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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67552 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67552)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The History of the Manners and Customs
-of Ancient Greece, Volume I (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
- I (of III)
-
-Author: James Augustus St. John
-
-Release Date: March 3, 2022 [eBook #67552]
-
-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 I (OF III) ***
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Transcriber’s Note:
-
-This version of the text cannot represent certain typographical effects.
-Italics are delimited with the ‘_’ character as _italic_.
-
-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.
-
-
-
-
- MANNERS AND CUSTOMS
-
- OF
-
- ANCIENT GREECE.
-
- -------
-
- VOL. I.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- --------------
-
- _Price_ 31_s._ 6_d._
-
- --------------
-
-
-
-
- NOTICE.
-
-The Proprietors of CIRCULATING LIBRARIES in all parts of the country are
-compelled by the new Copyright Act to discontinue purchasing and lending
-out a single copy of a foreign edition of an English work. _The mere
-having it in their possession ticketed and marked as a library book_,
-exposes them to
-
- A PENALTY OF TEN POUNDS.
-
- ---
-
-Several clauses of the new Copyright Act award severe punishments for
-introducing and exposing for sale or hire pirated editions of English
-works, both in Great Britain and in the Colonies. The Government
-absolutely prohibits the introduction of these nefarious reprints
-through the Custom-houses on any pretence whatever. The public should be
-made fully and perfectly aware that, in consequence of a Treasury Order
-to that effect, even single copies of works so pirated, brought in a
-traveller’s baggage, which were formerly admissible, are so no longer,
-_unless they be cut, the name written in them, and, moreover, so_ WORN
-_and used as to render them unfit for sale_; and that if afterwards they
-are found in a Circulating Library, the Proprietor is subject to a
-severe penalty. Two clauses of the new Customs’ Act, moreover, exclude
-them altogether after the commencement of the next financial year. These
-measures will, no doubt, be rigorously enforced both at home and in the
-Colonies.
-
-[Illustration: TOPOGRAPHY OF SPARTA.]
-
- THE HISTORY
- OF THE
- MANNERS AND CUSTOMS
- OF
- ANCIENT GREECE.
-
- BY J. A. ST. JOHN.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- IN THREE VOLUMES.
-
- VOL. I.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- RICHARD BENTLEY, NEW BURLINGTON STREET,
- =Publisher in Ordinary to Her Majesty.=
- 1842.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- _PRINTED BY S. AND J. BENTLEY, WILSON, AND FLEY,_
- Bangor House, Shoe Lane.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- DEDICATION.
-
- ---
-
- TO BAYLE ST. JOHN.
-
-I DEDICATE the following work to you, my dear Son, as a token of my
-gratitude for the cheerful patience with which you have aided me in
-completing it, despite the calamity that overtook me in the midst of my
-labours. Whatever may be the fate of the publication it will always
-recall to me some of the happiest hours of my life, rendered so chiefly
-by beholding the contented serenity with which you subdued the
-irksomeness of studies so little suited to your years. At length,
-however, you are delivered from lexicographers and scholiasts. The final
-page has been written, the last proof read. I escape from a task
-commenced before you were born, and you from a four years’
-apprenticeship to the craft and mystery of authorship. All that now
-remains is to watch the reception which the fruit of our toil may meet
-with in the world. It has been produced and has grown up under very
-peculiar circumstances. Whithersoever we have travelled, the wrecks of
-Grecian literature have accompanied us, and the studies to which these
-pages owe their existence have been pursued under the influence of
-almost every climate in Europe. Nay, if I pushed my researches still
-further and visited the portion of Africa commonly supposed to have been
-the cradle of Hellenic civilisation, it was solely in the hope of
-qualifying myself to speak with some degree of confidence on the subject
-of those arts which represent to the Modern World so much of the
-grandeur and genius of Greece. Here, probably, the action of
-pestilential winds, and of the sands and burning glare of the desert
-commenced that dimming of the “visual ray,” which, in all likelihood,
-will wrap me gradually in complete darkness, and veil for ever from my
-sight those forms of the beautiful which have been incarnated, if I may
-so speak, in marble. This is a language which neither you nor your
-sister can read to me. All that sweet Olympian brood which used to smile
-upon me with kindly recognition when I was a solitary wayfarer in lands
-not my own, will, as far as I am concerned, be annihilated. Those twelve
-mystical transformations of Aphroditè into stone, which may be beheld
-all together at Naples, and appeared to me more lovely than its vaunted
-bay, or even the sky that hangs enamoured over it, will, I conjecture,
-be seen of me no more, or seen obscurely as through a mist. Homer,
-however, and Æschylus, with Plato and Thucydides and Demosthenes, will
-be able still through the voices of my children—voices more cheerful and
-willing than ministered to the old age and blindness of Milton—to
-project their beauty into my soul. I will not, therefore, repine; but,
-imitating the example of wiser and better men, submit unmurmuringly to
-the will of God. Had things been otherwise ordered, I might have
-continued these researches. As it is, I take leave of them here. Our
-friend, Mr. Keightley, who has visited Italy for the purpose, will
-perform for the Romans what I have endeavoured to accomplish for the
-Greeks; and his extensive and varied learning, the excellence of his
-method, and the pleasing vivacity of his style, will, probably, ensure
-for his work a still greater degree of popularity even than that which
-his very successful productions already enjoy.
-
- Believe me, my dear son,
- Ever affectionately yours,
- J. A. ST. JOHN.
-
- London,
- October 13th, 1842.
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION.
-
-
-Many moral phenomena appear to baffle the sagacity of statesmen,
-because, confiding too implicitly in experience, they omit to widen the
-range of their contemplation so as to embrace the whole circle of the
-people’s existence whose fortunes and character they desire to
-comprehend. To be successful in such an inquiry it is requisite to lay
-open, as far as possible, the influence on that people of climate and
-geographical position, to break through the husk and shell of customs,
-manners, laws, religions, that we may come to the kernel of its moral
-nature, to that inner organization, intellectual and physical, of which
-the external circumstances of its civil and political life are but so
-many fluctuating symbols.
-
-To accomplish this, however, even in the case of a contemporary nation,
-among whom we may behold in full activity all the material movements of
-society, is no easy task. But the difficulty must be very much
-augmented, when, in addition to the obstacles which necessarily under
-the most favourable circumstances beset every avenue to a people’s inner
-life, those are added arising out of the distance on the track of time
-at which the nation we are considering happens to stand, the scantiness
-and contradictory nature of the reports that reach us, and more,
-perhaps, than all, the atmosphere of prejudice through which we are apt
-to view whatever in any degree differs from our own manners and
-institutions. But this consideration, though it should bespeak
-indulgence for the unavoidable errors even of the most diligent
-investigator, can certainly be no reason for abstaining from all further
-investigation. For, notwithstanding the disadvantages under which we
-labour, it is still possible to extract from the fragments remaining of
-ancient literature materials for reconstructing something more than the
-skeleton of antiquity. We can invest the bones with sinews and muscles,
-clothe them with flesh and skin, spread over the whole colours that
-shall resemble life; and if we cannot steal from heaven celestial fire
-to kindle this image of surpassing beauty, that, at least, is the only
-thing which exceeds our power.
-
-In saying this, I merely state my opinion of what is possible, not by
-any means what I conceive myself to have effected in the present work. I
-am but too sensible of how far the execution falls short of “the ample
-proposition that hope made,” when, many years ago, the idea suggested
-itself to me at that ardent and flattering season of life in which we
-are apt to imagine all things within our reach. But as
-
- Every action that hath gone before
- Whereof we have record, trial did draw
- Bias, and thwart; not answering the aim
- And that unbodied figure of the thought
- That gave ’t surmised shape;
-
-so, no doubt, in my own case, the realisation will be found to be a very
-imperfect embodying of the ideal plan.
-
-Few subjects, however, abound more in interest or instruction than the
-one I have here ventured to treat. The inquiry turns upon the
-institutions and moral condition of a people to whose fortunes history
-affords no parallel; of a people that, like the cloud no bigger than a
-man’s hand, which the servant of the prophet saw from the top of Carmel,
-contained within itself the seeds of mightiest and most momentous
-events. The Hellenes can never, in fact, by any but the uninformed be
-regarded in the same light as ordinary political communities. Their
-power, vast and astonishing for the age in which they flourished, arose
-entirely out of their national character and the spirit of their
-institutions. It was the power of intellect. They were in reality the
-sun and soul of the ancient world, and darted far into the darkness
-around them those vivifying rays which, reflected from land to land,
-have since lighted up the world.
-
-Athens, the wisest and noblest of Grecian states,
-
- Mother of arts
- And eloquence,
-
-was the great preceptress of mankind. The spirit of her laws,
-transmitted through those of Rome, still pervades the whole civilized
-world. Her wisdom and her arts form, in all polished communities, a
-principal object of study; and to comprehend and to enjoy them is to be
-a gentleman. Sallust, therefore, notwithstanding his genius and
-sagacity, took but a commonplace view of national greatness, when he
-considered that of Athens to be chiefly based on the splendour shed
-around her achievements by historians. Her triumphs, it is true, were
-not effected by vast military masses, such as those which many barbarous
-nations in different ages have put in motion for the purpose of spoil or
-conquest. Athens built her glory on other foundations. She could not,
-indeed, lead countless armies into the field, but she knew how, with a
-little band, to defeat those who could. In the days of her freedom no
-human force could subdue her. To effect this, every man within the
-borders of Attica must have been exterminated; for so long as an
-Athenian was left, the indomitable spirit of democracy would have
-survived in him and sufficed to kindle up fresh contests.
-
-But the energies of Athens, how great soever, did not, like those of
-most other states, develope themselves chiefly in war. It is the
-characteristic of barbarians to destroy, but to create nothing. The
-delight and glory of the people of Athens consisted, on the contrary, in
-the exercise of creative power, in calling into existence new arts,
-founding colonies, widening the circle of civilisation, covering the
-earth with beautiful structures, sacred and civil; in producing
-pictures, statues, vases, and sculptured gems, of conception and
-delicacy of workmanship inimitable. Wherever the Athenian set his foot,
-the very earth appeared to grow more lovely beneath it. His genius
-beautified whatever it touched. His imagination vivified everything. He
-spread a rich mythological colouring over land and sea. Gods, at his
-bidding, entered the antique oak, sported in the waters of brook and
-fountain, scattered themselves in joyous groups over the uplands and
-through the umbrageous valleys, and their voices and odoriferous breath
-mingled with every breeze that blew.
-
-In the distant colonies whither he betook himself, when poverty had
-relaxed the chain that bound him indissolubly to the Attic soil, a few
-years saw a new diminutive Athens springing up. The Pnyx, the Odeion,
-the Theatre of Bacchos, the Prytaneion, the Virgin’s Fane, rose on a
-diminished scale around him, presenting an image, though faint, of his
-earlier home, the loveliest, undoubtedly, and, after Jerusalem, the most
-hallowed spot ever inhabited by man. Above all things, he was everywhere
-careful to enjoy the blessings of his ancestral institutions, and
-listened, as in the mother city, to those popular thunders which, thrice
-in every month, rolled from the bema over the assembled crowd,
-communicating pleasurable emotions to his mind, and rousing continually
-the passion for freedom.
-
-It were needless to dwell at any considerable length on the naval and
-military achievements of the Athenians. The world is still full of the
-victories of Marathon, Salamis, and Platæa, and the soil, drenched in
-defence of liberty with Attic blood, is to this day sacred in the eyes
-of the most phlegmatic. I appeal in proof of this to every man’s daily
-experience: for does not the bare mention of any spot where the great
-Demos triumphed or suffered some national calamity, make the blood bound
-more rapidly and tingle in our veins? Even the grovelling and
-worldly-minded, who affect to consider nothing holy but Mammon, can have
-fire struck out of their cold natures by the spell of those glorious
-syllables; for virtue, and valour, and that religious link which binds
-the soul to the spot where a mother’s dust reposes, are found, and will
-ever be found, to kindle warm admiration in every heart. And never since
-society began did these great qualities develope themselves more visibly
-than among the people of Athens. For this reason, who can visit
-Syracuse, or the shores of the Hellespont, or the site of Memphis’s
-White Castle, without experiencing as he gazes on the scene an
-electrical thrill of mental anguish at the recollection of what Athenian
-citizens more than two thousand years ago suffered there? Even
-Thermopylæ, glorious as it is, scarcely stirs our nature so deeply as
-Marathon; for the coarser and more material genius and institutions of
-Sparta, the nurse of those heroes who fell at the Gates of Hellas
-inspire less of that fervent admiration which the great actions and
-great men of Athens awaken in every cultivated mind.
-
-Of the political institutions which throughout Hellas influenced so
-powerfully the developement of the national character, it is not my
-design in the present volumes to speak. I confine myself entirely to the
-other causes which rendered the ancient Greeks what they were; reserving
-the examination of their forms of government for a separate treatise.
-The subject here discussed possesses sufficient interest of itself. It
-has been my aim to open up as far as possible a prospect into the
-domestic economy of a Grecian family, the arts, comforts, conveniences,
-regulations affecting the condition of private life, and those customs
-and manners which communicated a peculiar character and colour to the
-daily intercourse of Greek citizens. For, in all my investigations about
-the nature and causes of those ancient institutions which, during so
-many ages constituted the glory and the happiness of the most highly
-gifted race known to history, I found my attention constantly directed
-to the circumstances of their private life, from which, as from a great
-fountain, all their public prosperity and grandeur seemed to spring.
-
-Indeed, the great sources of a nation’s happiness and power must always
-lie about the domestic hearth. There or nowhere are sown, and for many
-years cherished by culture, all those virtues which bloom afterwards in
-public, and form the best ornaments of the commonwealth. Men are
-everywhere exactly what their mothers make them. If these are slaves,
-narrow-minded, ignorant, unhappy, those in their turn will be so also.
-The domestic example, small and obscure though it be, will impress its
-image on the state; since that which individually is base and little,
-can never by congregating with neighbouring littleness, become great, or
-lead to those heroic efforts, those noble self-sacrifices, which elevate
-human nature to a sphere in which it appears to touch upon and partake
-something of the divine.
-
-By minutely studying, as far as practicable, those small obscure
-sanctuaries of Greek civilisation—the private dwellings of Attica--I
-hoped to discover the secret of that moral alchemy by which were formed
-
- Those dead, but sceptred sovereigns who still rule
- Our spirits from their urns.
-
-In these haunts, little familiar to our imagination, lay concealed the
-germs of law, good government, philosophy, the arts, and whatever else
-has tended to soften and render beautiful the human clay. That this was
-the case is certain; why it should have been so, we may perhaps be
-unable satisfactorily to explain; but that is what we shall at least
-attempt in the present work, and for this purpose, it will at the first
-glance be apparent, that the most elaborate delineation of the political
-institutions of Athens must prove altogether insufficient. These were
-but one among many powerful causes. The principal lay deeper in a
-combination of numerous circumstances:—a peculiarly perfect and
-beautiful physical organization; a mind fraught with enthusiasm, force,
-flexibility, and unrivalled quickness; a buoyancy of temper which no
-calamity could long depress; consequent, probably, upon this, a strong
-religious feeling ineradicably seated in the heart; an unerring
-perception of the beautiful in art and nature; and lastly, the enjoyment
-of a genial climate, and an atmosphere pure, brilliant, and full of
-sunshine as their minds.
-
-Races of men, though not in precisely the same manner as individuals,
-yet exhibit, at particular periods of their history, a freshness, a
-vigour, a disinterestedness, like that of youth; and, because this state
-of feeling may more than once occur in the course of their career, they
-seem to spring, like Æson, out of convulsions and apparent dissolution
-to a state of perfect rejuvenescence. Calamity and suffering purify
-whole communities as they do individuals. In the boiling and commotion
-of revolutions the impurities of the national character bubble upwards
-and are skimmed away by the iron hand of misfortune. These political
-convulsions are, in fact, so many efforts of nature to expel some
-disease lurking in the constitution, and which, though the race be
-immortal, might, if suffered to remain in the frame, produce a lethargy
-worse than death. This truth we should bear constantly in mind; for
-among the characteristics of the Athenian constitution, not the least
-remarkable are the many efforts it made to right itself, and adapt its
-framework to the changing circumstances of the times.
-
-In the present inquiry we must, as I have already said, discover, if we
-can, how much Hellas owed to its climate, to its position on the globe,
-and to the physical organization of its inhabitants. It would be absurd
-to infer with some writers, that the influence of these circumstances is
-imaginary, because Greece seems to remain where it was of old, and the
-constitution and temperament of the people to be likewise unchanged. But
-this is not the case. Greece no longer occupies in the map of the world
-the position it occupied in antiquity. It has been lifted out of the
-centre of civilisation, to be cast upon its outskirts, or, which is the
-same thing, civilisation has shifted its seat. Nor are the Greeks any
-longer what they formerly were, though perhaps by a fortunate
-combination of circumstances they might still be rendered so. At present
-there is the same difference between them and their ancestors as between
-a jar of Falernian, and an empty jar. The clay, indeed, is there,
-beautifully moulded, and the purple hue of life is on the cheek; but
-tyranny from the battle of Cheronæa,
-
- “That dishonest victory
- Fatal to liberty!”
-
-until now has been draining out the soul. In the day when Hellas was
-itself its children walked in light, in the first beautiful light of the
-morning, which long seemed to shine only upon them; and now, perhaps,
-after the revolution of a cycle almost equal to the Great Year, they
-may, probably, be approaching another dawn.
-
-Comparing the several states of Greece together, it is customary to
-bestow the palm of energy and military valour upon the Spartans, who
-made war their sole profession, and passed their lives as it were in the
-camp from the cradle to the grave. But, in thus deciding, justice is
-scarcely done to the character of Athens; for, if the former excelled in
-discipline, to the latter belonged, indisputably, the superiority in
-native courage. Trained or not trained they faced whatever enemy
-presented himself, and won at least as many laurels from Sparta, on the
-ocean, as the Doric State, in all its wars, ever gathered on land. And,
-lastly, at Platæa, among which race, among Ionians or Dorians, was most
-activity manifested? In whose ranks was found the greatest ardour to
-engage? Who bore the first brunt of the Median horse, and broke the
-dreaded shock of that vaunted Asiatic chivalry which the Barbarian hoped
-would have trampled down with its innumerable hoofs the spirit of
-Grecian freedom? This was effected by the Athenians; by those gay and
-seemingly effeminate soldiers, who went forth from their beautiful city
-curled, perfumed, clad in purple, as to the mimic combats of the
-theatre. The spirit of their commonwealth, all splendour without and all
-energy within, urged them to the field. Their cry at the approach of the
-king was “Freedom or honourable graves!”—such as their countrymen had
-ever been wont to repose in.
-
-In fact, the Athenians, under a free government, had learned what it was
-to live—had imbibed from their education the feeling, that if deprived
-of such a government, if reduced to bow beneath the yoke of despotism,
-to die, if the Apostle’s words may without blame be thus applied, would
-be gain. It will readily be conceived that the citizens of such a state
-felt an impassioned attachment to their country,—an attachment
-unintelligible to persons living under any other form of civil polity.
-Athens was the cradle of their freedom and their happiness. There was a
-religion in the love they bore it; they had, according to mythical
-traditions, which they believed, sprung on that spot from the bosom of
-the earth. It stood, therefore to them in the dearest of all relations,
-being, to sum up everything holy in one word,—their MOTHER; and they
-embodied their profound veneration for the sacred spot in every fond,
-every endearing, epithet their matchless language could supply. Even the
-gods, in their patriotic partiality, were believed to look on Athens as
-the most lovely, no less than the most glorious city on the broad
-earth,—an idea which they expressed by representing Poseidon and Athena
-contending for the honour of becoming their tutelar divinity.
-
-To persons so thinking no calamity short of the entire extinction of
-their race could appear so intolerable as beholding that sacred city,
-with the tombs of their ancestors, the sanctuaries of their gods, the
-venerable but immoveable symbols of their faith and mythological
-history, delivered over to be trodden down or obliterated with sword and
-fire by barbarian slaves, strong only from their countless numbers. Yet
-even to this did the love of freedom reconcile the Athenian people. They
-abandoned their holy place, and, embarking on board the fleet with their
-wives and children, took refuge in Trœzen and Salamis. History has
-described in touching language the circumstances of this event, than
-which it has nothing more pathetic to record save, peradventure, the
-carrying away of Judea and her children into captivity. I will not
-disturb its archaic simplicity. No eloquence could heighten its effect.
-It goes at once to the heart and rouses our noblest sympathies. “The
-embarkation of the people of Athens was a very affecting scene. What
-pity, what admiration of the firmness of those men who, sending their
-parents and families to a distant place, unmoved with their cries and
-embraces, had the fortitude to leave the city and embark for Salamis!
-What greatly heightened the distress was the number of citizens whom, on
-account of their extreme old age, they were forced to leave behind. And
-some emotions of tenderness were due even to the tame domestic animals
-which, running to the shore with lamentable howlings, expressed their
-affection and regret for the persons by whom they had been fed. One of
-these, a dog belonging to Xanthippos, the father of Pericles, unwilling
-to be left, is said to have leaped into the sea and to have swam by the
-side of the galley till it reached Salamis, where, quite spent with
-toil, it immediately died. And they show, to this day, a place called
-Cynossema—‘the dog’s grave’—where they tell us it was buried.”[1]
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- Plutarch, Life of Themistocles, in Langhorne’s plain and vigorous
- translation.
-
-The Athenian people, on this and similar occasions, were enabled to
-resolve and perform boldly from the generous spirit inspired by their
-national system of education. Their institutions, also, were eminently
-calculated to bring into play the energies of every individual citizen,
-and to diffuse in consequence through the whole community a grandeur of
-sentiment and an heroic enthusiasm peculiar to free states. At Athens
-whoever possessed the means of serving his country could easily,
-whatever might be his rank, make those means known, and bring them into
-operation. If he were virtuous his virtue was remarked and placed him on
-the road to promotion. If genius constituted his title to distinction,
-if nature had gifted him with the power to serve the state, the state,
-without inquiry whether he were poor or rich, readily availed itself of
-his capacity, rewarded him during his life with political honours and
-authority, and, after his death, with imperishable glory. If in war he
-performed any act of superior conduct or courage, a general’s name was
-his reward; if he received wounds that name, or the hope of it, healed
-them; if in the achieving of any heroic deed he perished, his country,
-he knew, would honour his ashes, watch over his memory, and, with words
-powerfully soothing because embodying a nation’s sympathy, dry up the
-tears of his parents and beloved children. He knew that his glory,
-heightened by matchless masters of eloquence, would flash like lightning
-from the bema; that lovely bosoms would beat high at his name; that
-hands, the fairest in Greece, would yearly wreath his tomb with
-garlands; and that tears would be shed for ever on the spot by the
-brave.
-
-If children remained behind him, the state would become their parent;
-every Athenian would share with them his salt; would impart to them
-their best inheritance—the feeling of patriotism and an inextinguishable
-hatred of tyranny; would repeat to them with unenvious pride the eulogy
-of their father, and point daily to the laurels which kept his grave
-ever green. The Athenian was taught, from the cradle, to consider death
-beautiful when met on the red battle-field in defence of his home. And,
-according to the creed of his country, he believed that his spirit would
-in such an event be numbered among the objects of public worship. Hence
-the sublimity, the thrilling power of that oath in Demosthenes, who, in
-swearing by the souls of those that fell at Marathon, accomplished their
-apotheosis and placed them among the gods of Athens.
-
-That such were the habitual feelings of this most gallant and
-generous-minded people appears even from the admission of their
-bitterest enemies. “They,” observe, in Thucydides, the Corinthian
-ambassadors, when urging Sparta into the Peloponnesian war,—"they push
-victory to the utmost, and are least of all men dejected by defeat;
-exposing their bodies for their country as if they had no interest in
-them, yet applying their minds in the public service as if that and
-their private interest were one. Disappointment of a proposed
-acquisition they consider as a loss of what already belonged to them;
-success in any pursuit they esteem only as a step towards farther
-advantages; and, defeated in any attempt, they turn immediately to some
-new project by which to make themselves amends: insomuch, that, through
-their celerity in executing whatever they propose, they seem to have the
-peculiar faculty of at the same time hoping and possessing. Thus they
-continue ever amid labours and dangers, enjoying nothing through
-sedulity to acquire; esteeming that only a time of festival in which
-they are prosecuting their projects; and holding rest as a greater evil
-than the most laborious business. To sum up their character, it may be
-truly said, that they were born neither to enjoy quiet themselves, nor
-to suffer others to enjoy it."[2]
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- Mitford, History of Greece, iii. 53.
-
-The feeling that what they fought for was their own, which accounts for
-the heroism of Hellenic armies, likewise led, particularly at Athens, to
-the beautifying and adorning of the city, and the perfection of public
-taste. The people saw among them no palaces devoted to the private
-luxuries of a despotic court, where persons maintained at the public
-expense learn to look with contempt on the honest hands that support
-them. There, whatever was magnificent belonged to the people at large,
-no private individuals, during the best ages of the commonwealth,
-presuming, how great soever might be their talents or their influence,
-to arrogate to themselves more than can be due to individuals, or to
-enshrine their perishable bodies in buildings suited only to the worship
-of God. Yet, in genuine grandeur, no monarch, with the wealth of half a
-world at the disposal of his caprice, ever rivalled the Athenian people.
-True taste, the genuine sense of the beautiful and the sublime, will,
-while the world endures, refuse to be the subject of a tyrant, or to
-inhabit the same city with him; because no patronage, pensions, or
-lavish expenditure, can create in one state of society what belongs to
-another; and pure taste being nothing more than the cultivated popular
-feeling spontaneously expanding, can nowhere exist but in a free state.
-A prince may, doubtless, know what pleases him; but the people only can
-tell what pleases the people, which nothing certainly will unless it be
-produced expressly for them, without the slightest reference to any
-other person.
-
-Such, in the best periods of Grecian history, were the Athenians. Among
-them Nature generally was allowed to make herself heard; from the cradle
-upwards it was their guide. A pure religion they had not, or pure
-morality. Far from it; they barely caught indistinct glimpses of what in
-faith and practice is true and beautiful. Nor could it be otherwise; for
-the sun had not then risen, and men but felt their way uncertainly and
-timidly amid the obscurities of the dawn. Nevertheless, the light
-vouchsafed them they did not spurn. According to the best notions then
-prevailing, they were of all men the most pious; and though of this
-piety much, nay, the greater part, was superstition, yet, doubtless,
-God, according to the saying of the Apostle, accounted it unto them for
-righteousness, that, having not the law, they were a law unto
-themselves.
-
-The Spartans, on the other hand, were mere monastic soldiers, brave,
-indeed, and true as their swords, but ungifted with those loftier and
-more exquisite sympathies which properly constitute the beauty of human
-character, and are alone the parents of love. Few, perhaps, were all
-things within their reach, would choose to be citizens of Sparta; while
-no one, for whom the poetry of life has any charms, would hesitate,
-after his own country, perhaps, to select Athens for his home. And that
-this is no scholastic fancy created by literary preferences is clear
-from the practice of antiquity. Every man possessing superior genius,
-whether sprung from Ionic or Doric race, betook himself to Athens, as to
-the Greece of Greece—the common country of letters, sciences, and arts.
-Thither, too, as now to London, fled the oppressed and persecuted of all
-lands, and there they found welcome and encouragement. It was the great
-asylum, the common city of refuge to all men. Strangers who could be
-content with hospitality and generous protection were never driven from
-thence. There every man might live as he pleased, think as he pleased,
-and utter freely what he thought. The recorded instances of persecution
-are barely sufficiently numerous to serve as exceptions to the general
-rule; and in Gorgias of Leontium, Polos, Protagoras, Prodicos, Hippias,
-“and what the Cynic impudence uttered,” we discover to how great an
-extent the spirit of toleration was carried at Athens. It would be
-absurd to object the examples of Anaxagoras, Aspasia, and Socrates; for
-these were merely instances of the rage of party spirit, from which,
-while men continue men, no state will ever be free, and can no more be
-imputed to the Athenian people, or to the spirit of their government,
-than the execution of Sir Thomas More, or Cranmer, or Fisher, can be
-laid to the charge of the English Constitution.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
- OF THE FIRST VOLUME.
-
- -------
-
- BOOK I.
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I. Original Inhabitants of Hellas 1
- II. Character of the Greeks 29
- III. Geographical Outline 51
- IV. Capital Cities of Greece—Athens 70
- V. Capital Cities of Greece—Sparta 92
-
-
- BOOK II.
-
- EDUCATION.
-
- I. Theory of Education.—Birth of Children.—Infanticide 107
- II. Birth-feast.—Naming the Child.—Nursery.—Nursery 128
- Tales.—Spartan Festivals
- III. Toys, Sports, and Pastimes 144
- IV. Elementary Instruction 164
- V. Exercises of Youth 189
- VI. Hunting and Fowling 206
- VII. Schools of the Philosophers and Sophists 233
- VIII. Education of the Spartans, Cretans, Arcadians,&c. 265
- IX. Influence of the Fine Arts on Education 289
- X. Hellenic Literature 314
- XI. Spirit of the Grecian Religion 349
-
- BOOK III.
-
- WOMEN.
-
- I. Women in Heroic Ages 369
- II. Women of Doric States 382
- III. Condition of unmarried Women.—Love. 401
-
-
-
-
- THE HISTORY
- OF THE
- MANNERS AND CUSTOMS
- OF
- ANCIENT GREECE.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK I.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
- ORIGINAL INHABITANTS OF HELLAS.
-
-
-The country of the Hellenes, which, in imitation of the Romans, we
-denominate Greece, was to its own inhabitants known by the name of
-Hellas. But the signification of this term was not fixed, being
-sometimes confined to Greece Proper, at others, comprehending likewise
-the possessions of the Hellenes in Asia; that is, Hellas within and
-beyond the Ægæan, as we now say, India within and beyond the Ganges.[3]
-The progress of the name seems to have been as follows: it designated,
-originally,[4] a city of Thessaly, built by Hellen son of Deucalion;
-next, Phthiotis; the whole of Thessaly; all Greece, with the exception
-sometimes of Peloponnesos, sometimes of Macedonia, sometimes,—which is
-very remarkable,—of Thessaly itself; sometimes of Epeiros; then all
-Greece within the Ægæan; afterwards all countries inhabited by Greeks in
-whatever part of the world; and, lastly, it would appear to have been
-occasionally employed to signify Athens alone.[5] The most ancient name,
-Pelasgia, sprang from the race who first, perhaps, peopled that part of
-Europe.
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- Paus. v. 21. 10. Palm. Desc. Gr. Ant. p. 32. Exercit. p. 397.
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- Il. β. 190. Strab. ix. 5. 297. Tauchnitz. with the authorities quoted
- by Palmerius, Græc. Ant. i. 3.
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- Fisch. ad Theoph. Char. p. 5. L. Bos. Ant. Gr. Zeun. i. 1.
-
-Nearly all writers who treat of Grecian history or antiquities, have
-ventured more or less upon inquiries respecting the original inhabitants
-of the country, some contending that it was peopled by many independent
-races, while others content themselves with supposing one primary stock.
-To arrive at certainty in such investigations is scarcely to be hoped
-for, since, over the whole field, facts have moved in so close a
-conjunction with fables, “that the most which remaineth to be seen, is
-the show of dark and obscure steps where some part of the truth hath
-gone.”[6] It appears, however, to be a fact established, that the
-Hellenes were not the first who occupied Greece. They were preceded by a
-number of tribes all apparently of Pelasgian origin. But who and what
-the Pelasgians were, how and whence they came into the country, and by
-what gradations and influences they were ripened into Hellenes, or were
-by these expelled from the land, are questions to which no satisfactory
-answers have ever been given, but must still be discussed whatever the
-result of the investigation may be.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- Hooker, Ecc. Pol. i. p. 95.
-
-Even the name of this people has opened up an endless labyrinth of
-conjecture, at least among the moderns, for the ancients when such
-points were to be cleared up, easily removed the difficulty by inventing
-a hero or a demigod, with an appellation exactly suited to their
-purpose. Thus from Hellen they derived the name of the Hellenes, from
-Heracles that of Heracleidæ, from Ion that of the Ionians, and from
-Pelasgos, the son sometimes of Zeus, sometimes of Poseidon, sometimes of
-Triops or Inachos or Lycaon or Palachthon or of the earth itself,[7]
-that of the Pelasgi. An Attic writer, familiar with this question, and
-hinting at a part of the theory which I have adopted, imagines the name
-of Pelasgi to have been at first bestowed on the race because they
-usually made their appearance on the shores of Hellas like migratory
-birds in spring.[8] But though conjecture in such matters may amuse, it
-is not likely, at this distance of time, to lead to truth.
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- Paus. viii. 1. 6; ii. 14. 4; 22. 1. Herod, ii. 56. Æsch. Prom. 859.
- Supp. 248. Nieb. Hist. of Rome, i. 24. Apollod. ii. 1. Serv. ad Æn. i.
- 628; ii. 83. Sch. Apol. Rhod. i. 580. Tzetz. ad Lyc. 177. 481. Natal.
- Com. p. 96. and conf. Palm. Græc. Ant. p. 41. sqq. Exercit. p. 527.
- with Buttm. Lexil. p. 155.
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- Philochor. Siebel. p. 14.
-
-The ancients had evidently formed no theory as to whence the Pelasgi
-came, but were satisfied with the notion of their autochthoneïty,[9]
-which we cannot adopt. It must be acknowledged, however, that we are
-little able to trace them with certainty beyond the limits of Greece,
-before their arrival in that country. My own opinion is, that when the
-migrations began from that vast and lofty table land of Central Asia,
-which formed the primitive abode of mankind, and where the mother
-language of the Sanskrit, the Greek, and many other dialects was first
-spoken, the illustrious race, afterwards known under the name of
-Pelasgi, moved westward by the Caspian, along the Caucasian range,
-through Armenia and Kourdistân, until they descended into the plains of
-Asia Minor. Here we seem to touch upon the obscurest verge of Grecian
-fable, for the tradition which sent Argo to Colchis, at the Eastern
-extremity of the Black Sea, evidently contemplated the people of the
-land as a kindred race, of similar faith, character, and manners. By
-what precise channel the stream of population rolled westward, cannot be
-determined: but here and there, on the southern shores of the Euxine, we
-discover some obscure footsteps of the parents of the Greeks, as they
-continued their journeyings towards the land which they were afterwards
-to encircle with glory. Moving through Pontos, Paphlagonia, and
-Bithynia, they appear everywhere to have made settlements on the coast,
-until they reached the narrow stream of the Bosporos, over which they
-threw themselves into Europe.
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- Marsh. Chron. Sec. ix. p. 130.
-
-Up to this point we have little whereon to build our conclusions, save
-what is supplied by the general theory of ancient migrations, and what
-appear to be facts dimly seen within the extreme orbit of mythology. The
-ancients themselves seem to have obtained some uncertain glimpses of
-links connecting their ancestors with Asiatic Scythia, for there were
-those among them who represented the Caucons of Paphlagonia stretching
-along the banks of the Parthenios, and between the Maryandinians and the
-sea, as a nation of Scythian origin. Now the Caucons were undoubtedly
-Pelasgians, as were the Phrygians, the Carians, and the Leleges, who,
-united by the ties of blood, flocked to the defence of Troy.[10] In a
-much remoter age, the heroes of the traditional Argo were, it is said,
-confounded by night at Cyzicos,[11] in Mysia, with the warlike Pelasgi,
-even then masters of the sea, and accustomed with their galleys to vex
-the coast and plunder the settled inhabitants. I regard the working of
-the gold and silver mines on the southern shores of the Euxine, anterior
-to the Trojan war, as another proof of the settlement of the Pelasgi in
-that part of Asia Minor;[12] and who but they, at a period beyond the
-reach of tradition, could have opened those gold mines on the shores of
-Thrace, which on his conquest of the country Philip of Macedon found to
-have been long ago worked and abandoned by some unknown people?[13]
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- Strab. viii. 3. p. 127.
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- Apollod. i. 9. 18. The mythology describes the Pelasgi as driven out
- of Thessaly by the Æolians, and, under the guidance of Cyzicos, taking
- possession of the peninsula of that name previous to the Argonautic
- expedition. They fought with the Argonauts, and were afterwards
- expelled by the Tyrrhenians, who in their turn were driven out by the
- Milesians. Phot. Bib. p. 139. a. 25. Bekk.
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- Il. β 857.
-
-Footnote 13:
-
- Payne Knight, on the Worship of Priapus, p. 147.
-
-Be this as it may, it was over the Bosporos and through Thrace that the
-Pelasgi seem to have made their earliest approaches towards Greece. The
-Thracians themselves were of Pelasgian origin. Thracians inhabited both
-sides of the Bosporos; traces of Pelasgian settlements and Pelasgian
-names are likewise found on both sides. The stream of knowledge
-unquestionably poured through Thrace into Greece; and it is highly
-probable that the stream of population had, at a remoter period, flowed
-in the same channel. Once in Macedonia, the adventurers would be tempted
-southward by the beauty of the climate and country; so that while some
-moved up the valley of the Haliacmon, others, perhaps, took possession
-of the ridge of Olympos, Ossa and Pelion, where they were known under
-the names of Centaurs and Lapithæ.[14] From these lofty ridges they
-looked down upon the great lake which in those ages covered the whole
-plain of Thessaly, and, following the ramifications of the mountains,
-peopled Pelasgian Argos, Phthiotis, and the roots of Œta, while the
-lowlands were still under water: thence, too, they crossed over into
-Eubœa, where they assumed the names of Macrones[15] and Curetes. This
-latter tribe settling at Chalcis,[16] and having been worsted in a
-contest for the Lalantian plain, fled across the Euripos, and traversing
-the whole of Bœotia, founded a new settlement about Pleuron in Ætolia,
-and gave the name of Curetis to the whole country. Hence, also, in
-process of time, they were driven by the Ætolians from Pisa in Elis,
-upon which they took refuge in Acarnania.[17]
-
-Footnote 14:
-
- Λέλεγας γάρ φασι πρότερον αὐτοὺς προσαγωρευομένους, διὰ τὸ ἀποκεντῆσαι
- τοὺς ἵππους προσαγορευθῆναι Ἱπποκενταύρους. Sch. Pind. Pyth. ii. 78.
- Cf. Schœll. Hist. de la Lit. Grecq. i. 4. seq.
-
-Footnote 15:
-
- Sch. Apoll. Rhod. i. 1024. Cf. Winkel. Hist. de l’Art. i. 317.
-
-Footnote 16:
-
- Strab. x. 3. p. 349.
-
-Footnote 17:
-
- Strab. x. 3. p. 349. Sch. Pind. Olymp. iii. 19. Pliny, iv. 2. Eustath.
- ad Il. β. 637. Certain ancient writers maintained that the Ætolians
- were called Curetes by Homer; and at a still earlier period Hyantes,
- and the country Hyantis.—Steph. Byzant. _v._ Αἰτωλ. p. 71. a. Palm. G.
- Ant. p. 426.—Acarnania itself was formerly called Curetis.—Demet. ap.
- Steph. _v._ Ἀθῆν. p. 45. a. Hard. ad Plin. iv. 2. p. 7.
-
-But the principal tribe, and that which subsequently spread throughout
-Greece, after filling with population the valley of the Haliacmon,
-traversing the Caulavian range, and descending along the course of the
-Aoös, seem on the banks of the Celydnos, to have turned their faces
-southward. Following that stream upwards towards its source, they found
-themselves in Epeiros, a land abounding with water brooks, with lovely
-mountains, and lovelier valleys, and at length settled, and erected
-themselves lasting habitations in the sacred neighbourhood of
-Dodona,[18] where the first oracle known to the Hellenes flourished
-under the protection of the Pelasgian Zeus.[19]
-
-Footnote 18:
-
- Strab. vii. 7. p. 124. seq. Hesiod. Frag. 54. et 124. Gœttl.—A second
- Dodona is supposed to have existed in Thessaly.—See Thirl. Hist. of
- Greece, i. 36.—Cf. Buttm. Diss. de orac. Dodon. Orat. Att. vii. 133.
- sqq.
-
-Footnote 19:
-
- Il. π. 233.
-
-Up to this point we have been treading, with little or no light to guide
-us, over a soil shifting, unsure, and treacherous; but here we touch
-upon comparatively firm ground, while the light of poetry dawns around,
-and enables us to direct our footsteps towards the luminous terra firma
-of history.
-
-It must not be denied that much of the foregoing theory is erected on
-inference and conjecture. Nevertheless, it rests in part on facts which
-an historian ought not to reject. For example, though it be nowhere,
-perhaps, distinctly stated that the Thracians were entirely of Pelasgian
-origin, we are compelled by various circumstances to believe that such
-was the case: first, Samothrace on the coast was undoubtedly peopled by
-Pelasgi;[20] secondly, the Macedonians, plainly of the same stock with
-the Thracians, are acknowledged to have been Pelasgi;[21] and since the
-Illyrians likewise were a kindred people,[22] we have a line of
-Pelasgian settlements stretching along the whole northern frontier of
-Greece, the Ægæan, the Hellespont, and the Propontis, from the Adriatic
-to the Black Sea. The chain of proofs, indeed, is not complete, but
-appears and disappears alternately, like the stream of the Alpheios,
-though little doubt can be entertained of the existence of the links
-which happen to lie out of sight. In nearly every part of Macedonia the
-footsteps of the Pelasgi are clearly discernible; at Crestona,[23] on
-the Echidoros in Pœonia; in Emathea, and Bottiœa;[24] and looking at the
-language of the country, we find it at all times to have been identical
-with that of Greece. That the same thing must be predicated of Thrace,
-even in the remotest ages, appears indisputably from this, that her
-bards, Thamyris and Orpheus traversed the whole of Hellas, and sang
-their wisdom to its inhabitants; while Olen coming from Lycia, a
-Pelasgian settlement,[25] likewise brought his kindred songs to the same
-tolerant and hospitable land.
-
-Footnote 20:
-
- Herod. ii. 51.
-
-Footnote 21:
-
- Justin. vii. 1. Thucyd. ii. 99.
-
-Footnote 22:
-
- Müller, Dor. i. 2.
-
-Footnote 23:
-
- Herod, i. 57.—On the situation of this city see Poppo, Proleg. ad
- Thucyd. ii. p. 383.
-
-Footnote 24:
-
- Justin, vii. 1. Æsch. Supp. p. 261. Cf. Thucyd. iv. 109.
-
-Footnote 25:
-
- Diod. v. p. 396. Wesseling.
-
-But to follow the movements of the Pelasgi through Greece itself, where,
-though no chronology of events can be attempted, our views rest on a
-stable foundation. Much, however, of our reasoning will be confused or
-perhaps unintelligible, if it be not borne in mind that the name of the
-Pelasgi, like that of the Tartars or Arabs, was a general appellation
-applied to the whole race, while the several tribes bore separate
-denominations; as the Chaones,[26] the Dryopes, the Leleges, the
-Caucons, the Cranaans, with many others,[27] precisely as among the
-Arabs, we find the Ababde, the Mahazi, the Beni Sakker, &c. The
-Pelasgian tribe which first made its appearance, and became powerful in
-Epeiros, a country not to be separated from Greece, was that of the
-Chaones, whose chief seat was Cheimera,[28] at the foot of the Ceraunian
-mountains. An obscure scholiast, indeed, denominates them
-barbarians;[29] but as from the best authority we know them to have been
-Pelasgi, this shows the value of the term in the mouth of the later
-writers. Another class,—the Levites, perhaps, of those primitive
-people,—settled amid the oak forests which surrounded the lovely lake of
-Dodona, where under the name of Selli,[30] they founded the most
-celebrated oracle of early antiquity. In their habits they remind us of
-the Sanyasis, and other religious anchorites of India, living from views
-of penance with unwashed feet, and sleeping on the bare ground. Other
-tribes renowned of old in Epeiros, and all Pelasgian,[31] were the
-Thesprotians, the Molossians, the Perrhæbians, and the Dolopians, the
-last rough mountaineers inhabiting both the eastern and western slopes
-of Pindos.[32]
-
-Footnote 26:
-
- Steph. Byz. _v._ Χαονία, p. 753. g.
-
-Footnote 27:
-
- Hermann, however, (Polit. Ant. p. 14,) imagines that the Caucons,
- Leleges, &c. were independent races, though less civilised and
- illustrious than the Pelasgi.
-
-Footnote 28:
-
- Plin. iv. 1.
-
-Footnote 29:
-
- Schol. ad Aristoph. Eq. 78.
-
-Footnote 30:
-
- Aristot. Meteorol. i. 14. p. 39.—Il. π. 234. seq.
-
-Footnote 31:
-
- Steph. Byz. _v._ Ἔφυρα, p. 367. c. Strab. vii. 7 p. 119. See also
- Müll. Dor. i. 6. Plut. Pyrrh. 1.—See the authorities collected by
- Niebuhr, i. 26.
-
-Footnote 32:
-
- Dolops was the son of Hermes, and dying in the city of Magnesia in
- Thessaly, had there a tomb erected by the sea-shore. Sch. Apoll. Rhod.
- i. 587. 558.
-
-When Epeiros had been thus thickly sprinkled with settlements, an
-earthquake appears to have produced in the range of Pelion the narrow
-precipitous gap, afterwards known as Tempe, by which the waters of the
-Thessalian lake discharged themselves into the sea. This happened, we
-are told, while one Pelasigos[33] reigned over the mountaineers in the
-district of Hæmonia. They were celebrating a great feast, when a certain
-slave named Peloros, brought them tidings of what had come to pass,
-speaking with admiration of the vast plains which were appearing through
-the ebbing waters. In gratitude for the news he communicated, they
-caused the man to seat himself at table while both the king and his
-attendants, in the joy and fulness of their hearts ministered to him.
-This, it is said, was the origin of the Pelorian festival, afterwards,
-down to a very late period, celebrated with great pomp and magnificence
-in Thessaly, where, for the day, masters changed condition with their
-slaves, and became their servants.[34] The same festival in the
-Pelasgian settlements of Italy was known down to the latest times, under
-the name of Saturnalia.
-
-Footnote 33:
-
- Palmer. Exercit. p. 527.—Sch. Apoll. Rhod. i. 500.—Dion. Hal. i. 3. 1.
-
-Footnote 34:
-
- Athen. xiv. 45.
-
-On the interior of Thessaly becoming thus habitable, the Pelasgian
-tribes of Epeiros, beginning to be straitened for room, and feeling
-still the original wandering impulse, poured over the heights of Pindos
-into the valleys of Histiæotis, and moved eastward along the foot of the
-Cambunian mountains, settling every where as they advanced. The tribe
-which took this direction bore the name of Perrhæbians, and left traces
-of their movements in the great Perrhæbian forest, stretching to the
-foot of Olympos, and in the name of the whole district extending from
-the Peneios to the northern limits of Thessaly. In this rich and fertile
-tract they became powerful, spreading their dominion along the banks of
-the Peneios, quite down to the sea. But the Lapithæ rising into
-consequence and overcoming the Perrhæbians in battle, reduced a portion
-of the tribes under their yoke, while the remainder, enamoured of
-independence, retreated inland, again crossed the Pindos, and
-established themselves in the upper valley of the Acheloös. About the
-same time, perhaps, a fragment of this tribe traversing the whole of
-Thessaly crossed over into Eubœa, where they subdued and took possession
-of Histiæotis. It was possibly the entrance of these adventurers into
-the island, pushing fresh waves of population southward, that caused the
-contest for the Lalantian plain, and the emigration of the Curetes to
-the continent.
-
-Other Pelasgian tribes established themselves, and became illustrious in
-Thessaly. The Centaurs, for example, a Lelegian clan inhabiting Mount
-Pelion, where they were, perhaps, the first tamers of the horse, whence
-the fable of their double form. Other sections of the Leleges were also
-found in Thessaly,[35] as were also the Dryopes. In this country,[36]
-notwithstanding that it must be regarded upon the whole as only the
-second stage of the Pelasgians in their migrations southward, we find
-more traces of their power and influence than anywhere else in Northern
-Greece. Here were two cities, called Larissa; here was Pelasgian
-Argos;[37] here, too, was a great district known by the name of
-Pelasgiotis, while that of Pelasgia seems to have preceded Thessaly as
-the appellation of the whole province.[38] This people, like most
-others, seem to have had a number of names, to which they were
-peculiarly attached, which we nearly always find reappearing wherever
-they formed a settlement. Generally, too, it may be regarded as certain
-that the more northern were the most ancient: thus we find Pelagonia in
-the kingdom of Macedon and in Thessaly; Larissa[39] on the Peneios;
-Larissa Cremaste near the shore. The Dryopes,[40] again, appear first in
-Epeiros, not far from Dodona; next we find them in Thessaly, then in
-Doris, finally in Peloponnesos; and Strabo is careful to remark that the
-last-mentioned were an off-shoot from those in the north.
-
-Footnote 35:
-
- Serv. ad. Æn. viii. 725.
-
-Footnote 36:
-
- Paus. iv. 36. 1. Sch. Apoll. Rhod. ii. 1239.
-
-Footnote 37:
-
- Pliny, iv. 14.—Even Phthiotis itself, one of the earliest cradles of
- the Hellenes, is recorded to have been a Pelasgian settlement. Sch.
- Apoll. Rhod. i. 14.—Cf. ad. i. 40. 580.
-
-Footnote 38:
-
- Sch. Apoll. Rhod. iv. 26.; i. 906. 580.
-
-Footnote 39:
-
- Steph. Byzant. _v._ Λάρισσ. p. 511. b, c, d. Sch. Apoll. Rhod. i. 40.
-
-Footnote 40:
-
- That the Dryopes were Pelasgi, appears from this:—they received their
- national appellation from Dryops, son of Lycaon, (Sch. Apoll. Rhod. i.
- 1218,) who was himself the son of Pelasgos.—Suid. _v._ Λυκ. Cf. Etym.
- Mag. 154, 7. 288, 32. Paus. viii. 2. 1.
-
-From Thessaly the tide of population rolled southward;[41] different
-tribes of Pelasgi, under the name of Leleges, Hyantes, Aones, and
-Dryopes taking possession of the mountains and valleys of Doris, Locris,
-Phocis, and extending their migrations into the plains of Bœotia. From
-thence, across the isthmus, some few straggling hordes appear to have
-found their way into Peloponnesos, where, as shepherds, they gradually
-diffused themselves over its rich plains. All the Pelasgi in fact appear
-like the Arabs and Tartars to have been originally Nomades, different
-tribes of whom, as they were tempted by the beauty of particular
-regions, quitted their wandering life, as the Arabs have done in Egypt,
-Yemen, and elsewhere, and from shepherds became husbandmen. In process
-of time, the descendants of the settlers, accustomed to the easy and
-luxurious life of cities, learned to look back upon their wandering
-ancestors as a wretched and a barbarous race. Indeed, they sometimes
-speak of them[42] after their arrival in Peloponnesos as cannibals,
-naked, houseless, ignorant of the use of fire, on a level, in short,
-with the fiercest and most brutal savages existing in the islands of the
-Pacific. But these erroneous ideas evidently arose from the theory of
-autochthoneïty which supposes man to have gradually ripened out of a
-beast into a man; whereas, the low savages discovered in various parts
-of the world, do not represent the original state of mankind, but are
-mere instances of extreme degeneracy. In fact, a different set of
-traditions also prevailed among the Greeks, which, referring evidently
-to the period when their ancestors were Nomades, spoke with rapture and
-enthusiasm of their happy and tranquil life, when, following their
-flocks from vale to vale and from stream to stream, they fed upon the
-spontaneous productions which nature spread before them. On this period
-the poets bestowed the name of the Golden Age, and, perhaps, if examined
-philosophically, there is no stage in the history of civilisation at
-which there is so much to enjoy and so little to suffer, as when the
-whole nation are shepherds, and happen to light upon a land where, as
-yet too few to inconvenience each other, they can live unmolested by
-foreign tribes.
-
-Footnote 41:
-
- Just. xiii. 4.—The Epicnemidian Locrians were anciently called
- Leleges, and by them the channel of the Cephissos was opened to the
- sea.—Pliny, iv. 12. Solin. vii. p. 55. Bipont. Hesiod. Frag. 25.
- Gœttl. Strab. vii. 7. p. 115; ix. 1. p. 248. Scymn. Chius, p.
- 24.—Phot. Bib. 321. b.
-
-Footnote 42:
-
- Mnaseas of Patræ ap. Sch. Pind. Pyth. iv. 104.—Dion. Hal. (Ant. Rom.
- i. 31) is one of those writers who considers the Pelasgi miserable
- because they were wanderers. Upon this notion Palmerius remarks
- judiciously: “Sed si tales migrationes miseræ sunt, miserrimi olim
- Galli majores nostri, qui usque in Asiam, post multas errores, armis
- victricibus penetrâsse historiæ omnes testantur, et hoc seculo
- miserrimi Tartari et Arabes, qui Nomadice vivunt, et sedes identidem
- mutantes, non se miseros existimant, et id genus vitæ Attalicis
- conditionibus mutare recusarent.”—Græc. Antiq. p. 60.
-
-It has now been shown how Hellas might have been entirely peopled from
-the north; but certain traditions, prevailing from the earliest times,
-compel us to admit that some portion, at least, of its population
-reached it by a different route; that is, through Asia Minor and the
-islands. I have already alluded briefly to the existence of a Pelasgian
-tribe in Paphlagonia,[43] that is to say, the Caucons, whose
-establishment in this region supplies a link in the chain of proofs by
-which we endeavour to connect the Pelasgi with the Scythians of Central
-Asia; for the Caucons are admitted to have been of Pelasgian origin, and
-an opinion prevailed among the ancients that they were likewise
-Scythians.[44] Thus we find that certain Scythians settled in
-Paphlagonia, were called Caucons, that the Caucons were Pelasgi, and
-that the Pelasgi peopled Greece. The Greeks, therefore, by this account,
-traced their origin to Scythia. Circumstances connected with the
-geography of Asia Minor and of Hellas, seem to furnish traces of the
-route of the Pelasgi westward. It appears to have been among the
-primitive articles of their creed, that the deity delighted to abide on
-the summits of lofty and even of snowy mountains; and whenever in their
-settlements the features of the earth presented any such towering
-eminence, they seem to have bestowed on it the name of Olympos, or
-Celestial Mansion.[45] Immediately south of the Cauconian settlements,
-on the limits of Bithynia and Galacia, we accordingly find a mountain of
-this name; again, travelling westward, we have another Mount Olympos, on
-the northern confines of Phrygia; a third meets us in the island of
-Lesbos;[46] a fourth in Cypros, a fifth in Arcadia,[47] a sixth in Elis,
-and a seventh, best known of all, near the cradle of the Hellenes in
-Thessaly. In Mysia,[48] the footsteps of the race are numerous;
-Pelasgian cities—Placia, Scylace, Cyzicos, Antandros—studded the coast;
-inland there was a Larissa;[49] and the lovely-leafed evergreen, which
-shaded the slopes and crags of the Trojan Ida, was named the Pelasgian
-laurel.[50] Other facts there are connecting the Trojans with the
-Pelasgian stock: thus the Caucons, whom we find among their allies in
-Homer, are called a Trojan tribe; the language of Troy was evidently a
-Pelasgian dialect, closely allied to the Greek,[51] which may likewise
-be predicated of the Phrygian, the Lydian, the Carian, the Lycian
-extending along the whole western coast of Asia Minor. The gods,
-oracles, rites, ceremonies of all these people appear in early times to
-have been identical with those of Hellas, and mythology represents the
-heroes of both continents as sprung from the same gods. Nay, positive
-testimony describes the Pelasgi as a great nation, holding the whole
-western coast of Asia Minor, from Mycale to the Hellespont;[52] and
-speaks of the Leleges as inhabiting a part of Caria, where their
-deserted fortifications, called Lelegia,[53] apparently of Cyclopian
-construction, were still found in the time of Strabo,[54] together with
-their tombs, probably barrows, resembling those scattered through
-Peloponnesos, and called the “Tombs of the Phrygians.”[55] Similar
-sepulchral relics of Carian dominion were found and opened by the
-Athenians in the purification of Delos.[56] Possibly, too, the tumuli,
-existing to this day in Tartary, and occasionally rifled by the
-Siberians, mark the original seat of the Pelasgi in Asia; though similar
-monuments are found in other parts of the East, as in Nubia, where I
-counted a cluster of ten or twelve, and nearly all over Europe. Homer
-speaks of one on the plains of Troy, and the Greeks themselves cast up
-barrows over their heroes, as Ajax, where
-
- “Far by the solitary shore he sleeps.”
-
-Footnote 43:
-
- According to the reading of Callisthenes, Homer himself fixes their
- residence in Paphlagonia.—Cf. Strab. xiii. p. 16. viii. p. 157. Sch.
- Hom. Υ. 329.—Unless we adopt this reading we must suppose with the
- Scholiast, that they were not separately mentioned in the catalogue,
- because Homer confounded them with the Leleges, or because they
- arrived late in the war.
-
-Footnote 44:
-
- Οἱ μὲν Σκύθας φασὶν, οἱ δὲ τῶν Μακεδόνων τινὰς, οἱ δὲ τῶν Πελασγῶν.
- Strab. xiii. p. 16.—To the same tradition alludes the Scholiast: Ἔθνος
- Παφλαγονίας, οἱ δὲ Σκυθίας· οἱ δὲ τοὺς λεγομένους Καυνίους εἴπον. Il.
- κ. 429.
-
-Footnote 45:
-
- In the dialect of the Dryopes, this mountain was known by the name of
- Βηλὸς, by which word the Chaldæans denoted the highest circle of the
- heavens.—Etym. Mag. 196. 19 seq.
-
-Footnote 46:
-
- Plin. v. 39.
-
-Footnote 47:
-
- Paus. viii. 38. 2. Sch. Apoll. Rhod. i. 599. Meurs. Cypr. i. 28. p.
- 76. Steph. Byzant. _v._ Ὄλυμπ. p. 612. e.—Mention, moreover, is made
- of an eighth Olympos in Cilicia. (Sch. Apoll. ut sup.)—A ninth in
- Lycia. (Plin. xxi. 7.)
-
-Footnote 48:
-
- Phot. Bib. 139. a. 12. 25. Herod. vii. 42. cf. i. 57. Pomp. Mela. i.
- 19.
-
-Footnote 49:
-
- Sch. Apoll. Rhod. i. 40.
-
-Footnote 50:
-
- Pliny, xv. 39.
-
-Footnote 51:
-
- Plato, Cratyl. I. iv. p. 58.—See, likewise, Müller (Dor. i. 9–11),
- where, however, too much ingenuity by far is displayed. Another proof
- of relationship is supplied by Homer (Il. ρ. 288) who represents
- Hippothoös, a Pelasgian, insulting the body of Patroclos.—Strab. xiii.
- 3. p. 142.—Niebuhr (i. 28) conjectures that the Trojans were not a
- Phrygian, but a Pelasgian tribe; though, in reality, both Phrygians
- and Trojans sprang from the same stock.
-
-Footnote 52:
-
- Strab. xiii. 3. p. 144.
-
-Footnote 53:
-
- Paus. vii. 2. 8.
-
-Footnote 54:
-
- W. f. 7. p. 114.—The Carians themselves are said to have lived
- habitually amid inaccessible rocks.—Schol. Arist. Av. 292.
-
-Footnote 55:
-
- Athen. xiv. 21.
-
-Footnote 56:
-
- Thucyd. i. 8.
-
-Not to omit any material facts, on which my view of Pelasgian history is
-founded, I shall proceed to mention in order the principal points on the
-Asiatic shore where the footsteps of the Pelasgi appear. We find, then,
-that they occupied the greater part of Lydia,[57] and at the time of the
-Ionian migration held the citadel of Ephesos. They, too, in conjunction
-with the Nymphs were the founders of the temple of Hera at Samos,[58]
-and crossing the Mæander they re-appear again at Miletos on the coast of
-Caria. Indeed this city[59] was originally, from its inhabitants, called
-Lelegeis, though it afterwards was known under a variety of names, as
-Pituoussa from the surrounding pine woods, Anactoria, and lastly,
-Miletos. A little further southward was another Lelegian settlement at
-Pedasos on the Satneios.[60] From a passage in Homer it has been
-supposed that the Carians and Lelegians were distinct races, but in
-reality the Carians were a Lelegian tribe;[61] that is Pelasgi, who like
-the Hellenes in Greece, gradually acquired power and dominion, and
-eclipsed their brethren. This they were enabled to do by applying
-themselves passionately to the use of arms, a circumstance which at a
-later period led them to make a traffic of their valour and hire their
-swords to the best bidder. In earlier and better times they achieved
-conquests for themselves, and rivalling the Phœnicians in maritime
-enterprise and success, reduced under their sway the greater number of
-the Ægæan islands,[62] and even some portion of the Hellenic continent
-itself.[63] Certain clans of this martial race sought an outlet for
-their restless daring by joining the Cilicians[64] in their piratical
-enterprises, and probably it was in this character that they first
-obtained possession of some of the smaller isles. Positive historical
-testimony there seems to be none for fixing the Pelasgi in Cypros,[65]
-though we cannot doubt that it was included in their dominions, from the
-ruins of Cyclopian fortresses still found there, and the Olympian Mount
-already mentioned. In Rhodes, however, and Samos antiquity speaks of
-their settlements;[66] they, too, were the earliest inhabitants of
-Chios,[67] whence they sent forth a colony to Lesbos,[68] which received
-from them the name of Pelasgia. They expelled the Minyans from
-Lemnos,[69] which afterwards, through fear of Darius, their king ceded
-to the Athenians,[70] and held Imbros[71] and Samothrace[72] in the
-north; Scyros, too, was originally named Pelasgia.[73] Andros was
-peopled by one[74] of their colonies, and Delos, as we have already
-seen, held their bones until they were cast forth by the Athenians. But
-it is unnecessary to enumerate each separate point, since we know
-generally that all the Ægæan isles were anciently in their
-possession,[75] and that even the great island of Crete formed, in
-remote ages, a portion of their empire. Here under the names of Curetes,
-Corybantes, Telchines and Dactyli,[76] they flourished in the mythical
-times, and were the reputed preservers and nurses of the infant Zeus, a
-god pre-eminently Pelasgian, so that wherever his worship was found I
-regard it as a proof that the Pelasgi had settled there.
-
-Footnote 57:
-
- Paus. vii. 2. 8. Steph. Byzant. _v._ Ἀγύλλα, p. 30, d. Ed. Berkel.
-
-Footnote 58:
-
- Athen. xv. 12. Thirl. Hist. of Greece, i. 43. Sch. Apoll. Rhod. i. 14.
-
-Footnote 59:
-
- Pliny, ii. 31. Steph. de Urb. _v._ Μίλετ. p. 559. b. c. Eustath. in
- Dion. Perieg. 825. 456. Sch. Apoll. Rhod. i. 186.
-
-Footnote 60:
-
- Il. φ. 86. Cf. Sch. ad κ. 429.
-
-Footnote 61:
-
- A glimpse of this fact is obtained from a tradition preserved by
- Hecatæos:—Τοὺς δὲ Λέλεγας τινὲς μὲν τοὺς αὐτοὺς Καρσὶν εἰκὰζουσιν.
- Strab. vii. 7. p. 114. From other authorities we learn that the
- Carians were regarded as Pelasgians.—Habitator incertæ originis. Alii
- indigenas, sunt qui Pelasgos, quidam Cretas existimant. Pomp. Mela, i.
- 16.—See likewise Barnes ad Eurip. Heracl. 317. But the strongest
- testimony is that of Herodotus, i. 171.
-
-Footnote 62:
-
- Strabo, xiv. 2. p. 208. Thucyd. i. 8.
-
-Footnote 63:
-
- Strabo, viii. 6. p. 204.
-
-Footnote 64:
-
- Strab. ap. Palmer. Gr. Ant. i. 10, p. 65. Serv. ad Æn. viii. 725. We
- again find these two people united at Troy; but not mentioned in the
- catalogue, because their leader had fallen and there were few of them
- left to be ranged under Hector. Their leaders were Helicon and his
- sons. Their capital city “Thebes with lofty gates” had been sacked by
- Achilles. Strab. xiii. 3. p. 141.
-
-Footnote 65:
-
- Travels of Ali Bey.
-
-Footnote 66:
-
- Phot. Bib. 141. a.
-
-Footnote 67:
-
- According, however, to a tradition preserved by Ephoros, the city of
- Karides, in this island, was founded by those who escaped with Macar
- from the Deluge of Deucalion. Athen. iii. 66.
-
-Footnote 68:
-
- Plin. v. 39.
-
-Footnote 69:
-
- Paus. vii. 22.
-
-Footnote 70:
-
- Suid. _v._ Ἑρμώνιος χάρις. t. i. p. 1044.
-
-Footnote 71:
-
- Herm. Pol. Antiq. p. 13. Herod. vi. 138, 140. v. 26.
-
-Footnote 72:
-
- Herod. ii. 51.
-
-Footnote 73:
-
- Thucyd. i. 98. cum not. Wass.
-
-Footnote 74:
-
- Phot. Bib. 139. a.
-
-Footnote 75:
-
- Phot. Bib. 141. a. Both the island of Lesbos, and its city Himera were
- called Pelasgia. Pliny, v. 39.
-
-Footnote 76:
-
- Serv. ad Æn. iii. 131. Strabo, x. 3. Pelasgic remains are still found
- in the island. Pashley, Trav. in Crete, i. 152.
-
-Passing thus from island to island in the very infancy of navigation,
-the Pelasgi appear by way of the Sporades and Cycladæ, to have migrated
-into Peloponnesos, first landing at Argos. Probably on their arrival
-they found there some few inhabitants who by the isthmus had entered and
-scattered themselves at leisure over the peninsula. But whether this was
-so or not, certain it is that the oldest legends of Hellenic mythology
-allude to the peopling of Argos by sea, representing Inachos, its first
-ruler, as a son of the ocean.[77] From this chief, whether historical or
-fabulous, the principal river of Argos received its appellation, and
-members of his family bestowed their names on Argolis first, and
-afterwards on the whole of Peloponnesos, which from Apis was denominated
-Apia;[78] from Pelasgos, Pelasgia;[79] and from another prince so
-called, it received the name of Argos.[80] In this division of Hellas,
-which the rays of poetry and mythology unite to render luminous, the
-Pelasgi[81] seem early to have struck deep root, and made a rapid
-progress in civilisation. Here, accordingly, in historical times were
-found the most numerous monuments of their power and grandeur; and here,
-in the treasury of Atreus and the walls of Tiryns denominated Cyclopian,
-we still may contemplate proofs of their opulence and progress in the
-arts. Among them would appear to have existed a class or caste named
-Cyclops, addicted extremely to handicrafts, particularly building. These
-it was who erected the walls and citadel of Argos,[82] on which they
-bestowed the name of Larissa, together with certain labyrinths, said to
-have existed in the neighbourhood of Nauplia. Mycenæ appears to have
-been the most ancient capital of the country, built while the site of
-Argos was yet a marsh,[83] or perhaps under water; then came Tiryns, and
-lastly Argos. Other early seats of the Pelasgi were at Epidauros and
-Hermione.[84]
-
-Footnote 77:
-
- Apollod. ii. 1. Keightley, Mythol. 405.
-
-Footnote 78:
-
- Cf. Athen. xiv. 63.
-
-Footnote 79:
-
- Tzet. ad Lyc. 177. Plin. iv. 5. Sch. Apoll. Rhod. i. 1024. Nic.
- Damasc. in Exc. p. 492.
-
-Footnote 80:
-
- Sch. Eurip. Orest. 1245.
-
-Footnote 81:
-
- Æsch. Supp. 642. 919.
-
-Footnote 82:
-
- Strab. viii. 6. p. 202. Müll. Dor. i. 90. Frag. Incert. Pind. p. 660.
- Diss.
-
-Footnote 83:
-
- Aristot. Meteorol. i. 14. p. 38.
-
-Footnote 84:
-
- Strab. viii. 6. p. 204.
-
-But the province of Peloponnesos which the Pelasgi most delighted to
-consider their home, was the rough, wild, and elevated table land of
-Arcadia,[85] resembling on a small scale their original seat in central
-Asia; belted round by mountains with many streams and rivers pouring
-down their sides: here long shut out from commerce with the rest of
-mankind they multiplied in ease and security, and became a great
-nation,[86] who, to express the idea of their own extreme antiquity,
-professed themselves to be older than the moon.[87] Having lost all
-tradition of their arrival in the country, they looked upon themselves
-as autochthons, and regarded their mountain-girt land as the great
-reservoir of Pelasgian population,[88] whence its colonies like streams,
-flowed outwards, and peopled the rest of Hellas; and probably it was
-thence that the first emigrants descended into the valley of the
-Eurotas, spread themselves through Laconia, and found a mountain on
-which they bestowed the holy name of Olympos. In this province one of
-the most famous of the Pelasgian tribes, is by some traditions said to
-have had its origin; for Lelex,[89] who gave his name to the Leleges,
-they fabled to have been an autochthon of Laconia, and down even to the
-times of Pausanias an heroum was shown at Sparta erected in honour of
-his name. Undoubtedly a mythical legend connected with this hero was
-deeply interwoven with the fabulous history of Laconia. His son Eurotas
-was the father of Sparta, wife of Lacedæmon, who gave his name to the
-country. He had two daughters, Amycla and Eurydice, the latter of whom
-became the wife of Acrisios.[90] The Acarnanians, however, had among
-them a tradition which made Lelex an autochthon of Leucadia,[91] and the
-people of Megara spoke of one Lelex[92] who arrived in their country by
-sea from Egypt.
-
-Footnote 85:
-
- Which Strabo (viii. 3, 157,) says was the original seat of the
- Caucons.
-
-Footnote 86:
-
- Sch. Apoll. Rhod. iv. 264.
-
-Footnote 87:
-
- Clem. Alex. i. 6.
-
-Footnote 88:
-
- Herod. i. 146. Pliny iv. 10. Nic. Damasc. in Exc. p. 494. Paus. viii.
- 1. 4.
-
-Footnote 89:
-
- Paus. iii. 12. 5.—i. 1. The country, moreover, obtained the name of
- Lelegia, iv. i. 1.
-
-Footnote 90:
-
- Apollod. iii. 10. 3.
-
-Footnote 91:
-
- Strab. vii. 7. p. 115.
-
-Footnote 92:
-
- From whom the people were called Leleges. Paus. i. 39. 6. He was said
- to be the son of Poseidon and Libya, and his tomb was shown near the
- sea-shore, 44. 3.
-
-To proceed, however, with the traces of the Pelasgi in Peloponnesos. It
-has sometimes been supposed that no proof exists of their having held
-any part of this peninsula excepting Argos, Achaia and Arcadia;[93] but
-erroneously, for we have seen the Leleges, a Pelasgian tribe, in
-Laconia; and we find a settlement of the Pelasgi in Messenia. Here also
-at Andania flourished the Pelasgian worship of the Dii Kabyri from
-Samothrace;[94] colony of Leleges, under Pylos, son of Cleison, settled
-at Pylos on the Coryphasian promontory.[95] The Caucons held
-Cyparissos;[96] that is both in the interior of Messenia and along the
-sea coast we find settlements of the race which peopled the whole
-peninsula. Passing northward into Elis, we immediately on crossing the
-Neda find Caucons in the Lepreatis,[97] where, probably, in proof that
-the tribe originated there, they showed in Strabo’s[98] time the tomb of
-Caucon. They had likewise a river Caucon[99] in the north of Elis, and
-in short the whole country from the Neda to the Larissos bore anciently
-the name of Cauconia.[100] Some, however, maintain that they were found
-only at three points on the coast, that is, in the south of
-Triphylia,[101] in the north near Dyme, and at Hollow Elis on the
-Peneios, which Aristotle considered their chief seat.[102] Nevertheless
-Antimachos regarded the Epeians as Caucons,[103] and since these
-inhabited the whole western coast from Messenia northward, we must
-consider Elis as the principal though not the original seat of this
-tribe; for we find them represented as issuing from Arcadia, and we have
-already shown that they were settled in Paphlagonia, and were
-denominated a Trojan tribe.
-
-Footnote 93:
-
- Thirl. Hist. of Greece, i. 38.
-
-Footnote 94:
-
- Paus. iv. 1. Müll. Dor. i. 116.
-
-Footnote 95:
-
- Paus. iv. 36. i.
-
-Footnote 96:
-
- Strab. viii. 3. 156.
-
-Footnote 97:
-
- Ibid. viii. 3. 152.
-
-Footnote 98:
-
- Ibid. viii. 3. 157.
-
-Footnote 99:
-
- Ibid. viii. 3. 151.
-
-Footnote 100:
-
- Ibid. viii. 3. 157.
-
-Footnote 101:
-
- Ibid. viii. 3. 151. The Caucons, however, mentioned by Athena in the
- Odyssey (θ. 366.) were different from those of Triphylia. The
- Triphylian Caucons held all the land lying south-east of Pylos on the
- way to Lacedæmon. Strab. viii. 3. 157.
-
-Footnote 102:
-
- Strab. viii. 3. 157.
-
-Footnote 103:
-
- Ibid.
-
-Turning our faces eastward from the promontory Araxos, we discover along
-the coast a chain of Pelasgian settlements founded by Ionians from
-Athens.[104] To complete our list of proofs that there was no spot in
-all Hellas not possessed by the Pelasgi, we find a prince of that race,
-and named Pelasgos, receiving the goddess Demeter at Corinth in the
-remotest periods of the mythology.[105]
-
-Footnote 104:
-
- Herod. vii. 14.
-
-Footnote 105:
-
- Paus. i. 14. 2.
-
-Thus, then, we have traced this illustrious people under various names
-through every region of Greece, save Attica; and there also they were
-found, but whether they arrived by land or sea, I profess myself wholly
-unable to determine. A modern historian[106] who experienced the same
-difficulty, observes, that the Ionians appear to have dropped from
-heaven into Attica. Unquestionably we do not know whence they came, and
-as their own legends represent them as autochthons[107] we can expect no
-aid from tradition. The most probable supposition is, that when the
-migratory hordes were pushing southward from Thessaly, some clans, more
-fortunate than the rest, traversing the heights of Cithæron soon found
-themselves in possession of this unfertile but lovely land, covered in
-those ages with forests, diversified by hill and dale, and breathing
-perfume from every thicket. The succeeding tide of emigration breaking
-against the ridge of Cithæron seems to have turned westward and flowed
-into the Peloponnesos, leaving Attica unmolested. Some have regarded its
-own barrenness as the rampart which protected it from invasion. But why
-may we not suppose that the inhabitants finding themselves thriving and
-tranquil, resolved early to fight for their possessions, and hedged
-themselves from invasion by courage and arms? be this as it may, Attica
-was the first part of Hellas that enjoyed permanent exemption from war,
-so that the olive, its principal ornament and riches, became in all
-after ages the emblem of peace. Once settled in this country the Pelasgi
-were never driven thence,[108] nor did they ever receive any
-considerable mixture of foreign settlers. Individuals from time to time
-were permitted to take up their abode among them; but, in this favoured
-spot, unalloyed by foreign mixture, the Pelasgic genius completely
-developed itself, and reached the highest pitch of civilisation known to
-the ancient world.
-
-Footnote 106:
-
- Müll. Dor. i. 12.
-
-Footnote 107:
-
- Sch. Arist. Acharn. 75.—Nubb. 971.
-
-Footnote 108:
-
- Herod. i. 56. vii. 161. Lesbon. Protrept. ii. 22. f. Conf. Wessel. ad
- Herod. p. 26.
-
-The earliest name bestowed on the Pelasgian tribe which held Attica was
-that of Cranaans;[109] but whether they were so distinguished before
-their migration thither, or, which is more probable, derived their
-appellation from the rocky nature[110] of their country, does not
-appear. Like most of the ancient nations, however, they frequently
-changed their name: at first perhaps simply Pelasgi, next Cranaans, then
-Cecropidæ and Ionians; afterwards, under the reign of Erechtheus they
-obtained from their patron divinity the name of Athenians, by which they
-have been known down to the present day. Among the fables of the
-mythology we discover traces of several attempts at disputing with the
-Aborigines the sovereignty of Attica. Thus Eumolpos, with a colony of
-Thracians, is by one tradition said to have obtained possession of the
-whole country,[111] while another and more probable legend represents
-him as settling with a small band at Eleusis, where his family during
-the whole existence of Paganism exercised the office of priests of
-Demeter.[112] The Cretans again under Minos sought to obtain a footing
-in the country; but the close of the tradition which speaks of this
-invasion shows that though disgraceful to Attica it was without any
-permanent result. Afterwards, when the unsettled Pelasgi had degenerated
-into pirates and freebooters, a powerful band of them appears to have
-found its way thither, and obtained a settlement in the immediate
-neighbourhood of the capital,[113] on condition, apparently, of
-labouring at the erection of walls round the Acropolis. A portion of the
-fortifications is said to have been completed by these marauders, and to
-have obtained from them the name of the Pelasgian wall. But even these
-strangers were not suffered to remain; quarrels arising either about the
-land which the Pelasgi had obtained on the slopes of Hymettos, or on
-account of violence offered to certain Athenian maidens descending to
-the fountain of Callirrhoë for water. The emigrants were expelled and
-took refuge in Lemnos. In revenge for what they regarded as an injury,
-they carried away a number of Attic virgins who were celebrating the
-festival of Artemis at Brauron, which led in after times to the capture
-of Lemnos by Miltiades.
-
-Footnote 109:
-
- Herod. i. 57. viii. 44.
-
-Footnote 110:
-
- Suid. _v._ Κραν. t. i. p. 1518. d.
-
-Footnote 111:
-
- Strab. vii. 7. p. 114.
-
-Footnote 112:
-
- Palmer. Græc. Antiq. p. 62.
-
-Footnote 113:
-
- Paus. ii. 8. 3. Philoch. p. 13. Siebel. Herod. ii. 51. seq.
-
-It seems to result from the above inquiry that every district in Hellas
-was originally peopled by the Pelasgi, which the poets in after ages
-expressed by saying that a king of that nation reigned over the whole
-country as far northward as the Strymon in Thrace.[114]
-
-Footnote 114:
-
- Æschyl. Suppl. 259. sqq.
-
-We have shown that their dominions extended much further, and included
-not Thrace only, beyond the limits of Greece, but a great part likewise
-of Asia Minor and nearly every island in the Ægæan. But even these
-spacious limits were not wide enough to contain the whole Pelasgian
-population; for traversing the Adriatic, they penetrated into Etruria,
-and there and elsewhere in Italy, under the name of Tyrrhenians, erected
-Cyclopian cities, and deposited the germs of its future
-civilisation.[115] Hence the great resemblance which historians and
-antiquaries have observed between the Etruscans and the Greeks. Both
-were offshoots from the great Pelasgic stem; though the simplicity of
-the original race in religion and manners maintained longer its ground
-in Italy than under the warmer skies of Greece. In these more western
-settlements, however, new tribes sprang up, who in glory eclipsed the
-mother race, which they learned to regard with contempt, so that they
-bestowed the name of Pelasgi on their slaves. A similar circumstance had
-previously occurred in Asia Minor, where the Carians reduced to
-servitude such of their brethren as in later times retained the name of
-Leleges.[116]
-
-Footnote 115:
-
- Gœttl. ad Hes. Theog. 311. 1014. Οἱ Τυρσηνοὶ δὲ, Πελασγοί. Sch. Apoll.
- Rhod. 580. The Pelasgi were the founders of Agylla, afterwards Cære in
- Etruria. Steph. Byzant. v. Ἀγύλλα, p. 30. d. Plin. iii. 8. Serv. ad
- Æn. viii. 479, who also gives another tradition according to which
- Agylla was built by Tyrrhenians from Lydia. Cf. Vibius, Sequest. 421,
- who says that the Tuscans were Pelasgi. The Poseidoniatæ, a Tuscan
- tribe, entirely forgot their original language, the manners of their
- country, and all its festivals, save one, in which they assembled to
- repeat the ancient names of kings, and recall the remembrance of their
- original home. They then separated with groans, cries, and mingling
- together their tears.—Athen. xiv. 81. The Bruttii are said to have
- been driven out of their country by the Pelasgi (Plin. iii. 8); who
- also settled in Lucania and Bruttium (9, 10). Pelasgi came out of
- Peloponnesos into Latium, settled on the Sarna, called themselves
- Sarrhastes, and built, among others, the town of Nuceria.—Serv. ad Æn.
- vii. 738. A different tradition brings them from Attica; another from
- Thessaly, because of the many Pelasgian relics found there.—Idem.
- viii. 600. Dion. Hal. i. 33.
-
-Footnote 116:
-
- Nieb. i. 22. Steph. Byzant. _v._ Χῖος, p. 758. b. Victor. Var. Lect.
- i. 10. Athen. vi. 101.
-
-If now we cast a rapid glance over the sciences and civilisation of the
-Pelasgi, we shall probably have acquired as complete an idea of that
-ancient people as existing monuments enable us to frame.[117] Tradition
-attributed to them the invention of several arts of primary necessity,
-as those of building houses and manufacturing clothing, which they did
-from the skins of wild boars, the animals first slain by man for food. A
-relic of this primitive style of dress remained, we are told, to a very
-late age among the rustics of Phocis and Eubœa.[118] Other traditions
-will have it that mankind fed on grass and herbs until the Pelasgi
-taught them the greater refinement of feeding upon acorns. But leaving
-these poetical fancies, we shall find in many genuine monuments and
-facts undisputed proofs of the power and knowledge of the Pelasgi. In
-the first place, they it was who bequeathed to their Hellenic
-descendants some knowledge, though imperfect and obscure, of the true
-God.[119] In their minds the recognition of the unity of the Divine
-Being formed the basis of theology, and the philosophers of after ages
-who reasoned best and thought most correctly rose no higher on these
-points than their rude ancestors.
-
-Footnote 117:
-
- See Nieb. i. 24.
-
-Footnote 118:
-
- Paus. viii. 1. 5.
-
-Footnote 119:
-
- Herod. ii. 32. 51. Plato, Tim. t. vii. 22–31. 96. 142.
-
-But the natural tendency of the human mind to error soon disturbed the
-simplicity of their faith; for as the tribes separated, each taking a
-different direction, they all in turns learned to consider the God as
-their patron, so that speedily there were as many gods as tribes, and
-polytheism was created. Thus the Pelasgi, who had at first like the
-polished nations of modern times no name for _the gods_, because they
-believed in but one, degenerated in the course of time, and invented
-that system of divinities and heroes which afterwards prevailed in
-Greece. They, too, it was, who in the developement of their superstition
-made the first steps towards the arts by setting up rude images of the
-powers they worshipped, and to them accordingly the introduction of the
-Hermæan statues at Athens is attributed.[120] There was likewise in a
-temple of Demeter between mount Eboras and Taygetos, a wooden statue of
-Orpheus, supposed to be the workmanship of the Pelasgi.[121] Evidently
-too, the worship of Demeter, and of all the rural gods grew up
-originally among them, as did likewise the adoration of supreme power
-and supreme wisdom in Zeus and Athena.[122]
-
-Footnote 120:
-
- Herod. ii. 51.
-
-Footnote 121:
-
- Paus. iii. 20. 5.
-
-Footnote 122:
-
- We find mention, too, of a Pelasgian Hera, Alex. ab. Alex. p. 321.
- Sch. Apol. Rhod. i. 14.
-
-Usually the Pelasgi are considered as a much wandering people,[123]
-though it would be more correct to represent them, like the Anglo-Saxon
-race in modern times, as the prolific parents of many settlements,
-spreading widely, but taking root wherever they spread. A proof of this
-still exists in the vast structures[124] which they reared, whose ruins
-are yet found scattered through Asia, Greece, and Italy. These Cyclopian
-buildings, palaces, treasuries, fortresses, barrows, were not the works
-of nomadic hordes, but of a people attached to the soil and resolute in
-defending it. Navigation, likewise, they cultivated, and were among the
-earliest nations who possessed a power at sea,[125] which led
-necessarily to the study of astronomy, together with the occult science
-of the stars.[126] Of their progress in the more ordinary arts of
-utility we have very little knowledge, but we find in the Iliad a
-Pelasgian woman staining ivory to be used as ornaments of a
-war-horse;[127] the invention of the shepherd’s crook was attributed to
-them; so likewise was the religious dance called Hyporchema;[128] their
-proficiency in music is spoken of;[129] and their pre-eminence in war
-was signified by representing them as inventors of the shield.[130]
-
-Footnote 123:
-
- Strab. xiii. 3. p. 144.
-
-Footnote 124:
-
- Serv. ad Æn. vi. 630. Winkelmann, ii. 557. On the Cyclopian walls of
- Crotona. Mus. Cortonen. pl. i. Rom. 1756.
-
-Footnote 125:
-
- Palm. Gr. Ant. p. 60. Herm. Pol. Ant. p. 13.
-
-Footnote 126:
-
- Palm. Gr. Ant. p. 72.
-
-Footnote 127:
-
- δ. 142. Sch. Apol. Rhod. iii. 1323. Natal. Com. 611.
-
-Footnote 128:
-
- Phot. Bib. 320. b.
-
-Footnote 129:
-
- They were the inventors of the trumpet. Πελασγιὰς ἔβρεμε σάλπιγξ,
- Nonn. Dion. 47. 568. Cf. Paus. ii. 21. 3. Gœttl. ad Hes. Theog. 311.
-
-Footnote 130:
-
- Serv. ad Æn. ix. 505.
-
-On the language of the Pelasgi various opinions are entertained. Some,
-relying on particular passages in ancient writers, have imagined that it
-was very different from the Greek,[131] but although in support of such
-an opinion much ingenuity may be exhibited there are circumstances which
-compel us to reject it. The Athenians and Arcadians, for example, though
-of Pelasgian origin, spoke, and that from the remotest times, the same
-language with the rest of the Greeks; and though the Æolic dialect,[132]
-the most ancient in Arcadia, or indeed in all Greece, was transformed to
-Latin in Italy, we are not on that account to infer that Latin bore a
-closer resemblance than the Greek to the mother tongue of both. The
-Pelasgian language indeed appears to have been the Hellenic in the
-earlier stages of its formation, just as the Pelasgi themselves were
-Greeks under another name and in a ruder state of civilisation. Whether
-they possessed any knowledge of written characters before[133] the
-introduction of the Phœnician we have now no means of ascertaining, the
-passages usually brought forward in behalf of such an opinion being of
-small authority. To them, however, tradition attributes the introduction
-of letters into Latium,[134] and there can be no doubt that the use of
-written characters was known in Greece before its inhabitants had ceased
-to be called Pelasgi.
-
-Footnote 131:
-
- Nieb. i. 23.
-
-Footnote 132:
-
- Palm. Gr. Ant. p. 55.
-
-Footnote 133:
-
- See, however, the question discussed in Palmerius, Gr. Ant. p. 49.
- sqq. Conf. Eustath. ad Il. β. 841.
-
-Footnote 134:
-
- Plin. vii. 56. Tacit. Annal. xi. 14. et Rupert ad loc. Hygin. Fab.
- 277. p. 336.
-
-I have now, I imagine, proved that the Pelasgi whencesoever they came,
-occupied, under one name or another, the whole continent of Greece and
-most of the islands. The Athenians, and consequently the Ionians, are on
-all hands acknowledged to have sprung from the Pelasgian stock. It only
-remains to be shown that the Dorians also traced their origin to this
-people, and we shall be satisfied that the whole of the illustrious
-nation, known to history under the name of Greeks, flowed from one and
-the same source. The Hellenes, of whom the Dorians were a tribe,[135]
-occupied in later times the south of Thessaly, but at a much earlier
-period, along with the Selli,[136] dwelt in the mountainous tracts about
-Dodona, where they were known under the name of Greeks or
-mountaineers,[137] which was the original signification of the term.
-This district of Epeiros, it has been shown, was among the very earliest
-of the Pelasgian settlements, from which of itself it might be inferred
-that the Hellenes were Pelasgi. We are not left to rely in this matter
-on mere inference, since Herodotus states distinctly that they were a
-fragment of the Pelasgi.[138]
-
-Footnote 135:
-
- Serv. ad Æn. ii. 4.
-
-Footnote 136:
-
- Aristot. Meteorol. i. 14. p. 39.
-
-Footnote 137:
-
- Palm. Gr. Ant. 5.
-
-Footnote 138:
-
- I. 58.
-
-It will be seen that I have hitherto made no allusion to the received
-fables about Egyptian and Phœnician colonies.[139] Nevertheless it is
-quite possible that on many occasions certain fugitives, both from
-Phœnicia and Egypt, may have taken refuge in Greece, and been permitted,
-as in after ages, to settle there. These persons, coming from countries
-farther advanced in civilisation, would undoubtedly bring along with
-them a superior degree of knowledge in many useful arts, which, in
-gratitude for their hospitable reception, they would undoubtedly
-communicate to the inhabitants. But the most active agent in the
-diffusion of civilisation was probably commerce, which, by bringing
-neighbouring nations into close contact, by enlarging the sphere of
-their experience, and teaching them the advantages to be derived from
-peaceful intercourse, has in all ages softened and refined mankind. When
-the use of letters began first to prevail in the East is not known, but
-it was probably communicated early to the Pelasgi, along with the
-materials for writing; and whatever inventions were made on either side
-of the Mediterranean passed rapidly from shore to shore, so that the
-civilisation of the Egyptians, Phœnicians, and Greeks, advanced
-simultaneously, though the beginnings of improvement were undoubtedly
-more ancient on the banks of the Nile and among the maritime Arabs than
-in Hellas. The amount, however, of eastern influences I conceive was not
-great, and as to colonies, properly so called, with the exception of
-those already described from Asia Minor, I believe there never were any.
-
-Footnote 139:
-
- See Mitford (Hist. of Greece, 81. ff.) who is full of these colonies.
- Herod. i. 2. Conf. Thirl. i. 185. Keightley, Hist. of Greece, p. 11.
- Müll. Dor. i. 16.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
- CHARACTER OF THE GREEKS.
-
-
-Having in the foregoing chapter endeavoured to ascertain by what races
-Greece was originally peopled, we shall next speak of the character and
-physical organization of its inhabitants. In doing this it may be useful
-to consider them in three different stages of their progress: first, in
-the heroic and poetical times; secondly, in the historical and
-flourishing ages of the Hellenic commonwealth; thirdly, in their corrupt
-and degenerate state under the dominion of the Macedonians and Romans.
-
-The most distinguishing characteristic of the Hellenes, when poetry
-first places them before us, is a profound veneration for the divinity
-and every thing connected with the service of religion. By the force of
-imagination heaven and earth were brought near each other, not so much,
-indeed, by elevating the latter, as by bringing down the former within
-the sphere of humanity. Gods and men moved together over the earth,
-cooperated in bringing about events, keeping up a constant interchange
-of beneficence; the god aiding, the mortal repaying his aid with
-gratitude;[140] the god guiding, the mortal submitting to be directed,
-until, sometimes, as in the case of Odysseus and Athena, the feeling of
-grace and favour on the one side, and of veneration and gratitude on the
-other, ripened into something like friendship and affection.
-
-Footnote 140:
-
- Cf. Plut. Pericl. § 13.
-
-No man entered on any important enterprise without first consulting the
-gods, and throwing himself upon their protection, by sacrifice,
-divination, and prayer.[141] They conceived, according to the best
-lights afforded them by their rude creed, that although means existed of
-warping the judgment, perverting the affections, and vitiating the
-decisions of their divinities, yet upon the whole and in the natural
-order of things they were just and beneficent, mercifully caring for the
-poor and the stranger, the guardians of friendship and hospitality, and
-avenging severely the offences committed against their laws. Habitually,
-when not provoked to vengeance by impiety or crimes, the gods they
-believed were not only beneficent towards mankind, but given among
-themselves to cheerfulness and mirth, loving music, songs, and laughter,
-feasting jovially together in a joy serene and almost imperturbable,
-save when interrupted by solicitude for some favoured mortal.
