persons who never flourish
-but where wine, or at least beer, is found.
-Homer more than once alludes to this vicious habit
-of the old world, where, with a sly insinuation of
-contempt,—for he was himself partial to the blood-red
-wine,—he tells us that this or that nation drank,
-like so many oxen or crocodiles, of the waters of
-such or such a river. Thus, when enumerating the
-allies of Ilion, he describes the Zeleians as those who
-sipped the black waters of the Æsepos.<a id='r563' /><a href='#f563' class='c012'><sup>[563]</sup></a> Pindar, too,
-in the hope of obtaining a reputation for sobriety,
-says, he was accustomed to drink the waters of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>Thebes, which, in his opinion, were very delicious,<a id='r564' /><a href='#f564' class='c012'><sup>[564]</sup></a>
-though Hippocrates would unquestionably have been
-of a totally different way of thinking. The Persian,
-and afterwards the Parthian kings, appear in many
-cases to have entertained a temperate predilection
-for the water of certain streams, of which Milton
-has given eternal celebrity to one:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in8'>“Choaspes, amber stream,</div>
- <div class='line'>The drink of none but kings.”<a id='r565' /><a href='#f565' class='c012'><sup>[565]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>But evidently through mistake; for though historians
-pretend that the Parthian monarchs would drink of
-no water save that of the Choaspes, to which Pliny<a id='r566' /><a href='#f566' class='c012'><sup>[566]</sup></a>
-adds the Eulæus, it is by no means said that they
-enjoyed a monopoly of those streams. Perhaps our
-great poet confounded the Choaspes with those Golden
-Waters which, in Athenæus, are said to have
-been wholly reserved for the use of the king and
-his eldest son.<a id='r567' /><a href='#f567' class='c012'><sup>[567]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wine, however, was invented very early in the
-history of the world; and the virtue of sobriety was
-born along with it; for, until then, it had been no
-merit to be sober. With whomsoever its use began,
-wine was well known to Homer’s heroes, one of whom
-speaks of it, in conjunction with bread, as the chief
-root of man’s strength and vigour.<a id='r568' /><a href='#f568' class='c012'><sup>[568]</sup></a> Yet the warriors
-of those ages by no means exhibited that selfish parsimony
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>which led the Romans to debar their matrons
-the use of wine.<a id='r569' /><a href='#f569' class='c012'><sup>[569]</sup></a> In Homer we find women, even
-while very young, permitted the enjoyment of it:
-for example, Nausicaa and her companions, who, in
-setting forth on their washing excursion, are furnished
-by the queen herself with a plentiful supply
-of provisions, and a skin of wine.<a id='r570' /><a href='#f570' class='c012'><sup>[570]</sup></a> Boys, likewise,
-in the heroic ages, met with similar indulgence; for
-Phœnix is represented permitting Achilles to join
-him in his potations before the little urchin knew
-how to drink without spilling it over himself.<a id='r571' /><a href='#f571' class='c012'><sup>[571]</sup></a> This
-practice, however, is very properly condemned by
-Plato, who considered that no person under eighteen
-should be allowed to taste of wine, and even then
-but sparingly.<a id='r572' /><a href='#f572' class='c012'><sup>[572]</sup></a> After thirty, more discretion might,
-he thought, be granted them; though he recommended
-sobriety at all times, save, perhaps, on the anniversary
-festival of Dionysos, and certain other divinities, when
-a merry bowl was judged in keeping with the other
-ceremonies of the day.<a id='r573' /><a href='#f573' class='c012'><sup>[573]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>We shall now pass from the primitive aliments of
-the heroic times to those almost infinite varieties of
-good things which the ingenuity of later ages brought
-into use. The reader, not already familiar with the
-gastronomic fragments of ancient literature, will probably
-be surprised at the omniverous character of
-the Greeks, to whom nothing seems to have come
-amiss, from the nettle-top to the peach, from the
-sow’s metra to the most delicate bird, from the shark
-to the small semi-transparent aphyæ, caught along
-the shores of Attica.<a id='r574' /><a href='#f574' class='c012'><sup>[574]</sup></a> Through this ocean of dainties
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>we shall endeavour to make our way on the following
-plan:—first, it will be our “hint to speak”
-of the more solid kinds of food, as beef, mutton, pork,
-veal; we shall then make a transition to the soups,
-fowls, and fish; next the fruit will claim our attention;
-and, lastly, the several varieties of wines.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It has already been observed, that in the earliest
-ages men wholly abstained from animal food.<a id='r575' /><a href='#f575' class='c012'><sup>[575]</sup></a> Afterwards
-when they began to cast “wolfish eyes” upon
-their mute companions on the globe, the hog is said
-to have been the first creature whose character emboldened
-them to make free with him. They saw
-it endued with less intelligence than other animals;
-and, from its stupidity, inferred that it ought to be
-eaten, its soul merely serving during life, as salt, to
-keep the flesh from putrefying.<a id='r576' /><a href='#f576' class='c012'><sup>[576]</sup></a> The determining
-reason, however, appears to have been, that they
-could make no other use of him, since he would
-neither plough like the ox, nor be saddled and mounted
-like the horse or ass, nor become a pleasant companion,
-or guard the house, like the dog.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It was long before men in any country slew the
-ox for food; his great utility was his protection,
-and in some parts of the East the well-meaning
-priesthood at length compassed him round with the
-armour of superstition, which outlasted the occasion,
-and in India has come down in nearly all its
-strength to our own day. It was otherwise in
-Greece. There common sense quickly dissipated
-the illusion, which, while it was necessary, had
-guarded the ox, and beef became the favourite food
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>of its hardy and active inhabitants, who likewise
-fed indiscriminately on sheep, goats, deer, hares,
-and almost every other animal, wild or tame.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It has been seen that in remote ages fish did
-not constitute any great part of the sustenance of
-the Greeks. But public opinion afterwards underwent
-a very considerable change. From having
-been held in so little estimation as to be left
-chiefly to the use of the poor, in the historical
-ages it became their greatest luxury.<a id='r577' /><a href='#f577' class='c012'><sup>[577]</sup></a> And there
-arose among gourmands, those ancient St. Simonians,
-whose god was their belly, a kind of enthusiastic
-rivalry as to who should be first in the
-morning at the fish-market, and bear away, as in
-triumph, the largest Copaic eels, the finest pair of
-soles, or the freshest <em>anthias</em>.<a id='r578' /><a href='#f578' class='c012'><sup>[578]</sup></a> On this subject,
-therefore, our details must be somewhat more elaborate
-than on beef and mutton. And first, we
-shall take the reader along with us to the market,
-whither it will be advisable that he carry as little
-money as possible, since, according to the comic
-poets, your Athenian fishmonger, not content with
-being a mere rogue, dealt a little also in the
-assassin’s trade.<a id='r579' /><a href='#f579' class='c012'><sup>[579]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The first thing which a rich gourmand inquired
-in the morning was, which way the wind blew.
-If from the north, and there was anything like a
-sea, he remained sullenly at home, for no fishing
-smacks could in that case make the Peiræeus;<a id='r580' /><a href='#f580' class='c012'><sup>[580]</sup></a>
-but if the wind sat in any other quarter, out he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>went eagerly and stealthily with a slave and basket<a id='r581' /><a href='#f581' class='c012'><sup>[581]</sup></a>
-at his heels, casting about anxious looks to discover
-whether any other impassioned fish-eater had got
-the start of him on his way to the Agora, who
-might clear the stalls of the best anthias or thunny
-before he could reach the spot.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The unmoneyed rogue, however, whose ambitious
-taste soared to these expensive dainties, approached
-the market with a rueful countenance. Thus we
-find a poor fellow describing, in Antiphanes, his
-morning’s pilgrimage in search of a pair of soles:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>I once believed the Gorgons fabulous:</div>
- <div class='line'>But in the agora quickly changed my creed,</div>
- <div class='line'>And turned almost to stone, the pests beholding</div>
- <div class='line'>Standing behind the fish stalls. Forced I am</div>
- <div class='line'>To look another way when I accost them,</div>
- <div class='line'>Lest if I saw the fish they ask so much for,</div>
- <div class='line'>I should at once grow marble.<a id='r582' /><a href='#f582' class='c012'><sup>[582]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Amphis, another comic poet, supplies us with
-further details respecting the hardships encountered
-by those who had to deal with fishmongers at
-Athens. Much of his wit is, I fear, intransferable,
-depending in a great measure on the vernacular clipping
-of Greek common in the market-place. But
-the sense, at least, may perhaps be given:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Ten thousand times more easy ’tis to gain</div>
- <div class='line'>Admission to a haughty general’s tent,</div>
- <div class='line'>And have discourse of him, than in the market</div>
- <div class='line'>Audience to get of a cursed fishmonger.</div>
- <div class='line'>If you draw near and say, How much<a id='corr139.30'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title=' my,'>, my</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_139.30'><ins class='correction' title=' my,'>, my</ins></a></span> friend,</div>
- <div class='line'>Costs <em>this</em> or <em>that</em>?—No answer. Deaf you think</div>
- <div class='line'>The rogue must be, or stupid; for he heeds not</div>
- <div class='line'>A syllable you say, but o’er his fish</div>
- <div class='line'>Bends silently like Telephos (and with good reason,</div>
- <div class='line'>For his whole race he knows are cut-throats all).</div>
- <div class='line'>Another minding not, or else not hearing,</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>Pulls by the legs a polypus.<a id='r583' /><a href='#f583' class='c012'><sup>[583]</sup></a> A third</div>
- <div class='line'>With saucy carelessness replies, ‘Four oboli,</div>
- <div class='line'>That’s just the price. For this no less than eight.</div>
- <div class='line'>Take it or leave it!’”<a id='r584' /><a href='#f584' class='c012'><sup>[584]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alexis, too, that most comic of comic writers,
-seems to have imagined, that the humour of his
-pieces would be incomplete without a spice of the
-fishmonger. Commencing, like Amphis, with an
-allusion to the haughty airs of military men, he
-glides into his subject as follows:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>However, this is still endurable.</div>
- <div class='line'>But when a paltry fishfag will look big,</div>
- <div class='line'>Cast down his eyes affectedly, or bend</div>
- <div class='line'>His eyebrows upwards like a fullstrained bow,</div>
- <div class='line'>I burst with rage. Demand what price he asks</div>
- <div class='line'>For—say two mullets; and he answers straight</div>
- <div class='line'>“Ten obols”—“Ten? That’s dear: will you take eight?”</div>
- <div class='line'>“Yes, if one fish will serve you.”—“Friend, no jokes;</div>
- <div class='line'>I am no subject for your mirth.”—“Pass on, Sir!</div>
- <div class='line'>And buy elsewhere.”—Now tell me is not this</div>
- <div class='line'>Bitterer than gall?<a id='r585' /><a href='#f585' class='c012'><sup>[585]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>But if the reader should be disposed to infer from
-these testimonies that the fishmongering race were
-saucy only at Athens, he will be in danger of falling
-into error. Throughout the ancient world they
-were the same, and we fear that should any poor
-devil from Grub-street, or the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>Quartier Latin</i></span>, presume
-to dispute respecting the price of salmon with
-one of their cockney or Parisian descendants, he
-would meet with little more politeness. At all
-events their manners had not improved in the Eternal
-city,<a id='r586' /><a href='#f586' class='c012'><sup>[586]</sup></a> for it is <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>a propos</i></span> of the Roman fishfags
-that Athenæus brings forward his examples of like
-insolence elsewhere. The poet Diphilos would appear,
-like Archestratos, to have travelled in search
-of good fish and civil fishmongers, but his labours
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>were fruitless; he might as well have peregrinated
-the world in the hope of finding that island where
-soles are caught ready-fried in the sea. Such at
-least is the tenour of his own complaint:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Troth, in my greener days I had some notion</div>
- <div class='line'>That here at Athens only, rogues sold fish;</div>
- <div class='line'>But everywhere, it seems, like wolf or fox,</div>
- <div class='line'>The race is treacherous by nature found.</div>
- <div class='line'>However, we have one scamp in the agora</div>
- <div class='line'>Who beats all others hollow. On his head</div>
- <div class='line'>A most portentous fell of hair nods thick</div>
- <div class='line'>And shades his brow. Observing your surprise,</div>
- <div class='line'>He has his reasons pat; it grows forsooth</div>
- <div class='line'>To form, when shorn, an offering to some god!</div>
- <div class='line'>But that’s a feint, ’tis but to hide the scars</div>
- <div class='line'>Left by the branding iron upon his forehead.</div>
- <div class='line'>But, passing that, you ask perchance the price</div>
- <div class='line'>Of a sea-wolf—“Ten oboli”—very good.</div>
- <div class='line'>You count the money. “Oh not those,” he cries,</div>
- <div class='line'>“Æginetan I meant.” Still you comply.</div>
- <div class='line'>But if you trust him with a larger piece,</div>
- <div class='line'>And there be change to give; mark how the knave</div>
- <div class='line'>Now counts in Attic coin, and thus achieves</div>
- <div class='line'>A two-fold robbery in the same transaction!<a id='r587' /><a href='#f587' class='c012'><sup>[587]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Xenarchos paints a little scene of ingenious roguery
-with a comic extravagance altogether Shakespearian,
-and incidentally throws light on a curious law of
-Athens, enacted to protect the citizens against stinking
-fish.<a id='r588' /><a href='#f588' class='c012'><sup>[588]</sup></a> The power of invention, he observes—willing
-to kill two birds with one stone—had totally
-deserted the poets in order to take up with
-the fishmongers; for while the former merely hashed
-up old ideas, the latter were always hitting upon
-new contrivances to poison the Demos:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Commend me for invention to the rogue</div>
- <div class='line'>Who sells fish in the agora. He knows</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>In fact there’s no mistaking,—that the law</div>
- <div class='line'>Clearly and formally forbids the trick</div>
- <div class='line'>Of reconciling stale fish to the nose</div>
- <div class='line'>By constant watering. But if some poor wight</div>
- <div class='line'>Detect him in the fact, forthwith he picks</div>
- <div class='line'>A quarrel, and provokes his man to blows.</div>
- <div class='line'>He wheels meanwhile about his fish, looks sharp</div>
- <div class='line'>To catch the nick of time, reels, feigns a hurt:</div>
- <div class='line'>And prostrate falls, just in the right position.</div>
- <div class='line'>A friend placed there on purpose, snatches up</div>
- <div class='line'>A pot of water, sprinkles a drop or two,</div>
- <div class='line'>For form’s sake on his face, but by mistake,</div>
- <div class='line'>As you must sure believe, pours all the rest</div>
- <div class='line'>Full on the fish, so that almost you might</div>
- <div class='line'>Consider them fresh caught.<a id='r589' /><a href='#f589' class='c012'><sup>[589]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>By a law passed at the instance of the wealthy
-Aristonicos, himself no doubt an ichthyophagos, the
-penalty of imprisonment was decreed against all
-those who, having named a price for their fish,
-should take less, in order that they might at once
-demand what was just and no more. In consequence
-of this enactment, an old woman or a child
-might be sent to the fish-market, without danger
-of being cheated. According to another provision
-of this Golden Law, as it is termed by Alexis, fishmongers
-were compelled to stand at their stalls and
-not to sit as had previously been the custom. The
-comic poet, in the fulness of his charity, expresses
-a hope that they might be all <em>suspended</em> aloft on
-the following year, by which means, he says, they
-would get a quicker sight of their customers, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>carry on their dealings with mankind from a machine
-like the gods of tragedy.<a id='r590' /><a href='#f590' class='c012'><sup>[590]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In consequence no doubt of the perpetually increasing
-demand, fish was extremely dear at Athens.
-Accordingly Diphilos, addressing himself to Poseidon,
-who, as god of the sea, was god also of its
-inhabitants, informs him that, could he but secure
-the tithe of fish, he would soon become the wealthiest
-divinity in Olympos. Among those who distinguished
-themselves in this business in the agora,
-and apparently became rich, it is probable that many
-were metoiki, such as Hermæos, the Egyptian, and
-Mikion, who, though his country is not mentioned,
-was probably not an Athenian. In proportion as
-they grew opulent, the gourmands on whom they
-preyed became poor, and doubtless there was too
-much truth in the satire which represented men
-dissipating their whole fortunes in the frying-pan.
-There were those also it seems who spent their evenings
-on the highway, in order to furnish their daily
-table with such dainties. For this fact we have the
-satisfactory testimony of Alexis in his Heiress:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Mark you a fellow who, however scant</div>
- <div class='line'>In all things else, hath still wherewith to purchase</div>
- <div class='line'>Cod, eel, or anchovies, be sure i’ the dark</div>
- <div class='line'>He lies about the road in wait for travellers.</div>
- <div class='line'>If therefore you’ve been robbed o’ernight, just go</div>
- <div class='line'>At peep of dawn to th’ agora and seize</div>
- <div class='line'>The first athletic, ragged vagabond</div>
- <div class='line'>Who cheapens eels of Mikion. He, be sure,</div>
- <div class='line'>And none but he’s the thief: to prison with him!<a id='r591' /><a href='#f591' class='c012'><sup>[591]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>They had at Corinth a pretty strict police regulation
-on this subject. When any person was observed
-habitually to purchase fish, he was interrogated
-by the authorities respecting his means. If
-found to be a man of property they suffered him
-to do what he pleased with his own; but, in the
-contrary event, he received a gentle hint that the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>state had its eye upon him. The neglect of this
-admonition was followed, in the first place, by a fine,
-and ultimately, if persevered in, by a punishment
-equivalent to the treadmill.<a id='r592' /><a href='#f592' class='c012'><sup>[592]</sup></a> These matters were in
-Athens submitted to the cognizance of two or three
-magistrates, called Opsonomoi, nominated by the Senate.<a id='r593' /><a href='#f593' class='c012'><sup>[593]</sup></a>
-With respect to the purchase of this class
-of viands, everywhere attended with peculiar difficulties,
-it may be said, that the ancients had considerably
-the advantage of us; since in Lynceus of
-Samos’s “Fish-buyer’s Manual,” they possessed a sure
-guide through all the intricacies of bargaining in the
-agora.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But before we proceed further with this part of
-our subject, we will demand permission of Lynceus
-to hear what Hesiod has to say of saltfish, on
-which Euthydemos, the Athenian, composed a separate
-treatise. According to this poet, who boldly
-speaks of cities erected long after his death, immense
-quantities of fish were salted on the Bosporos,
-sometimes entire, as in modern times,<a id='r594' /><a href='#f594' class='c012'><sup>[594]</sup></a> sometimes
-cut into gobbets of a moderate size. Among
-these were the oxyrinchos whose taste proved often
-fatal, the thunny, and the mackerel. The little city
-of Parion furnished the best kolias (a kind of mackerel),
-and the Tarentine merchants brought to Athens
-pickled orcynos from Cadiz, cut into small triangular
-pieces, in jars.<a id='r595' /><a href='#f595' class='c012'><sup>[595]</sup></a> Physicians, indeed, inveighed
-against these relishes; but the gourmands would consult
-only their palates and preferred a short life with
-pickled thunny to that of Saturn himself on beef
-and mutton.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But the Hesiod of Euthydemos (a creation probably
-of his own) is but very poor authority compared
-with Archestratos, who made the pilgrimage
-of the world in search of good cheer, and afterwards,
-for the benefit of posterity, treasured up his experience
-in a grand culinary epic. In his opinion a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>slice of Sicilian thunny was a rare delicacy, while
-the saperda, though brought from the Pontos Euxinos,
-he held as cheap as those who boasted of it.<a id='r596' /><a href='#f596' class='c012'><sup>[596]</sup></a>
-The scombros, by some supposed to be a species of
-thunny, though others understand by it the common
-mackerel, stood high in the estimation of this connoisseur.
-He directs that it be left in salt three
-days, and eaten before it begins to melt into brine.<a id='r597' /><a href='#f597' class='c012'><sup>[597]</sup></a>
-In his estimation the horaion<a id='r598' /><a href='#f598' class='c012'><sup>[598]</sup></a> of Byzantium was
-likewise a great delicacy, which he advises the traveller,
-who might pass through that city, to taste
-by all means. It seems to have been there what
-macaroni is at Naples.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Alexis, in one of his comedies, introduces the Symposiarch
-of an Eranos (president of a picnic) accounting
-with one of the subscribers who comes to demand
-back his ring, and in the course of the dialogue,
-where something like Falstaff’s tavern-bill is
-discussed, we find the prices of several kinds of salt-fish.
-An omotarichos (shoulder piece of thunny) is
-charged at five chalci; a dish of sea-mussels, seven
-chalci, of sea-urchins, an obol, a slice of kybion,
-three obols, a conger eel, ten, and another plate of
-broiled fish, a drachma. This comic writer<a id='r599' /><a href='#f599' class='c012'><sup>[599]</sup></a> rates
-the fish of the Nile very low, and he is quite right,
-for they are generally muddy and ill-tasted, though
-the Copts, who have considerable experience during
-Lent, contrive, by the application of much Archestratic
-skill, to render some kinds of them palatable.
-Sophocles, in a fragment of his lost drama of Phineus,
-speaks of salt-fish embalmed like an Egyptian
-mummy.<a id='r600' /><a href='#f600' class='c012'><sup>[600]</sup></a> Stock-fish, as I know to my cost,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>is still a fashionable dish in the Mediterranean, especially
-on board ship, and from a proverb preserved
-by Athenæus we find it was likewise in use among
-the Athenians.<a id='r601' /><a href='#f601' class='c012'><sup>[601]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The passion of this refined people for salt-fish furnished
-them with an occasion of showing their gratitude
-publicly. They bestowed the rights of citizenship
-on the sons of Chæriphilos, a metoikos who
-first introduced among them a knowledge of this sort
-of food.<a id='r602' /><a href='#f602' class='c012'><sup>[602]</sup></a> A similar feeling prompted the Dutch to
-erect a statue to G. Bukel, the man who taught
-them to salt herrings.<a id='r603' /><a href='#f603' class='c012'><sup>[603]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Without enumerating a tenth part of the other
-species eaten among the Greeks, we pass to the shell-fish,
-of which they were likewise great amateurs.
-Epicharmos, in his marriage of Hebe, supplies a curious
-list, which, however, might be extended almost
-ad infinitum. Among these were immense limpets,
-the buccinum, the cecibalos, the tethynakion, the
-sea-acorn, the purple fish, oysters hard to open but
-easy to swallow, mussels, sea-snails or periwinkles,
-skiphydria sweet to taste but prickly to touch, large
-shelled razor-fish, the black conch, and the amathitis.
-The conch was also called tellinè as the same
-poet in his Muses observes. Alcæos wrote a song
-to the limpet beginning with</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Child of the rock and hoary sea.”<a id='r604' /><a href='#f604' class='c012'><sup>[604]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Boys used to make a sort of whistle of tortoise
-and mussel shells. These mussels were usually
-broiled on the coals, and Aristophanes, very ingenious
-in his similes, compares a gaping silly fellow
-to a mussel in the act of being cooked.<a id='r605' /><a href='#f605' class='c012'><sup>[605]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Like the sepia, of which excellent pilaus are made
-at Alexandria, the porphyra or purple fish was very
-good eating, and thickened the liquor in which it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>was boiled.<a id='r606' /><a href='#f606' class='c012'><sup>[606]</sup></a> There was a small delicate shell-fish
-caught on the island of Pharos and adjacent coasts
-of Egypt, which they called Aphrodite’s ear,<a id='r607' /><a href='#f607' class='c012'><sup>[607]</sup></a> and
-there is still found on the same coast near Canopos
-a diminutive and beautiful rose-coloured conch
-called Venus’s nipple. On the same shore, about
-the rise of the Nile, that species of mussel called
-tellinè was caught in great abundance, but the best-tasted
-were said to be found in the river itself. A
-still finer kind were in season about autumn in the
-vicinity of Ephesos. The echinos, or sea-chestnut,<a id='r608' /><a href='#f608' class='c012'><sup>[608]</sup></a>
-cooked with oxymel, parsley, and mint, was esteemed
-good and wholesome eating. Those caught about
-Cephalonia, Icaria, and Achaia were bitterish, those
-of Sicily laxative; the best were the red and the
-quince coloured. A laughable anecdote is told of
-a Spartan, who being invited to dine where sea-chestnuts
-were brought to table, took one upon his plate,
-and not knowing how they were eaten put it into
-his mouth, shell and all. Finding it exceedingly
-unmanageable, he turned it about for some time,
-seeking slowly and cautiously to discover the knack
-of eating it. But the rough and prickly shell still
-resisting his efforts, his temper grew ruffled: crunching
-it fiercely he exclaimed, “Detestable beast!
-Well! I will not let thee go now, after having
-thus ground thee to pieces; but assuredly I will
-never touch thee again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Oysters were esteemed good when boiled with
-mallows, or monks’ rhubarb.<a id='r609' /><a href='#f609' class='c012'><sup>[609]</sup></a> In general, however,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>the physicians of antiquity considered them hard of
-digestion. But lest the shelled-fish should usurp
-more space than is their due, we shall conclude
-with Archestratos’ list, in which he couples with
-each the name of the place where the best were
-caught:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>For mussels you must go to Ænos; oysters</div>
- <div class='line'>You’ll find best at Abydos. Parion</div>
- <div class='line'>Rejoices in its urchins; but if cockles</div>
- <div class='line'>Gigantic and sweet-tasted you would eat,</div>
- <div class='line'>A voyage must be made to Mitylene,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or the Ambracian Gulf, where they abound</div>
- <div class='line'>With many other dainties. At Messina,</div>
- <div class='line'>Near to the Faro, are pelorian conchs,</div>
- <div class='line'>Nor are those bad you find near Ephesos;</div>
- <div class='line'>For Tethyan oysters, go to Chalcedon;</div>
- <div class='line'>But for the Heralds,<a id='r610' /><a href='#f610' class='c012'><sup>[610]</sup></a> may Zeus overwhelm them</div>
- <div class='line'>Both in the sea and in the agora!</div>
- <div class='line'>Aye, all except my old friend Agathon,</div>
- <div class='line'>Who in the midst of Lesbian vineyards dwells.<a id='r611' /><a href='#f611' class='c012'><sup>[611]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>We have already mentioned the magnificent eels
-of Lake Copais,<a id='r612' /><a href='#f612' class='c012'><sup>[612]</sup></a> in B&oelig;otia, a longing for which
-appears to have been Aristophanes’s chief motive
-for desiring an end to the Peloponnesian war.
-Next in excellence were those caught in the river
-Strymon, and the Faro of Messina.<a id='r613' /><a href='#f613' class='c012'><sup>[613]</sup></a> The ellops, by
-some supposed to be the sword-fish,<a id='r614' /><a href='#f614' class='c012'><sup>[614]</sup></a> was found
-in greatest perfection near Syracuse; at least, in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>the opinion of Archestratos; but Varro and Pliny
-give the preference to that of Rhodes, and others
-to that of the Pamphylian sea.<a id='r615' /><a href='#f615' class='c012'><sup>[615]</sup></a> The red mullet,
-the hepsetos, the hepatos, the elacaten, the thunny,
-the hippouros, the hippos, or sea-horse, found in
-perfection on the shores<a id='r616' /><a href='#f616' class='c012'><sup>[616]</sup></a> of Phœnicia, the ioulis,
-the kichlè, or sea-thrush, the sea-boar, the citharos,
-the kordylos, the river cray-fish, the shark, which
-was eaten when young, the mullet, the coracinos,
-the carp, the gudgeon, the sea-cuckoo, the sea-wolf,
-the latos, the leobatos, or smooth ray, the
-lamprey,<a id='r617' /><a href='#f617' class='c012'><sup>[617]</sup></a> the myræna, the anchovy,<a id='r618' /><a href='#f618' class='c012'><sup>[618]</sup></a> the black tail,
-the torpedo, the mormyros, the orphos, the onos,
-the polypus, the crab, the sea-perch, the physa, or
-sea-tench, the raphis, the sea-dog,<a id='r619' /><a href='#f619' class='c012'><sup>[619]</sup></a> the scaros, the
-sparos, the scorpios, the salpe, or stock-fish, the synodon,
-the sauros, the scepinos, or halibut, the
-sciaina, the syagris, the sphyræna, the sepia, the
-tœnia, the skate, the cuttle-fish, the hyca, the
-phagros, the perca cabrilla, the chromis, the gilthead,
-the trichidon, the thratta, and the turbot;<a id='r620' /><a href='#f620' class='c012'><sup>[620]</sup></a>
-such is a list of the fish in common use among
-the Greeks. The species it will be seen has not
-in many cases been ascertained.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f515'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r515'>515</a>. Cf. Plut. Quæst. Græc. 51.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f516'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r516'>516</a>. Cf. Dion. Perieg. 1082.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f517'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r517'>517</a>. These people were great eaters,
-and held none in estimation
-but those who resembled them.
-Aristoph. Acharn. 74. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f518'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r518'>518</a>. Ælian. Var. Hist. iii. 39.
-Perizonius in his note on this
-passage observes, that ἄπιος and
-ἀχράς are but different names
-for the same thing, both signifying
-“the pear,” the former term
-prevailing among the Argives, the
-latter among the Tirynthians and
-Laconians. By the other Greeks
-both words were used promiscuously,
-though ἄπιος was the more
-common. This able commentator
-objects to the assertion of his
-author, that the Hindoos lived on
-cane, since they also ate millet,
-rice, &amp;c. But Ælian could really
-have intended nothing more
-than that the articles he enumerates
-were in common use among
-the nations spoken of. Otherwise
-the whole must be regarded as a
-mere fable. The canes, mentioned
-by Ælian, are those from
-which sugar has been from very
-remote antiquity extracted.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Quique bibunt tenerâ dulces ab arundine succos.</span></div>
- <div class='line in32'>Lucan. Pharsal. iii. 237.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f519'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r519'>519</a>. See Goguet, i. 160, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f520'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r520'>520</a>. Hist. of Greece, i. 9, note.
-Cf. Anab. ii. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f521'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r521'>521</a>. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 85.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f522'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r522'>522</a>. Cf. Polluc. i. 234.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f523'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r523'>523</a>. Paus. viii. 1. 6. Pliny observes
-that the fruit of the fagus is
-sweet “dulcissima omnium glans
-fagi.” Hist. Nat. xvii. 6. Cf.
-Lucian. Amor. § 33. Theophrast.
-Hist. Plant. iii. 8, 2. This
-Arcadian dainty is still eaten
-in Spain. “In some parts (of
-Navarre) the mountains are girt
-at their base by forests of chestnut
-trees or of the Spanish oak called
-<em>encina</em>, whose acorn roasted, is
-as palatable as the chestnut.” (A
-Campaign with Zumalacarregui, i.
-40.) The same writer observes,
-that the fruit of the ever-green
-arbutus, in shape like a cherry,
-though insipid and intoxicating
-in its effects, is also eaten by the
-omniverous Spaniards, p. 51. See
-also Laborde’s Itinerary of Spain,
-iv. 80, and Capell Brooke’s Travels,
-ii. 72.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f524'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r524'>524</a>. See Bochart. Geog. Sac. i.
-309.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f525'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r525'>525</a>. Cf. Plat. De Legg. vi. t. vii.
-p. 471.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f526'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r526'>526</a>. Problem. x. 56, 58.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f527'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r527'>527</a>. Iliad. α. 496. β. 432, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f528'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r528'>528</a>. Iliad. ε. 196, et 341. The
-scholiast on this verse, observes
-that, before the invention of mills,
-men used to eat the raw grain.
-(Cf. on Iliad. α. 449, and Etym.
-Magn. v. οὐλόχυται, 641, 29.)
-But this is merely an absurd conjecture;
-for they could, at least,
-have roasted the young ear as in
-the East they still do, while it is
-full of juice, and have eaten it thus
-with salt, when it is both pleasant
-and nutritive. Besides, some
-means of reducing the grain to
-meal appears to have been known
-almost from the beginning.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f529'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r529'>529</a>. Iliad. λ. 629. Odyss. κ. 355.
-See, too, Theocrit. Eidyll. xxiv.
-135, sqq. Virgil. Æneid. i. 705.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f530'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r530'>530</a>. Deipnosoph. i. 15. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Origine
-des Loix,</span> ii. 306. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“J’ai dit que
-la simplicité faisoit le caractère
-distinctif de ses premiers âges. La
-manière dont on se nourissoit
-alors en fait preuve. On ne voit
-paroître ni sauce ni ragoût, ni
-même de gibier, dans la description
-que l’Ecriture fait du repas
-donné par Abraham aux trois anges
-qui lui apparurent dans la
-vallée de Membré. Ce Patriarche
-leur sert un veau roti, ou, pour
-mieux dire, grillé; du lait de
-beurre, et du pain frais cuit sous
-la cendre. Voilà tout le festin.
-Ce fait montre que les repas alors
-étoient plus solides que délicats.
-Abraham avoit certainement intention
-de traiter ses hôtes du
-mieux qu’il lui étoit possible, et il
-faut observer que ce Patriarche
-possédoit de très-grandes richesses
-en or, en argent, en troupeaux et
-en esclaves. On peut donc regarder
-le repas qu’il donne aux
-trois anges, comme le modèle
-d’un festin magnifique, et juger
-en conséquence quelle étoit de
-son tems la manière de traiter
-splendidement.”</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f531'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r531'>531</a>. Comm. ad Æneid. i. 710.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f532'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r532'>532</a>. Feith, Antiq. Homer, iii. 1, 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f533'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r533'>533</a>. Il. ω. 262.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f534'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r534'>534</a>. Hieron adv. Jovian. ii. 75.
-a. Diosc. ap. Athen. ix. 17. Eustath.
-ad Il. ω. p. 1481. 12.
-Schweigh, Animad. in Athen. t.
-vi. p. 96, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f535'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r535'>535</a>. Od. ι. 185. κ. 180.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f536'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r536'>536</a>. Iliad. ψ. 852, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f537'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r537'>537</a>. Προταριχεύειν. Herod. ii.
-77, edit. Wessel.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f538'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r538'>538</a>. Herod. i. 77, seq. ii. 15. ix.
-80.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f539'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r539'>539</a>. Plato, among others, remarks
-that, in the military messes of his
-heroes, Homer introduces neither
-fish nor boiled meat. De Rep.
-iii. t. vi. p. 141.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f540'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r540'>540</a>. Odyss. τ. 113.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f541'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r541'>541</a>. Odyss. μ. 330. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f542'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r542'>542</a>. Deipnosoph. i. 47.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f543'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r543'>543</a>. Plut. Sympos. viii. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f544'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r544'>544</a>. Il. ι. 360.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f545'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r545'>545</a>. Il. π. 407.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f546'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r546'>546</a>. Od. χ. 364, sqq. Eustathius,
-however, on this passage
-observes, that though nets are
-spoken of in the Iliad, (ε. 487,)
-this is the only place where the
-poet distinctly mentions their
-being used in taking fish.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f547'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r547'>547</a>. Il. ο. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f548'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r548'>548</a>. Od. ι. 236, 246. Theoc.
-Eidyll. xi. 35.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f549'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r549'>549</a>. Od. κ. 234, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f550'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r550'>550</a>. Il. λ. 623, sqq. This mixture
-called κυκεὼν, is more than once
-mentioned by Plato—De Rep.
-iii. t. vi. p. 148.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f551'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r551'>551</a>. Cf. Hom. Il. λ. 629, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f552'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r552'>552</a>. Od. ω. 339.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f553'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r553'>553</a>. Od. η. 115, sqq. Plut. Sympos.
-v. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f554'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r554'>554</a>. Od. λ. 587, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f555'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r555'>555</a>. Ad Æneid. i. 727.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f556'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r556'>556</a>. Il. ι. 214. In later times it
-was customary to bruise thyme
-small, and mingle it with salt to
-give it a finer flavour. Aristoph.
-Acharn. 772. Suid. v. θυμιτίδων ἁλῶν.
-t. i. p. 1336. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f557'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r557'>557</a>. Opera, t. vii. p. 80.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f558'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r558'>558</a>. Sympos. v. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f559'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r559'>559</a>. Erasm. Adag. Chil. i. Cent.
-vi. Adag. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f560'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r560'>560</a>. <a id='corr134.n3'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Ἅλαλείχειν'>Ἅλα λείχειν</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_134.n3'><ins class='correction' title='Ἅλαλείχειν'>Ἅλα λείχειν</ins></a></span>. Erasm. Adag.
-iii. vi. 33, or, as Persius expresses
-it, “digito terebrare salinum.”
-Sat. v. 138.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f561'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r561'>561</a>. Od. λ. 122.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f562'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r562'>562</a>. Paus. i. 1. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f563'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r563'>563</a>. Il. β. 824, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f564'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r564'>564</a>. Pind. Olymp. vi. 85.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f565'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r565'>565</a>. Paradise Regained, iii. 288,
-seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f566'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r566'>566</a>. Hist. Nat. xxxi. 21. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Parthorum
-reges,”</span> says this writer,
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“ex Choaspe et Eulæo tantum
-bibunt; et eæ quamvis in longinqua
-comitatur eos.”</span> Hence
-Tibullus has the following verses
-in his Panegyric of Messala, iv. 1.
-142:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Nec quâ vel Nilus vel <em>regia lympha</em> Choaspes</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><a id='corr135.n3.10'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Profluit.'>Profluit.”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_135.n3.10'><ins class='correction' title='Profluit.'>Profluit.”</ins></a></span></span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Herod. i. 188. Æl. Var. Hist. xii.
-40. Cf. Strabo. 1. xv. c. 3. t. iii.
-p. 318.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f567'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r567'>567</a>. Athen. xii. 9. Ἀγαθοκλῆς
-δ᾽, ἐν τρίτῳ Περὶ Κυζίκου, ἐν Πέρσαις
-φησὶν εἶναι καὶ χρυσοῦν
-καλούμενον ὕδωρ. εἶναι δὲ τοῦτο
-λιβάδας ἑβδομήκοντα, καὶ μηδὲνα
-πίνειν ἀπ’ αὐτοῦ ἢ μόνον βασιλέα,
-καὶ τὸν πρεσβύτατον αὐτοῦ τῶν
-παίδων. τῶν δ᾽ ἄλλων ἐάν τις πίῃ,
-θάνατος ἡ ζημία.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f568'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r568'>568</a>. Iliad, ι. 702. τ. 161.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f569'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r569'>569</a>. Athen. x. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f570'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r570'>570</a>. Od. ζ. 77, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f571'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r571'>571</a>. Iliad. ι. 487.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f572'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r572'>572</a>. Montaigne, whom few things
-of this kind had escaped, reads
-<em>forty</em>, and thinks that men
-might lawfully get drunk after
-that age. Essais, ii. 2. t. iii. p.
-278.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f573'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r573'>573</a>. De Legg. ii. t. vii. p. 258, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f574'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r574'>574</a>. Ass’s flesh was commonly
-eaten by the Athenians. Poll.
-ix. 48, et Comment. t. vi. p. 938,
-seq. Their neighbours the Persians,
-however, enjoyed one dainty
-not known, I believe, to the
-Greeks; that is to say, a camel,
-which, we are told, they sometimes
-roasted whole. Herod. i.
-123. Athen. iv. 6. In the opinion
-of Aristotle the flesh of this
-animal was singularly good: ἔχει
-δὲ καὶ τὰ κρέα καὶ τὸ γάλα ἥδιστα
-πάντων.—Hist. Anim. vi. 26. It
-was this passage, perhaps, that
-first induced Heliogabalus to try
-a camel’s foot, which he appears
-afterwards to have much affected.
-Lamprid. Vit. Anton. Heliogab.
-§ 19. Hist. Aug. Script. p. 195.
-The same emperor also tried the
-taste of an ostrich, whose eggs anciently
-constituted an article of
-food among certain nations of Africa.
-Lucian. de Dipsad. § 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f575'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r575'>575</a>. Plato, De Legg. vi. t. vii. p.
-471.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f576'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r576'>576</a>. Cicero, De Natura Deorum,
-ii. 64. Dion. Chrysost. i. 280,
-cum not. Reisk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f577'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r577'>577</a>. The Pythagoreans, however,
-must be excluded from this category
-since they abstained from
-fish because they kept perpetual
-silence like themselves.—Athen.
-vii. 80. Another and a better
-reason, perhaps, may be discovered
-in a passage of Archestratos,
-who, observing that the sea-dog is
-delicious eating, proceeds to dispose
-of the objection that it feeds
-on human flesh, by saying, that
-all fish do the same. Id. vii. 85.
-From this fact the Pythagoreans
-esteemed fish-eaters no better
-than cannibals at second-hand.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f578'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r578'>578</a>. Cf. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn.
-525.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f579'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r579'>579</a>. Amphis ap. Athen. vi. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f580'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r580'>580</a>. Athen. viii. 81. Cf. Xenoph.
-Hellen. v. i. 23.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f581'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r581'>581</a>. This basket was usually of
-rushes, in form like a basin, and
-with a handle passing over the
-top.—Antich. di Ercol. tav. 21.
-tom. i. p. 111.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f582'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r582'>582</a>. Athen. vi. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f583'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r583'>583</a>. Cf. Chandler, ii. 143. Plin.
-Hist. Nat. ix. 45, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f584'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r584'>584</a>. Athen. vi. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f585'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r585'>585</a>. Athen. vi. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f586'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r586'>586</a>. Deipnosoph. vi. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f587'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r587'>587</a>. Athen. vi. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f588'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r588'>588</a>. The longer to preserve fish
-fresh, the Orientals sometimes
-cover them with a coating of wax.
-Mullets, caught at Damietta, are
-sent, thus preserved, throughout
-the Turkish Empire, as well as to
-different parts of Europe. Pococke’s
-Description of the East.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f589'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r589'>589</a>. Our readers will probably remember
-the good old Italian marchioness,
-who having, perhaps,
-been cajoled, by the blarney of
-some Hibernian peripatetic, into
-the purchase of a pair of strong-odoured
-soles, recommended to
-our magistrates the adoption of
-an ordinance passed, as she affirmed,
-by his grace of Tuscany.
-In that prince’s territories, she
-assured their worships, the man
-who has fish to sell, must transact
-business standing on one leg in
-a bucket of hot water, a practice
-undoubtedly calculated to induce
-despatch and prevent haggling.
-This Tuscan enactment might
-evidently have been adopted with
-great advantage at Athens, where,
-however, legislation proceeded on
-exactly the same principles, and
-attained in this point an almost
-equal degree of perfection.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f590'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r590'>590</a>. Athen. vi. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f591'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r591'>591</a>. Athen. vi. 10. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f592'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r592'>592</a>. Diphilos apud Athen. vi. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f593'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r593'>593</a>. Athen. vi. 72.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f594'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r594'>594</a>. Herod. iv. 53.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f595'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r595'>595</a>. Athen. iii. 84.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f596'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r596'>596</a>. Athen. iii. 85.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f597'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r597'>597</a>. Athen. iii. 85. The Scomber
-Pelamys or mackerel of Pallas,
-caught in the Black Sea, is
-pickled in casks and not eaten
-for a twelvemonth. Travels in
-Southern Russia, iv. 242.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f598'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r598'>598</a>. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Poterant ὡραῖα nominari, ut
-<em>vere</em> vel initio æstatis salita, quo
-tempore minus pinguis totus piscis
-esset.</span> Schweigh. Animadv.
-in Athen. iii. 85. t. vii. 313. Cf.
-Plin. Nat. Hist. xxxii. 53. Gesner,
-De Salsamentis.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f599'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r599'>599</a>. Ap. Athen. iii. 86. Cf. Herod.
-ii. 77.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f600'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r600'>600</a>. Athen. iii. 86.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f601'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r601'>601</a>. Deipnosoph. iii. 89.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f602'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r602'>602</a>. Athen. iii. 90.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f603'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r603'>603</a>. Goguet, Origine des Loix, i.
-254.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f604'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r604'>604</a>. Athen. iii. 30, 31. Cf. Scheigh.
-Animadv. t. vii. p. 68, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f605'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r605'>605</a>. Fragm. Babylon. 2. Brunck.
-Athen. iii. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f606'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r606'>606</a>. Athen. iii. 30. During their
-long fasts the modern Greeks also
-eat the cuttle-fish, snails, &amp;c.
-Chandler, ii. 143.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f607'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r607'>607</a>. Athen. iii. 35.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f608'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r608'>608</a>. Athen. iii. 40. The taking
-of this fish at Sunium is thus described
-by Chandler: “Meanwhile
-our sailors, except two or three
-who accompanied us, stripped
-to their drawers to bathe, all
-of them swimming and diving
-remarkably well; some running
-about on the sharp rocks with
-their naked feet, as if devoid of
-feeling, and some examining the
-bottom of the clear water for
-the Echinus or sea-chestnut, a
-species of shell-fish common on
-this coast, and now in perfection,
-the moon being nearly
-at the full.” Vol. ii. p. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f609'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r609'>609</a>. Demet. Scep. ap. Athen. iii.
-41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f610'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r610'>610</a>. The κήρυξ, ceryx, so called
-because the Heralds (κήρυκες)
-used its shell instead of a trumpet,
-when making proclamation
-of any decree in the agora.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f611'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r611'>611</a>. Athen. iii. 44. Cf. Polluc.
-vi. 47. The ancients made the
-most of their fish in every way.
-They were hawked about the
-streets in rush-baskets, as with
-us.—Athen. vii. 72.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f612'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r612'>612</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Acharn. 845.
-Lysist. 36. There were in the
-fountain at Arethusa, as we are
-told by the philosophical Plutarch,
-eels that understood their own
-names.—Solert. Anim. § 23.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f613'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r613'>613</a>. Archestratos gives the preference
-over all other eels to those
-caught in the Faro of Messina.
-Athen. vii. 53. Very excellent
-and large eels are taken in the
-lake of Korion, in Crete, according
-to the testimony of Buondelmonte.
-Pashley, i. 72.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f614'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r614'>614</a>. On the sword-fish fishery in
-the Strait of Messina, see Spallanzani’s
-Travels in the Two Sicilies,
-vol. iv. p. 331, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f615'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r615'>615</a>. Athen. vii. 57. Animadv. t.
-ix. p. 220.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f616'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r616'>616</a>. The finest prawns were taken
-at Minturnæ, on the coast of
-Campania, exceeding in size
-those of Smyrna, and the crabs
-(ἀστακοὶ) of Alexandria.—Athen.
-i. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f617'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r617'>617</a>. See on Crassus’s lamprey.
-Plut. Solert. Animal. § 23.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f618'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r618'>618</a>. Esteemed a delicacy cooked
-with leeks. Aristoph. Vesp. 494.
-Cf. Acharn. 901. Av. 76.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f619'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r619'>619</a>. See Spallanzani’s Travels in
-the Two Sicilies, vol. iv. p. 343,
-sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f620'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r620'>620</a>. Athen. vii. 16–39. Aristot.
-Hist. Anim. iv. 2–6. viii. 3, 4,
-5, 16.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>
- <h3 class='c002'>CHAPTER IV. <br /> POULTRY, FRUIT, WINE, ETC.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The reader by this time will, probably, be willing
-to escape from fish, though it would be easy
-to treat him to many new kinds, and along with
-us take a slice of Greek pheasant, or the breast
-of an Egyptian quail. In other words, he will
-hear what we have to say on Hellenic poultry.
-Chrysippos, in his treatise on things desirable in
-themselves, appears to have reckoned Athenian cocks
-and hens among the number, and reprehends the
-people of Attica for importing, at great expense,
-barn-door fowls from the shores of the Adriatic,
-though of smaller size, and much inferior to their
-own; while the inhabitants of those countries, on
-the other hand, were anxious to possess Attic poultry.<a id='r621' /><a href='#f621' class='c012'><sup>[621]</sup></a>
-Matron, the parodist, who furnishes an amusing
-description of an Athenian repast, observes,
-that excellent wild ducks were brought to town
-from Salamis, where they grew fat in great numbers
-on the borders of the sacred Lake.<a id='r622' /><a href='#f622' class='c012'><sup>[622]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The thrush,<a id='r623' /><a href='#f623' class='c012'><sup>[623]</sup></a> reckoned among the greatest delicacies
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>of the ancients, generally at grand entertainments
-formed part of the propoma, or first
-course, and was eaten with little cakes, called
-ametiskoi. If we may credit Epicharmos, a decided
-preference was given to such as fed on the
-olive. Aristotle divides the thrush into three species,
-the first and largest of which he denominates
-Ixophagos, or the “mistletoe-eater;” it was of the
-size of a magpie. The second, equal in bigness
-to the black bird, he calls Trichas,<a id='r624' /><a href='#f624' class='c012'><sup>[624]</sup></a> and the third,
-and smallest kind, which was named Ilas or Tulas,
-according to Alexander, the Myndian, went in
-flocks, and built its nest like the swallow.<a id='r625' /><a href='#f625' class='c012'><sup>[625]</sup></a> Next
-in excellence to the thrush was a bird known by
-a variety of names, elaios, pirias, sycalis,<a id='r626' /><a href='#f626' class='c012'><sup>[626]</sup></a> the beccafico
-of the moderns, which was thought to be
-in season when the figs were ripe. They likewise
-ate the turtle and the ringdove,<a id='r627' /><a href='#f627' class='c012'><sup>[627]</sup></a> which are excellent
-in Egypt; the chaffinch, to whose qualities
-I cannot bear testimony; and the blackbird. Nor
-did they spare the starling, the jackdaw, or the
-strouthanion, a small bird for which modern languages
-cannot afford a name. Brains were thought
-by the ancient philosophers an odious and cannibal-like
-food, because they are the fountain of all
-sensation; but this did not prevent the gourmands
-from converting pigs’ brains into a dainty dish,<a id='r628' /><a href='#f628' class='c012'><sup>[628]</sup></a> and
-their taste has maintained its ground in Italy. Partridges,
-wood-pigeons, geese, quails, jays, are also
-enumerated among the materials of an Hellenic
-banquet.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>Goose’s liver was in extreme request both at
-Rome and Athens.<a id='r629' /><a href='#f629' class='c012'><sup>[629]</sup></a> Another dainty was a cock
-served up with a rich sauce, containing much vinegar.
-Aristophanes speaks of the pheasant in his
-comedy of the Birds; and, again, in the Clouds,
-Athenæus rightly supposes him to mean this bird,
-where others imagine he alludes to the horses of
-the Phasis. Mnesilochos, a writer of the middle
-comedy, classes a plucked pheasant with <em>hen’s milk</em>,
-among things equally difficult to be met with, which
-shows that the bird had not then become common.
-It obtained its name from being found in immense
-numbers about the embouchure of the Phasis, and
-the bird was evidently propagated very slowly in
-Greece and Egypt, since we find Ptolemy Philadelphos,
-in a grand public festival at Alexandria, exhibiting
-it, among other rarities, such as parroquets,
-peacocks, guinea-fowl, and Ethiopian birds
-in cages.<a id='r630' /><a href='#f630' class='c012'><sup>[630]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among the favourite game of the Athenian gourmands
-was the Attagas,<a id='r631' /><a href='#f631' class='c012'><sup>[631]</sup></a> or francolin, a little larger
-than the partridge, variegated with numerous spots,
-and of common tile colour, somewhat inclining to
-red. It is said to have been introduced from Lydia
-into Greece, and was found in extraordinary abundance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>in the Megaris. Another of their favourites
-was the porphyrion, a bird which might with great
-advantage be introduced into many countries of modern
-Europe, since it was exceedingly domestic, and
-kept strict watch over the married women, whose
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>faux pas</i></span> it immediately detected and revealed to
-their husbands, after which, knowing the revengeful
-spirit of ladies so situated, it very prudently hung
-itself. It is no wonder, therefore, that the breed
-has long been extinct, or that the remnant surviving
-has taken refuge in some remote region, where wives
-require no such vigilant guardians. In the matter
-of eating it agreed exactly with Lord Byron, loving
-to feast alone, and in retired nooks, where none
-could observe. Aristotle describes this half fabulous
-bird as unwebfooted, of blue colour, with long legs,
-and red beak. The porphyrion was about the size
-of a cock, and originally a native of Libya, where
-it was esteemed sacred.<a id='r632' /><a href='#f632' class='c012'><sup>[632]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Another bird common in Greece, but now no
-longer known, was the porphyris, by some confounded
-with the foregoing. Of the partridge, common
-throughout Europe, we need merely remark,
-that both the gray and the red (the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>bartavelle</i></span> of
-the French) were common in Greece.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>If we pass from the poultry to puddings and
-soups,<a id='r633' /><a href='#f633' class='c012'><sup>[633]</sup></a> we shall find that the Athenians were not ill-provided
-with these dainties. They even converted
-gruel into a delicacy,<a id='r634' /><a href='#f634' class='c012'><sup>[634]</sup></a> and it is said, that the best
-was made at Megara. They had bean soup, flour
-soup, ptisans made with pearl-barley or groats.<a id='r635' /><a href='#f635' class='c012'><sup>[635]</sup></a>
-We hear, also, of a delicately-powdered dish or soup
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>which was sprinkled over with fine flour and olives.
-The polphos, evidently <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>soupe à la julienne</i></span>, is said,
-by some, to have been composed of scraped roots,
-vegetables, and flour. Others take it to mean a
-sort of made-dish, resembling macaroni or vermicelli.
-Another kind of soup was the <em>kidron</em>, which,
-according to Pollux,<a id='r636' /><a href='#f636' class='c012'><sup>[636]</sup></a> they made of green wheat,
-roasted and reduced to powder.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There was one dish fashionable among the ancient
-Greeks mistaken by our neighbours, the French,
-for plum-pudding, which is still found in perfection
-in the Levant, where I have many times eaten of
-it. Julius Pollux<a id='r637' /><a href='#f637' class='c012'><sup>[637]</sup></a> has preserved the recipe for
-making it, and we can assure our gourmands, that
-nothing more exquisite was ever tasted, even in
-the best café of the Palais Royal. They took a certain
-quantity of the finest clarified lard, and, mixing
-it up with milk until it was quite thick, added
-an equal portion of new cheese, yolks of eggs, and
-the finest flour. The whole rolled up tight in a
-fragrant fig-leaf, was then cooked in chicken-broth,
-or soup made with kid’s flesh. When they considered
-it well done, the leaf was removed and the
-pudding soused in boiling honey. It was then served
-up hissing-hot. All the ingredients were used in
-equal proportions, excepting the yolks of eggs, of
-which there was somewhat more than of anything
-else, in order to give firmness and consistency to
-the whole.<a id='r638' /><a href='#f638' class='c012'><sup>[638]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Black puddings, made with blood, suet, and the
-other materials now used were also common at
-Athens.<a id='r639' /><a href='#f639' class='c012'><sup>[639]</sup></a> Mushrooms and snails were great favourites;
-and Poliochos speaks of going out in the
-dewy mornings in search of these luxuries.<a id='r640' /><a href='#f640' class='c012'><sup>[640]</sup></a> In
-spring, before the arrival of the swallow, the nettle
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>was collected and eaten, it being then young and
-tender.<a id='r641' /><a href='#f641' class='c012'><sup>[641]</sup></a> Leeks, onions, garlic, were in much request,
-the last particularly, which grew in great plenty
-in the Megarean territory, and hence, perhaps, the
-inhabitants were accounted hot and quarrelsome,
-garlic being supposed to inspire game, even in
-fighting cocks, to which it was accordingly given
-in great quantities.<a id='r642' /><a href='#f642' class='c012'><sup>[642]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among the herbs eaten by his countrymen, Hesiod
-enumerates the mallow,<a id='r643' /><a href='#f643' class='c012'><sup>[643]</sup></a> and the asphodel, which
-are likewise said by Aristophanes to have constituted
-a great part of the food of the early Greeks. Gœttling,
-therefore, not without reason, wonders that Pythagoras
-should have prohibited the use of the mallow.
-Lupines, pomegranates, horse-radish, the dregs
-of grapes and olives, all of which entered into the
-material of an Attic entertainment, were commonly
-cried about the streets of Athens.<a id='r644' /><a href='#f644' class='c012'><sup>[644]</sup></a> But these edible
-lupines, (θέρμοι) still eaten by the Egyptian peasantry
-and the poor generally throughout the Levant, must
-be distinguished from the common species. An
-anecdote of Zeno, of Cittion, will illustrate the
-character of this kind of pulse, with which the
-philosopher was evidently familiar. Being one day
-asked why, though naturally morose, he became
-quite affable when half-seas-over: “I am like the
-lupine,” he replied, “which, when dry, is very bitter,
-but perfectly sweet and agreeable after it has been
-well soaked.”<a id='r645' /><a href='#f645' class='c012'><sup>[645]</sup></a> Kidney-beans, too, were in much
-request, and pickled olives, slightly flavoured with
-fennel.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The radish<a id='r646' /><a href='#f646' class='c012'><sup>[646]</sup></a> was esteemed a great delicacy, particularly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>that of Thasos and Bœotia. And the seeds
-of the ground-pine,<a id='r647' /><a href='#f647' class='c012'><sup>[647]</sup></a> still eaten as a dessert in Italy,
-entered, in Greece, also into the list of edible fruits.<a id='r648' /><a href='#f648' class='c012'><sup>[648]</sup></a>
-The tree, I am informed, has been introduced into
-England, but I have nowhere seen its fruit brought
-among pears, walnuts, and apples, to table. Hen’s
-milk has already been spoken of among the good
-things of Hellas;<a id='r649' /><a href='#f649' class='c012'><sup>[649]</sup></a> but lest the reader should suspect
-us of amusing him with fables, it should be
-explained, that the white of an egg was so called
-by Anaxagoras.<a id='r650' /><a href='#f650' class='c012'><sup>[650]</sup></a> Eggs of all kinds were much esteemed.
-Sometimes they were boiled hard, and cut
-in two with a hair; but, many writers, confounding
-ὄα, the berries of the service-tree, with ὠὰ, eggs,
-have imagined that the Athenians, in the capriciousness
-of their culinary taste, actually ate pickled
-eggs, an idea which stirs to the bottom the erudite
-bile of David Ruhnken.<a id='r651' /><a href='#f651' class='c012'><sup>[651]</sup></a> Generally, eggs were eaten
-soft, as with us, or swallowed quite raw. Those
-of the pea-hen were considered the most delicate;
-next to these, the eggs of the chenalopex bergander,
-or Egyptian goose, and, lastly, those of the hen.
-This, at least, is the opinion of Epicrates and Heracleides,
-of Syracuse, in their treatises on cookery.<a id='r652' /><a href='#f652' class='c012'><sup>[652]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As when an entertainment was given the host necessarily
-expected his guests to make a good dinner,
-they usually commenced the business of the day with
-an antecœnium or whet, consisting of herbs of the
-sharpest taste. At Athens, the articles which generally
-composed this course were colewort, eggs, oysters,
-œnomel—a mixture of honey and wine—all supposed
-to create appetite.<a id='r653' /><a href='#f653' class='c012'><sup>[653]</sup></a> To these even in later
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>times were added the mallow and the asphodel,
-king’s-spear or day-lily, gourds,<a id='r654' /><a href='#f654' class='c012'><sup>[654]</sup></a> melons, cucumbers.
-The melons of Greece are still delicious, and famous
-as ever in the Levant. Antioch was celebrated for
-its cucumbers, Smyrna for its lettuces. Mushrooms
-were always a favourite dish;<a id='r655' /><a href='#f655' class='c012'><sup>[655]</sup></a> and they had receipts
-for producing them, which even now, perhaps, may
-not be wholly unworthy of attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The use, however, of this kind of food was always
-attended with great danger, there being comparatively
-few species that could be safely eaten. Persons
-were frequently poisoned by them, and a pretty
-epigram of Euripides has been preserved, commemorating
-a mother and three children who had been
-thus cut off, in the island of Icaros:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Bright wanderer through the eternal way,</div>
- <div class='line'>Has sight so sad as that which now</div>
- <div class='line'>Bedims the splendour of thy ray,</div>
- <div class='line'>E’er bid the streams of sorrow flow?</div>
- <div class='line'>Here, side by side, in death are laid</div>
- <div class='line'>Two darling boys, their mother’s care;</div>
- <div class='line'>And here their sister, youthful maid,</div>
- <div class='line'>Near her who nursed and thought them fair.<a id='r656' /><a href='#f656' class='c012'><sup>[656]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Diodes, of Carystos, enumerates among wholesome
-vegetables the red beet, the mallow, the dock, the
-nettle, orach, the bolbos, or truffle, and the mushroom,
-of which the best kinds were supposed to
-grow at the foot of elm and pine trees.<a id='r657' /><a href='#f657' class='c012'><sup>[657]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The sion<a id='r658' /><a href='#f658' class='c012'><sup>[658]</sup></a> (sium latifolium), another of their vegetables,
-is a plant found in marshes and meadows,
-with the smallage.<a id='r659' /><a href='#f659' class='c012'><sup>[659]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Another plant, of far greater celebrity, was the
-Silphion,<a id='r660' /><a href='#f660' class='c012'><sup>[660]</sup></a> once extremely plentiful in Cyrenaica, as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>also, though of an inferior quality, in Syria, Armenia,
-and Media, but afterwards so rare as to be thought
-extinct. Besides being used in seasoning soups and
-sauces, and mixed with salt for giving a superior
-flavour to meat, its juice occupied a high place among
-the materia medica.<a id='r661' /><a href='#f661' class='c012'><sup>[661]</sup></a> A single plant was discovered
-in the reign of Nero, and sent to Rome as a present
-to the Emperor. Its seed, according to Pollux,<a id='r662' /><a href='#f662' class='c012'><sup>[662]</sup></a> was
-called magudaris, its root silphion, the stem caulos,
-and the leaf maspeton. Be this as it may, it communicated
-to the sauces in which it was infused a
-pungent and somewhat bitter taste, and was in no
-favour with Archestratos.<a id='r663' /><a href='#f663' class='c012'><sup>[663]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>We come now to the fruit,<a id='r664' /><a href='#f664' class='c012'><sup>[664]</sup></a> and shall begin with
-that which was the pride of Attica, the fig.<a id='r665' /><a href='#f665' class='c012'><sup>[665]</sup></a> According
-to traditions fully credited in Athens, figs were first
-produced on a spot near the city, on the road to Eleusis,
-thence called <em>Hiera Sukè</em>, “the sacred fig-tree.”<a id='r666' /><a href='#f666' class='c012'><sup>[666]</sup></a>
-Like its men, the figs of Attica were esteemed the
-best in the world, and to secure an abundant supply
-for the use of the inhabitants it was forbidden to export
-them. As might have been expected, however,
-this decree was habitually contravened, and the informers
-against the delinquents were called sycophants,
-that is, “revealers of figs,”<a id='r667' /><a href='#f667' class='c012'><sup>[667]</sup></a> a word which has
-been adopted by most modern languages to signify
-mean-souled, dastardly persons, such as informers always
-are. The fig-tree of Laconia was a dwarfed
-species, and its fruit, according to Aristophanes,<a id='r668' /><a href='#f668' class='c012'><sup>[668]</sup></a> savoured
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>of hatred and tyranny, like the people themselves.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in8'>There is no kind of fig,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Whether little or big,</div>
- <div class='line'>Save the Spartan, which here does not grow;</div>
- <div class='line in8'>But this, though quite small,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Swells with hatred and gall,</div>
- <div class='line'>A stern foe to the Demos, I trow.<a id='r669' /><a href='#f669' class='c012'><sup>[669]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Aristophanes, in Athenæus, speaking of fruit, couples
-myrtle-berries with Phibaleian figs.<a id='r670' /><a href='#f670' class='c012'><sup>[670]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>According to the ancients, there were certain sorts
-of fig-trees that bore twice, thrice, and even four times,
-in the year. Sosibios, the Laconian, attributing the
-discovery of the fig to Bacchos, observes, that for this
-reason the god was, at Sparta, worshiped under the
-name of <em>Sukites</em>. Andriscos, however, and Agasthenes,
-relate that this divinity obtained the name of
-Meilichios, “the gracious,” among the Naxians because
-he taught them the use of figs. To eat figs
-at noon was regarded as unwholesome; and they were
-at all times supposed to be highly prejudicial to the
-voice, for which reason singers should carefully eschew
-them.<a id='r671' /><a href='#f671' class='c012'><sup>[671]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The apples of Delphi enjoyed great celebrity, and
-probably, therefore, were mild, since these were thought
-superior, or at least more wholesome, than sharp ones.
-Quinces they esteemed still more salubrious than apples,
-and, during certain public rejoicings, this fruit,
-handfuls of myrtle-leaves, crowns of roses and violets,
-were cast before the cars of their princes and other
-great men.<a id='r672' /><a href='#f672' class='c012'><sup>[672]</sup></a> The Greeks loved to connect something
-of the marvellous with whatever they admired. To
-the quince they attributed the honour of being a
-powerful antidote, observing that even the Phariac
-poison, though of extremely rapid operation, lost its
-virulence if poured into any vessel which had held
-quinces and retained their odour.<a id='r673' /><a href='#f673' class='c012'><sup>[673]</sup></a> According to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>Hermon, in his Cretic Glossaries, the quince was called
-Kodumala, in Crete. Sidoüs, a village of Corinthia,
-was famous for its fine apples; and even Corinth
-itself, the “windy Ephyrè” of Homer, produced them
-in great perfection.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“O where is the maiden, sweeter far</div>
- <div class='line'>Than the ruddy fruits of Ephyrè are?</div>
- <div class='line'>When the winds of summer have o’er them blown,</div>
- <div class='line'>And their cheeks with autumn’s gold have been strown!”<a id='r674' /><a href='#f674' class='c012'><sup>[674]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Another favourite fruit was the peach, introduced
-from Persia into Greece.<a id='r675' /><a href='#f675' class='c012'><sup>[675]</sup></a> The citron, too, though
-supposed by some not to have been known to the
-ancient inhabitants of Hellas, perfumed in later
-ages the tables of the Greeks with its delicious
-fragrance. This is the fruit which, according to
-King Juba, was called in Africa “the apple of the
-Hesperides,” a name bestowed by Timachidas on
-a rich and fragrant kind of pear called <em>epimelis</em>.
-The oldest Greek writer who has described the citron
-tree is Theophrastus,<a id='r676' /><a href='#f676' class='c012'><sup>[676]</sup></a> who says it was found
-in Persia and Media. Its leaf, he observes, resembled
-that of the laurel, the strawberry tree, or
-the walnut. Like the wild pear tree, and the oxyacanthos,
-it has sharp, smooth, and very strong
-prickles. The fruit is not eaten, but together with
-the leaves exhales a sweet odour, and laid with
-cloths in coffers protects them from the moth. The
-citron tree, is always covered with fruit, some ripe
-and fit to be gathered, others green, with patches
-of gold; and, in the midst of these, are other
-branches covered thick with blossoms. It now
-forms the fairest ornaments of the gardens of Heliopolis,
-where it shades the Fountain of the Sun.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>Antiphanes observes, in his B&oelig;otian, that it had
-only recently been introduced into Attica:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A. ’Twould be absurd to speak of what’s to eat,</div>
- <div class='line in3'>As if you thought of such things; but, fair maid,</div>
- <div class='line in3'>Take of these apples.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>B. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oh, how beautiful!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A. They are, indeed, since hither they but lately</div>
- <div class='line in3'>Have come from the great king.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>B. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By Phosphoros!</div>
- <div class='line in3'>I could have thought them from the Hesperian bowers,</div>
- <div class='line in3'>Where th’ apples are of gold.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There are but three.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>B. The beautiful is no where plentiful.<a id='r677' /><a href='#f677' class='c012'><sup>[677]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Athenæus, after quoting the testimony of poets,
-relates a curious anecdote <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>à propos</i></span> of citrons,
-which I shall here repeat: it has, probably, some
-reference to the secret of the Psylli. An opinion,
-it seems, prevailed in Egypt, that a citron eaten
-the first thing in the morning was an antidote
-against all kinds of poison, whether taken into the
-stomach, or introduced by puncture into the blood,
-and the notion arose out of the following circumstance.
-A governor of Egypt, in the time of the
-Emperors, had condemned two criminals to be executed,
-in obedience to custom, by the bite of an
-asp. They were, accordingly, led in the morning
-towards the place of execution, and on the way
-the landlady of an inn, who happened to be eating
-citrons, compassionating their condition, gave them
-some which they ate. Shortly afterwards they
-were exposed to the hungry serpents, which immediately
-bit them, but instead of exhibiting the
-usual symptoms followed by death, they remained
-uninjured. At this the governor marvelled much,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>and at length demanded of the soldier who guarded
-them, whether they had taken anything previously
-to their arrival. Learning what had happened
-he put off the execution to the following day, and
-ordering a citron to be given to one and not
-to the other, they were once more exposed to the
-bite of the asp. The wretch who had eaten nothing
-died soon after he was bitten, but the other
-experienced no inconvenience. Similar experiments
-were several times afterwards made by others, until
-it was at length ascertained that this exquisite
-fruit is really an antidote against poisons.<a id='r678' /><a href='#f678' class='c012'><sup>[678]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Another fruit of which great use was made, was
-the damascene plum, sometimes confounded with
-the brabylon. The cherry,<a id='r679' /><a href='#f679' class='c012'><sup>[679]</sup></a> introduced into Italy
-by Lucullus, was known to the Greeks<a id='r680' /><a href='#f680' class='c012'><sup>[680]</sup></a> at a much
-earlier period, and is described by Theophrastus.
-The wild service berry,<a id='r681' /><a href='#f681' class='c012'><sup>[681]</sup></a> the dwarf cherry, the arbutus
-fruit, and the mulberry, formed part of their
-dessert. Even the blackberry, when perfectly ripe,
-was not disdained.<a id='r682' /><a href='#f682' class='c012'><sup>[682]</sup></a> In fact, both the mulberry
-and blackberry were esteemed a preventive of gout,
-and an ancient writer relates, that this kind of
-fruit having failed during a period of twenty years,
-that disease prevailed like an epidemic, attacking
-persons of both sexes and all ages, and extending
-its ravages even to the sheep and cattle.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Filberts, walnuts, and almonds,<a id='r683' /><a href='#f683' class='c012'><sup>[683]</sup></a> deservedly held
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>a high place in the estimation of the ancients. Of
-almonds, the island of Naxos had the reputation of
-producing very excellent ones, and those of Cypros
-also enjoyed considerable reputation. These latter
-were longer in form than the former; like pickled
-olives they were eaten at the commencement of a
-repast, for the purpose of producing thirst; and
-bitter almonds were considered a preservative against
-intoxication, as we learn from an anecdote of Tiberius’s
-physician, who could encounter three bottles
-when thus fortified, but easily succumbed if deprived
-of his almonds. This fruit being extremely
-common in Greece, they had their almond-crackers,
-as we have our nut-crackers, which at Sparta were
-called <em>moucerobatos</em> but <em>amygdalocatactes</em> in the rest
-of Greece.<a id='r684' /><a href='#f684' class='c012'><sup>[684]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The larger kind of chestnut, sometimes denominated
-the “acorns of Zeus,” appears to have been
-introduced into Greece from the countries round the
-Pontos Euxinos, where they were produced in
-great abundance, particularly in the environs of Heraclea.
-There was, likewise, a sort of chestnut imported
-from Persia, and another from the neighbourhood
-of Sardes, in Lydia. Both these and the
-walnut were considered indigestible; but not so the
-almond, of which it was thought great quantities
-might be eaten with impunity.<a id='r685' /><a href='#f685' class='c012'><sup>[685]</sup></a> The best kinds
-were produced in Thasos and Cypros, and, when
-freshly gathered, the almonds of the south are, undoubtedly,
-of all fruit, the most delicate. The
-walnuts <a id='corr163.31'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='aud'>and</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_163.31'><ins class='correction' title='aud'>and</ins></a></span> chestnuts of Eub&oelig;a, in the opinion
-of Mnestheos, were difficult of digestion, but fattening;
-and no one can have frequented the eastern
-shores of the Mediterranean without observing what
-an important article of food, and how nourishing,
-they are.<a id='r686' /><a href='#f686' class='c012'><sup>[686]</sup></a> The pistachio nut, produced from a tree
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>resembling the almond-tree, was imported from Syria
-and Arabia.<a id='r687' /><a href='#f687' class='c012'><sup>[687]</sup></a> The <em>persea</em>, now no longer known,
-but supposed to be represented on the walls of the
-Memnonium,<a id='r688' /><a href='#f688' class='c012'><sup>[688]</sup></a> at Thebes, is, also, said, by Poseidonios,
-the stoic, to have grown in Arabia and Syria,
-and I brought home a quantity of leaves, preserved
-in an Egyptian coffin, which are, probably, those
-of this tree. Pears, which were brought to table
-floating in water,<a id='r689' /><a href='#f689' class='c012'><sup>[689]</sup></a> and service-berries, were grown
-in great perfection in the island of Ceos, and B&oelig;otia
-was famous for its pomegranates.<a id='r690' /><a href='#f690' class='c012'><sup>[690]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Speaking of this fruit, which the Bœotians call
-<em>sidè</em>, Agatharchides relates the following anecdote:
-A dispute arising between the Athenians and B&oelig;otians,
-respecting a spot called <em>Sidè</em>, situated on the
-borders, Epaminondas, in order to decide the question,
-took out a pomegranate from under his robe,
-and demanded of the Athenians, what they called
-it. “<em>Rhoa</em>” they replied. “Very good,” said Epaminondas;
-<a id='corr164.20'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='but'>“but</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_164.20'><ins class='correction' title='but'>“but</ins></a></span> we call it <em>Sidè</em>, and, as the place
-derives its name from the fruit which grows there
-in abundance, it is clear the land must belong to
-us.” And it was decided in favour of the Bœotians.<a id='r691' /><a href='#f691' class='c012'><sup>[691]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>We have already observed, that the palm-tree
-flourished and produced dates in Greece, particularly
-in Attica and Delos;<a id='r692' /><a href='#f692' class='c012'><sup>[692]</sup></a> but it is clear, from a
-remark of Xenophon, that these dates were small
-and of an inferior quality; for, speaking of the productions
-of Mesopotamia, he says, that they set
-aside for the slaves such dates as resembled those
-produced in Greece, while the larger and finer kinds,<a id='r693' /><a href='#f693' class='c012'><sup>[693]</sup></a>
-which were like amber in colour, they selected for
-their own use. They were also dried, as they still
-are in the East, to be eaten as a dessert, at other
-seasons of the year. From which we learn, that
-the black date, which is larger and finer than the
-yellow, was not then cultivated in Persia. But
-neither dates, nor any other fruit, could compare
-with the grape, which is found in perfection in almost
-every part of Greece, where, as in Burgundy and, I
-presume, in the rest of France, the law regulated
-the period of the vintage, prohibiting individuals
-from gathering their grapes earlier under a heavy
-penalty.<a id='r694' /><a href='#f694' class='c012'><sup>[694]</sup></a> The best kind of grape in Attica, like
-that of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>Clos Vougeot</i></span> in Burgundy, was the <em>Nikostrateios</em>,
-supposed to be unrivalled for excellence,
-though the Rhodians pretended, in their <em>Hipponion</em>,
-to possess its equal.<a id='r695' /><a href='#f695' class='c012'><sup>[695]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>From the grape we pass naturally to wine, which
-has of itself formed the subject of many treatises.
-It will not, therefore, be expected that we should
-enter into very minute details; though, if we are
-sparing, it will certainly not be for want of materials.
-D’Herbelot<a id='r696' /><a href='#f696' class='c012'><sup>[696]</sup></a> relates an oriental tradition which attributes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>the invention of wine to the ancient Persian
-monarch Giamshid; and Bochart, with some
-show of ingenuity, attributes to Bacchos, the Grecian
-inventor and god of wine, an origin which
-would confound him with the founder of Babylon.<a id='r697' /><a href='#f697' class='c012'><sup>[697]</sup></a>
-A very celebrated wine, called <em>nectar</em>, is said to
-have been produced in the neighbourhood of that
-city.<a id='r698' /><a href='#f698' class='c012'><sup>[698]</sup></a> But, according to Theopompos, it was the
-inhabitants of Chios who first planted and cultivated
-the vine, and from them the knowledge was transmitted
-to the other Greeks.<a id='r699' /><a href='#f699' class='c012'><sup>[699]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Theophrastus<a id='r700' /><a href='#f700' class='c012'><sup>[700]</sup></a> relates that, in the territory of
-Heraclea, in Arcadia, there was a wine which rendered
-men insane and women prolific.<a id='r701' /><a href='#f701' class='c012'><sup>[701]</sup></a> In the
-environs of Cerynia, in Achaia, grew a vine, the
-wine of which blasted the fruit of the womb, nay,
-the very grapes were said to possess a similar quality.<a id='r702' /><a href='#f702' class='c012'><sup>[702]</sup></a>
-At Thasos were two kinds of wine, of which
-the one caused stupefaction, while the other was in
-the highest degree exhilarating.<a id='r703' /><a href='#f703' class='c012'><sup>[703]</sup></a> The wine called
-anthosmias,<a id='r704' /><a href='#f704' class='c012'><sup>[704]</sup></a> according to Phanias of Eresos, was
-produced by mixing one part of salt-water with
-fifty parts of wine, and it was considered best when
-made with the grapes of young vines. The comic
-poets are eloquent in praise of the wines of Thasos,
-particularly of that mixed sort, of most agreeable
-flavour, which was drunk in their Prytaneion. Theophrastus<a id='r705' /><a href='#f705' class='c012'><sup>[705]</sup></a>
-gives the recipe for making it. They threw,
-he says, into the jars, a small quantity of flour
-kneaded with honey, the latter to impart a sweet
-odour to the wine, the former mildness. A similar
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>effect was produced by mixing up hard inodorous
-wine with one which was oily and fragrant.<a id='r706' /><a href='#f706' class='c012'><sup>[706]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The wines of Cos, Myndos, and Halicarnassos, being
-thought to temper the crudity of rain and well-water,
-were, therefore, like all others containing a quantity
-of salt-water, in great request at Athens and Sicyon,
-where the springs were harsh. The Mareotic wine<a id='r707' /><a href='#f707' class='c012'><sup>[707]</sup></a>
-was made from vineyards on the banks of the lake
-Mareotis, where the present Pasha has his gardens,
-in the vicinity of Marea, once a place of considerable
-importance, but now a small village. Attempts, however,
-have been made by M. Abro, an Armenian, once
-more to cover the ancient sites with vineyards, several
-acres of ground being planted with cuttings imported
-from the great nursery grounds at Chambéry, in Savoy.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The town of Marea derived its name, according to
-tradition, from Maron,<a id='r708' /><a href='#f708' class='c012'><sup>[708]</sup></a> a person who accompanied
-Bacchos in his military expedition, and, in honour of
-its founder, surrounded itself with the fruit-tree most
-agreeable to that god. The grapes here produced
-were delicious, and the wine, slightly astringent and
-aromatic, had an exquisite flavour. The Mareotic
-was white, of delicate taste, light, sparkling, and by
-no means heady. The best sort was the Tæniotic,
-so called from the <em>tænia</em>, “sandy eminences,” on which
-the vineyards were situated. This wine, in its pure
-state, had a greenish tinge, like the Johanisberg, and
-was rich and unctuous; but, mingled with water, it
-assumed the colour of Attic honey. By degrees the
-vine grew to be cultivated along the whole course
-of the Nile,<a id='r709' /><a href='#f709' class='c012'><sup>[709]</sup></a> but its produce differed greatly in different
-places, both in colour and quality. Among the
-best was that of Antylla, a city near Alexandria,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>the revenues arising from which the ancient kings of
-Egypt, and afterwards those of Persia, settled on their
-queens for their girdle. The wines of the Thebaid,
-particularly those made about Koptos, were so extremely
-light as to be given even in fevers, as, moreover,
-they passed quickly, and greatly promoted digestion.<a id='r710' /><a href='#f710' class='c012'><sup>[710]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>According to Nicander of Colophon, the word οἶνος,
-“wine,” was derived from the name of <em>Oineus</em>, who
-having squeezed out the juice of the grape into vases,
-called it, after his own name, <em>wine</em>. Diphilos,<a id='r711' /><a href='#f711' class='c012'><sup>[711]</sup></a> the
-comic poet, gives us, however, something better than
-etymologies in that burst of Bacchic enthusiasm in
-which, in verses fragrant as Burgundy, he celebrates
-the praises of the gift of Dionysos:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Oh! friend to the wise, to the children of song,</div>
- <div class='line'>Take me with thee, thou wisest and sweetest, along;</div>
- <div class='line'>To the humble, the lowly, proud thoughts dost thou bring,</div>
- <div class='line'>For the wretch who has thee is as blythe as a king:</div>
- <div class='line'>From the brows of the sage, in thy humorous play,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou dost smooth every furrow, every wrinkle away;</div>
- <div class='line'>To the weak thou giv’st strength, to the mendicant gold,</div>
- <div class='line'>And a slave warmed by thee as a lion is bold.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Nectar, the poetical drink of the gods, was a
-sort of wine made near Olympos in Lydia, by mingling
-with the juice of the grape a little pure
-honey and flowers of delicate fragrance. Anaxandrides,
-indeed, regards the nectar as the food of
-the immortals, and ambrosia as their wine; in which
-opinion he is upheld by Alcman and Sappho. But
-Homer and Ibycos take an opposite view of the
-matter.<a id='r712' /><a href='#f712' class='c012'><sup>[712]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Alexis speaks of those who are half-seas-over
-as much addicted to reasoning. Nicænetus<a id='r713' /><a href='#f713' class='c012'><sup>[713]</sup></a> considers
-wine as the Pegasus of a poet, mounted on
-the wings of which like Trygæos on his beetle he
-soars “to the bright heaven of invention.” At the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>port of Munychia, too, good wine was held in high
-estimation; indeed, the honest folks of this borough,
-with small respect for the water nymphs,
-paid particular honour to the hero <em>Acratopotes</em>, that
-is, in plain English, “one who drinks unmixed
-wine.” Even among the Spartans,<a id='r714' /><a href='#f714' class='c012'><sup>[714]</sup></a> in spite of their
-cothons, and black broth, certain culinary artistes
-set up in the Phydition, or common dining-hall,
-statues in honour of the heroes <em>Matton</em> and <em>Keraon</em>,
-that is, the genii of eating and drinking. In
-Achaia, too, much reverence was paid to <em>Deipneus</em>,
-or the god who presides over good suppers.<a id='r715' /><a href='#f715' class='c012'><sup>[715]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the Greeks had a marvellous respect for wine
-they, like the German paper enthusiast, almost appeared
-to imagine it could be made out of a stone.
-They had, accordingly, fig wine,<a id='r716' /><a href='#f716' class='c012'><sup>[716]</sup></a> root wine, palm
-wine, and so on; and their made or mixed wines
-were without number. There was scarcely an
-island or city in the Mediterranean that did not
-export its wines to Athens: they had the Lesbian,
-the Eub&oelig;an, the Peparethian, the Chalybonian, the
-Thasian, the Pramnian, and the Port wine. We
-have already observed, that wine was drunk mixed
-with flour,<a id='r717' /><a href='#f717' class='c012'><sup>[717]</sup></a> and in the island of Theræ it was
-thickened with the yolk of an egg. In the Megaris
-they prepared with raisins or dried grapes<a id='r718' /><a href='#f718' class='c012'><sup>[718]</sup></a>
-a wine called <em>passon</em>, in taste resembling the Ægosthenic
-sweet wine, or the Cretan malmsey. But,
-however exquisite the wines themselves, it was not
-thought enough in the summer months unless they
-were brought to table cooled with ice or snow,<a id='r719' /><a href='#f719' class='c012'><sup>[719]</sup></a>
-which was accordingly the practice.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f621'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r621'>621</a>. Athen. vii. 23.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f622'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r622'>622</a>. Athen. iv. 23.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f623'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r623'>623</a>. The solitary sparrow inhabits
-the cliffs of Delphi, and the song-thrush
-is heard in the pine woods
-of Parnassus. Above these, when
-the heights of the mountain are
-covered with snow, is seen the
-Emberiza Nivalis, inhabitant alike
-of the frozen Spitzbergen, and of
-the Grecian Alp.—Sibthorpe in
-Walp. Mem. i. 76, seq. Homer
-is said to have written a poem
-called Ἐπικιχλίδες, because when
-he sung it to the boys they rewarded
-him with thrushes. In
-consequence of the estimation in
-which these birds were held
-κιχλίζω “to feed on thrushes,”
-came to signify “to live luxuriously.”—Payne
-Knight, Prolegg.
-ad Hom. p. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f624'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r624'>624</a>. The red-winged thrush, well
-known to sportsmen in hard
-weather.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f625'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r625'>625</a>. Athen. ii. 68.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f626'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r626'>626</a>. Arist. Hist. Anim. viii. 3. p.
-221. ix. 49. p. 305. Bekk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f627'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r627'>627</a>. The turtle and the wood-pigeon
-are found in the woods and
-thickets. Among the larks, I
-observed the crested lark to be
-the most frequent species, with a
-small sort, probably the alauda
-campestris of Linnæus. Blackbirds
-frequent the olive grounds
-of Pendeli.—Sibth. in Walp.
-Mem. i. 76.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f628'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r628'>628</a>. Athen. ii. 69–72.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f629'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r629'>629</a>. See the fragment of Eubulos’s
-Garland-Seller, in Athen. ix. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f630'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r630'>630</a>. Athen. ix. 38.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f631'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r631'>631</a>. No bird appears to have
-puzzled commentators more than
-the <em>attagas</em>, some supposing it to
-be the <em>francolin</em>, or grouse, which
-is Schneider’s opinion; others, as
-Passow, the <em>hazel-hen</em>; others,
-again, as Ainsworth, consider it
-to have been a delicious bird, resembling
-our wood-cock, or snipe.
-Mr. Mitchell’s edit. of the Acharnæ
-of Aristophanes, 783.—This
-learned writer professes not to
-understand what Schneider means
-by <em>francolin</em>. The word in Italian
-is <span lang="it" xml:lang="it"><em>francolino</em></span>, as appears from
-Bellon. v. 6: <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Italiens ont
-nommé cet oiseau Francolin, que
-parcequ’il est franc dans ce pays,
-c’est-à-dire, qu’il est defendu au
-peuple d’en tuer: il n’y a que les
-princes qui aient cette prérogative.</span>—Valmont
-de Bomare, ii.
-739.—Hardouin thinks, that the
-Attagas is the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>gallina rustica</i></span>, or
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>gelinotte de bois</i></span>, which Laveaux
-explains to be a sort of partridge.—Cf.
-Dict. Franç. in voce, and
-Plin. Hist. Nat. xi. 68. ed. Franz.
-Cf. Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 257.
-This bird was plentiful about Marathon,
-Pac. 249.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f632'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r632'>632</a>. Athen. ix. 40. Aristoph.
-Hist. Anim. i. 17. viii. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f633'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r633'>633</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 103.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f634'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r634'>634</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 803.—It
-was thought, also, to deserve a
-place among the offerings to Asclepios,
-especially by pious old
-women, who, having lost their
-teeth, could eat nothing else. In
-lieu of the classical name of ἀθάρα,
-this gruel obtained, in the dialect
-of the common people, the more
-homely designation of κουρκούτη.
-Schol. Plut. 673.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f635'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r635'>635</a>. Athen. iii. 101. iv. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f636'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r636'>636</a>. Onomast. vi. 62.—Made usually
-from panic seed in Caria.—Schol.
-Aristoph. Pac. 580, et Eq.
-803. Cf. Goguet, Origine des
-Loix, i. 212.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f637'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r637'>637</a>. Onomast. i. 237. vi. 57, 69.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f638'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r638'>638</a>. Vid. Schol. Arist. Eq. 949.
-Acharn. 1066.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f639'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r639'>639</a>. Aristoph. Eq. 208.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f640'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r640'>640</a>. Athen. ii. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f641'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r641'>641</a>. Aristoph. Eq. 422. Brunck.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f642'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r642'>642</a>. Aristoph. Pac. 503.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f643'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r643'>643</a>. Cf. Lucian. Amor. § 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f644'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r644'>644</a>. Cf. Arist. Acharn. 166. Eq.
-493. Athen. xiii. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f645'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r645'>645</a>. This is as good as the reply
-of an English labourer who, being
-reproached for babbling in his
-drink, replied, “Sir, I am like a
-hedgehog—when I’m wet I
-open.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f646'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r646'>646</a>. Hesiod. Oper. et Dies, 41. ed.
-Gœttling. Aristoph. Plut. 543.
-Brunck.—Lobeck. Aglaoph. p.
-899.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f647'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r647'>647</a>. The kernels of the stone-pine
-are brought to table in Turkey.
-They are very common in the
-kitchens of Aleppo.—Russell ap.
-Walp. Mem. i. 236.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f648'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r648'>648</a>. Tim. Lex. Platon. v. στέμφυλα,
-p. 239. Ruhnken. Athen.
-ii. 45.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f649'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r649'>649</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 505.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f650'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r650'>650</a>. Athen. ix. 37.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f651'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r651'>651</a>. Not. ad Timæi Lex. Plat.
-p. 189. Cf. Platon. Conviv.
-Oper. iv. 404. Bekk. Athen.
-ii. 50.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f652'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r652'>652</a>. Athen. ii. 50.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f653'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r653'>653</a>. Potter, Archæol. Græc. iv.
-20. Stuck. Antiq. Conviv. iii. 11.
-Petron. Satyr. § 31. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f654'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r654'>654</a>. The σίκυα or long Indian
-gourd, so called because the seed
-was first brought from India to
-Greece. Athen. ii. 53.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f655'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r655'>655</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 189.
-191. Eccles. 1092. Theoph. Hist.
-Plant. vii. 13. 8. Dioscor. ii.
-200, seq. Athen. xii. 44. 70.
-Plin. Hist. Nat. xix. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f656'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r656'>656</a>. Athen. ii. 57.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f657'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r657'>657</a>. Athen. ii. 57. 59.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f658'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r658'>658</a>. Plin. Hist. Nat. xix. 11.
-Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 191. 199.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f659'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r659'>659</a>. Dioscorid. ii. 154.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f660'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r660'>660</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 891.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f661'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r661'>661</a>. It is called <em>laser</em>, Plin. Hist.
-Nat. xix. 15. Hard. But Philoxenos,
-in his Glossary, writes
-λάσαριον. Idem. See Dioscorid.
-iii. 76; and Strabo, xi. 13. t. ii.
-p. 452. Cf. Ezek. Spanh. Diss.
-iv. De Usu et Præstant. Numism.
-p. 253, sqq. Brotier, in
-his notes on Pliny, observes, on
-the authority of Le Maire, that
-the Silphion is still found in the
-neighbourhood of Derné, where it
-is called <em>cefie</em> or <em>zerra</em>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f662'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r662'>662</a>. Onomast. vi. 67.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f663'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r663'>663</a>. Ap. Athen. ii. 64.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f664'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r664'>664</a>. Plat. Tim. t. vii. p. 119. Bruyerin.
-de Re Cib. 1. xi. p. 447,
-sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f665'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r665'>665</a>. At present the green fig is
-esteemed insipid in Greece. Hobhouse,
-Travels, i. 227.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f666'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r666'>666</a>. Athen. iii. 6. Meurs. Lect.
-Att. v. 16. p. 274.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f667'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r667'>667</a>. Athen. iii. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f668'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r668'>668</a>. Fragm. Γεωργ. iv. t. ii. p.
-268. Bekk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f669'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r669'>669</a>. Athen. iii. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f670'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r670'>670</a>. See Schol. Aristoph. Acharn.
-707.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f671'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r671'>671</a>. Athen. iii. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f672'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r672'>672</a>. Stesich. ap. Athen. iii. 20.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f673'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r673'>673</a>. Athen. iii. 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f674'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r674'>674</a>. Antigonos Carystios, ap.
-Athen. iii. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f675'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r675'>675</a>. Vict. Var. Lect. p. 892.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f676'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r676'>676</a>. Hist. Plantarum, iv. 4. 2. The
-orange attains great perfection in
-Crete. Mr. Pashley speaks of
-twelve different kinds, and nearly
-as many sorts of lemons. Travels,
-i. 96, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f677'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r677'>677</a>. Ap. Athen. iii. 27. Mitford,
-Hist. Greece, i. 154, note 59, misled
-by Barthelemy (Anacharsis,
-ch. 59) confounds Antiphanes,
-the comic poet, born B. C. 407
-(Clinton, Fast. Hellen. ii. 81) with
-Antiphon, the master of Thucydides,
-born B. C. 479, and who
-died in the year 411, four years
-before the birth of Antiphanes.—Clinton,
-ii. 31, 37.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f678'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r678'>678</a>. Athen. iii. 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f679'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r679'>679</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii. 13, 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f680'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r680'>680</a>. It was spoken of by Xenophanes
-in his treatise περὶ φύσεως.
-Poll. vi. 46. Now this philosopher
-was born about the 40th
-Olympiad, 620 B. C.—Clinton,
-Fast. Hellen. ii. sub an. 477.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f681'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r681'>681</a>. The berry of the cedar, about
-the same size as that of the
-myrtle, had a pleasant taste, and
-was commonly eaten.—Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. iii. 12. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f682'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r682'>682</a>. Athen. ii. 33–37. A dainty
-of a very peculiar character is
-sometimes seen on the tables of
-the modern Greeks. “We were
-served also with some φασκομῆλια,
-or sage apples, the inflated
-tumours formed upon a species of
-sage, and the effect of the puncture
-of a cynops.”—Sibth. in
-Walp. Mem. t. i. p. 62. Cf. Sibth.
-Flor. Græc. t. i. pl. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f683'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r683'>683</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 11. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f684'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r684'>684</a>. Athen. ii. 40.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f685'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r685'>685</a>. Dioscorid. i. 176. Athen. ii.
-42. Cf. Hippocrat. de Morb. ii.
-p. 484. Foës.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f686'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r686'>686</a>. Athen. ii. 43.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f687'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r687'>687</a>. Athen. xiv. 61.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f688'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r688'>688</a>. We find that the Persea
-grew, likewise, in the island of
-Rhodes, but there, though flowers
-came, it produced no fruit.—Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. iii. 3, 5.
-For a full description of the tree
-see iv. 2, 5, and Cf. Caus. Plant.
-ii. 3, 7.—In its original country,
-Persia, the fruit of this tree is
-said to have been poisonous, for
-which reason the companions of
-Cambyses carried along with
-them numerous young trees,
-which they planted in various
-parts of Egypt, that the inhabitants,
-eating of the fruit, might
-perish. But, through the influence
-of soil and climate, the
-nature of the Persea was wholly
-changed, and, instead of a harsh
-and fatal berry, produced delicious
-fruit.—Ælian. de Nat.
-Animal. ap. Schneid. ad Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. iv. 2, 5. t. iii. p.
-284.—Cf. Athen. xiv. 61.—Schweigh.
-Animadv. t. xii. p. 585.
-Plin. xv. 13. xvi. 46.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f689'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r689'>689</a>. Athen. xiv. 63.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f690'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r690'>690</a>. The best pomegranates, however,
-were grown in Egypt and
-Cilicia.—Theoph. Caus. Plant.
-ii. 13. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f691'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r691'>691</a>. Athen. xiv. 64.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f692'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r692'>692</a>. Theoph. Char. pp. 33, 233.
-Casaub. A very fine palm-tree
-is at present growing in one of
-the principal streets of Athens.—Blackwood’s
-Magazine, April,
-1838.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f693'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r693'>693</a>. Pollux, i. 73. Herod. i. 28,
-172, 193. ii. 156. iv. 172, 183.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f694'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r694'>694</a>. Plato de Legg. t. viii. p. 106.
-Bekk. Athen. xiv. 68.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f695'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r695'>695</a>. Athen. xiv. 68. Cf. Bruyerin.
-de Re Cibaria, xi. 447, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f696'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r696'>696</a>. Biliothèque Orientale, Article
-Giamschid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f697'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r697'>697</a>. Geog. Sacr. I. ii. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f698'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r698'>698</a>. Chæreas. ap. Athen. i. 58.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f699'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r699'>699</a>. Athen. i. 47.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f700'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r700'>700</a>. Hist. Plant. ix. 18. 10, seq.
-In Athenæus, instead of Heraclea,
-we find Heræa, i. 57. Cf.
-Ælian. Var. Hist. xiii. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f701'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r701'>701</a>. The same effect was attributed
-to the waters of a fountain
-flowing near a temple of Aphrodite
-upon Mount Hymettos.—Chandler,
-ii. 164.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f702'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r702'>702</a>. Plin. Hist. Nat. xiv. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f703'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r703'>703</a>. Athen. i. 57.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f704'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r704'>704</a>. Ὁ ἀνθέων ὀσμὴν ἔχων οἶνος.—Etym.
-Mag. 108. 41. Cf.
-Suid. v. ἀνθοσμίας. t. i. p. 289.
-b. Aristoph. Plut. 808. Ran.
-1181.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f705'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r705'>705</a>. De Odor. 51.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f706'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r706'>706</a>. Athen. i. 56.—Cydonia, in
-Crete, is conjectured, by Mr.
-Pashley, to have produced a
-good wine.—Travels in Crete, i.
-23, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f707'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r707'>707</a>. Athen. i. 59.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f708'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r708'>708</a>. Idem, i. 60. Horat. Carm.
-i. 37. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f709'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r709'>709</a>. The cultivation of the vine
-appears to have flourished in
-Egypt down to the reign of the
-Caliph Beamrillah, who commanded
-all the vineyards both in
-the valley of the Nile and in
-Syria to be utterly destroyed.
-Maured Allatafet Jemaleddini,
-p. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f710'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r710'>710</a>. Athen. i. 60.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f711'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r711'>711</a>. Idem, ii. 1, where are collected
-many other etymologies
-and curious fables.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f712'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r712'>712</a>. Athen. ii. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f713'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r713'>713</a>. Or Nicarchos. Anthol. Græc.
-xiii. 29. Athen. ii. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f714'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r714'>714</a>. Athen. ii. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f715'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r715'>715</a>. Athen. ii. 9. Cf. x. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f716'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r716'>716</a>. Damm. 2224. βρύτον. Athen.
-x. 67. Plato de Rep. t. vi. p.
-144. Xenoph. Anab. p. 54. 138.
-Cyrop. p. 522. Plin. Hist. Nat.
-xiii. 4. Diod. Sic. ii. 136. On
-the οἶνος συκίτης vid. Foës. Œcon.
-Hip. in v. Dioscorid. v.
-40. Lotus wine. Theoph. Hist.
-Plant, iv. 3. 1. Herod, iv. 177.
-Athen. vii. 9–13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f717'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r717'>717</a>. Plato de Repub. t. vi. p.
