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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Buried Cities, Part 2, by Jennie Hall
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
+
+
+Title: Buried Cities, Part 2
+
+Author: Jennie Hall
+
+Release Date: August 10, 2004 [EBook #9626]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BURIED CITIES, PART 2 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, David Widger and PG Distributed
+Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+BURIED CITIES, PART 2
+
+OLYMPIA
+
+BY
+
+JENNIE HALL
+
+Author of "Four Old Greeks," Etc. Instructor in History and English in
+the Francis W. Parker School, Chicago
+
+With Many Drawings and Photographs From Original Sources
+
+
+
+The publishers are grateful to the estate of Miss Jennie Hall and to her
+many friends for assistance in planning the publication of this book.
+Especial thanks are due to Miss Nell C. Curtis of the Lincoln School,
+New York City, for helping to finish Miss Hall's work of choosing the
+pictures, and to Miss Irene I. Cleaves of the Francis Parker School,
+Chicago, who wrote the captions. It was Miss Katharine Taylor, now of
+the Shady Hill School, Cambridge, who brought these stories to our
+attention.
+
+
+
+
+FOREWORD: TO BOYS AND GIRLS
+
+Do you like to dig for hidden treasure? Have you ever found Indian
+arrowheads or Indian pottery? I knew a boy who was digging a cave in
+a sandy place, and he found an Indian grave. With his own hands he
+uncovered the bones and skull of some brave warrior. That brown skull
+was more precious to him than a mint of money. Another boy I knew was
+making a cave of his own. Suddenly he dug into an older one made years
+before. He crawled into it with a leaping heart and began to explore. He
+found an old carpet and a bit of burned candle. They proved that some
+one had lived there. What kind of a man had he been and what kind
+of life had he lived--black or white or red, robber or beggar or
+adventurer? Some of us were walking in the woods one day when we saw a
+bone sticking out of the ground. Luckily we had a spade, and we set to
+work digging. Not one moment was the tool idle. First one bone and then
+another came to light and among them a perfect horse's skull. We felt as
+though we had rescued Captain Kidd's treasure, and we went home draped
+in bones.
+
+Suppose that instead of finding the bones of a horse we had uncovered a
+gold-wrapped king. Suppose that instead of a deserted cave that boy
+had dug into a whole buried city with theaters and mills and shops and
+beautiful houses. Suppose that instead of picking up an Indian arrowhead
+you could find old golden vases and crowns and bronze swords lying in
+the earth. If you could be a digger and a finder and could choose your
+find, would you choose a marble statue or a buried bakeshop with bread
+two thousand years old still in the oven or a king's grave filled with
+golden gifts? It is of such digging and such finding that this book
+tells.
+
+
+
+CONTENTS:
+
+ 1. Two Winners of Crowns
+
+ 2. How a City Was Lost
+
+ _Pictures of Olympia_:
+
+ Entrance to Stadion
+
+ Gymnasium
+
+ Boys in Gymnasium
+
+ Temple of Zeus
+
+ The Labors of Herakles
+
+ The Statue of Victory
+
+ The Hermes of Praxiteles
+
+ The Temple of Hera
+
+ Head of an Athlete
+
+ A Greek Horseman
+
+
+
+
+OLYMPIA
+
+TWO WINNERS OF CROWNS
+
+The July sun was blazing over the country of Greece. Dust from the dry
+plain hung in the air. But what cared the happy travelers for dust or
+heat? They were on their way to Olympia to see the games. Every road
+teemed with a chattering crowd of men and boys afoot and on horses. They
+wound down from the high mountains to the north. They came along the
+valley from the east and out from among the hills to the south. Up from
+the sea led the sacred road, the busiest of all. A little caravan of men
+and horses was trying to hurry ahead through the throng. The master
+rode in front looking anxiously before him as though he did not see the
+crowd. After him rode a lad. His eyes were flashing eagerly here and
+there over the strange throng. A man walked beside the horse and watched
+the boy smilingly. Behind them came a string of pack horses with slaves
+to guard the loads of wine and food and tents and blankets for their
+master's camp.
+
+"What a strange-looking man, Glaucon!" said the boy. "He has a dark
+skin."
+
+The boy's own skin was fair, and under his hat his hair was golden. As
+he spoke he pointed to a man on the road who was also riding at the head
+of a little caravan. His skin was dark. Shining black hair covered his
+ears. His garment was gay with colored stripes.
+
+"He is a merchant from Egypt," answered the man. "He will have curious
+things to sell--vases of glass, beads of amber, carved ivory, and
+scrolls gay with painted figures. You must see them, Charmides."
+
+But already the boy had forgotten the Egyptian.
+
+"See the chariot!" he cried.
+
+It was slowly rolling along the stony road. A grave, handsome man stood
+in it holding the reins. Beside him stood another man with a staff in
+his hand. Behind the chariot walked two bowmen. After them followed a
+long line of pack horses led by slaves. "They are the delegates from
+Athens," explained Glaucon. "There are, doubtless, rich gifts for Zeus
+on the horses and perhaps some stone tablets engraved with new laws."
+
+But the boy was not listening.
+
+"Jugglers! Jugglers!" he cried.
+
+And there they were at the side of the road, showing their tricks and
+begging for coins. One man was walking on his hands and tossing a ball
+about with his feet. Another was swallowing a sword.
+
+"Stop, Glaucon!" cried Charmides, "I must see him. He will kill
+himself."
+
+"No, my little master," replied the slave. "You shall see him again at
+Olympia. See your father. He would be vexed if we waited."
+
+And there was the master ahead, pushing forward rapidly, looking neither
+to the right hand nor the left. The boy sighed.
+
+"He is hurrying to see Creon. He forgets me!" he thought.
+
+But immediately his eyes were caught by some new thing, and his face
+was gay again. So the little company traveled up the sloping road amid
+interesting sights. For here were people from all the corners of the
+known world--Greeks from Asia in trailing robes, Arabs in white turbans,
+black men from Egypt, kings from Sicily, Persians with their curled
+beards, half civilized men from the north in garments of skin. "See!"
+said Glaucon at last as they reached a hilltop, "the temple!"
+
+He pointed ahead. There shone the tip of the roof and its gold ornament.
+Hovering above was a marble statue with spread wings.
+
+"And there is Victory!" whispered Charmides. "She is waiting for Creon.
+She will never wait for me," and he sighed.
+
+The crowd broke into a shout when they saw the temple. A company of
+young men flew by, singing a song. Charmides passed a sick man. The
+slaves had set down his litter, and he had stretched out his hands
+toward the temple and was praying. For the sick were sometimes cured
+by a visit to Olympia. The boy's father had struck his heels into his
+horse's sides and was galloping forward, calling to his followers to
+hasten.