-Philosophy, in more intellectual times, condemned this rude conception
-of divine things; but men’s ideas, like their offerings, belong to the
-state of society in which they live, and the Greeks of the heroic ages
-unquestionably attributed to their gods the qualities most in esteem
-among themselves.
-
-Footnote 141:
-
- See Man. Moschop. ap Arist. Nubb. 982.
-
-Next to religion the most prominent feeling in the mind of the early
-Greeks was filial piety.[142] Nowhere among men were parents held in
-higher honour. The reverence paid to them partook largely of the
-religious sentiment. Regarded as the instruments by which God had
-communicated the mysterious and sacred gift of life, they were supposed
-by their children to be for ever invested with a high degree of sanctity
-as ministers and representatives of the Creator. Hence the anxiety
-experienced to obtain a father’s blessing and the indescribable dread of
-his curse. A peculiar set of divinities, the terrible Erinnyes, all but
-implacable and unsparing, were entrusted with the guardianship of a
-parent’s rights, and indescribable were the pangs and anguish supposed
-to seize upon transgressors. These were the powers who tracked about the
-matricides Orestes and Alcmæon, scaring them with spectral terrors and
-filling their palaces with the alarms and agonies of Tartaros. On the
-other hand, nothing can be more beautiful than the pictures of filial
-piety exhibited by the nobler characters of heroic times. The examples
-are innumerable, but none is so striking or complete as that of Achilles
-towards his father Peleus. Fierce, vehement, stern in the ordinary
-relations of life, towards his aged father he is gentle as a child. His
-heart yearns to him with a strength of feeling incomprehensible to a
-meaner nature. He submits to his sway and authority not from any
-apprehension of his power, not even from the fear of offending him, but
-from the fulness of his love, from the natural excellence and purity of
-his heart. He would erect his valour and the might of his arm into a
-rampart round the old man, to protect him from injury and insult; and
-even in the cold region of shadows beyond the grave this feeling is
-represented as still alive, so that in death, as in life, the uppermost
-anxiety of the hero’s soul is for the happiness of his father. Even in
-the government of his impetuous passions during his mortal career, in
-the choice of the object of his love, Achilles expresses a desire to
-render his feelings subordinate to those of his parent, thus verging on
-the utmost limits of self-denial and self-control conceivable in a state
-of nature. Homer understood his countrymen well when he gave these
-qualities to his hero. Without them, he knew that no degree of courage
-or wisdom would have sufficed to render him popular, and, therefore, we
-find him not only pre-eminent for his piety towards the gods, but at the
-same time the most affectionate and dutiful of sons, the warmest, most
-disinterested, and unchangeable of friends.
-
-Footnote 142:
-
- Respect for old age is still a remarkable feature in the Greek
- character. Thiersch. Etat Actuel de la Grèce, i. 292. On the same
- trait in their ancestors see Mitf. i. 186. Odyss. ω. 254. Plat. Repub.
- vi. p. 6. f. Æsch. cont. Tim. § 7.
-
-And this leads us to consider another remarkable feature of the Greek
-character,—its peculiar aptitude for friendship. No country’s history
-and traditions abound with so many examples of this virtue as those of
-Greece. In truth, it was there regarded as the most unequivocal mark of
-an heroic and generous nature, being wholly inconsistent with anything
-base, sordid, or ignoble, and flourishing only in company with virtues
-rarest and most difficult of acquisition. Poetry, no doubt, has clad the
-friendship of heroic times with a splendour scarcely belonging to real
-life, but the experience of history warrants us in making but slight
-deductions. Nature in those ages appeared to delight in producing men in
-pairs, each suited to be the ornament and solace of the other,
-possessing different qualities, imperfect when apart, but complete,
-united. Men thus constituted were a sort of moral twins, an extension,
-if we may so speak, of unity, the same yet different, bringing two souls
-under the yoke of one will, desiring the same, hating the same,
-possessing the same, valuing life and the gifts of life only as they
-were shared in common, seeking adventures, facing dangers together,
-conforming their thoughts, opinions, feelings, each to the other, having
-no distinct interest, no distinct hope, but engrafting two lives on the
-chances of one man’s fortune, and both perishing by the same blow.
-
-This feeling has by some been supposed to have owed its strength, in
-part at least, to the degraded position of women in society; a subject
-on which I shall have more to say hereafter, but may here remark that
-such an opinion is wholly incompatible with an impartial interpretation
-of the Homeric poems and the older traditions of Greece. Throughout
-fabulous times women are the prime movers in all great events; and the
-respect which as mothers, sisters, wives, and daughters they received,
-though expressed in uncourtly language, was perhaps as great as has ever
-been paid them in any age or country. Every distinguished woman in Homer
-is the centre of a circle of tender and touching associations. We behold
-them beloved by their relatives, honoured by their dependants, enjoying
-every decent freedom, every becoming pleasure, with all the influence
-and authority appertaining to their sex. Thus Helen, both before and
-after her fall, is entire mistress of her house, and treated with all
-possible deference and delicacy: so Hecuba, Andromache, Penelope, Arete,
-Nausicaa, and Iphigeneia in their respective positions, are held in the
-highest esteem, and command as great a share of love from those whose
-duty it was to love and honour them, as any other women in history or
-fiction. Nor were due respect and tenderness confined to the high and
-the noble; for innumerable proofs occur in Homer that even among the
-humblest ranks, that delicate self-respect which is shown by respect to
-our other self, and may be regarded as the pivot of civilisation, was
-already in that age very generally diffused.
-
-But if the Greeks of heroic times possessed the good qualities we have
-attributed to them, they were still more, perhaps, distinguished for
-others, which often obliterated the footsteps of their virtues, and
-appeared to be the guiding principles of their lives. Chief among these
-was their passion for war and violence,[143] which engaged them in
-everlasting struggles with their neighbours, developed overmuch their
-fierce and destructive qualities, and threw into comparative shade such
-of their propensities as were gentler and more humane. War by land,
-piracy by sea, filled the whole country with incessant alarms. Commerce
-was checked and confined within very narrow channels, both travelling
-and navigation being exceedingly unsafe, while bands of marauders
-traversed land and sea in quest of rapine and plunder. In some states no
-other mode was known of arriving at opulence, and the humbler classes of
-society were wholly subsisted by it.[144] The laws of war, too, were
-proportionably savage. It was customary either to give no quarter, or to
-devote all prisoners taken to servitude; and, accordingly, every petty
-state was filled with unfortunate captives, many of them of illustrious
-birth and qualities, reduced to the humblest conditions, being compelled
-to earn their bread by the sweat of their brow. In peace, too, and in
-their own homes their warlike habits led frequently to the perpetration
-of violence; their passions being strong and unbridled they resented
-insults on the spot, and numerous homicides were, in consequence, found
-flying from the country whose infant institutions their passions had
-sought to overthrow.
-
-Footnote 143:
-
- See Thirlwall i. 180. sqq. and Mitford i. 181.—Among the Sauromatæ, in
- the time of Hippocrates, even the women mounted on horseback and
- fought in battle. They were not allowed to marry until they had slain
- three enemies.—De Aër. et. Loc. § 78. A circumstance is related of the
- Parthian court, illustrative of the ferocity which prevailed generally
- in antiquity. The monarch, it is said, kept a humble friend, whom he
- fed like a dog, and whipped till the blood flowed, for the slightest
- offence at table, apparently for the amusement of the guests.—Athen.
- iv. 38. This trait of barbarism was imitated by the Czar Peter, by
- servile historians denominated the Great, who used brutally to
- maltreat the princess Galitzin before his whole court.—Mem. of the
- Margrav. of Bayreuth, vol. i. p. 34.
-
-Footnote 144:
-
- Thucyd. i. 5.
-
-But in all stages of society it has been ordained by Providence that out
-of the wickedness of man some compensating good shall flow: thus, from
-the dangers and difficulties surrounding the stranger the virtue of
-hospitality[145] sprang up in generous minds. From the distress and
-misery of the passionate or accidental slayer of man arose the merciful
-rites of expiation, and all the friendly ties which subsisted between
-the purifier and the purified. Wanderers driven from their home often
-found a better in a foreign land; and thus even the transgressions and
-misfortunes of men, by breaking down the narrow enclosures of families
-and clans, and connecting persons of distant tribes together by benefits
-and gratitude, hastened the progress of refinement and paved the way for
-the greatness and glory of succeeding ages.
-
-Footnote 145:
-
- Il. ρ. 212. seq. The word ξένος signified, actively and passively, the
- host and the guest. The rights of hospitality were hereditary, the
- descendants of men being compelled to entertain the descendants of
- those with whom their forefathers had contracted hospitable ties.
- Πρόξενοι sometimes signified persons who publicly received
- ambassadors, as Antenor among the Trojans. Agamemnon had hospitable
- ties with the Phrygians, because he came of Phrygian ancestors. Damm.
- _v._ ξένος. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 347. Cf. Virg. Æn. viii. 165. et Serv.
- ad loc. Plat. Soph. t. iv. p. 125, where Socrates alludes to a passage
- in Homer, in which Zeus is said to be the companion of the wanderer,
- observing jocularly that the Eleatic stranger might probably have been
- some deity in disguise. Cf. Tomas. Tess. Hosp. c. 23. ap. Gronov.
- Thesaur. ix. 266. sqq. It was a proverb at Athens that the doors of
- the Prytaneion would keep out no stranger.—Sch. Aristoph. Ach. 127.
- The Lucanians had a law thus expressed: “If a stranger arriving at
- sunset ask a lodging of any one, let him who refuses to be his host be
- fined for want of hospitality.” The object, I imagine, of the law,
- says Ælian (Var. Hist. iv. i.) was at once to avenge the stranger and
- Hospitable Zeus.
-
-It will, from what has been said, be seen that among the elements of the
-Greek character passion greatly predominated; but, even from the
-earliest times, the existence was apparent of other powerful principles,
-by the influence of which the nation was led to emerge rapidly from its
-period of barbarism. These were an innate love of magnificence, and a
-striking inclination towards all social enjoyments; the former leading
-to the cultivation of commerce and industry, the latter communicating an
-extraordinary impetus to the natural desire common to mankind for
-companionship and society. But in developing these principles nature
-pursued in Greece a peculiar route. Instead of establishing a common
-centre, towards which the energies of the whole nation might tend,
-society was broken up into numerous parts, each forming, when considered
-separately, a whole, but united with its neighbours by identity of
-origin, language, religion, and national character.
-
-Philosophers usually seek in geographical position a key to the fact of
-the formation of so many separate states as the Hellenic population was
-divided into; but the cause was probably of a different kind. Among
-every other people, a difficulty has always been experienced in
-discovering men capable of conducting public affairs; and, when any such
-have arisen, they have easily subdued to their will their less
-intellectual and, consequently, less ambitious neighbours. Among the
-Greeks the case was wholly different: every province, every district,
-nay, every town and village abounded with men endowed with the ability
-and passion for governing. These feelings begot the aversion to submit
-to the government of others; this aversion engendered strife; and it was
-only the accident of a numerical superiority existing in one division of
-the country, or of a statesman of extraordinary genius springing up,
-that enabled one village to subdue its neighbours for a few miles
-around, and thus establish a small political community.
-
-History rarely penetrates back so far as the period in which this state
-of things existed. But we have an example in the annals of Attica, where
-the twelve small municipal states, if one may so speak, were, partly by
-persuasion, partly by force, brought under the authority of one city,
-possessing the advantages of a superior position and wiser and more
-enterprising leaders.
-
-These diminutive polities once formed, many causes concurred to preserve
-their integrity, of which the most obvious and powerful was the pride of
-race, and, next to this, certain religious feelings and peculiarities,
-which stationed gods along the frontier line of states, and rendered it
-impious for the worshippers of other divinities to invade or dispossess
-them of their lands. Communities having at first been thus isolated,
-numerous circumstances arose to make eternal the separation. The ready
-invention of the people gave to each state its heroes and heroic
-traditions, based, perhaps, on the exploits of border warfare, in which
-the ancestors of one community had suffered or inflicted injuries on the
-ancestors of another. Poets sprang up who celebrated these deeds in
-song, and every assembly, every festival, every merry-making resounded
-with the commemoration of deeds as galling to one people as they were
-glorious to the other. These prejudices, this cantonal patriotism, this
-tribual vanity, if I may coin a new word to express a new idea,
-constituted a far more impassable barrier between the diminutive states
-of Greece, than either mountains or rivers; though, in process of time,
-some few cases occurred in which very small communities were immersed
-and lost in greater ones. The heroism, however, with which the smallest
-commonwealth struggled to preserve its separate existence, the watchful
-jealousy, the undying solicitude, the fierce and sanguinary valour by
-which it hedged round its independence, the indescribable agonies of
-political extinction, may be seen in the examples of Ægina, Megara,
-Platæa, and Messenia.
-
-In fact the most remarkable peculiarity in the Greek character was a
-certain centrifugal force, or abhorrence of centralisation, which
-presented insurmountable obstacles to the union of the whole Hellenic
-nation under one head. The inhabitants of ancient Italy exhibited on
-this point an entirely dissimilar character. Though differing from each
-other widely in manners, customs and laws, they still possessed so much
-of affinity as enabled them successively to unite themselves with Rome,
-and melt into one great people. The causes lay in their moral and
-intellectual character: possessing little genius or imagination, but
-much good sense, they experienced less keenly the misery of inferiority,
-the anguish of defeat, the tortures of submission, and calculated more
-coolly the advantages of protection and tranquillity, and all the other
-benefits of living under a strong government. Where the masses are but
-slightly impregnated with the fire of genius they are naturally disposed
-to amalgamation, and form a vast body necessarily subjected to one head.
-But where a nation is everywhere pervaded and quickened by genius, where
-imagination is an universal attribute, where to soar is as natural as to
-breathe, where the principal enjoyment of life is the exercise of power,
-where men hunger and thirst more for renown than for their daily bread,
-where life itself without these imaginary delights is insipid and
-despicable, no force, while the vigour of the national character
-continues unbroken, can erect a central government, or achieve extensive
-conquests, that is, subject one part of the nation to the sway of the
-other. And perhaps it may be found when we shall farther have perfected
-the science of government, that in politics as in physics the largest
-bodies are not the most valuable, or the most difficult to be shattered.
-The diamond resists when the largest rock yields. The true tendency of
-civilisation, therefore, is to reduce unwieldy empires into compact
-bodies, which the light of education can penetrate and render luminous.
-Vast empires are but opaque masses of ignorance.
-
-From precisely the same causes arose the peculiar notions of the Greeks
-on the subject of government; that is, the citizens of each state
-applied to one another the principle which regulated the conduct of
-communities. Every man experienced an aversion to yield obedience to his
-neighbour, every man was ambitious to rule; but, as this was impossible,
-it became necessary to invent some means by which public business could
-be carried on without offering too much violence to the national
-character. Hence the origin of republicanism and the establishment of
-commonwealths, in which the sovereignty was acknowledged to reside in
-the body of the people, and where such of the citizens as by abilities,
-rank, friends, were qualified, might rule in vicarious succession.
-
-But the various families of the Hellenes were not all equally endowed
-with the energy and intellect which belonged to their race; some
-possessed more of these qualities, others less, and there were besides
-in operation numerous peculiar and local causes which modified the forms
-of polity adopted by the various states of Greece. The heavier, the
-colder, the more inert naturally chose that form of government which
-would least tax their mental faculties, and most completely relieve them
-from the care of public affairs, in order the more sedulously to attend
-to their own; while the fierier, the busier, more active and buoyant
-preferred that political constitution which would afford their energetic
-natures most employment, and supply a legitimate outlet for the ardour
-and impetuosity of their temperament. Thus, in certain communities there
-was a leaning towards monarchy, in others towards oligarchy; in a third
-class towards aristocracy; while Athens and some few smaller states
-preferred the stir, bustle, and incessant animation of democracy.
-
-Again these institutions, springing at first out of national
-idiosyncrasies, became in their turn among the most active causes which
-impressed the stamp of individuality on the population of each separate
-state: for the principle which animates a form of government is not a
-barren principle, but impregnates, leavens, and vivifies the community
-subjected to its influence, and produces an offspring analogous to the
-source from which it sprang. Thus, in monarchies the summits of a nation
-are rich with verdure and glorious with light; in aristocracies a broad
-table-land is fertilized and rendered beautiful; while in commonwealths,
-properly so called, the whole surface of society unrolls itself like a
-vast plain to the sun, and receives the light and comfort, and
-invigorating influence of its beams:—and all these various modifications
-of civil polity were at different times and in different parts of the
-country beheld in Greece, where they produced their natural fruits.
-
-Among the principal results of the causes we have enumerated were a high
-intellectual cultivation, the profoundest study of philosophy, the most
-ardent pursuit of literature, a matchless taste for the beautiful in
-nature and in art, an irrepressible enthusiasm in the search after
-knowledge of every kind, and, joined with these, as their cause
-sometimes, and sometimes as their consequence, an invincible and
-limitless craving after fame. And these characteristic qualities of the
-people exhibited themselves in various ways. Sometimes, as in Thessaly,
-men sought to distinguish themselves by their wealth and the pomp by
-which they were surrounded:—sometimes their ruling passion urged them to
-pluck, amidst blood and slaughter, the laurels of war, as in Crete and
-Sparta, where military discipline was carried to its utmost perfection,
-where men lived perpetually encamped around their domestic hearths,
-cultivated the habits, preferences, tastes, and feelings of soldiers,
-and looked upon dominion as the supreme good:—sometimes religion, with
-its rites and pomp and sacrifices, absorbed a whole people, as in Elis,
-where the worship of supreme Zeus and the celebration of sacred games
-conferred a sanctity upon the land and people which all men of Hellenic
-blood respected:—elsewhere mountaineers,[146] of indomitable valour,
-hired out their swords to the best bidder, and became, as it were, the
-journeymen of war:—elegant pleasures in many cities, and commerce and
-magnificence, occupied and depraved the whole community; while
-others,[147] of grosser minds and more sordid propensities, passed their
-whole lives in indolent gluttony round the festive board, amid crowds of
-singers, flute-players, and dancers; or else, like the Delphians, were
-ever seen hovering amid the smoke of the altars, whetting their
-sacrificial knives or feasting on the savoury victims; and yet the
-triumphs of the Thebans proved that even the lowest of the Greeks, when
-circumstances led them to cultivate the arts of war, were capable of
-planning and executing great designs, and acquiring lasting celebrity.
-The arts, however, by which the Greeks rose to greatness,[148] and
-became the instructors and everlasting benefactors of mankind,
-flourished chiefly at Athens, and in the numerous colonies which she
-planted in various parts of Asia and the islands. To men of Ionian race
-we owe, in fact, the invention and most successful culture of poetry and
-philosophy, and those plastic and mimetic arts which added to the world
-of realities another world more beautiful still. If the Greeks borrowed,
-as no doubt they did, certain varieties and forms of art and learning
-from the barbarians, they immediately so refined and improved them, that
-the original inventors would no longer have recognised the works of
-their own hands. The glory of giving birth to several of the arts and
-sciences belongs to them: they were the inventors of the art of war;
-among them alone, in the ancient world, painting and sculpture assumed
-their proper dignity; and in politics and statesmanship, and that art of
-arts, philosophy, they led the way, and taught mankind the steps by
-which to arrive at perfection.
-
-Footnote 146:
-
- According to Hippocrates, the inhabitants of lofty mountains, well
- watered, are generally hardy and of tall stature, but fierce and
- ferocious. In saying this, the philosopher describes the Arcadians
- without naming them. De Aër. et Loc. § 120.
-
-Footnote 147:
-
- Athen. iv. 74.
-
-Footnote 148:
-
- Clem. Alex. Strom. i. p. 355. l. 12. Wink. Hist. de l’Art, i. 316.
-
-Greece, by the means we have described, was gradually reclaimed from the
-state of nature, covered with beautiful cities, harbours, docks,
-temples, palaces adorned with infinite variety of works of art, with
-sculpture in ivory and gold, with paintings, gems, and vases, which
-converted her principal cities into so many museums. Her plains, her
-dells, her mountain recesses were studded with sanctuaries and sacred
-groves, conferring the external beauty of religion on the whole face of
-the country. Public roads, branching from numerous capital cities,
-traversed the land in every direction; bridges spanned her rivers,
-agriculture covered her hills and plains with harvests, the vine hung in
-festoons from tree to tree, the foliage of the olive clothed the
-mountain sides, and a belt of beautiful gardens surrounded every city,
-town, and village.
-
-The primary cause of all this amazing activity has, by philosophers,
-been sought for in various circumstances of the condition of the Greeks,
-in the form of their institutions, in the rivalry of so many small
-communities, in the fact of their being inventors, and the consequent
-freshness of their pursuits. But although all these circumstances and
-many others contributed, as we have shown, to expedite the progress of
-the Greeks in civilisation, they were none of them the fountain head,
-which lies far beyond our ken. It were in fact as easy to tell why one
-star differs from another star in glory, as why one nation or one man
-rises in intellect above his fellows. But we are supplied with a link in
-the chain which connects the above effects with their cause, by the
-physical organisation of the Greeks, who possessed the most perfect
-forms in which humanity ever appeared. Their frame exhibiting all the
-beauty of which the human body is susceptible, uniting strength with
-lightness, dignity and elegance with activity, the utmost robustness of
-health with extreme delicacy of contour, the muscles developed by
-exercise, and developed over the whole structure alike, suggested the
-idea of power and indefatigable energy; the stature, generally above the
-middle size, the free and unembarrassed gait, the features[149] full of
-beauty, the expression replete with intellect, and the eye flashing with
-a consciousness of independence:—all these united conferred upon the
-form of the Greek an elevation, a grandeur, a majesty which we still
-contemplate with admiration in their sculpture, and denominate the
-ideal. Above all things, the form of the Grecian head was most
-exquisite, with its smooth, expansive, almost perpendicular forehead and
-majestic outline, describing a perfect oval. Generally the complexion
-was of a clear olive, the hair and eyes black, the temperament inclined
-to melancholy, though numerous instances occurred of sanguine fair
-persons with light eyes and chesnut or auburn hair, which the youth
-wore, as now, in a profusion of ringlets falling to the shoulders.
-Instances likewise occurred among the Greeks of individuals, who, like
-our own Chatterton, had eyes of different colours. Thus the poet
-Thamyris[150] is said to have had one eye grey, the other black. Nay,
-this peculiarity was even remarked among the inferior animals, more
-particularly the horses.[151]
-
-Footnote 149:
-
- Among the ancient Scythians an extraordinary uniformity of feature was
- observable, as also among the Egyptians, (the same is the case at
- present,) supposed to proceed, in the one case from the rigour, in the
- other from the extreme heat, of the climate. Hippoc. de Aër. et Loc. §
- 91. But in every country, the climate being alike for all, the same
- effect ought to be produced on the whole population. The similitude is
- chiefly to be traced to the absence of all mixture with foreign races;
- and the equal indevelopement of the mind.
-
-Footnote 150:
-
- Poll. iv. 141.
-
-Footnote 151:
-
- Aristot. de Gen. Anim. v. i.
-
-The characteristic beauty of the nation displayed itself in every stage
-of life, only assuming new phases in its progress from the beauty of
-infancy to the beauty of old age, inspiring the mingled feelings of love
-and admiration; and notwithstanding the effects of time, and
-inter-marriage with barbarous races, the same is the case still. For
-nowhere in Europe do we meet with infants so lovely, with youths so
-soft, so virginal, so beautiful in their incipient manliness, with old
-men so grave, stately, and with countenances so magnificent, as among
-the living descendants of the Hellenes, whose destiny may yet be, one
-day, as enviable as their forms.
-
-To push our enquiry one step further; it may be questioned, whether the
-glorious organisation we have been describing was not itself an effect
-of air, climate, and soil.[152] Certain at any rate it is, that the
-atmosphere of Greece is clearer, purer, more buoyant and elastic, than
-that of any other country in our hemisphere. At night, particularly,
-there is a transparency in the air, which appears to impart additional
-lustre and magnitude to the stars and moon. Its mountain tops, the
-intervening space being, as it were, removed, seem to mingle with the
-constellations which cluster in brightness on the edge of the horizon.
-
-Footnote 152:
-
- Cf. Hippoc. de Aër. et Loc. § 125, seq. § 23, seq. Casaub. ad Theoph.
- Char. p. 94. seq.
-
-A principal cause of this clearness and pellucidness is the great
-prevalence of the north wind,[153] which brings with it few or no
-vapours, but gathers together the clouds in heaps and rolls them from
-the land towards the Mediterranean. The reason why this wind so often
-prevails may be discovered in the geographical configuration of the
-country, which is not, like Italy, divided from the rest of the
-continent by a range of Alps that might have screened it from the colder
-blasts, but lies open like an elevated threshing-floor, to be purged and
-winnowed on all sides by the winds, which in many parts are so violent
-that no tree can attain to any great height, while the stunted woods
-throw all their branches in one direction, and the vines and other
-climbing shrubs are laid prostrate along the rocks. These winds,
-however, prevail not constantly, but the southern and western breezes,
-blowing at intervals, bring along with them the warm atmosphere of Syria
-or Egypt, or the cooling freshness of the ocean. Another cause, which
-greatly tends to promote the purity of the air, is the lightness,
-friability, and dryness of the soil, which, distributed for the most
-part in thin layers over ledges of rocks, permits no stagnation of
-moisture, but enables the rain that falls to trickle through, collect in
-rills and brooks, and find its way rapidly to the sea. The plains and
-irregular valleys, which form an exception to this rule, are not
-numerous enough, or of sufficient magnitude to affect the general
-proposition. There appear, moreover, to be many peculiar properties and
-virtues in the soil itself, causing all fruits transplanted thither to
-attain to speedy ripeness and superior flavour, while odoriferous plants
-and flowers, as the jasmine, the wild thyme, and the rose exhale sweeter
-and more delicious fragrance. This is more particularly the case in
-Attica, which accordingly produced in antiquity, where due care was
-bestowed on gardening and agriculture, the finest fruits and sweetest
-honey in the world.[154]
-
-Footnote 153:
-
- This wind, wherever it prevails, increases the appetite; and the
- Greeks were a hearty-eating people.—Aristot. Probl. xxvi. 45. The wind
- Ornithias was often so cold as to strike birds dead on the wing.
- Schol. Aristoph. Ach. 842.
-
-Footnote 154:
-
- Aristot. Probl. xx. 20. The black myrtle, which is much larger than
- the white, grew wild about the hills. (xx. 36.) The southern breezes
- were considered highly salutary to the plants of the Thriasian plain.
- (xxvi. 18.)
-
-The same qualities in soil and climate which affect vegetation, likewise
-powerfully influence the character and temperament of men and animals.
-It is, for example, well known in the Levant, that the Bedouins
-inhabiting Arabia Proper and the Eastern Desert degenerate both in
-character and physical organisation when transplanted to the Libyan
-wastes on the western banks of the Nile. But if particular soil and
-situation engender particular diseases; if the air of fens and marshes
-blunt the senses and paralyse, to a certain degree, the intellectual
-faculties, the converse of the proposition must also hold good; so that
-it is conceivable that the light soil and pure air of Greece may have
-produced corresponding effects on the bodies and minds of its
-inhabitants. The experiment, in fact, is made daily; for strangers
-arriving there with the germs of disease in their constitution, are, in
-most cases, speedily destroyed by the force of the climate; while the
-healthy and vigorous acquire the vivacity, the cheerfulness, the nervous
-and impetuous energy of the natives themselves, and, like them, extend
-the term of life to its utmost span. Greece, indeed, has always been the
-habitation of longevity; its philosophers in antiquity,—its monks,
-anchorites, and rural population in modern times, furnishing, perhaps,
-more examples of extreme old age than could be found on the same extent
-of territory in any other part of the globe.
-
-Now this excess of vitality, this superabundance of the principle of
-life, which constitutes what we intend by physical or moral energy,
-almost inevitably produces, among an ill-governed, ill-educated people,
-a large harvest of crime, and, accordingly, the modern Greeks have often
-been distinguished for audacious villany; the intrepid vigour of their
-character, controlled neither by religion nor philosophy, easily
-breaking through the restraints of tyranny and unjust laws in the chase
-after power or excitement. That Frenchman spoke more truly than he
-thought, who said the Greeks were still the same “canaille” as in the
-days of Themistocles: for, give them the same laws, the same education,
-the same incentives to virtue and to heroism, and they will probably be
-again as virtuous, as wise, and as heroic as their illustrious
-ancestors. I judge in this way partly from my own experience, for I have
-seldom become acquainted with a Greek,—and I have known many,—who has
-not improved upon acquaintance, won my esteem, and, in most cases, my
-affection, and impressed me with the firm belief that there is no nation
-in the varied population of Europe which, if ruled with wisdom and
-justice, would exhibit loftier or more exalted qualities. In these views
-I am happy to be borne out by the testimony of Monsieur Frederic
-Thiersch, whose facilities for studying the modern Greek have been far
-more ample than mine, and whose opinions are marked by the cautious
-acuteness of the statesman with the depth and originality of the
-philosopher.
-
-In alluding to the causes which pervert the feelings and misdirect the
-energies of the existing race, I have touched also at the great source
-of crime among their ancestors,—I mean, defective laws and institutions;
-for although the Greek character was, in force and excellence, all that
-I have said, and more, it, nevertheless, contained other elements than
-those I have described, which it now becomes my duty to speak of. From a
-very early period there existed in Greece two political parties,
-variously denominated in various states, but upholding,—the one, the
-doctrine that the many ought to be subjected to the few; the other, that
-the few ought to be subjected to the many: in other words, the
-oligarchical and democratical parties. From the struggles of these two
-factions the internal history of Greece takes its form and colour, as to
-them may be traced most of the fearful atrocities, in the shape of
-conspiracies, massacres, revolutions, which, instructing while they
-shock us, stain the Greek character with indelible blots.[155] Ambitious
-men are nowhere scrupulous. To enjoy the delight imparted by the
-exercise of power, individuals have in all ages stifled the dictates of
-conscience; and where, as in modern Italy and in ancient Greece,
-numerous small states border upon each other, sufficiently powerful to
-dream of conquest though too weak to achieve it, the number of the
-ambitious is of necessity greatly multiplied. In proportion, however, to
-the thirst of power in one class was the love of freedom and
-independence in the other, so that the process of encroachment and
-resistance, of tyranny and rebellion, of usurpation and punishment, was
-carried on perpetually,—the oligarchy now predominating, and cutting off
-or sending into exile the popular leaders, while the democratic party,
-triumphing in its turn, inflicted similar sufferings on its enemies. By
-degrees, moreover, there sprang up two renowned states to represent
-these opposite principles, and the contests carried on by them assumed
-consequently many characteristics of civil war,—its obstinacy, its
-bitterness, its revenge.
-
-Footnote 155:
-
- See the savage anecdote of Stratocles in Plutarch. Demet. § 12.
-
-In these struggles seas of blood were shed, and crimes of the darkest
-dye perpetrated. Cities, once illustrious and opulent, were razed to the
-ground; whole populations put to the sword or reduced to servitude;
-fertile plains rendered barren; men most renowned for capacity and
-virtue made a prey to treachery or the basest envy; the morals of great
-states corrupted, their glory eclipsed, their power undermined, and a
-way paved for the inroads of barbarian conquerors who ultimately put a
-period to the grandeur of the Hellenes.
-
-Examples without number might be collected of these horrors. It will be
-sufficient to advert briefly to a few, more to remind than to inform the
-reader. In the troubles of Corcyra[156] the nobles and the commons
-alternately triumphing over each other, carried on with the utmost
-ruthlessness the work of extermination with abundant baseness and
-perfidy, some portion of which attached to the Athenian generals: the
-wrongs and sufferings inflicted by the Spartans on the brave but
-unfortunate inhabitants of Messenia, with the annual butchery of the
-Helots, the treacherous withdrawal of suppliants from sanctuary, and
-their subsequent slaughter,[157] the extermination of the people of
-Hysia,[158] the precipitating of neutral merchants into pits,[159] the
-betrayal of the cities of Chalcidice and the islands, the massacre in
-cold blood of the Platæans, of four thousand Athenians in the
-Hellespont,[160] the reduction of innumerable cities to servitude: by
-the Athenians, the extermination of the people of Melos,[161] the
-slaughter of a thousand Mitylenians, the cruelties at Skione, Ægina, and
-Cythera;[162] but beyond these, and beyond all, the fearful excesses of
-civil strife at Miletos where the common people called Gergithes having
-risen in rebellion against the nobles and defeated them in battle, took
-their children and cast them into the cattle stalls where they were
-crushed and trampled to death by the infuriated oxen; but the nobles
-renewing the contest and obtaining ultimately the victory, seized upon
-their enemies,—men, women, children, and covered them with pitch, to
-which setting fire they burnt them alive.[163]
-
-Footnote 156:
-
- Thucyd. iii. 70. sqq.
-
-Footnote 157:
-
- Ælian. Var. Hist. vi. 7. Cf. Eurip. Andr. 445. seq.
-
-Footnote 158:
-
- Thucyd. v. 83.
-
-Footnote 159:
-
- Thucyd. ii. 67.
-
-Footnote 160:
-
- Pausan. ix. 32. 9.
-
-Footnote 161:
-
- Thucyd. v. 126; iii. 50.
-
-Footnote 162:
-
- Thucyd. v. 32; iv. 57.
-
-Footnote 163:
-
- Heracl. Pont. ap. Athen. xii. 26.
-
-From these glimpses of guilt and suffering, we may learn to what
-extremes the Greek was sometimes hurried by passion and the thirst of
-power. But propensities so wolfish were not predominant in his
-nature.[164] On the contrary, in private life, even the Spartans and the
-Dorians generally put off their cruel and severe habits, and relaxed on
-all proper occasions into joviality and mirth. In their social
-intercourse, in fact, few nations have been more cheerful or addicted to
-jokes and pleasantry than the Greeks, and above all the Athenians, whose
-hours of leisure were one continued round of gossip, sport, and
-laughter.[165] Never in any city were news-mongers, or even
-news-forgers, so numerous. In the mouth of young and old no question was
-so frequent as, “What is the news?” These were the sounds that
-circulated from rank to rank in the assembly of the people before the
-orators began their harangues, that were bandied to and fro in the
-Agora, that filled by their incessant repetition the shops of barbers
-and perfumers.[166] Akin to this itching ear was the passion for show
-and magnificence, every man, from highest to lowest, affecting as far as
-possible spacious dwellings, superb furniture and costly apparel. Even
-the bravest of the brave, the heroes of Marathon, were _petits-maîtres_
-at their toilette, and went forth to the field in purple cloaks, their
-hair curled, adorned with golden ornaments, and perfumed with essences.
-The study of philosophy itself failed in most cases to subdue this
-ostentatious spirit. Plato loved rich carpets and splendid raiment. Even
-Aristotle was an exquisite, and Æschines an acknowledged coxcomb.
-
-Footnote 164:
-
- Cf. Wink. Hist. de l’Art, i. 320. Thiersch, Etat. Act. de la Grèce, i.
- p. 290. sqq; and for their disinterestedness, Pashley, Trav. in Crete,
- i. 221.
-
-Footnote 165:
-
- Loud laughter was nevertheless considered vulgar among the
- Greeks.—Plat. Repub. t. vi. 112. The Athenians were addicted to the
- language of shrugging and nodding, κ.τ.λ. To nod upwards was to deny,
- downwards to confess. Sch. Aristoph. Ach. 112.
-
-Footnote 166:
-
- Aristotle says that the orators of Athens, who governed the people,
- passed sometimes the whole of the day seeing mountebanks or jugglers,
- or talking with those who had travelled as far as the Phasis or
- Borysthenes; and that they never read anything save the Supper of
- Philoxenos and that not all.—Athen. i. 10. It was in the opinion of
- these persons perhaps, that “a great book was a great evil.”—Id. iii.
- 1.
-
-From several of these weaknesses the Spartans were free. They cared
-little for news, still less for dress, and less still for cleanliness;
-so that their beautiful long hair and waving beards swarmed with those
-autochthonal beasts, for the expulsion of which there was no law in
-Sparta. Though neither a knowing nor cleanly race, however, their wit
-was bright and piercing. No people uttered pithier or finer sayings, and
-their taste both in music and poetry was cultivated and refined.
-Probably, therefore, the dining halls and gymnasia and public walks of
-Sparta were enlivened by as much mirth as those of any other Grecian
-city, where usually cheerfulness was so prevalent, that “to be as merry
-as a Greek,” has become a proverb in all countries.
-
-On the third period of the Greek character it is unnecessary to speak at
-any length. Most of their good qualities having departed with their
-freedom they degenerated into a dissembling, hypocritical, fawning and
-double-dealing race, with little or no respect for truth, without
-patriotism, and without genuine valour. The literature, painting, and
-sculpture, to which in their period of degradation they gave birth, bore
-evident marks of their degeneracy, and tended by the corruption they
-diffused to avenge them on their conquerors the Romans; whose minds and
-morals they vitiated, and whose career of freedom and glory they cut
-short. Through their vices, however, the fame of their more noble and
-virtuous ancestors has greatly suffered, for the Romans contemplating
-the Greeks they saw before them, and implanting their opinion throughout
-the whole civilised world, their false and unjust views have been
-bequeathed to posterity; for it is still in a great measure through the
-Romans that people study the Greeks.
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
- GEOGRAPHICAL OUTLINE.
-
-
-To render still clearer the point we have been insisting on in the
-foregoing chapter, it may be useful to take a rapid survey of the
-geography of the country, and enter somewhat more at length into its
-peculiar configuration and productions.[167] Considered as a whole, the
-most remarkable feature in the aspect of Greece consists in the great
-variety of forms which its surface assumes in the territories of the
-numerous little states into which the country was anciently divided. Of
-these no two resemble each other, whether in physical structure, climate
-or productions; so that it may be said that in general the atmosphere of
-Greece is mild,[168] but not in every part, for within its narrow
-boundaries are found nearly all grades of temperature. The inhabitants
-of Elis and the valley of the Eurotas are exposed to a degree of heat
-little inferior to that of Egypt, while the settlers about Olympos,
-Pindos and Dodona, with the rough goat-herds of Parnassos, Doris and the
-Arcadian mountains experience the rigours of an almost Scandinavian
-winter. In this extraordinary country the palm tree and the myrtle
-flourish within sight of the pine, the larch, and the silver fir of the
-north. In several of the islands and on parts of the continent certain
-tropical birds, as the peacock and the golden pheasant, have long been
-naturalised, while in other districts snipes and woodcocks[169] appear
-early; storms of sleet and hail are frequent, and the summits of
-mountains are capped with eternal snow.[170] A no very elevated range of
-hills separates the marsh miasmata and wit-withering fogs of
-Bœotia,[171] the home of gluttony and stupidity, from the bland
-transparent cheerful atmosphere and sweet wholesome soil of Attica,
-where, as a dwelling-place for man, earth has reached her highest
-culminating point of excellence, and where, accordingly, her noblest
-fruits, wisdom and beauty, have ripened most kindly.
-
-Footnote 167:
-
- Cf. Hermann, Pol. Ant. § 6. Müll. Dor. ii. 425.
-
-Footnote 168:
-
- Varro gave the preference to the soil and climate of Italy, where
- everything good was produced in perfection. He thought no barley to be
- compared with the Campanian, no wheat with the Apulian, no rye with
- the Falernian, no oil with the Venafran. The whole country was so
- thickly planted with trees that it seemed to be an orchard. Not even
- Phrygia itself abounded more in vineyards; nor was Argos so fertile as
- parts of Italy, though it was said to produce from ten to fifteen
- pipes the juger. De Re Rustica, i. 2. p. 46. b.
-
-Footnote 169:
-
- “Woodcocks and snipes, I am informed, visited the neighbourhood of
- Attica during the winter in considerable quantities. I heard the
- curlew and the red shank cry along the marsh to the right of the
- Piræus.” Sibth. in Walp. Mem. i. 76.
-
-Footnote 170:
-
- Cramer, Desc. of Greece, i. 8.
-
-Footnote 171:
-
- Βοιωτία ὗς. Pind. Olymp. vi. 151. Cram. ii. 200.—Thick and foggy
- atmosphere. Hipp. de Aër. § 55. Plat. De Legg. v. t. vii. p. 410.
- seq—Cicero observes:—“Etenim licet videre acutiora ingenia et ad
- intelligendum acutiora eorum, qui terras incolant eas, in quibus aër
- sit purus ac tenuis, quàm illorum, qui utantur crasso cœlo atque
- concreto.” De Nat. Deor. ii. 16. “The purple and the grey heron
- frequent the marshes of Bœotia.” Sibth. in Walp. Mem. i. 76.
-
-To proceed, however, with an outline of the country: along the shores,
-more especially towards the west, rugged cliffs of great elevation
-impend over the deep, and in stormy weather present an appearance highly
-desolate and forbidding. But descending the Ionian sea, and doubling
-Cape Crio, the south westernmost promontory of Crete, the approach
-towards the tropics is felt both in the air and in the landscape. The
-nights are beyond description lovely, the stars appear with increased
-size and brilliancy,[172] and morning spreads over both land and wave a
-beauty but faintly reflected even in poetry. Every rock and headland,
-clothed with the double light of mythology and the sun, emerges from the
-obscurities of the dawn glittering with dew and fresh as at the
-creation. The slopes of the mountains, feathered with hanging woods,
-lead the eye upwards to those aspiring peaks, the cradle of many a
-Hellenic legend, where snows pale and shining as those of Mont
-Blanc,[173] descending on all sides in wavy gradations to meet the
-forests, rest for ever, and at the opening and the close of day exhibit
-that crimson blush which we observe among the higher Alps. All the
-lowlands at their base are meantime covered, perhaps, with heavy mists,
-while lighter and more fleecy vapours hang here and there upon the
-mountain tops, augmenting their grandeur by allowing the imagination
-like a Titan to pile them up as high as it pleases towards heaven. The
-coasts of eastern Hellas, including those of Eubœa, along the whole line
-of Thessaly to the confines of Macedonia, are bold and rocky, frowning
-like the ramparts of freedom upon the slaves of the Asiatic plains.
-
-Footnote 172:
-
- I never saw the Pleiades appear so large as on the coast of Messenia.
- See Coray, Disc. Prel. ad Hipp. de Aër. et Loc. § 115.
-
-Footnote 173:
-
- Even the Cheviot hills are sometimes (as in 1838) covered all the
- summer with patches of snow, on which occasions the peasants are said
- to pay no rent. _Tyne Mercury_, July 1, 1838.
-
-Traversed in almost every direction by mountain chains infinitely
-ramified and towering in many places to a vast height, Greece has,
-likewise, its elevated table-lands, lakes, bogs, morasses, with
-extensive open downs and heaths. Lying between the thirty-sixth and
-forty-first degrees of north latitude, and excepting on the Illyrian and
-Macedonian frontier everywhere surrounded by the sea, it may in many
-respects be said to enjoy the most advantageous position on the globe.
-From the barbarian countries of Macedonia and Illyria it is divided by a
-series of contiguous mountain ridges, which commencing with Olympos,
-(covered all the year round with snow, amid which the poet Orpheus[174]
-was interred,) and including the Cambunian range, with the lofty peak of
-Lacmos, stretches westward across the continent, and terminates in the
-stormy Acroceraunian promontory. The most northern provinces of Hellas,
-immediately within this boundary and west of the Pindos range, were
-Chaonia and Molossia, and towards the east Thessaly—a circular valley of
-exceeding fertility, encompassed by chains of lofty mountains. This
-province contains the largest and richest plains in Greece; and many of
-the names most hallowed by its religious traditions and most renowned in
-poetry, belong to Thessaly. Here, in fact, was the supposed cradle of
-the Hellenes. From hence sailed the Argo and incomparably the greatest
-of all the heroes who fought at Troy
-
- “—--mixed with auxiliar gods.”
-
-Footnote 174:
-
- Paus. ix. 30. 9. Anthol. Græc. vii. 9. Menag. ad Diog. Laert. Proœm. §
- 5. Here, too, one of the three Corybantes, when he had been slain by
- his brethren, found a grave. Clem. Alex. Protrept. c. xi. t. i. p. 16.
- From the blood of this man sprang the herb parsley.
-
-The geography of Thessaly is remarkable. According to a tradition
-already mentioned it was once a mountain-girt lake, the waters of which
-augmented by unusual rains burst their stupendous barriers and tore
-themselves a way through opposing rocks to the sea. Among the tribes of
-northern Hindùstân a similar tradition prevails respecting the formation
-of the Vale of Kashmèr; and whether in these cases the voice of fame has
-preserved or not an historical truth, such events may be regarded as not
-improbable in countries abounding with mountain lakes whose beds lie
-considerably above the level of the sea. The lofty ridge which skirts
-the shores of the Ægæan, and is said to have been rent in remote
-antiquity by the waters of the lake, presents a highly varied aspect to
-the approaching mariner. First on sailing northward Pelion comes in
-sight: a broad ridge rising from the waves like a huge uncrenalated
-wall, and covered in Homeric times with fiercely waving woods. To this
-succeeds Ossa, with its steep conical peak, clothed with durable snows
-and divided by a narrow dusky gap from Olympos. This gap is Tempe,[175]
-whose savage beauties poets and sophists have vied with each other in
-describing, though the reality is still finer than their pictures. On
-entering the defiles of the mountains a narrow glen hemmed in by
-precipitous rocks, bare in some places, in others verdant with hanging
-oaks, receives the waters of the Peneios, which, like the Rhone at St.
-Maurice and the Nile at Silsilis, in some places fill up the whole
-breadth of the pass, leaving scarcely room for a straitened road carried
-over rocky ledges. Farther on they diffuse themselves over a broad
-pebbly bed, and narrow prospects are opened up through woody vistas into
-soft pastural recesses, carpeted with emerald turf, and perfumed with
-flowers and shrubs of the richest fragrance. Anon the vale contracts
-again, gloomy cliffs frown over the stream and sadden its surface with
-their shadows, until at length the whole chain is traversed and the
-Peneios precipitates its laughing waters into the Ægæan.[176] Crossing
-the great range of Pindos we enter Epeiros,[177] a country anciently
-divided into many provinces, and partly inhabited by semi-barbarous
-tribes, where on the borders of a lake singularly beautiful and
-picturesque stood the fane and oracle of Dodonæan Zeus. Homer,
-accustomed to the mild skies of Ionia, speaks of its climate as rude and
-severe. But Byron, born among the hungry rocks of Caledonia, and
-habituated to the savage features of the north, was smitten with its
-wild charms, and thus describes one of the scenes in the neighbourhood
-near the sources of the Acheron.
-
- Monastic Zitza, from thy shady brow,
- Thou small but favoured spot of holy ground,
- Where’er we gaze,—around, above, below,
- What rainbow tints, what magic charms are found!
- Rock, river, forest, mountain,—all abound;
- And bluest skies that harmonize the whole.
- Beneath, the distant torrent’s rushing sound
- Tells where the volumed cataract doth roll
- Between those hanging rocks which shock yet please the soul.
-
-Footnote 175:
-
- Æl. Var. Hist. iii. 1. Holland 291–95. Clarke iv. 290–97. Dodwell,
- 109. sqq. Gell. Itiner. of Greece, 280.
-
-Footnote 176:
-
- Aristotle accounts for what every traveller will have remarked, the
- extreme blueness of this sea, which he contrasts with the whitish
- waves of the Pontos Euxeinos. In the latter case, he observes, the
- air, thick and whitish, is reflected from the surface of the turbid
- waters; while, in the Ægæan, the sea, transparent to a great depth,
- reflects the bright rich colour of the sky.—Prob. xxiii. 6. He adds
- that the sea is more transparent during the prevalence of the north
- wind.
-
-Footnote 177:
-
- Though this country be not generally included by geographers within
- the limits of Hellas, I have considered it as a part of Greece,
- because Homer evidently so thought it. He reckons the Perrhæbi and
- Ænianes, and the dwellers about the cold Dodona, among the followers
- of Agamemnon, that is classes them among the Greeks.—Il. β. 749–755.
- The ancient name of the country is said to have been Æsa.—Etym. Mag.
- 39. 19. Cf. Steph. Byzant. _v._ Δωδών. p. 319. d. sqq.
-
-Clusters of islands clothed with poetical verdure stretch along the
-coast thickly indented by diminutive bays and embouchures of rivers. On
-a point of the Acarnanian shore[178] in the mouth of the Ambracian gulf,
-the Commonwealth of Rome which had foundered so many rival states
-suffered final shipwreck, and the shores of avenged Hellas were strewed
-with the wrecks of Roman freedom. Ætolia, Doris, Locris, Phocis, in
-which was the mystic navel of Gaia,[179] and the deep valley of Bœotia,
-divided from each other by mountains or by considerable rivers, minutely
-intersected by streams, and broken up into a perpetual succession of
-hill and dale, conduct us southward to the Corinthian Gulf and the
-borders of Attica.
-
-Footnote 178:
-
- Where stood a celebrated Temple of Apollo.—Thucyd. i. 29.
-
-Footnote 179:
-
- The “rocky Pytho” afterwards Delphi. Iliad, β. 519.
-
-Reserving this illustrious division of Hellas, and Megaris which
-originally formed a part of it, for the close of our rapid outline, we
-enter the Peloponnesos,—a country remarkable both for its physical
-configuration, and for the races which anciently inhabited it. Connected
-with the continent by the narrow isthmus of Corinth it immediately
-expands westward and southward into a peninsula of large dimensions, in
-form resembling a ragged plantain leaf or outstretched palm.[180] Like
-the northern division of Hellas the Peloponnesos is rough with mountain
-chains, and belted round with cliffs. Towards the centre it swells into
-a lofty plateau, known to antiquity under the name of Arcadia. Foreign
-poets, misapprehending the nature of the country, have described this
-province as a succession of soft pastoral scenes.[181] But its real
-character is very different, consisting chiefly of an extensive
-table-land, supported by vast mountain buttresses, which in some places
-tower into peaks of extraordinary elevation. It is broken up into
-innumerable valleys and deep glens, overhung with wild precipitous
-rocks, clothed with gloomy forests, and buried during a great part of
-the year in clouds and snow. The inhabitants were rough and unpromising
-as the soil, distinguished like the modern Swiss for no quality but
-bravery, which, like them too, they sold with a mercenary recklessness
-to the best bidder.[182] Achaia is a slip of sea-coast sloping towards
-the north. Elis, a succession of beautiful plains with few eminences
-intervening, well watered and renowned for their fine breed of mares.
-This, the Holy land of the Hellenes, sacred every rood to Zeus, was to
-the Greeks a place of pilgrimage, as Mecca to the Arabs and Palestine to
-the Christians of the West. In the Homeric age it was confined within
-narrow limits, its sea-coast only extending from Buprasion to the
-promontory of Hyrminè, scarcely indeed, so far, as Myrsinos is said to
-be its last city towards the north, and Buprasion is mentioned rather as
-a separate state. It was divided from Achaia by Mount Scollis, which
-Homer calls “the rock Olenia,” and Aleision is the boundary to the
-south; consequently, neither Mount Pholöe nor Olympia, nor the Alpheios
-was then included in Elis, still less Triphylia.
-
-Footnote 180:
-
- Strb. viii. 2. 140. Dion. Perieg. ap. Palm. Gr. Ant. 16.
-
-Footnote 181:
-
- Cf. Palm. Gr. Ant. 61. On the climate of Arcadia see Aristot. Problem.
- xxvii. 60. He observes that the winds, blowing in from the sea, were
- not colder there than in other parts of Greece; but that during calms
- the exhalations from the stagnant waters were particularly chill. See
- also Hippoc. de Aër. et Loc. § 120.
-
-Footnote 182:
-
- Cf. Steph. Byzant. _v._ Ἀρκας. p. 166. b. seq.
-
-Argolis, on the opposite side of the peninsula, is traversed by a broad
-ridge of hills, which, branching off from Mount Cyllene and Parthenion
-in Arcadia, abounds in deep ravines and spacious natural caverns. It
-contains, however, several plains of much fertility; but, though marshy
-and subject to malaria, the neighbourhood of the capital is deficient in
-good water. The fame of Argos[183] rests almost wholly on a fabulous
-basis: it was great in the infancy of Greece; it took the lead in the
-Trojan war; but, with the irruption of the half-barbarous Dorians into
-the Peloponnesos, the glory of the old heroic race
-
- “that fought at Thebes and Ilion,”
-
-waned visibly, and Argos and its twin city, Mycenæ, sank into
-comparative insignificance.
-
-Footnote 183:
-
- Il. β. 559. Mases, an Argive city, is mentioned by Homer in
- conjunction with Ægina, which island also belonged at that time to
- Argos. This place, in later ages, was the harbour of the
- Hermioneans.—Pausan. ii. 36, 83. Cf. Müll. Æginet. p. 85.
-
-Laconia consists of a hollow valley, enclosed between two mountain
-chains, proceeding from the great Arcadian barrier, Parnon and Kronios,
-and stretching southward to the sea. Down the centre of this vale flows
-the Eurotas, whose sources lie above Belemina, among the steep recesses
-of Taygetos.[184] Though enlarged by several tributary brooks, it
-preserves, until some way below Sparta, the character of a mountain
-torrent; but after precipitating itself in a romantic sparkling cascade,
-appears for some time to be lost in a morass. Escaping, however, from
-the swamp, it flows during the remainder of its course over a firm
-gravelly bed to the Laconian gulf. Immediately above Sparta the valley
-narrows exceedingly; but, at this point, the hills receding suddenly on
-both sides, sweep round a small circular plain, and, a short distance
-below the city, again approach, and press upon the bed of the
-Eurotas.[185] The site of Sparta, therefore, resembles on a small scale
-that of the Egyptian Thebes, which is similarly hemmed round by the
-Arabian and Libyan mountains. It follows, too, that the condition of the
-atmosphere must to a certain extent be alike in both places; for the
-ridges of Taygetos and Thornax rising to a great height, not only
-intercept the cooler breezes from the west and north, but, bending
-amphitheatrically round the plain, concentrate the sun’s rays, which,
-being bare and rocky, they reflect with great force. In summer,
-therefore, the heat is intense: in winter, on the other hand, their
-great elevation suffices morning and evening to exclude the slanting
-beams, thus causing a degree of cold little inferior, perhaps, to what
-is felt in the highlands of Arcadia.
-
-Footnote 184:
-
- This mountain (which in one place Vibius Sequester converts into a
- river, p. 19, Cf. Virg. Georg. ii. 487,) was sacred to Bacchos. Serv.
- ad. Virg. ut sup.—Strabo describes it at length, and Pausanias
- observes that it was adapted to the chase. On its summit horses were
- sacrificed to the sun.—Paus. iii. 20. 2. Cf. Oberlin, ad Vib. Sequest.
- p. 375.
-
-Footnote 185:
-
- Coronelli, Mém. Hist. et Géog. du Roy. de la Morée, &c. p. 90. sqq.
- Poucqueville, Travels in the Morea, p. 87. Chateaubriand, Itinéraire,
- t. i. pp. 102–118. Cf. Thiersch, Etat Actuel de la Grèce, i. 287, who
- gives the following romantic glimpse of the Laconian valley:—“Oh! que
- ce pays était beau, lorsqu’au mois de Mai 1832, nous traversâmes ses
- ravissantes vallées au milieu des montagnes de la Laconie, et ses
- villages situés au bord de ruisseaux limpides et entourés d’arbres
- fruitiers tout en fleurs! Quelle était belle cette terre, lorsque, le
- soir, revenant des ruines de Sparte à Mistra, nous étions comme
- baignés de ces parfums qu’exhalent les orangers qui remplissent la
- plaine, et rafraichis par la brise délicieuse descendue des montagnes
- majestueuses du Taygète, dont les cimes, encore couvertes de neige,
- semblaient toucher le ciel parsemé d’étoiles! Nôtre sommeil fut
- interrompu la nuit par le chant mélodieux d’une troupe de rossignols.”
-
-But though lofty and bleak, the uplands of Laconia are not incapable of
-cultivation, and in many places were anciently covered with forests of
-plane trees. Their eastern slopes were likewise clothed with vines,
-irrigated, as in Switzerland and Burgundy, by small rills, conducted
-through artificial channels from springs high up in the mountains.[186]
-The summits of Taygetos are waste and wild; rent and shattered by
-frequent earthquakes, lashed by rain-storms, and here and there bored
-and undermined by gnawing streams, working their way to the valley, it
-presents the aspect of a fragment of nature in its decrepitude. South,
-however, of Mount Evoras the country opens into a plain of considerable
-fertility, extending eastward towards Mount Zarax and the sea. On the
-Messenian frontier, also, are many valleys highly productive. This
-portion of Lacedæmon obtained in the time of Augustus the name, given
-perhaps in mockery, of the land of the Eleuthero Lacones, or “Free
-Laconians.”[187]
-
-Footnote 186:
-
- Aleman, ap. Athen. i. 57.
-
-Footnote 187:
-
- Strab. viii. 6. p. 190. Paus. iii. 21. 6.
-
-Protected on the land side by mountains difficult to be traversed, and
-presenting towards the sea an inhospitable harbourless coast, Laconia
-seems marked out by nature to be the abode of an unsocial people. Like
-that of many Swiss cantons, its climate is generally harsh and rude,
-vexed by cold winds alternating with burning heats, and appears to
-communicate analogous qualities to the minds of its inhabitants, who
-have been in all ages remarkable for valour untempered by humanity. In
-such a country the nobler arts can never be completely naturalised. The
-virus imbibed from nature will find its way into the character, and defy
-the influence of culture and of government.
-
-Messenia presents, in every respect, a contrast to Laconia. Along the
-sea-coast, indeed, particularly from Pylos to Cape Aeritas, its
-barrenness is complete; neither woods nor thickets, nor any vestige of
-verdure being visible upon the red cinder-like precipices beetling over
-the sea, or sloping off into grey mountains above. But having passed
-this Alpine barrier, we find the land sinking down into rich plains,
-which on the banks of the broad Pamisos were anciently, for their
-luxuriant fertility,[188] denominated “the Happy.” North, and about the
-sources of the Balyra, the Amphitos, and the Neda the scenery grows
-highly romantic and picturesque, the eye commanding from almost every
-elevated point innumerable narrow meandering glens, each with its
-bubbling streamlet circling round green eminences, clothed to their
-summits with hanging woods. Messenia, which, as soon inhabited, must
-have been wealthy, appears to have been a favourite resort of poets in
-remote antiquity. Here the Thracian Thamyris, in a contest, as was
-fabled, with the Muses, lost his sight, together with the gift of song;
-and in a small rocky island on its coast,—the haunt, when I saw it, of
-sea-mews and cormorants,—Sparta received from an Athenian general of
-mean abilities one of the most galling defeats recorded in her annals.
-
-Footnote 188:
-
- Cf. Sibth. in Walp. Mem. i. 60.
-
-Returning out of the Peloponnesos by way of the Isthmos, and quitting at
-the Laconian rocks the territories of Corinth, we enter the
-Megaris,[189] originally, as I have before observed, a part of the
-Athenian territories. Attica is a triangular promontory, of small
-extent, projecting into the Myrtöan sea, between Argolis and Eubœa. A
-mountain chain, of no great elevation, forms, under several names, the
-boundary between this country and Bœotia; and Mount Kerata, in later
-times, divided it from Megaris. On every other side Attica is washed by
-the sea, which, together with nearly all the circumjacent islands, was,
-in antiquity, regarded as a part of its empire.[190] This minute
-division of Greece, fertile in nothing but great men, is seldom viewed
-with any eye to the picturesque. Satisfied that Athens stood there, we
-commonly ask no more. Genius has breathed over it a perfume sweeter than
-the thyme of its own hills,—has painted it with a beauty surpassing that
-of earth,—rendered its atmosphere redolent for ever of human greatness
-and human glory,—and cast so dazzling an illusion over its very dust and
-ruins, that they appear more beautiful than the richest scenes and most
-perfect structures of other lands.
-
-Footnote 189:
-
- Strab. ix. i. p. 232.
-
-Footnote 190:
-
- Strab. ix. 1. Philoch. Siebel. p. 28.
-
-Independently, however, of its historical importance, Attica is invested
-with numerous charms. Consisting of an endless succession of hill and
-dale,[191] with many small plains interspersed; and swelling towards its
-northern frontier into considerable mountains, it presents a miniature
-of the whole Hellenic land.[192] In antiquity its uplands and ravines
-and secluded hollows were clothed with wood,—oaks, white poplars, wild
-olive-trees, or melancholy pines. The arbutus, the agnus castus, wild
-pear, heath, lentisk, and other flowering shrubs decked its hill-sides
-and glens; on the brow of every eminence wild thyme, sweet marjoram,
-with many different kinds of odoriferous plants exhaled their fragrance
-beneath the foot;[193] while rills of the clearest and sweetest water in
-the world, leaped down the rocks, or conducted their sparkling currents
-through its romantic and richly cultivated valleys. Southward, among the
-mountains of scoriæ of the mining district, springs of silver[194] may
-be said to have usurped the place of fountains. The face of the country
-is nearly everywhere arid and barren,—the plains are parched,—the
-gullies encumbered with loose shingle,—the eminences unpicturesque and
-dreary; yet wherever vegetation takes place, the virtue of the Attic
-soil displays itself in the production of fragrant flowers, whence the
-bee extracts the most delicious honey in the world, superior in quality
-to that of Hybla or Hymettos.
-
-Footnote 191:
-
- Mardonius, in fact, found Attica too hilly for the operations of
- cavalry:—οὔτε ἱππασίμη ἡ χώρη ἦν ἡ Ἀττική.—Herod. ix. 13.
-
-Footnote 192:
-
- See, in Plato’s Critias, t. vii. p. 153. the eulogium of its beauty
- and fertility. At present “the plain of Attica, if we except the
- olive-tree, is extremely destitute of wood, and we observed, on our
- return, the peasants driving home their asses laden with Passerina
- hirsuta for fuel.”—Sibthorp in Mitchell, Knights, p. 155. But the
- description by no means applies to the whole country. At the foot of
- Cithæron there are still forests four hours in length.—Sibth. in Walp.
- Mem. i. 64.
-
-Footnote 193:
-
- This is accounted for by the dryness and purity of the atmosphere;
- for, as Pliny remarks, “hortensiorum odoratissima quæ sicca; ut ruta,
- mentha, apium, et quæ in siccis nascantur.”—Hist. Nat. xxi. 18. p. 46.
-
-Footnote 194:
-
- Ἀργύρου πηγή τις αὐτοῖς ἐστι, βησαυρὸς χθονός.—Æschyl. Pers. 238. In
- all countries the waters of mining cantons are bad.—Hippocr. de Aër.
- et Loc. § 35.
-
-Comparative barrenness may, however, upon the whole, be considered as
-characteristic of Attica. Indeed, Plato,[195] in a very curious passage,
-likens to a body emaciated by sickness the hungry district round the
-capital, where the soil has collapsed about the rocks. But from this
-innumerable advantages have arisen. The earth being light and porous
-permits whatever rain falls immediately to sink and disappear, as in
-Provence,[196] which, more than any other part of Europe, resembles
-Attica. Hence, except in some few inconsiderable spots,[197] no bogs, no
-marshes exist to poison the air with cold effluvia: a ridge of mountains
-protects it against the northern blasts: mild breezes from the ocean
-prevail in almost all seasons: snow seldom lies above a few hours on the
-ground. The atmosphere, accordingly, kept constantly free from terrene
-exhalations, is buoyant and sparkling as on the Libyan desert, when, at
-noon, every elevated rock appears to be encircled by a luminous
-halo.[198] In air so pure the act of breathing is a luxury which
-produces a smile of satisfaction on the countenance; the mind performs
-its operations with ease and rapidity; and life, everywhere sweet,
-appears to have a finer relish than in countries exposed to watery and
-unwholesome fogs. It was perfectly philosophical, therefore, in
-Plato,[199] to regard Attica as a place designed by nature to bring the
-human intellect to the greatest ripeness and perfection, a quality
-extended by Aristotle to Greece at large. The same atmospheric
-properties were favourable to health and long life, warding off many
-disorders common in other parts of the country.
-
-Footnote 195:
-
- Critias, t. vii. p. 154. Words. Athens and Attica, 62.
-
-Footnote 196:
-
- Coray, Notes sur Hippoc. De Aër. et Loc. § 126. t. ii. p. 403.
-
-Footnote 197:
-
- Vide Sch. Aristoph. Lys. 1032.
-
-Footnote 198:
-
- Aristid. i. 187. Jebb. Aristophanes appears to speak of the brilliance
- of its atmosphere in the following verse (Ran. 155):
-
- ὅψει τι φῶς κάλλιστον, ὥσπερ ἐνθάδε.
-
- though Spanheim supposes him to mean the light of the world
- generally.—Not. in loc.
-
-Footnote 199:
-
- Plat. Tim. t. vii. pp. 12. 15. sqq. Bekk. Aristot. Pol. vii. 6. Cf.
- Coray, Disc. Prelim. ad Hippoc. De Aër. et Loc. p. cxxix. sqq.
-
-A learned and ingenious but fanciful writer[200] considers Peloponnesos
-to have been the heart of Greece. Following up this idea, we must
-unquestionably pronounce Athens to have been the head, the seat of
-thought, the place where its arts and its wisdom ripened. But ere we
-touch upon the capital, which cannot be slided over with a cursory
-remark, it will be necessary to enter into some little detail respecting
-the demi or country towns of Attica,[201] of which in the flourishing
-times of the republic there existed upwards of one hundred and
-seventy-four. Of these small municipal communities, of which too little
-is known, several were places of considerable importance, possessing
-their temples, their Agoræ, their theatres, filled with walks and
-surrounded by impregnable fortifications. The Athenians regarded Athens,
-indeed, as the Hebrews did Jerusalem, in the light of their great and
-holy city, the sanctuary of their religion and of their freedom. But
-this did not prevent their preferring the calm simplicity of a country
-life to the noisier pleasures of the town. Many distinguished families,
-accordingly, had houses in these demi, or villas in their vicinity.
-Here, also, several of the greatest men of Athens were born: Thucydides
-was a native of Halimos,[202] Sophocles of Colonos, Epicurus of
-Gargettos, Plato of Ægina, Xenophon of Erchia, Tyrtæos, Harmodios, and
-Aristogeiton of Aphidnæ, Antiphon of Rhamnos, and Æschylus of Eleusis.
-
-Footnote 200:
-
- Müll. Dor. i. 76.
-
-Footnote 201:
-
- See Col. Leake, Trans. Roy. Soc. Lit. i. 114–283.
-
-Footnote 202:
-
- Poppo, Prolegg. in Thucyd. i. 22.
-
-In other points of view, also, the towns and villages of Attica
-possessed great interest. They long continued to be the seats of the
-primitive worship of the country, where the tutelar deities of
-particular districts, of earth-born race, were adored with that
-affectionate faith and that fervency of devotion which peculiarly belong
-to small religious communities. The gods they worshipped appeared almost
-to be their fellow citizens, and to exist only for their protection. In
-fact, they were the patron saints of the villages. Fabulous legends and
-historical traditions combined with religion to shed celebrity over the
-Attic demi. There was hardly in the whole land a single inhabited spot
-which did not figure in their poetry or in their annals as the scene of
-some memorable exploit. Aphidnæ[203] was renowned, for example, as the
-place whence the Dioscuri bore away their sister Helen, after her rape
-by Theseus, in revenge for which the youthful heroes devastated the
-whole district. “Grey Marathon,”[204] as Byron aptly terms it, was
-embalmed for ever in Persian blood, and rendered holy by the vast
-barrows raised there by the state over the ashes of its fallen warriors.
-Rhamnos on the Attic Dardanelles became famous for its statue of
-Nemesis, originally of Aphrodite, the work of Diodotos or Agoracritos of
-Paros, not unworthy to be compared for size and beauty with the
-productions of Pheidias. The irruption of the Peloponnesians conferred a
-melancholy celebrity on Deceleia,[205] and Phylæ obtained a place in
-history as the stronghold where Thrasybulos gathered together the small
-but gallant band which avenged the cause of freedom upon the thirty. Of
-Eleusis,[206] it is enough to say that there the ceremonies of
-initiation into the mysteries were performed.
-
-Footnote 203:
-
- Paus. i. 17. 5.
-
-Footnote 204:
-
- Paus. i. 32. 3. sqq. “We observed the long-legged plover near
- Marathon; the grey plover and the sand plover on the eastern coast of
- Attica.” Sibth. Walp. Mem. i. 76. Chandler, ii. 83.
-
-Footnote 205:
-
- Where Sophocles and his ancestors were buried. Chandler, ii. 95.
-
-Footnote 206:
-
- Clem. Alex. Protrept. § 2. t. i. p. 16. seq. where he relates the
- story of Demeter and Baubo.
-
-The capital of Megara, like Athens, stood a short distance from the sea;
-but was joined by long walls to its harbour Nisæa, protected from the
-weather by the Minoan promontory. In sailing thence to the Peiræeus we
-pass several islands, none of which, however, are of any magnitude, save
-Salamis, in remote antiquity a separate state governed by its own laws.
-The old capital, already deserted in the time of Strabo, stood on the
-southern coast over against Ægina; but the principal town of later times
-was situated on a bay at the root of a tongue of land projecting toward
-that part of Attica[207] where Xerxes sat to behold his imperial armada
-annihilated by the republicans of Hellas. Salamis was known of old under
-various names,—Skiras, Cychræa and Pituoussa, from the Pitus, or pine
-tree, by which its rocks and glens were in many places shaded.
-Immediately before the engagement in which his navy was destroyed, the
-Persian monarch sought to unite Salamis to the continent by a dam two
-stadia in length; his project, had it succeeded, would have ruined the
-ferrymen of Amphialè, a class of individuals whose operations Solon
-judged of sufficient importance to be regulated by a particular article
-in his code. Of the smaller islets that form the outworks of the Attic
-coast, little need be said, since they were nearly all barren, and
-inhabited only by a few legendary traditions. The tomb of Circe was
-shown on the larger of the Pharmacoussæ; and the island of Helena, east
-of the Samian promontory obtained the reputation of having been the spot
-where the faithless queen of Menelaus consummated her guilt.[208]
-
-Footnote 207:
-
- On one of the projecting roots of Mount Ægaleus, which anciently,
- according to Statius, was well-wooded, and clothed like Hymettos with
- thyme.—Theb. xii. 631. Suid. _v._ Μᾶσσον. This mountain produced
- likewise an abundance of figs (Theoc. Eidyll. i. 147), which were
- considered the best in Attica.—Athen. xiv. 66. Meurs. Rel. Att. c. i.
- p. 4. seq. Cf. Leake, Topog. 71.
-
-Footnote 208:
-
- Il. γ. 445. where we find its ancient name to have been Kranäe.—Cf.
- Eurip. Helen. 1672. Strab. ix. 1. p. 245.—Pausanias (i. 35. 1) has
- preserved another tradition representing Helen as landing here on her
- return from Troy.—Chandler, ii. 7.
-
-Ægina belonged to Attica only by conquest; but as when subdued its
-subjection was complete and lasting, it must not be altogether omitted
-in this glance over the home territories of the Great Demos. Like Attica
-itself, the island lying in the Saronic Gulf is of a triangular shape.
-By proximity it belongs to the Peloponnesos, being within thirty stadia
-of the Methanæan Chersonesos, while to Salamis is a voyage of ninety
-stadia, and to the Peiræeus one hundred and twenty. But the sea itself
-having been considered a part of Attica, whose flag, like that of
-England, streamed for ages triumphantly over its billows, the islands
-also which it surrounded fell one by one into the hands of the people,
-and this small Doric isle among the rest. A number of diminutive islets,
-or rather rocks, cluster round the shores of Ægina, some barren and
-treeless, others indued with a certain degree of fertility and verdant
-with pine woods.
-
-The most remarkable objects in Ægina were placed at the angles of the
-island. The city and harbour towards the west, on the east looking
-towards Attica the temple of Athena, and, near its southern extremity,
-“a magnificent conical mountain, which from its grandeur, its form, and
-its historical recollections, is the most remarkable among the natural
-features of Ægina.”[209] An eminence so lofty and in shape so beautiful
-would naturally be an object of much interest in so small an island. The
-local superstitions would necessarily cluster round it, as around Ida in
-Crete and Olympos in Thessaly. Accordingly on the summit of this
-mountain the fables of Ægina represent King Æacos praying, in the name
-of the whole Hellenic nation, to Zeus for rain, as the prophet prayed
-for the Israelites, and with equal success. Here, therefore, a recent
-traveller has with great judgment fixed the site of the Panhellenion,
-near the spot where a chapel, dedicated to the prophet Elias, now
-stands. In dimensions Ægina, according to Scylax, ranked twelfth among
-the isles of Hellas. Strabo attributes to it a circumference of one
-hundred and eighty stadia; but Sir William Gell, in his Argolis,[210]
-considers its perimeter, not including the fluctuations of the bays and
-creeks, to be not less than two hundred and ten stadia, and its square
-contents three thousand one hundred and sixty-four stadia, or forty-one
-square miles.[211] The interior is rocky, rough, and perforated with
-caverns, in which, according to fabulous legends, the Myrmidons resided,
-and Chabrias afterwards lay in ambush for the Spartan Gorgopos and his
-Æginetan allies.[212] A light thin soil nourishes but sparing vegetation
-on the mountains, but several of the small valleys, filled with earth
-washed down by rains from the uplands, are rich and fertile, watered by
-springs and rivulets, and beautified with groves of imperishable
-verdure.[213]
-
-Footnote 209:
-
- Wordsworth, Athens and Attica, p. 262.
-
-Footnote 210:
-
- Ib. 28. ap. Müll. Æginet. p. 8.
-
-Footnote 211:
-
- Cf. Clint. Fast. Hellen. ii. 335.
-
-Footnote 212:
-
- Xen. Hellen. v. 1. 11.
-
-Footnote 213:
-
- Chandler (ii. 12) speaks of the whole island as covered with trees.
-
-Much has been written on the extent and population of Attica, respecting
-which most of the philosophers of the last generation entertained very
-erroneous ideas. An examination of their statements might still,
-perhaps, be interesting; but it would lead me far beside the scope of my
-present work, and occupy space that can be better filled up. According
-to the most careful calculation Attica contained seven hundred and
-twenty square miles, or taking into account the island of Salamis seven
-hundred and forty-eight. The whole of this extremely limited space
-swarmed, however, with population; for even so late[214] as 317 B. C.
-after all the calamities which the republic had undergone, Attica still
-contained five hundred and twenty-seven thousand six hundred and sixty
-persons, or nearly seven hundred and seventy-three to the square mile, a
-proportion much higher than is found in the most thickly peopled
-counties of England.
-
-Footnote 214:
-
- Clint. Fast. Hellen. ii. 386. sqq. Cf. Boeckh, Pub. Econ. of Athens,
- i. 44. seq. On the number of the citizens _vide_ Philoch. Siebel, p.
- 17. 28. Schol. Vesp. Aristoph. 709. Strab. ix. i. t. ii. p. 234.
- Hermann. Pol. Ant. § 18. Bochart, Geog. Sac. i. 286.
-
-This, however, taking into account the form of government, the
-industrious habits, and extreme frugality of the people, is entirely
-within the bounds of probability. But in what is related of the
-population of Ægina, the calculations current among learned authors are
-so extravagant as to exceed all belief. Müller and Boeckh,[215] who on
-other occasions, and sometimes very unseasonably affect scepticism,
-unhesitatingly admit the account in Athenæus, which attributes four
-hundred and seventy thousand slaves to the Æginetans.[216] To these the
-former adds a free population of forty thousand, making the whole amount
-to upwards of half a million, or twelve thousand four hundred and
-fifty-seven to the square mile. Mr. Clinton,[217] clearly perceiving the
-absurdity of this calculation, proposes to read seventy thousand, which
-will leave a population in the proportion of two thousand six hundred
-and eighty-two to the square mile. The passage in Athenæus is no doubt,
-as Bochart suspects,[218] corrupt, and this being the case nothing is
-left but to determine from analogy the population of Ægina, which,
-supposing it equally dense with that of Attica would have amounted to
-something more than thirty thousand souls.
-
-Footnote 215:
-
- Æginet. 128. Econ. of Athens, i. 55, seq.
-
-Footnote 216:
-
- Deipnosoph. vi. 103. Cf. Schol. Pind. Olymp. viii. 30.
-
-Footnote 217:
-
- Fast. Hellen. ii. 423.
-
-Footnote 218:
-
- Geog. Sac. Pars Prior, l. iv. c. 20, p. 286.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
- CAPITAL CITIES OF GREECE.—ATHENS.
-
-
-From these more general considerations, into which it was perhaps
-necessary to enter, let us now pass to the picture antiquity has left us
-of the principal capitals, confining ourselves chiefly to Athens and
-Sparta, which may be regarded as the representatives of all the rest.
-The physiognomy of these, like the features of an individual, may in
-some respects be considered as a key to the character of the
-inhabitants; a remark which, with great truth, may be applied to all
-capitals.
-
-In the structure of the one, external and internal,[219] there was
-everywhere visible an effort to embody the principle of beauty,
-improving the advantages and overcoming the difficulties of position. In
-the other little could be discovered indicative of imaginative power, of
-the thirst to create, of the yearning of the mind after the ideal, of
-the desire of genius to breathe a soul into stone, to live and obtain a
-perpetuity of existence in the works of its own hands, to gaze on its
-own beauty reflected on all sides from its own creations as from a
-concave mirror. At Athens everything public, everything which had
-reference to the united efforts of the people wore an air of grandeur.
-The Acropolis inhabited only by the gods appeared worthy to be the
-dwelling place of immortal beings: all the poetry of architecture was
-there; it seemed to have owed its birth to a concentration of the best
-religious spirit of the ancient world, aiming at giving earth a
-resemblance to heaven; at peopling it with mute deities, speaking only
-through their beauty and surrounding these representatives of the
-invisible Olympos with everything most excellent, most valuable, most
-cherished among men. At Sparta a spirit of calculating economy entered
-into the very worship of the gods. They seemed, in the manner they
-lodged and entertained them, to have always had an eye to their common
-tables and their black broth. Between the temples of Athens and Sparta
-there was, in fact, the same contrast that now exists between St.
-Peter’s at Rome and a Calvinistic conventicle. Accordingly, several
-ancient writers have vied with each other in heaping encomiums upon
-Athens, which they regarded as at once the most glorious and the most
-beautiful of cities. Athenæus denominates it the “Museum of Greece;”
-Pindar, “the stay of Greece;” Thucydides, in his epigram upon Euripides,
-“the Greece of Greece;” and the Pythian Apollo, “the home and place of
-council of all Greeks.”[220] By others it was termed “the Opulent;”
-though the principal part of its riches consisted in the wise and great
-men whom it produced, and whose achievements covered it with glory. In
-the same spirit the Arabs call Cairo the “Mother of cities;” and all
-nations concentrate more or less upon their capital, their affection and
-their pride.
-
-Footnote 219:
-
- Dem. Olynth. iii. 9. Palm. Exercit. in Auct. Græc. p. 622. Zander, De
- Luxu Athen. c. iii. 5, § 6.
-
-Footnote 220:
-
- Athen. v. 12. Soph. Œdip. Col. 107. seq.
-
-The superior magnificence of Athens appears from this; that it was
-always the place to which the Greeks referred when desirous of
-magnifying the splendour of their own country, in comparison with what
-could be found elsewhere. Thus Dion Chrysostom[221] affirms that Athens
-and Corinth in all that constitutes real grandeur surpassed the famous
-capitals of Persia, Syria, and Ecbatana, and Babylon, and the metropolis
-of Bactriana. Nay, in the opinion of this writer the Kraneion with its
-gymnasia, fountains, and shady walks, and the Acropolis with its
-Propylæa, antique altars, temples, and population of gods, exceeded in
-magnificence the palaces of the Great King, though there was something
-exceedingly striking in the site and structure of what may properly be
-called the Acropolis of Ecbatana.[222] The city itself was unwalled, but
-the citadel, which probably rose in the midst of it, occupied the slopes
-of a conical hill, not unlike Mount Tabor, and was girt by seven walls
-of different colours and elevation, rising in concentric circles above
-each other to the summit. The circumference of the lowest is said to
-have equalled that of Athens including the Peiræeus. The colour of this
-wall was white; the next being black for the sake of contrast, was
-succeeded by one of light purple, which was followed by walls of sky
-blue, of scarlet, of silver and of gold.
-
-Footnote 221:
-
- Orat. vi. t. i. p. 199.
-
-Footnote 222:
-
- Herod. i. 98. Bochart, Geog. Sac. Pars Prior, l. iii. c. 14. p. 222.
- Aristot. De Mund. ch. 6. Apuleius, p. 19.
-
-In mere magnitude the great capitals of the East far exceeded Athens.
-The circuit, for example, of Babylon, is said to have been at least four
-hundred stadia, while, according to the orator Dion, that of Athens was
-in round numbers two hundred stadia, or twenty-five miles. Aristeides
-probably adopted the same calculation when he pronounced it to be a
-day’s journey in compass. But there is some exaggeration in these
-accounts; for, according to Thucydides, the total extent of the walls
-did not exceed one hundred and seventy-eight stadia. The area, however,
-of the city was not proportioned to the vast range of its
-fortifications, consisting of two distinct systems of buildings, the
-Astu, or city proper, and the Peiræeus or harbour, connected together by
-three walls more than four miles in length. There were other capitals in
-the western world equal in dimensions, as Syracuse, one hundred and
-eighty stadia in circumference, and Rome, which in the time of Dionysios
-of Halicarnassos did not command a larger circuit, though the space
-included within the walls was much greater.
-
-In order, however, to convey a more complete idea of the ancient home of
-Democracy and the Arts, we must, as far as possible, open up a view into
-the interior of Athens, which, with its harbours, docks, arsenals, its
-market-places, bazārs, porticoes, public fountains and gymnasia,
-probably formed the noblest spectacle ever presented to the eye by a
-cluster of human dwellings. From whatever side approached, whether by
-land or by sea, the city appeared to be but one vast group of
-magnificence. In sailing up along the shore from the promontory of
-Sunium, the polished brazen helmet and shield of the colossal
-Athena,[223] standing on the brow of the Acropolis, were beheld from
-afar flashing in the sun. On drawing nearer, the Parthenon, the
-Propylæa, the temple of Erectheus, with the other marble edifices
-crowning the Cecropian rock, glittered above the pinnacles of the lower
-city, and the deep green foliage of the encircling plain and olive
-groves. Among its principal ornaments in the later ages of the republic
-was a remarkable monument in the road to Eleusis,—the tomb of the
-hetaira Pythionica, who dying while her beauty still bloomed and her
-powers of fascination were unimpaired, the love she had inspired
-survived the grave and manifested itself by rearing a costly pile of
-marble over her ashes.[224]
-
-Footnote 223:
-
- Paus. i. 28. 2.
-
-Footnote 224:
-
- Athen. xiii. 67.
-
-Upon sailing into the Peiræeus,[225] where generally ships from every
-quarter of the ancient world lay at anchor, the stranger was immediately
-struck by manifestations of the people’s power and predilection for
-stateliness and grandeur. The entrance into the port, barely wide enough
-to admit a couple of galleys abreast, with their oars in full sweep, lay
-between two round towers, in which terminated on either hand the
-maritime fortifications of the city. Across the mouth vast chains were
-extended in time of war, rendering the Peiræeus a closed port;[226]
-arrived within which, the pleased eye wandered over the spacious quays,
-wharfs, and long ranges of warehouses extending round the harbour, with
-tombs and sepulchral monuments rising here and there in open spaces
-between. Among them was a cenotaph in the form of an altar, raised by
-the repentant people in memory of Themistocles,[227] the founder of the
-naval power of Athens, whose bones however it has sometimes been
-supposed were brought thither from Magnesia. The Peiræeus consisted of
-three basins, Zea, Aphrodision, which was by far the largest, and
-Cantharos. On the western shore were the vast docks and arsenals of the
-commonwealth erected by Philon,[228] in which, during peace, all that
-portion of the public navy not engaged in protecting its trade in
-distant colonies, was drawn up in dry docks, roofed over and surrounded
-by massive walls. Towards the centre of the town stood the
-Hippodameia,[229] an agora or market place, which appears to have
-resembled Covent Garden, with ranges of stalls in the area and
-surrounded by dwelling-houses. This building derived its name from
-Hippodamos of Miletos, the architect who erected it, and laid out the
-whole maritime city in the regular and beautiful style of which he was
-the inventor.[230] Here, also, were several other market-places or
-bazārs, among which may be reckoned a place[231] resembling the Laura of
-Samos, the Sweet Ancon of Sardis, the Street of the Happy at Alexandria,
-and the Tuscan Street at Rome, in which fruit, confectionary, with
-delicacies and luxuries of every kind were exposed for sale. In these
-agora, as now in the bazārs of Cairo, Damascus, and Constantinople, were
-beheld, in close juxtaposition, the wines of Spain and Portugal, amber
-from the shores of the ocean, the carpets, shawls, and jewels of the
-East, fruit and gold from Thasos, ivory and ostrich feathers from
-Africa, and beautiful female slaves from Syria, Dardania, and the
-southern shores of the Euxine, the Mingrelians and Georgians of the
-modern world.[232] Around these singular groups the young men of Athens,
-in an almost oriental pomp of costume, might be seen lounging, some
-perhaps purchasing, others merely looking on, half in haste to return to
-the gymnasium or to the lectures of Socrates.
-
-Footnote 225:
-
- Cf. Steph. De Urb. v. Πειραιός. p. 633. G. sqq.
-
-Footnote 226:
-
- Leake, Top. of Ath. p. 311. sqq.
-
-Footnote 227:
-
- Paus. i. 1, 2. Plut. Them. § 32. Meurs. Pir. c. 3.
-
-Footnote 228:
-
- Strab. ix. 1. p. 239.
-
-Footnote 229:
-
- Harp. _v._ Ἱπποδ. Xen. Hell. ii. 4. Dem. in Timoth. § 5. Andoc. de
- Myst. § 10.
-
-Footnote 230:
-
- Arist. Polit. vi. 8. p. 40. 16. vii. 11. p. 199. 25. Hesych. v. Ἱπποδ.
- νέμησις.
-
-Footnote 231:
-
- Athen. xii. 57, 58. Animad. t. 11. p. 468. Sch. Aristoph. Pac. 98.
-
-Footnote 232:
-
- See for the authorities, Book vi. chapters 11 and 12.
-
-Among the public buildings[233] in the harbour were the Deigma[234] or
-Exchange, where the merchants met to transact business, bringing along
-with them samples of their goods; the Serangion[235] or public baths;
-the superb temples of Zeus and Athena adorned with exquisite pictures
-and statues, where in an open court seems to have stood the celebrated
-altar erected by Demosthenes[236] in commutation of his fine of thirty
-talents; the Long Portico which served as an agora to those living near
-the shore;[237] the theatre,[238] and the court of Phreattys[239] on the
-beach, where the accused pleaded his cause from a galley lying afloat.
-Somewhere in the Peiræeus was an altar to “the unknown Gods,”[240]
-which, notwithstanding that the plural form is used, may possibly have
-been that to which Saint Paul alludes in his speech to the Athenians on
-the hill of Areiopagos.
-
-Footnote 233:
-
- Meurs. Pir. c. 4, 5, 6.
-
-Footnote 234:
-
- Harpocrat. in v. p. 74. Maussac. Etymol. Mag. 259. 51. Suid. in v. t.
- i. p. 665. Xen. Hellen. v. 1. 21. Aristoph. Eq. 975. et Schol. Dem.
- adv. Lacrit. § 7. Lys. cont. Tynd. frag. 120. Polyæn. Strat. vi. 2. 2.
-
-Footnote 235:
-
- Harpocrat. in v. p. 166. Suid. in v. t. ii. 734 a. Isaeus De Philoct.
- Hered. § 6.
-
-Footnote 236:
-
- Meurs. Pir. c. 7.
-
-Footnote 237:
-
- Paus. i. 13.
-
-Footnote 238:
-
- Xen. Hellen. ii. 4. 33.
-
-Footnote 239:
-
- Paus. i. 28. 11.
-
-Footnote 240:
-
- Paus. i. 1. 4; v. 14. 8.
-
-Besides the Peiræeus, Athens possessed two other harbours Munychia and
-Phaleron, which were enclosed by the same line of fortifications, and in
-process of time formed but one city, superior in extent to the Astu
-itself. Of these the latter was the most ancient, and from hence
-Mnestheus sailed for Troy and Theseus for Crete.[241] The Munychian
-promontory,[242] abounding in hollows and artificial excavations, and
-connected by a narrow neck of land with the continent, was the strongest
-position on the coast, and may be regarded as the key of Athens, since
-whoever held possession of it could command the city. In this Demos
-stood the Bendideion[243] where shows were exhibited in honour of Bendis
-the Thracian Artemis, to behold which Socrates and his friends came down
-from the city, when at the house of Cephalos that conversation took
-place with Glaucon and Adimantos, out of which arose the Republic of
-Plato. This division of the port likewise possessed its theatre,[244]
-and here were fought some of those battles with the thirty that
-re-established the liberty of the commonwealth.
-
-Footnote 241:
-
- Paus. i. 1, 2.
-
-Footnote 242:
-
- Strab. ix. 1. t. ii. p. 239.
-
-Footnote 243:
-
- Xen. Hellen. ii. 4, 11.
-
-Footnote 244:
-
- Thucyd. viii. 93. Lys. in Agorat. § 7.
-
-Footnote 245:
-
- Of which there were three. Plat. Gorg. t. iii. p. 22. Wordsworth,
- Athens and Attica, p. 187. Dr. Cramer, Desc. of Greece, ii. 346, seq.
- understands the long walls to have been but two in number.
-
-Proceeding inland towards the Astu or city of Athens proper, the
-stranger beheld before him a straight street upwards of five miles in
-length, extending from the Peiræeus to the foot of the Acropolis,
-between walls[245] of immense elevation and thickness, flanked by square
-towers at equal distances. Along the summit of these vast piles of
-masonry a terrace was carried, commanding superb views of the Saronic
-bay and distant coasts of Peloponnesos; and, on the other hand, of the
-city relieved against the green slopes of Lycabettos[246]. The space
-between the long walls abounded with remarkable monuments. Here were the
-tombs of Diopethes, Menander, and Euripides, the temple of Hera, burned
-by the Persians, and left in ruins as a memento to revenge, and numerous
-cenotaphs and statues of illustrious men.
-
-Footnote 246:
-
- Marin. vit. Procl. p. 74. ed. Fabric.
-
-Spacious and lofty gates admitted you into the Astu, through a belt of
-impregnable fortifications: and the appearance of the interior,[247]
-though the streets for military purposes were mostly narrow and winding,
-and the houses low, projecting over the pavement or concealed by
-elevated front-walls, surpassed in all probability the promise of its
-distant aspect. The grandeur which peculiarly belonged to the Athenian
-democracy was visible at every step. But it would weary the reader to
-lead him in succession through all the public places—the Pnyx, the
-Agora, the Cerameicos: let us ascend the Acropolis, from whose ramparts
-the plan of the whole city will unfold itself before us like a map.
-
-Footnote 247:
-
- Boeckh, Pub. Econ. of Athens, i. 88. seq.