-144. Bekk. Athen. viii. 1. On
-the Pramnian cf. Athen. 1, 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f718'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r718'>718</a>. Athen. x. 41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f719'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r719'>719</a>. Athen. x. 56.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>
- <h3 class='c002'>CHAPTER V. <br /> ENTERTAINMENTS.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Having now gone rapidly through the materials
-of which Grecian repasts consisted, it will next be
-necessary to describe the manner in which all these
-good things were disposed of, first to maintain the
-energy of the frame, and secondly, for mere pleasure
-and pastime. Locke, with many other modern
-philosophers, erroneously supposes the Greeks of remote
-antiquity to have been so abstemious as to
-content themselves with one meal per diem. But
-experience appears to have led all mankind on this
-point to much the same conclusion; viz., that
-health and comfort require men to eat at least
-thrice in the day,<a id='r720' /><a href='#f720' class='c012'><sup>[720]</sup></a> which accordingly was the practice
-of the ancient Greeks, though Philemon and
-others enumerate four repasts. Our own ancestors,
-before the introduction of tea and coffee, appear
-to have been very well content with beer or ale
-for their morning’s meal, so that we could not pity
-the Greeks even though it should be found that
-they had nothing better<a id='r721' /><a href='#f721' class='c012'><sup>[721]</sup></a> than hot rolls, muffins,
-or crumpets, with strawberries, grapes, pears, and
-a flask of Chian or Falernian. But they soon found
-the necessity of some warm beverage; and though
-it does not appear how it was prepared, they had
-a substitute for tea,<a id='r722' /><a href='#f722' class='c012'><sup>[722]</sup></a> in use at Athens, in Eubœa,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>in Crete, and, no doubt, in all other parts
-of Greece. This meal, of whatever it consisted,
-was called <em>acratisma</em>, or <em>ariston</em>, and eaten at break
-of day.<a id='r723' /><a href='#f723' class='c012'><sup>[723]</sup></a> Homer’s heroes, whose business was fighting,
-just snatched a hasty meal, and hurried to the
-field; but at Athens, where people had other employments,
-they breakfasted early, to allow themselves
-ample time for despatching their affairs in
-the city, if they had any, and afterwards at their
-neighbouring farms or villas.<a id='r724' /><a href='#f724' class='c012'><sup>[724]</sup></a> The second repast,
-<em>deipnon</em>, or dinner, seems to have been eaten about
-eleven or twelve o’clock: the <em>hesperisma</em>,<a id='r725' /><a href='#f725' class='c012'><sup>[725]</sup></a> equivalent
-to our tea, late in the afternoon, and the
-<em>dorpon</em>, or supper, the last thing in the evening.
-But of these meals two only were serious affairs,
-and the <em>hesperisma</em> was often dispensed with altogether.
-In fact, Athenæus, a great authority
-on this subject, considers it perfectly absurd to
-suppose, that the frugal ancients could have
-thought of eating so often as three times in one
-day.<a id='r726' /><a href='#f726' class='c012'><sup>[726]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the greater includes the less, instead of confining
-ourselves to the ordinary daily dinner of a
-Greek, we shall in preference describe their grand
-entertainments, introducing remarks on the former
-by the way. These repasts were divided into three
-classes, the public dinner, the pic-nic, and the marriage
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>feast. The last, so far as it had any peculiar
-features, has been described among the circumstances
-attending matrimony. We have, therefore, for
-the present, to do with two only; and, as the
-Greek contrived to throw much of his ingenuity
-into all matters connected with feasting and merry-making,
-the discussion of this part of our subject
-should savour strongly of mirth and jollity.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The grand dinner,<a id='r727' /><a href='#f727' class='c012'><sup>[727]</sup></a> which they called <em>eilapinè</em>, was
-generally given at the expense of an individual, and
-its sumptuousness knew no limit but the means of
-the host. Other kinds of feasts there were at which
-all the members of a tribe, a borough, or a fraternity,
-were entertained, not to speak for the present of the
-common tables of the Cretans, Spartans, or Prytanes
-of Athens. We now confine ourselves to those jovial
-assemblages of private citizens whose object in meeting
-was not so much the dinner, though that was
-not overlooked, as the elevation of animal spirits and
-flow of soul produced by the union of a thousand
-different circumstances.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When a rich man desired to see his friends around
-him at his board, he delivered to his <em>deipnocletor</em><a id='r728' /><a href='#f728' class='c012'><sup>[728]</sup></a>
-a domestic kept for this purpose, a tablet, or as we
-should say, a card, whereon the names of the persons
-to be invited, with the day and hour fixed
-upon for the banquet, were inscribed. With brothers
-and other very near relations this ceremony was
-thought unnecessary.<a id='r729' /><a href='#f729' class='c012'><sup>[729]</sup></a> They came without invitation.
-So likewise did another class of men, who,
-living at large upon the public and lighting unbidden
-upon any sport to which they were attracted by the
-savour of a good dinner, were denominated<a id='r730' /><a href='#f730' class='c012'><sup>[730]</sup></a> <span class='sc'>Flies</span>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>and occasionally <span class='sc'>Shades</span> or <span class='sc'>Parasites</span>. There was
-at one time a law at Athens, which a good deal
-nonplussed these gentlemen. It was decreed, that
-not more than thirty persons should meet at a marriage
-feast, and a wealthy citizen, desirous of “going
-the whole hog,” had invited the full complement.
-An honest Fly, however, who respected no law that
-interfered with his stomach, contrived to introduce
-himself, and took his station at the lower end of
-the table. Presently the magistrate appointed for the
-purpose, entered, and espying his man at a glance,
-began counting the guests, commencing on the other
-side and ending with the parasite. “Friend,” said
-he, “you must retire. I find there is one person
-more than the law allows.” “It is quite a mistake,
-sir,” replied the Fly, “as you will find if you
-will have the goodness to count again, beginning
-<em>on this side</em>.”<a id='r731' /><a href='#f731' class='c012'><sup>[731]</sup></a> Among the Egyptians, who shrouded
-all their poetry in hieroglyphics, <em>a fly</em> was the emblem
-of impudence, which necessarily formed the
-principal qualification of a Parasite, and in Hume’s<a id='r732' /><a href='#f732' class='c012'><sup>[732]</sup></a>
-opinion is no bad possession to any man who would
-make his way in the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Archbishop Potter,<a id='r733' /><a href='#f733' class='c012'><sup>[733]</sup></a> in his account of Grecian entertainments,
-observes, upon the authority of Cicero
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>and Cornelius Nepos, that women were never invited
-with the men.<a id='r734' /><a href='#f734' class='c012'><sup>[734]</sup></a> But in this, as has been
-shown in the proper place, he was misled by those
-learned Romans; for, in many cities and colonies of
-Greece, no banquet was given at which they were
-not present. Even at Athens, where women of
-character thought it unbecoming to mingle in the
-convivial revelries of the men,<a id='r735' /><a href='#f735' class='c012'><sup>[735]</sup></a> in which wine constantly
-overleaps the boundaries of decorum, their
-place was supplied by hetairæ, whose polished manners,
-ready wit, and enlarged and enlightened understandings,
-recommended them to their companions,
-and caused the laxity of their morals to be forgotten.<a id='r736' /><a href='#f736' class='c012'><sup>[736]</sup></a>
-To proceed, however, with our feast: it will
-readily be supposed, that gentlemen invited out to
-dinner were careful to apparel themselves elegantly,
-to shave clean, and arrange their beards and moustachios
-after the most approved fashion of the day.
-Even Socrates, who cared as little as most people
-for external appearances, bathed, put on a pair of
-new shoes, brushed his chlamys, and otherwise spruced
-himself up when going to sup at Agathon’s with
-Phædros, Aristophanes, Eryximachos, and other exquisites.
-Even in Homeric times the bath was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>among the preliminaries to dinner, and guests arriving
-from a distance were attended through all the
-operations of the toilette by female slaves.<a id='r737' /><a href='#f737' class='c012'><sup>[737]</sup></a> But
-this general ablution was not considered sufficient.
-On sitting down to table water was again presented
-to every guest in silver<a id='r738' /><a href='#f738' class='c012'><sup>[738]</sup></a> lavers or ewers of gold.
-And since they ate with their fingers, as still is
-the practice in the Levant, it was moreover customary
-to wash the hands between every course,<a id='r739' /><a href='#f739' class='c012'><sup>[739]</sup></a> and
-wipe them,<a id='r740' /><a href='#f740' class='c012'><sup>[740]</sup></a> in remoter ages, with soft bread, which
-was thrown to the dogs, and in aftertimes with napkins.
-The Arcadians, however, about whose mountains
-all the old superstitions of Hellas clung like
-bats, found a very different use for the cakes with
-which they wiped their fingers. They supposed
-them to acquire some mystic powers by the operation,
-and preserved them as a charm against ghosts.<a id='r741' /><a href='#f741' class='c012'><sup>[741]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But we are proceeding too fast, for the guests
-are scarcely within doors, and our imagination has
-jumped to the conclusion. To return then. Immediately
-on entering, and when the host had welcomed
-and shaken hands with all, such gentlemen as possessed
-beards<a id='r742' /><a href='#f742' class='c012'><sup>[742]</sup></a> had them perfumed over burning censers
-of frankincense, as ladies have their tresses on
-visiting a Turkish harem. The hands, too, after each
-lavation, were scented.<a id='r743' /><a href='#f743' class='c012'><sup>[743]</sup></a> Before sitting down to table,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>and while the cooks were peppering the soup, frying
-the fish, or giving the roast-meat another turn,
-politeness required the guests to take a stroll<a id='r744' /><a href='#f744' class='c012'><sup>[744]</sup></a> in
-the picture-gallery and admire the exquisite taste
-of their entertainer in articles of <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>virtu</i></span>.<a id='r745' /><a href='#f745' class='c012'><sup>[745]</sup></a> Here while
-the scent of the savoury viands found its way through
-every apartment, and set the bowels of the hungry
-parasites croaking, the rogues who had lunched well
-at home leisurely discussed the merits of Zeuxis or
-Parrhasios, of Pheidias or Polygnotos, or opened
-wide their eyes at the microscopic creations of
-that Spartan artist whose chisel produced a chariot
-and four that could be hidden under the wing of
-a fly. At length, however, the connoisseurs were interrupted
-in their learned disquisitions by the entrance
-of Xanthos, Davos, or Lydos, with the welcome intelligence
-that dinner was on the table.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But the appetites of the gourmands had still to
-encounter another trial.<a id='r746' /><a href='#f746' class='c012'><sup>[746]</sup></a> The Greeks were above
-all things a pious people, and regarded every banquet,
-nay, every meal, in the light of a sacrifice, at
-which the first and best portion should be offered
-as an oblation to the gods,<a id='r747' /><a href='#f747' class='c012'><sup>[747]</sup></a> with invocations and
-prayer, after which it was considered lawful to attend
-to their own appetites. An altar, accordingly,
-of Zeus stood in the midst of every dining-room,
-on which these ceremonies were performed, and libations
-of pure wine poured.<a id='r748' /><a href='#f748' class='c012'><sup>[748]</sup></a> This done, the guests
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>took their places, in the earlier ages on chairs, but
-afterwards, when they had become familiar with the
-East, on rich sofas, arranged round the board.<a id='r749' /><a href='#f749' class='c012'><sup>[749]</sup></a> Occasionally,
-however, even so late as the age of Alexander,<a id='r750' /><a href='#f750' class='c012'><sup>[750]</sup></a>
-princes and other great men chose to adopt
-the ancient custom, and, on one occasion, that conqueror
-himself entertained four hundred of his officers,
-when seats of wrought silver, covered with
-purple carpets, were provided for all.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The manner of reclining on the divans was not
-a little ludicrous. For, at the outset, while the appetite
-was keen, they stretched themselves flat upon
-their stomachs, in order, I presume, to command
-the use of both hands, and putting forward their
-mouths towards the table looked like so many sparrows
-with their open bills projecting over the nest.
-But this they could conveniently do only when they
-had a large space to themselves. When packed
-close, as usually they were, one man, the chief in
-dignity, throwing off his shoes,<a id='r751' /><a href='#f751' class='c012'><sup>[751]</sup></a> placed himself on
-the upper end of the divan, that is, next the host,
-reclining on one elbow supported by soft cushions.
-The head of the next man reached nearly to his
-breast,—whence in Scripture, the beloved disciple
-is said to recline on the bosom of Christ,<a id='r752' /><a href='#f752' class='c012'><sup>[752]</sup></a>—while
-the feet of the first extended down behind him.
-The third guest occupied the same position with
-respect to the second, and so on until five individuals
-sometimes crowded each other on the same
-sofa.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the heaven of the poets was but a colossal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>picture of earth, we may, from the practice of the
-gods, infer what took place among mortals, even
-where supported by no direct testimony. Now, in
-Homer, we find gods and goddesses mingling freely
-together at the feast. Zeus takes the head of
-the table, next him sits his daughter Athena, while
-the imperial Hera, as Queen of Heaven, takes precedence
-of all the she Olympians, by placing herself
-at the head of the secondary divinities, directly
-opposite her husband. On one occasion we find
-Athena, the type of hospitality and politeness, yielding
-up her seat of honour to Thetis, because, as an
-Oceanid, she was somewhat of a stranger in Olympos.<a id='r753' /><a href='#f753' class='c012'><sup>[753]</sup></a>
-Potter has discussed, with more learning than
-perspicuity, the question of precedence at table.
-To render the matter perfectly intelligible would
-require a plan of the dining-room; but wanting this,
-it may be observed, that in Persia the king, or host
-of whatever rank, sat in the middle, while the guests
-ranged themselves equally on both sides of him.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In Greece, the bottom of the table was the end
-next the door. Here no one sat, it being left open
-for the servants to bring in and remove the dishes.
-From this point, on either side, the seats augmented
-in value, and consequently the post of greatest
-honour was the middle of the other extremity.<a id='r754' /><a href='#f754' class='c012'><sup>[754]</sup></a>
-There were those, however, who made no account
-of these matters, but suffered their guests to seat
-themselves as they pleased. This was the case with
-Timon, who, having invited a very miscellaneous
-party, would not be at the pains to settle the question
-of precedence between them; but a pompous
-individual of aristocratic pretensions, dressed like an
-actor, arriving late with a large retinue, and surveying
-the company from the door, went away again,
-observing, there was no fit place left for him. Upon
-which the guests, who, as Plutarch remarks, were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>far gone in their cups, burst into shouts of laughter,
-and bade him make the best of his way home.<a id='r755' /><a href='#f755' class='c012'><sup>[755]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Some persons observed a very different order in
-arranging their guests, grouping those together whom
-they considered suited by age or temper to each
-other, in order by this contrivance to produce general
-harmony,—the vehement and impetuous being
-placed beside the meek and gentle, the silent beside
-the talkative, the ripe and full and expansive
-minds beside those who were ready to receive instruction.
-But very often, as at Agathon’s, those
-sat next each other, who were most intimately acquainted
-or united together by friendship; for thus
-the greatest freedom of intercourse with the brightest
-sallies of convivial wit were likely to be produced.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At length, however, we must imagine the guests
-in their places and every thing in proper train. The
-servants bring in first one well-covered table, then
-a second, then a third, till the whole room is filled
-with dainties. Brilliant lamps and chandeliers poured
-a flood of light over the crowned heads of the guests,
-over the piled sweetmeats, over the shining dishes,
-and all the baits with which the appetite is caught.
-Then, on silver pateræ, cakes whiter than snow were
-served round. To these succeeded eggs, pungent
-herbs, oysters, and thrushes.<a id='r756' /><a href='#f756' class='c012'><sup>[756]</sup></a> Next several dishes
-of rich eels, brown and crisp, sprinkled thickly with
-salt, followed by a delicious conger dressed with
-every rare device of cookery, calculated to delight
-the palate of the gods. Then came the belly of a
-large ray, round as a hoop; dishes, containing, one
-some slices of a sea-dog, another garnished with a
-sparos, a third with a cuttle-fish, or smoking polypus
-whose legs were tender as a chicken. While the
-sight of these dainties was feasting the eyes of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>guests, the noses of the experienced informed them
-of the approach of a synodon,<a id='r757' /><a href='#f757' class='c012'><sup>[757]</sup></a> which perfumed the
-passages all the way from the kitchen, and, flanked
-with calamaries, covered the whole table. Shrimps
-too were there in their yellow cuirasses, sweet in
-flavour as honey, with delicious varieties of puff pastry
-bordered with fresh green foliage.<a id='r758' /><a href='#f758' class='c012'><sup>[758]</sup></a> The teeth
-of the parasites watered at the sight. But while
-deeply engaged in the discussion of these good things,
-in came some smoking slices of broiled thunny, a mullet
-fresh from the fish-kettle, with the teats of a
-young sow cooked <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>en ragoût</i></span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Pleasure of all kinds being supposed to promote
-digestion, female singers, flute-players and dancers,
-were meanwhile exercising their several arts for the
-entertainment of the guests. But as they paid very
-little attention to them till the rage of hunger was
-appeased, we shall imitate their example, and proceed
-with the gourmandize. One of the greatest accomplishments
-a boon companion could possess, was the
-power to seize with the fingers, and swallow hissing-hot,
-slices of grilled fish or morsels of lamb or veal
-broiled like kabobs, so as to be slightly burnt and
-cracking externally, while all the juice and flavour
-of the meat remained within. And the acquirement
-being highly important, great pains were taken
-to become masters of it. For this purpose some
-accustomed themselves daily to play with hot pokers,
-others case-hardened their fingers by repeatedly
-dipping them in water as hot as they could bear,
-and gargled their throats with the same, while one
-famous gourmand, more inventive than the rest, hit
-upon the ingenious device of wearing metallic fingerlings
-with which he could have seized a kabob
-even from the gridiron. These proficients in the art
-of eating, an art practised indeed by all, but possessed
-in perfection by very few, enjoyed great advantages
-over the ignorant and uninitiated. And
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>accordingly, when invited out, they generally succeeded
-in bribing the cook to send in all his dishes hot as
-Phlegethon, that, while the more modest and inexperienced
-guests sat gazing on, they might secure
-the best cuts, and come again before the others
-could venture on a mouthful.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among the articles served up in this scorching state
-were calf’s pluck, pig’s harslet, with the chine, the
-kidneys, and a variety of small hors-d’œuvre. To
-these may be added the head of a sucking-kid which
-had tasted nothing but milk, baked between two
-dishes well luted together; giblets boiled; small,
-delicate hams with their white sward unbroken; pigs’
-snouts and feet swimming in white sauce, which the
-gourmand Philoxenos thought a rare invention.
-Roast kid and lamb’s chitterlings, or the same viands
-boiled, formed a supplement to the dishes above enumerated,
-and were usually done so exactly to a turn,
-that even the gods, Bacchos for example, and Hermes,
-the parasites of Olympos, might have descended expressly
-to wag their beards over them. But the Levantines
-have always been enamoured of variety in cookery.
-Lady Wortley Montague counted fifty dishes
-served up in succession at the Sultana Hafiten’s table;
-and this she-barbarian, with all her wealth, could
-never rival the variety of invention of an ancient Eleian
-or Sicilian cook, who usually closed the list of his
-dainties with hare, chickens roasted to the gold-colour
-celebrated by Aristophanes, partridges, pheasants,
-wood-pigeons or turtle-doves, which your true gourmand
-should eat in the Thebaid, immediately after
-the close of harvest. But the dinner was not yet
-over. There still remained the dessert to be disposed
-of, consisting of pure honey from the district of the
-silver mines, curdled cream, cheese-tarts, and all
-that profusion of southern fruit of which we have
-already spoken.<a id='r759' /><a href='#f759' class='c012'><sup>[759]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It is a well-known rule among modern gourmands,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>that no man should utter a syllable at table till the
-first course is removed, and precisely the same regulation
-prevailed among the ancients. Silence, however,
-was sometimes interrupted by the arrival of some
-wandering buffoon, who, after long roaming about in
-search of a dinner, happened, perhaps, to be attracted
-thither by the wings and feathers ostentatiously scattered
-before the door. This sort of gentry required
-no introduction: they had only to knock and announce
-themselves to ensure a ready welcome; for
-most men would willingly part with a share of their
-supper to be made merry over the remainder. The
-Athenian demos was pre-eminently of this humour.
-No king, in fact, ever kept up so large an establishment
-of fools by profession, or, which is much the
-same thing, of wits,—fellows who grind their understandings
-into pointed jests to tickle the risible muscles
-and expand the mouths of sleek junketters, who
-esteem nothing beyond eating and grinning.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At a feast given by Callias, the famous jester,
-Philip, a-kin in spirit, I trow, to him of Macedon, presented
-himself in this way, and, on being admitted,—“Gentlemen,”
-said he, “you know my profession and
-its privileges, relying on which I am come uninvited,
-being a foe to all ceremony, and desiring to
-spare you the trouble of a formal invitation.”—“Take
-your place,” replied the host; “your company
-was much needed, for our friends appear to be
-plunged up to the chin in gravity, and would be
-greatly benefited by a hearty laugh.”<a id='r760' /><a href='#f760' class='c012'><sup>[760]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In fact, the heads of the honest people were filled
-with very serious meditations, being all in love, and endeavouring
-to discover how each might excel the other
-in absurdity. Philip began to fear, therefore, that he
-had carried his jests to a bad market, and, in reality,
-made many vain attempts to kindle the spirit of
-mirth, and call home the imaginations of persons who
-had evidently suffered them to stray as far as the
-clouds. Aware that success on this point was indispensable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>to his subsistence, the jester grew piqued
-at the indifference of his hearers, and breaking off
-in the midst of his supper, wrapped up his head in
-his chlamys, and lay down like one about to die.
-“What, now!” cried Callias. “Has any sudden panic
-seized on thee, friend?”—“The worst possible, by
-Zeus!” replied Philip; “for, since laughter, like
-justice, has taken its leave of earth, my occupation
-is gone. Hitherto I have enjoyed some celebrity
-in this way, living at the public expense, like the
-guests of the Prytaneion, because my drollery was
-effective, and could set the table in a roar. But it
-is all over, I see, with me now, for I might as soon
-hope to render myself immortal as acquire serious
-habits.” All this he uttered in a pouting, desponding
-tone, as if about to shed tears. The company, to
-humour the joke, undertook to comfort him, and the
-effect of their mock condolences, and assurances that
-they would laugh if he continued his supper, was so
-irresistibly ludicrous, that Autolychos, a youthful
-friend of Callias, was at length unable to restrain
-his merriment; upon which the jester took courage,
-and apostrophising his soul, informed it very gravely,
-that there would be no necessity for them to part
-company yet.<a id='r761' /><a href='#f761' class='c012'><sup>[761]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Greeks had, properly speaking, no drawing-rooms,
-so that, instead of retreating to another
-part of the house, they had the tables themselves
-removed immediately after dinner. Libations were
-then poured out to Zeus Teleios, and having sung
-a hymn to Phœbos Apollo, the amusements of the
-evening commenced. Professional singers and musicians
-were always hired on these occasions. They
-were female slaves, selected in childhood for their
-beauty and budding talents, and carefully educated
-by their owners.<a id='r762' /><a href='#f762' class='c012'><sup>[762]</sup></a> When not already engaged, they
-stood in blooming bevies in the agora, waiting, like
-the Labourers of Scripture, until some one should
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>hire them, upon which they proceeded, dressed and
-ornamented with great elegance, to the house of
-feasting. But, besides these, there were other <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>artistes</i></span>
-who contributed to the entertainment of the
-demos, persons that, like our Indian jugglers, performed
-wonderful feats by way of interlude between
-the regular exhibitions of the damsels from the agora.<a id='r763' /><a href='#f763' class='c012'><sup>[763]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Xenophon introduces into that living picture of
-Greek manners called the Banquet, a company of
-this kind. Finding Philip’s jokes dull things, he
-brings upon the scene a strolling Syracusan, with
-a beautiful female flute-player, a dancing girl who
-could perform surpassing feats of activity, and a
-handsome boy, who, besides performing on the cithara,
-was likewise able, on occasion, to sport the toe like
-his female companions.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But, where philosophers were present, amusements
-of this kind were not allowed to occupy their whole
-attention. Every thing that occurred was made a
-handle for conversation, so that discussions, more or
-less lively, according to the temperament or ability
-of the interlocutors, formed the solid ground-work
-upon which the flowers of gaiety and laughter were
-spread. It was usual, immediately after supper, to
-perfume the guests, and great was the variety of
-unguents, essences, and odorous oils, made use of
-by the rich and vain upon these occasions; but when
-Callias proposed conforming to the mode in this
-particular, Socrates objected, observing, that the
-odour of honourable toil was perfume enough for a
-man.<a id='r764' /><a href='#f764' class='c012'><sup>[764]</sup></a> Women, indeed, to whom every thing sweet
-and beautiful naturally belongs, might, he admitted,
-make use of perfume, and they did so most lavishly
-as we have already shown, when we entered their
-dressing-room and assisted at their toilette.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Greeks, however, were careful not to convert
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>their pleasure-parties into a mere arena for the exhibition
-of dialectic power. They from time to time
-glanced at philosophy, but only by the way, in the
-moments of transition from one variety of recreation
-to another. Their conversation was now and then
-brought to a pause by the rising of dancing girls,<a id='r765' /><a href='#f765' class='c012'><sup>[765]</sup></a>
-robed elegantly, as we behold them still on vases
-and on bas-reliefs, in drapery adapted to display
-all the beauty of their forms. Hoops were brought
-them, and while musicians of their own sex called
-forth thrilling harmonies from the flute, they executed
-a variety of graceful movements, in part
-pantomimic,—now casting up the hoops, now catching
-them as they fell, keeping time exactly with the
-cadences of the flute. Their skill in this accomplishment
-was so great, that many were enabled to
-keep up twelve hoops in the air at the same time,
-while others made use of poniards.<a id='r766' /><a href='#f766' class='c012'><sup>[766]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When the novelty of this exhibition was worn
-off a little, other different feats followed. A hoop
-stuck all round with upright swords was placed in
-the midst of the apartment, into which one of the
-dancing girls threw herself head foremost, and while
-standing on her head balanced the lower part of
-her body round over the naked points, to the infinite
-terror of the spectators. She would then dart
-forth between the swords, and, with a single bound,
-regain her footing without the circle.<a id='r767' /><a href='#f767' class='c012'><sup>[767]</sup></a> To add to
-the entertainment of the company, some parasitical
-buffoon would at times undertake to exhibit his
-awkwardness as a foil to the grace of the dancers,
-frisking about with the clumsy heaviness of a bear,
-and exaggerating his own ignorance of orchestics to
-excite a laugh. Sometimes the female dancer, like
-our own fair tumblers, would throw back her head
-till it reached her heels, and then putting herself
-in motion, roll about the room like a <a id='corr185.37'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='hoop'>hoop.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_185.37'><ins class='correction' title='hoop'>hoop.</ins></a></span><a id='r768' /><a href='#f768' class='c012'><sup>[768]</sup></a> To
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>these, as a relief and a change, would succeed, perhaps,
-a youth with fine rich voice, who accompanied
-himself on the lyre with a song.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But nothing could entirely restrain the Greeks
-from indulging in the pleasure of listening to their
-own voices. The buzz of conversation would soon
-be heard in different parts of the room, which,
-when Socrates was present, sometimes provoked
-from him a sarcastic reproof. For example, at
-Callias’s dinner, observing the company broken up
-into knots, each labouring at some particular question
-in dialectics, and filling the apartment with a
-babel of confused murmurs; “As we talk all at
-once,” said he, “we may as well sing all at
-once;” and without further ceremony he pitched
-his voice and began a song.<a id='r769' /><a href='#f769' class='c012'><sup>[769]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But when professed jugglers happened to be present,
-gentlemen were not long abandoned to their
-own resources for amusement. Trick followed trick
-in rapid succession. To the pantomimic dances, and
-the sword circle, succeeded the exhibition of the
-potter’s wheel, in which a young girl seated on this
-machine, like a little Nubian at a cow’s-tail in a
-<em>sakia</em>, was whirled round with great velocity,<a id='r770' /><a href='#f770' class='c012'><sup>[770]</sup></a> but
-retained so much self-possession as to be able both
-to write and to read. These, however, were merely
-sources of momentary wonder. Other amusements
-succeeded capable of exciting superior delight, such
-for example, as the mimetic dance, which, like that
-of the ghawazi, could tell a whole story of love, of
-adventure, of war, of religious frenzy and enthusiasm,
-transporting by vivid representations the fancy
-of the spectators to warmer or wilder scenes, calling
-up images and reminiscences of times long past, or
-steeping the thoughts in poetical dreams, filled with
-the caverned nymphs, the merry Seileni, the frisking
-satyrs, Bacchos, Pan, the Hours, the Graces, sporting
-by moonlit fountains, through antique woods,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>or on the shelled and sand-ribbed margin of the
-ocean.<a id='r771' /><a href='#f771' class='c012'><sup>[771]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On some occasions a slight dramatic scene was
-represented. Clearing the centre of the banqueting
-hall, the guests ranged themselves in order as at
-the theatre. A throne was then set up in the open
-space, and a female actor, representing Ariadne, entering,
-took her seat upon it, decked and habited
-like a bride, and supposed to be in her Thalamos at
-Naxos. Dionysos, who has been dining with Zeus,
-comes flushed with Olympian nectar into the harem
-to the sound of the Bacchic flute, while the nymph
-who has heard his approaching footsteps makes it
-manifest by her behaviour that her soul is filled
-with joy, though she neither advances nor rises to
-meet him, but restrains her feelings with difficulty,
-and remains apparently tranquil. The god, drawing
-near with impassioned looks, and dancing all the
-while, now seats himself, and places the fair one on
-his knee. Then, in imitation of mortal lovers, he
-embraces and kisses her, nothing loth; for, though
-she hangs down her head, and would wish to appear
-out of countenance, her arms find their way
-round his neck and return his embrace. At this
-the company, we may be sure, clapped and shouted.
-The god, encouraged by their plaudits, then stood
-up with his bride, and going through the whole
-pantomime of courtship, not coldly and insipidly,
-but as one whose heart was touched, at length
-demanded of Ariadne if in truth she loved him.
-Sometimes the mimic scene concealed beneath it
-all the reality of passion. From personating enamoured
-characters, the youthful actor and his partner
-learned in reality to love; and what was amusement
-to others contained a deep and serious meaning
-for them. This, Xenophon says, was the case with
-the youth and maiden who enlivened the banquet
-of Callias. Absorbed in the earnestness of their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>feelings, they seem to have forgotten the presence
-of spectators, and instead of a stage representation,
-gave them a scene from real life, where every impassioned
-look and gesture were genuine, and every
-fiery glance was kindled at the heart.<a id='r772' /><a href='#f772' class='c012'><sup>[772]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This, however, may be considered a serious amusement,
-and something like broad farce was necessary
-to awaken the guests from the reverie into which
-the love scene had plunged them. Jesters were,
-therefore, put in requisition; and, as even they
-sometimes failed to raise a laugh, their more humorous
-brethren the wits and jesters of the forests,
-or, in the language of mortals, monkeys were called
-upon to dissipate the clouds of seriousness. These
-were the favourite buffoons of the Scythian Anacharsis,—not
-the Abbé Barthélemy’s,—who said,
-he could laugh at a monkey’s tricks, because his
-tricks were natural, but that he found no amusement
-in a man who made a trade of it.<a id='r773' /><a href='#f773' class='c012'><sup>[773]</sup></a> Nor
-could Euripides at all relish punsters and manufacturers
-of jokes, whom he considered, with some
-reason, as a species of animal distinct from mankind.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Many there be who exercise their wits</div>
- <div class='line'>In giving birth, by cutting jests, to laughter.</div>
- <div class='line'>I hate the knaves whose rude unbridled tongues</div>
- <div class='line'>Sport with the wise; and cannot for my life</div>
- <div class='line'>Think they are men, though laughter doth become them,</div>
- <div class='line'>And they have houses filled with treasured stores</div>
- <div class='line'>From distant lands.<a id='r774' /><a href='#f774' class='c012'><sup>[774]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>But if Euripides found nothing desirable in laughter,
-there were those who had a clean contrary creed,
-and lamented nothing so much as the loss of their
-risible faculties. On this subject Semos has a story
-quite <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>à propos</i></span>. Parmeniscos, the Metapontine, having
-descended, he says, into the cave of Trophonios,
-became so extremely grave, that with all the appliances,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>and means to boot, furnished by wealth,
-and they were not a few, he thereafter found himself
-quite unable to screw up his muscles into a
-smile; which taking much to heart, as was natural,
-he made a pilgrimage to Delphi, to inquire by what
-means he might rid himself of the blue devils. Somewhat
-puzzled at the strangeness of the inquiry, the
-Pythoness replied,—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Poor mortal unmerry, who seekest to know</div>
- <div class='line'>What will bid thy brow soften, thy quips and cranks flow,</div>
- <div class='line'>To the house of the mother I bid thee repair—</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou wilt find, if she’s pleased, what thy heart covets, there.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Upon this, Parmeniscos hastened homeward, hoping
-soon to enjoy a good laugh as the reward of his industry;
-but, finding his features remain fixed as cast-iron,
-he began to suspect the oracle had deceived him.
-Some time after, being at Delos, he beheld with admiration
-the several wonders of the island, and, lastly,
-proceeded to the temple of Leto, expecting to find in
-the mother of Apollo something worthy of so great
-a divinity. But, on entering and perceiving, instead,
-a grotesque and smoky old figure in wood, he burst
-into an immoderate fit of laughter, whereupon the
-response of the oracle recurred to his mind, and he
-understood it; and, being thus delivered from his
-infirmity, he ever after held the goddess in extremest
-reverence.<a id='r775' /><a href='#f775' class='c012'><sup>[775]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Even from this story, therefore, it will be seen
-how highly “broad grins” were estimated in antiquity,
-particularly at Athens, where there was a
-regular “Wits’ Club,” consisting of threescore members,
-who assembled during the Diomeia,<a id='r776' /><a href='#f776' class='c012'><sup>[776]</sup></a> in the
-temple of Heracles. The names of several of these
-jovial mortals have come down to us; Mandrogenes,
-for example, and Strato, Callimedon, who,
-for some particular quality of mind or body, obtained
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>sobriquet</i></span> of the <em>Lobster</em>, Deinias, Mnasigeiton,
-and Menæchmos. The reputation of these
-gentlemen spread rapidly through the city, and,
-when a good thing had a run among the small wits,
-it was remarked, that “the Sixty had said <em>that</em>.”
-Or, if a man of talent were asked, whence he came,
-he would answer, “From the Sixty.” This was in
-the time of Demosthenes, when, unhappily, jesters
-were in more request in Athens than soldiers; and
-Philip of Macedon, himself no mean buffoon, learning
-the excellent quality of their <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>bon mots</i></span>, sent them
-a present of a talent of gold, with a request that,
-as public business prevented his joining the sittings
-of the club, they would make for his use a collection
-in writing of all their smart sayings, which
-was, probably, the first step towards those repositories
-for stray wit, called “Joe Millers,” that form
-so indispensable a portion of a bon vivant’s library.<a id='r777' /><a href='#f777' class='c012'><sup>[777]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But we are all this while detaining the company
-from their wine, and those other recreations which
-the fertile genius of the Greeks invented to make
-the wheels of life move smoothly. Though the tables,
-according to the fashion of the times, were removed
-with the solid viands, others were brought in to replace
-them, on which the censers, the goblets, the
-silver or golden ladles for filling the smaller cups,
-were arranged in order.<a id='r778' /><a href='#f778' class='c012'><sup>[778]</sup></a> The chairman, or, as he
-was then called, the king of the feast,<a id='r779' /><a href='#f779' class='c012'><sup>[779]</sup></a> enjoyed absolute
-power over his subjects, and could determine
-better than their own palates, how much and
-how often each man should drink. This important
-functionary was not always identical with the entertainer,
-but sometimes his substitute, sometimes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>a person chosen by lot.<a id='r780' /><a href='#f780' class='c012'><sup>[780]</sup></a> Capacious bowls of wine,<a id='r781' /><a href='#f781' class='c012'><sup>[781]</sup></a>
-mingled with water, were placed on a sideboard,
-whence cup-bearers, sometimes of one, sometimes
-of the other sex, but always selected for their youth
-and beauty, filled, with ladles,<a id='r782' /><a href='#f782' class='c012'><sup>[782]</sup></a> the goblets of the
-guests, which, when the froth rose above the brim,
-were, by an obvious metaphor, said to be crowned.<a id='r783' /><a href='#f783' class='c012'><sup>[783]</sup></a>
-Among the Doric Greeks, female cup-bearers seem
-to have been always preferred; the Ptolemies of
-Egypt cherished the same taste; and the people
-of Tarentum, themselves of Doric race, passing
-successively through every stage of luxury, came,
-at length, to be served at table by beautiful young
-women without a vestige of clothing. In most
-cases, these maidens were slaves, but, in some countries,
-and everywhere, in remoter ages, the performance
-of such offices was not regarded as any way
-derogatory to persons of noble or princely blood.
-But, whatever might be their birth, beauty of form
-and countenance constituted their chief recommendation.
-For there is a language in looks and gestures,
-there is a fountain of joy and delight concealed
-deep in the physical structure, and its waters
-laugh to the eye of intellect, and reflect into the
-hearts of those who behold it a sunniness and exhilaration
-greater than we derive from gazing on the
-summer sea. Hence, Hebe and Ganymede were
-chosen to minister at the tables of the gods, even
-Zeus himself<a id='r784' /><a href='#f784' class='c012'><sup>[784]</sup></a> not disdaining to taste of the pleasures
-to be derived from basking in the irradiations
-of beauty.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When the goblets were all crowned with the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>nectar of earth, the Master of the Feast<a id='r785' /><a href='#f785' class='c012'><sup>[785]</sup></a> set the
-example of good-fellowship by drinking to his guests,
-beginning with the most distinguished.<a id='r786' /><a href='#f786' class='c012'><sup>[786]</sup></a> Originally,
-custom required him who drank to the health of
-another to drain off his cup while his comrade did
-the same; but, in after ages, they sipped only a portion
-of the wine, and, as they still do in the East,
-presented the remainder to their friend. The latter,
-by the rules of politeness, was bound to finish the
-goblet, or, where the antique fashion prevailed, to
-drink one of equal size.<a id='r787' /><a href='#f787' class='c012'><sup>[787]</sup></a> The Macedonians, who,
-probably, excelled the Greeks in drinking, if in nothing
-else, disdained small cups as supplying a very
-roundabout way to intoxication, and plunged into
-Lethe at once by the aid of most capacious bowls.
-It was customary, when the practice of passing round
-the goblet had been introduced, for the king of the
-feast to drink to the next man on his right hand,
-who, in his turn, drank to the next, and so on till
-the bowl had circulated round the board. But different
-customs prevailed in the different parts of
-Greece. At Athens, small cups, like our wine-glasses,
-were in use; among the Chians, Thracians,
-and Thessalians, nations more prone to sensual indulgences,
-the goblets were of larger dimensions;
-but, at Sparta, where sobriety and frugality long
-flourished, the practice was to drink from diminutive
-vessels, which, as often as required, were replenished
-by the attendants.<a id='r788' /><a href='#f788' class='c012'><sup>[788]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Isocrates, in his exhortation to Demonicos, marks
-the distinction between the true and false friend,
-by observing, that, while the latter thinks only of
-those around him, the former remembers the absent,
-and makes his affection triumph over time and distance.
-And the Greeks generally had this merit.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>Amid the enjoyments of the festive board, they recalled
-to mind the friends of other days; and, having
-first performed libations to the gods, those best and
-purest of friends, drank to the health and prosperity
-of former associates, now far removed by circumstances,<a id='r789' /><a href='#f789' class='c012'><sup>[789]</sup></a>
-and this they did not in the mixed beverage
-which formed their habitual potations, but in
-pure wine.<a id='r790' /><a href='#f790' class='c012'><sup>[790]</sup></a> There was something extremely delicate
-in this idea, for tacitly it intimated, that their
-love placed the objects of it almost on a level with
-their divinities, in whose honour, also, on these occasions,
-a small portion of the wine was spilt in
-libations<a id='r791' /><a href='#f791' class='c012'><sup>[791]</sup></a> upon the earth. The young, in whose
-hearts a mistress held the first place,<a id='r792' /><a href='#f792' class='c012'><sup>[792]</sup></a> drank deeply
-in honour of their beloved, sometimes equalling
-the number of cups to that of the letters forming
-her name,<a id='r793' /><a href='#f793' class='c012'><sup>[793]</sup></a> which, if the custom prevailed so early,
-would account for Ægisthos’s being a sot. Sometimes,
-however, taking the hint from the number of the
-Graces, they were satisfied with three goblets; but,
-when an excuse for drinking “pottle deep” was
-sought, they chose the Muses for their patrons, and
-honoured their mistresses’ names with three times
-three.<a id='r794' /><a href='#f794' class='c012'><sup>[794]</sup></a> This is the number of cheers with which
-favourite political toasts are received at our public
-dinners, though every one who fills his bumper, and
-cries “hip, hip, hip, hurrah!” on these occasions,
-is, probably, not conscious that he is keeping up an
-old pagan custom in honour of the Muses.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The number four was in no favour at the drinking-table,
-not because it was an even number, for they
-sometimes drank ten, but because some old superstition
-had brought discredit on it. Our very fox-hunters,
-however, exhibit an inferior capacity to many
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>of the ancients in affairs of the bottle, though when
-it is the poets who perform the feat, we may safely
-consider them to be simply regaling their fancies on
-“air-drawn” goblets, which cost nothing, and leave
-no head-aches behind them. On this subject there
-is a very pretty song in the Anthology, which Potter,
-following some old edition, completely misrepresents.<a id='r795' /><a href='#f795' class='c012'><sup>[795]</sup></a>
-It deserves to be well translated, and I would translate
-it well if I could. The following at least preserves
-the meaning:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Pour out ten cups of the purple wine,</div>
- <div class='line'>To crown Lycidicè’s charms divine;</div>
- <div class='line'>One for Euphrantè, young and fair,</div>
- <div class='line'>With the sparkling eye and the raven hair.</div>
- <div class='line'>Then I love Lycidicè more, you say?</div>
- <div class='line'>By this foaming goblet I say ye nay.</div>
- <div class='line'>More valued than ten is Euphrantè to me,</div>
- <div class='line'>For, as when the heavens unclouded be,</div>
- <div class='line'>And the stars are crowding far and nigh</div>
- <div class='line'>On the deep deep blue of the midnight sky,</div>
- <div class='line'>The moon is still brighter and lovelier far</div>
- <div class='line'>Than the loveliest planet or brightest star;</div>
- <div class='line'>So, ’mid the stars of this earthly sphere,</div>
- <div class='line'>None are so lovely or half so dear</div>
- <div class='line'>As to me is Euphrantè young and fair,</div>
- <div class='line'>With the sparkling eye and the raven hair.<a id='r796' /><a href='#f796' class='c012'><sup>[796]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>But the Macedonians entertained no respect for
-poetical goblets: they loved to scent their moustachios
-with the aroma of the real rosy wine when it sparkled
-in the cup,—when it moved itself aright, as the wise
-king of Judah expresses it. Plutarch describes briefly
-one of their drinking-bouts which took place on the
-evening of the day wherein old Kalanos, the Hindù
-Yoghi, burnt himself alive to escape the colic.
-Alexander, on returning from the funeral pile, invited
-a number of his friends and generals to sup
-with him, and, proposing a drinking contest, appointed
-a crown for the victor. Prodigious efforts were made
-by all present to achieve so enviable a triumph; but
-the man who proved himself to possess the most
-capacious interior was Promachos, who is said to have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>swallowed upwards of two gallons. He obtained
-the prize, which was a golden crown, valued at a
-talent, but died within three days.<a id='r797' /><a href='#f797' class='c012'><sup>[797]</sup></a> Chares, the Mitylenian,
-relates the matter somewhat differently. According
-to him, Alexander celebrated funeral games
-in honour of Kalanos, at his barrow, where horseraces
-and gymnastic contests took place,<a id='r798' /><a href='#f798' class='c012'><sup>[798]</sup></a> and a poetical
-encomium was pronounced upon the Yoghi, who,
-like the rest of his countrymen, was, doubtless, a
-great toper, and thence the drinking-match instituted
-in the evening. Chares says there were three prizes;
-the first, in value, a talent; the second, thirty minæ,
-or about a hundred and twenty pounds sterling; the
-third, three minæ. The number of aspirants is not
-stated, but thirty-five (Plutarch says forty-one) perished
-in cold shiverings on the spot, and six more died
-shortly after in the tents.<a id='r799' /><a href='#f799' class='c012'><sup>[799]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Numbers have celebrated the military genius of
-Alexander; but Athenæus alone has given him due
-credit for his truly royal power of drinking. Like
-his father, Philip, who, in his jolly humour, ruffled
-the Athenian dead at Chæronea, where he could
-safely beard the fallen republicans, Alexander delighted
-to spend his evenings among drunken roysterers,
-whose chief ambition consisted in making a butt of
-their bowels. One of these worthies was Proteas,
-the Macedonian mentioned by Ephippos, in his work
-on the sepulture of Alexander and Hephæstion. He
-was a man of iron constitution, on which wine, whatever
-quantity he drank, appeared to make no impression.
-Alexander, knowing this, loved to pledge
-him in huge bowls, such as none, perhaps, but themselves
-could cope with. This he did even at Babylon,
-where the climate suffers few excesses to be
-indulged in with impunity. Taking a goblet more
-like a pail than a drinking-cup, Alexander caused it
-to be crowned with wine, which, having tasted, he
-presented the bowl to Proteas. The veteran immediately
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>drained it off, to the great amusement of
-the company, and presently afterwards, desiring to
-pledge the king, he filled it up again, and sipping
-a little, according to custom, passed the bowl to
-Alexander, who, not to be outdone by a subject,
-forthwith drank the whole. But if he possessed
-the courage, he wanted the physical strength of
-Proteas: the goblet dropped from his hand, his
-head sank on a pillow, and a fever ensued of which
-the conqueror of Persia, and the rival of Proteas
-in drinking, died in a few days.<a id='r800' /><a href='#f800' class='c012'><sup>[800]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But to return from these barbarians: as the
-presence of sober persons must always be felt by
-hard drinkers to be a tacit reproach, it was one
-of the rules of good fellowship, that all such as
-joined not in the common potations should depart.
-“Drink, or begone!” said the law, and a good
-one in Cicero’s opinion it was, for if men experienced
-no disposition to join in the mirth and
-enjoyment of the company, what had they to do
-there?<a id='r801' /><a href='#f801' class='c012'><sup>[801]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>From the existence of these rules, however, an
-inference has been drawn unfavourable to the Greek
-character, as if, because some were merry, the nation
-generally must of necessity have been wine-bibbers.<a id='r802' /><a href='#f802' class='c012'><sup>[802]</sup></a>
-But this is scarcely more logical than the
-reasoning of a writer, who, because the comic poets
-speak chiefly of the mirth and lighter enjoyments
-of the Athenians, very gravely concludes that they
-busied themselves about little else. The truth
-is, that like all ardent and energetic people, they
-threw their whole souls into the affair, whether
-serious or otherwise, in which they happened to
-be engaged; and besides, while the careful and industrious
-applied themselves to business, there was
-always an abundance of light and trifling people
-to whom eating and drinking constituted a serious
-occupation.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f720'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r720'>720</a>. Æschyl. Palamed. fr. 168.
-Klausen. Comm. in Agamemnon.
-p. 136.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f721'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r721'>721</a>. In modern times a breakfast
-in the Troad often consists
-of grapes, figs, white honey in
-the comb, and coffee.—Chandler,
-i. p. 37.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f722'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r722'>722</a>. Athen. xi. 26, 50. Pollux,
-ix. 67, sqq. Schol. Aristoph.
-Acharn. 643. Cf. Bœckh. Pub.
-Econ. of Athens, i. 140.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f723'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r723'>723</a>. Which we may infer from a
-passage of Aristotle, Hist. Anim.
-vi. 8. where describing the habits
-of birds, he says, τῶν δὲ φαβῶν
-ἡ μὲν θήλεια ἀπὸ δείλης ἀρξαμένη
-τὴν τε νύχθ᾽ ὅλην ἐπῳάζει καὶ
-ἕως ἀκρατίσματος ὥρας, ὁ δ᾽
-ἄῤῥην τὸ λοιπὸν τοῦ χρόνου.—One
-of the Homeric scholiasts is
-more explicit:—καὶ τὴν μὲν
-πρώτην ἐκάλουν ἄριστον, ἣν ἐλάμβανον
-πρωΐας σχεδὸν ἔτι σκοτίας
-οὔσης.—In Iliad β. 381. Cf.
-Athen. i. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f724'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r724'>724</a>. Xenoph. Œcon. xi. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f725'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r725'>725</a>. Philemon, ap. Athen. i. 19.
-Suid. v. δεῖπνον t. i. p. 671. a. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f726'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r726'>726</a>. Deipnosoph v. 20.—τρισὶ δὲ
-οὐδέποτε οὔτε μνηστῆρες οὔτε μὴν
-κύκλωψ ἐχρῶντο τροφαῖς.—Schol.
-Il. β. 381. Yet Athenæus i. 19.
-speaks in one place of a fourth
-repast in Homeric times.—τῆς δὲ
-τετάρτης τροφῆς οὔτως Ὅμηρος
-μέμνηται—“σὺ δ᾽ ἔρχεο δειελιήσας.”
-ὁ καλοῦσι τινες δειλινὸν, ὁ
-ἐστι μεταξὺ τοῦ ὑφ’ ἡμῶν λεγομένου
-ἀρίστου καὶ δείπνου.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f727'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r727'>727</a>. On the subject of dining see
-Pollux, vi. 9, seq. with the notes
-of Jungermann, Kuhn, Hemsterhuis.
-&amp;c.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f728'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r728'>728</a>. Athen. iv. 70. Aristoph.
-Concion. 648, et Schol.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f729'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r729'>729</a>. For a further account of the
-persons usually invited, see Athen.
-v. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f730'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r730'>730</a>. Plut. Sympos. vii. 6. Each
-guest was also followed by a
-footman who stood behind his
-master’s chair and waited on him.
-Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p. 219.
-To persons of this description the
-guests delivered the presents that
-were made them, or if they happened
-to be bad characters, what
-they stole. Athen. iv. 2. Plut.
-Anton. § 28. Lucian. Conviv.
-seu Lapith. § 46. Rich men
-then as now were usually haunted
-by flatterers who would pluck off
-the burrs from their cloaks or
-the chaff which the wind wafted
-into their beards, and try to
-screw a joke out of the circumstance
-by saying, they were grown
-grey! Theoph. Char. c. ii. p. 7.
-If the patron joked, they would
-stuff their chlamys into their
-mouths as if they were dying of
-laughter. In the street they
-would say to the person they met,
-“Stand aside, friend, and allow
-this gentleman to pass!” They
-would bring apples and pears in
-their pocket for his little ones and
-be sure to give them in his sight,
-with great praise both of father
-and children.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f731'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r731'>731</a>. Athen. vi. 45, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f732'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r732'>732</a>. Nothing, says this philosopher,
-carries a man through the
-world like a true genuine natural
-impudence. Essays, p. 9, quarto.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f733'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r733'>733</a>. Antiq. iv. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f734'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r734'>734</a>. Plato giving directions for a
-marriage feast, observes, that five
-male and five female friends should
-be invited; along with these, five
-male and five female relations,
-who with the bride and bridegroom,
-with their parents, grandfathers,
-&amp;c., would amount to 28.
-De Legg. vi. t. vii. Schweigh. ad
-Athen. t. vi. p. 60. Among the
-ancient Etruscans, who, if not
-Greeks, had many Greek customs,
-the women reclined at table with
-the men, under the same cover.
-Athen. i. 42.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f735'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r735'>735</a>. Isæus, De Pyrrh. Hered. § 2.
-That among the more simple and
-old-fashioned citizens of Athens,
-however, men and women, when
-of the same family or clan, dined
-together, we have the testimony
-of Menander to prove. He introduces
-one of his characters,
-apparently a fop, observing that it
-was a bore to be at a family party,
-where the father, holding the
-goblet in his hand, first made a
-speech, abounding with exhortations:
-the mother followed, and
-then the grandmother prated a
-little. Afterwards stood up her
-father, hoarse with age, and his
-wife, calling him her dearest;
-while he mean time nodded to all
-present. Athen. ii. 86.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f736'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r736'>736</a>. Athen. v. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f737'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r737'>737</a>. Odyss. δ. 48, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f738'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r738'>738</a>. Athen. ix. 27. In some luxurious
-houses wine mingled with
-spices was presented to the guests
-in lavers for the purpose of washing
-their feet. Plut. Phoc. § 20.
-In the palace of Trimalchio we find
-Egyptian servants pouring water,
-cooled with snow, on the hands of
-the guests. Petron. Satyr. p. 76.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f739'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r739'>739</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 412.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f740'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r740'>740</a>. Rich purple napkins were
-sometimes used. Sappho in
-Deipnosoph. ix. 79. These articles
-are still in the Levant elaborately
-embroidered.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f741'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r741'>741</a>. Athen. iv. 31.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f742'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r742'>742</a>. Hom. Odyss. γ. 33, seq.
-Athen. xv. 23. Similar customs
-still prevail in the Levant:
-“When we visited the Turks
-we were received with cordiality
-and treated with distinction.
-Sweet gums were burned in the
-middle of the room to scent the
-air, or scattered on coals before
-us while sitting on the sofa, to
-perfume our moustachios and
-garments, and at the door, at
-our departure, we were sprinkled
-with rose-water.” Chandler,
-ii. 150.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f743'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r743'>743</a>. Athen. ix. 77.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f744'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r744'>744</a>. Cf. Hom. Odyss. δ. 43, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f745'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r745'>745</a>. Aristoph. Vesp. 1208. Athen.
-v. 6, where the splendid roofs
-and ornaments of the court are
-mentioned. These ornaments,
-κρεκάδια, whatever they were,
-must have been worth looking at.
-See the note of Casaubon, Animadv.
-in Athen. t. viii. p. 27, seq.
-Consult likewise the note on
-Aristophanes in Bekker’s edition,
-t. iii. p. 606.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f746'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r746'>746</a>. Athen. v. 7. Cf. Plat. Symp.
-t. iv. p. 376, et Xenoph. Conviv.
-ii. 1. Schweigh. Animadv. in
-Athen. viii. p. 26, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f747'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r747'>747</a>. Casaubon mentions this as a
-thing <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>nota eruditis</i></span>. Ad Theoph.
-Charact. p. 232; but we must not
-on that account pass it over.
-Alexis poetically deplores the
-miseries of the half-hour before
-dinner. Athen. i. 42.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f748'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r748'>748</a>. There was in great houses
-a person whose duty it was to
-assign each guest his place at
-table, ὀνομακλήτωρ, or nomenclator.
-Athen. ii. 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f749'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r749'>749</a>. Plin. xxxiii. 51. xxxiv. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f750'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r750'>750</a>. At most sumptuous entertainments
-<em>tasters</em> were employed
-who, as in the East, made trial
-of the dishes before the guests,
-lest they should be poisoned.
-These persons were called ἐδέατροι
-and προτένθαι. Athen. iv.
-71.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f751'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r751'>751</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 825.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f752'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r752'>752</a>. John, xiii. 23. On the cushions,
-of which there was a great
-variety, see Pollux, vi. 9, where
-he reckons among them the ὑπηρέσιον,
-which Mitford confounds
-with the ἄσκωμα, or leathern
-bags which closed the row-port of
-war-galleys round the oar, to prevent
-the influx of sea-water.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f753'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r753'>753</a>. Iliad, ω. 100.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f754'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r754'>754</a>. Cf. Plut. Conv. Quæst. i. 3.
-Pet. Ciacon, De Triclin. p. 44.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f755'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r755'>755</a>. Sympos. i. 2. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f756'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r756'>756</a>. Probably also the myttotos,
-a dish flavoured with garlic and
-rich spices, formed a part of this
-course. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn.
-173. Vesp. 62.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f757'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r757'>757</a>. Athen. i. 8. vii. 46. 68. 119.
-Arist. Hist. Anim. v. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f758'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r758'>758</a>. Pollux, vi. 77.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f759'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r759'>759</a>. Athen. iv. 28. There was a
-kind of cheese, apparently much
-in use, imported from Gythion,
-in Laconia. Lucian. Diall. Hetair.
-xiv. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f760'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r760'>760</a>. Xenoph. Conv. i. 13, 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f761'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r761'>761</a>. Xenoph. Conviv. i. 15. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f762'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r762'>762</a>. Cf. Luc. Amor. § 10. Schol.
-Aristoph. Acharn. 1058.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f763'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r763'>763</a>. The Indian jugglers themselves
-became known to the
-Greeks in the age of Alexander.
-Ælian. Var. Hist. viii. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f764'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r764'>764</a>. Xen. Conv. ii. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f765'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r765'>765</a>. Lucian. Amor. § 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f766'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r766'>766</a>. Artemid. Oneirocrit. i. 68.
-Xen. Conviv. ii. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f767'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r767'>767</a>. Poll. iii. 134.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f768'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r768'>768</a>. Xen. Conviv. ii. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f769'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r769'>769</a>. Xen. Conviv. vii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f770'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r770'>770</a>. Xen. Conviv. vii. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f771'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r771'>771</a>. Plat. de Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 55. Bekk. Xen. Conv. vii. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f772'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r772'>772</a>. Xen. Conviv. ix. 1–7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f773'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r773'>773</a>. Athen. xiv. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f774'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r774'>774</a>. Eurip. Fragm. Melanipp. 20.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f775'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r775'>775</a>. Athen. xiv. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f776'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r776'>776</a>. Eustath. ad Iliad. δ. p. 337.
-53. Etym. Mag. 277. 24.
-Meurs. Græc. Feriat. ii. 96.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f777'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r777'>777</a>. Athen. xiv. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f778'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r778'>778</a>. Among the Etruscans these
-ladles were of bronze, and of extremely
-elegant form, the point
-ending in a swan’s or duck’s
-head.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f779'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r779'>779</a>. The proceedings of this person
-were governed by a code of
-laws, the making and reformation
-of which employed the wits of no
-less personages than Xenophanes,
-Spensippos, and Aristotle. Athen.
-i. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f780'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r780'>780</a>. Horat. Od. ii. 7. 25.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f781'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r781'>781</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 1183.
-Vesp. 1005.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f782'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r782'>782</a>. Eustath. ad Iliad, γ. p. 333.
-Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 855.—A
-specimen of these ladles (ἀρύταιναι)
-occurs in Mus. Chiaramont.
-pl. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f783'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r783'>783</a>. Virgil actually wreaths the
-bowls with garlands.—Æneid.
-iii. 525.—Homer, however,
-crowns his bowls only with
-wine.-Il. ε. 471.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f784'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r784'>784</a>. Homer. Iliad. δ. 2. γ. 232.
-β. 813. Odyss. ο. 327. Juven.
-Sat. v. 60. Cf. Philo. Jud. de
-Vit. Contempl. t. ii. p. 479.
-Mangey.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f785'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r785'>785</a>. There were certain barbarians,
-who, to cement their
-friendships, drank wine tinged
-with each other’s blood.—Athen.
-xv. 47.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f786'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r786'>786</a>. Plut. Symp. i. 2. 2. The first
-cup was drunk to the Agathodemon.—Schol.
-Aristoph. Eq. 85.
-Athen. xv. 47.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f787'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r787'>787</a>. Athen. v. 20.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f788'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r788'>788</a>. Athen. x. 39. Plut. Cleom.
-§ 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f789'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r789'>789</a>. Theoc. Eidyll. vii. 69.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f790'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r790'>790</a>. Cicero in Verr. Act. ii. Orat.
-i. § 26, and Ascon. Pedan. in
-loc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f791'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r791'>791</a>. Antiphon. Acc. Nec. Ven.
-§ 3.—The third libation was in
-honour of Zeus.—Scol. Pind. Isth.
-vi. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f792'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r792'>792</a>. Theocrit. Eidyll. xiv. 18, et
-Schol.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f793'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r793'>793</a>. Mart. Epig. i. 78.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f794'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r794'>794</a>. Horat. Od. iii. 19. 11, sqq.
-Lambinus in loc. p. 143.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f795'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r795'>795</a>. Antiq. ii. 394, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f796'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r796'>796</a>. Marc. Argent. ap. Anthol. Græc. v. 110.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f797'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r797'>797</a>. Plut. Alexand. Magn. §§ 69, 70.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f798'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r798'>798</a>. Ælian. Var. Hist. ii. 41. Periz.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f799'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r799'>799</a>. Athen. x. 49.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f800'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r800'>800</a>. Athen. x. 44.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f801'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r801'>801</a>. Tuscul. Quæst. ii. 41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f802'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r802'>802</a>. Potter, ii. 396.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>
- <h3 class='c002'>CHAPTER VI. <br /> ENTERTAINMENTS.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The man upon the creations of whose art the
-principal enjoyments of Greek gourmands were based
-was the cook,<a id='r803' /><a href='#f803' class='c012'><sup>[803]</sup></a> whose character and achievements
-ought not perhaps to be entirely passed over. We
-are, indeed, chiefly indebted for our information to
-the comic poets; but, in spite of some little exaggeration,
-the likeness they have bequeathed to us
-is probably upon the whole pretty exact.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Athenian cook was a singularly heterogeneous
-being, something between the parasite and the professed
-jester; he was usually a poor citizen, with
-all the pride of autochthoneïty about him, who
-considered it indispensable to acquire, besides his
-culinary lore, a smattering of many other kinds of
-knowledge, not only for the purpose of improving
-his soups or ragouts, but in order, by the orations
-he pronounced in praise of himself, to dazzle and
-allure such persons as came to the agora in search
-of an artist of his class. Of course the principal
-source of his oratory lay among pots and frying-pans,
-and the wonders effected by his art. Philemon
-hits off with great felicity one of these worthies,
-who desires to convey a lofty opinion of himself,—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“How strong is my desire ’fore earth and heaven,</div>
- <div class='line'>To tell how daintily I cooked his dinner</div>
- <div class='line'>’Gainst his return! By all Athena’s owls!</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>’Tis no unpleasant thing to hit the mark</div>
- <div class='line'>On all occasions. What a fish had I—</div>
- <div class='line'>And ah! how nicely fried! Not all bedevilled</div>
- <div class='line'>With cheese, or browned atop, but though well done,</div>
- <div class='line'>Looking alive, in its rare beauty dressed.</div>
- <div class='line'>With skill so exquisite the fire I tempered,</div>
- <div class='line'>It seemed a joke to say that it was cooked.</div>
- <div class='line'>And then, just fancy now you see a hen</div>
- <div class='line'>Gobbling a morsel much too big to swallow;</div>
- <div class='line'>With bill uplifted round and round she runs</div>
- <div class='line'>Half choking; while the rest are at her heels</div>
- <div class='line'>Clucking for shares. Just so ’twas with my soldiers;</div>
- <div class='line'>The first who touched the dish upstarted he</div>
- <div class='line'>Whirling round in a circle like the hen,</div>
- <div class='line'>Eating and running; but his jolly comrades,</div>
- <div class='line'>Each a fish worshiper, soon joined the dance,</div>
- <div class='line'>Laughing and shouting, snatching some a bit,</div>
- <div class='line'>Some missing, till like smoke the whole had vanished.</div>
- <div class='line'>Yet were they merely mud-fed river dabs:</div>
- <div class='line'>But had some splendid scaros graced my pan,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or Attic glaucisk, or, O saviour Zeus!</div>
- <div class='line'>Kapros from Argos, or the conger eel,</div>
- <div class='line'>Which old Poseidon exports to Olympos,</div>
- <div class='line'>To be the food of gods, why then my guests</div>
- <div class='line'>Had rivalled those above. I have, in fact,</div>
- <div class='line'>The power to lavish immortality</div>
- <div class='line'>On whom I please, or, by my potent art,</div>
- <div class='line'>To raise the dead, if they but snuff my dishes!”<a id='r804' /><a href='#f804' class='c012'><sup>[804]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>This honest fellow, in the opinion of Athenæus,
-exceeded in boasting even that Menecrates of Syracuse,
-who for his pride obtained the surname of
-Zeus; he was a physician, and used vauntingly to
-call himself the arbiter of life to mankind. He
-is supposed to have possessed some specific against
-epilepsy; but being afflicted with a vanity at least
-equal to his skill, he would undertake no one’s
-cure unless he first entered into an agreement to
-follow him round the country ever after as his
-slave, which great numbers actually did. Nicostratos,
-of Argos, one of the persons so restored,
-travelled in his train habited and equipped like
-Heracles; others personated Asclepios, and Apollo,
-while Menecrates himself enacted in this fantastic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>masquerade the part of Zeus; and, as the actors
-say, he dressed the character well, wearing a purple
-robe, a golden crown upon his head, sandals of the
-most magnificent description, and bearing a sceptre
-in his hand.<a id='r805' /><a href='#f805' class='c012'><sup>[805]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But whatever might have been the conceit of
-our Syracusan physician, there were those among
-the cooking race, who certainly lagged not far behind
-him. They usually stunned such as came to
-hire them with reciting their own praises, laying
-claim to as much science and philosophy as would
-have sufficed to set up two or three sophists. In
-fact, to take them at their word, there was nothing
-which they did not know, nothing which they
-could not do. Painting they professed to comprehend
-as profound connoisseurs, and, no doubt, the
-soles they fried tasted all the better for the accomplishment.
-In astronomy, medicine, and geometry,
-they appear to have made a still greater proficiency
-than Hudibras, notwithstanding that—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“In mathematics he was greater</div>
- <div class='line'>Than Tycho Brahe, or Erra Pater;</div>
- <div class='line'>For he by geometric scale</div>
- <div class='line'>Could take the size of pots of ale;</div>
- <div class='line'>Discern by sines and tangents strait</div>
- <div class='line'>If bread and butter wanted weight;</div>
- <div class='line'>And wisely tell what hour o’ the day</div>
- <div class='line'>The clock does strike by algebra.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>In all this he was a fool to the Athenian cooks;
-for, by the help of astronomy, they could tell when
-mackerel was in season, and at what time of the
-year a haddock is better than a salmon. From
-geometry they borrowed the art of laying out a
-kitchen to the best advantage, and how to hang
-up the gridiron in one place, and the porridge-pot
-in another. To medicine it is easy to see how
-deeply they must have been indebted, since it not
-only taught them what meats are wholesome, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>what not, but also enabled them by some sleight of
-art to diminish the appetite of those voracious parasites,
-who when they dined out appeared to have
-stomachs equal in capacity to the great tun of
-Heidelberg.<a id='r806' /><a href='#f806' class='c012'><sup>[806]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Many individuals, half guests, half parasites, used
-to extract considerable matter for merriment out
-of the dinner materials, that they might render
-themselves agreeable, and be invited again. Thus
-Charmos, the Syracusan, used to convert every dish
-served at table into an occasion for reciting poetical
-quotations or old proverbs, and sometimes, perhaps,
-suffered the fish to cool while he was displaying
-his erudition. He had always civil things to
-say both to shell-fish and tripe, so that a person
-fond of flattery might have coveted to be roasted,
-in order that his shade might be soothed with this
-kind of incense, which even Socrates allowed was
-not an illiberal enjoyment. It was, however, a
-common custom among parasites to make extracts
-from the poets and carry them in portfolios to the
-tables of their patrons, where they recited all such
-as appeared to be <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>à propos</i></span>. In this way the above
-Charmos obtained among the people of Messina the
-reputation of a learned man, and Calliphanes,<a id='r807' /><a href='#f807' class='c012'><sup>[807]</sup></a> son
-of Parabrycon,<a id='r808' /><a href='#f808' class='c012'><sup>[808]</sup></a> succeeded no less ingeniously by
-copying out the first verses of various poems, and
-reciting them, so that it might be supposed he
-knew the whole.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Cleanthes, of Tarentum, always spoke at table
-in verse, so likewise did the Sicilian Pamphilos;
-and these parasites, travelling about with wallets
-of poetry on their backs, were everywhere welcomed
-and entertained, which might with great
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>propriety have been adduced by Ilgen<a id='r809' /><a href='#f809' class='c012'><sup>[809]</sup></a> among
-his other proofs of the imaginative character of the
-Greeks.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Archestratos, the Syracusan, belonged no doubt to
-this class. He composed an epic poem on good eating,
-which commenced with recommending that no company,
-assembled for convivial enjoyment, should ever
-exceed four,<a id='r810' /><a href='#f810' class='c012'><sup>[810]</sup></a> or at most five, otherwise he said
-they would rather resemble a troop of banditti than
-gentlemen. It had probably escaped him, that there
-were twenty-eight guests at Plato’s banquet. Antiphanes,
-after observing that the parasites had lynx’s
-eyes to discover a good dinner though never invited,
-immediately adds, that the republic ought to get up
-an entertainment for them, upon the same principle
-that during the games an ox<a id='r811' /><a href='#f811' class='c012'><sup>[811]</sup></a> was slaughtered some
-distance from the course at Olympia, to feast the
-flies, and prevent them from devouring the spectators.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Besides Archestratos, there were several other celebrated
-gastronomers among the ancients. Of these
-the principal were Timachidas, of Rhodes, who wrote
-a poem in eleven books on good eating,<a id='r812' /><a href='#f812' class='c012'><sup>[812]</sup></a> Noumenios,
-of Heraclea, pupil to the physician Dieuches,
-Metreas, of Pitana, the parodist Hegemon, of Thasos,
-surnamed the <em>Lentil</em>, by some reckoned among the
-poets of the old comedy, Philoxenos, of Leucadia,
-and a second Philoxenos, of Cythera, who composed
-his work in hexameter verse. The former, after
-chaunting the eulogium of the kettle, comes nevertheless
-to the conclusion at last, that superior merit
-belongs to the <a id='corr201.31'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='fryingpan'>frying-pan</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_201.31'><ins class='correction' title='fryingpan'>frying-pan</ins></a></span>. He earnestly recommended
-truffles to lovers, but would not have them touch the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>barbel. His anger burst forth with great vehemence
-against those who cut in pieces fish which should
-be served up whole; and, though he admits that a
-polypus may occasionally be boiled, it was much
-better, he says, to fry it. From this man the Philoxenian
-cakes derived their name; and he it is whom
-Chrysippos reproaches with half scalding his fingers
-in the warm bath and gargling his throat with hot
-water, in order that he might be able to swallow
-kabobs hissing from the coals.<a id='r813' /><a href='#f813' class='c012'><sup>[813]</sup></a> He likewise used,
-at the houses of his friends, to bribe the cooks to
-bring up everything fiery hot, that he might help
-himself before any one else could touch them. A
-kindred gourmand, in the poet Krobylos, exclaims:
-“My fingers are insensible to fire like the Dactyls
-of Mount Ida. And ah! how delightful it is to
-refresh my throat with the crackling flakes of
-broiled fish! Oh I am in fact an oven, not a
-man!”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>According to Clearchos it was this same Philoxenos,
-who used to maraud about rich men’s houses,
-followed by a number of slaves laden with wine,
-vinegar, oil, and other seasonings. Wherever he
-smelled the best dinner he dropped in unasked, and
-slipping slily among the cooks, obtained their permission
-to season the dishes they were preparing, after
-which he took his place among the guests where he
-fed like a Cyclops. Arriving once at Ephesos, by
-sea, he found, upon inquiry in the market, that all
-the best fish had been secured for a wedding feast.
-Forthwith he bathed, and repairing to the house of
-the bridegroom, demanded permission to sing the
-Epithalamium. Every one was delighted; they could
-do no less than invite him to dinner. And “Will
-you come again to-morrow?” inquired the generous
-host. “If there be no fish in the market,” replied
-Philoxenos. It was this gourmand who wished
-nature had bestowed on man the neck of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>crane that the pleasure of swallowing might be prolonged.<a id='r814' /><a href='#f814' class='c012'><sup>[814]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Pithyllos, another parasite, surnamed “the Dainty,”
-not content with the membrane which nature has
-spread over the tongue, superinduced artificially a
-sort of mucous covering, which retained for a considerable
-time the flavour of what he ate.<a id='r815' /><a href='#f815' class='c012'><sup>[815]</sup></a> To prolong
-his luxurious enjoyment as much as possible,
-he afterwards scraped away this curious coating with
-a fish. Of all ancient gourmands he alone is said
-to have made use of artificial finger-points, that he
-might be enabled to seize upon the hottest morsels.
-An anecdote so good as to have given rise
-to many modern imitations, is related of Philoxenos,
-of Cythera. Dining one day with Dionysios, of Syracuse,
-he observed a large barbel served up to the
-prince, while a very diminutive one was placed before
-him. Upon this, taking up the little fish, he
-held it to his ear and appeared to be listening attentively.
-Dionysios, expecting some humorous extravagance,
-made a point of inquiring the meaning
-of this movement, and Philoxenos replied, that
-happening just then to think of his Galatea,<a id='r816' /><a href='#f816' class='c012'><sup>[816]</sup></a> he
-was questioning the barbel respecting her. But as
-it makes no answer, said he, I imagine they have
-taken him too young and that he does not understand
-me. I am persuaded, however, that the old
-fellow they have placed before your majesty must
-know all about it. The king, amused by his ingenuity,
-immediately sent him the larger fish which
-he soon questioned effectually.<a id='r817' /><a href='#f817' class='c012'><sup>[817]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But the Athenians were not reduced to depend
-for amusement at table upon the invention of these
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>humble companions. They knew how, when occasion
-required, to entertain themselves, and, in the
-exuberance of their hilarity, descended for this purpose
-to contrivances almost infantine. They posed
-each other with charades, enigmas, conundrums, and,
-sometimes, in the lower classes of society, related
-stories of witches, lamias, mormos, and other hobgoblins
-believed in by the vulgar of all nations.
-Among persons engaged in public affairs the excitement
-of political discussion was often, of course,
-intermingled with their more quiet pleasures.<a id='r818' /><a href='#f818' class='c012'><sup>[818]</sup></a> But
-with this we have, just now, nothing to do, nor
-with the enigmas which we shall describe anon.
-There was another and more elegant practice observed
-by the Greeks at convivial meetings, which,
-though not peculiar to them, has nowhere else, perhaps,
-prevailed to the same extent,—I mean the introduction
-of music and the singing of songs,<a id='r819' /><a href='#f819' class='c012'><sup>[819]</sup></a> light,
-graceful, and instinct with wit and gaiety, to the
-barbitos or the lyre.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among the Greeks, generally, the love of music
-and poetry seemed to be a spontaneous impulse of
-nature. Almost every act of life was accompanied
-by a song,—the weaver at his loom, the baker at
-his kneading-trough, the reaper, the “spinners and the
-knitters in the sun,” the drawer of water, even the
-hard-working wight who toiled at the mill, had his
-peculiar song, by the chaunting of which he lightened
-his labour. The mariner, too, like the Venetian
-gondolier, sang at the oar, and the shepherd and
-the herdsman, the day-labourer and the swineherd,
-the vintager and the husbandman, the attendant
-in the baths, and the nurse beside the cradle. It
-might, in fact, be said, that from an Hellenic village
-music arose as from a brake in spring. Their
-sensibilities were tremblingly alive to pleasure.
-There was elasticity, there was balm in their atmosphere,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>and joy and freedom in their souls.—How
-could they do other than sing?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But, if music and poetry thus diffused their delights
-over the industry of the laborious, it was
-quite natural that where men met solely for enjoyment,
-these best handmaids of enjoyment should not
-be absent. Accordingly, we find that while the
-goblet circulated, kindling the imagination, and unbending
-the mind, the lyre was brought in and a
-song called for. Nor was the custom of recent
-date. It prevailed equally in the heroic ages, and,
-like many other features of Greek manners, derived
-its origin from religion. For, in early times, men
-rarely met at a numerous banquet, except on occasion
-of some sacrifice, when hymns in honour of the
-gods constituted an important part of the ceremonies.
-Thus Homer, describing the grand expiatory
-rites by which the Achæan host sought to avert the
-wrath of Apollo, observes, that they made great
-feasts, and celebrated the praises of the god amid
-their flowing goblets.<a id='r820' /><a href='#f820' class='c012'><sup>[820]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Yet, though the theme of those primitive songs
-may have been at first serious, it was, probably, not
-long before topics better adapted to festive meetings
-obtained the preference. At all events, they
-soon came to be in fashion. The first step appears
-to have been from the gods to the heroes, whose
-achievements, being sometimes tinged with the ludicrous,
-opened the door to much gay and lively description.
-And these convivial pleasures,<a id='r821' /><a href='#f821' class='c012'><sup>[821]</sup></a> so highly
-valued on earth, were, with great consistency, transferred
-to Olympos, where the immortals themselves
-were thought to heighten their enjoyments by songs
-and merriment.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the ages following, the art of enhancing thus the
-delights of social intercourse, so far from falling into
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>neglect, grew to be more than ever cultivated. Even
-the greatest men, beginning from the Homeric Achilles,
-disdained not to sing. They did not, says a judicious
-and learned writer, consider it sufficient to perform
-deeds worthy of immortality, or to be the theme of
-poets and musicians, or so far to cultivate their minds
-as to be able to relish and appreciate the songs of
-others, but included music within the circle of their
-own studies, as an accomplishment without which no
-man could pretend to be liberally educated. For this
-reason it was objected by Stesimbrotos, as a reproach
-to Cimon, that he was ignorant of music, and every
-other gentlemanly accomplishment held in estimation
-among the Greeks;<a id='r822' /><a href='#f822' class='c012'><sup>[822]</sup></a> and even Themistocles himself
-incurred the charge of rusticity, because, when challenged
-at a party, he refused to play on the cithara.<a id='r823' /><a href='#f823' class='c012'><sup>[823]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A different theory of manners prevailed among the
-Romans, who, like the modern Turks, considered it
-unbecoming a gentleman to sing. But to the Greeks,
-a people replete with gaiety and ardour, and whose
-amusements always partook largely of poetry, music
-presented itself under a wholly different aspect, and
-was so far from appearing a mean or sordid study,
-that no branch of education was held in higher honour,
-or esteemed more efficacious in promoting tranquillity
-of mind, or polish and refinement of manners. The
-lyre is accordingly said, by Homer, to be a divine
-gift, designed to be the companion and friend of
-feasts, where it proved the source of numerous advantages.
-In the first place, persons too much addicted
-to the bottle found in this instrument an ally against
-their own failing, for, whether playing or listening,
-a cessation from drinking was necessarily effected.
-Rudeness also and violence, and that unbridled audacity
-commonly inspired by wine, were checked by
-music, which, in their stead, inspired a pleasing exaltation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>of mind, and joy free from all admixture of
-passion.<a id='r824' /><a href='#f824' class='c012'><sup>[824]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It has already been observed that the convivial
-song soon divested itself of its religious and sombre
-character; for, as parties are made up of persons differing
-extremely in taste and temperament, it necessarily
-happened that when each was required to sing,
-much variety would be found in the lays, which generally
-assumed a festive and jocund air. Hymns in
-honour of the gods were more sparingly introduced,<a id='r825' /><a href='#f825' class='c012'><sup>[825]</sup></a>
-nor was much stress laid on the praises of heroes;<a id='r826' /><a href='#f826' class='c012'><sup>[826]</sup></a>
-the spirit of joviality moulded itself into</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Quips and cranks, and wanton wiles;</div>
- <div class='line'>Nods and becks, and wreathed smiles.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Every one poured forth what the whim of the moment
-inspired,—jokes, love-songs, or biting satires,
-with the freedom and fertility of an improvisatore.<a id='r827' /><a href='#f827' class='c012'><sup>[827]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>These convivial songs were divided by the ancients
-into several kinds, with reference sometimes to their
-nature, sometimes to the manner in which they were
-chaunted: the most remarkable they denominated Scolia,
-or zig-zag songs,<a id='r828' /><a href='#f828' class='c012'><sup>[828]</sup></a> for a reason somewhat difficult of
-explanation. Several of the later Greek writers appear
-to have been greatly at a loss to account for
-the appellation, which is, no doubt, a singular one;
-but the learning and diligence of Ilgen<a id='r829' /><a href='#f829' class='c012'><sup>[829]</sup></a> may be
-said to have fully resolved this curious question.
-After determining the antiquity of the Scolion, which
-Pindar<a id='r830' /><a href='#f830' class='c012'><sup>[830]</sup></a> supposes to have been an invention of Terpander,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>or, at least, the verses of the song, but which
-Ilgen dates as far back as the heroic period, he observes,
-that the name itself was known in very remote
-ages, since they formed a separate class among the
-works of Pindar, and are mentioned by Aristophanes
-and Plato,<a id='r831' /><a href='#f831' class='c012'><sup>[831]</sup></a> and that, like the Cyclic chorus, it arose
-out of the circumstances under which it was sung.
-For as this chorus was called Cyclic, or circular, because
-chaunted by persons moving in a circle round
-the altar of Bacchos, so the Scolion, or zig-zag song,<a id='r832' /><a href='#f832' class='c012'><sup>[832]</sup></a>
-received its name from the myrtle branch, or the
-cithara, to which it was sung, being passed from one
-guest to another in a zig-zag<a id='r833' /><a href='#f833' class='c012'><sup>[833]</sup></a> fashion, just as those
-who possessed the requisite skill happened to sit at table.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To render this explanation perfectly intelligible,
-it will, perhaps, be necessary to describe succinctly
-the whole process of singing in company. At first,
-it has been conjectured, when manners were rude,
-and the language still in its infancy, singing, like
-dancing, required no great art, and was little more
-than those wild bursts of melody still common among
-the improvisatori of Arabia and other Eastern countries,
-but that from these humble beginnings lyrical
-poetry took its rise, preserving still the freedom of
-its original state, and rising, unshackled by the rigid
-laws of metre, to heights of sublimity and grandeur
-beyond which no human composition ever soared.
-By degrees some complex forms of verse obtained
-the preference,—such, for example, as those of Sappho
-and Alcæos,—and fixed and definite laws of metre
-were established.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>The Scolion, however, always preserved something
-of its original spontaneous character, at least in appearance,
-and the same thing may be predicated of
-all their festive lays. But before they gave loose to
-their gaiety, the deep religious sentiment which pervaded
-the whole nation required a pæan, or hymn,
-to be sung in honour of the gods, and in this every
-person present joined.<a id='r834' /><a href='#f834' class='c012'><sup>[834]</sup></a> While thus engaged, each
-guest, it is supposed, held in his hand a branch of
-laurel, the tree sacred to Apollo.<a id='r835' /><a href='#f835' class='c012'><sup>[835]</sup></a> To the pæan succeeded
-another air, which all present sang in their turn,
-holding this time a branch of myrtle,<a id='r836' /><a href='#f836' class='c012'><sup>[836]</sup></a> which, like
-the laurel bough mentioned above, was called æsakos,
-or the “branch of song.”<a id='r837' /><a href='#f837' class='c012'><sup>[837]</sup></a> The singing commenced
-with the principal guest, to whom the symposiarch
-or host delivered the Cithara<a id='r838' /><a href='#f838' class='c012'><sup>[838]</sup></a> and æsakos, demanding
-a song, which, according to the laws of the table, no
-one could refuse. Having performed his part, the
-singer was, in turn, entitled to call upon his neighbour,
-beginning on the right hand, and delivering to
-him the Cithara and the myrtle branch. The second,
-when he had sung, handed it then to the
-third, the third to the fourth, and so on until the
-whole circle of the company had been made. It
-sometimes happened, though not often, that among
-the guests an individual, unskilled in instrumental
-music, was found, and, in this case, he sang without
-accompaniment, holding the æsakos in his hand.<a id='r839' /><a href='#f839' class='c012'><sup>[839]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The poets who had the honour thus to cheer the
-convivial hours of the Greeks were, in remoter times,
-Simonides and Stesichoros, and, probably, Anacreon,
-with others of the same grade;<a id='r840' /><a href='#f840' class='c012'><sup>[840]</sup></a> and, if we may
-credit Aristophanes, songs were also selected from
-the plays of Æschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides, as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>among ourselves from Shakespeare, Beaumont and
-Fletcher, or Ben Jonson. It may even be inferred
-that passages from Homer himself<a id='r841' /><a href='#f841' class='c012'><sup>[841]</sup></a> were sung on
-these occasions; or, if not sung, they were certainly
-recited by rhapsodists introduced for the purpose into
-the assembly, who, holding a laurel branch while thus
-engaged, probably gave rise to the practice of passing
-round the myrtle bough. This branch, therefore,
-whether of myrtle or laurel,<a id='r842' /><a href='#f842' class='c012'><sup>[842]</sup></a> constituted a part of a
-singer’s apparatus. The latter was originally chosen
-as sacred to Apollo, the patron of music, and because
-it was also believed to be endowed with something
-of prophetic power, the Pythoness eating its leaves
-before she ascended the tripod, while it was the symbol
-of ever-during song. Instead of the laurel,
-myrtle was afterwards introduced, on account, probably,
-of its being sacred to Aphrodite, whose praises
-were celebrated in those amatory songs common at
-feasts. It may, likewise, have been considered an
-emblem of republican virtue, since Harmodios and
-Aristogeiton concealed their swords in a myrtle
-wreath.<a id='r843' /><a href='#f843' class='c012'><sup>[843]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To proceed, however, with the Scolia. These
-lays, like the rest, made the circle of the company,
-though not by passing in an unbroken series from
-man to man, but, as has already been said, from one
-skilful singer to another. In fact, the chanting of the
-scolia was a kind of contest which took place when all
-the other songs were concluded.<a id='r844' /><a href='#f844' class='c012'><sup>[844]</sup></a> The person who
-occupied the seat of honour chanted to the Cithara
-a song containing the praises of some mortal or
-immortal, or the developement of some moral precept
-or erotic subject, which was comprehended in
-a small number of verses. When he had finished,
-he handed the Cithara and myrtle, at his own discretion,
-to some other among the guests, and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>person thus challenged, who could not refuse without
-passing for an illiterate clown, must at once take
-up the same subject, and, without delay or premeditation,
-break forth into a song in the same metre
-and number of verses, if possible; and if unfamiliar
-with the Cithara, he could sing to the myrtle. The
-second singer now exercised his privilege and called
-upon a third, who was expected to do as he had
-done; so that very often the same idea underwent
-five or six transformations in the course of the evening.
-When the first argument had thus made the
-circle of the company, he who concluded had the
-right to start a new theme, which received the same
-treatment as the first; so that sometimes, when people
-were in a singing humour, air followed air, until
-eight or ten subjects had received all the poetical
-ornaments which the invention of those present could
-bestow upon them.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But to sing without wine would have been insipid.
-I have said the chanting of the scolia
-was a sort of contest, and, as he who contends and
-obtains the victory looks naturally for a reward, so
-the successful performer aspired to his, which, it
-must be owned, was not inappropriate, consisting
-of a brimming bowl, called <em>odos</em>, or the “cup of
-song,” at once a mark of honour and a reward of
-skill.<a id='r845' /><a href='#f845' class='c012'><sup>[845]</sup></a> All these particulars are inferable from the
-examples of the scolion, which still remain; and
-Aristophanes in the “Wasps,” presents something
-like an outline, though dim and obscure, both of
-the argument and the mode of execution. He imagines
-a company of jolly fellows,<a id='r846' /><a href='#f846' class='c012'><sup>[846]</sup></a> such as Theoros,
-Æschines, Phanos, Cleon, Acestor, and a foreigner
-of the same kidney, and represents them as engaged in
-performing certain scolia for their own entertainment.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But the idea we should form of this kind of song
-from the very comic passage in the “Wasps” differs
-materially from the theoretic view of Ilgen, since
-Philocleon constantly interrupts his son, terminating
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>each sentence for him in a manner wholly unexpected,
-and of course calculated to excite laughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But though musical, the Greeks would not imitate
-the grasshoppers,<a id='r847' /><a href='#f847' class='c012'><sup>[847]</sup></a> who are said to sing till they
-starve; but, having accomplished the circle above-mentioned,
-proceeded to other amusements which,
-though too numerous to be described at length, must
-not be altogether passed over. In the heroic ages
-the discovery had not been made that rest after
-meals is necessary to digestion, which in later times
-was a received maxim, and accordingly we find
-from the practice of the Phæacians,<a id='r848' /><a href='#f848' class='c012'><sup>[848]</sup></a> who, if an after-dinner
-nap had been customary, would certainly have
-taken it, that the men of those times, instead of
-indulging in indolent repose out of compliment to
-their stomachs, sallied forth to leap, to run, to wrestle,
-and engage in other athletic sports, which by no means
-appear to have impaired their health or their prowess.
-As civilisation advances, however, excuses are found
-for laying aside the habits of violent exercise. Science,
-in too many cases, fosters indolence and pronounces
-what is fashionable to be wise. But to
-the race-course and the wrestling-ring, sedentary,
-or at least indoor, pastimes succeed, and, instead
-of overthrowing their antagonists on the palæstra-floor
-or the greensward, men seek to subdue them
-at Kottabos, or on the chess-board, or to ruin them
-at the card-table or in the billiard-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The play of Kottabos,<a id='r849' /><a href='#f849' class='c012'><sup>[849]</sup></a> invented in Sicily, soon
-propagated itself, as such inventions do, throughout
-the whole of Greece, and got into great vogue at
-Athens, where the lively temperament of the people
-inclined them to indulge immoderately in whatever
-was convivial and gay. The most usual form of
-the game was this,—a piece of wood like the upright
-of a balance having been fixed in the floor
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>or upon a stable basis, a small cross-beam was
-placed on the top of it with a shallow vessel like
-the basin of a pair of scales, at either end.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Under each of these vessels stood a broad-mouthed
-vase, filled with water, with a gilt bronze statue,
-called Manes, fixed upright in its centre. The persons
-who played at the game, standing at some
-little distance, cast, in turn, their wine, from a
-drinking-cup into one of the pensile basins, which
-descending with the weight, struck against the head
-of the statue, which resounded with the blow. The
-victor was he who spilled least wine during the
-throw, and elicited most noise from the brazen
-head. It was, in fact, in its origin a species of
-divination, the object being to discover by the
-greater or less success obtained, the place occupied
-by the player in his mistress’s affections. By an
-onomatop&oelig;a the sound created by the wine in its
-projection was called <em>latax</em>, and the wine itself
-<em>latagè</em>. Both the act of throwing and the cup
-used were called <em>ankula</em>, from the word which expresses
-the dexterous turn of the hand with which
-the skilful player cast his wine into the scales.<a id='r850' /><a href='#f850' class='c012'><sup>[850]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Our learned Archbishop Potter, who has not unskilfully
-abridged the account of Athenæus, confounds
-the above with the <em>kottabos katactos</em>, another
-form of the game described both by Pollux and
-Athenæus.<a id='r851' /><a href='#f851' class='c012'><sup>[851]</sup></a> In this the apparatus was suspended
-like a chandelier from the roof. It was formed of
-brass, and a brazen vessel, called the skiff, was
-placed beneath it. The player, standing at a little
-distance, with a long wand, struck one end of the
-kottabos, which descending came in contact with
-the skiff, or rather the manes within, and produced
-a hollow sound. Occasionally the small vessels at
-the extremity of the kottabos were brought down,
-as in the former game, by having wine cast into
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>them. Another variety required the skiff to be
-filled with water, upon which floated a ball, an instrument
-like the tongue of a balance, a manes,
-three myrtle boughs, and as many phials. In this
-the great art consisted in striking some one of these
-with the kottabos, and whoever could sink most of
-them won the game. The prize, on these occasions,
-was usually one of those cakes called <em>pyramos</em><a id='r852' /><a href='#f852' class='c012'><sup>[852]</sup></a> or
-something similar; but instead of these it was sometimes
-agreed, when women were present, that the
-prize should be a kiss, as in our game of forfeits.
-Another kind of kottabos, chiefly practised on those
-occasions which resembled our christenings, when on
-the tenth day the child received its name, was a
-contention of wakefulness, when the person who
-longest resisted sleep, won the prize. Properly, however,
-kottabos was the amusement first described;
-and so fashionable did it become, that persons erected
-circular rooms expressly for the purpose, in order
-that the players might take their stand at equal
-distances from the apparatus which stood in the
-centre.<a id='r853' /><a href='#f853' class='c012'><sup>[853]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It might, without any authority, be presumed that
-when people met together for enjoyment they would
-derive the greater portion of it from conversation,
-which would, of course, vary and slide</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“From grave to gay, from lively to severe,”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>according to the character or fluctuating humour of
-the company. The Spartans, like all military people,
-were grievously addicted to jokes, which among them
-supplied the place of that elegant badinage, alternating
-with profound or impassioned discourse, familiar
-to the more intellectual Athenians. The latter, however,
-though free from the coarseness, possessed more
-than the mirthfulness of the Dorians, and in the
-midst of their habits of business and application to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>philosophy, knew better than any people how, amidst
-wine and good-eating, to unbend and enjoy the luxury
-of careless trifling and an unwrinkled brow.
-While some therefore retired to the kottabos-room,
-which occupied the place of our billiard-room, others
-still sat clustered round the table, extracting amusement
-from each other. Among these of course would
-be found all such as excelled in the art of small
-talk, who could tell a good story or anecdote, scatter
-around showers of witticisms, or give birth to a
-pun. Some, like the Spartans, had a Welsh passion
-for genealogies, and loved to run back over the history
-of the “Landed Gentry” of old Hellas, to the
-time of Deucalion or higher; others coined their wisdom
-and experience into fables, for which they exhibited
-an almost Oriental fondness; while the greater
-number, like the princes in the Arabian Nights,
-exercised their wits in propounding and resolving
-difficult questions, enigmas, charades, anagrams, and
-conundrums.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But the principal classes into which these contrivances
-were divided were two: <em>enigmas</em> and <em>griphoi</em>,<a id='r854' /><a href='#f854' class='c012'><sup>[854]</sup></a>
-the former comprehending all those terminating in
-mere pleasure, the latter such questions and riddles
-as involved within themselves the kernel of wisdom
-or knowledge,<a id='r855' /><a href='#f855' class='c012'><sup>[855]</sup></a> supposed to have been a dull and serious
-affair. Casaubon,<a id='r856' /><a href='#f856' class='c012'><sup>[856]</sup></a> however, vindicates it stoutly
-from this charge, affirming that in the griphos the
-<em>utile</em> was mingled with the <em>dulce</em> in due proportion;
-so that it must, according to Horace’s opinion, have
-borne away the palm from most literary inventions.
-In point of antiquity, too, the riddle may justly
-boast; for, if to be old is to be noble, it has “more
-of birth and better blood” even than the hungry
-Dorians of the Peloponnesos, whom Mr. Mitchell
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>prefers, on this account, before all nations of Ionic
-race. Like everything good also it comes from the
-East. The earliest mention of the riddle occurs in
-the book of Judges,<a id='r857' /><a href='#f857' class='c012'><sup>[857]</sup></a> where Samson, during his
-marriage-feast at Timnath, perplexes his guests with
-the following riddle:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Out of the eater came forth meat, and out of the strong came
-forth sweetness;”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>To which they, being instructed by his wife, replied:</p>
-
-<div class='quote'>
-
-<p class='c001'>“What is sweeter than honey? and what is stronger than a
-lion?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>The word griphos, in its original acceptation, signified
-a fishing-net, and hence by translation was
-employed to describe a captious or cunningly contrived
-question, in which the wits of people were
-entangled.<a id='r858' /><a href='#f858' class='c012'><sup>[858]</sup></a> As the ancients delighted in this sort
-of intellectual trifling they were at the pains to be
-very methodical about it, dividing the riddle into
-several kinds, which Clearchos of Soli<a id='r859' /><a href='#f859' class='c012'><sup>[859]</sup></a> made the
-subject of a separate work. This writer, a sort of
-Greek D’Israeli, defines the griphos to mean “a
-sportive problem proposed for solution on condition,
-that the discovery of the sense should be
-attended by a reward, and failure with punishment.”
-His description of the seven classes could
-scarcely be rendered intelligible, and certainly not
-interesting to the modern reader. It will be more
-to the purpose to introduce two or three specimens,
-prefacing them by a few remarks.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It has been above observed, that philosophical
-truths were often wrapped up in these sportive problems,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>which purposely obscured, so as to afford but
-dim and distant glimpses of the forms within, necessarily
-exercised and sharpened the wit and induced
-keen and persevering habits of investigation.
-The reward also and the penalty had the same tendency.
-A crown, an extra junket, and the applause
-of the company, cheered the successful Œdipos, while
-the lackwit who beat about the bush without catching
-the owl, had to make wry faces over a cup of
-brine or pickle. Theodectes, the sophist, a man distinguished
-for the excellence of his memory, obtained
-reputation as a riddle-solver, and denominated
-such questions the “springs of memory.”<a id='r860' /><a href='#f860' class='c012'><sup>[860]</sup></a> But whatever
-the interrogatories themselves may have been,
-the reward, to which their solution often led, was
-rather a source of forgetfulness, consisting of a goblet
-of wine which, when no interpreter could be found,
-passed to the propounder.<a id='r861' /><a href='#f861' class='c012'><sup>[861]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The riddle was of course a mine of wealth to the
-comic poets, who could not be supposed to forego
-the use of so admirable a contrivance to raise expectation
-and beget surprise. But it is clear, from
-the examples still preserved, that they oftener missed
-than hit. Antiphanes’s griphoi on “bringing and not
-bringing;” on the “porridge-pot;” on a “tart,” &amp;c.,
-are poor things; but the following from the “Dream”
-of Alexis is good:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A. A thing exists which nor immortal is,</div>
- <div class='line'>Nor mortal, but to both belongs, and lives</div>
- <div class='line'>As neither god nor man does. Every day,</div>
- <div class='line'>’Tis born anew and dies. No eye can see it,</div>
- <div class='line'>And yet to all ’tis known.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>B. A plague upon you!</div>
- <div class='line'>you bore me with your riddles.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A. Still, all this</div>
- <div class='line'>Is plain and easy.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>B. What then can it be?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A. <span class='sc'>Sleep</span>—that puts all our cares and pains to flight.<a id='r862' /><a href='#f862' class='c012'><sup>[862]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>The following from Eubulos is not amiss:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A. What is it that, while young, is plump and heavy,</div>
- <div class='line'>But, being full grown, is light, and wingless mounts</div>
- <div class='line'>Upon the courier winds, and foils the sight?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>B. The <span class='sc'>Thistle’s Beard</span>; for this at first sticks fast</div>
- <div class='line'>To the green seed, which, ripe and dry, falls off</div>
- <div class='line'>Upon the cradling breeze, or, upwards puffed</div>
- <div class='line'>By playful urchins, sails along the air.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Antiphanes, in his Sappho, introduces a very ingenious
-riddle, partly for the purpose of offering a
-sarcastic explanation directed against the orators:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>There is a female which within her bosom</div>
- <div class='line'>Carries her young, that, mute, in fact, yet speak,</div>
- <div class='line'>And make their voice heard on the howling waves,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or wildest continent. They will converse</div>
- <div class='line'>Even with the absent, and inform the deaf.<a id='r863' /><a href='#f863' class='c012'><sup>[863]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>The poet introduces the “Lesbian maid,” explaining
-the riddle, and this passage of the Athenian
-comic writer may be regarded as the original of
-those fine lines in Ovid, which Pope has so elegantly
-translated:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Heaven first taught <span class='fss'>LETTERS</span> for some wretch’s aid,</div>
- <div class='line'>Some banish’d lover, or some captive maid,</div>
- <div class='line'>They live, they speak, they breathe what love inspires,</div>
- <div class='line'>Warm from the soul, and faithful to its fires,</div>
- <div class='line'>The virgin’s wish without her fears impart,</div>
- <div class='line'>Excuse the blush and pour out all the heart,</div>
- <div class='line'>Speed the soft intercourse from soul to soul,</div>
- <div class='line'>And waft a sigh from Indus to the pole.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>By this time, however, the reader will probably
-be of opinion, that we have lingered long enough
-about the dinner-table and its attendant pastimes.