+
+In a few moments they reached higher land. Then they saw the sacred
+place spread out before them. There was the wall all around it. Inside
+it shone a few buildings and a thousand statues. Along one side
+stretched a row of little marble treasure houses. At the far corner lay
+the stadion with its rows of stone seats. Nearer and outside the wall
+was the gymnasium. Even from a distance Charmides could see men running
+about in the court.
+
+"There are the athletes!" he thought. "Creon is with them."
+
+Behind all these buildings rose a great hill, dark green with trees.
+Down from the hill poured a little stream. It met a wide river that
+wound far through the valley. In the angle of these rivers lay Olympia.
+The temple and walls and gymnasium were all of stone and looked as
+though they had been there forever. But in the meadow all around the
+sacred place was a city of winged tents. There were little shapeless
+ones of skins lying over sticks. There were round huts woven of rushes.
+There were sheds of poles with green boughs laid upon them. There were
+tall tents of gaily striped canvas. Farther off were horses tethered.
+And everywhere were gaily robed men moving about. Menon, Charmides'
+father, looking ahead from the high place, turned to a slave.
+
+"Run on quickly," he said. "Save a camping place for us there on Mount
+Kronion, under the trees."
+
+The man was off. Menon spoke to the other servants. "Push forward and
+make camp. I will visit the gymnasium. Come, Charmides, we will go to
+see Creon."
+
+They rode down the slope toward Olympia. As they passed among the tents
+they saw friends and exchanged kind greetings.
+
+"Ah, Menon!" called one. "There is good news of Creon. Every one expects
+great things of him."
+
+"I have kept room for your camp next my tent, Menon," said another.
+
+"Here are sights for you, Charmides," said a kind old man.
+
+Charmides caught a glimpse of gleaming marble among the crowd and
+guessed that some sculptor was showing his statues for sale. Yonder was
+a barber's tent. Gentlemen were sitting in chairs and men were cutting
+their hair or rubbing their faces smooth with stone. In one place a
+man was standing on a little platform. A crowd was gathered about him
+listening, while he read from a scroll in his hands.
+
+But the boy had only a glimpse of these things, for his father was
+hurrying on. In a moment they crossed a bridge over a river and stopped
+before a low, wide building. Glaucon helped Charmides off his horse.
+Menon spoke a few words to the porter at the gate. The man opened the
+door and led the visitors in. Charmides limped along beside his father,
+for he was lame. That was what had made him sigh when he had seen
+Victory hovering over Olympia. She would never give him the olive
+branch. But now he did not think of that. His heart was beating fast.
+His eyes were big. For before him lay a great open court baking in the
+sun. More than a hundred boys were at work there, leaping, wrestling,
+hurling the disk, throwing spears. During the past months they had been
+living here, training for the games. The sun had browned their bare
+bodies. Now their smooth skins were shining with sweat and oil. As they
+bent and twisted they looked like beautiful statues turned brown and
+come alive. Among them walked men in long purple robes. They seemed to
+be giving commands.
+
+"They are the judges," whispered Glaucon. "They train the boys."
+
+All around the hot court ran a deep, shady portico. Here boys lay on
+the tiled floor or on stone benches, resting from their exercise. Near
+Charmides stood one with his back turned. He was scraping the oil and
+dust from his body with a strigil. Charmides' eyes danced with joy
+at the beauty of the firm, round legs and the muscles moving in the
+shoulders. Then the athlete turned toward the visitors and Charmides
+cried out, "Creon!" and ran and threw his arms around him.
+
+Then there was gay talk; Creon asked about the home and mother and
+sisters in Athens, for he had been here in training for almost ten
+months. Menon and Charmides had a thousand questions about the games.
+
+"I know I shall win, father," said Creon softly. "Four nights ago Hermes
+appeared to me in my sleep and smiled upon me. I awoke suddenly and
+there was a strange, sweet perfume in the air."
+
+Tears sprang into his father's eyes. "Now blessed be the gods!" he
+cried, "and most blessed Hermes, the god of the gymnasium!"
+
+After a little Menon and Charmides said farewell and went away through
+the chattering crowd and up under the cool trees on Mount Kronion to
+their camp. The slaves had cut poles and set them up and thrown a wide
+linen cover over them. Under it they had put a little table holding
+lumps of brown cheese, a flat loaf of bread, a basket of figs, a pile
+of crisp lettuce. Just outside the tent grazed a few goats. A man in a
+soiled tunic was squatted milking one. Menon's slave stood waiting and,
+as his master came up, he took the big red bowl of foaming milk and
+carried it to the table. The goatherd picked up his long crook and
+started his flock on, calling, "Milk! Milk to sell!"
+
+Menon was gay now. His worries were over. His camp was pitched in a
+pleasant place. His son was well and sure of victory.
+
+"Come, little son," he called to Charmides. "You must be as hungry as a
+wolf. But first our thanks to the gods."
+
+A slave had poured a little wine into a flat cup and stood now offering
+it to his master. Menon took it and held it high, looking up into the
+blue heavens.
+
+"O gracious Hermes!" he cried aloud, "fulfill thy omen! And to Zeus, the
+father, and to all the immortals be thanks."
+
+As he prayed he turned the cup and spilled the wine upon the ground.
+That was the god's portion. A slave spread down a rug for his master
+to lie upon and put cushions under his elbow. Glaucon did the same for
+Charmides, and the meal began. Menon talked gaily about their journey,
+the games to-morrow, Creon's training. But Charmides was silent. At last
+his father said:
+
+"Well, little wolf, you surely are gulping! Are you so starved?"
+
+"No," said Charmides with full mouth. "I'm in a hurry. I want to see
+things."
+
+His father laughed and leaped to his feet.
+
+"Just like me, lad. Come on!"
+
+Charmides snatched a handful of figs and rolled out of the tent
+squealing with joy. Menon came after him, laughing, and Glaucon followed
+to care for them. "The sun is setting," said Menon. "It will soon be
+dark, and to-morrow are the games. They will keep us busy when they
+begin, so you must use your eyes to-day if you want to see the fair."
+
+He stopped on the hillside and looked down into the sacred place.
+
+"It is wonderful!" he said, half to himself. "The home of glory! I love
+every stone of it. I have not been here since I myself won the single
+race. And now my son is to win it. That was when you were a baby,
+Charmides."
+
+"I know, father," whispered the boy with shining eyes. "I have kissed
+your olive wreath, where it hangs above our altar at home."
+
+The father put his hand lovingly on the boy's yellow head.
+
+"By the help of Hermes there soon will be a green one there for you to
+kiss, lad. The gods are very good to crown our family twice."
+
+"I wish there were crowns for lame boys to win," said Charmides. "I
+would win one!"