-
-Half the beauty of all civilised countries springs out of their
-religion. At Athens nearly everything costly or magnificent belonged to
-the Gods; even the Propylæa,[248] apparently a mere secular or military
-structure, probably owed its erection in so expensive a style to the
-circumstance of its adorning the entrance to the sacred enclosure of
-Athena, and the other tutelary divinities of Athens, and spanning the
-road by which the pomp of the Panathenaic procession descended and
-ascended the mount. Be this as it may, a road[249] which, by running
-zigzag up the slope, was rendered practicable for chariots, led from the
-lower city to the Acropolis, on the edge of the platform of which stood
-the Propylæa, erected by the architect Mnesicles in five years, during
-the administration of Pericles. A pile of architecture, similar in name,
-is usually found at the entrance of the court of Egyptian temples, and
-the Propylæa Luxor and Karnak, with their aspiring obelisks, couchant
-sphynxes, and ranges of colossal statues, may be reckoned among the most
-chaste and beautiful monuments in the valley of the Nile. The Propylæa
-of Athens, richer in design and materials, and executed with a grace and
-perfection unknown to the Egyptians, enjoyed in its mere site an immense
-advantage over their noblest works which, the pyramids and the great
-temple of Koom Ombos excepted, stand on a dead level, while this
-occupies the brow of a precipitous rock, visible on every side from
-afar. Pillars, architraves, pediments, walls, and roof, were all of
-snow-white marble, with mouldings of bright red and blue, and ceilings
-of azure bedropped with stars.[250] Externally, on either hand, were
-equestrian statues of the sons of Xenophon,[251] placed on lofty square
-basements; and, overlooking the whole on the left, stood the colossal
-statue of Athena Promachos.[252]
-
-Footnote 248:
-
- Suid. in v. t. ii. p. 611. d. Harpocrat. in v. p. 254. Paus. i. 22. 4.
- Leake, Topog. p. 177. Wordsworth, Athens and Attica. p. 112.
-
-Footnote 249:
-
- Up this road goats were never allowed to ascend (Athen. xiii. 51).
- Even crows were said never to alight on the top of the sacred rock;
- and Chandler (ii. 61) remarks, that although he frequently saw these
- birds flying about the Acropolis, he never observed one on the summit.
- “The hooded crow, which retires from England during the summer, is a
- constant inhabitant of Attica, and is probably that species noticed by
- the ancients under the name of κορώνη. It is the word applied at
- present to it by the Greek peasants, who are the best commentators on
- the old naturalists.” Sibthorp in Walp. Mem. l. 75.
-
-Footnote 250:
-
- Wordsworth, Athens and Attica, p. 114.
-
-Footnote 251:
-
- Paus. i. 22. 4.
-
-Footnote 252:
-
- Müll. De Phid. Vit. p. 18 seq.
-
-On entering through the gates of the Propylæa a scene of unparalleled
-grandeur and beauty burst upon the eye. No trace of human dwellings
-anywhere appeared, but on all sides temples of more or less elevation,
-of Pentelic marble, beautiful in design and exquisitely delicate in
-execution, sparkled like piles of alabaster in the sun. On the left
-stood the Erectheion or fane of Athena Polias; to the right that
-matchless edifice known as the Hecatompedon of old, but to later ages as
-the Parthenon. Other buildings, all holy to the eye of an Athenian, lay
-grouped around these master structures, and in the open spaces between,
-in whatever direction the spectators might look, appeared statues, some
-remarkable for their dimensions, others for their beauty, and all for
-the legendary sanctity which surrounded them. No city of the ancient or
-modern world ever rivalled Athens in the riches of art. Our best filled
-museums, though teeming with her spoils, are poor collections of
-fragments compared with that assemblage of gods and heroes which peopled
-the Acropolis, the genuine Olympos of the arts, where all the divinities
-of the pagan heaven appeared grouped in immortal youth and beauty round
-the Thunderer and his virgin daughter. Many volumes were written in
-antiquity on the pictures, statues, and architectural monuments which
-thronged the summit of this rock, and though those works have perished,
-a long and curious list might still be given of the objects of this kind
-which we know to have existed there.[253] It will, however, be
-sufficient to glance over a few of the more striking features of the
-scene.
-
-Footnote 253:
-
- Somewhere in a cavern in the rock of the Acropolis was a slab called
- the pillar of infamy, on which were engraved the names of traitors and
- other public delinquents. Thrasybulos accused Leodamas of having had
- his name on this pillar.—Aristot. Rhet. ii. 23.
-
-On one side of the entrance stood a chariot drawn by four horses in
-bronze, and directly opposite a chapel of Aphrodite, containing a bronze
-lioness, with a statue of the goddess herself by Calamis; a little
-further the eye rested on Diitrephes, pierced like St. Sebastian with
-arrows; two figures of the goddess Health; a youth in bronze, by Lycios,
-bearing the Perirrhanterion, or brush for sprinkling holy water; Myron’s
-group of Perseus cutting off the head of Medusa, and the three Graces
-draped by Socrates,[254] son of Sophroniscos. Advancing past the chapel
-of Artemis Brauronia you beheld, amid numerous groups of less striking
-monuments, the Attic conception of the Trojan horse; Athena smiting
-Marsyas; Heracles strangling the serpents in his cradle; Phrixos
-sacrificing the ram; and Theseus, the national hero, slaughtering the
-Minotaur in the Cretan labyrinth.[255] Here, too, was an Athena issuing
-from the head of Zeus, together with the figure of a bull presented by
-the Senate of Areiopagos; and, a little beyond, an embodiment of a very
-pious and a very beautiful thought,—a figure of Earth, the mother of
-gods and men, praying to the ruler of Olympos for rain. Of Zeus, the
-Cloud-Compeller, there were numerous representations by artists of
-celebrity; the figure of Apollo, by Pheidias, standing before the
-eastern front of the Parthenon, was lighted up by the first rays of the
-morning. But the tutelar gods of Attica, Athena and Poseidon, the genii
-of political wisdom and maritime power, exhibited as struggling for the
-mastery over the Athenian mind, met the eye in various parts of the
-Acropolis,—the piety of the people delighting to reproduce with various
-attributes the objects of their affectionate adoration. Among these
-divinities, the statues of several poets, orators, and generals were
-found; Anacreon, Epicharmos, Phormio, Timotheus, Conon, Pericles, and
-Isocrates. On drawing near the Parthenon, its sculptured pediments and
-metopes, representing legends in the mythology and religious processions
-of Athens, excited admiration, and still excite it, by their original
-design and matchless workmanship: and, suspended from its highly painted
-friezes, and resting on its white marble architraves, were rows of
-highly burnished shields of gold.[256]
-
-Footnote 254:
-
- Paus. i. 22. 8.
-
-Footnote 255:
-
- On the labyrinth at present shown in Crete, see Tournefort, i. 76.
- sqq.
-
-Footnote 256:
-
- They were votive offerings, and the impressions they made are still
- visible upon the marble.—Words. Athens and Attica, 117. Lachares
- afterwards, when Athens was besieged by Demetrius, carried them away
- with him into Bœotia.—Paus. i. 25. 7. To facilitate his escape, he is
- said to have scattered handfuls of golden Darics on the road, which,
- tempting the cavalry in pursuit, prevented his capture.—Polyæn. iii.
- 7. 1.
-
-Technical descriptions of buildings, whether religious or civil, would
-be out of place in the present work; but a compendious account of the
-Erectheion and Parthenon, the two great sanctuaries of the Acropolis,
-could not with propriety be omitted. To commence with the former, as the
-more ancient and sacred:—this edifice, of irregular design though highly
-beautiful, contained three chapels, with the same number of porticoes.
-The chapel of Erectheus, entered through a portico of six columns, faced
-the east, where stood the altar of supreme Zeus, never stained by blood
-or libations of wine. The pavement of this portion of the edifice was
-raised eight feet above the level of the other chapels. Here the piety
-of Athens had erected altars to Erectheus, Poseidon, Butas, and
-Hephaistos, and pictures dedicated by the sacred family of the
-Eteobutadæ adorned the walls. In a subterraneous chamber beneath the
-floor lay the mortal remains of Ericthonios, a man sprung in a
-mysterious manner from the gods. The Erectheion being about twenty-four
-feet square, some have imagined it must have been hypæthral, unless the
-stone blocks of the roof were supported by pillars. But the ancients
-employed slabs of much greater dimensions in building and roofing their
-temples; for at the Egyptian quarries of Hajjar Silsilis and Essouan we
-observed blocks from forty-two to seventy feet in length and of suitable
-proportions, while others equally vast had been removed. Volney, too, as
-the reader will remember, found masses of no less magnitude in the walls
-of Syrian temples: besides, several obelisks, now on their pedestals,
-fall little short of a hundred feet in height.
-
-Between the Erectheion and the chapel of Athena Polias there was no door
-of communication. Having surveyed the former, therefore, the stranger
-again issued into the open air, and turning to the left entered the
-stately portico leading from the north into the temple of Pandrosos,
-where, constructed of Pentelic marble, stood the altar of frankincense.
-Passing this, and traversing the Pandrosion, he entered the ancient
-sanctuary of Athena, unwindowed and gloomy, whither not even that “dim
-religious light” which contends with obscurity in our gothic cathedrals
-could find its way. This is the case in many Egyptian temples where the
-adyta are totally dark. But sunshine and the splendour of day would ill
-have suited the mystic rites here celebrated; for which reason these
-sacred recesses were lighted up with lamps, magnificent in form and
-materials, that shed a soft pale ray over the worshippers. The
-many-branched[257] golden candelabrum of Athena’s sanctuary was
-furnished with asbestos wicks, and, according to the temple-wardens, of
-sufficient dimensions to contain oil for a whole year. Once lighted,
-therefore, it burned with perennial flame, and the smoke was received
-and conducted to the roof by a hollow bronze palm tree reversed.
-
-Footnote 257:
-
- A conjecture of Müller, Minerv. Pol. v. 25.
-
-This inextinguishable lamp was kindled and kept burning, through
-reverence for that antique image of Athena in wood of olive which
-constituted one of the palladia of Attica. In honour, moreover, of this
-primitive statue the Panathenaic procession is said to have been
-instituted, during which, like the velabrum of the temple of Mekka, the
-peplos,[258] whatever this may have been, was dedicated with vast pomp
-and ceremony to the service of the goddess.
-
-Footnote 258:
-
- Antiquarians have formed many ingenious conjectures; but to me it
- appears evidently to have been a female veil, such as Helenos in the
- Iliad (σ. 734) commands to be offered to the same goddess of citadels,
- by his mother and the other matrons of Troy.
-
-The principal argument, however, against supposing the peplos to have
-been designed for the gold and ivory statue of the Parthenon,—that it
-was not needed, is of very little weight. None of the ceremonies
-attending its presentation were necessary. The offering was a work of
-devotion; and however costly in itself and elaborately adorned, may have
-been simply designed to protect the image from dust and the action of
-the air. That Pheidias represented the goddess without her peplos, is no
-argument that his statue needed none, but the contrary. He may have
-omitted it expressly that it might be supplied by the piety of the
-state. Besides, the sculptured metopes of the Parthenon, representing
-the Panathenaic procession, are themselves a strong argument for
-connecting the presentation of the peplos and the other ceremonies of
-the festival with that more splendid structure and image rather than
-with the Erectheion. As the Athenians supposed the Islands of the
-blessed and the dwelling-place of their gods to have been somewhere in
-the regions of the west, they were accustomed to pray with their faces
-turned in that direction;[259] and so also buried they their dead. For
-this reason, desiring to behold the countenance of their divinities
-during this religious service, the statues of the gods were generally
-set up with their faces eastward; and hence, too, the front of the
-temples looked in the same direction. This was the case with the
-olive-wood image of Athena Polias; and in the reign of Augustus the
-Athenians, rendered more superstitious than ever by their misfortunes,
-were vehemently terrified on finding that the goddess had turned her
-back upon them,[260] as if preparing to seek her ancient home in the
-Atlantic Ocean. But her real presence had forsaken the city long before
-the battle of Chæroneia.
-
-Footnote 259:
-
- Plut. Sol. § 10. Visconti, Mem. p. 18. Müll. Minerv. Pol. p. 27.
-
-Footnote 260:
-
- Dion. Cass. iv. 7.
-
-But Athena, though the principal, was not the sole inhabitant of her
-sanctuary. On one side of the door stood a phallic statue of Hermes,
-originally set up by the Pelasgians,[261] and in later ages nearly
-concealed by a profusion of myrtle branches. Here, also, in a very
-extraordinary inmate were found traces of that animal worship which
-extended so widely over the ancient world. In a den constructed for its
-use lived a great serpent, considered as the guardian of the temple, and
-supposed to be animated by the soul of Ericthonios, who here performed
-the part assigned in the fane of Demeter to Cadmos, likewise believed to
-have undergone a similar transformation after death. The snake-god of
-the Acropolis received its daily sustenance from the priestess of
-Athena; and once every month was propitiated with pious offerings of
-cakes of the purest honey.[262] Relics of this worship are still found
-in Egypt. In a deep chasm, among the wild rocky mountains on the Arabian
-side of the Nile, we were shown a fissure in a hermit’s cell, whence a
-large reptile of this species is said to issue forth at stated days to
-receive the offerings of food brought him by the neighbouring peasants.
-This creature, as well as the guardian of the Athenian Temple, is
-supposed to possess a human soul, that of the holy Sheikh Haridi.
-
-Footnote 261:
-
- Herod. ii. 51.
-
-Footnote 262:
-
- Herod. viii. 41. Combe, Terra-cottas of the British Museum, pl. 28.
- Petit. Radel, Musée Napol. iv. 33.
-
-Like most other Hellenic sanctuaries, the chapel of the goddess was a
-kind of museum filled with memorials of Athenian victories and other
-remarkable objects. Here were shown curious or beautiful specimens of
-arms or armour, taken from the enemy; among which were the breast-plate
-and scimitar of Masistios,[263] commander of the Median cavalry at the
-battle of Platæa. Close beside these warlike memorials, stood a folding
-camp-stool, the invention, it was said, and workmanship of Dædalos; the
-archetype of all those portable seats borne after the maidens of Attica
-by the daughters of aliens in the grand Panathenaic procession.
-
-Footnote 263:
-
- Paus. i. 27. 1. The Athenians in the age of this traveller confounded,
- it seems, Masistios with Mardonios, nothing very extraordinary several
- hundred years after the event referred to. Pausanias speaks of it as a
- mistake; Mr. Müller, who is less ceremonious, as a falsehood. Minerv.
- Pol. 29. The passion for relics, which led to the preservation of
- these objects, existed in all its whimsicality among the ancients. But
- they were scarcely so ingenious as the Roman Catholics of the
- continent, whose sacred treasures include a number of feathers from
- the wings of the angel Gabriel, a small bone of one of the cherubim,
- and a few rays of the star by which the wise men of the East were led
- to Bethlehem. They have also a small phial, containing some of the
- darkness that overspread the land of Egypt. (Cf. Fabric. ad Cod.
- Pseud. epigr. v. i. p. 93. t. 11. and Christophori Carmen, ap
- Boissonade ad Eunap. p. 277. seq.) In the temples of antiquity relics
- nearly as curious were preserved: they had an egg of Leda, possibly,
- as Lobeck conjectures, an ostrich’s (Aglaoph. i. 52; Paus. iii. 16.
- 1); the teeth of the Erymanthean boar (Paus. viii. 24. 2), whose
- spoils were also shown at Tegea (Lucian adv. Indoct. § 13); the teeth
- of the Calydonian boar were preserved at Beneventum (Procop. Bell.
- Goth. i. 15. 349. c); they had also the sword of Memnon (Paus. iii. 3.
- 6); the iron spear of Epeios (Justin. xx. 7), the brazen vessel in
- which Pelias was boiled, the arrows of Teucer, the chlamys of
- Odysseus, were preserved in the temple of Apollo at Sicyon. (Ampel.
- Memor. viii. 68. Beckm. Hist. of Invent. ii. 364. Germ. in Lobeck.) In
- the Troad the anvils were shown which Zeus suspended to the heels of
- Hera, when he hung her up between heaven and earth (Eustath. p. 15. l.
- 30); here, too, anyone might see the cithara of Paris. (Plut. Alex. §
- 15.) Like the Catholics, too, they showed the same thing in two or
- three places; for example, the hair of Isis might be seen at Koptos
- (Etym. Mag. _v._ κόπτος, 522. 12), and at Memphis. (Luc. adv. Ind. §
- 13.) The Romans, according to Horace (Carm. ii. 3. 21), possessed the
- bronze wash-hand-basin of Sisyphos. A much more extensive list may be
- found in Beckmann, Hist. of Inven. ii. 42. seq. _Eng. Tr._
-
-Not the least interesting portion of this extraordinary edifice
-dedicated to the worship of so many gods and heroes, was the small
-chapel of Pandrosos, where Pandora and Thallo were said to have lived,
-and where the ashes of Cecrops reposed. Here dwelt the priestess, shut
-up for several months with the Ersephoræ. This cella may, therefore, be
-said to have belonged not only to Pandrosos, who was one of the earliest
-ministers of these rites, but to all who from her received the office.
-The building opened on the south into a portico, adorned with Caryatides
-instead of columns, and filled with ceremonial and religious
-associations. Here grew the Pancuphos, or sacred olive tree, which,
-burned by the Persians, shot up a cubit in a single night, and was
-thought to be endued with the power of undying vegetation, for, if the
-trunk were cut down, new shoots immediately succeeded. Near the sacred
-olive was the salt well, called the sea of Erectheus, which Poseidon is
-said to have produced by smiting the rock with his trident. In the
-hollow of this fountain, during the prevalence of the south wind, a
-sound like the murmuring of the waves was supposed to be heard. This
-well has not been discovered in modern times; but in another part of the
-citadel there existed a spring of brackish water, known by the name of
-the Clepsydra, which, about the rising of the dog-star, while the
-Etesian winds were blowing, overflowed; but on their cessation again
-subsided.[264]
-
-Footnote 264:
-
- This fountain was likewise called Empedo.—Sch. Arist. Vesp. 857. I may
- here mention, by the way, that most ancient cities were supplied with
- water by pipes underground, as Syracuse.—Thucyd. vi. 100. Cf. Sch.
- Arist. Achar. 1145.
-
-We have perhaps too long lingered among the dusky recesses of this
-ancient fane, spell-bound by the charms of a beautiful mythology. We
-emerge now into the light of history, and approach that matchless
-structure erected by Ictinos where the Athenian people offered up their
-daily prayers to heaven.[265] The Parthenon occupies the most elevated
-platform of the Acropolis, the pavement of its peristyle being on a
-level with the capitals of the columns of the Propylæa. It was
-constructed entirely of white Pentelic marble,[266] and consisted of a
-cella surrounded by a Doric peristyle having eight columns on either
-front, and seventeen on the sides. These pillars, thirty-four feet in
-height, sprang from a pavement elevated three steps above the rocky
-platform, from whence the total height of the building was about
-sixty-five feet. The arrangement of the interior like that of the great
-temples of Egypt had reference rather to utility and the convenience of
-public worship, than to the effect which long ranges of lofty pillars,
-extending through unencumbered space, would have produced upon the mind:
-for the cella, sixty-two feet in breadth, was divided into two chambers
-of unequal size,—the western about forty-four feet in length, the
-eastern nearly one hundred. In both these chambers the ceiling was
-supported by columns.
-
-Footnote 265:
-
- It is worthy of remark that from this temple all persons of Doric race
- were excluded. King Cleomenes, therefore, when desirous of obtaining
- admission, denied his birth-right, and called himself an
- Achæan.—Herod. v. 72.
-
-Footnote 266:
-
- The quarries of this mountain, worked to so great an extent by the
- ancients, are now filling again with marble which grows
- rapidly.—Chandler, ii. 191. Cf. Magius, Var. Lect. t. iv. 182. b.
- Gemme Fisica Sotterranea, l. 1. c. ix. § 6. p. 87.—For the manner in
- which it is thought to vegetate, see Tournefort, i. pp. 225. 228. sqq.
-
-Colonel Leake, to whose elaborate work I beg to refer the reader
-desirous of entering into minute details, concludes his general
-description as follows:—"Such was the simple construction of this
-magnificent building, which, by its united excellencies of materials,
-design, and decoration was the most perfect ever erected. Its dimensions
-of two hundred and twenty-eight feet by a hundred and two, with a height
-of sixty-eight feet to the top of the pediment, were sufficiently great
-to give an impression of grandeur and sublimity, which was not disturbed
-by any obtrusive division of parts, such as is found to diminish the
-effect of some larger modern buildings. In the Parthenon, whether viewed
-at a small or at a great distance, there was nothing to divert the
-spectator’s contemplation from the simplicity and majesty of mass and
-outline which forms the first and most remarkable object of admiration
-in a Greek temple; and it was not until the eye was satiated with the
-contemplation of the entire edifice that the spectator was tempted to
-examine the decorations with which this building was so profusely
-adorned; for the statues of the pediments the only elevation which was
-very conspicuous by its magnitude and position, being enclosed within
-frames, which formed an essential part of the design of either front,
-had no more obtrusive effect than an ornamental capital has to a single
-column."[267]
-
-Footnote 267:
-
- Topog. of Athens, pp. 211, 212. See also Chandler, ii. 49. sqq.
-
-That object of art, whatever its dimensions, is sufficiently great,
-which fills the mind with high ideas of grandeur and beauty. There is,
-moreover, in mere size, a point, beyond which if we proceed, the eye
-will fail to grasp the whole at a glance, and create a feeling of want
-of unity; but, in proportion as we fall short of that point will be our
-sense of the absence of sublimity. In this predicament, perhaps, the
-temples of Greece too generally stood. Considerations of expense, which
-in the end affected their habits of thinking, cramped the ideas of the
-architects, or forced them to direct their studies towards beauty of
-form unconnected with that grandeur which springs out of mass and
-elevation.
-
-Among the barbarous nations of the East, where the whole resources of
-the country lay at the disposal of the monarch or of the priestly caste,
-as in Hindùstân, Persia, and Egypt, full scope, on the contrary, was
-given to the imagination of the architect, who, if his invention were
-equal to it, might give his structures the elevation of a mountain and
-the spaciousness of a vast city. Hence, the grandeur arising from
-magnitude, is, in most cases, found to belong to the sacred edifices of
-Egypt;[268] and in some instances a feeling of symmetry, a sense of the
-beautiful, appears to have restrained the artist within due bounds, as
-in the great temple of Apollinopolis Magna, which, whatever may be the
-imperfections of its architectural details, is invested, as a whole,
-with an air of genuine magnificence and sublimity. Proceeding from the
-contemplation of these to the religious structures of Greece, there
-would be found, I imagine, in most minds a slight feeling of
-disappointment, and though afterwards, the delight imparted by the
-presence of extreme beauty,—a delight serene, soft, and inexpressibly
-soothing, may more than compensate for the want of awe and wondering
-admiration, their absence will still be felt.
-
-Footnote 268:
-
- Of these temples Lucian says: ὅμοιαι ... τοῖς Αἰγυπτίοις ἱεροῖς: κᾀκεῖ
- γὰρ, αὐτὸς μὲν ὁ νεὼς κάλλιστός τε καὶ μέγιστος, λίθοις τοῖς
- πολυτελέσιν ἠσκημένος, καὶ χρυσῷ, καὶ γραφαῖς διηνθισμὲνος. ἔνδον δὲ
- ἢν ζητῆς τὸν βεὸν ἢ πιθηκός ἔστιν, ἢ ἴβις, ἢ τράγος, ἢ αἴλουρος.
- Imagin. § 11.
-
-But to proceed: in rich and elaborate decorations the Parthenon
-resembled the temple of Tentyris. Every part of its exterior, where
-ornament was admissible, presented to the eye some creation of Hellenic
-taste and fancy, figures in high and low relief, grouped in action or
-repose, conceived and executed in a style worthy of the prince of the
-mimetic art.[269] Many wrecks of these matchless compositions are now
-protected from further defacements in the metropolis of Great Britain,
-but withal so mutilated and decayed that none but a practised eye can
-discern, through the ravages of age, all the sunshine of beauty and
-loveliness which beamed from them when fresh from the Pheidian chisel.
-One of the greatest works of this artist filled the interior of the
-Parthenon with the emanations of its beauty, the statue of Athena in
-ivory and gold,[270] which, representing a form distinguished for all
-the softness and roundness belonging to womanhood, and a countenance
-radiant with the highest intellect, must in some respects have borne
-away the palm from the Olympian Zeus; for in the latter, after all,
-nothing beyond masculine energy, dignity, majesty could have existed.
-These indeed were so blended, so subdued into a glorious and god-like
-serenity, that this creation of human genius, like the august being of
-which it was a mute type, possessed in a degree the celestial power of
-chasing away sadness and sorrow, and shedding benignity and happiness
-over all who beheld it.[271] But for men at least, the Zeus must have
-lacked some attributes possessed by the Athena. She was in all her
-etherial loveliness, a woman still, but without a woman’s weakness, or a
-single taint of earth. The Athenians paid the highest possible
-compliment to womanhood when they gave wisdom a female form; and the
-delicacy of the thought was enhanced by surrounding this mythological
-creation with an atmosphere of purity which no other divinity of the
-pagan heaven could lay claim to. Nor in beauty did Athena yield even to
-Aphrodite herself. Her charms partook indeed of that noble severity
-which belongs to virtue; and to intimate that she was rather of heaven
-than of earth, her eyes were of the colour of the firmament. Yet this
-spiritual elevation above the reach of the passions, only appears to
-have enhanced, in the estimation of the Athenians, the splendour of her
-personal beauty, which shed its chastening and ennobling influence among
-her worshippers like the droppings of a summer cloud.
-
-Footnote 269:
-
- Vid. Müll. De Parthenon. Fastig. p. 72, sqq.
-
-Footnote 270:
-
- Thucyd. ii. 13. Schol. t. v. p. 375. Bipont. Müll. De Phid. Vit. p.
- 22.
-
-Footnote 271:
-
- Arrian. Epict. I. 6. p. 27, seq.
-
-According to Philochoros,[272] this colossus was set up during the
-archonship of Theodoros, that is, in the third year of the eighty-fifth
-Olympiad. The Athenians, it has been ingeniously conjectured, seized for
-the dedication of the statue, on the period of the celebration of the
-most gorgeous festival in their calendar, the greater Panathenaia, which
-like a kind of jubilee occurred but once in an Olympiad.[273] What
-length of time Pheidias employed in finishing this statue we possess no
-means of determining; but as the Parthenon itself is supposed not to
-have been completed in less than ten years, the artist need not have
-been hurried in his work.[274]
-
-Footnote 272:
-
- Frag. ed. Siebel. p. 54. Müll. Phid. Vit. § 11. p. 22.
-
-Footnote 273:
-
- Boeckh. Corp. Inscrip. p. 182.
-
-Footnote 274:
-
- Quatremère de Quincy, Jup. Olymp. p. 222.
-
-In the temple of Zeus at Olympia and in every sacred structure we
-visited in Egypt and Nubia, there was a staircase conducting to the
-roof. No positive testimony remains to prove this to have been the case
-in the Parthenon, though antiquarians, with much probability, have
-supposed it to have been so.[275] Let us therefore assume the fact, and
-ascending to the summit of the edifice survey the surrounding scene and
-the superb city encircling the rock at our feet. Few landscapes in the
-world are more rich or varied, none more deeply interesting. History has
-peopled every spot within the circle of vision with spirit-stirring
-associations; or if history has passed over any, there has poetry been
-busy, building up her legends from the scattered fragments of tradition.
-Carrying our eye along the distant edge of the horizon we behold the
-promontory of Sunium, Ægina rising out of the Myrtoan sea, Trœzen, the
-birth-place of Theseus the national hero, the mountains of Argolis, the
-hostile citadel of Corinth, with Phylæ and Deceleia rendered too famous
-by the Peloponnesian war. Nearer the shore is “sea-born” Salamis, and
-that low headland where the barbarian took his seat to view the battle
-in the straits. Yonder at the extremity of the long walls are the ports
-of Munychia, Phaleron and Peiræeus; on our left is Hymettos with its bee
-swarms and odoriferous slopes;[276] to the right Colonos, the grove of
-the terrible Erinnyes, and the chasm in the rock by which the wretched
-Œdipus, having reached the end of his career, descended to the infernal
-world.[277] Beyond lies Eleusis and the Sacred Way.[278] Yonder in the
-midst of groves is the Academy; here is the Cerameicos[279] filled with
-the monuments which the republic erected to its heroes, there the
-Cynosarges and the Lyceium. The hill of Areiopagos, contiguous to the
-rock of the Acropolis, divides the Pnyx from the Agora planted by Conon
-with plane trees. Near at hand, encircled by ordinary dwellings, are the
-Leocorion, the temple of Theseus, the Odeion, the Stoa Pœcile, and the
-Dionysiac theatre, with various other monuments remarkable for their
-beauty or historical importance.[280]
-
-Footnote 275:
-
- Leake, Topog. p. 215.
-
-Footnote 276:
-
- About half a mile from Athens in this direction was a temple of
- Artemis (Ἄγρα), on the Ilissos, with an altar to Boreas; where,
- according to the fable, the god carried away Orithyia while playing on
- the rock with Pharmacia.—Plat. Phæd. i. 7. In consequence of the
- alliance thus contracted Boreas always felt a particular friendship
- for the Athenians, to whose succour he hastened with his aërial forces
- during the Median war.—Herod, vii. 189.
-
-Footnote 277:
-
- Antigone, in Sophocles, (Œdip. Col. 14-18) speaks of the towers of
- Athens as seen from Colonos, and describes that village, the
- birth-place of the poet, as rendered beautiful by the sacred grove of
- the Eumenides, consisting of the laurel, the olive, and the vine, in
- which a choir of nightingales showered their music on the ear.
-
-Footnote 278:
-
- Near this road stood the Hiera Suke. Athen. iii. 6.
-
-Footnote 279:
-
- Κεραμεικός, ἀπὸ τοῦ κεραμεύς. Etym. Mag. 504. 16. Cf. Suid. et
- Harpocrat. in voce. Paris, in like manner, has given the name of
- Tuileries to its principal palaces and gardens, from the tiles
- (_tuiles_) which were anciently manufactured on the spot.
-
-Footnote 280:
-
- Strab. ix. 1. 239–241.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
- CAPITAL CITIES OF GREECE.—SPARTA.
-
-
-From what has been said, the reader will, perhaps, have acquired a
-tolerably correct idea of the city of Athens, its splendour and extent.
-But the remaining fragments of Hellenic literature do not enable us to
-be equally clear or copious in our account of Sparta.[281] In fact so
-imperfect and confused is the information that has come down to us
-respecting it, so vague, unsatisfactory, and in many respects
-contradictory are the opinions of modern scholars and travellers, that
-after diligently and patiently examining their accounts, and comparing
-them with the descriptions of Pausanias, the hints of Xenophon, Livy,
-Polybius, and Plutarch, with the casual references of the poets, I am
-enabled to offer the following picture only as a series of what appear
-to me probable conjectures based upon a few indisputable facts.
-
-Footnote 281:
-
- The plan which accompanies the present chapter, based on the
- description of Pausanias, agrees in many of the main points with that
- given by Mr. Müller in his map of the Peloponnesos. M. Barbie du
- Bocage’s Essay on the Topography of Sparta, upon the whole faulty, is,
- nevertheless, in my opinion, right with respect to the portion of the
- bridge Babyx which Mr. Müller throws over the Tiasa, contrary to all
- the reasonable inferences to be derived from history. Colonel Leake’s
- plan, given in his travels in the Morea, conveys a different idea of
- Spartan topography; but I am unable to reconcile his views with the
- account of the city in Pausanias, though I very much regret that the
- plan I have adopted should not be recommended by the support of a
- writer so learned and so ingenious.
-
-The reader who has endeavoured to discover anything like order in
-Pausanias’ topography of Sparta,[282] will fully comprehend the
-difficulty of constructing from his information anything like an
-intelligible plan of the city. Nevertheless, by setting out from a fixed
-point, by laboriously studying the thread of his narration, by divining
-the secret order he seems to follow in enumerating and delineating the
-various public buildings of which he speaks, and by comparing his
-fragmentary disclosures with the present physiognomy of the site, I have
-formed a conception of the features of ancient Sparta which may,
-perhaps, be found to bear some resemblance to the original.
-
-Footnote 282:
-
- III. 11–20. Cf. Polyb. v. 22. Liv. xxxiv. 26. seq.
-
-We will suppose ourselves to have passed the Eurotas, and to be standing
-on the summit of the loftiest building of the Acropolis, the Alpion for
-example, or the temple of Athena Chalciœcos,[283] from which we can
-command a view of the whole site of Sparta from the Eurotas, where it
-flows between banks shaded with reeds and lofty rose laurels[284] on the
-east, to the brisk sparkling stream of the Tiasa, and the roots of the
-Taygetos on the west. North and south the eye ranges up and down the
-valley,[285] discovering in the latter direction the ancient cities of
-Therapne[286] and Amyclæ,[287] celebrated for their poetical and heroic
-associations. Beyond the Eurotas eastward, occupying the green and
-well-wooded acclivities upwards, from the banks of the stream towards
-the barren and red-tinted heights of the Menelaion,[288] lay scattered
-the villas of the noble Spartans, filled with costly furniture and every
-other token of wealth,[289] while here and there, on all sides,
-embosomed in groves or thickets, arose the temples and chapels of the
-gods surrounded by a halo of sanctity and communicating peculiar beauty
-to the landscape.
-
-Footnote 283:
-
- In the precincts of this temple, evidently the strongest place in the
- city, the Ætolian mercenaries took refuge after the assassination of
- Nabis.—Liv. xxxv. 36.
-
-Footnote 284:
-
- Plut. Instit. Lacon. § 10. Chateaubriand, Itin. xi. 110.
- Poucqueville’s description of the stream is striking and picturesque:
- “The banks,” he says, “are bordered with never-fading laurels, which,
- inclining towards each other, form an arch over its waters, and seem
- still consecrated to the deities of whom its purity is a just emblem;
- while swans, even of a more dazzling whiteness than the snows that
- cover the mountain-tops above, are constantly sailing up and down the
- stream.”—Travels, p. 84. The Viscount Chateaubriand, however, sought
- in vain for these poetical birds, and, therefore, evidently considers
- them fabulous.
-
-Footnote 285:
-
- Strabo’s brief description of the site deserves to be mentioned: ἔστι
- μὲν οὖν ἐν κοιλοτέρῳ χωρίῳ τὸ τῆς πόλεως ἔδαφος, καίπερ ἀπολαμβάνον
- ὄρη μεταξύ. viii. 5. t. ii. p. 185.
-
-Footnote 286:
-
- Xen. Hellen. v. 5. 2.
-
-Footnote 287:
-
- At this ancient city Castor and Polydeukes were worshipped not as
- heroes but as divinities. Isoc. Encom. Helen. § 27. Cf. Pind. Pyth.
- xi. 60, sqq. Nem. x. 56. Dissen supposes these tombs to have been
- vaults under ground in the Phœbaion.—Comm. p. 508.
-
-Footnote 288:
-
- Steph. de Urb. v. Μενέλαος, p. 551, a. Berkel.—Polyb. v. 22.
-
-Footnote 289:
-
- Xen. Hellen. vi. 5. 27.
-
-Contracting now our circle of vision, and contemplating the distinct
-villages or groups of buildings of which the capital of Laconia
-anciently consisted,[290] we behold the encampments as it were of the
-five tribes, extending in a circle about the Acropolis.[291] The quarter
-of the Pitanatæ,[292] commencing about the Issorion and the bridge over
-the Tiasa on the west, extended eastward beyond the Hyacinthine
-road[293] to the cliffs overhanging the valley of the Eurotas above the
-confluence of that river with the Tiasa. Immediately contiguous to the
-dwellings of this tribe in the north eastern division of the city,
-opposite that cloven island in the Eurotas, which contained the temple
-of Artemis, Orthia, and the Goddess of Birth, dwelt the Limnatæ,[294]
-who possessed among them the temple erected by the Spartans to Lycurgus.
-North again of these, and clustering around that sharp eminence which
-constituted as it were a second Acropolis, were the habitations of the
-Cynosuræ,[295] whose quarter appears to have extended from the old
-bridge over the Eurotas to the temple of Dictynna, and the tombs of the
-Euripontid kings on the west. From this point to the Dromos, lying
-directly opposite the southern extremity of the Isle of Plane Trees,
-formed by the diverging and confluent waters of the Tiasa, lay the
-village of the Messoatæ,[296] where were situated the tomb of Alcman,
-the fountain Dorcea, and a very beautiful portico overlooking the
-Platanistas. The road extending from the Dromos to the Issorion formed
-the western limits of the tribe of the Ægidæ,[297] whose quarter
-extending inward to the heart of the city, appears to have comprehended
-the Acropolis, the Lesche Pœcile, the theatre, with all the other
-buildings grouped about the foot of the ancient city.
-
-Footnote 290:
-
- Thucyd. i. 10.
-
-Footnote 291:
-
- See Müller, Dor. ii. 48.
-
-Footnote 292:
-
- Paus. Olymp. vi. 27. Diss. ἡ Πιτάνη φυλή. Hesych. Cf. Herod. iii. 55.
- ix. 53. Eurip. Troad. 1101. Thucyd. I. 20. et schol. Plut. de Exil. §
- 6. Apophth. Lacon. Miscell. 48. Plin. H. N. iv. 8. Athen. i. 57. Near
- this κώμη were the villages of Œnos, Onoglæ and Stathmæ, celebrated
- for their wines.
-
-Footnote 293:
-
- Athen. iv. 74.
-
-Footnote 294:
-
- Strab. viii. 4. p. 184. 5. p. 187. The marshes existing in this
- quarter anciently had been drained by the age of Strabo:—ἀλλ᾽ οὐδέν γε
- μέρος αὐτοῦ λιμνάζει· τὸ δὲ παλαιὸν ἐλίμαζε τὸ προάστειον, καὶ ἐκάλουν
- αὐτὸ Λίμνας· καὶ τὸ τοῦ Διονύσου ἱερὸν ἐν Λίμναις ἐφ᾽ ὑγροῦ βεβήκος
- ἐτύγχανε· νῦν δ᾽ ἐπὶ ξηροῦ τὴν ἵδρυσιν ἔχει. 5. p. 185. seq.
-
-Footnote 295:
-
- Hesych. in v. Berkel. ad Steph. Byzant. p. 490. Schol. ad Callim. in
- Dian. 94. Spanh. Observ. in loc. p. 196.
-
-Footnote 296:
-
- Steph de Urb. in v. p. 554. b. who refers to Strabo (viii. 6. p. 187).
- The words of the geographer are Μεσόαν δ᾽ οὐ τὴς χώρας εἶναι μέρος,
- τῆς Σπάρτης δὲ καθάπερ καὶ τὸ Λιμναῖον. Paus. vii. 20. 8.
-
-Footnote 297:
-
- Herod. iv. 149.
-
-The prospect presented by all these villages, nearly touching each
-other, and comprehended within a circle of six Roman miles, was once, no
-doubt, in the days of Spartan glory, singularly animated and
-picturesque. The face of the ground was broken and diversified, rising
-into six hills of unequal elevation, and constituting altogether a small
-table-land, in some places terminating in perpendicular cliffs;[298] in
-others, shelving away in gentle slopes to meet the meadows on the banks
-of the surrounding streams. Over all was diffused the brilliant
-light[299] which fills the atmosphere of the south, and paints, as
-travellers uniformly confess, even the barren crag and crumbling ruin
-with beauty.
-
-Footnote 298:
-
- Leake, Trav. in Morea, v. i. p. 154.
-
-Footnote 299:
-
- Cf. Chateaub. Itin. i. 112. Similar, also, is the testimony of Mr.
- Douglas. “The mixture of the romantic with the rich, which still
- diversifies its aspect, and the singularly picturesque form of all its
- mountains, do not allow us to wonder that even Virgil should generally
- desert his native Italy for the landscape of Greece; whoever has
- viewed it in the tints of a Mediterranean spring, will agree with me
- in attributing much of the Grecian genius to the influence of scenery
- and climate.” Essay, &c. p. 52.
-
-The structures that occupied the summit of the Acropolis appear to have
-been neither numerous nor magnificent. The central pile, around which
-all the others were grouped, was the temple of Athena Chalciœcos,[300]
-flanked on the north and south by the fanes of Zeus Cosmetas and the
-Muses. Behind it rose the temple of Aphrodite Areia, with that of
-Artemis Cnagia, and in front various other edifices and statues,
-dedicated to Euryleonis, Pausanias, Athena Ophthalmitis, and Ammon.
-Somewhere in the neighbourhood of the temenos of Athena stood two
-edifices, one called Skenoma and the other Alpion. The relative position
-of all these it is now extremely difficult, if not impossible, to
-determine. Let us therefore descend into the agora, and having briefly
-described the objects which there offered themselves to the eye of the
-stranger, endeavour to thread our way through the various streets of
-Sparta, pointing out as we go along the most remarkable monuments it
-contained.
-
-Footnote 300:
-
- Plut. Apophtheg. Lacon. Archid. 6. Lycurg. 7.
-
-In all Greek cities the point of greatest importance, next to the
-citadel, was the market-place, where the body of the citizens assembled
-not only to buy and sell, but to transact public business, and perform
-many ceremonies of their religion. Thus, in the agora of Sparta, in the
-centre of which probably stood an altar, surrounded by the statues of
-Apollo, Artemis, Leto, and the soothsayer Hagias who foretold the
-victory of Lysander at Ægospotamos, sacred chorusses and processions
-were exhibited during the Gymnopædia in honour of Phœbos Apollo, in
-consequence of which, a part at least of the place obtained the name of
-Choros: here, likewise, was a colossal statue, erected in honour of the
-Spartan Demos, with a group representing Hermes bearing the infant
-Dionysos in his arms, and a statue of King Polydoros, doubtless set up
-in the neighbourhood of his house, Boonetos, lying between the street
-Aphetæ and the steep road leading up to the citadel. The edifices by
-which the agora was encircled, though in most cases, perhaps, far from
-magnificent, when separately considered, presented a grand _coup-d’œil_.
-This will be made evident if, placing ourselves near the central altar,
-we enumerate and briefly describe them in the order in which they
-followed each other in the great circle of the agora. First, beginning
-on the right-hand corner of the street Aphetæ we behold the palace of
-the Bidiæi, the five magistrates who watched over the education of the
-youth; next succeeds that of the Nomophylaces, or guardians of the laws;
-then that of the Ephori; and, lastly, the senate-house, standing at the
-corner of the street leading to Therapne. Crossing over to the
-south-eastern side of the Agora we behold a spacious and stately portico
-called the Persian, because erected from the spoils of the Persians. Its
-columns of white marble were adorned with bassi relievi representing
-Persian warriors, among others Mardonios and Artemisia daughter of
-Lygdamis queen of Halicarnassos, who fought in person at the battle of
-Salamis. Beyond the road to Amyclæ, we meet with a range of temples to
-Gaia, Zeus Agoræos, Athena, Poseidon the Preserver, Apollo, and Hera;
-and traversing the western street opening into the Theomelida, and
-affording us a glimpse in passing of the tombs of the Agid kings we
-arrive at the ancient halls of the Ephori, containing the monuments of
-Epimenides and Aphareus. To this edifice succeed the statues of Zeus
-Xenios and Athena Xenia. Next follows the temple of the Fates, near
-which was the tomb of Orestes lying on the left hand of the road leading
-to the sanctuary of Athena Chalciœcos. On the other side stands the
-house of King Polydoros, which obtained in after ages the name of
-Boonetos because purchased of his widowed queen with a certain number of
-oxen. With this terminates the list of the buildings by which the Agora
-was encompassed.
-
-Quitting, now, this central point, we proceed northward through the
-street called Aphetæ, and observe on the right hand at a short distance
-from each other three temples of Athena Keleuthia, together with the
-heroa of Iops, Lelex, and Amphiaraos. On the opposite side apparently,
-stood the temenos of Tænarian Poseidon, with a statue of Athena, erected
-by the Dorian colonists of Italy. We next arrive at a place called the
-Hellenion, probably nothing more than a large open space or square in
-which the deputies or ambassadors of foreign states assembled on
-extraordinary occasions. Close to this was erected the monument of
-Talthybios. A little further on were the altar of Apollo Acreitas, the
-Gasepton, a temple of earth, and another altar sacred to Apollo
-Maleates. At the end of the street, near the walls of the late city, was
-a temple of Dictynna, with the tombs of the kings called Eurypontidæ.
-
-Returning to the Hellenion, and proceeding eastward up the great public
-road leading to the bridge Babyx, you saw the temple of Arsinoë,
-daughter of Leucippos, and sister to the wives of Castor and Polydeukes.
-Further on, near the Phrouria or Barriers, stood a temple of Artemis;
-and advancing a little you came to the monument of the Eleian
-soothsayers called Iamidæ, and the temple of Maron and Alpheios, who
-were among the bravest of those who fell with Leonidas at Thermopylæ.
-Beyond this stood the fane of Zeus Tropæos erected after the reduction
-of Amyclæ, when all the ancient inhabitants of Laconia had been brought
-under the yoke of the Dorians. Next followed the temple of the Great
-Mother and the heroic monuments of Hippolytos and Aulon. On a spot
-commanding the bridge stood the temple of Athena Alea.
-
-Setting out once more from the Agora, and advancing up the street
-leading towards the east the first building on the left-hand was called
-Skias[301] contiguous to the senate-house: it was of a circular form
-with a roof like an umbrella, and erected about seven hundred and sixty
-years before Christ, by Theodoros of Samos, inventor of the art of
-casting statues in iron. Here the Spartan people held their assemblies
-even so late as the age of Pausanias, who relates that the lyre of
-Timotheus[302] the Milesian, confiscated as a punishment for his having
-added four strings to the seven already in use, was suspended in this
-building as a warning to all innovators. Near the Skias was another
-circular building erected by Epimenides, containing statues of Olympian
-Zeus and Aphrodite. On the other side apparently of the street, in front
-of the Skias, were the tombs of Idas and Lynceus, the temple of Kora
-Soteira, said to have been built by Orpheus, or Abaris the Hyperboræan,
-the tomb of Cynortas and the temple of Castor. Near these were the
-statues of Apollo Carneios, and Aphetæos, the latter of which marked the
-point whence the suitors of Penelope started in their race for a wife,
-running up the street Aphetæ, whence the name. Immediately beyond this
-was a square surrounded with porticoes, where all kinds of cheap wares
-were anciently sold. Further on stood altars of Zeus, Athena, and the
-Dioscuri, all surnamed Amboulioi; opposite which was the hill called
-Colona whereon was erected a temple of Dionysos, and close at hand a
-temenos sacred to the hero who conducted the god to Sparta. Not far from
-the Dionysion was a temple of Zeus Euanemos, giver of gentle breezes;
-and immediately to the right the heroon of Pleuron. On the summit of a
-hill at a little distance stood a temple of the Argive Hera, together
-with the fane erected in honour of Hera Hypercheiria, built by order of
-the oracle after the subsiding of an inundation of the Eurotas. In this
-edifice was a very ancient wooden statue of Aphrodite Hera. Close to the
-road which passed to the right of the hill was a statue of Etymocles
-many times victor in the Olympic games. In descending towards the
-Eurotas you beheld a wooden statue of Athena Alea, and a little above
-the banks a temple of Zeus Plousios. On the further side of the river
-were temples of Ares and Asclepios.
-
-Footnote 301:
-
- Σκιὰς, τὸ ᾠδεῖον ἐκαλεῖτο τῶν Λακεδαιμονίων κατὰ τὴν ἀρχαίαν φωνήν. κ.
- τ. λ.—Etym. Mag. 717. 36. seq.
-
-Footnote 302:
-
- Cf. Plut. Agis, § 10.
-
-Once more retracing our steps to the Agora, and quitting it by a street
-leading towards the west, the first remarkable object that struck the
-eye was the cenotaph of Brasidas, and a little beyond it a spacious and
-beautiful theatre of white marble.[303] Directly opposite were the tombs
-of Leonidas and Pausanias, and near these a cippus, on which were
-engraved the names of the heroes who fell at Thermopylæ, together with
-those of their fathers. At this spot games were annually celebrated, in
-which none but Spartans were allowed to contend for the prizes.
-Discourses were likewise here pronounced in honour of the dead. The
-multitudes at these games required a large clear space in which to
-congregate, and this I suppose to have been the place called Theomelida,
-opening on both sides of the road, and extending as far as the tombs of
-the Agid Kings, and the Lesche of the Crotoniatæ. Near this edifice
-stood the temple of Asclepios, the tomb of Tænaros, and temples of
-Poseidon Hippocourios, and Artemis Ægeinea. Turning back towards the
-Lesche, probably round the foot of the Hill of the Issorion,[304] you
-observed on the slope of the eminence towards the Tiasa the temple of
-Artemis Limnæa the Britomartis of the Cretans, somewhere in the vicinity
-of which were temples of Thetis, Chthonian Demeter, and Olympian Zeus.
-
-Footnote 303:
-
- This theatre, as Mr. Douglas has observed, is the only remaining
- fragment of ancient Sparta, the other ruins still visible on its site,
- belonging all to Roman times.—Essay on certain Points of Resemblance
- between the Ancient and Modern Greeks, p. 23.
-
-Footnote 304:
-
- Ἰσσώριον, ὄρος τῆς Λακωνικῆς ἀφ’ οὗ ἡ Ἄρτεμις Ἰσσωρία.—Steph. Byz. in
- v. 426. d. with the note of Berkel. Cf. Hesych. in v. Polyæn. Strat.
- ii. 1. 14. Plut. Agesil. § 32.
-
-Starting from the crossroad at the north-west foot of the Issorion, on
-the way to the Dromos, the first edifice which presented itself on the
-left was the monument of Eumedes, one of the sons of Hippocoon. A little
-further on was a statue of Heracles, and close at hand, near the
-entrance to the Dromos, stood the ancient palace of Menelaos, inhabited
-in Pausanias’ time by a private individual. Within the Dromos itself
-were two gymnasia. This was the most remarkable building in the western
-part of the city, from whence branched off many streets, while numerous
-public structures clustered round it; to the north, for example, the
-temples of the Dioscuri, of the Graces, of Eileithyia, of Apollo
-Carneios, and Artemis Hegemona: on the east the temple of Asclepios
-Agnitas, and a trophy erected by Polydeukes after his victory over
-Lynceus. On the west towards the Platanistas were statues of the
-Dioscuri Apheterii, and a little further was the heroon of Alcon, near
-which stood the temple of Poseidon Domatites, near the bridge leading
-over to the island covered with plane trees. On the other hand
-apparently of the road a statue was erected to Cynisca, daughter of
-Archidamos, the first lady who ran horses at Olympia.
-
-Along the banks of the Tiasa from the Dromos to a line extending
-westward from the temple of Dictynna to the upper bridge leading to the
-Platanistas, lay a road adorned with numerous public buildings, among
-others a portico, behind which were two remarkable monuments, the heroa
-of Alcimos and Enaræphoros. Immediately beyond were the heroa of Dorceus
-and Sebros, and the fountain Dorcea flowing between them. The whole of
-this little quarter obtained from the latter hero the name of Sebrion.
-To the right of the last mentioned heroon was the monument of the poet
-Alcman;[305] beyond which lay the temple of Helen, and near it that of
-Heracles close to the modern wall.
-
-Footnote 305:
-
- Ἀλκμάν, Λάκων ἀπὸ Μεσσόας.—He was an erotic poet said to have been
- descended from servile parents.—Suid. i. p. 178. ed. Port.
-
-Hard by a narrow pathway, striking into the fields from the road leading
-eastward from the Dromos, was the temple of Athena Axiopænos, said to
-have been erected by Heracles.
-
-Leaving the Dromos by another road running in a south-easterly direction
-through the midst of the quarter of the Ægidæ, we behold, on one hand,
-the temples of Athena and Hipposthenes, and directly opposite the
-latter, a statue of Ares in chains. At a short distance beyond these was
-the Lesche Pœcile, and in front of it, the heroon of Cadmos son of
-Agenor, those of two of his descendants, Œolycos and his son Ægeus, and
-that of Amphilocos. Farther on lay the temples of Hera Ægophagos, so
-called because she-goats were sacrificed to her, and at the foot of the
-Acropolis, near the theatre, the temples of Poseidon Genethlios, on
-either side of which probably stood an heroon, the one sacred to
-Cleodæos son of Hyllos, and the other to Œbalos.
-
-We must now return to the Lesche Pœcile, and following a road skirting
-round the hill of the Acropolis, towards the east-south-east, pass by
-the monument of Teleclos, and the most celebrated of all the temples of
-Asclepios at Sparta, situated close to the Boonetos. Traversing the
-street Aphetæ and proceeding along the road leading to the Limnæ, the
-first temple on the left was that of Aphrodite, on a hill, celebrated by
-Pausanias for having two stories. The statue of the goddess was here
-seated, veiled and fettered. A little beyond was the temple of Hilaeira
-and Phœbe wherein were statues of the two goddesses, the countenance of
-one of which was painted and adorned by one of the priestesses according
-to the later rules of art, but warned by a dream she suffered the other
-to remain in its archaic simplicity. Here was preserved an egg adorned
-with fillets and suspended from the roof, said to have been brought
-forth by Leda. In a building near at hand, certain women wove annually a
-tunic for the Apollo of Amyclæ, from which circumstance the edifice
-itself obtained the name of Chiton. Next followed the house of the
-Tyndaridæ, the heroa of Chilon and Athenæus, and the temple of Lycurgus,
-with the tomb of Eucosmos behind it. Near them was the altar of Lathria
-and Anaxandra, and directly opposite the monuments of Theopompos and
-Eurybiades and Astrabacos. In an island in the marshes were the temple
-and altar of Artemis Orthia, and the fane of Eileithyia.
-
-On the road leading from the Agora to Amyclæ[306] there were few
-remarkable monuments. One only, the temple of the Graces, is mentioned
-north of the Tiasa, and beyond it the Hippodrome; towards the west the
-temple of the Tyndaridæ near the road, and that of Poseidon Gaiouchos
-towards the river.[307]
-
-Footnote 306:
-
- Οὗ τὸ τοῦ Ἀπόλλωνος ἱερόν. Strab. viii. 5. t. ii. p. 185.
-
-Footnote 307:
-
- Xen. Hellen. vi. 5. 30.
-
-Let us now consider the proofs on which the above description is based.
-Pausanias informs us that the citadel was the highest of the hills of
-Sparta. Colonel Leake observes that the eminence found in the quarter
-which I have assigned to the Cynosuræ is equal in height to that
-immediately behind the theatre; but the former is pointed and appears to
-have retained its natural shape, while the summit of the latter has been
-levelled for building. Now if its height be still equal, it must have
-been considerably greater before the levelling process took place.
-Therefore the hill behind the theatre was the Acropolis. Admitting this,
-the spacious flat or hollow immediately at its foot on the south-east
-side must have been the Agora,[308] for that the Agora was close to the
-citadel is clear from history, which represents Lycurgus and king
-Charilaos escaping thither from the market-place.[309] Again we know
-from Pausanias that it lay a little to the east of the theatre, having
-nothing between them but the cenotaph of Brasidas. The position of the
-Agora being thus fixed beyond dispute, we arrive with certainty at the
-direction of the four great streets that diverge from it; for, first, we
-know that the road to the Issorion lay towards the west; the road to
-Amyclæ towards the south. The street called Skias terminated at the
-extremity of the city between two small hills. These two hills are still
-there on the brink of the high ground overlooking the valley of the
-Eurotas on the east. This therefore was the direction of the Skias. As
-an additional proof, it may be mentioned that the temple of Hera
-Hypercheiria was erected in commemoration of the subsiding of an
-inundation of the Eurotas, which shows it must have been somewhere
-nearly within reach of the waters of that stream. For the street Aphetæ
-no direction is left but that towards the north-west or the north-east;
-but the latter led to the temple of Artemis Orthia in the Limnæ, the
-former to the temple of Dictynna. The street Aphetæ led therefore to the
-north-west, no other road being mentioned but that leading from Mount
-Thornax over the bridge Babyx, which was not the street called Aphetæ.
-Thus we have the direction of every one of the great streets of Sparta
-incontrovertibly determined. Proceed we now to establish the position,
-with respect to the citadel, of each of the five tribes who occupied as
-many quarters of the city. First we learn from Pausanias that the
-Pitanatæ inhabited the quarter round the Issorion:[310] from Pindar[311]
-and his scholiast that they dwelt likewise near the banks of the
-Eurotas. They possessed therefore the whole southern quarter of the
-city.[312] As the Limnatæ obtained their name from the marshes near
-which they lived, the position of the Limnæ determined by the chain of
-reasoning given above, proves them to have occupied the eastern quarter
-of the city directly opposite the temple of Artemis Orthia. That the
-tribe of the Ægidæ inhabited all that part extending in one direction
-from the Issorion to the Dromos, and in the other from the banks of the
-Tiasa to the Boonetos, may almost with certainty be inferred from the
-circumstance that the tomb of Ægeus, their founder, was situated in this
-quarter, close to the Lesche Pœcile. The quarter of the Mesoatæ lay in
-the north-west, between the Dromos and the temple of Dictynna; for here
-was found the tomb of Alcman who belonged to that tribe. All the rest of
-the site being thus occupied, there remains only for the tribe of the
-Cynosuræ that part lying between the road to Thornax and the temple of
-Dictynna, where accordingly we must suppose them to have lived.
-
-Footnote 308:
-
- Plut. Lycurg. § 11. Lacon. Apoph. Lycurg. 7.
-
-Footnote 309:
-
- Plut. Lycurg. § 5.
-
-Footnote 310:
-
- Polyæn. Stratag. ii. 1. 14. with the notes of Casaub. and Maasvic.
-
-Footnote 311:
-
- Olymp. vi. 28. Cf. Spanheim, ad Callim. in Dian. 172.
-
-Footnote 312:
-
- Cf. Athen. i. 57.
-
-With respect to the bridge Babyx, if bridge it really was, it appears
-very difficult[313] to believe that it spanned the Tiasa, though we
-still find massive ruins of arches in the channel of that stream. There
-seems to be much stronger reason for supposing it to have been thrown
-over the Eurotas, where the road from the Isthmus traversed it.[314] We
-should then understand by the oracle which commanded Lycurgus to
-assemble his people between Babyx and Cnacion,[315] that he was to
-gather them together anywhere within the precincts of the city.
-Accordingly we find in the time of Lycurgus, that the Agora in the
-centre of Sparta was the place were the Apellæ[316] were held. This,
-too, is evident, by the sense in which the matter was understood by
-Plutarch, who, speaking of the victory of the Bœotians over the Spartans
-at Tegyra, observes, that by this event it was made manifest that not
-the Eurotas, or the space between Babyx and Cnacion alone produced brave
-and warlike men.[317] Now it appears to me, that a few meadows without
-the city on which assemblies of the people were occasionally convened
-could never be said to produce these people. I have therefore supposed
-that Babyx was the bridge by which travellers coming from the Isthmus
-entered Sparta.
-
-Footnote 313:
-
- This, however, is the opinion of Mr. Müller, Dor. ii. 456.
-
-Footnote 314:
-
- See the passage in which Xenophon (v. 5. 27), describes the advance of
- the Thebans upon Sparta.
-
-Footnote 315:
-
- Plut. Lycurg. § 6.
-
-Footnote 316:
-
- Gœttl. ad Aristot. Pol. Excurs. i. p. 464.
-
-Footnote 317:
-
- Pelop. § 17.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK II.
- EDUCATION.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
- THEORY OF EDUCATION.—BIRTH OF CHILDREN.—INFANTICIDE.
-
-
-Whether on education the Greeks thought more wisely than we do or
-not,[318] they certainly contemplated the subject from a more elevated
-point of view. They regarded it as the matrix in which future
-generations are fashioned, and receive that peculiar temperament and
-character belonging to the institutions that presided at their birth.
-Their theories were so large as to comprehend the whole developement of
-individual existence, from the moment when the human germ is quickened
-into life until the grave closes the scene, and in many cases looked
-still further; for the rites of initiation and a great part of their
-ethics had reference to another world. On this account we find their
-legislators possessed by extreme solicitude respecting the character of
-those teachers into whose hands the souls of the people were to be
-placed, to receive the first principles of good or evil, to be
-invigorated, raised, and purified by the former, or by the latter to be
-perverted, or precipitated down the slopes of vice and effeminacy, by
-which nations sink from freedom to servitude. Among them, moreover, it
-was never matter of doubt, whether the light of knowledge should be
-allowed to stream upon the summits of society only, or be suffered to
-descend into its lower depths and visit the cottages of the poor.
-Whatever education had to impart was, in most states, imparted to all
-the citizens, as far as their leisure or their capacity would permit
-them to receive it. The whole object, indeed, of education among the
-Greeks was to create good citizens, from which it has by some been
-inferred that they confined their views to the delivering of secular
-instruction. But this is to take a narrow and ignorant view of the
-subject, since religion was not only an element of education but
-regarded as of more importance than all its other elements taken
-together. For it had not escaped the Hellenic legislators, that in many
-circumstances of life man is placed beyond the reach and scrutiny of
-laws and public opinion, where he must be free to act according to the
-dictates of conscience, which, if not rightly trained, purified, and
-rendered clearsighted by religion, will often dictate amiss. It is of
-the utmost moment, therefore, that in these retired situations man
-should not consider himself placed beyond the range of every eye, and so
-be tempted to lay the foundation of habits which, begun in secrecy, may
-soon acquire boldness to endure the light and set the laws themselves at
-defiance. Accordingly over those retired moments in which man at first
-sight appears to commune with himself alone, religion was called in to
-teach that there were invisible inspectors, who registered, not only the
-evil deeds and evil words they witnessed, but even the evil thoughts and
-emotions of the heart, the first impulses to crime in the lowest abysses
-of the mind. Consistently with this view of the subject, we discover
-everywhere in Greek history and literature traces of an almost
-puritanical scrupulousness in whatever appeared to belong to religion,
-so that in addressing the Athenians St. Paul himself was induced to
-reproach them with the excesses of their devotional spirit, which
-degenerated too frequently into superstition. But the original design
-with which this spirit was cultivated was wise and good, its intention
-being to rescue men from the sway of their inferior passions,—from envy,
-from avarice, from selfishness, and to inspire them with faith in their
-own natural dignity by representing their actions as of sufficient
-importance to excite the notice, provoke the anger, or conciliate the
-favour of the immortal gods. This religion, which base and sordid minds
-regard as humiliating to humanity, was by Grecian lawgivers and founders
-of states contemplated as a kind of holy leaven designed by God himself,
-to pervade, quicken, and expand society to its utmost dimensions.
-
-Footnote 318:
-
- Dion Chrysostom tells a curious story respecting a blunder of the
- Athenians on this subject. Apollo once commanding them, if they
- desired to become good citizens, to put whatever was most beautiful in
- the ears of their sons, they bored one of the lobes, and inserted a
- gold earring, not comprehending the meaning of the God. But this
- ornament would better have suited their daughters or the sons of
- Lydians or Phrygians; but for the offspring of Greeks, nothing could
- have been intended by the God but education and reason, the possessors
- of which would probably become good men, and the preservers of their
- country.—Orat. xxxii. t. i. p. 653. sqq.—The popular maxim that
- knowledge is power may be traced to Plato.—De Rep. v. t. vi. p. 268.
-
-The question which commands so much attention in modern states, viz.
-whether education should be national and uniform, likewise much occupied
-the thoughts of ancient statesmen, and it is known that in most cases
-they decided in the affirmative. It may however be laid down as an
-axiom, that among a phlegmatic and passive-minded people, where the
-government has not yet acquired its proper form and developement, the
-establishment of a national system of education, complete in all its
-parts and extending to the whole body of the citizens, must be
-infallibly pernicious. For such as the government is at the commencement
-such very nearly will it continue, as was proved by the example of Crete
-and Sparta. For the Cretan legislators, arresting the progress of
-society at a certain point by the establishment of an iron system of
-education, before the popular mind had acquired its full growth and
-expansion, dwarfed the Cretan people completely, and by preventing their
-keeping pace with their countrymen rendered them in historical times
-inferior to all their neighbours. In Sparta, again, the form of polity
-given to the state by Lycurgus, wonderful for the age in which it was
-framed, obtained perpetuity solely by the operation of his pædonomical
-institutions. The imperfection, however, of the system arose from this
-circumstance, that the Spartan government was framed too early in the
-career of civilisation. Had its lawgiver lived a century or two later,
-he would have established his institutions on a broader and more
-elevated basis, so that they would have remained longer nearly on a
-level with the progressive institutions of neighbouring states. But he
-fixed the form of the Spartan commonwealth when the general mind of
-Greece had scarcely emerged from barbarism; and as the rigid and
-unyielding nature of his laws forbade any great improvement, Sparta
-continued to bear about her in the most refined ages of Greece
-innumerable marks of the rude period in which she had risen. From this
-circumstance flowed many of her crimes and misfortunes. Forbidden to
-keep pace with her neighbours in knowledge and refinement, which by
-rendering them inventive, enterprising, and experienced, elevated them
-to power, she was compelled, in order to maintain her ground, to have
-recourse to astuteness, stratagem, and often to perfidy.
-
-The Spartan system, it is well known, made at first, and for some ages,
-little or no use of books. But this, at certain stages of society, was
-scarcely an evil;[319] for knowledge can be imparted, virtues implanted
-and cherished, and great minds ripened to maturity without their aid.
-The teacher, in this case, rendered wise by meditation and experience,
-takes the place of a book, and by oral communication, by precept, and by
-example, instructs, and disciplines, and moulds his pupil into what he
-would have him be. By this process both are benefited. The preceptor’s
-mind, kept in constant activity, acquires daily new force and expansion;
-and the pupil’s in like manner. In a state, therefore, like that of
-Sparta, in the age of Lycurgus, it was possible to acquire all necessary
-knowledge without books, of which indeed very few existed. But
-afterwards, when the Ionian republics began to be refined and elevated
-by philosophy and literature, Sparta, unable to accompany them, fell
-into the background: still preserving, however, her warlike habits she
-was enabled on many occasions to overawe and subdue them.
-
-Footnote 319:
-
- Montagne relates, in his Travels (t. iii. p. 51), an instance of how
- the mind may be cultivated, particularly in poetry, by persons
- ignorant of the art of reading and writing. His Lucchese
- improvisatrice may be regarded as a match for the ancient rhapsodists.
-
-Among the Athenians,[320] though knowledge was universally diffused,
-there existed, properly speaking, no system of national education. The
-people, like their state, were in perpetual progress, aiming at
-perfection, and sometimes approaching it; but precipitated by the excess
-of their intellectual and physical energies into numerous and constantly
-recurring errors. While Sparta, as we have seen, remained content with
-the wisdom indigenous to her soil, scanty and imperfect as it was,
-Athens converted herself into one vast mart, whither every man who had
-anything new to communicate hastened eagerly, and found the sure reward
-of his ingenuity. Philosophers, sophists, geometricians, astronomers,
-artists, musicians, actors, from all parts of Greece and her most
-distant colonies, flocked to Athens to obtain from its quick-sighted,
-versatile, impartial, and most generous people that approbation which in
-the ancient world constituted fame. Therefore, although the laws
-regulated the material circumstances of the schools and gymnasia,
-prescribed the hours at which they should be opened and closed, and
-watched earnestly over the morals both of preceptors and pupils, there
-was a constant indraught of fresh science, a perpetually increasing
-experience and knowledge of the world, and, consequent thereupon, a
-deep-rooted conviction of their superiority over their neighbours, an
-impatience of antiquated forms, and an audacious reliance on their own
-powers and resources which betrayed them into the most hazardous schemes
-of ambition.
-
-Footnote 320:
-
- Cf. Plat. De Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 1.
-
-But, by pushing too far their literary and philosophical studies, the
-Athenians were induced at length to neglect the cultivation of the arts
-of war, which they appeared to regard as a low and servile drudgery. And
-this capital error, in spite of all their acquirements and achievements
-in eloquence and philosophy,—in spite of their lofty speculation and
-“style of gods,” brought their state to a premature dissolution; while
-Sparta, with inferior institutions, and ignorance which even the
-children at Athens would have laughed at, was enabled much longer to
-preserve its existence, from its impassioned application to the use of
-arms, aided, perhaps, by a stronger and more secluded position. From
-this it appears that of all sciences that of war is the chiefest, since,
-where this is cultivated, a nation may maintain its independence without
-the aid of any other; whereas the most knowing, refined, and cultivated
-men, if they neglect the use of arms, will not be able to stand their
-ground against a handful even of barbarians. They mistake, too, who look
-upon literature and the sciences as a kind of palladium against
-barbarism,[321] for a whole nation may read and write, like the
-inhabitants of the Birman empire, without being either civilised or
-wise; and may possess the best books and the power to read them, without
-being able to profit by the lessons of wisdom they contain, as is proved
-by the example of the Greeks and Romans, who perished rather from a
-surfeit of knowledge than from any lack of instruction. But it is time,
-perhaps, to quit these general speculations, and proceed to develope, as
-far as existing monuments will enable us, the several systems of
-education which prevailed in the different parts of Greece.
-
-Footnote 321:
-
- Notwithstanding that Plato regards knowledge as the medicine of the
- soul.—Crit. t. vii. p. 145.—Cf. t. viii. p. 2. seq.—Aristot. Ethic.
- vi. 13.
-
-Among Hellenic legislators the care of children commenced before their
-birth. Their mothers were subject while pregnant to the operation of
-certain rules; their food and exercises were regulated, and in most
-cases the laws, or at least the manners, required them to lead a
-sedentary, inactive, and above all a tranquil life.[322] Physicians,
-guided by experience, prescribed a somewhat abstemious diet; and wine
-was prohibited, or only permitted to be taken with water, which, where
-reason is consulted, we find to be the practice at the present day. But
-Lycurgus, in the article of exercise, gave birth to, or, at least,
-sanctioned, customs wholly different.[323] Even while _enceinte_ his
-women were required to be abroad, engaged in their usual athletic
-recreations, eating as before and drinking as before.
-
-Footnote 322:
-
- Plat. de Legg. l. vii. t. viii. pp. 4. et 11.—During the pregnancy of
- women great care was taken not to bring into the house the wood of the
- ostrya or carpinus ostrys, the appearance of which was ominous of
- difficult births, or even of sudden death. Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii.
- 10. 3.
-
-Footnote 323:
-
- Xenoph. de Rep. Laced. i. 3. Perizon. ad Ælian. Var. Hist. x. 13.
-
-On this occasion, too, as on all others, the deep-rooted piety of the
-nation displayed itself. Prayers and sacrifices were habitually offered
-up by all married persons for children, as afterwards by Christian
-ladies to the saints;[324] and these of course were not discontinued,
-when it appeared by unequivocal signs that their desires had begun to
-receive their fulfilment. What the divinities were whom on these
-occasions the Athenian matrons invoked under the name of _Tritopatores_,
-it seems difficult to determine. Demon in Suidas[325] supposes them to
-be the winds; but Philochoros, the most learned of ancient writers on
-the antiquities of Attica, imagined them to be the first three sons of
-Helios and Gaia. According to some they were called Cottos or Coros,
-Gyges or Gyes, and Briareus; according to others Amalcides, Protocles,
-and Protocleon, the watchers and guardians of the wind. There are
-authors, moreover, by whom they have been confounded with the Dii Kabyri
-of Samothrace.
-
-Footnote 324:
-
- Theodoret. iv. 921.
-
-Footnote 325:
-
- _v._ Τριτοπ. t. ii. p. 947. b. seq. Cf. Siebel. ad Frag. Philoch. p.
- 11. Meurs. Græc. Fer. p. 264. Lect. Att. iii. 1. Vales. in Harpoc. p.
- 223. seq.
-
-During the period of their confinement women were supposed to be under
-the protection of Eileithyia. This goddess, who by Olen the Lycian was
-considered older than Kronos,[326] had the honour as certain mythical
-legends relate, of being the mother of love,[327] though several ancient
-authors appear to have confounded her with Pepromene or Fate, others
-with Hera, and others again with Artemis or the moon. The traditions of
-the mythology respecting this divinity were various. Her worship seems
-to have made its first appearance among the Greeks in the island of
-Delos, whither she is said to have come from the country of the
-Hyperboreans, to lend her aid to Leto, when beneath the palm tree, which
-Zeus caused to spring up over her,[328] she gave birth to the gods of
-night and day. From that time forward she was held in veneration by the
-Delians, who in her honour offered up sacrifices, chaunting the hymns of
-Olen, whence we may infer she was a Pelasgian deity.
-
-Footnote 326:
-
- Paus. viii. 21. 3.
-
-Footnote 327:
-
- Paus. ix. 27. 2. Cf. Cic. de Nat. Deor. iii. 23.
-
-Footnote 328:
-
- Callim. ii. 4.
-
-From thence her name and worship were diffused through the other islands
-and states of Hellas; though the Cretans pretended that she was born at
-Amnisos in the Knossian territory, and was a daughter of Hera. The
-Athenians, who erected a temple to Eileithyia appeared to favour both
-traditions, since of the two statues which were found in her fane the
-more ancient was said to have been brought from Delos by Erisicthon,
-while the second, dedicated by Phædra, came from Crete. Among the
-Athenians, alone, as an indication of the national modesty, the wooden
-images of this mysterious divinity were significantly veiled to the
-toes.[329]
-
-Footnote 329:
-
- Paus. i. 18. 5. Cf. Keightley, Mythol. p. 193. In Arcadia, also, this
- goddess was so closely draped that nothing was visible but the
- countenance, fingers, and toes.—Paus. vii. 23. 5.
-
-The simple delicacy of remoter ages required women to be attended, while
-becoming mothers, by individuals of their own sex. But the contrary
-practice, now general among civilised nations, prevailed early at
-Athens, where the study of medicine, in which the accoucheur’s[330] art
-is included, was prohibited to women and slaves. The consequences bear
-stronger testimony to the refined taste and truly feminine feelings of
-the Athenian ladies than a thousand panegyrics. Numbers, rather than
-submit to the immodest injunctions of fashion, declined all aid, and
-perished in their harems: observing which, and moved strongly by the
-desire to preserve the lives of her noble-minded countrywomen, a female
-citizen named Agnodice, disguised as a man, acquired a competent
-knowledge of the theory and practice of physic in the medical school of
-Herophilos; she then confided her secret to the women who universally
-determined to avail themselves of her services, and in consequence her
-practice became so extensive that the jealousy of the other
-practitioners was violently excited. In revenge, therefore, as she still
-maintained her disguise, they preferred an accusation against her in the
-court of Areiopagos as a general seducer. To clear herself Agnodice made
-known her sex, upon which the envious Æsculapians prosecuted her under
-the provisions of the old law. In behalf of their benefactress the
-principal gentlewomen appeared in court, and mingling the highest
-testimony in favour of Agnodice with many bitter reproaches, they not
-only obtained her acquittal, but the repeal of the obnoxious law, and
-permission for any free woman to become an accoucheuse.[331]
-
-Footnote 330:
-
- The duties of an accoucheuse are briefly enumerated by Max. Tyr.
- Dissert. xxviii. p. 333. Cf. Pignor. de Serv. 184.
-
-Footnote 331:
-
- Hygin. Fab. 274.
-
-Mention is made by ancient writers of several rude and hardy tribes,
-whose women, like those of Hindùstân at the present day, stood in very
-little need of the midwife’s aid. Thus Varro,[332] speaking of the rough
-shepherdesses of Italy, observes that among the countrywomen of Illyria,
-bringing forth children was regarded as a slight matter; for that,
-stepping aside from their work in the fields, they would return
-presently with an infant in their arms, having first bathed it in some
-fountain or running stream, appearing rather to have found, than given
-birth to, a child. Nor are the manners of these uncultivated people at
-all altered in modern times, as appears from an anecdote related to
-Pietro Vittore,[333] by Francesco Sardonati, professor of Latin at
-Ragusa, who said that he saw a woman go out empty-handed to a forest for
-wood, and return shortly afterwards with a bundle on her head and a
-new-born infant in her arms. At Athens, however, where the women were
-peculiarly tender and delicate, the young mother remained within doors
-full six weeks,[334] when the festival of the fortieth day was
-celebrated, after which she went forth, as our ladies do to be churched,
-to offer up sacrifices and return thanks in the temple of Artemis or
-some other divinity.
-
-Footnote 332:
-
- De Re Rust. ii. 10.
-
-Footnote 333:
-
- Var. Lect. xxxiv. 2.
-
-Footnote 334:
-
- Meurs. Græc. Fer. p. 260. sqq. Censor. de Die Natali. c. 11.
-
-New-born infants, when designed to be reared, were at Athens and in the
-rest of Greece bathed in cold water: at Sparta in wine, with the view of
-producing convulsions and death should the child be feeble, whereas,
-were its constitution strong and vigorous, it would thus they imagined,
-“acquire a greater degree of firmness, and get a temper in proportion,
-as Potter[335] expresses it, like steel in the quenching.”
-Swaddling-bands[336] also, in use throughout the rest of Greece, were
-banished from Sparta, which led the way therefore to that improved
-system of infant management advocated by Rousseau, Lacépède and
-others,[337] and now generally adopted in this country, though but
-partially in France. The ceremonies and customs of the Greeks were a
-kind of symbolical language, many times containing important meaning,
-and always perhaps indicative of the character and familiar feelings of
-the race. Much stress was laid on the thing wherein the infant was
-placed upon its entrance into the world. This, among the Athenians,
-consisted of a wrapper adorned with an embroidered figure of the
-Gorgon’s head, the device represented on the shield of Athena, tutelar
-divinity of the state. From the beginning every citizen seemed thus to
-be placed under the immediate shelter of that goddess’s ægis which
-should be extended over him in peace and in war. In other parts of
-Greece the child’s first bed, and too frequently his last, was a
-shield.[338] In accordance with this custom we find Alcmena cradling her
-twin boys Heracles and Iphicles in Amphytrion’s buckler; and the same
-practice prevailed, as might have been expected, at Sparta, where war
-constituted to men the sole object of life.[339] Elsewhere other symbols
-spoke to the future sense rather than the present of the new citizen. In
-agricultural countries the military symbol was replaced by a winnowing
-van, not unfrequently of gold or other costly materials;[340] though it
-may be doubted whether the word so rendered meant not rather a cradle in
-the form of that rustic implement.
-
-Footnote 335:
-
- Antiq. ii. 320.
-
-Footnote 336:
-
- Coray, ad Hippoc. de Aër. et Loc. ii. 309.
-
-Footnote 337:
-
- Even so early as the age of Montaigne the necessity of some change was
- felt. “Les liaisons et emmaillottements des enfans ne sont non plus
- necessaires.” He then alludes to the practice of the Spartan
- nurses.—Essais, ii. 12. However, in certain habits of body, swaddling
- is not merely useful, but necessary: as Hippocrates remarks in his
- account of the Scythians (de Aër. et Loc. § 101), and as his able
- commentator, Coray, confirms by example. _ubi sup._
-
-Footnote 338:
-
- Theoc. Eidyll. xxiv. 4. ἢ τὰν ἢ ἐπὶ τὰς. Plut. Lacæn. Apophtheg. t.
- ii. p. 187.
-
-Footnote 339:
-
- Nonn. Dionys. xli. 168. seq. Sch. Thucyd. ii. 39.
-
-Footnote 340:
-
- Callim. Hymn. in Jov. 48.
-
-In another custom, long on these occasions observed, we discern traces
-of that serpent-worship which at different epochs diffused itself so
-widely over the world. Among opulent and noble families at Athens
-new-born children were laid on golden amulets in the form of dragons by
-which they were supposed to commemorate Athena’s delivery of
-Erichthonios to the care of two guardians of that description.[341]
-
-Footnote 341:
-
- Eurip. Ion. 15. sqq.—There were certain amulets, too, called περίαπτα
- which superstitious mothers hung about the necks of their children to
- defend them from fascination and the evil eye. Pollux, iv. 182. Vict.
- in Arist. Ethic. Nicom. p. 42.
-
-But under certain circumstances, instead of the joy and gladness by
-which the noble and the great are greeted on their entrance into the
-world, the birth of a child was, as in Thrace,[342] an event fraught
-with sorrow and misery. It announced in fact the approach of an enemy,
-of one who, if he survived, must snatch from them a portion of what
-already would scarcely sustain life. Together with the announcement of
-his birth, therefore, came the awful consciousness that war must be made
-on him—that he must in short be cast forth, a scape-goat for the sins of
-society, not for his own—that his parents who should have cherished him,
-whose best solace he should have been, must steel their hearts and close
-fast their ears against the voice of nature, and become his
-executioners. The poor-laws of Greece, or rather their substitutes for
-poor-laws, were exceedingly imperfect, and foundling hospitals had not
-been introduced. They got rid of their surplus population, as many
-nations still do, by murder; for infanticide, under various forms, has
-more or less prevailed in all civilised countries, if the term civilised
-can properly be applied to nations among whom crimes so demoralising are
-habitually perpetrated. No doubt the sullen reluctance of a father to
-imbrue his hands in the blood of his child produced daily many a
-heart-rending scene; no doubt the sting of want must have been keenly
-felt before the habit of slaughter was confirmed;—but the fashion once
-set, children were thrown into an earthen pot and exposed in mountainous
-and desert places to perish of cold, or fall a prey to carnivorous
-birds[343] or wolves, as coolly as they are murdered by their young and
-frail mothers in our own Christian land.
-
-Footnote 342:
-
- Sext. Empir. p. 186.
-
-Footnote 343:
-
- Vict. (Var. Lect. ii. 3) has an useful chapter on the exposing of
- infants, in which he has collected several valuable testimonies.
-
-Under all circumstances, however, the parents thus criminal are objects
-of pity. Misery is blind, and crime is blind. But what shall we say to
-those priests of humanity, those sacred and reverend interpreters of
-nature,—the philosophers who come forward to sanction and justify the
-practice? It would be criminal to disguise the fact, that both Plato and
-Aristotle, the great representatives of the wisdom of the Pagan
-world,[344] conceived infanticide, under certain circumstances, to be
-allowable. Near, therefore, as the former stood to the truths of
-Christianity, there was still a cloud between him and them. What he saw,
-he saw through a glass darkly. Christ had not then stamped the seal of
-divinity upon human nature, had not shed abroad that light by which
-alone we discover the true features of crime, no less than the true
-features of holiness. Philosophy is beautiful; but with the beauty of
-one involuntarily polluted. Religion alone, breathing of heaven, radiant
-with light, reflected on its whole form from the face of God, is lovely
-altogether without spot or blemish. The Greeks wanting this guide went
-astray. They looked at the question of population as coarse
-utilitarians,—all but the gross, unintellectual Thebans, who, relying on
-the vast fertility of their soil, or led by some better instinct, on
-this point soared high above their cultivated neighbours, an example of
-how the foolish things of this world, even in the unregenerate state of
-nature, may sometimes confound the wise. Among the Tyrrhenians,[345]
-likewise, a people of Pelasgian origin, infanticide was unknown,
-probably because among them it was accounted no disgrace to be the
-parents of illegitimate offspring; indeed the sense of shame could not,
-in any case, be very keen among a people whose female slaves served
-naked at table, and where even the ladies appeared at public
-entertainments in the same state, drinking bumpers and joining freely in
-the conversation of the men.
-
-Footnote 344:
-
- Plato, de Rep. v. § 9. p. 359. Stallb. Aristot. Pol. vii. 16. Cf.
- Lips. Epist. ad Belg. Cent. 1. c. 85. with the work of Gerard Noodt,
- entitled “Julius Paulus,” in opp. Lugd. Bat. 1726. pp. 567, seq. 591.
- seq. Elmenhorst. ad Minuc. Felic. Octav. 289. ed. Ouzel.
-
-Footnote 345:
-
- Athen. xii. 14.
-
-In the modern world to take the life of an infant is a capital offence,
-yet we see with how little fear or ceremony the law is set at nought. It
-will, therefore, readily be supposed that in those countries of
-antiquity where neither law nor public opinion opposed the practice, but
-in some cases winked at, in others enjoined it, the number of
-child-murders must have been enormous. Sparta very naturally took the
-lead in this guilty course.[346] Here it was not permitted to private
-individuals to make away with their offspring stealthily, and with those
-marks of shame and compunction inseparable from individual guilt. The
-state monopolized the right to Herodise, and by sharing the criminality
-among great numbers appeared to silence the objections of conscience.
-Fathers were compelled by law to bring their new-born infants to certain
-officers, old, grave men,[347] who held their sittings in the Lesche of
-their tribe, and after due deliberation determined on the claim of each
-child to live or die. By what rules they decided, rude and ignorant of
-physiology as they were, it would now be impossible positively to
-affirm. Little skill no doubt had they in detecting the latent seeds of
-robustness and physical energy, still less those of splendid mental
-endowments lurking in the crimson countenance of helpless infancy. They
-who might have proved the wise and good of their generation no doubt
-often went instead of the mere animal. However, giving orders that the
-strong and apparently healthy should be nursed, the weakly and delicate,
-often the noblest men, and the bravest soldiers, as witness Lucius
-Sulla, were condemned to be cast like so many puppy dogs into the
-Apothetæ, a deep cavern at the foot of Mount Taygetos. This den of death
-relieved the Spartans from the necessity of erecting workhouses or
-enacting poor-laws. The surplus population went into that pit.
-
-Footnote 346:
-
- Compare the coolness of Hase. p. 190. Müller. ii. 313. with Lamb. Bos.
- p. 212. seq. and the humane remarks of Ubbo Emmius iii. 83. Potter,
- too (ii. 326. sqq.), seems to disapprove of the practice.
-
-Footnote 347:
-
- Plut. Lycurg. 16.
-
-To a certain extent, and in a mitigated form, the same practice
-prevailed at Athens. Here, however, it was more a matter of custom than
-of law, and in this respect differed materially[348] from the practice
-of Sparta, that it was left entirely to the father to determine the fate
-of his children. Accordingly, the more cold-blooded had recourse to
-murder, while the less atrocious exposed them in jars in desert places
-to perish, or in the thronged and crowded quarters of the city in the
-hope that they might excite in others that compassion, which he, their
-father, denied them.[349] And humane individuals were often found who,
-like our Squire Allworthy, would sympathise with these deserted
-creatures.[350] Numerous examples occur in the comic poets. In these
-cases poverty was no doubt the motive, particularly when boys were
-exposed; but even wealthy persons, reasoning like the Rajpoots of
-northern India, would prefer exposing their daughters, to the care and
-expense of educating them to an uncertain destiny. On these occasions
-the child was dressed and swaddled more or less carefully, placed in a
-large earthen vessel called a chytra,[351]—the same in which soup was
-made, and which ought, therefore, to have awakened humane
-associations,—and laid at the mouth of some cave without the walls, or
-in such situations as I have above described. To this custom allusion is
-made in the anecdote of a foundling, who amusing himself by rolling a
-chytra before him with his foot, “What! exclaimed some one desirous of
-reminding him of his origin, have you the impiety to kick your mother in
-the belly?”[352]
-
-Footnote 348:
-
- Petit is of the contrary opinion, but his authorities by no means bear
- him out.—Legg. Att. lib. ii. tit. 4. p. 144.
-
-Footnote 349:
-
- Paulus, ap. Petit. ubi sup.
-
-Footnote 350:
-
- On the ceremony of adoption, see Potter ii. 335. Compare Lady
- Montague’s Works, iii. 12.
-
-Footnote 351:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 289, or sometimes ὄστρακον, Ran. 1221.
-
-Footnote 352:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Thesmoph. 509.
-
-Sometimes when the object was rather to escape shame than to shun the
-expense of education, rings, jewels, or other valuable tokens were
-suspended about the child, or put along with it into the chytra.[353]
-And in the comic writers these usually assist in bringing about a
-discovery. If they fell into the hands of the poor the costly marks of
-noble birth, always held in honour by the ignorant and needy, would
-perhaps tempt them to preserve and cherish the off-cast, as in the case
-of Shakespeare’s Perdita, or in the event of death, would defray the
-expenses of their funerals. Sometimes superstition operated on their
-minds, urging them into a mock show of sharing their possessions with
-the little wretches they abandoned.[354] Thus Sostrata, wife of Chremes,
-in the Self-tormentor delivered along with her little daughter to the
-person who was to expose it, a ring from her own finger to be left with
-the child, that should it die it might not be wholly deprived of all
-share of their property. Such also is the behaviour of Creusa in
-Euripides; for Hermes, whom the poet introduces unfolding the argument
-of the drama, relates that when the young princess laid her new-born son
-to perish in the cavern, where he had been conceived, she took off her
-costly ornaments and with them decked her devoted boy.[355]
-
-Footnote 353:
-
- Vict. Var. Lect. ii. 3. Aristot. Poet. xvi.
-
-Footnote 354:
-
- Terent. Heautontim. iv. i. 36 seq. Victor. Var. Lect. ii. 3. Cf. Ter.
- Hecyr. iii. 3. 31. sqq.
-
-Footnote 355:
-
- Eurip. Ion, 26. seq. Cf. 15. sqq.
-
-From another part of the same play it may be inferred that children were
-often exposed on the steps of Apollo’s temple at Delphi, and nurtured by
-the Pythoness.[356] Indeed the priestess, on discovering Ion, who had
-been brought thither by Hermes from Attica, concludes at once that some
-unfortunate Delphian girl[357] is his mother, and adopts him under that
-impression. From the sequel it would appear that such children were the
-slaves of the temple, and under the immediate protection of the
-god.[358]
-
-Footnote 356:
-
- Conf. Hypoth. Ion.
-
-Footnote 357:
-
- Δελφίδων τλαίη κόρη. κ. τ. λ. Ion, 44. sqq.
-
-Footnote 358:
-
- Ion, 53. sqq.
-
-In the plain of Eleutheræ, near the temple of Dionysos, is a cavern, and
-close beside it a fountain. Here, according to the poets, Antiope
-brought forth Zethos and Amphion, twin sons of Zeus, whom, to conceal
-her shame, she abandoned where they were born. The infants were
-immediately afterwards discovered by a shepherd, who, having bathed them
-in the neighbouring spring, took them to his cot, where they were
-brought up as his own children.[359] The catastrophe of many an ancient
-play was brought about by a discovery of the real characters of persons
-who had been exposed in infancy. Thus Œdipus, whose story is too well
-known to need repetition, was abandoned on Mount Cithæron. The daughters
-of Phineus,[360] of whom nothing else has come down to us, had been cast
-forth in infancy and preserved, and were afterwards brought to be put to
-death on the same spot; by alluding to which their lives were saved. The
-sons,[361] likewise, of Tyro, Peleus and Neleus, were deserted by their
-mother, who placed them in a little bark or chest on the banks of the
-Enipeus, a circumstance which served afterwards to reveal the parentage
-of the twins. The story of Romulus and Remus, who were thus abandoned by
-their vestal mother, is familiar to every reader; and from the example
-of Moses recorded in the sacred volume, we may infer that the exposing
-of children was common in remoter ages in Egypt. Pindar,[362] in
-relating the birth of the prophet Iamos, presents us with a poetical
-picture of one of these unhappy transactions. Evadne, daughter of
-Poseidon by the river-nymph Pitana, dwelling at the court of Æpytos a
-king of Arcadia, going forth, like the daughters of the Patriarchs, to
-draw water from a fountain, is overtaken by her birth-pangs.
-
- “Her crimsoned girdle down was flung,
- The silver ewer beside her laid,
- Amid a tangled thicket, hung
- With canopy of brownest shade;
- When forth the glorious babe she brought,
- His soul instinct with heavenly thought.
- Sent by the golden-tressed god,
- Near her the Fates indulgent stood,
- With Eileithyia mild.
- One short sweet pang released the child,
- And Iamos sprang forth to light.
- A wail she uttered; left him then,
- Where on the ground he lay;
- When straight two dragons came,
- With eyes of azure flame,
- By will divine awaked out of their den;
- And with the bees’ unharmful venom they
- Fed him, and nursled through the night and day.
- The king meanwhile had come
- From stony Pytho driving, and at home
- Did of them all after the boy inquire
- Born of Evadne; for, he said, the sire
- Was Phœbos, and that he
- Should of earth’s prophets wisest be,
- And that his generation should not fail.
- Not to have seen or heard him they avouched,
- Now five days born. But he, on rushes couched,
- Was covered up in that wide brambly maze;
- His delicate body met
- With yellow and empurpled rays
- From many a violet:
- And hence his mother bade him claim
- For ever this undying name.”
-
-Footnote 359:
-
- Paus. ii. 6. 4.—Cf. Casaub. Diatrib. in Dion. Chrysost. ii. 469.