-We shall therefore hasten the departure of the
-guests, who after burning the tongues of the animals
-that had been sacrificed, to intimate that whatever
-had been uttered was to be kept secret, offered
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>libations to Zeus, Hermes, and other gods, and took
-their leave, in ancient times before sunset; but afterwards,
-as luxury and extravagance increased, the
-morning sun often enabled them to dispense with
-link-boys. Examples, indeed, of similar perversions
-of the night occur in Homer and Virgil, but always
-among the reckless or effeminate in the palaces of
-princes, whence, in all ages, the stream of immorality
-has flowed downward upon society to disturb
-and pollute it. The company assembled at Agathon’s,
-also, sit up all night in Plato; and Aristophanes
-represents drunken men reeling home through
-the agora by daylight.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f803'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r803'>803</a>. On famous Cooks see Max. Tyr. Dissert. v. 60. 83. Pollux,
-vi. 70, seq. Athen. iii. 60.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f804'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r804'>804</a>. Athen. vii. 32.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f805'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r805'>805</a>. Athen. vii. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f806'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r806'>806</a>. Athen. vii. 37.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f807'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r807'>807</a>. Suidas in v. t. i. p. 1361. c.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f808'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r808'>808</a>. Athen. i. 6. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Sic ut παράσιτος,
-et παραμασήτης vel παραμασύντης
-convivam denotat invocatum,
-qui absque symbola
-ad convivium venit; sic nomen
-παραβρύκων (à verbo βρύκω,
-mordeo, rodo, deglutio) eumdem
-habet significatum.”</span>—Scheigh.
-Animadv. t. vi. p. 54.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f809'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r809'>809</a>. De Scol. Poes. p. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f810'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r810'>810</a>. Athen. i. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f811'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r811'>811</a>. Athen. i. 7. This ox was
-sacrificed to Zeus the Fly-Chaser,
-in order to prevail on him to drive
-the swarms of insects, by which
-the spectators were incommoded,
-beyond the Alpheios. Cf. Plin.
-Nat. Hist. x. 40. ix. 34. Pausan.
-v. 14. i. viii. 26. 7. Ælian.
-De Nat. Animal. v. 17. xi.
-8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f812'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r812'>812</a>. Athen. i. 8. Suidas. v. Τιμαχίδας.
-t. i. p. 899, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f813'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r813'>813</a>. Athen. i. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f814'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r814'>814</a>. Suid. in v. Φιλοξ. t. ii. p. 1058.
-c. Athen. i. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f815'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r815'>815</a>. Athen. i. 10. Suid. v. Πιθυλλ.
-t. ii. p. 526. c.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f816'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r816'>816</a>. Making allusion perhaps to
-his love for Galatea, the mistress
-of Dionysios. Athen. i. 11.
-Ælian. Var. Hist. xii. 44. Schol.
-Aristoph. Plut. 290.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f817'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r817'>817</a>. Athen. i. 11. See another
-anecdote of this gourmand in
-Ælian. Var. Hist. x. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f818'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r818'>818</a>. Aristoph. Aves. 1189, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f819'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r819'>819</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 403.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f820'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r820'>820</a>. Iliad, α. 492, sqq. Ilgen,
-Disq. de Scol. Poes. p. 55.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f821'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r821'>821</a>. Conf. Odyss. θ 72, sqq. α.
-154. 350.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f822'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r822'>822</a>. Plut. Cim. § 4. Afterwards, however, we find Cimon represented
-as singing with great skill. § 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f823'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r823'>823</a>. Cicero, Tuscul. Quæst. i. 2. Cf. Ilgen. De Scol. Poes. p. 62.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f824'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r824'>824</a>. Athen. xiv. 24. Ilgen, Disq.
-De Scol. Poes. p. 64.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f825'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r825'>825</a>. The hymn, for example, in
-honour of Pallas was, in all ages,
-sung. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 954.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f826'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r826'>826</a>. Of Harmodios, for example,
-and Aristogeiton. Sch. Aristoph.
-Acharn. 942. See Ilgen, Disq. de
-Scol. Poes. p. 69.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f827'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r827'>827</a>. Conf. Hom. Hymn. in Herm.
-52, sqq. Pind. Olymp. i. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f828'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r828'>828</a>. Poll. vi. 108, with the notes
-of Seber and Jungermann, t. v. p.
-142.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f829'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r829'>829</a>. Who has published a collection
-of these songs, accompanied
-by very interesting and instructive
-notes. Σκολια· hoc est, Carmina
-Convivalia Græcorum. Jenæ,
-1798.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f830'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r830'>830</a>. Apud Plut. de Musica, § 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f831'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r831'>831</a>. Pind. Fragm. Dissen. t. i. p.
-234, with the Commentary, t. ii.
-p.639, sqq. Aristoph. Vesp. 1222,
-1240. Acharn. 532. Pac. 1302.
-Plat. Gorg. t. iii. p. 13. Bekk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f832'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r832'>832</a>. Suidas, v. σκολίον, t. ii. p.
-759, e. sqq. Etym. Mag. 718,
-35, sqq. Eustath. ad Odyss. η.
-276, 49.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f833'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r833'>833</a>. Mr. Müller, however, disapproves
-of this etymology. “It
-is much more likely,” he says,
-“that in the melody to which
-the scolia were sung, certain
-liberties and irregularities were
-permitted, by which the extempore
-execution of the song
-was facilitated.”—History of
-Greek Literature, pt. i. chap. xiii.
-§ 16, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f834'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r834'>834</a>. Plut. Symp. i. 1. Athen. xiv.
-24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f835'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r835'>835</a>. Hesych. v. ᾄσακος, ap. Ilgen.
-De Scol. Poes. p. 154.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f836'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r836'>836</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 1339,
-1346.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f837'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r837'>837</a>. Potter, Antiq. ii. 403.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f838'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r838'>838</a>. <a id='corr209.n5.1'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Scol.'>Sch.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_209.n5.1'><ins class='correction' title='Scol.'>Sch.</ins></a></span> Aristoph. Nub. 1337, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f839'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r839'>839</a>. Ilgen, De <a id='corr209.n6.1'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Schol.'>Scol.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_209.n6.1'><ins class='correction' title='Schol.'>Scol.</ins></a></span> Poes. p. 156.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f840'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r840'>840</a>. Aristoph. Nub. 1358. Conf.
-Schol. ad Vesp. 1222.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f841'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r841'>841</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 1367.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f842'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r842'>842</a>. Dresig. de Rhapsodis. p. 7.
-sqq. ap. Ilgen, De Scol. Poes.
-p. 157. Pind. Isthm. iv. 63.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f843'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r843'>843</a>. Ilgen, De Scol. Poes. p.
-159.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f844'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r844'>844</a>. Athen. xv. 49.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f845'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r845'>845</a>. Athen. xi. 110.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f846'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r846'>846</a>. Vesp. 1220.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f847'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r847'>847</a>. Plato Phædr. t. i. p. 65.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f848'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r848'>848</a>. Homer. Odyss. θ. 97, sqq.
-Eustath. p. 295, 43.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f849'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r849'>849</a>. Athen. xv. 2, sqq. xi. 22, 58,
-75.—Suidas, v. κοταβίζειν. t. i. p.
-1504, b. seq. Etym. Mag. 538.
-13, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f850'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r850'>850</a>. Potter, ii. 405, 406.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f851'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r851'>851</a>. Pollux. vi. 100, sqq. Athen.
-xv. 4. Cf. Flor. Christian ad
-Aristoph. Pac. 343.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f852'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r852'>852</a>. Pollux. vi. 101.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f853'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r853'>853</a>. Athen. xv. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f854'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r854'>854</a>. Vid. Clem. Alexan. Protrep.
-i. 1. Diog. Laert. ii. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f855'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r855'>855</a>. Pollux. vi. 107.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f856'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r856'>856</a>. Animadv. in Athen. x. 15.
-Cf. Scaliger, Poet. iii. 84, where
-the distinction made by Pollux is
-explained.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f857'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r857'>857</a>. Chap. xiv. vv. 14. 18. Chytræus,
-in his note on this passage,
-has several excellent and learned
-remarks on the subject. Vid.
-Seber. ad Poll. t. v. p. 141.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f858'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r858'>858</a>. Pollux. vi. 108. Scalig.
-Poet. iii. 84.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f859'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r859'>859</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 20.
-Athen. x. 69.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f860'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r860'>860</a>. Pollux. vi. 108.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f861'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r861'>861</a>. Etym. Mag. 341, 35, sqq.
-Suidas. v. γρῖφος, t. i. p. 628,
-seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f862'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r862'>862</a>. Athen. x. 71.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f863'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r863'>863</a>. Athen. x. 73.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>
- <h3 class='c002'>CHAPTER VII. <br /> THE THEATRE.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is far from being my purpose to repeat the
-information which may be obtained from a hundred
-authors on the rise and progress of scenic representation
-in Greece. I shall, on the contrary, confine
-myself chiefly to those parts of the subject which
-others have either altogether neglected, or treated
-in a concise and unsatisfactory manner. It would,
-nevertheless, be beside my purpose to attempt the
-clearing up of all such difficulties as occur in the
-accounts transmitted to us of the Hellenic drama;
-and, in fact, notwithstanding the laborious investigations
-into which I have been compelled to enter,
-I feel that there are many points upon which I can
-throw no new light, and which appear likely for
-ever to baffle the ingenuity of architects and
-scholars.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Dionysos, being a deity connected with agriculture,
-his worship naturally took its rise, and for a
-long time prevailed chiefly, in the country. His
-festivals were celebrated with merriment; and, the
-power of mimicry being natural to man, the rustics,
-when congregated to set forth the praise of their
-tutelar god, easily glided into the enactment of a
-farcical show. And dramatic exhibitions at the
-outset were little superior to the feats of Punch,
-though, so great was their suitableness to the national
-character, that, in the course of time, every
-town of note had its own theatre, as it had of old
-its own dithyrambic bard;<a id='r864' /><a href='#f864' class='c012'><sup>[864]</sup></a> and dramatic writers were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>multiplied incomparably beyond what they have been
-in any other country.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Both tragedy and comedy,<a id='r865' /><a href='#f865' class='c012'><sup>[865]</sup></a> properly so called,
-took their rise in Attica, and there only, in the
-ancient world, flourished and grew up to perfection.
-The theatre, in fact, formed at length a part of the
-constitution, and, probably, the worst part, its tendency
-being to foster personal enmities, to stir the
-sources of malice, and, while pretending to purge
-off the dross of the passions by the channels of
-sorrow and mirth, to induce habits of idleness and
-political apathy, by affording in the brilliant recesses
-of a mock world a facile refuge from the toils
-and duties of the real one. Nevertheless, it may
-be curious to open up a view into that universe of
-shadows wherein the vast creations of Æschylus, of
-Sophocles, of Euripides, of Aristophanes, and Menander
-displayed themselves before the eyes of the
-Athenians, with a costly grandeur and magnificence
-never equalled save in imperial Rome.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It has been already remarked, that to the Dionysiac
-theatre of Athens the architectural speculations
-of Vitruvius on dramatic edifices apply, this building
-having constituted the model on which similar
-structures were afterwards erected.<a id='r866' /><a href='#f866' class='c012'><sup>[866]</sup></a> By carefully
-studying its details, therefore, we shall be enabled
-to form a tolerably just conception of all the theatres
-once found in Greece, though each, perhaps, may
-have been slightly modified in plan, general arrangement,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>and decorations, by the peculiarities of the
-site, and the science or taste of its architect.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The great theatre of Bacchos, partly scooped out
-of the rock on the face of the hill at the south-eastern
-angle of the Acropolis, stretched forth, on
-solid piers of masonry, a considerable distance into
-the plain, and was capable of containing upwards
-of thirty thousand people. The diameter, accordingly,
-if it did not exceed, could have fallen little
-short of five hundred feet.<a id='r867' /><a href='#f867' class='c012'><sup>[867]</sup></a> For we are not to suppose
-that, while Sparta,<a id='r868' /><a href='#f868' class='c012'><sup>[868]</sup></a> and Argos, and Megalopolis,
-cities comparatively insignificant, possessed theatres
-of such dimensions, Athens, incomparably the largest
-and most beautiful of Hellenic capitals, would have
-been content with one of inferior magnitude.<a id='r869' /><a href='#f869' class='c012'><sup>[869]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To determine accurately the various parts of the
-theatre, and thus affix a distinct meaning to every
-term connected with it, has exercised the ingenuity
-of critics and architects for the last three hundred
-years, still leaving many difficulties to be overcome.
-I can scarcely hope in every case to succeed where
-they have failed. But the following explanation
-may, perhaps, convey of its interior an idea sufficiently
-exact for all practical purposes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Supposing ourselves to be standing at the foot
-of the Katatomè,<a id='r870' /><a href='#f870' class='c012'><sup>[870]</sup></a> a smooth wall of rock, rising
-perpendicularly from the back of the theatre to the
-superimpending fortifications of the Acropolis, we
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>behold on either hand, surmounted by porticoes,
-lofty piers of masonry projecting like horns down
-the rocky slope into the plain and united at their
-extremities by a wall of equal height, running in
-a straight line from one point of the horseshoe to
-the other. The space thus enclosed is divided into
-three principal parts,—the amphitheatre for the
-spectators, the orchestra,<a id='r871' /><a href='#f871' class='c012'><sup>[871]</sup></a> filling all the space occupied
-by the modern pit, for the chorus, and the
-stage, properly so called, for the actors. Each of
-these parts was again subdivided. Looking down
-still from the Katatomè, we behold the benches
-of white marble, sweeping round the whole semicircle
-of the theatre, descend like steps to the
-level of the orchestra, and intersected at intervals
-by narrow straight passages converging towards
-a point below.<a id='r872' /><a href='#f872' class='c012'><sup>[872]</sup></a> A number of the upper seats,
-cut off, by an open space extending round the
-whole semicircle, from the rest, was set apart
-for the women. Other divisions were appropriated
-to other classes of the population, as the tier of
-seats immediately overlooking the orchestra to the
-senators, or dicasts, another portion to the youth,
-another to foreigners and the guests of the state,
-while the remainder was occupied by the dense mass
-of citizens of all ages,<a id='r873' /><a href='#f873' class='c012'><sup>[873]</sup></a> with crowns of flowers on
-their heads.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Above the level of the most elevated range of
-seats, and stretching round the whole sweep of the
-edifice,<a id='r874' /><a href='#f874' class='c012'><sup>[874]</sup></a> arose a spacious portico,<a id='r875' /><a href='#f875' class='c012'><sup>[875]</sup></a> designed to afford
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>shelter to the spectators during the continuance of
-a sudden shower. Another range of porticoes extended
-along the small lawn or grove within the
-limits of the theatre, at the back of the stage, so
-that there was little necessity for the Athenian
-people to take refuge, as some have imagined, from
-the weather in the public buildings, sacred or civil,
-in the vicinity.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It would appear from an expression in Pollux,<a id='r876' /><a href='#f876' class='c012'><sup>[876]</sup></a>
-that the lower seats of the theatre, appropriated to
-persons of distinction, were covered with wood,<a id='r877' /><a href='#f877' class='c012'><sup>[877]</sup></a>
-notwithstanding which, it was usual, in the later
-ages of the commonwealth, for rich persons to have
-cushions brought for them to the theatre by their
-domestics,<a id='r878' /><a href='#f878' class='c012'><sup>[878]</sup></a> together with purple carpets for their
-feet. Theophrastus, accordingly, whom few striking
-traits of manners escaped, represents his flatterer
-snatching this theatrical cushion from the slave, and
-adjusting and obsequiously smoothing it for his patron.<a id='r879' /><a href='#f879' class='c012'><sup>[879]</sup></a>
-To render their devotion to Dionysos still less
-irksome, it was customary to hand round cakes and
-wine during the representation, though, like Homer’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>heroes, they were careful to fortify themselves
-with a good meal before they ventured abroad. We
-are informed, moreover, that when the actors were
-bad there was a greater consumption of confectionary,
-the good people being determined to make
-up in one kind of enjoyment what they lost in
-another. Full cups, moreover, were habitually
-drained on the entrance and exit of the chorus.<a id='r880' /><a href='#f880' class='c012'><sup>[880]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The orchestra, being considerably below the level
-of the stage, had in the middle of it a small square
-platform, called the Thymele,<a id='r881' /><a href='#f881' class='c012'><sup>[881]</sup></a> sometimes regarded
-as a bema on which the leader of the chorus mounted
-when engaged in dialogue with the actors; sometimes
-as an altar on which sacrifice was offered up to
-Dionysos. That part of the orchestra which lay between
-the Thymele and the stage was denominated
-the Dromos, while the name of Parodoi was bestowed
-on those two spacious side-passages,<a id='r882' /><a href='#f882' class='c012'><sup>[882]</sup></a> the
-one from the east, the other from the west, at the
-extremities of the tiers of seats which afforded the
-chorus ample room for marching in and out in rank
-and file, in the quadrangular form it usually affected.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At the extremity of the orchestra a pier of masonry
-called the Hyposcenion, adorned with columns
-and statues, rose to the level of the stage, where
-a most intricate system of machinery and decoration
-represented all that was tangible to sense in
-the creations of the poet. The stage was divided
-into two parts; first, the Ocribas or Logeion,<a id='r883' /><a href='#f883' class='c012'><sup>[883]</sup></a>
-floored with boards, and hollow beneath, for the
-purpose of reverberating the voice; second, the
-Proscenion,<a id='r884' /><a href='#f884' class='c012'><sup>[884]</sup></a> a broader parallelogram of solid stonework,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>necessary to support the vast apparatus of
-machinery and decoration required by the character
-of the Grecian drama. The descent from the stage<a id='r885' /><a href='#f885' class='c012'><sup>[885]</sup></a>
-into the orchestra was by two flights of steps situated
-at either extremity of the Logeion, at the
-point where the Parodoi touched upon the Dromos.
-Beyond the Proscenion arose the Scene,<a id='r886' /><a href='#f886' class='c012'><sup>[886]</sup></a> properly
-so called, the aspect of which was constantly varied,
-to suit the requirements of each successive piece.
-In most cases, however, it represented the front of
-three different edifices, of which the central one,
-communicating with the stage by a broad and lofty
-portal, was generally a palace. Sometimes, as in
-the Philoctetes, this portal was converted into the
-mouth of a cavern,<a id='r887' /><a href='#f887' class='c012'><sup>[887]</sup></a> opening upon the view, amid
-the rocks and solitudes of Lemnos, while in other
-plays it formed the entrance to the mansion of some
-private person of distinction, but was always appropriated
-to the principal actor. The building on
-the right assumed in comedy the appearance of an
-inn, through the door of which the second actor
-issued upon the stage, while the portal on the left
-led into a ruined temple, or uninhabited house. In
-tragedy the right hand entrance was appropriated
-to strangers, while on the left was that of the female
-apartments, or of a prison.<a id='r888' /><a href='#f888' class='c012'><sup>[888]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Upon the stage, in front of the doors, stood an
-altar of Apollo Aguieus, and a table covered with
-cakes and confectionary,<a id='r889' /><a href='#f889' class='c012'><sup>[889]</sup></a> which appears sometimes
-to have been regarded as the representative of that
-ancient table, on which, in the simplicity of Prothespian
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>times, the solitary actor mounted when
-engaged in dialogue with the chorus.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When the stage was fitted up for the performance
-of comedy, there stood near the house a painted scene
-representing a large cattle-shed, with capacious double
-gates, for the admission of waggons and sumpter oxen,
-with herds and droves of asses, when returning from
-the field. In the Akestriæ of Antiphanes,<a id='r890' /><a href='#f890' class='c012'><sup>[890]</sup></a> this rustic
-building was converted into a workshop. Beyond
-each of the side-doors on the right and left were two
-machines,<a id='r891' /><a href='#f891' class='c012'><sup>[891]</sup></a> one on either hand, upon which the extremity
-of the periactoi abutted. The scene on the
-right represented rural landscapes, that on the left
-prospects in the environs of the city, particularly
-views of the harbour. On these periactoi,<a id='r892' /><a href='#f892' class='c012'><sup>[892]</sup></a> were represented
-the marine deities riding on the waves,
-and generally all such objects as could not be introduced
-by machinery. By turning the periactoi
-on the right, the situation was changed, but when
-both were turned a wholly new landscape was placed
-before the eye. Of the parodoi, or side-passages,
-that on the right led from the fields, from the harbour,
-or from the city, as the necessities of the play
-required, while those arriving on foot from any
-other part entered by the opposite passage, and,
-traversing a portion of the orchestra, ascended the
-stage by the flights of steps before mentioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The machinery<a id='r893' /><a href='#f893' class='c012'><sup>[893]</sup></a> by which the dumb economy of
-the play was developed consisted of numerous parts,
-highly complicated and curious. To avoid labour,
-and, perhaps, some tediousness, these might be passed
-over with such a remark as the above, but this would
-be to escape from difficulties not to diminish them.
-I shall descend to particulars.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>First, and most remarkable, was that machine called
-an Eccyclema,<a id='r894' /><a href='#f894' class='c012'><sup>[894]</sup></a> much used by the ancients when
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>scenes within-doors were to be brought to view.
-It consisted of a wooden structure, moved on wheels,
-and represented the interior of an apartment. In
-order to pass forth through the doors, it was formed
-less deep than broad, and rolled forth sideways, turning
-round afterwards, and concealing the front of the
-building from which it had issued. The channels
-in the floor, which were traversed by the wheels,
-doubtless concealed beneath the lofty basis, received
-the name of Eiscyclema.<a id='r895' /><a href='#f895' class='c012'><sup>[895]</sup></a> Sometimes, as in the Agamemnon,
-it presented to view “the royal bathing
-apartment with the silver laver, the corpse enveloped
-in the fatal garment, and Clytemnestra, besprinkled
-with blood, and holding in her hand the
-reeking weapon, still standing with haughty mien
-over her murdered victim.”<a id='r896' /><a href='#f896' class='c012'><sup>[896]</sup></a> On other occasions a
-throne, a corpse, the interior of a tent, the summit
-of a building, were exhibited; and in the Clouds of
-Aristophanes the interior of Socrates’ house was laid
-open to the spectators, containing a number of masks,
-gaunt and pale, the natural fruit of philosophy.<a id='r897' /><a href='#f897' class='c012'><sup>[897]</sup></a> It
-should be remarked that the Eccyclema issued through
-any of the doors, as the piece required the cells of
-a prison, the halls of a palace, or the chambers of an
-inn, to be placed before the eyes of the audience.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That peculiar machine in which the gods made
-their appearance,<a id='r898' /><a href='#f898' class='c012'><sup>[898]</sup></a> or such heroes as enjoyed the privilege
-of travelling through the air,—Bellerophon,
-for example, and Perseus,—stood near the left side-entrance,
-and, in height, exceeded the stone skreen
-at the back of the stage. This, in tragedy, was
-denominated Mechanè, and Kradè in comedy,<a id='r899' /><a href='#f899' class='c012'><sup>[899]</sup></a>—in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>this case resembling a fig-tree, which the Athenians
-called Kradè. The watch-tower, the battlements, and
-the turret, were constructed for the use of those
-watchmen, such as the old man in the Agamemnon,
-who looked out for signals, or indications of the coming
-foe. The Phructorion<a id='r900' /><a href='#f900' class='c012'><sup>[900]</sup></a> was a pharos, or beacon-tower.
-Another portion of the stage was the Distegia,
-a building two stories high in palaces, from
-the top of which, in the Phœnissœ of Euripides,<a id='r901' /><a href='#f901' class='c012'><sup>[901]</sup></a> Antigone
-beholds the army. It was roofed with tiles,
-(and thence called Keramos,) which they sometimes
-cast down upon the enemy. In comedy, libertines
-and old women, or ladies of equivocal character, were
-represented prying into the street for prey from such
-buildings.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Keraunoskopeion<a id='r902' /><a href='#f902' class='c012'><sup>[902]</sup></a> was a lofty triangular column,
-which appears to have been hollow, and furnished
-with narrow fissures, extending in right lines
-from top to bottom. Within seem to have been a
-number of lamps, on stationary bases, from which, as
-the periactos whirled round, sheets of mimic lightning
-flashed upon the stage from behind the scenes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The construction of the Bronteion,<a id='r903' /><a href='#f903' class='c012'><sup>[903]</sup></a> or thunder magazine,
-I imagine to have been nearly as follows:—a
-number of brazen plates, arranged one below another,
-like stairs, descended through a steep, vaulted
-passage behind the scene, into the bottom of a tower,
-terminating in a vast brazen caldron. From the
-edge of this, a series of metallic apertures,<a id='r904' /><a href='#f904' class='c012'><sup>[904]</sup></a> probably
-spiral, pierced the tower wall, and opened without
-in funnels, like the mouths of trumpets.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When some deity was required to descend to earth
-in the midst of lightning and sudden thunder, the
-Keraunoskopeion was instantaneously put in motion,
-and showers of pebbles from the sea-shore were hurled
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>down the mouth of the Bronteion, and, rolling over
-the brazen receptacles, produced a terrific crash,
-which, with innumerable reverberations, was poured
-forth by the Echeia upon the theatre.<a id='r905' /><a href='#f905' class='c012'><sup>[905]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In a lofty gallery called the Theologeion, extending
-over the marble skreen at the back of the stage,
-appeared the gods, when the drama required their
-presence; and hence, I imagine, the Hebrew colony
-which makes its appearance nightly near the roof
-of our own theatres have obtained the name of gods.
-Here Zeus, and the other deities of Olympos, were
-assembled in that very extraordinary drama of Æschylus,
-the Psychostasia, or weighing in the balance the
-souls of Achilles and Hector.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>They employed in the theatre the machine called
-a Crane,<a id='r906' /><a href='#f906' class='c012'><sup>[906]</sup></a> the point of which being lowered, snatched
-up whatever it was designed to bear aloft into the
-air. By means of this contrivance, Eos, goddess of
-the dawn, descended and bore away the body of
-Memnon, slain by Achilles before Troy. At other
-times strong cords, so disposed as to resemble swings,
-were let down from the roof, to support the gods
-or heroes who seemed to be borne through the air.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Though by turning the Periactoi three changes of
-scene could be produced, many more were sometimes
-required, and, when this was the case, new landscapes
-were dropped, like hangings, or slided in frames in
-front of those painted columns. These usually represented
-views of the sea, or mountain scenery, or the
-course of some river winding along through solitary
-vales, or other prospects of similar character, according
-to the spirit of the drama.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The position of the Hemicycle is more difficult
-to comprehend. It appears to have been a retreating
-semicircular scene, placed facing the orchestra,
-and masking the marble buildings at the back of
-the stage, when a view was to be opened up into
-some distant part of the city, or shipwrecked mariners
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>were to be exhibited buffeting with the waves.
-Not very dissimilar was the Stropheion,<a id='r907' /><a href='#f907' class='c012'><sup>[907]</sup></a> which
-brought to view heroes translated to Olympos, or
-on the ocean, or in battle slain, where change of
-position with respect to the spectator was produced
-by the rotatory motion of the machine.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The position of the Charonian staircase,<a id='r908' /><a href='#f908' class='c012'><sup>[908]</sup></a> by which
-spectres and apparitions ascended from the nether
-world, is exceedingly difficult to be determined; but
-that it was somewhere on the stage appears to me
-certain, notwithstanding the seeming testimony of
-Pollux to the contrary. The hypothesis which
-makes the ghosts issue from a door immediately
-beneath the seats of the spectators, and rush along
-the whole depth of the orchestra, among the chorus
-and musicians, is, at any rate, absurd. It must
-have been somewhere towards the back of the
-stage, near the altar of Loxios, the table of shew-bread
-and those sacred and antique images which in
-certain dramas were there exhibited. Here, likewise,
-was the trap-door, through which river-gods
-issued from the earth, while the other trap-door,
-appropriated to the Furies, seems to have been situated
-in the boards of the Logeion, near one of the
-flights of steps leading down into the orchestra.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The above synopsis of the machinery and decorations
-employed by the Greeks in their theatrical
-shows may, possibly, from its imperfection, suggest
-the idea of a rude and clumsy apparatus. But, as
-the arts of poetry, sculpture, painting, and architecture
-reached in Greece the highest perfection, and,
-as this perfection was coëtaneous with the flourishing
-state of the drama, it is impossible to escape
-the conviction, that the art of scene-painting
-and the manufacturing of stage machinery, likewise,
-underwent all the improvements of which by their
-nature they are susceptible. For, in the first place,
-it is not easy to suppose, that a people, so fastidious
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>as were the Athenians, would have tolerated in the
-theatre displays of ignorance and want of skill which
-everywhere else they are known to have overwhelmed
-with contempt and derision; more especially
-as, in the first place, the landscapes and objects
-represented were usually those with which they
-were most familiar, though the fancy of the poet
-sometimes ventured to transport them to the most
-elevated and inaccessible recesses of Mount Caucasus,
-to the summit of the celestial Olympos, to the
-palaces and harems of Persia, to the wilds of the
-Tauric Chersonese,<a id='r909' /><a href='#f909' class='c012'><sup>[909]</sup></a> or even to the dim and dreary
-regions of the dead. The names, nevertheless, of
-few scene-painters, besides Agatharchos,<a id='r910' /><a href='#f910' class='c012'><sup>[910]</sup></a> have come
-down to us, though it is known, that, in their own
-day, they sometimes divided with the poet the admiration
-of the audience, and, on other occasions,
-enabled poets of inferior merit to bear away the
-prize from their betters.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The character, however, of stage-scenery differed
-very widely in tragedy, comedy, and satyric pieces,<a id='r911' /><a href='#f911' class='c012'><sup>[911]</sup></a>
-usually consisting, in the first, of façades of palaces,
-with colonnades, architraves, cornices, niches, statues,
-&amp;c.; in comedy, of the fronts or courts of ordinary
-houses, with windows, balconies, porticoes, &amp;c.;
-while, in the satyric drama, the fancy of the painter
-and decorator was allowed to develope before the
-audience scenes of rural beauty remote from cities,
-as the hollows of mountains shaded with forests,
-winding valleys, plains, rivers, caverns, and sacred
-groves.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Of the Grecian actors,<a id='r912' /><a href='#f912' class='c012'><sup>[912]</sup></a> whose business and profession
-next require to be noticed, too little by far
-is known, considering the curious interest of the
-subject. Their art, however, would appear to have
-sprung from that of the rhapsodists, who chanted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>in temples, during religious festivals, and afterwards
-in the theatres, the heroic lays of Greece. To a
-certain extent, indeed, the rhapsodist was himself
-an actor. His art required him to enter deeply
-into the spirit of the poetry he recited, to suit to
-the passion brought into play the modulations and
-inflexions of his voice, his tone, his looks, his gesture,
-so as vividly to paint to the imagination the
-picture designed by the poet, and sway the whole
-theatre by the powerful wand of sympathy through
-all the gradations of sorrow, indignation, and joy.<a id='r913' /><a href='#f913' class='c012'><sup>[913]</sup></a>
-By some writers, accordingly, the rhapsodist is apparently
-confounded with the actor, that is, he is
-considered an actor of epics,<a id='r914' /><a href='#f914' class='c012'><sup>[914]</sup></a> though in reality his
-imitations of character were partial and imperfect.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Actors formed at Athens part of a guild, or company,
-called the Dionysiac artificers,<a id='r915' /><a href='#f915' class='c012'><sup>[915]</sup></a> among whom
-were also comprehended rhapsodists, citharœdi, citharistæ,
-musicians, jugglers, and other individuals<a id='r916' /><a href='#f916' class='c012'><sup>[916]</sup></a>
-connected with the theatre. These persons, though
-for the most part held in little estimation, were yet
-somewhat more respectable than at Rome, where to
-appear on the stage was infamous.<a id='r917' /><a href='#f917' class='c012'><sup>[917]</sup></a> Like the rhapsodists,
-they generally led a wandering life, sometimes
-appearing at Athens,<a id='r918' /><a href='#f918' class='c012'><sup>[918]</sup></a> sometimes at Corinth,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>or Sicyon, or Epidauros, or Thebes, after the fashion
-approved among the strollers of our own day. In
-the course of these wanderings they now and then
-fell in with rare adventures, as in the case of that
-company of comedians which, on returning from
-Messenia towards the Isthmus, was met by king
-Cleomenes and the Spartan army near Megalopolis.<a id='r919' /><a href='#f919' class='c012'><sup>[919]</sup></a>
-To exhibit the superiority of his power and his contempt
-for the enemy, Cleomenes threw up, probably
-with turf and boards, a temporary theatre, where
-he and his army sat all day enjoying the jokes and
-wild merriment of the stage, after which, he bestowed,
-as a prize, upon the principal performers, the
-sum of forty minæ, or about one hundred and sixty
-pounds sterling.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>About this period, however, it was usual for the
-armies of Greece, republican as well as royal, to be
-followed by companies of strollers, jugglers, dancing
-girls, and musicians.<a id='r920' /><a href='#f920' class='c012'><sup>[920]</sup></a> Even in the army of Alexander,
-when proceeding on the Persian expedition,
-the “flatterers of Dionysos”<a id='r921' /><a href='#f921' class='c012'><sup>[921]</sup></a> were not forgotten;
-in fact, the son of Philip set a high value upon
-the performances of these gentlemen, and with truly
-royal munificence allowed them to enjoy their full
-share of the plunder of the East. Thus, when Nicocreon,
-king of Salamis, and Pasicrates, king of Soli,<a id='r922' /><a href='#f922' class='c012'><sup>[922]</sup></a>
-played the part of Choregi in Cyprus, in getting up
-certain tragedies there performed for the amusement
-of Alexander, and the actors, Thessalos, and Athenodoros
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>the Athenian, contended for the prize; he
-was piqued at the victory of the Athenian, and,
-though he commended the judges for bestowing the
-prize on him whom they regarded as the best performer,
-said, he would have given a part of his
-kingdom rather than have beheld Thessalos overcome
-by a rival.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Afterwards, when Athenodoros was fined by his
-countrymen for absenting himself from Athens during
-the Dionysiac festival, evidently contrary to the statutes
-in that case made and provided, Alexander paid
-the fine for his humble friend, though he refused
-to make application to the people for its remission.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>An anecdote related of Lycon of Scarphe, also
-shows the high value set by the Macedonian prince
-upon the amusements of the stage, and the influence
-exercised over his mind by the Dionysiac artificers,
-though, according to Antiphanes, he wanted
-the taste to discriminate between a good play and
-a bad one. The Scarpheote being one day in want
-of money, as actors sometimes are, introduced into
-the piece he was performing a line of his own
-making, beseeching the conqueror to bestow on him
-ten talents; Alexander, amused by his extravagance,
-or captivated perhaps, by the flattery which accompanied
-it, at once granted his request, and thus
-upwards of two thousand four hundred pounds of
-the public money were expended for the momentary
-gratification of a prince.<a id='r923' /><a href='#f923' class='c012'><sup>[923]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The philosophers, almost of necessity, thought
-and spoke of these wandering performers with extreme
-contempt. Plato observes, that they went
-about from city to city collecting together thoughtless
-crowds, and, by their beautiful, sonorous, and
-persuasive voices, converting republics into tyrannies
-and aristocracies. Aristotle endeavoured to
-account for their evil character and agency.<a id='r924' /><a href='#f924' class='c012'><sup>[924]</sup></a> They
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>were worthless, he says, because of all men they
-profited least by the lessons of reason and philosophy,
-their whole lives being consumed by the study
-of their professional arts, or passed in intemperance
-and difficulties.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Nevertheless, even among them there were different
-grades, some aiming at the higher walks of
-tragedy and comedy; while others were content
-to declaim rude, low songs, seated on waggons like
-mountebanks during the Lenæan festival.<a id='r925' /><a href='#f925' class='c012'><sup>[925]</sup></a> Nor
-must this fashion be at all regarded as Prothespian,
-since it prevailed down to a very late period.
-And as in every thing the Greeks aimed at excellence
-and distinction, so even here we find that
-there was a contest between the poets who wrote
-the comic songs sung by these humble performers
-from their waggons.<a id='r926' /><a href='#f926' class='c012'><sup>[926]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The various classes of actors known to the ancients
-were numerous. Among the lower grades were the
-Magodos, and the Lysiodos,<a id='r927' /><a href='#f927' class='c012'><sup>[927]</sup></a> who though confounded
-by some, appear clearly to have been distinct; the
-former personating both male and female characters;
-the latter female characters only, though disguised
-in male costume. But the songs, and every other
-characteristic of their performances, were the same.
-The spirit of the coarse satirical farces they acted
-forbids my explaining their nature fully.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There were even several authors who attained a
-“bad eminence” in this department of literature,
-which especially affected the Ionic dialect, as Alexander,
-the Ætolian,<a id='r928' /><a href='#f928' class='c012'><sup>[928]</sup></a> Pyretos of Miletos, a city noted
-for its dissolute characters, and Alexos, who obtained
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>on this account an opprobrious sobriquet. The most
-remarkable, however, of this vicious brood would appear
-to have been Sotades<a id='r929' /><a href='#f929' class='c012'><sup>[929]</sup></a> the Maronite, and his
-son Apollonios who wrote a work on his father’s
-poems. Sotades was probably the original imitated
-by Pietro Aretino, who obtained in modern times a
-like reputation, though timely penitence may have
-snatched him from a similar end. The ancient libeller,
-enacting the part of Thersites, fastened with
-peculiar delight on the vices of princes, not from
-aversion to their manners, but because such scandal
-paved the way to notoriety. Thus at Alexandria,
-he covered Lysimachos with obloquy, which, when
-at the court of Lysimachos, he heaped upon Ptolemy
-Philadelphos. His punishment, however, exceeded
-the measure of his offences. Being overtaken in
-the island of Caunos by Patrocles, one of Ptolemy’s
-generals, the obsequious mercenary caused him to
-be enclosed in a leaden box and cast into the sea.<a id='r930' /><a href='#f930' class='c012'><sup>[930]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Magodos, then, was a wandering farce actor,
-not unlike the tumbling mountebanks one sometimes
-sees in France and southern Europe. He
-travelled about with an apparatus of drums, cymbals,
-and female disguises, sometimes impersonating
-women, sometimes adulterers or the mean servants
-of vice; and the style of his dancing and performances
-corresponded with the low walk he selected,
-being wholly destitute of beauty or decorum. It
-seems necessary, therefore, to adopt the opinion of
-Aristoxenos, who considered the art of the Hilarodos
-as a serious imitation of tragedy; that of the Magodos
-as a comic parody, brought down to the level
-of the grossly vulgar. The latter art would appear
-to have derived its name from the charms, spells,
-or magical songs chanted by the mountebanks who
-likewise pretended to develope the secrets of pharmaceutics.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>Superior in every way to the Magodos and Lysiodos
-was the Hilarodos,<a id='r931' /><a href='#f931' class='c012'><sup>[931]</sup></a> who, though a wandering
-singer like the Italians and Savoyards of modern
-Europe, affected no little state, and was evidently
-treated with some respect. His costume, in conformity
-with the popular taste, displayed considerable
-magnificence, consisting of a golden crown, white
-stole and costly sandals, though in earlier ages he
-appeared in shoes. He was usually accompanied by
-a youth or maiden who touched the lyre as he sung.
-The style of his performances was decorous and manly.
-When a crown was given him in token of approbation
-by the audience, it was bestowed on the
-Hilarodos himself, not on the musician.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A class of actors existed, also from very remote
-times, among the Spartans. They were called Deikelistæ,<a id='r932' /><a href='#f932' class='c012'><sup>[932]</sup></a>
-and their style of performing showed the
-little value set upon the drama at Sparta. The
-poetry of the piece, if poetry it could be called, was
-extempore and of the rudest description, and the
-characters were altogether conformable. Sometimes
-the interest of the play turned upon a man robbing
-an orchard, or on the broken Greek of an outlandish
-physician, whom people respected for his gibberish.
-This weakness, prevalent of course at Athens also,
-is wittily satirised by Alexis in his Female Opium
-Eater.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16'>“Now if a native</div>
- <div class='line'>Doctor prescribe, ‘Give him a porringer</div>
- <div class='line'>Of ptisan in the morning,’ we despise him.</div>
- <div class='line'>But in some <em>brogue</em> disguised ’tis admirable.</div>
- <div class='line'>Thus he who speaks of <em>Beet</em> is slighted, while</div>
- <div class='line'>We prick our ears if he but mention <em>Bate</em>,</div>
- <div class='line'>As if <em>Bate</em> knew some virtue not in <em>Beet</em>.”<a id='r933' /><a href='#f933' class='c012'><sup>[933]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>The Deikelistæ, however, were not confined to
-Laconia, but, under various names were known
-in most other parts of Greece. Thus, at Sicyon,
-they obtained the appellation of Phallophori, elsewhere
-they were called Autocabdali, or Improvisator;
-while in Italy, (that is, among the Greek colonists,<a id='r934' /><a href='#f934' class='c012'><sup>[934]</sup></a>)
-they were known by the name of Phlyakes.<a id='r935' /><a href='#f935' class='c012'><sup>[935]</sup></a>
-By the common people they were called
-the wise men (σοφίσται), upon the same principle that
-actors in France are known by the name of <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>artistes</i></span>.
-The Thebans, renowned for the havoc they made in
-the language of Greece, denominated them the Voluntaries,
-alluding proleptically perhaps to the “voluntary
-principle.” Semos, the Delian, draws an
-amusing picture of these Improvisatori. Those performers,
-he says, who are called Autocabdali made
-their appearance on the stage, crowned with ivy,
-and poured forth their verse extempore. The name
-of Iambi was afterwards bestowed, both on them
-and their poems. Another class who were called
-Ithyphalli,<a id='r936' /><a href='#f936' class='c012'><sup>[936]</sup></a> wore those masks, which on the stage
-were appropriated to drunkards, with crowns of
-ivy and flowered gloves upon their hands. Their
-chitons were striped with white, and over these,
-bound by a girdle at the loins, they wore a Tarentine
-pelisse descending to the ankle. They entered
-upon the stage by the great door appropriated
-to royal personages, and, advancing in silence
-across the stage, turned towards the audience
-and exclaimed,—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Make way there, a wide space</div>
- <div class='line'>Yield to the god;</div>
- <div class='line'>For Dionysos has a mind to walk</div>
- <div class='line'>Bolt upright through your midst.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>The Phallophori made their appearance unmasked,
-shading their face with a drooping garland of wild
-thyme, intermingled with acanthus-leaves, and surmounted
-by an ample crown of ivy, with violets
-appearing between its glossy dark foliage. Their
-costume was the caunacè. Of these actors, some
-entered through the side-passages, others through
-the central door, advancing with measured tread,
-and saying,—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Bacchos, to thee our muse belongs,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Of simple chant, and varied lays;</div>
- <div class='line'>Nor fit for virgin ears our songs,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Nor handed down from ancient days:</div>
- <div class='line'>Fresh flows the strain we pour to thee,</div>
- <div class='line'>Patron of joy and minstrelsy!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>After which, skipping forward, they made a halt
-and showered their sarcasms indiscriminately on
-whomsoever they pleased, while the leader of the
-troop moved slowly about, his face bedaubed with
-soot.<a id='r937' /><a href='#f937' class='c012'><sup>[937]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The superior classes of performers, whether actors
-or musicians, seem to have been held in much estimation,
-and to have been still more extravagantly
-paid than in our own day. Thus Amœbæos, the
-Citharœdos, who lived near the Odeion at Athens,
-received, but at what period of the republic is not
-known, an Attic talent a day, as often as he played
-in public.<a id='r938' /><a href='#f938' class='c012'><sup>[938]</sup></a> Music, however, was always in high
-estimation in Greece, where the greatest men, though
-they did not seek to rival regular professors in skill,
-yet learned to amuse their leisure with it. Thus
-the Homeric Achilles plays on the lyre, the sounds
-of which could not only cure diseases of the mind
-but of the body. A similar belief existed among
-the Israelites, as we learn from the example of
-Saul.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Though talent must have been always respected
-in an actor, it appears to me that anciently they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>made comparatively little figure, while there were
-great poets to excite admiration. But, afterwards,
-when dramatic literature had sunk very low, the
-actor usurped the consideration due to the poet, as
-has long been the case in this country. They then
-contended for the prize in the tragic contests,<a id='r939' /><a href='#f939' class='c012'><sup>[939]</sup></a> and
-began to entertain a high opinion of their own
-merits. In fact, the ignorant being better calculated
-to feel than to judge, the actors often obtained
-the first prizes in the games, and were held
-in higher estimation than the poets themselves.<a id='r940' /><a href='#f940' class='c012'><sup>[940]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Thus persuaded of their own importance, they gradually
-exercised over the poor devils who composed
-plays for them, much the same tyranny as that in
-our own age complained of by the poetical servants
-of the theatre. That is, they despotically interfered
-with the framing of the plot, with the succession
-of the scenes, and procured episodes to be introduced,
-in order that they might show off their
-peculiar abilities. This is evident from a passage
-in Aristotle’s Politics,<a id='r941' /><a href='#f941' class='c012'><sup>[941]</sup></a> where he observes that the
-celebrated actor Theodoros would allow no inferior
-performer to appear before him on the stage, knowing
-the force of first impressions; from which it is
-evident that the author was compelled to yield to
-his caprice.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Antiquity has preserved the names of many celebrated
-actors, of whom several played a conspicuous
-though sometimes a dishonourable part in the great
-theatre of the world. Thus Aristodemos, who performed
-the first character alternately with Theodoros,
-became afterwards a traitor and betrayed the state
-to Philip. Such too was the case with Philocrates
-and Æschines, both actors,<a id='r942' /><a href='#f942' class='c012'><sup>[942]</sup></a> and both rogues. Satyros,
-a comedian of the same period, appears to
-have been a man of high character and honour, who
-in consequence obtained the friendship of <a id='corr242.1'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Demosthenes'>Demosthenes.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_242.1'><ins class='correction' title='Demosthenes'>Demosthenes.</ins></a></span>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>But the Garrick of that age seems to have
-been Theocrines,<a id='r943' /><a href='#f943' class='c012'><sup>[943]</sup></a> who by many, however, is supposed
-to have afterwards degenerated into a sycophant.
-Callipedes is chiefly known to us from the anecdote
-which describes the check his vanity received
-from Agesilaos. Having acquired great reputation
-as a tragic actor, he appears to have considered himself
-as equal at least to any king, and therefore,
-meeting one day with Agesilaos, he ostentatiously
-put himself forward, mingled with the courtiers and
-took much pains to attract his notice. Finding all
-these efforts useless, his pride was wounded, and
-going up directly to the Spartan, he said,</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Dost thou not know me, king?”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Why,” replied Agesilaos, “art thou not Callipedes,
-the stage-buffoon?”<a id='r944' /><a href='#f944' class='c012'><sup>[944]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The account transmitted to us of Æsopos is somewhat
-puzzling; he is described as one of the actors<a id='r945' /><a href='#f945' class='c012'><sup>[945]</sup></a>
-who performed in the tragedies of Æschylus, but is
-said to have been at the same time a fellow of infinite
-merriment who turned everything into a jest,
-a sort I suppose of comic Macbeth. Œagros obtained
-celebrity in the part of Niobe,<a id='r946' /><a href='#f946' class='c012'><sup>[946]</sup></a> in the tragedy
-of Æschylus or Sophocles; and Aristophanes
-enumerates among the pleasures of Dicasts the power,
-should such an actor appear before them in a court
-of justice, of requiring him by way of pleading his
-own cause, to give them a few choice speeches of
-his favourite tragic queen.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among the most celebrated actors of antiquity was
-Polos, a native of Ægina, who studied the art of
-stage-declamation under Archias, known in his own
-age by the infamous surname of Phugadotheras, or
-the “Exile <a id='corr242.34'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Hunter.'>Hunter.”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_242.34'><ins class='correction' title='Hunter.'>Hunter.”</ins></a></span><a id='r947' /><a href='#f947' class='c012'><sup>[947]</sup></a> This miscreant it was, who,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>under the orders of Antipater, pursued Demosthenes
-to the temple of Poseidon in Calauria, where, to escape
-the cruelty of the Macedonians, the orator put
-a period to his own life.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Polos appears to have risen speedily to that eminence
-which he maintained to the last. A striking
-anecdote is related of the means by which he worked
-upon his own feelings, in order the more vehemently
-to stir those of his audience. On one occasion,<a id='r948' /><a href='#f948' class='c012'><sup>[948]</sup></a>
-having to perform the part of Electra, he took along
-with him to the theatre an urn containing the ashes
-of a beloved son, whom he had recently lost, and thus,
-instead of shedding, under the mask of the heroic
-princess, feigned tears over the supposed remains of
-Orestes, he sprinkled the urn which he bore upon
-the stage with the dews of genuine and deep sorrow.
-He eclipsed in reputation all the actors of
-his time, and was in tragedy what Theocrines, in
-the preceding age, had been in comedy. His salary,
-accordingly, was very great, amounting at one
-time to half a talent per day, out of which, to be
-sure, he was required to pay the third actor.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He must have led, moreover, a life of much temperance,
-otherwise he would scarcely have been able
-to accomplish what is related of him by Philochoros,
-who says, that, at seventy years of age, a little before
-his death, he performed the principal parts of eight
-tragedies in four days. His devotion to his art did
-not, however, carry him so far as that of the comic
-poets, Philemon and Alexis, who breathed their last
-upon the stage at the moment that the crown of
-victory was placed upon their heads, and so were
-literally dismissed for the last time from the scene
-amidst the shouts and acclamations of the admiring
-multitude.<a id='r949' /><a href='#f949' class='c012'><sup>[949]</sup></a> But the passion of the Greeks for the
-arts of imitation did not confine itself to the enacting
-of human character and human feelings. Every
-species of mimicry found its patrons among them.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>There were, for example, persons who, by whistling,
-could imitate the notes of the nightingale; and
-Agesilaos, being once invited to witness the performances
-of one of these artists, replied somewhat
-contemptuously, “I have heard the nightingale herself.”<a id='r950' /><a href='#f950' class='c012'><sup>[950]</sup></a>
-Others, as Parmenion, could counterfeit to
-perfection the grunt of a pig,<a id='r951' /><a href='#f951' class='c012'><sup>[951]</sup></a> though it is probable,
-that actors of smaller dimensions were called upon
-to perform in the comedy of Aristophanes, where
-the Megarean<a id='r952' /><a href='#f952' class='c012'><sup>[952]</sup></a> brings on the stage his daughters in
-a sack, and disposes of them as porkers, having first
-carefully instructed them in the proper style of
-squeaking. Other actors obtained celebrity<a id='r953' /><a href='#f953' class='c012'><sup>[953]</sup></a> through
-their power of imitating by their voice the grating
-or rumbling of wheels, the creaking of axletrees,
-the whistling of winds, the blasts of trumpets, the
-modulations of flutes, or pipes, or the sounds of
-other instruments. It was customary, too, among
-this class of performers, to mimic, doubtless, in pastoral
-scenes, the bleating of sheep, and the bark
-of the shepherd’s dog, the neighing of horses, and
-the deep bellowing of bulls. They could imitate,
-moreover, but by what means is uncertain, the pattering
-of hail-storms, the dash and breaking of
-water in rivers or seas, with other natural phenomena.
-It was customary, likewise, as in modern
-times, to introduce boats and galleys rowed along
-the mimic waters of the stage, an example of which
-occurs on an Etruscan Chalcidone, where we behold
-a little vessel of extraordinary form, with a mariner
-at bow and stern, paddled along a bank adorned
-with flowers, while on a platform, occupying the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>boat’s waist, two naked dancers are exhibiting their
-saltatorial powers.<a id='r954' /><a href='#f954' class='c012'><sup>[954]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Very singular figures were also introduced upon
-the stage, as wasps, frogs, and birds, of sufficiently
-large dimensions to be enacted by men; and still
-stranger personages occasionally made their appearance,
-as where, in a kind of practical parody of the
-story of Andromeda,<a id='r955' /><a href='#f955' class='c012'><sup>[955]</sup></a> a whale emerges on the sea
-beach to snap off an old woman. In another drama
-the transformation of Argos was represented, after
-which this luckless male duenna strutted like a peacock
-before the audience. Io, moreover, was changed
-into a cow, and Euippe, in Euripides, into a mare.
-What there was peculiar in the appearance of Amymone
-it is not easy to conjecture; but she was, possibly,
-represented in the act of withdrawing the trident of
-Poseidon from the rock, from which gushed forth
-three fountains. The rivers, and mountains, and cities
-introduced<a id='r956' /><a href='#f956' class='c012'><sup>[956]</sup></a> were, doubtless, personifications, such as
-we still find in many works of art. The giants
-were simply, in all probability, huge figures of men,
-made to stalk about the stage, like elephants, with
-an actor in each leg; and the Indians, Tritons, Gorgons,
-Centaurs, with other personages of terrible or
-fantastic aspect, owed their existence, perhaps, to
-masks, if we may so speak, representing the whole
-figures.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In what form the Seasons, the Pleiades,<a id='r957' /><a href='#f957' class='c012'><sup>[957]</sup></a> or the
-nymphs of Mithakos, made their appearance on the
-stage, we are, I believe, nowhere told, though we
-possess some information respecting the costume and
-figure of those other strange persons of the drama,
-the Clouds,<a id='r958' /><a href='#f958' class='c012'><sup>[958]</sup></a> which came floating in through the Parodoi,
-enveloped, some in masses of white fleecy gauze,
-like vapour, others in azure, or many-tinted robes,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>or in drapery like piled-up flocks of wool, to represent
-the various aspects of the skies; while a hazy
-atmosphere was probably diffused around them, as
-around the other gods, by the smoke of styrax or
-frankincense, burnt in profusion on the altars of the
-theatre. Here and there, through these piles of
-drapery, a mask with ruddy pendant nose, like the
-tail of a lobster, peered forth, and a human voice
-was heard chanting in richest cadence and modulation
-the lively anapæsts of the chorus.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the tragedy of Alcestis, the grim, spectral figure
-of Death was beheld gliding to and fro through the
-darkness, in front of the palace of Admetos, while
-personifications still, if possible, more strange and
-wild, made their appearance in other dramas,—as Justice,
-Madness, Frenzy, Strength, Violence, Deceit,
-Drunkenness, Laziness, Envy.<a id='r959' /><a href='#f959' class='c012'><sup>[959]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Plato, who entertained peculiar notions<a id='r960' /><a href='#f960' class='c012'><sup>[960]</sup></a> respecting
-the dignity of human nature, banished the theatre
-from his Republic, because he thought it unbecoming
-a brave man, who had political rights to watch over
-and defend, to demean himself by low stage impersonations;
-and, from his account of what he would
-not have his citizens do, we learn what by others was
-done. Sometimes, he observes, the actor was required
-to imitate a woman, (though this task often
-devolved upon eunuchs,) whether young or old, reviling
-her husband, railing at and expressing contempt
-for the gods, either puffed up by the supposed stableness
-of her felicity, or stung to desperation by the
-severity of her misfortunes and sorrows. Other female
-characters were to be represented, toiling, or in love,
-or in the pangs of labour; which shows that there
-was scarcely an act or passage in human life not
-occasionally imitated on the stage.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Slaves of course performed an important part in
-the mimic world of the theatre; and with these,
-Plato, by some unaccountable association of ideas,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>classes smiths, and madmen, and vagabonds, and low
-artificers of every kind, and the rowers of galleys, and
-rogues, and cowards, below which his imagination
-could discover nothing in human nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But it was these very characters, with their low
-wit, buffoonery, and appropriate actions, that constituted
-the most effective materials of the comic poet,
-whose creed was, that</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les fous sont ici-bas pour nos menus plaisirs.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>They accordingly hesitated at no degree of grotesque
-buffoonery and extravagance, introducing not
-only low sausage-sellers with their trays of black-puddings
-and chitterlings suspended on their paunches,<a id='r961' /><a href='#f961' class='c012'><sup>[961]</sup></a>
-and drunkards lisping, hiccuping, and reeling about
-the stage,<a id='r962' /><a href='#f962' class='c012'><sup>[962]</sup></a> but even libertines and profligates carrying
-on their intrigues in the view of the spectators.
-An example of this kind of scene occurs on an
-Etruscan bronze seal dug up near Cortona, which
-represents an adulterer in conference with his mistress,
-together with the Leno who brought them
-together.<a id='r963' /><a href='#f963' class='c012'><sup>[963]</sup></a></p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f864'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r864'>864</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Av. 1404.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f865'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r865'>865</a>. See Bentley, Dissert. on Phal.
-i. 251.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f866'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r866'>866</a>. On the form and construction
-of ancient theatres, see Chandler,
-Travels, &amp;c., who describes the
-ruins of the theatre of Teos. i.
-110; of Ephesos, 138; of Miletos,
-(457 feet in length,) 168;
-of Myos, 191; of Stratonica,
-222; of Nysa, built with a blue-veined
-marble, 245; of Laodicea,
-262; of Ægina, ii. 16; of Athens,
-113; of Eleusis, 215; on
-the theatre of Syracuse, see Antiq.
-of Athens, &amp;c. Supplementary to
-Stuart, by Cockerel, Donaldson,
-&amp;c. p. 38.—See a plan of the theatre
-in the grove of Asclepios at
-Epidauros, pl. 1. p. 53, and another
-of that of Dramysos, near
-Joannina, pl. 3.—(Compare on the
-Dionysiac Theatre, Leake, Topog.
-of Athens, p. 53, sqq.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f867'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r867'>867</a>. Even a provincial theatre is
-compared by the rustic in Dion
-Chrysostom to a large hollow
-valley, i. 229; what then could
-the Abbé Dubos be thinking of
-when he wrote, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Il étoit impossible
-que les altérations du
-visage que le masque cache furent
-aperçûes distinctment des
-spectateurs, dont plusieurs étoient
-éloignes <em>de plus de douze
-toises</em> du comédien qui récitoit!”</span>—Reflex.
-Crit. i. 609.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f868'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r868'>868</a>. Scalig. Poet. i. 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f869'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r869'>869</a>. Colonel Leake, Topog. of Ath.
-p. 59. Cf. Wordsworth’s Athens
-and Attica, p. 29. The conjecture
-of Hemsterhuis on the passage
-of Dicæarchos cannot be
-adopted. The words must apply
-to the theatre; for he says the
-Parthenon charmed the spectators.
-But this could not apply to the
-Odeion, which was roofed.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f870'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r870'>870</a>. Poll. iv. 123.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f871'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r871'>871</a>. Tim. Lex. Platon. in v. ὀρχήστρα.
-p. 104. Poll. iv. 123.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f872'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r872'>872</a>. Poll. iv. 123.—The Cunei,
-for greater convenience, had particular
-marks, numbers, or names
-to distinguish them: the podium
-of the diazoma of the theatre at
-Syracuse has an inscription cut
-on the fascia of the cornice to
-each cuneus.—Antiq. of Ath.
-&amp;c. Supplem. to Stuart, &amp;c., by
-Cockerel, Kinnaird, Donaldson,
-&amp;c., p. 38.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f873'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r873'>873</a>. For the children, see Plat. de
-Rep. t. vi. p. 128. Athen. xi.
-13. Cf. Aristid. t. i. p. 505.
-Jebb.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f874'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r874'>874</a>. Vitruv. v. 9. Donaldson,
-Theatre of the Greeks, p. 139.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f875'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r875'>875</a>. Among the Romans it was
-customary to carry along with
-them, as a defence against rain,
-thick cloaks, rockets, or mandilions.
-Buleng. de Theat. i. 15.—The
-theatre of Regilla, built
-by Herodes Atticus in honour of
-his wife, was roofed with cedar.—Philost.
-Vit. Sophist. ii. 1. 5.—In
-later ages a velarium appears
-to have been extended over the
-great Dionysiac theatre, as was
-the custom at Rome.—Wordsworth,
-Athens and Attica, p. 90.
-Cf. Dion. Cass. xliii. p. 226. a.
-Hanov. 1606.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f876'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r876'>876</a>. Onomast. iv. 122.—To kick
-the seats with the heel was called
-πτερνοκοπεῖν, which they did
-when they wanted to drive away
-an actor, id. ibid. Cf. Diog.
-Laert. ii. 8. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f877'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r877'>877</a>. On the old wooden theatre see
-Hesych. v. ἰκρία. Suid. v. ἰκρία,
-t. i. p. 1234. d. Sch. Aristoph.
-Thesm. 395.—This theatre fell
-down whilst a play of Pratinas
-was acting.—Suid. v. Πρατίνας,
-t. ii. 585. d.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f878'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r878'>878</a>. Upon this practice Dr. Chandler
-has an ingenious conjecture.
-After attentively viewing the
-seats of several ancient theatres,
-and “considering their height,
-width, and manner of arrangement,
-I am inclined to believe
-that the ancient Asiatics sate
-at their plays and public spectacles,
-like the modern, with
-under them, and, it is probable,
-upon carpets.”—Travels, &amp;c.
-i. 269.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f879'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r879'>879</a>. Charact. c. ii. p. 10. Casaub.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f880'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r880'>880</a>. Philoch. Frag. Sieb. p. 85.
-Aristot. Ethic. Nic. 5. Athen. xi.
-13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f881'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r881'>881</a>. Etym. Mag. 653. 7. Cf.
-458. 30. 743. 30. et Suid. v.
-σκηνὴ t. ii. p. 753, seq. Cf.
-Thom. Magist. in v. θυμέλη, p.
-458, seq. Blancard. Scalig. Poet.
-i. 21. Poll. iv. 123.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f882'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r882'>882</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Acharn. 8. Cf.
-Vesp. 270.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f883'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r883'>883</a>. Plat. Conviv. t. iv. 411. Tim.
-Lex. v. ὀκρίβας, p. 102. Etym.
-Mag. 620. 52. Poll. iv. 123.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f884'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r884'>884</a>. Poll. iv. 123.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f885'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r885'>885</a>. It is impossible to adopt Genelli’s
-idea on these flights of
-steps, by the injudicious position
-of which in his plan, he entirely
-breaks up and destroys the
-beauty of the Hyposcenion, especially
-as the Scholiast on Aristophanes
-positively states, that
-they led from the Parodoi to the
-Logeion.—Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 149.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f886'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r886'>886</a>. On the stage and scenery,
-see Casalius.—De Trag. et Com.
-c. i. ap. Gronov. Thesaur. t. viii.
-p. 1603.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f887'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r887'>887</a>. Cf. Sch. Aristoph. Av. i.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f888'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r888'>888</a>. Vid. Scalig. de Art. Poet.
-i. 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f889'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r889'>889</a>. Poll. iv. 123. Vid. Spanh.
-ad Callim. t. ii. p. 228, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f890'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r890'>890</a>. Scalig. reads Antipho. De
-Art. Poet. i. 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f891'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r891'>891</a>. Μηχαναὶ for μία. Cf. Annot.
-Poll. iv. 126.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f892'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r892'>892</a>. Poll. iv. 126, 130, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f893'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r893'>893</a>. Vid. Buleng. De Theat. c. 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f894'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r894'>894</a>. Poll. iv. 127, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f895'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r895'>895</a>. Poll. iv. 128.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f896'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r896'>896</a>. Müller, Dissert. on the Eumenid.
-p. 91.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f897'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r897'>897</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 185.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f898'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r898'>898</a>. Ξενοκλῆς ὁ Καρκίνου δοκεῖ
-μηχανὰς καὶ τερατείας εἰσάγειν
-ν τοῖς δράμασι. Πλάτων Σοφισταῖς·
-Ξενοκλῆς ὁ δωδεκαμήχανος
-ὁ Καρκίνου παῖς τοῦ θαλαττίου·
-μηχανοδίφας δὲ εἶπεν
-αὐτοὺς, ἐπειδὴ πολλάκις ὡς τραγῳδοὶ
-μηχανὰς προσέφερον, ἡνίκα
-Θεοὺς ἐμιμοῦντο ἀνερχομένους ἢ
-κατερχομένους ἐκ τοῦ οὐρανοῦ ἢ
-ἄλλοτι τοιοῦτον. Schol. Aristoph.
-Pac. 769.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f899'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r899'>899</a>. Poll. iv. 129. Etym. Mag.
-465. 56. 534. 39.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f900'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r900'>900</a>. Aristoph. Av. 1161, et Schol.
-Cf. Herod. ap. Const. in v. φρυκτώριον.
-Poll. iv. 127.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f901'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r901'>901</a>. Phæn. 688, cum not. et
-Schol. Bekk. Poll. iv. 127, 129.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f902'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r902'>902</a>. Poll. iv. 127, 130.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f903'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r903'>903</a>. Idem, Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f904'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r904'>904</a>. These were called ἠχεῖα.
-Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 292.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f905'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r905'>905</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 292, 294.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f906'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r906'>906</a>. Poll. iv. 130.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f907'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r907'>907</a>. Poll. iv. 131.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f908'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r908'>908</a>. Id. iv. 132.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f909'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r909'>909</a>. Cf. Æsch. Prom. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f910'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r910'>910</a>. Vitruv. Præfat. lib. vii. Plut.
-Alcib. § 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f911'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r911'>911</a>. Vitruv. v. 8. Etym. Mag.
-763. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f912'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r912'>912</a>. Vid. Casal. c. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f913'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r913'>913</a>. Plat. Ion. t. ii. p. 183, seq.
-Wolf. Proleg. p. 95. Cf. S. F.
-Dresig. Comment. Lips. 1734.
-Gillies, Hist. of Greece, vol. i. c. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f914'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r914'>914</a>. Diod. Sic. xiv. 109. xv. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f915'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r915'>915</a>. Philost. Vit. Soph. ii. 16.
-Vit. Apoll. Tyan. v. 7. Vandale,
-Dissert. 380, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f916'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r916'>916</a>. Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p.
-121. Athen. v. 49. Animadv.
-t. viii. p. 196.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f917'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r917'>917</a>. Vandale. Dissert, v. p. 383.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f918'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r918'>918</a>. Plat. de Rep. viii. t. ii. p.
-229, seq. Athen. xiii. 44. In
-Roman times we find an actor
-travelling from the capital to
-Seville in Spain, where with
-his lofty cothurni, strange dress,
-and gaping mask, he frightened
-the natives out of the theatre.—Philost.
-Vit. Apoll. Tyan.
-v. 9. Cf. Luc. de Saltat. § 27.
-A taste for the amusements of
-the Grecian stage was diffused
-far and wide through the ancient
-world, so that we find the princes
-of Persia and Armenia not only
-enjoying the representation of
-Greek tragedies, but themselves,
-likewise, in some instances, aspiring
-to rival the dramatic poets
-of Hellas. Thus Artavasdes, the
-Armenian prince, is said to have
-written tragedies, as well as histories
-and orations, some of which
-still existed in the age of Plutarch.
-The Parthian court was
-engaged in beholding the Bacchæ
-of Euripides, in which Jason of
-Tralles was the principal performer,
-when Sillaces brought in
-the head of Marcus Crassus,
-upon which both king and nobles
-delivered themselves up to immoderate
-joy, and the actor, seizing
-upon the Roman’s head, exchanged
-the part of Pentheus for
-that of his mother, who appears
-upon the stage bearing a bleeding
-head upon her thyrsus; for this
-he received a present of a talent
-from the king.—Plut. Crass. §
-33. Polyæan. vii. 41. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f919'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r919'>919</a>. Plut. Cleom. § 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f920'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r920'>920</a>. Plut. ubi supra.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f921'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r921'>921</a>. Διονυσοκόλακες. Athen. vi.
-56.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f922'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r922'>922</a>. Plut. Alex. § 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f923'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r923'>923</a>. Plut. Alex. § 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f924'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r924'>924</a>. Prob. xxx. 10. They were
-likewise corrupted by their profession,
-since, in female parts,
-they frequently indulged in immodest
-gestures, as is particularly
-related of Callipedes. Id. Poet. v.
-2. Cf. Macrob. Saturnal. l. ii. c. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f925'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r925'>925</a>. Occasionally, as among ourselves,
-jugglers were introduced
-upon the stage, swallowing swords
-and performing other fantastic
-tricks.—Plut. Lycurg. § 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f926'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r926'>926</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 545.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f927'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r927'>927</a>. Athen. iv. 80. v. 47. vi. 61.
-Cf. Eustath. ad Odyss. ψ. p. 106,
-sub fin.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f928'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r928'>928</a>. Suid. v. φλύακες, t. ii. p.
-1073. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f929'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r929'>929</a>. Cf. Fabric. Bib. Græc. ii. p.
-495, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f930'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r930'>930</a>. Athen. xiv. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f931'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r931'>931</a>. Cf. Athen. iv. 57. Salm.
-Exercit. Plin. p. 76. Voss. Institut.
-Poet. ii. 21. Rhinthon
-was the inventor of the Hilaro-trag&oelig;di.
-i. e. Tragi-comedy.
-Suid. v. Ῥίνθων, t. ii. p. 685. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f932'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r932'>932</a>. Schol. Apoll. Rhod. i. 746.
-Plut. Ages. 21. Athen. xiv. 15.
-Etym. Mag. 260. 42.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f933'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r933'>933</a>. I have substituted this joke,
-à la Smollett, “for the miserable
-joke in the original.” Beet, Atticé
-σευτλίον, became τεύτλιον in the
-Doric brogue. Athen. xiv. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f934'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r934'>934</a>. Among the mimics of this
-part of Italy, the most celebrated
-was Cleon, surnamed the Mimaulos,
-who dispensed with the
-use of a mask.—Athen. x. 78.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f935'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r935'>935</a>. Athen. xiv. 15. Cf. Suid. in
-φλύακες, t. ii. p. 1073. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f936'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r936'>936</a>. Vid. Harpocrat. in v. ἰθύφαλλοι.
-Mauss. p. 152.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f937'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r937'>937</a>. Athen. xiv. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f938'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r938'>938</a>. Athen. xiv. 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f939'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r939'>939</a>. Aristot. Ethic. Nicom. iii. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f940'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r940'>940</a>. Aristot. Rhet. iii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f941'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r941'>941</a>. Polit. vii. 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f942'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r942'>942</a>. Dem. de Fal. Leg. § 58.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f943'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r943'>943</a>. Dem. de Coron. § 97.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f944'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r944'>944</a>. Δεικηλίκτας. Plut. Ages.
-§ 21. Apothegm. Lac. Ages. 57.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f945'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r945'>945</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 566.
-Flor. Christ. ad loc. In Plato’s
-time there were few or no actors
-who excelled at the same time in
-tragedy and comedy. Plat. de
-Rep. t. vi. p. 123.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f946'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r946'>946</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 579.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f947'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r947'>947</a>. Plut. Dem. § 28. Vit. x.
-Orat. 8. Another actor obtained
-the name of the Partridge. Athen.
-iii. 82.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f948'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r948'>948</a>. Aulus Gellius, vii. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f949'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r949'>949</a>. Plut. An. Seni. § 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f950'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r950'>950</a>. Plut. Ages. § 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f951'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r951'>951</a>. Etym. Mag. 607. 25.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f952'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r952'>952</a>. Acharn. 834.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f953'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r953'>953</a>. Plut. de Aud. Poet. § 3.
-Plat. de Rep. t. vi. pp. 125–127.
-This philosopher, it is
-clear, entertained a less elevated
-idea of art than some modern
-writers, who define it as follows:
-“Art is a representation (μίμησις),
-i. e. an energy by means
-of which a subject becomes an
-object,”—(Müller, cited by Mr.
-Donaldson, Theatre of the Greeks,
-p. 4,)—in other words, by which
-a nominative becomes an accusative.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f954'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r954'>954</a>. Mus. Cortonens. tab. 60.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f955'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r955'>955</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 548.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f956'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r956'>956</a>. See the figure of Alexandria
-in the Gemme Antiche Figurate
-of Agostini.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f957'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r957'>957</a>. Poll. iv. 142.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f958'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r958'>958</a>. Vid. Schol. Aristoph. Nub.
-289. 343. 442.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f959'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r959'>959</a>. Poll. iv. 141, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f960'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r960'>960</a>. De Rep. t. vi. p. 125.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f961'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r961'>961</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 150.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f962'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r962'>962</a>. Athen. x. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f963'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r963'>963</a>. Mus. Cortonens. tabb. 18, 19.
-Cf. p. 26, seq. 1750. Rom.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>
- <h3 class='c002'>CHAPTER VIII.<br /> THEATRE (<i>continued</i>).</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Into the various questions which have been raised
-respecting the origin and constitution of the chorus
-it is not my intention to enter. It undoubtedly appears,
-however, to have arisen amid the festivities
-of the vintage, when, after the grapes were brought
-home and pressed and the principal labours of the
-season concluded,<a id='r964' /><a href='#f964' class='c012'><sup>[964]</sup></a> the rustics delivered themselves
-up to wild joy and merriment, chanting hymns and
-performing dances in honour of Dionysos, the protecting
-god of the vine. At first the number of
-the persons engaged in these dances could not have
-been fixed, since it is probable that all the vintagers,
-both male and female, joined in the sports,
-as they had previously joined in the labour. And
-this free and unformal character the Dithyrambic or
-Dionysiac chorus must have preserved, as long as it
-remained a mere village pastime. But when afterwards,
-advancing from one step to another, it assumed
-something of an artificial form and several chorusses
-arose which contended with each other for a prize,
-the performers must have undergone some kind of
-training,<a id='r965' /><a href='#f965' class='c012'><sup>[965]</sup></a> both in singing and dancing, and then
-the number of the individuals constituting the chorus
-was possibly fixed. There appears to be some
-reason for thinking, that these exhibitions were more
-ancient than the congregation of the Athenians in
-one city, and that originally every tribe had its own
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>chorus,<a id='r966' /><a href='#f966' class='c012'><sup>[966]</sup></a> since we find that afterwards, when all the
-inhabitants of Attica came to regard themselves as
-one people, the Choreutæ were chosen from every
-tribe five.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>By what gradations, however, the village chorus
-was transformed into the Dithyrambic, the Dithyrambic
-into the Satyric, and the Satyric again into
-the Tragic, it now appears impossible to ascertain;
-but it seems to be quite clear,<a id='r967' /><a href='#f967' class='c012'><sup>[967]</sup></a> that in many ancient
-tragedies the number of the chorus was fifty,<a id='r968' /><a href='#f968' class='c012'><sup>[968]</sup></a>
-as, for example, in the “Judgment of the Arms,”
-by Æschylus, in which silver-footed Thetis appeared
-upon the stage accompanied by a train of fifty
-Nereids.<a id='r969' /><a href='#f969' class='c012'><sup>[969]</sup></a> Again, according to certain ancient authors,<a id='r970' /><a href='#f970' class='c012'><sup>[970]</sup></a>
-in the Eumenides of Æschylus, the chorus
-of Furies at first amounted to fifty, which, rushing
-tumultuously, with frightful gestures and horrid
-masks,<a id='r971' /><a href='#f971' class='c012'><sup>[971]</sup></a> into the orchestra, struck so great a terror
-into the people, particularly the women<a id='r972' /><a href='#f972' class='c012'><sup>[972]</sup></a> and children,
-that their number was afterwards reduced by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>law. I am aware that several distinguished scholars
-think very differently on this subject; some maintaining,
-that the chorus of Furies always consisted
-of fifteen, while others reduce their number to three.
-But, though both these opinions have been supported
-with much learning and ingenuity, it seems difficult
-to admit either the one or the other. In the
-first place, since every thing connected with the
-stage was in a state of perpetual fluctuation, since
-the masks and costume were repeatedly altered,
-since the number of the actors was augmented,
-since almost every arrangement of the theatre, and
-every characteristic of the poetry, underwent numerous
-modifications; the chorus, also, it is probable,
-submitted to the same alterations or reforms till
-it settled in that tetragonal figure<a id='r973' /><a href='#f973' class='c012'><sup>[973]</sup></a> and determinate
-number which it afterwards preserved, as long
-as the legitimate drama existed in Greece.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In one point of view the history of the chorus
-is extremely remarkable. At first, and for some
-time, it constituted in itself the whole of the spectacle
-exhibited at the Dionysiac festivals, where its
-songs and dances, accompanied by such rude music
-as the times afforded, satisfied the demands of the
-popular taste, and were consequently supposed to
-be everything that the god required. By degrees,
-as experience suggested improvements either in the
-music, in the manner of dancing, or in the materials
-and composition of the odes, the movements,
-singing, and appearance of the Chorus, assumed a
-more artificial form, which was necessarily carried
-forward many steps in the career of amelioration
-by the institution of rival bodies of Choreutæ, who,
-from the natural principle of emulation, endeavoured
-to excel each other. Next, a detached member
-of its own body, mounted on a table, enacted the
-part of a stranger or messenger come to announce
-something which it imported the servants of Dionysos
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>to know. This table was doubtless placed
-directly in front of the altar of Bacchos, on the
-steps of which the leader of the chorus was probably
-mounted in after ages, to hold communication
-with the stranger; and, as this altar ripened
-through many gradations into the Thymele, so the
-aforesaid table rose through innumerable changes
-into the Logeion. It may be remarked, moreover,
-that the slope of a hill,<a id='r974' /><a href='#f974' class='c012'><sup>[974]</sup></a> when any such existed
-near the village, would naturally be chosen on such
-occasions to afford the peasants an opportunity of
-standing behind each other on ascending levels, and
-thus, without inconvenience, beholding the show;
-and where such natural aid did not present itself,
-they probably threw up embankments of turf in the
-semicircular form, which experience proved to be
-most convenient, and, out of this rude contrivance,
-grew those vast and magnificent structures, which
-afterwards constituted one of the noblest ornaments
-of Greece.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The single actor, detached in the manner we have
-said from the Chorus, speedily acquired greater importance,
-and the aid of poetry was called in to
-frame and adorn his recitals; and as, during the
-songs and dances of the Chorus, he necessarily remained
-idle, the idea soon suggested itself that a
-second actor<a id='r975' /><a href='#f975' class='c012'><sup>[975]</sup></a> would be an improvement, upon which
-dialogue and the regular drama sprang into existence.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among the principal duties of the Chorus was the
-performance of certain dances, simple enough at the
-outset, but, in process of time, refined and rendered
-so intricate by art, that it required no little learning
-and ability to execute all their varied movements
-with dignity and grace. Somewhat to assist the eye
-and memory, the whole pattern, as it were, of the
-dance seems to have been chalked out on the floor
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>of the orchestra;<a id='r976' /><a href='#f976' class='c012'><sup>[976]</sup></a> while the greatest possible pains
-were taken in drilling the Choreutæ to open, file
-off, and wheel through their labyrinthine evolutions,
-without confusion. The manner in which these persons
-usually entered the orchestra, that is to say,
-ranged in a square body, three in front and five
-deep, or five in front and three deep, has suggested
-to some the notion that they represented a military
-Lochos;<a id='r977' /><a href='#f977' class='c012'><sup>[977]</sup></a> but besides that this is inconsistent with
-their Dionysiac origin, they did not always preserve
-this arrangement, but, on some occasions, came rushing
-in confusedly, while on others they traversed the
-Parodos in Indian file.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The musicians,<a id='r978' /><a href='#f978' class='c012'><sup>[978]</sup></a> in the Greek theatre, took their
-station upon and about the steps of the Thymele,
-which answers as nearly as possible to the position
-of the orchestra in our own theatres. Here, also,
-stood the Rhabduchi,<a id='r979' /><a href='#f979' class='c012'><sup>[979]</sup></a> or vergers of the theatre, whose
-business it was to see that order was preserved among
-the spectators.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>With respect to the dances<a id='r980' /><a href='#f980' class='c012'><sup>[980]</sup></a> performed by the
-Chorus, they were so numerous, long, and intricate,
-that it would be here impossible to enumerate and
-describe the whole. They appear to have conceived
-the idea of representing almost every passion and
-action in human life by that combination of movements
-and gestures which the term pantomime, borrowed
-from their own language, expresses much better
-than our word dancing.<a id='r981' /><a href='#f981' class='c012'><sup>[981]</sup></a> A taste, in some respects
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>similar, still prevails among the Orientals,
-whose Ghawazi and Bayadères, though relying rather
-upon routine and impulse than on the resources of
-art, perform at festivals and marriages, and before
-the ladies of the harem, little love-pieces and pastoral
-scenes, which evidently belong to the class of mimetic
-dances described by ancient authors.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In tragedy, such as it existed in the polished ages
-of Greece, the movements were slow and solemn,
-and, no doubt, full of dignity. The spirit of comedy
-required brisk and lively, and frequently tolerated,
-audaciously wanton dances; while the Chorus of the
-Satyric Drama would appear to have been rude and
-clownish rather than indecent, indulging in grotesque
-movements, ludicrous and extravagant gestures, and
-that rustic and farcical style of mimicry which may
-be supposed to have prevailed among the rough
-peasantry of Hellas.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In classing the various dances, it will, perhaps, be
-sufficient if we divide them into lively and serious,<a id='r982' /><a href='#f982' class='c012'><sup>[982]</sup></a>
-joining with the latter all such as attempted to
-embody a symbol or an allegory.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In certain dramas of Phrynichos the Chorus represented
-a company of wrestlers,<a id='r983' /><a href='#f983' class='c012'><sup>[983]</sup></a> who contrived by the
-quick, flexible, and varied movements of the dance,
-to imitate all the accidents of the palæstra. Sometimes
-they personated a party of scouts in the active
-look-out for the enemy, each with his right hand curved
-above the brow: this was one form of the Scops.<a id='r984' /><a href='#f984' class='c012'><sup>[984]</sup></a> On
-other occasions the dancer mimicked the habits of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>Scops, or mocking-owl, twirling about the head, and
-appearing to be absorbed in an ecstasy of imitation, until
-taken by the fowler. The performance of a piece like
-this, by a numerous Chorus, sometimes breaking off
-into a brisk gallopade, sometimes maintaining the same
-position, jigging, pirouetting, and ducking the crest,
-must, no doubt, have appeared infinitely comic; and
-yet it could have been nothing in comparison with
-the Morphasmos,<a id='r985' /><a href='#f985' class='c012'><sup>[985]</sup></a> in which, not the characteristic peculiarities
-of a single owl, but those of the whole
-animal creation were “taken off.” Thus we may
-suppose that the Hegemon of the Chorus started as
-a baboon, his next-door neighbour as a hog, a third
-as a lion, a fourth as an ass, and so on, each man
-accommodating his voice to the character he had,
-pro tempore, assumed, and gibbering, grunting, roaring,
-braying, as he leaped, or gamboled, or bounded,
-or scampered about the orchestra. Anon the frisky
-foresters were transformed into slaves, who would seem
-to have been introduced to the audience pounding
-something, perhaps onions and garlick, in a mortar.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Oclasma,<a id='r986' /><a href='#f986' class='c012'><sup>[986]</sup></a> a dance borrowed from the Persians,
-reminds one strongly of the performances of the negroes
-in the interior of Africa, the whole Chorus
-alternately crouching upon its heels, and springing
-aloft, like the frogs of Aristophanes about the fens
-of Acheron. Not, perhaps, un-akin to this, were
-those three frenzied dances, alluded to rather than
-described by the ancients,—that is to say, the
-Thermaustris,<a id='r987' /><a href='#f987' class='c012'><sup>[987]</sup></a> which seems to have consisted of a
-series of violent bounds, like the performances of
-the Hurons and Iroquois;<a id='r988' /><a href='#f988' class='c012'><sup>[988]</sup></a> the Mongas, which, from
-the name, probably represented the friskings and caracollings
-of a jackass; and the Kernophoros,<a id='r989' /><a href='#f989' class='c012'><sup>[989]</sup></a> or dance
-of the first-fruits, wherein the Chorus appeared upon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>the stage, some bearing censers, others fruit-baskets,
-evidently in a character resembling that of Bacchanals.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To this species of dance belonged, also, the Hecaterides,
-in which the performer interpreted his desires
-or passion by furious gestures of the hands. The
-Eclactisma was a female dance,<a id='r990' /><a href='#f990' class='c012'><sup>[990]</sup></a> requiring the exertion
-of great force and agility, its characteristics
-consisting in flinging the heels backwards above the
-level of the shoulders. Corresponding, in some measure,
-to the Eclactisma, was the Skistas,<a id='r991' /><a href='#f991' class='c012'><sup>[991]</sup></a> in which
-the dancer bounded aloft, crossing his legs several
-times while in the air. There was a dance, evidently
-of a very extraordinary description, which they performed
-to an air called Thyrocopicon,<a id='r992' /><a href='#f992' class='c012'><sup>[992]</sup></a> or “knocking
-at doors,” possibly representing the frolics of such
-wild youths as anticipated the scape-graces of our
-own day. The Mothon was a loose dance, common
-among sailors; the Baukismos, Bactriasmos, Apokinos,
-Aposeisis, and Sobas,<a id='r993' /><a href='#f993' class='c012'><sup>[993]</sup></a> were laughable, but
-lewd dances,<a id='r994' /><a href='#f994' class='c012'><sup>[994]</sup></a> resembling the Bolero and Fandango
-of the Spaniards.<a id='r995' /><a href='#f995' class='c012'><sup>[995]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Heducomos was a dance expressive of the
-outbreaks of joy, and the Knismos,<a id='r996' /><a href='#f996' class='c012'><sup>[996]</sup></a> represented the
-pinching, struggling, and quarrels of lovers. The
-Deimalea was a Laconian dance performed by Satyrs
-and Seileni, skipping and jumping about in a
-circle.<a id='r997' /><a href='#f997' class='c012'><sup>[997]</sup></a> Another Spartan dance<a id='r998' /><a href='#f998' class='c012'><sup>[998]</sup></a> was the Bryallika,
-of a ludicrous and licentious character, performed
-by women in grotesque masks, whence a courtezan
-at Sparta was denominated, Bryallika. The name
-of Hypogypones,<a id='r999' /><a href='#f999' class='c012'><sup>[999]</sup></a> was bestowed on certain performers
-who imitated old men, flourishing their sticks about
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>the stage, as we are informed they did in the
-play of Simermnos.<a id='r1000' /><a href='#f1000' class='c012'><sup>[1000]</sup></a> Akin in spirit to these were
-the Gypones,<a id='r1001' /><a href='#f1001' class='c012'><sup>[1001]</sup></a> who made their appearance in transparent
-Tarentine robes, and mounted on stilts probably
-in the form of goats’ feet, to give them a
-resemblance to the Ægipanes, worshipped as gods
-of the woods. A peculiar dance in honour of Artemis
-took its rise in the village of Carya in Laconia,
-where its invention was attributed to Castor and
-Polydeukes. No description of it, so far as I know,
-has come down to us; but the maidens by whom it
-was performed probably bore, and steadied with one
-hand, a basket of flowers on their heads, thus forming
-the model of those architectural figures, still
-from them called Caryatides.<a id='r1002' /><a href='#f1002' class='c012'><sup>[1002]</sup></a> The representation
-of this performance was, doubtless, a favourite subject
-among Spartan artists or such as were employed
-by the Spartans, as may perhaps be fairly inferred
-from the circumstance, that the device on the ring,
-which, in return for a comb, was presented by Clearchus
-to Ctesias to be shown to his friends at Lacedæmon,
-was a dance of Caryatides.<a id='r1003' /><a href='#f1003' class='c012'><sup>[1003]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Amid the laxity of morals which prevailed in the
-later ages of Greece, the Pyrrhic,<a id='r1004' /><a href='#f1004' class='c012'><sup>[1004]</sup></a> once supposed to
-be peculiar to warriors, degenerated into a dance of
-Bacchanals, with thyrsi instead of spears, or carrying
-torches in one hand, while with the other they
-sportively cast light reeds at one another. The story
-told in this mimetic performance referred to remote
-antiquity, and was both curiously and elaborately
-intricate, comprehending all the adventures of Bacchos
-and his merry crew during the Indian expedition,
-and assuming towards the conclusion a tragical
-form, developing the sad story of Pentheus.<a id='r1005' /><a href='#f1005' class='c012'><sup>[1005]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among the dances of a grave character are enumerated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>the Gingra performed like the Podismos
-to slow and solemn music, the Lion and the Tetracomos,<a id='r1006' /><a href='#f1006' class='c012'><sup>[1006]</sup></a>
-a warlike measure performed in honour of
-Heracles and supposed in its origin to have had
-some connexion with the Tetracomoi of Attica, that
-is, the Peiræeus, Phaleron, Oxypeteones, and Thymotadæ.<a id='r1007' /><a href='#f1007' class='c012'><sup>[1007]</sup></a>
-We read, moreover, of dances in which the performers
-represented certain historic or mythological
-personages, such as Rhodope, Phædra, or Parthenope.<a id='r1008' /><a href='#f1008' class='c012'><sup>[1008]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Anthema,<a id='r1009' /><a href='#f1009' class='c012'><sup>[1009]</sup></a> or Flower-dance, appears to have
-been chiefly performed in private parties by women,
-who acted certain characters and chanted, as they
-moved, the following verses:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Where is my lovely parsley, say?</div>
- <div class='line'>My violets, roses, where are they?</div>
- <div class='line'>My parsley, roses, violets fair,</div>
- <div class='line'>are my flowers? Tell me where.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>The Athenians, however, seem to have imagined
-that there was nothing in nature which might not
-be imitated in the dance, by the turns and mazes
-of which they accordingly sought to represent the
-movements of the stars.<a id='r1010' /><a href='#f1010' class='c012'><sup>[1010]</sup></a> A similar fancy, if Lucian
-may be credited, possessed the Indian Yoghis,
-who every morning and evening before their doors
-saluted the sun, at his rising and setting, with a
-dance resembling his own,<a id='r1011' /><a href='#f1011' class='c012'><sup>[1011]</sup></a> which, as that luminary
-no otherwise dances than by turning on its axis,
-must have been a performance resembling that of
-the whirling derwishes, whose broad symbolical petticoats
-are meant, I presume, to represent the disk of
-the sun. But the dance most difficult of comprehension
-is that upon which they bestowed the name of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>κόσμου εκπύρωσις,<a id='r1012' /><a href='#f1012' class='c012'><sup>[1012]</sup></a> or the “Conflagration of the World.”
-Of the figure and character of this performance antiquity,
-I believe, has left us no account, though it probably
-represented, by a train of allegorical personages
-and movements, the principal events which, according
-to the Stoics, are to precede the delivering up of the
-Universe to fire.<a id='r1013' /><a href='#f1013' class='c012'><sup>[1013]</sup></a> Scaliger,<a id='r1014' /><a href='#f1014' class='c012'><sup>[1014]</sup></a> who does not attempt to
-explain this strange exhibition, observes, however,
-pertinently, that it was a dance in which Nero might
-have figured, his burning of Rome deserving in some
-sort to be regarded as a rehearsal of this piece.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There existed among the Spartans<a id='r1015' /><a href='#f1015' class='c012'><sup>[1015]</sup></a> an elegant
-dance denominated Hormos, or the Necklace, performed
-by a chorus of youths and virgins who moved
-through the requisite evolutions in a row. The line
-was headed by a young man who executed his part
-in the firm and vigorous steps proper to his age,
-and which he would afterwards be expected to preserve
-in the field of battle. A maiden immediately
-followed, but, instead of imitating his masculine manner,
-confined herself to the modest graceful paces and
-gestures of her sex, and this alternation and interweaving,
-as it were, of force and beauty, suggesting
-the idea of a necklace composed of many coloured
-gems, gave rise to the appellation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The dance of the Crane,<a id='r1016' /><a href='#f1016' class='c012'><sup>[1016]</sup></a> among the Athenians,
-in some respects resembled the above. It was, according
-to tradition, first invented by Theseus, who
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>landing at Delos on his return from Crete, offered
-sacrifice to Apollo and dedicated the statue of Aphrodite
-which he had received from Ariadne, after which
-he joined the young men and women whom he had
-delivered, in performing a joyous dance<a id='r1017' /><a href='#f1017' class='c012'><sup>[1017]</sup></a> about the
-altar of Horns erected by Apollo, from the spoils
-of his sister’s bow. The Choreutæ, engaged in executing
-the Geranos, or Crane, formed themselves
-into one long line with a leader in van and rear,
-and then, guided by the design on the floor of
-the orchestra, described by their movements the
-various mazes and involutions of the Cretan labyrinth,
-until, having traversed all its intricate passages,
-they emerged at once, like their great countryman
-and his companions, into light and safety. Other
-dances there were, which, however curious they may
-have been, cannot now be described from the scanty
-materials left us: such were the dance of Heralds,
-or Messengers, the dance of the Lily,<a id='r1018' /><a href='#f1018' class='c012'><sup>[1018]</sup></a> the Chitonea,
-the Pinakides, the dance of the Graces,<a id='r1019' /><a href='#f1019' class='c012'><sup>[1019]</sup></a> and that
-of the Hours, in which the performers floated about
-with a circle of light drapery held over the head by
-both hands.<a id='r1020' /><a href='#f1020' class='c012'><sup>[1020]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>If from the dances we now pass to the Choreutæ,<a id='r1021' /><a href='#f1021' class='c012'><sup>[1021]</sup></a>
-by whom they were performed, we shall
-find that they generally made their appearance in
-the orchestra with golden crowns upon their heads,
-and habited in gorgeous raiment, frequently interwoven
-or embroidered with gold.<a id='r1022' /><a href='#f1022' class='c012'><sup>[1022]</sup></a> The Chorus,
-however, like the actors, must have constantly varied
-its costume, to suit the exigencies of the
-drama; sometimes to perform the part of senators,
-sometimes of Nereids, sometimes of female suppliants,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>sometimes of urn-bearers, sometimes of clouds,
-or wasps, or birds. When in the tragedy of Æschylus
-they were required to personate the Furies,
-their exterior was the most frightful that can well
-be imagined,—their long but scanty robes consisting,
-as has been conjectured, of black lamb-skins,
-slit up below and exposing their tawny withered
-limbs to sight, while their blood-stained eyes, livid
-tongue hanging out, and hair like a mass of knotted
-serpents, easily accredited the belief of their being
-infernal existences. Thus habited, with fingers terminating
-in black claws,<a id='r1023' /><a href='#f1023' class='c012'><sup>[1023]</sup></a> and grasping a burning
-torch, they burst upon the view of the spectators,
-like so many hideous phantoms conjured up by an
-imagination diseased with terror.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The costume of the actors,<a id='r1024' /><a href='#f1024' class='c012'><sup>[1024]</sup></a> which some modern
-writers suppose to have been extremely monotonous,<a id='r1025' /><a href='#f1025' class='c012'><sup>[1025]</sup></a>
-was in reality, however, as rich, varied, and
-characteristic as the masks of which we shall presently
-have to speak. Gods, heroes, kings, chiefs,
-soothsayers, heralds, rustics, the hetairæ, and their
-mothers; gay youths, flatterers, libertines, procurers,
-cooks, satyrs, slaves, &amp;c., had each and all their
-appropriate dresses and ornaments, modified, no
-doubt, from time to time by the change in public
-taste, and the fancy of the poets. The divinities
-had almost to be wholly framed by the Dionysiac
-artificers. Conceived to be of superhuman stature,
-it was necessary that the actors who represented
-them should, in the first place, be lifted up on Cothurni,<a id='r1026' /><a href='#f1026' class='c012'><sup>[1026]</sup></a>
-or half-boots, the soles of which were many
-inches high,<a id='r1027' /><a href='#f1027' class='c012'><sup>[1027]</sup></a> their limbs and bodies were enlarged
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>by padding, their arms lengthened by gloves, while
-their countenances, which might be ignoble or even
-ugly, were concealed by masks of exquisite ideal
-beauty, rising above the stately forehead in a mass
-of curls, which at once corresponded with the nobleness
-of their features and augmented their colossal
-height: add to all this robes of purple, or
-scarlet, or azure, or saffron, or cloth of gold, floating
-about the person in graceful folds, and training
-along the floor, and we have some faint idea of
-the celestial personages who with gemmed sceptres
-and glittering crowns made their appearance on the
-Grecian stage.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The queens and heroes,<a id='r1028' /><a href='#f1028' class='c012'><sup>[1028]</sup></a> who were constantly beheld
-grouped in converse, or in action, with these
-sublime dwellers of Olympos, were clad in a costume
-scarcely less majestic; the former, for example,
-in times of prosperity, issued forth from their palaces
-in white garments, with loose sleeves reaching
-to the elbow, and closed on the upper part of the
-arm by a succession of jewelled agraffes,<a id='r1029' /><a href='#f1029' class='c012'><sup>[1029]</sup></a> their
-tresses confined in front by a golden sphendone, or
-fillet, crusted with gems, while their robes terminated
-below in long sweeping trains of purple.<a id='r1030' /><a href='#f1030' class='c012'><sup>[1030]</sup></a> But
-when their houses were visited by misfortune, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>milk-white pelisse was exchanged for one quince-coloured
-or blue, while the purple train was converted
-into black. The costume of the kings,<a id='r1031' /><a href='#f1031' class='c012'><sup>[1031]</sup></a> likewise
-varied by circumstances, consisted usually of
-an ample robe of purple, or scarlet, or dark green,
-descending to the feet, a rich cloak of cloth of
-gold, or of some delicate colour, adorned with gold
-embroidery, and a lofty mitre on the head.<a id='r1032' /><a href='#f1032' class='c012'><sup>[1032]</sup></a> When
-any of these characters, as Tydeus or Meleager, was
-engaged in hunting or war, he wore the scarlet or
-purple mantle called Ephaptis,<a id='r1033' /><a href='#f1033' class='c012'><sup>[1033]</sup></a> which in action was
-wrapped about the left arm. Athenæus, in describing
-the horsemen of Antiochos, observes, that these
-Ephaptides<a id='r1034' /><a href='#f1034' class='c012'><sup>[1034]</sup></a> were embroidered with gold and adorned
-with the figures of animals. Bacchanals and soothsayers,
-like Teiresias, generally appeared upon the
-stage in an extraordinary garment, denominated
-Agrenon,<a id='r1035' /><a href='#f1035' class='c012'><sup>[1035]</sup></a> formed of a reticular fabric of wool of
-various colours. Dionysos himself,<a id='r1036' /><a href='#f1036' class='c012'><sup>[1036]</sup></a> in whose honour
-the theatre with all its shows was created,
-descended from Olympos in a saffron-coloured robe
-compressed below the bosom by a broad flowered
-belt, and bearing a thyrsus in his hand.<a id='r1037' /><a href='#f1037' class='c012'><sup>[1037]</sup></a> This girdle,
-in the case of other gods, or heroes, was sometimes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>replaced by one of gold.<a id='r1038' /><a href='#f1038' class='c012'><sup>[1038]</sup></a> Persons overtaken by
-calamity, especially exiles, wore garments dirty-white,
-or sad-coloured, or black, or quince-coloured,
-or bluish. The costume of Philoctetes, Telephos,
-Œneus, Phœnix, Bellerophontes, was ragged. The
-Seileni appeared in a shaggy Chiton, and the other
-personages of the Satyric drama in the skins of
-fawns, or goats, or sheep, or pards, and, sometimes,
-in the Theraion or Dionysiac garment, and a flowered
-cloak and a scarlet Himation. Old men were distinguished
-by the Exomis,<a id='r1039' /><a href='#f1039' class='c012'><sup>[1039]</sup></a> a white Chiton of mean
-appearance, having no seam or arm-hole on the
-left side—young men by the Campulè,<a id='r1040' /><a href='#f1040' class='c012'><sup>[1040]</sup></a> a scarlet or
-deep purple Himation,—the parasites by bearing
-the Stlengis and flask (as country people by the
-Lagobalon) and by black or sad-coloured robes, except
-in the play of the Sicyonians, where a person
-of this class, being about to be married, sported a
-white garment,—the cook by an Himation double
-and unfulled,—priestesses by white robes,—comic
-old women by such as were quince-coloured or dusky,
-like a cloudy morning sky in autumn,—the mothers
-of the hetairæ wore a purple fillet about the head,—the
-dresses of young women were white and delicate,—of
-heiresses the same with fringes. Pornoboski
-wore garments of various colours, with flowered
-cloaks, and carried a straight wand, called ἀρéσκος.<a id='r1041' /><a href='#f1041' class='c012'><sup>[1041]</sup></a>
-There were, likewise, female characters which wore
-the Parapechu and the Symmetria, a chiton reaching
-to the feet, with a border of marine purple.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>We now come to the masks,<a id='r1042' /><a href='#f1042' class='c012'><sup>[1042]</sup></a> a subject upon which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>much has been written, though very little has been
-explained. The primary difficulty connected with
-them is, to determine whether they were so constructed
-as to resemble a speaking-trumpet,<a id='r1043' /><a href='#f1043' class='c012'><sup>[1043]</sup></a> which,
-by narrowing the stream, and compressing, as it were,
-the particles of the voice, cast it forth condensed
-and corroborated upon the theatre,<a id='r1044' /><a href='#f1044' class='c012'><sup>[1044]</sup></a> which it was thus
-enabled to penetrate and fill, even to its utmost
-extremities. My own opinion, after bestowing much
-attention upon the subject, is, that the mask was in
-reality so constructed as to communicate additional
-force and intensity to the voice; but whether by
-roofing or encircling the artificial mouth by metallic
-plates, or thin laminæ of the stone called Chalcophonos,<a id='r1045' /><a href='#f1045' class='c012'><sup>[1045]</sup></a>
-it is now scarcely possible to determine.