+
+He said that fiercely and clenched his fist. His father looked kindly
+into his eyes and spoke solemnly.
+
+"I think you would, my son. Perhaps there are such crowns."
+
+They started on thoughtfully and soon were among the crowd. There were
+a hundred interesting sights. They passed an outdoor oven like a little
+round hill of stones and clay. The baker was just raking the fire out of
+the little door on the side. Charmides waited to see him put the loaves
+into the hot cave. But before it was done a horn blew and called him
+away to a little table covered with cakes.
+
+"Honey cakes! Almond cakes! Fig cakes!" sang the man. "Come buy!"
+
+There they lay--stars and fish and ships and temples. Charmides picked
+up one in the shape of a lyre.
+
+"I will take this one," he said, and solemnly ate it.
+
+"Why are you so solemn, son?" laughed Menon.
+
+The boy did not answer. He only looked up at his father with deep eyes
+and said nothing. But in a moment he was racing off to see some rope
+dancers.
+
+"Glaucon," said the master to the slave, "take care of the boy. Give him
+a good time. Buy him what he wants. Take him back to camp when he is
+tired. I have business to do."
+
+Then he turned to talk with a friend, who had come up, and Glaucon
+followed his little master.
+
+What a good time the boy had! The rope dancers, the sword swallowers,
+the Egyptian with his painted scroll, a trained bear that wrestled with
+a wild-looking man dressed in skins, a cooking tent where whole sheep
+were roasting and turning over a fire, another where tiny fish were
+boiling in a great pot of oil and jumping as if alive--he saw them all.
+He stood under the sculptors' awning and gazed at the marble people more
+beautiful than life. And when he came upon Apollo striking his lyre, his
+heart leaped into his mouth. He stood quiet for a long time gazing at
+this god of song. Then he walked out of the tent with shining eyes.
+
+At last it grew dark, and torches began to blaze in front of the booths.
+
+"Shall we go home, Charmides?" said Glaucon.
+
+"Oh, no!" cried the boy. "I haven't seen it all. I am not tired. It is
+gayer now than ever with the torches. See all those shining flames."
+
+And he ran to a booth where a hundred little bronze lamps hung, each
+with its tongue of clear light. It was an imagemaker's booth. The table
+stood full of little clay statues of the gods. Charmides took up one. It
+was a young man leaning against a tree trunk. On his arm he held a baby.
+
+"It is a model of the great marble Hermes in the temple of Hera, my
+little master," said the image maker. "Great Praxiteles made that one,
+poor Philo made this one."
+
+"It is beautiful," said Charmides and turned away, holding it tenderly
+in his hand.
+
+Glaucon waited a moment to pay for the figure. Then he followed
+Charmides who had walked on. He was standing on the bridge gazing at the
+water.
+
+"Glaucon," he said, "I must see that statue of Hermes."
+
+They stood there talking about the wonderful works of Praxiteles and of
+many another artist. Glaucon pointed to a little wooden shed lying in
+the meadow.
+
+"That," he said, "is the workshop of Phidias. There he made the gold and
+ivory statue of Zeus that you shall see in Zeus's temple. That workshop
+will stay there many a year, I think, for people to love because so
+great a thing was done there."
+
+"Is it so wonderful?" asked Charmides.
+
+"When it was finished," Glaucon answered solemnly, "Phidias stood before
+it and prayed to Zeus to tell him whether it pleased the god. Great Zeus
+heard the prayer, and in his joy at the beautiful thing he hurled a
+blazing thunderbolt and smote the floor before the statue as if to say,
+'This image is Zeus himself.' But I have never seen it, for a slave may
+not pass the sacred wall."
+
+Now the full moon had risen, and the world was swimming in silver light.
+The statue of Victory hung over the sacred place on spread wings. Many
+another great form on its high pillar seemed standing in the deep sky
+above the world. The little pool in the pebbly river had stars in the
+bottom.
+
+"This Kladeos is a savage little river in the spring," said Glaucon. "It
+tries to tear away our Olympia or drown it or cover it with sand. You
+see, men have had to fence it in with stone walls."
+
+But Charmides was looking at the sacred place and its soft shining
+statues in the sky.
+
+"Let us walk around the wall," he said.
+
+So they left the river and passed the gymnasium and the gate. Along this
+side the wall cast a wide shadow. Here they walked in silence. Here
+there were no tents, no torches, no noisy people. Everything was quiet
+in the evening air. The far-off sounds of the fair were a gentle hum. A
+hundred pictures were floating in Charmides' mind--Phidias, Zeus, Creon
+with the strigil, his own little Hermes, the strange people in the fair,
+the marble Apollo under the sculptor's tent. In a few moments they
+turned a corner and came out into the soft moonlight. A little beyond
+gleamed a broad river, the Alphaeus. Charmides and the slave went over
+and strolled along its banks. Here they were again in the crowd and
+among tents. They saw a group of people and went toward them. A man
+sat on a low knoll a little above the crowd. His hair hung about his
+shoulders and his long robe lay in glistening folds about his feet. A
+lyre rested on his knees, and he was striking the strings softly. The
+sweet notes floated high in the moonlit air. At last he lifted his voice
+and sang:
+
+ When the swan spreadeth out his wings to alight
+ On the whirling pools of the foaming stream,
+ He sendeth to thee, Apollo, a note.
+ When the sweet-voiced minstrel lifteth his lyre
+ And stretcheth his hand on the singing string,
+ He sendeth to thee, Apollo, a prayer.
+ Even so do I now, a worshiping bard,
+ With my heart lifted up to begin my lay,
+ Cry aloud to Apollo, the lord of song.
+
+Then he sang of that lordliest of all minstrels, Orpheus--how the trees
+swung circling about to his music; how the savage beasts lay down at his
+feet to listen; how the rocks rose up at his bidding and followed him,
+dancing, to build a town without hands; how he went to the dismal land
+of the dead to seek his wife and with his clear lyre and sweet voice
+drew tears from the iron heart of the king of hell and won back his
+loved Eurydice and lost her again the same hour.
+
+The boy, sitting there in the moonlight, went floating away on the song
+until he felt himself straying through that fair garden of the dead with
+singing lyre or riding with Artemis through the sky in her moon chariot.
+
+When the song was ended, Glaucon said, "Come, little master, you have
+fallen asleep. Let us go home."
+
+And Charmides rose and went, still clutching his image of Hermes in his
+hand and still holding the song fast in his heart.
+
+In the morning the whole great camp was awake and moving long before
+daylight. Every man and boy was in his fairest clothes. On every head
+was a fresh fillet. Every hand bore some beautiful gift for the gods--a
+vase, a plate of gold, an embroidered robe, a basket of silver. All were
+pouring to the open gate in the sacred wall. Here a procession formed.