-
-Footnote 360:
-
- Aristot. Poet. xvi. 8. cum not. Herm. p. 156.
-
-Footnote 361:
-
- Arist. Poet. xvi. 3.
-
-Footnote 362:
-
- Olymp. vi. 39. sqq. Diss. I give the passage as it is elegantly
- translated by Mr. Cary.
-
-Generally, it would appear, illegitimate children were exposed in the
-neighbourhood of the Gymnasium, in the Cynosarges, because, as suggested
-by Suidas, Heracles, who was himself a bastard, had a temple there.
-
-On the subject of infanticide the Thebans,[363] as I have said,
-entertained juster sentiments than the rest of their countrymen. By
-their institutions it was made a capital crime; but because severe laws
-would not furnish the indigent with the means of supporting the children
-they were forbidden to kill, they by another enactment provided for
-their maintenance. If a poor man found himself unable to support an
-addition to his family, he was commanded to bear his children
-immediately from the birth, wrapped in swaddling-clothes, to the
-magistrates, who disposed of them for a small sum to wealthy people in
-want of children or servants: for, according to the Theban laws, they
-who undertook the charge of foundlings, if they may be so called, were
-entitled to their services in return for their nursing and education.
-
-Footnote 363:
-
- Ælian, Var. Hist. ii. 7.—Cf. Phil. Jud. de Legg. Special. p. 543.
-
-Connected with infanticide is another subject equally important, but of
-very difficult treatment; that is practices to destroy the infant before
-the birth.[364] In modern nations all such offences are theoretically
-visited with very severe punishment by the law, and public opinion so
-strongly condemns them that no one solicitous of upholding a respectable
-character in society will dare to be their apologist. It was otherwise
-in antiquity. The greatest dread of a superabundant population was in
-many states felt, and led to customs and acts of a very nefarious
-nature; for some classes of which, if not for all, writers of highest
-eminence are found to plead. Thus Pliny,[365] commonly a great declaimer
-in behalf of virtue, admits that some artificial limit should be put to
-female productiveness; and Aristotle, despite his far nobler and more
-generous ethics, had on this point no loftier views. The regulations
-also of the Cretan Minos—but let them remain in the obscurity which
-encompasses his entire code.
-
-Footnote 364:
-
- See in Pollux, ii. 7. and iv. 208. a whole vocabulary of terms
- connected with this practice. In his note on the former passage, p.
- 297. Iungermann refers to the Commentaries of Camerarius, c. 32. Cf.
- Comm. in Poll. p. 507. seq. p. 541. et 891. seq. Tim. Lex. Plat. v.
- ἐξαμβλοῦν. cum. not. Ruhnken. p. 62. ed. Lond. Plat. Theæt. t. iii. p.
- 190. Max. Tyr. xvi. p. 179. Jacob Gensius (Victimæ Humanæ, pt. ii. p.
- 247. seq.), enters fully into the question of abortion, which at Rome,
- according to Justin, was procured to preserve the shape. The same
- practice prevails in Formosa.—Richteren, Voyage de la Compagnie des
- Indes, v. p. 70. Compare Lactant. v. p. 278. Phocyl. v. 172. seq.
-
-Footnote 365:
-
- Hist. Nat. xxxix. 27. t. viii. p. 404. Franz. Impie satis, as Kühn
- observes in his note on Ælian, Var. Hist. ii. 7. Arist. Pol. vii. 15.
- 253. Gœttl. Cf. Foës. Œcon. Hippoc. vv. Ἀμβλῶσαι and ἀποφθορά.
-
-Among the Romans several modern writers appear to suppose the existence
-of more humane feelings, for which it would certainly have been
-difficult to account. An ancient law attributed to Romulus has misled
-them. By this it was enacted that no male child should be exposed; and
-that of daughters the first should be permitted to live, while the
-others having been brought up till they were three years old, might then
-if judged expedient be destroyed.[366] The legislator, it is argued,
-knew human nature too well to fear that parents who had preserved their
-children three years would after that take away their lives. But infants
-exceedingly mutilated or deformed might be killed at once, having first
-been shown to five neighbours, and these neighbours, like the overseers
-of murder at Lacedæmon, were probably lax in interpreting the law,
-which, acknowledging the principle, would easily tolerate variations in
-the practice.[367] Be this, however, as it may, child-murder and child
-dropping were in imperial times of ordinary occurrence at Rome. There
-was in the Herb-market a pillar called the “Milky column,”[368] whither
-foundlings were brought to be suckled by public nurses, or to be fed
-with milk—for the passage in Festus may be both ways interpreted, and
-their numbers would seem to have been considerable. The Christian
-writers constantly object the practice of infanticide to the Romans.
-“You cast forth your sons,” says Tertullian,[369] “to be picked up and
-nourished by the first woman that passes.” And the poor, as Ambrose
-remarks, would desert and expose their little ones, and if caught deny
-them to be theirs.[370] Others adopted more decisive measures, and
-instead of exposing strangled them.[371] Probably, moreover, it was the
-atrocious device of legislators to get rid of their superabundant
-population that gave rise to the rite of child-sacrificing known to have
-prevailed among the Phœnicians, who passed their children through fire
-to Moloch; and among their descendants the Carthaginians,[372] who
-offered up infants to their gods, as at the present day our own
-idolatrous subjects in the East cast forth their first-born infants on
-islands at the mouth of the Ganges, to be devoured by the alligators. In
-China Christianity has performed for infancy the same humane duty as in
-ancient Rome, as many of the converts made by the Jesuits consisted of
-foundlings whom they had picked up when cast forth by their parents to
-perish in the streets.
-
-Footnote 366:
-
- Dion. Hal. Ant. Rom. i. 81; ii. 15.
-
-Footnote 367:
-
- Seneca, de Irâ, l. i. Apuleius Metam. x. where a husband gives command
- for the destruction of his daughter immediately on her birth.—Ap.
- Lips. Epist. ad Belgas, Cent. i. p. 818. seq.
-
-Footnote 368:
-
- Fest. v. Lactaria Columna.
-
-Footnote 369:
-
- Apolog. c. 9.
-
-Footnote 370:
-
- Hexæm. l. v. c. 18.
-
-Footnote 371:
-
- Arnob. cont. Gent. viii. Lactant. Instit. vi. 20. ap. Lips. Epist. ad
- Belg. 819.
-
-Footnote 372:
-
- Vid. Festus, v. Puelli.—In Syria children were sacrificed to the
- goddess, in like manner with other victims, by being tied up in a sack
- and then flung down from the lofty propylæa of her temple, their
- parents, in the mean while, overwhelming them with contumely, and
- protesting they were not children, but oxen.—Lucian. De Syriâ Deâ, §
- 58.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
- BIRTH-FEAST—NAMING THE CHILD.—NURSERY—NURSERY
- TALES—SPARTAN FESTIVAL.
-
-
-To quit, however, this melancholy topic: while the poor, as we have
-seen, were driven by despair to imbrue their hands in the blood of their
-offspring, their more wealthy neighbours celebrated the birth of a
-child[373] with a succession of banquets and rejoicings. Of these, the
-first was held on the fifth day from the birth, when took place the
-ceremony called Amphidromia, confounded by some ancient authors with the
-festival of the tenth day.[374] On this occasion the accoucheuse or the
-nurse, to whose care the child was now definitively consigned,[375]
-having purified her hands with water,[376] ran naked[377] with the
-infant in her arms, and accompanied by all the other females of the
-family, in the same state, round the hearth,[378] which was regarded as
-the altar of Hestia, the Vesta of the Romans. By this ceremony the child
-was initiated in the rites of religion and placed under the protection
-of the fire goddess, probably with the same view that infants are
-baptized among us.
-
-Footnote 373:
-
- More particularly that of a son.—Casaub. ad Theophr. Char. p. 307.
-
-Footnote 374:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Lysist. 757.
-
-Footnote 375:
-
- Etym. Mag. 89. 54.
-
-Footnote 376:
-
- Suid. in v. t. i. p. 214. d.
-
-Footnote 377:
-
- Hesych. in. v. δρομιάφιον. Meurs. Græc. Fer. p. 20. Brunck, in
- Aristoph. Av. 922.
-
-Footnote 378:
-
- Harpocrat. in v. Cf. not. Gronov. p. 26.
-
-Meanwhile the passer-by was informed that a fifth-day feast was
-celebrating within, by symbols suspended on the street-door, which, in
-case of a boy, consisted in an olive crown; and of a lock of wool,
-alluding to her future occupations, when it was a girl.[379] Athenæus,
-apropos of cabbage, which was eaten on this occasion, as well as by
-ladies “in the straw,”[380] as conducing to create milk, quotes a comic
-description of the Amphidromia from a drama of Ephippos, which proves
-they were well acquainted with the arts of joviality.
-
- “How is it
- No wreathed garland decks the festive door,
- No savoury odour creeps into the nostrils
- Since ’tis a birth-feast? Custom, sooth, requires
- Slices of rich cheese from the Chersonese,
- Toasted and hissing; cabbage too in oil,
- Fried brown and crisp, with smothered breast of lamb.
- Chaffinches, turtle-doves, and good fat thrushes
- Should now be feathered; rows of merry guests
- Pick clean the bones of cuttle-fish together,
- Gnaw the delicious feet of polypi,
- And drink large draughts of scarcely mingled wine.[381]”
-
-Footnote 379:
-
- Hesych. ap. Meurs. Græc. Fer. p. 20.
-
-Footnote 380:
-
- Potter, ii. 322.
-
-Footnote 381:
-
- Athen. ix. 10. Cf. Ludovic. Nonn. De Pisc. Esu. c. 7. p. 28.
-
-A sacrifice[382] was likewise this day offered up for the life of the
-child, probably to the god Amphidromos, first mentioned, and therefore
-supposed to have been invented by Æschylus.[383] It has moreover been
-imagined that the name was now imposed, and gifts were presented by the
-friends and household slaves.[384]
-
-Footnote 382:
-
- Cf. Aristoph. Lys. 700. cum not. et schol.—Plaut. Truc. ii. 4. 69.
-
-Footnote 383:
-
- Semel. fr. 203. Well.
-
-Footnote 384:
-
- Meurs. Gr. Fer. p. 21.
-
-But it was on the seventh day that the child generally received its
-name,[385] amid the festivities of another banquet; though sometimes
-this was deferred till the tenth.[386] The reason is supplied by
-Aristotle.[387] They delayed the naming thus long, he says, because most
-children that perish in extreme infancy die before the seventh day,
-which being passed they considered their lives more secure. The eighth
-day was chosen by other persons for bestowing the name, and, this
-considered the natal day, was solemnized annually as the anniversary of
-its birth, on which occasion it was customary for the friends of the
-family to assemble together, and present gifts to the child, consisting
-sometimes of the polypi and cuttle-fish[388] to be eaten at the feast.
-However the tenth day[389] appears to have been very commonly observed.
-Thus Euripides:[390]
-
- “Say, who delighting in a mother’s claim
- Mid tenth-day feasts bestowed the ancestral name?”
-
-Footnote 385:
-
- Alex. ab Alex. 99. a.
-
-Footnote 386:
-
- Harpocrat. _v._ Ἑβδομ. p. 92. Cf. Lomeier, De Lustrat. Vet. Gentil. c.
- 27. p. 327. sqq.
-
-Footnote 387:
-
- Hist. Anim. vii. 12. Bekk.
-
-Footnote 388:
-
- Suid. v. Ἀμφιδ. t. i. p. 214. d.
-
-Footnote 389:
-
- Isæus, Pyrrh. Hæred. § 5. Dem. Adv. Bœot. §§ 6, 7. Lys. in Harpocrat.
- v. Ἀμφιδρομ. p. 19.
-
-Footnote 390:
-
- Ægei. Frag. i.
-
-Aristophanes, too, on the occasion of naming his Bird-city, which a
-hungry poet pretends to have long ago celebrated, introduces
-Peisthetæros saying,
-
- “What! have I not but now the sacrifice
- Of the tenth day completed and bestowed
- A name as on a child?”[391]
-
-Footnote 391:
-
- Aves, 922. seq.
-
-Connected with this custom, there is a very good anecdote in Polyænos,
-from which Meursius[392] infers that there existed among the Greeks
-something like the office of sponsor. Jason, tyrant of Pheræ, most of
-whose stratagems were played off against members of his own family, had
-a brother named Meriones, extremely opulent, but to the last degree
-close-fisted, particularly towards him. When at length a son was born to
-Jason, he invited to the Nominalia many principal nobles of Thessaly,
-and among others his brother Meriones, who was to preside over the
-ceremonies. In these he was probably occupied the whole day, during
-which, under pretence, apparently, of providing some choice game for his
-guests, the tyrant went out for a few hours with his dogs and usual
-followers. His real object, however, soon appeared. Making direct for
-Pagasæ, where his brother’s castle stood, he stormed the place, and
-seizing on Meriones’ treasures, to the amount of twenty talents,
-returned in all speed to the banquet. Here, by way of showing his
-fraternal consideration, he delegated to his brother the honour of
-pouring forth the libations, and bestowing the name, which was the
-father’s prerogative. But Meriones receiving from one of the tyrant’s
-attendants a hint of what had taken place, called the boy “Porthaon,” or
-the “Plunderer.”[393] At Athens the feast and sacrifice took place at
-night, with much pomp, and all the glee which such an occasion was
-calculated to inspire.[394]
-
-Footnote 392:
-
- Græc. Feriat. p. 22.
-
-Footnote 393:
-
- Polyæn. Strat. vi. i. 6.
-
-Footnote 394:
-
- Suid. v. Δεκάτην ἑστιάσαν, t. i. p. 654. c. d.
-
-On the bestowing of the name Potter’s information is particularly full.
-He is probably right, too, in his conjecture, that in most countries the
-principal object of calling together so great a number of friends to
-witness this ceremony was to prevent such controversies as might arise
-when the child came out into the business of the world. But at Athens
-the Act of Registration[395] rendered such witnesses scarcely necessary.
-The right of imposing the name belonged, as hinted above, to the father,
-who likewise appears to have possessed the power afterwards to alter it
-if he thought proper. They were compelled to follow no exact precedent;
-but the general rule resembled one apparently observed by nature, which,
-neglecting the likeness in the first generation, sometimes reproduces it
-with extraordinary fidelity in the second. Thus, the grandson inheriting
-often the features, inherited also very generally the name of his
-grandfather,[396] and precisely the same rule applied to women; the
-granddaughter nearly always receiving her grandmother’s name.[397] Thus,
-Andocides, son of Leagoras, bore the name of his grandfather; the father
-and son of Miltiades were named Cimon; the father and son of Hipponicos,
-Cleinias.[398] The orator Lysias formed an exception to this rule, his
-grandfather’s name having been Lysanias.[399] In short, though there
-existed no law upon the subject, yet ancient and nearly invariable
-custom operated with the force of law.[400]
-
-Footnote 395:
-
- Harpocrat. v. Μεῖον, Poll. iii. 53. Schol. ad Aristoph. Ran. 810.
- Etym. Mag. 533. 37. Meurs. Lect. Att. iii. 1.
-
-Footnote 396:
-
- Palmer, Exercit. p. 754. Sluiter. Lect. Andocid. c. i.
-
-Footnote 397:
-
- Isæus de Pyrrh. Hæred. § 5.
-
-Footnote 398:
-
- Aristoph. Av. 284.
-
-Footnote 399:
-
- Plat. Rep. l. i. t. vi. p. 9.
-
-Footnote 400:
-
- Dem. c. Macart. § 17. Taylor, Lect. Lysiac. c. 5.
-
-The names of children were often in remote antiquity derived from some
-circumstance attending their birth, or in the history of their parents.
-Sometimes, too, their own deeds, as in the case of modern titles,
-procured them a name; or perhaps some misfortune which befell them.
-Thus, Marpissa, in Homer, being borne away[401] by Apollo, obtained the
-name of Halcyone, because her mother, like the Halcyon, was inconsolable
-for the loss of her offspring.[402] Scamandrios, son of Hector, was
-denominated Astyanax, because his father was τοῦ ἄστεος ἄναξ, “the
-defender of the city;”[403] and Odysseus, metamorphosed by the Romans
-into Ulysses, is supposed to have been so called τοῦ ἄστεος ἄναξ διὰ τὸ
-ὀδυσσέσθαι τοῦ Αὐτολυκου, from the anger of Autolychos.[404] Again, the
-son of Achilles, at first called Pyrrhos, as our second William, Rufus,
-from the colour of his hair, afterwards obtained the name of
-Neoptolemos, “the youthful warrior,” from his engaging at a very early
-age in the siege of Troy. It came, in aftertimes, to be considered
-indecorous for persons of humble condition to assume the names of heroic
-families. Thus, the low flatterer Callicrates, at the court of Ptolemy
-the Third, was thought to be audacious because he bestowed upon his son
-and daughter the names of Telegonos and Anticleia, and wore the effigy
-of Odysseus in his ring, which appeared to be claiming kindred with that
-illustrious chief. In fact, to prevent the profanation of revered names,
-the law itself forbade them to be adopted by slaves or females of bad
-character,[405] though, in defiance of its enactments, we find there
-were hetairæ, who derived their appellation from the sacred games of
-Greece, Nemeas, Isthmias, and Pythionica.[406]
-
-Footnote 401:
-
- See in Winkel. iii. p. 248, an account of a picture representing this
- transaction.
-
-Footnote 402:
-
- Il. i. 552. seq.
-
-Footnote 403:
-
- Potter, ii. 225.
-
-Footnote 404:
-
- Odyss. τ. 406. sqq.
-
-Footnote 405:
-
- Athen. xiii. 51.
-
-Footnote 406:
-
- Anim. ad Athen. t. xii. p. 170.
-
-But of this enough: we now proceed to the management and education of
-children, beginning with their earliest infancy. In old times the women
-of Greece always suckled their own offspring, and for the performance of
-this office they were excellently adapted by nature,[407] since they had
-no sooner become mothers than their breasts filled so copiously with
-milk than it not only flowed through the nipple, but likewise transpired
-through the whole bosom. On the little derangements of the system
-peculiar to nurses the Greeks entertained many superstitious opinions;
-for instance, they conceived those thread-like indurations which
-sometimes appear in the breasts to be caused by swallowing hairs, which
-afterwards come forth with the milk, on which account the disorder was
-called Trichiasis.[408] The nourishment supplied by mothers so robust
-and lactiferous was often so rich and abundant as, like over-feeding, to
-cause spasms and convulsions, supposed to be most violent when they
-happened during the full moon, and began in the back. The usual remedy
-among nurses would appear to have been wine, since Aristotle,[409] in
-speaking of the disorder, observes that white, particularly if diluted
-with water, is less injurious than red, though even from the former he
-thought it better to abstain. The administering of aperient medicines
-and the absence from everything that could cause flatulence, he
-considered the only safe treatment. Nurses, however, sometimes placed
-much reliance on the brains of a rabbit.[410]
-
-Footnote 407:
-
- When the case happened to be otherwise the remedies recommended by
- physicians were numerous, among which was the halimos, a prickly shrub
- found growing along the northern shores of Crete.—Dioscor. i. 120.
- Tournefort. i. 44.
-
-Footnote 408:
-
- Arist. Hist. An. vii. 10. Foës. Œconom. Hippoc. v. Τριχίασις.
-
-Footnote 409:
-
- Hist. An. vii. 11.
-
-Footnote 410:
-
- Dioscor. ii. 21.
-
-In Plato’s Republic the nurses were to live apart in a distinct quarter
-of the city, and suckle indiscriminately all the children that were to
-be preserved; no mother being permitted to know her own child.[411]
-
-Footnote 411:
-
- Plat. Rep. v. t. vi. p. 236.—The desire of the philosopher was, that
- the people, or the state, should be regarded as the father of the
- child. Among our ancestors illegitimate children were denominated
- “sons of the people,” which was then thought equivalent to being the
- sons of nobody. Hence the following distich:—
-
- Cui pater est populus, pater est sibi nullus et omnis,
- Cui pater est populus, non habet ipse patrem.
-
- Fortescue, Laud. Legg.
- Angl. c. 40.
-
-Every one must have observed, as well as Plato,[412] that children are
-no sooner born than they exhibit unequivocal signs of passion and
-anger, in the moderating and directing of which consists the chiefest
-difficulty of education. Most men, through the defect of nature or
-early discipline, live long before they acquire this mastery, which
-many never attain at all. Generally, however, where it is possessed,
-much may certainly be attributed to that training which begins at the
-birth, so that of all the instruments employed in the[413] forming of
-character, the nurse is probably the most important. Of this the
-ancients generally appear to have been convinced, and most of all the
-Spartans and Athenians. The Lacedæmonian nurses, on whom the force of
-discipline had been tried, enjoyed a high reputation throughout
-Greece, and were particularly esteemed at Athens.[414] They no doubt
-deserved it. To them may be traced the first attempt to dispense with
-those swathes and bandages which in other countries confined the
-limbs, and impeded the movements of infants, and by their skilful and
-enlightened treatment, combined with watchfulness and tender
-solicitude, they are said to have preserved their little charges from
-those distortions so common among children. But their cares extended
-beyond the person. They aimed at forming the manners, regulating the
-temper, laying the foundation of virtuous habits, at sowing in short
-the seeds, which in after life, might ripen into a manly, frank, and
-generous character. In the matter of food, in the regulating of which,
-as Locke confesses, there is much difficulty, the Spartan nurses acted
-up to the suggestions of the sternest philosophy, accustoming the
-children under their charge, to be content with whatever was put
-before them, and to endure occasional privations without murmuring.
-Over the fear of ghosts too they triumphed. Empusa and the
-Mormolukeion, and all those other hideous spectres which childhood
-associates with the idea of darkness, yielded to the discipline of the
-Spartan nurse.[415] Her charge would remain alone or in the dark,
-without terror, and the same stern system, which overcame the first
-offspring of superstition, likewise subdued the moral defects of
-peevishness, frowardness, and the habit of whining and mewling, which
-when indulged in render children a nuisance to all around them. No
-wonder therefore, these Doric disciplinarians were everywhere in
-request. At Athens it became fashionable among the opulent to employ
-them, and Cleinias, as is well known, placed under the care of one of
-these she-pædagogues that Alcibiades, whose ambitious character, to be
-curbed by no restraints of discipline or philosophy, proved the ruin
-of his country and the scourge of Greece.[416]
-
-Footnote 412:
-
- Repub. i. 315. Stallb.—On the harshness and severity of nurses,
- Teles remarks in that curious picture of human life, which he has
- drawn quite in the spirit of the melancholy Jaques. Stob. Floril.
- Tit. 98. 72.
-
-Footnote 413:
-
- Cf. Cramer de Educ. Puer. ap. Athen. 9. Odyss. β. 361. seq.
- Terpstra, Antiq. Homer. 122. seq.
-
-Footnote 414:
-
- Plut. Alcib. § 1.
-
-Footnote 415:
-
- Or if not, the Spartan legislator had recourse to other expedients
- for extirpating these superstitious terrors in after years. It being
- customary among the Laconians to drink moderately in the syssitia,
- says Plutarch, they went home without a torch, it not being lawful
- to make use of a light on these or any other occasions, in order
- that they might be accustomed to walk by night and in darkness
- boldly, and without fear. Instit. Lacon. § 3.
-
-Footnote 416:
-
- Plut. Lycurg. § 16.
-
-Plato, however, while framing at will an imaginary system, and though
-inclined upon the whole to laconise, adheres, in some respects, to the
-customs of his country, and ordains that infants be confined by
-swaddling bands till two years old. From the mention of this age, it
-may be inferred that children commonly did not walk much earlier at
-Athens, which is the case in the East, as we may learn from the story
-of Ala-ed-deen Abushamet. Plato would also have nurses to be vigorous
-and robust women, much inclined to frequent the temples, in order,
-probably, to introduce into the minds of their charges early
-impressions of religion, and to stroll about the fields and public
-gardens until the children could run alone; and even then, and until
-they were three years old, he urged the necessity of their being
-frequently carried, to prevent crooked legs and malformed ankles. But
-because all this might press hard on one nurse, several were employed,
-as among ourselves,[417] and a kind of Nursery Governess overlooked
-the whole. The Gerula or under-nurse was, in later times, the person
-upon whom fell the principal labour of bearing the infant about; but
-in remoter ages the Greeks, more particularly their royal and noble
-families, employed in this capacity a Baioulos[418] or nurse-father,
-who, as in the case of Phœnix, was sometimes himself of illustrious
-birth. Cheiron, too, the Pelasgian mountain prince, performed this
-sacred office for the son of his friend Peleus.
-
-Footnote 417:
-
- Plat. de Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 5. Pignor. de Serv. p. 185.
-
-Footnote 418:
-
- Pignor. de Serv. p. 186. seq.
-
-Our readers, we trust, will not be reluctant to enter a Greek
-nursery,[419] where the mother, whatever might be the number of her
-assistants, generally suckled her own children. Their cradles were of
-various forms, some of which like our own required rocking,[420] while
-others were suspended like sailors’ hammocks from the ceiling, and
-swung gently to and fro when they desired to pacify the child or lull
-it to sleep:[421] as Tithonos is represented in the mythology to have
-been suspended in his old age.[422] Other cradles there were in the
-shape of little portable baskets wherein they were carried from one
-part of the harem to another.[423] It is probable, too, that as in the
-East the children of the opulent were rocked in their cradles wrapped
-in coverlets of Milesian wool.
-
-Footnote 419:
-
- See in Winkelmann, vignette to l. iv. ch. 3. a view of an ancient
- nursery, where the mother, the pædagogue, the nurse, &c. are engaged
- in the work of education, t. i. p. 414. Cf. Max. Tyr. Diss. iv. p.
- 49. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 713.
-
-Footnote 420:
-
- Pignor. de. Serv. p. 186.
-
-Footnote 421:
-
- Schweigh. Animadv. in Athen. vi. 74.
-
-Footnote 422:
-
- Eudoc. ap. Villois. Anecdot. Græc. t. i. p. 396. Tzetz. ad Lyc. v.
- 16.
-
-Footnote 423:
-
- Mus. Real. Borbon. t. i. pl. 3.
-
-Occasionally in Hellas,[424] as everywhere else, the nurse’s milk
-would fail, or be scanty, when they had recourse to a very original
-contrivance to still the infant’s cries; they dipped a piece of sponge
-in honey which was given it to suck.[425] It was probably under
-similar circumstances that children were indulged in figs; the Greeks
-entertaining an opinion that this fruit greatly contributed to render
-them plump and healthy. They had further a superstition that by
-rubbing fresh figs upon the eyes of children they would be preserved
-from ophthalmia.[426]
-
-Footnote 424:
-
- It was even then remarked that sucking children teethe much better
- than such as are dry nursed.—Aristot. de Gen. Anim. v. 8. Hist.
- Anim. vii. 10.
-
-Footnote 425:
-
- Sch. Arist. Acharn. 439.
-
-Footnote 426:
-
- Athen. iii. 15.
-
-The Persians attributed the same preventive power to the petals of the
-new-blown rose.[427] When a child was wholly or partly dry-nursed, the
-girl who had charge of it would under pretence of cooling its pap,
-commonly made of fine flour of spelt,[428] put the spoon into her own
-mouth, swallow the best part of the nourishment, and give the refuse
-to the infant, a practice attributed by Aristophanes to Cleon, who
-swallowed, he says, the best of the good things of the state himself,
-and left the residue to the people.[429]
-
-Footnote 427:
-
- Geopon. xi. 18.
-
-Footnote 428:
-
- Dioscor. ii. 114.
-
-Footnote 429:
-
- Equit. 712. Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p. 326.
-
-All the world over the singing of the nurse has been proverbial. Music
-breathes its sweetest notes around our cradles. The voice of woman
-soothes our infancy and our age, and in Greece, where every class of
-the community had its song, the nurse naturally vindicated one to
-herself.[430] This sweetest of all melodies—
-
- “Redolent of joy and youth”
-
-was technically denominated Katabaukalesis, of which scraps and
-fragments only, like those of the village song which lingered in the
-memory of Rousseau, have come down to us. The first verse of a Roman
-nursery air, which still, Pignorius[431] tells us, was sung in his
-time by the mothers of Italy, ran thus:—
-
- “Lalla, Lalla; dorme aut lacte.
- Lalla, Lalla; sleep or suck.”
-
-Footnote 430:
-
- Ilgen. de Scol. Poes. p. xxvi. Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p. 204. seq.
-
-Footnote 431:
-
- De Serv. p. 186. seq. Cf. Athen. xiv. 10.
-
-The Sicilian poet, whose pictures of the ancient world are still
-so fresh and fragrant, has bequeathed to us a Katabaukalesis of
-extreme beauty and brevity which I have here paraphrastically
-translated:[432]—
-
- “Sleep ye, that in my breast have lain,
- The slumber sweet and light,
- And wake, my glorious twins, again
- To glad your mother’s sight.
- O happy, happy be your dreams,
- And blest your waking be,
- When morning’s gold and ruddy beams
- Restore your smiles to me.”[433]
-
-Footnote 432:
-
- A nurse’s lay prevalent among our own ancestors may not inaptly find
- a place here:
-
- “Now suck, child, and sleep, child, thy mother’s own joy,
- Her only sweet comfort to drown all annoy;
- For beauty, surpassing the azurèd sky,
- I love thee, my darling, as ball of mine eye.”
-
- D’Israeli, Amenities of
- Literature ii. 287.
-
-Footnote 433:
-
- Theoc. Eidyll. 24. 7. sqq.
-
-The philosopher Chrysippos[434] considered it of importance to
-regulate the songs of nurses, and Quintilian,[435] with a quaint but
-pardonable enthusiasm, would have the boy who is designed to be an
-orator placed under the care of a nurse of polished language and
-superior mind. He observes,[436] too, that children suckled and
-brought up by dumb nurses, will remain themselves dumb, which would
-necessarily happen had they no other person with whom to converse.
-When the infant was extremely wakeful the soothing influence of the
-song was heightened by the aid of little timbrels and rattles hung
-with bells.
-
-Footnote 434:
-
- Quintil. i. 10.
-
-Footnote 435:
-
- Instit. Orat. i. 1.
-
-Footnote 436:
-
- Quintil. Inst. Orat. l. x. c. i. Herod. ii. 2.
-
-A very characteristic anecdote is told of Anacreon apropos of
-nurses.[437] A good-humoured wench with a child in her arms happening
-one day to be sauntering _more nutricum_, through the Panionion, or
-Grand Agora of Ionia, encountered the Teïan poet, who returning from
-the Bacchic Olympos, found the streets much too narrow for him, and
-went reeling hither and thither as if determined to make the most of
-his walk. The nurse, it is to be presumed, felt no inclination to
-dispute the passage with him; but Anacreon attracted, perhaps, by her
-pretty face, making a timely lurch, sent both her and her charge
-spinning off the pavement, at the same time muttering something
-disrespectful against “the brat.” Now, for her own part, the girl felt
-no resentment against him, for she could see which of the divinities
-was to blame; but loving, as a nurse should, her boy, she prayed that
-the poet might one day utter many words in praise of him whom he had
-so rudely vituperated; which came to pass accordingly, for the infant
-was the celebrated Cleobulos, whose beauty the Teïan afterwards
-celebrated in many an ode.[438]
-
-Footnote 437:
-
- See in the Mus. Cortonens. pl. 35. the figure of a nurse bearing the
- infant Bacchos.
-
-Footnote 438:
-
- Max. Tyr. Diss. xi. p. 132.
-
-Traces of the remotest antiquity still linger in the nursery. The word
-baby, which we bestow familiarly on an infant, was with little
-variation, in use many thousand years ago among the Syrians, in whose
-nursery dialect _babia_[439] had the same signification. _Tatta_, too,
-_pappa_ and _mamma_[440] were the first words lisped by the children
-of Hellas. And from various hints dropped by ancient authors, it seems
-clear that the same wild stories and superstitions that still flourish
-there haunted the nursery of old. The child was taught to dread Empusa
-or Onoskelis or Onoskolon,[441] the monster with one human foot and
-one of brass, which dwelt among the shades of night and glided through
-dusky chambers and dismal passages to devour “naughty children.” The
-fables which filled up this obscure part of Hellenic mythology, were
-scarcely less wild than those the Arabs tell about their Marids, their
-Efreets, and their Jinn; for Empusa, the phantom minister of
-Hecate,[442] could assume every various form of God’s creatures,
-appearing sometimes as a bull, or a tree, or an ass, or a stone, or a
-fly, or a beautiful woman.[443] Shakspeare, having caught, perhaps,
-some glimpse of this superstition, or inventing in a kindred spirit,
-attributes a similar power of transformation to his mischievous elf in
-the Midsummer Night’s Dream, located on Empusa’s native soil.
-
- “I’ll follow you, I’ll lead you about, around,
- Through bog, through bush, through brake, through briar.
- Sometimes a horse I’ll be, sometime a hound,
- A hog, a headless bear, sometimes a fire,
- And neigh, and bark, and grunt, and roar, and burn,
- Like horse, hound, hog, bear, fire at every turn.”
-
-Footnote 439:
-
- Phot. Biblioth. 31. l. 11. Menage shrewdly supposes Baby, Babble,
- &c. to have been derived from Babel.—D’Israeli, Amenities of
- Literature, i. 5.
-
-Footnote 440:
-
- Pignor. de Serv. p. 187. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 1365.—Pac. 119.
-
-Footnote 441:
-
- Lil. Gyrald. Synt. xii. Hist. Deor. 361 seq. Cf. Lucian. Ver. Hist.
- lib. 2 § 46. This spectre was said to glide before the sight of
- persons celebrating the rites of initiation, and therefore the
- mother of Æschines who performed a part in the rites, and also
- appeared to the initiated was, with much bad taste, called Empusa by
- Demosthenes.—De Coronâ, § § 41. 79. Adam Littleton in his Cambridge
- Dictionary supposes this to have been her real name, which, however,
- was Glaucis or Glaucothea. Stock. and Wunderl. ad loc. Cf. Harpoc.
- in. v. Sch. Aristoph. Concion. 1056. Ran. 293, 294. ὁρᾲς τὸν
- Αἰσχινην ὅς τυμπανιστρίας υἱὸς ἠν. Lucian. Somn. § 12.
-
-Footnote 442:
-
- This goddess was also known by the name of Artemis Phosphoros.
- Aristoph. Concion. 444 et schol.
-
-Footnote 443:
-
- Aristoph. Ran. 293. Epicharm. ap. Nat. Com. p. 854. See also Sch.
- Apol. Rhod. iii. 478. iv. 247.
-
-It was this spectral being that was said to appear to those who
-performed the sacrifices to the dead, to men overwhelmed with
-misfortune,[444] and travellers in remote and dismal roads; as
-happened to the companions of Apollonios of Tyana who, in journeying
-on a bright moonlight night, were startled by the appearance of
-Empusa, which having stood twice or thrice in their way, suddenly
-vanished.[445] To protect themselves against this demon the
-superstitious were accustomed to wear about them a piece of jasper,
-either set in a ring, or suspended from the neck.[446]
-
-Footnote 444:
-
- Meurs. Lect. Att. iii. 17.
-
-Footnote 445:
-
- Philost. Vit. Apoll. Tyan. l. ii. c. 2.
-
-Footnote 446:
-
- Cf. De Boot, De Lap. p. 251. sqq. on the properties and virtues of
- this stone.
-
-The Lamia, too, fierce and beautiful, the ancestress of our “White
-ladies,” and of the Katakhanas or Vampire of the modern Greeks, roamed
-through solitary places to terrify, delude, or destroy good folks, big
-or little, who might lose their way amid moonlit crags or shores made
-white with bones and sea-shells. They loved to relate “around the fire
-o’ nights,” how Lamia had once been a beautiful woman caressed and
-made the mother of a fair son by Zeus; how Hera through jealousy had
-destroyed the boy; and how, thereupon Lamia took to the bush and
-devoted her wretched immortality to the destroying of other women’s
-children.[447] According to another form of the tradition there were
-many Lamiæ, so called from having capacious jaws, inhabiting the
-Libyan coast,[448] somewhere about the Great Syrtis, in the midst of
-sand hills, rocks, and wastes of irreclaimable aridity. Formed above
-like women of surpassing beauty, they terminated below in serpents.
-Their voice was like the hissing of an adder, and whatever approached
-them they devoured.[449]
-
-Footnote 447:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 1035. Philost. Vit. Apoll. Tyan. iv. 25.
-
-Footnote 448:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 1035.
-
-Footnote 449:
-
- Lil. Gyrald. Hist. Deor. Synt. xv. 447. seq.
-
-Another race of wild and grotesque spirits were the Kobaloi,[450]
-companions of Dionysos, who doubtless subsist still in our woods and
-forests under the name of goblins and hobgoblins. Our Elves and Trolls
-and Fairies appear likewise to belong to the same brood, though in
-these northern latitudes, they have become less mischievous and more
-romantic, delighting the eyes of the wayfarers by their frolics and
-gambols, instead of devouring him.
-
- “Fairy elves,
- Whose midnight revels, by a forest side,
- Or fountain, some belated peasant sees,
- Or dreams he sees, while overhead the moon
- Sits arbitress, and nearer to the earth
- Wheels her pale course; they on their mirth and dance
- Intent, with jocund music charm his ear,
- At once with joy and fear his heart rebounds.”
-
-Footnote 450:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Plut. 279.
-
-Though, as we have seen, weak children were unscrupulously sacrificed
-at Sparta, they still made offerings to the gods in favour of the
-strong. The ceremony took place annually during certain festivals,
-denominated Tithenidia,[451] when, in a moment of hospitality, they
-not only made merry themselves, but overlooked their xenelasia, and
-entertained generously all such strangers as happened to be present.
-The banquet given on this occasion was called Kopis, and, in
-preparation for it, tents were pitched on the banks of the Tiasa near
-the temple of Artemis Corythalis. Within these, beds formed of heaps
-of herbs were piled up and covered with carpets. On the day of the
-festival the nurses proceeded thither with the male children in their
-arms, and, presenting them to the goddess, offered up as victims a
-number of sucking pigs. In the feast which ensued loaves baked in an
-oven, in lieu of the extemporary cake, were served up to the guests.
-Choruses of Corythalistriæ or dancing girls, likewise performed in
-honour of the goddess; and in some places persons, called Kyrittoi, in
-wooden masks, made sport for the guests.[452] Probably it may have
-been on occasions such as this that the nurses, like her in Romeo and
-Juliet, gave free vent to their libertine tongues, and indulged in
-those appellations which the tolerant literature of antiquity has
-preserved.[453]
-
-Footnote 451:
-
- Athen. iv. 16.
-
-Footnote 452:
-
- Meurs. Græc. Fer. 261. seq.
-
-Footnote 453:
-
- Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. 161.
-
-When children were to be weaned, they spread, as the moderns do,
-something bitter over the nipple,[454] that the young republican might
-learn early how—
-
- “Full in the fount of joy’s delicious springs
- Some bitter o’er the flower its bubbling venom flings.”
-
-Footnote 454:
-
- Athen. vi. 51.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
- TOYS, SPORTS, AND PASTIMES.
-
-
-Having described, as far as possible, the management of infants and
-young children, it may not be uninteresting to notice briefly their
-toys, sports, and pastimes; for, though children have been
-substantially the same in all ages and countries, the forms of their
-amusements have been infinitely varied, and where they have resembled
-each other it is not the less instructive to note that resemblance.
-The ancients[455] have, however, bequeathed us but little information
-respecting the fragile implements wherewith the happiness of the
-nursery was in great part erected. Even respecting the recreations
-which succeeded and amused the leisure of boys our materials for
-working out a picture are scanty, so that we must content ourselves
-with little more than an outline. Nevertheless, though the accounts
-they have transmitted to posterity are meagre, they attached much
-importance to the subject itself; so that the greatest legislators and
-philosophers condescended to make regulations respecting it. Thus
-Plato, with a view of generating a profound reverence for ancient
-national institutions, forbade even the recreations of boys to be
-varied with reckless fickleness; for the habit of innovation once
-introduced into the character would ever after continue to influence
-it, so that they who in boyhood altered their sports without reason,
-would without scruple in manhood extend their daring hands to the laws
-and institutions of their country.[456]
-
-Footnote 455:
-
- Plato had the utmost faith in the power of education over both mind
- and body; but his system embraced much more than is usually
- comprehended under the term, even taking charge of the infant before
- its birth, and immediately afterwards, in the hope of wisely
- regulating its physical developement. As the child grows most during
- the first five years, its size in the following twenty being seldom
- doubled, most care, he thought, should then be taken that the great
- impulses of nature be not counteracted. Much food is then consumed,
- with very little exercise; hence the multitude of deaths in infancy
- and diseases in after-life, of which the seeds are then sown. For
- this reason he would encourage the violent romping and sports of
- children, that the excess of nourishment may be got rid of. De Legg.
- vii. t. viii. p. 2. seq.
-
-Footnote 456:
-
- Plat, de Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 21. seq.
-
-Amongst the Hellenes the earliest toy consisted, as in most other
-countries, of the rattle, said to be the invention of the philosopher
-Archytas.[457] To this succeeded balls of many colours,[458] with
-little chariots, sometimes purchased at Athens in the fair held during
-the feast of Zeus.[459] The common price of a plaything of this kind
-would appear to have been an obolos. The children themselves, as
-without any authority might with certainty be inferred, employed their
-time in erecting walls with sand,[460] in constructing little
-houses,[461] in building and carving ships, in cutting carts or
-chariots out of leather, in fashioning pomegranate rinds into the
-shape of frogs,[462] and in forming with wax a thousand diminutive
-images, which pursued afterwards during school hours subjected them
-occasionally to severe chastisement.[463]
-
-Footnote 457:
-
- Aristot. Polit. viii. 6. 1.
-
-Footnote 458:
-
- Dion. Chrysost. Nat. viii. p. 281.
-
-Footnote 459:
-
- Aristoph. Nub. 862. sqq. et Schol. Rav. in loc. Cf. Suid. v. Ἁμαξὶς,
- t. i. p. 194. b. Pollux, x. 168.
-
-Footnote 460:
-
- Damm. v. Ἄθυρμα.
-
-Footnote 461:
-
- Lucian. Hermot. § 33.
-
-Footnote 462:
-
- Aristoph. Nub. 877. sqq. et Schol.
-
-Footnote 463:
-
- Lucian. de Somn. § 2.
-
-Another amusement which the children of Hellas shared with their
-elders was that afforded by puppets,[464] which were probably an
-invention of the remotest antiquity. Numerous women appear to have
-earned their livelihood by carrying round from village to village
-these ludicrous and frolicsome images, which were usually about a
-cubit in height, and may be regarded as the legitimate ancestors of
-Punch and Judy. By touching a single string, concealed from the
-spectators, the operator could put her mute performers in action,
-cause them to move every limb in succession, spread forth the hands,
-shrug the shoulders, turn round the neck, roll the eyes, and appear to
-look at the audience.[465] After this, by other contrivances within
-the images, they could be made to go through many humorous evolutions
-resembling the movements of the dance. These exhibitors, frequently of
-the male sex, were known by the name of Neurospastæ. This art passed,
-together with other Grecian inventions, into Italy, where it was
-already familiar to the public in the days of Horace, who, in speaking
-of princes governed by favourites, compares them to puppets in the
-hands of the showman.
-
- “Tu, mihi qui imperitas, aliis servis miser; atque
- Duceris, ut nervis alienis mobile lignum.”[466]
-
-Footnote 464:
-
- Buleng. de Theat. l. i. c. 36. sqq. Muret. ad Plat. Rep. p. 645.
- Eustath. in Odyss. δ. p. 176. Mount. Not. ad Dem. Olynth. ii. § 5.
- Perizon. ad Æl. Var. Hist. viii. 7. See also the article Marionnette
- in the Encyclopédie Française; and Caylus, Rec. d’Antiq. t. vi. p.
- 287. t. iv. pl. 80. no. i.
-
-Footnote 465:
-
- Aristot. de Mund. c. 6. translated by Apuleius, p. 20. Herod. ii.
- 48. See Comment. ad Poll. vii. 189. Duport. ad Theophr. Char. p.
- 308. This juggler having, for his ill behaviour, been driven from
- Athens, flew to Philip, with whom such persons were always in
- favour. Dem. Olynth. i. § 7.
-
-Footnote 466:
-
- Sat. ii. 7. 81. seq. Plerumque simulacra de ligno facta nervis
- moventur.—Vet. Schol.
-
-A very extraordinary puppet, in the form of a silver skeleton, was,
-according to Petronius Arbiter,[467] exhibited at the court of Nero;
-for, like the Egyptians, this imperial profligate appears to have been
-excited to sensual indulgences by the remembrance of the grave: “Let
-us eat and drink,” cried he, “for tomorrow we die.” The skeleton being
-placed upon the table, in the midst of the tyrant’s orgies, threw its
-limbs strangely about, and bent its form into various attitudes with
-wonderful flexibility, which having performed once and again, and then
-suddenly ceasing to move, the master of the feast exclaimed, “Alas,
-alas! what a mere nothing is man! Like unto this must we all be when
-Orcus shall have borne us hence. Therefore let us live while enjoyment
-is in our power.” But to return to the children of Hellas. Among the
-earliest sports of the Greek boy was whipping the bembyx or top,[468]
-which would appear to have been usually practised in those open spaces
-occurring at the junction of several roads:—
-
- “Where three ways meet there boys with tops are found,
- That ply the lash and urge them round and round.”[469]
-
-Sometimes also, as with us, they spun their tops with cord. The
-amusement is thus described by Tibullus:[470]
-
- “Namque agor, ut per plana citus tota verbere turben,
- Quem celer assuetâ versitat arte puer.”
-
-Footnote 467:
-
- Satyric. p. 80. Helenop. 1610. Wouwer. Anim. p. 418. Erhard. Symbol.
- p. 611. Plut. Conv. Sept. Sap. ch. 2.—A story is told of an Ionian
- juggler who proceeded to Babylon to perform what he deemed a
- wonderful feat before the Great King, and the feat was this: fixing
- a long point of steel on a wall, and retiring to a considerable
- distance, he threw at it a number of soft round pellets of dough,
- with so nice an aim that every one of them was penetrated, the last
- pellet driving back the others. Max. Tyr. Diss. xix. p. 225. Anim.
- ad Poll. vii. 189. p. 532.
-
-The hoop, too, so familiar to our own schoolboys, formed one of the
-playthings of Hellenic children. It was sometimes made of bronze,
-about three feet in diameter,[471] and adorned with little spherical
-bells and movable rings, which jingled as it rolled. The instrument
-employed to urge
-
- “the rolling circle’s speed,”
-
-as Gray expresses it, in his reminiscences of the Eton play-ground,
-was crooked at the point, and called a plectron: its exact
-representation may any day, in the proper season, be seen in the
-streets of London impelling forward the iron hoop of our own children.
-The passages of ancient authors, in which mention of the trochos
-occurs, appear to have been imperfectly understood before the
-discovery of a basso-rilievo, in marble, on the road from Rome to
-Tivoli, afterwards removed to the vineyard of the Cardinal Alexander
-Albani. On certain engraved gems also, in the cabinet of Stosch, are
-several representations of boys playing at hoop, where the trochos in
-some cases reaches to the waist, in others to the breast, and where
-the child is very small up to the chin. It has been conjectured by
-Winkelmann,[472] that a circle represented in one of the paintings of
-Herculaneum was no other than an ancient trochos. Rolling the hoop
-formed a part of the exercises of the palæstra, which were performed
-even by very young children. Thus we find the nurse describing the
-sons of Medeia returning from playing at hoop the very day that they
-were slain by their mother.[473] This amusement has been described
-briefly by the Roman poets. Thus Martial:[474]—
-
- “Garrulus in laxo cur annulus orbe vagatur
- Cedat, et argutis obvia turba trochis.”
-
-Footnote 468:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 1517. Diog. Laert. i. 4. 8. Cf. Hyde
- Nerdilud. p. 259.
-
-Footnote 469:
-
- Callim. Ep. i. 9. seq. p. 180.
-
-Footnote 470:
-
- I. 5. 3.
-
-Footnote 471:
-
- Cf. Caylus, Rec. D’Antiq. t. vi. 318. seq.
-
-Footnote 472:
-
- Descr. des Pierres Grav. du Cab. de Stosch. 452. seq.
-
-Footnote 473:
-
- Eurip. Mod. 45. et Sch.
-
-Footnote 474:
-
- L. xiv. Ep. 169.
-
-Propertius[475] notices the crooked form of the plectron, or clavis:—
-
- “Increpat et versi clavis adunca trochi.”
-
-Horace[476] likewise alludes to the game:—
-
- “Indoctusque pilæ discive trochive quiescit.”
-
-This poet clearly informs us that the Romans received the game from
-the Greeks:[477]—
-
- “Ludere doctior,
- Seu Græco jubeas trocho,
- Seu malis vetita legibus alea.”
-
-Another less innocent amusement was[478] spinning goldchafers, which
-appears to have afforded the Greek urchins the same delight as
-tormenting cockchafers does their successors of the north. This
-species of beetle making its appearance when the apple-trees were in
-bloom, was therefore called _Melolanthe_, or apple-blossom. Having
-caught it, and tied a linen thread about its feet, it was let loose,
-and the fun was to see it move in spiral lines through the air as it
-was twisted by the thread.[479]
-
-Footnote 475:
-
- iii. 12.
-
-Footnote 476:
-
- Ars Poet. 380. where the ancient scholiast seems doubtful whether
- the trochus was a hoop or a top:—“Trochus dicitur turben, qui
- flagello percutitur, et in vertiginem rotatur, aut rota quam
- currendo pueri scuticâ vel virgâ regunt.”
-
-Footnote 477:
-
- Carm. iii. 24. 56. sqq.
-
-Footnote 478:
-
- On the games at present practised in Greece, see Dodwell, ii. 37.
- sqq.; and Douglas, Essay on certain points of resemblance between
- the Anc. and Mod. Greeks, p. 127. sqq.
-
-Footnote 479:
-
- Poll. ix. 124.
-
-It was the practice among the children of Greece, when the sun
-happened to be obscured by a cloud, to exclaim, “Ἔξεχ᾽ ὦ φίλ᾽
-ἥλιε!”—“Come forth, beloved sun!” Strattis makes allusion to this
-custom in a fragment of his Phœnissæ:—
-
- “Then the god listened to the shouting boys,
- When they exclaimed, ‘Come forth, beloved sun!’”[480]
-
-It is fortunate that our English boys have no such passion for
-sunshine; otherwise, as Phœbos Apollo hides his face for months
-together in this blessed climate, we should be in a worse plight than
-Dionysos among the frogs of Acheron, when his passion for Euripides
-led him to pay a visit to Persephone. In some parts of the country,
-however, the children have a rude distich which they frequently bawl
-in chorus, when in summer-time their sports are interrupted by a
-long-continued shower:—
-
- “Rain, rain, go to Spain;
- Fair weather, come again.”
-
-Footnote 480:
-
- Poll. ix. 123.
-
-The Muïnda was our “Blindman’s-buff,” “Blind Hob,” “Hobble ’em-blind,”
-and “Hood-man-blind,” in which, as with us, a boy moved about with his
-eyes bandaged, spreading forth his hands, and crying “Beware!” If he
-caught any of those who were skipping around him, the captive was
-compelled to enact the blind-man in his stead. Another form of the
-game was for the seers to hide, and the blind man to grope round till
-he found them; the whole probably being a rude representation of
-Polyphemos in his cave searching for the Greeks who had blinded him. A
-third form was, for the bystanders to strike or touch the blindfolded
-boy until he could declare who had touched him, when the person
-indicated took his place. To this the Roman soldiers alluded when they
-blindfolded our Saviour and smote him, and cried, “Prophesy who struck
-thee.”[481] In the Kollabismos,[482] the Capifolèt of the French, one
-person covered his eyes with his own hands, the other then gave him a
-gentle blow, and the point was, for the blindfolded man to guess with
-which hand he had been stricken. The Χαλκὴ Μυῖα,[483] or Brazen Fly,
-was a variety of Blindman’s-buff, in which a boy, having his eyes
-bound with a fillet, went groping round, calling out, “I am seeking
-the Brazen Fly.” His companions replied, “You may seek, but you will
-not find it”—at the same time striking him with cords made of the
-inner bark of the papyros; and thus they proceeded till one of them
-was taken. Apodidraskinda (“hide and seek,” or “whoop and holloa!”)
-was played much as it is now. One boy shut his eyes, or they were kept
-closed for him by one of his suspicious companions, while the others
-went to hide. He then sallied forth in search of the party who lay
-concealed, while each of them endeavoured to gain the post of the
-seeker; and the first who did this turned him out and took his place.
-
-Footnote 481:
-
- This has been observed by Hemsterhuis, ad Poll. t. vi. p. 1173,
- where his commentary alone can render the text intelligible.—Cf.
- Matthew, xxvi. 68. Mark, xiv. 64. Luke, xxii. 65.
-
-Footnote 482:
-
- “Jeu de la main chaude.” Steph. Thes. Ling. Græc. v. Κολλαβισμός.
-
-Footnote 483:
-
- Hyde, Hist. Nerdilud. p. 266.
-
-Another game was the Ephedrismos, in which a stone called the Dioros
-was set up at a certain distance, and aimed at with bowls or stones.
-The one who missed took the successful player upon his back, and was
-compelled to carry him about blindfolded, until he went straight from
-the standing-point to the Dioros. This latter part of the game has
-been described by several ancient authors, under the appellation of
-Encotyle, though they are rightly, by Hesychius,[484] considered as
-different parts of the same sport. The variety called Encotyle,—the
-“Pick-back” or “Pick-a-back,” of English boys, consisted in one lad’s
-placing his hands behind his back, and receiving therein the knees of
-his conqueror, who, putting his fingers over the bearer’s eyes, drove
-him about at his pleasure. This game was also called the Kubesinda and
-Hippas,[485] though, according to the conjecture of Dr. Hyde, the
-latter name signified rather our game of “Leap-frog,”—the “mazidha” of
-the Persians, in which a number of boys stooped down with the hands
-resting on the knees, in a row, the last going over the backs of all
-the others, and then standing first.
-
-Footnote 484:
-
- In v. Ἐφεδρίζειν.
-
-Footnote 485:
-
- Hyde, Hist. Nerdilud. p. 241.
-
-In the game called Chytrinda, in English[486] “Hot-cockles,” “Selling
-of pears,” or “How many plumbs for a penny,” one boy sat on the
-ground, and was called the chytra or pot, while his companions,
-forming themselves into a ring, ran round, plucking, pinching, or
-striking him as they went. If he who enacted the chytra succeeded in
-seizing upon one of the buffeters the captive took his place. Possibly
-it was during this play that a mischievous foundling, contrary to
-rule, poking, as he ran round, the boy in the centre with his foot,
-provoked from the latter the sarcastic inquiry, “What! dost thou kick
-thy mother in the belly?” alluding to the circumstance of the former
-having been exposed in a chytra.[487] Another form of the Chytrinda
-required the lad in the centre to move about with a pot on his head,
-where he held it with his left hand, while the others struck him, and
-cried out, “Who has the pot?” To which he replied, “I Midas,”
-endeavouring all the while to reach some one with his foot,—the first
-whom he thus touched being compelled to carry round the pot in his
-stead.[488]
-
-Footnote 486:
-
- Hyde, Hist. Nerdilud. p. 263.
-
-Footnote 487:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Thesm. 509. But see above, p. 122.
-
-Footnote 488:
-
- Poll. ix. 114.
-
-Another game, peculiar to girls, was the Cheli Chelone, or “the
-tortoise,” of which I remember no representative among English
-pastimes. It somewhat resembled the Chytrinda of the boys. For one
-girl sat on the ground and was called the tortoise, while her
-companions, running round, inquired “Tor-tortoise what art thou doing
-there in the middle?” “Spinning wool,” replied she, “the thread of the
-Milesian woof;” “And how, continued they, was thy son engaged when he
-perished?” “He sprang from his white steeds into the sea.”[489] If
-this was, as the language would intimate, a Dorian play, I should
-consider it a practical satire on the habits of the other Hellenic
-women, who remained like tortoises at home, carding and spinning,
-while their sons engaged in the exercises of the palæstra or the
-stadium. Possibly, also, originally the name may have had some
-connection with καλλιχέλωνος “beautiful tortoise,” the figure of this
-animal having been impressed on the money of the Peloponnesians; in
-fact, in a fragment of the Helots of Eupolis, we find the obolos
-distinguished by the epithet of καλλιχέλωνος.[490]
-
-Footnote 489:
-
- Poll. ix. 125.
-
-Footnote 490:
-
- Id. ix. 74. Cf. Suid. v. Καλλικολώνη t. i. p. 1359. c. Meurs. De
- Lud. Græc. p. 41.
-
-The Kynitinda was so called from the verb κυνέω to kiss, as appears
-from Crates in his “Games,” a play in which the poet contrived to
-introduce an account of this and nearly all the other juvenile
-pastimes. The form of the sport being little known, the learned have
-sometimes confounded it with a kind of salute called the chytra in
-antiquity, and the “Florentine Kiss” in modern Italy, in which the
-person kissing took the other by the ears. Giraldi[491] says he
-remembers, when a boy, that his father and other friends, when kissing
-him, used sometimes to take hold of both his ears, which they called
-giving a “Florentine kiss.” He afterwards was surprised to find that
-this was a most ancient practice, commemorated both by the Greek and
-Latin authors. It obtained its name, as he conjectures, from the
-earthen vessel called chytra, which had two handles usually laid hold
-of by persons drinking out of it, as is still the practice with
-similar utensils in Spain. This writer mentions a present sent from
-the peninsula to Leo X, consisting of a great number of chytræ of red
-pottery, if we may so call them, of which he himself obtained one.
-Crates, as Hemsterhuis[492] ingeniously supposes, introduced a wanton
-woman playing at this game among the youths in order that she might
-enjoy the kisses of the handsome.
-
-Footnote 491:
-
- Opp. ii. p. 880. Theocrit. v. 133. Wart.—Poll. x. 100.
-
-Footnote 492:
-
- Comment. ad Poll. t. vi. p. 1180.
-
-The Epostrakismos[493] was what English boys call “Ducks and Drakes,”
-and sometimes, among our ancestors at least, “A duck and a drake and a
-white penny cake,” and was played with oyster-shells. Standing on the
-shore of the sea at the Peiræeus, for example, they flung the shells
-edgeways over the water so that they should strike it and bound
-upwards again and again from its surface. The boy whose shell made
-most leaps before sinking, won the game. Minucius Felix gives a very
-pretty description of this juvenile sport. “Behold, he says, boys
-playing in frolicsome rivalry with shells on the sea-shore. The game
-consists in picking up from the beach a shell rendered light by the
-constant action of the waves, and standing on an even place, and
-inclining the body, holding the shell flat between the fingers, and
-throwing it with the greatest possible force, so that it may rase the
-surface of the sea or skim along while it moves with gentle flow, or
-glances over the tops of the waves as they leap up in its track. That
-boy is esteemed the victor whose shell performs the longest journey or
-makes most leaps before sinking.”[494]
-
-Footnote 493:
-
- Poll. ix. 119.
-
-Footnote 494:
-
- Seber ad Poll. t. vi. p. 1188.
-
-The Akinetinda was a contention between boys, in which some one of
-them endeavoured to maintain his position unmoved. Good sport must
-have been produced by the next game called Schœnophilinda, or “Hiding
-the Rope.” In this a number of boys sat down in a circle, one of whom
-had a rope concealed about his person, which he endeavoured to drop
-secretly beside one of his companions. If he succeeded, the unlucky
-wight was started like a hare round the circle, his enemy following
-and laying about his shoulders. But on the other hand, if he against
-whom the plot was laid detected it, he obtained possession of the rope
-and enjoyed the satisfaction of flogging the plotter over the same
-course.
-
-The Basilinda[495] was a game in which one obtained by lot the rank of
-king, and the vanquished, whether one or many, became subject to him,
-to do whatever he should order. It passed down to the Christians, and
-was more especially practised during the feast of the Epiphany. It is
-commonly known under the name of Forfeits, and was formerly called
-“One penny,” “One penny come after me,” “Questions and commands,” “The
-choosing of king and queen on Twelfth night.” In the last-mentioned
-sense it is still prevalent in France, where it is customary for
-bakers to make a present to the families they serve, of a large cake
-in the form of a ring in which a small kidney bean has been concealed.
-The cake is cut up, the pieces are distributed to the company, and the
-person who gets the bean is king of the feast. This game entered in
-Greece likewise into the amusements of grown people, both men and
-women, as well as of children, and an anecdote, connected with it, is
-told of Phryne, who happened one day to be at a mixed party where it
-was played. By chance it fell to her lot to play the queen; upon
-which, observing that her female companions were rouged and lilied to
-the eyes, she maliciously ordered a basin and towel to be brought in,
-and that every woman should wash her face. Conscious of her own native
-beauty, she began the operation, and only appeared the fresher and
-more lovely. But alas for the others! When the anchusa, psimmuthion,
-and phukos had been removed by the water, their freckled and coarse
-skins exposed them to general laughter.[496]
-
-Footnote 495:
-
- Poll. ix. 110.
-
-Footnote 496:
-
- Galen. Protrept. § 10. Kühn. Compare the admirable note of
- Hemsterhuis ad Poll. t. vi. p. 1066. seq.
-
-The Ostrakinda was a game purely juvenile. A knot of boys having drawn
-a line on the ground, separated into two parties. A small earthenware
-disk or ostrakon, one side black with pitch, the other white, was then
-produced, and each party chose a side, white or black. The disk was
-then pitched along the line, and the party whose side came up was
-accounted victorious, and prepared to pursue while the others turned
-round and fled. The boy first caught obtained the name of the ass, and
-was compelled to sit down, the game apparently proceeding till all
-were thus caught and placed hors de combat. He who threw the ostrakon
-cried, “night or day,” the black side being termed _night_, and the
-opposite _day_. It was called the “Twirling of the ostrakon.” Plato
-alludes to it in the Phædros.[497]
-
-Footnote 497:
-
- Poll. ix. 111. seq. Plat. Phæd. t. i. p. 29. seq. Bekk.
-
-The Dielkustinda, “French and English,” was played chiefly in the
-palæstra, and occasionally elsewhere. It consisted simply in two
-parties of boys laying hold of each other by the hand, and pulling
-till one by one the stronger had drawn over the weaker to their side
-of the ground.
-
-The Phryginda was a game in which, holding a number of smooth and
-delicate fragments of pottery between the fingers of the left hand,
-they struck them in succession with the right so as apparently to
-produce a kind of music.[498]
-
-Footnote 498:
-
- Turneb. Advers. xxvii. 33. Poll. ix. 114. Comment. t. vi. p. 1178.
-
-There was another game called Kyndalismos, played with short batons,
-and requiring considerable strength and quickness of eye. A stick
-having been fixed up-right in a loose moist soil, the business was to
-dislodge it by throwing at it other batons from a distance; whence the
-proverb, “Nail is driven out by nail, and baton by baton.”[499] A
-person who played at this game was called by some of the Doric poets
-Kyndalopactes.[500] A similar game is played in England, in which the
-prize is placed upon the top of the upright stick. The player wins
-when the prize falls without the hole whence the upright has been
-dislodged.
-
-Footnote 499:
-
- Vid. Vatic. Append. Proverb. Cent. ii. prov. 12. et Ib. not. And.
- Schotto. Kühn ad Poll. t. vi. p. 1190.
-
-Footnote 500:
-
- Meursius, Græc. Lud. p. 26. and after him Pfeiffer, Ant. Græc. iv.
- p. 120. read κινδαλοπαίκτης, which Hemsterhuis observes is contrary
- to the authority of the MSS.
-
-The game of Ascoliasmos[501] branched off into several varieties, and
-afforded the Athenian rustics no small degree of sport. The first and
-most simple form consisted in hopping on one foot, sometimes in pairs,
-to see which in this way could go furthest. On other occasions the
-hopper undertook to overtake certain of his companions who were
-allowed the use of both legs. If he could touch one of them he came
-off conqueror. This variety of the game appears to have been the
-Empusæ ludus of the Romans. “Scotch hoppers,” or “Fox to thy hole,” in
-which boys, hopping on one leg, beat one another with gloves or pieces
-of leather tied at the end of strings, or knotted handkerchiefs, as in
-the _diable boîteux_ of the French. At other times victory depended on
-the number of hops, all hopping together and counting their
-springs,—the highest of course winning. But the most amusing variety
-of the game was that practised during the Dionysiac festival of the
-Askolia. Skins filled with wine or inflated with air, and extremely
-well oiled, were placed upon the ground, and on these the shoeless
-rustics leaped with one leg and endeavoured to maintain a footing,
-which they seldom could on account of their slipperiness. However, he
-who succeeded carried off the skin of wine as his prize.
-
-Footnote 501:
-
- Phurnutus, De Nat. Deorum, c. 30. p. 217. seq. Gale.—Poll. ix. 121.
- Sch. Aristoph. Plut. 1130. Kust.—Meurs. Græc. Fer. p. 52; Græc.
- Ludibunda, p. 6.
-
-A game, evidently also of rustics, was the Trygodiphesis, Tantali
-ludus, “Bobbing for cherries,” “Bob cherry,” in which something very
-nice was thrown into a bowl of wine lees, which the performer, with
-his hands behind his back, was to fish up with his lips. The fun was
-to see the ludicrous figure he cut with his face daubed and
-discoloured by the lees.
-
-Phitta Maliades, Phitta Meliai, Phitta Rhoiai, “Hasten, nymphs!” may
-be regarded as exclamations of encouragement uttered by Dorian girls,
-when engaged in a race.[502]
-
-Footnote 502:
-
- Poll. ix. 127. with the note of Hemsterhuis.
-
-Playing at ball was common, and received various names. Episkyros,
-Phæninda, Aporraxis and Ourania. The first of these games was also
-known by the names of the Ephebike and the Epikoinos. It was played
-thus: a number of young men assembling together in a place covered
-with sand or dust, drew across it a straight line, which they called
-Skyros, and at equal distances, on either side, another line. Then
-placing the ball on the Skyros, they divided into two equal parties,
-and retreated each to their lines, from which they immediately
-afterwards rushed forward to seize the ball. The person who picked it
-up, then cast it towards the extreme line of the opposite party, whose
-business it was to intercept and throw it back, and they won who by
-force or cunning compelled their opponents to overstep the boundary
-line.
-
-Daniel Souter[503] contends that this was the English game of
-football, into which perhaps it may, in course of time, have been
-converted. This rough and, it must be confessed, somewhat dangerous
-sport, originally, in all probability, introduced into this country by
-the Romans, may still on Shrove Tuesday be witnessed in certain towns
-of South Wales. The balls consist of bulls’ bladders protected by a
-thick covering of leather, and blown tight. Six or eight are made
-ready for the occasion, every window in the town is shut by break of
-day, at which time all the youths of the neighbourhood assemble in the
-streets. The ball is then thrown up in front of the town-hall, and the
-multitude, dividing into two parts, strive with incredible eagerness
-and enthusiasm to overcome their antagonists, each endeavouring to
-kick the foot-ball to the other extremity of the town. In the struggle
-severe kicks and wounds are given, and many fierce battles take place.
-The ball sometimes mounts thirty or forty feet above the tops of the
-highest houses and falls far beyond, or goes right over into the
-gardens, whither it is immediately followed by a crowd of young men.
-The sport is kept up all day, the hungry combatants recruiting their
-strength from time to time by copious horns of ale, and an abundant
-supply of the nice pancakes which the women sell in baskets at the
-corner of every street. To view this sport, thousands of persons
-assemble from all the country round, so that to the secluded
-population of those districts it is in some sort what the battle in
-the Platanistas was to the Spartans, or even what the Isthmian and
-Nemean games were to the whole of Greece.
-
-Footnote 503:
-
- Palamedes, iii. 4. p. 207. Alex. ab Alex. iii. 21.
-
-The Phæninda[504] is supposed to have received its name either from
-its inventor, Phænides (called Phænestios in Athenæus[505] and the
-Etymologicon Magnum), or from the verb Φενακίζειν[506] “to deceive,”
-because, making as though they would throw at one person, they
-immediately sent it at another, thus deluding the expectation of the
-former. It appears at first to have been played with the small ball
-called Harpaston, though the game with the large soft one may
-afterwards perhaps have also been called Phæninda. The variety named
-Aporraxis consisted in throwing the ball with some force against the
-ground and repelling it constantly as it rebounded; he who did this
-most frequently, winning. In the game called Ourania, the player,
-bending back his body, flung up the ball with all his might into the
-air; on which there arose a contention among his companions who should
-first catch it in its descent, as Homer appears to intimate in his
-description of the Phæacian sport. They likewise played at ball in the
-modern fashion against a wall, in which the person who kept it up
-longest, won, and was called king; the one who lost, obtained the name
-of ass, and was constrained by the laws of the game to perform any
-task set him by the king.[507]
-
-Footnote 504:
-
- Cf. Souter. Palam. iii. 3. p. 201.
-
-Footnote 505:
-
- Deipnosoph. i. 26.
-
-Footnote 506:
-
- Cf. Schweigh. ad Athen. t. vi. p. 248. seq.
-
-Footnote 507:
-
- Poll. ix. 106.
-
-A game generally played in the gymnasia was the Skaperda. In this a
-post was set up with a hole near the top and a rope passed through it.
-Two young men then seized each one end of the rope, and turning their
-back to the post exerted their utmost strength to draw their
-antagonist up the beam. He who raised his opponent highest won.
-Sometimes they tried their strength by binding themselves together,
-back to back, and pulling different ways.
-
-The Himanteligmos, “pricking the garter,” in Ireland “pricking the
-loop,” was really an ingenious amusement. It consisted in doubling a
-thong, and twisting it into numerous labyrinthine folds, which done,
-the other party put the end of a peg into the midst in search of the
-point of duplication. If he missed the mark the thong unwound without
-entangling the peg; but if he dropped it into the right ring his peg
-was caught and the game won. Hemsterhuis[508] supposes the Gordian
-knot to have been nothing but a variety of the Himanteligmos. He
-conjectures that the boys of Abdera were fond of this game, on which
-account the sophisms of Democritus were called ἱμαντελικτεαὶ, and
-hence probably a sophist, as one who twists words together, to _lash_
-others, was called Himantelicteus.
-
-Footnote 508:
-
- Ad Poll. t. vi. p. 1186. sqq. Cf. Plut. Symp. i. 1.
-
-Another game, not entirely confined to children, was the Chalkismos,
-which consisted in twisting round rapidly on a board or table a piece
-of money, and placing the point of the finger so dexterously on its
-upper edge as to put a stop to its motion without permitting it to
-fall. This was a favourite amusement of Phryne the hetaira, as
-building houses of cards was of La Belle Stuart.[509] Some of these
-sports were peculiar to the female sex,[510] as the Pentalitha, which
-is still played by girls in some remote provinces of our island, where
-it is called “Dandies.” The whole apparatus of the game consisted in
-five astragals—knuckle bones—pebbles, or little balls, which, gathered
-up rapidly, were thrown into the air and attempted to be caught in
-falling on the back of the hand or between the slightly spread
-fingers. If any fell it was allowable to pick them up, provided this
-were done with the fingers of the same hand on which the other
-astragals rested.[511] The girls of France, according to Bulenger,
-still amuse themselves with the Pentalitha, there played with five
-little glass balls, which are flung in the air and caught so
-dexterously as seldom to fall either on the table or on the ground. I
-have never, however, seen it played myself in that country.
-
-Footnote 509:
-
- Poll. ix. 118.
-
-Footnote 510:
-
- The game of astragals, properly so called, was common to both sexes
- (Paus. vi. 24. 7), who saw in Elis one of the Graces, represented
- with an astragal in her hand, while her two companions held the one
- a rose, the other a branch of myrtle, symbolical of their
- relationship to Aphrodite. The poets sometimes transfer these sports
- of earth to the Olympian halls, where we find Eros and Ganymede
- playing with golden astragals—Cf. Apollon. Rhod. iii. 117. seq. Cf.
- Odyss. α. 107. Il. χ. 87. seq.
-
-Footnote 511:
-
- Poll. ix. 126.
-
-The Astragalismos,[512] which by the Romans was denominated talorum or
-taxillorum ludus, (by Hyde through the Greek πάσσαλος, derived from
-the Hebræo-Punic Assila,) by the Arabs Ka’b or Shezn, by the Persians
-Shesh-buzhûl bâzi, by the Turks Depshelìm, (played in their country
-both by girls and boys,) by the French Garignon or Osselets, in
-English “Cockall.”[513] In the game of astragals the Persians, as is
-implied in the name given above, often use six bones while the Greeks
-employed only four, which were thrown either on a table or on the
-floor. According to Lucian,[514] the huckle bones were sometimes those
-of the African gazelle.
-
-Footnote 512:
-
- Children, according to Lysander, were to be deceived with astragals,
- and men with oaths.—Plut. Lysan. § 8.
-
-Footnote 513:
-
- Hyde, Hist. Talor. § 2. t. ii. p. 314.
-
-Footnote 514:
-
- Amor. § 16. Theoph. Char. c. 5. See Nixon. Acc. of Antiq. at Hercul.
- Phil. Trans. vol. 50. pt. i. p. 88. Hyde. Hist. Talor. p. 137.
-
-The several sides of the astragal or huckle bone had their character
-expressed by numbers, and obtained separate names, which determined
-the value of the throw.[515] Thus, the side showing the Monas was
-called the Dog, the opposite side Chias, and the throw Chios. In
-cockall as in dice there are neither twos nor fives. The highest
-number, six, was called the Coan (συνορικὸς or ἑξίτης); the Dog or one
-was called the Chian or dog-chance; to which the old proverb alluded
-Κῶος πρὸς χῖον, six to one. To have the Dog turn up was to lose,
-hence, perhaps, the phrase, “going to the dogs,” that is, playing a
-losing game. The throw of eight was denominated Stesichoros, because
-the poet’s tomb at Himera consisted of a perfect octagon. Among the
-forty who succeeded to the thirty at Athens Euripides was one, and
-hence, if the throw of the astragals amounted to forty points, they
-bestowed upon it the name of Euripides. All animals in which the
-astragal is found have it in the hough or pastern of the hind legs.
-The τὸ πρανὲς, the gibbous side or blank, because it counts for
-nothing; the τὸ κοῖλον, the hollow side or “put in;” the χῶα, the
-tortuous side, "cockall," or “take all,” so called because it wins the
-stake; the smooth side τα χῖα, “take half,” because of the money put
-in, it wins half. Among the Greeks and Romans the _put in_ was called
-trias, the blank tetras, the half-monas, and the cockall hexas.[516]
-By the Arabs they are denominated the thief, the lamb, the wezeer, and
-the sultan; by the Turks the robber, the ploughman, the kihaya, or the
-dog, and the bey; by the Persians the robber, the rustic, the wezeer,
-and the schah; by the Armenians the thief, the ploughman, the steward,
-and the lord. The number of casts among the Greeks, according to
-Eustathius, amounted to thirty-five.[517] Pliny[518] speaks of a work
-of Polycletos representing naked boys playing at this game, and the
-reader will probably remember the mutilated group in the British
-Museum, in which a boy having evidently been beaten at astragals, is
-biting in revenge the leg of his conqueror.
-
-Footnote 515:
-
- Hyde. Hist. Talor. p. 141. sqq. Poll. ix. 100.
-
-Footnote 516:
-
- Arist. Hist. Anim. ii. 2. p. 30. Bekk.
-
-Footnote 517:
-
- Meurs. Græc. Lud. p. 7.
-
-Footnote 518:
-
- xxxiv. 19. Vid. Calcagnin, Dissert. de Talis. J. Cammer. Comment. de
- Utriusque Ling. c. 846.
-
-To play at Odd or Even[519] was common; so that we find Plato
-describing a knot of boys engaged in this game in a corner of the
-undressing room of the gymnasium. There was a kind of divination by
-astragals, the bones being hidden under the hand, and the one party
-guessing whether they were odd or even. The same game was occasionally
-played with beans, walnuts, or almonds, or even with money, if we may
-credit Aristophanes, who describes certain serving-men playing at Odd
-or Even with golden staters.[520] There was a game called Eis
-Omillan,[521] in which they drew a circle on the ground, and, standing
-at a little distance, pitched the astragals at it; to win consisting
-in making them remain within the ring. Another form of the Eis Omillan
-was to place a trained quail within a circle, on a table for example,
-out of which the point was to drive it by tapping it with the middle
-finger. If it reared at the blow, and retreated beyond the line, its
-master lost his wager. The play called Tropa[522] was also generally
-performed with astragals, which were pitched into a small hole, formed
-to receive such things when skilfully thrown. The common acorn, and
-fruit of the holm oak, were often substituted for astragals in this
-game. The Ephentinda seems to have consisted in pitching an ostrakon
-into a circle, so as to cause it to remain there. The Skeptinda
-consisted in placing an ostrakon, or a piece of money, on the ground,
-and pitching another at it so as to make it turn.[523]
-
-Footnote 519:
-
- Hyde, Hist. Nerdilud. p. 261.
-
-Footnote 520:
-
- Plut. 817. sqq. Cf. Sch. in loc.
-
-Footnote 521:
-
- Suid. et Hesych. in v. Poll. ix. 102. Cf. Meurs. Græc. Ludib. p. 69.
-
-Footnote 522:
-
- Cf. Meurs. de Lud. Græc. p. 61. Hesych. v. Τρόπα.
-
-Footnote 523:
-
- Poll. ix. 117.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
- ELEMENTARY INSTRUCTION.
-
-
-In Greece, as everywhere else, education[524] commenced in the
-nursery; and though time has very much obscured all remaining traces
-of the instruction which the children there received, we are not left
-on this point wholly without information. From the very day of his
-birth man begins to be acted on by those causes that furnish his mind
-with ideas. As his intelligence acquires strength, the five sluices
-which let in all that flood of knowledge which afterwards overflows
-his mind, appear to be enlarged, and education at first, and for some
-time, consists in watching over the nature and quality of the ideas
-conveyed inward by those channels. It is difficult to say when actual
-instruction commenced: but among the earliest formal attempts at
-impressing traditionary knowledge on the infant mind was the
-repetition by mothers and nurses of fables and stories, not always, if
-Plato may be credited, constructed with a religious or ethical
-purpose.[525] They, in fact, introduced into the minds of their
-children the legends of the mythology, under the forms of which truths
-of the greatest importance, such as Bacon has developed in his “Wisdom
-of the Ancients,” lay sometimes concealed, though more frequently,
-perhaps, they inculcated no useful lesson, but were the mere sportive
-creations of fancy, or if they contained any moral kernel the shell in
-which it was cased was too hard for the teeth of the vulgar. Such, for
-example, as the legend of Zeus in Hesiod mutilating his father Kronos,
-which, in Plato’s opinion, was not to be delivered to the empty-headed
-multitude or to untaught children; but, having sacrificed, not a hog,
-but the most precious victim, in mysterious secrecy to a few.
-
-Footnote 524:
-
- Among the ancient writers on education, of which the greater number
- have perished, was Clearchos of Soli, on whom see Voss. de Hist.
- Græc. i. Athen. xv. 54. Men. in Diog. Laert. p. 4. b.
-
-Footnote 525:
-
- Rep. ii. t. vi. p. 94.—Cf. Adolph. Cramer, 8, 9.
-
-Wholly different from these, however, were the fables[526] properly so
-called, which, invented apparently by Hesiod,[527] (at least his Hawk
-and Nightingale is the oldest example extant in Hellenic literature,)
-were afterwards sprinkled by the greatest poets, through their
-writings, or spontaneously uttered in pressing emergencies to warn
-their countrymen against the approaches of tyranny. Archilochos’ Eagle
-and Fox[528] was famous throughout antiquity, as was likewise the
-Horse and the Stag, related by Stesichoros[529] to the people of
-Himera, to put them on their guard against the Machiavellian policy of
-Gelon. But the most complete, perhaps, of these ancient compositions
-is the fable of the lion, delivered by Eumenes to the Macedonian
-generals under his order, when they had been tampered with by
-Antigonos, who would have persuaded them to disband.[530]
-
-Footnote 526:
-
- Cf. Suid. v. Καὶ τὸ τοῦ λύκου. i. 1427.
-
-Footnote 527:
-
- Opp. et. Dies, 202–212. Quintil. v. 2.
-
-Footnote 528:
-
- Plat. Rep. l. ii. cap. 8. c. p. 117. Schol. Aristoph. Av. 652.
- Philostrat. Imag. i. 3.
-
-Footnote 529:
-
- Phot. Bib. 139. b. 8. Hor. Epist. i. 10. Gyraldi, de Poet. Histor.
- p. 462. a. sqq. Aristot. Rhet. ii. 20.
-
-Footnote 530:
-
- Diod. Sic. l. xix. c. 25.
-
-“It is said,” observed the Prince, “that once upon a time a lion
-falling in love with a young maiden came to make proposals of marriage
-to her father. The old man replied that he was quite ready to bestow
-on him his daughter upon one condition, namely, that he should pluck
-out his teeth and his claws, for that he feared his majesty might upon
-the wedding night forget himself and unwittingly destroy the bride. To
-these terms the lion consented, and allowed his teeth and claws to be
-pulled out, upon which the father seeing he had lost the only things
-which rendered him terrible fell upon him with a club and beat him to
-death.” The Æsopic fables[531] which Socrates a few days before his
-death amused himself by turning into verse,[532] are known to us
-solely by comparatively modern imitations, and of those which were
-denominated Sybaritic we know nothing[533] beyond the name; for though
-one scholiast informs us that the Sybaritic fables brought men upon
-the scene, as the Æsopic did animals, another states the direct
-contrary. In the earlier and ruder ages of Greece, however, these
-compositions were in great repute, as they are still among the people
-of the East. To the infancy of nations as of individuals the wisdom
-they contain is, in fact, always palatable; for which reason they were
-highly esteemed by Martin Luther as particularly adapted to the spirit
-of his times.
-
-Footnote 531:
-
- Aristoph. Pac. 128. Vesp. 1392, sqq. et Scholia.
-
-Footnote 532:
-
- Diog. Laert. ii. 5. 22.
-
-Doubtless we know too little of how the foundation of the republican
-character was laid in the ancient commonwealths; but it was laid by
-woman, and for centuries cannot have been laid amiss, as the glorious
-superstructure of virtue and patriotism erected upon it fully
-demonstrates. On this point we must reject the testimony of Plato’s
-academic dream. The historic fields of Marathon, Platæa, Thermopylæ,
-and a thousand others confute his fanciful theorising, proving
-incontestably that the love of glory and independence could, in the
-very polities which lie least esteemed, achieve triumphs unknown to
-the subjects of other governments.
-
-Footnote 533:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Av. 471. Sch. Vesp. 1251.
-
-At seven years[534] old boys were removed from the harem and sent
-under the care of a governor to a public school, which, from the story
-of Bedreddin Hassan, we find to have been formerly the practice among
-the Arabs, even for the sons of distinguished men and Wezeers. “When
-seven years had passed over him his grandfather, (Shemseddeen, Wezeer
-of the Sultan of Egypt,) committed him to a schoolmaster, whom he
-charged to educate him with great care.”[535]
-
-Footnote 534:
-
- Aristot. Polit. vii. 15.
-
-Footnote 535:
-
- Arabian Nights, i. 286. Lane’s Translation.
-
-Mischievous no doubt the boys of Hellas were, as boys will everywhere
-be, and many pranks would they play in spite of the crabbed old slaves
-set over them by their parents; on which account, probably, it is that
-Plato considers boys, of all wild beasts the most audacious, plotting,
-fierce and intractable.[536] But the urchins now found that it was one
-thing to nestle under mamma’s wing at home, and another to delve under
-the direction of a didaskalos, and at school-hours, after the bitter
-roots of knowledge. For the school-boys of Greece tasted very little
-of the sweets of bed after dawn. “They rose with the light,” says
-Lucian, “and with pure water washed away the remains of sleep, which
-still lingered on their eyelids.”[537] Having breakfasted on bread and
-fruit, to which through the allurements of their pædagogues they
-sometimes added wine,[538] they sallied forth to the didaskaleion, or
-schoolmaster’s lair as the comic poets jocularly termed it,[539]
-summer and winter, whether the morning smelt of balm, or was deformed
-by sleet or snow, drifting like meal from a sieve down the rocks of
-the Acropolis.
-
-Footnote 536:
-
- De Legg. vi. t. viii. p. 41. Creuzer. de Civ. Athen. p. 556.
-
-Footnote 537:
-
- Amor. § 44.
-
-Footnote 538:
-
- Athen. xiii. 61. sqq.
-
-Footnote 539:
-
- Poll. iv. 19.
-
-Aristophanes has left us a picture, dashed off with his usual
-grotesque vigour, of a troop of Attic lads marching on a winter’s
-morning to school.[540]
-
- “Now will I sketch the ancient plan of training,
- When justice was in vogue and wisdom flourished.
- First, modesty restrained the youthful voice
- So that no brawl was heard. In order ranged,
- The boys from all the neighbourhood appeared,
- Marching to school, naked, though down the sky
- Tumbled the flaky snow like flour from sieve.
- Arrived, and seated wide apart, the master
- First taught them how to chaunt Athena’s praise,
- ‘Pallas unconquered, stormer of cities!’ or
- ‘Shout far resounding’ in the self-same notes
- Their fathers learned. And if through mere conceit
- Some innovation-hunter strained his throat
- With scurril lays mincing and quavering,
- Like any Siphnian or Chian fop—
- As is too much the fashion since that Phrynis[541]
- Brought o’er Ionian airs—quickly the scourge
- Rained on his shoulders blows like hail as one
- Plotting the Muses’ downfal. In the Palæstra
- Custom required them decently to sit,
- Decent to rise, smoothing the sandy floor
- Lest any traces of their form should linger
- Unsightly on the dust. When in the bath
- Grave was their manner, their behaviour chaste.
- At table, too, no stimulating dishes,
- Snatched from their elders, such as fish or anis,
- Parsley or radishes or thrushes, roused
- The slumbering passions.”[542]
-
-Footnote 540:
-
- Cf. Plato, de Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 41. seq.
-
-Footnote 541:
-
- For an account of this musician, see Pollux iv. 66. with the notes
- of Kühn and Iungermann, t. iv. p. 709. sqq.
-
-Footnote 542:
-
- Aristoph. Nub. 961. sqq. Cf. Plaut. Bacchid. iii. 3.
-
-The object of sending boys to school was twofold: first to cultivate
-and harmonise their minds by arts and literature; secondly, so to
-occupy them that no time could be allowed for evil thoughts and
-habits. On this account, Aristotle enumerating Archytas’ rattle among
-the principal toys of children, denominates education the rattle of
-boys.[543] In order, too, that its effect might be the more sure and
-permanent, no holidays[544], or vacations appear to have been allowed,
-while irregularity or lateness of attendance was severely
-punished.[545] The theories broached by Montagne, Locke, and others,
-that boys are to be kept in order by reason and persuasion were not
-anticipated by the Athenians.[546] They believed that to reduce the
-stubborn will to obedience, and enforce the wholesome laws of
-discipline, masters must be armed with the power of correction, and
-accordingly their teachers and gymnasiarchs checked with stripes[547]
-the slightest exhibition of stubbornness or indocility.[548]
-
-Footnote 543:
-
- Polit. viii. 6. 268. Gœttl.
-
-Footnote 544:
-
- Casaub. ap. Theoph. Char. p. 273.
-
-Footnote 545:
-
- Plaut. Bacchid. iii. 3. 22.
-
-Footnote 546:
-
- Plato, indeed, at one time entertained a similar fancy.—De Rep. t.
- vi. p. 385. (Cf. Muret. in Aristot. Ethic. 71.) But, afterwards, in
- his old age, adopted the general conviction of mankind, that he who
- spares the rod spoils the child.—De Legg. t. viii. p. 12. seq.
- Varro, however, who wrote much on education, observes, that
- “remotissimum ad discendum formido, ac nimius timor, et omnis
- perturbatio animi. Contra delectatio pro telo ad discendum.” Victor.
- Var. Lect. l. xv. c. 2. Theodoric, the Gothic king of Italy, had
- another reason for sparing the rod in education. The child, he said,
- who had trembled at a rod would never dare to look upon a
- sword.—Gibbon vii. 19. This Gothic prince was not, therefore,
- acquainted with the Spartan system of education.
-
-Footnote 547:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 959.
-
-Footnote 548:
-
- Cf. Cressoll. Theat. Rhet. v. 6. p. 471. seq.
-
-Nor did their pædagogues[549] or governors behave towards them with
-less strictness. These were persons,—slaves for the most part,—who at
-Athens as in the rest of Greece, Sparta not excepted, were from the
-earliest ages intrusted with the care of boys, and whose ministry
-could on no account be dispensed with. By Plato[550] even these
-precautions were deemed insufficient. In his ideal state he would have
-the pædagogues themselves, as at Sparta, under the strictest
-inspection, making it the duty of every citizen to have an eye upon
-them, and arming him with the power to correct their delinquencies as
-well as those of the boys under their charge. There was to be,
-moreover, a general inspector intrusted with authority to punish
-neglect, by whichsoever of the parties committed. Upon these points
-the views of the Athenians were unquestionably judicious, for since
-boys did not amongst them pass at once from the hands of their mothers
-and domestic guardianship into those of the state as at Sparta, such
-governors were necessary to preserve their manners from defilement and
-contamination.[551] Their principal duty consisted in leading the lad
-to and from school, in attending him to the theatre, to the public
-games, to the forum, and wherever else it was thought fit he should
-go.[552] It has been by some conjectured that while the boys continued
-under the care of the schoolmaster the governors remained in the
-house, or in a building adjoining denominated the pædagogeion, to
-await their return; but the inference, drawn chiefly from the name of
-the edifice, is erroneous; pædagogeion was employed to signify the
-school itself,[553] and we have the testimony of Plato to prove that
-the pædagogue having delivered the boy to the didaskalos, usually
-returned to his master’s house.
-
-Footnote 549:
-
- On these and the other persons engaged in the education of youth,
- see Bergmann, ad Isoc. Areop. § 14.
-
-Footnote 550:
-
- De Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 42. See p. 11 of Cramer’s excellent little
- pamphlet, which I have frequently found extremely useful.
-
-Footnote 551:
-
- Xenoph. de Rep. Laced. ii. 1. 2.
-
-Footnote 552:
-
- Plat. Lysis. t. i. p. 118. De Legg. iv. t. viii. p. 325. De Rep.
- iii. t. vi. p. 128.
-
-Footnote 553:
-
- Poll. iv. 19. Ulp. ad Demosth. de Cor. § 78. Orat. Att. t. x. p.
- 113. Plat. Lysis. t. i. p. 145.
-
-On the character of these governors[554] antiquity appears to have
-transmitted us more satire than information. If we may credit some
-writers, it was not merely slaves who were intrusted with the care of
-boys, but often the meanest and vilest of slaves,—base in mind,
-depraved in manners,—whose guardianship, when they chanced to be
-crabbed and morose, could be no other than disgusting to their
-charges; and, when inclined to indulgence, most pernicious. Nay, were
-they themselves corrupt, what could be of more evil tendency than
-their own example? They who take this view of the matter appear to me
-illogical and inconsistent.[555] Though aware that these men were
-chosen by the parents to preserve their children from bad example,
-from the infection of corrupt manners, from the allurements of vicious
-companions, these writers persuade themselves that they voluntarily
-gave them as companions and guardians men worse than whom could not be
-found. It is more reasonable to conclude that when these pædagogues
-proved unworthy of the trust reposed in them they were sufficient
-masters of hypocrisy to conceal their vices at home, and only revealed
-themselves to their young masters gradually as their lessons produced
-their evil fruits. Thus, it is clear, that the father whom the comic
-writer Plato, in his Fellow Deceiver,[556] introduced reproaching the
-pædagogue who had corrupted his son, knew nothing of his evil ways
-when he delivered the lad to his keeping.