-Be this, however, as it may, there existed in some
-theatres other contrivances for conveying and augmenting
-the volume of the actor’s voice; these were
-the Echeia,<a id='r1046' /><a href='#f1046' class='c012'><sup>[1046]</sup></a> vases generally of metal, finely toned,
-and arranged according to the musical scale, in a
-succession of domed cells,<a id='r1047' /><a href='#f1047' class='c012'><sup>[1047]</sup></a> running in diverging lines
-up the hollow face of the theatre. They rested with
-one edge upon a smooth and polished pavement, the
-mouth outward, and the external edge reposing on the
-summit of a small, blunt obelisk,<a id='r1048' /><a href='#f1048' class='c012'><sup>[1048]</sup></a> while a low opening
-in each cell enabled the resonances, or echoes,
-thus created, to issue forth, and fill the air with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>sound,<a id='r1049' /><a href='#f1049' class='c012'><sup>[1049]</sup></a> which, however the fact may be accounted
-for, produced no isolated reverberations, no confusion.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The materials wherewith the masks were constructed
-varied, no doubt, considerably in different ages;<a id='r1050' /><a href='#f1050' class='c012'><sup>[1050]</sup></a>
-but that they were ever manufactured of bronze or
-copper is scarcely credible, if we reflect upon the
-weight of so voluminous an apparatus, covering the
-entire head and neck, composed of either of those
-metals. Such metallic specimens as have come down
-to us are to be regarded simply as model-masks,
-or as works of art, designed by the statuary as ornaments.
-The intention, at first, of this disguise being
-to give additional boldness and self-confidence to the
-actor, by concealing from his neighbours the shamefacedness
-which a raw performer would sometimes
-naturally feel while strutting about in imperial robes,
-and pouring forth the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>sesquipedalia verba</i></span> of Pelias
-and Telephos, they were contented to cover the face
-with a piece of linen, having openings for the eyes
-and a breathing-place.<a id='r1051' /><a href='#f1051' class='c012'><sup>[1051]</sup></a> To this appears to have
-succeeded a mask manufactured from the flexible
-bark of certain trees,<a id='r1052' /><a href='#f1052' class='c012'><sup>[1052]</sup></a> shaped, of course, and coloured
-to resemble the human countenance. The next step
-was to employ wood, some kinds of which, while
-possessing the advantage of extreme lightness, might
-be wrought with all the delicacy and fineness of a
-statue, while, better than any other material, it would
-receive that smooth and polished enamel by which
-were represented the texture<a id='r1053' /><a href='#f1053' class='c012'><sup>[1053]</sup></a> and complexion of
-the skin. Specimens of masks of this kind have been
-found among nations in a very rude state; among the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>inhabitants, for example, of Nootka Sound, whose dress,
-we are told,<a id='r1054' /><a href='#f1054' class='c012'><sup>[1054]</sup></a> “is accompanied by a mask representing
-the head of some animal: it is made of wood,
-with the eyes, teeth, &amp;c., and is a work of considerable
-ingenuity. Of these masks they have a
-great variety, which are applicable to certain circumstances
-and occasions. Those, for example,
-which represent the head of the otter or any other
-marine animals, are used only when they go to
-hunt them. In their war expeditions, but at no
-other time, they cover the whole of their dress
-with large bear-skins.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But while the above improvements were going
-on in the national theatre,<a id='r1055' /><a href='#f1055' class='c012'><sup>[1055]</sup></a> the rustic drama continued
-to preserve its original simplicity, the actors
-to prevent their being recognised, shading their brows
-with thick projecting crowns of leaves, and daubing
-their faces<a id='r1056' /><a href='#f1056' class='c012'><sup>[1056]</sup></a> with lees of wine. Thus disguised they
-chanted their songs upon the public roads, sitting
-in a waggon,<a id='r1057' /><a href='#f1057' class='c012'><sup>[1057]</sup></a> whence the proverb, “he speaks as
-from the waggon,” <i>i. e.</i> he is shamelessly abusive,
-which was in fact the case with the comic poets.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The masks were divided into three kinds, the
-Tragic, the Comic, and the Satyric. Those belonging
-to Tragedy were again subdivided into numerous
-classes, representing every marked variety
-of character, and every stage of human life from
-childhood to extreme old age. In the highly varied
-range of countenances thus brought into play, the
-mask-maker enjoyed abundant opportunities of exhibiting
-his skill. The hair, of course, was real and
-adjusted on the mask like a wig,<a id='r1058' /><a href='#f1058' class='c012'><sup>[1058]</sup></a> differently fashioned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>and coloured according to the age, habits,
-and complexion of the wearer. In some cases it
-was gathered together and piled up on the forehead,<a id='r1059' /><a href='#f1059' class='c012'><sup>[1059]</sup></a>
-in a triangular figure,<a id='r1060' /><a href='#f1060' class='c012'><sup>[1060]</sup></a> adding many inches
-to the actor’s stature; at other times it was combed
-smoothly downwards, from the crown, twisted round
-a fillet and disposed like a wreath about the head
-as we sometimes find it in the figures of Asclepios
-and the philosopher Archytas. Some characters were
-represented wholly bald, with a garland of vine-leaves
-or ivy wreathed about the brow,<a id='r1061' /><a href='#f1061' class='c012'><sup>[1061]</sup></a> others were
-simply bald in front, while a third class exhibited
-a bushy fell of hair, something like a lion’s mane.
-Young ladies displayed a profusion of pendant curls,
-kept in order by the fillet or sphendone, or gathered
-up in nets, or twisted about the head in braided
-tresses. In representing certain characters the eye-sockets
-were left open, so that the actor’s eyes
-could be seen moving and flashing within;<a id='r1062' /><a href='#f1062' class='c012'><sup>[1062]</sup></a> but on
-other occasions, when the part of a squinter was to
-be acted by a performer who did not squint or
-vice versa, as in the case of Roscius Gallus, the
-mask-maker must have represented the eyes by
-glass or some other transparent substance, through
-which the actor could see his way. This was necessarily
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>the case in the part of the poet Thamyris,<a id='r1063' /><a href='#f1063' class='c012'><sup>[1063]</sup></a>
-who, like our own Chatterton, had eyes of different
-colours, one blue, the other black, which, as Aristotle
-informs us, was common among the horses of
-Greece.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The time of acting, as is well-known, was during
-the Dionysiac and Lenæan festivals, in the
-spring and autumn.<a id='r1064' /><a href='#f1064' class='c012'><sup>[1064]</sup></a> The theatres being national establishments,
-in the proper sense of the word, were
-therefore open, free of expense, to all the citizens,
-who were not called together as with us by playbills,<a id='r1065' /><a href='#f1065' class='c012'><sup>[1065]</sup></a>
-but for the most part knew nothing of what
-they were going to see till they were seated in the
-theatre, and the herald<a id='r1066' /><a href='#f1066' class='c012'><sup>[1066]</sup></a> commanded the chorus of
-such and such a poet to advance. Previously to the
-commencement of the performance the theatre was
-purified by the sacrifice of a young hog, the blood
-of which was sprinkled on the earth.<a id='r1067' /><a href='#f1067' class='c012'><sup>[1067]</sup></a></p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f964'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r964'>964</a>. Cf. Ficorini, Degli Masch.
-Scen. p. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f965'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r965'>965</a>. On the importance afterwards
-attached to the training of the
-chorus, see the substance of an
-inscription in Chandler, ii. 72.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f966'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r966'>966</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Av. 1404.
-Schneid. de Orig. Trag. Græc. c. i.
-p. 2. The Dithyrambic ode was
-said to have been invented by
-Arion at Corinth. Schol. Pind.
-Olymp. xiii. 25, seq. The first
-choral songs were improvisations.
-Max. Tyr. Dissert. xxi. p. 249.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f967'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r967'>967</a>. Poll. iv. 108. Sch. Aristoph.
-Acharn. 210.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f968'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r968'>968</a>. Cf. Schol. ad Æschin. Tim.
-Orator. Att. t. xii. p. 376. Tzetz.
-ad Lycoph. p. 251, sqq. See also
-Müller, Dissert. on the Eumenides
-of Æschylus, p. 54. Schol. Aristoph.
-Eq. 587.—<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Nous savons
-que sur les Théâtres Grecs les
-femmes dansaient dans les
-chœurs.”</span>—Winkel. Mon. Ined.
-iii. p. 86. I have found no
-proof in any ancient author that
-this was the practice among the
-Greeks.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f969'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r969'>969</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Acharn. 848.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f970'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r970'>970</a>. Vit. Æschyl. p. vi.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f971'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r971'>971</a>. Bœttiger, Furies, p. 2. Poll.
-iv. 110. Schol. Aristoph. Av.
-298. Eq. 586.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f972'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r972'>972</a>. According to Mr. Bœttiger,
-however, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><a id='corr249.n7.2'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='‘chez'>“chez</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_249.n7.2'><ins class='correction' title='‘chez'>“chez</ins></a></span> les anciens Atheniens
-les femmes n’ont jamais
-assisté aux représentations théatrales.”</span>—Furies,
-p. 3, note.
-But, in addition to the proofs of
-the contrary, accumulated in the
-preceding book, the reader may
-consult the testimony of Aristides,
-who severely blames his
-countrymen for allowing their
-wives and children to frequent
-the theatres, t. i. p. 518, cf. p.
-507.—Jebb. He speaks, indeed,
-more particularly of the Smyrniotes;
-but Smyrna was an Ionian
-colony.—Herod. i. 149.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f973'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r973'>973</a>. Cf. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 209.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f974'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r974'>974</a>. Cf. Scalig. Poet, i. 21. Leroy,
-Ruines des plus beaux Monumens
-de la Grèce, p. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f975'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r975'>975</a>. Cf. Hesych. v. νέμησις ὑποκριτῶν.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f976'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r976'>976</a>. This, however, I merely conjecture
-from the practice of marking
-with lines the station of the
-chorus. Hesych. v. γραμμαί.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f977'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r977'>977</a>. When making their exit, it
-is said they were preceded by a
-flute-player. Sch. Aristoph. Vesp.
-582. These musicians wore, while
-playing, straps of leather called
-φορβείαι, bound over their mouth
-in order to regulate the quantity
-of air transmitted into the pipe.
-Id. ibid. See Burney, Hist. of
-Music, i. 279.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f978'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r978'>978</a>. Cf. Torrent. in Suet. Domit.
-Com. p. 390. a. The best auletæ
-were those of Thebes. Dion Chrysost.
-i. 263.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f979'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r979'>979</a>. Suidas, v. ῥαβδοῦχοι, t. ii. p.
-672. f. Scalig. Poet. i. 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f980'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r980'>980</a>. See Cahusac, Traité Historique
-de la Dance, ii. i. t. i. p.
-61, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f981'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r981'>981</a>. It is said that certain ancient
-poets were called orchestic,—as
-Thespis, Phrynichos, Pratinas,
-Carcinos,—not only because they
-adapted the subjects of their pieces
-to the dances of the chorusses,
-but, also, because they instructed
-in dancing the chorusses of other
-dramatic writers. Athen. i. 39.
-The above poet, Carcinos, was likewise
-celebrated for being the father
-of three sons who danced in the
-tragic chorusses, and, from their
-extremely diminutive stature, obtained
-the name of Quails. Schol.
-Aristoph. Pac. 761.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f982'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r982'>982</a>. Hesych. v. ἐμμέλεια. Sch.
-Aristoph. Nub. 532. Poll. iv.
-99. Athen. xiv. 27, seq. Luc. de
-Saltat. § 22. 26. Plut. Symposiac.
-ix. 15. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f983'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r983'>983</a>. Suid. v. Φρυνίχου πάλαισμα,
-t. ii. p. 1092. b. c. d.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f984'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r984'>984</a>. Poll. iv. 103. Athen. xiv.
-27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f985'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r985'>985</a>. Poll. iv. 103. Cf. Xenoph.
-Conviv. vi. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f986'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r986'>986</a>. Poll. vi. 99.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f987'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r987'>987</a>. Pfeiffer. Antiq. Græc. ii. 58.
-p. 382.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f988'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r988'>988</a>. Cf. Dodwell, Classical Tour
-in Greece, vol. i. p. 133, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f989'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r989'>989</a>. Athen. xiv. 27. Poll. iv.
-104.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f990'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r990'>990</a>. Poll. iv. 10. 2. Aristoph. Vesp.
-1492. 1495, et Schol.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f991'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r991'>991</a>. Poll. iv. 105. See, in the
-Mus. Cortonens. tab. 60, the representation
-of a group of dancers
-on a platform in a boat, on the
-margin of the sea.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f992'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r992'>992</a>. Athen. xiv. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f993'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r993'>993</a>. Athen. xiv. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f994'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r994'>994</a>. On the character of the old
-comedy, which tolerated these
-dances, see Plut. Lucull. § 39.
-Demet. § 12. Pericl. § 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f995'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r995'>995</a>. Poll. iv. 99.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f996'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r996'>996</a>. Id. ib.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f997'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r997'>997</a>. Poll. iv. 104.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f998'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r998'>998</a>. See Müller. ii. 354.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f999'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r999'>999</a>. Poll. iv. 104.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1000'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1000'>1000</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 534.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1001'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1001'>1001</a>. Poll. iv. 104.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1002'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1002'>1002</a>. Vitruv. i. 1.—Poll. iv. 104.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1003'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1003'>1003</a>. Plut. Artaxerx. § 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1004'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1004'>1004</a>. Duport. ad Theoph. Char. c.
-6. p. 305, sqq. Poll. iv. 99.—Athen.
-xiv. 29. On the Cretan
-warlike dances Orsites and Epicredios,
-id. xiv. 26.—Luc. de Saltat.
-§ 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1005'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1005'>1005</a>. Athen xiv. 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1006'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1006'>1006</a>. Poll. iv. 99.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1007'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1007'>1007</a>. Poll. iv. 105.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1008'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1008'>1008</a>. Luc. de Saltat. § 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1009'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1009'>1009</a>. Athen. xiv. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1010'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1010'>1010</a>. It may possibly have been in
-this dance that Eumelos or Arctinos,
-an old Corinthian poet, introduced
-Zeus himself sporting
-the toe:—</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><a id='corr257.n5'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Μεσσοισιν'>Μέσσοισιν</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_257.n5'><ins class='correction' title='Μεσσοισιν'>Μέσσοισιν</ins></a></span> δ᾽ ὠρχεῖτο πατὴρ
-ἀνδοῶν τε θεῶν τε. Athen. i. 40.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Cf. Plut. Sympos. ix. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1011'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1011'>1011</a>. Luc. de Saltat. § 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1012'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1012'>1012</a>. Athen. xiv. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1013'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1013'>1013</a>. Cf. Lips. Physiolog. Stoic. ii.
-22. t. iv. p. 955.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1014'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1014'>1014</a>. De Poet. i. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1015'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1015'>1015</a>. Luc. de Saltat. § 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1016'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1016'>1016</a>. Poll. iv. 101. Spanh. ad
-Callim. t. ii. p. 513. Plut. Thes.
-§ 21. Cf. Douglas, Essay on some
-points of Resemblance, &amp;c., p. 123.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“One of the dances still performed
-by the Athenians has
-been supposed that which was
-called the Crane, and was said
-to have been invented by Theseus,
-after his escape from the
-labyrinth of Crete. The peasants
-perform it yearly in the
-street of the Frank convent at
-the conclusion of the vintage;
-joining hands and preceding
-their mules and asses, which
-are laden with grapes in panniers,
-in a very curved and intricate
-figure; the leader waving
-a handkerchief, which has been
-imagined to denote the clue
-given by Ariadne.” Chandler,
-ii. 151.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1017'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1017'>1017</a>. Like the Cyclic Chorus. Vid.
-Izetzes ad Lycoph. i. p. 251, sqq.
-Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 311.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1018'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1018'>1018</a>. Athen. iii. 82. xiv. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1019'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1019'>1019</a>. Poll. iv. 93. Xenoph. Conviv.
-vii. 5. Plat. De Legg. vii. t. viii.
-p. 55. Cf. Herm. Comment. ad
-Arist. Poet. xxvii. 3. p. 190, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1020'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1020'>1020</a>. Scalig. Poet. i. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1021'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1021'>1021</a>. Cf. Buleng. de Theat. c. 55.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1022'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1022'>1022</a>. Dem. cont. Mid. § 7, seq.
-Athen. iii. 62. Animadv. t. vii.
-p. 215.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1023'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1023'>1023</a>. Bœttiger, Furies, p. 28, sqq.
-and pl. ii. Casaub. ad Athen. xii.
-2. Aristoph. Plut. 423.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1024'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1024'>1024</a>. On the actors’ wardrobe, see
-Poll. iv. 113, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1025'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1025'>1025</a>. Müller, Dissert. on the Eumenides,
-p. 100. Mr. Donaldson,
-Theatre of the Greeks, p. 132,
-adopts this opinion.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1026'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1026'>1026</a>. Luc. Jup. Tragœd. § 41.
-Cf. Xen. Cyrop. viii. 8, 17.
-Poll. ii. 151. vii. 62.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1027'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1027'>1027</a>. See Winkel. Monum. Ined.
-t. iii. p. 84. c. ix. § 1. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les extrémités
-des Cothurnes étoient
-ronds et quelquefois un peu aigues;
-mais on n’en vit jamais
-de carrés, comme aux gravés sur
-l’estampe,</span> de Vasali. p. 85. Cf.
-Luc. de Saltat. § 27. Their
-height depended first upon the
-stature of the actor, second, upon
-that of the character represented.
-Sometimes they were satisfied
-with attributing four cubits even
-to the heroes.—Aristoph. Ran.
-1046. Cf. Athen. v. 27. But
-the ghost of Achilles when it appeared
-to Apollonios of Tyana,
-rose five cubits in height, and, no
-doubt, the spectre was careful to
-accommodate itself to public opinion.—Philost.
-Vit. Apoll. Tyan.
-iv. 16. Aul. Gell. iii. 10. See,
-also, Scalig. Poet. i. 13. Scaliger
-relates <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>à propos</i></span> of the Cothurnus
-a facetious remark of his father:
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Italas mulieres altissimis soccis
-usas vidimus; quamvis diminutiva
-dicant voce Socculos. Patris
-mei perfacetum dictum
-memini. Ejusmodi uxorum
-dimidio tantùm in lectis frui
-maritos, alter dimidio cum
-soccis deposito,”</span> p. 53.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1028'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1028'>1028</a>. Poll. iv. 119.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1029'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1029'>1029</a>. Cf. Mus. Chiaramont. tavv.
-3. 7. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1030'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1030'>1030</a>. Poll. vii. 60. Bœttiger, Furies,
-p. 32. Luc. Jup. Tragoed.
-§ 41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1031'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1031'>1031</a>. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">On voit parmi les plus belles
-peintures d’Herculaneum un de
-ces premiers acteurs, ou protagonistes,
-avec une large ceinture de
-couleur d’or, une sceptre dans une
-main, et l’épée au côté.</span>—Winkelmann.
-Monum. Ined. t. iii. p. 84.
-Pitt. Ercol. i. 4. i. 41.—Plutarch
-observes, that, together with their
-royal garments, actors assumed
-the very strut of kings.—Vit.
-Demet. § 18.—Demetrius moreover,
-is said to have resembled a
-tragic actor, because he went clad
-in cloth of purple and gold, and
-wore sandals of purple and gold
-tissue. § 41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1032'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1032'>1032</a>. Aristoph. Av. 512, et Schol.
-Nub. 70. Poll. iv. 115. Suid.
-v. Ξυστὶς. t. ii. p. 264. e.—The
-actor who personated Heracles
-made his appearance with club
-and lion’s skin.—Luc. de Saltat.
-§ 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1033'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1033'>1033</a>. Poll. iv. 116, 117. Aristoph.
-Nub. 71, et Schol. Lysist. 1189.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1034'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1034'>1034</a>. Deipnosoph. v. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1035'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1035'>1035</a>. Poll. iv. 117. Hesych. v.
-ἀγρηνὸν.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1036'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1036'>1036</a>. Poll. iv. 118.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1037'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1037'>1037</a>. It behoved the actors, however,
-to take care of their gold and
-jewels, since it would appear that
-thieves found their way even to
-the stage.—Aristoph. Acharn.
-258.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1038'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1038'>1038</a>. Poll. iv. 118.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1039'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1039'>1039</a>. Dion. Chrysost. i. 231. Scalig.
-Poet. i. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1040'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1040'>1040</a>. Poll. iv. 119, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1041'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1041'>1041</a>. Scalig. Poet. i. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1042'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1042'>1042</a>. When actors displeased the
-audience they were sometimes
-compelled to take off their masks
-and face those who hissed them,
-which was regarded as a serious
-punishment. Duport. ad Theoph.
-Char. p. 308. We ought, perhaps,
-to understand Lucian <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>cum grano</i></span>,
-when he informs us that actors
-who performed their parts ill
-were scourged. Piscator, § 33.
-On the derivation of the word
-<em>persona</em>, Aul. Gell. v. 7. Cf.
-Aristoph. Poet. c. 5. Scalig. Poet.
-i. 13, on the derivation of πρόσωπον.
-Etym. Mag. 691. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1043'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1043'>1043</a>. Vid. Cassiod. iv. 51. Plin.
-xlvii. 10. Solin. cxxxvii. Lucian.
-de Saltat. § 27. De Gymnast.
-§ 23. A tragic poet,
-Hieronymos, exposed himself to
-ridicule by introducing into one
-of his pieces a mask of frightful
-aspect. Aristoph. Acharn. 390.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1044'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1044'>1044</a>. Cf. Suid. v. φλοιός. t. ii. p.
-1073. Diog. Laert. iv. p. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1045'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1045'>1045</a>. Plin. xxxvii. 56.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1046'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1046'>1046</a>. See Burney’s Hist. of Music,
-i. 153. sqq. Scalig. Poet. i. 21.
-Antiq. of Athens, &amp;c., Supplementary
-to Stuart, by Cockerell,
-Kinnaird, Donaldson, &amp;c. p. 39.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1047'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1047'>1047</a>. Vitruv. v. 6. Antiq. of Ath.
-by Cockerell, Donaldson, &amp;c. p.
-39. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Tectum porticus quod est
-in summa gradatione, respondet
-Sienæ altitudinem, ut vox crescens
-æqualiter ad summas gradationes
-et tectum perveniat.</span>
-Buleng. de Theat. c. 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1048'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1048'>1048</a>. Marinus’s edition of Vitruv.
-t. iv. tab. 81.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1049'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1049'>1049</a>. Empty pots were built into
-the walls of certain public edifices
-to augment the sound of the
-voice. Aristot. Prob. xi. 8. i. 1. v.
-5. The orchestra was sometimes
-strewed with chaff, which was
-found to deaden the voice. 25.
-Plin. ii. 51.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1050'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1050'>1050</a>. Scalig. Poet. i. 14. Poll. iv.
-143.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1051'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1051'>1051</a>. Suid. in θέσπις, p. 1315. d.
-Poll. x. 167.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1052'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1052'>1052</a>. Virg. Georg. ii. 387.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1053'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1053'>1053</a>. Vid. Horat. de Art. Poet.
-278. Athen. xiv. 77. Suid. v.
-χοιρίλλος, t. ii. p. 1160. f. Etym.
-Mag. 376. 47. Poll. iv. 133,
-sqq. Schol. Soph. Œdip. Tyr.
-80.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1054'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1054'>1054</a>. Meare’s Voyage, p. 254.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1055'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1055'>1055</a>. On the Roman Stage the
-actors appeared in hats up to the
-age of Livius Andronicus. Roscius
-Gallus was the first who put
-on a mask, which he did on account
-of his squinting. Ficorini,
-Masch. Scen. p. 15. On the origin
-of the Mask see Paccichelli
-De Larvis, Capillamentis, et Chirothecis.
-Neap. 1693.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1056'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1056'>1056</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 29.
-Scalig. Poet. i. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1057'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1057'>1057</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 545.
-Nub. 29.—Demosth. De Coron.
-§ 37. Ulp. in. § 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1058'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1058'>1058</a>. Scalig. Poet. i. 13.—Poll. iv.
-133, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1059'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1059'>1059</a>. Cf. Thucyd. i. 6, et Schol.
-Ælian. Var. Hist. iv. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1060'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1060'>1060</a>. See a beautiful head of Aphrodite
-with a pole of curls. (ὄγκος)
-Mus. Chiaramont. tav. 27. Cf. a
-tragic female mask, with the hair
-bound by a fillet, in the Cabinet
-d’ Orleans, pl. 52.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1061'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1061'>1061</a>. It may be remarked that persons
-ridiculed upon the stage
-were introduced with masks exactly
-resembling their countenances.
-They seized, however,
-upon the ludicrous features, which
-any one happened to possess, as
-the eyebrows of Chærephon, and
-the baldness of Socrates. Sch.
-Aristoph. Nub. 147, 224. This
-applies to living characters. The
-dead were protected from ridicule
-by the laws. Sch. Pac. 631. The
-Comic mask was said to have been
-invented by Mason. Athen. xiv.
-77. The Comte de Caylus, however,
-attributes the invention of
-masks to the Etruscans. Recueil
-d’ Antiq. i. 147, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1062'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1062'>1062</a>. Cic. de Orat. ii. 46. See in
-Agostini Gemme Antiche, pl. 17,
-a representation of one of these
-masks. For examples of hideous
-masks see Mus. Florent. t. i. pp.
-45–51.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1063'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1063'>1063</a>. Poll. iv. 141. Dubos, Reflex.
-Crit. sur la Poes. et sur la Peint.
-i. 603.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1064'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1064'>1064</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 545.
-Acharn. 336. Cf. Dem. cont.
-Mid. § 4, et annot. Plut. Vit.
-x. Rhet. Lycurg.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1065'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1065'>1065</a>. Winkelmann, however, supposes
-they had a kind of playbill,
-Monum. Ined. iii. p. 86,
-founding his opinion upon a misinterpretation
-of Pollux, iv. 131.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1066'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1066'>1066</a>. Aristoph. Acharn. 10, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1067'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1067'>1067</a>. Sch. Æschin. Tim. p. 17.
-Orator. Att. t. xiii. p. 377. Vales.
-ad Harpoc. 99, 296. Suid.
-v. καθάρσιον, t. i. p. 1346. a. Poll.
-viii. 104.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>BOOK V. <br /> RURAL LIFE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c002'>CHAPTER I. <br /> THE VILLA AND THE FARMYARD.</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>If we now, for a moment, quit the city and its
-amusements, and observe the tone and character
-of Hellenic rural life, we shall find, perhaps, that
-there existed in antiquity a still greater contrast
-between town and country than in modern times.
-From the poetry of Athens, rife with sylvan imagery,
-we, no less than from its history, discover
-how deeply they loved the sunshine and calm and
-quiet of their fields. The rustic population confined
-to the city during the Peleponnesian war almost
-perished of nostalgia within sight of their village
-homes. Half the metaphors in their language are of
-country growth. The bee murmurs, the partridge
-whirrs, the lark, the nightingale, the thrush, pour
-their music through the channels of verse and
-prose. The odours of ripe fruit, of new wine “purple
-and gushing,” the fresh invigorating morning
-breeze from harvest fields, from clover meadows
-dotted with kine, the scent of milk-pails, of honey,
-and the honey-comb, still breathe sweetly over the
-Attic page, and prove how smitten with home delights
-the Athenian people were,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“With plesaunce of the breathing fields yfed.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>This their manly and healthful taste, however,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>constantly, in time of war, exposed them to the
-malice of their enemies. For the valleys and
-grassy uplands of Attica, being thickly covered
-with villas and farmhouses,<a id='r1068' /><a href='#f1068' class='c012'><sup>[1068]</sup></a> the first act of an invading
-army was to lay all those beautiful homesteads
-in ashes. Thus the Persians, in their two
-invasions, destroyed the whole with fire and sword.
-But the gentlemen, immediately on their return,
-rebuilt their dwellings<a id='r1069' /><a href='#f1069' class='c012'><sup>[1069]</sup></a> with greater taste and magnificence,
-so that, before the breaking out of the Peloponnesian
-war, it is probable that, as a scene of
-unambitious affluence, taste, high cultivation, and
-rustic contentment, nothing was ever beheld to
-compare with Attica. Here and there, throughout
-the land, perched on rocks, or shaded by trees,
-were small rustic chapels dedicated to the nymphs,
-or rural gods.<a id='r1070' /><a href='#f1070' class='c012'><sup>[1070]</sup></a> On the mountains, and in solitary
-glens, and wherever springs gushed from the cliffs,
-caverns were scooped out by the hands of the leisurely
-shepherds,<a id='r1071' /><a href='#f1071' class='c012'><sup>[1071]</sup></a> and consecrated by association
-with mythology. Fountains, also, and water-courses,
-altars, statues,<a id='r1072' /><a href='#f1072' class='c012'><sup>[1072]</sup></a> and sacred groves,<a id='r1073' /><a href='#f1073' class='c012'><sup>[1073]</sup></a> protected at once
-by religion and the laws,<a id='r1074' /><a href='#f1074' class='c012'><sup>[1074]</sup></a> imprinted on the landscape
-features of poetry and elegance.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Another cause which, in the eyes of the Athenians,
-imparted sanctity to their lands, was the practice
-of burying in them their dead. The spot selected
-for this sacred purpose seems usually to have
-been the orchard, where, amid fig-trees and trailing
-vines,<a id='r1075' /><a href='#f1075' class='c012'><sup>[1075]</sup></a> often near the boundaries of the estate, might
-be seen the ancient and venerable monuments of
-the dead. All Attica, therefore, in their eyes, appeared
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>holy as a sepulchre; and, as every one guarded
-his own ancestral ashes, to sell a farm cost a man’s
-feelings more than in countries where people inter
-those they love in public cemeteries; and this circumstance
-with many would operate like a law of
-entail.<a id='r1076' /><a href='#f1076' class='c012'><sup>[1076]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But it is easy thus to present to the imagination
-a general picture of the country. What we want
-is to thrust aside the impediments, to dissipate the
-obscurity of two thousand years, and lift the latch
-of a Greek farmhouse, such as it existed in the days
-of Pericles.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the first place it was common in Attica to
-erect country-houses in the midst of a grove of silver
-firs,<a id='r1077' /><a href='#f1077' class='c012'><sup>[1077]</sup></a> which in winter protect from cold, and in
-summer attract the breezes that imitate in their
-branches the sound of trickling runnels, or the distant
-murmur of the sea. Towards the centre of the
-grove, with a spacious court in front and a garden
-behind, stood the house,<a id='r1078' /><a href='#f1078' class='c012'><sup>[1078]</sup></a> sometimes with flat, sometimes
-with pointed roof, ornamented with a picturesque
-porch, and surrounded with verandahs or
-colonnades. Occasionally opulent persons had on the
-south front of their houses large citron trees,<a id='r1079' /><a href='#f1079' class='c012'><sup>[1079]</sup></a> growing
-in pots, on either side the door, where they
-were well watered and carefully covered during winter.<a id='r1080' /><a href='#f1080' class='c012'><sup>[1080]</sup></a>
-In the plainer class of dwellings, numerous
-outhouses, as stables, sheds for cattle,<a id='r1081' /><a href='#f1081' class='c012'><sup>[1081]</sup></a> henroosts,
-pigstyes, &amp;c., extended round the court, while the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>back-front, generally in the East the principal, opened
-upon the garden or orchard.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Much pains was usually taken in selecting the site
-of a farmhouse,<a id='r1082' /><a href='#f1082' class='c012'><sup>[1082]</sup></a> though opinions of course varied
-according to the peculiar range of experience on
-which they were based. In general such positions
-were considered most favourable as neighboured the
-sea, or occupied the summits or the slopes of mountains,<a id='r1083' /><a href='#f1083' class='c012'><sup>[1083]</sup></a>
-more especially if looking towards the north.<a id='r1084' /><a href='#f1084' class='c012'><sup>[1084]</sup></a>
-The vicinity of swamps and marshes, and as much
-as possible of rivers, was avoided, together with
-coombs, or hollow valleys, and declivities facing the
-south or the setting sun. If necessitated by the
-nature of the ground to build near the banks of a
-stream, the front of the dwelling was carefully turned
-away from it, inasmuch as its waters communicated
-an additional rigour to the winds in winter, and in
-summer filled the atmosphere with unwholesome
-vapours. The favourite exposure was towards the
-east whence the most salubrious breezes were supposed
-to blow, while the cheerful beams of the sun,
-as soon as they streamed above the horizon, dissipated
-the dank fogs and murkiness of the air. Notwithstanding
-the warmth of the climate, moreover,
-they loved such situations as were all day long illuminated
-by the sun, whilst every care was taken
-to fence out the sirocco, a moist and pestilential
-wind, blowing across the Mediterranean from the
-deserts of Africa. In Italy, nevertheless, the farmer
-often selected for the site of his mansion the
-southern roots of mountains, further defended from
-Alpine blasts by a sweep of lofty woods.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>According to the fashion prevailing in antiquity,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>farmhouses were built high, large, and roomy, though
-Cato<a id='r1085' /><a href='#f1085' class='c012'><sup>[1085]</sup></a> shrewdly advises, that their magnitude should
-bear some relation to that of the domain, lest the
-villa should have to seek for the farm, or the farm
-for the villa.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Much, however, would depend upon the taste of
-the individual; but in a plain farmhouse more attention
-appears to have been paid to substantial comfort,
-and something like rough John-Bullism, than to
-that cold finical elegance which certain persons are
-fond of associating with whatever is classical. An
-Attic farmer of the true old republican school was
-anything but a fine gentleman. He scorned none
-of the occupations or productions by which he lived.
-On entering his dwelling you found no small difficulty
-in steering between bags of corn,<a id='r1086' /><a href='#f1086' class='c012'><sup>[1086]</sup></a> piles of
-cheeses, hurdles of dried figs<a id='r1087' /><a href='#f1087' class='c012'><sup>[1087]</sup></a> or raisins, while the
-racks groaned with hams<a id='r1088' /><a href='#f1088' class='c012'><sup>[1088]</sup></a> and bacon flitches. If
-they resembled their descendants,<a id='r1089' /><a href='#f1089' class='c012'><sup>[1089]</sup></a> too, even their
-bedchambers were invaded by some species of provisions,
-for there in the present day you often behold
-long strings of melons suspended like festoons
-from the rafters. In one corner of the ground-floor
-stood a corbel filled with olive-dregs, recently pressed,
-in another a wool-sack or a pile of dressed skins.<a id='r1090' /><a href='#f1090' class='c012'><sup>[1090]</sup></a>
-Yonder in the room looking into the garden, with
-the honey-suckle twining about the open lattice,
-were madam’s loom and spinning-wheel, and carding
-apparatus, and work-baskets; and there with the
-lark<a id='r1091' /><a href='#f1091' class='c012'><sup>[1091]</sup></a> might you see her, serene and happy, suckling
-her young democrat, and rocking the cradle of a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>second with her foot, thriftily giving directions the
-while to Thratta, Xanthia or “the neat-handed”
-Phillis.<a id='r1092' /><a href='#f1092' class='c012'><sup>[1092]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The kitchen must sometimes have been in fine
-disorder; geese and ducks waddling across the floor,
-picking up the spilled grain, or snatching away the
-piece of bread and honey which my young master
-had just put down on the stool to play at a game
-of romps with Thratta. Up in the dusky corner
-there, behind a huge armchair or settle, you may
-discern a very suspicious looking enclosure, from
-which, at intervals, issues a suppressed grunt; it
-is the pigsty.<a id='r1093' /><a href='#f1093' class='c012'><sup>[1093]</sup></a> But be not offended; the practice
-is classical; and pigs, in my apprehension, are as
-pleasant company as geese and many other animals.
-Now, that geese were fed even about palaces, we
-have the testimony of Homer, whose Penelope, <a id='corr274.18'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='the'>the</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_274.18'><ins class='correction' title='the'>the</ins></a></span>
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>beau idéal</i></span> of a good housewife, says—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Full twenty geese have we at home, that feed</div>
- <div class='line'>On wheat in water steeped.”<a id='r1094' /><a href='#f1094' class='c012'><sup>[1094]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>But the whole economy of geese-feeding<a id='r1095' /><a href='#f1095' class='c012'><sup>[1095]</sup></a> has
-been transmitted to us; in the first place, the birds
-usually preferred were those most remarkable for
-their size and whiteness.<a id='r1096' /><a href='#f1096' class='c012'><sup>[1096]</sup></a> The ancients esteemed
-the variegated, or spotted, as of inferior value. The
-same rule applied to fowls. The chenoboscion,<a id='r1097' /><a href='#f1097' class='c012'><sup>[1097]</sup></a> or
-enclosure in which the geese were kept, was commonly
-situated near ponds or freshes,<a id='r1098' /><a href='#f1098' class='c012'><sup>[1098]</sup></a> abounding
-with rich grass and aquatic plants. Geese, it was
-observed, are not nice in the article of food, but
-devour eagerly nearly all kinds of plants, though
-the chick-pea, and the couch-grass, the laurel and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>the laurel-rose,<a id='r1099' /><a href='#f1099' class='c012'><sup>[1099]</sup></a> were by the ancients supposed to
-be hurtful to them. Of their eggs some were
-hatched by hens, but such as were designed to be
-sitten on by the goose herself, (who, during the
-period of incubation<a id='r1100' /><a href='#f1100' class='c012'><sup>[1100]</sup></a> was fed on barley steeped
-in water,) were marked by writing or otherwise,
-to distinguish them from the eggs of their neighbours,
-which it was thought she would not be at
-the pains to hatch. For the first ten days after
-they had broken the shell the young goslings were
-kept within-doors, where they were fed on wheat
-steeped in water, <em>polenta</em> a preparation of barley-meal
-dried at the fire, and chopped cresses. This
-period over, they were driven out to feed and afterwards
-to water; they who tended them taking great
-care that they should not be stung by nettles, or
-pricked by thorns, or swallow the hair<a id='r1101' /><a href='#f1101' class='c012'><sup>[1101]</sup></a> of pigs or
-kids, which they imagined to be fatal to them.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When full-grown geese were intended to be fattened,
-the custom was, to confine them in dark and
-extremely warm cells.<a id='r1102' /><a href='#f1102' class='c012'><sup>[1102]</sup></a> Their food was scientifically
-varied and regulated, proceeding from less to more
-nutritious, until they were judged fit for the table.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>At first their diet consisted of a preparation composed
-of two parts <em>polenta</em>, and four parts bran boiled
-in water. Of this they were permitted to eat as
-much as they pleased three times a day, and once
-again at midnight, while water was furnished them
-in abundance. When they had continued on this
-regimen for some time, they were indulged with a
-more luxurious table,—nothing less than the most
-exquisite dried figs, which, being chopped small, and
-dissolved in water, were served up as a sort of jelly
-for twenty days, after which the pampered animal
-itself was ready for the spit.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Occasionally that delicate and humane device, for
-the practice of which Germany has, in modern times,
-obtained so enviable a celebrity, of enlarging preternaturally
-the dimensions of the liver, was resorted
-to by the ancients,<a id='r1103' /><a href='#f1103' class='c012'><sup>[1103]</sup></a> whose mode of proceeding was
-as follows: during five-and-twenty days, being cooped
-up as before in a place of high temperature, the
-geese were fed with wheat and barley steeped in
-water, the former of which fattened, while the latter
-rendered their flesh delicately white. For the next
-five days certain cakes or balls, denominated collyria,<a id='r1104' /><a href='#f1104' class='c012'><sup>[1104]</sup></a>
-the composition of which is not exactly known,
-were given them at the rate of seven per day, after
-which the number was gradually augmented to fifteen,
-which constituted their whole allowance for other
-twenty days. To this succeeded the most extraordinary
-dish of all, consisting of bolusses of leavened
-dough, steeped in a warm decoction of mallows, by
-which they were puffed up for four days. Their
-drink, meanwhile, was still more delicious than their
-food, being nothing less than hydromel,<a id='r1105' /><a href='#f1105' class='c012'><sup>[1105]</sup></a> or water
-mingled with honey. During the last six days dried
-figs, chopped fine, were added to their leaven, and
-the process being thus brought to a conclusion, the
-gourmands for whom they were intended, feasted on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>the tenderest geese and the largest livers in the
-world. It should be added, however, that before
-being cooked the liver was thrown into a basin of
-warm water, which the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>artistes</i></span> several times changed.
-Geese, adds the ingenious gastronomer to whom we
-are indebted for these details, are, both for flesh and
-liver, much inferior to ganders. The Greeks did
-not, however, like the Romans and the moderns,
-select young geese for this species of culinary apotheosis,
-but birds of a mature age and of the largest
-size, from two to four years old, which only proves
-the superior strength and keenness of their teeth.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Ducks were kept in ponds, carefully enclosed, and,
-perhaps, covered over that they might not fly away.
-In the centre were certain green islets,<a id='r1106' /><a href='#f1106' class='c012'><sup>[1106]</sup></a> planted with
-couch-grass, which the ancients considered as beneficial
-to ducks as it was hurtful to geese. Their usual
-food, which was cast in the water encircling the
-islets, consisted of wheat, millet, barley, sometimes
-mixed with grape-stones and grape-skins. Occasionally
-they were indulged with locusts, prawns, shrimps,<a id='r1107' /><a href='#f1107' class='c012'><sup>[1107]</sup></a>
-and whatever else aquatic birds habitually feed
-on. Persons desirous of possessing tame ducks were
-accustomed to beat about the lakes and marshes<a id='r1108' /><a href='#f1108' class='c012'><sup>[1108]</sup></a>
-for the nest of the wild bird. Giving the eggs
-to a hen to sit on, they obtained a brood of ducklings
-perfectly domesticated.<a id='r1109' /><a href='#f1109' class='c012'><sup>[1109]</sup></a> Wild ducks were
-sometimes caught by pouring red wine, or the lees
-of wine, into the springs whither they came to
-drink.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>With respect to barn-door fowl, originally introduced
-from India and Media into Greece, the
-greatest care appears to have been taken to vary
-and improve the breeds. For this purpose cocks
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>and hens were imported<a id='r1110' /><a href='#f1110' class='c012'><sup>[1110]</sup></a> from the shores of the
-Adriatic, from Italy, Sicily, Numidia, and Egypt,
-while those of Attica were occasionally exported
-to other countries. There appears to have been
-a prejudice against keeping more than fifty fowls<a id='r1111' /><a href='#f1111' class='c012'><sup>[1111]</sup></a>
-about one farmyard, some traces of which may
-also be discovered in the practice of the Arabs.<a id='r1112' /><a href='#f1112' class='c012'><sup>[1112]</sup></a>
-The fowl-house furnished with roosts,<a id='r1113' /><a href='#f1113' class='c012'><sup>[1113]</sup></a> as with us,
-was so contrived and situated as to receive from
-the kitchen a tolerable supply of smoke, which was
-supposed to be agreeable to these Median strangers.
-The food of fowls<a id='r1114' /><a href='#f1114' class='c012'><sup>[1114]</sup></a> being much the same all the
-world over, it is unnecessary to observe more than
-that the green leaves of the Cytisus were supposed
-to render them prolific. To preserve them from
-vermin, the juice of rue, by way I suppose of
-charm, was sprinkled over their feathers.<a id='r1115' /><a href='#f1115' class='c012'><sup>[1115]</sup></a> The
-proportion of male birds was one to six. Hens
-were usually put to sit about the vernal equinox,
-during the first quarter of the moon, in nests carefully
-constructed of boards, and strewed with fresh
-clean straw, into which, as a sort of talisman against
-thunder, they threw an iron nail, heads of garlic, and
-sprigs of laurel.<a id='r1116' /><a href='#f1116' class='c012'><sup>[1116]</sup></a> During the period of incubation,
-the eggs which had previously been kept in bran
-were turned every day.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The other inhabitants of the farmyard were peacocks,<a id='r1117' /><a href='#f1117' class='c012'><sup>[1117]</sup></a>
-commonly confined in beautiful artificial islands
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>provided with elegant sheds; pheasants<a id='r1118' /><a href='#f1118' class='c012'><sup>[1118]</sup></a> from the
-shores of the Black Sea;<a id='r1119' /><a href='#f1119' class='c012'><sup>[1119]</sup></a> guinea-fowls from Numidia,<a id='r1120' /><a href='#f1120' class='c012'><sup>[1120]</sup></a>
-though according to other authors they were
-originally found in Ætolia;<a id='r1121' /><a href='#f1121' class='c012'><sup>[1121]</sup></a> partridges, quails, and
-the attagas. Thrushes were bred in warm rooms
-with slight perches projecting from the walls, and
-laurel boughs or other evergreens fixed in the corners.<a id='r1122' /><a href='#f1122' class='c012'><sup>[1122]</sup></a>
-Over the clean floor was strewed their food,
-dried figs, which had been steeped in water, and
-mixed with flour or barley meal, together with the
-berries of the myrtle; the lentiscus, the ivy, the
-laurel, and the olive. They were fattened with millet,
-panic, and pure water.<a id='r1123' /><a href='#f1123' class='c012'><sup>[1123]</sup></a> Other still smaller birds
-were reared, and fattened in like manner. Every
-farmhouse had, moreover, its columbary and dove-cotes,<a id='r1124' /><a href='#f1124' class='c012'><sup>[1124]</sup></a>
-sometimes so large as to contain five thousand
-birds. They usually consisted of spacious buildings,<a id='r1125' /><a href='#f1125' class='c012'><sup>[1125]</sup></a>
-roofed over and furnished with windows closed
-by lattice work, made so close that neither a lizard
-nor a mouse could creep through them. In the
-floor were channels and basins of water, in which
-these delicate birds<a id='r1126' /><a href='#f1126' class='c012'><sup>[1126]</sup></a> might wash and plume themselves,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>and adjoining was a chamber into which such
-as were required for sale, or the table, were enticed.
-Even jackdaws were kept about farmyards,
-and like common fowls had perches set up for
-them.<a id='r1127' /><a href='#f1127' class='c012'><sup>[1127]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Much pains was taken by the ancients to improve
-the breed of animals.<a id='r1128' /><a href='#f1128' class='c012'><sup>[1128]</sup></a> Polycrates, tyrant of
-Samos, introduced into that island the Molossian
-and Spartan dogs, goats from Scyros and Naxos,
-and sheep from Attica and Miletos.<a id='r1129' /><a href='#f1129' class='c012'><sup>[1129]</sup></a> The fineness
-and beauty of Merinos were also known to the ancients,
-who purchased from Spain rams for breeding
-at a talent each, that is, about two hundred
-and forty-one pounds sterling.<a id='r1130' /><a href='#f1130' class='c012'><sup>[1130]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Horses were at all times few, and, consequently,
-dear in Greece; they were, therefore, seldom employed
-in agriculture, but bred and kept chiefly for
-the army, for religious pomps and processions, and
-for the chariot races at Olympia. Originally, no
-doubt, the horse was introduced from Asia, and, up
-to a very late period, chargers of great beauty and
-spirit, continued to be imported from the shores of
-the Black Sea.<a id='r1131' /><a href='#f1131' class='c012'><sup>[1131]</sup></a> Princes, in the Homeric age, appear
-to have obtained celebrity for the beauty of
-their steeds, as Laomedon, Tros, and Rhesos; and
-it was customary for them to possess studs of brood
-mares in the rich pasture lands on the sea-shore.
-That of Priam, for example, lay at Abydos, on the
-Hellespont.<a id='r1132' /><a href='#f1132' class='c012'><sup>[1132]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The high estimation in which horses<a id='r1133' /><a href='#f1133' class='c012'><sup>[1133]</sup></a> were held
-in remote antiquity, may be gathered from the numerous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>fables invented respecting them,—as that of
-the centaurs in Thessaly, of the winged courser of
-Bellerophontes, and the Muses, and of the marvellous
-steeds presented by Poseidon to Peleus on his
-marriage with Thetis. They were reckoned, likewise,
-among the most precious victims offered in
-sacrifice to the gods. Thus we find the Trojans
-plunging live horses into the whirlpool of the Scamander<a id='r1134' /><a href='#f1134' class='c012'><sup>[1134]</sup></a>
-to deprecate the anger of that divinity.
-The Romans, likewise, in later times, sacrificed horses
-to the ocean;<a id='r1135' /><a href='#f1135' class='c012'><sup>[1135]</sup></a> and, in many parts of Asia, it appears
-to have been customary in nearly all ages, to
-offer up, as anciently in Laconia,<a id='r1136' /><a href='#f1136' class='c012'><sup>[1136]</sup></a> this magnificent
-animal on the altars of the sun.<a id='r1137' /><a href='#f1137' class='c012'><sup>[1137]</sup></a> Thus, among the
-Armenians, whose breed, though smaller than that
-of the Persians, was far more spirited, this practice
-prevailed as it still does in Northern India, and
-Xenophon,<a id='r1138' /><a href='#f1138' class='c012'><sup>[1138]</sup></a> a religious man, observes in the Anabasis,
-that he gave his steed, worn down with the
-fatigues of the march, to be fed and offered up by
-the Komarch, with whom he had been for some
-days a guest. From Homer’s account of Pandarus
-we may infer, that the possessors of fine horses
-often submitted to great personal inconvenience
-rather than hazard the well-being of their favourites.
-For this wealthy prince,<a id='r1139' /><a href='#f1139' class='c012'><sup>[1139]</sup></a> who possessed eleven carriages
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>and twenty-two steeds, came on foot to the
-assistance of Priam, lest they should not find a plentiful
-supply of provender at Troy.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Several countries were famous<a id='r1140' /><a href='#f1140' class='c012'><sup>[1140]</sup></a> for their breed of
-horses, as Cyrene, Egypt, Syria, Phrygia, and the
-Phasis.<a id='r1141' /><a href='#f1141' class='c012'><sup>[1141]</sup></a> Thessaly, too, particularly the neighbourhood
-of Triccæ, abounded in barbs, as did likewise
-Bœotia. But one of the most remarkable races
-was that produced in Nisæon,<a id='r1142' /><a href='#f1142' class='c012'><sup>[1142]</sup></a> a district of Media,
-which seems to have been white, or of a bright
-cream colour,<a id='r1143' /><a href='#f1143' class='c012'><sup>[1143]</sup></a> and of extraordinary size and swiftness.
-On one of these Masistios<a id='r1144' /><a href='#f1144' class='c012'><sup>[1144]</sup></a> was mounted during
-the expedition into Greece. Apollo, in an oracle
-is said to have spoken of the beauty of mares,
-alluding, perhaps, to those of Elis, which were remarkable
-for their lightness and elegance of form;
-and Aristotle celebrates a particular mare of Pharsatis,
-called Dicæa, which was famous for bringing
-colts resembling their sires.<a id='r1145' /><a href='#f1145' class='c012'><sup>[1145]</sup></a> Among the Homeric
-chiefs, Achilles and Eumelos boasted the noblest
-coursers, as we learn from a picturesque and striking
-passage in the Catalogue:<a id='r1146' /><a href='#f1146' class='c012'><sup>[1146]</sup></a> “And now, O Muse,
-declare, which of the leaders and their horses were
-most illustrious. Excepting those of Achilles, the
-finest steeds before Troy were those of Eumelos
-from Pheræ, swift as birds, alike in mane, in
-age, and so equal in size, that a rule would stand
-level on their backs. They were both bred by
-Apollo in Pieria, both mares, and they bore with
-them the dread of battle. Noblest of all, however,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>were the coursers of Achilles. But he, in
-his lunar-prowed, sea-passing ships remains incensed
-against Atreides, the shepherd of his
-people; his myrmidons amuse themselves on the
-sea-shore with pitching the quoit, launching the
-javelin, and drawing the bow; their horses, standing
-beside the chariots, feed upon lotus, trefoil and
-marsh parsley; and the chariots themselves, well
-covered with hangings, are drawn up in the tents
-of the chiefs, while the soldiers, sighing for the
-leading of their impetuous general, stroll carelessly
-through the camp without joining in the war.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The food of the Homeric horses,<a id='r1147' /><a href='#f1147' class='c012'><sup>[1147]</sup></a> was little inferior
-to that of their masters, since, besides the
-natural delicacies of the meadows, they were indulged
-with sifted barley and the finest wheat.<a id='r1148' /><a href='#f1148' class='c012'><sup>[1148]</sup></a>
-The halter with which, while feeding, they were tied
-to the manger seems usually to have been of leather.
-Aristotle,<a id='r1149' /><a href='#f1149' class='c012'><sup>[1149]</sup></a> remarks, that horses are fattened less by
-their food than by what they drink, and that, like
-the camel,<a id='r1150' /><a href='#f1150' class='c012'><sup>[1150]</sup></a> they delight in muddy water, on which
-account they usually trouble the stream before
-they taste it.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Greek conception of equine beauty<a id='r1151' /><a href='#f1151' class='c012'><sup>[1151]</sup></a> differed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>but little from our own, since they chiefly loved
-horses of those colours which are still the objects of
-admiration: as snow-white, with black eyes like those
-of Rhesos, which Plato thought the most beautiful;
-cream-coloured, light bay, chestnut, and smoky grey.
-They judged of the breeding of a horse by the shortness
-of its coat and the dusky prominence of its
-veins. As a fine large mane greatly augments the
-magnificent appearance of this animal, they were
-careful after washing to comb and oil it<a id='r1152' /><a href='#f1152' class='c012'><sup>[1152]</sup></a> while they
-gathered up the forelock in a band of gilded leather.<a id='r1153' /><a href='#f1153' class='c012'><sup>[1153]</sup></a>
-The floors of their stables were commonly pitched
-with round pebbles bound tight together by curbs
-of iron.<a id='r1154' /><a href='#f1154' class='c012'><sup>[1154]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Horses were usually broken<a id='r1155' /><a href='#f1155' class='c012'><sup>[1155]</sup></a> by professed grooms,
-who entered into a written agreement with the
-owners implicitly to follow their directions.<a id='r1156' /><a href='#f1156' class='c012'><sup>[1156]</sup></a> The
-process was sufficiently simple. They began with
-the year-and-a-half colts,<a id='r1157' /><a href='#f1157' class='c012'><sup>[1157]</sup></a> on which they put a halter
-when feeding, while a bridle was hung up close to
-the manger, that they might be accustomed to the
-touch of it, and not take fright at the jingling of
-the bit.<a id='r1158' /><a href='#f1158' class='c012'><sup>[1158]</sup></a> The next step was to lead them into the
-midst of noisy and tumultuous crowds in order to
-discover whether or not they were bold enough to
-be employed in war.<a id='r1159' /><a href='#f1159' class='c012'><sup>[1159]</sup></a> The operation was not completely
-finished till they were three years old. When,
-on the course or elsewhere, horses had been well
-sweated,<a id='r1160' /><a href='#f1160' class='c012'><sup>[1160]</sup></a> they were led into a place set apart for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>the purpose, and, in order to dry themselves, made
-to roll in the sand. It was customary for owners
-to mark their horses with the Koppa,<a id='r1161' /><a href='#f1161' class='c012'><sup>[1161]</sup></a> or other letter
-of the alphabet, whence they were sometimes
-called Koppatias, Samphoras, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The mule and the ass were much employed in
-rural labours, the former both at the cart and the
-plough, the latter in drawing small tumbrils, and in
-bearing wood<a id='r1162' /><a href='#f1162' class='c012'><sup>[1162]</sup></a> or other produce of the farm to the
-city.<a id='r1163' /><a href='#f1163' class='c012'><sup>[1163]</sup></a> The wild ass<a id='r1164' /><a href='#f1164' class='c012'><sup>[1164]</sup></a> was sometimes resorted to
-for improving the breed of mules, which, in the
-Homeric age, were found in a state of nature among
-the mountains of Paphlagonia.<a id='r1165' /><a href='#f1165' class='c012'><sup>[1165]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But their cares extended even to swine, which, if
-King Ptolemy may be credited, were sometimes
-distinguished in Greece for their great size and
-beauty. He, in fact, observes in his Memoirs, that
-in the city of Assos he saw a milk-white hog two
-cubits and a half in length, and of equal height;
-and adds, that King Eumenes had given four thousand
-drachmæ, or nearly two hundred pounds sterling,
-for a boar of this enormous size, to improve the
-breed of pigs in his country.<a id='r1166' /><a href='#f1166' class='c012'><sup>[1166]</sup></a> So that we perceive
-those great generals, whom posterity usually contemplates
-only in the cabinet or in the battle-field, were,
-at the same time, in their domestic policy, the rivals
-of the Earls Spencer and Leicester. Superstition,
-among the Cretans, prevented the improvement of
-bacon; for as a sow was said to have suckled the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>infant Jupiter, and defended his helpless infancy, they,
-in gratitude,<a id='r1167' /><a href='#f1167' class='c012'><sup>[1167]</sup></a> abstained from hog’s flesh.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In all farms the care of cattle necessarily formed
-a principal employment. The oxen<a id='r1168' /><a href='#f1168' class='c012'><sup>[1168]</sup></a> were used in
-ploughing, treading out the corn, drawing manure to
-the fields, and bringing home the produce of the
-harvest. To prevent their being overcome by fatigue
-while engaged in their labours, the husbandmen of
-Greece had recourse to certain expedients, one of
-which was, to smear their hoofs with a composition
-of oil and terebinth, or wax, or warm pitch:<a id='r1169' /><a href='#f1169' class='c012'><sup>[1169]</sup></a> while,
-to protect them from flies, their coats were anointed
-with their own saliva, or with a decoction of bruised
-laurel berries and oil.<a id='r1170' /><a href='#f1170' class='c012'><sup>[1170]</sup></a> Their milch cows, in the
-selection of which much judgment was displayed,<a id='r1171' /><a href='#f1171' class='c012'><sup>[1171]</sup></a>
-were commonly fed on cytisus and clover; and, still
-further to increase their milk, bunches of the herb
-dittany were sometimes tied about their flanks. The
-usual milking-times<a id='r1172' /><a href='#f1172' class='c012'><sup>[1172]</sup></a> were, in the morning immediately
-after the breaking-up of the dawn, and in
-the evening about the close of twilight; though,
-occasionally, both cows, sheep, and goats were milked
-several times during the day. In weaning calves
-they made use of a species of muzzle,<a id='r1173' /><a href='#f1173' class='c012'><sup>[1173]</sup></a> as the Arabs
-do in the case of young camels. Their pails, like
-our own, were of wood,<a id='r1174' /><a href='#f1174' class='c012'><sup>[1174]</sup></a> but somewhat differently
-shaped, being narrow above, and spreading towards
-the bottom. When conveyed into the dairy the milk
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>was poured into pans,<a id='r1175' /><a href='#f1175' class='c012'><sup>[1175]</sup></a> on the form of which I have
-hitherto found no information.<a id='r1176' /><a href='#f1176' class='c012'><sup>[1176]</sup></a> That they skimmed
-their milk is evident (whatever they may have done
-with the cream), from the mention of that thin
-pellicle which is found on it only when skimmed,
-whether scalded or not. “Here, drink this!” said
-Glycera to Menander, when he had returned one
-day in exceeding ill-humour from the theatre. “I
-don’t like the wrinkled skin,” replied the poet to
-the lady, whose beauty, it must be remembered,
-was at this time on the wane. “Blow it off,” replied
-she, immediately comprehending his meaning, “and
-take what is beneath.”<a id='r1177' /><a href='#f1177' class='c012'><sup>[1177]</sup></a> Milk, in those warm latitudes,
-grows sour more rapidly than with us; but
-the ancients observed that it would keep three days
-when it had been scalded, and stirred until cold with
-a reed or ferula.<a id='r1178' /><a href='#f1178' class='c012'><sup>[1178]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Greeks of classical times appear to have made
-no use of butter,<a id='r1179' /><a href='#f1179' class='c012'><sup>[1179]</sup></a> though so early as the age of Hippocrates
-they were well enough acquainted with its
-existence and properties.<a id='r1180' /><a href='#f1180' class='c012'><sup>[1180]</sup></a> Even in the present day
-butter is much less used in Greece than in most
-European countries, its place being supplied by fine
-olive oil. For cheese, however, they seem to have
-entertained a partiality, though it is probable that
-the best they could manufacture would have lost
-very considerably in comparison with good Stilton
-or Cheshire, not to mention Parmasan. It was a
-favourite food, however, among soldiers in Attica,
-who during war used to supply themselves both with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>cheese and meal.<a id='r1181' /><a href='#f1181' class='c012'><sup>[1181]</sup></a> Their cheese-lope or rennet in
-most cases resembled our own, consisting of the
-liquid substance found in the ruen of new-born
-animals, as calves, kids, or hares, which was considered
-superior to lamb’s rennet.<a id='r1182' /><a href='#f1182' class='c012'><sup>[1182]</sup></a> Occasionally they
-employed for the same purpose burnt salt or vinegar,
-fowl’s crop or pepper, the flowers of bastard
-saffron, or the threads which grow on the head of
-the artichoke. For these again, was sometimes substituted
-the juice of the fig-tree;<a id='r1183' /><a href='#f1183' class='c012'><sup>[1183]</sup></a> or a branch freshly
-cut<a id='r1184' /><a href='#f1184' class='c012'><sup>[1184]</sup></a> was used in stirring the milk while warming
-on the fire. This cheese would seem, for the most
-part, to have been eaten while fresh and soft,<a id='r1185' /><a href='#f1185' class='c012'><sup>[1185]</sup></a> like
-that of Neufchatel, though they were acquainted
-with various means of preserving it for a considerable
-space of time. Acidulated curds were kept
-soft by being wrapped in the leaves of the terebinth
-tree, or plunged in oil, or sprinkled with salt.
-When desirous of preserving their cheese for any
-length of time, they washed it in pure water, and,
-after drying it in the sun, laid it upon earthen jars
-with thyme and summer savory. Some other kinds
-were kept in a sort of pickle, composed of sweet
-vinegar or oxymel or sea-water, which was poured
-into the jars until it entirely penetrated and covered
-the whole mass. When they wished to communicate
-a peculiar whiteness to the cheese, they laid
-it up in brine. Dry cheese was rendered more
-solid and sharp-tasted by being placed within reach
-of the smoke. If from age it were hard or bitter,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>it was thrown into a preparation of barley-meal,
-then soaked in water, and what rose to the top
-was skimmed off.<a id='r1186' /><a href='#f1186' class='c012'><sup>[1186]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That the milk-women in Greece understood all the
-arts of their profession may be gathered from the
-instructions which have been left us on the best methods
-of detecting the presence of water in milk. If
-you dip a sharp rush into milk, says Berytios, and
-it run off easily, there is water in it. And again,
-if you pour a few drops upon your thumb-nail, the
-pure milk will maintain its position, while the adulterated
-will immediately glide away!<a id='r1187' /><a href='#f1187' class='c012'><sup>[1187]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Their mode of fattening cattle<a id='r1188' /><a href='#f1188' class='c012'><sup>[1188]</sup></a> was as follows:
-first they fed them on cabbage chopped small and
-steeped in vinegar, to which succeeded chaff and gurgions
-during five days. This diet was then exchanged
-for barley, of which for nearly a week they were
-allowed four cotylæ a-day, the quantity being then
-gradually augmented for six other days. As of necessity
-the hinds were stirring early, the cattle began
-even in winter to be fed at cock-crowing; a second
-quantity of food was given them about dawn, when
-they were watered, and their remaining allowance
-towards evening. In summer their first meal commenced
-at day-break, the second at mid-day, and
-the third about sunset. They were at this time of
-the year suffered to drink at noon and night of
-water rendered somewhat tepid; in winter it was
-considerably warmer.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>About Mossynos, in Thrace, cattle were sometimes
-fed upon fish, which was likewise given to horses,
-and even to sheep. Herodotus, who mentions a
-similar fact, calls food of this description χόρτος,
-“fodder,”<a id='r1189' /><a href='#f1189' class='c012'><sup>[1189]</sup></a> though hay or dried straw was, doubtless,
-its original meaning. The provender of cattle
-in the district about Ænia appears to have been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>so wholesome, that the herds which fed upon it
-were never afflicted by the mange.<a id='r1190' /><a href='#f1190' class='c012'><sup>[1190]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among the animals domesticated and rendered
-useful by the Greeks we must, doubtless, reckon
-bees,<a id='r1191' /><a href='#f1191' class='c012'><sup>[1191]</sup></a> which, in the heroic ages, had not yet been
-confined in hives. For, whenever Homer describes
-them, it is either where they are streaming forth
-from a rock,<a id='r1192' /><a href='#f1192' class='c012'><sup>[1192]</sup></a> or settling in bands and clusters on
-the spring flowers. So, likewise, in Virgil, they</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in22'>Hunt the golden dew;</div>
- <div class='line'>In summer time on tops of lilies feed,</div>
- <div class='line'>And creep within their bells to suck the balmy seed.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>In that Bœotian old savage, Hesiod,<a id='r1193' /><a href='#f1193' class='c012'><sup>[1193]</sup></a> however, we
-undoubtedly find mention of the hive where he is
-uncourteously comparing women to drones—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>As when within their well-roofed hives the bees</div>
- <div class='line'>Maintain the mischief-working drones at ease,</div>
- <div class='line'>Their task pursuing till the golden sun</div>
- <div class='line'>Down to the western wave his course hath run,</div>
- <div class='line'>Filling their shining combs, while snug within</div>
- <div class='line'>Their fragrant cells, the drones, with idle din,</div>
- <div class='line'>As princes revel o’er their unpaid bowls,</div>
- <div class='line'>On others’ labours cheer their worthless souls.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>As the honey of Attica constantly, in antiquity,
-enjoyed the reputation of being the finest in the
-world,<a id='r1194' /><a href='#f1194' class='c012'><sup>[1194]</sup></a> the management of bees naturally formed in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>that country an important branch of rural economy.
-The natural history, moreover, of the bee was studied
-with singlar enthusiam by the Greeks in general.
-Aristomachos of Soli, devoted to it fifty-eight
-years, and Philiscos, the Thasian, who passed
-his life among bees in a desert, obtained on that
-account the name of the Wild Man. Both wrote
-on the subject.<a id='r1195' /><a href='#f1195' class='c012'><sup>[1195]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This branch of rural economy was carried to very
-great perfection in Attica. The vocabulary<a id='r1196' /><a href='#f1196' class='c012'><sup>[1196]</sup></a> connected
-with it was extensive, as every separate
-operation had its technical term, by the study of
-which, chiefly, an insight into their practice is obtained.
-Thus, from certain expressions employed
-by Aristotle<a id='r1197' /><a href='#f1197' class='c012'><sup>[1197]</sup></a> and Pollux, it seems clear that bee-managers,
-whom we may occasionally call melitturgi,
-constituted a separate division among the
-industrious classes; and these, instructed by constant
-experience, probably anticipated most of the improvements
-imagined in modern times. For example,
-instead of destroying the valuable and industrious
-little insects for the purpose of obtaining possession
-of their spoils, they in some cases compelled them
-by smoke to retire temporarily from the hive, whence
-their treasures were to be taken; and in the mining
-districts about Laureion they understood the art,
-concerning which, however, no particulars are known,
-of procuring the virgin honey pure and unsmoked.<a id='r1198' /><a href='#f1198' class='c012'><sup>[1198]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The grounds of a melitturgos or bee-keeper were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>chosen and laid out with peculiar care.<a id='r1199' /><a href='#f1199' class='c012'><sup>[1199]</sup></a> In a sheltered
-spot, generally on the thymy slope of a hill,
-the hives were arranged in the midst of flowers and
-odoriferous shrubs. And if the necessary kinds had
-not by nature been scattered there, they were planted
-by the gardener. Experience soon taught them what
-blossoms and flowers yielded the best honey,<a id='r1200' /><a href='#f1200' class='c012'><sup>[1200]</sup></a> and
-were most agreeable to the bees. These, in Attica,
-were supposed to be the wild pear-tree, the bean,
-clover, a pale-coloured vetch, the syria, myrtle, wild
-poppy, wild thyme, and the almond-tree.<a id='r1201' /><a href='#f1201' class='c012'><sup>[1201]</sup></a> To which
-may be added the rose, balm gentle, the galingale
-or odoriferous rush, basil royal, and above all the
-cytisus,<a id='r1202' /><a href='#f1202' class='c012'><sup>[1202]</sup></a> which begins to flower about the vernal
-equinox, and continues in bloom to the end of September.<a id='r1203' /><a href='#f1203' class='c012'><sup>[1203]</sup></a>
-Of all the plants, however, affected by the
-bee, none is so grateful to it as the thyme, which
-so extensively abounds in Attica and Messenia<a id='r1204' /><a href='#f1204' class='c012'><sup>[1204]</sup></a> as
-to perfume the whole atmosphere. In Sicily too,
-all the slopes and crests of its beautiful hills, from
-Palermo to Syracuse, are invested with a mantle of
-thyme,<a id='r1205' /><a href='#f1205' class='c012'><sup>[1205]</sup></a> and other odoriferous shrubs, which, according
-to Varro, gives the superior flavour to the Sicilian
-honey. Box-wood abounded on mount Cytoros,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>in Galatia, and in the island of Corsica, on which
-account the honey of the latter country was bitter.<a id='r1206' /><a href='#f1206' class='c012'><sup>[1206]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In selecting a spot for hives, the ancients observed
-a rule which I do not recollect to have been mentioned
-by modern bee-keepers, and that was to avoid
-the neighbourhood of an echo,<a id='r1207' /><a href='#f1207' class='c012'><sup>[1207]</sup></a> which by repeating
-their own buzzing and murmuring suggested the idea
-perhaps of invisible rivals. Place them not, says
-Virgil,<a id='r1208' /><a href='#f1208' class='c012'><sup>[1208]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Near hollow rocks that render back the sound,</div>
- <div class='line'>And doubled images of voice rebound.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Care was taken to conduct near the hives small
-runnels of the purest water, not exceeding two or
-three inches in depth with shells or pebbles rising
-dry above the surface, whereon the bees might alight
-to drink.<a id='r1209' /><a href='#f1209' class='c012'><sup>[1209]</sup></a> When of necessity the apiary was situated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>on the margin of lakes or larger streams other contrivances
-were had recourse to for the convenience
-of the airy labourers.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Then o’er the running stream or standing lake</div>
- <div class='line'>A passage for thy weary people make,</div>
- <div class='line'>With osier floats the standing water strow,</div>
- <div class='line'>Of massy stones make bridges if it flow,</div>
- <div class='line'>That basking in the sun thy bees may lie</div>
- <div class='line'>And resting there their flaggy pinions dry,</div>
- <div class='line'>When late returning home the laden host</div>
- <div class='line'>By raging winds is wrecked upon the coast.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Their hives were of various kinds and shapes.
-Some, like the modern Circassians, they made with
-fine wicker-work, of a round form and carefully plastered
-on the inside with clay.<a id='r1210' /><a href='#f1210' class='c012'><sup>[1210]</sup></a> Other hives were
-constructed of bark, especially that of the cork-tree,
-others of fig, oxya, beech, and pine-wood,<a id='r1211' /><a href='#f1211' class='c012'><sup>[1211]</sup></a> others, as
-now in Spain, of the trunk of a hollow tree, others
-of earthenware, as is the practice in Russia; and
-others again of plaited cane of a square shape, three
-feet in length and about one in breadth, but so contrived
-that, should the honey materials prove scanty,
-they might be contracted, lest the bees should lose
-courage if surrounded by a large empty space. The
-wicker-hives were occasionally plastered both inside
-and outside with cow-dung to fill up the cavities
-and smooth the surface.<a id='r1212' /><a href='#f1212' class='c012'><sup>[1212]</sup></a> A more beautiful species
-of hive was sometimes made with the lapis specularis,<a id='r1213' /><a href='#f1213' class='c012'><sup>[1213]</sup></a>
-which, being almost as transparent as glass,
-enabled the curious owner to contemplate the movements
-and works of the bees.<a id='r1214' /><a href='#f1214' class='c012'><sup>[1214]</sup></a> When finished, they
-were placed on projecting slabs, so as not to touch
-or be easily shaken. There were generally three
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>rows of hives rising above each other like Egyptian
-tombs on the face of the wall, and there was a prejudice
-against adding a fourth.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The fences of apiaries were made high and strong
-to protect the inmates from the inroads of the bears,<a id='r1215' /><a href='#f1215' class='c012'><sup>[1215]</sup></a>
-which would otherwise have overthrown the hives
-and devoured all the combs.<a id='r1216' /><a href='#f1216' class='c012'><sup>[1216]</sup></a> Another enemy of the
-bee was the Merops,<a id='r1217' /><a href='#f1217' class='c012'><sup>[1217]</sup></a> which makes its appearance
-about Hymettos towards the end of summer.<a id='r1218' /><a href='#f1218' class='c012'><sup>[1218]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There were, in ancient times, two entrances,
-one on either hand, and on the top a lid, which
-the Melitturgos could remove when he desired to
-take the honey, or inspect the condition of the bees.
-The best of these lids were made of bark, the worst
-of earthenware, which were cold in winter, and in
-summer exceedingly hot.<a id='r1219' /><a href='#f1219' class='c012'><sup>[1219]</sup></a> It was considered necessary
-during spring and the succeeding season
-for the bee-keeper to inspect the hives thrice a
-month, to fumigate them slightly, and remove
-all filth and vermin. He was careful, likewise, to
-destroy the usurpers if there were more than one
-queen,<a id='r1220' /><a href='#f1220' class='c012'><sup>[1220]</sup></a> since, in Varro’s<a id='r1221' /><a href='#f1221' class='c012'><sup>[1221]</sup></a> opinion, they gave rise to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>sedition; but Aristotle thinks there ought to be
-several, lest one should die, and the hive along
-with it. Of the queen bees there are three kinds,
-the black, the ruddy, and the variegated; though
-Menecrates, who is good authority, speaks only of
-the black and variegated.<a id='r1222' /><a href='#f1222' class='c012'><sup>[1222]</sup></a> Aristotle, however, describes
-the reddish queen bee as the best. Even
-among the working insects there are two kinds, the
-smaller, in form round, and variegated in colour,
-the larger, which is the tame bee, less active and
-beautiful. The former, or wild bee,<a id='r1223' /><a href='#f1223' class='c012'><sup>[1223]</sup></a> frequents the
-mountains, forests, and other solitary places, labours
-indefatigably, and collects honey in great quantities;
-the latter, which feeds among gardens, and in man’s
-neighbourhood, fills its hive more slowly.<a id='r1224' /><a href='#f1224' class='c012'><sup>[1224]</sup></a> With
-respect to the drones, or males, which the working
-bees generally expel at a certain time of the year,
-the Attic melitturgi got rid of them in a very ingenious
-manner. It was observed, that these gentlemen
-though no way inclined to work, would yet
-occasionally, on very fine days, go abroad for exercise,
-rushing forth in squadrons, mounting aloft into
-the air, and there wheeling, and sporting, and man&oelig;uvring
-in the sun.<a id='r1225' /><a href='#f1225' class='c012'><sup>[1225]</sup></a> Taking advantage of their
-absence, they spread a fine net over the hive-entrance,
-the meshes of which, large enough to
-admit the bee, would exclude the drone. On returning,
-therefore, they found themselves, according
-to the old saying, “on the smooth side of the door,”
-and were compelled to seek fresh lodgings.<a id='r1226' /><a href='#f1226' class='c012'><sup>[1226]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In late springs, or when there is a drought or
-blight, the bees breed very little, but make a great
-deal of honey, whereas in wet seasons they keep
-more at home, and attend to breeding. Swarms in
-Greece<a id='r1227' /><a href='#f1227' class='c012'><sup>[1227]</sup></a> appeared about the ripening of the olive.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>Aristotle is of opinion, that honey is not manufactured
-by the bee, but falls perfectly formed from
-the atmosphere, more especially at the heliacal rising
-or setting of certain stars, and when the rainbow
-appears. He observes, too, that no honey is found
-before the rising of the Pleiades,<a id='r1228' /><a href='#f1228' class='c012'><sup>[1228]</sup></a> which happens
-about the thirteenth of May.<a id='r1229' /><a href='#f1229' class='c012'><sup>[1229]</sup></a> This opinion is in
-exact conformity with the fact, that at certain seasons
-of the year what is called the honey dew descends,
-covering thick the leaves of the oak, and
-several other trees, which at such times literally
-drop with honey. On these occasions the bees find
-little to do beyond the labour of conveying it to
-their cells, and, accordingly, have been known to
-fill the hive in one or two days. It has been observed,
-moreover, that autumn flowers, which yield
-very little fragrance, yield, also, little or no honey.
-In the kingdom of Pontos there was a race of white
-bees which made honey twice a month; and at
-Themiscyra there were those which built their combs
-both in hives and in the earth, producing very little
-wax, but a great deal of honey.<a id='r1230' /><a href='#f1230' class='c012'><sup>[1230]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>When the time of year arrived for robbing the
-bee, some hives were found to produce five, others
-ten, others fifteen quarts of honey, still leaving sufficient
-for winter consumption.<a id='r1231' /><a href='#f1231' class='c012'><sup>[1231]</sup></a> And in determining
-what quantity would suffice great judgment was required;
-for if too much remained the labourers grew
-indolent, if too little they lost their spirits. However,
-in this latter case the bee-keepers, having ascertained
-that they were in need of food, introduced
-a number of sweet figs, and other similar fruit into
-the hive, as now we do moist sugar in a split cane.
-Elsewhere the practice was to boil a number of
-rich figs in water<a id='r1232' /><a href='#f1232' class='c012'><sup>[1232]</sup></a> till they were reduced to a jelly,
-which was then formed into cakes and set near the
-hive. Together with this, some bee-keepers placed
-honey-water, wherein they threw locks of purple
-wool, on which the bees might stand to drink.<a id='r1233' /><a href='#f1233' class='c012'><sup>[1233]</sup></a>
-Certain melitturgi, desirous of distinguishing their
-own bees<a id='r1234' /><a href='#f1234' class='c012'><sup>[1234]</sup></a> when spread over the meadows, sprinkled
-them with fine flour. Mention is made of a person
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>who obtained five thousand pounds’ weight of honey
-annually; and Varro<a id='r1235' /><a href='#f1235' class='c012'><sup>[1235]</sup></a> speaks of two soldiers who,
-with a small country house, and an acre of ground
-left them by their father, realised an independent
-fortune.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Theophrastus, in a fragment<a id='r1236' /><a href='#f1236' class='c012'><sup>[1236]</sup></a> of one of his lost
-works, speaks of three different kinds of honey, one
-collected from flowers, another which, according to
-his philosophy, descended pure from heaven, and a
-third produced from canes. This last, which was
-sometimes denominated Indian honey, is the sugar
-of modern times. There appear, likewise, to have
-been other kinds of sugar manufactured from different
-substances, as Tamarisk and Wheat.<a id='r1237' /><a href='#f1237' class='c012'><sup>[1237]</sup></a> The
-honey-dew, on the production of which the ancients<a id='r1238' /><a href='#f1238' class='c012'><sup>[1238]</sup></a>
-held many extraordinary opinions, was supposed to
-be superior to the nectar of the bee.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Amyntas, in his Stations of Asia, cited by Athenæus,
-gives a curious account of this sort of honey
-which was collected in various parts of the East,
-particularly in Syria. In some cases they gathered
-the leaves of the tree, chiefly the linden and the
-oak, on which the dew was most abundantly<a id='r1239' /><a href='#f1239' class='c012'><sup>[1239]</sup></a> found,
-and pressed them together like those masses of Syrian
-figs, which were called <em>palathè</em>. Others allowed
-it to drop from the leaves and harden into globules,
-which, when desirous of using, they broke,
-and, having poured water thereon in wooden bowls
-called <em>tabaitas</em>, drank the mixture. In the districts
-of Mount Lebanon<a id='r1240' /><a href='#f1240' class='c012'><sup>[1240]</sup></a> the honey-dew fell plentifully
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>several times during the year, and was collected
-by spreading skins under the trees, and shaking
-into them the liquid honey from the leaves; they
-then filled therewith numerous vessels, in which it
-was preserved for use. On these occasions, the
-peasants used to exclaim, “Zeus has been raining
-honey!”</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1068'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1068'>1068</a>. Demosth. in Ev. et Mnes. § 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1069'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1069'>1069</a>. Thucyd. ii. 65.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1070'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1070'>1070</a>. In the neighbourhood of the
-Isthmus the shepherds of the
-present day often pass the winter
-months in mountain caverns.—Chandler,
-ii. p. 261.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1071'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1071'>1071</a>. Theocrit. i. 143, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1072'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1072'>1072</a>. Cf. Iliad. β. 305, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1073'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1073'>1073</a>. On the wild olive and other
-trees, of which these groves were
-composed, the eye of the passenger
-usually beheld suspended a
-number of votive offerings.—Sch.
-Aristoph. Ran. 943.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1074'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1074'>1074</a>. Cf. Plat. Phæd. t. i. p. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1075'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1075'>1075</a>. Eurip. Bacch. 10, seq. Cf.
-Kirch. de Funer. Rom. iii. 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1076'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1076'>1076</a>. Demosth. in Callicl. § 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1077'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1077'>1077</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 406.
-On the music of the pine-groves,
-the Schol. on Theocritus, i. 1, has
-an amusing passage: ἡ πίτυς ἐκείνη,
-ἡδὺ τι μελουργεῖ, κατὰ τὸ
-ψιθύρισμα. κ. τ. λ.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1078'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1078'>1078</a>. Called in Latin pagus from
-πηγὴ, a fountain. Serv. ad Virg.
-Georg. 182. See also the note of
-Gibbon, t. iii. p. 410.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1079'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1079'>1079</a>. Geop. x. 7. 11. These pots,
-like those in which the palm-tree
-was cultivated, were pierced at
-the bottom like our own. Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. iv. 4. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1080'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1080'>1080</a>. As the orange-tree is still in
-Lemnos. Walp. Mem. i. 280.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1081'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1081'>1081</a>. The stalls for cattle were built
-as often as convenient, near the
-kitchen and facing the east, because
-when exposed to light and
-heat they became smooth-coated.
-Vitruv. vi. 9. Cf. Varro. i. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1082'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1082'>1082</a>. Geop. ii. 3. Cf. Vitruv. i. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1083'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1083'>1083</a>. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Petatur igitur aer calore et
-frigore temperatus, quem fere medius
-obtinet collis, quod neque
-depressus hieme pruinis torpet,
-aut torret æstute vaporibus, neque
-elatus in summa montium perexiguis
-ventorum motibus, aut
-pluviis omni tempore anni sævit.
-Columell.</span> De Re Rust. i. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1084'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1084'>1084</a>. The same opinion is held by
-Hippocrates, De Morbo Sacro. cap.
-7. p. 308, ed. Foes. Ὁ Βορέης
-ὑγιεινότατος ἐστι τῶν ἀνέμων.
-Cf. Plin. ii. 48. Varro. i. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1085'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1085'>1085</a>. De Re Rust. 3. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Ita ædifices,
-ne villa fundum quærat,
-neve fundus villam.”</span> Cf. Colum.
-De Re Rust. i. 4. It
-may here by the way be observed
-that, during the flourishing
-periods of Roman agriculture,
-farms were generally rather small
-than large. Plin. Hist. Nat. viii.
-21. Schulz. Antiq. Rustic. § vii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1086'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1086'>1086</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 45.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1087'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1087'>1087</a>. Philost. Icon. ii. 26. p. 851.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1088'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1088'>1088</a>. Cf. Athen. iv. 38.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1089'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1089'>1089</a>. Walp. Mem. i. 281.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1090'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1090'>1090</a>. Aristoph. Nub. 45, seq. et
-Schol.—Schol. Eq. 803.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1091'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1091'>1091</a>. Plat. De Legg. vii. t. viii. p.
-40. Aristoph. Lysist. 18, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1092'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1092'>1092</a>. Aristoph. Acharn. 272. Vesp.
-824. Pac. 1138. Thesm. 286,
-seq. Suid. v. Θρᾶττα. t. p. 1330. a.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1093'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1093'>1093</a>. Ἐπὶ τῆς ἑστίας τρέφουσι χοίρους.—Schol.
-Aristoph. Vesp.
-844. Lysist. 1073, Poll. ix. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1094'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1094'>1094</a>. Odyss. τ. 536.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1095'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1095'>1095</a>. Cf. Vict. Var. Lect. p. 891.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1096'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1096'>1096</a>. Geop. xiv. 22. Varro. iii.
-10. Colum. viii. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1097'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1097'>1097</a>. Poll. ix. 16. Heresbach.
-De Re Rust. lib. iv. p. 285. a.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1098'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1098'>1098</a>. Cf. Pallad. i. 30. Plin. x. 79.
-Plaut. Trucul. ii. 1. 41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1099'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1099'>1099</a>. Ælian. De Nat. Anim. v. 29.
-This ingenious writer, anxious to
-remove from geese the reputation
-of folly, relates that, when traversing
-Mount Taurus, conscious
-of their disposition to cackling,
-they carry stones in their bills,
-and thus frequently escape the
-eagles which inhabit that lofty
-ridge of mountains. This the poet
-Phile undertakes to confirm in
-verse:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Λίθον δὲ τῷ στόματι μὴ κλάγξῃ στέγων</div>
- <div class='line'>Ὅνπερ καλοῦσι Ταῦρον, ἀμείβει πάγον</div>
- <div class='line'>Τοὺς ἀετοὺς γὰρ φασὶ τοὺς χηνοσκόπους,</div>
- <div class='line'>Ἐκεῖσε δεινῶς ἐλλοχᾷν πρὸ τοῦ ψύχους.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Iamb. De Animal. Proprietat.
-c. 15. p. 62.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1100'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1100'>1100</a>. Which according to Aristotle
-was thirty days.—-Hist. Anim.
-vii. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1101'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1101'>1101</a>. Pallad. i. 30. Cavendum est
-etiam, ne pulli eorum setas glutiant.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1102'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1102'>1102</a>. The Quintilian Brothers, ap.
-Geop. xiv. 22. For the fate of
-these illustrious authors, Maximus
-and Condianus, see Gibbon,
-i. 142. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Sint calido et tenebroso
-loco: quæres ad creandas
-adipes multum conferunt.”</span> Colum.
-viii. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1103'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1103'>1103</a>. Eupolis, ap. Athen. ix. 32.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1104'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1104'>1104</a>. Cf. Suid. v. κολλύρα. t. i. p.
-1489. a. Poll. i. 248. Etym.
-Mag. 526. 26. Schol. Aristoph.
-Pac. 122.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1105'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1105'>1105</a>. Cf. Dioscor. v. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1106'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1106'>1106</a>. Geop. xiv. 23. Varro, iii. 11.
-Ælian. De Nat. Anim. v. 33.
-Aristot. De Hist. Anim. viii.
-3. Athen. ix. 52. Phile, De
-Anim. Proprietat. c. 14. p. 59.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1107'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1107'>1107</a>. Athen. iii. 64. Κουρίδες·
-καρίδες, ἢ τὰς μικρ`ας ἐγχλώρας,
-τὰς δὲ ἐρυθρὰς καμμάρους. Hesych.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1108'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1108'>1108</a>. Cf. Philost. Icon. i. 9. p. 776.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1109'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1109'>1109</a>. Colum. viii. 15. Heresbach.
-De Re Rust. lib. iv. p. 288. a.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1110'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1110'>1110</a>. Athen. vii. 23. Of these
-birds the black were esteemed
-less than the white. ix. 15. On
-the fighting cocks. Plin. x. 24.
-Æsch. Eum. 864, 869. Schol.
-ad Æsch. Tim. Orat. Attic. t.
-xii. p. 379. Schol. Aristoph. Eq.
-492.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1111'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1111'>1111</a>. Geop. xiv. 7, 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1112'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1112'>1112</a>. Arabian Nights, Story of the
-Ass, the Ox, and the Labourer,
-vol. 1. p. 23.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1113'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1113'>1113</a>. Ταῤῥοὶ. Sch. Aristoph. Nub.
-227.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1114'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1114'>1114</a>. Beans, however, were eschewed
-as they were supposed to
-prevent them from laying.—Geoponic.
-ii. 35. But cocks were suffered
-to feed on them, at least when
-they belonged to poor men.—Luc.
-Mycill. § 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1115'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1115'>1115</a>. Dioscor. iii. 52.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1116'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1116'>1116</a>. Geop. xiv. 7. 11. Colum.
-viii. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1117'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1117'>1117</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 63.
-Petit. Leg. Att. p. 277. Geop.
-xiv. 18. 1. Athen. xiv. 70. See
-the poetical description of this
-bird by Phile: De Animal. Proprietat.
-c. 8. p. 32, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1118'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1118'>1118</a>. Geop. xiv. 19. Colum. viii.
-12. Pallad. i. 28. Athen. ix.
-37, seq. Suid. v. φασιανοὶ. t. i.
-p. 1083. a. b. Aristoph. Nub.
-109.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1119'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1119'>1119</a>. According to Diogenes Laertius,
-(i. iv. 51) both pheasants
-and peacocks were familiar to the
-Greeks in the days of Solon.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1120'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1120'>1120</a>. Athen. xiv. 71. Ælian. De
-Nat. Anim. v. 27. Aristot. Hist.
-Anim. vi. 2. A number of these
-birds were kept on the Acropolis
-of Athens.—Suid. v. μελεαγρίδες.
-t. ii. p. 122. a.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1121'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1121'>1121</a>. Within the enclosure for these
-birds pellitory of the wall was
-probably planted, as they loved
-to roll in and pluck it up.—Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. i. 6. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1122'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1122'>1122</a>. Cf. Pollux. ii. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1123'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1123'>1123</a>. Geop. xiv. 24. 5, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1124'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1124'>1124</a>. The king of Tuban, in Java,
-had formerly his bed surrounded
-by cages of turtle-doves, which
-roosted on perches of various coloured
-glass.—Voyage de La
-Compagnie des Indes, i. 533.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1125'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1125'>1125</a>. Varro. iii. 7. Columell. viii.
-8. Pallad. i. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1126'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1126'>1126</a>. For the food with which
-they were supplied, see Geopon.
-xiv. 1. 5. Occasionally when
-the birds were permitted to fly
-abroad, their owners sprinkled
-them with unguents, or gave
-them cumin seed to eat, in
-order that they might attract
-and bring back with them flights
-of doves or wild pigeons to their
-cells.—Id. xiv. 3. 1. So also
-Palladius: Inducunt alias, si
-cumino pascantur assidue, vel
-hirci alarum balsami liquore tangantur,
-i. 24. Cf. Plin. x. 52.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1127'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1127'>1127</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 129.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1128'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1128'>1128</a>. Cf. Arist. Hist. Anim. vii.
-6. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1129'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1129'>1129</a>. Athen. xii. 57.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1130'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1130'>1130</a>. Strab. iii. 2. t. i. p. 231.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1131'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1131'>1131</a>. Aristoph. Nub. 109. Suid.
-v. φασιανοὶ. t. ii. p. 1033.
-b. Thom. Magist. v. φασιανοὶ.
-p. 885. Blancard. Of the commentators
-on Aristophanes, however,
-some by the word φασιανοὶ
-understand horses, and some
-pheasants. The probability is,
-that they imported both, and
-that the poet means to play upon
-the word.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1132'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1132'>1132</a>. Iliad. δ. 500.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1133'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1133'>1133</a>. See also Iliad, ε. 358. Wolf.
-Proleg. 80, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1134'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1134'>1134</a>. Iliad φ. 132.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1135'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1135'>1135</a>. Fest. v. October, t. ii. p. 521,
-seq. v. Panibus, p. 555. Lomeier,
-de Lustrat. cap. 23. p. 292, seq.
-Propert. iv. i. 20, with the note
-of Frid. Jacob, in whose edition
-it is, v. i. 20.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1136'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1136'>1136</a>. Pausan. iii. 20. 4. Fest.
-v. October, t. ii. p. 520, tells us
-that this horse was sacrificed to
-the winds.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1137'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1137'>1137</a>. Herod. i. 216. Brisson. de
-Regn. Pers. ii. 5. The reason why
-the horse was selected as a victim
-to the sun, was that its swiftness
-appeared to resemble that of the
-god:—ὡς τακύτατον τῷ τακύτατω.
-Bochart. Hierozoic. pt. i. l. ii.
-c. 10. Olear. in Philost. Vit.
-Apoll. Tyan. i. 31. p. 29. Justin.
-i. 10. Suid. v. μίθρου. t. ii.
-p. 162, f. This practice is likewise
-mentioned by Ovid, (Fast.
-i. 385, seq.)</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Placat equo Persis radiis Hyperiona cinctum,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ne detur celeri victima tarda deo.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Cf. Vigenere, Images des Philostrates,
-p. 773. Par. 1627.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1138'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1138'>1138</a>. Anab. iv. 5. 35.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1139'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1139'>1139</a>. Iliad. ε. 192, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1140'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1140'>1140</a>. Sch. Pind. Pyth. iv. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1141'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1141'>1141</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 110.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1142'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1142'>1142</a>. Strab. xi. 13. p. 453. Τούς
-δὲ Νησαίους ἵππους, οἷς ἐχρῶντο
-οἱ βασιλεῖς ἀρίστοις οὖσι καὶ μεγίστοις.
-Cf. Herod. i. 189, on
-the sacred horses of Persia.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1143'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1143'>1143</a>. Suid. v. ἱππος Νισαῖος. t. i.
-p. 1271. d. who relates that, according
-to some, the breed was
-found near the Erythrean Sea.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1144'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1144'>1144</a>. Herod. ix. 20. Cf. Il. ε.
-583. δ. 142, seq. In Philostratus
-we find mention made of a
-black Nisæan mare with white
-feet, large patch of white on the
-breast, and white nostrils.—Icon.
-ii. 5. p. 816.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1145'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1145'>1145</a>. Hist. Anim. vii. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1146'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1146'>1146</a>. Il. β. 760, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1147'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1147'>1147</a>. Iliad. θ. 560. Cf. ι. 123, seq.
-265, 407. κ. 565, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1148'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1148'>1148</a>. Il. ε. 196. On an ancient
-crystal engraved in Buonaroti a
-man with cap and short breeches
-is represented feeding an ass with
-corn. Osserv. Istorich. sop. alc.
-Medagl. Antich. p. 345.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1149'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1149'>1149</a>. Hist. Anim. viii. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1150'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1150'>1150</a>. Phile applies the same observation
-to the elephant:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Ὕδωρ δὲ πίνει πλῆθος ἄφθονον πάνυ·</div>
- <div class='line'>Πλὴν οὐ καθαρὸν, καὶ διειδὲς οὐ θέλει,</div>
- <div class='line'>Ἀλλ’ οὖν ῥυπαρὸν καὶ κατεσπιλωμένον.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c017'>Iamb. de Animal. Proprietat.
-c. 39. p. 56, 165, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1151'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1151'>1151</a>. Geop. xvi. 2. Philost. Icon.
-i. 28. p. 804. Notwithstanding
-the admiration of the Greeks for
-horses we do not find that they
-made any attempt to naturalize
-among them those Shetlands of
-the ancient world which, according
-to a very grave naturalist,
-were no larger than rams. These
-diminutive steeds were found in
-India:—Παρά γε τοῖς ψύλλοις
-καλουμένοις τῶν Ἰνδῶν, εἱσὶ γὰρ
-καὶ Λιβύων ἕτεροι, ἵπποι γίνονται
-τῶν κριῶν οὐ μείζους.
-Ælian. de Animal. xvi. 37.
-Modern writers relate the same
-thing of a certain breed of oxen
-in India: “Naturalists speak of
-a diminutive breed of oxen in
-Ceylon, and the neighbourhood
-of Surat, no larger than a Newfoundland
-dog, which, though
-fierce of aspect, are trained to
-draw children in their little
-carts.” Hindoos, i. 23.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1152'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1152'>1152</a>. Iliad, χ. 281, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1153'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1153'>1153</a>. Il. ε. 358.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1154'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1154'>1154</a>. Xenoph. de Re Equest. iv. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1155'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1155'>1155</a>. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 158.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1156'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1156'>1156</a>. Xenoph. de Re Equest. ii. 2.
-Cf. Œconom. iii. 11. xiii. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1157'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1157'>1157</a>. Geop. xvi. i. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1158'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1158'>1158</a>. Xen. de Re Equest. 10. 6.
-Poll. viii. 184.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1159'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1159'>1159</a>. The swimming powers of the
-war-horse were probably augmented
-by exercise, since we find
-them passing by swimming from
-Rhegium to Sicily. Plut. Timol.
-§ 19. This feat, however,
-was nothing to that of the stags
-which swam from Syria to Cyprus!
-Ælian. De Nat. Anim. v. 56.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1160'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1160'>1160</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 32. Cf.
-25, 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1161'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1161'>1161</a>. Aristoph. Eq. 601. Nub. 25.
-Spanh. in loc. Athen. xi. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1162'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1162'>1162</a>. In carting wood from Mount
-Ida in the Troad oxen are at present
-substituted for asses, and
-the bodies of the vehicles they
-draw, in form resembling ancient
-cars, are constructed of wickerwork.