+Young men led cattle with gilded horns and swinging garlands, or sheep
+with clean, combed wool. Stately priests in long chitons paced to the
+music of flutes. The judges glowed in their purple robes. Then walked
+the athletes, their eyes burning with excitement. And last came all the
+visitors with gift-laden hands. The slaves and foreigners crowded at
+the gate to see the procession pass, for on this first holy day only
+freedmen and Greeks of pure blood might visit the sacred shrines. When
+Charmides passed through, his heart leaped. Here was no empty field with
+a few altars. He had never seen a greater crowd in the busy market place
+at home in Athens. But here the people were even more beautiful than
+the Athenians. Their limbs were round and perfect. They stood always
+gracefully. Their garments hung in delicate folds, for they were people
+made by great artists--people of marble and of bronze. All the gods of
+Olympos were there, and athletes of years gone by, wrestling, running,
+hurling the disc. There were bronze chariots with horses of bronze to
+draw them and men of bronze to hold the reins. There were heroes of Troy
+still fighting. And here and there were little altars of marble or
+stone or earth or ashes with an ancient, holy statue. At every one the
+procession halted. The priests poured a libation and chanted a prayer.
+The people sang a hymn. Many left gifts piled about the altar. Before
+Hermes Charmides left his little clay image of the god. And while
+the priests prayed aloud, the boy sent up a whispered prayer for his
+brother.
+
+Once the procession came before a low, narrow temple. It was of
+sun-dried bricks coated with plaster. Its columns were all different
+from one another. Some were slender, others thick; some fluted, others
+plain; and all were brightly painted. Charmides smiled up at his father.
+
+"It is not so beautiful as the Parthenon," he said.
+
+"No," his father answered, "but it is very old and very holy. Every
+generation of man has put a new column here. That is why they are not
+alike. This is the ancient temple of Hera."
+
+Then they entered the door. Down the long aisle they walked between
+small open rooms on either side. Here stood statues gazing out--some of
+marble, some of gold and ivory. The priests had moved to the front and
+stood praying before the ancient statues of Zeus and Hera. But suddenly
+Charmides stopped and would go no farther. For here, in a little room
+all alone, stood his Hermes with the baby Dionysus. The boy cried out
+softly with joy and crept toward the lovely thing. He gently touched the
+golden sandal. He gazed into the kind blue eyes and smiled. The marble
+was delicately tinted and glowed like warm skin. A frail wreath of
+golden leaves lay on the curling hair. Charmides looked up at the tiny
+baby and laughed at its coaxing arms.
+
+"Are you smiling at him?" he whispered to Hermes. "Or are you dreaming
+of Olympos? Are you carrying him to the nymphs on Mount Nysa?" And then
+more softly still he said, "Do not forget Creon, blessed god."
+
+When his father came back he found him still gazing into the quiet face
+and smiling tenderly with love of the beautiful thing. As Menon led him
+away, he waved a loving farewell to the god.
+
+The most wonderful time was after the sacrifice to Zeus before the great
+temple with its deep porches and its marble watchers in the gable.
+The altar was a huge pile of ashes. For hundreds of years Greeks had
+sacrificed here. The holy ashes had piled up and piled up until they
+stood as a hill more than twenty feet high. The people waited around the
+foot of it, watching. The priests walked up its side. Men led up the
+sleek cattle to be slain for the feast of the gods. And on the very top
+a fire leaped toward heaven. Far up in the sky Charmides could half
+see the beautiful gods leaning down and smiling upon their worshiping
+people.
+
+Then he turned and walked with the crowd under the temple porch and into
+the great, dim room. He trembled and grasped his father's hand in awe.
+For there in the soft light towered great Zeus. In embroidered robes of
+dull gold he sat high on his golden throne. His hands held his scepter
+and his messenger eagle. His great yellow curls almost touched the
+ceiling. He bent his divine face down, and his deep eyes glowed upon his
+people. Sweet smoke was curling upward, and the room rang with a hymn.
+
+As Charmides gazed into the solemn face, a strange light quivered about
+it, and the boy's heart shook with awe. The words of Homer sprang to his
+lips:
+
+"Zeus bowed his head. The divine hair streamed back from the kindly
+brows, and great Olympos quaked."
+
+After the sacrifices were over there was time to wander again among the
+statues and to sit on the benches under the cool porches and watch the
+moving crowd and the glittering sun on the gold ornaments of the temple
+peaks. Then there was time to see again the strange sights of the fair
+in the plain. The next morning was noisier and gayer than anything
+Charmides had ever known. While it was still twilight his father hurried
+him down the hill and through the gates, on through the sacred enclosure
+to another gate. And all about them was a hurrying, noisy crowd. They
+stumbled up some steps and began to wait. As the light grew, Charmides
+saw all about him men and boys, sitting or standing, and all gaily
+talking. Below the crowd he saw a long, narrow stretch of ground. He
+clapped his hands. That was the ground Creon's feet would run upon! Up
+and down both sides of the track went long tiers of stone seats. They
+were packed with people who were there to see Creon win. The seats
+curved around one narrow end of the course. But across the other end
+stood a wall with a gate. Menon pointed to a large white board hanging
+on the wall and said, "See! The list of athletes."
+
+Here were written names, and among them, "Creon, son of the Olympic
+winner Menon." Charmides' eyes glowed with pride.
+
+Every eye was watching the gate. Soon the purple-clad judges entered.
+Some of them walked the whole length of the stadion and took their seats
+opposite the goal posts. Two or three waited at the starting line. There
+was a blast of a trumpet. Then a herald cried something about games
+for boys and about only Greeks of pure blood and about the blessing of
+Hermes of the race course.
+
+Immediately there entered a crowd of boys, while the spectators sent
+up a rousing cheer. The lads gathered to cast lots for places. At last
+eight of them stepped out and stood at the starting line. Creon was not
+among them. A post with a little fluttering flag was between every two.
+The boys threw off their clothes and stood ready. One of the judges said
+to them:
+
+"The eyes of the world are upon you. Your cities love an Olympic winner.
+From Olympos the gods look down upon you. For the glory of your cities,
+for the joy of your fathers, for your own good name, I exhort you to do
+your best."
+
+Then he gave the signal and the runners shot forward. Down the long
+course they went with twinkling legs. The spectators cheered, called
+their names, waved their chlamyses and himations. Their friends cried
+to the gods to help. Down they ran, two far ahead, others stringing out
+behind. Every runner's eyes were on the marble goal post with its little
+statue of Victory. In a moment it was over, and Leotichides had first
+laid hand upon the post and was winner of the first heat.
+
+Immediately eight other boys took their places at the starting line.
+Charmides snatched his father's hand and held it tight, for Creon was
+one of them. Another signal and they were off, with Creon leading by
+a pace or two. So it was all the way, and he gave a glad shout as he
+touched the goal post.