-
- “The youth, O wretch, whom I intrusted to thee
- Thou hast perverted, teaching him vile habits
- Once stranger to his mind; for now he drinks
- Even in the morning, which was not his wont.”
-
-Footnote 554:
-
- Plut. de Lib. Educ. § 7. The Athenians sought to create a high idea
- of this class of persons by annually offering sacrifice to Connidas,
- the reputed pædagogue of Theseus.—Plut. Thes. § 4.
-
-Footnote 555:
-
- Cram. de Educ. Puer. ap. Athen. p. 12.
-
-With the greatest reason we may suppose, that of all the domestics in
-the family the most staid and sober, the most attached, the most
-faithful, were chosen to fulfil this important duty, such as Plautus
-describes an honest pædagogue,—
-
- Eademque erat hæc disciplina olim, cum tu adolescens eras?
- Nego tibi hoc annis viginti fuisse primis copiæ,
- Digitum longe a pædagogo pedem ut efferres ædibus,
- Ante solem exorientem nisi in palæstram veneras,
- Gymnasii præfecto haud mediocres pœnas penderes.
- Idque ubi obtigerat, hoc etiam ad malum arcessabatur malum
- Et discipulus et magister perhibebantur improbi.
- Ubi cursu, luctando, hasta, disco, pugillatu, pila,
- Saliendo sese exercebant magis, quam, scorto aut saviis:
- Ibi suam ætatem extendebant, non in latebrosis locis.
- Inde de hippodromo et palæstra ubi revenisses domum,
- Cincticulo præcinctus in sella apud magistrum assideres:
- Cum librum legeres. Si unam peccavisses syllabam,
- Fieret corium tam maculosum quam est nutricis pallium
- * * * * * Id equidem ego certo scio.
- Nam olim populi prius honorem capiebat suffragio,
- Quam magistri desinebat esse dicto obediens.[557]
-
-Footnote 556:
-
- Athen. xiii. 61. 63.
-
-Footnote 557:
-
- Plaut. Bacchid. Act iii. Sc. 3.
-
-Lucian, too, speaking of the attendants of youths in the better times
-of the republic, describes them as an honourable company who followed
-their young masters to the schools, not with combs and looking-glasses
-like the attendants of ladies, but with the venerable instruments of
-wisdom in their hands, many-leaved tablets or books recording the
-glorious deeds of their ancestors, or if proceeding to the music
-master bearing, instead of these, the melodious lyre.[558]
-
-Footnote 558:
-
- Amor. §. 44.
-
-In fact the fortunes of war often in those days reduced men of virtue
-and ability to the condition of slaves, when they would naturally be
-chosen as the governors of youth. Thus we find Diogenes the Cynic
-purchased by a rich Corinthian, who intrusted to him the education of
-his sons. The account which antiquity has left us of his sale,
-reception by his master, and manner of teaching, being extremely
-brief, we shall here give it entire. Hermippos[559] who wrote a small
-treatise called the Sale of Diogenes, observes that when the
-philosopher was exposed in the slave-market and interrogated
-respecting his qualifications, he replied that “He could command men;”
-and then addressing himself to the herald, bade him inquire whether
-there was any one present who wanted a master. Being forbidden to sit
-down, he said “This matters nothing, for fish are bought in whatever
-way they may lie.” He remarked also, that he wondered that when people
-were buying a pot or a dish they examined it on all sides, whereas
-when they purchased a man they were contented with simply looking at
-him. Afterwards, when he had become the slave of Xeniades, he informed
-his owner that he expected the same obedience to be paid to him as men
-yield to a pilot or a physician.
-
-Footnote 559:
-
- Diog. Laert. Vit. Diog. vi. ii. 4. sqq. with the observation of
- Menage, t. ii. p. 138.
-
-It is further related by Eubulos, who likewise wrote a treatise on
-this incident, that Diogenes conducted with the utmost care the
-education of the children under his charge. In addition to the
-ordinary studies, he taught them to ride, to draw the bow, to use the
-sling, and to throw the javelin. In the palæstra, moreover, where,
-contrary to the Athenian practice he remained to watch over the boys,
-Diogenes would not permit the master of the Gymnasium to exercise them
-after the manner of the athletæ; but in those parts only of
-gymnastics, which had a tendency to animate them and strengthen their
-constitutions. They learned also by heart,[560] under his direction,
-numerous sentences from the poets and historians, as well as from his
-own writings. It was his practice likewise very greatly to abridge his
-explanations in order that they might the more easily be committed to
-memory. At home he habituated them to wait on themselves, to be
-content with frugal fare, and drink water, from which it may be
-inferred that others drank wine. He accustomed them to cut their hair
-close, not to be fastidious in dress, and to walk abroad with him
-barefoot and without a chiton, silent and with downcast eyes.[561] He
-also went out with them to hunt. On their part they took great care of
-him, and pleaded his cause with their parents. He therefore grew old
-in the family, and they performed for him the rites of sepulture.
-
-Footnote 560:
-
- I may say with Herault de Sechelle “Apprendre _par cœur_; ce mot me
- plait. Il n’y a guère en effet que le cœur, qui retienne bien, et
- qui retienne vîte.”—Voyage à Montbar, &c. p. 77.
-
-Footnote 561:
-
- Cf. Luc. Amor. § 44. Καὶ χλανίδα ταῖς ἐπωμίαις περόναις συῤῥάψας ἀπὸ
- τῆς πατρῴας ἑστίας ἐξέρχεται κάτω κεκυφὼς, καὶ μηδένα τῶν ἀπαντών
- τῶν ἐξ ἐναντίου προσβλέπων. In his exhortation to Demonicos,
- Isocrates has thrown together numerous precepts which almost
- constitute a code of morals and politeness. They are far superior to
- Lord Chesterfield’s even where the Graces only are recommended; and
- have the advantage of almost always subjoining the reason to the
- rule.
-
-Now what Diogenes was in the house of Xeniades numerous pædagogues
-were doubtless found to be in other parts of Greece. But the majority
-it is thought were open to blame; and so they are everywhere, and so
-they would be, though taken from the best classes of mankind. That is,
-they were men with many failings, far from what could be wished; but
-that their character upon the whole was respectable seems to me
-demonstrated by the powers delegated to them by the parents. For not
-only could they use upon occasion, as we have said, menace and harsh
-language,—they were even permitted to have recourse to blows, in order
-to preserve their pupils from vices which none would have sooner
-taught than they, had their characters been such as is commonly
-believed. For example, would they have made a drunkard the guardian of
-a boy’s sobriety? a thief the guardian of his honesty? a libertine of
-his chastity? a coarse and ribald jester the inculcator of modesty and
-purity of language?[562]
-
-Footnote 562:
-
- Cf. Dion. Chrysost. ii. p. 261; i. 299.
-
-At home, of course, the influence and example of the parents surpassed
-all other influences, of the mother more especially, who up to their
-manhood retained over her sons the greatest authority. Of this a
-playful illustration occurs in the Lysis of Plato.[563] Socrates,
-interrogating the youth respecting the course of his studies, inquires
-archly whether when in the harem he was not as a matter of course
-permitted to play with his mother’s wool basket, and loom, and spathe,
-and shuttle?
-
-Footnote 563:
-
- Opp. t. i. p. 118. The influence of imitation over the gesture,
- voice, and thoughts of youth is forcibly pointed out in the
- Republic.—t. vi. p. 124.
-
-“If I touched them,” replied Lysis, laughing, “I should soon feel the
-weight of the shuttle upon my fingers.”
-
-“But,” proceeds the philosopher, “if your mother or father require
-anything to be read or written for them, they, probably, prefer your
-services to those of any other person?”
-
-“No doubt.”
-
-“And in this case, as you have been instructed in reading and
-spelling, they allow you to proceed according to your own knowledge.
-So likewise, when you play to them on the lyre, they suffer you, as
-you please, to relax or tighten the chords, to touch them with the
-fingers, or strike them with the plectron,—do they not?”
-
-“Certainly.”
-
-From this it would appear that the authority of the parents was equal;
-though generally at Athens, as Plato[564] elsewhere complains, greater
-reverence was paid to the commands of the mother even than to those of
-the father. Indeed to be wanting in respect to her was there deemed
-the _ne plus ultra_ of depravity.[565] The father, however, of
-necessity took a considerable share in the instruction and moral
-training of his son,[566] who at home profited by his conversation,
-and, arrived at the proper age, accompanied him abroad.[567] When
-reduced to the state of orphanhood the republic took children under
-its own protection, not considering it safe to intrust them to the
-sole guidance of masters or pædagogues.
-
-Footnote 564:
-
- Repub. viii. 5. t. ii. p. 182. Stallb.
-
-Footnote 565:
-
- Aristoph. Nub. 1443. Δυοῖν δ᾽ ὀνομάτοιν σεβασμίοιν πᾶσαι τιμαι
- μένουσιν, ἐξίσου παρτὶ μητέρα προσκυνούντων.—Luc. Amor. § 19.
-
-Footnote 566:
-
- On the force of example and imitation see Plato, de Rep. t. vi. p.
- 124.
-
-Footnote 567:
-
- Plat. Lach. t. i. p. 269.—Among the public places to which a father
- might take his sons the courts of law were not included, though we
- find Demosthenes, when a boy, contriving to introduce himself, where
- unseen of the judges he might listen to the eloquence of
- Callistratos.—Victor. Var. Lect. l. xxx. c. 20.
-
-Care, too, was taken lest those public schools, established for the
-advancement of virtue and morals, should themselves be converted into
-nurseries of vice. They were by law[568] forbidden to be opened before
-sunrise, and were closed at sunset; nor during the day could any other
-men be introduced besides the teachers,[569] though it appears from
-some of Plato’s dialogues that this enactment was not very strictly
-observed.[570] To prevent habits of brawling, boys were forbidden to
-assemble in crowds in the streets on their way to school. Nor were
-these laws deemed sufficient; but still further to protect their
-morals ten annual magistrates called Sophronistæ, one from each tribe,
-were elected by show of hands,[571] whose sole business it was to
-watch over the manners of youth. This magistracy, dated as far back as
-the age of Solon,[572] and continued in force to the latest time. The
-Gymnasiarch, another magistrate,[573] was intrusted with the
-superintendence of the Gymnasia, which, like the public games and
-festivals, appeared to require peculiar care; and, if we can receive
-the testimony of Plautus[574] for the classical ages of the
-commonwealth, transgressors received severe chastisement.
-
-Footnote 568:
-
- Æsch. cont. Timarch. § 5, 6.
-
-Footnote 569:
-
- See Theoph. Char. c. 5. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 180.
-
-Footnote 570:
-
- Lysis. t. i. p. 145. Theætet. t. iii. p. 179.
-
-Footnote 571:
-
- Etym. Mag. 742. 38.
-
-Footnote 572:
-
- Cramer de Educ. Puer. ap. Athen. p. 13.
-
-Footnote 573:
-
- Vandale Dissert. pp. 584–727.
-
-Footnote 574:
-
- Bacchid. iii. 3.
-
-It has sometimes been imagined that in Greece separate edifices were
-not erected as with us expressly for school-houses, but that both the
-didaskalos and the philosopher taught their pupils in fields, gardens
-or shady groves.[575] But this was not the common practice, though
-many schoolmasters appear to have had no other place wherein to
-assemble their pupils than the portico of a temple[576] or some
-sheltered corner in the street, where in spite of the din of business
-and the throng of passengers the worship of learning was publicly
-performed. Here, too, the music-masters frequently gave their lessons,
-whether in singing or on the lyre, which practice explains the
-anecdote of the musician, who, hearing the crowd applaud one of his
-scholars, gave him a box on the ear, observing, “Had you played well
-these blockheads would not have praised you.” A custom very similar
-prevails in the East, where, in recesses open to the street, we often
-see the turbaned schoolmaster with a crowd of little Moslems about
-him, tracing letters on their large wooden tablets or engaged in
-recitations of the Koran.
-
-Footnote 575:
-
- See Coray, Disc. Prelim. sur Hippoc. de Aër. et Loc. § 41. t. i. p.
- 46. seq.
-
-Footnote 576:
-
- In the Antichita di Ercolano (t. iii. p. 213.) we find a
- representation of one of these schools during the infliction of
- corporal chastisement. Numerous boys are seated on forms reading,
- while a delinquent is horsed on the back of another in the true
- Etonian style. One of the carnifices holds his legs, while another
- applies the birch to his naked back. Occasionally in Greece we find
- that free boys were flogged with a leek in lieu of a birch. Sch.
- Aristoph. Ran. 622. Schneid. ad Theoph. Hist. Plant. vii. 4. 10. p.
- 574.
-
-But these were the schools of the humbler classes. For the children of
-the noble and the opulent spacious structures were raised, and
-furnished with tables, desks,—for that peculiar species of
-grammateion[577] which resembled the plate cupboard, can have been
-nothing but a desk,—forms, and whatsoever else their studies required.
-Mention is made of a school at Chios[578] which contained one hundred
-and twenty boys, all of whom save one were killed by the falling in of
-the roof. From another tragical story we learn that in Astypalæa,[579]
-one of the Cyclades, there was a school which contained sixty boys.
-The incidents connected with their death are narrated in the romantic
-style of the ancients. Cleomedes, a native of this island, having in
-boxing slain Iccos the Epidaurian, was accused of unfairness and
-refused the prize, upon which he became mad and returned to his own
-country. There, entering into the public school, he approached the
-pillar that supported the roof, and like another Sampson seized it in
-an access of frenzy, and wresting it from its basis brought down the
-whole building upon the children. He himself however escaped, but,
-being pursued with stones by the inhabitants, took sanctuary in the
-temple of Athena, where he concealed himself in the sacred chest. The
-people paying no respect to the holy place still pursued him and
-attempted to force open the lid, which he held down with gigantic
-strength. At length when the coffer was broken in pieces Cleomedes was
-nowhere to be found, dead or alive. Terrified at this prodigy they
-sent to consult the oracle of Delphi, by which they were commanded to
-pay divine honours to the athlete as the last of the heroes.[580]
-
-Footnote 577:
-
- Poll. iv. 18, 19. x. 57. seq.
-
-Footnote 578:
-
- Herod. vi. 27.
-
-Footnote 579:
-
- Called the Table of the Gods, from its beauty and amenity.—Steph. de
- Urb. in v. p. 189. b.
-
-Footnote 580:
-
- Paus. vi. 9. 6. seq. Plut. Rom. § 28.
-
-In the interior of the school there was commonly an oratory[581]
-adorned with statues of the Muses, where, probably in a kind of font,
-was kept a supply of pure water for the boys. Pretending often, when
-they were not, to be thirsty, they would steal in knots to this
-oratory, and there amuse themselves by splashing the water over each
-other; on which account the legislator ordained that strict watch
-should be kept over it. Every morning the forms were spunged,[582] the
-schoolroom was cleanly swept, the ink ground ready for use, and all
-things were put in order for the business of the day.
-
-Footnote 581:
-
- Sch. Æsch. cont. Tim. in Orator. Att. t. xii. p. 376 a.
-
-Footnote 582:
-
- Dem. de Cor. § 78. seq.
-
-The apparatus[583] of an ancient school was somewhat complicated:
-there were mathematical instruments, globes, maps, and charts of the
-heavens, together with boards whereon to trace geometrical figures,
-tablets, large and small, of box-wood, fir, or ivory[584] triangular
-in form, some folding with two, and others with many leaves; books too
-and paper, skins of parchment, wax for covering the tablets, which, if
-we may believe Aristophanes,[585] people sometimes ate when they were
-hungry.[586]
-
-Footnote 583:
-
- Pollux, iv. 19. Cf. Herod. vii. 239. ii. 21. Sch. Aristoph. Vesp.
- 529.
-
-Footnote 584:
-
- Poll. i. 234. Lucian. Ner. § 9. Amor. § 44. Antich. di Ercol. t. ii.
- p. 55. t. iii. p. 237.
-
-Footnote 585:
-
- Poll. x. 58, 59.
-
-Footnote 586:
-
- On this subject Isidorus Hispal. vi. 9. has a curious passage: “Ceræ
- literarum materies, parvulorum nutrices. Ipsæ dant ingenium pueris
- primordia sensus, quarum studium primi Græci tradidisse produntur.
- Græci enim et Thusci primum ferro in ceris scripserunt. Postea
- Romani jusserunt, ne graphium ferreum quis haberet. Undè et apud
- scribas dicebatur, Ceram ferro ne lædito. Postea institutum est, ut
- in cerâ ossibus scriberent, sicut indicat Alsa in Satyrâ dicens:
- Vertamus vomerem in ceram, mucroneque aremus osseo.” Cf. Pfeiffer,
- Antiq. Græc. p. 413.
-
-To the above were added rulers, reed-pens,[587] pen-cases, pen-knives,
-pencils, and last, though not least, the rod which kept them to the
-steady use of all these things.
-
-Footnote 587:
-
- It was as the instrument of literature that the reed subdued half
- the world, though Pliny only celebrates its conquest as an arrow.
- “Ac si quis Æthiopas, Ægyptum, Arabas, Indos, Scythas, Bactros,
- Sarmatarum tot gentes et Orientis, omniaque Parthorum regna
- diligentiùs computet, æqua fermè pars hominum in toto mundo calamis
- superata degit.”—Hist. Nat. xvi. 65.
-
-At Athens these schools were not provided by the state. They were
-private speculations, and each master was regulated in his charges by
-the reputation he had acquired and the fortunes of his pupils. Some
-appear to have been extremely moderate in their demands.[588]
-
-Footnote 588:
-
- Which was the case even among the sophists, as we find Proclos
- granting a perpetual admission to his lectures for a hundred
- drachmæ.—Philost. Vit. Soph. ii. 21. § 3. This he was the better
- enabled to do from his carrying on the business of a merchant.—§ 2.
- Professors’ charges appear to have been often disputed, as we find
- mention, in many authors, of law-suits between them and their
- pupils.—Lucian. Icaromenip. § 16. “The wages of industry are just
- and honourable, yet Isocrates shed tears at the first receipt of a
- stipend.”—Gibbon, vii. 146.
-
-There was for example a school-master named Hippomachos, upon entering
-whose establishment boys were required to pay down a mina, after which
-they might remain as long and benefit by his instructions as much as
-they pleased. Didaskaloi were not however held in sufficient respect,
-though as their scholars were sometimes very numerous,[589] as many
-for example as a hundred and twenty, it must often have happened that
-they became wealthy. From the life of Homer, attributed to
-Herodotus,[590] we glean some few particulars respecting the condition
-of a schoolmaster in remoter ages.
-
-Footnote 589:
-
- Athen. xiii. 47.
-
-Footnote 590:
-
- Vit. Hom. §§ 5. seq. 25. seq.
-
-Phemios it is there related kept a school at Smyrna, where he taught
-boys their letters and all those other parts of education then
-comprehended under the term music. His slave Chritheis, the mother of
-the poet, spun and wove the wool which Phemios received in payment
-from his scholars. She likewise introduced into his house great
-elegance and frugality, which so pleased the school-master that it
-induced him to marry her. Under this man, according to the tradition
-received in Greece, Homer studied, and made so great a proficiency in
-knowledge that he was soon enabled to commence instructor himself. He
-therefore proceeded to Chios,[591] and opened a school where he
-initiated the youth in the beauties of epic poetry, and, performing
-his duties with great wisdom, obtained many admirers among the Chians,
-became wealthy, and took a wife, by whom he had two sons.
-
-Footnote 591:
-
- Speaking of the antiquities of this island Chandler remarks: “The
- most curious remain is that which has been named, without reason,
- _The School of Homer_. It is on the coast at some distance from the
- city, northward, and appears to have been an open temple of Cybele,
- formed on the top of a rock. The shape is oval, and in the centre is
- the image of the goddess, the head and an arm wanting. She is
- represented, as usual, sitting. The chair has a lion carved on each
- side, and on the back. The area is bounded by a low rim or seat, and
- about five yards over. The whole is hewn out of the mountain, is
- rude, indistinct, and probably of the most remote antiquity.” i. 61.
-
-The earliest task to be performed at school was to gain a knowledge of
-the Greek characters, large and small, to spell next, next to read.
-Herodes the Sophist experienced much vexation from the stupidity
-exhibited in achieving this enterprise by his son Atticus, whose
-memory was so sluggish that he could not even recollect the
-Christ-cross-row. To overcome this extraordinary dulness he educated
-along with him twenty-four little slaves of his own age, upon whom he
-bestowed the names of the letters, so that young Atticus might be
-compelled to learn his alphabet as he played with his companions, now
-calling out for Omicron now for Psi.[592] In teaching the art of
-writing their practice nearly resembled our own; the master traced
-with what we must call a pencil (γραφὶς), a number of characters on a
-tablet, and the pupil following with the pen the guidance of the faint
-lines[593] before him, accustomed his fingers to perform the requisite
-movements with adroitness.[594] These things were necessarily the
-first step in the first class of studies, which were denominated
-_music_,[595] and comprehended everything connected with the
-developement of the mind; and they were carried to a certain extent
-before the second division called gymnastics was commenced. They
-reversed the plan commonly adopted among ourselves, for with them
-poetry[596] preceded prose, a practice which coöperating with their
-susceptible temperament, impressed upon the national mind that
-imaginative character for which it was preëminently distinguished. And
-the poets in whose works they were first initiated were of all the
-most poetical, the authors of lyrical and dithyrambic pieces,
-selections from whose verses they committed to memory, thus acquiring
-early a rich store of sentences and imagery ready to be adduced in
-argument or illustration, to furnish familiar allusions or to be woven
-into the texture of their style.[597]
-
-Footnote 592:
-
- Philost. Vit. Soph. ii. 10.
-
-Footnote 593:
-
- Quint. i. 1. Poll. vii. 128. Aristoph. Thesm. 778.
-
-Footnote 594:
-
- Plat. Protag. t. i. p. 181.
-
-Footnote 595:
-
- See Plat. de Rep. ii. t. vi. p. 93. seq. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 188.
- seq.
-
-Footnote 596:
-
- In the Homeric age men, we are told, received their mental
- instruction from the bards, and their physical at the
- gymnasium.—Athen. i. 16.
-
-Footnote 597:
-
- Cf. Plat. de Rep. t. i. p. 149. Stallb.
-
-Considerable difference however existed in the practice of different
-teachers. Some imagining that by the variety of their acquirements
-they would be rendered eloquent, recommended the indiscriminate study
-of the poets,[598] whether they wrote in hexameter, in trimeter, or
-any other kind of verse, on ludicrous or on serious subjects. Certain
-poets there were who like Fenelon and the pretended Ossian, wrote
-their works in prose,[599] respecting the use of whose compositions
-Plato was in some doubt.
-
-Footnote 598:
-
- Cf. Plato de Legg. t. viii. p. 44. sqq. On the style of declamation
- used in the Greek and Roman schools, see Schömann, de Comit. p. 187.
-
-Footnote 599:
-
- There were likewise poems written in the language of the common
- people.—Athen. xiv. 43.
-
-By other philosophers wandering unrestrained over the vast fields of
-literature was condemned. They desired to separate the gold from the
-dross, contending that persons accustomed from their infancy to the
-loftier and purer inspirations of the muse will regard with contempt
-every thing mean or illiberal, whereas they who have learned to
-delight in low and vulgar compositions will consider all other
-literature tame and insipid. For so great is the force of imitation,
-that habits commenced from the earliest years pass into the manners
-and character of a man, affecting even his voice and corporeal
-developement, nay, modifying the very nature of the thoughts
-themselves.
-
-Among the other branches of knowledge[600] most necessary to be
-studied, and to which they applied themselves nearly from the outset,
-was arithmetic, without some inkling of which, a man, in Plato’s
-opinion, could scarcely be a citizen at all. For, as he observes,
-there is no art or science which does not stand in some need of it,
-especially the art of war, where many combinations depend entirely on
-numbers. And yet Agamemnon in some of the old tragic poets was
-represented by Palamedes as wholly ignorant of calculation, so that
-possibly, as Socrates jocularly observes, he could not reckon his own
-feet.[601] The importance attached to this branch of education,
-nowhere more apparent than in the dialogues of Plato, furnishes one
-proof that the Athenians were preëminently men of business, who in all
-their admiration for the good and beautiful never lost sight of those
-things which promote the comfort of life, and enable a man effectually
-to perform his ordinary duties. With the same views were geometry and
-astronomy pursued. For, in the Republic, Glaucon,[602] who may be
-supposed to represent the popular opinion, confesses at once, upon the
-mention of geometry, that as it is applicable to the business of war
-it would be most useful. He could discover the superiority of the
-geometrician[603] over the ignorant man in pitching a camp, in the
-taking of places, in contracting or expanding the ranks of an army,
-and all those other military movements practised in battles, marches
-or sieges. To Plato however this was its least recommendation. He
-conceived that in the search after goodness and truth the study of
-this science was especially beneficial to the mind, both because it
-deals in positive verities, and thus begets a love of them, and
-likewise superinduces the habit of seeking them through lengthened
-investigation and of being satisfied with nothing less.
-
-Footnote 600:
-
- Cf. Plat. de Legg. t. viii. p. 62. where he describes the Egyptian
- method of teaching arithmetic by rewards and allurements. Locke,
- however, condemned the practice. “He that will give to his son
- apples or sugar-plums, or what else of this kind he is most
- delighted with, to make him learn his book, does but authorise his
- love of pleasure, and cocker up that dangerous propensity, which he
- ought by all means to subdue and stifle in him.” Education § 52.
- Vid. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 340. seq. Muret. Orat. iv. 43. Sir
- Josiah Child has some good remarks on the value of arithmetic as a
- branch of education: “It hath been observed in the nature of
- arithmetic, that, like other parts of the mathematics, it doth not
- only improve the natural faculties, but it inclines those that are
- expert in it to thriftiness and good husbandry, and prevents both
- husbands and wives in some measure from running out of their
- estates, when they have it always ready in their heads what their
- expenses do amount to, and how soon by that course their ruin must
- overtake them.”—Discourse of Trade, p. 5.
-
-Footnote 601:
-
- Plat. de Rep. vii. t. vi. p. 340. sqq.
-
-Footnote 602:
-
- Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 349. seq. De Legg. t. viii. p. 371. Sch.
- Aristoph. Nub. 180. Cf. Cicero de Orat. iii. 32. t. ii. 319. ed.
- Lallemand.
-
-Footnote 603:
-
- See in Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 181. an anecdote of Thales cutting a new
- channel for the river Halys.
-
-In the study of astronomy[604] itself a coarse and obvious utility was
-almost of necessity the first thing aimed at, and even in the age of
-Socrates, when philosophical wants were keenly felt in addition to
-those of the animal and civil life, there were evidently teachers who
-considered it necessary to justify such pursuits, by showing their
-bearing on the system of loss and profit. For when Socrates comes in
-his ideal scheme of education to touch on this science, Glaucon, the
-practical man, at once recognises its usefulness, not only in
-husbandry and navigation, but in affairs military. Nor are such fruits
-of it to be despised. But philosophy proposes a higher aim, insisting,
-in opposition to popular belief, that by means of such pursuits the
-soul may be purified, and its powers of discovering truth, overlaid
-and nearly extinguished by other studies, rekindled and fanned into
-activity like a flame.
-
-Footnote 604:
-
- Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 357. seq.; de Legg. t. viii. p. 370. Sch.
- Aristoph. Nub. 860. 208.
-
-The importance of music,[605] in the education of the Greeks, is
-generally understood. It was employed to effect several purposes.
-First, to soothe and mollify the fierceness of the national character,
-and prepare the way for the lessons of the poets, which, delivered
-amid the sounding of melodious strings, when the soul was rapt and
-elevated by harmony, by the excitement of numbers, by the magic of the
-sweetest associations, took a firm hold upon the mind, and generally
-retained it during life. Secondly, it enabled the citizens gracefully
-to perform their part in the amusements of social life, every person
-being in his turn called upon at entertainments to sing or play upon
-the lyre. Thirdly, it was necessary to enable them to join in the
-sacred choruses, rendered frequent by the piety of the state, and for
-the due performance in old age of many offices of religion, the
-sacerdotal character belonging more or less to all the citizens of
-Athens. Fourthly, as much of the learning of a Greek was martial and
-designed to fit him for defending his country, he required some
-knowledge of music that on the field of battle his voice might
-harmoniously mingle with those of his countrymen, in chaunting those
-stirring, impetuous, and terrible melodies, called pæans, which
-preceded the first shock of fight.
-
-Footnote 605:
-
- Vid. Ilgen. de Scol. Poes. xiv.—“Post Persica demum bella musicæ
- assidue operatos Græcos dicit. Et præmia diebus festis nonnullis
- constituta iis pueris adolescentibusque, qui lyrica carmina Solonis
- aliorumque optime cecinissent.”—Creuzer. de Civ. Athen. Omn. Hum.
- Par. p. 55. seq.
-
-For some, or all of these reasons, the science of music began to be
-cultivated among the Hellenes, at a period almost beyond the reach
-even of tradition. The Bards, whom we behold wandering on the remotest
-edge of the fabulous horizon, have invariably harps or lyres in their
-hands; and the greatest of the heroes of poetry, the very acme of Epic
-excellence, is represented delighting in the performance of music, and
-chaunting on the shores of the Hellespont the deeds of former
-warriors. In those ages the music of the whole nation possessed
-evidently a grave and lofty character; but as that of the Ionians
-became afterwards modified by the influence of a softer climate and
-imitation of the Asiatic, while the Dorian measure remained nearly
-unchanged, the latter is supposed to have possessed originally the
-superiority over the former, which in reality it did not. In process
-of time, however, the existence of three distinct measures was
-recognised, the Dorian, the Æolian, and the Ionian: the first was
-grave, masculine, full of energy, and though somewhat monotonous
-peculiarly adapted to inspire martial ardour; the last distinguished
-by a totally different character, rich, varied, flexible, breathing
-softness and pleasure, adorning the hour of peace and murmuring
-plaintively through the groves and temples of Aphrodite, Apollo, and
-the Muses; while the second, which was fiery, with a mixture of
-gaiety, formed the intermediate step between the two measures,
-partaking something of the character of each. The Hypermixolydian and
-Hyperphrygian, at one time cultivated among the Ionians, were
-comparatively recent inventions.[606]
-
-Footnote 606:
-
- Athen. xiv. 20. sqq. Cf. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 984. Clem. Alex. i. 3.
- 5.
-
-The Phrygian measure distinguished for its exciting and enthusiastic
-character,[607] was much employed upon the stage, on which account
-Agias the poet used to say that the styrax burned on the altar in the
-orchestra had a Phrygian smell, because its odours recalled the wild
-Phrygian measures there heard. The national instrument of the
-Phrygians was the flute, and it is worthy of remark that up to a very
-late period flute-players at Athens were usually distinguished by
-Phrygian names. Olympos the greatest musician known to the Greeks, was
-probably himself a native of Phrygia, since he is said to have been a
-pupil of Marsyas. In fact the barbarians of antiquity appear, though
-in a somewhat different way, to have made as much use of music as the
-Greeks themselves. They chaunted the songs of their bards in going to
-battle, sang funeral dirges at tombs, and even caused their
-ambassadors when proceeding on a mission to foreign states to be
-accompanied by music.[608] No people, however, appear to have carried
-their love for music to so preposterous a length as the Tyrrhenians,
-who caused their slaves to be flogged to the sound of the flute.
-
-Footnote 607:
-
- Luc. Nigrin. § 37.
-
-Footnote 608:
-
- Athen. xiv. 24.
-
-The music of the flute[609] was supposed to be peculiarly delightful
-to the gods, so that those who died while its sounds were on their
-ears were permitted to taste of the gifts of Aphrodite in Hades, as
-Philetæros expresses it in his Flute-lover:
-
- “O Zeus! how glorious ’tis to die while piercing flutes are near
- Pouring their stirring melodies into the faltering ear;
- On these alone doth Eros smile within those realms of night,
- Where vulgar ghosts in shivering bands, all strangers to delight,
- In leaky tub from Styx’s flood the icy waters bear,
- Condemned, for woman’s lovely voice, its moaning sounds to hear.”
-
-Footnote 609:
-
- On the effect of music on the mind, see Magius, Var. Lect. p. 204 b.
-
-The teachers of music were divided into two classes: the Citharistæ,
-who simply played on the instrument, and the Citharœdi who accompanied
-themselves on the cithara with a song.[610] Of these the humble and
-poorer taught, as we have already observed, in the corners of the
-streets, while the abler and more fortunate opened schools of music or
-gave their lessons in the private dwellings of the great. The Cithara,
-however, was not anciently in use at Athens, if we may credit the
-tradition which attributes to Phrynis its introduction from
-Ionia.[611]
-
-Footnote 610:
-
- Kühn ad Poll. iv. p. 711. Cf. Plat. de Legg. t. viii. p. 49.
-
-Footnote 611:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 958; Vesp. 574.
-
-Damon the great Athenian musician[612] used to observe, that wherever
-the mind is susceptible of powerful emotions there will be the song
-and the dance, and that wherever men are free and honourable their
-amusements will be liberal and decorous, where men are otherwise the
-contrary. A very judicious remark was likewise made by Caphesias the
-flute-player. Observing one of his pupils striving to produce loud
-sounds, he stamped on the ground and said,—"Boy, that is not always
-good which is great; but that is great which is good."[613]
-
-Footnote 612:
-
- Cf. Plat. Repub. t. vi. p. 133.
-
-Footnote 613:
-
- Athen. xiv. 26.
-
-The power of music in assuaging passion and anger is well illustrated
-by an anecdote of Cleinias the Pythagorean philosopher, a man
-distinguished for his virtue and gentleness. If at any time he felt
-himself moved to wrath, taking up his lyre he would touch the chords
-and chaunt thereto some ode, and if any questioned why he did so, he
-would reply, “I am in search of serenity.”[614]
-
-Footnote 614:
-
- Πραΰνομοι. Cham. Pont. ap. Athen. xiv. 18.
-
-Like the Hebrews, also, the people of Hellas attributed to music still
-more marvellous virtues,[615] conceiving it to be able to cure
-diseases both of the mind and body. Thus the sounds of the flute were
-supposed to remove epilepsy, and sciatica, and faintness, and fear,
-and paroxysms of long-established madness,[616] which will probably
-remind the reader of David playing before Saul, when his mind was
-troubled.
-
-Footnote 615:
-
- Thus demons were expelled by the sound of brass bells.—Magius, Var.
- Lect. p. 205. b.
-
-Footnote 616:
-
- Athen. xiv. 18. Apollon. ap. Schweigh. Animad. xii. p. 399. on the
- story, and bronze votive offerings on the Tænarian promontory of the
- musician Arion.—Herod. i. 23. seq. Dion. Chrysost. Orat. xxxvii. p.
- 455. Pausan. i. 24. Ælian. de Nat. Animal. xii. 45.
-
-In the later ages of the commonwealth drawing likewise, and the
-elements of art entered into the list of studies pursued by youths,
-partly with the view of diffusing a correct taste, and the ability to
-appreciate and enjoy the noble productions of the pencil and chisel,
-and partly, perhaps, from the mere love of novelty, and the desire
-which man always feels to enlarge the circle of his acquirements.
-Aristotle,[617] indeed, suggests a much humbler motive, observing that
-a knowledge of drawing would enable men to appreciate more accurately
-the productions of the useful arts; but this perhaps was said more in
-deference to that spirit of utilitarianism then beginning to show
-itself than from any conviction of its soundness.
-
-Footnote 617:
-
- Polit. viii. 3.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
- EXERCISES OF YOUTH.
-
-
-Simultaneously with the above studies,[618] that highly intricate and
-artificial system of exercises denominated gymnastics occupied a
-considerable portion of the time of youth. Among northern nations the
-influence of education is requisite to soften the manners and check
-ferocity; but in the south hardihood must in general be the fruit of
-discipline, and flourishes only while assiduously cultivated. Thus we
-find that the Persians,[619] by acting on the advice of Crœsos, and
-teaching the Lydians to become musicians and shopkeepers, uprooted
-entirely their martial spirit. In Greece, however, during the
-flourishing period of her history there was more danger that the
-passion for war should drown all others, than that its influence
-should be too feeble. Among the Athenians particularly, that restless
-energy of character, so marvellous and so distasteful to the Dorians,
-sought vent in dangerous and distant wars and stupendous schemes of
-ambition. This characteristic trait is adduced by Plato for the
-purpose of suggesting a contrast with the rival race. He had been
-dwelling, to his Cretan and Spartan companions, on the exercises
-necessary for pregnant women,[620] and observing their astonishment,
-he could understand, he said, how it might appear extraordinary to
-them, but at Athens his recommendation would be perfectly
-intelligible; for there, people were rather too active than otherwise.
-The difficulty always was to find becoming employment. Accordingly,
-for lack of something better, not merely boys but grown-up men,
-comprehending nothing of the _dolce far niente_, employed themselves
-in breeding cocks, quails, and other birds for fighting, and the care
-of these imposed on them the necessity of much exercise. To be sure,
-these cock-fighters, during their professional perambulations,
-presented a spectacle infinitely ludicrous. All regard to appearances
-was abandoned. With a couple of small cocks[621] in their hands, and
-an old one under either arm, they sallied forth, like vagabonds who
-had been robbing a henroost, to give their favourite animals air and
-gentle exercise, and thus laden often strolled several miles into the
-country.
-
-Footnote 618:
-
- Cf. Plato, de Rep. t. vi. p. 139, seq.
-
-Footnote 619:
-
- Herod. i. 155. Cf. Polyæn. vii. 6. 4. Justin, i. 6.
-
-Footnote 620:
-
- De Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 3. cf. p. 11.
-
-Footnote 621:
-
- Plato, de Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 3. seq.—On the practice of
- quail-fighting, see Poll. vii. 16. Comm. p. 237. Büd. Com. Ling.
- Græc. p. 615. Paris. Iungermann ad Poll. vii. 136. p. 427, observes
- that it was customary to exhibit public quail-fights at Athens. But
- Lucian who states this (Anach. § 37), confounds the quail with the
- cock-fighting.—Ælian. V. H. ii. 28. Cf. Ludovic. Nonn. de Re Cib.
- ii. 22. p. 228. Poliarchos, an Athenian, buried his dogs and cocks
- magnificently.—viii. 4. In the same spirit, a French lady erected a
- mausoleum to her cat with this epitaph:
-
- “Ci-gît une chatte jolie,
- Sa maîtresse qui n’aima rien
- L’aima jusques à la folie.
- Pourquoi le dire? On le voit bien.”
-
- The dog who detected the robber of Asclepios’s temple, received
- while he lived the marks of public gratitude, and was maintained
- like a hero at the people’s expense.—Ælian. V. H. vii. 14.
-
-To such a people the gymnasium opened up a source of peculiar delight,
-and in the end became a passion prejudicial to the cultivation of the
-understanding. But within the bounds of moderation it was prescribed
-by philosophers in lieu of physic, and as an antidote against those
-pale faces and emaciated frames, too common where intellectual studies
-are ardently pursued.[622] It was a law of Solon, that every
-Athenian[623] should be able to read and to swim; and the whole spirit
-of Attic legislation, leaving the poor to the exercise of industrious
-and hardy occupations, tended to create among the opulent and the
-noble a taste for field-sports, horsemanship, and every martial and
-manly exercise.[624] The difficulty, of course, was to render them
-subordinate to mental cultivation, and to blend both so cunningly
-together as to produce a beautiful and harmonious system of
-discipline, well fitted to ripen and bring to greatest perfection
-every power and faculty of body and mind.
-
-Footnote 622:
-
- Aristoph. Nub. 185. Plat. Repub. t. vi. p. 146.
-
-Footnote 623:
-
- Petit. de Legg. Att. l. ii. tit. iv. p. 162. Æsch. cont. Tim. § 2–4.
-
-Footnote 624:
-
- Plat. de Legg. vii. t. viii. 17. seq.
-
-The practises of the gymnasium may be traced backward to the remotest
-antiquity, and probably commenced among the warriors of the heroic
-ages,[625] in the peaceful intervals occurring between expeditions,
-from the desire to amuse their leisure by mimic representations of
-more serious contests. At first, no doubt, the exercises, frequently
-performed in honour of the gods,[626] were few and rude; but by the
-age of Homer they had assumed an artificial and regular form, and
-comprehended nearly all such divisions of the art as prevailed in
-later times. Other views than those with which they were instituted,
-caused them to be kept up. When reflection awoke, it was perceived
-that in these amicable contests men acquired not only force and
-agility, a martial bearing, the confidence of strength, beauty, and
-lightness of form; but, along with them, that easy cheerfulness into
-which robust health naturally blossoms.[627] In fact, so far were the
-legislators of Greece from designing by gymnastics to create, as
-Montesquieu[628] supposes, a nation of mere athletes and combatants,
-that they expressly repudiate the idea, affirming that lightness,
-agility, a compactly knit frame, health, but chiefly a well-poised and
-vigorous mind, were the object of this part of education. In order the
-better to attain this point, Plato in his republic ordains that boys
-be completed in their intellectual studies, which in his ideal state
-they were to be at the age of sixteen, before they entered the
-gymnasium, the exercises of which were to be the companions of simple
-music. From converting their citizens into athletes they were
-prevented by experience; for it was quickly discovered that those men
-who made a profession of gymnastics acquired, indeed, by their diet
-and peculiar discipline a huge stature and enormous strength, but were
-altogether useless in war, being sleepy, lethargic, prodigious eaters,
-incapable of enduring thirst or hunger, and liable to the attacks of
-sudden and fatal diseases if they departed in the least degree from
-their usual habits and regimen.[629]
-
-Footnote 625:
-
- Cf. Athen. i. 16.
-
-Footnote 626:
-
- Hom. Hymn. Apoll. 149.
-
-Footnote 627:
-
- Plat. Gorg. t. iii. p. 14.
-
-Footnote 628:
-
- Esprit des Loix, l. iv. c. 8.
-
-Footnote 629:
-
- Cf. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 151.—To express the sweat gained by
- exercise or labour, the Greeks used to say ξηρὸς ἱδρὼς, or ‘dry
- sweat.’—Phæd. t. i. p. 26. Runners, it was observed, had large legs;
- wrestlers small.—Xenoph. Conv. ii. 17.
-
-Already in the Homeric age, gymnastics, though not as yet so
-named, constituted the principal object of education, and many
-branches of the art had even then been carried to a high degree of
-perfection.[630] The passion for it descended unimpaired to the
-Spartans, whose polity, framed solely for the preservation of
-national independence and the acquisition of glory in war,
-inspired little fondness for mental pursuits, but left the youth
-chiefly to the influence of the gymnasia, which gradually created
-in them a temper of mind compounded of insensibility and
-ferocity,[631] not unlike that of the North American Indians.
-This, however, they above all things prized, though as has been
-justly observed their exercises could in no sense be considered
-among the aids to intellectual cultivation.[632]
-
-Footnote 630:
-
- Feith, Antiq. Homer. iv. 6. 304. Cramer. p. 35.
-
-Footnote 631:
-
- Plat. de Rep. t. vi. 154.
-
-Footnote 632:
-
- Hermann. Polit. Antiq. § 26. n. 2.
-
-At Athens they came later into vogue, though common in the age of
-Solon. When, however, this ardent and enthusiastic people commenced
-the study of gymnastics, admiring as they did strength and vigour of
-frame, when united with manly beauty, their plastic genius soon
-converted it into an art worthy to be enumerated among the studies of
-youth. In very early ages they imitated the Spartan custom of
-admitting even boys into the gymnasia. But this was soon abandoned, it
-being found more profitable first to instruct them in several of the
-branches of study above described, and a class of men[633] called
-pædotribæ or gymnasts arose, who taught the gymnastic art privately,
-in subordination to their other studies, and were regarded as
-indispensable in the progress of education.[634] These masters gave
-their instructions in the palæstræ,[635] which generally formed a part
-of the gymnasia, though not always joined with those edifices, and to
-be carefully distinguished from them. It is not known with certainty
-at what age boys commenced their gymnastic exercises, though it
-appears probable that it was not until their grammatical and musical
-studies were completed, that is somewhere perhaps, as Plato counsels,
-about the age of sixteen. For it was not judged advisable to engage
-them in too many studies at once, since in bodies not yet endowed with
-all their strength over-exertion was considered injurious.
-
-Footnote 633:
-
- Cf. Æsch. cont. Tim. § 37. Casaub. ad Theophr. Char. p. 200.
-
-Footnote 634:
-
- Cramer, p. 36.
-
-Footnote 635:
-
- Poll. iii. 149.
-
-Before we enumerate and explain the several exercises it may be proper
-to introduce a description of the gymnasia themselves. Of these
-establishments there were many at Athens;[636] though three only,
-those of the Academy, Lyceum, and Cynosarges have acquired celebrity.
-The site of the first of these gymnasia being low and marshy was in
-ancient times infested with malaria, but having been drained by Cimon
-and planted with trees it became a favourite promenade and place of
-exercise.[637] Here, in walks shaded by the sacred olive, might be
-seen young men,[638] with crowns of rushes in flower upon their heads,
-enjoying the sweet odour of the smilax and the white poplar, while the
-platanos and the elm mingled their murmurs in the breeze of spring.
-The meadows of the Academy, according to Aristophanes the grammarian,
-were planted with the Apragmosune,[639] a sort of flower so called as
-though it smelt of all kind of fragrance and safety like our
-Heart’s-ease or flower of the Trinity. This place is supposed to have
-derived its name from Ecadamos, a public-spirited man who bequeathed
-his property for the purpose of keeping it in order. Around it were
-groves of the moriæ sacred to Athena, whence the olive crowns used in
-the Panathenaia were taken. The reason why the olive trees as well as
-those in the Acropolis were denominated moriæ must be sought for among
-the legends of the mythology, where it is related that Halirrothios
-son of Poseidon formed the design of felling them because the
-patronship of the city had been adjudged to Athena, for the discovery
-of this tree. Raising his axe, however, and aiming a blow at the trunk
-the implement glanced, and he thus inflicted upon himself a wound
-whereof he died.[640]
-
-Footnote 636:
-
- There was a gymnasium sacred to Hermes, near the Peiraic
- gate.—Leake, Topog. of Attica, p. 124.
-
-Footnote 637:
-
- Cf. Xenoph. de Off. Mag. Equit. iii. 14.
-
-Footnote 638:
-
- Aristoph. Nub. 1001.
-
-Footnote 639:
-
- Sch. ad Aristoph. Nub. 1003.
-
-Footnote 640:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 992.
-
-The name of the Lyceum[641] sometimes derived from Lycus, son of
-Pandion[642] probably owed its origin to the temenos of Lycian Apollo
-there situated. It lay near the banks of the Ilissos, and was adorned
-with stately edifices, fountains and groves. Here stood a celebrated
-statue of Apollo, in a graceful attitude, as if reposing after toil,
-with his bow in the left hand, and the right bent negligently over his
-head. The walls, too, were decorated with paintings. In this place
-anciently the Polemarch held his court[643] and the forces of the
-republic were exercised before they went forth to war.[644]
-
-Footnote 641:
-
- Pausan. i. 19. 3. Harpocrat. v. Λύκειον, p. 190.
-
-Footnote 642:
-
- Here Aristotle taught (Cic. Acad. Quæst. i. 4.) as he had previously
- done at Stagira, where the stone seats and covered walls of his
- school remained in the age of Plutarch.—Alexand. § 7.
-
-Footnote 643:
-
- Suid. v. Ἄρχων. i. p. 452. c.
-
-Footnote 644:
-
- Aristoph. Pac. 355. seq. Suid. v. Λύκειον, t. ii. p. 66. b. Xenoph.
- de Off. Magist. Equit. iii. 6.
-
-Appended to the name of the Cynosarges, or third gymnasium surrounded
-with groves[645] was a legend which related that when Diomos was
-sacrificing to Hestia, a white dog snatched away a part of the victim
-from the altar, and running straightway out of the city deposited it
-on the spot where this gymnasium was afterwards erected.[646] Here
-were several magnificent and celebrated temples to Alcmena, to Hebe,
-to Heracles, and to his companion Iolaos. Its principal patron,
-however, was Heracles,[647] who, lying himself under the suspicion of
-illegitimacy, came very naturally to be regarded as the protector of
-bastards, half citizens, and in general all persons of spurious birth,
-who accordingly in remoter ages resorted thither to perform their
-exercises.
-
-Footnote 645:
-
- Liv. xxxi. 24.
-
-Footnote 646:
-
- Suid. v. Κυνόσαργ. t. i. p. 1550. e.
-
-Footnote 647:
-
- In the gymnasia, the statue of Eros was generally placed beside
- those of this divinity and Hermes.—Athen. xiii. 12.
-
-Themistocles afterwards, by prevailing upon several of the young
-nobility to accompany him to the Cynosarges, obliterated its reproach,
-and placed it on the same level with the other gymnasia.[648] Here
-anciently stood a court in which causes respecting illegitimacy, false
-registry, &c. were tried. But to proceed to the general description.
-“The gymnasia were spacious edifices, surrounded by gardens and a
-sacred grove. The first entrance was by a square court, two stadia in
-circumference, encompassed with porticoes and buildings. On three of
-its sides were large halls, provided with seats, in which
-philosophers, rhetoricians, and sophists assembled their disciples. On
-the fourth were rooms for bathing and other practices of the
-gymnasium. The portico facing the south was double, to prevent the
-winter rains, driven by the wind, from penetrating into the interior.
-From this court you passed into an enclosure, likewise square, shaded
-in the middle by plane-trees. A range of colonnades extended round
-three of the sides. That which fronted the north had a double row of
-columns, to shelter those who walked there in summer from the sun. The
-opposite piazza was called Xystos, in the middle of which, and through
-its whole length, they contrived a sort of pathway, about twelve feet
-wide and nearly two deep, where, sheltered from the weather, and
-separated from the spectators ranged along the sides, the young
-scholars exercised themselves in wrestling. Beyond the Xystos was a
-stadium for foot-races.”[649]
-
-Footnote 648:
-
- Plut. Them. § 1.
-
-Footnote 649:
-
- Barthel. Trav. of Anach. ii. p. 133. sqq.
-
-The principal parts of the gymnasium were,—first, the porticoes,
-furnished with seats and side-buildings where the youths met to
-converse. 2. The Ephebeion,[650] that part of the edifice where the
-youth alone exercised. 3. The Apodyterion, or undressing-room.[651] 4.
-The Konisterion, or small court in which was kept the haphe, or yellow
-kind of sand sprinkled by the wrestlers over their bodies[652] after
-being anointed with the ceroma, or oil tempered with wax. An important
-part of the baggage of Alexander in his Indian expedition consisted of
-this fine sand for the gymnasium. 5. The Palæstra, when considered as
-part of the gymnasium,[653] was simply the place set apart for
-wrestling: the whole of its area was covered with a deep stratum of
-mud. 6. The Sphæristerion,[654]—that part of the gymnasium in which
-they played at ball. 7. Aleipterion or Elaiothesion,[655] that part of
-the palæstra where the wrestlers anointed themselves with oil. 8. The
-area: the great court, and certain spaces in the porticoes, were used
-for running, leaping, or pitching the quoit. 9. The Xystoi have been
-described above. 10. The Xysta[656] were open walks in which, during
-fine weather, the youths exercised themselves in running or any other
-suitable recreation. 11. The Balaneia or baths, where in numerous
-basins was water of various degrees of temperature, in which the young
-men bathed before anointing themselves, or after their exercises. 12.
-Behind the Xystos, and running parallel with it, lay the stadium,[657]
-which, as its name implies, was usually the eighth part of a mile in
-length. It resembled the section of a cylinder, rounded at the ends.
-From the area below, where the runners performed their exercises, the
-sides, whether of green turf or marble, sloped upwards to a
-considerable height, and were covered with seats, rising behind each
-other to the top for the accommodation of spectators.
-
-Footnote 650:
-
- Vitruv. v. 11.
-
-Footnote 651:
-
- Plin. xxv. 13.—Even old men performed their exercises naked.—Plat.
- de Rep. t. vi. p. 221.
-
-Footnote 652:
-
- Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p. 172.
-
-Footnote 653:
-
- Poll. iii. 149.
-
-Footnote 654:
-
- Suet. Vesp. c. 20. with the note of Torrentius, p. 375.
-
-Footnote 655:
-
- In the Gymnasium of Asclepios at Smyrna, Heracleides the sophist
- erected an anointing-room, containing a fountain or well of oil, and
- adorned with a gilded roof.—Philostr. de Vit. Sophist. ii. 26. p.
- 613.
-
-Footnote 656:
-
- Vitruv. v. 11. Cf. on the Xystoi, Xenoph. Œconom. xi. 15.—Cicero,
- Acad. iv. 3; ad Att. l. 8. Of this covered walk Aristeas makes
- mention in a fragment of his Orpheus:—
-
- Ἦν μοὶ παλαίστρα καὶ δρόμος
- ξυστὸς πέλας.
- Poll. ix. 43.
-
-Footnote 657:
-
- Potter, Book i. chap. 8.
-
-Such were the buildings which Athens appropriated to the exercises of
-its youth; and if we consider the conveniences which they contained,
-the large spaces they enclosed, and the taste and magnificence which
-they exhibited, we shall probably conclude that no country in the
-world ever bestowed on the physical training of its citizens so much
-enlightened care.
-
-The first step in gymnastics was to accustom the youth to endure,
-naked, the fiercest rays of the sun and the cold of winter, to which
-they were exposed during their initiatory exercises.[658] This is
-illustrated in a very lively manner by Lucian, where he introduces the
-Scythian Anacharsis anxious to escape from the scorching rays of noon
-to the shade of the plane-trees; while Solon, who had been educated
-according to the Hellenic system, stands without inconvenience
-bareheaded in the sun. The step next in order was wrestling, always
-regarded as the principal among gymnastic contests, both from its
-superior utility and the great art and skill which the proper practice
-of it required. To the acquisition of excellence in this exercise the
-palæstra and the instructions of the pædotribæ were almost entirely
-devoted; while nearly every other branch of gymnastics was performed
-in the gymnasium. These, according to Lucian, were divided into two
-classes, one of which required for their performance a soft or muddy
-area, the other one of sand, or an arena properly so called.[659] In
-all these exercises the youth were naked, and had their bodies
-anointed with oil.
-
-Footnote 658:
-
- Lucian, Amor. § 45. seq.
-
-Footnote 659:
-
- Lucian, Anach. § § 1–3. 28.
-
-To render, however our account of the exercises more complete, it may
-be proper to give a separate though brief description of each. The
-first or most simple was the Dromos or Course,[660] performed, as has
-been above observed, in the area of the stadium, which, in order to
-present the greater difficulty to the racers, was deeply covered with
-soft and yielding sand. Still further to enhance the labour, the youth
-sometimes ran in armour, which admirably prepared them for the
-vicissitudes of war, for pursuit after victory, or the rapid movements
-of retreat. The high value which the Greeks set upon swiftness may be
-learned from the poems of Homer, where likewise are found the most
-graphic and brilliant descriptions of the several exercises. Some of
-these we shall here introduce from Pope’s version, which in this part
-is peculiarly sustained and nervous. Speaking of the race between
-Oilean Ajax, Odysseus, and Antilochos, he says:—[661]
-
- “Ranged in a line the ready racers stand,
- Pelides points the barrier with his hand.
- All start at once, Oileus led the race;
- The next Ulysses, measuring pace with pace,
- Behind him diligently close he sped,
- As closely following as the mazy thread
- The spindle follows, and displays the charms
- Of the fair spinster’s breast and moving arms.
- Graceful in motion, thus his foe he plies,
- And treads each footstep ere the dust can rise;
- The glowing breath upon his shoulder plays,
- Th’ admiring Greeks loud acclamations raise,
- To him they give their wishes, heart, and eyes,
- And send their souls before him as he flies.
- Now three times turned, in prospect of the goal,
- The panting chief to Pallas lifts his soul;
- Assist, O Goddess, (thus in thought he prayed,)
- And present at his thought descends the maid;
- Buoyed by her heavenly force he seems to swim,
- And feels a pinion lifting every limb.”
-
-Footnote 660:
-
- Accumenes, the friend of Socrates, advised persons to walk on the
- high-road in preference to the places of exercise, as being less
- fatiguing and more beneficial.—Plat. Phæd. t. i. p. 3. On the
- rapidity of public runners see Herod. vi. 106. Cf. on the Pentathlon
- West, Dissert. on the Olympic Games, p. 77. They appear to have
- acquired so equable and steady a pace that time was measured by
- their movements, as distance is by that of caravans in the East.
- Thus Dioscorides, ii. 96. gives direction that gall should be boiled
- while a person could run three stadia.
-
-Footnote 661:
-
- Il. ψ. 754. sqq. Cf. Odyss. η. 119.—As an illustration of the
- necessity there was of going through all the various exercises, it
- is mentioned by Xenophon that runners had large legs, wrestlers
- small ones.—Conviv. ii. 17.
-
-Next in the natural order, proceeding from the simplest to the most
-artificial exercises, was leaping, in which the youth among the Greeks
-delighted to excel. In the performance of this exercise they usually
-sprang from an artificial elevation (βατὴρ), and descended upon the
-soft mould, which, when ploughed up with their heels, was termed
-ἐσκαμμένα.[662] The better to poise their bodies and enable them to
-bound to a greater distance, they carried in their hands metallic
-weights, denominated _halteres_,[663] in the form of a semi disk,
-having on their inner faces handles like the thong of a shield,
-through which the fingers were passed. Extraordinary feats are related
-of these ancient leapers. Chionis the Spartan and Phaÿllos the
-Crotonian, being related to have cleared at one bound the space of
-fifty-two, or according to others, of fifty-five feet.
-
-Footnote 662:
-
- Poll. iii. 151.
-
-Footnote 663:
-
- Paus. v. 26. 3; 27. 12.
-
-With the latter account agrees the inscription on the Crotonian’s
-statue:
-
- “Phaÿllos leaped full five and fifty feet,
- The discus flung one hundred wanting five.”[664]
-
-Footnote 664:
-
- Eustath. ad Odyss. θ. 128. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 210.
-
-Homer briefly describes leaping among the sports of the Phæacians:
-
- “Amphialos sprang forward with a bound,
- Superior in the leap a length of ground.”[665]
-
-Footnote 665:
-
- Odyss. θ. 128.
-
-To this succeeded pitching the quoit, which in the Homeric age would
-appear to have been practised with large stones or rude masses of
-iron. On ordinary occasions it has been conjectured that one discus
-only was used. But Odysseus, desirous of exhibiting his strength to
-the Phæacians, converts into a quoit the first block of stone within
-his reach.[666]
-
- “Then striding forward with a furious bound
- He wrenched a rocky fragment from the ground,
- By far more ponderous and more large by far
- Than what Phæacia’s sons discharged in air;
- Fierce from his arm the enormous load he flings,
- Sonorous through the shaded air it sings;
- Couched to the earth, tempestuous as it flies,
- The crowd gaze upwards while it cleaves the skies.
- Beyond all marks, with many a giddy round,
- Down rushing it upturns a hill of ground.”
-
-Footnote 666:
-
- Odyss. θ. 186. sqq. Cf. Il. ψ. 836. seq.
-
-The disk[667] in later times varied greatly both in shape, size, and
-materials. Generally it would seem to have been a cycloid, swelling in
-the middle and growing thin towards the edges. Sometimes it was
-perforated in the centre and hurled forward by a thong, and on other
-occasions would appear to have approached the spherical form, when it
-was denominated solos.[668]
-
-Footnote 667:
-
- Schol. Hom. Il. β. 774.
-
-Footnote 668:
-
- Schol. Hom. Il. β. 774.
-
-Other of these exercises were shooting with the bow at wisps of straw
-stuck upon a pole,[669] and darting the javelin, sometimes with the
-naked hand and sometimes with a thong wound about the centre of the
-weapon. In the stadium at Olympia, the area within which the pentathli
-leaped, pitched the quoit, and hurled the javelin, appears to have
-been marked out by two parallel trenches: but if these existed
-likewise in the gymnasia, they must have been extremely shallow, as we
-find in Antiphon[670] a boy meeting with his death by inconsiderately
-running across the area while the youths were engaged in this
-exercise. Instead of throwing for the furthest, they would seem, from
-the expressions of the orator, to have aimed at a mark.
-
-Footnote 669:
-
- Lucian. Hermot. § 33.
-
-Footnote 670:
-
- Tetral. ii. 1. Cf. Plat. de Legg. t. viii. p. 51. sqq. 142.
-
-Wrestling[671] consisted of two kinds, the first, called Orthopale,
-was that style, still commonly in use, in which the antagonists,
-throwing their arms about each other’s body, endeavoured to bring him
-to the ground. In the other, called Anaclinopale, the wrestler who
-distrusted his own strength but had confidence in his courage and
-powers of endurance, voluntarily flung himself upon the ground,
-bringing his adversary along with him, and then by pinching,
-scratching, biting, and every other species of annoyance, sought to
-compel him to yield.
-
-Footnote 671:
-
- Cf. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 569.
-
-An example of wrestling in both its forms occurs in Homer, where Ajax
-Telamon and Odysseus contend in the funeral games for the prize.[672]
-
- “Amid the ring each nervous rival stands,
- Embracing rigid, with implicit hands;
- Close locked above, their heads and arms are mixt;
- Below their planted feet at distance fixt.
- Like two strong rafters which the builder forms
- Proof to the wintry winds and howling storms;
- Their tops connected, but at wider space
- Fixed on the centre stands their solid base.
- Now to the grasp each manly body bends,
- The humid sweat from every pore descends,
- Their bones resound with blows, sides, shoulders, thighs
- Swell to each gripe, and bloody tumours rise.
- Nor could Ulysses, for his art renowned,
- O’erturn the strength of Ajax on the ground;
- Nor could the strength of Ajax overthrow
- The watchful caution of his artful foe.
- While the long strife even tires the lookers-on,
- Thus to Ulysses spoke great Telamon:
- Or let me lift thee, Chief, or lift thou me,
- Prove we our strength and Jove the rest decree.
- He said; and straining heaved him off the ground
- With matchless strength; that time Ulysses found
- The strength t’ evade, and where the nerves combine
- His ankle struck: the giant fell supine.
- Ulysses following on his bosom lies,
- Shouts of applause run rattling through the skies.
- Ajax to lift Ulysses next essays;
- He barely stirred him but he could not raise.
- His knee locked fast the foe’s attempt defied,
- And grappling close they tumbled side by side,
- Defiled with honourable dust they roll,
- Still breathing strife and unsubdued of soul.”
-
-Footnote 672:
-
- Il. ψ. 708, sqq. et Heyne ad loc.
-
-Boxing, which has very properly been called a rough exercise, though
-condemned by physicians and philosophers, was still practised in the
-gymnasium, sometimes with the naked fist but more frequently with the
-cestus, which consisted of a series of thongs, bound round the hand
-and arm up to the elbow, or even higher.[673] This exercise, however,
-seems to have been little practised, except by those who designed to
-become athletæ by profession. Homer has described the combat with the
-cestus in its most terrible form.[674]
-
- “Amid the circle now each champion stands,
- And poises high in air his iron hands:
- With clashing gauntlets now they firmly close,
- Their crackling jaws re-echo to the blows,
- And painful sweat from all their members flows.
- At length Epeus dealt a weighty blow
- Full on the cheek of his unwary foe.
- Beneath that ponderous arm’s resistless sway
- Down dropped he powerless, and extended lay.
- As a large fish, when winds and waters roar,
- By some huge billow dashed against the shore,
- Lies panting, not less battered with his wound,
- The bleeding hero pants upon the ground.
- To rear his fallen foe the victor lends
- Scornful his hand, and gives him to his friends,
- Whose arms support him reeling through the throng,
- And dragging his disabled legs along.
- Nodding, his head hangs down his shoulders o’er,
- His mouth and nostrils pour the clotted gore.
- Wrapped round in mist he lies, and lost to thought,
- His friends receive the bowl too dearly bought.”
-
-Footnote 673:
-
- Theoc. Eidyll. xxii. 3. et 80. Mercurial. de Art. Gymnast. ii. 9.
- Virg. Æn. v. 401. sqq. Paus. viii. 40. 3. Poll. ii. 150. Scalig.
- Poet. i. 22. p. 92.
-
-Footnote 674:
-
- Il. ψ. 684. sqq.
-
-Among the exercises of the gymnasium which Hippocrates advises to be
-practised during winter[675] and bad weather, when it is necessary to
-remain under cover, is walking on the tight rope. This feat seems to
-have been so great a favourite among the youths of antiquity, that
-they applied themselves to it with constant assiduity, and arrived at
-length at a degree of skill little inferior to that of our
-mountebanks. It seems, in fact, to have been a common practice in the
-gymnasium to run upon the tight rope. The Romans, seeking in something
-to outdo the Greeks, taught an elephant to perform a similar exploit.
-
-Footnote 675:
-
- But Galen cautions youth against useless acquisitions, which he says
- are not arts at all: such as πεττευριπτεῖν, throwing the
- tali,—walking over a small tight rope,—whirling round without being
- giddy, like Myrmecides the Athenian and Callicrates the
- Spartan.—Protrept. § 9. p. 20. Kühn.—He then speaks very slightingly
- of gymnastic exercises. The studies he recommends are: medicine,
- rhetoric, music, geometry, arithmetic, dialectics, astronomy,
- grammar, and jurisprudence, to which may be added, modelling and
- painting.—§ 14. Cf. Foës. Œcon. Hip. p. 366.
-
-Another branch of gymnastics consisted in the various forms of the
-dance, to be ignorant of which was at Athens esteemed a mark of an
-illiberal education. To excel in this accomplishment was nearly by all
-the Greeks[676] considered absolutely necessary, either as a
-preparation for the due performance of the movements and evolutions of
-war, sustaining a proper part in the religious choruses, or regulating
-the carriage with the requisite grace and decorum in the various
-relations of private life. Thus the Cretans, the Spartans, the
-Thessalians, and the Bœotians, held this division of gymnastics in
-especial honour, chiefly with a view to war, while the Athenians, and
-Ionians generally, contemplated it more as a means of developing the
-beauty of the form, and conferring ease and elegance on the gait and
-gesture. But because in treating of the theatre I design fully to
-describe the several varieties of scenic dances, I think it proper to
-throw together in that place whatever I may have to say on this
-subject.[677]
-
-Footnote 676:
-
- Vid. Aristot. de Poet. i. 6. Herm.
-
-Footnote 677:
-
- See Book iv. Chapter 8.
-
-To all these branches of gymnastics the Grecian youth[678] applied
-themselves with peculiar eagerness, and on quitting the schools
-devoted to them a considerable portion of their time, since they were
-regarded both as a preparation for victory in the Olympic and other
-games, and as the best possible means for promoting health and
-ripening the physical powers. Nor could anything be easily conceived
-better suited to the genius of their republics. In the first place, as
-I have already observed, the wild and headstrong period of youth was
-withdrawn by these agreeable exercises from the desire and thoughts of
-evil, while a wholesome feeling of equality was cultivated, and
-something like brotherhood engendered in men destined to live and act
-together. Besides what could more admirably prepare them for
-fulfilling their duties as citizens and more especially for defending
-their country, than a system of physical training, which at the same
-time brought to perfection their strength, their vigour, and their
-manly beauty, and fitted them for the acquisition of that peculiar
-species of glory which success in the sacred games conferred? The
-acquisition, moreover, of robust health and that vigour of mind which
-accompanies it, was a consideration second to none. And it will
-readily be conceived that a judicious system of exercises, such as we
-have described, would necessarily render men patient of labour,
-inaccessible to fear, and be productive at once of graceful habits and
-lofty and honourable sentiments.
-
-Footnote 678:
-
- Cf. Plat. de Legg. t. viii. p. 97.—The gymnasia in the later ages of
- Greece were so little frequented, that their area was sown with
- corn. Dion. Chrysos. i. 223.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
- HUNTING AND FOWLING.
-
-
-Among the sports and pastimes of the Greeks, which may be considered
-as a kind of supplement to gymnastics, we must class first the chase,
-which Xenophon vainly hoped might be made to operate as a check on the
-luxurious and effeminate habits of his contemporaries.[679] But each
-age having its own distinctive characteristic, it profits very little
-to aim at engrafting the customs of one period of civilisation upon
-another. The world will go its own gait. Chuckfarthing and Pricking
-the Loop might as well be recommended to young gentlemen and ladies
-dying for love, as hunting to the population of a vain and foppish
-city, to whom wild boars and wolves must seem certain death. However,
-the country gentlemen, and the agricultural population generally, long
-in their own defence continued the practice of the chase, though in
-Attica the absence of wild animals, consequent upon a high and careful
-cultivation, had reduced it at a very early period to a matter of mere
-amusement.
-
-Footnote 679:
-
- In the early ages of the world, hunting we are assured led to the
- establishment of monarchy by accustoming youth whose brains were in
- their sinews to pay implicit obedience to their leaders in the
- chase.—Bochart, Geog. Sac. t. i. p. 258.
-
-But in remoter times, and in those parts of the country where game
-always continued to abound, there were never wanting persons who
-delighted in the excitement of the chase. Herdsmen, particularly, and
-shepherds, considered it part of their occupation.[680] Thus we find
-Anchises a young Trojan chief, who inhabited the hill country, making
-his lair of bears and lion-skins, the spoils of his own lance.[681]
-Sport, of course, it would furnish to bold and reckless young men, as
-lion and tiger hunting still does to our countrymen in Northern India;
-but from this recreation proceeded in some measure their safety, since
-where wild beasts are numerous they not only devastate the
-country,[682] trampling down the corn-fields and devouring herds and
-flocks, but occasionally, if they chance to find them unarmed, dine
-also upon their hunters. Thus the chase of the Calydonian boar, the
-tally-ho’s and view-halloes of which still sound fresh in song, was
-undertaken by the Ætolians and Curetes, for the purpose of delivering
-the rustic population from a pest;[683] and precisely the same motive
-urged Alcmena’s boy into the famous conflict with the Nemean
-lion,[684] which he brought down with his invincible bow and finished
-with his wild olive club. In like manner Theseus, his rival in glory,
-slew the Marathonian bull; and delivered the Cretans from another
-monster of the same kind.[685] He engaged, too, with a sow of great
-size at Crommyon on the confines of Corinthia, and slaughtered the
-pig, an achievement of much utility and no little glory.
-
-Footnote 680:
-
- Iliad, λ. 547.
-
-Footnote 681:
-
- Hom. Hymn in Vener. 160. seq.
-
-Footnote 682:
-
- Paus. i. 27. 9.
-
-Footnote 683:
-
- Iliad, ι. 547. sqq.
-
-Footnote 684:
-
- Theocrit. xxv. 211. sqq.
-
-Footnote 685:
-
- Paus. i. 27. 9. sqq.
-
-The arms and accoutrements of these primitive sportsmen corresponded
-with the rough service in which they were engaged. Sometimes, to the
-attack of the wild bull or the boar, they went forth with formidable
-battle-axes.[686] But when their game was fleet and innocuous a
-handful of light javelins and the bow sufficed, as when Odysseus and
-his companions beat the country in search of wild goats.[687] In the
-Æneid, too, we find the hero doing great execution among a herd of
-deer with his bow. Boar-spears also were in use ere the period of the
-Trojan war, as Odysseus, who appears to have been excessively addicted
-to the chase, is represented going thus armed to the field with the
-sons of Autolycos when he was wounded by the hog.[688] With the same
-weapon we find Adrastos engaged in the same sport, killing the son of
-Crœsos.[689] The chase of the lion, which in Xenophon’s time could
-no longer be enjoyed in Greece Proper, required the most daring
-courage and the most formidable weapons, spears, javelins, clubs, and
-burning torches, with which at last they repelled him at night from
-the cattle stalls. Homer, as usual, represents the contest to the
-life:[690]
-
- “He turned to go, as slow retreats the lion from the stalls,
- Whom men and dogs assault while round a shower of javelins falls.
- They all night watch about their herds, lest he intent on prey
- Should bear the flower of all their fields, the fattest bull away.
- Onward impetuously he bounds—the hissing javelins fly
- From daring hands, while torches send their blaze far up the sky.
- He dreads, though fierce, the dazzling flames thick flashing on his
- sight,
- And hungry still and breathing rage, retires with morning’s light.”
-
-Footnote 686:
-
- Iliad, ρ. 520. seq. Feith. Antiq. Hom. iv. c. 2. § 2.
-
-Footnote 687:
-
- Odyss. ι. 155. seq.
-
-Footnote 688:
-
- Odyss. ι. 465. seq.
-
-Footnote 689:
-
- Herod. i. 43.
-
-Footnote 690:
-
- Il. ρ. 657. Cf. Aristot. Hist. Anim. ix. 31. Oppian Cyneget. iv.
- 131. sqq.
-
-The existence of wild beasts in a country has by some been enumerated
-among the causes of civilisation, and it may, under certain
-circumstances, deserve to be so considered, though generally such
-modes of accounting for things are exceedingly unphilosophical.
-Mitford, who advances it,[691] needed but to cast a glance across the
-Mediterranean to dissipate his whole theory, since nowhere are there
-more wild beasts or men less civilised than in Africa. Egypt, Chaldæa,
-Assyria, the earliest peopled countries, enjoyed few of these helps to
-refinement. The reasons of Greek civilisation lay neither in their
-country or in the accidents of it, but in the race itself, which, as
-one family in a nation is distinguished from its neighbours by
-superior genius, was thus distinguished from other races of men.
-However, the lion, as we have seen, formerly existed among them,
-though never probably in great numbers, and even in the age of
-Herodotus was still found in a wild tract of country extending from
-the Acheloös in Acarnania to the Nestos in Thrace,[692] where in
-fabulous times Olynthos, son of Strymon,[693] is said to have been
-slain in a lion hunt. In the age of Dion Chrysostom, however, this
-fierce animal was no longer known in Europe.[694]
-
-Footnote 691:
-
- Hist. of Greece, i. 16.
-
-Footnote 692:
-
- Herod. vii. 125. seq.
-
-Footnote 693:
-
- Conon, Dieg. iv. ap. Phot. 131. Rüdig. Prolegg. ad Dem. Olynth. p.
- 3.
-
-Footnote 694:
-
- Orat. 21. t. i. p. 501. Reiske.
-
-Dogs, all the world over and from the remotest times, have been man’s
-companions in the chase, and Homer, the noblest painter of the ancient
-world, has bequeathed us many sketches of the antique hunting breed.
-It has above been seen that in company with man they feared not to
-attack even the lion. Odysseus’ famous dog Argos was a hound that
-
- “Never missed in deepest woods the swift game to pursue
- If once it glanced before his sight, for every track he knew.[695]”
-
-Footnote 695:
-
- Odyss. ρ. 316. seq.
-
-And again when the same sagacious Nimrod makes his rounds in quest of
-“belly timber,” a brace of dogs runs before him “examining the
-traces,” while with boar-spear in hand he follows close at their
-heels.[696] But already, even in those days, the habit of keeping more
-cats than catch mice had got into fashion—that is among the
-great—since we find grandees with their κύνες τραπεζῆες or “table
-dogs,”[697] valued simply for their beauty. Patroclus maintained nine
-of these handsome animals, and Achilles understanding his tastes, cast
-two of them into the flames of his funeral pile, that their shades
-might sit at his board in the realms below.[698]
-
-Footnote 696:
-
- Id. τ. 436. seq.
-
-Footnote 697:
-
- Id. ρ. 310.
-
-Footnote 698:
-
- Iliad ψ. 173. seq.
-
-Footnote 699:
-
- Deipnosoph. i. 22. et 24.
-
-Fowling too, if we may depend upon Athenæus,[699] entered into the
-list of heroic amusements. It is clear, however, that the sportsmen of
-those days were arrant poachers, for, not content with attacking their
-prey in open fight, they condescended to spread nets for them and set
-gins for their feet. But being accomplished bowmen, however, they
-could occasionally, when pressed for provisions, fetch down a thrush,
-a pigeon, or a dove with an arrow, dexterously as that Jew in
-Eusebius[700] who exhibited his marksmanship to demonstrate the
-fallacy of augury. For in the funeral games of Patroclus, we find one
-of the heroes hitting from a considerable distance a dove which had
-been tied by a small cord to the summit of a mast.[701]
-
-Footnote 700:
-
- Præp. Evang. l. ix. c. 4. p. 408. d.
-
-Footnote 701:
-
- Iliad, ψ. 853. sqq.
-
-They were given moreover not only to fishing with nets—a practice in
-nowise unbecoming a hero when in want of a dinner—but even to angling
-with “crooked O’Shaughnessies,”[702] as Homer expresses it; though the
-passage in the Iliad, indeed, where a net is mentioned, cannot well be
-adduced in corroboration, since it may refer to fowling as well as to
-fishing.[703] Certain verses in the Odyssey, however, prove beyond a
-doubt that the Greeks had already begun to derive a great part of
-their sustenance from the sea;[704] and the Homeric heroes even
-understood the value of oysters, which, as appears from the Iliad,
-were procured by diving.[705]
-
-Footnote 702:
-
- Γναμπτοῖς ἀγκιστροίσιν. Odyss. μ. 331. seq. Ludovic. Nonn. de Re
- Cibar. iii. 4. p. 294. Plut. de Solert. Anim. § 24. Cf. Antich. di
- Ercol. t. i. tav. 36. p. 191. From an expression of Augustus, if we
- can regard it as anything more than a figure of speech, it may be
- inferred that to increase the luxury of the sport by converting it
- into a species of gambling, people sometimes fished with golden
- hooks.—Polyæn. Strat. viii. 24. 6.
-
-Footnote 703:
-
- Iliad, γ. 487. seq. Eustath. ad Odyss. χ. 386.
-
-Footnote 704:
-
- Odyss. χ. 386.
-
-Footnote 705:
-
- Iliad, π. 747. sqq.
-
-Nevertheless these ancient heroes, though by no means averse as we
-have seen to pigeons or oysters, delighted chiefly in the chase of the
-larger animals, in which article of taste they agreed with Plato, who
-considered all other kinds as unworthy of men. He appears to have
-entertained an especial aversion for the Isaac Waltons of the ancient
-world, and in his advice to youth earnestly exhorts them to eschew
-hooks and fish-traps, which he slily classes with piracy and
-house-breaking: and so he does fowling. Nor would his generous
-philosophy countenance poaching with nets and gins and snares. His
-sportsmen, modelled after the old Homeric type, were to mount their
-chargers,[706] and accompanied by their dogs come to close quarters
-with their wild foes in open daylight, and subdue them by dint of
-personal courage.[707] Precisely similar views prevailed in the heroic
-age, when the chiefs and principal men were exercised from boyhood in
-the chase, as appears from the examples of Achilles and Odysseus;[708]
-of whom the former, according to Pindar, tried his hand at a lion at
-the age of six years, ἐξέτης τοπρῶτον. Being swift of foot as those
-Arabs of Northern Africa, who, as Leo[709] says, are a match for any
-horse, he used without the aid of dogs to overtake and bring down deer
-with his javelin, and whatever prey he took he carried to his old
-master Cheiron. This passage Mr. Cary has translated in the following
-vigorous and elegant manner:—
-
- “In Philyra’s house a flaxen boy
- Achilles oft in rapturous joy
- His feats of strength essayed.
- Aloof like wind his little javelin flew,
- The lion and the brinded boar he slew;
- Then homeward to old Cheiron drew
- Their panting carcases.
- This when six years had fled;
- And all the after time
- Of his rejoicing prime
- It was to Dian and the blue-eyed Maid
- A wonder how he brought to ground
- The stag without or toils or hound.
- So fleet of foot was he.”
-
-Footnote 706:
-
- Cf. Poll. Onom. v. 17.
-
-Footnote 707:
-
- De Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 71. seq.—In his Republic boys were to be
- permitted when they could do so with safety to proceed to the field
- of battle, and there to approach sufficiently near the scene as to
- be able like young hounds to taste, so to speak, of blood.—t. vi. p.
- 367.
-
-Footnote 708:
-
- Pind. Nem. iii. 43. seq. Diss. Odyss. τ. 429. seq.
-
-Footnote 709:
-
- Descrip. Afric.
-
-Similar manners, if we may confide in Virgil,[710] prevailed among the
-old inhabitants of Latium, and Xenophon[711] in his monarchical Utopia
-trains the youth in the same habits.
-
-Footnote 710:
-
- Æneid, ix. 605.
-
-Footnote 711:
-
- Cyneg. ii. 1.
-
-On hunting,[712] as practised in the civilised ages of Greece, we
-possess more ample details, and it is chiefly by the minuter touches
-that a picture of this kind can be invested with interest and utility.
-Xenophon, an aristocratic country gentleman, who living in a corrupt
-age was, as I have said, wisely partial to the nobler manners of the
-past, considers the chase as a branch of education.[713] He does not,
-however, entertain upon this subject the heroic views of Plato, but,
-looking solely to utility, not only describes the physical conditions
-and mental qualities of the hunter, but the nets, poles, arms, and
-every implement made use of by the ancients in the chase.
-
-Footnote 712:
-
- To form a proper idea of the sporting vocabulary of the Greeks, the
- reader should consult Julius Pollux, Onomasticon, v. 9.-94.
-
-Footnote 713:
-
- Cyneg. ii. 1.
-
-Not to interfere with the discipline of the schools and the gymnasia,
-the youths were exhorted to betake themselves to field-sports about
-the age of twenty. Their notions of a sportsman’s costume differed
-materially from our own, for instead of decking themselves like our
-fox-hunters in scarlet, they selected the soberest and least brilliant
-colours both for their cloaks and chitons. The latter were in general
-extremely short, reaching merely to the hams, as Artemis is usually
-represented in works of art. But the chlamys was long and ample, that
-it might be twisted round the left arm in close contest with the
-larger animals. Their hunting boots reached to the knee, and were
-bound tight round the leg with thongs. Probably also, as in
-travelling, they covered their heads with a broad-brimmed hat.
-
-The apparatus of a Greek sportsman would appear somewhat cumbersome,
-and perhaps a little ludicrous to a modern Nimrod. But understanding
-their own object they went their own way to work; their arms and
-implements, varying with the chase in which they were engaged,
-consisted of short swords, hunting knives[714] for the purpose of
-cutting down brushwood to stop up openings in the forest, axes for
-felling trees, darts furnished with thongs for drawing them back when
-they had missed their aim, bows, boar-spears, weapons peculiarly
-formidable, nets small and large, some for setting up in the plains,
-some for traversing glades or narrow alleys in the woods, and others
-shaped like a female head-net, to be placed in small dusky openings,
-where being unperceived the game sprang into them as into a sack,
-which closed about it by means of a running cord, net-poles, forked
-stakes, snares, gins, nooses, and leashes for the dogs.[715] The darts
-used on these occasions had ashen or beechen handles, and the nets
-were usually manufactured with flax imported from Colchis on the
-Phasis, Egypt, Carthage, and Sardinia.[716] Generally, too, they took
-along with them the Lagobalon, a short, crooked stick with a knob at
-one end, with which they sometimes brought down the hare in its
-flight.[717] This practice, common enough among poachers in our
-country, is by them denominated _squailing_.
-
-Footnote 714:
-
- Poll. v. 19.
-
-Footnote 715:
-
- Cf. Grat. Falisc. Cyneg. p. 14. Wase.
-
-Footnote 716:
-
- Xen. Cyneg. ii. 3. Grat. Falisc. Cyneg. p. 6. Wase. Pollux, v. 26.
-
-Footnote 717:
-
- Spanh. Obs. in Callim. Hymn. in Dian. ii. p. 122. Poll. v. 20.—Hares
- are hunted with sticks in South Guinea by the blacks.—Barbot. iii.
- 14.
-
-Without the aid of dogs, however, hunting is a poor sport. The
-ancients, therefore, much addicted to this branch of education, paid
-great attention to the breed of these animals, of which some were
-sought to be rendered celebrated by heroic and fabulous associations.
-Thus the Castorides, it was said, sprang[718] from a breed to which
-the twin god of Sparta was partial; the Alopecidæ were a cross between
-a dog and a she-fox; and a third kind[719] arose from the mingling of
-these two races. Among modern sportsmen, there are also good
-authorities who prefer harriers with a quarter of the fox-strain.[720]
-Other kinds of hounds, as the Menelaides and Harmodian derived their
-appellation from the persons who reared them.[721]
-
-Footnote 718:
-
- Poll. v. 39. Xen. Cyneg. iii. 1.
-
-Footnote 719:
-
- Arist. Hist. Anim. viii. 28. Poll. v. 39.
-
-Footnote 720:
-
- Letters on Hunting, p. 60.
-
-Footnote 721:
-
- Poll. v. 40.
-
-But the whole breeds of certain countries[722] were famous, as the
-Argive, the Locrian, the Arcadian, the Spanish, the Carian, the
-Eretrian; the Celtic or greyhound (not known[723] in more ancient
-times); the Psyllian, so called from a city of Achaia; the dog of
-Elymæa, a country lying between Bactria and Hyrcania; the Hyrcanian,
-which was a cross with the lion; the Laconian, of which the bitch was
-more generous,[724] sometimes crossed with the Cretan, which was
-itself renowned for its nose, strength and courage,[725] those which
-kept watch in the temple of Artemis Dictynna having been reckoned a
-match even for bears; the Molossian, less valued for the chase than as
-a shepherd’s dog, on account of its great fierceness and power to
-contend with wild beasts;[726] the Cyrenaic, a cross with the wolf,
-and lastly the Indian, on which the chief reliance was placed in the
-chase of the wild boar. This breed, according to Aristotle, was
-produced by crossing with the tiger, probably the Cheeta.[727] The
-first and second removes were considered too fierce and unmanageable,
-and it was not until the third generation that these tiger-mules could
-be broken in to the use of the sportsman. Some sought in mythology the
-origin of this noble animal; for, according to Nicander, the hounds of
-Actæon, recovering their senses after the destruction of their master,
-fled across the Euphrates and wandered as far as India. Strange
-stories are related of this breed, of which some it is said would
-contend with no animal but the lion. Alexander’s dog, which he
-purchased in India for a hundred minæ, had twice overcome and slain
-the monarch of the forest.[728]
-
-Footnote 722:
-
- Arist. de Gen. Anim. v. 2. p. 344. Virg. Georg. iii. 405. See the
- enumeration by Gratius, Cyneg. p. 20. seq.
-
-Footnote 723:
-
- Arrian, de Venat. c. 2.
-
-Footnote 724:
-
- Arist. Hist. Anim. ix. 1. Soph. Ajax, 8. Virg. Georg. iii. 405.
- Λάκαιναι σκύλακες, Plat. Parmen. t. ii. p. 7. had long noses. Arist.
- de Gen. Anim. v. 2. 344.
-
-Footnote 725:
-
- Æl. De Nat. Anim. iii. 2. Pashley, Travels in Crete, i. 33. Hughes,
- Travels, &c. i. 489, 501.
-
-Footnote 726:
-
- Arist. Hist. Anim. ix. i.
-
-Footnote 727:
-
- Arist. Hist. Anim. viii. 28, with the observations of Camus, t. ii.
- p. 215. Cf. Scalig. de Subtilitat. x. p. 383. Æl. de Nat. Anim.
- viii. i.
-
-Footnote 728:
-
- Æl. De Nat. Anim. viii. 1. Poll. Onom. v. 42. seq.
-
-Let us, therefore, now imagine the hounds exactly what they ought to
-be, and observe under what circumstances they were led afield. As in
-England, their principal sport was the hare. In winter,[729] it was
-observed that puss, from the length of the nights, took a wider
-circuit, and therefore afforded the dogs a better chance of detecting
-her traces.[730] But when in the morning the ground was covered with
-ice or white with hoar-frost, the dogs lost their scent, as also
-amidst abundant dews or after heavy rains. The sportsman accordingly
-waited till the sun was some way up the sky, and had begun to quicken
-the subtile odours communicated to the earth.[731] The west wind,[732]
-which covers the heavens with vast clouds and fills the air with
-moisture, and the south blowing warm and humid, weaken the scent; but
-the north wind fixes and preserves it.[733] By moonlight, too, as the
-old sportsmen remark, and the warmth it emits, the scent is affected;
-besides that when the moon shines brightly, in their frolicsome and
-sportive mood the hares, in the secluded glades of the forest, take
-long leaps and bounds over the green sward, leaving wide intervals
-between their traces.[734]
-
-Footnote 729:
-
- See on the subject of scent, Sport. Mag. Jan. 1840, and compare
- Essay on Hunting, p. 1. et seq.
-
-Footnote 730:
-
- Cf. Poll. v. 11. Σύμβολα ἐν τετυπωμένα τῇ γῇ.
-
-Footnote 731:
-
- The phrase in Pollux is ἀποφέρεται ἀπ᾽ αὔτων (τῶν ἰχνῶν) τὸ πνεῦμα.
- v. 12. The author of the Essay on Hunting (p. 15.) enumerating the
- several kinds of scent, speaks of them as stronger, sweeter, or more
- distinguishable at one time than another; and Pollux makes use of
- much the same language: ἄνοσμα, δύσοσμα, εὔοσμα, κ. τ. λ. l. c.
-
-Footnote 732:
-
- Arist. Prob. xxvi. 23—Falling stars were regarded as a prognostic of
- high winds, 24. Letters on Hunting, p. 106.
-
-Footnote 733:
-
- Cf. Xen. Cyneg. viii. 1.
-
-Footnote 734:
-
- Xen. Cyneg. v. 4. Poll. v. 67.
-
-From a remark of Xenophon it appears that at least on one point the
-sportsmen of antiquity were less humane than the modern, since they
-pursued the chase even in breeding time.[735] They, however, spared
-the young in honour of Artemis;[736] the spirit even of false
-religion, on this, as on many other occasions, strengthening the
-impulses of humanity.
-
-Footnote 735:
-
- See also Spanh. Obs. in Callim. t. ii. p. 123.
-
-Footnote 736:
-
- Xen. Cyneg. v. 14. Klaus. Com. in Agam. p. 114.—Leverets, properly
- λαγίδια, were often in common with the young of all other wild
- animals denominated ὀμβρίαι and ὀμβρίκια by the poets.—Poll. v. 15.
-
-Several causes coöperated to render hares unplentiful on the Hellenic
-continent,—the number of sportsmen, of foxes which devoured both them
-and their young, and of eagles that delighted in its lofty and almost
-inaccessible mountains, and shared its game with the huntsman and the
-fox. Homer, in a few picturesque words, describes the war carried on
-against puss by this destructive bird.[737] On the islands, whether
-inhabited or not, few of these obstacles to their increase existed.
-Sportsmen rarely passed over to them, and in such as were sacred to
-any of the gods the introduction of dogs was not permitted, so that,
-like the pigeons and turtle-doves of Mekka, they multiplied in those
-holy haunts prodigiously.
-
-Footnote 737:
-
- Il. χ. 308. sqq.
-
-It was prohibited by the laws of Attica[738] to commit the slightest
-trespass during the chase. The sportsman was not allowed to traverse
-any ground under cultivation, to disturb the course of running water,
-or to invade the sanctity of fountains. The scene of action
-accordingly lay among the woods and mountains, the common property of
-the republic, or, if not, abandoned by general consent to the use of
-the sportsman. Such were, for example, the woodland districts of
-Parnes and Cithæron on the borders of Bœotia. Towards these the
-huntsman, well shod, plainly and lightly dressed,[739] and with a
-stick in his hand, set out about sunrise in winter, in summer before
-day.[740] On the road strict silence was observed[741] lest the hare
-should take the alarm and to her heels. Having reached the cover, the
-dogs were tied separately that they might be let slip the more easily,
-the nets were spread in the proper places, the net-guards set, and the
-huntsman with his dogs proceeded to start the game, first piously
-making a votive offering of the primitiæ to Apollo and Artemis,[742]
-divinities of the chase.[743]
-
-Footnote 738:
-
- Xen. Cyneg. v. 34.
-
-Footnote 739:
-
- Poll. v. 17.