-Chandler, i. 47.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1163'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1163'>1163</a>. Lucian. Luc. siv. Asin. §
-43. Cf. Artemid. Oneirocrit. ii.
-12. p. 97.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1164'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1164'>1164</a>. Geop. xvi. 21. Varro ii. 6.
-3. To account for this care it
-may be observed, that rich men
-sometimes rode, as they still do
-in the East, on asses superbly
-caparisoned and adorned with
-bells. Lucian. Luc. sive Asin.
-§ 48.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1165'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1165'>1165</a>. Il. β. 852.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1166'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1166'>1166</a>. Athen. ix. 17. Cf. Steph. De
-Urb. 184. e.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1167'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1167'>1167</a>. Athen. ix. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1168'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1168'>1168</a>. Scheffer, De Re Vehic. p. 80;
-et vid. Dickenson, Delph. Phænicizant.
-c. 10. p. 116, seq.
-Heresbach. De Re Rust. p. 236,
-sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1169'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1169'>1169</a>. Geop. xvii. 9, with the note
-of Niclas. Aristoph. Hist. Anim.
-viii. 7. 23. Cato. De Re Rust.
-72. Plin. xxviii. 81.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1170'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1170'>1170</a>. African. ap. Geop. xvii. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1171'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1171'>1171</a>. Geop. xvii. 2. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1172'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1172'>1172</a>. Buttm. Lexil. p. 86.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1173'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1173'>1173</a>. Hesych. v. πύσσαχος.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1174'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1174'>1174</a>. Eustath. ad Odyss. ε. p. 219.
-Their milk-cups were sometimes
-of ivy. Eurip. Fragm. Androm.
-27. Athen. xi. 53. Macrob. Sat.
-v. 21. Cf. on the milk-pans and
-cheese-vats, Poll. x. 130; Theocrit.
-Eidyll. v. 87. Milk-pails
-were sometimes called πέλλαι,
-ἀμολγοὶ, γαλακτοδόκα, and <a id='corr286.n8'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='out out'>out</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_286.n8'><ins class='correction' title='out out'>out</ins></a></span>
-of these they sometimes drank.
-Schol. i. 25.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1175'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1175'>1175</a>. Cf. Il. π. 642, et Schol. Venet.
-Etym. Mag. 659. 41. Athen.
-xi. 91.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1176'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1176'>1176</a>. Even Philostratus, while
-mentioning these vessels, filled to
-the brim with milk, on which
-the cream lies rich and shining,
-omits to furnish any hint of their
-form:—ψυκτῆρες γάλακτος, οὐ
-λευκοῦ μόνον, ἀλλὰ καὶ στιλπνοῦ·
-καὶ γὰρ στίβειν ἔοικεν, ὑπὸ
-τῆς ἐπιπολαζούσης αὐτῷ πιμελῆς.
-Icon. i. 31. p. 809.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1177'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1177'>1177</a>. Athen. xiii. 49.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1178'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1178'>1178</a>. Geop. xviii. 19. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1179'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1179'>1179</a>. See Beckman. Hist. of Inv. i.
-372, seq. Butter is made at
-present in Greece by filling a skin
-with cream and treading on it.
-Chandler, ii. 245.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1180'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1180'>1180</a>. Foes, Œconom. Hippoc. v.
-πικέριον, p. 306.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1181'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1181'>1181</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Pac. 394.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1182'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1182'>1182</a>. Varro. De Re Rust. ii. 11. 4.
-Colum. vii. 8. Eustath ad Il. ε.
-p. 472. Hesych. v. ὀπὸς.—Mœris:
-ὀπὸς Ἀττικοὶ, πυτία Ἕλληνες.
-p. 205. Cf. Aristot. Hist.
-Anim. iv. 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1183'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1183'>1183</a>. The cheese made in this manner
-was called ὀπίας. Eurip.
-Cyclop. 136. Athen. xiv. 76.
-Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 353.
-Dioscor. i. 183. Plin. xxiii. 63.
-Plut. Sympos. vi. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1184'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1184'>1184</a>. Geop. xviii. 12. These cheeses
-were sometimes made in box-wood
-moulds. Colum. vii. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1185'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1185'>1185</a>. Philostratus describes one of
-these delicate little cheeses freshly
-made and quivering like a slice of
-blanc-manger:—καὶ τρυφαλὶς ἐφ᾽
-ἑτέρου φύλλου νεοπαγὴς, καὶ σαλέυουσα.
-Icon. i. 31. p. 809.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1186'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1186'>1186</a>. Geop. xviii. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1187'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1187'>1187</a>. Geop. xviii. 20.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1188'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1188'>1188</a>. Geop. xvii. 12. Heresbach.
-p. 233. a.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1189'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1189'>1189</a>. Herod. v. 16. Athen. vii. 72.
-Ælian. de Nat. Anim. v. 25.
-Cf. Sch. Aristoph. Pac. 891.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1190'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1190'>1190</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. iv. 14. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1191'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1191'>1191</a>. Athen. iii. 59. Sch. Aristoph.
-Vesp. 107.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1192'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1192'>1192</a>. Il. β. 87. μ. 67. Odyss.
-ν. 106.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1193'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1193'>1193</a>. Theogon. 594, seq.—Pro σίμβλοισι,
-quod præbet R. S., cæteri
-Mss. σμήνεσσι. Schæferus tamen
-malebat σίμβλοισιν ἐπηρεφέεσι.
-Gœttling. But Goguet, who has
-considered this passage, does not
-think that “hives” are meant;
-because, if their use had been
-known in the times of Hesiod,
-he would not have failed to leave
-us some directions on the subject.
-Origine des Loix, t. iii. p. 399.
-Wolff, following in the <a id='corr290.n4'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='foosteps'>footsteps</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_290.n4'><ins class='correction' title='foosteps'>footsteps</ins></a></span>
-of Heyne, gets easily over the
-difficulty by pronouncing the
-whole passage, v. 590–612,
-spurious. Gœttling, p. 55. Cf.
-Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 937.
-Phile, de Animal. Proprietat. c.
-28. p. 87, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1194'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1194'>1194</a>. The pasturage of Hymettos,
-however, was, by Pausanias, regarded
-as second to that of the
-Alazones on the river Halys,
-where the bees were tame, and
-worked in common in the fields.
-i. 32. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1195'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1195'>1195</a>. Plin. Hist. Nat. xi. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1196'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1196'>1196</a>. Poll. i. 254. Artemid. Oneirocrit.
-ii. 22. p. 109.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1197'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1197'>1197</a>. Hist. Anim. v. 22. ix. 40.
-Etym. Mag. 458. 44.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1198'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1198'>1198</a>. Τοῦ δὲ μέλιτος, ἀρίστου ὄντος
-τῶν πάντων τοῦ Ἀττικοῦ, πολὺ
-βέλτιστὸν φάσι τὸ ἐν τοῖς ἀργυρέοις,
-ὁ καὶ ἀκαπνίστον καλοῦσιν ἀπὸ
-τοῦ τρόποῦ τῆς σκευασίας.
-Strab. ix. 2. t. ii. p. 246.—Wheler
-describes the modern
-method observed by the Athenians
-in taking honey without
-destroying the bee, but in a style
-so lengthy and uncouth, that I
-must content myself with a reference
-to his travels. Book vi.
-p. 412, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1199'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1199'>1199</a>. On the management of bees
-in Circassia and other countries
-on the Black Sea, see Pallas,
-Travels in Southern Russia, ii.
-p. 204.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1200'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1200'>1200</a>. On the coast of the Black Sea
-bees sucked honey from the grape.
-Geop. v. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1201'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1201'>1201</a>. Arist. Hist. Anim. ix. 26, 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1202'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1202'>1202</a>. Geop. xv. 2. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1203'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1203'>1203</a>. Varro, De Re Rust. iii. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1204'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1204'>1204</a>. Sibthorpe in Walpole’s Memoirs,
-t. ii. p. 62. Geop. xv. 2.
-5. Speaking of Hymettos, Chandler
-observes, that it produces a
-succession of aromatic plants,
-herbs, and flowers, calculated to
-supply the bee with nourishment
-both in winter and summer, ii. p.
-143. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Les montagnes (des îles)
-sont couvertes de thym et de
-lavande. Les abeilles, qui y
-volent par nuées, en tirent un
-miel qui est aussi transparent
-que notre gelée.”</span> Della Rocca,
-Traité sur les Abeilles, t. i. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1205'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1205'>1205</a>. This plant in Greece flowers
-about midsummer, and those who
-kept bees conjectured whether
-honey would be plentiful or not,
-according as it was more or less
-luxuriant. Theoph. Hist. Plant.
-vi. 2, 3. The wild thyme of
-Greece was a creeping plant which
-was sometimes trained on poles or
-hedges, or even in pits, the sides
-of which it speedily covered. Id.
-vi. 7. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1206'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1206'>1206</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii. 15. 5.
-The honey of modern Crete is esteemed
-of a good quality. Pashley,
-Travels, vol. i. p. 56.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1207'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1207'>1207</a>. Echo, in the mythology, is
-said to have been beloved of Pan,
-by which she seems tacitly to be
-connected with the generation of
-Panic Terrors Polyæn. Stratagem.
-i. 2. 1. Offensive smells are
-often reckoned among the aversions
-of bees, but I fear without
-good reason. At least they have
-sometimes been found to select
-strange places wherein to deposit
-their treasures of sweets. In the
-book of Judges, chap. xiv. ver. 8,
-seq., it is related that, when Samson,
-on his way to Timnath,
-turned aside to view the carcass
-of a young lion which he had a
-short time previously slain, “behold,
-there was a swarm of bees
-and honey in the carcass of the
-lion, and he took thereof in his
-hands and went on eating, and
-came to his father and mother,
-and he gave them and they
-did eat, but he told not them
-that he had taken the honey
-out of the carcass of the lion.”
-Upon this passage the following
-may serve as a note:—“Among
-this pretty collection
-of natural curiosities, (in the
-cemetery of Algesiras,) one in
-particular attracted our attention;
-this was the contents of a
-small uncovered coffin in which
-lay a child, the cavity of the
-chest exposed and tenanted by
-an industrious colony of bees.
-The comb was rapidly progressing,
-and I suppose, according to
-the adage of the poet, they were
-adding sweets to the sweet, if
-not perfume to the violet.”
-Napier, Excursions on the Shores
-of the Mediterranean, v. i. 127.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1208'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1208'>1208</a>. Georg. iv. 50, with the commentaries
-of Servius and Philargyrius;
-and Varro, De Re Rust.
-iii. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1209'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1209'>1209</a>. Cf. Geop. xv. 2, 3, 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1210'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1210'>1210</a>. Vir. Georg. iv. 34, seq. Varro,
-iii. 16. Colum. ix. 2–7.
-Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 295. Vesp.
-241. Callim. Hymn. i. 50. Cf.
-Wheler, Travels into Greece.
-Book vi. p. 411.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1211'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1211'>1211</a>. Geop. xv. 2. 7. Cf. Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. iii. 10. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1212'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1212'>1212</a>. Geop. xv. 2. 8. Varro, iii. 16.
-Colum. ix. 14. Pallad. vii. 8.
-Cato. 81.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1213'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1213'>1213</a>. Plin. xxi. 47.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1214'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1214'>1214</a>. At present the hives, we are
-told, are set on the ground in
-rows enclosed within a low wall.
-Chandler, ii. 143.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1215'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1215'>1215</a>. Phile gives a long list of the
-bees’ foes, which begins as follows:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Ὄφις, δὲ καὶ σφὴξ, καὶ χελιδὼν, καὶ φρύνος,</div>
- <div class='line'>Μύρμηξ τε, καὶ σὴς, αἰγιθαλὴς, καὶ φάλαγξ,</div>
- <div class='line'>Καὶ σαῦρος ὦχρὸς, καὶ φαγεῖν δεινὸς μέροψ,</div>
- <div class='line'>Σμήνει μελισσῶν δυσμενεῖς ὁδοστάται.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Iamb. De Animal. Proprietat.
-c. 30, p. 104, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1216'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1216'>1216</a>. Arist. Hist. Anim. viii. 5.
-Plin. Nat. Hist. viii. 54.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1217'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1217'>1217</a>. Besides this enemy the bees
-of America have another still
-more audacious, that is to say, the
-monkey, which either carries off
-their combs or crushes them for
-the purpose of dipping his tail in
-the honey, which he afterwards
-sucks at his leisure. Schneider,
-Observ. sur Ulloa, t. ii. p. 199.—See
-a very amusing chapter on
-the enemies of the bee in Della
-Rocca, iii. 219, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1218'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1218'>1218</a>. Sibthorpe in Walp. Mem. i.
-75. The practice, moreover, of
-stealing hives was not unknown
-to the ancients. Plat. De Legg.
-t. viii. p. 104.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1219'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1219'>1219</a>. Colum. ix. 6. Della Rocca,
-however, considers this kind as
-equal to any other, except that
-it is more fragile. t. ii. p. 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1220'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1220'>1220</a>. Geop. xv. 2. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1221'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1221'>1221</a>. De Re Rust. iii. 16, 18.
-Colum. ix. 9. 6. Hist. Anim. v.
-19, 22. Xenoph. &OElig;conom. vii.
-32.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1222'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1222'>1222</a>. Cf. Geop. xv. 2, 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1223'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1223'>1223</a>. On the humble bee, see Sch.
-Aristoph. Acharn. 831.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1224'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1224'>1224</a>. Varro, De Re Rust. iii. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1225'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1225'>1225</a>. Arist. Hist. Anim. ix. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1226'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1226'>1226</a>. Arist. Hist. Anim. v. 21.
-Cf. Xenoph. &OElig;con. xvii. 14, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1227'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1227'>1227</a>. Cf. Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 425.
-In the island of Cuba, where the
-tame bee was originally introduced
-by the English, it has been
-found to swarm and multiply
-with incredible rapidity, each
-hive sometimes sending forth two
-swarms per month, so that the
-mountains are absolutely filled
-with them. This rapid increase
-seems to have taken place chiefly
-in the neighbourhood of the sugar
-plantations, which they were long
-since supposed to deteriorate by
-extracting too much honey from
-the cane. Don Ulloa, Memoires
-Philosophiques, &amp;c., t. i. p. 185.
-In North America where bees are
-known among the natives by the
-name of the “English Flies,”
-they betray an invariable tendency
-for migrating southward.
-Kalm. t. ii. 427. Schneider,
-Observ. sur Ulloa, ii. 198.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1228'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1228'>1228</a>. Hist. Anim. v. 22. Orion
-rises on the 9th of July, Gœttling
-ad Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 598.
-Arcturus, 18th September. Id.
-610.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1229'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1229'>1229</a>. A similar opinion has been
-sometimes maintained also by the
-moderns:—“I have heard,” observes
-Lord Bacon, “from one
-that was industrious in husbandry,
-that the labour of the
-bee is about the wax, and that
-he hath known in the beginning
-of May, honey combs empty
-of honey, and within a fortnight
-when the sweet dews
-fall filled like a cellar.”—Sylva
-Sylvarum, 612.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1230'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1230'>1230</a>. Arist. Hist. Anim. v. 22. In
-the Crimea wild bees are found
-in great abundance in the clefts
-and caverns of the mountains.—Pallas,
-Travels in Southern Russia,
-iii. 324. Among the numerous
-species of wild bees found in
-America there is one which pre-eminently
-deserves to be introduced
-into Europe and brought
-under the dominion of man. This
-bee does not, like the ordinary
-kind, deposit its honey in combs
-but in separate waxen cells about
-the size and shape of a pigeon’s
-egg. As the honey of this bee is
-of an excellent quality, many
-persons in South America have
-been at the pains to tame its
-maker, whose labours have proved
-extremely profitable.—Schneider,
-Observ. sur Ulloa, ii. 200.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1231'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1231'>1231</a>. Arist. Hist. Anim. ix. 27.
-24. In Attica, the honey was
-taken about the summer solstice;
-at Rome about the festival of
-Vulcan, in the month of August.—Winkelmann.
-Hist. de l’Art,
-i. 65. But commentators are
-not at all agreed respecting the
-meaning of Pliny, whom this
-writer relies upon. xi. 15. Cf.
-Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 797.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1232'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1232'>1232</a>. Arist. Hist. Anim. ix. 27.
-19. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 752. Cf.
-Meurs. Græc. Ludib. p. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1233'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1233'>1233</a>. Varro, de Re Rust. iii. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1234'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1234'>1234</a>. A gentleman in Surrey desirous
-of knowing his own bees,
-when he should chance to meet
-them in the fields, touched their
-wings with vermilion as they
-were issuing from the hive. Being
-one fine day in summer on
-a visit at Hampstead, he found
-them thickly scattered among the
-wild flowers on the heath.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1235'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1235'>1235</a>. De Re Rust. iii. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1236'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1236'>1236</a>. Preserved by Photius. Biblioth.
-cod. 278. p. 529. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1237'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1237'>1237</a>. Herod. vii. 31. Cf. iv. 194.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1238'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1238'>1238</a>. On the origin of the honeydew,
-see the Quarterly Journal
-of Agriculture, No. XLIV. p.
-499, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1239'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1239'>1239</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii. 7.
-6. Cf. Hes. Opp. et Dies, 232.
-seq. Cf. Lord Bacon, Sylva
-Sylvarum. 496.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1240'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1240'>1240</a>. Schneid. Comm. ad Theoph.
-Frag. t. iv. p. 822.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>
- <h3 class='c002'>CHAPTER II. <br /> GARDEN AND ORCHARD.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Lord Bacon, who loved to be surrounded by plants
-and trees and flowers, delivers it as his opinion,
-that the scientific culture of gardens affords a surer
-mark of the advance of civilisation than any improvement
-in the science of architecture, since men, he
-observes, enjoyed the luxury of magnificent palaces
-before that of picturesque and well-ordered garden-grounds.
-This, likewise, was the conviction of the
-ancient Greeks,<a id='r1241' /><a href='#f1241' class='c012'><sup>[1241]</sup></a> in whose literature we everywhere
-discover vestiges of a passion for that voluptuous
-solitude which men taste in artificial and secluded
-plantations, amid flower-beds and arbours and hanging
-vines and fountains and smooth shady walks.
-No full description, however, of an Hellenic garden
-has survived; even the poets have contented
-themselves with affording us glimpses of their “studious
-walks and shades.” We must, therefore, endeavour,
-by the aid of scattered hints, chance expressions,
-fragments, and a careful study of the natural
-and invariable productions of the country, to work
-out for ourselves a picture of what the gardens of
-Peisistratos, or Cimon, or Pericles, or Epicurus,
-whom Pliny<a id='r1242' /><a href='#f1242' class='c012'><sup>[1242]</sup></a> denominates the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>magister hortorum</i></span>, or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>any other Grecian gentleman, must in the best ages
-have been.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That portion of the ground<a id='r1243' /><a href='#f1243' class='c012'><sup>[1243]</sup></a> which was devoted
-to the culture of sweet-smelling shrubs and flowers,
-usually approached and projected inwards between
-the back wings of the house, so that from the windows
-the eye might alight upon the rich and variegated
-tints of the parterres<a id='r1244' /><a href='#f1244' class='c012'><sup>[1244]</sup></a> intermingled with verdure,
-while the evening and morning breeze wafted
-clouds of fragrance into the apartments.<a id='r1245' /><a href='#f1245' class='c012'><sup>[1245]</sup></a> The lawns,
-shrubberies, bosquets, thickets, arcades, and avenues,
-were, in most cases, laid out in a picturesque though
-artificial manner, the principal object appearing to
-have been to combine use with magnificence, and
-to enjoy all the blended hues and odours which the
-plants and trees acclimated in Hellas could afford.
-Protection, in summer, from the sun’s rays, is, in those
-southern latitudes, an almost necessary ingredient
-of pleasure, and, therefore, numerous trees, as the
-cedar,<a id='r1246' /><a href='#f1246' class='c012'><sup>[1246]</sup></a> the cypress, the black and white poplar,<a id='r1247' /><a href='#f1247' class='c012'><sup>[1247]</sup></a> the
-ash, the linden, the elm, and the platane, rose here
-and there in the grounds, in some places singly, elsewhere
-in clumps, uniting their branches above, and
-affording a cool and dense shade. Beneath these
-umbrageous arches the air was further refrigerated
-by splashing fountains,<a id='r1248' /><a href='#f1248' class='c012'><sup>[1248]</sup></a> whose waters, through numerous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>fair channels, straight or winding, as the use
-demanded of them required,<a id='r1249' /><a href='#f1249' class='c012'><sup>[1249]</sup></a> spread themselves over
-the whole garden, refreshing the eye and keeping
-up a perpetual verdure. Copses of myrtles, of roses,
-of agnus-castus,<a id='r1250' /><a href='#f1250' class='c012'><sup>[1250]</sup></a> and other odoriferous shrubs intermingled,
-clustering round a pomegranate-tree, were
-usually placed on elevated spots,<a id='r1251' /><a href='#f1251' class='c012'><sup>[1251]</sup></a> that, being thus
-exposed to the winds, they might the more freely
-diffuse their sweetness. The spaces between trees
-were sometimes planted with roses,<a id='r1252' /><a href='#f1252' class='c012'><sup>[1252]</sup></a> and lilies, and
-violets, and golden crocuses;<a id='r1253' /><a href='#f1253' class='c012'><sup>[1253]</sup></a> and sometimes presented
-a breadth of smooth, close, green sward,
-sprinkled with wild-flowers, as the violet and the blue
-veronica,<a id='r1254' /><a href='#f1254' class='c012'><sup>[1254]</sup></a> the pink, and the pale primrose, the golden
-motherwort, the cowslip, the daisy, the pimpernel,
-and the periwinkle. In many gardens the custom
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>was, to plant each kind of tree in separate groups,
-and each species of flower-bed also had, as now in
-Holland,<a id='r1255' /><a href='#f1255' class='c012'><sup>[1255]</sup></a> a distinct space assigned to it; so that
-there were beds of white violets,<a id='r1256' /><a href='#f1256' class='c012'><sup>[1256]</sup></a> of irises, of the
-golden cynosure,<a id='r1257' /><a href='#f1257' class='c012'><sup>[1257]</sup></a> of hyacinths, of ranunculuses, of
-the blue campanula, or Canterbury bells, of white
-gilliflowers, carnations, and the branchy asphodel.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>One of the principal causes which induced the
-Greeks to attend to the culture of ornamental shrubs
-and flowers, was the perpetual use made of them in
-crowns and garlands.<a id='r1258' /><a href='#f1258' class='c012'><sup>[1258]</sup></a> Nearly all their ceremonies,
-whether civil or religious, were performed by individuals
-wearing certain wreaths about their brow.
-Thus the Spartans, during the Promachian festival,<a id='r1259' /><a href='#f1259' class='c012'><sup>[1259]</sup></a>
-shaded their foreheads with plaited tufts of reeds—priests
-and priestesses, soothsayers,<a id='r1260' /><a href='#f1260' class='c012'><sup>[1260]</sup></a> prophets, and enchanters,
-appeared in their several capacities before
-the gods in temples or sacred groves with symbolical
-crowns encircling their heads, as the priests of
-Hera, at Samos, with laurel,<a id='r1261' /><a href='#f1261' class='c012'><sup>[1261]</sup></a> and those of Aphrodite
-with myrtle,<a id='r1262' /><a href='#f1262' class='c012'><sup>[1262]</sup></a> while the statues of the divinities themselves
-were often crowned with circlets of these
-“earthly stars.” In the festival of Europa, at Corinth,
-a crown of myrtle, thirty feet in circumference,
-was borne in procession through the city.<a id='r1263' /><a href='#f1263' class='c012'><sup>[1263]</sup></a> The actors,
-dancers, and spectators of the theatre usually
-appeared crowned with flowers,<a id='r1264' /><a href='#f1264' class='c012'><sup>[1264]</sup></a> as did every guest
-at an entertainment, while lovers suspended a profusion
-of garlands on the doors of their mistresses,
-as did the devout on the temples and altars of the
-gods.<a id='r1265' /><a href='#f1265' class='c012'><sup>[1265]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Most of the flowers cultivated, moreover, suggested
-poetical or mythological associations; for the
-religion of Greece combined itself with nearly every
-object in nature, more particularly with the beautiful,
-so that the Greek, as he strolled through his
-garden, had perpetually before his fancy a succession
-of fables connected with nymphs and goddesses and
-the old hereditary traditions of his county. Thus
-the laurel recalled the tale and transformation
-of Daphnè,<a id='r1266' /><a href='#f1266' class='c012'><sup>[1266]</sup></a> the object of Apollo’s love—the cypresses
-or graces of the vegetable kingdom,<a id='r1267' /><a href='#f1267' class='c012'><sup>[1267]</sup></a> were the everlasting
-representatives of Eteocles’ daughters, visited
-by death because they dared to rival the goddesses
-in dancing—the myrtle<a id='r1268' /><a href='#f1268' class='c012'><sup>[1268]</sup></a> was a most beautiful maiden
-of Attica, fairer than all her countrywomen, swifter
-and more patient of toil than the youth, who therefore
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>slew her through envy—the pine<a id='r1269' /><a href='#f1269' class='c012'><sup>[1269]</sup></a> was the tall
-and graceful mistress of Pan and Boreas—the mint
-that of Pluto—while the rose-campion sprung from
-the bath of Aphrodite, and the humble cabbage from
-the tears of Lycurgus, the enemy of Dionysos.<a id='r1270' /><a href='#f1270' class='c012'><sup>[1270]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It has sometimes been supposed,<a id='r1271' /><a href='#f1271' class='c012'><sup>[1271]</sup></a> that the flower
-which constitutes the greatest ornament of gardens
-was wholly unknown in the early ages of Greece.
-But this theory, imagined for the purpose of destroying
-the claims of the Anacreontic fragments to
-be considered genuine,<a id='r1272' /><a href='#f1272' class='c012'><sup>[1272]</sup></a> is entirely overthrown by
-the testimony of several ancient writers, more particularly
-Herodotus,<a id='r1273' /><a href='#f1273' class='c012'><sup>[1273]</sup></a> who speaks of the rose of sixty
-leaves, as found in the gardens of Midas in Thrace,
-at the foot of the snowy Bermios. Elswhere, too,
-he compares the flower of the red Niliac lotus<a id='r1274' /><a href='#f1274' class='c012'><sup>[1274]</sup></a> to
-the rose; and Stesichoros,<a id='r1275' /><a href='#f1275' class='c012'><sup>[1275]</sup></a> an older poet than Anacreon,
-distinctly mentions chaplets composed of this flower.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Many a yellow quince was there</div>
- <div class='line'>Piled upon the regal chair,</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>Many a verdant myrtle-bough,</div>
- <div class='line'>Many a rose-crown featly wreathed,</div>
- <div class='line'>With twisted violets that grow</div>
- <div class='line'>Where the breath of spring has breathed.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Homer,<a id='r1276' /><a href='#f1276' class='c012'><sup>[1276]</sup></a> too, it is evident, was familiar with the
-rose, to whose fragrant petals he compares the
-fingers of the morning, and not, as has been imagined,
-to the blood-red flower of the wild pomegranate
-tree.<a id='r1277' /><a href='#f1277' class='c012'><sup>[1277]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>According, moreover, to a tradition preserved to
-later times, the seasons of the year, which in remote
-antiquity were but three, they symbolically represented
-by a rose, an ear of corn, and an apple.<a id='r1278' /><a href='#f1278' class='c012'><sup>[1278]</sup></a>
-This division is thought to have been borrowed
-from the Egyptians, in whose country, however, the
-apple was never sufficiently naturalised to be taken
-as an emblem of one of the seasons of the year.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But, at whatever period the rose began to be
-cultivated, it evidently, as soon as known, shared
-with the violet the admiration of the Athenian people,
-whose extensive plantations of this most fragrant
-shrub recall to mind the rose gardens of the Fayoum,
-or Serinaghur. The secret, moreover, was early
-discovered of hastening or retarding their maturity,
-so as to obtain an abundant supply through every
-month in the year.<a id='r1279' /><a href='#f1279' class='c012'><sup>[1279]</sup></a> Occasionally, too, numbers of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>rosebuds were laid among green barleystalks, plucked
-up by the roots, in unglazed amphoræ, to be brought
-forth and made to blow when wanted. Others deposited
-them between layers of the same material
-on the ground, or dipped them in the liquid dregs
-of olives. Another mode of preserving the rose was
-exceedingly curious,—cutting off the top of a large
-standing reed, and splitting it down a little way,
-they inserted a number of rosebuds in the hollow,
-and then bound it softly round and atop with papyrus
-in order to prevent their fragrance from exhaling.<a id='r1280' /><a href='#f1280' class='c012'><sup>[1280]</sup></a>
-How many varieties of this flower<a id='r1281' /><a href='#f1281' class='c012'><sup>[1281]</sup></a> were
-possessed by the ancients it is now, perhaps, impossible
-to determine; but they were acquainted
-with the common, the white, and the moss rose,
-the last, in Aristotle’s<a id='r1282' /><a href='#f1282' class='c012'><sup>[1282]</sup></a> opinion, the sweetest, together
-with the rose of a hundred leaves,<a id='r1283' /><a href='#f1283' class='c012'><sup>[1283]</sup></a> celebrated
-by the Persian poets. Even the wild rose was not
-wholly inodorous in Greece.<a id='r1284' /><a href='#f1284' class='c012'><sup>[1284]</sup></a> Roses were artificially
-blanched by being exposed while unfolding to
-powerful and repeated fumigations with sulphur.<a id='r1285' /><a href='#f1285' class='c012'><sup>[1285]</sup></a>
-The roses which grew on a dry soil were supposed
-to be the sweetest, while their fragrance
-was augmented by planting garlic near the root.<a id='r1286' /><a href='#f1286' class='c012'><sup>[1286]</sup></a>
-To cause them to bloom in January, or in early
-spring (for even in the most southern parts of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>Greece the rose season only commences in April)<a id='r1287' /><a href='#f1287' class='c012'><sup>[1287]</sup></a>
-various means were resorted to; sometimes, the
-bushes were watered twice a-day during the whole
-summer; on other occasions, a shallow trench was
-dug at a distance of about eighteen inches round
-the bush, into which warm water was poured
-morning and evening;<a id='r1288' /><a href='#f1288' class='c012'><sup>[1288]</sup></a> while a third, and, perhaps,
-the surest, method was to plant them in pots, or
-baskets, which, during the winter months, were
-placed in sheltered sunny spots by day,<a id='r1289' /><a href='#f1289' class='c012'><sup>[1289]</sup></a> and carried
-into the house at night; afterwards, when the season
-was sufficiently advanced, these portable gardens
-were buried in the earth.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Another favorite denizen of Hellenic gardens was
-the lily, which, probably, introduced from Suza or
-from Egypt, beheld the virginal snow of its bells compelled,
-by art, to put on various hues, as deep red
-and purple,<a id='r1290' /><a href='#f1290' class='c012'><sup>[1290]</sup></a>—the former, by infusing, before planting,
-cinnabar into the bulb,—the latter, by steeping it
-in the lees of purple wine. This flower naturally
-begins to bloom<a id='r1291' /><a href='#f1291' class='c012'><sup>[1291]</sup></a> just as the roses are fading; but,
-to produce a succession of lilies at different seasons,
-some were set near the surface, which grew up and
-blossomed immediately, while others were buried at
-different depths, according to the times at which
-they were required to flower.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Along with these, about the dank borders of
-streams or fountains, grew the favourite flower of
-the Athenian people, purple, double, white, and gold,<a id='r1292' /><a href='#f1292' class='c012'><sup>[1292]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in22'>“The violet dim,</div>
- <div class='line'>But sweeter than the lids of Juno’s eyes,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or Cytherea’s breath;”<a id='r1293' /><a href='#f1293' class='c012'><sup>[1293]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>the pansy,<a id='r1294' /><a href='#f1294' class='c012'><sup>[1294]</sup></a> “freaked with jet;” the purple cyperus,
-the iris, the water-mint,<a id='r1295' /><a href='#f1295' class='c012'><sup>[1295]</sup></a> and hyacinth,<a id='r1296' /><a href='#f1296' class='c012'><sup>[1296]</sup></a> and the
-narcissus,<a id='r1297' /><a href='#f1297' class='c012'><sup>[1297]</sup></a> and the willow-herb, and the blue speedwell,
-and the marsh-marigold, or, brave bassinet, and
-the jacinth, and early daffodil,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“That come before the swallow dares, and take</div>
- <div class='line'>The winds of March with beauty.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>A netting of wild thyme<a id='r1298' /><a href='#f1298' class='c012'><sup>[1298]</sup></a> tufted with sweet mint,
-and marjoram,<a id='r1299' /><a href='#f1299' class='c012'><sup>[1299]</sup></a> which, when crushed by the foot,
-yielded the most delicious fragrance, embraced the
-sunny hillocks, while here and there singly, or in
-beds, grew a profusion of other herbs and flowers,
-some prized for their medicinal virtues, others for
-their beauty, others for their delicate odour, as the
-geranium, the spike-lavender, the rosemary,<a id='r1300' /><a href='#f1300' class='c012'><sup>[1300]</sup></a> with
-its purple and white flowers, the basil,<a id='r1301' /><a href='#f1301' class='c012'><sup>[1301]</sup></a> the flower-gentle,
-the hyssop, the white privet, the cytisus, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>sweet marjoram, the rose-campion, or columbine,<a id='r1302' /><a href='#f1302' class='c012'><sup>[1302]</sup></a>
-the yellow amaryllis, and the celandine. Here, too,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Their gem-like eyes</div>
- <div class='line'>The Phrygian melilots disclose,”<a id='r1303' /><a href='#f1303' class='c012'><sup>[1303]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>with the balm-gentle, the red, the purple, and the
-coronal anemone,<a id='r1304' /><a href='#f1304' class='c012'><sup>[1304]</sup></a> the convolvulus, yellow, white, pale
-pink, and blue, together with our Lady’s-gloves, the
-flower of the Trinity, southernwood,<a id='r1305' /><a href='#f1305' class='c012'><sup>[1305]</sup></a> and summer-savory,<a id='r1306' /><a href='#f1306' class='c012'><sup>[1306]</sup></a>
-œnanthe,<a id='r1307' /><a href='#f1307' class='c012'><sup>[1307]</sup></a> gith, the silver sage,<a id='r1308' /><a href='#f1308' class='c012'><sup>[1308]</sup></a> Saint Mary’s
-thistle, and the amaranth, while high above all rose
-the dark pyramidal masses of the rhododendron,<a id='r1309' /><a href='#f1309' class='c012'><sup>[1309]</sup></a> with
-its gigantic clusters of purple flowers.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>How many of the lovely evergreens<a id='r1310' /><a href='#f1310' class='c012'><sup>[1310]</sup></a> that abound
-in Greece were usually cultivated in a single garden,
-we possess no means of ascertaining, though all appear
-occasionally to have been called in to diversify
-the picture. The myrtle,<a id='r1311' /><a href='#f1311' class='c012'><sup>[1311]</sup></a> whose deep blue berries
-were esteemed a delicacy,<a id='r1312' /><a href='#f1312' class='c012'><sup>[1312]</sup></a> in some places rose into
-a tree, while elsewhere it was planted thick, and bent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>and fashioned into bowers,<a id='r1313' /><a href='#f1313' class='c012'><sup>[1313]</sup></a> which, when sprinkled
-with its snowy blossoms, combined, perhaps, with
-those of the jasmine, the eglantine, and the yellow
-tufts of the broad-leaved philyrea,<a id='r1314' /><a href='#f1314' class='c012'><sup>[1314]</sup></a> constituted some
-of the most beautiful objects in a Greek paradise.
-Thickets of the tamarisk,<a id='r1315' /><a href='#f1315' class='c012'><sup>[1315]</sup></a> the strawberry-tree,<a id='r1316' /><a href='#f1316' class='c012'><sup>[1316]</sup></a> the
-juniper, the box, the bay, the styrax, the andrachne,
-and the white-flowered laurel, in whose dark leaves
-the morning dew collects and glistens in the sun like
-so many tiny mirrors of burnished silver, varied the
-surface of the lawn, connecting the bowers, and the
-copses, and the flower beds, and the grassy slopes
-with those loftier piles of verdure, consisting of the
-pine tree, the smilax, the cedar, the carob, the
-maple,<a id='r1317' /><a href='#f1317' class='c012'><sup>[1317]</sup></a> the ash, the elm tree, the platane,<a id='r1318' /><a href='#f1318' class='c012'><sup>[1318]</sup></a> and
-the evergreen oak which here and there towered
-in the grounds. In many places the vine shot up
-among the ranges of elms or platanes, and stretched
-its long twisted arm from trunk to trunk, like
-so many festoons of intermingled leaves and tendrils,
-and massive clusters of golden or purple
-grapes.<a id='r1319' /><a href='#f1319' class='c012'><sup>[1319]</sup></a> Alternating, perhaps, with the lovely favourite
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>of Dionysos, the blue and yellow clematis<a id='r1320' /><a href='#f1320' class='c012'><sup>[1320]</sup></a>
-suspended their living garlands around the stems,
-or along the boughs of the trees, in union or contrast
-with the dodder, or the honeysuckle, or the
-delicate and slender briony. And, if perchance a
-silver fir, with its bright yellow flowers,<a id='r1321' /><a href='#f1321' class='c012'><sup>[1321]</sup></a> formed part
-of the group, large pendant clusters of mistletoe,
-the food sometimes of the labouring ox,<a id='r1322' /><a href='#f1322' class='c012'><sup>[1322]</sup></a> might frequently
-be seen swinging thick among its branches.
-In some grounds was probably cultivated the quercus
-suber,<a id='r1323' /><a href='#f1323' class='c012'><sup>[1323]</sup></a> or cork tree, with bark four or five
-inches thick, triennially stripped off,<a id='r1324' /><a href='#f1324' class='c012'><sup>[1324]</sup></a> after which
-it grows again with renewed vigour. Occasionally,
-where streams and rivulets<a id='r1325' /><a href='#f1325' class='c012'><sup>[1325]</sup></a> found their way through
-the grounds, the black and white poplar, the willow,
-and the lentiscus, with a variety of tufted reeds,
-crowded about the margin, here and there shading
-and concealing the waters.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Proceeding now into the orchard we find, that,
-instead of walls, it was, sometimes at least, if it
-touched on the confines of another man’s grounds,
-surrounded by hedges<a id='r1326' /><a href='#f1326' class='c012'><sup>[1326]</sup></a> of black and white thorn,
-brambles, and barberry bushes, as at present<a id='r1327' /><a href='#f1327' class='c012'><sup>[1327]</sup></a> by impenetrable
-fences of the Indian cactus.<a id='r1328' /><a href='#f1328' class='c012'><sup>[1328]</sup></a> On the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>banks of these hedges, both inside and out, were
-found, peculiar tribes of plants and wild flowers, in
-some places enamelling the smooth close turf, elsewhere
-flourishing thickly in dank masses of verdure,
-or climbing upwards and interlacing themselves with
-the lofty and projecting thorns, such as the enchanter’s
-nightshade, the euphorbia, the iris tuberosa, the
-red-flowered valerian, the ground-ivy,<a id='r1329' /><a href='#f1329' class='c012'><sup>[1329]</sup></a> the physalis
-somnifera, with its coral red seeds in their inflated
-calyces,<a id='r1330' /><a href='#f1330' class='c012'><sup>[1330]</sup></a> the globularia, the creeping heliotrope, the
-penny-cress,<a id='r1331' /><a href='#f1331' class='c012'><sup>[1331]</sup></a> the bright yellow scorpion-flower, and
-the broad-leaved cyclamen or our Lady’s-seal, with
-pink flower, light green leaf, veined with white and
-yellow beneath. The ancient Parthians surrounded
-their gardens with hedges of a fragrant, creeping
-shrub denominated philadelphos or love-brother,<a id='r1332' /><a href='#f1332' class='c012'><sup>[1332]</sup></a>
-whose long suckers they interwove into a kind of
-network forming a sufficient protection against man
-and beast. In mountainous districts, where rain-floods
-were to be guarded against, the enclosures
-frequently consisted of walls of loose stones,<a id='r1333' /><a href='#f1333' class='c012'><sup>[1333]</sup></a> as is
-still the case in Savoy on the edge of mountain
-torrents.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It was moreover the custom, both in Greece and
-Italy, to plant, on the boundary line of estates, rows
-of olives or other trees,<a id='r1334' /><a href='#f1334' class='c012'><sup>[1334]</sup></a> which not only served to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>mark the limits of a man’s territory, but shed an
-air of beauty over the whole country. A proof of
-this practice prevailing in Attica, has with much
-ingenuity<a id='r1335' /><a href='#f1335' class='c012'><sup>[1335]</sup></a> been brought forward from the “Frogs,”
-where Bacchos, addressing the poet Æschylus in
-the shades, observes “It will be all right provided
-your anger does not transport you beyond the olives.”
-It may likewise be remarked that in olive-grounds,<a id='r1336' /><a href='#f1336' class='c012'><sup>[1336]</sup></a>
-the trees, excepting the sacred ones called <em>moriæ</em>,
-were always planted in straight lines, from twenty-five
-to thirty feet<a id='r1337' /><a href='#f1337' class='c012'><sup>[1337]</sup></a> apart, because, in order to ripen
-the fruit,<a id='r1338' /><a href='#f1338' class='c012'><sup>[1338]</sup></a> it is necessary that the wind should be
-able freely to play upon it from all sides. And
-further because they delight in a warm dry air like
-that of Libya, Cilicia,<a id='r1339' /><a href='#f1339' class='c012'><sup>[1339]</sup></a> and Attica, the best olive-grounds
-were generally supposed to be those which
-occupied the rapid slopes of hills where the soil is
-naturally stony and light. The oil of the plains was
-commonly coarse and thick.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among these olive grounds in summer, the song
-of the tettix<a id='r1340' /><a href='#f1340' class='c012'><sup>[1340]</sup></a> is commonly heard; for this musical
-insect loves the olive, which, like the sant of the
-Arabian desert, yields but a thin and warm shade.<a id='r1341' /><a href='#f1341' class='c012'><sup>[1341]</sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>The tettix, in fact, though never found in an unwooded
-country, as in the plains about Cyrene,
-equally avoids the dense shade of the woods.<a id='r1342' /><a href='#f1342' class='c012'><sup>[1342]</sup></a> Here
-likewise<a id='r1343' /><a href='#f1343' class='c012'><sup>[1343]</sup></a> are found the blackbird, the roller, and
-three distinct species of butcher-bird—the small grey,
-the ash-coloured, and the redheaded.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In an Attic orchard were most of the trees reared
-in England, together with many which will not stand
-the rigour of our climate.—The apple,<a id='r1344' /><a href='#f1344' class='c012'><sup>[1344]</sup></a> cultivated
-with peculiar care in the environs of Delphi and
-Corinth; the pear,<a id='r1345' /><a href='#f1345' class='c012'><sup>[1345]</sup></a> the cherry from Cerasos on the
-southern shore of the Black Sea,<a id='r1346' /><a href='#f1346' class='c012'><sup>[1346]</sup></a> which sometimes
-grew to the height of nearly forty feet,<a id='r1347' /><a href='#f1347' class='c012'><sup>[1347]</sup></a> the damascene,<a id='r1348' /><a href='#f1348' class='c012'><sup>[1348]</sup></a>
-and the common plum. Along with these
-were likewise to be found the quince,<a id='r1349' /><a href='#f1349' class='c012'><sup>[1349]</sup></a> the apricot,
-the peach, the nectarine, the walnut, the chestnut,
-the filbert, introduced from Pontos,<a id='r1350' /><a href='#f1350' class='c012'><sup>[1350]</sup></a> the hazel nut,
-the medlar, and the mulberry, which, according to
-Menander, is the earliest fruit of the year.<a id='r1351' /><a href='#f1351' class='c012'><sup>[1351]</sup></a> With
-these were intermingled the fig, white, purple, and
-red, the pomegranate,<a id='r1352' /><a href='#f1352' class='c012'><sup>[1352]</sup></a> from the northern shores of
-Africa, the orange,<a id='r1353' /><a href='#f1353' class='c012'><sup>[1353]</sup></a> still planted under artificial shelter
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>at Lemnos, the citron, the lemon,<a id='r1354' /><a href='#f1354' class='c012'><sup>[1354]</sup></a> the date-palm,<a id='r1355' /><a href='#f1355' class='c012'><sup>[1355]</sup></a>
-the pistachio, the almond, the service, and
-the cornel-tree.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As these gardens were arranged with a view no
-less to pleasure than to profit, the trees were planted
-in lines, which, when sufficiently close, formed
-a series of umbrageous avenues, opening here into
-the lawn and there into the vineyard, which generally
-formed part of a Greek gentleman’s grounds.
-And such an orchard decked in its summer pride
-with foliage of emerald and fruit, ruddy, purple, and
-gold, the notes of the thrush, the nightingale,<a id='r1356' /><a href='#f1356' class='c012'><sup>[1356]</sup></a> the
-tettix, with the “amorous thrill of the green-finch,”<a id='r1357' /><a href='#f1357' class='c012'><sup>[1357]</sup></a>
-floating through its boughs, and the perfume of the
-agnus-castus, the myrtle, the rose, and the violet,
-wafting richly on all sides, was a very paradise.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Not unfrequently, common foot-paths traversed
-these orchards and vineyards, in which case the
-passers-by were customarily, if not by law, permitted
-to pick and eat the fruit,<a id='r1358' /><a href='#f1358' class='c012'><sup>[1358]</sup></a> which seems also
-from the account of our Saviour to have been the
-practice in Judæa. The contrary is the case in
-modern Europe. In Burgundy and Switzerland,
-where pathways traverse vineyards, it is not uncommon
-to see the grapes smeared with something
-resembling white lime which children are assured
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>is a deadly poison. This, while in the country, I
-regarded as a mere stratagem, intended to protect
-the vineyards from depredation, though there seems
-after all to be too much reason to believe the nefarious
-practice to exist in several localities. At
-least two children were recently killed at Foix by
-eating poisoned grapes on the way-side.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Greeks placed much of their happiness in
-spots like those we have been describing, as may
-be inferred from such of their fabulous traditions,<a id='r1359' /><a href='#f1359' class='c012'><sup>[1359]</sup></a>
-as relate to the garden of the Hesperides,<a id='r1360' /><a href='#f1360' class='c012'><sup>[1360]</sup></a>
-the gardens of Midas, with their magnificent roses,
-and those of Alcinoös,<a id='r1361' /><a href='#f1361' class='c012'><sup>[1361]</sup></a> which still shed their fragrance
-over the pages of the Odyssey. From the
-East, no doubt, they obtained, along with their noblest
-fruit-trees, the art of cultivating them, and,
-perhaps, that sacred tradition of the Garden of
-Eden, preserved in the Scriptures, formed the basis
-of many a Hellenic legend.<a id='r1362' /><a href='#f1362' class='c012'><sup>[1362]</sup></a> The Syrians acquired
-much celebrity among the ancients for their knowledge
-of gardening, in which, according to modern
-travellers, they still excel. Of the manner of cultivating
-fruit-trees in the earlier ages very little is
-known. No doubt they soon discovered that some
-will thrive better in certain soils and situations than
-in others, and profited by the discovery; but the
-art of properly training and grafting trees is comparatively
-modern.<a id='r1363' /><a href='#f1363' class='c012'><sup>[1363]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>No mention of it occurs in the Pentateuch, though
-Moses there gives directions how to manage an orchard.
-For the first three years the blossoms were
-not to be suffered to ripen into fruit, and even in
-the fourth all that came was sacred to the Lord.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>From the fifth year, onward, they might do with
-it what they pleased. Of these regulations the intention
-was to prevent the early exhaustion of the
-trees. Homer, also, is silent on the practice of
-grafting, nor does any mention of it occur in the
-extant works of Hesiod, though Manilius<a id='r1364' /><a href='#f1364' class='c012'><sup>[1364]</sup></a> refers to
-his poems in proof of the antiquity of the practice.
-By degrees, however, it got into use;<a id='r1365' /><a href='#f1365' class='c012'><sup>[1365]</sup></a> and, in the
-age of Aristotle,<a id='r1366' /><a href='#f1366' class='c012'><sup>[1366]</sup></a> was already common, as at present
-almost everywhere, save in Greece,<a id='r1367' /><a href='#f1367' class='c012'><sup>[1367]</sup></a> since no fruit
-was esteemed excellent unless the tree had been
-grafted. Some few of the rules they observed in
-this process may be briefly noticed.<a id='r1368' /><a href='#f1368' class='c012'><sup>[1368]</sup></a> Trees with a
-thick rind were grafted in the ordinary way, and
-sometimes by inserting the graft between the bark
-and the wood, which was called infoliation.<a id='r1369' /><a href='#f1369' class='c012'><sup>[1369]</sup></a> Inoculation,
-also, or introducing the bud of one tree into
-the rind of another, was common among Greek gardeners.<a id='r1370' /><a href='#f1370' class='c012'><sup>[1370]</sup></a>
-They were extremely particular in their
-choice of stocks.<a id='r1371' /><a href='#f1371' class='c012'><sup>[1371]</sup></a> Thus the fig was grafted only on
-the platane<a id='r1372' /><a href='#f1372' class='c012'><sup>[1372]</sup></a> and the mulberry; the mulberry on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>the chestnut,<a id='r1373' /><a href='#f1373' class='c012'><sup>[1373]</sup></a> the beech, the apple, the terebinth,
-the wild pear, the elm, and the white poplar,
-(whence white mulberries;) the pear on the pomegranate,
-the quince, the mulberry, (whence red
-pears,) the almond, and the terebinth; apples<a id='r1374' /><a href='#f1374' class='c012'><sup>[1374]</sup></a> on
-all sorts of wild pears and quinces, (whence the
-finest apples called by the Athenians Melimela,)<a id='r1375' /><a href='#f1375' class='c012'><sup>[1375]</sup></a>
-on damascenes, also, and <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>vice versâ</i></span>, and on the
-platane, (whence red apples.)<a id='r1376' /><a href='#f1376' class='c012'><sup>[1376]</sup></a> Another method of
-communicating a blush to this fruit was to plant
-rose-bushes round the root of the tree.<a id='r1377' /><a href='#f1377' class='c012'><sup>[1377]</sup></a> The walnut
-was grafted on the strawberry-tree only;<a id='r1378' /><a href='#f1378' class='c012'><sup>[1378]</sup></a> the pomegranate
-on the myrtle<a id='r1379' /><a href='#f1379' class='c012'><sup>[1379]</sup></a> and the willow; the laurel
-on the cherry<a id='r1380' /><a href='#f1380' class='c012'><sup>[1380]</sup></a> and the ash; the white peach on
-the damascene and the almond; the damascene on
-the wild pear, the quince, and the apple; chestnuts
-on the walnut, the beech, and the oak;<a id='r1381' /><a href='#f1381' class='c012'><sup>[1381]</sup></a> the cherry
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>on the terebinth, and the peach; the quince on the
-oxyacanthus; the myrtle on the willow; and the
-apricot on the damascene, and the Thasian almond-tree.
-The vine, also, was grafted on a cherry and
-a myrtle-stock, which produced, in the first case,
-grapes in spring,<a id='r1382' /><a href='#f1382' class='c012'><sup>[1382]</sup></a> in the second, a mixed fruit, between
-the myrtle-berry and the grape.<a id='r1383' /><a href='#f1383' class='c012'><sup>[1383]</sup></a> When the
-gardener desired to obtain black citrons, he inserted
-a citron-graft into an apple-stock, and, if red, into
-a mulberry-stock.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Citrons were likewise occasionally grafted on the
-pomegranate-tree. In the present day, the almond,
-the chestnut, the fig, the orange, and the citron,
-with many other species of fruit-trees, are no longer
-thought to require grafting.<a id='r1384' /><a href='#f1384' class='c012'><sup>[1384]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In illustration of the prolific virtue of the Hellenic
-soil it may be mentioned, that young branchless
-pear-trees, transplanted from Malta to the neighbourhood
-of Athens, in the autumn of 1830, were the
-next year covered thick with fruit, which hung
-even upon the trunk like hanks of onions.<a id='r1385' /><a href='#f1385' class='c012'><sup>[1385]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Notwithstanding the early season of the year at
-which Gaia distributes her gifts in Greece, numerous
-arts were resorted to for anticipating the productions
-of summer,<a id='r1386' /><a href='#f1386' class='c012'><sup>[1386]</sup></a> though of most of them the nature
-is unknown. It is certain, however, that they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>possessed the means of ripening fruits throughout
-the winter, either by hothouses or other contrivances
-equally efficacious.<a id='r1387' /><a href='#f1387' class='c012'><sup>[1387]</sup></a> During the festival celebrated
-in honour of the lover of Aphrodite, the seeds of
-flowers were sown in those silver pots, or baskets,
-called the gardens of Adonis,<a id='r1388' /><a href='#f1388' class='c012'><sup>[1388]</sup></a> and with artificial
-heat and constant irrigation compelled to bloom in
-eight days. Among the modern Hindus corn is still
-forced to spring up in a few days, by a similar
-process, during the festival of Gouri.<a id='r1389' /><a href='#f1389' class='c012'><sup>[1389]</sup></a> To produce
-rathe figs,<a id='r1390' /><a href='#f1390' class='c012'><sup>[1390]</sup></a> a manure, composed of dove’s dung
-and pepper and oil, was laid about the roots of the
-tree. Another method was that which is still employed
-under the name of caprification, alluded to
-by Sophocles.<a id='r1391' /><a href='#f1391' class='c012'><sup>[1391]</sup></a> For this purpose care was taken to
-rear, close at hand, several wild fig-trees, from which
-might be obtained the flies made use of in this process,<a id='r1392' /><a href='#f1392' class='c012'><sup>[1392]</sup></a>
-performed by cutting off bunches of wild figs
-and suspending them amid the branches of the cultivated
-species,<a id='r1393' /><a href='#f1393' class='c012'><sup>[1393]</sup></a> when a fly issuing from the former
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>pricked the slowly ripening fruit and accelerated its
-maturity.<a id='r1394' /><a href='#f1394' class='c012'><sup>[1394]</sup></a> In growing the various kinds of fig they
-were careful to plant the Chelidonian, the Erinean, or
-wild fig, the Leukerinean, and the Phibaleian<a id='r1395' /><a href='#f1395' class='c012'><sup>[1395]</sup></a> on
-plains. The autumn-royals would grow anywhere.
-Each sort has its peculiar excellence. The following
-were the best: the colouroi, or truncated, the forminion,
-the diforoi, the Megaric, and the Laconian,
-which would bear abundantly if well-watered.<a id='r1396' /><a href='#f1396' class='c012'><sup>[1396]</sup></a>
-Rhodes was famous for its excellent figs, which
-were even thought worthy to be compared with
-those of Attica.<a id='r1397' /><a href='#f1397' class='c012'><sup>[1397]</sup></a> Athenæus, however, pretends that
-the best figs in the world were found at Rome.
-There were figs with a ruddy bloom in the island
-of Paros, the same in kind as the Lydian fig.<a id='r1398' /><a href='#f1398' class='c012'><sup>[1398]</sup></a>
-The Leukerinean produced the white fig.<a id='r1399' /><a href='#f1399' class='c012'><sup>[1399]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The fancy of Hellenic gardeners amused itself
-with effecting numerous fantastic changes in the
-appearance and nature of fruit. Thus citrons, lemons,
-&amp;c., were made, by the application of a clay
-mould, to assume the form of the human face, of
-birds and other animals.<a id='r1400' /><a href='#f1400' class='c012'><sup>[1400]</sup></a> Occasionally, too, they were
-introduced, when small, into the neck of a bottle
-provided with breathing holes, the figure of which
-they assumed as they projected their growth into
-all its dimensions. We are assured, moreover, that,
-by a very simple process, they could produce
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>peaches, almonds,<a id='r1401' /><a href='#f1401' class='c012'><sup>[1401]</sup></a> &amp;c., covered, as though by magic,
-with written characters. The mode of operation
-was this,—steeping the stone of the fruit in water for
-several days, they then carefully divided it, and taking
-out the kernel inscribed upon it with a brazen pen
-whatever words or letters they thought proper. This
-done, they again closed the stone over the kernel,
-bound it round with papyrus, and planted it; and
-the peaches or almonds which afterwards grew on
-that tree bore every one of them, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>mirabile dictu!</i></span>
-the legend inscribed upon the kernel. By similar
-arts<a id='r1402' /><a href='#f1402' class='c012'><sup>[1402]</sup></a> they created stoneless peaches, walnuts without
-husks, figs white one side, and black the other, and
-converted bitter almonds into sweet.<a id='r1403' /><a href='#f1403' class='c012'><sup>[1403]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The rules observed in the planting of fruit-trees
-were numerous.<a id='r1404' /><a href='#f1404' class='c012'><sup>[1404]</sup></a> Some, they were of opinion, were
-best propagated by seed, others by suckers wrenched
-from the root of the parent stock,<a id='r1405' /><a href='#f1405' class='c012'><sup>[1405]</sup></a> others, again, by
-branches selected from among the new wood on the
-topmost boughs. A rude practice, too, common
-enough in our own rural districts, appears to have
-been in much favour among them,—bending some
-long pendant bough to the ground, they covered
-a part of it with heavy clods, allowing, however, the
-extremity to appear above the earth. When it had
-taken root it was severed from the tree and transplanted
-to some proper situation. At other times,
-the points of boughs were drawn down and fixed
-in the ground, which even thus took root, and sent
-the juices backwards, after which the bough was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>cut off and a new stock produced. Trees generated
-by this method, as well as those planted during
-the waning moon,<a id='r1406' /><a href='#f1406' class='c012'><sup>[1406]</sup></a> were supposed to spread and
-grow branchy, while those set during the waxing
-moon attained, though weaker, to a much greater
-height. It ought, perhaps, to be further added,
-that all seeds and plants were put into the ground
-while the moon was below the horizon.<a id='r1407' /><a href='#f1407' class='c012'><sup>[1407]</sup></a> Those trees
-which it was customary to renew by seed were the
-pistachio, the filbert, the almond, the chestnut, the
-white peach, the damascene, the pine-tree, and the
-edible pine, the palm, the cypress, the laurel, the
-ash, the maple, and the fig. The apple,<a id='r1408' /><a href='#f1408' class='c012'><sup>[1408]</sup></a> the cherry,
-the rhamnus jujuba, the common nut, the dwarf
-laurel, the myrtle, and the medlar, were propagated
-by suckers; while the quicker and surer mode of
-raising trees from boughs was frequently adopted
-in the case of the almond, the pear, the mulberry,
-the citron,<a id='r1409' /><a href='#f1409' class='c012'><sup>[1409]</sup></a> the apple, the olive, the quince,<a id='r1410' /><a href='#f1410' class='c012'><sup>[1410]</sup></a> the
-black and white poplar, the ivy, the jujube-tree,
-the myrtle, the chestnut, the vine, the willow, the
-box, and the cytisus.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But the thrifty people of Hellas seldom devoted
-the orchard-ground entirely to fruit-trees. The custom
-seems to have been to lay out the whole in
-beds and borders for the cultivation of vegetables,
-and to plant trees, at intervals, along the edges and
-at the corners. These beds, moreover, were often,
-as with us, edged with parsley and rue; whence the
-proverb,—“You have not proceeded beyond the rue,”
-for “You know nothing of the matter.”<a id='r1411' /><a href='#f1411' class='c012'><sup>[1411]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>The rustics of antiquity, who put generally great
-faith in spells and talismans, possessed an extraordinary
-charm for ensuring unfailing fertility to their
-gardens; they buried an ass’s head deep in the middle
-of them, and sprinkled the ground with the juice
-of fenugreek and lotus.<a id='r1412' /><a href='#f1412' class='c012'><sup>[1412]</sup></a> Somewhat greater efficacy,
-however, may be attributed to their laborious methods
-of manuring and irrigation.<a id='r1413' /><a href='#f1413' class='c012'><sup>[1413]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The aspect of such a garden differed very little,
-except perhaps in luxuriance, from a similar plot of
-ground in Kent or Middlesex. Here you perceived
-beds of turnips, or cabbages, or onions; there, lettuces,
-or endive, or succory,<a id='r1414' /><a href='#f1414' class='c012'><sup>[1414]</sup></a> in the process of blanching,
-or the delicate heads of asparagus, or broad-beans,
-or lentils, or peas, or kidney-beans, or artichokes.
-In the most sunny spots were ranges of
-boxes or baskets for forcing cucumbers.<a id='r1415' /><a href='#f1415' class='c012'><sup>[1415]</sup></a> Near the
-brooks, where such existed, were patches of watermelons,<a id='r1416' /><a href='#f1416' class='c012'><sup>[1416]</sup></a>
-the finest in the world; and here and there,
-clasping round the trunks of trees,<a id='r1417' /><a href='#f1417' class='c012'><sup>[1417]</sup></a> and, suspending
-its huge leaves and spheres from among the branches,
-you might behold the gourd,<a id='r1418' /><a href='#f1418' class='c012'><sup>[1418]</sup></a> as I have often seen
-it in the palm-groves of Nubia. It may be added,
-that the pumpkin, or common gourd, was eaten by
-the Greeks,<a id='r1419' /><a href='#f1419' class='c012'><sup>[1419]</sup></a> as it is still in France and Asia Minor.<a id='r1420' /><a href='#f1420' class='c012'><sup>[1420]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Lettuces<a id='r1421' /><a href='#f1421' class='c012'><sup>[1421]</sup></a> were blanched by being tied a-top, or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>being buried up to a certain point in sand.<a id='r1422' /><a href='#f1422' class='c012'><sup>[1422]</sup></a> They
-were, moreover, supposed to be rendered more rich
-and delicate by being watered with a mixture of
-wine and honey, as was the practice of the gourmand
-Aristoxenos, who having done so over-night, used
-next morning to cut them, and say they were so
-many green cakes sent him by mother Earth.<a id='r1423' /><a href='#f1423' class='c012'><sup>[1423]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Greek gardeners appear to have delighted
-exceedingly in the production of monstrous vegetables.
-Thus, in the case of the cucumber, their principal
-object appears to have been to produce it without
-seed, or of some extraordinary shape.<a id='r1424' /><a href='#f1424' class='c012'><sup>[1424]</sup></a> In the first
-case they diligently watched the appearance of the
-plant above ground, and then covering it over with
-fresh earth, and repeating the same operation three
-times, the cucumbers it bore were found to be seedless.
-The same effect was produced by steeping the
-seeds in sesamum-oil for three days before they were
-sown. They were made to grow to a great length
-by having vessels of water<a id='r1425' /><a href='#f1425' class='c012'><sup>[1425]</sup></a> placed daily within a
-few inches of their points, which, exciting by attraction
-a sort of nisus in the fruit, drew them forward
-as far as the gardener thought necessary.<a id='r1426' /><a href='#f1426' class='c012'><sup>[1426]</sup></a> They
-were made, likewise, to assume all sorts of forms by
-the use of light, fictile moulds,<a id='r1427' /><a href='#f1427' class='c012'><sup>[1427]</sup></a> as in the case of
-the citron. Another method was, to take a large
-reed,<a id='r1428' /><a href='#f1428' class='c012'><sup>[1428]</sup></a> split it, and clear out the pith; then introducing
-the young cucumber into the hollow, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>sections of the reed were bound together, and the
-fruit projected itself through the tube until it acquired
-an enormous length. It is observed by Theophrastus,
-that if you steep the seeds of cucumbers
-in milk, or an infusion of honey, it will improve
-their flavour.<a id='r1429' /><a href='#f1429' class='c012'><sup>[1429]</sup></a> They were, moreover, believed to expand
-in size at the full of the moon, like the sea-hedgehog.<a id='r1430' /><a href='#f1430' class='c012'><sup>[1430]</sup></a>
-A fragrant smell was supposed to be
-communicated to melons<a id='r1431' /><a href='#f1431' class='c012'><sup>[1431]</sup></a> by constantly keeping the
-seed in dry rose-leaves. To preserve the seed for
-any length of time, it was sprinkled with the juice
-of house-leek.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Megaréans, in whose country melons, gourds,<a id='r1432' /><a href='#f1432' class='c012'><sup>[1432]</sup></a>
-and cucumbers were plentiful, were accustomed to
-heap dust about their roots during the prevalence of
-the Etesian winds, and found this answer <a id='corr328.16'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='of of'>of</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_328.16'><ins class='correction' title='of of'>of</ins></a></span>
-irrigation.<a id='r1433' /><a href='#f1433' class='c012'><sup>[1433]</sup></a> It appears from the following proverb,—“The
-end of cucumbers and the beginning of pompions,”—that
-the former went out of season as the
-latter came in.<a id='r1434' /><a href='#f1434' class='c012'><sup>[1434]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To procure a plentiful crop of asparagus, they used
-to bury the shavings of a wild ram’s horn, and well
-water them.<a id='r1435' /><a href='#f1435' class='c012'><sup>[1435]</sup></a> By banking up the stalks, moreover,
-immediately after cutting the heads, they caused new
-shoots to spring forth, and thus enjoyed a fresh supply
-throughout the year. This plant was probably
-obtained from Libya,<a id='r1436' /><a href='#f1436' class='c012'><sup>[1436]</sup></a> where it was said to attain,
-in its wild state, the height of twelve, and sometimes
-even of thirty cubits;<a id='r1437' /><a href='#f1437' class='c012'><sup>[1437]</sup></a> and on the slopes of Lebanon,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>in Syria, it has in our own clay been seen from twelve
-to fifteen feet high.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That kind of cabbage which we call savoys was
-supposed to flourish best in saline spots, on which
-account the gardeners used to sift pounded nitre<a id='r1438' /><a href='#f1438' class='c012'><sup>[1438]</sup></a>
-over the beds where it was sown, as was the practice
-also in Egypt. In and about Alexandria,<a id='r1439' /><a href='#f1439' class='c012'><sup>[1439]</sup></a> however,
-there was said to be some peculiar quality in
-the earth which communicated a bitter taste to the
-cabbage. To prevent this they imported cabbage-seed
-from the island of Rhodes, which produced good
-plants the first year, but experienced in the second
-the acrid influence of the soil.<a id='r1440' /><a href='#f1440' class='c012'><sup>[1440]</sup></a> Kumè was celebrated
-for its fine cabbages, which, when full-grown,
-were of a yellowish green colour, like the new leather
-sole of a sandal. Broccoli and sea-kale and cauliflowers
-would appear to have been commonly cultivated
-in the gardens of the ancients. There was,
-likewise, among them a sort of cabbage supposed to
-have some connexion with the gift of prophecy;<a id='r1441' /><a href='#f1441' class='c012'><sup>[1441]</sup></a>
-and by this, probably, it was, that certain comic
-personages used to swear, as Socrates by the dog,
-and Zeno by the caper-bush.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Radishes<a id='r1442' /><a href='#f1442' class='c012'><sup>[1442]</sup></a> were rendered sweet by steeping the
-seeds in wine and honey, or the fresh juice of grapes:
-Nicander speaks of preserved turnips.<a id='r1443' /><a href='#f1443' class='c012'><sup>[1443]</sup></a> Parsley-seed
-was put into the earth in an old rag, or a wisp of
-straw,<a id='r1444' /><a href='#f1444' class='c012'><sup>[1444]</sup></a> surrounded with manure, and well-watered,
-which made the plant grow large. Rue they sowed in
-warm and sunny spots, without manure.<a id='r1445' /><a href='#f1445' class='c012'><sup>[1445]</sup></a> It was defended
-from the cold of winter by being surrounded
-with heaps of ashes,<a id='r1446' /><a href='#f1446' class='c012'><sup>[1446]</sup></a> and was sometimes planted in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>pots, probably to be kept in apartments for the sake
-of its bright yellow flowers,<a id='r1447' /><a href='#f1447' class='c012'><sup>[1447]</sup></a> and because, when smelt,
-it was said to cure the head-ache. The juice of wild
-rue, mixed with woman’s milk, sharpened the sight,
-in the opinion of the ancients.<a id='r1448' /><a href='#f1448' class='c012'><sup>[1448]</sup></a> The juice of sweet
-mint, which was a garden herb, squeezed into milk,<a id='r1449' /><a href='#f1449' class='c012'><sup>[1449]</sup></a>
-was supposed to prevent coagulation, even should
-rennet be afterwards thrown into it.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Both the root and bean of the nymphæa nelumbo
-or red lotus,<a id='r1450' /><a href='#f1450' class='c012'><sup>[1450]</sup></a> were eaten in Egypt,<a id='r1451' /><a href='#f1451' class='c012'><sup>[1451]</sup></a> where its crimson
-flowers were woven into crowns which diffused
-an agreeable odour, and were considered exceedingly
-refreshing in the heat of summer.<a id='r1452' /><a href='#f1452' class='c012'><sup>[1452]</sup></a> This plant was
-by the Greeks of Naucratis denominated the melilotus,
-to distinguish it from the lotus with white
-flowers. Theophrastus<a id='r1453' /><a href='#f1453' class='c012'><sup>[1453]</sup></a> observes, that it grows in the
-marshes to the height of four cubits, and has a
-striped root and stem. This lotus was also anciently
-found in Syria and Cilicia, but did not there
-ripen. In the environs of Toronè in Chalcidice,<a id='r1454' /><a href='#f1454' class='c012'><sup>[1454]</sup></a>
-however, it was found in perfection in a small marsh.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The lupin,<a id='r1455' /><a href='#f1455' class='c012'><sup>[1455]</sup></a> and the caper-bush, probably cultivated
-for the beauty of its delicate white flowers,<a id='r1456' /><a href='#f1456' class='c012'><sup>[1456]</sup></a> deteriorated
-in gardens,<a id='r1457' /><a href='#f1457' class='c012'><sup>[1457]</sup></a> as did likewise the mallows,<a id='r1458' /><a href='#f1458' class='c012'><sup>[1458]</sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>which, together with the beet, were said to acquire
-in gardens the height of a small tree.<a id='r1459' /><a href='#f1459' class='c012'><sup>[1459]</sup></a> The stem
-of the mallows was sometimes used as a walking
-stick. Its large pale red flower which</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Follows with its bending head the sun,<a id='r1460' /><a href='#f1460' class='c012'><sup>[1460]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>constituted one of the ornaments of the garden.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Besides these the ancients usually cultivated in
-their grounds two species of cistus, one with pale
-red flowers now called the long rose, the other which
-about midsummer has on its leaves a sort of fatty
-dew, of which laudanum is made;<a id='r1461' /><a href='#f1461' class='c012'><sup>[1461]</sup></a> together with
-the blue eringo,<a id='r1462' /><a href='#f1462' class='c012'><sup>[1462]</sup></a> rocket, cresses, (which were planted
-in ridges,) bastard parsley, penny-royal, anis,<a id='r1463' /><a href='#f1463' class='c012'><sup>[1463]</sup></a> water-mint,
-sea-onions, monk’s rhubarb, purslain, a leaf
-of which placed under the tongue quenched thirst,
-garden coriander, hellebore, yellow, red, and white,
-bush origany,<a id='r1464' /><a href='#f1464' class='c012'><sup>[1464]</sup></a> with its pink cones, flame-coloured
-fox-glove, brank-ursine, or bear’s foot, admired for
-its vast pyramid of white flowers, chervil, skirwort,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>the mournful elecampane, giant fennel, dill, mustard
-and wake-robin, which was sown,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Soon as the punic tree, whose numerous grains,</div>
- <div class='line'>When thoroughly ripe, a bright red covering hides,</div>
- <div class='line'>Itself did with its bloody blossoms clothe.<a id='r1465' /><a href='#f1465' class='c012'><sup>[1465]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Other garden herbs were the cumin, the seed
-of which was sown with abuse and curses,<a id='r1466' /><a href='#f1466' class='c012'><sup>[1466]</sup></a> the sperage-berry,
-the dittander, or pepperwort, turnips,<a id='r1467' /><a href='#f1467' class='c012'><sup>[1467]</sup></a> and
-parsnips, (found wild in Dalmatia,)<a id='r1468' /><a href='#f1468' class='c012'><sup>[1468]</sup></a> with onions, garlic,
-and leeks.<a id='r1469' /><a href='#f1469' class='c012'><sup>[1469]</sup></a> For these last Megara was famous,
-as Attica was for honey, which suggested to the
-Athenians an occasion of compliment to themselves,<a id='r1470' /><a href='#f1470' class='c012'><sup>[1470]</sup></a>
-it having been a saying among them, that they were
-as superior to the Megareans as honey is to garlic
-and leeks.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The cultivation of that species of leek called gethyllis
-was carried to great perfection at Delphi,<a id='r1471' /><a href='#f1471' class='c012'><sup>[1471]</sup></a>
-where it was an established custom, evidently with
-a view to the improvement of gardening, that the
-person who, on the day of the Theoxenia,<a id='r1472' /><a href='#f1472' class='c012'><sup>[1472]</sup></a> presented
-the largest vegetable of this kind to Leto should
-receive a portion from the holy table.<a id='r1473' /><a href='#f1473' class='c012'><sup>[1473]</sup></a> Polemo, who
-relates this circumstance says, that he had seen on
-these occasions leeks nearly as large as turnips. The
-cause of this ceremony was said to be, that Leto
-when great with Apollo longed for a leek.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mushrooms<a id='r1474' /><a href='#f1474' class='c012'><sup>[1474]</sup></a> were sedulously cultivated by the ancients,
-among whose methods of producing them
-were the following. They felled a poplar-tree<a id='r1475' /><a href='#f1475' class='c012'><sup>[1475]</sup></a> and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>laying its trunk in the earth to rot, watered it assiduously,
-after which mushrooms, at the proper time
-sprung up. Another method was to irrigate the
-trunk of the fig-tree after having covered it all round
-with dung, though the best kind in the opinion of
-others were such as grew at the foot of elm and pine-trees.<a id='r1476' /><a href='#f1476' class='c012'><sup>[1476]</sup></a>
-Those springing from the upper roots were
-reckoned of no value.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On other occasions<a id='r1477' /><a href='#f1477' class='c012'><sup>[1477]</sup></a> they chose a light sandy soil
-accustomed to produce reeds, then burning brushwood,
-&amp;c., when the air was in a state indicating
-rain, this ambiguous species of vegetable started
-forth from the earth with the first shower. The
-same effect was produced by watering the ground
-thus prepared, though this species was supposed to
-be inferior. In France, the most delicate sort of
-mushrooms are said to proceed from the decayed
-root of the Eryngium.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This vegetable appears to have been a favourite
-dish among the ancients, together with the truffle,<a id='r1478' /><a href='#f1478' class='c012'><sup>[1478]</sup></a>
-eaten both cooked and raw;<a id='r1479' /><a href='#f1479' class='c012'><sup>[1479]</sup></a> and the morrille.<a id='r1480' /><a href='#f1480' class='c012'><sup>[1480]</sup></a>
-That particular kind, called geranion, is the modern
-crane’s bill. The Misu, another sort of truffle,<a id='r1481' /><a href='#f1481' class='c012'><sup>[1481]</sup></a>
-grew chiefly in the sandy plains about Cyrene, and,
-as well as the Iton,<a id='r1482' /><a href='#f1482' class='c012'><sup>[1482]</sup></a> found in the lofty downs of
-Thrace, was said to exhale an agreeable odour resembling
-that of animal food. These fanciful luxuries,
-which were produced among the rains and
-thunders<a id='r1483' /><a href='#f1483' class='c012'><sup>[1483]</sup></a> of autumn, continued to flourish in the
-earth during a whole year, but were thought to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>in season in spring. Truffle-seed was usually imported
-from Megara, Lycia, and Getulia; but in
-Mytelene the inhabitants were spared this expense,
-their sandy shores being annually sown from the
-neighbouring coast by the winds and showers. It
-has been remarked, that neither truffles nor wild
-onions were found near the Hellespont.<a id='r1484' /><a href='#f1484' class='c012'><sup>[1484]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>What methods the ancients employed for discovering
-the truffle, which grows without stem or leaf
-in a small cell beneath the surface of the earth, I
-have nowhere seen explained. At present<a id='r1485' /><a href='#f1485' class='c012'><sup>[1485]</sup></a> their
-existence is said to be detected in Greece, not by
-the truffle hound, but by the divining rod. On the
-dry sandy downs of the Limousin, Gascogne, Angoumois,
-and Perigord, as well as in several parts
-of Italy,<a id='r1486' /><a href='#f1486' class='c012'><sup>[1486]</sup></a> they are collected by the swineherds;
-for the hogs being extremely fond of them utter
-grunts of joy, and begin to turn up the earth as
-soon as they scent their odour, upon which the
-herdsmen beat the animals away, and carefully preserve
-the delicacy for the tables of the rich. At
-other times they are discovered in the following
-manner: the herdsmen stooping down, and looking
-horizontally along the surface of the Landes, observe
-here and there, on spots bare of grass and
-full of fissures, clouds of very diminutive flies hatched
-in the truffle, and still regaling themselves with
-its perfume. In some parts of Savoy they have
-been found two pounds in weight.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1241'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1241'>1241</a>. But see Dr. Nolan on the
-Grecian Rose, Trans. Roy. Soc.
-ii. p. 330, and Poll. i. 229.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1242'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1242'>1242</a>. Hist. Nat. xix. 4. Dr. Nolan,
-p. 330. Nic. Caussin. De Eloquent.
-xi. p. 727, seq. Cic. De
-Senect. § 17. Ælian. De Nat.
-Anim. xiii. 18, has a brief but
-interesting description of the garden
-of the Indian kings, with its
-evergreen groves, fish-ponds, and
-flights of peacocks, pheasants, and
-parrots, reckoned sacred by the
-Brahmins. Cf. Xenoph. Œconom.
-iv. 13, where he celebrates
-the fondness of the Persian kings
-for gardens.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1243'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1243'>1243</a>. Here sometimes were grown
-both vegetables, as lettuces, radishes,
-parsley, &amp;c., and flowering
-shrubs, as the wild or rose-laurel,
-which was supposed to be a deadly
-poison to horses and asses.
-Lucian. Luc. siv. Asin. § 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1244'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1244'>1244</a>. Luc. Piscat. § 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1245'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1245'>1245</a>. Geop. x. 1. 1. xii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1246'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1246'>1246</a>. The cedar still grows wild
-on the promontory of Sunium.
-Chandler, ii. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1247'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1247'>1247</a>. Sibth. Flor. Græc. t. i. pl. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1248'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1248'>1248</a>. Plato describes, though not
-in a garden, a fountain and a
-plane-tree, in language so picturesque
-and harmonious, that it
-has captivated the imagination of
-all succeeding writers, many of
-whom have sought to express
-their admiration by imitating it
-in their own style:—Ἥ τε γὰρ
-πλάτανος αὕτη μάλ’ ἀμφιλαφής
-τε καὶ ὑψηλή, τοῦ τε ἄγνου τὸ
-ὕψος καὶ τὸ σύσκιον πάγκαλον,
-καὶ ὡς ἀγμὴν ἔχει τῆς ἀνθης, ὡς
-ἄν εὐωδέστατον παρέχοι τὸν τόπον·
-ἥ τε αὖ πηγὴ χαριεστάτη
-ὑπο τῆς πλατάνου ῥεῖ μάλα ψυχροῦ
-ὕδατος, ὥς τε γε τῷ ποδὶ
-τεκμήρασθαι· νυμφῶν τε τινων καὶ
-Ἀχελώου ἱερὸν ἀπὸ τῶν κορῶν τε
-καὶ ἀγαλμάτων ἔοικεν εἶναι· εἰ
-δ᾽ αὖ βούλει, τὸ εὔπνουν τοῦ
-τόπου ὡς ἀγαπητὸν καὶ σφόδρα
-ἡδὺ· θερινόν τε καὶ λιγυρὸν ὑπηχεῖ
-τῷ τῶν τεττίγων χορῷ, πάντων
-δὲ κομψότατον τὸ τῆς πόας ὅτι
-ἐν ἠρέμα προσάντει ἱκανὴ πέφυκε
-κατακλινέντι τὴν κεφαλὴν παγκάλως
-ἔχειν. Phæd. t. i. p. 8,
-seq. The prevailing image in
-this passage is thus expressed by
-Cicero: <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Cur non imitamur Socratem
-illum, qui est in Phædro
-Platonis; nam me hæc tua
-platanus admonuit, quæ non
-minus ad opacandum hunc locum
-patulis est diffusa ramis,
-quam illa cujus umbram secutus
-est Socrates quæ mihi videtur
-non tam ipsa aquula,
-quæ describitur, quam Platonis
-oratione crevisse.”</span> De Orat. i.
-7. The picture is slightly varied
-by Aristinætos, who introduces
-it into a garden:—Ἡ δὲ
-πηγὴ χαριεστάτη ὑπὸ τῇ πλατάνῳ
-ῥεῖ ὕδατος εὖ μάλα ψυχροῦ,
-ὥς γε τῷ ποδὶ τεκμήρασθαι, καὶ
-διαφανοῦς τοσοῦτον, ὥστε συνεπινηχομένων
-καὶ διὰ διαυγὲς ὑδάτιον
-διαπλεκομένων ἐπαφροδίτως
-ἀλλήλοις, ἅπαν ἡμῶν φανερῶς
-ἀποκαταφαίνεσθαι μέλος. Epist.
-Lib.i. Epist. 3. p. 14. On the epithet
-ἀμφιλαφὴς, which Ruhnken
-(ad Tim. Lex. p. 24) observes
-was almost exclusively appropriated
-by the ancients to the
-Plane tree, see Apollon. Rhod. ii.
-733. Wellauer. et schol.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1249'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1249'>1249</a>. Where running water was not
-to be obtained, they constructed
-two gardens, the one for winter,
-which depended on the showers,
-the other on a northern exposure,
-where a fresh, cool air was preserved
-throughout the summer.
-Geop. xii. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1250'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1250'>1250</a>. Used by rustics in crowns.
-Athen. xv. 12. Prometheus was
-crowned with agnus-castus. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1251'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1251'>1251</a>. Geop. xi. 7. Plin. xv. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1252'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1252'>1252</a>. Geop. x. 1. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1253'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1253'>1253</a>. Which delighted particularly
-in the edges of paths and trodden
-places. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 6.1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1254'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1254'>1254</a>. Sibth. Flor. Græc. t. i. pl. 5,
-sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1255'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1255'>1255</a>. Laing, Notes of a Traveller,
-p. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1256'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1256'>1256</a>. Geop. xi. 21, 23, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1257'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1257'>1257</a>. Sibth. Flor. Græc. t. i. pl. 79.
-pl. 203. pl. 334, &amp;c.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1258'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1258'>1258</a>. Πρῶτον μὲν γὰρ ἀφ’ ὧν ζῶσιν
-οἱ ἄνθρωποι, ταῦτα ἡ γῆ φέρει ἐργαζομένοις·
-καὶ ἀφ’ ὧν τοίνυν ἡδυπαθοῦσι
-προσεπιφέρει.—Ἔπειτα
-δὲ ὅσα κοσμοῦσι βωμοὺς και ἀγάλματα,
-καὶ οἷς αὐτοὶ κοσμοῦνται,
-καὶ ταῦτα μετὰ ἡδίστων ὀσμῶν
-καὶ θεαμάτων παρέχει. κ. τ. λ.
-Xenoph. Œconom. v. 2, seq.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Pliny has a curious passage on
-the use of crowns among the Romans,
-which Holland has thus
-translated: “Now when these
-garlands of flowers were taken
-up and received commonly in all
-places for a certain time, there
-came soon after into request
-those chaplets which are named
-Egyptian; and after them,
-winter coronets, to wit, when
-the earth affordeth no flowers
-to make them, and these consisted
-of horn shavings dyed
-into sundry colours. And so
-in process of time, by little and
-little crept into Rome, also the
-name of corolla, or as one would
-say, petty garlands; for that
-these winter chaplets at first
-were so pretty and small: and
-not long after them, the costly
-coronets and others, corollaries,
-namely, when they are
-made of thin leaves and plates
-and latten, either gilded or silvered
-over, or else set out with
-golden and silvered spangles,
-and so presented.” xxi. 2. Pollux
-affords a list of the principal
-flowers used in crowns by the
-Greeks: τὰ δὲ ἐν τοῖς στεφάνοις
-ἄνθη, ῥόδα, ἴα, κρίνα, σισύμθρια,
-ἀνεμῶναι, ἕρπυλος, κρόκος, ὑάκινθος,
-ἑλίχρυσος, ἡμεροκαλὲς, ἑλένειον,
-θρυαλὶς, ἀνθρίσκος, νάρκισσος,
-μελίλωτον, ἀνθεμὶς, παρθενὶς,
-καὶ τἄλλα ὅσα τοῖς ὀφθαλμοῖς
-τέρψιν, ἠῥισὶν ἡδεῖαν ὄσφρησιν
-ἔχει. Cratinus enumerates
-among garland flowers, those of
-the smilax and the cosmosandalon.
-Onomast. vi. 106. Athen. xv. 32.
-Cf. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 1. 2–6.
-4. Persons returning from a
-voyage were sometimes crowned
-with flowers. Plut. Thes. § 22.
-Soldiers also going to battle.
-Ages. § 19. Cf Philost. Icon. i.
-24. p. 799. Plut. Sympos. iii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1259'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1259'>1259</a>. Athen. xv. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1260'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1260'>1260</a>. Id. xv. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1261'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1261'>1261</a>. Id. xv. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1262'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1262'>1262</a>. Id. xv. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1263'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1263'>1263</a>. Id. xv. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1264'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1264'>1264</a>. Id. xv. 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1265'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1265'>1265</a>. Athen. xv. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1266'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1266'>1266</a>. Geop. xi. 2. Ovid. Metam.
-550.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1267'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1267'>1267</a>. Geop. xi. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1268'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1268'>1268</a>. Geop. xi. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1269'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1269'>1269</a>. Geop. xi. 10. Cf. Plut. Sympos.
-vol. iii. 1, where he assigns
-the reason why the pine was sacred
-to Poseidon and Dionysos.
-The foliage of the pine-forests
-was so dense in Bœotia as to permit
-neither snow nor rain to penetrate
-through. Theoph. Hist.
-Plant. iii. 9. 6. The shade of
-such trees, therefore, would be
-more especially coveted.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1270'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1270'>1270</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 537. Geop.
-xii. 17. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1271'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1271'>1271</a>. By Dr. Nolan. See his paper
-on the Grecian Rose. Trans. Roy.
-Soc. of Lit. ii. 327, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1272'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1272'>1272</a>. Cf. Athen. xv. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1273'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1273'>1273</a>. Οἱ δὲ, ἀπικόμενοι ἐς ἄλλην
-γῆν τῆς Μακεδόνιης, οἴκησαν πέλας
-τῶν κήπων τῶν λεγομένων
-εἶναι Μίδεω τοῦ Γορδίεω. ἐν τοῖσι
-φύεται αὐτόματα ῥόδα, ἕν ἕκαστον
-ἔχον ἑξήκοντα φύλλα ὀδμῆ δὲ
-ὑπερφέροντα τῶν ἀλλων· ἐν τούτοισι
-καὶ ὁ Σιληνὸς τοῖσι κήποισι
-ἥλω, ὡς λέγεται ὑπὸ Μακεδόνων.
-ὑπὲρ δὲ τῶν κήτων οὖρος κέεται,
-Βέρμιον οὔνομα, ἄβατον ὑπὸ χειμῶνος.
-viii. 138. On the arts
-and manners of this Midas, who,
-together with Orpheus and Eumolpos
-was the founder of the Hellenic
-religion, see J. G. Voss. de
-Idololat. i. 24, and Bouhier, Dissert.
-sur Herod. ch. 80.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1274'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1274'>1274</a>. Cf. Theop. Hist. Plant. iv. 87.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1275'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1275'>1275</a>. Athen. iii. 21. Stesichoros
-lived before Christ about 632.
-Clint. Fast. Hellen. ii. 5. Crowns
-of roses are mentioned by Cratinus
-who was born 519 <span class='fss'>B. C.</span> which
-shows that roses must have been
-largely cultivated in his time.
-Athen. xv. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1276'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1276'>1276</a>. Il. α. 477. ι. 703. Cf. Hesiod.
-Opp. et Dies, 610. To
-place the matter beyond dispute,
-Homer speaks of oils rendered
-fragrant by the perfume of the
-rose:—ῥοδόεντι δὲ χρῖεν ἐλαίῳ.
-Il. ψ. 186.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1277'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1277'>1277</a>. Dioscor. i. 154.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1278'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1278'>1278</a>. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Les Egyptiens, selon le département
-de leur Roy Horus,
-n’en mettaient que trois (saisons):
-le printemps, l’esté, et
-l’automne: leur attribuans
-quatre mois à chacune, et les
-figurans par une rose, une
-espy, et une pomme, ou raisin.”
-Les Images de Platte
-Peinture des deux Philostrates,
-par Vigenère,</span> Paris, fol. 1627,
-p. 555.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1279'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1279'>1279</a>. Geop. xi. 18. A species of
-perpetual rose is said to have
-been recently discovered in France,
-where “A Parisian florist, we are
-told, has succeeded in producing
-a new hybrid rose from the
-Bourbon rose and Gloire de
-Rosomène, the flowers of which
-he had fertilised with the pollen
-of some Damask and hybrid
-China roses. The plant
-is extremely beautiful, the colour
-bright crimson shaded with
-Maroon purple, and is further
-enriched with a powerful fragrance.”
-<span class='sc'>Times</span>, March 24th,
-1841.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1280'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1280'>1280</a>. Geop. xi. 18. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1281'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1281'>1281</a>. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Plinius varia genera commemorat,
-Milesia ardentissimo colore,
-Alabandica albicantibus foliis,
-Spermonia vilissima, Damascenæ
-albæ distillandis aquis
-usurpantur. Differunt foliorum
-multitudine, asperitate, lævore,
-colore, odore.</span>—Heresbachius, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">de
-Re Rustica</span>, lib. ii. p. 121. a.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1282'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1282'>1282</a>. Problem. xii. 8. Theoph. Hist.
-Plant. vi. 6. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1283'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1283'>1283</a>. Athen. xv. 29. Plin. xxi.
-10. Cf. Theoph. Hist. Plant.
-vi. 6. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1284'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1284'>1284</a>. As Dr. Nolan seems to suppose.
-On the Grecian Rose.
-Transact. Roy. Soc. ii. 328.
-Though Theophrastus states the
-contrary very distinctly. Hist.
-Plant. vi. 2. 1—6. 4—7. 5. The
-white rose appears at present to
-be commonly cultivated in Attica.—Chandler,
-ii. 181.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1285'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1285'>1285</a>. Geop. xi. 18. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1286'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1286'>1286</a>. Geop. xi. 18. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1287'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1287'>1287</a>. Pashley, Trav. i. 8, who
-observes, that the rose is common
-in February at Malta.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1288'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1288'>1288</a>. Geop. xi. 18. 5. Plin. xxi.
-4. Pallad. iii. 21. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1289'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1289'>1289</a>. Geop. xi. 18. 4. Cf. xii.
-19. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1290'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1290'>1290</a>. Geop. xi. 20. Heresbach.
-de Re Rust. p. 122. b. Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. vi. 6. 4, 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1291'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1291'>1291</a>. Plin. xxi. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1292'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1292'>1292</a>. Colum. De Cultu Hortorum,
-x. 102.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1293'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1293'>1293</a>. Winter’s Tale, iv. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1294'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1294'>1294</a>. Sibth. Flor. Græc. t. i. tab.
-222, tab. 318. Schol. Aristoph.
-Eq. 1320. Theoph. Hist. Plant.
-vi. 6. 4. The finest violets, crocusses,
-&amp;c., in the ancient world,
-were supposed to be found in
-Cyrene. Id. vi. 6. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1295'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1295'>1295</a>. Dioscor. ii. 155.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1296'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1296'>1296</a>. On the birth of the Hyacinth,
-see Eudocia in the Anecdota
-Græca, i. 408.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1297'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1297'>1297</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 6.
-9. 8. 2. This flower flourishes
-after the setting of Arcturus,
-about the autumnal equinox.—“We
-were ferried over a narrow
-stream fringed with Agnus-Castus,
-into a garden belonging
-to the convent. A number of
-vernal flowers now blossomed
-on its banks; the garden anemone
-was crimsoned with an
-extraordinary glow of colouring.
-The soil which was a
-sandy loam, was further enlivened
-with the Ixia, the grass-leaved
-Iris, and the enamel-blue
-of a species of speedwell,
-not noticed by the Swedish
-Naturalist.” Sibth. Walp. Mem.
-i. 282, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1298'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1298'>1298</a>. This plant was brought from
-Mount Hymettos, to be cultivated
-in the gardens of Athens.
-The Sicyonians, likewise, transplanted
-it to their gardens from
-the mountains of Peloponnesos.—Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. vi. 7. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1299'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1299'>1299</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 7. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1300'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1300'>1300</a>. Dioscor. iii. 89. Sibth. Flor.
-Græc. t. i. tab. 14, tab. 192, seq.
-tab. 310, tab. 518, tab. 549. Column.
-x. De Cult. Hort. 96, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1301'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1301'>1301</a>. The basil-gentle was watered
-at noon, other plants morning
-and evening.—Theoph. Hist.
-Plant. vii. 5. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1302'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1302'>1302</a>. Dioscor. iii. 114.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1303'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1303'>1303</a>. Colum. x. 399, seq. Engl.
-Trans.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1304'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1304'>1304</a>. The anemone among other
-flowers beautifies the fields of
-Attica, so early as the month of
-February.—Chandler, ii. 211.
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Les campagnes et les collines
-sont rouges d’anémones.”—Della
-Rocca, Traité sur les Abeilles,</span>
-t. i. p. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1305'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1305'>1305</a>. Cultivated usually in pots,
-resembling the gardens of Adonis.
-Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 7. 3.
-Thickets of this shrub constitute
-one of the greatest beauties of
-the islands of the Archipelago.
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Les lauriers roses, que l’on conserve
-en France avec tant de
-soin, viennent à l’aventure dans
-les prairies, et le long des ruisseaux
-qui en sont bordés.
-Rien n’est plus agréable que
-de voir ces beaux arbres, de
-la hauteur de douze à quinze
-pieds, variés de fleurs rouges et
-blanches, se croiser par les
-branches d’en haut, sur un
-ruisseau ou sur le lit d’une
-fontaine, et faire un berceau
-qui dure quelquefois un grand
-quart de lieue.” Della Rocca,
-Traité Complet sur les Abeilles,</span>
-t. i. p. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1306'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1306'>1306</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 253.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1307'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1307'>1307</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 8. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1308'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1308'>1308</a>. Sibth. Flor. Græc. t. i. tab.
-27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1309'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1309'>1309</a>. Known also by the names of
-νηρίον and ῥοδοδάφνη.—Dioscor.
-iv. 82. Geop. ii. 42. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1310'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1310'>1310</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 9. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1311'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1311'>1311</a>. Cf. Clus. Hist. Rar. Plant.
-i. 43. p. 65.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1312'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1312'>1312</a>. Plat. De Rep. t. vi. p. 85.
-The berry, both of the myrtle
-and the laurel, assumed, we are
-told, a black colour in the garden
-of Antandros.—Theophrast. Hist.
-Plant. ii. 2. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1313'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1313'>1313</a>. Hemsterhuis, Annot. ad
-Poll. ix. 49. p. 943. Cf. Dion.
-Chrysost. i. 273.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1314'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1314'>1314</a>. Sibthorp. Flor. Græc. t. i.
-tab. 2, tab. 367, tab. 374, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1315'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1315'>1315</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 9. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1316'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1316'>1316</a>. The strawberry-tree is found
-flourishing in great beauty and
-perfection on Mount Helicon, and
-its fruit is said to be exceedingly
-sweet.—Chandler, ii. 290.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1317'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1317'>1317</a>. Sibth. Flor. Græc. tab. 361.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1318'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1318'>1318</a>. Ἔνθα πλάτανος μὲν ἀμφιλαφής
-τε καὶ σύσκιος, πνεῦμα δὲ
-μέτριον, καὶ πόα μαλθακὴ, ὥρα
-θέρους ἐπανθεῖν εἰωθυῖα. Aristænet.
-Epist. lib. i. Epist. 3. p.
-13. There was, according to
-Varro, an evergreen platane tree
-in Crete, i. 7. The same platane
-is mentioned by Theophrastus,
-who informs us, that it grew beside
-a fountain in the Gortynian
-territory where Zeus first reclined
-on landing from the sea with
-Europa, i. 9. 5. Near the city
-of Sybaris, there is said to have
-grown a common oak which enjoyed
-the privilege of being undeciduous.
-Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1319'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1319'>1319</a>. Ἄμπελοι δὲ παμμήκεις σφόδρα
-τε ὑψηλαὶ περιελίττονται
-κυπαρίττους ὡς ἀνακλᾷν ἡμᾶς
-ἐπὶ πολὺ τὸν αὐχενα πρὸς θέαν
-τῶν κύκλῳ συναιωρουμένων βοτρών,
-ὧν οἱ μὲν ὀργῶσιν, οἱ δὲ
-περκάζουσιν οἱ δὲ ὄμφακες, οἱ δὲ
-οἰνάνθαι δοκοῦσιν.—Aristænet.
-Epist. lib. i. Ep. 3. p. 13, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1320'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1320'>1320</a>. Sibth. Flor. Græc. tab. 516.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1321'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1321'>1321</a>. Theophrast. Hist. Plant. i.
-13. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1322'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1322'>1322</a>. Dodwell, ii. 455. Sibth. in
-Walp. Mem. i. 283. There was
-a species of mistletoe called the
-Cretan, which found equally congenial
-the climates of Achaia and
-Media. Theoph. Hist. Plant. ix.
-1. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1323'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1323'>1323</a>. That is to say at a late period,
-for in the time of Theophrastus
-it would seem not to
-have been common in Greece, if
-it had been at all introduced.
-Hist. Plant. iii. 17. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1324'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1324'>1324</a>. Dodwell, ii. 455.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1325'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1325'>1325</a>. Even the platane, also, delights
-in humid places. Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. i. 4. 2. The black
-poplar was said to bear fruit in
-several parts of Crete. iii. 3. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1326'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1326'>1326</a>. Geop. v. 44. Cf. Artemid.
-Oneirocrit. ii. 24. p. 112.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1327'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1327'>1327</a>. Walp. Mem. i. 60.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1328'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1328'>1328</a>. The cactus, as most travellers
-will have remarked, flourishes luxuriantly
-in Sicily even among the
-beds of lava where little else will
-grow; it appears, however, to delight
-in a volcanic soil. Spallanzani,
-Travels in the Two Sicilies,
-“i. 209. In the Æolian Islands it
-thrives so well that it usually
-grows to the height of ten,
-twelve, and sometimes fifteen
-feet, with a stem a foot or more
-in diameter. The fruits, which
-are nearly as large as turkeys’
-eggs, are sweet and extremely
-agreeable to the palate. It is
-well-known that the fruits grow
-at the edges of the leaves, the
-number on each leaf is not constant,
-but they are frequently
-numerous, as I have counted
-two and twenty on a single
-leaf.” iv. 97.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1329'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1329'>1329</a>. Sibth. Flor. Græc. t. i. tab. 29.