+
+Charmides heard men all about him say:
+
+"A beautiful run!"
+
+"How easily he steps!"
+
+"We shall see him do something in the last heat."
+
+"Who is he?"
+
+And when the herald announced the name of the winner, the benches buzzed
+with,
+
+"Creon, Creon, son of Menon the Athenian."
+
+Four more groups were called and ran. Then the six winners stepped up
+to the line. This time the goal was the altar at the farther end of the
+stadion. A wave of excitement ran around the seats. Everybody leaned
+forward. The signal! Leotichides sprang a long pace ahead. Next came
+Creon, loping evenly. One boy stumbled and fell behind. The other three
+were running almost side by side. Menon was muttering between his teeth:
+
+"Hermes, be his aid! Great Zeus look upon him! Herakles give him wind!"
+
+Now they were near the goal, and Leotichides was still leading by a
+stride. Then Creon threw back his head and stretched out his legs and
+with ten great leaps he had touched the altar a good pace ahead. He had
+won the race.
+
+The crowd went wild with shouting. Menon leaped over men's heads and
+went running down the course calling for his son. But the guards caught
+him and forced him back upon the seats. Charmides sat down and wept for
+joy. And nobody saw him, for everybody was cheering and watching the
+victor.
+
+One of the judges stepped out and gave a torch to Creon. The boy touched
+the flame to the pile on the altar. As the fire sprang up, he stretched
+his hands to the sky and cried,
+
+"O blessed Hermes, Creon will not forget thy help."
+
+As he turned away the judge gave him a palm in sign of victory. The boy
+walked back down the course with the palm waving over his shoulder. His
+body was glistening, his cheeks were flushed, his eyes were burning
+with joy. He was looking up at the crowd, hoping to see his father and
+brother. And at every step men reached out a hand to him or called
+to him, until at last Menon's own loving arms pulled him up upon the
+benches. Then there was such a noise that no one heard any one else, but
+everybody knew that everybody was happy. Men pushed their heads over
+other men's shoulders, and boys peeped between their fathers' legs to
+see the Olympic winner. And in that circle of faces Menon stood with
+his arms about Creon, laughing and crying. And Charmides clung to his
+brother's hand. But at last Creon whispered to his father:
+
+"I must go and make ready. I am entered for the pentathlon, also."
+
+Menon cried out in wonder.
+
+"I kept that news for a surprise," laughed Creon. "Good-by, little one,"
+he said to Charmides, and pushed through the crowd.
+
+Menon sat down trembling. If his boy should win in the pentathlon also!
+That would be too great glory. It could not happen. He began to mutter a
+hundred prayers. Another race was called--the double race, twice around
+the course. But Menon did not stand to see it. He could think of nothing
+but his glorious son. After the race was another great shout. Some other
+boy was carrying a palm. Some other father was proud. Then followed
+wrestling, bout after bout, and cheering from the crowd. But Menon cared
+little for it all.
+
+It was now near noon. The sun shone down scorchingly. A wind whirled
+dust up from the race course into people's faces.
+
+"My throat needs wetting," cried a man.
+
+He pulled off a little vase of wine that hung from his girdle and passed
+it to Menon, saying:
+
+"I should be proud if the father of the victor would drink from my
+bottle."
+
+And Menon took it, smiling proudly. Then he himself opened a little
+cloth bag and drew out figs and nuts.
+
+"Here is something to munch, lad," he said to Charmides.
+
+Other people, also, were eating and drinking. They walked about to visit
+their friends or sat down to rest. Menon's neighbor sank upon his seat
+with a sigh.
+
+"This is the first time I have sat down since sunrise," he laughed.
+
+Then the pentathlon was announced. Everyone leaped to his feet again. A
+group of boys stood ready behind a line. One of the judges was softening
+the ground with a pick. An umpire made a speech to the lads. Then, at a
+word, a boy took up the lead jumping weights. He swung his hands back
+and forth, swaying his graceful body with them. Then a backward jerk! He
+threw his weights behind him and leaped. The judges quickly measured
+and called the distance. Then another boy leaped, and another, and
+another--twenty or more. Last Creon took the weights and toed the line.
+
+"Creon! Creon!" shouted the crowd: "The victor! Creon again!"
+
+He swung and swayed and then sailed through the air.
+
+"By Herakles!" shouted a man near Charmides. "He alights like a
+sea-gull."
+
+There went up a great roar from the benches even before the judges
+called the distance. For any one could see that he had passed the
+farthest mark. The first of the five games was over and Creon had won
+it.
+
+Now the judges brought a discus. A boy took it and stepped behind the
+line. He fitted the lead plate into the crook of his hand. He swung it
+back and forth, bending his knees and turning his body. Then it flew
+into the air and down the course. Where it stopped rolling an umpire
+marked and called the distance.
+
+"I like this game best of all," said a man behind Charmides. "The whole
+body is in it. Every movement is graceful. See the curve of the back,
+the beautiful bend of the legs, the muscles working over the chest! The
+body moves to and fro as if to music."
+
+One after another the boys took their turn. But when Creon threw,
+Charmides cried out in sorrow, and Menon groaned. His disc fell short of
+the mark. He was third.
+
+"It was gracefully done," Charmides heard some one say, "but his arms
+are not so good as his legs. See the arms and chest of that Timon. No
+one can throw against him."
+
+After that a judge set up a shield in the middle of the course. Every
+boy snatched a spear from a pile on the ground and threw at the central
+boss of the shield. Again Creon was beaten. Phormio of Corinth, son of a
+famous warrior, won.
+
+Then they paired off for wrestling. Creon and Eudorus of Aegina were
+together. Each boy poured oil into his hand from a little vase and
+rubbed the body of his antagonist to limber his muscles. Then he took
+fine sand from a box and dusted it over his skin for the oiled body
+might slip out of his arms in the wrestling match. Then, at a signal,
+the pairs of wrestlers faced each other.
+
+Creon held his hands out ready, bent his knees, thrust forward his head,
+and stood waiting. Eudorus leaped to and fro around him trying to get a
+hold. At last he rushed at him. Creon caught him around the waist and
+hurled him to the ground. Charmides laughed and shouted and clapped
+his hands. That was one throw. There must be three. Eudorus was up
+immediately and was circling around and around again. Suddenly Creon
+leaped low and caught him by the leg and threw him. He had won two bouts
+out of three and stood victor without a throw.
+
+Soon all the pairs had finished. The eight victors stood forth and cast
+lots for new partners. Again they wrestled. This time, also, Creon won.
+Then these four winners paired off and wrestled, and at the end Creon
+and Timon were left to try it together.