-
-Footnote 740:
-
- The pleasure experienced on these occasions is thus enthusiastically
- described by Christopher Wase:—"What innocent and natural delights
- are they, when he seeth the day breaking forth, those blushes and
- roses which poets and writers of romances only paint, but the
- huntsman truly courts! When he heareth the chirping of small birds
- perched upon their dewy boughs, when he draws in that fragrancy of
- the pastures and coolness of the air! How jolly is his spirit when
- he suffers it to be imported with the noise of bugle-horns and the
- baying of hounds which leap up and play around him!"—Pref. to Tr. of
- Gratius, p. 3.
-
-Footnote 741:
-
- See, in the Cyropædia, i. 6. 40, an extremely interesting passage on
- the chase of the hare.—Cf. Oppian. de Venat. iv. 422.
-
-Footnote 742:
-
- Hence the goddess obtained many of the epithets bestowed on her by
- the poets, as: ἀγροτέρα, καὶ κυνηγέτις, καὶ φιλόθηρος, καὶ ὀρεία,
- ἀπὸ τῶν ὀρῶν· καὶ Ἰδαία, ἀπὸ τῆς Ἴδης, καὶ δίκτυνα, ἀπὸ τῶν δικτύων·
- καὶ ἑκηβόλος, ἀπὸ τοῦ ἑκὰς τὰ θνρία βάλλειν· καὶ πολλὰ ἄλλα ὀνόματα
- ἀπὸ θήρας.—Poll. v. 13.
-
-Footnote 743:
-
- Xen. Cyneg. vi. 1. seq. Poll. v. 13.—It was customary, moreover, to
- nail the head or a foot of the game to some tree in honour of
- Artemis.—Sch. Aristoph. Ran. 143.
-
-And now, exclaims the leader of the Ten Thousand, I behold the hounds,
-joyous and full of fire, spring forward in the track of their game.
-Eagerly and ardently do they pursue it—they traverse—they run about in
-a circle—they advance now in a straight line, now bounding away
-obliquely—they plunge into the thickets, across the glades, through
-the paths, known or unknown, hurrying one before the other, shaking
-their tails, their ears hanging low,[744] their eyes flashing with
-fire. Drawing near the game they indicate the fact to their master by
-their movements, kindling up into a warlike humour, bounding emulously
-forward, scorning all thought of fatigue,—now in a body, now
-singly,—till reaching the hiding-place[745] of the hare they spring
-towards it all at once. In the midst of shouts and barking the swift
-animal glances from her form with the hounds at her heels. The
-huntsman, his left hand wrapped in his chlamys, follows staff in hand,
-animating his dogs, but avoiding, even if in his power, to head the
-game.[746]
-
-Footnote 744:
-
- C. Poll. v. 61.
-
-Footnote 745:
-
- Οἱ θάμνοι, the technical term for covert. Poll. v. 15.
-
-Footnote 746:
-
- Xen. Cyneg. vi. 14–17.
-
-A singular species of chase, now common in our own rabbit-warrens,
-appears to have passed over from Africa to the Balearic Isles, in an
-ancient account of which the first mention of it occurs. Those
-islands, it is said, were almost entirely exempted from vermin, but,
-on the other hand, contained prodigious numbers of rabbits, which
-almost destroyed every herb and plant by biting their roots. At
-length, however, they discovered a remedy for this evil. They imported
-ferrets from Africa, which, having first muzzled them, they let loose
-in the rabbit-warrens. Creeping into the holes they scared forth the
-inmates, which were caught by the sportsman. Strabo, who relates the
-circumstance, calls the ferret a “wild cat.” Pliny, having likewise
-described the devastations of the rabbits, speaks of it under the name
-of _viverra_, and says it was held in great estimation for its utility
-in this chase, which in the seventeenth century was practised in the
-island of Procida, where they procured the animal from Sicily, and
-denominated it Foretta, whence the English name. The common Italian
-appellation was donnola.[747]
-
-Footnote 747:
-
- Vict. Var. Lect. xxxi. 20. p. 883. seq. Cf. Plin. Hist. Nat. viii.
- 8, cum notis. Strab. iii. 2. p. 231.
-
-It is clear, however, that in classic times the ferret was unknown in
-Greece, otherwise we should never have heard of the proverb of the
-Carpathian and his Hare[748] applied to persons who brought evil upon
-themselves. Originally, we are told, the Island of Carpathos[749] was,
-like Ithaca, entirely destitute of hares; but a pair having been at
-length introduced, multiplied so prodigiously that they almost
-depopulated the island by devouring the fruits of the earth. A similar
-fact is related of the island Porto Santo, near Madeira, for Prince
-Henry of Portugal, immediately after its discovery, “sent Bartholomew
-Perestrello with seeds to sow and cattle to stock the place; but one
-couple of rabbits put in among the rest increased so prodigiously that
-all corn and plants being destroyed by them it was found necessary to
-unpeople the place.”[750]
-
-Footnote 748:
-
- Suid. v. Λαγώς. t. ii. p. 3.
-
-Footnote 749:
-
- This island now abounds in cattle and game, particularly quails and
- partridges.—Dapper, Descrip. des Iles de l’Archip. p. 173.
-
-Footnote 750:
-
- Hist. of Navig. prefixed to Church. Coll. of Voy. and Trav. vol. i.
- p. xx.
-
-A peculiar kind of hare is commemorated by the ancients as found in
-Elymœa. It is said to have been little inferior in size to the fox, to
-have been elongated and slender in shape, and blackish in colour, with
-a long white tip at the end of the tail. It is remarked by the same
-writer that the scent left by leverets on the ground is stronger and
-more pungent than that of the grown hare, so that the dogs become
-furious on getting wind of it.[751]
-
-Footnote 751:
-
- Poll. v. 74.
-
-From the chase of the hare and rabbit we pass on to that of the fawn
-and the stag, in which they made use of Indian dogs,[752] animals of
-great strength, size, speed, and courage. Fawns[753] were hunted in
-spring, the season of their birth. The first step was for the
-sportsman to beat up the woods to discover where the deer were
-numerous; and having found a proper place he returned thither before
-day, armed with javelins, and accompanied by a game-keeper with a pack
-of hounds. The dogs were kept in leash afar off, lest they should give
-tongue at the sight of the deer. He himself took his station on the
-look-out. At break of day[754] the does, with their yellowish and
-richly-speckled skins, were seen issuing from the thickets, followed
-by their still more delicately-spotted fawns, which they led to the
-places[755] where they usually suckled them, while the stags stationed
-themselves at a distance, as an advanced guard, to defend them from
-all intruders. The graceful creatures then lay down to perform their
-matronly office, looking round watchfully the while to observe whether
-they were discovered. This pleasing task completed, they, like the
-stags, posted themselves in a circle about their fawns to protect
-them. Sportsmen have no sentiment. At the very moment when this most
-beautiful exhibition of mute affection would have warmed with sympathy
-the heart of the philosopher or the poet, the dogs were let loose,
-while their master and his companions, armed with javelins, closed
-upon the game. The fawn itself, unless chilled and drenched by the
-dew—in which case it frisked about—would remain still in its place and
-be taken. But on hearing its cries the doe rushed forward to deliver
-it, and was smitten down by the javelins or torn to pieces by the
-dogs. The chase of the female elephant in Africa exhibits the same
-traits of affection in the brute and ferocity in man. In this case the
-young will fight for his mother, or the mother for her young till
-death.
-
-Footnote 752:
-
- Xen. Cyneg. ix. 1.
-
-Footnote 753:
-
- The terms by which, in our old hunting vocabulary, the stag was
- known at the different periods of his life are as follow:—1. a fawn;
- 2. a pricket; 3. a sourell; 4. a soure; 5. a buck of the first head;
- 6. a buck. Wase. Pref. to Gratius, p. 12.
-
-Footnote 754:
-
- Xen. Cyneg. ix. 3.
-
-Footnote 755:
-
- That is on the ὀργάδες or lawns, which, according to Pollux they
- chiefly frequented, v. 15. Cf. Schneid. ad Xen. Cyneg. ix. § 1.
-
-When the fawn had attained any considerable size, and begun to feed
-among the herd, the chase of it became more arduous. The fidelity of
-instinctive love, opposed to human sagacity, exhibited all its force.
-Closing round their young and drawing up in front of them, the stags,
-emboldened by affection, trampled the dogs under their feet,
-frequently to death, unless the huntsman, dashing into the midst of
-them, could succeed in detaching a single animal from the herd. But,
-supposing this done, the hounds at first remained far behind the fawn,
-which, terrified at finding itself alone, bounded along with
-incredible velocity, though, its strength soon failing, it in the end
-fell a prey to the hunter.
-
-The object of the ancients, however, in the chase not being simple
-sport, but to obtain possession by the shortest method possible of the
-game, they set snares in the narrows of the mountains, around the
-meadows, near the streams and freshes, and in the thickets—wherever,
-in short, stags could be taken. Pitfalls, too, were dug, as in Africa
-for the lion,[756] and most of those stratagems resorted to which the
-Nubians and Egyptian Arabs put in practice against the gazelle. It was
-in fact common to erect, with rough stones or wood, a sort of skreen,
-perhaps semicircular, like those behind which the hunters of the
-desert hide, to conceal themselves when lying in wait for the
-game.[757]
-
-Footnote 756:
-
- Xen. Cyneg. ix. 14. sqq.—Ælian describes another method of taking
- these animals not much practised by modern sportsmen; that is to say
- by the charms of music, as the Egyptian Psylli captured serpents.—De
- Nat. Anim. xii. 46.
-
-Footnote 757:
-
- Poll. v. 36.
-
-For the chase of the wild boar,[758] at once a manly and a useful
-sport, somewhat complicated preparations were necessary. In this the
-dogs of India, of Crete, of Locris, of Sparta, hunted side by side,
-and the sportsman took the field armed with strong nets, javelins,
-hunting poles, and snares. The boar-spears of the ancients[759] were
-most carefully fashioned, with a broad sharp head and handle of tough
-wood. So likewise were their hunting-poles armed with long iron
-points, fixed in brazen sockets, with a shaft of service wood.
-Footsnares of great strength were set at intervals. This was not the
-sport of a solitary hunter. They went out in considerable numbers, and
-kept close together, finding still, for lack of fire-arms, no small
-difficulty in coping with the foe. On reaching the spot where they
-supposed the hog to be ensconced, the dogs were all led carefully in
-leash with the exception of one Spartan hound, which was let loose and
-accompanied in all his movements. When he appeared to have found the
-track, they followed him, and he thus took the lead in the chase.
-Numerous signs also directed the movements of the hunter; in soft
-places the track, broken branches in thickets, and in forests the
-wounds on the bark of trees, given by the boar in sharpening his tusks
-as he passed.[760]
-
-Footnote 758:
-
- Cf. Aristoph. Vesp. i. 202. seq. Xen. Cyrop. i. 6. 28.
-
-Footnote 759:
-
- Xen. Cyneg. x. 3.
-
-Footnote 760:
-
- The huntsmen give judgment of the wild boar by the print of his
- foot, by his rooting; a wild swine roots deeper than our ordinary
- hogs, because its snout is longer, and when he comes into a
- corn-field, as the Calydonian boar in Ovid, turns up one continued
- furrow, &c.—Wase, Illustrations, V. p. 64.
-
-Generally the traces were found leading to some sheltered nook, warm
-in winter, in summer cool, where the boar made his lair. On
-discovering him the dog gave tongue, but the animal in general refused
-to rise. The hound was then withdrawn and put in leash with the
-others, and every opening, save one, leading to the place, closed with
-nets, the upper ends of which were passed over the forks of trees. The
-nets were hung so as to belly outwards, and carefully disposed so that
-they could be seen through. Bushes cut hastily supported them on
-either side, and closed every aperture through which the game could
-attempt to force a way. This done the hounds were all slipped, and the
-hunters, armed with pikes and spears, entered the netted enclosure.
-One of the boldest and most experienced led the dogs; the others
-followed at intervals, leaving an ample space between them for the
-boar, which if closely hemmed in might have inflicted on his opponents
-the fate of Adonis. Presently the hounds sprang all at once upon the
-game, which rising in sudden alarm tossed the first it encountered
-into the air, and breaking through the pack made away towards the
-nets, followed by men and dogs in full cry. On finding the
-unaccustomed opposition, he would, if running down hill, plunge right
-forward to force his way through; if in a plain he would stand still,
-glaring fiercely around.
-
-The dogs, however, soon closed upon his track, while the hunters
-galled him with javelins and stones, approaching closer and closer
-till he was driven by his own impetuosity into the nets. Upon this the
-most daring of his pursuers drew near, pike in hand, and sought to put
-an end to the contest by piercing him in the head. Sometimes,
-notwithstanding all they could do, instead of plunging into the toils
-he would turn upon them; in which case some dexterous sportsman, armed
-with spear or pike, usually presented himself to receive his charge
-with one foot advanced, impelling the weapon with the right hand,
-directing it with the left. Instead, however, of rushing on at once
-the hog would perhaps pause a moment to reconnoitre, when it behoved
-his antagonist carefully to mark every movement of his head or glance
-of his eye.[761] For in the very moment that a blow was aimed at him,
-he would sometimes dash the spear aside with tusk or snout, and the
-next moment be upon his enemy, whose only chance of safety now
-consisted in throwing himself instantaneously on his face, and holding
-fast by whatever he could grasp, since, the tusks of the boar curving
-upwards, he found it difficult to gore his enemy thus lying, and
-failing to turn him over would in his fury trample on him. A second
-hunter now rushed forward to deliver his companion, and usually drew
-off the hog by dexterous attacks in flank. The fallen sportsman,
-recovering at the same time his feet and his spear, must by the laws
-of the chase return to the combat, and could only secure his
-reputation by immolating his foe. By this time, indeed, the task had
-generally become easier; for, rendered reckless by fury, he would
-throw himself impetuously on their pikes, which, but for the
-protecting guards at the head, would have gone through him handle and
-all. His whole frame now appeared to be kindled with rage, his blood
-boiling, his eyes flashing, and his tusks so nearly on fire that if
-brought in contact with hair at the moment of death, they would
-frizzle it like a red-hot iron.[762]
-
-Footnote 761:
-
- Cf. Poll. v. 23. sqq.
-
-Footnote 762:
-
- Οὕτω δὲ πολλὴ ἡ δυναμίς ἐστιν αὐτοῦ, ὥστε καὶ, ἃ οὐκ ἂν οἴοιτό τις,
- πρόσεστιν αὐτῷ· τεθνεῶτος γὰρ εὐθὺς ἐάν τις ἐπὶ τὸν ὀδόντα ἐπιθῇ
- τρίχας, συντρέχουσιν· οὑτως εἰσὶ θερμοὶ· ζῶντι δὲ διάπυροι, ὅταν
- ἐρεθίζηται· οὐ γὰρ ἂν τῶν κυνῶν, ἁμαρτάνων τῇ πληγῄ τοῦ σώματος,
- ἄκρα τὰ τριχώματα περιεπίμπρα.—Xen. Cyneg. x. 17. Cf. Poll. v. 80.
- Oppian. Venat. iii. 379. seq. Scalig. Poët. v. 14. p. 698.
-
-Of the hunting of the bear[763] the ancients have left us no exact
-description. As this animal abounded, however, in most parts of
-Greece, where it was extremely troublesome and destructive,
-particularly to the fruit-trees, various expedients were hit upon for
-taking and destroying it. Sometimes it was pursued as game and brought
-down by the bow; but the common method appears to have been to make
-use of traps and snares. They dug, for example, a deep trench round
-one of those trees in the fruit of which the bear particularly
-delighted, and covering it with reeds or brittle branches, they
-sprinkled thereon a thin layer of earth, and concealed the whole
-apparatus with fresh grass. The bear, proceeding as usual towards the
-tree on his thievish errand, broke in the roof of the pit with his
-weight, and was caught. Even in the most civilised times this animal
-had not been wholly extirpated from Attica,[764] but, as well as the
-boar, was found on Mount Parnes. In Laconia also, through the whole
-range of Taygetos, it abounded, together with hogs, deer, and wild
-goats. Bruin was sacrificed in Achaia to Artemis Laphria. In Thrace
-the white bear was found.[765]
-
-Footnote 763:
-
- Pausanias mentions the bear as an inhabitant of Pendeli. “About
- three years since one was shot in the mountains of Parnassos, and
- brought to Aracooa. The lynx, the wild cat, the wild boar, the wild
- goat, the stag, the roebuck, the badger, the martin, and squirrel
- inhabit the steeper rocks of Parnassos, and the thick pine forests
- above Callidia. The rough mountains about Marathon are frequented by
- moles, foxes, and jackals; weasels are sometimes taken in the
- villages and out-houses; hares are too numerous to be
- particularised.” Sibthorp in Walp. Mem. i. 73.
-
-Footnote 764:
-
- Paus. i. 32. 1.
-
-Footnote 765:
-
- Paus. iii. 20. 4. vii. 18. 13. viii. 17. 3.
-
-Respecting the habits of the Grecian bear the ancients have left us
-some few facts which may be worth repeating. When it comes forth from
-the den,[766] where it has passed the winter, it is said to chew bits
-of wood, and to feed on snake-weed, wake-robin, or cuckoo-pint (arum
-maculatum[767]), which has a purgative power. These operations
-performed, its ravenous appetites immediately awake, and it commences
-its devastations in the farm-yard, the orchard and the apiary.
-Delighting greatly in honey it attacks and overthrows the hives which
-it tears to pieces in order to devour the combs, though Pliny[768]
-adduces another reason for this fact, exceedingly characteristic of
-that writer. He says that the bear, after his winter sleep, finding
-his eyes dim and his head heavy, applies to the bees as to skilful
-oculists, that in revenge for robbing them of their honey, sting him
-angrily about the face, which by letting much blood relieves him at
-once from his ophthalmia and his headache. The bear, it is well known,
-is omnivorous like man. He accordingly plunders the bean-fields, and
-feeds on every kind of pulse. In robbing orchards,[769] too, his
-courage and ability are great, being as I have said as complete an
-adept as a school-boy in climbing trees, out of which when he has
-satisfied himself he descends, like the aforesaid mischievous beast,
-feet foremost. When none of the delicacies above enumerated was within
-his reach, the bear would feed on ants, crabs, or any kind of vermin,
-but preferred of course the flesh of the larger animals, such as the
-stag, the wild boar, and the bull. His mode of taking his prey was
-curious. Upon the boar and stag he probably dropped from his hiding
-place in the trees, but the stratagem by which he usually got the bull
-into his power was this.[770] Throwing himself on the ground directly
-in his way he provoked the lord of the herd to gore him, upon which,
-seizing his horns, and fastening ravenously upon his shoulder, he
-brought him to the ground, where he fed upon his carcass at leisure.
-When flying from the more terrible face of man, the female usually
-drove her young before her, or taking them up in her mouth or on her
-back, she would endeavour to escape with them into the trees.[771]
-
-Footnote 766:
-
- Aristot. Hist. Anim. ix. 6. viii. 17. vi. 30. Ælian de Nat. Anim.
- vi. 3. Cf. Buffon, Hist. Nat. t. viii. p. 27.
-
-Footnote 767:
-
- This now we find is the food of swine. “Leaving Pyrgo (in Bœotia),
- we advanced along the plain to Eremo Castro; in our road we observed
- droves of pigs tearing up the ground for the roots of the
- cuckow-pint (arum maculatum) which was called by the swineherds
- δρακοντίο.”—Sibth. in Walp. i. 65.
-
-Footnote 768:
-
- Nat. Hist. viii. 54.
-
-Footnote 769:
-
- Aristot. Hist. Anim. viii. 5.
-
-Footnote 770:
-
- Ælian. de Nat. Anim. vi. 6. Aristot. ut sup.
-
-Footnote 771:
-
- Aristot. Hist. Anim. ix. 6. Ælian. de Nat. Anim. vi. 6.
-
-As the lion was not found in Greece in the civilised periods of its
-history, the chase of it cannot be said to have formed an Hellenic
-amusement.[772] They might, however, by proceeding a little beyond the
-borders in their colonies of Thrace and Asia Minor, on Mount Pangæos,
-on the Mysian Olympos, and in Syria, enjoy this dangerous pastime if
-they desired it. In all those countries, however, both the lion,[773]
-the panther, the pard, the lynx, and other animals of this destructive
-class had been confined to the mountains, where, as an acute and
-experienced observer has remarked, they lose much of their force and
-ferocity. The expression made use of by Xenophon proves in fact that
-the dread of man had driven them almost into inaccessible fastnesses,
-whither they could not be pursued by the hunter, so that they were
-chiefly taken in their descent to the lowlands by poisoning, with
-aconite,[774] the waters or the baits which they set for them:
-sometimes, indeed, when want compelled them into the plains, parties
-of hunters on horseback, and armed to the teeth, would assault and
-destroy them, not without imminent peril. Pitfalls, too, of ingenious
-construction were dug for them, having an earthen pillar in the centre
-on which a goat was tied.[775] The encircling moat, like that above
-described, destined for the bear, was concealed by a covering of
-slender bushes which, breaking under them, they were precipitated to
-the bottom and there killed. The wolf, though a sacred animal[776] in
-Attica, had by the laws a price set upon his head, at which
-Menage[777] wonders, though the Egyptians also slaughtered their
-sacred crocodiles, when they exceeded a certain size.
-
-Footnote 772:
-
- Xen. Cyneg. xi. 1.
-
-Footnote 773:
-
- Pollux (v. 14.) observes that in his time lions were chiefly found
- in mountainous tracts as wild boars were in marshes and pardales in
- the depths of the woods.
-
-Footnote 774:
-
- Xen. Cyneg. xi. 2. Poll. v. 82. Plin. viii. 27. Dioscor. iv. 77.
- Foxes were supposed to be killed by baits steeped in the juice of
- bitter almonds (Id. i. 176); wolves, panthers, dogs, &c. by
- dog’s-bane.—Id. iv. 81.
-
-Footnote 775:
-
- Oppian. de Venat. iv. 85. sqq.
-
-Footnote 776:
-
- Cf. Hesych. v. Λυκαβ.
-
-Footnote 777:
-
- Ad D. Laert. p. 20. b. c. Meurs. Solon, c. 19.
-
-In the chase of the wild goat the bow, among the mountains of Crete,
-was made use of, and so skilful as marksmen were the Cretans[778] that
-from the depths of the valleys they would bring down their game from
-the pinnacles of the loftiest cliffs.[779] They were fabled to have
-been taught the art of hunting by the Curetes, and, practising it
-constantly in steep and difficult places, they acquired great
-suppleness and agility of body, and were exceedingly swift of
-foot.[780]
-
-Footnote 778:
-
- The very name of the Cretans has by some been derived from the use
- of the bow. Κρῆτες, παρὰ τὸ ἐπὶ κέρασι βιοτεύειν· κυνηγετικοὶ γάρ.
- Etym. Mag. 537. 54. See in Homer a description of the bow of
- Pandaros where we are told it was made from the horns of a wild
- goat.—Il. δ. 105. sqq.
-
-Footnote 779:
-
- Ælian. Var. Hist. i. 10. On the cothurnos which these hunters wore,
- see Spanheim ad Callim. in Dian. 16. p. 142. sqq. Bœttig. Les
- Furies, p. 37. The high half-boot worn by Artemis in the chase is
- represented in Mus. Chiaramon. pl. 18.
-
-Footnote 780:
-
- Athen. xii. 28. Meurs. Cret. p. 177.
-
-The Macedonians, too, were both practised and enthusiastic sportsmen,
-and delighted in the amusement even whilst engaged in their most
-toilsome expeditions. Thus during the campaigns of Alexander in Asia,
-we find the generals Leonatos and Menelaos or Philotas[781] carrying
-about among their baggage, linen skreens, ten or twelve miles in
-length, which during their halts they caused to be stretched round a
-given district, where they hunted as in a park. An anecdote is related
-strikingly illustrating the high estimation in which the chase was
-held at the court and among the nobles of Macedonia, where it was
-customary for the son to sit upright on a chair at his father’s table
-and not to recline among the guests until he had slain a wild boar out
-of the toils. Cassander, son of Antipater, continued, it is said,[782]
-up to his thirty-fifth year bolt upright at the regal board, because,
-though a brave man and a skilful hunter, fortune had constantly denied
-him the pleasure of despatching the hog after the prescribed fashion.
-
-Footnote 781:
-
- Athen. xii. 55. Plut. Alex. § 40. See in Wase’s Illustrations, p.
- 68. an account of the Polish royal hunts in which, on a smaller
- scale, the same practice prevailed.
-
-Footnote 782:
-
- Athen. i. 31.
-
-There is one department of the chase, and that perhaps the most
-curious and interesting, which was not practised by the Greeks of
-classical times, though it cannot be said to have been unknown to
-them; I mean falconry, described by several ancient writers as it was
-pursued in India and in Thrace. If I give a short description of it,
-therefore, it must be regarded as a digression introduced for the
-purpose of completing, as far as possible, the circle of ancient
-amusements. Ctesias,[783] who was contemporary with Socrates, and
-published his Indian history four hundred years before Christ, seems
-to be the oldest writer by whom falconry is mentioned. He tells us
-that among the Hindùs hares and foxes were hunted with kites, ravens,
-and eagles, and minutely describes the way in which the birds were
-broken in. Having been caught while young, they were first taught to
-fly at tame hares and foxes in the following manner. The animals with
-pieces of flesh tied to them were started in sight of the falcons,
-which were immediately let loose and sent in pursuit. When they caught
-and brought back the game the flesh was given them as their reward,
-and by this bait and allurement they were encouraged to persevere.
-When sufficiently trained, they were taken to the mountains and flown
-against wild hares and foxes. The passion for falconry is still kept
-alive in the East, particularly in Persia, where the shâh-baz, or
-royal falcon, is flown against hares and antelopes, occasionally
-invested with leathers, which protect him from being torn
-asunder.[784] But the most daring and dangerous service in which
-falcons have ever been employed is the chase of the wild horse by the
-Turcomâns of Khiva on the eastern shores of the Caspian.[785] A more
-detailed description of ancient falconry than that given by Ctesias is
-found in a work attributed to Aristotle.[786] It is said, observes
-this writer, that the youth of Thrace, who were addicted to hunting,
-pursued their game by the assistance of hawks. On arriving upon the
-ground, the falcon, which had evidently been trained for the purpose,
-obeyed the calls of the sportsmen and chased the birds into the
-thickets, where they were knocked down with hunting-poles and taken.
-Even when the falcons themselves captured the game, they brought it to
-the hunters, who as in modern times gave them, as a reward, some
-portion of the animal.
-
-Footnote 783:
-
- Ap. Ælian. de Nat. Anim. iv. 26.
-
-Footnote 784:
-
- Sir John Malcolm’s Sketches of Persia.
-
-Footnote 785:
-
- Anthony Jenkinson in Hackluyt, v. i. p. 368.
-
-Footnote 786:
-
- De Mirab. Auscult. 128. Beckm. Hist. of Discov. and Inven. i. p.
- 321.
-
-In their fowling they made use of great cruelty:—Pigeons and
-turtle-doves were commonly blinded, to be used as decoys, and in this
-condition would sometimes live eight years.[787] Partridges were
-employed for the same purpose in a different manner. The male bird
-having been tamed was put out in the neighbourhood of a covey, upon
-which the boldest of the wild birds came forward to fight him, and was
-secured with the net. The challenge was usually accepted by every male
-bird in the covey until one after another they were all taken. When
-the female was employed she drew them successively to the nets by her
-call.[788] The first that is deluded is generally the principal cock
-in the covey, which the others collecting together seek to drive away.
-To elude their pursuit the leader sometimes drew near the decoy in
-silence, that he might not have to contend with the other males. Not
-unfrequently they would descend and allow themselves at such times to
-be caught on the roofs of the houses.[789]
-
-Footnote 787:
-
- Arist. Hist. Anim. ix. 8. Xenoph. Cyrop. i. 6. 39. has introduced
- many particulars respecting fowling.
-
-Footnote 788:
-
- Cf. Xen. Memorab. ii. 1. 4. Their nets were denominated νεφέλαι,
- Schol. Aristoph. Av. 194. Cf. Schol. Pac. 1144. The man who watched
- the nets bore the name of λινόπτης.—Aristot. ap. id. ibid.
-
-Footnote 789:
-
- Athen. ix. 42.
-
-The Greeks established at Alexandria had, according to Athenæus, who
-was a native of Egypt, a kind of chase peculiar to themselves, viz.
-that of the horned owl. The sophist of Naucratis has indeed been
-suspected of confounding the ὠτὸς with the ὠτὶς, that is, the owl with
-the bustard;[790] but it having been in his power to examine what he
-relates, I shall lay his account before the reader, who will judge for
-himself. This bird, it is said, is found in great numbers in the
-desert near Alexandria, (though I myself saw none there,) and is as
-much given to mimicry as a monkey. Above all things he is ambitious of
-imitating man, and, as far as possible, will do whatever he sees done
-by the fowler. Aware of his propensity in this way, these gentlemen,
-when desirous of taking an owl, carried along with them into the
-desert a thick tenacious glue, with which on coming within eyeshot of
-the Otos they affected to anoint their eyes. Then laying down the
-glue-pot on the sand they retreated to some hollow for concealment.
-Upon this the owl having watchfully observed their movements,
-approached, and covering his eyes with the treacherous ointment was
-blinded and taken.
-
-Footnote 790:
-
- Alexand. Myndius calls it the λαγωδίας in which case it may probably
- mean the _Ptarmigan_.
-
-Another mode of catching this bird also prevailed. It having been
-discovered that he was as partial as the Bedouin Arab to the company
-of a horse, the fowlers covered themselves with horses’ skins, and in
-this disguise approaching the flock were enabled to catch as many as
-they pleased. A third method of taking the Otos was one which exposed
-the unfortunate bird to the ridicule of the comic poets. The fowlers
-setting out upon the chase in pairs, separated at coming in sight of
-the game. One of the two then stepped out in front of the game and
-commenced a jig, upon which the thoughtless mimic immediately did the
-same, beating exact time with his feet, and keeping his eye fixed upon
-his wily teacher. While the merry victim was thus engaged, capering,
-springing, and pirouetting like a feathered Taglioni, the other
-bird-catcher approached from behind and seized him by the neck.
-
-The same story is related by other writers of the Scops or
-mocking-owl, in imitation of whose movements, the ancients had a
-celebrated dance.[791]
-
-Footnote 791:
-
- Athen. ix. 44. seq. Arist. Hist. Anim. viii. 12 ad fin.
-
-Quails in certain seasons of the year frequent Greece in vast numbers,
-as they do Egypt and Southern Italy.[792] It has been supposed that
-the island of Delos received the name of Ortygia from the quails
-(ὄρτυγες), which alighted on it in great numbers during their
-migration towards the north. They were likewise plentiful in
-Phœnicia,[793] where they sacrificed them to Heracles. Numerous
-contrivances were resorted to for catching this bird. During pairing
-time it was taken as follows: mirrors were set up in the fields with
-snares in front of them, and the quail running towards the imaginary
-bird was there entrapped. Clearchos of Soli describes a curious mode
-of capturing jackdaws. In places frequented by those birds they used,
-he says, to lay broad vessels filled to the brim with oil. Presently
-the jackdaws, curious and prying in their temper, would alight on the
-edges, and, being vastly pleased with the reflection of their own
-beauty, would chuckle over it and clap their wings, till becoming
-saturated with oil the feathers stuck together and they could no
-longer fly.
-
-Footnote 792:
-
- They are taken in so great numbers in the island of Capri that they
- constitute the chief source of revenue to the bishop of that island.
-
-Footnote 793:
-
- Phanodem. l. iii. ap. Ath. ix. 47.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
- SCHOOLS OF THE PHILOSOPHERS AND SOPHISTS.
-
-
-Having thus drawn as complete a picture as the plan of our work would
-permit, of the physical training of the Greeks in all its branches,
-comprehending Gymnastics properly so called, together with those other
-exercises which under the name of field-sports were enjoyed rather
-than studied under the lead of no master but experience, we now return
-to that mental discipline, which for the most part exerted its
-influence in the developement of the intellectual faculties at the
-same time that the foregoing bodily discipline brought forth all the
-energies of the frame. We shall thus have traversed the whole circle
-of Hellenic education, when we shall have exhibited the youth passing
-through the schools of the philosophers and sophists into the
-world.[794]
-
-Footnote 794:
-
- Cf. M. Ant. Muret. Orat. vii. p. 70. sqq.
-
-Their mode of teaching differed very materially from ours. It scarcely
-seemed an object with them to devour large quantities of learning, but
-going leisurely again and again over the same ground they appeared to
-give the lessons they received time to sink like gentle rain into
-their minds. Some advantage, too, arose from their method of teaching,
-as far as possible, orally. The master was to them instead of a
-library. A book has but one set of phrases for all. But the living
-teacher, if he found his pupils could not rise to his language, could
-lower it to meet them half-way, could be brief or expansive, or
-general or minute, as the necessities of the moment required. There
-was a familiarity, too, in the relation, scarcely compatible with our
-manners. The youth forgot he was learning, and rather supposed himself
-to be searching in the company of a friend for truths equally unknown
-to both. This appears to have been more particularly the case in their
-moral studies,[795] at least in the Socratic schools, where all the
-pomp of wisdom was laid aside that it might be the more popular.
-
-Footnote 795:
-
- Vid. Ant. Muret. Orat. iv. 43. sqq.
-
-It has been already remarked that the first lessons in morals were
-learned from the poets, whom, in my opinion, Plato wrongs most
-egregiously when he arraigns their fables as so many sources of
-immorality.[796] He appears, in fact, wilfully to confound them with
-those impostors, the purificators and diviners, who furnished the
-Popes with the original hint of penitences and indulgencies, and
-expiating crimes by proxy. But this is unjust. It is visiting the sins
-of low and sensual versifiers upon the divine heads of bards whom
-heaven itself had inspired. However this may be, upon the Greeks young
-and old no teachers exercised so powerful an influence as the poets,
-who, from Homer down to Callistratos,[797] whether in epic or
-after-dinner song, wielded the empire of their feelings despotically,
-prompting them to actions pregnant with renown. And the avidity with
-which their lessons were imbibed, is compared to that of a swarm of
-bees alighting (ἐπιπτομένοι)[798] on a bed of spring flowers. In fact,
-what Jason of Pheræ said of himself,—that he was devoured by the love
-of empire[799]—appears to have been true of the Athenian youth, in
-their irrepressible thirst after knowledge. Such of them, at least, as
-were εὐφυεῖς καὶ ἱκανοὶ, are said to have hungered fiercely after
-philosophy, and that not for any particular part but for the whole.
-And Socrates declares that he who while young is fastidious in his
-studies, rejecting this, disliking that, before mature reason has
-taught him which is useful and which is not, may consider himself what
-he pleases, but can never be great in learning or philosophy. To excel
-in these it is necessary insatiably to covet every kind of
-instruction, and joyfully to enter on the acquisition of it. He says,
-indeed, that they resemble sight-seers, greedy of every spectacle; or
-musical people, who are led by the ear wherever fiddling and singing
-are going forward; except that, with the latter pleasure is the sole
-motive, with the former an exalted passion for truth.[800] But what
-truths are the object of philosophy? Those which have regard to the
-nature and attributes of goodness, from which, as from a fountain,
-flow all the usefulness and advantages of virtue. Philosophy in Greece
-comprehended religion, and to be religious was to act justly,
-benevolently, mercifully towards men, humbly and piously towards God.
-To live thus, that is, to be virtuous, they considered it necessary to
-possess a knowledge of the whole theory of ethics, since virtue, in
-their opinion, is incompatible with ignorance. But man, besides being
-a moral being, accountable to God, is a political being, accountable
-to the laws of his country. He has duties also to perform towards that
-country. To perform these properly he must comprehend the nature of a
-state, and the relations subsisting between the state and the
-individuals who compose it; that is, he must be acquainted with the
-science of politics. Again in all free states, reasoning and
-persuasion, not blind will and brute force, are the instruments of
-government. The citizen must, therefore, be versed in logic and
-eloquence,[801] that he may think correctly and explain clearly and
-forcibly to others the convictions which determine his own judgment.
-We have thus a cycle of Greek studies with the reasons on which they
-were founded.
-
-Footnote 796:
-
- Plat. de Rep. ii. t. i. p. 112. sqq. Stallb. Cf. Hardion, Dissert.
- sur l’Eloquence, iii. Biblioth. Academ. t. iii. p. 194. p. 210. sqq.
-
-Footnote 797:
-
- See Schoel. Hist. de la Lit. Grecq. i. 288. Lowth. Poes. Sacr. Hebr.
- p. 12. Leipz.
-
-Footnote 798:
-
- Plat. de Rep. ii. t. i. p. 115. Stallb. On the ardent and noble
- temperament of Athenian youth, see the note of Valckennaer, ad
- Xenoph. Mem. iii. 3. 13. p. 286. Schneid. Cf. Plat. de Rep. v. t. i.
- p. 345.
-
-Footnote 799:
-
- Aristot. Polit. iii. 4.
-
-Footnote 800:
-
- Plat. de Rep. v. t. i. p. 393. seq. Stallb.
-
-Footnote 801:
-
- Plat. Gorg. t. iii. p. 27. De Rep. t. vi. p. 358. sqq. Bekk.
-
-With regard to their religious education, which commenced in the
-nursery and was interwoven with every other study, it may be observed
-that without it no person at Athens could rise to any eminence, or
-command, even in private life, the respect of his fellow-citizens. To
-be in favour with them a man must be supposed to stand well with the
-gods. They conceived, in fact, that while conscience remained
-unstifled, there would be a sense of religion, and that when this
-went, probity, for the most part, and honour fled along with it. For
-regarding the deity in the light of a parent,—"we are all his
-offspring,"—irreligion appeared to them something like a disposition
-to parricide, a compound of injustice with the basest and most
-atrocious ingratitude. Arrived at this pitch, a man to compass his
-ends would scruple at nothing. They, therefore, regarded every symptom
-of impiety as a blow aimed at the democracy, of which Zeus was king.
-He who tramples on his country’s religion, which is the basis of all
-its laws, will infallibly, if it be in his power, trample next on
-those laws themselves, and next on his fellow-citizens whom the laws
-protect. Hence the terror, the vengeance, and, indeed, the cruelty
-arising out of the mutilation of the Hermæ, and the profanation of the
-mysteries, and the prosecution which followed, of Alcibiades,
-Andocides, and the rest. An attempt had been made to break down that
-enclosure of reverential sanctity which surrounded the commonwealth,
-and commended it to the protection of heaven. They considered the act
-a formal renouncing of the Almighty, and feared,—so imperfect were
-their notions,—lest the impiety of the few should redound to the
-detriment of the whole.
-
-The remark is common in the mouths[802] of men that the education of
-the people should be conformable to the spirit of their institutions.
-But this is a mere truism, and means no more than this,—that men
-should not be enjoined one thing by their laws and political
-constitution, and another by the habits and maxims taught in youth.
-The grand difficulty, however, always has been to make them so to
-harmonise in practice that they should be but two parts of the same
-system.
-
-Footnote 802:
-
- See on this part of the subject Destutt de Tracy. Com. sur l’Esprit
- des Loix, p. 25. sqq.
-
-In monarchies[803] a spirit of exclusion, something like that on which
-the system of castes is built, must pervade the whole business of
-education. The nobility must have schools to themselves, or, if
-wealthy plebeians be suffered to mingle with them, superior honour and
-consideration must be yielded to the former. The masters must look up
-to them and to their families, not to the people for preferment and
-advancement; and the plebeians, though superior in number, must be
-weak in influence, and be taught to borrow their tone from the
-privileged students.
-
-Footnote 803:
-
- In an ill-constituted state, observes Muretus, a good man cannot be
- a good citizen, for he will desire to alter the government, which
- being bad he cannot respect.—In Aristot. Eth. p. 398.
-
-In an oligarchy, properly so called, there should be no mingling of
-the classes at all. Schools must be established expressly for the
-governors, and others for the governed. The basis of education should
-be the notion that some men were born for rule and others for
-subjection; that the happiness of individuals depends on uninquiring
-submission to authority; that their rulers are wise and they unwise;
-that all they have to do with the laws is to obey them; and all
-teachers must be made to feel that their admission among the great
-depends on the faithful advocacy of such notions.
-
-In free states, again, the contrary course will best promote the ends
-of government; the schools must be strictly public, and not merely
-theoretically but practically open to all. There should be no
-compulsion to attend them, but ignorance of the things there taught
-should involve a forfeiture of civil rights as much as being of
-unsound mind; for in truth, an ignorant man is not of sound mind, any
-more than one unable to use all his limbs is of sound body. Here the
-discipline must be very severe. A spirit rigidly puritanical must
-pervade the studies and preside over the amusements. Every tendency
-irreligious, immoral, ungentlemanly, as unworthy the dignity of
-freedom, should be nipped in the bud. The students must be taught to
-despise all other distinctions but those of virtue and genius, in
-other words the power to serve the community. They should be taught to
-contemplate humanity as in other respects wholly on the same level,
-with nothing above it but the laws. The teachers must be dependent on
-the people alone, and owe their success to their own abilities and
-popular manners. And this last in a great measure was the spirit of
-Athenian education.[804]
-
-Footnote 804:
-
- The advantages of which were so much coveted by foreigners, that
- they sent their children in crowds to be educated at Athens.—Æsch.
- Epist. Orat. Att. xii. 214.
-
-The best proof[805] that could be furnished of the excellence of a
-system of education would be its rendering a people almost independent
-of government, that is swayed more by their habits than by the laws.
-This was preëminently the case with the Athenians. They required to be
-very little meddled with by their rulers. Instructed in their duties
-and the reason which rendered them duties, accustomed from childhood
-to perform them, they lived as moral and educated men live still,
-independent of the laws.
-
-Footnote 805:
-
- A commonwealth, says Plato, once well constituted will proceed like
- an ever rolling circle. For by persevering in good training and
- instruction, the minds and disposition of the people will be
- rendered good, and these again in their turn will improve the system
- of training and instruction, and even the race of man itself, as the
- breed of other animals, is rendered more excellent by care.—De Rep.
- t. vi. p. 173. Cf. Isocrates, Areop. § 14. seq.
-
-This was the effect. The causes must be sought in their discipline and
-studies. I have observed that among them a principal subject of
-investigation was the science of politics, that is the science
-according to the principles of which states are framed and preserved.
-Nor did they, as some do, conduct their studies in that cold manner in
-which men investigate matters of mere curiosity, or things they are
-never to do more than converse or write about. They studied it as a
-profession, as a means of rising to power, and through power to fame,
-that is with all the ardour and earnestness of which enthusiastic
-youth is capable. Education by this means exerted an influence unknown
-under other forms of government. A consciousness that they were
-engaged in a sort of sacred contest, of which all Greece was
-spectator, pervaded the youth of every rank, and impelled them
-irresistibly into that course of studies which promised the greatest
-probability of success. Hence, no doubt much of the enthusiasm with
-which philosophy was cultivated. It was often not so much the abstract
-love of wisdom as a conviction of the political value of that wisdom
-which filled the schools of the great men who taught at Athens,
-whether they were physiologists, mathematicians, masters of music, of
-strategy, or of eloquence. The example of Pericles applying himself to
-natural philosophy under Anaxagoras, and deriving thence those streams
-of pure and masculine eloquence which overflowed the Pnyx, operated
-forcibly on public opinion. By the same arts and studies men hoped to
-mount to equal elevation, forgetting that Anaxagoras only watered the
-plant spontaneously produced by nature.
-
-However, the hopes and aspirations I have described filled the schools
-first of the philosophers, then of the sophists. And this is the
-natural course of things. Few pursue wisdom for its own sake, in order
-that it may purify and render holy their own minds. And by this
-dispensation of Providence society is a gainer; for, as man is
-constituted, no sooner does he possess any mental excellence, any
-knowledge or art or experience, which can be rendered available, than
-he comes eagerly forward with it to extort praise or reward from the
-community by conferring benefits upon it. The examples of reserve in
-this matter are few, nor, in fact, are they to be commended who in
-this or in any thing else hide their light under a bushel; and
-therefore Plato is wrong when he teaches that wise men will as a rule
-abstain from intermeddling with state affairs, unless constrained
-thereto by fines and menaces. He confesses, indeed, that the worst of
-all punishments is to be governed by evil men, and that to avoid this
-even philosophers will consent to hold the reins of government.[806]
-But where they do not, they are always in free states the masters of
-those who do. Their schools were the colleges and universities of the
-ancient world, and so long as freedom endured the great object of
-their philosophy was to create able citizens and a happy state. On
-this account their remains are still instinct with life. Their object
-was gradually to ripen human nature into perfection by perfecting its
-education and its institutions. They knew how completely a people is
-in the power of its teachers for good or for evil, and accordingly,
-with some few exceptions, applied themselves to elevate the
-conceptions, the moral tone, the feelings of their countrymen, seldom
-descending to trifling disquisitions excepting for relaxation in the
-intervals of more important inquiries.
-
-Footnote 806:
-
- Repub. i. t. vi. p. 42. seq. Bekk.
-
-The physical sciences,[807] save in the case of their earliest
-cultivators, were regarded as simple handmaids to ethics and politics.
-Nevertheless, in the study of them much earnestness was exhibited.
-For, where knowledge is at all held in honour, men will always be
-found sufficiently prone to the palpable and visible. But even these
-pursuits assumed a peculiar form in Greece. The genius of the nation,
-essentially creative, developed its force and its peculiar energy in
-framing systems of physics, explaining the origin of the world, the
-birth of the human race, its early fortunes and fabulous history.
-Every great philosopher became, like an intellectual sun, the centre
-of a system of physics, and his disciples like satellites revolved
-around him, receiving and reflecting his light. This, despite of some
-inconveniences, was highly favourable to science. It compelled men to
-the study of the philosophical art of attack and defence. Each school
-became the reviewers and critics of its rivals, sought out their weak
-points, studied them profoundly, called up all its acuteness, all its
-subtlety, both to assault others and defend itself; and thus, whatever
-became of the system, the professors of it carried, as far as might be
-towards perfection, their intellectual powers, invested their
-reasonings with every grace of which they were susceptible, culled
-from the most recondite arts and hidden resources of style and
-eloquence.
-
-Footnote 807:
-
- Vid. Athen. ii. 18.—That geography entered but very little into
- their studies may be inferred from Thucydides, vii. 1.
-
-But, while this golden currency was circulating through Greece,
-enriching its mind and augmenting its chances of independence and
-happiness, a race of men sprang up, who brought into use a number of
-ingenious and beautiful counters,—I mean the sophists.[808] The
-influence of these men in the education of the Greeks has seldom been
-correctly appreciated. It has been more common to vituperate than to
-study them. They corrupted, we are told, the mind and manners of
-youth. But how? No one, as far as I know, has observed that to them is
-to be traced the extinction of the republican spirit and the opening
-of a way for despotism.[809] That they created the yearning after
-innovation I will not affirm; but their epoch constituted a period of
-transition from republican to monarchical institutions, and the only
-way in which they can be said to have corrupted the youth was by
-undermining that love of liberty and of country, the feeling of
-disinterestedness on which chiefly a commonwealth must be founded, and
-inculcating in lieu thereof a system of ethics more in conformity with
-the modifications of civil polity prevalent in modern times. In this
-way only did they corrupt and undermine the morals of their country.
-But in so far they effected it, and that the more easily, in that
-circumstances conspired, about the time they arose, to fling the whole
-business of teaching into their hands, insomuch that to be a sophist,
-and to teach youth, grew to be synonymous terms.[810]
-
-Footnote 808:
-
- Vid. Herod. i. 29. And Cf. Schœll. Hist. de la Lit. Grecq. ii. 134.
- Isoc. de Perm. § 26. Muret. in Arist. Ethic. p. 477. Menag. ad Diog.
- Laert. p. 5. a. b. &c.
-
-Footnote 809:
-
- Hobbes, the great representative of this class of men in modern
- times, living under the despotism of the Stuarts, sought to turn the
- tables upon the philosophers, and accused them of corrupting the
- minds of youth. “As to rebellion, in particular against monarchy,
- one of the most frequent causes of it is the reading of the books of
- policy and histories of the ancient Greeks and Romans; from which
- young men, and all others that are unprovided of the antidote of
- solid reason, receiving a strong and delightful impression of the
- great exploits of war, achieved by the conductors of their armies,
- receive withal a pleasing idea of all they have done besides; and
- imagine their great prosperity not to have proceeded from the
- emulation of particular men, but from the virtue of their popular
- form of government.”—Leviathan, pt. ii. c. 29. vol. iii. p.
- 315.—Edition of Sir William Molesworth.
-
-Footnote 810:
-
- Poll. iv. 17.
-
-They were themselves, however, but a corruption of what in its origin
-was good, and always continued in the opinion of the undiscerning to
-be confounded with the men they aped.[811] Whether we have sophists
-among us at the present day, I will not determine; but this is the way
-they arose in Greece. It was soon discovered by shrewd and calculating
-men, that since philosophy excited much admiration and rendered its
-teachers objects of mark and reverence, it might by a little ingenuity
-be converted into a source of profit.[812] But by what means?—The
-philosophers at the outset were in possession of the popular ear, more
-through the sanctity of their lives, of which all could judge, than
-through their doctrines, necessarily comprehended in their fullest
-extent by few. They despaired, therefore, of the people. There
-existed, however, in Greece, and will ever exist in free states, young
-men of immeasurable ambition, who, impatient of the restraint of laws,
-would gladly cast them off, seize the reins of government, and become
-the tyrants of their country. The mere conception of such a design
-implies the possession of wealth and powerful friends. Eager for any
-help they enthusiastically welcomed all who seemed capable of
-promoting their views, and when the sophists appeared, enriched with a
-variety of knowledge, specious, eloquent, unscrupulous, they eagerly
-threw themselves into their arms, became their pupils, and in
-conjunction with them framed the subjugation of Greece.
-
-Footnote 811:
-
- Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 286. seq. Cf. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 331.
-
-Footnote 812:
-
- That money was the sole object of the sophists is observed by
- Isocrates, Hel. Encom. § 4. Elsewhere, with a stroke of sly humour
- not usual with him, he says, they would sell anything short of
- immortality for three or four minæ.—Cont. Sophist. § 3, p. 576. See
- on the whole subject of the Sophists, Hard. Dissert. v. Bibl. Acad.
- t. iii. p. 240. sqq. Muret. in Arist. Ethic. p. 533. Cressol. Theat.
- Rhet. v. iii. p. 447.
-
-In tracing this class of men to their origin, we must look back a
-great way, and endeavour to detect them, under a variety of forms,
-different from that in which they ultimately settled. They arose with
-the first philosophers, or the first poet who made self the centre of
-his researches, and sought to render the investigation of science a
-means of personal aggrandisement. Protagoras describes in Plato the
-rise of his own art; where, though a side blow be wrongfully aimed at
-poetry itself, the truth of the accusation against a number of poets
-cannot be denied. He makes good at the very outset what I have
-asserted above. They travelled, he says, over all Greece, alluring the
-noblest youths to abandon the company of their friends and
-fellow-citizens, to become their pupils, and be guided wholly by their
-maxims, the nature of which I shall presently unfold. The feelings
-they thus excited, he denominates envy and malevolence, though in
-truth it was nothing more than that patriotic and parental jealousy
-and hatred experienced by the good when they behold those they love
-led astray. The better to escape this hostility, the ancient sophists
-adopted various disguises, sometimes enveloping their art in the folds
-of poetry as Homer, Hesiod, and Simonides, on other occasions
-affecting to be the interpreters of foreign rites and oracles, as
-Orpheus and Musæus; while a third class concealed the features of
-their art under the less suspected mask of gymnastics, such as Iccos
-of Tarentum, and that Herodicos of Silymbria a man of Megarean origin
-who in the art of sophistry was second to none of his age.
-Occasionally they made their entrance into cities as professors of
-music. In this capacity Damon conversed with Pericles, and Agathocles,
-an Athenian by birth, diffused through the state the seeds of
-sophistry; Pythocleides, too, the Coan, pursued the same course; and
-thus a youth, while ostensibly engaged in gaining a proficiency on the
-lyre or cithara, was initiated in the mysteries of tyranny, irreligion
-and injustice.[813]
-
-Footnote 813:
-
- Plat. Protag. t. i. p. 163. seq. Bekk.
-
-By degrees, however, it was discovered that all disguise might be very
-safely laid aside.[814] In fact the object at first aimed at,—to
-escape the notice of men in power,—was found impracticable; and as to
-the people, against whom all these shafts were directed, it was easy
-to delude them, since what their leaders recommended they praised.
-Protagoras, accordingly, boldly professed himself a sophist, trusting
-for safety to his eloquence, and that growing laxity of manners which
-was rapidly undermining the old republican constitution and preparing
-the way for a new order of things. His candour was praiseworthy, but
-lamentable were the circumstances which rendered it safe.
-
-Footnote 814:
-
- At a late period, by a decree of Sophocles, the sophists were driven
- out of Attica.—Athen. xiii. 92. Cf. Cressol. Theat. Rhet. i. 12. p.
- 87.
-
-I would not, however, be understood to share the opinions of those,
-who can discern nothing but evil in the doctrines of the sophists. On
-many points their notions harmonised altogether with those of the
-wisest philosophers. Accordingly it was not precisely what they
-inculcated, but the principles which regulated their teaching, that
-rendered them sophists. They taught with a view to enrich themselves,
-which is wholly incompatible with a strict allegiance to truth; since,
-with such views, men will always be found to prophesy agreeably in
-order that they may effect their purpose.
-
-This circumstance has not been sufficiently considered by the writers
-who undertake their apology. They compare them with the literary men
-of modern times, and imagine this comparison a defence. But does it
-not rather substantiate the accusation? It is true that, like modern
-literary men, they haunted the houses of the great, whom they regarded
-as their patrons; that to them, rather than to the people, they looked
-for support; that, like them, they worshipped wealth and abhorred
-poverty; that their studies, their discourses, their writings,
-diffused far and wide through society a taste for arts and elegance;
-that they furnished the public in their declamations, satires, novels,
-of which they were the inventors, with inexhaustible sources of
-amusement:—but what virtue did they inculcate? On whom did they urge
-the necessity of sacrificing private to public good? On what occasion
-did they dare to stem the torrent of immorality, of impiety, of
-unpatriotic maxims, which the base and the selfish were pouring forth
-against the old bulwarks of freedom? That among them there were men of
-a very high order of genius, it is impossible to deny. Gorgias of
-Leontium, from whose name we have borrowed an epithet to express
-whatever is most glorious in nature or dazzling and elaborate in art,
-Protagoras, Prodicos, Hippias of Elis, Polos of Agrigentum,
-Thrasymachos of Chalcedon, have left behind them an imperishable
-memory;[815] but so have Busiris and Phalaris and Catiline. They are
-remembered for the good they might have done, and the evil they did.
-
-Footnote 815:
-
- Muretus considers the word sophist to be synonymous with a teacher
- of eloquence: “Sophista, id est, dicendi magister;” and, speaking of
- this same Thrasymachos, cites a passage from Cicero which attributes
- to him the invention of the rhetorical style. Orat. § 12. Suidas
- regards Thrasymachos as the first who made use of the period and the
- colon; and supposes him to have been pupil to Plato and Isocrates,
- whereas he preceded both.—Muret. Comm. p. 631. seq.
-
-Since, however, the sophists acted so important a part in the
-education of the Greeks, the space I devote to them is clearly their
-due: it is necessary to the thorough comprehension of the subject.
-Almost from the moment they arose they aimed at a monopoly of the art
-of teaching, and the father of the art, properly so called, was
-Gorgias. Few names of antiquity, as Geel[816] has well observed, are
-better known or more celebrated than that of this distinguished
-sophist, among the causes of whose amazing popularity must be reckoned
-the number of great men whom he instructed in eloquence, and the
-splendid vices of style which his example and precept brought into
-vogue. The exact date of his birth is not known:[817] he is, however,
-supposed to have been born at Leontium in Sicily, about the
-seventy-third Olympiad. His father’s name was Charmantes.[818] Nearly
-all the particulars of his early life are unknown, the ancients having
-been as much too negligent as we are too lavish of biographical
-details. Under whom he studied, with whom he conversed, how much he
-owed to others, and how much to his own genius and industry, are
-points not easy to be determined, though we cannot adopt the opinion
-of Ælian,[819] who sends him to school to Philolaos; or of Diogenes
-Laertius, who will have Empedocles to have been his teacher, since the
-latter was very little older than himself, and the former much
-younger. Empedocles is indeed said to have invented the art of
-rhetoric, in which case we might suppose Gorgias to have been his
-scholar. But how invented? He may have been the first who sought to
-reduce it into an art, or who so called it; but as Aristotle observes,
-every man who reasons persuasively is a rhetorician, whether his
-eloquence be based on the formal study of the art or not. In
-philosophy, indeed, he would seem[820] to have been the disciple of
-Empedocles; but in rhetoric they both very probably derived
-instruction from Corax and Tisias, who flourished and taught rhetoric
-in Sicily about the period of their youth.[821]
-
-Footnote 816:
-
- Hist. Sophist. p. 13.
-
-Footnote 817:
-
- Clinton, Fast. Hellen. ii. 28. 65. 67. Geel (Hist. Sophist. p. 14)
- assumes the seventieth Olympiad as the date of his birth; but as it
- seems to result from the text of Pausanias that he was still living
- in 380. B.C. this would extend the duration of his life beyond that
- assigned to it by any ancient writer.
-
-Footnote 818:
-
- Of whom, as Muretus (Comm. p. 631. seq.) observes, no mention occurs
- save in Plato de Repub. i. § 2. t. i. p. 8. Stallb.
-
-Footnote 819:
-
- Var. Hist. i. 23. Diog. Laert. viii. 58.—Mr. Clinton, however,
- adopts the opinion of Diogenes (Fast. Hell. ii. 365); and, to render
- it probable, supposes Empedocles to have been a few years older than
- his pupil.
-
-Footnote 820:
-
- Plat. Men. p. 14. g.
-
-Footnote 821:
-
- Cic. Brut. § 12. Geel, Hist. Sophist. p. 15. seq. Sext. Empir. p.
- 306. seq.
-
-These, however, are mere conjectures. He would probably have died in
-obscurity, and been forgotten with the kings who reigned _ante
-Agamemnona_, had not the misfortunes of his country brought him, in
-old age, to the great workshop of Fame. The immediate occasion was
-this; the people of Leontium having engaged and been worsted in war by
-the Syracusans, sent ambassadors to demand succour of the Athenian
-people, and among these the principal speaker was Gorgias. Practised
-in a style of oratory new at Athens, indulging in a profusion of
-metaphors and other figures bordering on the licences of poetry, he
-immediately hurried away captive his hearers, fulfilled the desires of
-his fellow citizens, and established for himself a reputation[822]
-where all men most desired to possess one. To augment his glory it has
-not been unusual to enumerate Pericles and Thucydides among those who
-became his scholars. But this embassy took place in the fifth year of
-the Peloponnesian war when Pericles had been dead two years. That
-Thucydides heard him, however, is not at all improbable, since his
-exile did not take place[823] till the eighth year of the war. Among
-his admirers are mentioned two other men, whose principles and history
-afford the best illustration of what fruit the teaching of the
-sophists was likely to produce,—Critias and Alcibiades, whose ability,
-courage, and profligacy rendered them the scourges of their country.
-It has been with great probability supposed that, having on his return
-to Leontium rendered an account of his mission, he quitted Sicily for
-ever, for the purpose of becoming a professor of eloquence in Greece.
-This is Diodorus’s account, but the Scholiast on Hermogenes supposes
-him to have remained at Athens. Whether this was the case or not, he
-soon considered one city, however great or celebrated, too confined a
-theatre for the display of his merit. He, therefore, adopted the
-profession of an itinerant lecturer, with the double view of
-gratifying his vanity and filling his purse. And he thoroughly
-understood the art of dazzling mankind, for, not supposing it enough
-to unfold before his auditors his magazines of tropes and figures,
-stored up, like theatrical thunder and lightning, to be introduced at
-the proper moment, he had recourse to other dramatic arts for
-producing effect, appearing in magnificent attire, flowing purple
-robes, embroidered sandals, his fingers sparkling with gold and gems.
-But though the oldest of the sophists, he was not the first who
-adopted this course. Protagoras, and perhaps others, had previously
-commenced their peregrinations, and begun to practise on the credulity
-and weakness of the multitude. Among the Athenians they were paid
-chiefly with praise; “the solid pudding” was to be sought elsewhere.
-And accordingly we find, as Plato sarcastically expresses it, that
-upon the advent of the sophists, the Thessalians, usually celebrated
-for their full purses and fine horses,[824] grew all at once
-remarkable for their love of wisdom, that is, paid the sophists
-handsomely, in the hope of thus enticing knowledge to remain among
-them. In fact they supposed that wisdom is like a candle and lantern,
-by which you may have light,—or a saint’s shirt, by wearing which you
-infallibly become holy,—or the lamp of Epictetus, which a rich man
-bought at three thousand drachmas, in the hope that it would light him
-into the very adyta of philosophy. However this may be, it is very
-certain that the Thessalians became the patrons of the sophists, who
-disposed in that country of more wisdom and eloquence than in any
-other part of Greece, and the principal purchasers of it were of the
-rich family of the Aleuadæ, the earliest Mæcenases, I believe, on
-record.
-
-Footnote 822:
-
- Diod. Sicul. xii. 53.
-
-Footnote 823:
-
- I cannot, therefore, see the reason of Geel’s doubt.—Hist. Sophist.
- p. 18. Cf. Clint. Fast. Hellen. ii. p. 68.
-
-Footnote 824:
-
- Plat. Hip. Maj. t. v. p. 416.
-
-But the sophists, to their credit be it acknowledged, were no misers.
-What they easily gained they spent freely; and not merely so, but in
-many instances converted the effects of their personal vanity into
-public ornaments of the whole country. Thus Gorgias, enriched by the
-spoils of Thessaly, erected at Delphi a golden statue[825] of himself,
-which argued a more generous spirit than he would have shown by
-setting it afloat in the channels of trade or husbandry or usury, in
-the hope of rendering himself a great capitalist.
-
-Footnote 825:
-
- Cressol. Theat. Rhet. i. 8.
-
-Gorgias was long absent from Athens, and visited during his travels
-the most considerable cities of Greece. Among other places he came to
-Delphi, where from the steps of the altar, probably during the games,
-he delivered that oration called the Pythian, in celebration of which
-he erected the above-mentioned statue.[826] From thence perhaps,—for
-the chronology of his journey is not exactly known,—he proceeded to
-Olympia, where he also assisted at the games for the purpose of
-exhibiting his oratorical talents in the presence of all Greece, and
-reaping as it were in an hour a harvest of glory. This declamation,
-delivered during the Peloponnesian war, had at least the
-recommendation of being patriotic. Standing in front of the temple of
-Zeus, the god of concord and of peace, he earnestly recommended union
-and harmony.[827] If war they must have, there were the
-barbarians,—let their arms be turned against them. With what success
-he spoke, history has informed us; but the satirists of antiquity,
-ever naturally addicted to scandal, are careful to remark that this
-great advocate of concord and unanimity kept up a civil war in his own
-house, where the charms of some beautiful-cheeked θεραπαινίδιον[828]
-excited the jealousy of Madame. At the same time the old gentleman, to
-adopt the most moderate computation, must have been hard upon
-three-score and ten, though some would make him eighty.
-
-Footnote 826:
-
- Geel, Hist. Sophist. p. 23.
-
-Footnote 827:
-
- They sometimes selected more humble subjects for their panegyric,
- for example, the bumble-bee, or salt.—Isocrat. Hel. Encom. § 4. p.
- 461. Plutarch, too, speaks of a learned work on salt, which he
- considered very edifying.—Sympos. § 5. A French author of the same
- class devoted twenty years of his life to a treatise on the
- nightingale. Another member of this confraternity is celebrated by
- Rousseau:—“On dit qu’un allemand a fait un livre sur un zeste de
- citron; j’en aurais fait un sur chaque gramen des prés, sur chaque
- mousse des bois, sur chaque lichen qui tapisse les rochers; enfin,
- je ne voulais pas laisser un poil d’herbe, pas un atome végétal qui
- ne fût amplement décrit.”—Réveries, t. iii. p. 106. On the verbal
- trifling of the sophists see Muret. in Aristot. Ethic. p. 79. By Le
- Conte, in his Commentary on the Anabasis, Gorgias is transformed
- into “a prudent and experienced officer,” because Proxenos is said
- to have studied under him.—t. i. p. 246.
-
-Footnote 828:
-
- Plut. Conj. Præcept. § 43. whom Geel follows.—Hist. Sophist. p. 25.
- But Isocrates, who had been himself a hearer of Gorgias in Thessaly
- (Cic. Orat. § 22), relates that he was never married, and had no
- children.—De Permut. § 26. 10. Another tradition however speaks of
- his son Philip as having been condemned by the Heliasts.—Schol.
- Aristoph. Av. 1700.
-
-Over the latter days of Gorgias[829] hovers the same darkness which
-conceals from view the commencement. It is known with no degree of
-certainty where he spent the close of his long life or where he died,
-though as no account exists of his return to Sicily, it probably was
-in Greece.
-
-Footnote 829:
-
- See Athen. xii. 71.
-
-Next to Gorgias in reputation was Protagoras, whose history is still
-less known. In the opinion of some writers he was the oldest of the
-sophists. Though the date of his birth be later than that of Gorgias,
-he preceded him in the profession of the art. He was certainly, I
-think, born much earlier than is supposed either by Clinton or by
-Geel, who take him to have been almost exactly of Socrates’ age, that
-is to have come into the world about 479 B. C. But in this opinion I
-cannot concur. It is in direct contradiction with a passage in
-Plato[830] who, however careless in matters of chronology, would, I am
-persuaded, never push his negligence so far as to make one man say to
-another, born in the same year with himself, that he was old enough to
-be his father. To me, therefore it appears necessary that we throw
-back ten or twelve years the date of his birth. He was ten years, it
-is admitted, older than Democritos. The latter, who had made
-considerable progress in philosophy when he saw Protagoras in the
-capacity of a wood-carrier and undertook to initiate him in his
-system, could hardly have been less than seven or eight and twenty, so
-that the former was little short of forty. He exercised the profession
-of sophist during forty years, and died about 406 B. C. He must
-therefore have been born about 484–485 B. C.[831]
-
-Footnote 830:
-
- Addressing Socrates, among many others, he says in one place, ἀλλὰ
- πότερον ὑμῖν, ὡς πρεσβύτερος νεωτέροις, μῦθον λέγων ἐπιδείξω. κ. τ.
- λ.—Protag. i. 170. But this is nothing to what he elsewhere says:
- οὐδενὸς ὅτου οὐ πάντων ἂν ὑμῶν καθ᾽ ἡλικίαν πατὴρ εἴην.—Id. p.
- 165.—which without extreme absurdity a man could not say to a person
- exactly of his own age. Meiners. (Hist. des Arts et des Sciences,
- iii. 258), evidently refers to this passage; as does also Hardion.
- Dissert. vii. Bib. Acad. iii. 295. Yet it must have wholly escaped
- Geel, who (Hist. Sophist. p. 71) says: “Deinde _nescimus_ quomodo
- efficiatur e Platonis Protagorâ, sophistam ejusdem nominis _multo_
- majorem fuisse Socrate.”
-
-Footnote 831:
-
- Diog. Laert. ix. 55. observes that, according to some writers, he
- died, at the age of 90, during a journey.—Geel, p. 81. It is
- sufficiently remarkable that most of the Sophists attained to a very
- great old age, and the same thing may be said generally of the
- philosophers of antiquity. Lord Bacon undertakes to account for the
- fact. Having given the palm of long life to hermits and anchorites,
- he says: “Next unto this is a life led in good letters, such as was
- that of Philosophers, Rhetoricians, Grammarians. This life is also
- led in leisure, and in those thoughts which, seeing they are severed
- from the affairs of the world, bite not, but rather delight through
- their vanity and impertinency: they live also at their pleasure,
- spending their time in such things as like them best, and for the
- most part in the company of young men, which is ever the most
- cheerful.”—History of Life and Death, p. 24.
-
-But I cannot here pursue the history of the sophists, which no further
-belongs to my work than as it is connected with the subject of
-education. On their writings, however, and manner of teaching it is
-necessary that I should be more explicit. Whether Gorgias first
-published or Protagoras is of little moment; both evidently wrote with
-the same aim, which was to confound truth and error, right and wrong,
-not perhaps through any enmity to truth or to virtue, but from the
-sheer vanity of being thought capable of any thing, and the desire of
-converting their talents to account. One distinguishing quality of the
-class was fertility. They piqued themselves on being able to pour
-forth volume after volume, treatise after treatise, speech after
-speech. This, indeed, it was that constituted their principal claim to
-superiority over the philosophers, a pains-taking race, among whom the
-period of intellectual gestation was longer than that of the elephant;
-whereas your true sophist, without meditation, study or experience,
-astonished his admirers by the copiousness of his invention, by
-imagery, gorgeous and glittering, generally stolen from the poets, and
-by a piquant air of profoundness and originality, which the art of
-seeming to doubt all that other men believe never fails to confer.
-
-Besides, comprehending enough of human nature to know that whoever
-amuses is listened to, whatever atrocities he may utter, they were
-careful to invest their doctrine with a light and graceful exterior.
-No man ever excelled them at a joke. They in fact managed matters so
-that in their hands every thing became a joke, and to overthrow an
-antagonist demanded nothing more than to be able to raise a laugh at
-his expense; for, all the world over, in the opinion of the vulgar,
-whoever is ridiculous is wrong. From calculation, they eschewed the
-uphill task of correcting error, or advancing truth, or reforming
-manners. To upbraid men for their faults and counsel amendment, is to
-incur their enmity. Reformers, prophets, apostles of truth have always
-been persecuted, often put to death. The sophists felt no ambition to
-be martyrs. Poverty, too, and obscurity, spare diet, a coarse mantle,
-and the solitude in which the poor great man walks the world, they
-could not away with. To their happiness crowds of admirers, opulence,
-costly robes[832] and all the refinements of luxury formed a _sine quâ
-non_; and accordingly in the choice of their doctrines they were
-guided by one consideration only, viz. how they might amuse mankind,
-and reap all the advantages of popularity.
-
-Footnote 832:
-
- Herault de Sechelles, who, had he lived, would have excelled Boswell
- in biography, describes with singular felicity the passion of that
- arch-sophist, Buffon, for the splendours of dress. Even among the
- peasants of Montbar, a race of primitive simplicity, the French
- Hippias would never appear but in an embroidered suit, curled and
- decorated as if at court. He had nicely calculated the effect of
- external appearances on the mind; and we must forgive him, since he
- shared the weakness with Lord Bacon and Aristotle.—See Voyage à
- Montbar, p. 42, seq.
-
-The eloquence which statesmen employed to recommend their measures,
-the sophists applied to fictitious uses, imagining themselves in
-impossible circumstances, reversing times, confounding manners, and
-attacking or defending men long since dead. In all such cases the
-interest would chiefly depend on the novelty or ingenuity of the
-thoughts and the subtle artifices of style. Hence the extravagance,
-the coldness, the perversion of imagery, the distortion and monkey
-tricks of language, for which their manner of compositions became
-remarkable. The false position they took up led, in philosophy, to
-results equally disastrous. To aim at truth, would have been to throw
-themselves into the wake of the philosophers, to share, without
-worldly compensation, their dangers, labours, and comparative
-insignificance. They struck out, therefore, a new course for
-themselves. Taking philosophy as it was, they undertook to dispute on
-all and every part of it; to show that for a skilful dialectician
-there was no proposition that might not with nearly equal facility be
-attacked or defended; that by means of syllogisms or enthymemes,
-artfully arranged, darkness may be proved to be light, and light
-darkness; that between lying and speaking the truth there is no
-difference; that in fact both veracity and falsehood are nonentities,
-all our notions being mere arbitrary fictions; and that to beat your
-dog and to beat your father is the same thing.
-
-Of this novel and ingenious style of argumentation,[833] in which
-Hudibras was an adept, we are furnished with abundant examples by
-Plato, more especially in the Euthydemus, where two old fellows, with
-arguments longer than their beards, luxuriate in the felicitous
-inventions by which, like another Circe, they are enabled to transform
-their hearers into hogs and bulldogs. In humorous extravagance the
-dialogue scarcely falls short of an Aristophanic comedy or a Christmas
-pantomime. Socrates[834] plays the Clown, Ctesippos the Harlequin, and
-the blows dealt upon the magicians in the course of the piece, are
-such as, were they fully comprehended, would set all Drury Lane or
-Covent Garden in a roar. But the length of the scenes prevents their
-transplantation into my pages, and the abridgment of a joke is a very
-dull thing. Let us, however, hear by what logic they proved Socrates
-to have been a second “man without a navel.”
-
-Footnote 833:
-
- Another example may be found in Athen. iii. 54.
-
-Footnote 834:
-
- Socrates has been confounded with the Sophists, because he
- frequented their company to refute them; but there was between them
- the same difference, as between a thief-taker and a thief.
-
-“Answer me,” cried Dionysidoros.
-
-“Well then,” replied Socrates, “I answer that Iolaus was the nephew of
-Heracles, and, as far as I can see, no nephew of mine. For my brother
-Patrocles was not his father, but quite another guess sort of person,
-Iphicles the brother of Heracles.”
-
-“And Patrocles was your brother?”
-
-“By the mother, not by the father.”
-
-“Then he was your brother, and not your brother?”
-
-“By the father’s side he was not,” answered Socrates, “since he was
-the son of Charidemos, and I of Sophroniscos.”
-
-“But Sophroniscos, no less than Charidemos, was a father.”
-
-“Exactly; the former was my father, the latter Patrocles’.”
-
-“Then was Charidemos other than a father?”
-
-“He was other than mine.”
-
-“Then he was a father, and not a father? But, come, are you the same
-thing as a stone?”
-
-“I fear,” replied Socrates, “I shall appear to be no better in your
-hands, though I do not discover the identity.”
-
-“Well, being other than a stone, you are not a stone; being other than
-gold, you are not gold. And must not the same thing happen to
-Charidemos? Being something else than a father, he is not a father.”
-
-“So it seems,” replied the philosopher.
-
-“And what is true of Charidemos,” replied the younger sophist, “must
-be true of Sophroniscos. Being other than a father, he is not a
-father: from which, my good friend, it follows that you never had any
-father at all![835]”
-
-Footnote 835:
-
- Plat. Opp. iii. 444, seq.
-
-Socrates being thus placed on a level with the first man, his friend
-Ctesippos took up the ball, and sent it with so much force into the
-face of the sophists, that it somewhat startled them.
-
-“Come, then,” said he, “is not your own father in precisely the same
-circumstances? Is he not different from my father?”
-
-“Not at all,” answered Euthydemos.
-
-“What, then, he is the same?”
-
-“Exactly.”
-
-“I should be sorry to think so. However, is he my father only, or is
-he everybody else’s father?”
-
-“Everybody’s, of course; for can you imagine him to be a father, and
-not a father?”
-
-“I should have thought so,” answered Ctesippos.
-
-“What! that gold is not gold, and that a man is not a man?”
-
-“Not so, friend Euthydemos; but you do not, as the saying is, mingle
-flax with flax; and your assertion, that your father is the father of
-all men, seems very extraordinary.”
-
-“But he is, though.”
-
-“Very good; but is he not only the father of men but of horses and
-every other animal?”
-
-“Of everything!”
-
-“And your mother, in like manner, is the mother of all things?”
-
-“Certainly.”
-
-“Then she is the mother of the sea-hedgehog.”
-
-“And so is yours!”
-
-“And you are the full brother of gudgeons, cubs, and sucking-pigs.”
-
-“So are you!”
-
-“And your father is a dog.”
-
-“And yours, too!”
-
-It was now evident they were in anger, and accordingly Dionysidoros
-interposed, and observed jocularly,—
-
-“Provided you will answer me, Ctesippos, I undertake to make you
-confess that your father is just what my brother has said. So, tell
-me, have you a dog?”
-
-“I have, and a snappish cur he is, too.”
-
-“And has he young ones?”
-
-“Ay, and they are more snappish than himself.”
-
-“Well, now, is not the dog their father?”
-
-“No doubt.”
-
-“And the dog is yours?”
-
-“Certainly.”
-
-“It follows then, if he be a father and yours, that he must be your
-father; so that his cubs are your brothers.”
-
-Before the young man could reply to this compliment the sophist
-proceeded:
-
-“Answer me, Ctesippos, a little longer. Do you ever beat that dog?”
-
-“That I do,” replied Ctesippos laughing; “and I wish I could
-administer the same discipline to you in your turn.”
-
-“Then you beat your own father!”
-
-“The beating,” answered the young man, “would be more justly inflicted
-on yours, for having knowingly let loose two such sages upon
-mankind!”[836]
-
-Footnote 836:
-
- Plat. Opp. t. iii. p. 245.—The amusing manner of teaching introduced
- by these sophists was sometimes imitated by the philosophers. Thus
- Theophrastus, who, before proceeding to his school, used to anoint
- himself with oil and perform his exercises, had recourse to
- extraordinary drollery for the purpose of charming his pupils,
- adapting all his gestures and movements to his discourses; so that
- when describing the manners and character of a glutton, he used,
- like a comic actor, to thrust out his tongue and lick his
- lips.—Athen. i. 38.
-
-But these, after all, were but laughing sophists, who, though they had
-succeeded in confounding and obliterating from their own minds every
-trace of difference between right and wrong, fell short of that superb
-degree of wickedness at which Polos, Callicles, and Thrasymachos
-arrived, at least in speculation. The former were mere babblers, who
-corrupted a pupil or two whom bad luck threw in their way.
-Thrasymachos flew at higher game. His sophistry was political,[837]
-and his aim the destruction of freedom, by extinguishing that sense of
-justice on which it must ever be based. The genius of the man was
-considerable. He had deep thoughts, and investigated boldly; but his
-sympathies having somehow been early perverted, he grew sombre,
-fierce, and unsociable, and without the slightest disguise advocated,
-like our Hobbes,[838] tyrannical maxims and morals. Money, like the
-rest, he of course worshipped. Nay, in the conversation at the house
-of Cephalos he even ventures to sneer rudely at Socrates’ poverty;
-upon which Glaucon[839] observes:—"Don’t fear to go unpaid for the
-instruction you may give him, for we will enter into a subscription on
-his behalf."[840] Thrasymachos, however, was still more vain than
-avaricious. He thirsted to exhibit his notions in order to enjoy the
-satisfaction arising from shocking those who heard him. He maintained
-that justice is nothing more than what in any state the rulers think
-proper to establish; and that, consequently, the ordinances of a
-tyrant are as binding and as just as the laws of a free state, since
-by nature all actions are indifferent.
-
-Footnote 837:
-
- Cf. Dem. Lacrit. § 10. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 113.
-
-Footnote 838:
-
- The modern Thrasymachos is as frank in his hatred of philosophers as
- the ancient. He compares their enthusiasm in favour of freedom to
- the virus imparted by the bite of a mad dog, imagining that nothing
- is so sedulously to be guarded against as liberty. He would, if
- possible, have the study of ancient statesmen and historians
- prohibited, or at least that care should be taken to counteract
- their maxims by the teaching of discreet sophists. “I cannot
- imagine,” he says, “how anything can be more prejudicial to a
- monarchy than the allowing of such books to be publicly read,
- without present applying such correctives of discreet masters, as
- are fit to take away their venom; which venom I will not doubt to
- compare to the biting of a mad dog, which is a disease the
- physicians call _hydrophobia_, or _fear of water_. For, as he that
- is so bitten has a continual torment of thirst, and yet abhorreth
- water, and is in such an estate, as if the poison endeavoured to
- convert him into a dog; so, when a monarchy is once bitten to the
- quick, by those democratical writers, that continually snarl at that
- estate, it wanteth nothing more than a strong monarch, which,
- nevertheless, out of a certain _tyrannophobia_ or fear of being
- strongly governed, when they have him, they abhor.”—Leviathan, Pt.
- ii. c. 29. iii. 315. Count Capo D’Istrias, if he was ignorant of the
- language of ancient Greece, appears at least to have understood
- something of the spirit of ancient philosophy, for, designing to
- establish a tyranny, he prohibited the reading of Plato in the
- public schools. He may possibly have learned his maxims of
- government from Hobbes, as well as that the master of the academy
- deserved his hatred.—Thiersch. Etat. Act. de la Grèce, ii. 121.
-
-Footnote 839:
-
- Plat. Rep. i. § 11. t. i. p. 41. Stallb.
-
-Footnote 840:
-
- Ἔρανος. Cf. Sympos. t. iv. p. 379. Bekk.
-
-It was, in fact, a part of the sophistical doctrine, to maintain in
-politics, what Hobbes afterwards advocated, the right of the
-stronger:—
-
- —--"The good old rule, the simple plan,
- That they should take who have the power,
- And they should keep who can."
-
-But because there is in every man’s heart a rooted prejudice in favour
-of justice, they were fain to argue that all governors, in as far as
-they deserved the name, would ordain what was best for themselves, and
-that, whatever it might be, was just:[841] a very satisfactory
-doctrine, which has never grown wholly out of fashion. They laughed to
-scorn, as persons who required nurses to look after them and wipe
-their noses,[842] whomsoever they found entertaining the notion that
-governments were instituted for the good of the governed.
-
-Footnote 841:
-
- Upon this point Father Paul observes:—"We must reduce under the
- title of justice everything that may contribute to the service of
- the state; for the prince has no greater justice than to preserve to
- himself the quality of prince, and, in order to this, to keep his
- subjects in a dutiful subjection to his authority."—Max. of the Gov.
- of Venice, chap. i. § 1.
-
-Footnote 842:
-
- Plat. Rep. t. vi. p. 34.
-
-Their staple comparison was always a flock or a herd. What shepherd,
-they inquired, ever looked after his flock for their benefit, and not
-for his own use? In like manner magistrates, who, as is proper, hold
-the chief place in cities, look on the public exactly as if they are
-so many sheep or oxen, and think of nothing, night or day, but how
-they may derive most advantage from them. Justice, therefore, is what
-promotes the interests of the governors, though it may be loss to the
-governed. The man, esteemed just and pious and holy by the
-philosopher, was merely, in their opinion, a fool. Whenever anything
-is to be gained he gets less than any man, and when anything is to be
-done for the community he does more. He is always ready with his purse
-whenever anything is to be paid; always out of the way when gain is
-afloat. The unjust man, on the contrary, knows what he is about. He
-pays and does as little as possible for the public, and takes from it
-all he can. The former renders himself disagreeable to his friends and
-domestics, by refusing to commit any unjust action on their behalf.
-The latter, on the other hand, unscrupulous in acquisition, is able to
-oblige many by his wealth if he happens to require their services.
-Thus even in private life and small matters injustice is to be
-preferred; but when it operates on a grand scale, plunders whole
-cities, and usurps over them supreme authority, it reaches the acme of
-felicity, is saluted by the name of prince, and becomes an object of
-envy to all mankind.
-
-Nor did they pause even here. It was not enough to show the happiness
-of vice as vice; they undertook to prove that vice is virtue and
-virtue vice, which may be considered as their magnum opus. They went
-to work boldly, but, like the fox of Archilochos,[843] always kept
-something of their figure concealed, that, if any necessity arose,
-they might be able to retreat by treating their whole chain of
-argumentation as a mere rhetorical exercise. “You appear to be in
-earnest,” observed Socrates on one occasion. “What does it signify to
-you whether I am in earnest or not,” replied the sophist, “if you
-cannot refute what I advance?” With this prudent reserve, they taught
-that injustice is a powerful and beautiful principle, reckoning it
-among the virtues, and attributing to it all the characteristics
-usually attributed to justice.[844] Pascal, in developing the morals
-of the Jesuits, describes their principles exactly. They patronised
-even cutting purses, providing the operator had the ingenuity to
-conceal his performance. No doubt, in thus arguing, they did violence
-to their secret convictions, and might, by an able dialectician, be
-made to feel, though never to acknowledge, the deformity of their
-doctrines, as Thrasymachos, driven up in a corner by the logic of
-Socrates, blushes and is chap-fallen;[845] but as sophistry was their
-occupation, the misery and degradation was, that, convinced or not
-convinced, they must still sing the old song. It is evident, in fact,
-that, like many sophists of other days, they were bold with the lips
-while the heart within trembled. The light of conscience could not be
-wholly quenched. They conceived the gods to be armed with power and
-disposed to exert it, not only against evil doers but against evil
-speakers also. Pressed upon this point, whether the bad be not
-obnoxious and the good agreeable to the deities, Thrasymachos would
-not deny it. And why? Lest he should render himself hateful to them,
-ἴνα μὴ τοῖς δὲ ἀπέχθωμαι. So that in the worst times of paganism,
-religion, how corrupt soever, failed not to preserve some influence
-over men’s minds, to save them from the bestial recklessness into
-which they seemed desirous to plunge.[846]
-
-Footnote 843:
-
- Plat. Rep. t. vi. p. 72. Bekk.
-
-Footnote 844:
-
- Id. i. t. vi. p. 44. seq.
-
-Footnote 845:
-
- Plat. de Rep. vi. 49. i. 76. Stallb. Cf. Vict. Var. Lect. iii. v.
-
-Footnote 846:
-
- Plat. Rep. t. vi. p. 52.
-
-Nevertheless, the sophists on many points did but methodise, condense
-and embody in florid language the maxims and modes of thinking current
-in corrupt ages among the vulgar. Their doctrines were but an echo of
-what was heard in the ecclesiæ, in the law courts, in the theatres,
-and in the camps. It would have been to little purpose, therefore, to
-have silenced them, unless, at the same time, the above schools could
-have been purified, wherein young and old, men and women, imbibed the
-opinions, maxims, prejudices, which constituted the system of the
-sophists.[847] And Plato, who observes this, supplies us, in doing so,
-with a fresh proof that women frequented the theatre. In one of these
-four places, he says, they were corrupted: but they were not soldiers,
-and, therefore, not in the camp; they were not dicasts, and,
-therefore, not in the law courts; they were neither orators nor
-voters, and, therefore, not in the ecclesiæ. The evil doctrines they
-imbibed, therefore, must have been imbibed at the theatre.[848] Here,
-too, the youth, disciplined and principled in better things by his
-philosophical teachers, received a new education which overthrew the
-former. Deeds and words, condemned by his teachers, he often found to
-be greeted here with rapturous applause, re-echoed by rocks and walls;
-while hisses, sneers, or vociferous vituperation would, perhaps, be
-showered on things he had been taught most to revere. In his feelings,
-therefore, and internal convictions a revolution was soon effected. He
-grew ashamed of the notions implanted in him at school. Every
-lingering sentiment of honour seemed to him an unfortunate prejudice
-despised by men of the world, and he hastened to shift his notions as
-a clown does his dress to prepare for admittance into fashionable
-company.
-
-Footnote 847:
-
- Id. vi. 290.
-
-Footnote 848:
-
- Plat. Rep. vi. t. vi. p. 289. Cf. Athen. ii. 54.
-
-The sophists, skilled in the study of mankind, soon discovered, that
-to please and ultimately to rule the ignorant, it was necessary to
-humour their failings, and, in appearance at least, to adopt their
-opinions. In a commonwealth, governed by wholesome principles, great
-men obtain influence, not by resembling the majority but by
-differing from them. They are popular by the authority of their
-virtues. They are reverenced with the reverence due to a father from
-his child, who confides in him from long experience in his love and
-implicit faith in his honour, and will submit to be rebuked and
-chastised, and determined by him in his actions from the conviction
-that his superior wisdom and probity and affection entitle him to
-rule. But the sophists, and their political disciples, despaired of
-thus governing the people. In their manners there was none of the
-dignity, in their minds none of the wisdom, in their resolutions
-none of that inflexible firmness arising from consciousness of
-right, which neither threats nor clamour can subdue. They regarded
-the populace as a huge beast, whose ways and temper they must study,
-whose passions and desires they must know how to raise and how to
-satisfy; by what arts they might safely enter his den, stroke his
-terrible paws, or mount, if they thought proper, on his back and
-direct his irresistible might against their enemies. And this they
-esteemed as wisdom, and upon those who excelled in it they bestowed
-the name of statesmen and philosophers.[849] Among the arts by which
-this influence was acquired were flattery and boasting; by the
-former they disposed people to listen, by the latter they sought to
-justify them for listening, by dwelling on the wonders they could
-perform. If they might be believed, they could convert fools into
-wise men, which philosophers regarded in the light of a miracle.
-This disposition τὸ θρασὺ καὶ τὸ ἰταμὸν,[850] as Basilius expresses
-it, is admirably painted by Plato in the character of Thrasymachos.
-And the contrast afforded by Socrates makes good, as Muretus
-observes, the wise remark of Thucydides ὅτι ἀμαθία μὲν θάρσος,
-φρόνησις δ᾽ ὄκνον φέρει.
-
-Footnote 849:
-
- Plat. de Rep. vi. 293.
-
-Footnote 850:
-
- Plat. de Rep. vi. 333. Cf. Muret. Adnot. in Repub. p. 667, seq. 677,
- seq.
-
-Such, however, as they were, the reputation of the sophists spread far
-and wide. Even among the barbarians of Asia a desire was felt to have
-the ear tickled by their eloquence, as we may gather from the letter
-of Amytocrates, an Indian king, to Antiochos, requesting him to ship
-off for India as soon as possible, some boiled wine, dried figs, and a
-sophist, observing that he would very willingly pay the price of him.
-But Antiochos, either loth to part with so useful a servant of the
-monarchy, or out of pity for the Indians, whom he suspected to be
-already sufficiently tormented, replied, that as for boiled wine and
-figs he might be supplied to his heart’s content, but that with
-respect to sophists the law prohibited their exportation.[851] He had
-all the while, however, without knowing it, abundant specimens of the
-race in his own realms, where the Brahmins have, time out of mind,
-cultivated and thriven by the same arts, and maintained the same
-opinions, as conferred celebrity on the followers of Gorgias and
-Protagoras. Their practices, indeed, as well as those of the Yoghis,
-are in India modified by the state of society and public opinion. The
-wonder which among the Greeks was excited by the advocacy of monstrous
-doctrines, on the banks of the Ganges, arises out of physical pranks.
-The Greek sophist tortured his mind, the Indian tortures his body for
-the edification of the public, but the result is the same; the
-practitioners thus contrive to subsist in idleness on the earnings of
-the industrious and credulous.
-
-Footnote 851:
-
- Athen. xiv. 67.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
- EDUCATION OF THE SPARTANS, CRETANS,
- ARCADIANS, ETC.
-
-
-A different picture is presented to us by the education of the
-Spartans,[852] which, almost perfect in its kind, aimed chiefly at
-unfolding the powers of the body. Mental acquirements in the states of
-Doric origin were few, and the object even of these seems to have been
-rather connected with the developement of the animal than the
-spiritual nature of man, though they were not utterly destitute of all
-those arts and accomplishments which embellish a life of peace. Little
-stress, however, can be laid on the elaborate divisions of youth into
-numerous classes, the intention of which is not stated. There can,
-nevertheless, be no doubt that much art, reflection and wisdom was
-exhibited in the forming of the system whose object was the creation
-of a military character, and through this the enjoyment of the
-hegemonia or lead in the public affairs of Greece, an honour which
-Sparta attained to and held during many years.[853]
-
-Footnote 852:
-
- See Müll. Dor. ii. 313, sqq. Cf. Pfeiff. Ant. ii. 57. p. 370.
-
-Footnote 853:
-
- To destroy the power of Sparta the Achæans could imagine no better
- means than to change their system of education.—Plut. Vit. Philop. §
- 16. Paus. vii. 8. 5. The Mityleneans, too, desirous of breaking the
- military spirit of certain of their allies, forbade them to give the
- least instruction to their children.—Ælian, V. H. vii. 15. With the
- same view the Emperor Julian closed the public schools against the
- Christians.—Gibbon, iv. 111. Among our ancestors, too, when a blow
- was meditated against Dissenters, no measure more severe could be
- devised than to deprive them of education.—Lord John Russell, Hist.