-tab. 157. tab. 185.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1330'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1330'>1330</a>. Sibth. in Walp. Trav. p. 73,
-seq. On the seasons of these
-wild flowers see Theoph. Hist.
-Plant. vii. 9. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1331'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1331'>1331</a>. Dioscor. ii. 186.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1332'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1332'>1332</a>. Athen. xv. 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1333'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1333'>1333</a>. Demosth. in Callicl. § 1. 3,
-seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1334'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1334'>1334</a>. Cf. Varro. i. 15. Magii Miscellan.
-lib. iv. p. 187. b. As the
-cotton-tree in modern times has
-been supposed not to thrive at a
-much greater distance than twenty
-miles from the sea; so, among
-the ancients, the olive was supposed
-not to flourish at a greater
-distance than three hundred stadia.
-Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 2. 4. Both
-opinions are probably erroneous,
-as the olive-tree is found in perfection
-in the Fayoum, and the
-cotton-plant in Upper Egypt.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1335'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1335'>1335</a>. Vict. Var. Lect. p. 874.
-But the Scholiast (Aristoph. Ran.
-1026) gives a different though less
-probable interpretation to the passage.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1336'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1336'>1336</a>. Cf. Sibth. Flor. Græc. t. i.
-tab. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1337'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1337'>1337</a>. Cato. De Re Rusticâ 6. They
-were sometimes also grafted, we
-are told, on lentiscus stocks. Plut.
-Sympos. ii. 6. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1338'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1338'>1338</a>. In Syria and some other
-warm countries the olive was said
-to produce fruit in clusters. Theophrast.
-Hist. Plant. i. 11. 4. And
-when this fruit was found chiefly
-on the upper branches, they augured
-a productive year. id. i. 14.
-2. Geop. ix. 2. 4. The ancients
-entertained extraordinary ideas
-concerning the purity of the olive,
-which they imagined bore more
-freely when cultivated by persons
-of chaste minds. Thus the olive-grounds
-of Anazarbos, in Cilicia,
-were thought to owe their extraordinary
-fertility to the reserved
-and modest manners of the youths
-who cultivated them. Id. ix. 2. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1339'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1339'>1339</a>. Geop. ix. 3. 1. Virg. Georg. ii.
-179. The heads of olive-stocks
-when freshly planted were covered
-with clay, which was protected
-from the wet by a shell. Xenoph.
-Œconom. xix. 14. The pits for
-the planting of the olive and other
-fruit-trees were of considerable
-depth and dug long beforehand.
-Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 6. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1340'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1340'>1340</a>. Cf. Hesiod. Opp. et Dies,
-582, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1341'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1341'>1341</a>. Οὐ γίνονται δὲ τέττιγες ὅπου
-μὴ δένδρα ἐστιν· διὸ καὶ ἐν Κυρήνη
-οὐ γίνονται ἐν τῷ πεδίῳ, περὶ δὲ
-τὴν πόλιν πολλοί, μόλιστα δ᾽ οὗ
-ἐλαῖαι· οὐ γὰρ γίνονται παλίν
-σκίοι. Aristot. Hist. Anim. v. 30.
-Cf. Phile, de Animal. Proprietat.
-c. 25. p. 81.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1342'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1342'>1342</a>. In Spain, however, these insects
-exhibit a somewhat different
-taste, being there found amid the
-foliage of the most leafy trees.
-“Every oak in the cork-wood
-near Gibraltar was the abode if
-not of harmony, at least of noise,
-and the concert kept up amidst
-the foliage by the numerous
-grass or rather tree-hoppers was
-quite deafening.” Napier, Excursions
-on the shores of the
-Mediterranean, ii. p. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1343'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1343'>1343</a>. Sibth. in Walp. Mem. i. 75.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1344'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1344'>1344</a>. On the cultivation of the apple
-see Theophrast. Hist. Plant. i.
-3. 3. Geop. xviii. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1345'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1345'>1345</a>. Athen. xiv. 63. Etym. Mag.
-122. 20.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1346'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1346'>1346</a>. Geop. x. 41. Plin. xv. 25.
-Athen. ii. 35.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1347'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1347'>1347</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii. 13. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1348'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1348'>1348</a>. Etym. Mag. 211. 4, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1349'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1349'>1349</a>. Geop. x. 3. 73.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1350'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1350'>1350</a>. Geop. xiii. 19. Athen. ii. 38.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1351'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1351'>1351</a>. Athen. ii. 12. Vid. Cœl.
-Rhodigin. vii. 15. Bochart, Geog.
-Sac. col. 629.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1352'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1352'>1352</a>. Theophrast. Hist. Plant. i. 3.
-3. The fruit of the pomegranate-tree
-lost much of its acidity in
-Egypt. Id. Hist. Plant. ii. 2. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1353'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1353'>1353</a>. In Greece the orange-tree
-and the lemon blossom in June,
-Chandler, ii. 238.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1354'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1354'>1354</a>. Cf. Chandler, ii. 250.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1355'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1355'>1355</a>. In Babylonia the palm-tree
-was by some thought to be propagated
-by off-shoots. Theophrast.
-Hist. Plant. ii. 2. 2. In Greece,
-the fruit seldom ripened completely.
-iii. 3. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1356'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1356'>1356</a>. Ἔτι δὲ τὸ ἔμπνουν τῆς αὔρας
-λιγυρὸν ὑπηχεῖ τῷ μουσικῷ
-τῶν τεττίγων χορῷ δι᾽ ἥν καὶ τὸ πνίγος
-τῆς μεσημβρίας ἠπιῶτερον
-ἐγεγόνει ἡδὺ καὶ ἀηδόνει, περὶ
-πετόμεναι τὰ νάματα, μελωδοῦσιν.
-ἀλλὰ καὶ τῶν ἄλλων ἡδὺ φώνῶν
-κατηκούομεν ὀρνίθων, ὥσπερ
-ἐμμελῶς ὁμιλούντων ανθρώποις.
-Aristænet. Epist. lib. i. Ep. 3.
-p. 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1357'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1357'>1357</a>. “The amorous thrill of the
-green-finch was now heard distinctly.
-The little owl hooted
-frequently round the walls of
-the convent. In the river below,
-otters were frequently
-taken. On the sides of the
-banks were the holes of the
-river-crabs; and the green-backed
-lizard was sporting among
-the grass.” Sibth. in Walp.
-Trav. p. 76.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1358'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1358'>1358</a>. Plat. De Legg. t. viii. p. 107.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1359'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1359'>1359</a>. Eudoc. Ionia. 434.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1360'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1360'>1360</a>. Plin. xix. 19. Athen. xi. 39.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1361'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1361'>1361</a>. Bœttig. Fragm. sur les Jar. des
-Anciens, in Magaz. Encycloped.
-Ann. vii. t. i. p. 337. Cardinal
-Quirini, Primordia Corcyræ, c.
-vii. p. 60, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1362'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1362'>1362</a>. See in Xenophon a brief description
-of the gardens of Cyrus.
-Œconom. iv. 21. Upon this passage
-our countryman, Sir Thomas
-Browne, has written an elaborate
-treatise.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1363'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1363'>1363</a>. On the various methods of
-propagating trees see Theophrast.
-Hist. Plant. ii. 1. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1364'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1364'>1364</a>. Astronomicon, ii. p. 30. l. 4.
-Scalig. et not. p. 67.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1365'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1365'>1365</a>. Cf. Athen. xiv. 68.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1366'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1366'>1366</a>. De Plantis, ii. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1367'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1367'>1367</a>. Hobhouse, Travels, i. 227.
-Thiersch, Etat Actuel de la
-Grèce, t. i. p. 297.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1368'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1368'>1368</a>. Geop. iii. 3. 9. Clem. Alexand.
-Stromat. l. vi. Opera, t. ii.
-p. 800. Venet. 1657.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1369'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1369'>1369</a>. Geop. xii. 75. x. 75. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1370'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1370'>1370</a>. Geop. x. 77. Colum. v. 11.
-1. Pallad. vii. 5. 2. Plin. xvii.
-26. Cato. 42. Virg. Georg. ii.
-73, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1371'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1371'>1371</a>. Geop. x. 76.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1372'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1372'>1372</a>. Introduced by Dionysios the
-elder into Rhegium, where it
-attained, however, no great size.
-Theoph. Hist. Plant. iv. 5. 6.
-The same naturalist speaks of
-two plane trees, the one at Delphi,
-the other at Caphyæ in Arcadia,
-said to have been planted
-by the hand of Agamemnon,
-which were still flourishing in
-his own days, iv. 13. 2. This
-tree attains a prodigious size in
-Peloponnesos. Chandler, Travels,
-ii. 308. Our traveller was
-prevented from measuring the
-stem by the fear of certain Albanian
-soldiers who lay asleep under
-it; but Theophrastus gives
-us the dimensions of a large platane,
-at Antandros, whose trunk,
-he says, could scarcely be embraced
-by four men, while its
-height before the springing forth
-of the boughs was fifteen feet.
-Having described the dimensions
-of the tree, he relates a very extraordinary
-fact in natural history,
-namely, that this platane,
-having been blown down by the
-winds and lightened of its branches
-by the axe, rose again spontaneously
-during the night, put forth
-fresh boughs, and flourished as
-before. The same thing is related
-of a white poplar in the
-museum at Stagira, and of a large
-willow at Philippi. In this last
-city a soothsayer counselled the
-inhabitants to offer sacrifice, and
-set a guard about the tree, as a
-thing of auspicious omen. Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. iv. 16. 2, seq.
-Cf. Plin. xvi. 57. In corroboration
-of the narrative of Theophrastus,
-Palmerius relates, that,
-during the winter of 1624–25,
-while Breda was besieged by
-Ambrosio Spinola, he himself
-saw in Brabant an oak twenty-five
-feet high, and three feet in
-circumference, overthrown by the
-wind, and recovering itself exactly
-in the manner described by
-the great naturalist. The vulgar,
-who regarded it as a miracle,
-preserved portions of its
-bark or branches as amulets.—Excercitationes,
-p. 598.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1373'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1373'>1373</a>. Plut. Sympos. ii. 6. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1374'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1374'>1374</a>. “It is reported,” observes
-Lord Bacon, “that, in the low
-countries, they will graft an apple
-scion upon the stock of a
-colewort, and it will bear a
-great flaggy apple, the kernel
-of which, if it be set, will be a
-colewort and not an apple.”
-Sylva Sylvarum, 453.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1375'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1375'>1375</a>. Geop. x. 20. 1. Varro. i.
-59. Mustea (mala) a celeritate
-mitescendi: quæ nunc melimela
-dicuntur, a sapore melleo.—Plin.
-xv. 15. Dioscor. i. 161.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1376'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1376'>1376</a>. Plut. Sympos. ii. 6. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1377'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1377'>1377</a>. Geop. x. 19. 15, cum not.
-Niclas.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1378'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1378'>1378</a>. Inseritur vero ex fœtu uncis
-arbutus horrida. Virg. Georg.
-ii. 69, with the note of Servius.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1379'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1379'>1379</a>. Plut. Sympos. ii. 6. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1380'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1380'>1380</a>. Plin. xvii. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1381'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1381'>1381</a>. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Castanea inseritur in se, et
-in salice, sed ex salice tardius
-maturat, et fit asperior in sapore.</span>
-Pallad. xii. 7. 22. Cf. Virg.
-Georg. ii. 71. Plutarch speaks
-of certain gardens on the banks
-of the Cephissos, in Bœotia, in
-which he beheld pears growing
-on an oak-stock: ἦσαν δὲ καὶ
-δρύες ἀπίους ἀγαθὰς ἐκφέρουσαι.
-Sympos. ii. 6. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1382'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1382'>1382</a>. Geop. x. 41. 3. iv. 12. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1383'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1383'>1383</a>. Geop. iv. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1384'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1384'>1384</a>. Thiersch, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Etat Actuel de la
-Grèce,</span> t. i. p. 298.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1385'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1385'>1385</a>. Idem. t. i. p. 288. Speaking of
-the fertility of the islands, Della
-Rocca remarks: <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Le terroir y
-est si bon, et les arbres y viennent
-si vîte, que j’ai vu à
-Naxie des pépins d’orange de
-Portugal pousser en moins de
-huit ans de grands orangers,
-dont les fruits étoient les plus
-délicieux du monde, et la tige
-de l’arbre si haute, qu’il falloit
-une longue échelle pour y monter.”—Traité
-Complet des
-Abeilles,</span> t. i. p. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1386'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1386'>1386</a>. On the artificial ripening of
-dates, Theoph. ii. 8. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1387'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1387'>1387</a>. Athen. iii. 19. Plut. Phoc.
-§ 3. Xenoph. Vectigal. i. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1388'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1388'>1388</a>. Ὁ νοῦν ἔχων γεωργός, ὧν
-σπερμάτων κήδοιτο καὶ ἔγκαρπα
-βούλοιτο γενέσθαι, πότερα σπονδῇ ἂν
-θέρους εἰς ᾿Αδώνιδος κήπους
-ἀρῶν χαίροι θεωρῶν καλοὺς
-ἐν ἡμέραισιν ὀκτὼ γιγνομένους.—Plat.
-Ph&oelig;d. t. i. p. 99. Suid.
-v. Ἀδώνιδ. κῆπ. t. i. p. 84. b.
-Theoph. Hist. Plant. v. 7. 3.
-Caus. Plant. i. 12. 2. Eustath.
-ad Odyss. λ. p. 459. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1389'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1389'>1389</a>. Tod, Annals of Rajast’han,
-vol. i. p. 570.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1390'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1390'>1390</a>. Cf. Athen. iii. 12. Theophrast.
-Hist. Plant. i. 3. 3. The
-fruit of the Egyptian sycamore,
-or Pharaoh’s fig-tree, was eaten
-in antiquity as now. Athenæus,
-who was a native of the Delta,
-says they used to rip open the
-skin of the fruit with an iron
-claw, and leave it thus upon the
-tree for three days. On the
-fourth it was eatable, and exhaled
-a very agreeable odour.
-Deipnosoph. ii. 36. Theophrastus
-adds, that a little oil was
-likewise poured on the fruit when
-opened by the iron. De Caus.
-Plant. i. 17. 9. ii. 8. 4. In Malta
-figs are still sometimes ripened
-by introducing a little olive oil
-into the eye of the fruit, or by
-puncturing it with a straw or
-feather dipped in oil. Napier,
-Excursions along the Shores of
-the Mediterranean, vol. ii. p. 144.
-Cf. Lord Bacon, Sylva Sylvarum,
-446.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1391'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1391'>1391</a>. Ap. Athen. iii. 10. Cf.
-Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 8. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1392'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1392'>1392</a>. Aristot. de Gen. Anim. t. i.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1393'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1393'>1393</a>. Suid. v. ερινεὸς. t. i. p.
-1038. d.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1394'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1394'>1394</a>. Cf. Tournefort, t. ii. p. 23.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1395'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1395'>1395</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 767</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1396'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1396'>1396</a>. Athen. iii. 7. The Laconian
-fig-tree was not commonly planted
-in Attica. Frag. Aristoph. Georg.
-4. Brunck. This kind of fig requires
-much watering, which was
-found to deteriorate the flavour
-of other kinds. Theoph. Hist.
-Plant. i. 7. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1397'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1397'>1397</a>. Athen. iii. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1398'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1398'>1398</a>. Athen. iii. 9. In the fig-tree
-orchards of Asia Minor the
-spaces between the trees are
-sown, as in vineyards, with corn,
-and the bushes are often filled
-with nightingales.—Chandler, i.
-244.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1399'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1399'>1399</a>. Athen. iii. 10. There was,
-also, a species which received its
-name from resembling the crow
-in colour. Sch. Aristoph. Pac.
-611. Philost. Icon. i. 31. p.
-809, where figs are enumerated
-in his elegant description of the
-Xenia. Cf. Pausan. i. 37. Vitruv.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1400'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1400'>1400</a>. Geop. x. 9. Clus. Rar. Plant.
-Hist. i. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1401'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1401'>1401</a>. Geop. x. 14. 60. Pallad. ii.
-15. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1402'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1402'>1402</a>. Geop. x. 16. 53. 76.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1403'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1403'>1403</a>. Geop. x. 59. Theoph. Hist.
-Plant. ii. 8. 1. Caus. Plant. i. 9. 1.
-Plin. xvii. 43. Pallad. ii. 15. 1l.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1404'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1404'>1404</a>. Geop. x. 3. Cf. Xenoph.
-Œconom. xix. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1405'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1405'>1405</a>. Plin. xvii. 13. When a tree
-was barren, or had lost its
-strength in blooming, they split
-it at the root, and put a stone
-into the fissure to keep it open,
-after which it was said to bear
-well. Theoph. Hist. Plant. ii.
-7. 6. It was customary, moreover,
-to wound the trunks of
-almond, pear, and other trees,
-as the service-tree in Arcadia, in
-order to render them fertile. 1d.
-ii. 7. 7. The berries of the cornel
-and service-trees were sweeter
-and ripened earlier wild than
-when cultivated, iii. 2. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1406'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1406'>1406</a>. The ancients believed that
-the moon ripens fruit, promotes
-digestion, and causes putrefaction
-in wood, and animal substances.
-Athen. vii. 3. Cf. Plut. Sympos.
-iii. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1407'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1407'>1407</a>. Geop. x. 2. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1408'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1408'>1408</a>. Cf. Vigenère, Images des Philostrates,
-p. 48.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1409'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1409'>1409</a>. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Les orangers et les citronniers
-perfument l’air par la
-quantité prodigieuse des fleurs
-dont ils sont chargés, et qui
-s’épanouissent aux premières
-chaleurs.”</span>—Della Rocca, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Traité
-sur les Abeilles,</span> t. i. p. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1410'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1410'>1410</a>. Originally of Crete. Pashley,
-i. 27. κοδύμαλον in the ancient
-dialect of the country. Athen.
-iii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1411'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1411'>1411</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 480.
-Geop. xii. 1. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1412'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1412'>1412</a>. Geop. xii. 6. Pallad. i. 35. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1413'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1413'>1413</a>. Lucian. Luc. siv. Asin. § 43.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1414'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1414'>1414</a>. Geop. ii. 37. 40.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1415'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1415'>1415</a>. These were covered with
-plates of the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">lapis specularis</span>, and
-furnished with wheels, that they
-might the more easily be moved
-in and out from under cover.
-Colum. De Re Rust. xi. 3. p.
-461: see also Castell, Villas of
-the Ancients, p. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1416'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1416'>1416</a>. These are found growing at
-present even in the cemeteries.
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Des melons d’eau qui végètent
-çà et là sur ces tombes abandonnées,
-resemblent, par leur
-forme et leur pâleur, à des
-crânes humains qu’on ne s’est
-pas donné la peine d’ensèvelir.”
-Chateaub.</span> Itin. i. 27.
-These fruit are considered so innocent
-in the Levant as to be
-given to the sick in fevers. Chandler,
-i. p. 77.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1417'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1417'>1417</a>. Colum. De Cult. Hortor. 234.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1418'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1418'>1418</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Acharn. 494.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1419'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1419'>1419</a>. Athen. iii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1420'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1420'>1420</a>. Chandler, i. 317.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1421'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1421'>1421</a>. See Strattis’s Invocation to
-the Caterpillar. Athen. ii. 79.
-Theoph. Hist. Plant. vii. 2. 4.
-5. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1422'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1422'>1422</a>. Geop. xii. 13. 3. Pallad. ii.
-14. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1423'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1423'>1423</a>. Athen. i. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1424'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1424'>1424</a>. Geop. xii. 19. 1, sqq. Pallad.
-iv. 9. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1425'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1425'>1425</a>. Plin. xix. 23. Pallad. iv.
-9. 8.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">At qui sub trichila manantem repit ad undam,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Labentemque sequens nimio tenuatur amore,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Candidus, effœtæ tremebundior ubere porcæ.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Colum. x. De Cult. Hortor. 394.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1426'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1426'>1426</a>. Lord Bacon, having noticed this
-fact, adds the following sage remark:
-“If you set a stake or prop
-at a certain distance from it (the
-vine), it will grow that way,
-which is far stranger than the
-other: for that water may work
-by a sympathy of attraction; but
-this of the stake seemeth to be
-a reasonable discourse.” Sylva
-Sylvarum, 462.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1427'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1427'>1427</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vii. 3.
-5. Plin. Hist. Nat. xix. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1428'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1428'>1428</a>. Plin. xix. 23.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1429'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1429'>1429</a>. Cf. Athen. iii. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1430'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1430'>1430</a>. Athen. iii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1431'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1431'>1431</a>. The best melons at present
-known in Greece are those of
-Cephalonia, which lose their flavour
-if transplanted. Hobhouse,
-Trav. &amp;c., i. 227. Cf. Chandler, i.
-p. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1432'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1432'>1432</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 494.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1433'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1433'>1433</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. ii. 7.
-5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1434'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1434'>1434</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Pac. 966.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1435'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1435'>1435</a>. Geop. xii. 18. 2. Plin. xix.
-42. Dioscor. ii. 152. The physician,
-however, modestly professes
-his unbelief: ἔνιοι δὲ ἱστόρησαν,
-ὅτι ἐάν τις κριοῦ κέρατα συγκόψας
-κατορύξῃ, φύεται ἀσπάραγος · ἐμοὶ
-δὲ ἀπίθανον.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1436'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1436'>1436</a>. The asparagus, however, has
-been found, in modern times,
-growing wild among the ruins of
-Epidauros. Chandler, ii. 249.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1437'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1437'>1437</a>. Athen. ii. 62.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1438'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1438'>1438</a>. Geop. ii. 41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1439'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1439'>1439</a>. Athen. ix. 9. Suid. v. κράμβη.
-t. i. p. 1518. b. Cf. Foës. Œconom.
-Hippoc. v. κραμβίων. p. 214.
-Dioscorid. ii. 146.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1440'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1440'>1440</a>. Cf. Steph. Byzant. de Urb.
-p. 488. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1441'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1441'>1441</a>. Cf. Casaub. Animadv. in
-Athen. ix. 9. t. x. p. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1442'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1442'>1442</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vii. 1. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1443'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1443'>1443</a>. Athen. iv. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1444'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1444'>1444</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vii. 4.
-2. 6. 4. Aristoph. Concion. 355,
-et schol.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1445'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1445'>1445</a>. Geop. xii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1446'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1446'>1446</a>. Geop. xii. 25. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1447'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1447'>1447</a>. Cf. Sibth. Flor. Græc. tab.
-368.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1448'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1448'>1448</a>. Dioscor. iii. 53. Geop. xii.
-25. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1449'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1449'>1449</a>. Geop. xii. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1450'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1450'>1450</a>. The rose-coloured lotus was
-said by the poet Pancrates to
-have been produced from the
-blood of the lion slain by the
-Emperor Adrian. Athen. xv. 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1451'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1451'>1451</a>. Athen. iii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1452'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1452'>1452</a>. Nicander in Georgicis ap.
-Athen. iii. 1.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Σπείρειας κύαμον Αἰγύπτιον, ὄφρα θερείης</div>
- <div class='line'>Ἅνθεα μὲν στεφάνους ἀνύῃς· τὰ δὲ πεπτηῶτα</div>
- <div class='line'>Ἀκμαίου καρποῖο κιβώρια δαινυμένοισιν</div>
- <div class='line'>Ἐς χέρας ἠΐθεοισι, πάλαι ποθέουσιν, ὀρέξης</div>
- <div class='line'>Ῥίζας δ᾽ ἐν θοίνῃσιν ἀφεψήσας προτίθημι.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'>See the note of Schweighæuser, t. vii. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1453'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1453'>1453</a>. Histor. Plant. iv. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1454'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1454'>1454</a>. It was also found in Thesprotia.
-Athen. iii. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1455'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1455'>1455</a>. Geop. ii. 39. Apuleius relates
-that the lupin-flower turned
-round with the sun, even in cloudy
-weather, so that it served as
-a sort of rural clock. Cf. Plin.
-xviii. 67.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1456'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1456'>1456</a>. The caper-bush blossoms in
-June. Chandler, ii. 275.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1457'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1457'>1457</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 3. 6.
-Cf. Sibth. Flor. Græc. tab. 488.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1458'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1458'>1458</a>. Athen. ii. 52.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1459'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1459'>1459</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 9. 2.
-Cf. vii. 3, 3. Hesiod reckons the
-mallow and the asphodel among
-edible plants. Opp. et Dies, 41.
-G&oelig;ttling, therefore, (in loc.) wonders
-Pythagoras should have prohibited
-the mallow. Cf. Aristoph.
-Plut. 543. Suid. v. θύμος. t. 1.
-p. 1336. e. Horat. Od. i. 32. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1460'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1460'>1460</a>. Colum. de Cult. Hortor. 253.
-Cardan in his treatise De Subtilitate
-having undertaken to assign
-the cause why certain flowers
-bend towards the sun, his antagonist,
-J. C. Scaliger, remarks upon
-his philosophy as follows:—<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“De
-floribus, qui ad Solem convertuntur
-non pessime ais: tenue
-humidum ad Solis calorem, se habere,
-ut corii ad ignem. Cæterum
-adhuc integra restat quæstio.
-Rosis enim tenuissimum esse humidum
-testantur omnia. Non
-convertuntur tamen. Platonici
-flores quosdam etiam Lunæ dicunt
-esse familiares: qui sane
-huic Sideri, sicut illi suo canant
-hymnos, sed mortalibus ignotos
-auribus.”</span> Exercit. 170, § 2.
-“The cause (of the bowing of the
-heliotrope) is somewhat obscure;
-but I take it to be no other, but
-that the part against which the
-sun heateth, waxeth more faint
-and flaccid in the stalk, and
-thereby less able to support the
-flower.” Bacon, Sylva Sylvarum
-§ 493.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1461'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1461'>1461</a>. Sibth. Flor. Græc. t. 1. tab.
-258, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1462'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1462'>1462</a>. Colum. x. de Cult. Hortor.
-230, sqq. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 235.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1463'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1463'>1463</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 72. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1464'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1464'>1464</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 826,
-837.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1465'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1465'>1465</a>. Colum. x. De Cult. Hortor.
-374. English Translation. Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. vii. 12. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1466'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1466'>1466</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vii. 3. 3.
-Cf. Dioscor. iii. 68, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1467'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1467'>1467</a>. Athen. iv. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1468'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1468'>1468</a>. Athen. ix. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1469'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1469'>1469</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vii. 4.
-7, 10, 11. Aristoph. Plut. 283,
-et schol. Eq. 675. 494. Vesp.
-680. Acharn. 166, 500. Plut.
-283.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1470'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1470'>1470</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Pac. 246.
-252.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1471'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1471'>1471</a>. Cf. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 675.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1472'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1472'>1472</a>. This passage has escaped the
-diligence of Meursius, Græc. Feriat.
-p. 150.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1473'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1473'>1473</a>. Athen. ix. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1474'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1474'>1474</a>. Dioscor. ii. 200, seq. Plin.
-xix. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1475'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1475'>1475</a>. Athen. ii. 57. Schol. Aristoph.
-Nub. 189, 191. Eccles. 1092.
-Geop. xii. 36.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1476'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1476'>1476</a>. A similar observation is made
-in France respecting the truffles,
-the best of which are supposed to
-grow about the roots and under
-the shadow of the oak. Trollope’s
-Summer in Western France, ii.
-352.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1477'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1477'>1477</a>. Geop. xii. 41. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1478'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1478'>1478</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 189.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1479'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1479'>1479</a>. This was more particularly
-the case on the Tauric Chersonese.—Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. vii.
-13. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1480'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1480'>1480</a>. Theophrast. Hist. Plant. i.
-10. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1481'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1481'>1481</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 6.
-13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1482'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1482'>1482</a>. Athen. ii. 62.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1483'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1483'>1483</a>. Plut. Sympos. iv. 2. 1. who
-relates that the ὕδνα attained to
-a very large size in Elis.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1484'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1484'>1484</a>. Vid. Theoph. Hist. Plant. i.
-6. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1485'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1485'>1485</a>. Walp. Mem. i. 284.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1486'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1486'>1486</a>. Valmont de Bomare, Dict.
-D’Hist. Nat. t. ii. p. 21, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>
- <h3 class='c002'>CHAPTER III. <br /> VINEYARD, VINTAGE, ETC.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>One of the principal branches of husbandry<a id='r1487' /><a href='#f1487' class='c012'><sup>[1487]</sup></a> in
-Greece was the culture of the vine, probably introduced
-from Phœnicia.<a id='r1488' /><a href='#f1488' class='c012'><sup>[1488]</sup></a> Long before the historical
-age, however, it had spread itself through the whole
-country, together with several parts of Asia Minor,
-as may be inferred from the language of Homer,<a id='r1489' /><a href='#f1489' class='c012'><sup>[1489]</sup></a>
-who frequently enumerates vineyards among the
-possessions of his heroes. Like most things the
-origin of which was unknown, the vine furnished
-the poets and common people with the subjects of
-numerous fables, some of which were reckoned of
-sufficient importance to be treasured up and transmitted
-to posterity. Thus, among the Ozolian Locrians,
-it was said<a id='r1490' /><a href='#f1490' class='c012'><sup>[1490]</sup></a> to have sprung from a small
-piece of wood, brought forth in lieu of whelps by
-a bitch. Others supposed a spot near Olympia<a id='r1491' /><a href='#f1491' class='c012'><sup>[1491]</sup></a> to
-have given birth to the vine, in proof of which the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>inhabitants affirmed a miracle was wrought annually
-among them during the Dionysiac festival. They
-took three empty brazen vessels, and having closely
-covered and sealed them in the presence of witnesses,
-again opened them after some interval of
-time, not stated, when they were found full of
-wine. According to other authorities, the environs
-of Plinthinè, in Egypt, had the honour of being
-the cradle of Dionysos, on which account the ancient
-Egyptians were by some accused of inebriety,
-though in the age of Herodotus<a id='r1492' /><a href='#f1492' class='c012'><sup>[1492]</sup></a> there would appear
-to have been no vineyards in the whole valley
-of the Nile. In reality,<a id='r1493' /><a href='#f1493' class='c012'><sup>[1493]</sup></a> the vine appears to be a
-native of all temperate climates, both in the old
-world and the new, and will even flourish<a id='r1494' /><a href='#f1494' class='c012'><sup>[1494]</sup></a> and produce
-fine grapes in various situations within the
-tropics, where clusters in different stages of ripeness
-may be observed upon its branches at all seasons
-of the year.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The opinions of Grecian writers respecting the
-soil best suited to the cultivation of the vine, having
-been founded on experience, generally agree
-with those which prevail in modern times.<a id='r1495' /><a href='#f1495' class='c012'><sup>[1495]</sup></a> They
-preferred for their vineyards the gentle acclivities
-of hills,<a id='r1496' /><a href='#f1496' class='c012'><sup>[1496]</sup></a> where the soil was good, though light and
-porous, and abounding in springs at no great depth
-from the surface.<a id='r1497' /><a href='#f1497' class='c012'><sup>[1497]</sup></a> A considerable degree of moisture
-was always supposed to be indispensable, on
-which account, in arid situations, large hollow sea-shells,
-and fragments of sandstone<a id='r1498' /><a href='#f1498' class='c012'><sup>[1498]</sup></a> were buried in
-the soil, these being regarded as so many reservoirs
-of humidity.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>By some the vine was even thought to delight in
-the rich alluvial soil of plains, such as is found in
-Egypt,<a id='r1499' /><a href='#f1499' class='c012'><sup>[1499]</sup></a> where, in later times, the banks of the Nile,
-from Elephantinè to the sea, seem to have presented
-one vast succession of vineyards.<a id='r1500' /><a href='#f1500' class='c012'><sup>[1500]</sup></a> But superior
-vines were produced on a few spots only, as at
-Koptos, and in the neighbourhood of Lake Mareotis,
-where showers of sand, pouring in from the desert
-or the sea-shore, diminished the fatness of the
-ground. With respect to Koptos, we possess, however,
-no precise information,<a id='r1501' /><a href='#f1501' class='c012'><sup>[1501]</sup></a> but are expressly told,
-that the Mareotic vineyards covered a series of sandy
-swells, stretching eastward from the lake towards
-Rosetta.<a id='r1502' /><a href='#f1502' class='c012'><sup>[1502]</sup></a> On the southern confines of Egypt, in
-the rocky and picturesque island of Elephantinè, the
-vine was said<a id='r1503' /><a href='#f1503' class='c012'><sup>[1503]</sup></a> never to shed its leaves; but as none
-grow there at present, the traveller has no opportunity
-of deciding this question. In Greece the vineyards
-of the plains were generally appropriated to
-the production of the green grape, the purple being
-supposed to prefer the sides of hills, or even of
-mountains, provided it were not exposed to the
-furious winds upon their summits. Several sorts of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>white grape, also, as the Psillian, Corcyrean, and
-the Chlorian, delighted in elevated vineyards,<a id='r1504' /><a href='#f1504' class='c012'><sup>[1504]</sup></a> though
-it was often judged necessary to reverse these rules,
-and compel the hill-nurslings to descend to the plains,
-while those of the plains were in their turn exposed
-to the climate of the mountains.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Much judgment was thought to be required in
-selecting the site of a vineyard, though almost everything
-depended on the climate and general configuration
-of the district in which it was situated. Thus
-in warm countries, as in the Pentapolis of Cyrene,
-the vineyards sloped towards the north; in Laconia,
-they occupied the eastern face of Mount Taygetos,
-while in Attica and the islands, the hills often appear
-to have been encircled with vines. Upon the
-whole, however, those were most esteemed which
-looked towards the rising sun and enjoyed, without
-obstruction, the first rays of the morning.<a id='r1505' /><a href='#f1505' class='c012'><sup>[1505]</sup></a> And
-this also is the case in the Côte d’Or, where the
-best wines, as the Chambertin, the Vin de Beaune,
-and that of the Clos Vougeot, are grown on eastern
-declivities. In some parts of Greece, the vine was
-strongly affected by the prevalence of certain winds,
-as those of the east and the west in Thessaly, which in
-the forty cold days of winter were attended by frost
-that killed its upper extremities, and sometimes the
-whole trunk. At Chalcis, in Eubœa likewise, the
-Olympias, a western wind, parched and shrivelled,
-or, as the Greeks express it, burnt up the leaves,
-sometimes completely destroying the shrub itself.<a id='r1506' /><a href='#f1506' class='c012'><sup>[1506]</sup></a>
-In such situations it was accordingly found necessary
-to protect it by a covering<a id='r1507' /><a href='#f1507' class='c012'><sup>[1507]</sup></a> during the prevalence
-of cold winds. At Methana, in Argolis, when
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>the south-east in spring blew up the Saronic gulf,<a id='r1508' /><a href='#f1508' class='c012'><sup>[1508]</sup></a>
-the inhabitants, to defend them from it, spread over
-their vines the invisible teguments of a spell; which
-was effected in the following manner: taking a milk-white
-cock, and cutting it in halves, two men seized
-each a part, and then, standing back to back, started
-off in opposite directions, made the tour of the vineyard,
-and, returning whence they had set out, buried
-the cock’s remains in the earth. After this the Libs
-might blow as it listed, since it possessed no power
-to injure any man’s property within the consecrated
-circle.<a id='r1509' /><a href='#f1509' class='c012'><sup>[1509]</sup></a> The prevalence of the north wind during
-autumn was considered auspicious, as they supposed
-it to hasten the ripening of the fruit.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When the husbandman had resolved on the formation
-of a new vineyard, he first, of course, encircled
-the spot with a hedge<a id='r1510' /><a href='#f1510' class='c012'><sup>[1510]</sup></a> which was made both
-thick and strong for the purpose of repelling the
-flocks and herds, which, as well as goats, foxes, and
-soldiers, loved to prey upon the vine.<a id='r1511' /><a href='#f1511' class='c012'><sup>[1511]</sup></a> His next
-care was to root up the hazel bush and the oleaster,
-the roots of the former being supposed to be
-inimical to the Dionysiac tree, while the oily bark
-of the latter rendered it peculiarly susceptible of
-taking fire, by which means vineyards would often
-appear to have been reduced to ashes. So at least
-says Virgil.<a id='r1512' /><a href='#f1512' class='c012'><sup>[1512]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Root up wild olives from thy laboured lands,</div>
- <div class='line'>For sparkling fire from hinds’ unwary hands</div>
- <div class='line'>Is often scattered o’er their unctuous rinds,</div>
- <div class='line'>And often spread abroad by raging winds;</div>
- <div class='line'>For first the smouldering flame the trunk receives,</div>
- <div class='line'>Ascending thence it crackles in the leaves;</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>At length victorious to the top aspires,</div>
- <div class='line'>Involving all the wood in smoky fires.</div>
- <div class='line'>But most when driven by winds the flaming storm</div>
- <div class='line'>Of the long files destroys the beauteous form;</div>
- <div class='line'>In ashes then the unhappy vineyard lies,</div>
- <div class='line'>Nor will the blasted plants from ruin rise,</div>
- <div class='line'>Nor will the withered stock be green again,</div>
- <div class='line'>But the wild olive shoots, and shades th’ ungrateful plain.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>The next operation<a id='r1513' /><a href='#f1513' class='c012'><sup>[1513]</sup></a> was to trench the ground and
-throw it into lofty ridges, which, by the operation
-of the summer sun, and the rain and winds and
-frosts of winter, were rendered mellow and genial.
-Occasionally a species of manure, composed<a id='r1514' /><a href='#f1514' class='c012'><sup>[1514]</sup></a> of pounded
-acorns, lentils, and other vegetable substances,
-was dug in for the purpose of giving to the soil
-the warmth and fertility required by the vine.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The ground having remained in this state during
-a whole year, its surface was levelled, and a series
-of shallow furrows traced for the slips by line, rather
-close, on rich alluvial plains, but diverging
-more and more<a id='r1515' /><a href='#f1515' class='c012'><sup>[1515]</sup></a> in proportion to the elevation of
-the site. Generally the vine was propagated by
-slips of moderate length, planted sometimes upright
-or à l’aiguille,<a id='r1516' /><a href='#f1516' class='c012'><sup>[1516]</sup></a> as the phrase is in Languedoc, sometimes
-obliquely,<a id='r1517' /><a href='#f1517' class='c012'><sup>[1517]</sup></a> which was generally supposed to
-be the better fashion. Along with the slip a handfull
-of grape-stones was usually cast into the furrow,<a id='r1518' /><a href='#f1518' class='c012'><sup>[1518]</sup></a>
-those of the green grape with the purple vine,
-and those of the purple with the green, in order
-to cause it the sooner to take root. With some
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>the practice was always to set two slips together, so
-that if one missed the other might take, and when
-both grew, the weaker was cut off or removed.
-Several stones,<a id='r1519' /><a href='#f1519' class='c012'><sup>[1519]</sup></a> about the size of the fist, were
-placed round the slip above whatever manure was
-used, the belief being, that they would aid in preventing
-the root from being scorched by the sun
-in the heats of summer.<a id='r1520' /><a href='#f1520' class='c012'><sup>[1520]</sup></a> Some touched the lower
-point of the slip with cedar oil which prevented it
-from decaying, and likewise by its odour repelled
-vermin.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To produce grapes without stones the lower end
-of the slip was split, and the pith carefully extracted
-with an ear-pick.<a id='r1521' /><a href='#f1521' class='c012'><sup>[1521]</sup></a> It was then bound round
-with a papyrus leaf, thrust into a sea-onion and
-thus planted. Vines producing medicinal grapes
-were created by withdrawing the pith from the
-lower part of the slip, but without splitting, and
-introducing certain drugs into the hollow,<a id='r1522' /><a href='#f1522' class='c012'><sup>[1522]</sup></a> closing
-up the extremity with papyrus and thus setting it
-in the earth. The wine, the grape, the leaves, and
-even the ashes of such a vine were thought to be
-a remedy against the bite of serpents and dogs,
-though no security against hydrophobia. Another
-mode of producing stoneless grapes was to cut short
-all the branches of a vine already growing, extract
-the pith from the ends of them, and fill up the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>cavity once a-week with the juice of sylphion,<a id='r1523' /><a href='#f1523' class='c012'><sup>[1523]</sup></a> binding
-them carefully to props that the liquor might
-not escape. A method was also in use of producing
-green and purple grapes on the same cluster.<a id='r1524' /><a href='#f1524' class='c012'><sup>[1524]</sup></a> This
-was to take two slips as nearly as possible of the
-same size, the one of the white, the other of the
-black grape, and, having split them down the middle,
-carefully to fit the halves to their opposites,
-so that the buds, when divided, should exactly
-meet. They were then bound tight together with
-papyrus thread, and placed in the earth in a sea-onion,<a id='r1525' /><a href='#f1525' class='c012'><sup>[1525]</sup></a>
-whose glutinous juice aided the growing together
-of the severed parts. Sometimes instead of
-slips, offshoots removed from the trunk of a large
-vine, with roots attached to them, were used. On
-other occasions the vine was grafted, like any other
-fruit-tree, on a variety of stocks,<a id='r1526' /><a href='#f1526' class='c012'><sup>[1526]</sup></a> each modifying
-the quality and flavour of the grape. Thus a vine
-grafted on a myrtle-stock,<a id='r1527' /><a href='#f1527' class='c012'><sup>[1527]</sup></a> produced fruit partaking
-of the character of the myrtle-berry. Grafted on a
-cherry-tree, its grapes underwent a different change,
-and ripened, like cherries, in the spring. As the
-clay encircling the junctures of these grafts grew dry,
-and somewhat cracked in hot summers, it was customary
-for gardeners to moisten them every evening
-with a sponge dipped in water.<a id='r1528' /><a href='#f1528' class='c012'><sup>[1528]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The husbandmen of antiquity were often somewhat
-fanciful in their practices. In order, when forming
-a nursery,<a id='r1529' /><a href='#f1529' class='c012'><sup>[1529]</sup></a> to coax the young plants to grow, the
-beds to which they were transferred, were formed
-of a stratum of earth brought from the vineyard
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>whence they also were taken. Another nicety was
-to take care, that they occupied precisely the same
-position with respect to the quarters of the heavens<a id='r1530' /><a href='#f1530' class='c012'><sup>[1530]</sup></a>
-as when growing on the parent stock.<a id='r1531' /><a href='#f1531' class='c012'><sup>[1531]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Besides to plant it as it was they mark</div>
- <div class='line'>The heaven’s four quarters on the tender bark,</div>
- <div class='line'>And to the north or south restore the side</div>
- <div class='line'>Which at their birth did heat or cold abide,</div>
- <div class='line'>So strong is custom; such effects can use</div>
- <div class='line'>In tender souls of pliant plants produce.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>When desirous of extending the plantation in an
-old vineyard, instead of the methods above described,
-they had recourse to another, which was to bend
-down<a id='r1532' /><a href='#f1532' class='c012'><sup>[1532]</sup></a> the vine branch, and bury it up to the point
-in the earth, where it would take root, and send forth
-a new vine, and in this way a long series of leafy
-arcades<a id='r1533' /><a href='#f1533' class='c012'><sup>[1533]</sup></a> may sometimes have been formed. At the
-foot of their vines some cultivators were in the habit
-of burying three goats’ horns<a id='r1534' /><a href='#f1534' class='c012'><sup>[1534]</sup></a> with their points downwards,
-and the other end appearing above the soil.
-These they regarded as so many receptacles for receiving
-and gradually conveying water to the roots,
-and, consequently, an active cause of the vines’ fertility.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>Respecting the seasons of planting,<a id='r1535' /><a href='#f1535' class='c012'><sup>[1535]</sup></a> opinions were
-divided, some preferring the close of autumn, immediately
-after the fall of the leaf, when the sap
-had forsaken the branches, and descended to the
-roots; others chose, for the time of this operation,
-the early spring, just before the sap mounted; while
-a third class delayed it until the buds began to swell,
-and the tokens of spring were evident. To these
-varieties of practice Virgil makes allusion,—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>When winter frosts constrain the field with cold,</div>
- <div class='line'>The fainty root can take no steady hold;</div>
- <div class='line'>But when the golden spring reveals the year,</div>
- <div class='line'>And the white bird returns whom serpents fear,</div>
- <div class='line'>That season deem the best to plant thy vines;</div>
- <div class='line'>Next that, is when autumnal warmth declines,</div>
- <div class='line'>Ere heat is quite decayed, or cold begun,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or Capricorn admits the winter sun.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>But the above were not the only rules observed;
-for, besides the general march of the seasons, they took
-note of the phases of the moon,<a id='r1536' /><a href='#f1536' class='c012'><sup>[1536]</sup></a> whose influence
-over vegetation all antiquity believed to be very
-powerful. Some planted during the four days immediately
-succeeding the birth of the new moon, while
-others extended their labours through the first two
-quarters. The act of pruning<a id='r1537' /><a href='#f1537' class='c012'><sup>[1537]</sup></a> was performed when
-that planet was in its wane.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There were in Greece<a id='r1538' /><a href='#f1538' class='c012'><sup>[1538]</sup></a> three remarkable varieties
-of the vine, created by difference in the mode of
-cultivation.<a id='r1539' /><a href='#f1539' class='c012'><sup>[1539]</sup></a> The first consisted of plants always
-kept short, and supported on props, as in France;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>the second of tree-climbers, thence called Anadendrades;
-the third sort enjoyed neither of these advantages,<a id='r1540' /><a href='#f1540' class='c012'><sup>[1540]</sup></a>
-but being grown chiefly in steep and stony
-places, spread their branches over the earth, as is still
-the fashion in Syra<a id='r1541' /><a href='#f1541' class='c012'><sup>[1541]</sup></a> and other islands of the Archipelago.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Vine-props<a id='r1542' /><a href='#f1542' class='c012'><sup>[1542]</sup></a> appear to have commonly consisted of
-short reeds, which, accordingly, were extensively cultivated
-both in Hellas and its colonies of Northern
-Africa, where the musical cicada, whose excessive
-multiplication betokened a sickly year, bored through
-the rind, and laid its eggs in the hollow within.<a id='r1543' /><a href='#f1543' class='c012'><sup>[1543]</sup></a>
-From an inconvenience attending the use of this kind
-of support came the rustic proverb, “The prop has
-defrauded the vine;”<a id='r1544' /><a href='#f1544' class='c012'><sup>[1544]</sup></a> for these reeds sometimes took
-root, outgrew their clients, and monopolized the moisture
-of the soil.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In rich and level lands,<a id='r1545' /><a href='#f1545' class='c012'><sup>[1545]</sup></a> particularly where the
-Aminian vine<a id='r1546' /><a href='#f1546' class='c012'><sup>[1546]</sup></a> was cultivated, the props often rose
-to the height of five or six feet; but in hill-vineyards,
-where the soil was lighter and less nutritive,
-they were not suffered to exceed that of three feet.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>Where reeds were not procurable, ash-props<a id='r1547' /><a href='#f1547' class='c012'><sup>[1547]</sup></a> were
-substituted, but they were always carefully barked,
-to prevent cantharides, and other insects hurtful to
-the vine, from making nests in them. Their price
-would appear to have been considerable, since we
-find a husbandman speaking of having laid out a
-hundred drachma in vine-props.<a id='r1548' /><a href='#f1548' class='c012'><sup>[1548]</sup></a> To prevent their
-speedily decaying they were smeared a-top with pitch,
-and carefully, after the vintage, collected and laid
-up within doors.<a id='r1549' /><a href='#f1549' class='c012'><sup>[1549]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A vineyard, consisting wholly of Anadendrades,<a id='r1550' /><a href='#f1550' class='c012'><sup>[1550]</sup></a>
-most common in Attica, presented, in spring and
-summer, a very picturesque appearance, especially
-when situated on the sharp declivity of a hill.<a id='r1551' /><a href='#f1551' class='c012'><sup>[1551]</sup></a> The
-trees designed for the support of the vines,<a id='r1552' /><a href='#f1552' class='c012'><sup>[1552]</sup></a> planted
-in straight lines, and rising behind each other, terrace
-above terrace, at intervals of three or four and twenty
-feet, were beautiful in form and varied in feature,
-consisting generally of the black poplar, the ash,
-the maple, the elm,<a id='r1553' /><a href='#f1553' class='c012'><sup>[1553]</sup></a> and probably, also, the platane,
-which is still employed for this purpose in Crete.<a id='r1554' /><a href='#f1554' class='c012'><sup>[1554]</sup></a>
-Though kept low in some situations, where the soil
-was scanty, they were, in others, allowed to run to
-thirty or forty, and sometimes, as in Bithynia, even
-to sixty feet in height.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The face of the tree along which the vine climbed
-was cut down sheer like a wall, against which the
-purple or golden clusters hung thickly suspended,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>while the young branches crept along the boughs,
-or over bridges of reeds,<a id='r1555' /><a href='#f1555' class='c012'><sup>[1555]</sup></a> uniting tree with tree,
-and, when touched with the rich tints of autumn,
-delighting the eye by an extraordinary variety of
-foliage. As the lower boughs of these noble trees
-were carefully lopped away, a series of lofty arches
-was created, beneath which the breezes could freely
-play, abundant currents of pure air being regarded
-as no less essential to the perfect maturing of the
-grape<a id='r1556' /><a href='#f1556' class='c012'><sup>[1556]</sup></a> than constant sunshine. Sometimes the vine,
-in its ascent, was suffered to wind round the trunk
-of its supporter, which, however, by the most judicious
-husbandmen, was considered prejudicial, since
-the profusion of ligatures which it threw out in its
-passage upwards was thought to exhaust too much
-of its strength, to prevent which wooden wedges<a id='r1557' /><a href='#f1557' class='c012'><sup>[1557]</sup></a>
-were here and there inserted between the vine stem
-and the tree. In trailing the branches, moreover,
-along the boughs, care was taken to keep them as
-much as possible on the upper side, that they might
-enjoy a greater amount of sunshine, and be the more
-exposed to be agitated by the winds.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>These Anadendrades,<a id='r1558' /><a href='#f1558' class='c012'><sup>[1558]</sup></a> which were supposed to produce
-the best and most lasting wines, probably, as at
-present, ripened their produce much later than the
-other sorts of vines on account of the trees by which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>they were shaded. In modern Crete,<a id='r1559' /><a href='#f1559' class='c012'><sup>[1559]</sup></a> where, however,
-they are never pruned, their grapes seldom
-ripen before November, and sometimes they furnish
-the bazaar of Khania with fresh supplies till Christmas.
-The same is the case also in Egypt.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Occasionally, too, more especially in Cypros, the
-Anadendrades grew to an enormous size. At Populonium,
-in Etruria, there was a statue of Jupiter
-carved from a single vine; the pillars of the temple
-of Hera, at Metapontum, consisted of so many vines;
-and the whole staircase leading to the roof of the
-fane of Artemis, at Ephesos, was constructed with
-the timber of a single vine from Cypros. To render
-these things credible, we are informed, that, at
-Arambys, in Africa,<a id='r1560' /><a href='#f1560' class='c012'><sup>[1560]</sup></a> there was a vine twelve feet
-in circumference, and modern travellers have found
-them of equal dimensions in other parts of the
-world.<a id='r1561' /><a href='#f1561' class='c012'><sup>[1561]</sup></a> In France, for example, the celebrated
-Anne, Duc de Montmorenci, had a table made
-with a single slab of vinewood, which, two hundred
-years afterwards, Brotier<a id='r1562' /><a href='#f1562' class='c012'><sup>[1562]</sup></a> saw preserved at the town
-of Ecouen.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To return, however: the wide spaces between the
-trees were not in this class of vineyards allowed to
-remain entirely idle, having been sometimes sown<a id='r1563' /><a href='#f1563' class='c012'><sup>[1563]</sup></a>
-with corn, or planted with beans, and gourds, and
-cucumbers, and lentils.<a id='r1564' /><a href='#f1564' class='c012'><sup>[1564]</sup></a> The cabbage<a id='r1565' /><a href='#f1565' class='c012'><sup>[1565]</sup></a> was carefully
-excluded,<a id='r1566' /><a href='#f1566' class='c012'><sup>[1566]</sup></a> as an enemy to Dionysos. In other cases
-these intervals were given up to the cultivation of
-fruit-trees, such as the pomegranate, the apple, the
-quince, and the olive. The fig-tree was regarded as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>pernicious, though often planted in rows on the outside
-of the vineyard.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Respecting those vines which were cultivated without
-the aid of props,<a id='r1567' /><a href='#f1567' class='c012'><sup>[1567]</sup></a> or trees, we possess little information,
-except that there were such. But, as they
-are still found in the country, it is probable, that
-the mode of dressing them now prevailing nearly
-resembles that of antiquity. They are generally, in
-Syria, planted along the steep sides of mountains,
-where they spread and rest upon the stones, and
-have their fruit early ripened by the heat reflected
-from the earth. Frequently, also, they are planted
-on more level ground, in which case, as soon as
-the grapes acquire any size, the husbandman passes
-through the vineyard with an armful of forked
-wooden props which he skilfully introduces beneath
-the branches and fixes firmly so as to keep the
-clusters from touching the mould. The reason for
-adopting this method is the furious winds which
-at certain seasons of the year prevail in many of
-the Grecian islands, preventing the growth of woods
-and prostrating the fig and every other fruit-tree to
-the earth. The spaces between the lines are turned
-up annually by a peculiar sort of plough<a id='r1568' /><a href='#f1568' class='c012'><sup>[1568]</sup></a> drawn by
-oxen, in front of which a man advances, lifting up
-the vines and holding them aside while they pass.
-This destroys the weeds, and, at the same time, all
-the upper roots of the vine, which compels it to
-descend deeper into the earth, where it finds a
-cooler and more abundant nourishment. In this
-respect the practice of the Syrotes closely resembles
-that of their ancestors. Some husbandmen were
-careful, likewise, while weeding,<a id='r1569' /><a href='#f1569' class='c012'><sup>[1569]</sup></a> to remove the
-larger stones, though they are often supposed, by
-preserving moisture, to do more good than harm.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>It is a peculiar feature in the character of the
-ancients that they loved to attribute to the inferior
-animals the first hints of various useful practices.
-Thus they maintained it was the ass that, by browsing
-on the extremities of the vine, which only made
-it bear the more luxuriantly, taught them the art
-of pruning as well perhaps as that of feeding on
-the tendrils and tender branches,<a id='r1570' /><a href='#f1570' class='c012'><sup>[1570]</sup></a> which among them
-were esteemed a delicacy. To manifest their gratitude
-for this piece of instruction they erected at
-Nauplia,<a id='r1571' /><a href='#f1571' class='c012'><sup>[1571]</sup></a> a marble statue in honour of this ill-used
-quadruped, who has seldom, I fear, from that day
-to this, been so well treated. The rules observed
-in pruning<a id='r1572' /><a href='#f1572' class='c012'><sup>[1572]</sup></a> resembling those still in use, it is unnecessary
-to repeat them, though it may be worth
-mentioning, that the husbandman, who coveted an
-abundant vintage, was careful to lop his vines<a id='r1573' /><a href='#f1573' class='c012'><sup>[1573]</sup></a> with
-his brows shaded by an ivy crown. They esteemed
-it a sign of a fruitful year when the fig-tree and
-the white vine put forth luxuriantly in spring,<a id='r1574' /><a href='#f1574' class='c012'><sup>[1574]</sup></a> after
-which they had only to petition the gods against
-too much rain, or too much drought,<a id='r1575' /><a href='#f1575' class='c012'><sup>[1575]</sup></a> and those
-terrible hailstorms which sometimes devastate whole
-districts. Against this calamity, however, they had
-a preservative, which was to bind an amulet in the
-shape of a thong of seal-hide or eagle’s wing, about
-one of the stocks,<a id='r1576' /><a href='#f1576' class='c012'><sup>[1576]</sup></a> after which the whole vineyard
-was supposed to be secure from injury. The same
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>effect was produced by striking a chalezite stone
-with a piece of iron on the approach of a storm,
-and by hanging up in the vineyard a picture of a
-bunch of grapes at the setting of the constellation
-of the Lyre.<a id='r1577' /><a href='#f1577' class='c012'><sup>[1577]</sup></a> To repel the ascent of vermin along
-the trunk it was smeared with a thick coat of bitumen,<a id='r1578' /><a href='#f1578' class='c012'><sup>[1578]</sup></a>
-imported from Cilicia, while to preserve the
-branches from wasps a little olive-oil was blown
-over them.<a id='r1579' /><a href='#f1579' class='c012'><sup>[1579]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>While the grapes were growing, the ancients, following
-in the track of nature, supposed them to need
-shade, since the leaves at that time put forth most
-abundantly, to screen the young fruit from the scorching
-sun; but when they began to don their gold or
-purple hues, observing the foliage shrivel and shrink
-from about them, in order to admit the warm rays
-to penetrate and pervade the fruit they then stripped
-the branches and hastened the vintage,<a id='r1580' /><a href='#f1580' class='c012'><sup>[1580]</sup></a> plucking
-moreover the clusters as they ripened, lest they
-should drop off and be lost. But this partial gathering
-of the grapes could only take place in their
-gardens, or where the vine was trained about the
-house; for in the regular vineyards the season of
-the vintage was regulated by law,<a id='r1581' /><a href='#f1581' class='c012'><sup>[1581]</sup></a> as in Burgundy
-and the south of France, in order to protect the
-public against the pernicious frauds which would
-otherwise be practised. This, in Attica, usually coincided
-with the heliacal rising of the constellation
-Arcturus.<a id='r1582' /><a href='#f1582' class='c012'><sup>[1582]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When the magistrate had declared that the season
-of the vintage<a id='r1583' /><a href='#f1583' class='c012'><sup>[1583]</sup></a> was come, the servants of Bacchos
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>hurried forth to the vine-clad hills, converting
-their labours into a pretext for superabundant mirth
-and revelry. The troops of vintagers, composed of
-youths and maidens, with crowns of ivy on their
-heads, and accompanied by rural performers on the
-flute or phorminx, moved forward with shout, and
-dance, and song, to the sacred enclosures of Dionysos,
-surrounded with plaited hedgerows, and blue
-streamlets.<a id='r1584' /><a href='#f1584' class='c012'><sup>[1584]</sup></a> Here, where</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>“——the showering grapes</div>
- <div class='line'>In Bacchanal profusion reel to earth</div>
- <div class='line'>Purple and gushing,”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>they at once commenced their joyous task. With
-sharp pruning-hooks<a id='r1585' /><a href='#f1585' class='c012'><sup>[1585]</sup></a> they separated the luxuriant
-clusters, gold or purple, from the vine, and piling
-them in plaited baskets of osier or reed, bore them
-on their shoulders to the wine-press. In this operation,
-as I have said, both men and women joined;
-but the press was trodden by men only,<a id='r1586' /><a href='#f1586' class='c012'><sup>[1586]</sup></a> who, half
-intoxicated by pleasure,<a id='r1587' /><a href='#f1587' class='c012'><sup>[1587]</sup></a> and the fumes of the young
-wine, chanted loudly their ancient national lays in
-praise of Bacchos.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The wine-press, which stood under cover, sometimes
-consisted of two upright, and many cross
-beams,<a id='r1588' /><a href='#f1588' class='c012'><sup>[1588]</sup></a> which, descending with great weight upon
-the grapes squeezed forth all their juices, and these
-falling through a species of strainer,<a id='r1589' /><a href='#f1589' class='c012'><sup>[1589]</sup></a> upon an inclined
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>slab, were poured through a small channel
-formed for the purpose, into a broad open vessel
-communicating with the vat. Into the process
-of wine-making<a id='r1590' /><a href='#f1590' class='c012'><sup>[1590]</sup></a> it is unnecessary to enter. It
-will be sufficient, perhaps, to say that, when made,
-it was laid up in skins or large earthen jars until
-required for use. The wines of modern Attica and
-the Morea<a id='r1591' /><a href='#f1591' class='c012'><sup>[1591]</sup></a> are preserved from becoming acid by
-a large infusion of resin.<a id='r1592' /><a href='#f1592' class='c012'><sup>[1592]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The sports,<a id='r1593' /><a href='#f1593' class='c012'><sup>[1593]</sup></a> which took place during the vintage,
-were loud and frolicsome, and distinguished sometimes
-for their excessive licence. They brought
-forth a number of wine skins, filled tight, to the
-village green, and there smearing them liberally with
-oil the staggering rustics sought, each in his turn,
-to leap and stand upon one of them with his naked
-foot.<a id='r1594' /><a href='#f1594' class='c012'><sup>[1594]</sup></a> The missing, slipping, and falling, the awkward
-figure they sometimes made upon the ground,
-the jokes, and shouts, and laughter of the bystanders,
-mingled with the twanging of rustic instruments,
-and the roar of Bacchanalian songs, constituted
-the charm of the rural Dionysia, out of which,
-through many changes and gradations, arose, as we
-have seen, the Greek drama. In order without
-shame to give the freer licence to their tongues,
-they sometimes covered their faces with masks,
-formed with the bark of trees, which, there can
-be no doubt, led to those afterwards employed in
-the theatre. Sometimes a sort of farce<a id='r1595' /><a href='#f1595' class='c012'><sup>[1595]</sup></a> was acted,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>representing the search of the Athenians for the
-bodies of Icarios and Erygone. The former, according
-to tradition, was the person who taught the inhabitants
-of Attica the use of wine, with which on
-a certain occasion he regaled a number of shepherds.
-These demi-savages, observing their strength and
-their reason fail, imagined themselves to have been
-poisoned, and falling, in revenge, upon the donor,
-put him to death. His dog Mœra escaped, and
-leading Erygone to the spot where her father had
-been murdered, she immediately hung herself on
-the discovery of the corpse. Upon this they were
-all transported to the skies, and changed into so
-many constellations, namely Boötes,<a id='r1596' /><a href='#f1596' class='c012'><sup>[1596]</sup></a> the Dog, and
-the Virgin, by whose brilliancy we are still rejoiced
-nightly. Soon afterwards the maidens of Attica
-were seized with madness and hung themselves
-in great numbers, upon which the oracle being consulted,
-commanded the Athenians to make search
-for the bodies of Icarios and Erygone. Being able
-to discover them nowhere on earth, they suspended
-ropes from the branches of lofty trees, by swinging
-to and fro on which they appeared to be conducting
-their search in the air; but many of these adventurous
-explorers receiving severe falls, they were
-afterwards contented with suspending to the ropes
-little images after their own likeness, which they
-sent hither and thither in the air as their substitutes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But all the produce of the vineyards was not appropriated
-to the making of wine, great quantities
-of grapes<a id='r1597' /><a href='#f1597' class='c012'><sup>[1597]</sup></a> being preserved for the table, or converted
-into raisins.<a id='r1598' /><a href='#f1598' class='c012'><sup>[1598]</sup></a> The latter were sometimes
-made by being carefully gathered after the full
-moon, and put out to dry in the sun, about ten
-o’clock in the morning, when all the dew was evaporated.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>For this purpose, there was in every
-vineyard, garden, and orchard, a place called Theilopedon,<a id='r1599' /><a href='#f1599' class='c012'><sup>[1599]</sup></a>
-which would seem to have been a smooth
-raised terrace, where not grapes only, but myrtle-berries,
-and every other kind of fruit, were exposed
-to the sun on fine hurdles. Here, likewise,
-the berries of the Palma Christi<a id='r1600' /><a href='#f1600' class='c012'><sup>[1600]</sup></a> were prepared
-for the making of castor oil. Another method was
-to twist the stem of the cluster<a id='r1601' /><a href='#f1601' class='c012'><sup>[1601]</sup></a> and allow the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>grapes to dry on the vine. They were then laid
-up in vessels among vine leaves, dried also in the
-sun, covered close with a stopper, and deposited in
-a cold room free from smoke.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To preserve the grapes fresh some cut off with
-a sharp pruninghook the clusters separately, others
-the branches on which they grew, after which, dipping
-the stem into pitch and removing the damaged
-grapes with a pair of scissors, they spread them in
-cool and shady rooms, on layers of pulse-halm, or
-hay, or straw.<a id='r1602' /><a href='#f1602' class='c012'><sup>[1602]</sup></a> The halm of lentils was usually
-preferred, because it is hard and dry, and repels
-mice. On other occasions, the branches were kept
-suspended, having sometimes been previously dipped
-in sweet wine. Grapes were likewise preserved in
-pitched coffers, immersed in dry saw-dust of the
-pitch tree, or the silver fir, or the black poplar,
-or even in millet flour. Others plunged the bunches
-in boiling sea-water, or if this were not at hand,
-into a preparation of wine, salt, and water, and then
-laid them up in barley straw. Others boiled the
-ashes of the fig-tree, or the vine, with which they
-sprinkled the bunches. Others preserved grapes by
-suspending them in granaries, where the grain beneath
-was occasionally moved, for the dust rising
-from the corn settled on the outside of the clusters,
-and protected them from the air. Another
-method was to boil rain-water to a third, and then,
-after cooling it in the open air, and pouring it into
-a pitched vessel, to fill it with clusters perfectly
-cleansed. The vessel was then covered, luted with
-gypsum, and laid by in a cold place. The grapes
-in this way remained quite fresh, and the water
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>itself acquiring a vinous taste was administered to
-sick persons in lieu of wine. Occasionally, also,
-grapes as well as apples were kept in honey.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The most extraordinary, and perhaps the most effectual
-contrivance,<a id='r1603' /><a href='#f1603' class='c012'><sup>[1603]</sup></a> however, was to dig near the
-vine a pit three feet deep, the bottom of which
-was covered with a layer of sand. A few short
-stakes were then fixed upright in it, and to these
-a number of vine branches laden with clusters were
-bent down and made fast. The whole was then
-closely roofed over so as completely to keep out
-the rain, and in this way the grapes would remain
-fresh till spring.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The labours of the vintage being concluded, the
-husbandman next turned his attention to olive gathering
-and the making of oil. This, in Greece, was
-a matter of great importance. The olives, therefore,<a id='r1604' /><a href='#f1604' class='c012'><sup>[1604]</sup></a>
-for all the better sorts of oil, were picked by hand,
-and not, as in Italy, suffered to fall. When as many
-were gathered as could conveniently be pressed during
-the following night and day, they were spread loosely
-on fine hurdles, and not heaped up lest they should heat
-and lose the delicacy of their flavour. They were, likewise,
-cleansed carefully from leaves and every particle
-of wood, these substances, it was supposed, impairing
-the quality and durability of the oil. Towards evening
-a little salt was sprinkled over the olives, which
-were then put into a clean mill,<a id='r1605' /><a href='#f1605' class='c012'><sup>[1605]</sup></a> and so arranged
-that they could be bruised without crushing the
-stones, from the juice of which the oil contracted
-a bad taste. Having been sufficiently bruised, they
-were conveyed in small vessels to the press, where
-they were covered with hurdles of green willows,
-upon which, at first, was placed a moderate weight,—for
-that which flows from slight pressure is the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>sweetest and purest oil, on which account it was
-drawn off in clean leaden vessels,<a id='r1606' /><a href='#f1606' class='c012'><sup>[1606]</sup></a> and preserved
-apart. Greater weight was then added, and the mass
-having been well writhen, the second runnings were
-laid up in separate vessels. The next step was to
-cause the precipitation of the lees, which was effected
-by mingling with the crude oil a little salt and nitre.
-It was then stirred with a piece of olive-wood, and
-left to settle, when the amurca or watery part sank
-to the bottom. The pure oil was then skimmed off
-with a shell, and laid up in glass vases, this substance
-having been preferred on account of its cold
-nature. In default of these, pickle-jars, glazed with
-gypsum, were used, which were deposited in cool
-cellars facing the north.<a id='r1607' /><a href='#f1607' class='c012'><sup>[1607]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Greeks had a variety of other oils besides that
-procured from the olive,<a id='r1608' /><a href='#f1608' class='c012'><sup>[1608]</sup></a> as walnut-oil, oil of terebinth,
-oil of sesamum, oil of violets, oil of almonds,
-oil of Palma Christi, or castor-oil, oil of saffron, oil
-of Cnidian laurel, oil of datura, oil of lentisk, oil
-of mastic, oil of myrtle, and oil of mustard. They
-had, likewise,<a id='r1609' /><a href='#f1609' class='c012'><sup>[1609]</sup></a> the green and wild-olive oil, and the
-double-refined oil of Sicyon, together with imitations
-of the Spanish and Italian oils.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As fruit of all kinds was in great request among
-the Greeks, they had recourse to numerous contrivances<a id='r1610' /><a href='#f1610' class='c012'><sup>[1610]</sup></a>
-for ensuring an unfailing supply throughout
-the year. At many of these our gardeners may,
-perhaps, smile, but they were, nevertheless, most of
-them ingenious, and, probably, effectual, though the
-fruit thus preserved may have been dear when brought
-to market. Into the details of all their methods it
-will be unnecessary to enter: the following were the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>principal and most curious. Walnuts, chestnuts,
-filberts, &amp;c., were gathered and kept in the ordinary
-way. They understood the art of blanching almonds,
-which were afterwards dried in the sun. Medlars,
-service-berries, winter-apples, and the like, having
-been gathered carefully, were simply laid up in straw,
-whether on the loft-floor or in baskets. This, likewise,
-was sometimes the case with quinces, which,
-together with apples and pears, were, on other occasions,
-deposited in dry fig-leaves. For these, in the case
-of pears and apples, walnut-leaves were often substituted,
-sometimes piled under and over them in
-heaps, at other times wrapped and tied about the
-fruit, the hues and odours of which they were supposed
-greatly to improve.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Citrons,<a id='r1611' /><a href='#f1611' class='c012'><sup>[1611]</sup></a> pomegranates,<a id='r1612' /><a href='#f1612' class='c012'><sup>[1612]</sup></a> apples, quinces, and pears,
-were preserved in heaps of sand, grapestones, oak,
-poplar, deal, or cedar sawdust, sometimes sprinkled
-with vinegar, chopped straw, wheat, or barley, or
-the seeds of plants, all of which sufficed equally to
-exclude the external air. Another method with
-apples<a id='r1613' /><a href='#f1613' class='c012'><sup>[1613]</sup></a> was to lay them up surrounded with sea-weed
-in unbaked jars, which were then deposited
-in an upper room free from smoke and all bad
-smells. When sea-weed was not procurable they
-put each apple into a small separate jar closely
-covered up and luted. These apple-jars were
-often lined with a coating of wax. Figs were, in
-like manner, preserved green<a id='r1614' /><a href='#f1614' class='c012'><sup>[1614]</sup></a> by being enclosed
-in so many small gourds. Citrons and pomegranates
-were often suffered to remain throughout the winter
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>on the tree, defended from wet and wind by being
-capped with little fictile vases bound tightly to the
-branches to keep them steady. Others enclosed
-these fruits, as well as apples, in a thick coating
-of gypsum, preventing their falling off by binding
-the stem to the branches with packthread. Nor
-was it unusual, even when gathered, to envelope
-apples, quinces, and citrons, in a covering of the
-same material, or potter’s clay, or argillaceous earth,
-mixed with hair, sometimes interposing between the
-fruit and this crust a layer of fig-leaves, after which
-they were dried in the sun. When at the end,
-perhaps, of a whole year the above crust was broken
-and removed the fruit came forth perfect as when
-plucked from the bough. It is possible, therefore,
-that, in a similar manner, mangoes, mangusteens, and
-other frail and delicate fruit of the tropics, might
-be brought fresh to Europe, and that, too, in such
-abundance as to make them accessible to most persons.
-To render pears and pomegranates durable,
-their stems were dipped in pitch, after which they
-were hung up. In the case of the latter the fruit
-itself was sometimes thus dipped; and, at other times,
-immersed in hot sea-water, after which it was dried in
-the sun. One mode of preserving figs was to plunge
-them in honey so as neither to touch each other,
-nor the vessel in which they were contained; another,
-to cover a pile of them with an inverted vase of
-glass, or other pellucid substance, closely luted to
-the slab on which it stood. Cherries were gathered
-before sunrise, and put, with summer savory above
-and below, into a jar, or the hollow of a reed, which
-was then filled with sweet vinegar, and closely covered.
-Mulberries were preserved in their own juice,
-apples and quinces in pitched coffers, wrapped in
-clean locks of wool, pears by being placed in salt<a id='r1615' /><a href='#f1615' class='c012'><sup>[1615]</sup></a>
-for five days, and afterwards dried in the sun, as
-were also figs, which were strung by the stalks to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>a piece of cord or willow twig, like so many hanks
-of onions<a id='r1616' /><a href='#f1616' class='c012'><sup>[1616]</sup></a> as they are sold in modern times. Elsewhere
-they were preserved, as dates in Egypt, by
-being pressed together in square masses, like bricks.<a id='r1617' /><a href='#f1617' class='c012'><sup>[1617]</sup></a>
-Damascenes were kept in must or sweet wine, as
-were also pears, adding sometimes a little salt and
-jujubes, with leaves, above and below. The same
-course was pursued with apples and quinces, which
-communicated to the liquor additional durability and
-the most exquisite fragrance. Quinces, whose sharp
-effluvia prevented their being placed with other fruit,
-were often put into closely-covered jars, and kept
-floating in wine to which they imparted a delicious
-perfume. The same custom was observed with respect
-to figs, which were cut off on the bearing
-branch a little before they were ripe, and hung, so
-as not to touch each other, in a square earthen
-jar. Upon the same principle apples were preserved
-in jars hermetically sealed, which, for the sake of
-coolness, were plunged in cisterns or deep wells.<a id='r1618' /><a href='#f1618' class='c012'><sup>[1618]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It may, perhaps, be worth while to mention, in
-passing, that, like ourselves, the ancients possessed
-the art of extracting perry and cider<a id='r1619' /><a href='#f1619' class='c012'><sup>[1619]</sup></a> from their
-pears and apples; and from pomegranates a species
-of wine which is said to have been of an extremely
-delicate flavour. The Egyptians, also, made wine
-from the fruit of the lotos.<a id='r1620' /><a href='#f1620' class='c012'><sup>[1620]</sup></a></p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1487'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1487'>1487</a>. The importance of this branch
-of cultivation in some countries
-may be perceived from the fact,
-that in France it is said to afford
-employment to 2,200,000 families,
-comprising a population of
-6,000,000, or nearly one-fifth of
-the population of the entire kingdom.
-<span class='sc'>Times</span>, Aug. 3, 1838.
-The quantity of land devoted to
-the culture of the vine was estimated
-in 1823, at 4,270,000
-acres, the produce of which amounted
-to 920,721,088 gallons,
-22,516,220<i>l.</i> 15<i>s.</i> sterling. Redding,
-Hist. of Modern Wines,
-chap. iv. p. 56. In the Greek
-Budget of 1836, the tax on cattle
-produced 2,100,000 drachmas,
-on bees 35,000, olive-grounds
-64,776, and on vineyards and
-currant-grounds 58,269.—Parish,
-Diplomatic History of the Monarchy
-of Greece, p. 175.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1488'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1488'>1488</a>. Or according to Athenæus,
-from the shores of the Red Sea.
-Deipnosoph. xv. 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1489'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1489'>1489</a>. Iliad. β. 561. γ. 184. ι.
-152, 294. Cf. Pind. Isth. viii.
-108.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1490'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1490'>1490</a>. Paus. x. 38. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1491'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1491'>1491</a>. Athen. i. 61.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1492'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1492'>1492</a>. ii. 77.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1493'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1493'>1493</a>. Cf. Redding History of Modern
-Wines, chap. i. p. 2. An
-interesting and able work.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1494'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1494'>1494</a>. Nienhoff in Churchill’s Collection,
-ii. 264. Barbot. iii.
-13. Ulloa, Memoires Philosophiques,
-t. ii. p. 15. Voyages,
-t. i. p. 487, 491.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1495'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1495'>1495</a>. Virg. Georg. ii. 276.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1496'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1496'>1496</a>. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Quòd colles Bacchus amaret.”</span>
-Manil. Astronom. ii. p.
-31. 6. Scalig.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1497'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1497'>1497</a>. Geop. v. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1498'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1498'>1498</a>. Geop. v. 9. 8. Virg. Georg.
-ii. 348.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1499'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1499'>1499</a>. Καλλίστη δὲ γῆ καὶ ἑ ὑπὸ
-τῶν ῥεόντων ποταμῶν χωσθεῖσα,
-ὅθεν καὶ τὴν Αἴγυπτον ἐπαινοῦμεν.—Florent.
-ap. Geop. v. 1. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1500'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1500'>1500</a>. Jemaleddin. Maured Allatafet,
-p. 7. All these vines it will
-be remembered were cut down
-by order of the Caliph Beamrillah,
-even in the province of the
-Fayoum. Some vestiges, however,
-of vineyards were here discovered
-by Pococke. “I observed,”
-says he, “about this lake
-(Mœris) several roots in the
-ground, that seemed to me to
-be the remains of vines, for
-which the country about the
-lake was formerly famous.
-Where there is little moisture
-in the air, and it rains so seldom,
-wood may remain sound
-a great while, though it is not
-known how long these vineyards
-have been destroyed.”
-Vol. i. p. 65.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1501'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1501'>1501</a>. Though with regard to the
-nature of the wine itself we are
-told, that it was so light as to be
-given to persons in fevers,—ὁ δὲ
-κατὰ τὴν Θηβαΐδα, καὶ μάλιστα
-ὁ κατὰ τὴν Κόπτον πόλιν, οὕτως
-ἐστὶ λεπτὸς, καὶ εὐανάδοτος, καὶ
-ταχέως πεπτικὸς, ὡς τοῖς πυρεταίνουσι
-διδόμενος μὴ βλάπτειν.
-Athen. i. 60.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1502'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1502'>1502</a>. Athen. i. 60. Horat. Od. i.
-37. 14. Strab. xvii. 1. t. iii. p.
-425.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1503'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1503'>1503</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 3. 5.
-Varro, i. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1504'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1504'>1504</a>. Geop. v. 1. 15. Cf. Geop.
-iii. 2. “The shifting of ground
-is a means to better the tree
-and fruit, but with this caution,
-that all things do prosper best
-when they are advanced to the
-better.” Bacon, “Sylva Sylvarum,”
-439.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1505'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1505'>1505</a>. Geop. v. 4.1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1506'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1506'>1506</a>. Theoph. Caus. Plant. v. 12. 5.
-Cf. Hist. Plant. iv. 14. 11. And
-yet the neighbourhood of the sea
-was considered propitious to the
-vine. Geop. v. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1507'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1507'>1507</a>. Theoph. Caus. Plant. v. 12. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1508'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1508'>1508</a>. On the prevalence of these
-winds in winter and spring, together
-with the causes of the phenomenon,
-see Aristot. Problem.
-xxvi. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1509'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1509'>1509</a>. Paus. ii. 34. 2. Chandler,
-Travels, ii. 248.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1510'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1510'>1510</a>. Virg. Georg. ii. 371, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1511'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1511'>1511</a>. Aristoph. Eq. 1073, seq.
-Küst.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1512'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1512'>1512</a>. Georg. ii. 299, sqq. Dryden’s
-Translation.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1513'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1513'>1513</a>. Geop. iii. 4. Cf. Virg. Georg.
-ii. 259, seq. et Serv. ad loc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1514'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1514'>1514</a>. Geop. v. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1515'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1515'>1515</a>. Virg. Georg. ii. 274, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1516'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1516'>1516</a>. Skippon in Churchill, Collection
-of Voyages, vi. 730.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1517'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1517'>1517</a>. Πότερα δὲ ὅλον τὸ κλῆμα
-ὀρθὸν τιθεὶς πρὸς τὸν οὐρανὸν
-βλέπον ἡγῇ μάλλον ἂν ῥιζοῦσθαι
-αὐτὸ, ἢ καὶ πλάγιόν τι ὑπὸ τῇ
-ὑποβεβλημένη γῇ θείης ἂν, ὥστε
-κεῖσθαι ὥσπερ γάμμα ὕπτιον;
-οὕτω νὴ Δία· πλείονες γὰρ ἂν οἱ
-ὀφθαλμοὶ κατὰ γῆς εἶεν· ἐκ δὲ
-τῶν ὀφθαλμῶν καὶ ἄνω ὁρῶ
-βλαστάνοντα τὰ φυτὰ. Xenoph.
-Œconom. xix. 9, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1518'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1518'>1518</a>. Geop. v. 9. This practice is
-noticed by Lord Bacon who advises
-gardeners to extend the experiment
-by laying “good store”
-of other kernels about the roots
-of trees of the same kind. Sylva
-Sylvarum, i. 35.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1519'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1519'>1519</a>. Virg. Georg. ii. 348.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1520'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1520'>1520</a>. A similar remark is made
-by Lord Bacon: “It is an assured
-experience,” he says,
-“that an heap of flint or stone
-laid about the bottom of a wild
-tree, as an oak, elm, ash, &amp;c.,
-upon the first planting, doth
-make it prosper double as much
-as without it. The cause is
-for that it retaineth the moisture
-which falleth at any time
-upon the tree and suffereth it
-not to be exhaled by the sun.”
-Sylva Sylvarum, 422.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1521'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1521'>1521</a>. Geop. iv. 7. Mention of the
-stoneless grapes of Persia occurs
-in many travellers, and, by Mr.
-Fowler, one of the most recent,
-are enumerated under the name of
-<em>kismis</em>, among the choicest fruits
-of that country. Three Years in
-Persia, vol. i. p. 323. It may
-here be remarked, that certain
-sorts of vines, among others the
-Capneion, produced sometimes
-white clusters, sometimes purple.
-Theophrast. Hist. Plant. ii. 3. 2.
-Cf. de Caus. Plant. v. 3. 1. κ. τ. λ.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1522'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1522'>1522</a>. Geop. iv. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1523'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1523'>1523</a>. Geop. iv. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1524'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1524'>1524</a>. Geop. iv. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1525'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1525'>1525</a>. It has been remarked also by
-ancient naturalists that a fig-tree
-planted in a sea-onion, grows
-quicker and is more free from
-vermin. Theoph. Hist. Plant. i.
-5. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1526'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1526'>1526</a>. Colum. v. 11.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">—Adultâ vitium propagine</span></div>
- <div class='line in4'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Altas maritat populos,</span></div>
- <div class='line in2'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Inutilesque falce ramos amputans</span></div>
- <div class='line in4'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Feliciores inserit.</span></div>
- <div class='line in20'>Horat. Epod. ii. 9, seq.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1527'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1527'>1527</a>. Geop. iv. 4, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1528'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1528'>1528</a>. Geop. iv. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1529'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1529'>1529</a>. Virg. Georg. ii. 265, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1530'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1530'>1530</a>. Lord Bacon gives this experiment
-a place in his philosophy,
-observing, that “in all trees
-when they be removed (especially
-fruit-trees) care ought to
-be taken that the sides of the
-trees be coasted (north and
-south) and as they stood before.”
-Sylva Sylvarum, 471.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1531'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1531'>1531</a>. Virg. Georg. ii. 270, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1532'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1532'>1532</a>. An analogous practice is observed
-in the pepper gardens of
-Sumatra:—“When the vines
-originally planted to any of the
-chinkareens (or props) are observed
-to fail or miss; instead
-of replacing them with new
-plants, they frequently conduct
-one of the shoots, or suckers,
-from a neighbouring vine, to
-the spot, through a trench
-made in the ground, and there
-suffer it to rise up anew, often
-at the distance of twelve or
-fourteen feet from the parent
-stock.” Marsden, History of
-Sumatra, p. 111.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1533'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1533'>1533</a>. Virg. Georg. ii. 26. Serv. ad
-loc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1534'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1534'>1534</a>. Geop. iv. 2. The nymphs
-are said to have been the nurses
-of Bacchos, because water supplied
-moisture to the vine. The
-explanation of Athenæus is forced
-and cold. ii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1535'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1535'>1535</a>. Geop. v. 7, seq. Virg. Georg.
-ii. 323, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1536'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1536'>1536</a>. Geop. v. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1537'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1537'>1537</a>. Geop. iii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1538'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1538'>1538</a>. Cf. Theoph. Caus. Plant. iv.
-3. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1539'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1539'>1539</a>. The low vines of Asia Minor
-are now pruned in a very particular
-manner. “As we approached
-Vourla the little valleys
-were all green with corn, or
-filled with naked vine-stocks in
-orderly arrangement, about a
-foot and a half high. The people
-were working, many in a
-row, turning the earth, or
-encircling the trunks with tar,
-to secure the buds from grubs
-and worms. The shoots which
-bear the fruit are cut down
-again in winter.” Chandler, i.
-98.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1540'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1540'>1540</a>. On the cultivation of the Corinth
-grape, see Chandler, ii. 339.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1541'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1541'>1541</a>. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Abbé Della Rocca, Traité
-Complet des Abeilles,</span> i. 203.
-Lord Bacon, who had heard of
-this manner of cultivating the
-vine, observes, that in this state
-it was supposed to produce grapes
-of superior magnitude, and advises
-to extend the practice to
-hops, ivy, woodbine, &amp;c. Sylva
-Sylvarum, 623.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1542'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1542'>1542</a>. Geop. v. 22. 27. Reeds delight
-in sunny spots, and are
-nourished by the rain. They
-were cultivated for props, and,
-if thoroughly smoked, the insects
-called ἶπες were killed, which
-would otherwise breed in them,
-to the great injury of the vine,
-v. 53. Plin. xviii. 78. Cf.
-Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 1140.
-983. Varro, i. 8. In the island
-of Pandataria the vineyard was
-filled with traps, to protect the
-grapes from the mice. Id. ib.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1543'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1543'>1543</a>. Aristoph. Hist. Anim. v. 24.
-3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1544'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1544'>1544</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 1282.
-Cf. Thom. Magist. v. χάραξ. p.
-911, seq. Blancard. cum not.
-Stieber. et Oudendorp. Ammon.
-v. χάραξ. p. 145, with the note
-of Valckenaer. Liban. Epist. 218.
-p. 104 seq. Wolf.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1545'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1545'>1545</a>. Geop. v. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1546'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1546'>1546</a>. Cf. Geop. iv. 1. Dioscor. v.
-6. Virg. Georg. ii. 97. Servius,
-on the authority of Aristotle, relates
-that the Aminian vines were
-transplanted from Thessaly into
-Italy. Cf. Pier. ad loc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1547'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1547'>1547</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 1116.
-Acharn. 1177. In the Æolian
-islands the vines are supported
-on a frame-work of poles and
-trees, over which they spread
-themselves with extraordinary
-luxuriance. Spallanzani, iv. 99.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1548'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1548'>1548</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Pac. 1262.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1549'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1549'>1549</a>. Virg. Georg. 408, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1550'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1550'>1550</a>. Which were pruned in January
-(Geop. iii. 1), and esteemed
-the most useful, iv. 1. The solidest
-and hardest vines were thought
-to bear the least fruit. Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. v. 4. 1. Cf. Chandler,
-i. 98.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1551'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1551'>1551</a>. Dem. in Nicostrat. § 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1552'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1552'>1552</a>. </p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Vitem viduas ducit ad arbores.”</div>
- <div class='line in18'>Hor. Carm. iv. 5. 30.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1553'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1553'>1553</a>. Virg. Georg. ii. 361, seq.
-An amictâ vitibus ulmo. Hor.
-Epist. i. 16. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1554'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1554'>1554</a>. Pashley, Travels, ii. 22. The
-oak is now used for the same
-purpose in Asia Minor. Chandler,
-i. 114.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1555'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1555'>1555</a>. Gœttling ad Hesiod. Scut.
-Heracl. 298.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1556'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1556'>1556</a>. Another means of augmenting
-the fertility of the vine is
-noticed by Lord Bacon, whose
-diligent study of antiquity was
-at least as remarkable as his
-superior intellect. “It is strange,
-which is observed by some of
-the ancients, that dust helpeth
-the fruitfulness of trees and of
-vines by name; insomuch as
-they cast dust upon them of
-purpose. It should seem that
-powdring when a shower cometh
-maketh a kind of soiling to the
-tree, being earth and water
-finely laid on. And they note
-that countries where the fields
-and waies are dusty bear the
-best vines.” Sylva Sylvarum,
-666.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1557'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1557'>1557</a>. Geop. iv. 1. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1558'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1558'>1558</a>. These vines were likewise
-called ἁμαμάξυες. Aristoph.
-Vesp. 325, et Schol. The rustics
-engaged in pruning them,
-feeling themselves secure in their
-lofty station, used to pour their
-rough raillery and invectives on
-the passers-by. Horace, Satir. i.
-7. 29, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1559'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1559'>1559</a>. On the vines of this island
-cf. Meurs. Cret. c. 9. p. 103.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1560'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1560'>1560</a>. Bochart. Geog. Sac. Pars
-Alt. l. i. c. 37. p. 712. Cf. Plin.
-Hist. Nat. v. i.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1561'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1561'>1561</a>. Tozzeli, Viaggi. t. iv. p. 208.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1562'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1562'>1562</a>. Not. ad Plin. xiv. i. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1563'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1563'>1563</a>. Geop. iv. 1. v. 7, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1564'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1564'>1564</a>. Barley and other grain are
-still in modern times sown between
-the vines in Asia Minor.
-Chandler, i. 114. The same
-practice has been partially introduced
-into the Æolian islands.
-Spallanzani, iv. 100.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1565'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1565'>1565</a>. Suid. v. κράμβη, t. i. p. 1518.
-b.—παρὰ ἀμπέλω οὐ φυέται
-Etym. Mag. 534. 47.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1566'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1566'>1566</a>. So was the laurel. Theoph.
-Caus. Plant. ii. 18. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1567'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1567'>1567</a>. This creeping vine, cultivated
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>sine ridicis</i></span>, was common in Spain.
-Varro, i. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1568'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1568'>1568</a>. Della Rocca, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Traité Complet
-sur les Abeilles,</span> t. i. p. 203, sqq.
-Cf. Thiersch, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Etat Actuel de la
-Grèce,</span> t. i. p. 288. 296. Damm.
-Nov. Lex. Græc. Etym. 1122.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1569'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1569'>1569</a>. Geop. v. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1570'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1570'>1570</a>. Theoph. Caus. Plant. vi. 12.
-9. After the vintage the goat
-and the camel, among the modern
-Asiatics, are sometimes let into
-the vineyard to browse upon the
-vine. Chandler, i. 163.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1571'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1571'>1571</a>. Paus. ii. 38. 3. See, however,
-another interpretation of the passage
-in the Tale of a Tub, where
-the author gravely insists, that,
-by Ass, we are to understand a
-critic. Sect. iii. p. 96.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1572'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1572'>1572</a>. Cf. Plat. De Rep. t. vi. p. 53.
-Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 166. See
-an exact representation of the
-pruninghook in the hand of Vertumnus.
-Mus. Cortonens. pl.
-36. This instrument was usually
-put into requisition about the
-vespertinal rising of Arcturus.
-Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 566, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1573'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1573'>1573</a>. Geop. v. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1574'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1574'>1574</a>. Theoph. Caus. Plant. i. 20. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1575'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1575'>1575</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 1117.
-Küst.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1576'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1576'>1576</a>. Geop. i. 14. Cf. Sch. Aristoph.
-Nub. 1109. Husbandmen
-were accustomed to nail the heads
-and feet of animals to the trunks
-of trees to prevent their being
-withered by the operation of the
-evil eye. Sch. Ran. 943.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1577'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1577'>1577</a>. Geop. ii. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1578'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1578'>1578</a>. Theoph. De Lapid. § 49.
-Schneid. Cf. Sir John Hill, notes,
-p. 200. It was likewise obtained
-from Seleucia Pieria in Syria.
-Strab. vii. 5. t. ii. p. 106.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1579'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1579'>1579</a>. Geop. iv. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1580'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1580'>1580</a>. Xenoph. Œcon. xix. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1581'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1581'>1581</a>. Plat. De Legg. t. viii. 106.
-Geop. v. 45.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1582'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1582'>1582</a>. Cf. Geop. i. 9. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1583'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1583'>1583</a>. Cf. Plut. Thes. § 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1584'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1584'>1584</a>. Il. σ. 561, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1585'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1585'>1585</a>. Scut. Heracl. 291, seq. On
-the modern modes of gathering
-the grapes, see Redding Hist.
-of Modern Wines, chap. ii. 26,
-et seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1586'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1586'>1586</a>. The practice is still the same
-in the Levant:—“The vintage
-was now begun, the black
-grapes being spread on the
-ground in beds exposed to the
-sun to dry for raisins; while
-in another part, the juice was
-expressed for wine, a man with
-feet and legs bare, treading the
-fruit in a kind of cistern, with
-a hole or vent near the bottom,
-and a vessel beneath it to receive
-the liquor.” Chandler, ii.
-p. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1587'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1587'>1587</a>. Anacreon, Od. 52. See a
-representation of the whole process
-in the Mus. Cortonens, pl. 9,
-where the vintagers are clad in
-skins; and Cf. Zoëga, Bassi Rilievi,
-tav. 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1588'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1588'>1588</a>. Antich. di Ercol. t. i. tav. 35,
-p. 187.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1589'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1589'>1589</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Pac. 527.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1590'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1590'>1590</a>. For the making of the sweet
-wine (Βίβλινος οἶνος) which resembled,
-perhaps, our Constantia
-or Malaga, and enjoyed extraordinary
-favour among the ancients
-Hesiod gives particular directions.
-Opp. et Dies, 611, sqq. Colum.
-xii. 39. Plin. Hist. Nat. xiv. 8.
-Pallad. xi. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1591'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1591'>1591</a>. Sibth. in Walp. Mem. ii.
-235. Chandler, ii. 251.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1592'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1592'>1592</a>. A few drops of the oil which
-ran from olives without pressing
-were supposed by the ancients to
-render the wine stronger and
-more lasting.—Geop. vii. 12. 20.
-On the boiled wine, σίραιον. Cf.
-Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 878.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1593'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1593'>1593</a>. Virg. Georg. ii. 580, sqq.
-Hes. Scut. Heracl. 291, sqq. Cf.
-Schol. Theocrit. i. 48.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1594'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1594'>1594</a>. See Book ii. chapter 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1595'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1595'>1595</a>. Serv. ad Virg. Georg. ii. 389.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1596'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1596'>1596</a>. Æl. de Anim. vi. 25.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1597'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1597'>1597</a>. Geop. iv. 15. Cato, 7. Colum.
-xii. 39. Pallad. 11. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1598'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1598'>1598</a>. In the warm climate of Asia
-Minor grapes were sometimes
-turned into raisins, on the stalk,
-by the sun.—Chandler, i. 77.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1599'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1599'>1599</a>. Eustath. ad Odyss. η. p. 276.
-Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 51. κρεμάθρα.
-fruit-baskets, 219.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1600'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1600'>1600</a>. Dioscor. i. 38.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1601'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1601'>1601</a>. Geop. v. 52. This we find
-is still the practice in the islands
-of the Archipelago, for the purpose
-of making sweet wine. M. l’
-Abbé della Rocca, who mentions
-it, enumerates at the same time
-the most delicious sorts of grapes
-now cultivated in Greece—<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“On
-peut juger si les vins y sont
-exquis, et si les anciens eurent
-raison d’appeller Naxie l’île de
-Bacchus. Les raisins y sont
-monstrueux, et il arrive souvent
-que dans un repas, on n’en
-sert qu’un seul pour le fruit;
-mais aussi couvre-t-il toute la
-profondeur d’un grand bassin:
-les grains en sont gros comme
-nos damas noirs. Il y a dans
-les îles des raisins de plus de
-vingt sortes: les muscats de
-Ténédos et de Samos l’emportent
-sur tous les autres; ceux
-de Ténédos sont plus ambrés;
-ceux de Samos, plus délicats.
-Les Sentorinois, pour donner
-une saveur plus exquise à leurs
-raisins, leur tordent la queue
-lorsqu’ils commencent à mûrir;
-après quelques jours d’un soleil
-ardent, les raisins deviennent
-à demi flétris, ce qui fait un
-vin dont ceux de la Cieutat et
-de Saint-Laurent n’approchent
-pas. Les autres sortes de raisins
-sont <em>l’aïdhoni</em>, petit raisin
-blanc qu’on mange vers la mi-juillet;
-le <i><a id='corr355.n3.38'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='samia'>samia,</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_355.n3.38'><ins class='correction' title='samia'>samia,</ins></a></span></i> gros raisin
-blanc qu’on fait sécher; le
-siriqui, ainsi nommé parce qu’il
-a le goût de la cerise; <em>l’ætonychi</em>,
-qui a la figure de l’ongle
-d’un aigle, et qui est très savoureux;
-le malvoisie, le muscat
-violet, le corinthe, et plusieurs
-autres dont les noms
-me sont échappés.”</span> <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Traité
-sur les Abeilles,</span> t. i. p. 6, seq.
-Speaking of the prodigious productiveness
-of vines, Columella
-mentions one which bore upwards
-of two thousand clusters, De Re
-Rust. iii. 3. A vine producing
-a fifth of this quantity has been
-thought extraordinary in modern
-Egypt: <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Il n’est pas croyable
-combien rapporte un seul pied
-de vigne. Il y en a un dans
-la maison Consulaire de France,
-qui a porté 436 grosses grappes
-de raisin, et qui en donne ordinairement
-300.”</span>—De Maillet,
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Description de l’Egypte</span>, p.
-17.<a id='corr355.n3.64'></a><a href='#c_355.n3.64'><ins class='correction' title='See comment.'>*</ins></a> In the Grecian Archipelago,
-however, the vine has
-been known to yield still more
-abundantly than in Egypt: <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“On
-a compté pendant trois ans
-consécutifs, cent trente-quatre
-grappes de raisin sur une
-souche; et sur un autre cep
-de vigne planté dans un terrain
-très-gras, on a compté jusqu’à
-quatre cent quatre-vingts
-grappes; et l’intendant de
-l’évêché de notre île m’a plus
-d’une fois assuré qu’on avoit
-fait soixante-quinze bouteilles
-de vin, avec le raisin d’un seul
-cep.”</span> Della Rocca, t. i. p. 65.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1602'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1602'>1602</a>. Geop. iv. 15. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1603'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1603'>1603</a>. Geop. iv. 11. Pallad. xii.
-12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1604'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1604'>1604</a>. Geop. ix. 19. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1605'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1605'>1605</a>. The fruit of the terebinth
-was ground, like the olive, in a
-mill, for the making of oil. The
-kernels were used in feeding pigs,
-or for fuel. Geop. ix. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1606'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1606'>1606</a>. Cf. Cato, De Re Rust. 66.
-This clear pure oil, sometimes
-rendered odoriferous by perfumes,
-(Il. ψ. 186,) was chiefly employed
-in lubricating the body.
-Thus we find the virgin in Hesiod
-anointing her limbs with
-olive-oil to defend herself from
-the winter’s cold. Opp. et Dies,
-519, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1607'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1607'>1607</a>. Vitruv. vi. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1608'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1608'>1608</a>. Geop. ix. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1609'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1609'>1609</a>. Geop. ix. 19, seq. iii. 13.
-Dioscor. i. 140.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1610'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1610'>1610</a>. Geop. x. 10–70. Cf. Mazois,
-Pal. de Scaurus, p. 182, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1611'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1611'>1611</a>. Palladius, iv. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1612'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1612'>1612</a>. We find mention in modern
-times of a species of pomegranate,
-the kernels of which are without
-stones, peculiar apparently to the
-island of Scio. “It is usual to
-bring them to table, in a plate,
-sprinkled with rose-water.”