+
+In the first bout the Spartan boy lifted Creon off the ground and threw
+him, back down. Then the men on the benches began shouting advice.
+
+"Look out for his arms!"
+
+"Don't let him grapple you!"
+
+"Feint, feint!"
+
+Creon leaped to his feet. He began circling around Timon as Eudorus had
+circled around him. He dodged out from under Timon's arms. He wriggled
+from between his hands. The benches rang with cheers and laughs.
+
+"He is an eel," cried one man.
+
+Suddenly Creon ducked under Timon's arms, caught him by his legs and
+tripped him. The two boys were even.
+
+In the next bout Timon ran at Creon like a wild bull. He caught him
+around the waist in his strong arms to whirl him to the ground. But with
+a crook of his leg Creon tripped him and wriggled out of his arms before
+he fell.
+
+Menon caught up Charmides and threw him to his shoulder laughing and
+stamping his feet.
+
+"Do you see, lad?" he cried. "He has won two games. Only the race is
+left, and we know how he can run."
+
+And how he did run! He threw back his head and leaped out like a deer,
+skimming over the ground in long strides and leaving his dust to the
+others. He had the three games out of five and was winner of the
+pentathlon.
+
+Then there was no holding the crowd. They poured down off the seats and
+ran to Creon. Some lifted him upon their shoulders and carried him out
+of the stadion, for this was the end of the games for that day. And
+those who could not come near Creon and his waving palms crowded around
+Menon. So they went, shouting, out of the gate and among the statues and
+on to the river. There they put Creon down, and his father and Charmides
+led him away to camp.
+
+That was the happiest night of Charmides' life. He heard his wonderful
+brother talk for hours of the life in the gymnasium. He heard new tales
+of Creon's favorite god, Hermes. He heard of the women's games that were
+held once a year at Olympia in honor of Hera. He heard a hundred new
+names of boys and cities, for there had been, athletes from every corner
+of Greece in training here. He held the victor's palms in his own hands.
+He slept beside this double winner of Olympic crowns. He dreamed that
+Apollo and Hermes came hand in hand and gazed down at him and Creon as
+they lay sleeping and dropped a great garland over them both. It was
+twined of Olympic olive leaves and Apollo's own laurel.
+
+On the next day there were games for the men, like those the boys had
+played. On the day after that there were chariot races in a wide place
+outside the walls. Every night there was still the gay noise of the
+fair. But instead of going to see it, Charmides stretched himself under
+the trees on Mount Kronion and gazed up at the moon and dreamed.
+
+Then came the last day, with its great procession again and its
+sacrifices at every altar. The proud victors walked with their palm
+leaves in their hands. In the temple of Zeus, under the eyes of the
+glowing god, the priests put the precious olive crowns upon the winners'
+heads. They were made from sacred olive leaves. They were cut with a
+golden sickle from the very tree that godlike Herakles had brought out
+of the far north. That wreath it was which should be more dear than a
+chest of gold to Creon's family and Creon's city. That was the crown
+which poets should sing about. When the priest set the crown upon
+Creon's head, Charmides thought he felt a god's hands upon his own brow.
+Menon leaned upon a friend's shoulder and burst into tears.
+
+"I could die happy now," he said. "I have done enough for Athens in
+giving her such a glorious son."
+
+As the three walked back to camp, Menon said:
+
+"Who shall write your chorus of triumph, Creon? Already my messengers
+have reached Athens, and the dancers are chosen who shall lead you home.
+But the song is not yet made. It must be a glorious one!"
+
+Then Charmides blushingly whispered,
+
+"May I sing you something, father? Apollo helped me to make it."
+
+His father smiled down in surprise. "So that is why you have been lying
+so quiet under the trees these moonlit nights!" he said.
+
+Charmides ran ahead and was sitting thrumming a lyre when his father
+and Creon came up. He struck a long, ringing chord and raised his clear
+voice in a dancing song:
+
+ When Creon, son of Menon, bore off the Olympic olive,
+ Mount Kronion shook with shouting of Hellas' hosts assembled.
+ They praised his manly beauty, his grace and strength of body.
+ They praised his eyes' alertness, the smoothness of his muscles.
+ They blessed his happy father and wished themselves his brothers.
+ Sweet rang the glorious praises in ears of Creon's lovers.
+ But I, when upward gazing, beheld a sight more wondrous.
+ The gates of high Olympos were open wide and clanging,
+ Deserted ev'ry palace, the golden city empty.
+ And all the gods were gathered above Olympia's race-course,
+ They smiled upon my Creon and gifts upon him showered.
+ From golden Aphrodite dropped half a hundred graces.
+ Athene made him skillful. Boon Hermes gave him litheness.
+ Fierce Ares added courage, Queen Hera happy marriage.
+ Diana's blessed fingers into his soul shed quiet.
+ Lord Bacchus gave him friendship and graces of the banquet,
+ Poseidon luck in travel, and Zeus decreed him victor.
+ Apollo, smiling, watched him and saw his thousand blessings.
+ "Enough," he said, "for Creon. I'll bless the empty-handed."
+ He turned to where I trembled, and stepping downward crowned me.
+ "To thee my gift," he whispered, "to sing thy brother's glory."
+
+"Well done, little poet!" cried Menon.
+
+"A happy man am I. One son is beloved by Hermes, the other by Apollo.
+Bring wax tablets, Glaucon, and write down the song. I will prepare a
+messenger to hurry with it to Athens."
+
+So it happened that a lame boy won a crown. And when Creon stepped
+ashore at Pirseus, and all Athens stood shouting his name, a chorus of
+boys came dancing toward him singing his brother's song. Creon was led
+home wearing Zeus' wreath upon his head, and Charmides with Apollo's
+crown in his heart. [Illustration: _A Coin of Alexander the Great_. It
+shows Zeus sitting on his throne.]
+
+
+
+
+HOW A CITY WAS LOST
+
+Such was Olympia long ago. Every four years such games took place. Then
+the plain was crowded and busy and gay. Year after year new statues were
+set up, new gifts were brought, new buildings were made. Olympia was
+one of the richest places in the world. Its fame flew to every land. At
+every festival new people came to see its beauties. It was the meeting
+place of the world.
+
+But meantime the bad fortune of Greece began. Her cities quarreled and
+fought among themselves. A king came down from the north and conquered
+her. After that the Romans sailed over from Italy and conquered her
+again. Often Roman emperors carried off some of her statues to make Rome
+beautiful. Shipload after shipload they took. The new country was filled
+with Greek statues. The old one was left almost empty. Later, after
+Christ was born, and the Romans and the Greeks had become Christian, the
+emperor said,
+
+"It is not fitting for Christians to hold a festival in honor of a
+heathen god." And he stopped the games. He took away the gold and silver
+gifts from the treasure houses. He carried away the gold and ivory
+statues. Where Phidias' wonderful Zeus went nobody knows. Perhaps the
+gold was melted to make money. Olympia sat lonely and deserted by her
+river banks. Summer winds whirled dust under her porches. Rabbits made
+burrows in Zeus' altar. Doors rusted off their hinges. Foxes made their
+dens in Hera's temple. Men came now and then to melt up a bronze statue
+for swords or to haul away the stones of her temples for building.