- of Eur. i. 273.
-
-A modern writer has correctly remarked that by permitting the state to
-decide on the lives of infants, the institutions of Lycurgus
-recognised the authority of the community to regulate, how it pleased,
-the education they were to receive. The authority of parents over
-their children was thus all but annihilated, for, although the
-recognition and feeling of relationship continued after the state had
-undertaken the training of youth, their influence was exceedingly
-weakened, a circumstance to which may be attributed the seeming
-heroism of the Spartan women, who could stoically bear the death of
-their sons because they had been in a great measure estranged from
-them.
-
-As, however, the institutions of Lycurgus differed in all things else
-from those of other Grecian legislators, it is not surprising they
-should also differ on the subject of education. But it may greatly be
-doubted whether we altogether comprehend his system. The accounts
-transmitted to us are in many points contradictory, and it may in
-general be remarked that on no subject whatever do modern ideas differ
-so much from those prevalent in antiquity, as on the subject of
-education. Plutarch and Xenophon, or rather the sophist who assumed
-his name, two of the authors on whom in this discussion most reliance
-is usually placed, were prejudiced and credulous, and often, to speak
-frankly, extremely ignorant. Both were unwilling, even if they
-possessed the power, to criticise the system, and yet by modern
-writers their opinions have generally without scruple been adopted.
-Xenophon himself, as well as the sophist who here apes him, was in
-predilections a Spartan, and as strongly disposed to satirise and
-underrate the institutions of his own country as to exaggerate the
-merits of the Laconian. Even were the trifling essay on the
-Lacedæmonian republic proved to be his, we should yet lay little
-stress upon its testimony, unless when corroborated by the evidence of
-other and better writers.
-
-Elsewhere in Greece,—observes the author of this tract,[854] whoever
-he was,—persons, the most solicitous respecting the education of their
-children, placed over them at the first dawn of intellectual
-developement, pædagogues, who at the outset undertook their
-instruction, and afterwards conducted them to the schools where
-letters, music, and gymnastics were taught. In this respect, however,
-as a modern writer has shown, the institutions of Sparta were in no
-degree superior, since Helots were there the instructors of young
-children; and, on this account, he rejects the story of Plutarch,[855]
-that they were compelled to intoxicate themselves, to exhibit to the
-youths a practical proof of the deformity of drunkenness.[856] It was
-contrary, he says, to common sense. But as common sense had very
-little to do with any part of the system, this is a poor argument, and
-will not weigh against positive testimony.
-
-Footnote 854:
-
- Rep. Lac. ii. 1. Cf. Pfeiff. Ant. p. 370.
-
-Footnote 855:
-
- Lycurg. 28. Müll. Dor. ii. 39. Commonly, also, the nurses of the
- kings were Helots.—Plut. Ages. § 3.
-
-Footnote 856:
-
- Plut. Inst. Lac. § 29.
-
-Another evil which the Pseudo-Xenophon discovers in the common
-Hellenic plan of training,[857] was that lads were indulged with the
-use of shoes, and rendered effeminate by frequent changes of clean
-linen, while their appetite, generally keen in boyhood,[858] was
-suffered to be the measure of what they ate. Lycurgus, he remarks,
-managed all these things differently. Instead of remaining under the
-superintendence of their parents, and frequenting what schools and
-masters they might judge proper, boys at Sparta passed under a sort of
-camp discipline regulated by the laws and intrusted to the
-guardianship of a particular magistrate, whom they denominated a
-Pædonomos. This part of the system Xenophon[859] prefers to the
-Athenian practice of intrusting youth to the care of servile
-pædagogues. The Pædonomos, however, resembled in many respects the
-Athenian Gymnasiarch, and, so far as I can perceive, possessed no
-superiority over him, except that his authority extended beyond school
-hours. He was, indeed, a kind of despot, vested with the power to call
-the boys together when he pleased, and inflict chastisement, at his
-own discretion, on any whom he detected exhibiting the least symptom
-of effeminacy. To enable him to carry his resolutions instantly into
-effect he marched about the town like an executioner, attended by men
-having whips, who at his nod seized the boy delinquent and subjected
-him at once to the torture. Thus possessing the power of enforcing
-obedience, a great show at least of reverence attended him.
-
-Footnote 857:
-
- De Rep. Laced. ii. 5. Cf. Plut. Lycurg. § 17.
-
-Footnote 858:
-
- And keen it must needs have been before they could have relished
- their black broth, with a dose of which Dionysios once made an
- experiment upon his stomach. Having put a spoonful of the compound
- into his mouth, he instantly spat it out again, declaring that he
- could not swallow it, for it was the filthiest stuff he had ever
- tasted; upon which his Spartan cook remarked, “You should have first
- bathed in the Eurotas.”—Plut. Inst. Lac. § 2.
-
-Footnote 859:
-
- De Rep. Lac. ii. 2. Lycurg. § 17. Cf. Hesych. v. Παιδονόμος.
-
-The privilege of sharing the paternal cares of the Pædonomos was not
-rigidly confined to the sons of Spartans (πολιτικοὶ παῖδες);[860] the
-Mothaces also, Spartans of half blood, and even strangers might share
-it. Who the Mothaces were it is extremely difficult to determine. Some
-contend that they were slaves brought up in the family.[861] But
-Athenæus, and Phylarchos whom he quotes, state most distinctly that
-they were free, ἐλεύθεροι μέν εἰσί. In order to remove the
-unfavourable impression made on mankind by the accounts transmitted to
-us of Spartan slavery, it has been pretended that they, as well as the
-Neodamodes, were Helots. Of the Neodamodes, however, the very author
-on whom reliance is placed asserts the contrary. They were originally
-slaves indeed, he says, but different from the Helots, ἑτέρους ὄντας
-τῶν εἱλώτων. With respect to the Mothaces,[862] notwithstanding the
-testimony of Hesychius and other grammarians, it seems clear that they
-were the sons of free though poor Laconians, who, desirous of
-obtaining for them the rights of Spartans, sent them to be the
-companions of such youthful citizens as would consent to receive them.
-It is moreover added that the youth, according to their means, chose
-one, two, or more of these companions; which shows that although the
-right of controlling the studies of its children was vested in the
-state, the expenses, in whole or in part, devolved upon the parents.
-
-Footnote 860:
-
- Athen. vi. 102.
-
-Footnote 861:
-
- Müll. ii. 314.
-
-Footnote 862:
-
- Harpocrat. v. Μόθωνες.
-
-The Mothaces, or Mothones as they are sometimes called, were identical
-with the σύντροφοι:[863] but the τρόφιμοι were such youthful
-strangers—for example, the sons of Xenophon[864] and Phocion—as, by
-submitting to the severities of Spartan discipline, acquired the
-freedom of the city, the privilege of aspiring to political
-distinction, and, according to some writers, even a share of the land.
-This, if true, would render credible the statement of the philosopher
-Teles,[865] who affirms that even Helots, by the means above
-described, could rise to the rank of Spartans; while they who in this
-point disobeyed the laws, were they even the children of kings, sank
-to the condition of Helots, and of course forfeited their estates,
-otherwise there would have been no land to bestow on the military
-neophytes. Three of the most remarkable men in Spartan story,
-Lysander, Gylippos, and Callicratidas were Mothaces, whose fathers
-were obscure.[866] It will be seen that we have here the original of
-that system of education sketched by Xenophon in his Persian Utopia,
-and designed to recommend monarchy to his countrymen, as that of Sir
-Thomas More was framed for the contrary purpose.
-
-Footnote 863:
-
- De Rep. Lac. iii. 3. 3. Schneid.
-
-Footnote 864:
-
- Diog. Laert. ii. c. vi. § 10. Xen. Hellen. v. 3. 9. Plut. Ages. § 6.
-
-Footnote 865:
-
- Ap. Stob. Florileg. 40. 8. Gaisf. Cf. Plut. Inst. Lac. § 21, 22.
- Athen. vi. 103. Müll. Dor. ii. 315. note p.—In Xenophon’s Persian
- Utopia such citizens as were too poor to maintain their children at
- school lost the benefits of public training; but, according to law,
- the advantages of the Spartan system were open to all.—Arist. Polit.
- iv. 9.
-
-Footnote 866:
-
- Ælian, Var. Hist. xii. 43.
-
-According to the laws of Lycurgus the heir-apparent to the throne was
-exempted from the necessity of mixing with his fellow-citizens in the
-public schools, though the younger members of the royal family
-occupied the same level with other boys.[867] That this was an unwise
-regulation, however, will be at once evident, since no man stands so
-much in need of severe discipline as a prince, who in spite of
-correction is too apt to be guided by his unbridled passions. Fact,
-too, bears out this view, for two of the noblest sovereigns of Sparta,
-Leonidas and Agesilaos, had been subjected, while boys,[868] to the
-correction of their teachers.
-
-It has been already remarked that the spirit of Spartan education was
-severe. It was, in fact, precisely the same as that which, in the last
-generation, pervaded the discipline of the Seneka and Mohawk Indians,
-and produced those numerous examples of patience, fortitude, and
-magnanimity, together with that force, agility and suppleness of body
-so greatly admired and, perhaps, envied by civilised nations. It was
-this stern and martial system that constituted the secret model,
-according to which Locke fashioned his plan of youthful training,
-designed rather to produce a sound mind in a sound body than to
-shatter and enervate the latter by the piling up in the brain of
-miscellaneous and often useless knowledge. But in his attempts at
-hardening the frame and rendering it invulnerable to the stings of
-suffering, our countryman did not dare to go the lengths of the
-Spartan legislator, who in this, at least, exhibited superior wisdom,
-that he did not consider the chastisement of stripes to have any
-tendency towards creating a base and servile habit of mind.[869]
-
-Footnote 867:
-
- Plut. Ages. § i.
-
-Footnote 868:
-
- Müll. Dor. ii. 315.
-
-Footnote 869:
-
- On the democratic tendency of Spartan discipline see Bœckh. in Plat.
- Min. 181. sqq. Isocrat. Areop. § 14–16.
-
-Consistently with the general aim of his institutions, Lycurgus,
-instead of ordaining, like Locke, that his alumni should wear leaky
-shoes, dispensed with the incumbrance altogether. And, certainly, in a
-soldier, the habit of trampling with the naked foot on ice and snow
-and the sharpest rocks, is worthy of acquisition.
-
-Institutions are generally based on the actual circumstances of
-society. Lycurgus legislated for a people to whom it was important to
-be able easily to climb steeps, or descend them with a sure foot, to
-spring forward also, to run, to bend, and perform innumerable acts of
-personal dexterity. He, therefore, commenced with boyhood the
-inculcating of those habits and exercises which their manhood would
-imperatively require of them.
-
-It has been seen that for change of linen an especial aversion was
-entertained at Sparta. Children were, therefore, taught to be content
-with one clean shirt per annum, at the termination of which period it
-was probably as well peopled as the Emperor Julian’s beard,
-particularly as, during all that time, it was considered low and
-unfashionable to bathe or make use of the ordinary ointments, an
-indulgence permitted to them but for a few days in the course of the
-year. All this time, however, they might more properly, perhaps, be
-said to be shirtless, since the himation only was left them, the
-chiton being taken away.[870] They were compelled also, as incipient
-soldiers, to lie hard on pallet beds, made with the tops of reeds
-collected, perfunctorily, without the help of the knife or dagger,
-from the banks of the Eurotas. To this, as an especial indulgence,
-they were in winter permitted to add a quantity of thistle-down, which
-material was supposed to contain much warmth.[871]
-
-Footnote 870:
-
- Plut. Lycurg. § 17. Inst. Lac. § 5. Xen. de Rep. Lac. ii. 4.
-
-Footnote 871:
-
- Plut. Inst. Lac. § 10.
-
-The initiation into these accomplishments commenced at the age of
-twelve. At the same time, acting upon the Galenian maxim, that “a fat
-stomach makes a lean wit,” the boys were reduced to short commons, the
-Bouagor, or leader of the juvenile troop, being instructed to pinch
-them as closely as possible on that score, in order that when the
-chances of war should reduce them to the necessity of subsisting on
-famine rations, they might be prepared without murmuring to submit to
-it. Persons so educated, moreover, would be little delicate in the
-choice of provisions. Anything, from a sea hedgehog to a snail, would
-suit their stomachs; and it would be hard indeed if war could ever
-place them in circumstances where such food as they were accustomed to
-might not be found. Health, too, and light spirits, as Lycurgus well
-understood, are the offspring of an abstemious diet. The spare
-warrior, clean-limbed and agile, would leap round the man puffed out
-and bloated with overfeeding, and, therefore, to be fat was at Sparta
-an offence punishable at law.[872] However, not to be too hard on the
-young gentlemen, it was always permitted, when hunger grew
-troublesome, to have recourse to what, for want of a fitter name, we
-must call stealing.[873]
-
-Footnote 872:
-
- Ælian. V. H. xiv. 7. Plut. Inst. Lac. § 13. Athen. xii. 74.—Apropos
- of this subject, the ancients have left us a very curious anecdote.
- Dionysios, son of Clearchos, the first tyrant of Heraclea, having
- succeeded to the government of his country, became insensibly so
- corpulent by his daily excess and extreme niceness in the choice of
- his viands, that he was nearly suffocated by the enormous mass of
- his fat. Every time he fell into a deep slumber it was feared he
- would never wake again; and, to rouse him from his lethargy, the
- physicians were often compelled to thrust long, sharp needles into
- his body until they reached the quick, upon which he would again
- exhibit signs of animation. Of this prodigious obesity his majesty
- was so much ashamed, however, that, when transacting business or
- giving audience to strangers, he would ensconce himself behind a
- large trunk, so that no part of him was visible but his face. Yet,
- in spite of this infirmity, he lived fifty-five years and reigned
- thirty-three; and, to the honour of corpulence be it remarked, that
- no tyrant ever before exhibited so much mildness and moderation.—Id.
- xii. 72.
-
-Footnote 873:
-
- Xen. Rep. Lac. ii. 6.—This writer observes, that what might be
- filched was determined by law.—Anab. iv. 6. 14. And Plutarch
- explains, that they might take as much food as they could.—Inst.
- Lac. § 12.
-
-In modern times it would be thought a poor compliment to any system of
-education to represent it as an admirable method for rendering a man
-an accomplished thief. But the Spartan sophists, whose wisdom Plato,
-in a jocular mood, so greatly extols, held a different theory. They
-did not undertake the teaching of morals, but such habits as became a
-soldier, among which thieving always maintains a distinguished place.
-Xenophon, however, is careful to guard us against the supposition that
-this habit of appropriation arose from want. The object of the
-legislator was, without the incurring of moral guilt, to nourish all
-the useful habits commonly found in a thief,—as, the power to watch by
-night, to wear the mask of honesty by day, craftily to lay snares, and
-even to set spies upon the individual to be plundered. To men designed
-to spend their lives in war such qualities are, doubtless, of the
-highest importance, since they enable them to procure provisions and
-overreach the enemy.[874] To this practice Xenophon alludes in the
-Anabasis, where the army is placed in circumstances of much
-difficulty. “I understand,” he says to Cheirisophos, “that among you
-Lacedæmonians the habit of stealing is carefully cultivated from
-childhood; and that, so far from being disgraceful, it is considered a
-necessary accomplishment, so long as you keep within the bounds
-prescribed by law. When detected, however, it is equally lawful to be
-scourged.”[875]
-
-Footnote 874:
-
- Xen. de Rep. Lac. ii. 7.
-
-Footnote 875:
-
- Anab. iv. vi. 14.
-
-Were they scourged, then, for stealing? Not at all, but simply for
-being caught; and Xenophon is right in remarking, that, in all human
-arts, they who unskilfully perform what they undertake are punished,
-and so should a bungling thief.[876] The passage immediately following
-is mutilated or inextricably corrupt,[877] but, from an attentive
-examination, it would appear that the boys detected on these occasions
-were selected to be flogged[878] during the festival of Artemis
-Orthia, or Orthosia, whose altar was thus annually smeared with human
-blood. This impartial superstition extended its empire over all ranks
-and conditions of men, servile or free, from the beggar to the prince;
-for here, we are told, Helots had sometimes the honour to be scourged
-in company perhaps with a scion of the Eurypontid or Agid kings. At
-Alea, in Arcadia, women, by the command of an oracle, were subjected
-to the same discipline. “Here,” says Pausanias,[879] “during the
-festival of Dionysos women, by command of an oracle, were flogged like
-the youth of Sparta at the altar of Artemis Orthia.”
-
-Footnote 876:
-
- De Rep. Lac. ii. 8.
-
-Footnote 877:
-
- Schneid. in Xen. de Rep. Lac. ii. 9.
-
-Footnote 878:
-
- Sometimes to death.—Plut. Inst. Lac. § 39. Vit. Aristid. § 17.
- Pausan. iii. 16. 6. Sext. Empir. Pyrrh. Hypot. iii. 24. p. 153. c.
- Spanheim ad Callim. in Dian. 174. The Scholiast on Pindar derives
- this name of Artemis from Mount Orthion or Orthosion in
- Arcadia.—Olymp. iii. 54. Cf. Lycoph. 1330. with the Schol. of
- Tzetzes. Schol. Plat. de Legg. p. 224. Ruhnk.
-
-Footnote 879:
-
- Arcad. viii. 23. 1. Meurs. (Græc. Fer. p. 256,) understands _sese
- flagellabant_.
-
-The above ordinance of Lycurgus led in the next instance to the
-hybernation of the youth upon the mountains:[880] to inure them still
-further to hardships, and, practically to teach them the art of
-providing for themselves, they were sent forth with a roving
-commission to prowl about the highlands and less frequented parts of
-Laconia, armed for self-protection, and that they might be able to
-bring down their game. At first, perhaps, they confined themselves
-within the limits prescribed by law. But almost of necessity they
-would become involved in quarrels with the Helots, by plundering whose
-farms and villages they chiefly subsisted. The Helots would sometimes
-resist and sometimes resent their incursions. Ill blood would be
-engendered. Hot and fiery youths, abandoned to their own guidance,
-would easily discover excuses for cruelty and revenge. From quarrels
-they would proceed to blows—from blows to assassination; and beaten,
-perhaps, by day, they would fall suddenly on the defenceless peasants
-in the dead of night, and butcher whole hamlets to avenge an affront
-offered to them perhaps by an individual. Thus, out of a custom
-blameless enough in its origin, grew the terrible institution of the
-Crypteia,[881] or annual massacre of the Helots, denied by some modern
-writers, but too well authenticated, and too much in keeping with the
-Spartan character and general policy, to allow of our indulging in any
-scepticism on the point.
-
-Footnote 880:
-
- The Platonic Scholiast confounds this practice with the Crypteia, so
- called, he says, because the youth were compelled to conceal
- themselves while they subsisted on plunder. Ἀπολύοντες γὰρ ἕκαστον
- γυμνὸν, προσέταττον ἐνιαυτὸν ὅλον ἔξω ἐν τοῖς ὄρεσι πλανᾶσθαι, καὶ
- τρέφειν ἑαυτὸν διὰ κλοπῆς, καὶ τῶν τοιούτων, οὕτω δὲ ὥστε μηδενὶ
- κατάδηλον γενέσθαι· διὸ καὶ κρύπτεια ὠνόμασται· ἐκολάζοντο γὰρ οἱ
- ὅπου δήποτε ὀφθέντες.—Ad Legg. p. 225. Ruhnk.
-
-Footnote 881:
-
- For a fuller account of this institution see Book V. Chapter VIII.
-
-But, in addition to the above, there were other branches of education
-taught at Sparta,—that is gymnastics and music. Writers, desirous of
-enhancing the mental acquisitions of the Dorians, adhere somewhat too
-strictly to the meaning often affixed by the Greeks to the word
-_music_, which they employed to signify literature. But Xenophon, in
-his treatise on the Lacedæmonian Commonwealth, appears invariably to
-use it in its limited and modern signification.
-
-To gymnastics the Dorians, upon the whole an unintellectual people,
-were naturally much addicted,—far too much according to ancient
-writers; but here again their modern historian steps in to their
-defence. He will have it, that it was in later times that they became
-philogymnasts, and quotes Dion Chrysostom as if he was the principal
-witness. Plato, to be sure, is referred to as a parasitical authority,
-and so is Aristotle;[882] but then the latter only says, that their
-constant violent exercises rendered them brutal, in which the
-historian appears to discover no harm. “This want of moderation,
-however, though it occurred in later times, is never perceivable in
-the maxims and ideas of the Dorians, who in this, as in several other
-cases, know how to set bounds to youthful ardour, and check its
-pernicious effects.”[883] This, it appears to me, is the language of
-an apologist. If they had such knowledge, how culpable must they have
-been not to check it in the matter of the Crypteia?
-
-Footnote 882:
-
- Polit. viii. 3. 3.—To this may be added the testimony of Plato, who
- evidently, without naming them, means to describe the Spartans,
- where he speaks of a people wholly given up to the study of bodily
- exercises, and by that means becoming brutal and ferocious.—De Rep.
- t. vi. p. 154.
-
-Footnote 883:
-
- Dorians, ii. 319. seq.
-
-It may be observed, however, that though they devoted to gymnastics
-too much of their leisure, the fault lay in them, not in the system of
-exercises, which was in itself one of extreme beauty and simplicity.
-Its object,—which it was excellently calculated to attain,—was not to
-create athletæ but soldiers, not gigantic strength, but an elastic,
-agile, beautiful frame, adapted for all the movements of war. Boxing,
-accordingly, and the pancration[884] were banished from their
-gymnasia, a regulation evincing at the same time their wisdom and
-their taste; the former being the most barbarous and useless, the
-latter the most unseemly portion of gymnastics, often exhibiting the
-antagonists rolling and struggling, like savages or animals devoid of
-reason, on the ground.
-
-Footnote 884:
-
- Ταῦτα μόνα μὴ κωλύσαντος ἀγωνίζεσθαι τοὺς πολίτας, ἐν οἷς χεὶρ οὺκ
- ἀνατείνεται.—Plut. Lycurg. § 19. The exercises, in which the
- admission of being vanquished was made by holding up the hand, are
- elsewhere named:—Πυγμὴν δὲ καὶ παγκράτιον ἀγωνίζεσθαι ἐκώλυσεν, ἵνα
- μηδὲ παίζοντες ἀπαυδᾷν ἐθίζωνται.—Reg. Apophtheg. Lycurg. 4.
- Apophtheg. Lacon. Lycurg. 23.
-
-As the ancient idea of education included every thing employed to
-develope the powers of body or mind, we must regard in this light the
-military games peculiar to the Spartans and Cretans.[885] Among the
-former the youth, having sacrificed to Ares in a temple at Therapne,
-passed over into an island dyked round and called Platanistas, where,
-dividing off into separate parties, they engaged in a contest which
-wanted nothing but arms to render it a genuine battle. A learned
-historian, seldom sparing of words, avoids describing this interesting
-scene; and wherefore?—Because a faithful description of it must convey
-a striking idea of Spartan ferocity. “They exerted” says he, “every
-means in their power to obtain the victory.”—Exactly; but what were
-those means? “Adolescentium greges Lacedæmone vidimus ipsi indibili
-contentione certantes, pugnis, calcibus, unguibus, morsu denique; quum
-exanimarentur priusquam se victos faterentur.[886]” Yet were these
-battles carried on under the eyes of magistrates, the five Bidiæi[887]
-appointed to superintend these exercises as well as those performed
-elsewhere. The little island where they fought was a spot of great
-natural beauty, encircled by a sheet of clear water, and approached on
-all sides through thick and lofty groves of platane trees. A bridge
-thrown over the canal led to the island on both sides, and on the one
-stood a statue of Heracles, on the other of Lycurgus. This battle was
-reckoned among the institutions of the latter, and under the
-protection probably of the former. The preliminaries to the fight were
-as follow. They first sacrificed in the Phœbaion which stands without
-the city, not far from Therapne. Here each of the two divisions of the
-youth offered up a dog’s whelp to Ares, the bravest of domestic
-animals, sacred in their opinion to the bravest of the Gods. No other
-Grecian people sacrificed the dog excepting the Colophonians, who
-offered up a black bitch to Hecate. In both cities the sacrifice was
-performed by night. After the ceremony two tame boars were brought
-forward, one by each party, which they compelled to fight; and they
-whose brute champion proved superior, thence augured that victory
-awaited them in the Platanistas. On the following day, a little before
-noon, they entered by the bridges into the island, one party by one
-bridge, the other by the other. But the choice was not left to them,
-having been determined on the preceding night by lot. Being arrived,
-they faced each other, and commenced the battle, striking with the
-fist, kicking, leaping on each other, tearing one another with their
-teeth, and gouging after the most approved Kentucky fashion. Thus they
-struggled, man to man, urging forward together and thrusting each
-other into the water.[888] From these words, as well as from the
-testimony of Cicero cited above, it is clear the combat was conducted
-with no other arms than those furnished by nature, though Lucian,
-misemploying the verb ὁπλομάχειν,[889] would lead us to a different
-conclusion. But this kind of battle is always enumerated among the
-gymnastic exercises or contests; and what necessity would there have
-been to have recourse to fists, feet, teeth, and nails, had they been
-permitted the use of arms? Fatigued with this violent exertion they
-betook themselves for a short time to repose, refreshed by which they
-resumed their exercises, dancing in most intricate measures to the
-sound of the pipe.[890] Akin in spirit to the contests in the
-Platanistas were the ever-recurring battles fought by the young men
-with the three hundred followers of the Hippagretæ; three inferior
-magistrates appointed by the Ephori, who selected each one hundred
-followers from among the healthiest and bravest of the youthful
-population. Against this chosen band all the other young men of the
-city were bound by custom to make war; and, but that they could be
-parted by any citizen who might happen to be passing by, it is
-probable that these fierce boxing matches would often have terminated
-fatally.
-
-Footnote 885:
-
- Müll. ii. 26.
-
-Footnote 886:
-
- Cic. Tusc. Disput. v. 27.
-
-Footnote 887:
-
- Paus. iii. 11. 2.
-
-Footnote 888:
-
- Paus. iii. 14. 8. sqq.
-
-Footnote 889:
-
- Anachars. § 38.
-
-Footnote 890:
-
- Cf. Ubb. Emm. Antiq. Græc. iii. 89. sqq.
-
-Similar customs prevailed in Crete, where, as in most other parts of
-Greece, the business of education appears to have commenced at the age
-of seven years, when the cake called Promachos was given to the boys,
-because, as it has been conjectured, they were thenceforward to be
-trained for fighting. Up to the age of seventeen they were denominated
-Apageli, since they were not until then admitted into those Agelæ[891]
-or bands, in which they thenceforward performed their exercises. Here,
-as in Sparta, the greatest possible care was taken to extirpate from
-the character every germ of effeminacy. They ate whatever food was
-given them squatting on the ground, not being permitted to join their
-elders at the board, and went abroad in all weathers clad in a single
-garment, like the boys of Sparta during their hibernation. However,
-the youth of the several Agelæ, armed with stones, and iron weapons,
-marching to the sound of flutes, and assailing each other, converted
-their exercises into something very like real warfare. Our
-cudgel-playing, single-stick, &c. are pastimes of the same
-description; and boxing now nearly exploded, can plead classical
-precedent. They were habituated, says Ephoros, to labours and arms,
-and taught to despise both heat and cold, rough roads and cliffs, and
-the blows they received in the gymnasium and their mock battles. The
-use of the bow formed part of their education, as well as the armed
-dance, at first taught by the Curetes, and afterwards named the
-Pyrrhic; so that a warlike spirit breathed through the whole system of
-their education.[892]
-
-Footnote 891:
-
- Ἀγέλη for the boys, συσσίτιον for the men.—Strab. x. 4. p. 379.
- Müll. (Dor. ii. 326.) uses both indiscriminately.
-
-Footnote 892:
-
- Strab. x. 4. p. 380. seq.—This agrees with what Plato relates of the
- Cretan polity.—De Legg. t. vii. p. 260. t. viii. p. 86.
-
-With all these facts before him, though many of them he has
-suppressed, the historian of the Doric race, in direct contradiction
-to Plato and Aristotle, contends naïvely that it would be erroneous to
-conclude that the aim of bodily exercise among the Dorians was war, or
-that in their result they rendered the youth either brutal or
-ferocious. Their object, in his opinion, was to obtain something like
-ideal beauty of form, strength, and health, which, he says, they
-accordingly attained, being, about B. C. 540, the healthiest of the
-Greeks and most renowned for beautiful men and women. But Xenophon
-whom, on the subject of health he quotes, does not authorise his
-superlative:—"It would not be easy," are his words, “to find healthier
-or more active men.”[893] Again, the language of Herodotus by no means
-bears him out. He, indeed, affirms that Callicrates, a Spartan, was
-the handsomest man in the army at Platæa, but says nothing of the
-Spartans being handsomer than the other Greeks; but rather the
-contrary. He was not merely the handsomest man among his countrymen,
-but, which he evidently considered more remarkable, among all the
-other Greeks.[894]
-
-Footnote 893:
-
- De Rep. Lac. v. 9.—At a later period the reputation of being the
- handsomest men in Greece was enjoyed by certain young men of
- Athens.—Æschin. cont. Tim. § 31.
-
-Footnote 894:
-
- Herod. ix. 72.
-
-Not, however, to insist on such points as these, let us proceed to
-examine the intellectual cultivation of the Dorians.[895] That the art
-of writing never flourished very generally at Sparta appears to be on
-all hands admitted, though we can by no means doubt that among them
-numerous individuals possessing this accomplishment might always be
-found. Thus, in the old story of the combat of the three hundred
-Spartans and Argives, it is related that Othryades, the sole survivor
-of the Laconian band, having remained last on the field of battle,
-erected a trophy and wrote upon it with his blood Λακεδαιμόνιοι κατ᾽
-Ἀργείων, immediately after which he died of his wounds.[896]
-Generally, however, no great stress was laid on a knowledge of the art
-of writing, which, in the opinion of some authors, was of
-comparatively little value where the people were taught to chant their
-laws as well as their songs. Similar customs and regulations prevailed
-on this head in Crete, where, nevertheless, letters appear to have
-been viewed with a more favourable eye.[897] In addition to their body
-of legal poetry, which was probably less voluminous than a metrical
-version of the statutes at large, the youth were taught to sing hymns
-in honour of the gods and the praises of illustrious men.[898] In
-music, too, they were permitted to make some proficiency, though
-generally, we are told, it was their ambition to excel rather in the
-regularity of their manners than in the extent of their acquirements.
-
-Footnote 895:
-
- Cf. Ælian. Var. Hist. xii. 50.
-
-Footnote 896:
-
- Stob. Florileg. vii. 67.
-
-Footnote 897:
-
- Plut. Inst. Lac. § 14. seq.—The Spartans sacrificed to the muses
- before going to battle in order that they might perform something
- worthy of notice by them.—Id. § 16. It is remarked of king Cleomenes
- that he studied philosophy under Sphæros the Borysthenite who was
- likewise permitted to impart his system to the other youth.—Id.
- Cleom. § 2.—Cf. Diog. Laert. vii. 6.
-
-Footnote 898:
-
- In later times learning grew to be more highly valued. Thus it was
- ordained by law that the youth should assemble annually in the Hall
- of the Ephori to hear the work of Dicæarchos on the constitution of
- their country read to them.—Suid. v. Δικαίαρχ. t. i. p. 730. d.
-
-With respect to the Spartans it is probable, though the testimony of
-ancient writers be sufficiently contradictory, that no great stress
-was laid even on the ability to read; for, while Plutarch[899]
-conceives this art to have been among their ordinary acquirements,
-Isocrates, a grave and more competent authority, is decidedly of the
-opposite opinion.[900]
-
-Footnote 899:
-
- Inst. Lac. § 4. Lycurg. § 16.
-
-Footnote 900:
-
- Panathen. § 83. Τοσοῦτον ἀπολελειμμένοι τῆς κοινῆς παιδείας καὶ
- φιλοσοφίας εἰσιν ὥστ᾽ οὐδὲ γράμματα μανθάνουσιν.
-
-Ælian,[901] too, coming in the rear of Plutarch, observes that the
-Lacedæmonians were ignorant of mental culture (μουσικῆς) meaning
-evidently as Perizonius has already observed, not “music” as Kühn
-would translate it, (for in this they were learned,) but a knowledge
-of poetry and eloquence.[902]
-
-Footnote 901:
-
- Var. Hist. xii. 50.
-
-Footnote 902:
-
- So again in Ælian. Var. Hist. iv. 15. Gelo, king of Syracuse, an
- illiterate person is termed ἄμουσος.
-
-That the Spartans were noted for their indifference to literature, is
-well known. Even Xenophon, their apologist, instituting a comparison
-between their system of education and that prevailing among the other
-Greeks, observes that the latter sent their boys to school that they
-might learn their letters, music, and the exercises of the palæstra,
-while the former placed them under the care of a grave man who might
-punish them if slothful and inactive, and inculcate great modesty and
-obedience in lieu of the usual accomplishments. Plato also, in the
-Greater Hippias,[903] having observed that their laws were averse from
-the reception of foreign learning, adds immediately after that the
-majority of them were even ignorant of arithmetic. In another
-place,[904] indeed, the philosopher appears to hold a different
-language, and is literally understood by Perizonius. But the reader
-who examines the passage attentively, will probably agree with me in
-considering it nothing more than one of those profoundly ironical
-strokes in which, above all writers, he abounds. He in fact remarks,
-what in another sense may have been very true, that no countries were
-more fertile in sophists than Crete and Lacedæmon, but that they
-dissembled their wisdom and feigned ignorance, lest they should appear
-to excel all their countrymen in sapience, of which in reality there
-was very little danger. He observes, however, no less ironically, that
-those rude and unrhetorical nations were of all men most philosophical
-and eloquent, and that it had long been understood by a great many
-that to _laconise_, or act the Spartan, was rather to be a philosopher
-than a diligent student of gymnastics. Perizonius,[905] indeed,
-conceives that all this is to be understood of natural sound sense,
-applied to morals and those brief and pithy sayings or λογοὶ, which
-constituted the science of laconics.
-
-Footnote 903:
-
- T. v. p. 418.
-
-Footnote 904:
-
- Protag. t. i. p. 209.
-
-Footnote 905:
-
- Not. ad Ælian. xii. 50.—From an ironical passage of Plato we
- may likewise infer that they were able genealogists and
- story-tellers.—Hipp. Maj. t. v. p. 419.
-
-But, after all, there never was, as Cicero observes, a single orator
-among the Spartans; nor could it be otherwise, since all the arts
-which beget and foster eloquence, and, more important still, every
-political institution which favours it, were unknown in their state.
-Nay, so far did they push their aversion for the oratorical art, that
-if any citizen of Sparta acquired, in his experience abroad, the skill
-artificially to wield a syllogism or a trope, he was subjected to
-punishment,[906] while rhetoricians were expelled the city.[907]
-Ignorance, therefore, of whatever learned nations prize, was their
-chief boast. To them the sublime speculations of the Academy, and the
-logic, sharp and irresistible, of the Lyceum, were equally strangers;
-yet their discipline, and the habits of youth, imparted to them what
-in modern jargon is termed a kind of practical “philosophy.” They
-understood the great art, at least among them, how to command their
-passions; as Maximus Tyrius[908] relates of Agesilaos who, though
-educated in no school of philosophy, was nevertheless not a slave to
-love, which therefore the sophist infers could not be a matter of
-great difficulty. However there were limitations to their aversions
-for learning. They opened in their state an asylum for those antique
-teachers of mankind, the poets,[909] proscribed by Plato, and were in
-this respect so superior in good taste to that philosopher, that they
-at length, in imitation of the Great Preceptors of Greece, instituted
-public recitations of Homer. And this, Maximus Tyrius adduces as a
-proof that many well-constituted states had existed in which Homer was
-not publicly studied, for he could not mean that he was once entirely
-unknown at Sparta.[910]
-
-Footnote 906:
-
- The laws of Sparta were in this respect, as in many others, merely
- imitations of those of Crete.—Sext. Empir. adv. Mathemat. l. ii. p.
- 68. Plutarch having remarked that they did learn to read, adds—τῶν
- δὲ ἄλλων παιδευμάτων ξενηλασίαν ἐποιοῦτο, οὐ μᾶλλον ἀνθρώπων ἢ
- λόγων.—Instit. Lac. § 4.
-
-Footnote 907:
-
- Cressol. Theat. Rhet. i. 12. p. 88.
-
-Footnote 908:
-
- Dissert. ix. p. 118.
-
-Footnote 909:
-
- Cf. Athen. xiv. 33.
-
-Footnote 910:
-
- Dissert. vii. p. 91.
-
-Into the character of the Greeks, generally, there entered an element
-but faintly discernible in the moral composition of modern nations, I
-mean a most exquisite and exalted sensibility, which rendered them to
-the last degree susceptible, and liable to be swayed irresistibly for
-good or for evil by poetry and music. And this characteristic
-distinguished in some degree the Doric as well as the Ionic race. They
-could be excited, past belief, by the agency of sound. Music,
-therefore, with us at least a mere source of enjoyment, among them was
-invested with a moral character, and employed in education as a
-powerful means of harmonising, purifying, ennobling the principles and
-the affections of the heart. For this reason the government, which in
-Greece was in reality a Committee of Public Safety,[911] watched over
-the music no less sedulously than over the morals of the people, which
-it powerfully influenced. It must, nevertheless, be confessed that
-many ancient authors are little philosophical in relating or reasoning
-upon the effects of music. They often confound consequences with
-causes. Thus, in the example which certain authors undoubtingly adduce
-of the Sicilian Dorians,[912] whose morals we are told were corrupted
-by their fiddlesticks, they omit to inquire whether it was not rather
-the natural and necessary degeneracy of a wealthy people, which
-corrupted the music. This is my interpretation. For, in the history of
-the ancient Sicilians, I can discover causes enough of lax and
-imperfect morals, without calling in the aid of lyre or cithara. But
-some writers on this point have an easy faith. They suppose that the
-strict domestic discipline of Sparta “would hardly have been
-preserved”[913] without the old-fashioned music.
-
-Footnote 911:
-
- Plut. Inst. Lac. § 17.
-
-Footnote 912:
-
- Max. Tyr. iv. p. 54. Cic. de Legg. ii. 15.—Cicero, though apt in
- most cases to defer to the opinion of Plato, hangs back here. He
- does not, indeed, consider it a matter of indifference what songs
- are sung, or what airs prevail in a state; but neither does he
- credit the inferences drawn too subtilely by the great philosopher
- from his musical theory.
-
-Footnote 913:
-
- Dorians. ii. 340.
-
-In whatever way we decide on the metaphysics of the matter, certain it
-is that in old times music was an universal accomplishment in most
-parts of Greece; but this was when it was little more than the
-chanting of savages, in which, however ignorant, any one may join.
-Exactly in proportion as it rose into an art its cultivators
-diminished in number, until, when a high degree of perfection had been
-attained, it was abandoned almost wholly to professional musicians.
-The Athenians had been commanded by the Pythian oracle to chant
-chorically in the streets, a divine service in honour of Bacchos.[914]
-At Sparta similar performances took place during the gymnopædia, when
-choruses of naked men and boys, with crowns of palm leaves on their
-heads, proceeded through the streets singing the songs of Thaletas and
-Alcman and the pæans of Dionysidotos.[915] Mr. Müller, who loves to
-complete or round off the accounts he finds in ancient authors, says
-that, _doubtless_, a large portion of the inhabitants of the city took
-part in these exhibitions. Perhaps they did, but we have no authority
-for such a supposition. The place in the agora which contained statues
-of Apollo, Artemis and Leto, was called _Choros_,[916] because there
-the Ephebi danced in choruses in honour of Apollo. On these occasions
-unwarlike persons were sometimes thrust into the least honourable
-places,[917] while bachelors were excluded; so that, as Schneider has
-well remarked, cowardice was less dishonourable than celibacy. But it
-does not at all appear that the Spartans themselves were ever good
-musicians, though they were not incapable of relishing good
-music;[918] and hence the foreign musicians who flocked thither found
-a welcome reception. The developement of the warlike constitution of
-the state threw the favourable side of their discipline into the
-shade.[919]
-
-Footnote 914:
-
- Demosth. in Mid. § 15.
-
-Footnote 915:
-
- Athen. xv. 22.
-
-Footnote 916:
-
- Paus. iii. 11. 9.—Müller, ii. 341., supposes the whole agora may
- have been thus denominated.
-
-Footnote 917:
-
- Xen. de Rep. Lac. ix. 5. Plut. Lycurg. § 15.
-
-Footnote 918:
-
- Aristot. Pol. viii. 5.
-
-Footnote 919:
-
- Cf. Müll. Dor. ii. 342.
-
-The Arcadians, likewise, made great use of music in their system of
-education, and, though otherwise a rude race, continued to practise it
-up to the age of thirty. Among them alone, in fact, were children
-accustomed from infancy to sing, in certain measures, hymns and poems,
-in which they celebrated the praises of the gods and heroes of their
-country. After this, observes Polybius,[920] they learned the _nomoi_
-of Timotheus and Philoxenos, and every year during the Dionysia formed
-choruses in the theatre, where they danced to the sound of the flute.
-Here boys contended with antagonists of their own age, and the young
-men with those more advanced towards their prime. During the whole of
-their lives they frequented these public assemblies, where they
-instructed each other by their songs, and not by means of foreign
-actors. With respect to other branches of education they considered it
-no disgrace to profess themselves ignorant; but not to know how to
-sing would, in Arcadia, have been a mark of extreme vulgarity. They
-habituated themselves to walk with gravity to the sound of the flute,
-and, having been thus instructed at the expense of the state,
-proceeded once a year in public procession to the theatre. Their
-ancestors introduced these customs, not with any view to pleasure, or
-that they might grow rich by the exercise of their talents, but in
-order to soften the austerity of character which their cold and murky
-atmosphere would otherwise have engendered. For the character of
-nations is invariably analogous to the air they breathe, and it is the
-geographical position of races which determines alone their temper of
-mind and the colour and configuration of their bodies.
-
-Footnote 920:
-
- iv. 20. 7. Athen. xiv. 21. seq.
-
-Besides what has already been said of the Arcadians, it may be added,
-that it was customary among them for the men and women to unite in
-chanting certain odes, and to offer up sacrifices in common. There
-were also dances in which the youth of both sexes joined, and their
-object was to create and diffuse humane and gentle manners.
-
-But the same habits were not prevalent throughout the whole country.
-The Kynæthes made no progress in these humanising arts, and as they
-dwelt in the rudest districts of Arcadia, and breathed the crudest
-air, their ferocity became proverbial; they addicted themselves to
-strife and contention, and degenerated into the fiercest and most
-untameable savages in Greece. In fact, obtaining possession of several
-cities, they shed so much blood that the whole nation was roused, and
-at length united in expelling them the land. Even after their
-departure the Mantinæans thought it necessary to purify the soil by
-sacrifices, expiations, and the leading of victims round the whole
-boundary line.
-
-Dancing very naturally constituted a separate branch of education at
-Sparta as in Crete. In both places the execution of the Pyrrhic
-appears to have been regarded as a necessary accomplishment, the
-youths, from the age of fifteen or earlier, having been taught to
-perform it in arms.[921] It was or is—for the Pyrrhic still lingers in
-Greece,
-
- “Ye have the Pyrrhic dance as yet—”
-
-an exhibition purely military. The dancers, accoutred with spear and
-shield, went gracefully and vigorously through a number of movements,
-wheeling, advancing, giving blows or shunning them, as in real
-action.[922] In other parts of Greece, however, the Pyrrhic quickly
-degenerated in character, becoming little better than a wild dance of
-Bacchanals.[923] It has been rightly observed that at Sparta “the
-chief object of the Gymnopædia was to represent gymnastic exercises
-and dancing in intimate union, and, indeed, the latter only as the
-accomplishment and end of the former.”[924] One of the dances,
-resembling the Anapale, partook of a Bacchanalian character.”[925] The
-youth, also, when skilled in these exercises, danced in rows behind
-each other to the music of flutes, both military and choral dances, at
-the same time, repeating an invitation in verse to Aphrodite and Eros
-to join them, and an exhortation to each other.[926]
-
-Footnote 921:
-
- Athen. xiv. 29.—The armed dance was in particular favour with
- Plato.—De Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 17. Boys danced in armour during
- the Panathenaia at Athens.—Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 935.
-
-Footnote 922:
-
- Plat. de Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 54.
-
-Footnote 923:
-
- Athen. xiv. 29.
-
-Footnote 924:
-
- Müll. Dor. ii. 351.
-
-Footnote 925:
-
- Creuz. Com. Herod. i. 230.
-
-Footnote 926:
-
- Lucian de Saltat. § 10. seq.
-
-It will be seen from the above details that the object of education at
-Sparta was rather the formation of habits and the disciplining of the
-mind to act in exact conformity with the laws, than to develope to
-their fullest extent the intellectual powers of individuals. They
-desired to amalgamate the whole energies of the people into one mass,
-upon the supposition that being thus impelled in any particular
-direction they would prove irresistible. No account was made of
-private happiness. Everything seems to have been devised for the
-effecting of national purposes, though from the known laws of the
-human mind even the restraint and tyrannical interference of such a
-system would with time be reconciled to the feelings and contribute to
-individual content. But very much of what renders life sweet, was
-sacrificed. Letters and arts, that subordinate creation, that world
-within a world which the beneficence of Providence has permitted man
-to call into existence, were at Sparta unknown. They enjoyed little or
-nothing of that refined delight which arises from multiplying the
-almost conscious fruits of the soul, from sending winged thoughts
-abroad to move, enchant, electrify millions, from deifying truth and
-confounding error, from ascending to the greatest heights of
-mortality, and diffusing from thence a light and a glory to warm and
-illuminate and gladden the human race for ever. This greater felicity
-was reserved for the education of Athens, which must, therefore, in
-all enlightened times, bear away the palm of excellence and utility.
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-INFLUENCE OF THE FINE ARTS ON EDUCATION.
-
-It behoves us now to quit the circle of studies, which, taken
-together, are commonly supposed to constitute the whole of education,
-and consider the influence exercised by other elements on the minds of
-the Hellenic youth. Even in these days we speak intelligibly and
-correctly of that experience which young men gain on their first
-entrance into life, from travel and fashionable society, as of a
-particular stage in their education, it being during that period that
-they learn to estimate the value of their school acquirements, how
-advantageously to conceal or display them according to circumstances,
-and to bend the neck, perchance, of their lofty theories and sublime
-speculations to the yoke of the world. But in Greece this was more
-palpably the case; for, though escaped from the formal rule of
-preceptors and pædagogues, the youth had still to master several
-departments of study, either by their own independent exertions or
-under the guidance of judicious friends: I mean those infinitely
-varied creations of art and literature, which, as they are in harmony
-with them or otherwise, confirm or subvert the principles and
-discipline of the schools.
-
-Thoroughly to comprehend, therefore, the nature and extent of that
-sway which the state and its institutions directly or indirectly
-exerted over the minds of the citizens, it is necessary briefly to
-inquire into the character of the plastic and mimetic arts which found
-encouragement in the Grecian commonwealths, and afterwards to examine
-for a moment the stores of thought and sentiment and passion, and
-piety and virtue, which the literature and religion of Greece laid
-open to the contemplation of those who were entering upon the career
-of life. We shall begin with the arts, as they were the inculcators of
-the principle of the beautiful, advance next to literature, the
-teacher of wisdom and patriotism, concluding with religion, which
-opened up to their view a prospect, though dim, of heaven, and
-directed their footsteps thitherward.
-
-It is certain that, to the generality, the vast superiority of the
-Greeks in the arts, which like an universal language need no
-translation, is more palpable and apparent than their superiority in
-literature; though Demosthenes be in reality as much above any orator,
-Thucydides above any historian, Plato above any philosopher, Homer
-above any epic poet, Milton perhaps excepted, who has since written,
-as Pheidias, or Polycletos, or Praxiteles rose above any sculptor of
-the north. Nor can we account for this any more than we can explain
-why Shakespeare was superior to Ford or Massinger. Nature infused more
-genius into their souls. They loved or rather worshiped the beautiful.
-It breathed within and around them: their minds were pregnant with it,
-and, when they brought forth, beauty was their offspring. Thus
-Aristophanes[927] insinuates, that even the gods borrowed much of
-their majesty and splendour from the human mind, when he says, that
-heaven-born peace derived her loveliness from some relationship to
-Pheidias.
-
-Footnote 927:
-
- Pac. 614. seq.
-
-Religion, in one sense, may be called the parent of the fine arts; but
-it would perhaps be more philosophical to consider religion and the
-arts as twin sisters, both sprung from that yearning after the ideal
-which constituted the most marked feature in the Hellenic mind. We
-must carry back our investigations very far, if we would discover them
-radiant with loveliness in their cradle; but when they issued thence
-it was to shed light over the earth, a light derived from the skies.
-For man does not originate his ideas of the beautiful, which fall like
-images from heaven on the speculum of his mind; he gives back but what
-he receives. The conception of beauty is an inspiration, a thing which
-does not come when called upon; or rather, shining on all, it is lost
-on the dull and opaque fancy, and is reflected only from the luminous
-and bright.
-
-Man needs companionship always, and the creative and imaginative make
-to themselves companions of their own ideas, and clothe them in
-material forms to render the illusion more complete. There is an
-impassioned intercourse between the soul and its offspring. We love
-nothing like that which has sprung from ourselves, and in this we are
-truly the image of God, who saw all things that he had made, and,
-behold, they were very good. And he loved his creation; and from him
-we inherit, as his children, the love we bear to our creations. Hence
-the enthusiasm for art, hence the power and the inspiration of poetry.
-They are not things of earth. They are the seeds of immortality
-ripening prematurely here below; and therefore we should love them.
-They are the warrant, the proof that we are of God; that we are born
-to exercise an irresistible sway over the elements; that our thrones
-are building elsewhere; that in the passion for whatever is spiritual
-we exhibit instinctively indubitable tokens that spirits we are, and
-in a spiritual world only can find our home.
-
-It does not belong to this work to attempt a history of Grecian art,
-which in a certain sense has been already written. My object, if I can
-accomplish it, is to describe the spirit by which that art was created
-and sustained, and this I should do triumphantly if love were
-synonymous with power; for never, since the fabled artist hung
-enamoured over the marble he had fashioned, did any man’s imagination
-cleave more earnestly to the spirit that presided over Grecian art,
-not the plastic merely but every form of it, from the epic in poetry
-and sculpture down to the signet ring and the drinking song. But the
-thing is an ample apology for the enthusiasm. There, if anywhere, we
-discover the culminating point of human intellect and human
-genius;—there
-
- “The vision and the faculty divine”
-
-meet us at every step. Even the fragments of her literature and her
-art are gathered up and treasured in all civilised countries, as if
-the fate of our race were mystically bound up in them. And so it is:
-for when we cease to love the beautiful, of which they are the most
-perfect realisation we know, our own race of glory and greatness will
-have been run: we shall be close on the verge, nay, within the pale of
-barbarism.
-
-Socrates used to say, that whatever we know we can explain; but not so
-always with what we feel. There is in the ideal of beauty, which
-formed the vivifying principle of Greek art, a certain subtile and
-fugitive delicacy, a certain nameless grace, a certain volatile and
-fleeting essence, which defy definition, and, rejecting the aid of
-language, persist in presenting themselves naked to the mind. And by
-the mind only, and only, moreover, by the inspired mind, can they be
-discerned.
-
-It was in the attempt, however, to chain this spirit, and to imprison
-it in durable forms, that all the poetry and arts of Greece consisted.
-They beheld within them a world of loveliness, of living forms which
-knocked at the golden door of fancy, and demanded their dismissal from
-the spiritual to the material universe. All their studies were but how
-to dress these celestial habitants in fitting habiliments to go abroad
-in; and their lives were often spent in the throes of creatures big
-with immortal beauty. It is a privilege to the world to converse with
-minds of such a nature. It is ennobling to approach them. Their
-energy, their vivifying power continues ever active, ever operating,
-and if high art be ever to flourish and command, not admiration, but
-love in England, it can only be by kindling here the lamp removed from
-Greece, but essentially Greek, that is, essentially beautiful.
-
-The proof that religion issued with art from the same womb in Greece,
-and was not its parent, is supplied by every other country. There is
-religion elsewhere, while nowhere is there art like that of the
-Greeks. But religion had nevertheless much to do with the forms in
-which the creative faculty there developed itself, as it invariably
-has with whatever is great or beautiful among men. The persuasion
-arose in them that the inhabitants of Olympos could be represented by
-material forms, and as they found their own reverence for the divine
-being represented, augment in proportion to the beauty or grandeur of
-its image, the conclusion was natural that the deity himself would be
-pleased by the same rule, so that their piety was their first and most
-powerful incentive to excellence. They hoped to recommend themselves
-to the gods, as they did to their countrymen, by the greatness of
-their workmanship; and veneration from without, and piety from within,
-united in urging them forward. And this, with the poet equally as with
-the artist, inflamed the desire to excel.
-
-There are, as has already been observed,[928] three periods in the
-history of art: 1st. that, in which the necessary is sought; 2ndly,
-that in which the study of the beautiful is pursued; and 3dly, the
-period of superfluity and extravagance. But in some countries men
-appear to pass from the first to the third, without traversing the
-second. Thus, in Egypt, Persia, Etruria, in Germany, Holland, France,
-England[929] the wild, the grotesque, the terrible have been aimed at,
-seldom the beautiful. Even in Italy, where in modern times art has
-taken firmest root and most luxuriantly flourished, the object sought
-to be attained has lain on a lower level. Among the northern nations
-the grotesque variously disguised or modified is the spirit of art;
-among the Italians it is voluptuousness, among the Greeks the
-beautiful. Hence no Greek statue of the flourishing period of art is
-indecent.[930] Naked it may be, but like the nakedness of infancy, it
-is chaste as a mother’s love. Our thoughts are instantly carried away
-by it to the regions of poetry; the soft influence of the ideal
-descends like dew upon our fancy; we are elevated above the region of
-the passions to heights where all is sunny and calm and pure. The
-beautiful is chaste as an icicle, yet warm as love. It breathes in
-Raffaelle’s virgins which we regard as some “bright particular star,”
-things to inspire a holy affection, a love not akin to earth. Yet this
-beauty is not distanced from us by its severity: no! but by its
-intense innocence, by its unsullied purity, by its inexpressible
-concentration and mingling up of maternity and girlhood. It was this
-beauty that Milton sought in his Comus to express, when he represents
-chastity as its own guard. And this is preëminently the spirit
-breathing through Grecian art. In the Artemis, in the Athena, nay,
-even in Aphrodite or Leda, or an orgiastic Bacchante, the overruling
-sense of beauty, after the first flutter of sensation, hurries the
-imagination far beyond all considerations of sex or passion. The root
-of all the pleasures we feel, seems to be hidden under the load of
-three thousand years, not because the things are old, but because they
-are the material representatives of a period when the foot of the
-beautiful rested on the earth.
-
-Footnote 928:
-
- By Winkelmann, Hist. de l’Art, i. 2.
-
-Footnote 929:
-
- It is remarked by Winkelmann that Rubens painted the figures of
- Flemings after many years’ residence in Italy.—i. 60. The Greek grew
- up from infancy in the presence of the beauty he afterwards
- represented: his mother, his sisters, his father, and all around
- him. What he saw constituted the basis of what he painted or
- sculptured. In most modern nations the school models of our youth
- are Greek; but their home models, and which are to them models from
- the cradle, are of a different style. Hence they are under two sets
- of influences, the one neutralising the other, and producing that
- coldness which the mock classical exhibits. This may, perhaps, be
- one cause of the slow progress of art among us.
-
-Footnote 930:
-
- Plato, jocularly perhaps, bestows the same praise on Egyptian art,
- and Muretus seriously adopts his notions: “Meritoque Ægyptios
- commendat Plato, apud quos et pictorum et musicorum licentia legibus
- coërcebatur, quod permagni interesse judicarent, ut adolescentes à
- teneris annis honestis picturis, et honestis cantibus
- assuefierent.”—In Aristot. Ethic. p. 249. But perhaps Plato had not
- looked very narrowly into the sacred sculptures of Egypt which in
- reality abound with images offensive to decency.
-
-No doubt we come prepared to regard them with eyes coloured, and a
-fancy haunted by the beauties of Grecian literature. Possibly, it is
-under the spell of Homeric verse that our eyes grow humid with delight
-at the aspect of Aphrodite, that we behold divinity in Zeus or Phœbos
-Apollo; but this only proves that the fragments of Hellenic
-civilisation throw a light upon each other, and are parts of one great
-whole. Perhaps, too, no man ever enjoyed the sculpture of Greece as he
-should, unless conversant with her poetry—the right hand of her art.
-In this we find the first seeds and increments of those ideas, which
-were afterwards transplanted and bore fruit in another field. We
-discover, therefore, but half the subject when we see only the
-sculpture. It is unknown to us whether the artist has fulfilled the
-conditions into which he entered, by undertaking to clothe in marble,
-thoughts already invested with the forms of language. Hence the little
-sympathy between Hellenic art and the people generally of modern
-nations. The figures they behold are dumb to them. To a Greek, on the
-contrary, or to a man with a Greek’s soul, a thousand sweet
-reminiscences, a thousand legends, a thousand dim but cherished
-associations appear clustering round them. Every time they flash upon
-him, he lives his youth over again. The briery nook, the dewy lanes,
-the dim religious forests, the pebbly or wave-fretted shore, where the
-poetry of Greece first opened its eyes upon him in boyhood, sweep in
-procession over his fancy. He starts to see the hamadryad or the faun
-or the mountain nymph, before him but one remove from life; to him art
-speaks not merely in an intelligible, but in an impassioned tongue. He
-comprehends all the mysteries she has to reveal, and loves her because
-in a land as it were of foreigners they can converse with each other,
-and speak of the past and the future.
-
-It is scarcely philosophical to regard poetry, sculpture, and
-painting, as the offspring of pleasure, though pleasure in some sense
-be as necessary to man as food. Man possesses creative and imitative
-faculties, and must, at certain stages of society, employ them. The
-moment his merely animal wants are provided for, he begins to feel
-that he has others which demand no less imperiously their
-gratification. First, he desires to clothe with material forms the
-things he worships, and hence the first-born of art are gods. At the
-outset, indeed, (and this is a strong argument against their having
-borrowed their arts from the East,)[931] the Greeks were content with
-setting up rude stones, as symbols rather than representations of
-their divinities; then followed the head upon a rude pillar; then, the
-indications of the sex; next, the round thighs began to swell out of
-the stone; to these succeeded legs and feet; and, lastly, arms and
-hands completed the figure. Dædalos, a mythological personage, is
-supposed to have been the first who carried the art to this point of
-improvement. His figures were of wood, and already executed with
-considerable skill, though they would have been despised in the days
-of Socrates.[932]
-
-Footnote 931:
-
- See Winkel. t. i. p. 7.—Pollux gives a list of the names under which
- the representations of the gods were classed.—i. 7.
-
-Footnote 932:
-
- Plat. de Repub. t. vi. p. 354. Cf. Hipp. Maj. t. v. p.
- 410.—Winkelmann slightly misinterprets the sense of Plato.—Hist. de
- l’Art, t. i. p. 12.
-
-For some ages, perhaps, a stiff, unanimated manner, not unlike the
-Egyptian, prevailed; but the impulse, once given, went on increasing
-in strength. One improvement imperceptibly followed another. Artists,
-together with their experience, acquired professional learning, the
-results of which soon became visible in their productions. Movement
-and variety of position succeeded. But though knowledge of art was
-enlarged and strict rules laid down, there still remained a hard,
-square massiveness in the style, resembling what we find in modern
-sculpture as improved by Michael Angelo. And this manner became the
-type of the Æginetan school, which expressed the character of the
-Doric mind, powerful but rude, harmonious but heavy, wanting in grace,
-wanting in elegance, and aiming rather at effect than beauty.[933]
-
-Footnote 933:
-
- Cf. Winkelmann, t. i. p. 22.
-
-Numerous causes, however, concurred in ripening the principle of art
-in Greece,—the climate, the form of government, the happy taste of the
-people, and, lastly, the high respect which was there paid to artists.
-Nor is it at all paradoxical to affirm, that moral causes concurred
-powerfully with physical, in begetting that radiant beauty of
-countenance which distinguished the nation. The consciousness of
-freedom and independence produces satisfaction in the mind; the
-serenity thus originated communicates itself to the features; thence
-arise harmony and dignity of aspect and mien; these are so many
-elements of beauty, and such feelings long indulged would operate
-powerfully on the countenance, and, seconded by the tranquillising
-influences of external nature, end by creating symmetry and
-proportion, which, joined with intellect, are beauty. Artists in such
-a country, besides that they must themselves involuntarily be
-impressed with a veneration for it, would soon discover the reverence
-paid to beauty and the value set upon accurate representations of it.
-
-Of the high estimation in which beauty was held innumerable proofs
-exist in Greek literature. At Ægion in Achaia, the priest of Zeus was
-chosen for the splendour of his personal charms, to determine which a
-sort of contest was instituted. This office he held till his beard
-began to appear, when the honour passed to the youth then judged to
-excel[934] in the perfection of his form. So, also, at Tanagra, the
-youth selected to bear the lamb round the walls in honour of Hermes
-was supposed to be the first for beauty in the city.[935] Of the
-involuntary power of beauty history has recorded various instances.
-Phrynè, accused of impiety and on the point of being condemned,
-obtained her acquittal through the hardihood of her advocate, who
-bared her bosom before the judges. Another example is said to have
-been afforded by Corinna, sole poetess of Tanagra, who, contending
-with Pindar for the prize of verse, obtained the victory more by her
-beauty, (she being the loveliest woman of her time,) and the sweetness
-of the Æolic dialect in which she wrote, than by the greatness of her
-genius.[936]
-
-Footnote 934:
-
- Paus. vii. 24. 4.
-
-Footnote 935:
-
- Id. ix. 22. 1.
-
-Footnote 936:
-
- Id. ix. 22. 3.
-
-In another instance heroic honours were paid to a man after death for
-the beauty of his person.[937] This happened at Egestum in Sicily,
-where Philippos, a native of Crotona, obtained this distinction, which
-Herodotus observes never fell to any other man’s lot before.[938]
-
-Footnote 937:
-
- Euripides, speaking of course as a poet, pronounces beauty to be
- worthy of supreme power. But many ancient nations were seriously of
- this mind, and chose the finest person among them to be their king:
- which was the practice of those Ethiopians called the
- Immortals.—Athen. xiii. 20. If by Ethiopians be meant the people now
- known under the name of Nubians, I am sure they had very good reason
- to encourage beauty, than which there is, at this day, nothing more
- rare in their country.
-
-Footnote 938:
-
- V. 47.
-
-It was to its artists that Greece delegated, at least in some
-instances, the privilege of deciding on the rival pretensions of the
-fair and beautiful. They were permitted to select from the loveliest
-women of the land models for their female divinities, and at other
-times made their mistresses the representatives of goddesses. Pains
-were taken, by filling their apartments with beautiful statues, to
-impress upon the imagination of pregnant women the perfect forms of
-gods and heroes, as of Nireus, Narcissos, Hyacinthos, Castor and
-Polydeukes, Bacchos and Apollo.[939] This was at Sparta. In other
-parts of the Peloponnesos a species of Olympic contest for the prize
-of beauty took place, instituted, it is said, by Cypselos, an ancient
-king of Arcadia. Having founded a city in the plain on the banks of
-the Alpheios, in which he fixed a colony of Parrhasians, he dedicated
-a temple and altar, and instituted a festival in honour of Eleusinian
-Demeter, during which the women of the neighbourhood disputed with
-each other the prize, and received from some circumstance connected
-with the contest the name of Chrysophoræ. The first woman who won was
-Herodice, wife of the founder Cypselos. This institution flourished
-upwards of fourteen hundred years, having been established in the time
-of the Heracleidæ, and still existing in the age of Athenæus.[940]
-
-Footnote 939:
-
- Opian. Cyneg. i. 357. sqq.
-
-Footnote 940:
-
- Deipnosoph. xiii. 90. Eustath. ad Il. τ. 282. relates briefly the
- same facts, concluding with the very words made use of by Athenæus.
- Palmerius, who, in his remarks on Diogenes Laertius quotes them,
- immediately adds: “quæ non dubito Eustathiun ab aliquo auctore
- antiquo accepisse.”—Exercit. in Auct. Græc. p. 448. In which
- conjecture he was right; and that ancient author was Nicias in his
- history of Arcadia.
-
-A similar practice prevailed in the islands of Tenedos and Lesbos,
-where likewise the ebullitions of vanity were concealed beneath the
-veil of religion. The exhibition took place in the temple of Hera, to
-whom, as the goddess of marriage, beauty should be dear. Priapos,
-however, was in some places supposed to be the deity who awarded the
-prize of loveliness in the Callisteia, on which account Niconoë, a
-Bacchante perhaps, dedicated to him her fawn-skin and golden
-ewer.[941] But the ladies were not singular in these displays. For
-among the Eleians, who had as favourable an opinion of themselves as
-Oliver Goldsmith, a similar show took place, and the pretensions of
-the male candidates were as carefully sifted as if they had been to
-take academical honours on their figures. And honours in fact they did
-take. They were presented with a complete suit of armour, which the
-winner consecrated with extraordinary pomp and rejoicing in the temple
-of Athena, whither he was led garlanded with fillets by his triumphant
-friends. According to Myrsilos, he was likewise decorated with a
-myrtle crown.[942]
-
-Footnote 941:
-
- Schol. ad Il. ι. 129. Cf. Meurs. Gr. Fer. p. 177. Hedyl. in Anth.
- Gr. vi. 292. Athen. xiii. 90.
-
-Footnote 942:
-
- Athen. xiii. 90.
-
-In some places, not named by historians, a contest was instituted
-which, though unconnected with the arts, we will intreat the reader’s
-permission to introduce here, for its extraordinary nature. This was a
-contest in prudence and good housewifery, in which certain barbarian
-nations followed the example. And, to show that character and mental
-qualifications were properly esteemed by the Greeks, it is added by
-Theophrastos[943] that it is these that render beauty beautiful, and
-that without them it is apt to degenerate into wantonness. Winkelmann,
-who has noticed several of these facts, is betrayed into some errors.
-He speaks of an Apollo of Philesia[944] at whose festival a prize was
-bestowed on the youth who excelled in kissing. The contest took place
-under the inspection of a judge, he supposes, at Megara. Meursius,
-though under the name of Diocleia he notices the Megarean festival,
-overlooks the writer who gives the fullest account of it;—I mean the
-scholiast on Theocritus, who observes that Diocles was an Athenian
-exile who took refuge at Megara. In a battle in which he was engaged,
-he fought side by side with a friend, whose life he saved at the
-expense of his own. He was interred by the Megareans, who instituted
-an annual festival in his honour, where the youth who excelled his
-companions was crowned and led in triumph to the arms of his
-mother.[945]
-
-Footnote 943:
-
- Ap. Athen. xiii. 90.
-
-Footnote 944:
-
- Lutat. ad Stat. Theb. viii. 178. Cf. Barth. iii. 828. Hist. de
- l’Art, i. 319. Carlo Fea with a simplicity rare in an Italian,
- remarks upon this: “Il est question ici de baise-mains!” The Apollo
- intended is Apollo Philesias, whose statue was sculptured in
- Æginetic marble by Canachos.—Plin. Hist. Nat. xxxiv. 19. 14.
-
-Footnote 945:
-
- Sch. in Theocrit. xii. 28.
-
-The exercises, discipline, and moral notions of the Greeks had
-doubtless much effect on their form; for in the decline of their
-states, when despotism had succeeded to freedom, and vice to virtue,
-beauty became exceedingly rare. Cotta, in the De Naturâ Deorum,
-observes that he found few handsome youths at Athens, where in the age
-of Demosthenes the most beautiful in Greece flourished;[946] and Dion
-Chrysostom observes that in his time there were scarcely any that
-could be so considered.[947]
-
-Footnote 946:
-
- Æschin. cont. Tim. § 31.
-
-Footnote 947:
-
- Orat. 21. t. 1. p. 500. sqq. Reiske.
-
-If we come now to the other causes which account for the progress of
-the arts in Greece, we shall find the principal of these to have been
-the high consideration and esteem[948] in which artists were held.
-Riches, no doubt, obtained credit there as elsewhere, but not to the
-exclusion of other recommendations as in modern Europe, or at least in
-England. Winkelmann scarcely comprehends the irony of Socrates,
-however, when he supposes him seriously to mean that artists alone
-were wise; though, since the sage had himself been a sculptor, he had
-some reason to think well of them. It is, nevertheless, perfectly true
-that men of this profession might become legislators or generals, or
-even behold a statue erected to them beside those of Miltiades and
-Themistocles, or among the gods themselves.[949] The historian of art
-observes with pride that Xenophilos and Straton were permitted at
-Argos to place their own statues, even in a sitting posture, near
-those of Asclepios and Hygeia.[950] Cheirisophos, who sculptured the
-Apollo at Tegea, dedicated in the same fane a statue of himself in
-marble, which was erected close to his great work.[951] The figure of
-Alcamenes occupied a place among the bassi-rilievi on the temple of
-Demeter at Eleusis. Parrhasios and Silanion shared the reverence paid
-to their picture of Theseus; and Pheidias affixed his name to his
-Olympian Zeus, the nearest approach perhaps which the arts have ever
-made to perfection.[952]
-
-Footnote 948:
-
- At the same time the earnings of inferior sculptors were small.—Luc.
- Somm. § 9.
-
-Footnote 949:
-
- Cf. Plut. Thes. § 4.
-
-Footnote 950:
-
- Pausan. ii. 23. 4.
-
-Footnote 951:
-
- Pausan. viii. 53. 8.
-
-Footnote 952:
-
- Id. v. 10. Wink. iv. 1. § 12. p. 332.
-
-If the satisfaction of beholding a whole nation, I might say a whole
-world, smitten with delight and wonder at his performance, would repay
-an artist for years of toil and study, Pheidias had his reward. And
-not to the narrow circle of his life was this admiration confined; for
-six hundred years after his death pilgrims from all parts of the
-civilised world flocked to Olympia[953] to behold his matchless
-performance; for to die without having partaken of this enjoyment was
-considered a misfortune. But neither praise, nor encouragement, nor
-honour, nor gain will suffice to bring the arts to perfection. To
-ensure this, the nation to which the arts address themselves must
-comprehend their language. For, if the people be incapable of deciding
-when an artist has succeeded and when he has failed, it is very
-certain that he will seldom succeed at all. Men soon find the
-uselessness of producing what no one around them can appreciate. Even
-in the matter of virtue and vice, few will soar very high in countries
-where a low standard of morals prevails generally; and, in the arts,
-no one will devote himself to the creation of forms which he knows
-will be dumb to the public eye.
-
-Footnote 953:
-
- Εἰς Ὀλυμπίαν μὲν ἀποδημεῖτε ἵν᾽ εἰδῆτε τὸ ἔργον τοῦ Φειδίου·
- καὶ ἀτύχημα ἕκαστος ὕμων οἴεται, τὸ ἀνιστόρητον τούτον
- ἀποθανεῖν.—Arrian. Com. in Epict. l. i. p. 27.
-
-In Greece every condition required to ripen the genius of an artist
-existed. He knew that his reputation and fortune would depend on the
-caprice of no particular individual or class of individuals. He
-perceived among his countrymen at large the knowledge, the taste, and
-the enthusiasm which just decisions in art demand, and laboured
-fearlessly for them, not doubting that he should obtain the reward his
-genius merited. There were public exhibitions, as among us, both at
-Corinth and at Delphi;[954] but, instead of converting them into a
-sordid traffic, the whole world was invited to behold their
-performances, and judges were appointed to decide upon the merits of
-the exhibitors. Instances no doubt there were of artists showing their
-performances for money: at least the memory of one example has come
-down to us. Zeuxis of Heraclea, having finished his picture of Helen,
-opened an exhibition and fixed a certain admission price, by which he
-cleared a large sum of money; but to mark their disapprobation of such
-conduct, his contemporaries bestowed on his picture the name of the
-courtesan.[955]
-
-Footnote 954:
-
- Plin. Hist. Nat. xxxv. 35.
-
-Footnote 955:
-
- Ælian, Var. Hist. iv. 12. Cf. Meurs. ad Lycoph. Cassand. 131. p.
- 1189. and Val. Max. iii. 7.
-
-In the public exhibitions they appear to have looked solely to merit,
-and not to have allowed themselves to be dazzled by great names; for
-when Panænos, brother of Pheidias, entered the lists, neither his own
-reputation, nor that of the illustrious sculptor, could obtain for him
-the preference over Timagoras, who was allowed to have excelled. A
-like spirit prevailed among the judges of Olympia, whither artists
-sometimes brought their pictures during the games to delight assembled
-nations, and reap a harvest of joy and glory in a day. Thus when Ætion
-appeared with his “Marriage of Alexander and Roxana,” before the
-Hellanodicos Proxenides,[956] he not only obtained the credit due to
-his genius, but that magistrate, more emphatically to express his
-admiration, bestowed on him the hand of his daughter. And Lucian, who
-had seen the picture in Italy, has left a description of it which
-justifies the enthusiasm of Proxenides.
-
-Footnote 956:
-
- Lucian. Herod. § 4.
-
-I have already in a former chapter accounted in some measure for the
-diffusion of a correct taste among the great body of the people. It
-formed with them an indispensable branch of study. The arts of design
-were cultivated by the philosopher, the politician, in short, by every
-one who claimed to be considered a gentleman.[957] Nay, gentlewomen
-also enjoyed these advantages, and instances are recorded of their
-arriving at professional excellence and celebrity; for example,
-Timarete,[958] daughter of the younger Micon, an Athenian, and Helen
-an Alexandrian Greek, who painted the “Battle of the Issos,”
-afterwards consecrated in the temple of Peace.[959] It was in the
-nature of things, that artists moving in such a moral atmosphere
-should partake largely of the national grandeur of sentiment, and look
-rather to the perpetuation of their name than to any sordid
-considerations of gain, above which they were elevated by the form
-which the national gratitude assumed. For we may be sure that what is
-related of the great historian of Halicarnassos was, to a certain
-extent, true of great artists. Men pointed at him, we are told, as he
-moved through the public assemblies, exclaiming, “That is he! That is
-the man who has celebrated our victories over the Barbarians!”
-
-Footnote 957:
-
- Diog. Laert. iii. 5.—Aristot. Pol. viii. 3.
-
-Footnote 958:
-
- Plin. Hist. Nat. xxxv. 35.
-
-Footnote 959:
-
- Phot. Bib. p. 149.
-
-Winkelmann, who understood human nature no less than the arts,
-enumerates similar facts among the causes why art flourished in
-Greece;[960] and though sometimes mistaken, as in so large a work was
-to be expected, his reasoning generally, and his illustrations,
-deserve that every lover of art should be familiar with his writings.
-
-Footnote 960:
-
- Hist. de l’Art, l. iv. c. 1. § 13.
-
-This distinguished historian, however, is not sufficiently guarded in
-his expressions, when he contends that the productions of art were
-consecrated solely to the deity or to public utility; for, though they
-were principally directed to these ends, many individuals possessed
-collections in their houses,[961] which were by no means the humble
-dwellings he supposes. However the public constituted the great patron
-of art, and uniting in itself natural aptitude, acquired knowledge,
-and an inherent leaning towards grandeur, communicated to those who
-laboured to gratify it corresponding taste and elevation. In many
-cases the whole population of a city identified its own glory with
-that of some celebrated picture or statue within its walls. Olympia,
-though peopled by works of art of surpassing excellence, still looked
-upon the Pheidian Zeus[962] as the apex of its glory; and even Athens,
-where probably more objects of art were crowded together than in any
-other city of the world, the colossal statue of Athena stood
-preëminently the ornament of the Acropolis. In one respect we have
-begun to imitate the Greeks, who often erected by general subscription
-the statue of a divinity, or of some Athletæ victorious in the sacred
-games. Some minor cities are solely remembered for the works of art
-they contained: for example, that of Aliphera which owed its celebrity
-entirely to its statue of Athena in bronze, the work of Hecatodoros
-and Sostratos.[963]
-
-Footnote 961:
-
- Galen, Protrept. § 8. t. i. p. 19.
-
-Footnote 962:
-
- On the interior of this statue inhabited by rats and mice. See Luc.
- Som. seu. Gall. § 24.
-
-Footnote 963:
-
- Polyb. iv. 340. d. Winkel. iv. 1. 15. The Eros of Thespiæ, also, and
- the Aphrodite of Cnidos, were famous. Luc. Amor. § 11. seq.
-
-Winkelmann supposes that both sculpture and painting arrived earlier
-at a certain degree of perfection than architecture, and, assuming the
-fact, proceeds philosophically to account for it. But his theory
-itself, on this point, appears to be erroneous. In Egypt, at least,
-where the mind would necessarily be guided by the same laws as in
-Greece, it is certain that while sculpture and painting never escaped
-from the swaddling bands of infancy, architecture advanced to a very
-high degree of perfection. The force of necessity, which leads to the
-creation of architecture, communicates a far more lasting impulse than
-the instinct of imitation. Men must everywhere build to protect
-themselves from the fury of the elements; and the first step thus
-made, and leisure supervening, that sense of proportion and symmetry
-and arrangement, which is almost an instinct, would soon lead to the
-contemplation of the ideal and the creation of architecture as an art.
-Sculpture sprang later into existence, and still later painting; but
-like the children of one family,—of whom some are older, others
-younger,—all the arts flourish nearly together, and nearly together
-decay. Nevertheless we may subdivide this period into minuter cycles,
-when we shall find that architecture and sculpture reached almost like
-twins their acme together, while, like a younger sister, painting
-attained its greatest beauty when the former two had fallen something
-from their perfection. Thus, the Zeus of Pheidias and the Hera of
-Polycletos, two of the most celebrated statues of antiquity, already
-existed, while Hellenic painting exhibited no knowledge of
-chiaro-scuro and was wholly destitute of harmony.
-
-Apollodoros and after him Zeuxis, master and disciple,[964] who
-flourished about the ninetieth Olympiad, were the first who rendered
-themselves remarkable for a knowledge of light and shade.[965] But,
-arrived at this pitch, the beauty of the art began to be felt, picture
-galleries were commenced in various temples,[966] and, a new world of
-forms and colours disclosing itself to the imagination, the versatile
-Greeks transferred to it a large share of the admiration hitherto
-monopolised by sculpture. Painting, in fact, speaks a more popular
-language. It tells a story, while sculpture can but embody a thought
-or fix an incident. Its accessories realise events more completely.
-The Apollo, in sculpture, has bent his bow and discharged his
-arrow—the remainder of the action the imagination must shape for
-itself. Painting gives us the whole scene teeming with life,—the
-writhing dragon, the rocks, the woods, the mountain, the sky, with all
-the illusions spread before the eye by many-coloured light. Sculpture
-furnishes the nucleus of glorious associations, but ’tis we that must
-group them into sublime beauty. It asks more knowledge, more fancy,
-more in short of every element of genius in its admirers than does
-painting. Hence the latter will always number, and justly, more
-partisans. In most persons a preference for sculpture would be mere
-affectation. It cannot equally please the many.
-
-Footnote 964:
-
- Winkel. iv. 1. 16.
-
-Footnote 965:
-
- Quintil. xii. 10. Plin. Hist. Nat. xxxv. 36.
-
-Footnote 966:
-
- In the Stoa of Dionysos, at Rhodes, there was a picture gallery
- filled with historical and mythic pieces.—Luc. Amor. § 8. Similar
- exhibitions appear to have existed at Cnidos, in the portico of
- Sostratos.—§ 11. Works of art, sacred to the gods, were likewise
- treasured up at home.—§ 16. In some temples, we learn, even
- pictures of immoral tendency, by Parrhasios and others, were
- admitted.—Lobeck, Aglaopham. p. 606. Aristotle takes from this
- circumstance occasion to sneer at the religion of paganism which
- patronised such excesses.—Polit. vii. 15. p. 255. Gœttl.
-
-However, in proportion as the public became more enlightened, and, to
-justify its admiration and enthusiasm, imposed harder conditions on
-artists, the latter enlarged the circle of their studies, which
-gradually expanded until it embraced a certain portion of metaphysics,
-the science of form and colours, with that art of grouping and
-arrangement which constitutes a species of narrative in painting. A
-complete exposition of their studies would be the best manual which
-could be put into the hands of contemporary artists, and at the same
-time would furnish the best explanation of their seemingly
-inexplicable superiority. But such an exposition would be out of place
-here. My object is simply to hint at what may be done, not to attempt
-it myself; and to show, that if the Greek nation afforded
-encouragement to its artists, it was because those artists met their
-countrymen more than half way, and laboured to deserve encouragement.
-
-There existed in Greece a philosophy of art, that is, a perfect theory
-of what its object is, and of all the means by which that object may
-be accomplished. Now the object of art is delight, a delight which
-aggrandises and ennobles the mind, and such delight is only to be
-obtained through the contemplation of the beautiful. This conviction
-established, the studies of the Greek artist were directed to the
-discovery of the elements of the beautiful, not such as it exists in
-the original types of the intellectual world (which he abandoned to
-the philosopher), but such as we find it in material developements of
-the ideal, and chiefly in the forms of our own species.
-
-Their researches, conducted in a philosophical spirit, by degrees
-taught them that perfect beauty, like perfect happiness, consists in
-absolute serenity and repose. Thus, the heavens are beautiful when in
-the noon of a summer’s day their blue depths are unstained by a cloud,
-and not a breath is heard among the trees. Thus, the ocean is
-beautiful when the most perfect calm broods upon it, and has smoothed
-down every ripple and converted it into a mirror for reflecting the
-cerulean purity of the sky. And this is what the poets signify when
-they represent Aphrodite, the very soul of beauty and of love,
-springing up from the level and glittering surface of such a sea. In
-the same state the human countenance is most beautiful, when every
-feature in the most perfect equilibrium breathes of calm, joy, and
-serenity, and by the force of sympathy converts all who approach it
-into so many mirrors reflecting its absolute bliss. This is the secret
-of that beauty which exists in Grecian sculpture.
-
-It was a maxim of Greek philosophy, that the magnanimous man is
-seldom, under any circumstances, disturbed. In action, therefore, he
-would exhibit the same tranquil countenance as when at rest. Thus,
-Socrates at Potidæa, at Delion, in the Prison of the Eleven about to
-quaff the hemlock, would in looks be much the same. And this
-self-command, observable in one great man, art attributed generally to
-the gods and heroes, who, in whatever actions they might be engaged,
-would still retain a self-possessed and serene aspect. Hence, even the
-battle-pieces of the Greeks are beautiful. Men fight and die, but
-under the guidance of duty. We behold none of those demoniacal
-passions, nothing of that animal ferocity, or of that succumbing to
-pain which convert so many modern pictures into slaughter-house
-representations. We feel that the actors contemplated death only as
-the distributor of imperishable glory,—that imagination had coloured
-everything around them with its rainbow tints,—that by anticipation
-they enjoyed the panegyric which would be pronounced over them in the
-hearing of all they loved,—the monument which would be raised over
-their ashes,—the deathless reward which would be bestowed on their
-patriotism and valour in the historic page. To men, so feeling and so
-thinking, where was the sting of death? They could compress eternity
-into a moment, and grasp all future time, and live through it by the
-irresistible force of imagination.
-
-To be able to represent such forms and features, it was necessary to
-study simultaneously the conceptions of the poets, and the progressive
-developement of the human figure from infancy to age. From this study
-resulted a body of experience, the fruit of innumerable comparisons,
-out of which sprang that gradually corrected and improved and elevated
-conception of the human figure which is denominated _the ideal_.
-Instances, isolated from the great body of artistic study, have crept
-into ordinary books, and been thereby invested with an air of
-vulgarity. But this will not hinder the philosopher or the artist from
-including them in his scheme of study and converting them into germs
-of utility. In this part of their progress religion stepped in to the
-aid of the artist. The several goddesses represented each a style of
-women of whom they might be considered the original type. Aphrodite,
-for example, represented the impassioned and tender,[967] naturally
-parasites of man and too often frail; Hera, the chaste matron,
-dignified, authoritative, energetic, but inclined to violence and
-self-will; Artemis, reserved, modest, retiring, like a nun, was the
-prototype of unspotted maidenhood, revered for its own purity; Athena,
-perfect in intellect as in form, uniting the loveliness of Aphrodite,
-the majesty of Hera, the delicacy and chastity of Artemis with the
-wisdom of Zeus, constituted properly the ideal of womanhood, loftier
-than Eve before the fall and such as it can exist only in the
-imagination.
-
-Footnote 967:
-
- An ancient author has the following expression: οὐκοῦν τὸ θῆλυ, κᾄν
- λίθινον ᾖ, φιλεῖται· τί δ᾽ εἴ τις ἔμψυχον εἶδε τοιοῦτον κάλλος;—Luc.
- Amor. § 17.
-
- Something very like which is found in Byron:
-
- “There, too, the Goddess _loves in stone_, and fills
- The air around with beauty.”
-
-In search, however, of female forms to represent these ideal originals
-artists travelled through the whole of Greece, gathering up as they
-went those fragments of beauty which, when united, were to approach
-perfection. They resembled Isis in search of the limbs of Osiris.
-Sometimes, as at Crotona and Agrigentum, parents did not scruple to
-expose their daughters naked to their eyes, that from them they might
-fashion that loveliness which was to represent to their senses the
-divine being they worshiped. But this excess of superstition was rare.
-In general the Hetairæ, their mistresses and companions, served for
-the models after which the soft divinities of Greece were moulded:
-
- “If Queensberry to strip there’s no compelling,
- ’Tis from a handmaid we must take a Helen.”
-
-Thus Phryne, idealised by art, became Aphrodite, Anadyomene in the
-hands of Apelles, or Aphrodite of Cnidos in those of Praxiteles.
-
-Childhood obtained its representative in Eros the god of love. Thus,
-from infancy upwards, even to old age, the human form in all its
-phases became the object of study to the Greek artist, not to be
-servilely copied, but to be idealised, to be clothed with poetry, to
-be divested of everything mean, gross, unspiritual, and embalmed in
-eternal beauty. And their success is proved by this, that, even with
-their works before them, modern artists have never been able
-satisfactorily to imitate their excellences. Of this Winkelmann[968]
-mentions some examples which have not come under my own notice.
-“Although the best modern artists,” he says, “have striven to imitate
-exactly the celebrated Medusa of the Strozzi cabinet at Rome, which,
-nevertheless, is not a countenance of the highest beauty, an
-experienced antiquary will always be able to distinguish the original
-from the copy.” The same thing is true, he says, with respect to the
-Pallas of Aspasios, engraved by Natter and others. But this is
-perfectly intelligible. The original artist, working after his own
-ideas and comprehending thoroughly his own object, would impart to his
-creations a flexibility, a grace, a freedom, not to be reached by one
-whose type existed out of his own mind. For even in literature it is
-thus—language, malleable, expansive, obedient to control in the hands
-of the original writer, who breathes into it his own ideas and
-requires it only to drape them, becomes a stiff unmanageable mass with
-the imitator like a corpse put in motion by galvanism.
-
-Footnote 968:
-
- Hist. de l’Art, iv. 2. 23.
-
-To be conversant with the arts of Greece, is to move among a race of
-gods endued with eternal youth. In the goddesses the small neck, the
-undeveloped bosom convey the idea of virgin innocence. The nipple
-shrinking inward retreats from the eye. Over the visage a radiance
-indescribable appears to play; the form, whether draped or undraped,
-suggests the idea of divine unfleeting existence—of the poetry of life
-and love—such as youth dreams of in its purest aspirations. For the
-gods our feelings are in a slight degree different. Zeus, invested
-with the majesty of Olympos, in the fulness of manhood, powerful,
-beautiful, sublime, awakens in us a mingling of reverence and love, as
-towards a father. Apollo towers like an elder brother above our heads.
-Hades, Poseidon, Ares are powers whom we do not love. Mighty they
-were, but strangers whom our sympathies do not cling to. But Dionysos,
-with his vine garland and beautiful face of friendship, with Eros and
-Heracles and the heroic twins and Hephæstos and Seilenos, and the
-Fauns, with every haunter of grove, or spring, or mountain seem
-familiar all and formed to inspire and repay affection. They are
-spirits of joy every one of them. They have lived from boyhood in our
-dreams, they have constituted one principal link in binding us to the
-past, one principal argument in favour of Grecian genius: and who can
-do otherwise than love them? Nay, in some measure, when we consider
-their manifold escapes from time and barbarism, they appear to us as
-Othello to Desdemona—we “love _them_ for the dangers they have
-passed,”—and it asks no faith in miracles to persuade us that they
-“love _us_ that we do pity them.”
-
-Winkelmann, who on so many questions connected with art has put
-forward opinions highly just and philosophical, appears to have fallen
-short of his wonted acumen in the theory he had formed of the beauty
-of the goddesses. His language in fact descends to puerility where he
-says:—"Since on the subject of female beauty there are few
-observations to be made, it may be concluded that the study of it is
-less complicated and far easier for the artist. Nature itself appears
-to experience less difficulty in the formation of women than of men,
-_if it be true_ that there are born fewer boys than girls."[969] Since
-the direct contrary is true, this imaginary difficulty of Nature (not
-to hazard a more sacred word) may be dismissed with contempt; but the
-remark by which it is ushered in requires to be confuted. Artists are
-well aware, and Winkelmann himself admits, that the beau ideal of
-heroic beauty (that for example of Achilles or of Theseus) is merely
-the blending of feminine loveliness with masculine power, so as to
-leave it undetermined, from the countenance, to which sex it belongs.
-And still the beauty of the Grecian youth, where they are beautiful,
-consists in a near approach to that of the female, so near indeed that
-they might be easily mistaken for women. If, therefore, the beauty of
-men when highest and most perfect, consists chiefly in what it borrows
-from that of woman, the latter necessarily constitutes the apex of
-human beauty; and the artist whom this conviction guides in his
-creations, will be the first to rival the great masters of antiquity.
-Another observation which it is strange to find in the Historian of
-Art, is that artists draped their female figures because of the little
-difficulty there is in imitating the naked form. But was it the
-extreme facility of representing paternal grief that led Timanthes to
-veil the face of his Agamemnon? In draping their goddesses and
-heroines, artists were guided by other reasons, of which the principal
-was their desire to conform to the ideas of the poets and to popular
-belief.
-
-Footnote 969:
-
- Hist. de l’Art, iv. 2. 67.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
- HELLENIC LITERATURE.
-
-
-From the arts the transition is natural to the literature[970] of
-Greece, which in the historical period necessarily constituted the
-principal agent in ripening and stamping their peculiar character upon
-the fruits of education among the people. Literature is in fact the
-school-mistress of nations. In it so long as it remains entire, we may
-contemplate the whole character, intellectual and moral, of the race
-out of whose passions, yearnings, tastes, and energies it may be said
-to be fashioned. And this, true of all literature, is especially
-applicable to that of Greece, which more than any other bears the
-impress of nationality. Every idea, every image, every maxim, every
-reflection seems to emanate from one source. Nothing is foreign.
-Neither the inspiration, nor the spirit which regulated it and moulded
-it into beauty, borrowed a single impulse from anything existing
-beyond the circle of Hellenic thought. Greece supplied at once the
-matrix and the materials, the active power and that delicate sense of
-beauty and perfection which presided over its organisation and
-rendered it the delight of mankind.
-
-Footnote 970:
-
- Speaking of the influence of literature on education Plato remarks,
- that persons accustomed from their infancy to the loftier and purer
- inspirations of the muse will regard with contempt everything mean
- or illiberal; whereas they who have always been familiar with low
- and vulgar compositions will look upon all other literature as tame
- and insipid.—De Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 30.