-Chandler, i. 58.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1613'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1613'>1613</a>. Cf. Philost. Icon. t. 31. p.
-809. ii. 2. p. 812.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1614'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1614'>1614</a>. Ficus virides servari possunt
-vel in melle ordinatæ, ne se invicem
-tangant, vel singulæ intra
-viridem cucurbitam clausæ, locis
-unicuique cavatis, et item tessera,
-quæ secatur, inclusis, suspensa ea
-cucurbita, ubi non sit ignis vel
-fumus. Pallad. iv. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1615'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1615'>1615</a>. Cato, 7. Varro. i. 59. Colum. xii. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1616'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1616'>1616</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 755.
-Sibth. in Walp. Mem. ii. 61.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1617'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1617'>1617</a>. Phot. ap. Brunckh. ad Aristoph.
-Pac. 574.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1618'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1618'>1618</a>. Pallad. iii. 25.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1619'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1619'>1619</a>. Pallad. iii. 25. Colum. xii.
-45.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1620'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1620'>1620</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. iv. 3. i.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>
- <h3 class='c002'>CHAPTER IV. <br /> STUDIES OF THE FARMER.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>In other branches of rural economy the country
-gentlemen of Attica exhibited no less enthusiasm
-or skill. Indeed, throughout Greece, there prevailed
-a similar taste. Every one was eager to instruct
-and be instructed; and so great in consequence
-was the demand for treatises on husbandry,
-theoretical and practical, that numerous writers, the
-names of fifty of whom are preserved by Varro,<a id='r1621' /><a href='#f1621' class='c012'><sup>[1621]</sup></a>
-made it the object of their study. Others without
-committing the result of their experience to writing,
-devoted themselves wholly to its practical improvement.
-They purchased waste or ill-cultivated lands,
-and, by investigating the nature of the soil, skilfully
-adapting their crops to it, manuring, irrigating, and
-draining, converted a comparative desert into a productive
-estate.<a id='r1622' /><a href='#f1622' class='c012'><sup>[1622]</sup></a> We can possibly, as Dr. Johnson
-insists, improve very little our knowledge of agriculture
-by erudite researches into the methods of
-the ancients; though Milton was of opinion, that
-even here some useful hints might be obtained.
-In describing, however, what the Greeks did, I am
-not pretending to enlighten the present age, but
-to enable it to enjoy its superiority by instituting a
-comparison with the ruder practices of antiquity.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Already in those times the men of experience
-and routine,<a id='r1623' /><a href='#f1623' class='c012'><sup>[1623]</sup></a> had begun to vent their sneers against
-philosophers for their profound researches into the
-nature of soils,<a id='r1624' /><a href='#f1624' class='c012'><sup>[1624]</sup></a> in which, however, they by no means
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>designed to engage the husbandman, but only to
-present him, in brief and intelligible maxims, with
-the fruit of their labours. Nevertheless the practical
-husbandman went to work a shorter way. He
-observed his neighbour’s grounds,<a id='r1625' /><a href='#f1625' class='c012'><sup>[1625]</sup></a> saw what throve
-in this soil, what in the other, what was bettered
-by irrigation, what in this respect might safely be
-left to the care of Heaven; and thus, in a brief
-space, acquired a rough theory wherewith to commence
-operations. An agriculturist, the Athenians
-thought, required no recondite erudition, though to
-his complete success the exercise of much good sense
-and careful observation was necessary. Every man
-would, doubtless, know in what seasons of the year
-he must plough and sow and reap, that lands exhausted
-by cultivation must be suffered to lie fallow,
-that change of crops is beneficial to the soil, and so
-on. But the great art consists in nicely adapting
-each operation to the varying march of the seasons,
-in converting accidents to use, in rendering the
-winds, the showers, the sunshine, subservient to your
-purposes, in mastering the signs of the weather, and
-guarding as far as possible against the injuries sustained
-from storms of rain or hail.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There was in circulation among the Greeks a
-small body of precepts, addressed more especially to
-husbandmen, designed to promote the real object of
-civilisation. Quaint, no doubt, and ineffably commonplace,
-they will now appear, but they served,
-nevertheless, in early and rude times, to soften the
-manners and regulate the conduct of the rustic Hellenes.
-Who first began to collect and preserve them
-is, of course, unknown; they are thickly sprinkled
-through the works of Hesiod,<a id='r1626' /><a href='#f1626' class='c012'><sup>[1626]</sup></a> and impart to them
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>an air of moral dignity which relieves the monotony
-that would otherwise result from a mere string of
-agricultural maxims. The chief aim of the poet
-seems to be, to promote peace and good neighbourhood,
-to multiply among the inhabitants of the fields
-occasions of joining the “rough right hand,”<a id='r1627' /><a href='#f1627' class='c012'><sup>[1627]</sup></a> to apply
-the sharp spur to industry, and thus to augment
-the stores, and, along with them, the contentment,
-of his native land. Be industrious, exclaims the
-poet, for famine is the companion of the idle. Labour
-confers fertility on flocks and herds, and is the
-parent of opulence. He who toils is beloved by
-gods<a id='r1628' /><a href='#f1628' class='c012'><sup>[1628]</sup></a> and men, while the idle hand is the object
-of their aversion. The slothful man envies the prosperity
-of his neighbour; but glory is the reward of
-virtue. Prudence heaps up that which profligacy
-dissipates. Be hospitable to the stranger, for he
-who repels the suppliant from his door is no less
-guilty than the adulterer, than the despoiler of the
-orphan, or the wretch who blasphemes his aged
-parent on the brink of the grave: of such men the
-end is miserable, when Zeus rains down vengeance
-upon them in recompense for their evil actions. Be
-mindful that thou offer up victims to the gods with
-pure hands and holy thoughts,—to pour libations in
-their temples, adorn their altars, and render them
-propitious to thee in all things. When about to
-ascend thy couch to enjoy sweet sleep, and when
-the sacred light of the day-spring first appears, omit
-not to demand of heaven a pure heart and a cheerful
-mind, with the means of extending thy possessions,
-and protection from loss. When thou makest
-a feast, invite thy friends and thy neighbours, and
-in times of trouble they will run to thy assistance
-half-clad, while thy relations will tarry to buckle
-on their girdles. Borrow of thy neighbour, but, in
-repaying him, exceed rather than fall short of what
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>is his due. Rise betimes. Every little makes a
-mickle. Store is no sore. Housed corn breaks no
-sleep. Drink largely the top and the bottom of the
-jar; be sparing of the middle:<a id='r1629' /><a href='#f1629' class='c012'><sup>[1629]</sup></a> it is niggardly to
-stint your friends when the wine runs low. Do unto
-others as they do unto you.—These seeds of morality
-are simple, as I have said, and far from recondite;
-but they produced the warriors of Marathon and
-Platæa, and preserved for ages the freedom and the
-independence of Greece.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The other branches of an Hellenic farmer’s studies
-comprehended something like the elements of natural
-philosophy,—the influence of the sun and moon, the
-rising and setting of the stars, the motion of the
-winds, the generation and effects of dews, clouds,
-meteors, showers and tempests, the origin of springs
-and fountains, and the migrations and habits of
-birds and other animals. In addition to these things,
-it was necessary that he should be acquainted with
-certain practices, prevalent from time immemorial in
-his country, and, probably, deriving their origin from
-ages beyond the utmost reach of tradition. The source
-of these we usually denominate superstition, though it
-would, perhaps, be more proper to regard them as
-the offspring of that lively and plastic fancy which
-gave birth to poetry and art, and inclined its possessors
-to create a sort of minor religion, based on a
-praiseworthy principle, but developing itself chiefly
-in observances almost always minute and trifling, and
-sometimes ridiculous. To describe all these at length
-would be beside my present purpose, which only requires
-that I mention by the way the more remarkable
-of those connected especially with agriculture.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The knowledge of soil was called into play both
-in purchasing estates and in appropriating their several
-parts to different kinds of culture. According to
-their notions, which appear to have been founded
-on long experience, and in most points, I believe,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span>agree with those which still prevail, a rich black
-mould, deep, friable, and porous,<a id='r1630' /><a href='#f1630' class='c012'><sup>[1630]</sup></a> which would resist
-equally the effects of rain and drought, was, for all
-purposes, the best. Next to this they esteemed a
-yellow alluvial soil, and that sweet warm ground
-which best suited vines, corn, and trees. The red
-earth, also, they highly valued, except for timber.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Their rules for detecting the character and qualities
-of the soil appear to have been judicious.
-Good land, they thought, might be known even from
-its appearance, since in drought it cracks not too
-much, and during heavy and continued showers becomes
-not miry, but suffers all the rain to sink
-into its bosom. That earth they considered inferior
-which in cold weather becomes baked, and is covered
-on the surface by a shell-like incrustation. They
-judged, likewise, of the virtue of the soil by the luxuriant
-or stunted character of its natural productions:<a id='r1631' /><a href='#f1631' class='c012'><sup>[1631]</sup></a>
-thus they augured favourably of those tracts
-of country which were covered by vast and lofty
-timber-trees, while such as produced only a dwarfed
-vegetation, consisting of meagre bushes, scattered
-thickets, and hungry grass, they reckoned almost
-worthless.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Not content with the testimony of the eye, some
-husbandmen were accustomed to consult both the
-smell and the taste; for, digging a pit of some depth,
-they took thence a small quantity of earth, from the
-odour of which they drew an opinion favourable or
-otherwise. But to render surety doubly sure, they
-then threw it into a vase, and poured on it a quantity
-of potable water, which they afterwards tasted,
-inferring from the flavour the fertility or barrenness
-of the soil. This was the experiment most relied
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>on; though many considered that soil sweet which
-produced the basket-rush, the reed, the lotos, and
-the bramble. On some occasions they employed another
-method, which was, to make a small excavation,
-and then, throwing back the earth into the
-opening whence it had been drawn, to observe whether
-or not it filled the whole cavity:<a id='r1632' /><a href='#f1632' class='c012'><sup>[1632]</sup></a> if it did so, or
-left a surplus, the soil was judged to be excellent;
-if not, they regarded it as of little value. Soils
-possessing saline qualities were shunned by the ancients,
-who carefully avoided mingling salt with their
-manure, though lands of this description were rightly
-thought to be well adapted to the cultivation of
-palm-trees,<a id='r1633' /><a href='#f1633' class='c012'><sup>[1633]</sup></a> which they produce in the greatest perfection,<a id='r1634' /><a href='#f1634' class='c012'><sup>[1634]</sup></a>
-as in Phœnicia, Egypt, and the country round
-Babylon.<a id='r1635' /><a href='#f1635' class='c012'><sup>[1635]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Another art in which the condition of the husbandman
-required him to be well versed was that
-of discovering the signs of latent springs,<a id='r1636' /><a href='#f1636' class='c012'><sup>[1636]</sup></a> the existence
-of which it was necessary to ascertain before
-laying the foundation of a new farm. The investigation
-was complicated, and carried on in a variety
-of ways. First, and most obvious, was the inference
-drawn from plants and the nature of the soil itself; for
-those grounds, they thought, were intersected below by
-veins of water which bore upon their surface certain
-tribes of grasses and herbs and bushes, as the couch-grass,
-the broad-leaved plantain, the heliotrope, the
-red-grass, the agnus-castus, the bramble, the horse-tail,
-or shave-grass, ivy, bush-calamint, soft and slender
-reeds,<a id='r1637' /><a href='#f1637' class='c012'><sup>[1637]</sup></a> maiden-hair, the melilot, ditch-dock, cinquefoil,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>or five leaf-grass, broad-leaved bloodwort, the
-rush, nightshade, mil-foil, colt’s-foot or foal’s-foot, trefoil
-or pond-weed, and the black thistle. Spring-heads
-were always supposed to lurk beneath fat and black
-loam, as, likewise, in a stony soil, especially where
-the rocks are dark and of a ferruginous colour. But
-in argillaceous districts, particularly where potter’s-clay
-abounds, or where there are many pebbles and
-pumice-stones,<a id='r1638' /><a href='#f1638' class='c012'><sup>[1638]</sup></a> they are of rare occurrence.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To the above indications they were in most cases
-careful to add others. Ascending ere sunrise to a
-higher level than the spot under examination, they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>observed by the first rays and before the light thickened,
-whether they could detect the presence of any
-exhalations, which were held unerringly to indicate
-the presence of springs below. Sometimes inquisition
-was made during the bright and clear noon,
-when the subterraneous retreats of the Naiads were
-supposed in summer to be betrayed by cloudlets of
-thin silvery vapour, and in the winter season by
-curling threads of steam. In this way the natives
-of southern Africa discover the existence of hidden
-fountains in the desert.<a id='r1639' /><a href='#f1639' class='c012'><sup>[1639]</sup></a> Swarms of gnats flitting
-hither and thither, or whirling round and ascending
-in a column, were regarded as another sign.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When not entirely satisfied by any of the above
-means, they had recourse to the following experiment:<a id='r1640' /><a href='#f1640' class='c012'><sup>[1640]</sup></a>
-sinking a pit to the depth of about four feet
-and a half, they took a hemispherical pan or lead
-basin, and having anointed it with oil, and fastened
-with wax a long flake of wool to the bottom, placed
-it inverted in the pit. It was then covered with
-earth about a foot deep, and left undisturbed during
-a whole night. On its being taken forth in
-the morning, if the inside of the vessel were covered
-thickly with globules, and the wool were dripping
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>wet, it was concluded there were springs beneath,
-the depth of which they calculated from the scantiness
-or profusion of the moisture. A similar trial
-was made with a sponge covered with reeds.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Since most streams and rivers take their rise in
-lofty table-lands or mountains, which by the ancients
-were supposed to be richer in springs in proportion
-to the number of their peaks, it would seem
-to follow, that scarcely any country in Europe
-should be better supplied with water than Greece.
-Experience, however, shows, that this in modern
-times is not the fact, several rivers supposed to
-have been of great volume in antiquity, having
-now dwindled into mere brooks, and innumerable
-streamlets and fountains become altogether dry; on
-which account the credit of Greek writers is often
-impugned, it being supposed that the natural characteristics
-of the country must necessarily be invariable.
-But this is an error. For the existence of
-springs and rivulets depends less perhaps on the
-presence of mountains than on the prevalence of
-forests, as Democritos<a id='r1641' /><a href='#f1641' class='c012'><sup>[1641]</sup></a> long ago observed. Now,
-from a variety of causes, still in active operation,
-the ridges and hills and lower eminences of modern
-Greece have been almost completely denuded
-of trees, along with which have necessarily
-disappeared the well-springs, and runnels, and cascades,
-and rills, and mountain tarns, which anciently
-shed beauty and fertility over the face of Hellas,
-whose highlands were once so densely clad with
-woods<a id='r1642' /><a href='#f1642' class='c012'><sup>[1642]</sup></a> that the peasants requiring a short cut from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>one valley to another, were compelled to clear themselves
-a pathway with the axe.<a id='r1643' /><a href='#f1643' class='c012'><sup>[1643]</sup></a> To restore to
-Greece, therefore, its waters, and the beauty and
-riches depending on them, the mountains must be
-again forested, and severe restraint put on the wantonness
-of those vagrant shepherds who constantly
-expose vast woods to the risk of entire destruction
-for the sake of procuring more delicate grass for
-their flocks.<a id='r1644' /><a href='#f1644' class='c012'><sup>[1644]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In Attica,<a id='r1645' /><a href='#f1645' class='c012'><sup>[1645]</sup></a> both fields and gardens were chiefly
-irrigated by means of wells which, sometimes, in
-extremely long and dry summers, failed entirely,
-thus causing a scarcity of vegetables.<a id='r1646' /><a href='#f1646' class='c012'><sup>[1646]</sup></a> The water,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>we find, was drawn up by precisely the same machinery
-as is still employed for the purpose.
-The invention of these conveniences of primary
-necessity having preceded the birth of tradition,
-has, by some writers, been attributed to Danaos,
-who is supposed to have emigrated from Egypt into
-Greece. Arriving, we are told, at Argos, he, upon
-the failure of spontaneous fountains, taught the inhabitants
-to dig wells, in consequence of which he
-was elected chief. But where was Danaos himself
-to have learned this art? He is said to have been
-an Egyptian, and Egypt is a country so entirely
-without springs, that two only exist within its limits,
-and of these but one was known to the ancients.
-Of wells they had none. Danaos could, therefore,
-if he was an Egyptian, have known nothing of
-springs or wells; and, if he had such knowledge, he
-must have come from some other land.<a id='r1647' /><a href='#f1647' class='c012'><sup>[1647]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Where there existed neither wells nor fountains,
-people were compelled to depend on rain-water, collected
-and preserved in cisterns.<a id='r1648' /><a href='#f1648' class='c012'><sup>[1648]</sup></a> For this purpose
-troughs were in some farm-houses run along the
-eaves both of the stables, barns, and sheep-cotes, as
-well as of the dwelling of the family, while others
-used only that which ran from the last, the roof of
-which was kept scrupulously clean. The water was
-conveyed through wooden pipes<a id='r1649' /><a href='#f1649' class='c012'><sup>[1649]</sup></a> to the cisterns,
-which appear to have been frequently situated in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>the front court.<a id='r1650' /><a href='#f1650' class='c012'><sup>[1650]</sup></a> Bad water they purified in several
-ways: by casting into it a little coral powder,<a id='r1651' /><a href='#f1651' class='c012'><sup>[1651]</sup></a> small
-linen bags of bruised barley, or a quantity of laurel
-leaves, or by pouring it into broad tubs and exposing
-it for a considerable time to the action of
-the sun and air. When there happened to be about
-the farms ponds of any magnitude, they introduced
-into them a number of eels or river crabs, which
-opened the veins of the earth and destroyed leeches.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A scarcely less important branch of the farmer’s
-studies was that which related to the weather and
-the general march of the seasons.<a id='r1652' /><a href='#f1652' class='c012'><sup>[1652]</sup></a> Above all things,
-it behoved him to observe diligently the rising and
-setting of the sun and moon. He was, likewise,
-carefully to note the state of the atmosphere at the
-disappearance of the Pleiades, since it was expected
-to continue the same until the winter solstice, after
-which a change sometimes immediately supervened,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>otherwise there was usually no alteration till the
-vernal equinox.<a id='r1653' /><a href='#f1653' class='c012'><sup>[1653]</sup></a> Another variation then took place
-in the character of the weather, which afterwards
-remained fixed till the rising of the Pleiades, undergoing
-successively fresh mutations at the summer
-solstice and the autumnal equinox. According to
-their observations, moreover, a rainy winter<a id='r1654' /><a href='#f1654' class='c012'><sup>[1654]</sup></a> was
-followed by a dry and raw spring, and the contrary;
-and a snowy winter by a year of abundance. But
-as nature by no means steadily follows this course,
-exhibiting many sudden and abrupt fluctuations, it
-was found necessary to subject her restless phenomena
-to a more rigid scrutiny, in order that rules
-might be obtained for foretelling the approach of
-rain, or tempests, or droughts, or a continuance of
-fair weather. Of these some, possibly, were founded
-on imperfect observation or casual coincidences, or
-a fanciful linking of causes and effects; while others,
-we cannot doubt, sprang from a practical familiarity
-with the subtler and more shifting elements of natural
-philosophy.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As nothing more obviously interests the husbandman
-than the seasonable arrival and departure of
-rains, everything connected with them, however remotely,
-was observed and treasured up with scrupulous
-accuracy. Of all the circumstances pre-signifying
-their approach the most certain was supposed
-to be the aspect of the morning; for if, before sunrise,
-beds of purpurescent clouds<a id='r1655' /><a href='#f1655' class='c012'><sup>[1655]</sup></a> stretched along
-the verge of the horizon, rain was expected that
-day, or the day after the morrow. The same augury
-they drew, though with less confidence, from the appearance
-of the setting sun,<a id='r1656' /><a href='#f1656' class='c012'><sup>[1656]</sup></a> especially if in winter
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span>or spring it went down through an accumulation
-of clouds or with masses of dusky rack on the left.
-Again, if, on rising, the sun looked pale, dull red,
-or spotted;<a id='r1657' /><a href='#f1657' class='c012'><sup>[1657]</sup></a> or, if, previously, its rays were seen
-streaming upwards;<a id='r1658' /><a href='#f1658' class='c012'><sup>[1658]</sup></a> or, if, immediately afterwards,
-a long band of clouds extended beneath it, intersecting
-its descending beams; or if the orient wore a
-sombre hue; or if piles of sable vapour towered into
-the welkin; or if the clouds were scattered loosely
-over the sky like fleeces of wool;<a id='r1659' /><a href='#f1659' class='c012'><sup>[1659]</sup></a> or came waving
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>up from the south in long sinuous streaks—the
-“mares’ tails” of our nautical vocabulary—the husbandman
-reckoned with certainty upon rain, floods,
-and tempestuous winds. Among the signs of showers
-peculiar to the site of Athens may be reckoned these
-following: if a rampart of white ground-fogs begirt
-at night the basis of Hymettos; or, if its summits
-were capped with vapour;<a id='r1660' /><a href='#f1660' class='c012'><sup>[1660]</sup></a> or, if troops of mists
-settled in the hollow of the smaller mount, called
-the Springless; or, if a single cloud rested on the
-fane of Zeus at Ægina.<a id='r1661' /><a href='#f1661' class='c012'><sup>[1661]</sup></a> The violent roaring of the
-sea upon the beach was the forerunner of a gale,
-and they were enabled to conjecture from what
-quarter it was to blow, by the movements of the
-waters, which retreated from the shore before a north
-wind; while, at the approach of the sirocco, they
-were piled up higher than usual against the cliffs.
-Elsewhere, in Attica, they supposed wet weather
-to be foretold by the summits of Eubœa rising clear,
-sharp, and unusually elevated through a dense floor
-of exhalations, which, when they mounted and gathered
-in blowing weather about the peaks of Caphareus,<a id='r1662' /><a href='#f1662' class='c012'><sup>[1662]</sup></a>
-on the eastern shores of the island, presaged
-an impending storm of five days’ continuance.
-But here these signs concerned rather the mariner
-than the husbandman, since the cliffs that stretched
-along this coast are rugged and precipitous, and
-the approaches so dangerous that few vessels which
-are driven on it escape. Scarcely are the crews
-able to save themselves, unless their bark happen
-to be extremely light. Another portent of foul weather
-was the apparition of a circle about the moon,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>while, by the double reflection of its orb north and
-south, that luminary appeared to be multiplied into
-three. At night, also, if the nubecula,<a id='r1663' /><a href='#f1663' class='c012'><sup>[1663]</sup></a> called the
-Manger, in the constellation of the Crab, shone
-less luminously, it betokened a similar state of the
-atmosphere. A like inference<a id='r1664' /><a href='#f1664' class='c012'><sup>[1664]</sup></a> was drawn when
-the moon at three days old rose dusky; or, with
-blunt horns; or, with its rim, or whole disk, red;
-or blotted with black spots; or encircled by two
-halos.<a id='r1665' /><a href='#f1665' class='c012'><sup>[1665]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The phenomena of thunder and lightning, likewise,
-instructed the husbandman who was studious
-in the language of the heavens: thus, when thunder
-was heard in winter or in the morning, it betokened
-wind; in the evening or at noon, in summer,
-rain; when it lightened from every part of
-the heavens, both. Falling stars<a id='r1666' /><a href='#f1666' class='c012'><sup>[1666]</sup></a> likewise denoted
-wind or rain, originating in that part of the heavens
-where they appeared.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among our own rustics the whole philosophy of
-rainbows has been compressed into a couple of distichs:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A rainbow at night</div>
- <div class='line'>Is the shepherd’s delight.</div>
- <div class='line'>A rainbow in the morning</div>
- <div class='line'>Is the shepherd’s warning.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>And upon this subject,<a id='r1667' /><a href='#f1667' class='c012'><sup>[1667]</sup></a> the peasants of Hellas
-had little more to say; their opinion having been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span>that, in proportion to the number of rainbows, would
-be the fury and continuance of the showers with
-which they were threatened.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Other signs of mutation in the atmosphere they
-discovered in almost every part of nature; for example,
-when bubbles rose on the surface of a river
-they looked for a fall of rain; as also when small
-land-birds were seen drenching their plumage; when
-the crow was beheld washing his head upon the
-rocky beach,<a id='r1668' /><a href='#f1668' class='c012'><sup>[1668]</sup></a> or the raven flapping his wings, while
-with his voice he imitated amidst his croaking the
-pattering of drops of rain; when the peasant was
-awakened in the morning by the cry of the passing
-crane,<a id='r1669' /><a href='#f1669' class='c012'><sup>[1669]</sup></a> or the shrill note of the chaffinch within
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>his dwelling. Flights of island birds flocking to the
-continent,<a id='r1670' /><a href='#f1670' class='c012'><sup>[1670]</sup></a> preceded drought; as a number of jackdaws
-and ravens flying up and down, and imitating
-the scream of the hawk, did rain. The
-incessant shrieks of the screech-owl and the vehement
-cawing of the crow, heard during a serene
-night, foretold the approach of storms. The
-barn-door fowl and the house-dog also played the
-part of soothsayers, teaching their master to dread
-impending storms by rolling themselves in the dust.
-Of similar import was the flocking of geese with
-noise to their food, or the skimming of swallows
-along the surface of the water.<a id='r1671' /><a href='#f1671' class='c012'><sup>[1671]</sup></a> Again, when troops
-of dolphins were seen rolling near the shore, or oxen
-licking their fore-hoofs, or looking southwards, or,
-with a suspicious air, snuffing the elements,<a id='r1672' /><a href='#f1672' class='c012'><sup>[1672]</sup></a> or
-going bellowing to their stalls; when wolves approached
-the homesteads; when flies bit sharp,<a id='r1673' /><a href='#f1673' class='c012'><sup>[1673]</sup></a> or
-frogs croaked vociferously, or the ruddock, or land-toad,
-crept into the water; when the salamander lizard
-appeared, and the note of the green-frog was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span>heard in the trees, the rustic donned his capote,
-and prepared, like Anaxagoras at Olympia,<a id='r1674' /><a href='#f1674' class='c012'><sup>[1674]</sup></a> for a
-shower. The flight of the storm-birds, kepphoi,<a id='r1675' /><a href='#f1675' class='c012'><sup>[1675]</sup></a>
-was supposed to indicate a tempest from the point
-of the heavens towards which they flew. When
-in bright and windless weather clouds of cobwebs,<a id='r1676' /><a href='#f1676' class='c012'><sup>[1676]</sup></a>
-floated through the air, the husbandman anticipated
-a drenching for his fields, as also when earthen pots
-and brass pans emitted sparks; when lamps spat;
-when the wick made mushrooms;<a id='r1677' /><a href='#f1677' class='c012'><sup>[1677]</sup></a> when a halo encircled
-its flame,<a id='r1678' /><a href='#f1678' class='c012'><sup>[1678]</sup></a> or when the flame itself was dusky.
-The housewife was forewarned of coming hail-storms,
-generally from the north, by a profusion of bright
-sparks appearing on the surface of her charcoal fire;
-when her feet swelled she knew that the wind would
-blow from the south.<a id='r1679' /><a href='#f1679' class='c012'><sup>[1679]</sup></a> Heaps of clouds like burnished
-copper rising after rain in the west portended
-fine weather; as did likewise the tops of
-lofty mountains, as Athos, Ossa, and Olympos, appearing
-sharply defined against the sky; while an
-apparent augmentation in the height of promontories
-and the number of islands foreshowed wind.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1621'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1621'>1621</a>. De Re Rusticâ, i. 1. Cf.
-Colum. i. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1622'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1622'>1622</a>. Xenoph. Œconom. xx. 22,
-sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1623'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1623'>1623</a>. Cf. Plat. De Legg. t. vii. p. 111.
-t. viii. p. 103.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1624'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1624'>1624</a>. Xenoph. Œconom. xvi. 1,
-sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1625'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1625'>1625</a>. The sight of a rich and thriving
-neighbour operated likewise
-as a spur to his industry:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Εἰς ἕτερον γάρ τίς τε ἰδὼν ἔργοιο χατίζων</div>
- <div class='line'>Πλούσιον ὅς σπεύδει μέν ἀρόμμεναι ἠδὲ φυτεύειν,</div>
- <div class='line'>Οἶκον τ᾽ εὖ θέσθαι· ζηλοῖ δὲ τε γείτονα γείτων</div>
- <div class='line'>Εἰς ἄφενον σπεύδοντ᾽ ἀγαθὴ δ᾽</div>
- <div class='line in5'>Ἔρις ἥδε βροτοῖσι.</div>
- <div class='line in26'>Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 21, sqq.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1626'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1626'>1626</a>. Opp. et Dies, 298, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1627'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1627'>1627</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Pac. 190.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1628'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1628'>1628</a>. </p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Καὶ τ᾽ ἐργαζόμενος πολὺ φίλτερος ἀθανάτοισιν.</div>
- <div class='line'>Ἔσσεαι ἠδὲ βροτοῖς· μάλα γὰρ στυγέουσιν ἀεργούς.</div>
- <div class='line in24'>Opp. et Dies. 309, seq.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1629'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1629'>1629</a>. Cf. Plut. Sympos. vii. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1630'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1630'>1630</a>. Geop. ii. 9. In these rich
-loams, particularly on the banks
-of the Stymphalian and Copaic
-lakes, wheat has been known to
-yield a return of fifty-fold. Thiersch,
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Etat Act. de la Grèce.</span> t. ii.
-p. 17.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Other spots, again, return thirty-fold.
-Sibth. in Walp. Mem. i. 60.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1631'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1631'>1631</a>. The pitch-pine indicated a
-light and hungry soil; the cypress,
-a clayey soil. Philost.
-Icon. ii. 9. p. 775.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1632'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1632'>1632</a>. Geop. ii. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1633'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1633'>1633</a>. The Grecian husbandman,
-therefore, when planting palm-trees
-in any other than a sandy
-soil, sprinkled salt on the earth
-immediately around. Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. i. 6. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1634'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1634'>1634</a>. Geop. ii. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1635'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1635'>1635</a>. Xenoph. Anab. ii. 3. 16. The
-doom-palm, generally, I believe,
-supposed to be peculiar to Upper
-Egypt and the countries beyond
-the cataract, was anciently cultivated
-also in Crete. Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. i. 6. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1636'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1636'>1636</a>. Geop. ii. 4, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1637'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1637'>1637</a>. Philost. Icon. ii. 9. p. 775.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1638'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1638'>1638</a>. Spallanzani, in his scientific
-Travels in the Two Sicilies, describes
-and explains the cause of
-the rarity of springs in volcanic
-countries. In some districts
-among the roots of Ætna the female
-peasants are compelled to
-travel ten miles, at certain seasons
-of the year, in search of
-water, a jar of which costs, consequently,
-almost a day’s journey. vol.
-i. p. 299, sqq. In another part of
-the same work he investigates the
-origin of springs in the Æolian
-isles, which he illustrates by the
-example of Stromboli. iv. 128.
-In this island there are two fountains,
-one of slightly tepid water,
-at the foot of the mountain, the
-other on its slope. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Je recontrai,”</span>
-observes Monsieur Dolomieu,
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“à moitié hauteur une
-source d’eau froide, douce, légère
-et très bonne à boire, qui ne
-tarit jamais et qui est l’unique
-ressourse des habitans
-lorsque leurs cîternes sont épuisées
-et lorsque les chaleurs ont
-desséché une seconde source qui
-est au pied de la montagne
-ce qui arrive tous les étés.”</span>
-He then adds with reason: <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Cette
-petite fontaine dans ce lieu très
-élevé au milieu des cendres
-volcaniques, est très remarquable,
-elle ne peut avoir son réservoir
-que dans une pointe
-de montagne isolée, toute de
-sable et de pierres poreuses, matières
-qui ne peuvent point
-retenir l’eau, puisqu’elles sont
-perméables à la fumée.” Voyage
-aux Iles de Lipari,</span> t. i. p.
-120. He then endeavours to account
-for its existence by evaporation.
-In the island of Saline,
-among the same Æolian group,
-there is another never-failing
-spring, which, as some years no
-rain falls in these islands during
-the space of nine months, has
-greatly perplexed the theories of
-naturalists. Spallanzani conceives,
-however, that the phenomenon
-may be explained in the usual
-way: “It appears to me,” he
-says, “extremely probable, that
-in the internal parts of an
-island which, like this, is the
-work of fire, there may be immense
-caverns that may be filled
-with water by the rains;
-and that in some of these which
-are placed above the spring,
-the water may always continue
-at nearly the same height.”
-Travels in the Two Sicilies, vol.
-iv. p. 136.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1639'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1639'>1639</a>. Le Vaillant, t. viii. p. 162.
-Even in the southern provinces of
-France, the discovery of hidden
-springs is an art of no mean importance;
-and the persons who
-possess it are regarded as public
-benefactors. Thus, as I learn
-from my friend M. Louis Froment,
-of the department of the
-Lot, M. Paramelle, a curé having
-a living in that part of the
-country, is held in high estimation
-on account of the power
-he possesses of discovering the
-lurking retreats of spring-heads.
-He is able, from a certain distance,
-and without the least hesitation,
-to point out the source of
-living water, determine the depth
-at which it is to be found, say,
-without ever falling into error,
-what is the quantity and what
-the quality of the water. Without
-seeking to penetrate the plan,
-of which he keeps the secret, his
-countrymen avail themselves of
-the advantages offered to them;
-and the inhabitants of one village,
-situated on a calcareous tableland,
-have discovered, by the
-assistance of M. Paramelle, a
-source in their market-place,
-whilst before they were compelled
-to seek water at a distance of five
-miles.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1640'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1640'>1640</a>. Geop. ii. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1641'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1641'>1641</a>. Geop. ii. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1642'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1642'>1642</a>. Cf. Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 233,
-where he speaks of swarms of wild
-bees on the slopes of the mountains.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In another passage this poet
-describes the ravages and devastation
-of a hurricane amid the
-fountain forests:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Μῆνα δὲ Ληναιῶνα, κάκ᾽ ἤματα, βουδόρα πάντα,</div>
- <div class='line'>τοῦτον ἀλεύασθαι, καὶ πηγάδας, αἵτ ἐπὶ γαῖαν</div>
- <div class='line'>πνεύσαντος Βορέαο δυσηλεγέες τελέθουσιν,</div>
- <div class='line'>ὅστε διὰ Θρῄκης ἱπποτρόφου ἐυρέϊ πόντῳ</div>
- <div class='line'>ἐμπνεύσας ὤρινε· μέμυκε δὲ γαῖα καὶ ὕλη.</div>
- <div class='line'>πολλὰς δὲ δρῦς ὑψικόμους ἐλάτας τε παχείας</div>
- <div class='line'>οὔρεος ἐν βήσσῃς πιλνᾷ χθονὶ πουλυβοτείρῃ</div>
- <div class='line'>ἐμπίπτων, καὶ πᾶσα βοᾷ τότε νήριτος ὕλη.</div>
- <div class='line in21'>Opp. et Dies, 504, sqq.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>The pine and pitch trees, it is
-related by Theophrastus, were
-often uprooted by the winds in
-Arcadia. Hist. Plant. iii. 6. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1643'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1643'>1643</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii. 3.
-7. In all countries, small and
-great, the progress of civilisation
-has been inimical to forests. Thus
-in the little island of Stromboli,
-containing about a thousand inhabitants,
-attempts were made
-towards the end of the eighteenth
-century to enlarge the cultivable
-ground by clearing away the
-woods. Spallanzani, Travels in
-the Two Sicilies, vol. iv. p. 126,
-seq. The difficulty of extirpating
-trees is illustrated by Theophrastus
-who relates that, in a spot
-near Pheneon in Arcadia, a well-wooded
-tract was overflowed by
-the water and the trees destroyed.
-Next year, when the flood had
-subsided and the mud dried, each
-kind of tree appeared in the situation
-which it had formerly occupied.
-The willow, the elm, the
-pine, and the fir, growing in its
-own place, doubtless from the
-roots of the former trees. Hist.
-Plant. iii. 1. 2. Again: the
-Nessos, in the territory of the
-Abderites, constantly changed its
-bed, and in the old channels trees
-sprung up so rapidly that, in three
-years, they were so many strips
-of forest. Id. iii. 1. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1644'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1644'>1644</a>. Thiersch, Etat Actuel de la
-Grèce. t. i. p. 276. It is remarked
-by Theophrastus, however, that
-pine forests, being destroyed by
-fire, shot up again, as happened
-in Lesbos, on a mountain near
-Pyrrha. Hist. Plant. iii. 9. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1645'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1645'>1645</a>. Cf. Chandler, i. p. 261.
-The apparatus now used in irrigation
-by the Sciots exactly
-resembles that of the Egyptian
-Arabs. Id. i. 315.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1646'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1646'>1646</a>. Demosth. Adv. Polycl. §
-16. On the supply of water to
-Athens we possess little positive
-information, though we cannot
-doubt that all possible advantage
-was taken of those pure sources
-which are still found in its neighbourhood.
-“In no country necessity
-was more likely to have
-created the hydragogic art
-than in Attica; and we have
-evidence of the attention bestowed
-by the Athenians upon
-their canals and fountains in
-the time of Themistocles, as
-well as in that of Alexander
-the Great.” Col. Leake, on
-some disputed points in the Topography
-of Athens. Trans. Lit.
-Soc. iii. 189. Cf. Aristoph. Av.
-Schol. 998. Plut. Themist. § 31.
-Arist. Polit. vi. 8. vii. 12. We
-find, from Theophrastus, that there
-was in his time, an aqueduct in
-the Lyceum with a number of
-plane trees growing near it.
-Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 7. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1647'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1647'>1647</a>. Mitford, i. 33, seq. In B&oelig;otia,
-Babylonia, Egypt, and Cyrenaica,
-the dew served instead
-of rain. Theoph. Hist. Plant.
-viii. 4. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1648'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1648'>1648</a>. Λακκοὶ. Machon. ap. Athen.
-xiii. 43.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1649'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1649'>1649</a>. Geop. ii. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1650'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1650'>1650</a>. Sir W. Hamilton, Acc. of
-Discov. at Pompeii, p. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1651'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1651'>1651</a>. Water was cooled by being
-suspended in vessels over the
-mouths of wells; and sometimes
-boiled previously to render the
-process more complete. For, according
-to the Peripatetics, πᾶν
-ὕδωρ προθερμανθὲν ψύχεται μᾶλλον,
-ὥσπερ τὸ τοῖς βασιλεῦσι
-παρασκευαζόμενον, ὅταν ἑψηθῇ
-μέχρι ζέσεως, περισωρεύουσι τῷ
-ἀγγείῳ χιόνα πολλὴν, καὶ γίνεται
-ψυχρότερον. Plut. Sympos.
-vi. 4. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1652'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1652'>1652</a>. Geop. i. 2–4. 11. Theophrast.
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">De Signis Pluviarum et de Ventis,
-<em>passim</em></span>. Our own agriculturists,
-also, were formerly much
-addicted to these studies. Thus,
-“The oke apples, if broken in
-sunder about the time of their
-withering, do foreshewe the sequel
-of the yeare, as the expert
-Kentish husbandmen have
-observed, by the living things
-found in them: as, if they
-find an ant, they foretell plentie
-of graine to insue; if a
-whole worm, like a gentill or
-maggot, then they prognosticate
-murren of beasts and cattle;
-if a spider, then (saie they)
-we shall have a pestilence or
-some such like sickness to followe
-amongst men. These
-things the learned, also, have
-observed and noted: for Mathiolus,
-writing upon Dioscorides
-saith, that before they
-have an hole through them,
-they conteine in them either
-a flie, a spider, or a worme;
-if a flie, then warre insueth; if
-a creeping worme, then scarcitie
-of victuals; if a running spider,
-then followeth great sickness
-and mortalitie.” Gerrard,
-Herball, Third Book, c.
-29. p. 1158. Cf. Lord Bacon,
-Sylva Sylvarum, 561.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1653'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1653'>1653</a>. Cf. Hesiod, Opp. et Dies,
-486, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1654'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1654'>1654</a>. Cf. Lord Bacon, Sylva Sylvarum,
-675. 812.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1655'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1655'>1655</a>. Cf. Arato. Prognost. 102, sqq.
-But, on the other hand, “purus
-oriens, atque non fervens, serenum
-diem nuntiat.” Plin.
-Hist. Nat. xviii. 78. Aristot.
-Problem. xxvi. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1656'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1656'>1656</a>. The sun-sets of the Mediterranean
-exhibit, as most travellers
-will have observed, a variety of
-gorgeous phenomena, which, as
-betokening certain states of the
-atmosphere serve as so many admonitions
-to the husbandman.
-The sun before going down “assumed,”
-observes Dr. Chandler,
-“a variety of fantastic shapes.
-It was surrounded, first, with
-a golden glory of great extent,
-and flamed upon the surface of
-the sea in a long column of
-fire. The lower half of the
-orb soon after emerged in the
-horizon, the other portion remaining
-very large and red,
-with half of a smaller orb beneath
-it, and separate, but in
-the same direction, the circular
-rim approaching the line of its
-diameter. These two, by degrees,
-united, and then changed
-rapidly into different figures,
-until the resemblance was that
-of a capacious punch-bowl inverted.
-The rim of the bottom
-extending upward, and
-the body lengthening below
-it, became a mushroom on a
-stalk with a round head. It
-was next metamorphosed into
-a flaming caldron, of which
-the lid, rising up, swelled
-nearly into an orb and vanished.
-The other portion put
-on several uncircular forms,
-and, after many twinklings and
-faint glimmerings, slowly disappeared,
-quite red, leaving the
-clouds hanging over the dark
-rocks on the Barbary shore finely
-tinged with a vivid bloody
-hue.” Travels, i. p. 4. Appearances
-similar, though of inferior
-brilliance and variety, are
-sometimes witnessed in the Western
-Hemisphere. Describing the
-beauties of an evening on the Canadian
-shore, Sir R. H. Bonnycastle
-observes: “First, there
-was a double sun by reflection,
-each disk equally distinct;
-afterwards, when the
-orb reached the mark x, a solid
-body of light, equal in breadth
-with the sun itself, but of great
-length from the shore, shot
-down on the sea, and remained
-like a broad fiery golden column,
-or bar, until the black
-high land hid the luminary
-itself.” The Canadas in 1841.
-v. i. p. 34.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1657'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1657'>1657</a>. </p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Ille ubi nascentem maculis variaverit ortum</div>
- <div class='line'>Conditus in nubem, medioque refugerit orbe;</div>
- <div class='line'>Suspecti tibi sint imbres.</div>
- <div class='line in21'>Virg. Georg. i. 441, sqq.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1658'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1658'>1658</a>. Plin. Hist. Nat. xviii. 78.
-Aratus, Prognost. 137, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1659'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1659'>1659</a>. Cf. Plin. xviii. 82. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Si
-nubes ut vellera lanæ spargentur
-multæ ab oriente, aquam
-in triduum præsagient;”</span> and
-Virg. Georg, i. 397:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Tenuia nec lanæ per cœlum vellera ferri.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1660'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1660'>1660</a>. If the Mounts Parnes and
-Brylessus appeared enveloped in
-clouds, the circumstance was
-thought to foretel a tempest.
-Theoph. de Sign. Pluv. iii. 6.
-Cf. Strabo. ix. 11. t. ii. p. 253.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1661'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1661'>1661</a>. Pausan. ii. 30. 3. Pind.
-Nem. v. 10. Dissen.—Müll.
-Æginetica, § 5. p. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1662'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1662'>1662</a>. Dion. Chrysost. i. 222. Cf.
-Aristot. Prob. xxvi. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1663'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1663'>1663</a>. This is explained by Lord
-Bacon. “The upper regions of
-the air,” he observes, “perceive
-the collection of the matter of
-tempest and wind before the air
-here below. And, therefore, the
-observing of the smaller stars is
-a sign of tempests following.”
-Sylva Sylvarum, 812.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1664'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1664'>1664</a>. Similar observations have
-been made in most countries, as
-we find from the signs of the
-weather collected by Erra Pater,
-and translated by Lilly, Part iv.
-§ 3–5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1665'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1665'>1665</a>. Cf. Seneca. Quæst. Nat. i.
-c. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1666'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1666'>1666</a>. Aristot. Problem, xxvi. 24.
-Alexand. Aphrodis. Problem. i.
-72. Plin. xviii. 80. Virg. Georg.
-i. 365, sqq.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Sæpe etiam stellas, vento impendente, videbis</div>
- <div class='line'>Præcipites cœlo labi, noctisque per umbram</div>
- <div class='line'>Flammarum longos à tergo albescere tractus.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1667'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1667'>1667</a>. On the effects of the rainbow
-the ancients held a curious
-opinion, which Lord Bacon thus
-expounds:—“It hath been observed
-by the ancients, that
-where a rainbow seemeth to
-hang over or to touch, there
-breathed forth a sweet smell.
-The cause is, for that this happeneth
-but in certain matters
-which have in themselves some
-sweetness, which the gentle dew
-of the rainbow doth draw forth,
-and the like to soft showers, for
-they also make the ground
-sweet, but none are so delicate as
-the dew of the rainbow where
-it falleth.” Sylva Sylvarum.
-832. His Lordship here, as in
-many other places, adopts the
-explanation of the Peripatetics
-while he seems to be himself
-assigning the cause of the phenomenon.
-Aristotle (Problem.
-12. 3) enters fully into the
-subject, which appears to have
-been brought under the notice
-of philosophers by the shepherds
-who had observed that when certain
-thickets had been laid in
-ashes the passing of a rainbow
-over the spot caused a sweet
-odour to exhale from it. The
-same fact is noticed by Theophrastus,
-De Caus. Plant. 6. 17.
-7. Cf. Plin. Hist. Nat. 12. 52.
-21. 18. 2. 60. To many among
-the older philosophers that comparatively
-rare phenomenon, the
-lunar rainbow, was unknown.
-(Arist. Meteor. iii. 2: νύκτωρ
-δ᾽ ἀπὸ σελήνης ὡς μὲν οἱ ἀρχαῖοι
-ᾢοντο οὐκ ἐγίγνετο·) but in the
-time of Aristotle it had been observed,
-and the cause of its pearly
-whiteness investigated. Cf. Meteorol.
-iii. 4. 5. Senec. Quæst.
-Nat. i. 2, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1668'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1668'>1668</a>. Cf. Ælian. De Nat. Anim.
-vii. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1669'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1669'>1669</a>. </p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Φράζεσθαι δ᾽, εὖτ᾽ ἂν γεράνου φωνὴν ἐπακούσῃς</div>
- <div class='line'>ὑψόθεν ἐκ νεφέων ἐνιαύσια κεκληγυίης·</div>
- <div class='line'>ἥτ᾽ ἀρότοιο τε σῆμα φέρει, καὶ χείματος ὥρην</div>
- <div class='line'>δεικνύει ομβρηροῦ· κραδίην δ᾽ ἔδακ’ ἀνδρὸς ἀβούτεω.</div>
- <div class='line in22'>Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 448, sqq.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>To the same purpose, Homer:—Il.
-γ. 3, sqq.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Ἠΰτε περ κλαγγὴ γεράνων πέλει οὐρανόθι πρὸ,</div>
- <div class='line'>αἵτ᾽ ἐπεὶ οὖν χειμῶνα φύγον καὶ ἀθέσφατον ὄμβρον,</div>
- <div class='line'>κλαγγῇ ταίγε πέτονται ἐπ’ Ὠκεανοῖο ῥοάων.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>And Aristophanes:—(Av. 710,
-sqq.)</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Πρῶτα μὲν ὥρας φαίνομεν ἡμεῖς ἦρος, χειμῶνος, ὀπώρας ·</div>
- <div class='line'>Σπείρειν μὲν, ὅταν γέρανος κρώζουσ᾽ ἐς τὴν Λιβύην μεταχωρῇ,</div>
- <div class='line'>καὶ πηδάλιον τότε ναυκλήρῳ φράζει κρεμάσαντι καθεύδειν.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1670'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1670'>1670</a>. All birds which frequent the
-sea, more particularly those which
-fly high, are observed to seek
-terra firma at the approach of
-foul weather:—Ἀριστοτέλους
-ἀκούω λέγοντος, ὅτι ἄρα γέρανοι
-ἐκ τοὺς πελάγους εἰς τὴν γῆν πετόμενοι,
-χειμῶνος ἀπειλὴν ἰσχουραὶ
-ὑποσημαίνουσι τῷ συνιέντι.
-Ælian. De Nat. Anim. vii. 7.
-Before the great earthquake of
-1783, which shook the whole of
-Calabria and destroyed the city
-of Messina, the mews and other
-aquatic birds were observed to
-forsake the sea and take refuge
-in the mountains. Spallanzani,
-Travels in the Two Sicilies, vol.
-iv. p. 158.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1671'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1671'>1671</a>. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Aut arguta lacus circumvolitat
-hirundo.</span> Virg. Georg. i. 377.
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Hirundo tam juxta aquam volitans,
-ut penna sæpe percutiat.”</span>
-Plin. xviii. 87.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1672'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1672'>1672</a>. Plin. xviii. 88. Virg. Georg.
-i. 375.—Ælian, De Nat. Anim.
-vii. 8, describes the ox before
-rain snuffing the earth, and adds:
-πρόβατα δὲ ἐρυττοντα ταῖς ὁπλαῖς
-τὴν γῆν, ἔοικε σημαίνειν χιεμῶνα.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1673'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1673'>1673</a>. Cf. Ælian De Nat. Anim.
-viii. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1674'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1674'>1674</a>. Diog. Laert. i. 3. 5. Ælian
-(De Nat. Anim. vii. 8) relates a
-curious anecdote of Hipparchos
-who, from some change in the
-goatskin cloak he wore, likewise
-foretold a rain storm to the great
-admiration of Nero.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1675'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1675'>1675</a>. Probably the storm-finch observed
-frequently on the wing
-flying along the Ægean sea, particularly
-when it is troubled.
-Sibth. in Walp. Mem. i. 76.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1676'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1676'>1676</a>. Cf. Aristot. Problem. xxvii.
-63, where he investigates the
-causes of the phenomenon; and
-Plin. Nat. Hist. xi. 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1677'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1677'>1677</a>. Vid. Aristoph. Vesp. 262.
-The Scholiast entertains a somewhat
-different notion:—φασὶν
-ὅτι ὑετοῦ μέλλοντος γενέσθαι οἱ
-περὶ τὴν θρυαλλίδα τοῦ λύχνου
-σπινθῆρες ἀποπηδῶσιν, οὓς μύκητας
-νῦν λέγει, ὡς τοῦ λύχνου ἐναντιουμένου
-τῷ νοτερῷ ἀέρι· καὶ Ἄρατος “ἢ λύχνοιο
-μύκητες ἐγείρονται περὶ μύξαν, νύκτα
-κατὰ νοτίην.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1678'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1678'>1678</a>. Aristot. Meteorol. iii. 4. Seneca,
-Quæst. Nat. i. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1679'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1679'>1679</a>. Cf. Aristot. Problem. xxvi.
-17.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span>
- <h3 class='c002'>CHAPTER V. <br /> THE VARIOUS PROCESSES OF AGRICULTURE.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>If we now pass to the actual labours of the farm,
-and the implements by which they were usually carried
-on, we shall find that the Grecian husbandman
-was no way deficient in invention, or in that ingenuity
-by which men have in all countries sought to
-diminish their toils. For the purpose of procuring
-at a cheap rate whatever was wanted for the use
-of the establishment,<a id='r1680' /><a href='#f1680' class='c012'><sup>[1680]</sup></a> smiths, carpenters, and potters,
-were kept upon the land or in its immediate neighbourhood;
-by which means also the necessity was
-avoided of often sending the farm-servants to the
-neighbouring town, where it was observed they contracted
-bad habits, and were rendered more vicious
-and slothful.<a id='r1681' /><a href='#f1681' class='c012'><sup>[1681]</sup></a> Waggons, therefore, and carts, and
-ploughs, and harrows, were constructed on the spot,
-though it was sometimes necessary perhaps to obtain
-from a distance the timber used for these implements,
-which was generally cut in winter-time. They exhibited
-much nicety in their choice of wood. Thus
-they would have the poplar or mulberry-tree for the
-felloes of their wheels; the ash, the ilex, and the
-oxya, for the axle-tree, and fine close-grained maple
-for the yokes of their oxen,<a id='r1682' /><a href='#f1682' class='c012'><sup>[1682]</sup></a> sometimes carved in
-the form of serpents which seemed to wind round
-the necks of the animals, and project their heads
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span>on either side.<a id='r1683' /><a href='#f1683' class='c012'><sup>[1683]</sup></a> Their harrows, it is probable, were
-formed like our own. The construction of the
-plough,<a id='r1684' /><a href='#f1684' class='c012'><sup>[1684]</sup></a> always continued to be extremely simple.
-In the age of Hesiod<a id='r1685' /><a href='#f1685' class='c012'><sup>[1685]</sup></a> it consisted of four parts,
-the handle, the socket, the coulter, and the beam;
-and very little alteration seems afterwards to have
-been made in its form or structure, till the introduction
-of the wheel-plough, which did not, it is
-believed, occur until after the age of Virgil. The
-more primitive instrument, however, would seem to
-have consisted originally of two parts only, one
-serving the purpose of handle, socket, and share, the
-other being the beam by which it was fastened to
-the yoke. In the antique implement<a id='r1686' /><a href='#f1686' class='c012'><sup>[1686]</sup></a> the beam was
-sometimes made of laurel or elm, the socket of oak,
-and the handle of ilex.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Before mills were invented, the instrument by
-which they reduced corn into flour was a large
-mortar, scooped out of the trunk of a tree, furnished
-with a pestle upwards of four feet in length,
-exactly resembling that still in use among the Egyptian
-Arabs. To give the pestle greater effect it was
-fixed above in a cross-bar, seven feet long, and
-worked by two individuals.<a id='r1687' /><a href='#f1687' class='c012'><sup>[1687]</sup></a> By this rude contrivance,
-it is possible to produce flour as fine as that
-proceeding from the most perfect boulting machine.
-In addition to these they possessed winnowing fans,
-scythes, sickles, pruning-hooks, fern or braken-scythes,
-saws and hand-saws, used in pruning and grafting,
-spades, shovels, rakes, pick-axes, hoes, mattocks,—one,
-two, and three pronged,—dibbles, fork-dibbles, and
-grubbing-axes.<a id='r1688' /><a href='#f1688' class='c012'><sup>[1688]</sup></a> When rustics were clearing away
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span>underwood or cutting down brakes, they went clad
-in hooded skin-cloaks, leather gaiters, and long
-gloves.<a id='r1689' /><a href='#f1689' class='c012'><sup>[1689]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On the subject of manure<a id='r1690' /><a href='#f1690' class='c012'><sup>[1690]</sup></a> the Greeks appear
-to have entertained very just notions, and have left
-behind them numerous rules for using and preparing
-it. In lean lands which required most the help
-of art, they were still careful to avoid excess in
-the employment of manure, spreading it frequently
-rather than copiously; for as, left to themselves,
-they would have been too cold, so, when over enriched
-by art, their prolific virtue was thought to
-be consumed by heat. In applying it to plants,
-they were careful to interpose a layer of earth lest
-their roots should be scorched. Of all kinds of manure
-they considered that of birds the best,<a id='r1691' /><a href='#f1691' class='c012'><sup>[1691]</sup></a> except
-the aquatic species, which, when mixed, however,
-was not rejected. Most husbandmen set a peculiar
-value on the sweepings of dovecotes,<a id='r1692' /><a href='#f1692' class='c012'><sup>[1692]</sup></a> which, in small
-quantities, were frequently scattered over the fields
-with the seed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On the preparation of manure-pits they bestowed
-much attention.<a id='r1693' /><a href='#f1693' class='c012'><sup>[1693]</sup></a> Having sunk them sufficiently
-deep in places abundantly supplied with water, they
-cast therein large quantities of weeds, with all descriptions
-of manure, among which they reckoned
-even earth itself, when completely impregnated with
-humidity. When they had lain long enough to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span>entirely decayed, they were fit for use. To the above
-were sometimes added wood-ashes, the refuse of
-leather-dressers, the cleansing of stables, and cow-houses,
-with stubble, brambles, and thorns reduced
-to ashes. In maritime situations sea-weed,<a id='r1694' /><a href='#f1694' class='c012'><sup>[1694]</sup></a> also,
-having been well washed in fresh water, was mingled
-in large proportion with other materials, and,
-where possible, a channel was made conducting
-the muck and puddle<a id='r1695' /><a href='#f1695' class='c012'><sup>[1695]</sup></a> of the neighbouring road
-into the pit, which at once accelerated the putrescence
-of the manure and augmented it. The Attic
-husbandmen had a mode of enriching their lands<a id='r1696' /><a href='#f1696' class='c012'><sup>[1696]</sup></a>
-somewhat expensive, and, as far as I know, peculiar
-to themselves; having sown a field, they allowed
-the corn to spring up and the blade to reach a
-considerable height, upon which they again ploughed
-it in as a kind of sacrifice to the earth. A practice,
-not altogether unlike, still prevails in the kingdom
-of Naples, where the husbandmen sometimes bury
-their beans and lupins, just before flowering, for manure.<a id='r1697' /><a href='#f1697' class='c012'><sup>[1697]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In ploughing there was great variety of practice,
-and in small farms, where the soil was light, they
-had recourse to what may be denominated spade
-husbandry. Most lands were ploughed thrice; first,
-immediately after the removal of the preceding crop;
-secondly, at a convenient interval of time; and, thirdly,<a id='r1698' /><a href='#f1698' class='c012'><sup>[1698]</sup></a>
-in the sowing season, when the ploughman scattered
-the grain in the furrows as they were laid
-open while a lad followed at his heels with a hoe
-breaking the clods and covering the seed that it might
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>not be devoured by the birds.<a id='r1699' /><a href='#f1699' class='c012'><sup>[1699]</sup></a> Occasionally, in very
-hot weather, and in certain situations, the farmer
-ploughed all night;<a id='r1700' /><a href='#f1700' class='c012'><sup>[1700]</sup></a> first, out of consideration to the
-oxen, whose health would have suffered from the
-sun; secondly, to preserve the moisture and richness
-of the soil; and, thirdly, by the aid of the dew,
-to render it more pliable. On these occasions, it
-was customary to employ two pair of oxen and a
-heavier share in order to produce the deeper furrows,
-and turn up the hidden fat of the earth. In
-choosing a ploughman they took care that he should
-be tall and powerful,<a id='r1701' /><a href='#f1701' class='c012'><sup>[1701]</sup></a> that he might be able to
-thrust the share deeper into the ground and wield
-it generally with facility: and yet they would not,
-if <a id='corr385.15'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='posssible'>possible</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_385.15'><ins class='correction' title='posssible'>possible</ins></a></span>, that he should be under forty years of
-age, lest, instead of attending to his duties, his eye
-should be glancing hither and thither, and his mind
-be roving after his companions.<a id='r1702' /><a href='#f1702' class='c012'><sup>[1702]</sup></a> When in particular
-haste to complete his task, the ploughman often
-carried a long loaf under his arm, which, like the
-French peasants, he ate as he went along.<a id='r1703' /><a href='#f1703' class='c012'><sup>[1703]</sup></a> In this
-department of rural labour it may be observed, mules
-were sometimes employed as well as oxen.<a id='r1704' /><a href='#f1704' class='c012'><sup>[1704]</sup></a> Both
-were directed and kept in order by a sharp goad.<a id='r1705' /><a href='#f1705' class='c012'><sup>[1705]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the Greeks well understood the practice of fallowing,
-their lands were then, as now, suffered to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>regain their strength by lying for a time idle;<a id='r1706' /><a href='#f1706' class='c012'><sup>[1706]</sup></a> and
-it seems to have been as much their custom as it
-is still of their descendants,<a id='r1707' /><a href='#f1707' class='c012'><sup>[1707]</sup></a> for the poor, at least,
-to roam over these fallow grounds, collecting nettles,<a id='r1708' /><a href='#f1708' class='c012'><sup>[1708]</sup></a>
-mallows, the sow-thistle or jagged lettuce,<a id='r1709' /><a href='#f1709' class='c012'><sup>[1709]</sup></a> dandelions,
-sea-purslain, stoches, hartwort, briony sprouts,
-gentle-rocket, usually found in the environs of towns,
-and about the courts of houses, gardens, and ruins,
-with other wild herbs for salads, or to be eaten as
-vegetables.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The rules observed in sowing were numerous, and,
-in many instances, not a little curious. As a matter
-of course, they were careful to adapt the grain to
-the soil:<a id='r1710' /><a href='#f1710' class='c012'><sup>[1710]</sup></a> thus rich plains were appropriated to wheat,
-and in the intervals cropped with vegetables; middling
-grounds to barley;<a id='r1711' /><a href='#f1711' class='c012'><sup>[1711]</sup></a> while poor and hungry
-spots were given up to lentils, vetches, lupins, and
-such other pulse as were cultivated on a large scale.
-Beans and peas, however, were supposed to thrive
-best in fat and level lands. The principal sowing-time<a id='r1712' /><a href='#f1712' class='c012'><sup>[1712]</sup></a>
-was in autumn; for, as soon as the equinoctial
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_387'>387</span>rains had moistened the earth, the sower
-immediately went forth to sow, committing to the
-ground the hopes of the future year. The best
-time for scattering wheat they placed somewhere in
-November, about the setting of the constellation
-called the Crown. They were careful in this operation
-to avoid the time when the south wind<a id='r1713' /><a href='#f1713' class='c012'><sup>[1713]</sup></a> blew,
-and, generally, all cold and raw weather, as it rendered
-the earth ungenial, and little apt to fructify
-that which was entrusted to it. Great skill was
-supposed to be required in scattering the seed: in
-the first place, that it should be equally distributed;
-and, secondly, that none should fall between the
-horns of the oxen, superstition having taught them
-the belief that such grain, which they denominated
-Kerasbolos,<a id='r1714' /><a href='#f1714' class='c012'><sup>[1714]</sup></a> if it sprang up at all, would produce
-corn which could neither be baked nor eaten. A
-favourite sowing sieve was made of wolf’s-hide, pierced
-with thirty holes as large as the tips of the fingers.
-In later ages much virtue was supposed to reside
-in the barbarous term Phriel,<a id='r1715' /><a href='#f1715' class='c012'><sup>[1715]</sup></a> which they accordingly
-wrote on the plough. The choice of grains
-for sowing necessarily afforded much exercise<a id='r1716' /><a href='#f1716' class='c012'><sup>[1716]</sup></a> to their
-ingenuity: seed wheat, they thought, should be of
-a rich gold colour, full, smooth, and solid; barley,
-white and heavy; both not exceeding one year old,
-for they quickly deteriorated, and, after the third
-year, would not they supposed grow. This, however,
-was an error, since barley has been known to preserve
-its vitality upwards of two thousand years.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It was customary often to renew seed by sowing
-the produce of mountains on plains; of dry places
-in moist, and the contrary.<a id='r1717' /><a href='#f1717' class='c012'><sup>[1717]</sup></a> To try the comparative
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_388'>388</span>value of different qualities of grain<a id='r1718' /><a href='#f1718' class='c012'><sup>[1718]</sup></a> they took
-a sample of each, and sowed the whole in separate
-patches of the same bed, a little before the rising
-of the Dog-star. If the produce of any of these
-samples withered, through the influence they supposed
-of Syrius, the wheat which it represented was
-rejected. As corn when committed to the earth is
-exposed to numerous enemies, they had recourse to
-a variety of contrivances for its preservation: to
-protect it from birds, mice, and ants,<a id='r1719' /><a href='#f1719' class='c012'><sup>[1719]</sup></a> they steeped
-it in the juice of houseleeks, or mixed it with hellebore
-and cypress leaves, and scattered it out of a
-circle, or sprinkled it with water into which river
-crabs had been thrown for eight days, or with powdered
-hartshorn or ivory. Not satisfied with these
-precautions, they had likewise recourse to scarecrows,<a id='r1720' /><a href='#f1720' class='c012'><sup>[1720]</sup></a>
-fixing up long reeds here and there in the
-fields, with dead birds suspended to them by the
-feet. This long list of contrivances they closed by
-a spell: taking a live toad, they carried it round
-the field by night, after which they shut it up carefully
-in a jar, which they buried in the middle of
-the grounds.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When the corn began to spring up it was diligently
-weeded<a id='r1721' /><a href='#f1721' class='c012'><sup>[1721]</sup></a> a first and a second time. They
-would not trust entirely, however, to the industry of
-their hands, but called in to their aid certain characteristic
-enchantments, some two or three of which
-may be worth describing. First, to subdue the
-growth of choke-weed they planted sprigs of rose-laurel,
-at the corner and in the middle of their
-fields, or set up a number of potsherds, upon which
-had been drawn with chalk the figure of Heracles
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_389'>389</span>strangling the lion. But the most effectual of
-all spells, was for a young woman, naked and with
-dishevelled hair, to take a live cock in her hands
-and bear him round the fields, upon which, not only
-would the choke-weed and the restharrow vanish,<a id='r1722' /><a href='#f1722' class='c012'><sup>[1722]</sup></a>
-but all the produce of the land would turn out of
-a superior quality.<a id='r1723' /><a href='#f1723' class='c012'><sup>[1723]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the ancients well understood the value of hay,
-they took much pains in the formation and management
-of meadows. In the first place, all stones,
-stumps, bushes, and brambles,<a id='r1724' /><a href='#f1724' class='c012'><sup>[1724]</sup></a> were diligently removed,
-together with whatever else might interrupt
-the free play of the scythe in mowing. They avoided,
-moreover, letting into them their droves of hogs,
-which were found to turn up the soil and destroy
-the roots of the young grass. In moist lands, too,
-even the larger cattle were excluded, as the holes
-made by their hoofs<a id='r1725' /><a href='#f1725' class='c012'><sup>[1725]</sup></a> in sinking broke up the fine
-level of the turf. Old hay fields, in districts where
-much rain fell, grew in time to be clothed with a
-coating of moss,<a id='r1726' /><a href='#f1726' class='c012'><sup>[1726]</sup></a> which some farmers sought to remove
-by manuring the ground with ashes; but the
-more scientific agriculturists ploughed them up, and
-took precisely the same steps as in the formation of
-a new meadow, that is, they sowed the ground with
-beans, turnips, or rape-seed, which, in the second year,
-were succeeded by wheat; on the third it was thoroughly
-cleared out, and sown with hay-seed, mingled
-with vetches, after which the whole field was
-finely levelled by the harrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The rules observed by them in the regulation of
-their hay harvest<a id='r1727' /><a href='#f1727' class='c012'><sup>[1727]</sup></a> were, first, to mow before the
-grass or clover was withered, when it became less
-rich and nutritive; second, to beware in making the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_390'>390</span>ricks, that it was neither too dry nor too damp,
-since in the former case it was little better than
-straw, and in the latter was liable to spontaneous
-combustion.<a id='r1728' /><a href='#f1728' class='c012'><sup>[1728]</sup></a> It may be observed further, that
-clover<a id='r1729' /><a href='#f1729' class='c012'><sup>[1729]</sup></a> was usually sown in March or April, and
-though commonly mown six, or at least five, times
-in the twelve months, did not require to be renewed
-in less than ten years.<a id='r1730' /><a href='#f1730' class='c012'><sup>[1730]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Harvest usually commenced in Greece about the
-rising of the Pleiades,<a id='r1731' /><a href='#f1731' class='c012'><sup>[1731]</sup></a> when the corn had already
-acquired a deep gold colour, though not yet so ripe
-as to fall from the ear, which in barley happens
-earlier than in wheat, the grain having no hose.<a id='r1732' /><a href='#f1732' class='c012'><sup>[1732]</sup></a>
-Among the Romans operations were preceded by
-the sacrifice<a id='r1733' /><a href='#f1733' class='c012'><sup>[1733]</sup></a> of a young sow to Ceres, with libations
-of wine, the burning of frankincense, and the
-offering of a cake to Jove, Juno, and Janus. They,
-at the same time, addressed their prayers to the
-last-mentioned gods, nearly in the following words:—“O
-father Janus or Jupiter, in making an oblation
-of this cake I offer up my prayers that thou
-wouldst be propitious to me and my children, my
-house, and my family!”<a id='r1734' /><a href='#f1734' class='c012'><sup>[1734]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At Athens, as soon as the season for reaping<a id='r1735' /><a href='#f1735' class='c012'><sup>[1735]</sup></a> had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_391'>391</span>come round, those hardy citizens who lived by letting
-out their strength for hire,<a id='r1736' /><a href='#f1736' class='c012'><sup>[1736]</sup></a> ranged themselves
-in bands in the agora, whither the farmers of the
-neighbourhood resorted in search of harvesters. They
-then, in consequence of the hot weather, proceeded
-half-naked<a id='r1737' /><a href='#f1737' class='c012'><sup>[1737]</sup></a> to the fields, where, taking the sickle in
-hand, and separating into two divisions, they stationed
-themselves at either end of the piece of corn to be
-reaped, and began their work with vigour and emulation,
-each party striving to reach the centre of
-the field before their rivals.<a id='r1738' /><a href='#f1738' class='c012'><sup>[1738]</sup></a> On other occasions
-they took advantage of the wind,<a id='r1739' /><a href='#f1739' class='c012'><sup>[1739]</sup></a> moving along with
-it, whereby they were supposed to benefit considerably,
-avoiding the beard or chaff which it might
-have blown into their eyes, and having by its action
-the tall straw bent to their hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_392'>392</span>In many parts of Greece, though the practice was
-not general, the women joined in these labours. The
-reapers, as they advanced, laid the corn behind them
-in long lines upon the stubble, and were followed
-by two other classes of harvesters, one of whom
-bound it into sheaves which the others bore back
-and piled up into mows. Of the whole of these
-operations, together with the plenteous feast which
-interrupted or terminated their toils, Homer has
-left us a graphic picture in the Iliad:<a id='r1740' /><a href='#f1740' class='c012'><sup>[1740]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>There in a field ’mid lofty corn, the lusty reapers stand,</div>
- <div class='line'>Plying their task right joyously, with sickle each in hand.</div>
- <div class='line'>Some strew in lines, as on they press, the handfuls thick behind,</div>
- <div class='line'>While at their heels the heavy sheaves their merry comrades bind.</div>
- <div class='line'>These to the mows a troop of boys next bear in haste away,</div>
- <div class='line'>Piling upon the golden glebe the triumphs of the day.</div>
- <div class='line'>Among them wrapped in silent joy, their sceptered king appears,</div>
- <div class='line'>Beholding, in the swelling heaps, the stores of future years.</div>
- <div class='line'>A mighty ox beneath an oak the busy heralds slay,</div>
- <div class='line'>With grateful sacrifice to close the labours of the day.</div>
- <div class='line'>While near, the husbandman’s repast the rustic maids prepare,</div>
- <div class='line'>Sprinkling with flour the broiling cates whose savour fills the air.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>In these remote and unsettled times it behoved
-the rustic to keep a sharp look-out on the sheaves
-left behind him on the field, as there were usually
-prowlers,<a id='r1741' /><a href='#f1741' class='c012'><sup>[1741]</sup></a> lurking amid the neighbouring woods and
-thickets, ready to pounce upon and carry off whatever
-they saw unguarded.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The implement used in cutting wheat seems always
-to have been the sickle, while in the case of barley
-and other inferior grains, the scythe was commonly
-employed. In some parts of ancient Gaul, where
-no value was set upon the straw, corn was reaped
-by a sort of cart,<a id='r1742' /><a href='#f1742' class='c012'><sup>[1742]</sup></a> armed in front with scythes,
-having the edges inclined upwards, which, as it was
-driven along by an ox, harnessed behind, cut off
-the ears of corn, which were received into the tumbril.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_393'>393</span>In this manner the produce of a whole field
-might be got in easily in a day. Reaping among
-the ancient inhabitants of Italy<a id='r1743' /><a href='#f1743' class='c012'><sup>[1743]</sup></a> was performed in
-three ways: first they reaped close, as in Umbria,
-and laid the handfuls carefully on the ground, after
-which the ears were separated from the straw,
-and borne in baskets to the threshing-floor. Elsewhere,
-as in Picenum, they made use of a ripple
-or serrated hook, having a long handle with
-which the ears only were cut off, leaving the
-straw standing to be afterwards collected and raked
-up into mows.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the neighbourhood of Rome they reaped with
-the common sickle, holding the upper part of the
-straw in their left hand, and cutting it off in the
-middle. This tall stubble was afterwards mown and
-carried off to be used as fodder or bedding for cattle.
-In Upper Egypt and Nubia, the dhoura stalks are
-left about two feet in height to support the crop
-of kidney-beans which succeeds next in order.
-Among the Athenians<a id='r1744' /><a href='#f1744' class='c012'><sup>[1744]</sup></a> when the corn grew tall
-the stubble was suffered to remain to be burned
-for manure; but, when short, the value of the straw
-led them to reap close.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In separating the grain from the straw the ancients
-made use of horses, oxen, and mules, which, passing
-round and round over the threshing-floor, trod out
-the corn. All the labourer had to do was to guide
-the movements of the cattle, and take care that
-no part of the sheaf remained untrodden.<a id='r1745' /><a href='#f1745' class='c012'><sup>[1745]</sup></a> From
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_394'>394</span>a very humane law in the Old Testament we
-learn, that among some nations it was customary
-to tie up the mouths of such animals as they employed
-in this labour, which was forbidden the Israelites:
-“Thou shalt not,” says the Scripture, “muzzle
-the ox that treadeth out the corn.” Nor was
-it practised among the Greeks in the age of Homer,<a id='r1746' /><a href='#f1746' class='c012'><sup>[1746]</sup></a>
-whom we find describing the oxen bellowing as
-they made their unwearied round. The threshing-floor,
-which was of a circular form,<a id='r1747' /><a href='#f1747' class='c012'><sup>[1747]</sup></a> stood on a
-breezy eminence, in the open field, where, as at
-present, in modern Greece, and in the Crimea,<a id='r1748' /><a href='#f1748' class='c012'><sup>[1748]</sup></a> a
-high pole was set up in the centre, to which the
-cattle were tied by a cord determining the extent
-of the circle they had to describe.<a id='r1749' /><a href='#f1749' class='c012'><sup>[1749]</sup></a> The end being
-nailed, every turn made by the cattle coiled the
-rope about the pole and diminished their range, until,
-at length, they were brought quite close to the
-centre, after which, their heads were turned about,
-and by moving in an opposite direction the cord
-was unwound. Great pains were taken in the construction
-of this threshing-floor, which was somewhat
-elevated about the centre, in order, as Varro
-observes, that what rain fell might speedily run off.
-It was sometimes paved with stone, or pitched with
-flints, but more commonly coated with stucco, made
-level by a roller, and well soaked with the lees of
-oil which at once prevented the growth of weeds
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_395'>395</span>and grass, preserved it from cracking, and repelled
-the approach of mice, ants, and moles, to which oil-lees
-are destructive.<a id='r1750' /><a href='#f1750' class='c012'><sup>[1750]</sup></a> Though some authorities advise
-that it should be situated under the master’s,
-or at least the steward’s, eye, it was generally
-thought advisable to keep it at a distance from
-the house and gardens, since the finer particles of
-chaff, borne thickly through the air, caused ophthalmia,
-and often blindness,<a id='r1751' /><a href='#f1751' class='c012'><sup>[1751]</sup></a> and proved exceedingly
-injurious to all plants and pulpy fruits, more particularly
-grapes. In some parts of the ancient
-world, exposed to the chances of summer rains,
-the threshing-floor was covered; and, even in Italy,
-an umbracula,<a id='r1752' /><a href='#f1752' class='c012'><sup>[1752]</sup></a> or shed, was always constructed close
-at hand, into which the corn could be removed in
-case of bad weather. But this in the sunnier climate
-of Greece was judged unnecessary. In obedience
-to a notion prevalent among Hellenic farmers,
-the sheaves were piled up with the straw towards
-the south, by which means they believed the grain
-was enlarged and loosened from the hose. When
-the farmer happened to be scant of cattle he made
-use of a threshing-machine,<a id='r1753' /><a href='#f1753' class='c012'><sup>[1753]</sup></a> which consisted of a
-kind of heavy sledge, toothed below with sharp
-stones or iron. Occasionally, too, the flail<a id='r1754' /><a href='#f1754' class='c012'><sup>[1754]</sup></a> was
-used, especially in the case of such corn as was
-laid up in the barn and threshed during winter.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In winnowing,<a id='r1755' /><a href='#f1755' class='c012'><sup>[1755]</sup></a> when the breeze served, they simply
-threw the grain up into the air with a scoop,
-until the wind had completely cleared away the chaff.
-In serene days they had recourse to a winnowing
-machine, which, though turned by the hand, was of
-great power, as we may judge from its being employed
-in cleansing vetches, and even beans.<a id='r1756' /><a href='#f1756' class='c012'><sup>[1756]</sup></a> To receive
-the chaff, which was too valuable to be lost, pits
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_396'>396</span>appear to have been sunk all round the threshing-floor,
-which, for the passage of the men and cattle,
-would appear to have been covered, save in the
-direction of the wind.<a id='r1757' /><a href='#f1757' class='c012'><sup>[1757]</sup></a> When the corn was designed
-for immediate use, one winnowing was deemed sufficient;
-but that which was intended to be laid up
-in the granary<a id='r1758' /><a href='#f1758' class='c012'><sup>[1758]</sup></a> underwent the operation a second
-time.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On the building and preparation of granaries<a id='r1759' /><a href='#f1759' class='c012'><sup>[1759]</sup></a> the
-ancients bestowed great pains. Every means which
-could communicate to grain firmness and durability
-appears to have been tried by them; and their success
-was answerable to their diligence, for, in their
-granaries, wheat was preserved in perfection fifty,
-and millet a hundred years.<a id='r1760' /><a href='#f1760' class='c012'><sup>[1760]</sup></a> Their methods, however,
-were various; some laid up their grain in hollow
-rocks and caves, as in Thrace and Cappadocia;
-others sank deep pits in the earth<a id='r1761' /><a href='#f1761' class='c012'><sup>[1761]</sup></a> where they found
-it to be perfectly free from humidity, as in Farther
-Spain, while others, as in Hither Spain, Apulia, and
-Greece,<a id='r1762' /><a href='#f1762' class='c012'><sup>[1762]</sup></a> erected their granaries on lofty basements
-fronting the East, and with openings towards the
-north and west winds.<a id='r1763' /><a href='#f1763' class='c012'><sup>[1763]</sup></a> There was usually a range of
-numerous diminutive windows near the roof, to supply
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_397'>397</span>free vent for the heated air, while the floor, in many
-cases, contained small apertures for the admission of
-the cool breezes beneath. The walls were built with
-suitable solidity, and having, together with the floor,
-been plastered with rough mortar,<a id='r1764' /><a href='#f1764' class='c012'><sup>[1764]</sup></a> made commonly
-with hair, for which chaff was sometimes substituted,
-received a coat of fine stucco, on the preparation
-of which much care was bestowed. It was generally
-composed of lime, sand, and powdered marble, moistened
-with the lees of oil, the peculiar flavour and
-odour of which were supposed effectually to repel
-the approaches of mice,<a id='r1765' /><a href='#f1765' class='c012'><sup>[1765]</sup></a> weevils, and ants. Instead
-of this a common stucco, formed of clay, was often
-used. Occasionally the grain was packed up in baskets
-or large jars,<a id='r1766' /><a href='#f1766' class='c012'><sup>[1766]</sup></a> such, it may be presumed, as those
-still employed for the purpose in Africa, where they
-are commonly kept in a corner outside the door.
-Beans and other pulse were preserved in oil-jars
-rubbed with ashes.<a id='r1767' /><a href='#f1767' class='c012'><sup>[1767]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Before the produce of the new year was carried
-in, the granaries, having been carefully swept, were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_398'>398</span>smeared all over with oil-lees. Various other precautions
-were, likewise, taken to protect the sacred
-gifts of Demeter from depredation, such as drawing
-on the floor broad lines of chalk,<a id='r1768' /><a href='#f1768' class='c012'><sup>[1768]</sup></a> or strewing handfuls
-of wild origany round the heaps, or sprinkling
-them with the ashes of oaken twigs or dry cow’s
-dung, or sprigs of wormwood and southernwood, or,
-in greater quantity, the leaves of the everlasting.
-Instead of these, in some cases, they made use of
-powdered clay<a id='r1769' /><a href='#f1769' class='c012'><sup>[1769]</sup></a> or dry pomegranate leaves, rubbed
-small, and passed through a sieve, a chœnix of which
-was sprinkled over a bushel of corn. The favourite
-plan, however, seems to have been, to spread a layer
-of half-withered fleabane over the floor, on which
-were poured about ten bushels of wheat, then a layer
-of fleabane, and so on, until the granary was full.<a id='r1770' /><a href='#f1770' class='c012'><sup>[1770]</sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_399'>399</span>Wheat thus layed up was supposed not only to last
-many years, but also to preserve its weight in breadmaking.
-To render barley durable, they strewed over
-it laurel leaves, or the ashes of laurel wood, as, likewise,
-everlasting, calaminth, and gypsum, or placed
-a tightly-corked bottle of vinegar,<a id='r1771' /><a href='#f1771' class='c012'><sup>[1771]</sup></a> in the middle of
-the heap. To communicate greater plumpness to
-all kinds of grain, they sprinkled over the piles a
-mixture composed of nitre,<a id='r1772' /><a href='#f1772' class='c012'><sup>[1772]</sup></a> spume of nitre, and fine
-earth, which, likewise, acted as a preservative. To
-render flour more durable, they thrust into it small
-maple branches, stripped of their leaves, or little
-cakes of salt and cumin.<a id='r1773' /><a href='#f1773' class='c012'><sup>[1773]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The fruits of the earth having been thus safely
-lodged within doors, the grateful husbandmen celebrated
-in honour of their rural gods, Demeter and
-Dionysos, a festival which may, perhaps, be denominated
-that of the Harvest Home. In Attica it took
-place in the great temple at Eleusis, and continued
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_400'>400</span>during several days. No bloody sacrifices were on this
-occasion offered up; but, in lieu of them, oblations
-of cakes and fruit with other rustic offerings, designed
-at once to express their gratitude for past blessings,
-and to render the gods propitious to them in future.
-The first loaf made from the new corn was probably
-eaten or offered up on this day, since it received
-the name of Thargelos, or Thalusios, from Thalusia,
-the denomination of the festival.<a id='r1774' /><a href='#f1774' class='c012'><sup>[1774]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Before we quit the farm, it may be observed,
-that the ancients kept a number of slaves, constituting
-a kind of rural police, whose occupation
-wholly consisted in guarding the boundaries of estates.<a id='r1775' /><a href='#f1775' class='c012'><sup>[1775]</sup></a>
-These, among the Romans, were denominated rangers,
-or foresters. There were others to whom the care
-of the fruit was entrusted; and both these classes of
-persons were probably elderly men, remarkable for
-their diligence and fidelity, who were rewarded, by
-appointment to this more easy duty, for their honest
-discharge in youth of such as were more painful and
-laborious. Boys were sometimes set to keep watch
-over vineyards,<a id='r1776' /><a href='#f1776' class='c012'><sup>[1776]</sup></a> as we may see in the first Eidyll of
-Theocritus, where he gives us a lively sketch of such
-a guardian plotted against by two foxes.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1680'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1680'>1680</a>. Geop. ii. 49. Illustrating the
-wretched condition of a tyrant
-dwelling in the midst of a nation
-that abhors him, Plato draws the
-picture of a man being in a remote
-part of the country with his
-wife and children, surrounded by
-a gang of fifty or sixty slaves,
-with scarcely a free neighbour at
-hand to whom, in case of necessity,
-he might fly. In what terror,
-he says, must this man live,
-lest his slaves should set upon
-and murder him, with all his family!
-De Repub. t. vi. p. 439.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1681'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1681'>1681</a>. Carts were sometimes roofed
-with skins. Scheffer, De Re Vehic.
-p. 246, seq. Justin, ii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1682'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1682'>1682</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. v. 7. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1683'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1683'>1683</a>. Scheffer, De Re Vehic. p. 114.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1684'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1684'>1684</a>. Pollux, x. 128. Goguet,
-Orig. des Lois, i. 189, seq. Pallad.
-i. 43. Colum. ii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1685'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1685'>1685</a>. Opp. et Dies, 467, seq. Vid.
-Gœttl. ad v. 431. Etym. Mag.
-173, 16. Poll. i. 252. The
-Syrians used a small plough, with
-which they turned up extremely
-shallow furrows. Theoph. Hist.
-Plant. viii. 6. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1686'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1686'>1686</a>. Hesiod, Opp. et Dies, 435, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1687'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1687'>1687</a>. Idem, 423, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1688'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1688'>1688</a>. Poll. x. 129. Pallad. i. 51.
-Brunckh. not. ad Aristoph. Pac.
-567. Cf. Eurip. Bacch. 344.
-Sch. Aristoph. Pac, 558, seq. 620.
-Plat. de Repub. t. vi. p. 81. Artemid.
-Oneirocrit. ii. 24. p. 111.
-Lutet.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1689'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1689'>1689</a>. Pallad. i. 43. Colum. i. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1690'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1690'>1690</a>. Geop. ii. 21, seq. Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. vii. 5. 1. i. 7. 4.
-To exemplify the importance of
-manure, it is remarked by this
-writer, that manured corn ripens
-twenty days earlier than that
-which wants this advantage,
-viii. 7. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1691'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1691'>1691</a>. Geop. ii. 21. 4. From a
-speech of the Earl of Radnor, in
-the House of Lords, May 25,
-1841, we learn that our own
-farmers have begun to make experiments
-with this kind of manure
-on the lands of Great Britain,
-and that ship-loads of bird’s
-dung have been imported for the
-purpose from the Pacific. The
-rocks and smaller islands along
-the American coast are sometimes
-white with this substance. Keppel,
-Life of Lord Keppel, i. 48.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1692'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1692'>1692</a>. Geop. xii. 4. 3. v. 26. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1693'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1693'>1693</a>. Xenoph. Œconom. xx. 10.
-Cf. Artemid. Oneirocrit. ii. 26.
-p. 114.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1694'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1694'>1694</a>. Geopon. ii. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1695'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1695'>1695</a>. The practice of mingling water
-with the manure was in great
-use among the ancients, particularly
-in the island of Rhodes, in
-the cultivation of the palm-trees.
-Theoph. Hist. Plant. i. 6. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1696'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1696'>1696</a>. Xenoph. Œconom. xvii. 10.
-Cf. Earl of Aberdeen, Walp. Mem.
-i. 2.50. In such lands the farmers
-suffered their cattle to eat down
-the young corn to prevent its too
-great luxuriance. Theoph. Hist.
-Plant. viii. 7. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1697'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1697'>1697</a>. Swinburne, Letters from the
-Courts of Europe, i. 144.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1698'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1698'>1698</a>. Cf. Xenoph. Œconom. xvi.
-10, seq. Theoph. Hist. Plant.
-vi. 5. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1699'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1699'>1699</a>. Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 469,
-seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1700'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1700'>1700</a>. Geop. ii. 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1701'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1701'>1701</a>. Geop. ii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1702'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1702'>1702</a>. Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 443,
-sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1703'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1703'>1703</a>. Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 442.
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Vide Athenæum, quem Lanzius
-laudavit, iii. p. 114. e. hæc ex
-Philemone referentem: βλωμιλίους
-ἄρτους ὀνομάζεσθαι λέγει
-τοὺς ἔχοντας ἐντομάς, οὓς Ῥωμαῖοι,
-καδράτους λέγουσι. ὀκτάβλωμον
-Spohnius intelligit de
-servo celeriter edente. Minime
-verò. Panes rustici incisuras
-suas habent, ut servis omnibus
-æquas partes frangendo possis dirimere.</span>
-v. Philostrat. Imagg. p.
-95. 16. Jacobs.” Gœttling in loc.
-p. 173.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1704'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1704'>1704</a>. Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 46.
-Dickinson. Delphi Phœnicizantes,
-c. 10. p. 101, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1705'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1705'>1705</a>. Scheffer. de Re Vehic. 186,
-seq. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 449.
-The necks of these animals, when
-galled by the yoke, were cured
-by the leaves of black briony
-steeped in wine. Dioscor. iv.
-185.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1706'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1706'>1706</a>. Xenoph. Œconom. xvi. 13,
-seq. Cf. Schulz. Antiquitat.
-Rustic. § 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1707'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1707'>1707</a>. Sibthorpe, in Walp. Mem. v.
-i. p. 144.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1708'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1708'>1708</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 420. Hesiod
-alludes to this diet where he
-celebrates the inferiority of the
-half to the whole:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Νήπιοι, οὐδὲ ἴσασιν ὅσῳ πλέον ἥμισυ παντός,</div>
- <div class='line'>Οὐδ᾽ ὅσον ἐν μαλάχῄ τε καὶ ἀσφοδέλῳ μεγ’ ὄνειαρ.</div>
- <div class='line in32'>Opp. et Dies, 40, seq.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Cf. on the proverb in the first
-verse, Diog. Laert. i. 4. 2. Aristot.
-Ethic. Nicom. i. 7. Ovid.
-Fast. v. 718.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1709'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1709'>1709</a>. Theoph. Hist. Plant. vi. 4.
-8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1710'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1710'>1710</a>. Geop. ii. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1711'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1711'>1711</a>. A fine kind of barley was
-cultivated on the plain of Marathon,
-which obtained the name
-of Achillean, on account, as Dr.
-Chandler conjectures, of its tallness.
-ii. 184. Attica, in fact,
-produced the best barley known
-to the ancients. Theoph. Hist.
-Plant. viii. 8. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1712'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1712'>1712</a>. Geop. ii. 14.—Ἐπειδὰν ὁ
-μετοπωρινὸς χρόνος ἔλθῃ, πάντες
-που οἱ ἄνθρωποι πρὸς τὸν θεὸν
-ἀποβλέπουσιν, ὁπότε βρέξας τὴν
-γὴν ἀφήσει αὐτοὺς σπείρειν. Xenoph.
-Œconom. xvii. 2. There
-was a second sowing-time in the
-spring, and a third in summer
-for millet and sesame. Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. viii. 1. 2, sqq. In
-Phocis, and other cold parts of
-Greece, they sowed early, that
-the corn might be strong before
-the winter came on. § 7. In ancient
-Italy corn was chiefly committed
-to the ground in September
-and October; though in mild
-seasons the work of sowing went
-on throughout the winter. Schulze,
-Antiquitates Rusticæ, § 4. p. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1713'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1713'>1713</a>. Cf. Aristot. Problem, xxvi. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1714'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1714'>1714</a>. Plat. de Legg. t. viii. p. 119.
-Tim. Lex. Plat. p. 85. Ruhnk.
-Plut. Sympos. vii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1715'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1715'>1715</a>. Geop. ii. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1716'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1716'>1716</a>. Geop. ii. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1717'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1717'>1717</a>. Geop. ii. 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1718'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1718'>1718</a>. Geop. ii. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1719'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1719'>1719</a>. Geop. ii. 18. “The bunting,
-the yellow-hammer, and a species
-of Emberiza, nearly related
-to it, frequent the low bushes
-in the neighbourhood of corn-fields.”
-Sibth. in Walp. Mem.
-i. 77.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1720'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1720'>1720</a>. Among the husbandmen of
-Asia Minor people are employed
-to drive away the birds as the
-corn ripens. Chandler, i. 100.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1721'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1721'>1721</a>. Geop. ii. 24. Cf. Xen. Œconom.
-xv. 1. 13, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1722'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1722'>1722</a>. Cf. Schulz. Antiquit. Rustic.
-§ vii.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1723'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1723'>1723</a>. Geop. ii. 42. Theoph. Hist.
-Plant. vi. 5. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1724'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1724'>1724</a>. Colum. ii. 18. Varro, i. 49.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1725'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1725'>1725</a>. Cf. Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 489.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1726'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1726'>1726</a>. Lord Bacon, Sylva Sylvarum,
-539.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1727'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1727'>1727</a>. Much hay was laid up in
-Eubœa for consumption during
-the winter months.—Dion Chrysost.
-i. 225.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1728'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1728'>1728</a>. Colum. ii. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1729'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1729'>1729</a>. Καὶ τὴν βοτάνην δὲ, τὴν
-μάλιστα τρέφουσαν τοὺς ἵππους
-ἀπὸ τοῦ πλεονάζειν ἐνταῦθα
-ἰδίως Μηνδικὴν καλοῦμεν. Strab.
-xi. 13. t. ii. p. 453.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1730'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1730'>1730</a>. Pallad. v. 1. Schol. Aristoph.
-Eq. 604.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1731'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1731'>1731</a>. Geop. ii. 25. Hesiod. Opp.
-et Dies, 383. xiv. cal. June.
-Cf. Plin. Hist. Nat. xviii. 69.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1732'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1732'>1732</a>. Pallad. vii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1733'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1733'>1733</a>. The custom with which the
-modern Greeks hail the approach
-of summer is picturesque and
-beautiful: “On the first of May
-at Athens, there is not a door
-that is not crowned with a garland,
-and the youths of both
-sexes, with the elasticity of
-spirits so characteristic of a
-Greek, forget or brave their
-Turkish masters, while with
-guitars in their hands, and
-crowns upon their heads,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘They lead the dance in honour of the May.’”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Douglas, p. 64.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1734'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1734'>1734</a>. Cato, 134.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1735'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1735'>1735</a>. The harvest began earlier in
-Salamis than in the neighbourhood
-of Athens. Theoph. Hist.
-Plant. viii. 2. 11. Chandler, vol.
-ii. p. 230. In Egypt barley was
-reaped on the sixth month after
-sowing, and wheat on the seventh.
-Theoph. Hist. Plant. viii. 2. 7.
-In Greece, barley required seven
-or eight months to ripen; wheat
-still more. This latter grain came
-to maturity more speedily in Sicily,
-and returned thirty-fold. § 8.
-In a district in the island of
-Rhodes they reaped barley twice
-in the year. § 9. Harvest was
-thirty days earlier in Attica than
-in the Hellespont. 8. 10. There
-was a kind of wheat in Eubœa
-which ripened very early; and
-there was introduced from Sicily
-into Achaia another kind which
-was fit for the sickle in two
-months. Id. viii. 4. 4. Wheat
-returned in Babylonia, even to
-negligent husbandmen, fifty-fold,
-and to such as properly cultivated
-their lands, a hundred-fold. Id.
-viii. 7. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1736'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1736'>1736</a>. Dem. De Cor. § 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1737'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1737'>1737</a>. Or perhaps wholly so when
-they happened to be inhabitants
-of the warm lowlands on the sea-shore
-and valleys. At least this
-is the opinion of Hesiod who
-counsels the husbandman, γυμνὸν
-σπείρειν, γυμνὸν δὲ βοωτεῖν, γυμνὸν
-δ᾽ ἀμάαν, εἴ χ’ ὥρια πάντ᾽
-ἐθέλησθα ἔργα κομίζεσθαι Δημήτερος.
-Opp. et Dies, 391, sqq.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Aristophanes alludes to the
-same custom. Lysist. 1175.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Ἥδη γεωργεῖν γυμνὸς, ἀποδὺς
-βούλομαι. And Virgil. “Nudus
-ara, sere nudus,” Georg, i. 299,
-upon which Servius remarks:
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Non dicit nudum esse debere,
-quasi aliter non oporteat aut
-possit; sed sub tanta serenitate
-dicit hæc agenda, ut et amictus
-possit contemni.”</span> Be this, however,
-as it may, the precept of
-Hesiod and Virgil is literally observed
-in Egypt, where the rustics
-often perform their labour stark
-naked.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1738'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1738'>1738</a>. Il. λ. 67, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1739'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1739'>1739</a>. Πότερα οὖν τέμνεις, ἔφη, στὰς
-ἔνθα πνεῖ ἄνεμος, ἢ ἀντίος· οὐκ
-ἀντίος, ἔφην, ἔγωγε· χαλεπὸν γὰρ,
-οἶμαι, καὶ τοῖς ὄμμασι καὶ ταῖς
-χερσὶ γίγνεται, ἀντιον ἀχύρων
-καὶ ἀθέρων θερίζειν. Xenoph.
-Œconom. xviii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1740'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1740'>1740</a>. σ. 550, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1741'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1741'>1741</a>. Ἡμερόκοιτοὶ ἀνδρες, an elegant
-euphonism for “thieves”.
-Hesiod. Opp. et Dies, 605. Cf.
-the note of Gœttling on verse 375.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1742'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1742'>1742</a>. Pallad. vii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1743'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1743'>1743</a>. Varro. i. 50.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1744'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1744'>1744</a>. Καὶ ἀκροτομοίης δ᾽ἂν, ἔφη, ἢ
-παρὰ γῆν τέμνοις; ἢν μὲν βραχὺς
-ἦ ὁ κάλαμος τοῦ σίτου, ἔγωγ’,
-ἔφην, κάτωθεν ἂν τέμνοιμι, ἵνα
-ἱκανὰ τὰ ἄχυρα μᾶλλον γίγνηται.
-Ἐὰν δὲ ὑψηλὸς ᾖ, νομίζω ὀρθῶς
-ἂν ποιεῖν μεσοτομῶν, ἵνα μήτε οἱ
-ἁλοῶντες μοχθῶσι περιττὸν πόνον,
-μήτε οἱ λικμῶντες, ὧν οὐδὲν προσδέονται.
-Τὸ δὲ ἐv τῇ γῇ λειφθὲν
-ἡγοῦμαι καὶ κατακαυθὲν συνωφελεῖν
-ἂν τὴν γῆν καὶ εις κοπρον
-ἐμβληθὲν τὴν κόπρον συμπληθύνειν.
-Xenoph. Œconom. xviii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1745'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1745'>1745</a>. Xenoph. Œconom. xviii. 4.
-The same custom still prevails in
-Southern Europe and in the East.
-“Corn is trodden out in Granada
-in circular-formed threshing-floors,
-in the open fields; the
-animals employed are mules
-or oxen.” Napier, Excursions,
-&amp;c., i. 156. Again, in the Troad,
-“The oxen or horses being harnessed
-to a sort of sledge, the
-bottom part of which is armed
-with sharp flints, are driven
-over the corn, the person
-who guides the cattle balancing
-him or herself with great dexterity
-whilst rapidly drawn
-round in revolving circles.” Id.
-ii. 171. Cf. Fowler, Three Years
-in Persia, i. 173, and Chandler,
-i. 320. ii. 234.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1746'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1746'>1746</a>. Iliad, υ. 495, seq. Hesiod.
-Opp. et Dies, 599.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1747'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1747'>1747</a>. Suid. v. ἁλωὰ t. i. p. 186. c.
-Philoch. Frag. Siebel. p. 86. Etym.
-Mag. 73. 56, seq. Colum.
-ii. 20. Geop. ii. 26. Senec.
-Quæst. Nat. i. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1748'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1748'>1748</a>. Earl of Aberdeen in Walp.
-Mem. i. 150. Pallas, Trav. in
-South. Russia, vol. iv. p. 148,
-seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1749'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1749'>1749</a>. Schneid. ad Xenoph, Œcon.