+The Alpheios kept eating away its banks and cutting under statues and
+monuments. Many a beautiful thing crumbled and fell into the river and
+was rolled on down to the sea. Men sometimes found a bronze helmet or a
+marble head in the bed of the stream.
+
+After a long time people came and lived among the ruins. On an old
+temple floor they built a little church. Men lived in the temple of
+Zeus, and women spun and gossiped where the golden statue had sat. In
+the temple of Hera people set up a wine press. Did they know that the
+little marble baby in the statue near them was the god of the vineyard
+and had taught men to make wine? Out of broken statues and columns and
+temple stones they built a wall around the little town to keep out their
+enemies. Sometimes when they found a bronze warrior or a marble god they
+must have made strange stories about it, for they had half forgotten
+those wonderful old Greeks. But the marble statues they put into a kiln
+to make lime to plaster their houses. The bronze ones they melted up for
+tools. Sometimes they found a piece of gold. They thought themselves
+lucky then and melted it over into money.
+
+But an earthquake shook down the buildings and toppled over the statues.
+The columns and walls of the grand old temple of Zeus fell in a heap.
+The marble statues in its pediments dropped to the ground and broke.
+Victory fell from her high pillar and shattered into a hundred pieces.
+The roof of Hera's temple fell in, and Hermes stood uncovered to the
+sky. Old Kronion rocked and sent a landslide down over the treasure
+houses. Kladeos rushed out of his course and poured sand over the sacred
+place.
+
+That earthquake frightened the people away, and they left Olympia alone
+again. Hermes was still there, but he looked out upon ruins. Victory lay
+in a heap of fragments. Apollo was there, but broken and buried in earth
+with the other people of the pediments. Zeus and all the hundreds of
+heroes and athletes were gone. So it was for a while. Then a new race of
+people came and built another little town upon the earth-covered ruins.
+They little guessed what lay below their poor houses. But for some
+reason this town, also, died and left the ruins alone. Then dusty winds
+and flooding rivers began to cover up what was left. Kladeos piled up
+sand fifteen feet deep. Alpheios swung out of its banks and washed away
+the race-course for chariots. Under the rains and floods the sun-dried
+bricks of Hera's walls melted again into clay and covered the floor.
+Again the earth quaked, and Hermes fell forward on his face, and little
+was left of the beautiful old Olympia. Grass and flowers crept in from
+the sides. Seeds blew in and shrubs and trees took the place of columns.
+Soon the flowers and the animals had Olympia to themselves. A few gray
+stones thrust up through the soil. So it was for hundreds of years.
+Greece was conquered by the men of Venice and then by the Turks. But
+Olympia, in its far corner, was forgotten and untouched except when a
+Turkish officer or farmer went there to dig a few stones out of the
+ground. And they knew nothing of the ancient gods and the ancient
+festival and the old story of the place, for they were foreigners and
+new people.
+
+But about a hundred years ago Englishmen and Germans and Frenchmen began
+to visit Greece. They went to see, not her new Turkish houses or her
+Venetian castles or the strange dress of her new people, but her old
+ruins and the signs of her old glory. These men had read of Olympia in
+ancient Greek books and they knew what statues and buildings had once
+stood there. They wrote back to their friends things like this:
+
+"I saw a piece of a huge column lying on top of the ground. It was seven
+feet across. It must have belonged to the temple of Zeus."
+
+"To-day I saw a long, low place in the ground where I think must have
+been the stadion in ancient days."
+
+At last, about thirty years ago, Ernst Curtius and several other Germans
+went there. They were men who had studied Greek history and Greek art
+and they planned to excavate Olympia.
+
+"We will uncover the sacred enclosure again. Men shall see again the
+ancient temples and altars, the stadion, the statues."
+
+Germany had given them money for the work, and at last Greece allowed
+them to begin. In October they started their digging. Workmen up-rooted
+shrubs and dug away dirt. Excavators watched every spadeful. They were
+always measuring, making maps, taking notes. They found a few vases,
+terra cotta figures, pieces of bronze statues, swords and armor. They
+cleared off temple floors and were able to make out the plans of the old
+buildings. They found the empty pedestals of many statues. Yet they were
+disappointed. Olympia had been a beautiful place, a rich place. They
+were finding only the hints of these things. The beauty was gone. Of the
+three thousand statues that had been there should they not find one?
+
+Then they uncovered the fallen statues of the pediments of Zeus' temple.
+Thirty or more there were--Apollo, Zeus, heroes, women, centaurs,
+horses. Arms were gone, heads were broken, legs were lost. The
+excavators fitted together all the pieces and set the mended statues up
+side by side as they had been in the gable. They found, too, the carved
+marble slabs that showed the labors of Herakles. But even these were not
+the lovely things that people had hoped to see from Olympia. They were
+rather stiff and ungraceful. They had not been made by the greatest
+artists. In the temple of Hera one day men were digging in clay. Over
+all the rest of Olympia was only sand. The excavators wondered for a
+long time why this one spot should have clay. Where could it have come
+from? They read their old books over and over. They thought and studied.
+At last they said:
+
+"The walls of the temple must have been made of sun-dried brick. In the
+old days they must have been covered with plaster. This and the roof
+kept them dry. But the plaster cracked off, and the roof fell in, and
+the rain and the floods turned the bricks back to clay again."
+
+Then one May morning, when the men were digging in the clay, a workman
+lifted off his spadeful of dirt, and white marble gleamed out. After
+that there was careful work, with all the excavators standing about to
+watch. What would it be? They thought over all the statues that the
+ancient books said had stood in Hera's temple. Then were slowly
+uncovered, a smooth back, a carved shoulder, a curly head. A white
+statue of a young man lay face down in the gray clay. The legs were
+gone. The right arm was missing. From his left hung carved drapery. On
+his left shoulder lay a tiny marble hand.
+
+"It is the Hermes of Praxiteles," the excavators whispered among
+themselves.
+
+In his day Praxiteles had been almost as famous as Phidias. The old
+Greek world had rung with his praises. Modern men had dreamed of what
+his statues must have been and had longed to see them. How did he shape
+the head? How did his bodies curve? What expression was on his faces?