-xviii. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1750'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1750'>1750</a>. Varro. de Re Rust. i. 51.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1751'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1751'>1751</a>. Geop. ii. 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1752'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1752'>1752</a>. Varro. i. 51. Pallad. i. 36.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1753'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1753'>1753</a>. Mathem. Vett. p. 85. Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. iii. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1754'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1754'>1754</a>. Colum. ii. 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1755'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1755'>1755</a>. Plat. Tim. t. vii. p. 65.
-Xenoph. Œconom. xviii. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1756'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1756'>1756</a>. Il. ν. 588.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1757'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1757'>1757</a>. Il. ε. 562.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1758'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1758'>1758</a>. See on the vessels in which
-the produce of the harvest was
-received, Pollux. x. 129.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1759'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1759'>1759</a>. Cf. Pallad. l. 19. Colum.
-i. 6. A granary, commonly σιτοφυλακεῖον,
-was, by Menander, in
-his Eunuch, denominated σιτοβόλιον;
-among the Siciliotes and
-Greek colonists of Italy ῥογος;
-as in the Busiris of Epicharmos.
-Poll. ix. 45.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1760'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1760'>1760</a>. Varro. i. 57.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1761'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1761'>1761</a>. The same practice is still
-found in several of the Grecian
-islands. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Ils font dans les champs
-un trou proportionné à la quantité
-de bled qu’ils y veulent
-serrer; il est ordinairement de
-cinq pieds de diamètre, sur
-deux ou trois de profondeur.
-On en tapisse l’intérieur
-d’environ un demi-pied de paille
-brisée sous les pieds des b&oelig;ufs;
-on y serre ensuite le grain, de
-manière qu’il s’élève par dessus
-la terre, à une hauteur
-à-peu-près égale à la profondeur
-du trou; on le couvre avec
-un demi-pied de paille, sur laquelle
-on met trois ou quatre
-pouces de terre.”</span> Della Rocca,
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Traité Complet sur les Abeilles</span>,
-t. i. p. 198, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1762'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1762'>1762</a>. Geop. ii. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1763'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1763'>1763</a>. Cf. Lord Bacon. Hist. Life
-and Death, p. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1764'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1764'>1764</a>. But, according to Theophrastus,
-corn kept best in granaries
-unplastered with lime. Hist.
-Plant. viii. 10. 1. In a certain
-part of Cappadocia called Petra,
-corn would keep fit for sowing
-forty years, and for food sixty or
-seventy, although in that district
-cloths and other articles decay
-rapidly. Id. viii. 10. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1765'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1765'>1765</a>. Among tame animals designed
-to protect the farmstead from
-vermin, the weasel was sometimes
-used. Hom. Batrachom. 52. Ovid.
-Met. ix. 323. Luc. Timon. § 21.
-Perizon. ad Ælian. Var. Hist. xiv.
-4. Muncker, ad Anton. Liber. 29.
-Plin. Hist. Nat. xix. 16. Welcker.
-ad Simon. Amorg. p. 43.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1766'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1766'>1766</a>. From which they carefully
-cleansed the spider’s webs: ἐκ δ᾽ ἀγγέων
-ἐλάσειας ἀράχνια. Hesiod.
-Opp. et Dies, 475. Cf. 600. A similar
-method still prevails in the
-islands of the Archipelago when
-the grain is intended for the market:
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Ceux qui veulent porter
-leurs grains à la ville, les mettent
-dans des vases de terre
-cuite, qu’ils remplissent à deux
-ou trois pouces près; ensuite
-ils étendent par dessus quelques
-feuilles de figuier sauvage, appelé
-<em>orni</em>, et en Latin <em>caprificus</em>;
-enfin ils achèvent de remplir
-les vases avec de la cendre,
-et les couvrent d’une espèce
-d’ardoise, mais plus forte et plus
-épaisse que celle dont on se
-sert en France pour couvrir les
-maisons.” Della Rocca, Traité
-Complet sur les Abeilles,</span> t. i. p.
-200.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1767'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1767'>1767</a>. Varro. i. 57.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1768'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1768'>1768</a>. Geop. ii. 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1769'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1769'>1769</a>. This substance was brought
-from Olynthos and Cerinthos, in
-Eubœa. It is said to have improved
-the appearance of the wheat,
-though it deteriorated its quality
-as an article of food. Theoph.
-viii. 10. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1770'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1770'>1770</a>. The granaries of the island
-of Syra, with the contrivance by
-which corn is there preserved at
-the present day, are thus described
-by Della Rocca:—<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Les granges,
-appelées en Grec θεμονέα, ont
-communément une vingtaine
-de pieds de long, sur huit à dix
-de hauteur et de largeur. On
-les remplit jusqu’à la moitié
-de leur hauteur, de paille bien
-foulée: on pratique un espace
-de trois ou quatre pieds, que
-l’on remplit de grain. A côté
-on en forme un autre, que l’on
-remplit de même, et ainsi de
-suite, selon l’étendue de la
-grange, et la quantité de grain
-que l’on a; cela fait, par des
-ouvertures pratiquées dans la
-couverture, on recouvre de paille
-tout le bled, jusqu’à ce que la
-grange soit exactement remplie.
-Quand on veut en faire usage,
-on commence par le tas le plus
-voisin de la porte; on enlève
-d’abord la paille avec beaucoup
-de précaution: plus on
-approche, plus cette précaution
-augmente; enfin, pour ôter les
-derniers brins de paille, on se
-sert d’un balai de millepertuis
-ou d’autres plantes que
-l’on fait sécher; et si malgré
-tous ces soins, la surface du
-monceau de grain n’est pas bien
-nette, on achève d’en enlever
-toutes les menues pailles en
-la vannant avec un chapeau
-car les paysans de nos îles portent
-comme ici, dans les champs,
-des chapeaux ronds de feutre;
-ils en portent aussi de paille,
-que l’on travaille avec beaucoup
-de délicatesse à Sifanto.”
-Traité Complet sur les Abeilles.</span>
-t. i. p. 199, seq. Among the tribes
-of Northern Africa a more complete
-system of preserving grain
-prevails. “The Arabs, in lieu
-of granaries, preserve all their
-grain in pits: forty or fifty of
-these are made, each to contain
-about a thousand bushels:
-the spot selected is a dry,
-sandy soil, the hole being formed
-in the shape of a large earthen
-jug, the sides are plastered
-with mortar about a foot in
-thickness, and the wheat or
-grain filled up to the mouth,
-which is left just large enough
-for a man to get in at, and
-is about three feet below the
-surface of the ground; this
-is now plastered over also, and
-filled with the soil around
-to the same level as the surrounding
-country. The earth
-taken out in forming the pits
-is removed to a distance, and
-being scattered abroad, in a
-month or two the grass grows
-over the surface, and no one,
-unless those who have buried
-this treasure, would imagine
-that there was anything beneath
-their feet. The grain
-thus buried preserves for many
-years. I have eaten bread at
-the Esmailla made from wheat
-as old as the Sultan, having
-been buried the year of his
-birth, and it was as good as
-that made of flour from this
-year’s crop.” Colonel Scott,
-Journal of a Residence in the
-Esmailla of Abd-el-Kader. p. 155,
-seq. Mandelslo (lib. ii. c. iii.) found
-corn-vaults of similar construction
-in the Azores; and most travellers
-who have visited the island
-of Malta will have observed in
-the fortifications of Valetta that
-series of curious and beautiful
-granaries excavated in the form
-of a bottle in the solid rock.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1771'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1771'>1771</a>. Geop. ii. 30, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1772'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1772'>1772</a>. Geop. ii. 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1773'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1773'>1773</a>. Geop. ii. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1774'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1774'>1774</a>. Vid. Theoc. Eidyll. vii. 3.
-Etym. Mag. 444. 13. Athen.
-xiii. 65. iii. 80. Meurs. Græc.
-Fer. p. 15. p. 142. Dem. adv.
-Neær. § 27, with the authorities
-collected by Taylor.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1775'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1775'>1775</a>. Such of these as had charge
-of the timber may be denominated
-wood-reeves, a term which answers
-very well the Latin Saltuarius.
-The slave-guards of forests,
-in Crete, were called Ergatones.
-Hesych. ap. Meurs. Cret. p.
-190.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1776'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1776'>1776</a>. Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p.
-223, seq. Theocrit. Eidyll. xxv. 27.
-Cf. Feith. Antiq. Hom. iv. i. 276,
-sqq. Vineyards in Athens still require
-guards. Speaking of his approach
-to Athens from the Peiræeus,
-Chandler observes:—“In a
-tree was a kind of couch, sheltered
-with boughs, belonging to a
-man employed to watch there
-during the vintage.” ii. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_401'>401</span>
- <h3 class='c002'>CHAPTER VI. <br /> PASTORAL LIFE.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>But within the circle of Hellenic country life<a id='r1777' /><a href='#f1777' class='c012'><sup>[1777]</sup></a>
-there was a kind of parenthetical existence, a
-remnant of the old nomadic habits, once common,
-perhaps, to the whole race,—I mean the pastoral
-life, of which we obtain so many glimpses
-through the leafy glades and grassy avenues of Greek
-poetry. No doubt, the fancy of imaginative men,
-thirsting for a degree of simplicity and happiness
-greater than they find around them in cities or
-villages, is apt to kindle and shed too glorious a
-light on approaching the tranquil solitudes, the pine
-forests, the mountain glens, the hidden lakes, the
-umbrageous streams that leap and frolic down the
-wild rocks of a country so rife with beauty as Greece.
-Nevertheless, adhering strictly to truth and reality,
-there is, in such regions, much about the pastoral
-life to delight the mind. In the first place, the
-occupations of an ancient shepherd left him great
-leisure, and he was generally, by habit no less than
-by inclination, led to prize that “dolce far niente”
-which, in all southern climates, constitutes the chief
-enjoyment of existence.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_402'>402</span>And indeed all the world over, repose, both of
-mind and body, is sweet. But not entire repose.
-Accordingly the Grecian shepherd, whose flocks fed
-tranquilly, whose condition, assured, and pinched by
-no necessities, left him at liberty to consult his own
-tastes in his recreations, took refuge from idleness
-in music and song.<a id='r1778' /><a href='#f1778' class='c012'><sup>[1778]</sup></a> At first, and perhaps always,
-their lays were rude; but nature, their only teacher,
-infused into them originality and passion, such as
-we find in the only poet of antiquity, save Homer,
-in whose verses the fragrance of the woods still
-breathes. Whether like Paris and Anchises they
-kept their own flocks or undertook the care for
-others, they were still on the mountains perfectly
-free. Their education was peculiar. Abroad much
-after dark,<a id='r1779' /><a href='#f1779' class='c012'><sup>[1779]</sup></a> in a climate where the summer nights
-are soft and balmy beyond expression, and where
-the stars seem lovingly to crowd closer about the
-earth, they necessarily grew romantic and superstitious.<a id='r1780' /><a href='#f1780' class='c012'><sup>[1780]</sup></a>
-Events occurring early in their own lives or
-handed down to them by tradition, long meditated
-on, were in the end invested with supernatural attributes.
-Under similar circumstances their national
-religion had probably been first formed. They in
-the same way, in every canton, created a local religion.<a id='r1781' /><a href='#f1781' class='c012'><sup>[1781]</sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_403'>403</span>Their very creed was poetry. Tree, rock,
-mountain, spring, every thing was instinct with divinity,
-not mystically, as in certain philosophical
-systems, but literally; and, as they believed, the immortal
-race, their invisible companions at all hours,
-could when they pleased put on visibility, or rather
-remove from their eyes the film which prevented
-their habitually beholding them.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It is well known that, in the present day, among
-the nomadic nations of Asia, the sons of the chiefs
-still follow their flocks in the wilderness. And this
-in the heroic ages was likewise the case in Greece,<a id='r1782' /><a href='#f1782' class='c012'><sup>[1782]</sup></a>
-where youths of the noblest families watched over
-their fathers’ sheep and cattle. Thus Bucolion, son
-of Laomedon, led to pasture the flocks of his sire,
-and, in the solitudes of the Phrygian mountains, was
-met and loved by a nymph.<a id='r1783' /><a href='#f1783' class='c012'><sup>[1783]</sup></a> Two sons also of
-Priam pursued the same occupation;<a id='r1784' /><a href='#f1784' class='c012'><sup>[1784]</sup></a> and thus
-among the Hebrews, David, the son of Jesse, passes
-his youth in the sheepfold, and his manhood on a
-throne. In this secluded and solitary life the sights
-and sounds of nature became familiar to them, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_404'>404</span>voice of sudden torrents rushing from the mountains,<a id='r1785' /><a href='#f1785' class='c012'><sup>[1785]</sup></a>
-the roar of lions springing on their folds, or the sweet
-moonlight silvering both mountain and valley. It
-is with the shepherd’s life that Homer connects
-that noble description of the night which Chapman
-has thus translated:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>As when about the silver moon, when air is free from wind,<a id='r1786' /><a href='#f1786' class='c012'><sup>[1786]</sup></a></div>
- <div class='line'>And stars shine clear,<a id='r1787' /><a href='#f1787' class='c012'><sup>[1787]</sup></a> to whose sweet beams high prospects and the brows</div>
- <div class='line'>Of all steep hills and pinnacles thrust up themselves for shows,</div>
- <div class='line'>And even the lonely valleys joy to glitter in their sight,</div>
- <div class='line'>When the unmeasured firmament bursts to disclose her light,</div>
- <div class='line'>And all the signs in heaven are seen, that glad the shepherd’s heart.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>The glimpses of pastoral life, albeit too few, are
-still frequent in Homer, who loves, whenever possible,
-to illustrate his subject by bringing before our
-minds the image of a shepherd. Thus Hector, lifting
-a large rock, is compared to a shepherd bearing
-a ram’s fleece.<a id='r1788' /><a href='#f1788' class='c012'><sup>[1788]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>As when the fleece, though large yet light, the careful shepherd rears,</div>
- <div class='line'>With both hands plunged within its folds, so he the rock uptears.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_405'>405</span>Again, the Trojan forces following their leader,
-Æneas, suggest to his mind the idea of innumerable
-flocks bounding after a ram to drink.<a id='r1789' /><a href='#f1789' class='c012'><sup>[1789]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>The people followed, as the flock the shaggy ram succeeds,</div>
- <div class='line'>Who to the cooling streamlet’s bank the woolly nation leads</div>
- <div class='line'>(While swells the shepherd’s heart with joy) from pasture on the meads.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Elsewhere, he describes a troop of hungry wolves
-attacking the flocks on the mountains:—<a id='r1790' /><a href='#f1790' class='c012'><sup>[1790]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>As when the hungry wolves, on folds forsaken by the watch,</div>
- <div class='line'>Descend, the kids and tender lambs by thievish force to snatch;</div>
- <div class='line'>Or when the timid browsing crew are scattered far and wide,</div>
- <div class='line'>And seized, by witless shepherds left upon the mountain side.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>But, in another place, they are represented contending
-with a lion by night for the body of one
-of their flock.<a id='r1791' /><a href='#f1791' class='c012'><sup>[1791]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Thus the night-watching shepherds strive, but vainly, to repel</div>
- <div class='line'>The angry lion, whom the stings of want and rage impel,</div>
- <div class='line'>Upon the carcase fastens he: his heart no fear can quell.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Where the number of the flock required the care
-of several men a chief shepherd ἐπιποιμὴν was appointed
-to overlook the rest.<a id='r1792' /><a href='#f1792' class='c012'><sup>[1792]</sup></a> Among the ancients
-twenty sheep were thought to require the attention
-of a man and a boy;<a id='r1793' /><a href='#f1793' class='c012'><sup>[1793]</sup></a> but, in modern times, three
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_406'>406</span>men and a boy, with four or five dogs, are sometimes
-entrusted with a flock of five hundred, of
-which two-thirds are ewes.<a id='r1794' /><a href='#f1794' class='c012'><sup>[1794]</sup></a> The proportion of rams
-to ewes is at present as four to a hundred.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>From very remote ages shepherds had learned
-to avail themselves of the aid of dogs,<a id='r1795' /><a href='#f1795' class='c012'><sup>[1795]</sup></a> which in
-farms were usually furnished with wooden collars.<a id='r1796' /><a href='#f1796' class='c012'><sup>[1796]</sup></a>
-The breed generally employed in this service, in
-later ages at least, was the Molossian,<a id='r1797' /><a href='#f1797' class='c012'><sup>[1797]</sup></a> which, though
-exceedingly powerful and fierce towards strangers,
-was by its masters found sufficiently gentle and
-tractable. The shepherd’s pipe,<a id='r1798' /><a href='#f1798' class='c012'><sup>[1798]</sup></a> frequently made
-of the donax, or common river-reed,<a id='r1799' /><a href='#f1799' class='c012'><sup>[1799]</sup></a> likewise used
-in thatching cottages, formed a no less necessary
-accompaniment. Another of their instruments of
-music was the flute crooked at the top, finely polished
-and rubbed with bees’ wax.<a id='r1800' /><a href='#f1800' class='c012'><sup>[1800]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the Arcadians, descendants of the Pelasgians,
-derived one of their principal delights from music,<a id='r1801' /><a href='#f1801' class='c012'><sup>[1801]</sup></a>
-it is reasonable to infer that the ancestral nation,
-preëminently pastoral, was likewise addicted to this
-science. The feeding of herds and flocks constituted
-the principal occupation of the Proselenoi,<a id='r1802' /><a href='#f1802' class='c012'><sup>[1802]</sup></a>
-who were little devoted to agriculture, as may be
-inferred from their acorn-eating habits; for no nation
-ever continued to feed on mast after they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_407'>407</span>could obtain bread. A report prevailed in the ancient
-world that the Arcadians were of a poetical
-temperament, to which Virgil alludes in the well-known
-verses—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in18'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Arcades ambo,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Et cantare pares et respondere parati.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>And as improvisatori they may possibly have excelled,
-though Greece knew nothing of an Arcadian
-literature. However, chiefly after the example
-of Virgil, the poets of modern times have always
-delighted to convert Arcadia into a kind of pastoral
-Utopia, which is done by Sannazaro, Tasso,
-Guarini, Sir Philip Sydney, Daniel, and many others.
-Palmerius à Grentmesnil<a id='r1803' /><a href='#f1803' class='c012'><sup>[1803]</sup></a> discovers something like
-the descendants of the Arcadians among the Irish,
-whose pastoral taste for music he conceives to be
-commemorated by the triangular harp in the national
-insignia.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Their usual clothing consisted of diptheræ, or
-dressed sheepskins,<a id='r1804' /><a href='#f1804' class='c012'><sup>[1804]</sup></a> just as at the present day
-among the Nubian shepherds, whom one may see
-thus clad, roaming through the sandy hollows of
-the Lybian desert. On the inside of these skins
-the traitor Hermion wrote the letters which betrayed
-the designs of his countrymen to the enemy in Laconia.<a id='r1805' /><a href='#f1805' class='c012'><sup>[1805]</sup></a>
-Others wore goatskin cloaks, which they
-likewise used as a coverlet at night.<a id='r1806' /><a href='#f1806' class='c012'><sup>[1806]</sup></a> Euripides introduces
-his chorus of satyrs complaining of this
-miserable costume.<a id='r1807' /><a href='#f1807' class='c012'><sup>[1807]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_408'>408</span>“Much loved Bacchos where dost thou</div>
- <div class='line'>Lonely dwell afar,</div>
- <div class='line'>Shaking thy gold locks at eve</div>
- <div class='line'>Like a blazing star?</div>
- <div class='line'>While I thy minister am fain</div>
- <div class='line'>To serve this one-eyed Cyclop swain,</div>
- <div class='line'>A slave borne down by fortune’s stroke</div>
- <div class='line'>In a wretched goatskin cloak.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>And thus simple was ever their appearance in
-the East. But, as I have hinted above, their very
-great leisure,<a id='r1808' /><a href='#f1808' class='c012'><sup>[1808]</sup></a> the accidents of their occupation, and
-the grand and regular march of natural phenomena
-in those countries, often ripened their intellects beyond
-what the condition of a modern heath-trotter
-renders credible. Thus, in the mountains of Chaldæa,
-astronomy and all its parasitical sciences took
-birth among the shepherd race. From temperament
-and circumstances, the inhabitants of thinly-peopled
-tracts, if unvexed by wars, are profoundly meditative.
-What they behold in serene indistraction
-gradually rouses their thoughts, and presenting itself
-again and again, attended always, as the phenomena
-of the heavens are, by the same accidents, compels
-them to study.<a id='r1809' /><a href='#f1809' class='c012'><sup>[1809]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_409'>409</span>But solitude is less surely the nurse of science
-than of superstition. The leaven, which in populous
-cities scarcely swells visibly in the breast, ferments
-unrestrainedly in the depths of woods, in the
-high-piled recesses of mountains, in the gloom of
-caverns, where nature invests itself with attributes
-which address themselves powerfully to the heart,
-and appears almost to hold communion with its
-offspring. Hence the wild mythologies of Nomadic
-races, which are not loose-hanging creeds, to be put
-off and on like a cloak, but a belief inwrought
-into their souls, a part of themselves, and perhaps
-the best part, since it is from this that springs the
-whole dignity and poetry of their lives. In all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_410'>410</span>countries fables rise in the fields, to flow into and
-be lost in the cities. Observe the wild picture
-which Plato, in his Academic Dream, presents to
-us of a group of Lydian shepherds. It has all the
-poetical elements of an Arabian tale.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Tradition, he says, represented Gyges the ancestor
-of Crœsus as a hired shepherd, who with many
-others guarded the imperial flocks in the remoter
-districts of the country. At this time happened a
-great earthquake, attended by floods of rain, which,
-in the parts where they were, opened up a vast
-chasm in the earth. Gyges arriving alone at the
-mouth of the gap stood amazed at its depth and
-magnitude, but observing a practicable descent went
-down, and roamed through its subterraneous passages.
-Many marvellous things, according to the
-mythos, did he there see, and among the rest a
-hollow brazen horse, with doors in its side, through
-which looking in, he beheld a colossal naked corpse,
-with a jewelled ring on its hand. Transferring this
-to his own finger Gyges departed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Shortly afterwards, still wearing the signet, he
-went to the assembly of shepherds, which met
-monthly, for the purpose of selecting a person to
-bear the usual report of the flocks to the king.
-Sitting down among the rest he happened to turn
-the beavil of his ring towards himself, upon which
-he became invisible to his companions,<a id='r1810' /><a href='#f1810' class='c012'><sup>[1810]</sup></a> as he clearly
-discovered from their discourse, which proceeded as
-if about an absent man. Smitten with much wonder
-he returned the gem to its former position and
-again became visible. He made the experiment
-over and over and always with success; upon which,
-like another Macbeth, a vast scheme of ambition
-darkly shadowed itself upon his mind, and a crown
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_411'>411</span>tinged slightly with blood swam before him. It
-does not, however, appear that like the Thane of
-Cawdor he was perplexed with scruples. He does
-not say,—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Why do I yield to that suggestion,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whose horrid image doth unfix my hair,</div>
- <div class='line'>And make my seated heart knock at my ribs,</div>
- <div class='line'>Against the use of nature? Present facts</div>
- <div class='line'>Are less than horrible imaginings.</div>
- <div class='line'>My thought whose murder’s yet but phantasy,</div>
- <div class='line'>Shakes so my single state of man, that function</div>
- <div class='line'>Is smothered in surmise, and nothing is,</div>
- <div class='line'>But what is not.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Gyges, with the ruthless resolution of an Oriental,
-forms his plan at once, and coolly works it out.
-He procures himself to be elected one of the mission
-to the king, and on arriving at the capital,
-dishonours the queen, murders his master, and ascends
-the throne.<a id='r1811' /><a href='#f1811' class='c012'><sup>[1811]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This may be regarded as a specimen of the shepherds’
-tales.<a id='r1812' /><a href='#f1812' class='c012'><sup>[1812]</sup></a> But they moved for the most part in
-an atmosphere of superstition, had ceremonies of
-their own, a mythology of their own, and of the
-whole the pervading spirit was love. In communities
-highly civilised, this passion commonly degenerates
-into a plaything, despised when weak, and
-mischievous when strong. It is otherwise in the
-early stages of society. There, in proportion to
-their freedom from the aspirations and anxieties of
-ambition, men seek happiness in the cultivation of
-the affections. The society of women is to them
-all in all. And the evils that infest them, disturb
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_412'>412</span>their quiet, and engender crime, spring, too, from
-the same bitter-sweet fountain, which flows with
-honey or gall according to the temper of those who
-drink of it. Consequently, in contemplating the
-pastoral life of Greece, we must beware not to
-overlook the shepherdesses,<a id='r1813' /><a href='#f1813' class='c012'><sup>[1813]</sup></a> those heroines of Bucolic
-poetry, whose freshness and nature still survive
-in Theocritus, and other fragments of antiquity,
-and may operate as an antidote to that insipid
-spawn whose loves and lamentations affect us
-like ipecacuanha in modern pastorals.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In these latitudes of society, at least, women enjoyed
-their freedom, and the glimpses presented to
-us of them as they there existed may be regarded
-among the chief charms of Greek poetry. Only,
-for example, observe the picture which Chæremon
-the Flower Poet, has delineated of a bevy of beautiful
-virgins sporting by moonlight:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“There one reclined apart I saw, within the moon’s pale light,</div>
- <div class='line'>With bosom through her parted robe appearing snowy white;</div>
- <div class='line'>Another danced, and floating free her garments in the breeze</div>
- <div class='line'>She seemed as buoyant as the wave that leaps o’er summer seas.</div>
- <div class='line'>While dusky shadows all around shrunk backward from the place,</div>
- <div class='line'>Chased by the beaming splendour shed like sunshine from her face:</div>
- <div class='line'>Beside this living picture stood a maiden passing fair</div>
- <div class='line'>With soft round arms exposed; a fourth with free and graceful air,</div>
- <div class='line'>Like Dian when the bounding hart she tracks through morning dew,</div>
- <div class='line'>Bared through the opening of her robes her lovely limbs to view.</div>
- <div class='line'>And oh! the image of her charms, as clouds in heaven above,</div>
- <div class='line'>Mirrored by streams, left on my soul the stamp of hopeless love.</div>
- <div class='line'>And slumbering near them others lay, on beds of sweetest flowers,</div>
- <div class='line'>The dusky petaled violet, the rose of Paphian bowers.</div>
- <div class='line'>The inula and saffron flower, which on their garments cast,</div>
- <div class='line'>And veils, such hues as deck the sky when day is ebbing fast;</div>
- <div class='line'>While far and near tall marjoram bedecked the fairy ground,</div>
- <div class='line'>Loading with sweets the vagrant winds that frolicked all around.”<a id='r1814' /><a href='#f1814' class='c012'><sup>[1814]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>In the ordinary bucolic poets women to be sure
-are sketched with a rude pencil, though coquettish
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_413'>413</span>as queens, of which we have an exemplification in
-the picture on the shepherd’s cup:<a id='r1815' /><a href='#f1815' class='c012'><sup>[1815]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>And there, by ivy shaded, sits a maid divinely wrought,</div>
- <div class='line'>With veil and circlet on her brows, by two fond lovers sought.</div>
- <div class='line'>Both beautiful with flowing hair, both sueing to be heard,</div>
- <div class='line'>On this side one, the other there, but neither is preferred.</div>
- <div class='line'>For now on this, on that anon, she pours her witching smile,</div>
- <div class='line'>Like sunshine on the buds of hope, in falsehood all and guile,</div>
- <div class='line'>Though ceaselessly, with swelling eyes, they seek her heart to move,</div>
- <div class='line'>By every soft and touching art that wins a maiden’s love.<a id='r1816' /><a href='#f1816' class='c012'><sup>[1816]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>There is here no straining after the ideal. Like
-Titian’s beauties, these shepherdesses are all creatures
-of this earth, filled with robust health, dark-eyed,
-warm, impassioned, and somewhat deficient in
-reserve. They understand well how to act their
-part in a dialogue. For every bolt shot at them
-they can return another as keen. Each bower and
-bosky bourne seems redolent of their smiles; their
-laughter awakens the echoes; their ruddy lips and
-pearly teeth hang like a vision over every bubbling
-spring and love-hiding thicket which they were wont
-to frequent. Hence the charm of Theocritus. And
-a still stronger charm perhaps would have belonged
-to the pages of him who should have painted the
-shepherd’s life of a remoter age,<a id='r1817' /><a href='#f1817' class='c012'><sup>[1817]</sup></a> when none were
-above such an occupation, which therefore united
-at once all the dignity of lofty independence with
-the careless freedom of manners and unapprehensive
-enjoyment in which consists the secret source of all
-the pleasure which rustic pictures afford. Most of
-his creations, though not all, are in this respect wanting.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_414'>414</span>Ideas of penury<a id='r1818' /><a href='#f1818' class='c012'><sup>[1818]</sup></a> slip in, and, in the midst of
-rich poetry, check the developement of pleasurable
-feelings. For the musical swains, though apparently
-ambitious of nought but the reputation of song, permit
-us to discover, that they are but hirelings tending
-flocks not their own. The contrast between persons
-of this class and those who are owners of the sheep
-they tend, is forcibly pointed out in the sacred language
-of Christ: “I am the good shepherd: the
-good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep. But
-he that is an hireling and not the shepherd and
-whose own the sheep are not, seeth the wolf
-coming, and leaveth the sheep and fleeth, and
-the wolf catcheth them and scattereth the sheep.
-The hireling fleeth because he is a hireling, and
-careth not for the sheep. I am the good shepherd
-and know my sheep and am known of mine.
-As the Father knoweth me even so know I the
-Father; and I lay down my life for the sheep.”<a id='r1819' /><a href='#f1819' class='c012'><sup>[1819]</sup></a>
-The same affectionate tenderness is attributed to
-shepherds in the prophetic writings: “he shall feed
-his flocks like a shepherd, he shall gather the
-lambs with his arm, and carry them in his bosom,
-and shall gently lead those that are with young.”<a id='r1820' /><a href='#f1820' class='c012'><sup>[1820]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the matter of virtues and vices, the shepherds
-of antiquity were very much, no doubt, like other
-men. Their habits were such as grew naturally out
-of their position. Towards whatever their feelings led
-them they proceeded vehemently, and with that singleness
-of purpose which belongs to men of simple
-and decided character.<a id='r1821' /><a href='#f1821' class='c012'><sup>[1821]</sup></a> They were too commonly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_415'>415</span>creatures of mere impulse. From the peculiar form of
-their communion with nature, which, like the masses
-of Egyptian architecture, was continued and monotonous,
-they acquired a peculiarity of mental temperament,
-warm, as it were, in parts, and cold in
-parts. Every circumstance around them tended to
-rouse, pique, and inflame the passion of desire and
-its concomitants; the pairing of their flocks, of
-the birds, of the very wild beasts whose courage or
-ferocity they dreaded; their own leisure combined
-with the excess of health, the influence of climate,
-the solicitations of opportunity, impelled them into
-excess; and, accordingly, their morals in this respect
-sank to a low standard, and rendered them any
-thing but models of the golden age. The intellect
-of course was comparatively little cultivated; and
-there being no other check upon the feelings, suicides,
-murders of jealousy, and other evidences of
-ill-regulated passion would often occur.<a id='r1822' /><a href='#f1822' class='c012'><sup>[1822]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But, in proportion as we pierce further back into
-antiquity, these tragical incidents become fewer: not
-merely because our knowledge of those ages is more
-scanty, but that in ruder times morality is comparatively
-lax, and men’s taste less fastidious. The
-rigid laws of marriage were then little observed.
-Women passed from husband to husband without
-losing character or caste; and when they produced
-illegitimate offspring attributed the paternity to some
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_416'>416</span>god, and scarcely considered the circumstance a misfortune.
-Half the princes of the Homeric age were
-illegitimate; for this is what is always meant by
-saying they were descended from the gods. Æneas
-was the son of some young woman whom Anchises
-met on the mountains, where he pastured his father’s
-flocks and pretended to have been loved by
-Aphrodite.<a id='r1823' /><a href='#f1823' class='c012'><sup>[1823]</sup></a> Persons so circumstanced were, doubtless,
-capable of much romance. Nymphs and goddesses
-peopled their imagination, and their imagination
-let loose its brood upon the woods. Poets
-afterwards, able to infuse a soul into these rustic
-traditions, gave a local habitation and a name to
-every beautiful legend they could collect. Hence
-that sunny picture, the interview of Aphrodite and
-Anchises amid the lofty recesses, the grassy slopes,
-the sparkling leaping brooks, and old umbrageous
-forests of Mount Ida. Already, however, the force
-of dress was known, which Montaigne afterwards
-celebrated; for the Homeric bard, about to record
-an interview between the goddess and her shepherd-lover,
-instead of supposing her to have been</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“When unadorned, adorned the most,”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>describes all the arts of a luxurious toilette.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The picture, however, of pastoral life which he
-suggests rather than describes, is worked out with
-strokes of great simplicity. All the other herdsmen
-disperse in the execution of their several duties,
-leaving Anchises alone in the cattle-sheds,<a id='r1824' /><a href='#f1824' class='c012'><sup>[1824]</sup></a>
-spacious in dimensions, and tastefully erected, where
-he amuses his solitary leisure with the music of the
-cithara. While thus engaged he beholds the approach
-of the goddess,<a id='r1825' /><a href='#f1825' class='c012'><sup>[1825]</sup></a> and is at once struck with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_417'>417</span>her beauty and the splendour of her raiment. At
-the unearthly vision his love is kindled; but the
-poet, skilled in the mysteries of the heart, chastens
-his passion by overmastering feelings of reverence,
-such as necessarily belong to unsophisticated youth.
-Anchises constitutes, indeed, the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>beau idéal</i></span> of an
-heroic shepherd, simple, high-minded, ingenuous,
-venturous and fearless in contests with man or
-beast, but in his intercourse with woman gentle, reverent,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“And of his port as meek as is a maid.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>In fact, the gallant knights of romance seem rather
-to have been modelled after the heroic warriors of
-Greece, than from any realities supplied by the chivalrous
-ages. The author of the Hymn is careful
-in describing the shepherd’s couch, to insinuate with
-how great strength and courage he was endowed.
-He reclines, we are told, on skins of bears and
-lions slain by his own hand, though over these
-there were cast, for show, garments of the softest
-texture.<a id='r1826' /><a href='#f1826' class='c012'><sup>[1826]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Throughout this work it has been seen how the influence
-of climate and position concurred in the formation
-of the Greek character. We may ourselves
-put the doctrine to the proof by observing the effect
-upon our minds of those reflections of landscapes which
-appear in language; rude Boreal scenes exciting the
-spirit of contention and energy; while the soft valleys,
-groves, and odoriferous gardens of the South
-produce a calm upon our thoughts favourable to the
-more benevolent emotions. Hellenic shepherds,
-therefore, no other causes preventing, may upon
-the whole be supposed to have been humane.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_418'>418</span>Indeed, the very curious adventures of a sophist,<a id='r1827' /><a href='#f1827' class='c012'><sup>[1827]</sup></a>
-in the mountains of Eubœa, preserved among the
-literary wrecks of antiquity, open up to our view
-a picture of pastoral life which, in spite of much
-rudeness and indigence, exhibits the Greek character
-in its original roughness and simplicity, full of
-kindness, full of gentleness, full of hospitable propensities,
-which would do honour to the noblest
-Arab Sheikh. And the material scene itself, in
-every feature Grecian, harmonises exactly with the
-moral landscape.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The eastern shores of the island of Negropont,
-beetled over by Mount Caphareus,<a id='r1828' /><a href='#f1828' class='c012'><sup>[1828]</sup></a> and indented by
-no creeks or harbours, were in antiquity infamous
-for shipwrecks, notwithstanding that they formed
-the principal station of the purple fishers.<a id='r1829' /><a href='#f1829' class='c012'><sup>[1829]</sup></a> Cast
-away on this coast, the sophist Dion, for his eloquence
-surnamed of the golden-mouth, fell in with
-a pastoral hunter who, entertaining him generously,
-furnished at the same time a complete idea of the
-rude herdsman, who preserved in the vicinity of the
-highest civilisation known to the old world the simplicity
-of the Homeric Abantes.<a id='r1830' /><a href='#f1830' class='c012'><sup>[1830]</sup></a> Nay, this wild
-sportsman, pursuing with his huge dogs a stag along
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_419'>419</span>the cliffs, powerful in limb, hale in colour, and with
-long hair streaming over his shoulders, appeared to
-be the natural descendant of those Heroic warriors.<a id='r1831' /><a href='#f1831' class='c012'><sup>[1831]</sup></a>
-Armed with his hunting-knife, he flays and cuts up
-the stag upon the spot, and taking along with him
-the skin and choicest pieces of venison abandons the
-remainder on the beach. As they go along he displays
-the knowledge wherewith experience stores
-the rustic mind. He understands the signs of the
-weather, and from the clouds which cap the summits
-of Caphareus foretells how long the sea will
-continue unnavigable.<a id='r1832' /><a href='#f1832' class='c012'><sup>[1832]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Rude as an American backwoodsman, he was precipitated,
-by the rare luck of meeting with a stranger,
-into equal inquisitiveness and garrulity. He put
-questions without waiting for an answer. He gossipped
-of his own concerns; explained without being
-asked the whole economy of his life; and exhibited
-all that enthusiasm of beneficence which belongs to
-human nature when uncorrupted by the thirst of
-gold. There is a rare truth in the description; far
-too much ever to have graced a sophist’s tale, unless
-nature had supplied the model.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“There are two of us,” says he, “who inhabit together
-the same rude nook, having married sisters,
-by whom we have both sons and daughters. We
-derive our subsistence principally from the chase,
-paying but little attention to agriculture, since we
-have no land of our own. Nor were our fathers
-better off in this respect than ourselves; for, though
-freeborn citizens, they were poor, and by their condition
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_420'>420</span>constrained to tend the herds of another,
-a man of great property, owning vast droves of
-cattle, numerous horses and sheep, several beautiful
-estates, with many other possessions, and all
-these mountains as far as you can see. This opulence,
-however, became his ruin. For the emperor,
-casting a covetous eye upon his domains, put him
-to death, that he might have a pretext for seizing
-on them. Our few beasts went along with our
-master’s, and the wages due to us there was no
-one to pay.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Here, therefore, of necessity we remained<a id='r1833' /><a href='#f1833' class='c012'><sup>[1833]</sup></a> where
-two or three huts were left us, with a slight wooden
-shed in which the calves had been housed in the summer
-nights.<a id='r1834' /><a href='#f1834' class='c012'><sup>[1834]</sup></a> For, during winter, we had been used to
-descend for pasture to the plains where, in the proper
-season, stores of hay were also laid up; but
-with the re-appearance of summer we returned again
-to the mountains. The spot which had formed our
-principal station now became our fixed dwelling.
-Branching off on either hand is a deep and shady
-valley, having in the middle a rivulet so shallow as
-to be easily traversed, both by cattle and their young.
-This stream, flowing from a spring hard by, is pure
-and perennial and cooled by the summer wind blowing
-perpetually up the ravine. The encircling forests
-of oak stretch forth their boughs far above, over a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_421'>421</span>carpet of soft verdure, which descends with a gentle
-slope into the stream, giving birth to a few gad-flies,<a id='r1835' /><a href='#f1835' class='c012'><sup>[1835]</sup></a>
-or any other insect hurtful to herds. Extending
-around are numerous lovely meadows, dotted with
-lofty trees, where the grass is green and luxuriant
-throughout the year.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The eloquence of this description, I mean in the
-original, is not unworthy to be compared with that
-in the Phædrus<a id='r1836' /><a href='#f1836' class='c012'><sup>[1836]</sup></a> which has given eternal bloom to
-the platane-tree and agnus castus on the banks of
-the Ilissos.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The conversion of these herdsmen into hunters
-is narrated by Dion with a patient simplicity worthy
-of Defoe. An air of solitude, snatched from Robinson
-Crusoe’s island, seems to breathe at his bidding
-over Eubœa. The same education operates strange
-changes both in man and dog; and bringing them
-into hostile contact with wolves, wild boars, stags,
-and other large animals, gives the latter a taste for
-blood, and renders him fierce and destructive. Subsisting
-by the chase, they pursued it summer and
-winter, following both hares and fallow-deer by their
-tracks in the snow. In their intervals of leisure
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_422'>422</span>they strengthened and beautified their dwellings,
-saw their children intermarry and grow up to succeed
-them, without even once approaching any city
-or even village.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The style of hospitality prevalent among such men
-in antiquity differs very little from that which one
-would now find in the hut of a good-natured Albanian.<a id='r1837' /><a href='#f1837' class='c012'><sup>[1837]</sup></a>
-Their industry rendered them independent,
-and their independence rendered them generous. By
-degrees their rustic cottages were surrounded by a
-garden and fruit-trees, their court was walled in,
-and luxuriant vines hung their foliage and purple
-fruit over windows and porch. On the arrival of a
-stranger, the wife takes her station at table beside
-her husband. Their marriageable daughter, in the
-bloom and beauty of youth, aids her brothers in
-waiting at table, where host and guest recline on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_423'>423</span>highly raised divans of leaves covered with the skins of
-beasts. The young maiden, like a rustic Hebe, pours
-out the wine, dark and fragrant, while the youths
-served up the dishes and then laid out a table for
-themselves and dined together. And the sophist,
-versed in the courts of satraps and kings, conceived
-these rude hunters of the mountains the happiest
-and most enviable of mankind.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But a pastoral picture is incomplete without love.
-The youthful beauty of Caphareus, hidden, like
-another Nouronihar<a id='r1838' /><a href='#f1838' class='c012'><sup>[1838]</sup></a> from the world, is accordingly
-beloved by her cousin, an adventurous hunter like
-her sire, who joins the family circle in the evening,
-accompanied by his father, bringing in his hand a hare
-as a present to his mistress. The old man salutes
-the guest, the youth offers his present with a kiss,
-and immediately undertakes the office of the girl,
-who thereupon resumes her place beside her mother.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Observing this arrangement, the stranger inquires
-whether she is not soon to be married to some
-wealthy peasant, who might benefit the family,
-upon which the youth and maiden blush, and her
-father replies,</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Nay, but she will take a husband, humble in
-rank, and like ourselves a hunter,” glancing at the
-same time at the lover.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“How is it then that you wait?” inquired the
-stranger. “Do you expect him from the village?”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“No,” answered the father, “he is not far off;
-and so soon as we can fix upon a fortunate day
-the nuptials will be celebrated.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“And by what do you judge of a fortunate day?”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“The moon must be approaching the full, the
-weather fair, and the atmosphere transparent.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“And is the youth in reality an able hunter?”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“I am,” said the young man, answering for himself,
-“in the chase of the stag or boar, as you
-yourself, if you please, shall judge <a id='corr423.38'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='to-morrow”'>to-morrow.”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_423.38'><ins class='correction' title='to-morrow”'>to-morrow.”</ins></a></span></p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_424'>424</span>“And did you take this hare, my friend?”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“I did,” replied he with a smile, “having set a
-gin for him by night;<a id='r1839' /><a href='#f1839' class='c012'><sup>[1839]</sup></a> the weather being surpassing
-beautiful, and the moon larger than it
-ever was before.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Upon this both the old men laughed, and the
-lover abashed held his peace.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“But,” observed the father of the maiden, “it
-is no fault of mine that the solemnity is deferred;
-we only wait at your father’s desire, till a victim
-can be purchased; for a sacrifice must be offered
-to the gods.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“With respect to the victim,” interposed the
-maiden’s younger brother, “he has long provided
-one, and a noble one too, which is now feeding
-behind the cottage.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“And is it truly so?” demanded the old man.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“It is,” replied the lad.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“And where,” addressing the youth, “did you
-procure it?” inquired they.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“When we took the wild sow,<a id='r1840' /><a href='#f1840' class='c012'><sup>[1840]</sup></a> which was followed
-by her litter,” answered he, “and the greater
-number, swifter than hares, made their escape; I
-hit one with a stone, and my companions coming
-up threw a skin over him. This I secured, and
-exchanged in the village for a young domestic
-pig which has been fatted in a sty behind the
-house.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“I now understand,” exclaimed the father, “the
-cause of your mother’s mirth when I would wonder
-what that grunting could be, and how the
-barley was disappearing so fast.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Nevertheless,” observed the young man, “to be
-properly fatted our Eubœan swine require acorns.<a id='r1841' /><a href='#f1841' class='c012'><sup>[1841]</sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_425'>425</span>However, if you will just step this way I will
-show her to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Upon which off they went, the boys quite at a
-run, and in vast glee.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the meantime, the maiden going into the
-other cottage, brought forth a quantity of split service-berries,<a id='r1842' /><a href='#f1842' class='c012'><sup>[1842]</sup></a>
-medlars,<a id='r1843' /><a href='#f1843' class='c012'><sup>[1843]</sup></a> and winter apples, and bunches
-of superb grapes, bursting ripe,<a id='r1844' /><a href='#f1844' class='c012'><sup>[1844]</sup></a> and, brushing down
-the table, she spread them out there upon a layer
-of clean fern. Next moment the lads returned
-bringing in the pig, with much joking and shouts
-of laughter. Then came, too, the young man’s mother,
-with two of his little brothers, and they brought
-along with them nice white loaves, with boiled eggs
-in wooden salvers, with a quantity of parched peas.
-Having embraced her brother, with his wife and
-daughter, she sat down beside her husband, and
-said,</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Behold the victim, which my son has long fed
-for his marriage, and the other things also are
-ready; both the barley-meal and the flour. A
-little wine, perhaps, may be wanting, but even
-this we can easily procure from the village.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And her son standing near her, fixed his eyes
-wistfully upon his father-in-law.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The latter smilingly observed,—</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“All delay now is on the lover’s part, who, perhaps,
-is anxious to fatten his pig.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_426'>426</span>“As to her,” said the youth, “she is bursting with
-fat.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Upon this the sophist, willing to aid the lover,
-interposed, and remarked,—</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“But you must take care lest while the pig is
-fattening he himself grow thin.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“The stranger’s remark is just,” said his mother;
-“for already he is more meagre than he used to be;
-and I have of late observed him to be wakeful at
-night, and to go forth from the cottage.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Oh! that,” said he, “was when the dogs barked,
-and I stepped out to see what was the matter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Not you!” said his mother,—“but went moping
-about. Let us, therefore,” continued she, “put him
-to no further trial.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And throwing her arms about her sister, the maiden’s
-mother, she kissed her; whereupon the latter,
-addressing her husband, said,—</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>“Let us grant them their desire.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To which he agreed; and it was resolved, that the
-marriage should be solemnized in three days, the
-stranger being invited to remain and witness it, which
-he did.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The above picture of an obscure herdsman’s life
-in its naked simplicity, void of all embellishment,
-will probably be thought more trustworthy than the
-elaborate descriptions of the poets, notwithstanding
-that, even in these, it is easy to separate the real
-from the fictitious.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the estimation of the Greeks the herdsman<a id='r1845' /><a href='#f1845' class='c012'><sup>[1845]</sup></a>
-commonly ranked before the shepherd, and the latter
-before the goatherd,—for the dream of rank pursues
-mankind even amid the quiet of the fields,—and
-their manners are supposed to have corresponded.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_427'>427</span>Pollux,<a id='r1846' /><a href='#f1846' class='c012'><sup>[1846]</sup></a> however, reckons the goatherd next after
-the herdsman, and again inverts the order. Varro,
-on the other hand, gives precedence to the shepherd
-as the most ancient, the sheep, in his opinion, having
-been the animal earliest tamed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In point of utility the goat, in some parts of the
-ancient world, rivalled the sheep, producing fine hair
-which was shorn like wool.<a id='r1847' /><a href='#f1847' class='c012'><sup>[1847]</sup></a> I may remark, too, in
-passing, that the large-tailed sheep still common in
-Asia Minor, as well as at the Cape, were anciently
-plentiful in Syria, where, according to the great
-naturalist,<a id='r1848' /><a href='#f1848' class='c012'><sup>[1848]</sup></a> their tails attained a cubit in breadth.
-In some parts of Arabia another more curious breed
-was found, with tails three cubits in length, to carry
-which they were supplied by the ingenuity of the
-shepherds with wooden carriages.<a id='r1849' /><a href='#f1849' class='c012'><sup>[1849]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In most parts of Greece, as well as in the East,
-it was customary to bring home the sheep from pasture
-towards evening, and shut them up for the night
-in warm and roomy cotes, which were surrounded by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_428'>428</span>wattled fences,<a id='r1850' /><a href='#f1850' class='c012'><sup>[1850]</sup></a> strong and high, both to prevent
-them from leaping over, and to exclude the wild
-beasts which, in remoter ages, abounded in the mountains.
-They were carefully roofed over, and every
-other precaution was taken to render them perfectly
-dry, the floor being usually pitched with stones, and
-slightly inclined. Their bedding<a id='r1851' /><a href='#f1851' class='c012'><sup>[1851]</sup></a> consisted of calaminth
-and asphodel and pennyroyal and polion (a
-sort of herb whose leaves appear white in the morning,
-of a purple colour at noon, and blue when the
-sun sets<a id='r1852' /><a href='#f1852' class='c012'><sup>[1852]</sup></a>) and fleabane and southernwood and origany,<a id='r1853' /><a href='#f1853' class='c012'><sup>[1853]</sup></a>
-all which repel vermin. The more completely
-to effect the same purpose, they were, likewise, in
-the habit of fumigating the cotes from time to time,
-by burning in them several locks of some shepherdess’s
-hair,<a id='r1854' /><a href='#f1854' class='c012'><sup>[1854]</sup></a> together with gum ammoniac, hartshorn, the
-hoofs or hair of goats, bitumen, cassia, fleabane, or
-calaminth, for the smell of which serpents were
-thought to have a peculiar aversion.<a id='r1855' /><a href='#f1855' class='c012'><sup>[1855]</sup></a> Their ordinary
-food, while in the folds, consisted of green clover and
-cytisus, fenugreek, oaten and barley straw, and vegetable
-stalks,<a id='r1856' /><a href='#f1856' class='c012'><sup>[1856]</sup></a> which were supposed to be improved
-if sprinkled on the threshing-floor with brine, figs
-blown down by the wind, and dry leaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_429'>429</span>In the short and sharp days of winter,<a id='r1857' /><a href='#f1857' class='c012'><sup>[1857]</sup></a> they were
-not led forth to pasture till both the dew and
-the hoar frost had disappeared; but in summer
-the shepherds were careful to be a-field with the
-dawn while the dew was still heavy on the grass.
-In Attica<a id='r1858' /><a href='#f1858' class='c012'><sup>[1858]</sup></a> and the environs of Miletus, where was
-produced the finest and costliest wool in the ancient
-world, the sheep<a id='r1859' /><a href='#f1859' class='c012'><sup>[1859]</sup></a> were protected from rain
-and dust and brambles and whatever else could
-damage their fleeces<a id='r1860' /><a href='#f1860' class='c012'><sup>[1860]</sup></a> by housings of purple leather.<a id='r1861' /><a href='#f1861' class='c012'><sup>[1861]</sup></a>
-The same practice prevailed also in the Megaris,
-where Diogenes beholding a flock of sheep<a id='r1862' /><a href='#f1862' class='c012'><sup>[1862]</sup></a> thus
-clad, while the children, like those of the Egyptian
-peasants were suffered to run about naked,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_430'>430</span>said, “It is better to be a Megarean’s ram
-than his son.” Ælian<a id='r1863' /><a href='#f1863' class='c012'><sup>[1863]</sup></a> alludes to this saying for
-the purpose of noticing the ignorance and want of
-education prevalent among the Megareans. We
-find likewise in Plutarch<a id='r1864' /><a href='#f1864' class='c012'><sup>[1864]</sup></a> another version of the
-anecdote taxing these Dorians with avarice and
-meanness. Augustus imitated the saying of Diogenes
-and applied it to Herod, hearing of whose
-cruelty to his family, he said, “It were better to be
-Herod’s hog than his son.”<a id='r1865' /><a href='#f1865' class='c012'><sup>[1865]</sup></a> But if the Megareans
-lived poorly they built grandly: so that of them it
-was said, that they ate as if they were to die to-morrow,
-and built as if they were to live for ever.<a id='r1866' /><a href='#f1866' class='c012'><sup>[1866]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Sheep, as most persons familiar with the country
-will probably have observed, are wont in hot summer
-days to retire during the prevalence of the sun’s
-greatest heat beneath the shade of spreading trees,<a id='r1867' /><a href='#f1867' class='c012'><sup>[1867]</sup></a>
-at which time a green sweep of uplands dotted
-with antique oaks or beeches,<a id='r1868' /><a href='#f1868' class='c012'><sup>[1868]</sup></a> each with its stem
-encircled by some portion of the flock reposing upon
-their own fleeces, presents a picture of singular beauty
-and tranquillity. The picturesque features of the
-scene were in old times enhanced by the addition
-of several accompaniments now nowhere to be found,
-consisting of statues, altars, or chapels, erected in
-honour of the rural gods or nymphs.<a id='r1869' /><a href='#f1869' class='c012'><sup>[1869]</sup></a> Fountains,
-moreover, of limpid water<a id='r1870' /><a href='#f1870' class='c012'><sup>[1870]</sup></a> in many places gushed
-forth from beneath the trees, where there were usually
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_431'>431</span>a number of seats for the accommodation of
-the shepherds and shepherdesses. In these retreats
-they generally passed the sultry hours of the
-day, playing on the pastoral flute or the syrinx,
-chanting their wild lays, or amusing each other
-by the relation of those strange legends which inhabited
-the woods and lonely mountains of Greece.<a id='r1871' /><a href='#f1871' class='c012'><sup>[1871]</sup></a>
-There prevailed among them a superstition against
-disturbing by their music or otherwise that hushed
-stillness which most persons must have observed
-to characterise the summer noon. At this hour of
-the day the God Pan,<a id='r1872' /><a href='#f1872' class='c012'><sup>[1872]</sup></a> in the opinion of Greek
-shepherds, took his rest after the toils of the chase,
-reclining under a tree in the solitary forest;<a id='r1873' /><a href='#f1873' class='c012'><sup>[1873]</sup></a> and,
-as he was held to be of a hasty choleric disposition,
-they abstained at that time from piping through
-fear of provoking his anger. The other Gods likewise
-were believed to enjoy a short sleep at this
-time, as we find in the case of the nymph Aura, in
-the Dionysiacs.<a id='r1874' /><a href='#f1874' class='c012'><sup>[1874]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>From a passage in St. John’s gospel it would
-appear, that the practice prevailed among the Oriental
-shepherds of distinguishing the several members
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_432'>432</span>of their flocks by separate names: “The sheep
-hear his voice, and he calleth his own sheep by
-name and leadeth them out. And when he putteth
-forth his own sheep he goeth before them,
-and the sheep follow him, for they know his voice.”
-We likewise find traces of the same custom in
-Sicily, Crete, and various other parts of Greece,
-where goats, and heifers, and sheep, enjoyed the
-privilege of a name, as Cynœtha, Amalthea, and
-others. In later times it was judged preferable,
-that the flock should follow their shepherds by the
-eye, for which reason they were accustomed to stuff
-their ears with wool.<a id='r1875' /><a href='#f1875' class='c012'><sup>[1875]</sup></a> To prevent rams from butting,
-they used to bore a hole<a id='r1876' /><a href='#f1876' class='c012'><sup>[1876]</sup></a> through their horns
-near the roots. Sheep were generally shorn<a id='r1877' /><a href='#f1877' class='c012'><sup>[1877]</sup></a> during
-the month of May, and after the wool had been
-clipped, they were commonly anointed with wine,
-oil, and the juice of bitter lupins.<a id='r1878' /><a href='#f1878' class='c012'><sup>[1878]</sup></a> In remoter ages
-the practice prevailed of plucking off the wool instead
-of shearing it; and this barbarous method, at
-once so painful to the sheep and so laborious to
-the shepherd, had not been entirely abandoned in
-the age of Pliny.<a id='r1879' /><a href='#f1879' class='c012'><sup>[1879]</sup></a> It was a rule among the
-pastoral tribes, that the number of their flocks
-should be uneven.<a id='r1880' /><a href='#f1880' class='c012'><sup>[1880]</sup></a> The shepherds of Greece bestowed
-the name of Sekitai,<a id='r1881' /><a href='#f1881' class='c012'><sup>[1881]</sup></a> (from σηκος an enclosure)
-upon lambs taken early from the ewes, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_433'>433</span>fed by hand. They were usually kept in a cote
-apart from the other sheep.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As flocks, in most parts of Greece, were exposed
-to the rapacity of the wolf,<a id='r1882' /><a href='#f1882' class='c012'><sup>[1882]</sup></a> the shepherds had recourse
-to an extraordinary contrivance, to destroy
-this fierce animal; kindling large charcoal fires in
-open spaces in the woods, they cast thereon the
-powder of certain diminutive fish, caught in great
-numbers along the grassy shores of Greece, together
-with small slices of lamb and kid. Attracted by
-the savour which they could snuff from a distance,
-the wolves flocked in great numbers towards the
-fires, round which they prowled with loud howlings,
-in expectation of sharing the prey, the odour of
-which had drawn them thither. Stupified at length
-by the fumes of the charcoal, they would drop upon
-the earth in a lethargic sleep, when the shepherds
-coming up knocked them on the head.<a id='r1883' /><a href='#f1883' class='c012'><sup>[1883]</sup></a></p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1777'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1777'>1777</a>. The charm of that repose
-and freedom from care supposed
-to be tasted in the seclusion of
-the country, appears in all ages
-to have led to the belief, that
-there is something more natural
-in fields and forests than in cities,
-though it be quite as necessary
-that man should have dwellings
-as that he should cultivate the
-ground. The paradox, however,
-is thus expressed by Varro: Divina
-natura dedit agros, ars humana
-ædificavit urbes. De Re
-Rust. iii. 1, which Cowper, unconsciously
-perhaps, has thus
-translated,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>God gave the country, but man made the town.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1778'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1778'>1778</a>. Travellers find among the
-modern shepherds of the East
-much the same tastes and habits.
-“The hills,” observed Dr. Chandler,
-speaking of Lydia, “were
-enlivened by flocks of sheep and
-goats, and resounded with the
-rude music of the lyre and of
-the pipe; the former a stringed
-instrument resembling a guitar,
-and held much in the same
-manner, but usually played on
-with a bow.” Chandler, i. p.
-85. Cf. Theocrit. Eidyll. i. 7.
-viii. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1779'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1779'>1779</a>. The same habits still prevail:
-“We could discern fires on Lesbos
-as before on several islands and
-capes, made chiefly by fishermen
-and shepherds, who live much
-abroad in the air, to burn the
-strong stalks of the Turkey wheat
-and the dry herbage on the mountains.”
-Chandler, i. 11. Cf. p.
-320.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1780'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1780'>1780</a>. Among other things we find
-them putting the strongest faith
-in dreams—at least we may suppose
-the fishermen in Theocritus,
-who lay so much stress on the
-visions of the night, to hold a
-creed pretty nearly akin to that
-of shepherds. Eidyll. 21. v. 29.
-sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1781'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1781'>1781</a>. The gods they principally
-worshiped were Pan, the Muses,
-and the Nymphs. To the
-Nymphs and Pan they sacrificed
-as to gods presiding over mountains,
-where they themselves
-usually wandered. Pan, moreover,
-was skilled in the pipe, the
-instrument of their race. The
-Muses they adored as the goddesses
-of poetry and music. Schol.
-Theoc. i. 6. In verse 12 of the
-same Eidyll. the Nymphs are
-spoken of where the office of the
-Muses is in contemplation, which
-may easily be explained. For
-the Muses are properly the
-Nymphs of those fountains which
-inspire poets with their lays. Cf.
-Voss. ad Virg. Eclog. iii. 84.
-By the Lydians the Muses were
-denominated Nymphs. Schol.
-Theoc. Eidyll. vii. 92. Cf. Eidyll.
-v. 140. Lyc. Cassand. 274.
-ibique Schol. et Potter. Kiessl. ad
-Theocrit.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1782'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1782'>1782</a>. Lycoph. Cassand. 91, seq. in
-common with Homer and the
-other ancient poets, represent
-princes as shepherds. The guarding
-of flocks was then, in fact, a
-regal occupation. Didymos, ad
-Odyss. ν. 223, observes, that τὸ
-παλαιὸν καὶ οἱ τῶν βασιλέων παίδες
-πανάπαλοι (l. παναίπολοι)
-ἐκαλοῦντο, καὶ ἐποίμαινον. Meurs.
-ad Lycoph. p. 1181. Varr. De
-Re Rust. ii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1783'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1783'>1783</a>. Il. ζ. 25. Odyss. ο. 385, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1784'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1784'>1784</a>. Il. δ. 106.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1785'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1785'>1785</a>. Iliad. δ. 452, seq. ε. 137.
-θ, 555.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1786'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1786'>1786</a>. The following picture by
-Milton almost seems to be designed
-to form a contrast to the
-above:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>As when from mountain-tops the dusky clouds</div>
- <div class='line'>Ascending, while the north wind sleeps, o’erspread</div>
- <div class='line'>Heaven’s cheerful face, the lowring element</div>
- <div class='line'>Scowls o’er the darken’d landscape snow or shower;</div>
- <div class='line'>If chance the radiant sun, with farewell sweet,</div>
- <div class='line'>Extend his evening beam, the fields revive,</div>
- <div class='line'>The birds their notes renew, and bleating herds</div>
- <div class='line'>Attest their joy, that hill and valley rings.</div>
- <div class='line in26'>Parad. Lost, ii. 488, sqq.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Iliad θ. 559, sqq. Here <em>shepherd</em>,
-observes the Scholiast, is
-used for <em>herdsman</em>. Ποιμήν εἶπεν
-ἀντὶ τοῦ βουκόλος διὰ νυκτὸς γὰρ
-αἱ βόες νέμονται, in loc. i. 238.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1787'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1787'>1787</a>. On this passage Ἀρίσταρχος
-τὴν κατὰ φύσιν λαμπρὰν λέγει
-κἂν μὴ πλήθουσα ᾖ εἰ γὰρ
-πληροσέληνος ἦν, ἐκέκρυπτο ἄν μᾶλλον
-τὰ ἄστρα. Schol. Bekker.
-t. i. 238. Cf. Eustath. in Iliad.
-θ. t. i. p. 621.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1788'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1788'>1788</a>. Iliad, μ. 451, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1789'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1789'>1789</a>. Iliad, ν. 491, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1790'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1790'>1790</a>. Iliad. π. 354, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1791'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1791'>1791</a>. Iliad. σ. 161, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1792'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1792'>1792</a>. Odyss. μ. 131. The duties
-of this servant are described by
-Varro, who likewise states the
-physical qualities required to
-be found in shepherds. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Contra,
-pernoctare ad suum quemque
-gregem esse omnes sub
-uno magistro pecoris cum esse
-majorem natu potius quàm alios
-et peritiorem quàm reliquos, quod
-iis qui ætate, et scientia præstant
-animo æquiore reliquis parent.
-Ita tamen oportet ætate
-præstare ut ne propter senectutem
-minus sustinere possit labores.
-Neque enim senes, neque
-pueri callium difficultatem, ac
-montium arduitatem, atque asperitatem
-facile ferunt: quod patiendum
-illis qui greges sequuntur
-præsertim armenticios, ac caprinos
-quibus rupes ac silvæ ad
-pabulandi cordi.</span> De Re Rust,
-ii. 10. Cf. Colum. ii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1793'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1793'>1793</a>. Geop. xviii. 1. Yet we find
-mention in Demosthenes of a
-shepherd with a flock of fifty
-sheep under his care. In Everg.
-et Mnes. § 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1794'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1794'>1794</a>. Leake, Travels in the Morea,
-vol. i. p. 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1795'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1795'>1795</a>. Plat. de Rep. iv. t. vi. p.
-204. Columella describes with
-poetical enthusiasm the character
-and qualities of the shepherd’s
-dog, which he refuses to
-class among dumb animals, its
-bark being, according to him, full
-of meaning: <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Canis falso dicitur
-mutus custos nam quis hominum
-clarius, aut tanta vociferatione
-bestiam vel furem prædicat
-quam iste latratu? quis
-famulus amantior domini? quis
-fidelior comes? quis custos incorruptior?
-quis excubitor inveniri
-potest vigilantior? quis denique
-ultor aut vindex constantior?
-Quare vel in primis hoc animal
-mercari tuerique debet agricola,
-quod et villam et fructus familiamque,
-at pecora custodit.”</span>
-De Re Rusticâ, 7. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1796'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1796'>1796</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 897.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1797'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1797'>1797</a>. Aristot. Hist. Animal. ix. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1798'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1798'>1798</a>. Luc. Bis Accus. § 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1799'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1799'>1799</a>. Plat. Rep. iii. § 10. Stalb.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1800'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1800'>1800</a>. Theocrit. i. 129. Plat. de
-Rep. t. vi. p. 132. Mosch. Eidyll.
-iii. 54.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1801'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1801'>1801</a>. Athen. xiv. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1802'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1802'>1802</a>. Etym. Mag. 690. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1803'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1803'>1803</a>. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Sic et hodie audio Hibernos,
-qui pecuariam exercent, musicæ
-deditos, et triangulari cithara
-(quam vocamus <em>harpe</em>) plerumque
-se oblectare solere, unde
-aiunt insignia regni Hiberniæ
-fuisse olim et esse adhuc tale
-musicum instrumentum.”</span> Desc.
-Græc. Ant. p. 61.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1804'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1804'>1804</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 73.
-Cf. Vesp. 442. Küst.—Eq. 398.
-Bekk. Luc. Tim. § 8. We find
-mention also made of a cloak of
-wolfskin. Philostrat. Vit. Sophist.
-ii. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1805'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1805'>1805</a>. Suidas. v. διφθέρα. t. i. p.
-757. e.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1806'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1806'>1806</a>. Harless. ad Theocrit. v. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1807'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1807'>1807</a>. Cyclop. 79, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1808'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1808'>1808</a>. Lord Bacon considers the
-pastoral state preferable in some
-respects to the agricultural:—“The
-two simplest and most
-primitive trades of life; that
-of the shepherd (who by reason
-of his leisure, rests in a place,
-and living in view of heaven,
-is a lively image of a contemplative
-life) and that of the
-husbandman; where we see the
-favour of God went to the
-shepherd and not to the tiller
-of the ground.”—Advancement
-of Learning, p. 64. Shepherds
-made libations of milk to the
-Muses. Theocrit. i. 143, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1809'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1809'>1809</a>. Even yet we find the shepherds
-of Greece retain some
-smack of classical learning:
-“After dinner I walked out
-with a shepherd’s boy to herbarise;
-my pastoral botanist
-surprised me not a little with
-his nomenclature; I traced the
-names of Dioscorides, and Theophrastus,
-corrupted, indeed, in
-some degree by pronunciation,
-and by the long <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>series annorum</i></span>,
-which had elapsed since the
-time of these philosophers, but
-many of them were unmutilated,
-and their virtues faithfully
-handed down in the oral traditions
-of the country. My shepherd
-boy returned to his fold
-not less satisfied with some
-paras that I had given him,
-than I was in finding in such
-a rustic a repository of ancient
-science.”—Sibth. in Walp. i.
-66, seq. There is in Sir John
-Fortescue, De Laudibus Legum
-Angliæ, translated by Robert
-Mulcaster, in the reign of Queen
-Elizabeth, a passage describing
-the pastoral habits of our ancestors,
-and the intellectual superiority
-they engendered, which
-appears to me so excellent, that
-I cannot resist the temptation
-to introduce it here:—“England
-is so fertile and fruitefull, that
-comparing quantity to quantity
-it surmounteth all other landes
-in fruitefulnesse. Yea, it bringeth
-forth fruite of itselfe, scant
-provoked by mann’s industrie
-and labour. For there the
-landes, the fieldes, the groves,
-and the woodes, doe so aboundantlye
-springe, that the same
-untilled doe commonly yield to
-their owners more profite then
-tilled, though else they bee
-most fruitefull of corne and
-graine. There also are fieldes
-of pasture inclosed with hedges
-and ditches, with trees planted
-and growing uppon the same,
-which are a defence to their
-heardes of sheepe and cattell,
-against stormes and heate of
-the sunne; and the pastures are
-commonly watered, so that cattell
-shutte and closed therein
-have no neede of keeping neither
-by day, nor by night.
-For there bee no wolves, nor
-beares, nor lyons, wherefore
-their sheepe lye by night in
-the fields, unkept within their
-foldes wherewith their land is
-manured. By the meanes
-whereof, the men of that countrie
-are scant troubled with
-any painefull labour, wherefore
-they live more spiritually, as
-did the ancient fathers, which
-did rather choose to keepe and
-feede cattell, than to disturbe
-the quietnesse of the minde with
-care of husbandrie. And heereof
-it cometh, that menne of
-this countrie are more apte and
-fitte to discerne in doubtfull
-causes of great examination
-and triall, than are menne
-whollye given to moyling in
-the ground; in whom that
-rurall exercise engendereth
-rudeness of witte and minde.”
-chap. 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1810'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1810'>1810</a>. The reader will in this place
-perhaps remember the dream of
-Rousseau, on the enjoyment
-which the possession of such a
-ring would have afforded him;
-when after pushing his speculations
-as far as they could go he
-determines that he was much
-better without it.—Rêveries du
-Promeneur Solitaire, iii. 137.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1811'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1811'>1811</a>. Plat. Rep. ii. § 3. Cf. x.
-§ 12. Stallb. Among the gods
-similar powers were attributed to
-the helmet of Hades. Thus, in
-Homer, Athena is concealed from
-Mars by the effect of this enchanted
-piece of armour.—Iliad,
-ε. 845. Apollod. ii. 4. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1812'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1812'>1812</a>. To the same class belongs
-that tradition of a brazen tablet
-thrown up by a fountain in Lycia
-foretelling the overthrow of
-the Persian monarchy by the
-Greeks.—Plut. Alexand. § 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1813'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1813'>1813</a>. Cf. Varr. De Re Rust. ii. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1814'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1814'>1814</a>. Athen. xiii. 87.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1815'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1815'>1815</a>. This was the κισσύβιον, a
-goblet or cup turned of ivy wood.
-It was usually rubbed with wax
-and polished, for the purpose of
-bringing out the beautiful carving
-which adorned it. Cf. Etym.
-Mag. 515. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1816'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1816'>1816</a>. Theocrit. i. 32, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1817'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1817'>1817</a>. Though even here we detect
-the presence of hirelings; for Homer
-observes, that, among the
-Læstrigons, such shepherds as
-could do with little sleep received
-double wages. Odyss. κ. 84, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1818'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1818'>1818</a>. In fact black slaves, from
-Africa, were sometimes employed
-as shepherds, at least in Sicily.
-Theoc. i. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1819'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1819'>1819</a>. John, x. 11, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1820'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1820'>1820</a>. Isaiah, xl. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1821'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1821'>1821</a>. It has been observed by Gibbon,
-who had diligently studied
-the pastoral nations of Asia in
-their general habits and characteristics,
-that ambition and the
-spirit of conquest are powerfully
-excited by the shepherd’s manner
-of life. “The thrones of Asia
-have been repeatedly overturned
-by the shepherds of the north,
-and their arms have spread terror
-and devastation over the
-most fertile and warlike countries
-of Europe. On this occasion,
-as well as on many others,
-the sober historian is forcibly
-awakened from a pleasing vision
-and is compelled with some reluctance
-to confess, that the
-pastoral manners which have
-been adorned with the fairest
-attributes of peace and innocence
-are much better adapted
-to the fierce and cruel habits of
-a military life.” Decline and
-Fall of the Roman Empire, iv. 348.
-Hippocrates in his brief but vigorous
-manner has presented us
-with a picture of the Scythian
-shepherd’s life in ancient times,
-(De Aër. et Loc. § 92, sqq.) and
-from modern travellers we find
-that it differed very little from
-that which they lead at the present
-day. See the travels of Rubriquis
-in Hakluyt, i. 101, sqq.
-See also the notes of Coray on
-Hippocrates, t. ii. 280, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1822'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1822'>1822</a>. Theocritus describes Daphnis
-dying for love. Eidyll. i. 135.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1823'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1823'>1823</a>. Hom. Hymn. ad Ven. 54,
-sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1824'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1824'>1824</a>. Compare Trollope, Notes on
-St. John, x. i.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1825'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1825'>1825</a>. Aleuas, the Thessalian, is
-said to have been favoured with
-the visits of a very different mistress
-as he pastured his herds on
-Mount Ossa, near the Hæmonian
-spring; for a dragon of
-enormous size, becoming enamoured
-of his beauty and golden
-hair, frequently approached the
-shepherd with presents of game
-of her own catching. Having
-laid her gifts at his feet, she
-would kiss his locks and lick his
-face with her tongue, which, as
-the fountain was so near it, may
-be hoped was a work of supererogation.
-Ælian. De Nat. Animal.
-viii. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1826'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1826'>1826</a>. Hymn. ad Vener. 158, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1827'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1827'>1827</a>. Dion Chrysostom. Orat. vii.
-t. i. p. 219, sqq. Phot. 166. a. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1828'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1828'>1828</a>. On this mountain and the
-mythological legends attached to
-it, see Virg. Æn. xi. 260, with
-the note of Servius. Ovid. Metamorph.
-xiv. 472. Cf. Propert.
-v. 115, sqq. Jacobs. Plin. iv. 21.
-An ancient scholiast, quoted by
-Morell, thus relates the revenge
-of Nauplios: Ναύπλιος τοῦ υἱέος
-δὴ τοῦ Παλαμήδους τοῦ φόνου
-ἀμυνόμενος τοὺς Ἕλλήνας τοῦ
-ἀνέμου αὐτοῖς ἐνστάντος· ἐπεὶ τοῦτον
-διὰ θαλάττης ἐγέλων. αὐτὸς
-οὗτος τὸν Καφηρέα καταλαβὼν
-εἶτα νυκτὸς πυρσεύων ἀπὸ τῶν
-ἐκεῖσε πετρωδῶν πάγων, ἠπάτα
-προσχεῖν, ὡς δή τινι εὐπροσόδῳ
-ἀκτῆ τοῖς ἀποτόμοις κρημνοῖς εἰς
-βάθος ἐῤῥιζωμένοις καὶ χοιράσι
-διειλημμένοις. καὶ οὕτως ἀπρόοπτως
-ἀπωλόντο. Schediasm.
-&amp;c., in Dion. t. ii. p. 580, seq.
-Cf. Strab. viii. 6. t ii. p. 195.
-Apollodor. ii. i. 5. Orph. Argonaut.
-204, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1829'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1829'>1829</a>. On the purple fisheries of
-Eubœa, cf. Feder. Morell. Schediasm.
-&amp;c., in Dion. ii. 576.
-Reiske. and Aristot. Hist. Animal.
-v. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1830'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1830'>1830</a>. A life equally simple is led
-by the Albanian shepherds of the
-present day. “They live on the
-mountains, in the vale or the
-plain, as the varying seasons
-require, under arbours, or
-sheds, covered with boughs,
-tending their flocks abroad, or
-milking the ewes and she-goats
-at the fold, and making cheese
-and butter to supply the city.”
-Chandler, ii. p. 135.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1831'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1831'>1831</a>. Iliad. β. 541. δ. 464. The
-long hair of these ancient warriors
-is thus mentioned by the
-Homeric Scholiast: τὰ ὀπίσω
-μέρη τῆς κεφαλῆς κομῶντες ἀνδρείας
-χάριν. ἴδιον δὲ τοῦτο τῆς
-τῶν Εὐβοέων κουρᾶς, τὸ ὄπισθεν
-τὰς τρίχας βαθείας ἔχειν. t. i.
-p. 83. Bekker.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1832'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1832'>1832</a>. Cf. Theoph. De Sign. Pluv.
-i. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1833'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1833'>1833</a>. Had Bernardin de St. Pierre
-read this when he wrote his Indian
-Cottage?</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1834'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1834'>1834</a>. An equal degree of contentment
-to that which in this recital
-we find exhibited by the Eubœan
-herdsmen, is still in our own
-times displayed by the rough peasants
-of the Lipari islands, in the
-midst of far greater privations:—“It
-is incredible at the same time
-how contented these islanders
-are amid all their poverty. Ulysses
-perhaps cherished not a
-greater love for his Ithaca than
-they bear to their Eolian rocks
-which, wretched as they may
-appear, they would not exchange
-for the Fortunate islands.
-Frequently have I entered their
-huts which seem like the nests
-of birds hung to the cliffs. They
-are framed of pieces of lava ill-joined
-together, equally destitute
-of ornament within and
-without, and scarcely admitting
-a feeble uncertain light, like
-some gloomy cavern.” Spallanzani,
-Travels in the Two Sicilies,
-iv. 147.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1835'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1835'>1835</a>. The absence of these tormentors
-of cattle was considered a
-matter of great importance by the
-ancients. Virgil, where he is
-giving directions respecting the
-best pastures suited to the youthful
-mothers of the herds, celebrates
-the exploits of the gadfly:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Saltibus in vacuis pascant, et plena secundum</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Flumina: muscus ubi, et viridissima gramine ripa,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Speluncæque tegant, et saxea procubet umbra.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Est lucos Silari circa, ilicibusque virentem</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Plurimus Alburnum volitans, cui nomen asilo</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Romanum est, œstrum Graii vertere vocantes:</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Asper, acerba sonans: quo tota exterrita sylvis</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Diffugiunt armenta; furit mugitibus æther</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Concussus, sylvæque et sicci ripa Tanagri.</span></div>
- <div class='line in34'>Georg. iii. 143, sqq.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>See the note of Philargyrius in
-loc. Aristot. Hist. Animal, iv. 4.
-v. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1836'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1836'>1836</a>. Plat. Opp. t. i. p. 9. To protect
-from pollution spots shaded
-by noble trees they were accustomed
-to consecrate them to some
-god, and to erect beneath the overhanging
-branches statues and altars.
-Id. ib. In Crete the fountains
-are often shaded still by majestic
-plane-trees. Pashley, ii. 31.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1837'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1837'>1837</a>. Or even in the shed of a
-Turkish shepherd in Asia Minor.
-Dr. Chandler has a passage illustrative
-of the hospitality of pastoral
-tribes, which is at once so
-picturesque and concise that I am
-tempted to transcribe it: “About
-two in the morning our whole
-attention was fixed by the
-barking of dogs, which, as we
-advanced, became exceedingly
-furious. Deceived by the light
-of the moon we now fancied we
-could see a village, and were
-much mortified to find only a
-station of poor goatherds without
-even a shed, and nothing
-for our horses to eat. They
-were lying wrapped in their
-thick capotes or loose-coats by
-some glimmering embers, among
-the bushes in a dale under a
-spreading tree by the fold.
-They received us hospitably,
-heaping on fresh fuel and producing
-caimac or sour curds
-and coarse bread which they
-toasted for us on the coals.
-We made a scanty meal, sitting
-on the ground lighted by the
-fire and by the moon, after
-which sleep suddenly overpowered
-me. On waking I found
-my companions by my side,
-sharing in the comfortable cover
-of the Janizary’s cloak which
-he had carefully spread over us.
-I was now much struck with
-the wild appearance of the spot.
-The tree was hung with rustic
-utensils, the she-goats in a pen
-sneezed and bleated and rustled
-to and fro; the shrubs, by which
-our horses stood, were leafless,
-and the earth bare; a black
-cauldron with milk was simmering
-over the fire, and a
-figure more than gaunt or savage
-close by us was struggling
-on the ground with a kid whose
-ears he had slit, and was endeavouring
-to cauterise with a
-piece of red-hot iron.” Chandler,
-vol. i. 180, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1838'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1838'>1838</a>. History of the Caliph Vathek. p. 102.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1839'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1839'>1839</a>. Cf. Philost. Icon. ii. 26, p.
-851.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1840'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1840'>1840</a>. The wild hog is still one of
-the most common animals in the
-forests of Greece and Asia Minor.
-Chandler, i. 77. Even wild bulls
-occasionally make their appearance
-in the latter country. 176.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1841'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1841'>1841</a>. To this best and most economical
-food for hogs, Homer
-makes allusion where he introduces
-the goddess Circe attending
-to her sty, which she had filled
-with the transformed companions
-of Odysseus:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in21'>τοῖσι δε Κίρκη</div>
- <div class='line'>Πὰρ ῥ’ ἄκυλον, βάλανον τ᾽ ἔβαλεν, καρπόν τε κρανείης</div>
- <div class='line'>Ἔδμεναι, οἷα σύες χαμαιευνάδες αἰὲν ἔδουσιν.</div>
- <div class='line in17'>Od. κ. 241, sqq. Cf. ν. 409.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Ælian de Nat. Animal. v. 45,
-celebrates these Homeric dainties
-as the food of the hog to which
-he elsewhere adds the fruit of the
-ash. viii. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1842'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1842'>1842</a>. Cf. Theoph. Hist. Plant. ii.
-2. 10. ii. 7. 7—iii. 6. 5—vi. 3. 11.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Ὄα, ἀκροδρύων εἶδος μήλοις μικροῖς ἐμφερές</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>Tim. Lec. Platon. in voce with
-the note of Ruhnken.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1843'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1843'>1843</a>. On the three kinds of medlars,
-Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii. 12. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1844'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1844'>1844</a>. Philost. Icon. i. 31, p. 809.
-ii. 26, p. 851.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1845'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1845'>1845</a>. Robust persons, with loud
-voices, were ordinarily chosen for
-herdsmen, while goatherds were
-selected for their lightness and
-agility. Geop. ii. 1. Shepherds
-obtained among the Greeks the
-name of ποιμένες; while the
-keepers of other flocks and herds
-were termed αἰπόλοι. Schol.
-Theoc. i. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1846'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1846'>1846</a>. Onomast. i. 249.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1847'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1847'>1847</a>. Arist. Hist. Anim. viii. 27. 3.
-Things manufactured from the
-hair of this animal were called
-κιλίκια. Etym. Mag. 513. 41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1848'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1848'>1848</a>. Arist. Hist. Anim. viii. 27.
-3. Speaking of the neighbourhood
-of Smyrna,—The “sheep,”
-observed Dr. Chandler, “have
-broad tails, hanging down like
-an apron, some weighing eight,
-ten, or more pounds. These
-are eaten as a dainty, and the
-fat, before they are full-grown,
-accounted as delicious as marrow.”
-Travels, i. 77. Of the
-broad-tailed sheep mentioned by
-the ancients the most remarkable
-were those of India, where,
-according to Ctesios, of veracious
-memory, both they and the goats
-were larger than asses:—τὰ πρόβατα
-τῶν Ἰνδῶν καὶ αἱ αἶγες μείζους
-ὄνων εἰσί, καὶ τίκτουσιν
-ἀνὰ τεσσάρων καὶ ἓξ ὡς ἐπὶ τὸ
-πολύ, ἔχουσι δὲ οὐρὰς μεγάλας · διὸ
-τῶν τοκάδων ἀποτέμνουσιν ἵνα
-δύνωνται ὀχεύεσθαι. Phot. Biblioth.
-Cod. 72. p. 46. b. Bekker.
-Ælian. de Nat. Animal, iv.
-32, relates, without any symptoms
-of incredulity, precisely the
-same fact; and then adds a circumstance
-which may keep in
-countenance the Abyssinian story
-of Bruce respecting the carving of
-a rump-steak from a live cow,—for
-the Indians, observes Ælian,
-were in the habit of cutting
-open the tails of the rams, extracting
-all the fat, and then sowing
-them up again so dexterously
-that in a short time no trace of
-the incision remained visible.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1849'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1849'>1849</a>. Herod. iii. 113. Ælian. Hist.
-Anim. x. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1850'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1850'>1850</a>. Bound together, probably, by
-wild succory or cneoron, as in modern
-times by the withe-wind.
-Theoph. Hist. Plant. vii. 11. 3.
-vi. 2. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1851'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1851'>1851</a>. Geop. xviii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1852'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1852'>1852</a>. Plin. xxi. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1853'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1853'>1853</a>. Dioscor. iii. 32.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1854'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1854'>1854</a>. Geop. xviii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1855'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1855'>1855</a>. Aristoph. Eccles. 644. Geop.
-xviii. 2.4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1856'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1856'>1856</a>. Geop. xviii. 2. Apropos of
-Cytisus, it is observed by Æschylides,
-in Ælian. de Nat. Animal.
-xvi. 32, that the rustics of
-Cios, on account of the aridity
-of the island, possessed few flocks.
-Those they had, however, were
-fed entirely on the leaves of the
-cytisus, the fig-tree, and the olive,
-mingled occasionally with the
-straw and halm of vegetables.
-The lambs reared on this island
-were of singular beauty, and sold
-at a higher price than those of
-most other parts. In Lydia and
-Macedonia sheep were sometimes
-fattened upon fish, which must
-have given the mutton of those
-countries a somewhat unsavoury
-odour. Ælian. De Nat. Animal.
-xv. 5. Another favourite food
-of sheep was the leaves of the
-white nymphæa, the tender shoots
-of which were eaten by swine,
-while men themselves fed upon
-the fruit. Theoph. Hist. Plant.
-iv. 10. 7. Children, too, it is
-said, regarded as a delicacy the
-stalks of the phleos, the typha,
-and the butomos. The roots of
-this fruit were given as food to
-cattle. Id. ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1857'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1857'>1857</a>. Geop. xviii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1858'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1858'>1858</a>. Cf. Athen, v. 60. Hom. Il.
-β. 305, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1859'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1859'>1859</a>. Those of the neighbouring
-country of Bœotia are now, however,
-more highly valued. “Flocks
-of sheep whose fleeces were of a
-remarkable blackness were feeding
-on the plain; the breed
-was considerably superior in
-beauty and size to that of Attica.”
-Sibth. in Walp. i. 65.
-To dream of sheep of this colour
-was regarded by the ancients as
-unlucky. Artemid. Oneirocrit. ii.
-12. p. 96. The finest black sheep
-in the ancient world were found
-in a district of Phrygia in the
-neighbourhood of the cities of
-Colossè and Laodicea, the wool of
-which not only exceeded that of
-Miletos in softness, but was of a
-glossy jet colour like that of the
-raven’s wing. Φέρει δ᾽ ὁ περὶ
-τὴν Λαοδίκειαν τόπος προβάτων
-ἀρετὰς, οὐκ εἰς μαλακότητας μόνον
-τῶν ἐρίων, ᾗ καὶ τῶν Μιλησίων
-διαφέρει, ἀλλὰ καὶ εὶς τὴν κοραξὴν
-χρόαν ὥστε καὶ προσοδεύονται
-χρόαν ὥστε καὶ προσοδεύονται
-λαμπρῶς ἀπ᾽ αὐτῶν· ὥσπερ καὶ
-οἱ Κολοσσηνοὶ ἀπὸ τοῦ ὁμωνύμου
-χρώματος πλησίον οἰκοῦντες.
-Strab. xii. 8. t. iii. p. 74. Plin. Nat.
-Hist. viii. 73. Cf. Chandler, Travels
-in Greece and Asia Minor, i. 262.
-The country round Abydos also
-was celebrated for its black flocks
-among which not a single white
-sheep was to be discovered. Ælian
-de Nat. Animal. 3. 32.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1860'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1860'>1860</a>. Varro. de Re Rust. ii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1861'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1861'>1861</a>. Horace speaks of the “pellites
-oves Galesi.” Od. ii. 6. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1862'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1862'>1862</a>. Diog. Laert. vi. 41. The
-practice is noticed also by Pliny
-who says,—<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Ovium summa genera
-duo, tectum et colonicum;
-illiud mollius, hoc in pascuo
-delicatius, quippe quum tectum
-rubis vescatur. Operimenta ei
-ex Arabicis præcipua.”</span> Nat.
-Hist. viii. 72. Columella also mentions
-these coverings:—<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Molle
-vero pecus, etiam velamen
-quo protegitur, amittit atque
-id non parvo sumptu <a id='corr429.n6.14'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='reparatur'>reparatur.”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_429.n6.14'><ins class='correction' title='reparatur'>reparatur.”</ins></a></span></span>
-vii. 3, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1863'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1863'>1863</a>. Var. Hist. xii. 56.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1864'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1864'>1864</a>. De Cupiditate. § 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1865'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1865'>1865</a>. Macrob. Sat. ii. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1866'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1866'>1866</a>. Tertull. in Apolog. ap. Menag.
-ad Laert. vi. 41. t. ii. p. 141.
-b. c.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1867'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1867'>1867</a>. Geop. xviii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1868'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1868'>1868</a>. Nor in Asia Minor is the
-shade of trees always deemed
-sufficient. “We came,” says Dr.
-Chandler, “to a shed formed
-with boughs round a tree, to shelter
-the flocks and herds from the
-sun at noon.” Travels, i. 25.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1869'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1869'>1869</a>. Schol. Theoc. i. 21. Cf. Plat.
-Phædr. t. i. p. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1870'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1870'>1870</a>. I cannot resist the temptation
-to introduce in this place
-the picture in miniature of a
-Greek landscape from the picturesque
-and beautiful journal of
-Dr. Sibthorpe: “We dined under
-a rock, from whose side descended
-a purling spring among
-violets, primroses, and the starry
-hyacinth, mixed with black Silyrium
-and different coloured orches.
-The flowering ash hung
-from the sides of the mountain,
-under the shade of which bloomed
-saxifrages, and the snowy Isopyrum,
-with the Campanula Pyramidalis;
-this latter plant is now
-called χαρισονη; it yields abundance
-of a sweet milky fluid, and
-was said to promote a secretion
-of milk, a quality first attributed
-to it under the doctrine of signatures.
-Our guide made nose-gays
-of the fragrant leaves of the
-Fraxinella; the common nettle
-was not forgotten as a pot-herb,
-but the Imperatoria seemed to be
-the favourite salad. Among the
-shrubs I noticed our gooseberry-tree,
-and the Cellis Australis grew
-wild among the rocks.” Walp.
-Mem. i. 63.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1871'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1871'>1871</a>. See Hesiod. Opp. et Dies,
-582, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1872'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1872'>1872</a>. To dream of this god was
-considered auspicious by shepherds.
-Artemid. Oneirocrit. ii.
-42. p. 133.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1873'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1873'>1873</a>. Schol. Theoc. i. 15. Cal.
-Hymn. in. Lav. Poll. 72. ibique
-interp. Nem. Eclog. iii. 3. Cf.
-Hom. Il. τ. 13. Od. ι. 9. The shepherd
-in the Anthology (Jacob. t.
-ii. no. 227. p. 694) is not so religious
-as Theocritus’ goatherd, for
-he boldly pipes in the morn and
-at noon χὡ ποιμὴν ἐν ὄρεσσι
-μεσαμβρινὸν ἀγχόθι παγᾶς συρίσδων.
-Kiessling. ad Theoc. i. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1874'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1874'>1874</a>. Nonn. xlviii. 258, sqq. Cf.
-Philost. Icon. ii. 11. et J. B. Carpzov.
-Disp. Phil. De Quiete Dei,
-p. 16, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1875'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1875'>1875</a>. Geop. xviii. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1876'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1876'>1876</a>. Ferocia ejus cohibetur cornu
-juxta aurem terebrato. Plin. Nat.
-Hist. vii. 72. Cf. Geopon. viii.
-5. To the same purpose writes
-also Columella:—<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Epicharmus Syracusanus
-qui pecudum medicinas
-diligentissime conscripsit affirmat
-pugnacem arietem mitigari
-terebra secundum auriculas foratis
-cornibus qua curvantur in
-flexu.</span> Columell. vii. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1877'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1877'>1877</a>. It is observed by the ancients
-that long lank wool indicated
-strength in the sheep, curly wool
-the contrary. Geop. xviii. 1, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1878'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1878'>1878</a>. Geop. xviii. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1879'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1879'>1879</a>. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Duerat quibusdam in locis
-vellendi mos. Plin. Nat. Hist,
-vii. 73. Veliæ unde essent plures
-accepi caussas inquies quod ibi
-pastores palatim ex ovibus ante
-tonsuram inventam vellere lanam
-sint soliti, ex quo vellera dicuntur.
-Varr. de Ling. Lat. iv.</span> Cf. De
-Re Rust. ii. 11. Isidor. xix. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1880'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1880'>1880</a>. Geop. xviii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1881'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1881'>1881</a>. Schol. Theoc. i. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1882'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1882'>1882</a>. From the relations of travellers
-it would appear that the
-method observed by the ancient
-Greeks in ridding themselves of
-the wolf is no longer known to
-their descendants, though the apprehension
-of their destructiveness
-and ferocity be as great as ever.
-Solon, it is well known set a
-price in his laws on the head of a
-wolf, which appears to have varied
-in different ages; (cf. Plut.
-Solon. § 23. Schol. Aristoph.
-Av. 369;) but could never have
-amounted to the sum of two
-talents. Whatever the ancient
-price may have been, however, it
-was paid by the magistrates;
-but “the peasant now produces
-the skins in the bazaar or market,
-and is recompensed by voluntary
-contributions.” Chandler,
-ii. p. 145. Close by a
-khan on mount Parnes, which is
-covered with pine trees, Sir
-George Wheler saw a very curious
-fountain, to which the
-wolves, bears, and wild boars
-commonly descend to drink. Id.
-p. 197.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1883'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1883'>1883</a>. Geop. xviii. 14. Nevertheless,
-when a wolf bit a sheep
-without killing it, the flesh was
-supposed to be rendered more
-tender and delicate, an effect
-which Plutarch attributes to the
-hot and fiery breath of the beast.
-Sympos. ii. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>END OF THE SECOND VOLUME.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_434'>434</span>LONDON:</div>
- <div>Printed by S. &amp; J. <span class='sc'>Bentley</span>, <span class='sc'>Wilson</span>, and <span class='sc'>Fley</span>,</div>
- <div>Bangor House, Shoe Lane.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<p class='c001'><a id='endnote'></a></p>
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='large'>Transcriber’s Note</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>The printer employed the cursive forms of beta (ϐ) and theta (ϑ),
-sometimes in the same passage with the standard β and θ. These have
-been replaced with the standard forms.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Hyphenated words sometimes also appear without hyphenation, e.g.
-‘olive grounds’ and ‘olive-grounds’. Where there is a clear
-preponderance, the hyphen has either been retained or removed to
-following the preference. When there was none, they are left as
-printed.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>Comments</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='15%' />
-<col width='84%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_91.10'></a><a href='#corr91.10'>91.10</a></td>
- <td class='c020'>The original quotation marks (“Wretch, would you make me a “Phaselitan for a farthing?”) have been properly nested.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_355.n3.64'></a><a href='#corr355.n3.64'>355.n3.64</a></td>
- <td class='c020'>The asterisk seems to serve no purpose. It might have referred to an internal footnote that was never printed. It was retained, nonetheless.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c001'>Minor punctation errors and inconsistencies in the footnote apparatus
-have been corrected with no further mention here.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Those errors deemed most likely to be the printer’s have been corrected, and
-are noted here. The references are to the page and line in the original.
-Corrections within notes are denoted with ‘n’ and the original note
-number.</p>
-
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='14%' />
-<col width='57%' />
-<col width='28%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_36.n1'></a><a href='#corr36.n1'>36.n1</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>καὶ πᾶσαν τὴν ο[ἴκι]/ἰκίαν</td>
- <td class='c020'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_61.15'></a><a href='#corr61.15'>61.15</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>to have been a comb[.]</td>
- <td class='c020'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_63.31'></a><a href='#corr63.31'>63.31</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>The <i>Ægle[,]</i> the <i>Pede</i> and</td>
- <td class='c020'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_65.11'></a><a href='#corr65.11'>65.11</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>in Lycia[,/.]</td>
- <td class='c020'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_71.29'></a><a href='#corr71.29'>71.29</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>ran into the opposite extreme[,/.]</td>
- <td class='c020'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_86.7'></a><a href='#corr86.7'>86.7</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>signi[ni]fies eggs)</td>
- <td class='c020'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_119.20'></a><a href='#corr119.20'>119.20</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>were most brilliantly reflected[,/.]</td>
- <td class='c020'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_133.8'></a><a href='#corr133.8'>133.8</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>recal[l]s to mind</td>
- <td class='c020'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_134.n3'></a><a href='#corr134.n3'>134.n3</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>Ἅλα[ ]λείχειν</td>
- <td class='c020'>Space added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_135.n3.10'></a><a href='#corr135.n3.10'>135.n3.10</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>Profluit.[”]</td>
- <td class='c020'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_139.30'></a><a href='#corr139.30'>139.30</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>How much [my,/, my] friend,</td>
- <td class='c020'>Transposed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_163.31'></a><a href='#corr163.31'>163.31</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>The walnuts a[u/n]d chestnuts</td>
- <td class='c020'>Inverted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_164.20'></a><a href='#corr164.20'>164.20</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>[“]but we call it</td>
- <td class='c020'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_185.37'></a><a href='#corr185.37'>185.37</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>roll about the room like a hoop[,/.]</td>
- <td class='c020'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_201.31'></a><a href='#corr201.31'>201.31</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>to the frying[-]pan</td>
- <td class='c020'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_209.n5.1'></a><a href='#corr209.n5.1'>209.n5.1</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>Sc[ol/h\. Aristoph. Nub. 1337, seq.</td>
- <td class='c020'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_209.n6.1'></a><a href='#corr209.n6.1'>209.n6.1</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>Ilgen, De Sc[h]ol. Poes. p. 156.</td>
- <td class='c020'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_242.1'></a><a href='#corr242.1'>242.1</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>the friendship of Demosthenes[.]</td>
- <td class='c020'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_242.34'></a><a href='#corr242.34'>242.34</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>the “Exile Hunter.[”]</td>
- <td class='c020'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_249.n7.2'></a><a href='#corr249.n7.2'>249.n7.2</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>[‘/“]chez les anciens Atheniens</td>
- <td class='c020'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_257.n5'></a><a href='#corr257.n5'>257.n5</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>Μ[ε/έ]σσοισιν</td>
- <td class='c020'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_274.18'></a><a href='#corr274.18'>274.18</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>whose Penelope, the[ the] <i>beau idéal</i></td>
- <td class='c020'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_286.n8'></a><a href='#corr286.n8'>286.n8</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>and out [out ]of these they sometimes drank.</td>
- <td class='c020'>Repetition.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_290.n4'></a><a href='#corr290.n4'>290.n4</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>following in the foo[t]steps of Heyne</td>
- <td class='c020'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_328.16'></a><a href='#corr328.16'>328.16</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>found this answer of[ of] irrigation.</td>
- <td class='c020'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_355.n3.38'></a><a href='#corr355.n3.38'>355.n3.38</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>le <i>samia</i>[,] gros raisin</td>
- <td class='c020'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_385.15'></a><a href='#corr385.15'>385.15</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>hey would not, if po[s]ssible,</td>
- <td class='c020'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_423.38'></a><a href='#corr423.38'>423.38</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>shall judge to-morrow[.]”</td>
- <td class='c020'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c019'><a id='c_429.n6.14'></a><a href='#corr429.n6.14'>429.n6.14</a></td>
- <td class='c008'>non parvo sumptu reparatur.[”]</td>
- <td class='c020'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HISTORY OF THE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF ANCIENT GREECE VOLUME II (OF III) ***</div>
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