+All these things they had wished to know. But not one of his statues
+had ever been found. Now here lay one before the very eyes of these
+excavators. They put out their hands and lovingly touched the polished
+marble skin. But what would they find when they lifted it?--Perhaps the
+nose would be gone, the face flattened by the fall, the ears broken, the
+beautiful marble chipped. They almost feared to lift it. But at last
+they did so.
+
+When they saw the face, they were struck dumb by its beauty, and I think
+tears sprang into the eyes of some of them. No such perfect piece of
+marble had ever been found before. There was not a scratch. The skin
+still glowed with the polishing that Praxiteles' own hands had given it.
+There was even a hint of color on the lips. The soft clay bed had saved
+the falling statue. Here was a statue that the whole world would love.
+It would make the name of Olympia famous again. The excavators were
+proud and happy. That old ruined temple seemed indeed a sacred place to
+them as they gazed upon perhaps the most beautiful statue in the world.
+
+"Surely we shall find nothing else so perfect," they said.
+
+Yet they went on with the work. Before long Hermes' right foot was found
+imbedded in the clay. Its sandal still shone with the gilding put on two
+thousand years before. Workmen were tearing down one of the houses of
+the little town that had been built on the ancient ruins. Every stone in
+it had some old story. Pieces of fluted columns, carved capitals, broken
+pedestals, blocks from the temple of Zeus--all were cemented together to
+make these walls. The workmen pulled and chipped and lifted out piece
+after piece. The excavators studied each scrap to see whether it was
+valuable. And at last they found a baby's body. They carefully broke off
+the mortar. It was of creamy marble, beautifully carved. They carried it
+to Hermes. It fitted upon the drapery over his arm. On a rubbish heap
+outside the temple they had found a little marble head. They put it upon
+this baby's shoulders. It was badly broken, but they could see that it
+belonged there. So after two thousand years Hermes again smiled into the
+eyes of the baby Dionysus.
+
+Other things were found. The shattered Victory was uncovered. Carefully
+the excavators fitted the pieces together. But the wide wings could
+never be made again, and the head was ruined. Even so, the statue is a
+beautiful thing, with its thin drapery flying in the wind.
+
+After five years the work was finished. Now again hundreds of visitors
+journey to Olympia every year. They see no gleaming roofs and
+high-lifted statues and joyful games. They walk among sad ruins. But
+they can tread the gymnasium floor where Creon and many another victor
+wrestled. They can enter the gate of the grass-grown stadion. They can
+see the fallen columns of the temple of Zeus. In the museum they can see
+the statues of its pediments and, at the end of the long hall, they
+see Victory stepping toward them. They can wander on the banks of the
+Kladeos and the Alpheios. They can climb Mount Kronion and see the whole
+little plain and imagine it gay with tents and moving people.
+
+All these things are interesting to those who like the old Greek life.
+But most people make the long journey only to see Hermes. In the museum,
+in a little room all alone, he stands, always calm and lovable, always
+dreaming of something beautiful, always half smiling at the coaxing
+baby.
+
+
+
+
+PICTURES OF OLYMPIA
+
+
+ENTRANCE TO STADION.
+
+This was not the gate where Charmides entered. This entrance was
+reserved for the judges, the competitors, and the heralds. Inside there
+were seats for forty-five thousand people. On one side the hill made a
+natural slope for seats. But on the other sides a ridge of earth had to
+be built up. The track was about two hundred yards long. Only the two
+ends have been excavated. The rest still lies deep under the sand.
+
+
+GYMNASIUM.
+
+Here Creon and the other boys spent a month in training before the
+games. The gymnasium had a covered portico as long as the track in the
+stadion, where the boys could run in bad weather. A Greek boy of to-day
+is playing on his shepherd's pipes in the foreground, and they are the
+same kind of pipes on which the old Greeks played.
+
+
+BOYS IN GYMNASIUM.
+
+From a vase painting. They are wrestling, jumping with weights, throwing
+the spear, throwing the discus, while their teachers watch them. One man
+is saying, "A beautiful boy, truly."
+
+
+THE TEMPLE OF ZEUS.
+
+When we see a picture of fallen broken columns lying about a field
+in disorder, we try to learn how the original building looked and to
+imagine it in all its beauty. This, men believe, is the way the Temple
+of Zeus looked. The figures in the pediment were all of Parian marble.
+In the center stands Zeus himself. A chariot race is about to be run,
+and the contestants stand on either side of Zeus. Zeus gave the victory
+to Pelops, and Pelops became husband of Hippodameia, and king of Pisa,
+and founded the Olympic Games. These games were held every fourth year
+for more than a thousand years.
+
+ Note: This and the following plates of the Labors of Herakles and the
+ statue of Victory, were photographed from Curtius and Adler's
+ "Olympia: Die Ergebnisse der von dem Deutschen Reich Veranstalteten
+ Ausgrabung," etc. This is one of the most beautiful books ever made
+ for a buried city.
+
+Boys and girls who can reach the Metropolitan Museum Library should not
+miss it. It is in many volumes, each almost as large as the top of the
+table, and you do not need to read German to appreciate the plates.
+
+
+THE LABORS OF HERAKLES.
+
+Under the porches of the Temple of Zeus were twelve pictures in marble,
+six at each end, showing the Labors of Herakles. Herakles was highly
+honored at Olympia and, according to one tale, he, instead of Pelops,
+was the founder of the Olympic Games.
+
+[Illustration: Herakles and the Nemean lion.--_Metropolitan Museum_]
+
+[Illustration: Herakles and the hydra.--_Metropolitan Museum_]
+
+
+THE STATUE OF VICTORY.
+
+In the sand, not far from the Temple of Zeus, the explorers found the
+fragments of this statue. It shows the goddess flying down from heaven
+to bring victory to the men of Messene and Naupaktos. So the victors
+must have erected this statue at Olympia in gratitude.
+
+Something like the picture used as the frontispiece, men believe the
+statue looked originally. It stood upon a base thirty feet high so that
+the goddess really looked as if she were descending from heaven.
+
+
+THE TEMPLE OF HERA.
+
+This shows the ruins of the temple where Charmides saw the statue of
+Hermes, perhaps the most beautiful statue in the world.
+
+
+HEAD OF AN ATHLETE.
+
+The Greek artist who made this statue believed that a beautiful body is
+glorious, as well as a beautiful mind, and a fine spirit. Do you
+think his statue shows all these things? The original is now at the
+Metropolitan Museum.
+
+
+A GREEK HORSEMAN.
+
+The artist had great skill who could chisel out of marble such a strong,
+bold rider, and such a spirited horse.
+
+ This picture and the one before it are not pictures of things found at
+ Olympia. They are two of the most beautiful statues of Greek athletes,
+ and we give them to remind you of the sort of people who came to the
+ games at Olympia.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Buried Cities, Part 2, by Jennie Hall
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BURIED CITIES, PART 2 ***
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