-
-In characterising this literature many singular notions have been
-broached. We have been told that its spirit is exclusively masculine,
-which means, of course, that while it abounds with strength and
-energy, with sublimity of speculation and impassioned and impetuous
-impulses, it is wanting in that sweetness, delicacy, grace, and
-tenderness which confer on the intellectual offspring of some modern
-nations a feminine aspect. Grecian literature, however, is neither
-masculine nor feminine, but androgynous like the son of Aphrodite and
-Hermes. There is no excellence of thought or language, of which, even
-in its present fragmentary state, it does not offer us some example.
-There is a predominance, doubtless, of stern grandeur and colossal
-elevation of thought; but, beside these, we discover frequently
-modifications of light and airy beauty, infantine purity of sentiment,
-ease, grace, felicitous negligence, and a dreamy luxury of speculation
-not to be outdone by the most subtile and fanciful literature
-existing. If there be a deficiency of any thing, it is of
-spirituality. The imagination of the Greeks confined itself too
-rigidly perhaps to this “bank and shoal of time.” Not being able to
-lift the veil which curtains the realms beyond the grave, it busied
-itself too little about those things with which the disembodied soul
-must converse for ever. In most Greek writers there is a visible
-reluctance to walk amid the forms of Hades. Their fancy will not be
-conducted beyond the limits of the visible universe, but shudders,
-rears and reverts its eyes towards the light where alone it finds firm
-footing for speculation. But on the other hand if it refuse to quit
-this earthly scene of existence, how glorious is the flood of sunshine
-and splendour which it pours over it! It is in these walks of
-literature that we discover truly the freshness and the loveliness of
-morning. The very clouds that hover over the landscape only add to its
-majesty, by diversifying the prospect and introducing those shadows
-and contrasts which the mind delights everywhere to discover.
-
-Poets,[971] it is constantly repeated, commence in every country the
-mental movement which evolves civilisation out of the chaos of
-barbarism; but it remains a mystery how and by what they themselves
-are moved. There may possibly be something more than a figure of
-speech in the old affirmation that they were inspired of heaven. Their
-imagination towered to so great a height that it was kindled by the
-lamps of the firmament, and may be regarded as that fabled Prometheus
-who applied the flame of science to the human clay. I do not therefore
-see what objection can be urged against our maintaining the old
-doctrine that poets partook and partake still, when their minds are
-pure, of a divine impulse—that to the infant nations of the earth they
-were teachers commissioned from on high.
-
-Footnote 971:
-
- Cf. Lil. Gyrald. Opp. t. ii. p. 2. “Nihil traditum videbis in
- religionibus et mysteriis, nihil in theologiâ et philosophiâ
- aliisque bonis artibus à principio fuisse sine poeticâ, ita ut hoc
- verè me tibi dicturum existimem, ex omnibus disciplinis unam hanc
- divinam extitisse, quasi totius vitæ magistram.”
-
-The condition of the mind in those early ages when poets were the only
-oracles, it is difficult for men surfeited with the luxuries of a
-prolific literature to comprehend. Among the Arabs of the desert we
-may still perhaps discover something similar. Deprived of books, but
-enjoying much leisure, they eagerly treasure up in their memories the
-moral distich, the apologue, the tale which instructs while it
-delights, and thus mentally furnished with a few weapons they are
-often wiser in deliberation, more persuasive in discourse, more ready
-in action than persons of education in civilised countries, whose
-intellectual armoury is so full that in the moment of danger they know
-not what weapon to choose. Poets, among such a race and under such
-circumstances, feel that they have a high mission to fulfil; their
-endeavours are not by polished rhythmical trifles to amuse a few rich
-and noble persons, but to clothe in befitting language and marry to
-immortal verse those great central truths, upon which the whole system
-of the future world of civilisation must revolve. We find them always
-curiously adapting their revelations to the times. First, the great
-fundamental truths of religion, the basis of the social structure, are
-infused into the public mind. Next the rudiments of politics and
-legislation, the precepts of agriculture, the leading rules of the
-useful arts, the observances of civil life, and the first faint
-whispers of the passions and affections are treasured up in their
-lays. Then, growing bolder by degrees, they aim at subduing the whole
-empire of knowledge, and impetuously, with numerous charms and
-allurements, hurry mankind forward in a sort of orgiastic rapture to
-the very threshold of philosophy.
-
-Among the earliest names in the literary traditions of Hellas are
-those of Olen, Pamphos, Musæos and Orpheus,[972] who, for their
-wisdom, are said to be sprung from the gods. They were sacred bards,
-whose genius obtained for them an ascendency over the minds of their
-countrymen. Yet all they attempted, perhaps, was to teach the doctrine
-of prayer, thanksgiving, sacrifice, which, being afterwards
-misunderstood, caused them to be confounded with those impostors and
-incantation-mongers, who, in more recent times, granted absolutions
-and sold indulgences both to individuals and states, with a hardihood
-worthy of Giovanni di Medici. Musæos, older probably than Orpheus,
-though sometimes regarded as his disciple, is said by certain
-traditions to have been a teacher of ethics, who delivered a body of
-moral precepts in four thousand verses. His country is unknown,—for he
-is now represented as an Athenian, now as a Thracian,—but his name and
-the name of Orpheus and Eumolpos are associated with the expiations,
-orgies, mysteries, celebrated during many ages in honour of Demeter
-and Dionysos.[973] We must rest content, however, with very imperfect
-notions of what they were, for, in looking back at these great men,
-whom we behold on the edge of the horizon, enlarged like the sun at
-its setting by misty exhalations, but by the same means rendered dim
-and obscure, we can form no just idea of their character.
-
-Footnote 972:
-
- Plato de Repub. t. ii. p. 113. seq. Stallb.—De Legg. t. vii. p. 243.
- Bek. Athen. i. 24. Paus. ix. 27. 2. Diog. Laert. Proœm. iv. 5.
-
-Footnote 973:
-
- Muret. in Plat. Rep. p. 699. seq. Cf. Lil. Gyrald. ii. 5. Wolf.
- Proleg. in Homer. p. 51.
-
-These, however, and such as these, were the men who fabricated the
-first link in that chain of thought and beauty, which, stretching over
-the gulf of time and fastened to the skies, still holds up the nations
-of the earth from sinking into barbarism. Literature is degraded when
-contemplated as an art or as an amusement. It is a paradise, into
-which the best fruits of the soul, when arrived at their greatest
-maturity and beauty, are transplanted to bloom in immortal freshness
-and fragrance. It is the garner wherein the seeds of religion, virtue,
-morals, national greatness and individual happiness are preserved for
-the use of humanity. It is a gallery, where the likenesses of all the
-great and noble souls who have shed light and glory on the earth, are
-treasured up as the heirloom and palladium of the human race. It is
-impossible, therefore, for any but the most sordid minds to look back
-towards the venerable fathers of literature without a deep thrill of
-filial reverence and love, conjoined with the generous impulse and
-yearning desire to enlarge and add fresh brightness to the halo which
-encircles their names. They were not, what since too many have been,
-the instruments and panders to the pleasures of worldlings. Conscious
-of the holy mission wherewith, according to their creed, the father of
-gods and men had intrusted them, they stood forward as the apostles of
-truth, encircled by the majesty which a sense of divine inspiration
-must impart. They felt a harmony within their souls which, in
-manifesting itself, sought the aid of harmonious language; and hence
-the precepts of wisdom, distilling from their lips like honey from the
-honeycomb, moulded themselves naturally into verse, at whose sound the
-fountains of the great deep of knowledge were broken up, and the
-windows of heaven opened, and a deluge of philosophy and science and
-intellectual delight poured forth upon the amazed world.
-
-In what age or province of Greece arose the first minister of this
-poetical revelation, it is not now possible to decide. The art of
-writing, however, which the Egyptian king regarded as the enemy of
-memory, had not passed the Ægæan. The songs men heard were wafted on
-the wings of music from tongue to tongue, and, by degrees, the
-professors of this marvellous art, by which the wisdom and the glory
-of the past were embalmed in the sweets of verse, embodied themselves
-into a distinct order called Aoidoi or Singers.[974] The life of these
-men in the remote ages of antiquity is little known to us. Wanderers,
-however, for the most part they were, in some respects not unlike the
-Jongleurs and Troubadours of the middle ages, though occupying a
-higher station and guided by a higher aim. Their first and ostensible
-object was, doubtless, to delight; but it is of great importance to
-inspire men with a delight in lofty and ennobling conceptions,—to
-withdraw them for a moment from pursuits sordid or brutalising or
-unmanly, to the contemplation of heroic acts,—of honour, of
-patriotism, of friendship,—of the great and solid advantages accruing
-from peace and commerce, and the experience of travel and adversity.
-
-Footnote 974:
-
- Cf. Wolf. Proleg. in Hom. p. 73. 93. sqq.
-
-What were the rewards they obtained it is easy to conjecture. They
-consisted, principally, in the rays of joy reflected back upon them by
-a thousand happy countenances at once. Gain they neither would nor
-could regard. He who renders multitudes wise and happy must be happy
-and wise himself; and wisdom scorns to measure its gifts against gold.
-The truly wise and great man, therefore, if fortune have originally
-befriended him, will shower his benefactions, as God his rain,
-liberally and without distinction upon all; and if necessity compel
-him to receive some return, his moderation will content itself with
-the least possible amount. Embraced within the circle of refinement
-which they themselves had created, however, they gradually became
-secularised, though we must be careful to distinguish them from their
-successors of a later age. The prodigious admiration which they and
-their songs excited may be learned from those passages in Homer where
-Phemios and Demodocos are introduced, and from that animated dialogue
-of Plato, in which the rhapsodist Ion describes his office and his
-audience. It has been justly remarked, that if this man, a mere actor,
-could hurry into whatever channel he pleased the affections of a whole
-theatre, melt them into tears, fire them with indignation, or clothe
-their countenances with the smiles of joy, much more would the poets
-themselves work upon their passions by an art far nearer nature.
-
-Care must, no doubt, be taken not to confound the Rhapsodists with the
-Aoidoi who preceded them, though it be certain that the manners and
-condition of the later race may serve to throw considerable light on
-those of the earlier. Both have recently much occupied the attention
-of the learned; and Wolff in particular deserves credit for his
-defence of the Rhapsodists, into which, however, he was chiefly led by
-the requirements of his celebrated theory. They were certainly, at
-first, a remarkable order of men, whom it would be injurious to
-confound with their frivolous representatives in the age of Plato and
-Xenophon. Nevertheless, the above distinguished scholar is perhaps
-inclined to exaggerate their merits, since to them, in his opinion, we
-owe it that the great Homeric poems have come down to us. But this is
-taking for granted the matter in dispute between him and his
-opponents, who maintain that the author of the Iliad and Odyssey
-possessed both the knowledge and the materials for writing. He, with
-reason however, assumes that both theatrical and oratorical action
-found a way opened for them by the rhapsodic art, though its
-professors were neither actors nor orators, but men exercising an
-office connected with a peculiar state of society, and no longer
-existing in modern times.
-
-It has often been supposed, grounding the opinion on a false
-interpretation of the word _rhapsodist_, that the members of this
-fraternity were mere compilers or patchers up of poems from fragments
-pilfered out of various authors. And, to augment the absurdity, the
-practice of a recent age has been attributed to remote antiquity,
-when, as some imagine, the great rhapsodists like a modern lecturer,
-carried about with them pictures of the subject they were upon, and
-pointed out to the audience with a stick[975] the various characters
-or incidents they might be describing. Another error much insisted on
-by Wolff, is the supposition that the Homeric poems alone were chanted
-by the older Rhapsodists, which no doubt is contrary to the testimony
-of antiquity and to common sense. For, as might naturally be
-concluded, not only the songs of Hesiod[976] and the whole epic race
-were thus publicly sung, but those likewise of the lyric and iambic
-poets, and the very laws of the state when the legislator happened to
-have composed them in verse. It must nevertheless be remarked, (though
-of this Wolff takes no notice,) that so much did recitations of
-Homer’s works predominate over all others, that Rhapsodists and
-Homerists were often regarded as synonymous terms;[977] and even in
-later ages, when at any rate the art of writing was not unknown,
-Demetrius Phalereus introduced upon the stage a class of reciters,
-who, down to the days of Athenæus, enjoyed the name of Homerists.
-Still, as I have observed above, the works of other good poets were at
-times recited, as Hesiod, Archilochos, Mimnermos, and Phocylides. Nay,
-the Rhapsodist Mnasion, as Lysanias relates, used to recite the
-Iambics of Simonides; Cleomenes, the Purifications of Empedocles, and
-Hegesius the comedian, the Histories of Herodotus; that is, some
-portions of them I presume. Certain authors delivered their own
-productions in this way,[978] as Xenophanes, who composed both epics,
-elegies and iambics.[979]
-
-Footnote 975:
-
- Anim. ad Athen. xii. p. 371. Cf. Suid. v. Ῥαψῳδοί. t. ii. p. 678.
- Etym. Mag. 703. 32. Aristoph. Concionat. 674.
-
-Footnote 976:
-
- Ῥαψῳδὸν δὲ, καλῶς Ἰλίαδα καὶ Ὀδυσσεῖαν ἢ τι τῶν Ἡσωδείων διατιθέντα,
- τάχ᾽ ἂν ἡμεῖς οἱ γέροντες ἥδιστα ἀκούσαντες νικᾷν ἂν φαῖμεν
- πάμπολο.—Plat. de Legg. ii. t. vii. p. 243. Bekk. Again: Ἅμα δὲ
- ἀναγκαῖον εἶναι ἔν τε ἄλλοις ποιηταῖς διατρίβειν πολλοῖς κᾀγαθοῖς
- καὶ δὴ καὶ μάλιστα ἐν Ὁμήρῳ, κ. τ. λ. Ion. Plat. Opp. t. ii. p. 172.
-
-Footnote 977:
-
- Ὅτι δ᾽ ἐκαλοῦντο οἱ ῥαψῳδοὶ καὶ Ὁμηρισταὶ Ἀριστοκλῆς εἴρηκε, κ. τ.
- λ.—Athen. xiv. 12.
-
-Footnote 978:
-
- Athen. xiv. 12.
-
-Footnote 979:
-
- Diog. Laert. ix. 18.
-
-It has with reason been observed that although the name of the
-rhapsodic art would seem to have been invented posterior to Homer, the
-thing itself existed long before, and was held in greater honour than
-at any subsequent period. In fact, the poets of those times were
-themselves Rhapsodists, and for many ages the only ones, if it be true
-that Hesiod[980] was the first who reduced the chanting of other men’s
-poems into an art. Afterwards, from the age of Terpander the Lesbian
-(Olymp. 34) down to Cynæthos of Chios (Olymp. 69) supposed to have
-been the author of the Homeric Hymn to Apollo, and a man of
-distinguished genius, the Rhapsodists sometimes chanted the poems of
-others, sometimes their own, and occasionally perhaps interpolated new
-verses into the golden relics of the past, as our modern actors often
-foist their one-legged jokes into the stage text of Shakespeare. There
-appears, however, to be no foundation for the notion, that nearly
-every one of these chanters was likewise a clever poet, which no
-ancient writer, I believe, asserts, and which the assertions of fifty
-would not render credible, though the probability is, that of those
-numerous rhapsodists some were themselves poets, and others desirous,
-without the genius, of being thought such; so that it is quite as
-likely that their vanity frequently laid claim to the works of others,
-where detection could be escaped, as that others were suffered to rob
-them of their just fame.
-
-Footnote 980:
-
- Ῥαψωδῆσαι φησὶ πρῶτον τὸν Ἡσιοδὸν Νικοκλῆς.—Schol. Pind. Nem. ii. 1.
- Cf. Dissen. ad loc. Wolf. Proleg. p. 96. sqq.
-
-They who contend for the flourishing of the system of castes in
-Greece, would probably maintain that the Rhapsodists constituted from
-the first _a clan_, as the Homeridæ are said to have been in
-Chios.[981] Among the few arts which commanded the undivided time and
-study of numerous professors in those ages, that of the Aoidos or
-Poet, was certainly one, and that, too, the most honoured and revered.
-Doubtless their characters were pure and noble, to overcome the envy
-which superior abilities usually inspire. For whether at home or
-abroad, in their native cities no less than in the public assemblies,
-and at the festive boards of kings, they were regarded as dear to gods
-and venerable to men. The Rhapsodists likewise enjoyed the same
-estimation and led the same kind of life until other studies and other
-manners, with that most debasing of all passions, the love of gain,
-brought contempt on their profession and pursuits.[982]
-
-Footnote 981:
-
- Schol. Pind. Nem. ii. 1. Etym. Mag. 623. 50.
-
-Footnote 982:
-
- Payne Knight, Proleg. in Hom. § 13. 28.
-
-In the Homeric poems themselves we discover abundant proofs of the
-high honour in which the professors of the poetical art were held by
-their countrymen. They fulfilled in Greece[983] the office performed
-among the Hebrews by the Schools of the Prophets,[984] or the solitary
-possessors of the vaticinatory power who revealed to their countrymen
-the will of heaven, and taught by what practices it might be
-propitiated. Some institution of this kind probably existed, as I have
-already observed, from the very dawn of civilisation which it
-principally created. Most princes, like Agamemnon, Alcinoüs and
-Odysseus, retained in their palaces a man at once their chaplain and
-their laureate, who, when guests foreign or domestic assembled at
-their board, might administer instruction and delight, by chanting the
-praises of the gods, the exploits or greatness of their ancestors, or
-even by delivering precepts in morals or the useful arts. To a poet,
-also, as to the holiest of guardians, kings entrusted the care of
-their wives and families,[985] when departing on distant expeditions;
-and so great was the veneration paid to their character, that we find
-Clytemnæstra banishing the poet before she dares to become the
-paramour of Ægisthos.
-
-Footnote 983:
-
- Athen. i. 16.
-
-Footnote 984:
-
- Cf. Sigon. de Rep. Hebræorum v. 9. Godwin, Moses et Aaron, i. 6.
-
-Footnote 985:
-
- But the δόμων προφῆται in Æschylus (Agam. 377 Klausen,) were
- household prophets, who not only disclosed the secrets of the future
- and interpreted dreams, but acted also the part of counsellors in
- present emergencies, and treasured up the records of the past.
- Apollo is called the Prophet of Zeus, because he receives oracles
- from him.—Eum. 19. 618. So Amphiaraos is denominated a great
- prophet.—Sept. c. Theb. 611.
-
- See the comment of Klausen, Agam. p. 143. seq.-Notice of the
- household interpreters of dreams δόμων ὀνειρόμαντες and again κριταὶ
- τῶν ὀνειράτων (Choep. 36. 39), is found in several parts of
- Æschylus, who loved to furnish traits of these old superstitions. In
- the Persians we find Atossa speaking of the τῶν ἐνυπνίων κριτὴς
- (226) as a person of supernatural powers.
-
-But those men of great original genius whose fame spread rapidly,
-and who probably found superior enjoyment in the independence of a
-wandering life, not content with the patronage of a single prince,
-or the admiration of a single people, moved perpetually from land to
-land, enhancing at once their glory and experience. We in fact
-discover in Homer, Pindar, and other original poets proofs that the
-flowers from which they collected the honey of their melodies grew
-not all on one spot. Odysseus was a type of the bard who sang his
-adventures, and looking still further back we find the Thracian
-Thamyris, whom the Muses were said to have punished for his vanity,
-penetrating into the obscurest parts of Peloponnesos, protected by
-the sanctity of his character and the reverence due to his
-profession.[986]
-
-With respect to Homer, both ancient tradition and the form and spirit
-of his poems, require us to consider him in this light, though there
-is no ground for supposing him with Payne Knight to have celebrated
-the different heroes of Greece for the purpose of ingratiating himself
-with their descendants.
-
-Footnote 986:
-
- Iliad β. 590. sqq. Payne Knight, Proleg. § 74.
-
-Those writers who imagine the works of Homer to have been composed
-fortuitously by a club of poets, all actuated by a blind instinct to
-produce a number of parts which, when completed, should fit as well
-together as the several members of a statue, are necessarily desirous
-to establish two points: first, that the Aoidoi recited their works
-from memory, and that because, secondly, the art of writing was
-unknown. By far too much ingenuity has already been expended on this
-question to allow it to be any longer tempting from its novelty. Wolff
-and Heyne have obtained all the credit they sought by their visionary
-hypothesis, and the echoes of their scepticism are not yet silenced in
-the academies and universities. The argument, derived from the
-practice of the Rhapsodists, of repeating from memory, is attended by
-two inconveniences: first, it cannot be shown that the order arose
-before the art of writing was common; second, these recitations were
-equally made from memory, not only in the age of Pericles, but down to
-the latest period of their flourishing. It may, therefore, without the
-slightest risk to the argument, be granted the academic sceptics that
-the Rhapsodists recited from memory, even when we know with certainty
-that they learned the poems from written copies.
-
-To render more credible the notion that the art of writing in the age
-of Homer was not yet known, great stress is laid on the powers of
-memory in certain individuals, though from these nothing can in
-reality be inferred, except, that when necessary, men can certainly
-remember a great deal. It matters little, however, for my present
-purpose, whether the Iliad and Odyssey were written by one man or by a
-hundred; the grandeur of the poetry remains, and to it as a great
-fountain-head may be traced several principal streams of Hellenic
-civilisation.
-
-Plato, indeed, who laboured so assiduously in enlarging the empire and
-corroborating the powers of the human understanding, at times
-maintained the fancy that little benefit had been conferred on Greece
-by her bard. He observes, but in a manner so ironical that it is
-difficult to determine his meaning, that if Homer and Hesiod had
-possessed the gift of improving their contemporaries in virtue they
-would never have been suffered to wander about chanting their poems.
-People, he thinks, would have constrained them by benefits to remain
-with them, or, not succeeding in this, would have quitted their homes
-to attend their footsteps, as in his age many did in the case of the
-sophists.[987]
-
-Footnote 987:
-
- De Rep. x. 4. t. ii. 318. Stallb.
-
-At the same time he admits the general opinion to have been that Homer
-was the great preceptor of Hellas, who taught the sciences of politics
-and ethics, together with the whole discipline and economy of human
-life.[988] Perhaps, notwithstanding his great wisdom and his genius,
-he looked upon the question from a wrong point of view, regarding
-poetry as the rival rather than the precursor of philosophy. The
-mission of the former had, however, in his time been in a great
-measure accomplished, as far, I mean, as concerned positive teaching;
-and he did not consider that as civilisation advances and materialises
-nations the curb of poetry is the more required to check their
-downward tendencies, and direct their head towards the skies. The
-object of poetry is to keep alive in the human breast the love of
-whatever is noble and beautiful, to dazzle the worldling from the
-worship of gold by showing him something more glorious than anything
-that gold can purchase, to accomplish the apotheosis of pure
-affection, of virtue, of disinterestedness, of great passions, of
-patriotism,—and in Homer all this is effected with a spontaneous
-energy, which like the ocean appears equal to bear the whole weight of
-humanity clothed with all its attributes upon its breast.
-
-Footnote 988:
-
- De Rep. x. 7. t. ii. 336.
-
-Greece has no poet worthy to be compared with our Shakespeare and our
-Milton but Homer, who possesses some advantages over them both.
-Shakespeare, buoyant and full of life as was his spirit, felt
-evidently the waves of his imagination lapse at times from about him
-and leave his mind stranded and bare on the shores of the immeasurable
-universe. Melancholy creeps over him, like a black vapour, concealing
-the Titanian head wont to tower above the region of the clouds. Even
-over Milton’s soul, serene in its fiery brightness as it usually is, I
-think I discover something which at times obscures his faith in
-himself and human nature, and produces a flagging of the fancy. But in
-Homer this never appears. Cheerfully and joyously he pursues his
-course with eternal sunshine on his brow, and a heart beating full and
-true, as if the life of all the world were within him. There is no end
-of his vitality. He seems as if he could never grow old. His strength
-is inexhaustible. Equal to whatever may happen, he nowhere seems to be
-hurried by his subject, or compelled to strain a nerve to accomplish
-what he desires. In himself he appears happy as a god, and only to
-sympathise in human suffering from the boundlessness of his charity.
-He comes forth as the sun in the morning, full of brightness, showing
-all the tears that sprinkle the earth and drying them too, but
-shedding none. We call him old, though in reality he is all
-youthfulness and love. Every function of life goes on harmoniously in
-his frame. He enjoys whatever nature brings within the circle of his
-experience. He drinks in with rapture the freshness of dawn,—basks
-smilingly in the blaze of noon,—welcomes the stillness of evening—the
-solemn grandeur of night. Sleep, too, has for him inexpressible
-charms, and on the pleasures we taste among its bowers he has bestowed
-every grateful, every endearing epithet. Milton is far more spiritual,
-and careers in a course nearer the stars. Shakespeare, in his
-metaphysical subtlety and yearning to pierce beyond the grave,
-suggests stranger thoughts, and calls up a wilder world of fancies.
-But Homer, as if admitted behind the veil, never doubts for a moment.
-Habitually, too, his thoughts are of action, of man as he is, of the
-virtue of the citizen, of the soldier, of the husband, of the father,
-of the son, of the wife. He loved the world and all that it contains.
-His eye could detect beauty where the atrabilious sceptic beholds
-nothing but deformity.
-
-Hence the universal fame and admiration of his writings. For, wherever
-a well-spring of delight exists, the world will discover it and have
-recourse to it for ever. The tragic poets who took up his mantle
-differed widely from him both in temper and character. The experiment
-of civilisation had been tried, and been the cause of less happiness
-than at the outset it seemed to promise. A spirit of dissatisfaction
-had consequently grown up in society, which, shaken by convulsions
-within and assaulted from without by storms, appeared to be fast
-resolving into its original elements. Upon the minds of the tragic
-poets there accordingly fell a gloomy shadow. They looked backwards
-and around them, and were saddened by the view of terrible pictures
-which the dark pencil of Fate was constantly filling up. The
-inexplicable influence of events upon the inner organisation of man
-had caused them too, and their contemporaries equally, to delight in
-gloom, in slaughter, in revenge, in exhibitions of suffering,
-analogous in many cases to what they beheld their countrymen inflict
-upon each other.
-
-Observe the creations of Æschylus:[989] in them, pregnant all with
-Miltonic haughtiness, energy, grandeur, we already discover symptoms
-of profound discontent with the character of actual existence and an
-invincible yearning towards the past. He seemed desirous to haunt the
-imaginations of his contemporaries with gigantic phantoms, quarried
-out of the wrecks of a vanished ethical system, in which such
-greatness found congeniality and sympathy. His ideas seemed to clothe
-themselves spontaneously in language of massive structure, like a
-Cyclopean wall, such as before or since no man ever used. He projected
-himself by the force of meditation into the heroic spheres, conversed
-there with mighty shades, acquired among them stern principles of
-action, of thought, of belief, of composition; and with these he
-sought to inspire the men of his own time. His object seems less to
-delight than to overawe, to persuade than to command. His ideas move
-along the highest arch of imagination which spans the universe from
-pole to pole, or rise out of a sea of darkness which they illuminate
-for a moment like lightning flashes in their passage.
-
-Footnote 989:
-
- The plays of this poet, like those of Shakespeare, were, in
- succeeding ages, altered for the stage—Quint. Instit. Orat. x. 1.
- The orator, Lycurgus, procured a decree, ordering the tragedies of
- the three poets to be copied, and statues to be erected in their
- honour.—Plut. Vit. x. Orat.
-
-All Æschylus’s more marked characters come before us invested with
-marvellous attributes, and their voices awake a thrilling mysterious
-echo in the depths of the soul. Prometheus, for example,—who or what
-in poetry is like him? Some features of resemblance he may have to the
-Satan of “Paradise Lost,” but only in his indomitable energy, in his
-unconquerable will; in all other respects he stands differenced from
-that “archangel ruined” by qualities the most remarkable. Towards
-mankind he appears in the relation of supreme love. For their sake
-alone he braves the anger of Zeus, who, in the tempest of vengeance
-which he pours upon the naked form of this beneficent god, is
-presented to the mind as a tyrannical oppressor. Again, in the
-Erinnyes, what mysterious phantoms does he conjure up! The whole
-scene, where black and blood-dripping they rise before the fancy in
-the shrine of Delphi, is, beyond imagination, awe-inspiring and
-sublime. Like Orestes himself, the fancy is haunted, as we read, by an
-uneasy consciousness of their presence. They appear like the summits
-of the infernal world, thrust up visibly into the world of reality.
-They are frightful dreams endued with form and vitality, and walking
-abroad to scare us even while waking. Never did faith in visionary
-beings equal in strength the faith which he constrains us to have in
-these his creations. The scent of blood fills the nostrils as we read.
-We pant,—we shudder,—we expect to hear their footsteps on the carpet
-behind us. Nevertheless the effect of Æschylus’ poetry is not, like
-Byron’s, to humiliate or depress. On the contrary, it imparts to us
-its energy as we read. It fills,—it expands,—it aggrandises,—it
-elevates the mind.
-
-Sophocles presents us with a wholly different type of genius. His
-conceptions, without being gigantic, are still great, and have a
-richness and roundness something like the form of woman. To him, as to
-Raffaelle, the world appeared pregnant on all sides with beauty. Yet,
-there was a vein of pensiveness in his fancy which, running through
-all his works, imparts to them a witchery independent of the amount of
-intellect displayed. He never, like Æschylus, transports us into the
-dim twilight of mythology amidst the nodding ruins of systems and
-creeds. However antique may be the subject which he treats, his
-invention gives it completeness, and he brings it out fresh, glossy,
-distinct, and beautiful as the creations of to-day. Æschylus carries
-us back to the past, Sophocles brings the past forward to us. By a
-vigorous exertion of genius he breathes life into things dead; melts
-away from about them by his warm touch the hoar of antiquity; fills up
-the outline; freshens the colours; converts them into contemporary
-existencies. All his sympathies, healthy and true, cling to the things
-around him: the religion, the form of polity, the climate, the soil of
-Attica, invested with the beauty which they assumed in his plastic
-vision, satisfied his desires. What he found not in realities he
-bestowed upon them. He idealised his contemporaries. His poetry is
-sunny as the Ægæan in spring, and a breeze as healthful and refreshing
-breathes over it. Like the nightingale, whose music he loved, it comes
-to us full of forgotten harmonies, re-awakening all the associations,
-all the delights, all the hopes and aspirations of youth. Sweet and
-musical, and replete with tenderness, are his marvellous chorusses.
-They burst upon the heart like the first note of the cuckoo[990] in
-the depths of a forest, curling round the mossy trunks of the
-meditative old trees upon the ear.
-
-Footnote 990:
-
- In Greece heard early in the spring.—Sibthorp, in Walp. Mem. i. 75.
-
-And then his female characters, in which above all things he excels.
-Not Imogen herself, whose breath like violets perfumes the page of
-Shakespeare, rises before us a more exquisite vision than Antigone, in
-her maiden purity, her unfathomable tenderness, her holy affection,
-filial and fraternal. Even Œdipos, supported and led into the light by
-such a daughter, appears glorious as a god, his involuntary stains
-worked off by years of suffering, his reverend old age garlanded by
-calamity, wreathed with the tendrils and snowy blossoms of a
-daughter’s love. And Tecmessa, does she not seem to be Desdemona
-ripened into a mother? There is no poet who has pourtrayed a wife of
-more unmingled gentleness, or who has better sounded the depths of a
-mother’s heart. Her affection expands like an atmosphere round the boy
-Eurysaces, menaced at once by treacherous enemies and by his father’s
-madness, and casts a pure and bright ray over the sea of blood and
-stormy passion and guilt that floats around her. His Dejanira,
-likewise, is a character of great beauty; but in the Clytemnæstra and
-Electra, in the Chrysothemis and Ismene, he has been less successful.
-Among his male characters Œdipos is the masterpiece. Compounded of
-ungovernable passion, a powerful will, a resolution invincible by
-suffering, extreme in love or hate, he stands before us in heroic
-grandeur, and like the sun’s orb dilates as he descends beneath the
-horizon. Next to him in originality and beauty are Neoptolemos and
-Teucer, youths of the greatest nobleness of soul, who contrast
-strikingly with his fox-like Odysseus and the mean-souled imperial
-brothers.
-
-To Sophocles succeeds Euripides,[991] whose genius inspired Milton
-with the deepest admiration, as it had before inspired Aristotle.
-Resembling Sophocles as little as the latter resembles Æschylus, he is
-more deeply imbued than either with the tragic spirit, interprets more
-unerringly the language of passion and the heart, and unlocks more
-surely the hidden springs of pity. In him, however, poetry is less an
-instinct than an art. His intellect, lofty, powerful, penetrating,
-ranged through the most untrodden paths of nature and philosophy,
-grasped at all learning, at all experience, enriched itself with
-prodigious stores of reflections, observations, imagery, over which it
-possessed the most perfect mastery, to render them subservient to the
-purposes of the drama. Other poets learned in effects, may exhibit
-action with no less truth and skill; Euripides dares to unveil causes,
-to give the wherefore and the why of actions, to descend into the
-abysses of the mind and lay bare the curious mechanism, and, so to
-say, central fires which produce and ripen our resolutions and our
-demeanour.
-
-Footnote 991:
-
- This writer, like most of his poetical contemporaries, used
- constantly to wear a tablet and stylus suspended to his
- dress.—Athen. xiii. 45. The use in fact of memorandum books was
- common.—Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 529.
-
-Without the stern grandeur or the rich physical imagery of his
-predecessors, he could more surely touch the feelings and create an
-intense interest in the story of his tragedies. No man, moreover, has
-given birth to nobler sentiments. A moral beauty broods over his
-scenes; he elevates,—he enlarges,—he purifies the affections. Truths
-of greatest importance make themselves wings of melody in his verse,
-and fly across the gulf of two thousand years from him to us. Above
-all things, he may almost be said to have discovered the inexhaustible
-mine of love, whence he drew the gold that fashioned the divine image
-of Alcestis, the noblest mixture of earth’s mould that ever bore the
-name of woman. It is true this image is but dimly beheld. Perhaps no
-genius, not even Shakespeare’s, could have filled up the outline of
-unearthly beauty which Euripides dared to draw. It embodies all the
-imagination ever conceived of love. Pure as the celestial Artemis,
-impassioned to perfect disinterestedness, all devotion as a wife, all
-tenderness as a mother,—content to die, yet jealous of posthumous
-love,—sacrificing everything for her husband’s life, yet haunted by
-the fear that death might snap the golden links of affection, she
-issues forth like a celestial vision to take her farewell of the sun.
-Euripides might well be proud of this creation. Not Andromache, not
-Nausicaa, not even the far-famed consort of Odysseus can exceed in
-truth and beauty his conception of Alcestis. Yet this is the poet whom
-Aristophanes had the bad taste to overwhelm with unceasing ridicule,
-and whom numerous critics, borrowing their canons from him, have
-rashly pronounced languid and insipid.
-
-Moving on a level below this is the character of Electra in the
-Orestes. In the Alcestis we have rather the results than the
-developement of inexpressible love, which
-
- “raised a mortal to the skies.”
-
-But Electra’s affection unfolds itself before us. There she watches
-beside her brother’s bed, contending with the inexpiable guilt of
-matricide, sharing his remorse but comforting him, herself oppressed,
-yet courageously bearing up for his sake against the worst
-
- “ills that flesh is heir to.”
-
-With the most supreme delicacy is Polyxena conceived; and generally,
-whatever may be said of Euripides’ aversion for the sex, it may be
-affirmed that no poet has more ably or more nobly painted the female
-character.
-
-Passing next to comedy, of which Aristophanes must be regarded as the
-representative, we have a department of literature peculiar to Greece,
-for its comedy resembles that of no other country. It has never,
-perhaps, been fairly characterised. They who take part with the poet
-against the philosopher exaggerate his merits: the admirers of
-Socrates, in revenge for the unjust death of that great man, generally
-undervalue them. Let us endeavour to be just. Aristophanes was a poet
-of vast genius, quick to perceive, and powerful to paint the
-imperfections, vices, follies, weaknesses, miseries of man in society.
-He was greedy, too, of reputation, in the acquisition of which he
-spared neither men nor institutions. The youthful, the gay, the
-thoughtless, reckoning laughter and amusement among the real wants of
-life, (as to the weak and frivolous perhaps they are,) he undertook to
-build his fame on easing the human character of those moral excrements
-which pass off in grinning and mirth. There is, in fact, a load of
-small malignity and mischief in most mental constitutions, which, if
-not expelled, might obstruct the healthful play of the faculties.
-Mirth is the form it assumes in its exit, and comedy is one of the
-means provided by Nature for promoting its discharge.
-
-Aristophanes, who comprehended at least this part of philosophy, found
-an abundant harvest of follies in his fellow-citizens. He saw, too,
-that of all men they possessed the most inexhaustible good-nature,—to
-forgive if they could not profit by the satire which was directed
-against themselves. No one could complain of them on this score. Their
-risible muscles were at every man’s service who could coin a joke, or
-make faces, or draw a caricature or enact one. Athens was, in fact,
-the home of laughter: it was the weak side of the national character;
-and never, since merry-making was invented, did a more skilful
-manufacturer of this autochthonal production exist than Aristophanes.
-He could make round things square, or straight crooked; he could
-invest the noblest and most sacred things with burlesque and ridicule;
-he could convert patriotism into a laughable weakness, genius into
-puerility, virtue into a farce. He knew how to make the brave man (as
-Lamachos) seem a mere gasconader; the man of genius (as Euripides) a
-dealer in rhythmical jingles; the possessor of highest wisdom and most
-unsullied integrity a babbling impostor and a thief. Such were his
-prodigious powers. Another excellence he had, not unakin to the
-former; he could, when it suited his purpose, place the most nefarious
-vices on the same level with very harmless foibles, so that both
-should appear equally laughable or equally odious.
-
-But the Athenians must have been a base people had these been the
-qualities which rendered him popular. They were not: on the contrary,
-they formed the great drawback on his reputation. His attack on
-Socrates caused the first cast of the Clouds to be hooted off the
-stage. But great and crying as were his delinquencies against morals
-and philosophy, his genius triumphed, and he became popular in spite
-of them; and in spite of them he has continued to be a favourite among
-scholars down to the present day. No mean amount of creative power
-could have achieved a triumph like this. He possessed, in fact, the
-quality, whatever it be, which confers vitality on the offspring of
-the mind. Each of his plays, however extravagant its conceptions,
-however improbable the plot or wild the scene or fantastic the
-characters, still developes a distinct cycle of existences into which
-the breath of everlasting life has been breathed. To every individual
-whom he brings upon the stage has been assigned a distinct type of
-character, a marked individuality, a moral and intellectual
-physiognomy as peculiar to himself as his mask. No man exhibits
-greater variety in a small compass. When he is working out a character
-every word tells, and his ease is infinite. Nothing appears to have
-proceeded from him in a hurry. Like the wind, which now rises in
-gusts, now sinks to a whisper, but never suggests the idea of
-weakness, Aristophanes may trifle, but always because he desires to
-trifle.
-
-Moreover, however barren the subject may be, however rugged, bleak,
-intractable, he pours over it the dews of poetry, and clothes it
-magically with flowers and verdure. Look at the comedies of the Frogs
-and the Birds. By whom but Aristophanes could they have been rendered
-tolerable? And yet what marvellous effects grow out of them in his
-hands! How completely is the imagination detached from the common
-everyday world, and sent drifting down the dreamy intoxicating streams
-of poetry! Not in the island of Prospero or Philoctetes, not in the
-savage-encircled nest of Robinson Crusoe, not in the most visionary
-vale that opens before us its serene bosom in the Arabian Nights, do
-we breathe more at large, or more fresh and wholesome air, than among
-the fogs and fens of Acheron, or the eternal forests of the Hoopoo
-king.
-
-With an art, in which Shakespeare was no mean proficient, he opens up
-a more culpable source of interest in the frequent satire of vices,
-condemned as commonly as they are practised. He unveils the mysteries
-of iniquity with a fearless and by no means an unreluctant hand. No
-abyss of wickedness was too dark for his daring muse. He ventured
-fearlessly upon themes which few since or before have touched on,
-despising contemporary envy and vindictiveness and the stern
-condemnation of posterity. To be plain, he evidently shared in the
-worst corruptions of his age, and, like many other satirists, availed
-himself joyfully of the mask of satire as an apology for entertaining
-his own imagination with the description of them. No one with the
-least clearsightedness or candour can fail to perceive and acknowledge
-the depraved moral character of this comic writer. Only less filthy
-than Rabelais, his fancy runs riot among the moral jakes and common
-sewers of the world, over which, by consummate art and the matchless
-magic of his style, he contrives unhappily to cast a kind of delusive
-halo, and to breathe a fragrance which should never be found but where
-virtue is.
-
-Upon the subject of his attack on Socrates his defenders must grant
-one of two things—that he libelled him ignorantly, or that he
-exhibited a degree of wickedness capable, under other circumstances,
-of rising to the enormity of Judas Iscariot. Socrates, both for genius
-and for virtue, stands at the head of the pagan world. He whom Plato
-admired must have stood on a higher level than Plato,—that is, have
-occupied the apex of mere humanity: and in that position we find him
-in the Gorgias, the Republic, the Euthyphron, and the Phædon. Many
-charlatans, since the days of Aristophanes, have endeavoured to puff
-upward at him the smoke of their ignorance or their envy; and from
-those who tread the mire with them have for a moment hidden the all
-but divine serenity that smiles on humankind from that lofty and
-immovable basis where the homage of a world has placed him; but the
-next breeze has cleared away the stinking vapours, and left both him
-and them where they were,—the one on the highest, the others on the
-lowest step of the ladder which connects human nature with the skies.
-
-Upon the dramatic poets whose fragments only remain, it is in this
-place unnecessary to dwell. I therefore pass to the historians and
-orators, who, no less vividly than her poets, reflect the genius of
-Greece. The first age of prose composition, there as elsewhere,
-exhibited the natural characteristics of dawning art—indecisiveness
-and timidity. Herodotus, properly speaking, was her earliest
-historian, and even he still walks within the gigantic shadow of epic
-fable which stretched far over the civilised and cultivated ages of
-Greece, as doth that of Memnon at dawn over the Theban plains. His
-character as a writer is very remarkable. He narrates like a prophet.
-His language everywhere bears the impress and image of the
-supernatural world wrought into its very substance. He had formed to
-himself a poetical standard of human character and human action, which
-accordingly in his work develope themselves in poetical forms. Long
-and profound meditation had spread out the past before him like a map,
-on which he could trace every fluctuation in the stream of events with
-something like the skill of a diviner. Men, past or present, may be
-interpreted by meditation, if we comprehend the science of human
-nature. Herodotus understood much of this science. Indeed his chief
-greatness lies in his wisdom.
-
-Ordinary readers, who are always wiser than their dead instructors,
-discovering him to be frankly superstitious, to have faith in oracles,
-in dreams, in prodigies, to chronicle many trivial actions, many
-trivial remarks, feel or affect for him a species of contempt. But
-they know very little of what is contained in that vast treasury of
-epic events. Little do they suspect with how many great statesmen,
-generals and heroic kings the eloquent Halicarnassian could render
-them familiar. In his pages alone, perhaps, do we view in his true
-proportions that man of men, Themistocles, who overtops by a head and
-shoulders all the other statesmen of the ancient world. There, too,
-may we best discover the character of his contemporaries, those
-extraordinary personages who connect the heroic with the historical
-period, and constitute the steps by which we descend from the heights
-of mythos and fable to the stern level of realities. Such an epoch
-required an historian of peculiar character. In him were to be united
-the power to comprehend poetical motives to action, and the solemn
-eloquence fittingly to describe deeds springing from such a source.
-Both were found in Herodotus. He beheld Providence leading man as it
-were into the light from the wilderness of mythological times, still
-invested with many of his heroic habits and his forehead beaming with
-visionary splendours, but prepared to doff them one by one, and in
-their stead to substitute the iron theory and practice of
-civilisation.
-
-Thucydides, a few years only younger than Herodotus, found himself
-placed in the midst of events the most extraordinary, produced by a
-system of civilisation prematurely decaying. Greece had not been
-suffered to grow wise and great according to the laws which usually
-regulate the ripening of states. She had been scorched into
-fruit-bearing by the fiery conflicts of the Median war; and her
-strength thus brought into play, and found to be great beyond
-calculation, was immediately by ambitious statesmen seized upon,
-parcelled out into lots which were directed against each other, and
-thus exhausted in petty struggles. In Greece we have an example of a
-state whose energies, turned inwards, corroded themselves by
-concentration; affording a contrast with Rome whose energies, worked
-outward and were gradually weakened and lost by expansion. The genius
-of the people begot corresponding historians. Rome, had its
-perspicuous ornate, diffuse, haughty and sublime Livy; Athens her
-Thucydides full of poetry indeed, and haughtier and more sublime, but
-condensed as an oracle, and as an oracle obscure.
-
-Few have measured the greatness of this man. Ordinary critics missing
-the ostentatious display of what is termed philosophy, appear to
-imagine that Thucydides is not a philosophical historian, reserving
-this praise for Gibbon, Hume, or Voltaire. But each of these great
-writers would have contemned the praise of such persons. Thucydides in
-historical writing stands above rivalry or comparison. The political
-atmosphere in which he lived, dusky with thunderclouds and continual
-storms, his eye could penetrate through, and discover all the very
-extraordinary figures that moved beneath it. Calmly, from heights of
-speculation never trodden before, he contemplated the various groups
-of generals and statesmen dispersed over his horizon, pierced through
-every disguise into their characters, detected their motives,
-unravelled their plots, gave their secret maxims a tongue, weighed and
-described their actions with an impartial sagacity which among
-historians belongs to him alone. In this consists his philosophy. The
-society, whose developement he studied, was torn by two antagonist
-principles—aristocracy and democracy, whose struggles, undying in free
-states, were then more fierce than at any other period in the history
-of the world. To enable his countrymen and posterity to comprehend the
-whole chain of events, he opened up a long vista into the past, to the
-point at which those adversaries appeared upon the scene, and threw a
-broad light upon all their movements down to the time when Providence
-removed him from his post. His conception of an historian’s duty,
-somewhat different from that now entertained, was adopted by all
-antiquity, in which every succeeding writer bore testimony to his
-superiority by imitating him. He thought it not enough to narrate and
-describe, but, throwing open the council chamber and stilling the
-tumultuous agora, he brings the living statesman or demagogue upon the
-stage, developing in our hearing his views, his conceptions of
-surrounding circumstances and characters, his projects, his means for
-accomplishing them. That the speeches found in his history were
-actually in that form delivered, I will by no means affirm. He
-probably obtained but the substance from report, and himself clothed
-it in those vivid expressions which two thousand years have not
-stripped of their freshness. Nevertheless, the more trifling the
-amount of what he owed to the relations of others, the greater must
-appear his genius, his unerring sense of fitness, his dramatic power
-of projecting himself successively into a whole gallery of characters,
-and truly interpreting the opinions, maxims, feelings of each; for no
-one pretends that he has ever misrepresented a single individual. And
-if those speeches be examined on the score of eloquence, whether of
-thought or language, it will I think be found, that in almost every
-excellence they may rank with those of Demosthenes. In each a peculiar
-economy is observed in the management of the arguments, in the
-sentiments, in the opinions, in the logical tone, in the
-manifestations of individuality which diffuse themselves over the
-whole and give a colour to it.
-
-The defects—for such there are—resolve themselves into a certain
-magisterial air, indicating a consciousness of superiority, sure, more
-or less, to offend in all cases, and a certain imperspicuity of style
-arising principally from the loose manner in which the drapery of
-language is flung over his ideas, which is chiefly observable in the
-orations, his narrative for the most part being free from this
-imperfection. Besides, whatever be the series of facts he relates,
-their importance appears to be enhanced by his manner of handling
-them. He casts aside, as unworthy both of himself and the reader,
-whatever is of inferior moment. These, in fact, the mere chaff of
-human affairs, only cling round the grain of action to conceal it, and
-must be blown aside by the reader if the historian neglect to do it.
-
-The circumstances of the times conferred upon his subject all the
-interest and the gloom of tragedy. But it thus suited him the better.
-His genius delighted in terrible pictures: battles, plagues,
-earthquakes, general massacres, the storming of cities, the
-annihilation of great armies. His fancy vividly realised all,—the
-plague-tumbril rumbling, choked with dead, towards the sepulchral
-suburbs,—the streets of Corcyra streaming alternately with democratic
-and aristocratic blood,—the expected slaughter of Mitylene,—the
-reality at Melos,—two thousand Helots cut off by the perfidy of
-Sparta,—the butchery at Platæa,—at Skione,—in Sicily! Through all
-these scenes we are precipitated forward, shuddering, compassionating,
-detesting by turns. But we are neither overwhelmed nor inspired with
-disgust for human nature. Our sympathies cling closer and closer to
-the historian, who spares no villany, gratifies no malice, tramples on
-no noble principle, succumbs to no temptation of partiality. Faithful
-to his trust he deals forth truth to all, to none the slightest
-flattery. Not even for his country will he lie. It was she, in fact,
-with her heroic ethics and grandeur of sentiment, that had taught him
-his high principles, and he repaid her by recording all her errors,
-all her wrongs, all her imperfections: in which he acted like a great
-and a wise man. He would have sacrificed for her his life,—he would
-not sacrifice his conscience.
-
-To him succeeds Xenophon, a writer whom it is difficult to
-characterise. There was in the temper of his mind something
-parasitical, which led him to lean on others for support,—on Socrates,
-on Cyrus, on Agesilaos. Incapable of acting in a republic the part of
-a good citizen, he would have been that rare thing—a virtuous
-courtier. From this the tone of his writings may be conjectured.
-Almost everywhere we discover a degree of gentleness, sweetness,
-modesty, which steals imperceptibly into the heart, and creates the
-impression that he was a man highly amiable and upright. His piety,
-likewise, causes itself to be felt. He never mentions the gods but
-with due reverence, exhibits a strong reliance upon Providence, and,
-according to his best apprehensions, justifies its ways to men with
-earnest solicitude. The style of his composition, necessarily
-harmonising with the qualities of his mind, is full of suavity,
-polished elegance, gentlemanliness, bonhomie, the very characteristics
-of a popular writer. Readers of moderate understanding can everywhere
-perceive his drift, can accompany him without feeling out of breath.
-He is communicative, sensible, rational, indulges in no cloudy
-flights, never dives out of sight in the ocean of speculation.
-
-Xenophon, however, misunderstood himself when he conceived that it was
-for him to continue the history of Thucydides. It was as if Andrea del
-Sarto had undertaken to complete a picture left in parts unfinished by
-Michael Angelo. He had neither the penetrating sagacity necessary to
-comprehend the internal plan of the picture, the vivifying energy to
-preserve the intense tragedy of the action, nor the colours to
-harmonise with what he found painted. Still, considered by himself, he
-has great merits. Several scenes in his history, the trial, for
-example, of the generals, the death of Theramenes, the battles on the
-Hellespont, exhibit a force of conception and a scope and flexibility
-of style uncommon in any literature; and the Anabasis, without
-comparison his greatest work, reads like a chronicle of the most
-chivalrous knight-errantry. The attempt, however flagitious on the
-part of Cyrus, had the merit of extreme boldness. It was the model
-expedition which disclosed the secret of Asia to Alexander, and showed
-with how little danger its vast empires might be shattered to pieces.
-Xenophon who, young and adventurous, accompanied the Persian prince
-and the heroic mercenaries in his pay, contemplated with delight the
-physical aspect of the East, its luxurious population, its roving
-tribes, with the triumphs of his disciplined and warlike countrymen
-over innumerable barbarian hosts. This we discover from the interest
-and animation of his narrative, in which stern realities exceed in
-grandeur and wildness the creations of romance. But it is equally
-clear that he did not fully comprehend the moral of the scene. For,
-otherwise, he could never, with these facts before him, have
-endeavoured by his Cyropædia, to recommend to his countrymen those
-institutions which rendered Persia, with all its wealth, a constant
-prey to the small republics of Greece.
-
-Of the other writings of Xenophon little need be said: they are the
-parsley and the rue of Greek literature, bordering and adorning its
-entrance, and therefore beheld of all. But most of these have their
-beauty. Even in the hunting treatise, amid the breeding of dogs, and
-nets, and knives, and boar-spears, and the slaughter of animals, we
-catch glimpses of better things,—of glades where the hare frolics by
-moonlight, and grassy uplands, dewy and fragrant, where does, poetical
-as she of Rylstone, lead forth their fawns at break of day. The
-treatises on the states of Athens and Sparta have, I trust, been
-falsely attributed to this able and accomplished writer. They are
-contemptible productions, conceived in the spirit of a servile
-flatterer of the Dorians, and of a satirist, equally servile and
-stupid, of the greater and infinitely more intellectual Ionic race.
-
-I pass over the historians known to us only by a few scanty fragments,
-that I may at once come to the orators, the peculiar ornament and
-pride of Greece, whose greatest statesmen were equally great as
-speakers, more especially at Athens, where, as an art, eloquence was
-most assiduously cultivated, and achieved its greatest triumphs.
-Tradition attributes to Themistocles, to Pericles, to Alcibiades
-consummate skill in guiding the currents of human sympathy, and a
-sense of their glory lingered on the high places of society like
-sunshine on the Alps long after they had quitted the world. But as
-they did not augment the stores of their country’s literature, we can
-have nothing to speak of them here. The orators whose fragments time
-has been unable to destroy are however sufficient, if not to satiate
-our thirst of admiration, at least to show, by the grandeur of their
-proportions, how great and glorious Attic eloquence, when entire, must
-have been. More than any other department of literature it is the
-growth of patience and toil. A man may be born with the instincts of
-eloquence,—fancy, constitutional fire, vehemence,—but unless these
-instincts be broken in and trained by consummate art, nature will in
-vain have bestowed her gifts. These truths were early understood at
-Athens. It was perceived that without eloquence political distinction
-was unattainable, and therefore all who aspired to
-
- “wield at will that fierce democracy,”
-
-subjected themselves to a course of laborious study, to which our more
-phlegmatic natures would not submit.
-
-The results we may, in part, still contemplate in that body of
-Athenian oratory, which to the author and the statesman is in itself a
-library. Every legitimate form of eloquence is there beheld. In
-Antiphon and Andocides it appears in rough simplicity, employing
-contrivance and art, but employing them awkwardly. Lysias makes
-considerable advances beyond them, clothes his style with grace,
-constructs his narrative with extraordinary skill, and moves the
-passions by considerable pathos. Isocrates it is common with the
-moderns, who echo one another, to underrate: their delicate ears,
-offended by his too nicely balanced periods, his antitheses, his
-monotonous cadences, refuse to relish that stately harmony, and
-majestic flow of language, which recommend the thoughts of this “old
-man eloquent,” whose greatest panegyric is pronounced by Plato[992] in
-the Phædros. In Isæos we have an argumentative, able pleader; in
-Deinarchos a vigorous accuser; in Demades the power of splendid
-improvisation; in Lycurgus noble sentiments clothed in poetical
-language, haughty patriotism, the rough virtues of a stoic; in
-Æschines an union of magnificent style, thoughts full of weight,
-admirable arrangement, warmth, vivacity, wit. Yet Demosthenes soars
-far above Æschines,—far above all. On him nature had bestowed every
-quality which constitutes an ingredient of eloquence,—originality,
-love of labour, a clear head, a warm heart, a judgment all but
-unerring, with an impetuous vehemence perfectly irresistible.
-
-Footnote 992:
-
- Opp. t. i. p. 105. seq.—He is said to have received a thousand
- drachmas for each of his pupils.—Dem. cont. Lacrit. § 11.
-
-A very extraordinary impression is created by the study of this
-writer. He seems never to put forth all his strength. You see him,
-indeed, bear down every thing before him, overwhelming the arguments
-and the gold of Philip, crushing his rivals, annihilating his enemies;
-but the persuasion rests with you that he could have done more. You
-discover amid the waves and foam of his terrible eloquence indications
-that that vast ocean had never been stirred to the bottom, that
-occasion had never called forth all its latent powers of destruction.
-He measures himself with his antagonist, and is secure of victory. He
-presents a front bristling with the deadliest points of logic, like
-the spears of the Macedonian phalanx, and wherever he moves he is
-invincible. Nevertheless he appears to advance nothing for the sake of
-effect, to be in search of none of the beauties of style, but rather
-to avoid them. He is neither draped, nor painted, nor adorned; but a
-naked colossus whose sublimity springs from the perfection and
-greatness of its proportions.
-
-Other orators persuade, Demosthenes enforces conviction. They who
-listen to him have no choice,—they must believe. Without offending the
-reader’s pride, he makes him ashamed to hesitate. He reminds one of
-the Nile at the cataracts, where, confined by rocks within too narrow
-limits, it pours resistlestly along, swelling, deep, with scattered
-whirlpools and foam scarcely visible on its vast surface, seemingly
-calm at a short distance, but, to those who look near, agitated,
-angry, full of unstemmable currents and boiling motion. He had
-profoundly studied human nature, chiefly, of course, as it developes
-itself in free states, and, better than any man, knew by what motives
-it may, in spite of corruption and degeneracy, be impelled to
-strenuous action, though but for a brief space. His language, flashing
-through the moral gloom around him, called forth bright reflections
-from whatever was brilliant or polished, and kindled the fragments of
-patriotic emotions into a flame. If genius could regenerate, could
-pour the blood of youth into the veins of age, could substitute
-loftiness of sentiment, heroic daring, disinterested love of country,
-religious faith, spirituality, for sensual self-indulgence, for sordid
-avarice, for a base distrust in Providence, Demosthenes had renewed
-the youth of Athens. The spirit of the old democratic constitution
-breathes through all his periods. He stands upon the last defence of
-the republican world, when all else had been carried, the
-representative of a noble but perished race, fighting gallantly,
-though in vain, to preserve that fragment sacred from the foot of the
-spoiler. The passion and the power of democracy seem concentrated in
-him. He unites in his character all the richest gifts of nature under
-the guidance of the most consummate art, and, doubtless, Hume was
-right when he said that, of all human productions, his works approach
-the nearest to perfection.
-
-Beyond this point it is irksome to proceed in our view of Grecian
-literature, which, after the battle of Cheronæa, was overshadowed by
-despotism and dwindled gradually into insignificance. Not that genius
-wholly and suddenly disappeared. The soil of Hellenic intellect was
-not entirely exhausted, but the fruit it bore was comparatively
-insipid. A courtly stamp was set upon every thing. Men no longer
-obeyed their genuine impulses. It was dangerous generally, and always
-profitless to be frank and manly. Instead of addressing themselves to
-the healthy natural sympathies of the people, writers servilely
-laboured by conceit and flattery to wring reluctant patronage from
-princes. The spirit of affectation, accordingly, for the first time
-made its appearance. Men tortured their ingenuity to invent smart
-things. Enthusiasm and passion and earnestness, characteristics all of
-popular writers, are never fashionable among courtiers, who consider
-sincerity vulgar, and hypocrisy a virtue. In the later Greek writers,
-therefore, who all wrote for some court or other, we discover the
-usual frigidity and extravagance which invariably deform the
-literature of such states. Along with these faults, others also are
-found far more pernicious: the inculcation of selfishness, gross
-sensuality, base maxims, a depraved taste. Man in the savage state is
-a garden in which noxious weeds and the most beautiful flowers and
-useful plants grow together; civilised and free, he is the same garden
-cleared, as far as possible, of its weeds; but, when verging a second
-time into barbarism, the weeds again become luxuriant, and entirely
-choke or conceal the flowers. And thus too it is in literature. In the
-literatures of Greece, Rome, and modern Italy we can now contemplate
-the complete process; in our own, a part only, how great a part—it is
-not here my business to inquire.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
- SPIRIT OF THE GRECIAN RELIGION.
-
-
-Whether the Greeks received their earliest system of philosophy from
-the East, as is commonly believed, or themselves invented it, as to me
-seems most probable, there can I think be little doubt that once
-engaged in philosophical speculations they exhibited in the pursuit a
-degree of boldness and originality, a patience of research, a power of
-combination rarely if ever equalled in succeeding times. For some
-ages, it is true, from the days of Thales down to those of Socrates
-(B. C. 600 to B. C. 450) physical investigations and researches
-chiefly occupied the philosophers of Greece. They conceived it to be
-within the power of man to discover the nature of the principal
-elements which compose the world, and the law’s that regulated its
-formation.[993] The origin likewise of the human race, of which
-nothing is yet known but that which has been revealed, naturally
-awakened their curiosity and led to many theories wild and fantastic
-in the extreme.
-
-Footnote 993:
-
- Cf. Diog. Laert. Pr. iii. 4. Ἀρχαῖος μὲν οὖν τις λόγος καὶ πάτριος
- ἐστὶ πᾶσιν ἀνθρώποις, ὡς ἐκ θεοῦ τὰ πάντα, καὶ διὰ θεοῦ ἡμῖν
- συνέστηκεν.—Aristot. de Mund. c. 6. In c. 7. we have a curious list
- of the various epithets of Zeus, whose name the Pseudo-Aristotle
- conceives to signify the root of all existence: ὡς κᾄν εἰ λέγοιμεν,
- δἰ ὅν ζῶμεν. This thought St. Paul expresses by the well-known
- words—"in whom we live and move and have our being." The author of
- the Treatise De Mundo then quotes from the Orphic fragments a
- passage, the doctrine of which strongly resembles the Pantheism of
- Pope:
-
- Ζεὺς πρῶτος γένετα, Ζεὺς ὕστατος ἀρχικέραυνος·
- Ζεὺς κεφαλὴ, Ζεὺς μέσσα· Διὸς δ᾽ ἐκ πάντα τέτυκται·
- Ζεὺς πυθμὴν γαίης τε καὶ οὐρανοῦ ἀστερόεντος·
- Ζεὺς ἄρσην γένετο, Ζεὺς ἄμβροτος ἔπλετο, νύμφη·
- Ζεὺς πνοιὴ πάντων, Ζεὺς ἀκαμάτου πυρὸς ὁρμή·
- Ζεὺς πόντου ῥίζα· Ζεὺς ἥλιος, ἠδὲ σελήνη·
- Ζεὺς βασιλεὺς· Ζεὺς ἀρχὸς ἁπάντων ἀρχικέραυνος·
- Πάντας γὰρ κρύψας αὖτις φάος ἐς πολυγηθὲς
- Ἐξ ἱερῆς κραδίης ἀνενέγκατο μέρμερα ῥέζων.
-
- Cf. Orphic. fragm. 6. p. 138.
-
-Into any consideration of these it is not my design to enter; but the
-Greeks had another philosophy, which, resting on the basis of
-theology, comprehended religion, morals, and politics, and may be
-regarded as the instrument, the soul, and the measure of their
-civilisation. It seems to be a truth frequently overlooked, that man
-is civilised exactly in proportion as he is religious; at least this
-was the case in Greece, where the highest developement of the national
-mind concurred in Socrates and Plato with the utmost developement of
-the religious instinct, and began immediately to decline in Aristotle
-and his successors, arriving at the lowest degradation among the
-grovelling sophists of the lower empire. This division of philosophy
-occupied among the Greeks the place, which in modern times is assigned
-to religion,[994] that is, it was their guide through this life, and
-their preparation for a better. It may, indeed, be regarded as the
-spiritual part of paganism, teaching man his duties, and explaining
-the grounds and motives which should lead to their performance.
-
-Footnote 994:
-
- “Do good to all,” an evangelical precept (Plat. Rep. i. § 9. p. 33.
- Stallb.), forming part of that philosophy which taught the Greeks
- what was honourable and what base, what just and what unjust, what
- was above all things to be desired and what avoided, how they were
- to demean themselves towards the gods, towards their parents, their
- elders, the laws, strangers, magistrates, friends, wives, children,
- slaves: to wit, that they were to reverence the gods, honour their
- parents, respect their elders, obey the laws, love their friends, be
- affectionate to their wives, solicitous for their children,
- compassionate towards their slaves.—Plut. de Educ. Puer. § 10.
-
-There is one article of faith without which no religion can of course
-exist—the belief in God. Devoid of this, it may be doubted whether an
-individual or a nation ought not rather to be classed among the
-inferior animals than among men. It is superfluous, therefore, to say
-that the Greeks, preëminently endowed with the highest attributes of
-humanity, were a religious people, and held firmly all the doctrines
-which entitle a people to such an appellation. From their ancestors,
-the Pelasgi,[995] they inherited a pure and lofty theism, which seems
-to have always continued to be the religion of the more enlightened;
-while among the mass of the people, this central truth of religion was
-gradually surrounded by a constantly expanding atmosphere of fable,
-which obscured its brightness, and in a great measure concealed its
-form. Mr. Mitford, whose acute and philosophical mind clearly
-discerned this verity, also seems to have understood the cause. “A
-firm belief both in the existence of the Deity, and in the duty of
-communication with him, appears to have prevailed universally in the
-early ages. But religion was then the common care of all men, a
-sacerdotal order was unknown.”[996]
-
-Footnote 995:
-
- Herod. ii. 52.
-
-Footnote 996:
-
- History of Greece, i. 97. Dioscorides in Athenæus observes that no
- sacrifice is so acceptable to the gods as that which is offered up
- by members of a family living in unison.—i. 15. In the earliest ages
- of the world the first-born of every family was esteemed a
- prophet.—Godwin, Moses et Aaron, i. 6. 2.
-
-The institution of an order of priests, however effected, almost
-necessarily corrupted the simple truths of religion, but it is
-unphilosophical in the highest degree to consider those ancient
-priests as impostors on this account, or to speak of their propagation
-of error as craft. Meditating, in seclusion and solitude, on the few
-truths which had come down to them by tradition or been discovered by
-reason, they soon bewildered their own wits, and wandered into
-superstition.[997] As was too natural, they conceived that the
-Divinity must be desirous of giving them signs, marking what was to be
-done and what avoided. The mistake of concomitance for causation,
-often made in more learned and refined ages, would confirm them in
-this view. They would, for example, find that in the order of time the
-flight of certain birds over their heads, the appearance of a serpent
-in their path, the apparition of certain objects in a dream, was
-followed by certain misfortunes; while other apparitions were
-succeeded by contrary events. Out of these observations the science of
-augury, divination, &c. arose. Yet the inventors were not therefore
-impostors, but rather, in their intentions, benefactors of mankind;
-and to be respected accordingly.
-
-Footnote 997:
-
- Plato, Crit. t. vii. 146.
-
-The generation of polytheism is to be in like manner explained. It was
-an abuse of the inductive method of philosophy. Men perceived, as soon
-as they began to observe nature and draw inferences from what they
-beheld, that the sun and moon[998] exert extraordinary influence,
-beneficial or hurtful, upon mankind and the world they inhabit; and
-the supposition was neither unnatural nor absurd that those glorious
-bodies, by whose rising and setting, by whose approximation or
-retreat, they were in turn affected with gladness or melancholy, with
-comfort or discomfort, with good or evil, must be themselves possessed
-of intelligence as well as power, or at least be inhabited and
-directed by beings on whom they bestowed the name of gods. The air,
-too, “which bloweth where it listeth while thou canst not tell whence
-it cometh or whither it goeth,” sweeping around them invisibly, and
-appearing only in its effects, soon obtained the rank of a deity,[999]
-as did the ocean which appears to be alive in all its extent, and the
-earth on whose inexhaustible bounty we subsist.
-
-Footnote 998:
-
- Plat. de Legg. t. viii. p. 182.
-
-Footnote 999:
-
- The air was Zeus.—Lycoph. Cassand. 80. Meurs. Comm. p. 1179. To some
- particular state of which the ancients alluded when they spoke of
- Kronos seeking to devour his children and swallowing stones instead
- of them. For the teeth of time which produce no effect on the air
- appear to devour whatever is composed of the element of earth.
- Mythologists, however, have generally omitted to remark that the
- stones which Kronos mistook for his children were not ordinary
- blocks of basalt or granite but rather so many statues of children
- endued, _pro tempore_, with life.—Ἔτι δέ, φησὶν, ἐπενόησε θεὸς
- Οὐρανὸς βαιτύλια, λίθοις ἐμψύχοις μηχανησάμενος.—Sanchon. ap. Euseb.
- Præp. Evang. l. i. c. 10. p. 37.
-
-Out of these elements the sacerdotal families of Greece framed its
-religion, which, however, is by no means to be considered a system of
-materialism. They conceived every portion of nature to be animated by
-its particular soul, just as they believed the whole, as a whole, to
-have one universal soul, the source of all the others. Their mythology
-was based on unity. At every step backwards we find the number of gods
-diminish, till at length we arrive at the Great One, surrounded by the
-unfathomable splendours of eternity. This is the θεὸς ὁ θεῶν Ζεὺς, of
-whom Plato[1000] and Aristotle constantly speak when they employ the
-expression τὸ δαιμόνιον.[1001] Philosophy, indeed, considered it to be
-its chiefest task to deliver men from their multitudinous errors
-respecting the nature of God, and of our duties towards Him; so that,
-in their speculative notions, very little difference from our own can
-be detected. Above all men, Plato sought to elevate the sphere of
-philosophy. In his works, in truth, it moves frequently within the
-confines of theology, and seldom quits them except for the purpose of
-infusing spirituality into politics and morals.
-
-Footnote 1000:
-
- Crit. t. vii. p. 173.
-
-Footnote 1001:
-
- Poll. i. 5.
-
-This great man, whose profound veneration for the Deity equalled,
-perhaps, that of Newton himself, conceived that human happiness
-consists wholly in the knowledge of God, concerning whose character
-and attributes he was anxious that no unworthy ideas should be
-entertained. His doctrine was, “that we should ever describe God such
-as he is.” But, as Muretus has well observed, this was requiring too
-much of human nature, for, most assuredly, we should never speak of
-God if we waited to discover language befitting His majesty. “For the
-mind of man is incapable of comprehending the essence of God; the
-nature of God is known to God alone; he alone perfectly understands
-himself, and in himself all things. The mind of man waxes dim,
-beholding that stupendous light whose brightness excels all other
-lights; and, in proportion as it endeavours more daringly to soar, is
-it conscious of falling below its great aim.”[1002] The Egyptians
-expressed the same conviction in the celebrated epigraph on the base
-of the veiled statue of Neith at Saïs: “I am whatever has been, is, or
-shall be, and no mortal has drawn aside my veil.” To the same purpose
-was the saying of Simonides to Hiero, “that the more he contemplated
-the Divine Nature the less he appeared to comprehend it.” And
-Socrates, in the Philebos of Plato, observes that he shuddered as
-often as the Great Name was to be pronounced lest he should bestow
-upon it some unworthy epithet.
-
-Footnote 1002:
-
- Muret. ad Plat. Rep. p. 726.
-
-It would appear, indeed, that the idea which the theologians of Greece
-had formed of the Almighty was very nearly the same as our own;
-though, in compliance with popular prejudices, they often made use of
-the plural for the singular. Goodness, power, and knowledge were his
-characteristics, which in substance are the same as the types of the
-theologians of modern times—goodness, immutability, truth,—goodness
-leading the van in both cases, and the remaining conditions answering
-perfectly to each other. For in supreme power and supreme wisdom must
-be immutability and truth, since the Almighty can do all he wills and
-must ever will what is right.[1003] In accordance with these views,
-the spiritual philosophy of Greece maintained that the Deity is the
-source of no evil, though traces of a far different theory are here
-and there discoverable among the poets. Thus, speaking of the
-calamities arising from the anger of Achilles, Homer says
-
- Διὸς δ᾽ ἐτελείετο βουλή.
-
-And, again—
-
- Ζεὺς δ᾽ ἀρετὴν ἄνδρασιν ὀφέλλει τε, μινύθει τε
- Ὅππως κεν ἐθέλησιν.[1004]
-
-Footnote 1003:
-
- Muret. ad Plat. Rep. p. 727.
-
-Footnote 1004:
-
- Iliad, υ. 242. seq.
-
-So, again, the two vases in the palace of Zeus, out of which he
-distributed good and evil to mankind.[1005] Hesiod also introduces
-Zeus, boasting that instead of fire he will give men a curse:—
-
- Τοῖς δ᾽ ἐγὼ ἀντὶ πυρὸς δώσω κακόν
-
-But in all ages men lay their misfortunes at the door of Providence.
-However, though the notions men entertain of God be ever so just,
-their conduct will not be thereby influenced, or a religion, properly
-speaking, created, unless several other truths be equally believed. It
-must be established not only that the maker of the universe still
-regards his workmanship, and will punish all those who seek to
-disorder the machine, by entailing remorse upon transgression, but
-that man is not a fugitive being, who can escape out of the hands of
-God by shrinking into annihilation, but a creature who, in accordance
-with his will, must run the vast circle of eternity, co-lasting with
-God himself.[1006] This is the great keystone of religion: without
-this, men will believe that even the Almighty can have no hold upon
-them; that they die, and their accountability ceases. The doctrine of
-immortality, however, has everywhere opened the skies to man, and set
-him upon the discovery of the steps leading thither, and, at the same
-time, has checked his daring, and poisoned his guilty pleasures.
-
-Footnote 1005:
-
- Iliad, ω. 527. seq. Cf. Muret. p. 737.
-
-Footnote 1006:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 95.
-
-From the remotest ages the immortality of the soul constituted a
-leading dogma in the religion of Greece, and was necessarily
-accompanied by the persuasion, that to the good that immortality would
-bring happiness, and to the evil the contrary.[1007] Homer is full of
-this, and the fables, wherein the enemies of God, parricides,
-murderers, the perpetrators of impiety and wrong, are, after death,
-banished to the depths of Tartarus, while various degrees of glory and
-happiness, not altogether unlike what is sublimely shadowed forth by
-St. Paul, are attributed to the good. That part, for example, of
-Heracles, which is divine, ascends to Heaven: Achilles enjoys the
-everlasting serenity of the Islands of the Blessed; and, generally,
-every virtuous man who rightly performed his duty ascended to the
-mansion prepared for him in the stars, there to live for ever in
-happiness.[1008] They taught, moreover, that the spirit of man is of
-heavenly birth: without this we had lived as so many animals. But God
-bestowed upon us an immortal soul, to watch as a guardian angel over
-the body, and placed it in the loftiest part of our frame, to teach us
-to look upward, and remember our birth,—that men are not creatures of
-clay but children of God and heirs of immortality.[1009]
-
-Footnote 1007:
-
- Among the people of the East we even discover traces of the doctrine
- of the resurrection:—Καὶ ἀναβιώσεσθαι, κατὰ τοὺς Μάγους, φησὶ
- (Θεόπομποσ) τοὺς ἀνθρώπους, καὶ ἔσεσθαι ἀθανάτους.—Diog. Laert. Pr.
- vi. 9.
-
-Footnote 1008:
-
- Plato, Tim. Opp. vii. 45. Cf. p. 97.—Is there not some allusion in
- the following passage to the scriptural account of the creation of
- man before woman? Ὡς γάρ ποτε ἐξ ἀνδρῶν γυναῖκες καὶ τἄλλα θηρία
- γενήσοίντο ἠπίσταντο οἱ ξυνιστάντες ἡμᾶς.—Tim. Opp. t. vii. p. 111.
-
-Footnote 1009:
-
- Plato, Tim. Opp. t. vii. p. 137.
-
-It will not, however, surprise those who comprehend the constitution
-of human nature, to find that the Greeks, deprived as they were of
-revelation, were not content with the simple dogma of immortality,
-rendered happy or otherwise by rewards and punishments, but imagined a
-return of the soul to earth, and its passage through a long succession
-of bodies, until the stains,[1010] contracted during its first
-sojourn, had been obliterated: properly, therefore, their Hell was a
-kind of Purgatory, and, no doubt, suggested the original idea of that
-intermediate place to the Church of Rome. The religious part of the
-pagan world, those especially who went through the ceremonies of
-expiation and initiatory rites, firmly believed that bad men met in
-the realms of Hades with a just retribution for their crimes, and were
-again launched into the career of life, that they might receive from
-others that which they had done unto them.[1011] Though even in those
-days there were not wanting persons who affected to possess the power
-of absolution, nay, of granting for a moderate sum of money
-indulgences and licences to sin. These ragged impostors, of course,
-patronised only rich sinners, over whose heads vengeance might be
-hanging for crimes committed either by themselves or their ancestors,
-(since the Greeks also believed that the sins of the parents are
-visited upon the children to the third and fourth generations,[1012])
-professing to be masters of arts and incantations by which the gods
-were compelled to grant their prayers.
-
-Footnote 1010:
-
- Even among the ancient Christians this doctrine was not wholly
- exploded. Origen believed it:—Λέγει δὲ καὶ ἄλλα παραλογώτατα· καὶ
- δυσσεβείας πλήρη μετεμψυχώσείς τε γὰρ ληρωδεὶ καὶ ἐμψύχους τοὺς
- ἀστέρας καὶ ἑτέρα τούτοις παραπλησία.—Phot. Bib. p. 3. seq.
-
-Footnote 1011:
-
- Plato de Legg. ix. Opp. viii. 152. seq. Cf. 172. seq. 191. seq. De
- Rep. i. Opp. vi. 9. sqq.
-
-Footnote 1012:
-
- De Rep. ii. 7. t. i. p. 112. sqq. Stallb.—The belief that children
- suffered for the crimes of their parents, which widely pervaded the
- pagan world, is nowhere more clearly stated than by Plato:—Γὰρ ἐν
- Αἵδου δίκην δώσομεν ὧν ἂν ἐνθαδε ἀδικήσωμεν, ἢ αὐτσὶ ἢ παῖδες
- παῖδων.—Id. c. 8. p. 119.
-
-But while the vulgar and the superstitious were thus deluded, they who
-possessed superior education and superior minds, united, with a belief
-in the future, a more cheerful faith in the justice and beneficence of
-the Deity. They discovered, even by the light of reason, that human
-nature has been perverted from its original perfection,—that an evil
-principle has been introduced into our inmost essence,—that in our
-sinful state we are at enmity with God and all goodness,—and must by
-prayers and sacrifices be purified and reconciled to him ere we can
-taste of happiness. On the subject of prayer the wiser Greeks
-entertained notions not wholly unbecoming a Christian.[1013] They well
-enough understood, that it is not to be considered as an importuning
-of God for wealth or fame or wisdom, or, as ignorant persons suppose,
-an impious desire that He would for our sakes depart from his eternal
-purposes; but merely the nourishing in our minds of a profound
-veneration for the Almighty, a trust in his Providence and wisdom, an
-habitual disclosure voluntarily made of our inmost thoughts and
-desires, which must be known to him whether we will or not. Hence the
-great philosopher of antiquity[1014] simply prayed for those things
-which it might please God to send, and that if he asked for anything
-wrong it might be denied him.
-
-Footnote 1013:
-
- Cf. Mitford, Hist. of Greece, i. 115. 8vo.
-
-Footnote 1014:
-
- Xen. Mem. i. 3. 2. Cf. Plut. Inst. Lac. § 26.
-
-It is no doubt true, as Mr. Mitford[1015] has observed, that the Gods
-in Homer are sometimes introduced favouring the perpetrators of
-injustice. But this is in contradiction to the general tone of the
-Greek religion; according to the tenets of which, every injured person
-had his Erinnyes who avenged whatever wrongs or violence he might
-suffer. Nay, even animals were comprised within the protecting circle
-of this beneficent superstition; and the God Pan was intrusted with
-the punishment of excesses perpetrated against them,[1016]
-
- “When vultures that, with grief exceeding measure,
- Lament their heart’s lost treasure,
- And o’er their empty nest, in torturing woe,
- Pass to and fro,
- Borne on their oarlike wings,
- Missing the task that brings
- Joy with it, send their piercing wail on high,
- Apollo, Pan, or Zeus hearing the cry,
- Charges th’ Erinnyes, though late,
- The penalty decreed by Fate
- To visit on the spoilers far or nigh.”
-
-Footnote 1015:
-
- Hist. of Greece, i. 108.
-
-Footnote 1016:
-
- Æsch. Agam. 55. sqq. with the commentary of Klausen. p. 104.—There
- occurs in the Scriptures a like sentiment, “He who stilleth the
- young ravens, when they cry.” So also the Mahomedan tradition, that
- in the midst of a battle-field, where two mighty hosts were engaged,
- God preserved from the hoofs of the chargers, and from the feet of
- men, the lapwing’s nest.
-
-Another doctrine, which we might scarcely expect to discover in
-paganism, constituted, nevertheless, a part of the Greek religion,—I
-mean the power of penitence. In all cases, indeed, this would not
-avail. The laws of nature (πεπρωμένη, fate) would have their course
-whatever might be the conduct or disposition of man; but in all other
-cases, tears[1017] shed in secret, solemn acts of religion, and deep
-contrition were supposed to appease the anger of Heaven. Besides, when
-afflictions fell upon men, they were not necessarily regarded as
-evils; for by suffering, the soul, they thought, is purified,
-chastened, endued with wisdom,—
-
- “Sweet are the uses of adversity;”
-
-and, hence, of those trials which ignorance regards as evils, most, if
-not all, are but so many dispensations of mercy, designed to work off
-the dross of sin, and restore the spirit to its original
-brightness.[1018] By these means, likewise, transgressors were
-believed to make some atonement for their crimes. Remembrance haunted
-them even in sleep. Their miseries rose up before them, compassed them
-round, and urged them by invisible stripes into her track, “whose ways
-are ways of pleasantness, and all whose paths are peace.”
-
-Footnote 1017:
-
- Πηγὴ δακρύων—Soph. Trach. 852. Antig. 802. A Scriptural expression,
- “O that mine eyes were a _fountain of tears_.” Æsch. Agam. 68. sqq.
- Eumen. 900. Suppl. 1040.
-
-Footnote 1018:
-
- Æsch. Agam. 160. sqq.—Klaus. Com. p. 120. Hence the proverb,
- παθήματα μαθήματα.—Blomfield.
-
-But over the impenitent wicked vengeance for ever impended; nor could
-wealth or rank purchase impunity, as the bare-footed friars and
-ass-mounters of the time were fain to persuade the credulous and
-weak-minded. Long withheld, the anger of the Gods descended at length
-in showers, utterly extirpating the evil-doers.[1019] Thus perished
-Paris, the violator of marriage and of hospitable rites; thus
-Clytemnæstra and Ægisthos, adulterers and murderers; thus the whole
-house of [OE]dipos, involved in an unutterable cycle of misery and
-crime. The interval, moreover, between the commission of guilt and its
-final punishment, was given up to the Erinnyes,[1020] those dire and
-mysterious powers of vengeance, whose breathless chace after crime is
-pourtrayed with so much sublimity by Sophocles. These divinities,
-starting into instant birth, whenever blood was unlawfully shed,
-walked perpetually beside the murderer to his grave,—to him alone
-visible, to him alone audible.
-
-Footnote 1019:
-
- Pind. Pyth. iii. 11. Æsch. Agam. 342. sqq. Klausen. Com. p. 140.
-
-Footnote 1020:
-
- Cf. Æsch. Eum. 859. seq.—Schol. ad Æsch. Tim. Orat. Att. t. 12. p.
- 384.
-
-The gross and carnal-minded contrived, indeed, in the case of lesser
-transgressions, to remain blind to this deformity, while youth and
-health and prosperity cast their illusions over their path. But age in
-this matter sharpened their sight. On drawing near the brink of the
-grave, the vices, hitherto so blythe and comely, appeared to grow more
-shrivelled and hideous and unlovely than their own impure
-countenances, and they would then fain have parted company with them.
-But, no! Having been comrades of their own choosing, Zeus chained them
-to their side to the last, unless repentance severed the link; and
-their fearful howlings, night and day, broke their repose, harrowed up
-their feelings, augmented tenfold their terrors, while sweat and
-tears, and agonising shrieks burst from them even in their dreams. The
-wicked, therefore, in the deepest darkness of paganism, were not left
-wholly to the error of their ways. But God reserved himself a witness
-in their hearts, and set up a light by which they might rightly, if
-they chose, direct their footsteps. It is true that the cardinal
-verities of religion were then but very imperfectly perceived, that,
-to get at them at all, men had to break through the shells of many
-fables, and that, when found, they must be for the most part enjoyed
-in secret, far from the din of ambition. Not, indeed, that the people
-refused their sympathy to virtue,—public opinion is never so far
-corrupted,—but that in the world there has always existed a strong
-current bearing men far from the track of duty and holiness.
-
-There was, no doubt, some degree of fanaticism mixed up with all this.
-The priesthood, an order of men much calumniated, but without whom
-society would be worse by far than it is, found it necessary to allure
-men into the bosom of their church by imposing ceremonies, by
-sacrifices, and by the mysterious disclosure of certain truths in the
-performance of certain rites. It will be seen that I allude to the
-mysteries. On the occasion of initiation, as if to intimate that men
-cannot be virtuous or religious by proxy, each individual became his
-own priest and sacrificed[1021] for himself. But in what initiation
-itself consisted, no man knows. Antiquity has revealed nothing, and
-nothing can we discover. The hypotheses of scholars are, therefore, so
-many dreams, and a mere waste of ingenuity; for, if they should by
-chance hit the mark, there exist no means of proving that they have
-done so. But of this we are sure, that a persuasion was widely spread
-that a blissful immortality awaited the initiated. A greater degree of
-holiness was supposed to attach to them,—there was a spell shed around
-their persons,—in situations of danger they experienced less of the
-fear of death. In storms, for example, at sea, when the ship seemed
-about to sink—"Have you been initiated?" was the question men asked
-each other. Still, among philosophers, the wisest and best sometimes
-neglected this popular consummation of a pious life. Socrates belonged
-not to this communion, a circumstance which rendered it more easy to
-fasten upon him the charge of impiety, in those days more atrocious
-than now, since, to be esteemed inimical to the gods, was the surest
-way to make enemies of men. Further than this, it is not necessary
-that I enter into the gentile faith, which only incidentally, as it
-affected morals, belongs to my subject.
-
-Footnote 1021:
-
- Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 712.
-
-But there exists in all countries a minor cycle of superstitions,
-which, more strongly perhaps than anything paints the peculiarities of
-the national character. In the north, as we know, this indigenous
-belief has survived all changes in the public creed, and will subsist
-to the last, lingering among our woods, our ruins, our moonlit
-meadows, our churchyards, by our firesides. Fairies, witches, ghosts,
-goblins can by no advances in civilisation be put to flight. They sail
-in our steamers on the ocean, ride at quickest speed along the
-railroads, go to bed with the first lady in the land, and even nestle
-beneath the statesman’s vest.[1022] With us these aërial beings, or
-spectres of crime, too commonly assume an aspect grotesque or
-devilish, but they nevertheless keep alive in the popular mind the
-spirit of romance and poetry, one of the never-failing handmaids of
-religion. Mythology rarely penetrates down to these primitive
-superstitions, which, however, constitute the basis of the whole
-science, and in Greece assumed, in many cases, forms of beauty
-analogous to its loftier and more poetic fables.
-
-Footnote 1022:
-
- See, for example, Lord Castlereagh’s vision of the fire-devil in Mr.
- Lockhart’s Life of Sir Walter Scott.
-
-The place occupied in our own popular mythology by the
-“light-sandalled fays,” was in Greece filled by the Hamadryads and
-Nymphs.[1023] No wood or grove or solitary tree, no fountain or rill
-in moss-grown cell or rustic cavern, existed without its co-existent
-divinity, female generally, and instinct with beauty and beneficence.
-These creatures, the Jinn and Jinneh of the Arabs, extended their
-dominion over all minor streams, and sported, in the softness and
-stillness of night, athwart the billows silvered by the moon; but the
-deities of great rivers, as the Acheloös, the Peneios, and others,
-were male. Being only a few degrees raised above humanity, they were
-often enamoured of mortals, to whom they appeared arrayed in
-loveliness, amid the glimmering forests, at dawn or twilight, or when
-
- “overhead the moon
- Wheels her pale course.”
-
-Footnote 1023:
-
- The same superstitions, a little modified, are still found in many
- parts of Greece. “The religious feelings of the Cretan, in the
- nineteenth century, differ very little, if at all, from those
- entertained for the Naïads by his heathen ancestors.”—Pashley, Trav.
- in Crete, i. 89.
-
-It was not always, however, that the love of a nymph proved a
-blessing. There were occasions when, having for a moment revealed
-their superhuman charms to some shepherd in his romantic solitude, or
-to some poet worshiping the muses alone, beside the inspiring mount or
-spring, they again capriciously withdrew, and left him vision-smitten
-to pine or, perchance, to die.
-
-Nor were the Greeks wholly devoid of belief in evil spirits, for the
-demon Alastor,[1024] which was a deification of the principle that
-incites to crime and afterwards brings vengeance, can in no way be
-regarded as good. Typhon, too, with the Giants and Titans, had at
-least a predominance of evil in their character, but these are treated
-of at length by the mythologists. Several superstitions, commonly
-supposed to be wholly Oriental, were current in Greece, such as that
-men had the power by using certain spells to quit their mortal forms
-and roam disembodied through the earth. By magic rings, too, and
-helmets they might be rendered invisible, and, thus protected, enter
-into the secret chambers of kings, pollute their wives, and rifle
-their treasures.[1025] Means, moreover, they had, confounded in those
-ages with supernatural power, of charming poisonous serpents, as to
-this day is done by the subjects of our Eastern empire, and the
-snake-catchers of Egypt; and though it be now known that opium
-constitutes no small portion of this charm, the people generally, both
-in the East and West, conceive other influences to be employed than
-those of legitimate art.
-
-Footnote 1024:
-
- Cf. Poppo, Proleg. in Thucyd. i. 14. Xenarchos observes that the
- home perishes when conflicting fortunes attach to the master, and
- into which the Alastor creeps:
-
- φθίνει δόμος
- ἀσυντάτοισι δεσποτῶν κεχρημένος
- τύχαις, ἀλάστωρ τ᾽ εἰσπέπαικε.
-
- Ap. Athen. ii. 64. seq. See also Æsch. Choeph. 119. Eumen. 560. 802.
- with Klausen. Æsch. Theolog. i. 9. 56. seq. et ad Agam. p. 119. The
- Egyptians had their Babys or Typhon, a god of evil.—Athen. xv. 25.
-
-Footnote 1025:
-
- Plat. Rep. ii. § 3. Stallb.
-
-There was not in later times, perhaps, that boundless faith in spells
-and transformations still subsisting in the East. But in the earlier
-ages, and in the gloomy mountain recesses of Arcadia, events equally
-strange were supposed to have happened. Thus Lycaon having sacrificed
-an infant to Zeus Lycæos, and sprinkled the blood upon the altar,
-immediately became a wolf;[1026] and it was reported that any one who
-performed this dreadful sacrifice, and afterwards by accident tasted
-of the human entrails, when mingled with those of other victims,
-forthwith underwent the same transformation.[1027] Thus we find the
-gloomy legend of the Breton forests existing in the heart of the
-Peloponnesos, where there can, I fear, be little doubt, that human
-victims were habitually offered up. Another ancient superstition,
-which found its way into Italy, was, that a person first seen by a
-wolf lost his voice, whereas if the man obtained the prior glimpse of
-the animal no evil ensued.[1028]
-
-Footnote 1026:
-
- Paus. viii. 2, 3. Cf. Plat. Rep. viii. 16. Stallb.
-
-Footnote 1027:
-
- Plat. Rep. viii. 16. t. ii. p. 223. Stallb. Cf. Bœckh in Platon.
- Minoem. p. 55. seq.
-
-Footnote 1028:
-
- Muret. ad Plat. Rep. i. p. 670. where, with much ingenuity, he
- detects an allusion to this superstition in a hasty glance of the
- philosopher.—Plin. Hist. Nat. viii. 34. Schol. ad Theocr. xiv. 21.
- Virg. Ecl. ix. 53. Donat. in Ter. Adelph. iv. 1. 21. et Stallb. ad
- Plat. Rep. i. 37.
-
-The belief in ghosts, coeval no doubt with man, flourished especially
-among the Greeks. Hesiod entertained peculiar notions on this subject,
-which some suppose to have been borrowed from the East, that is, he
-believed that the good men of former times became, at their decease,
-guardian spirits, and were entrusted[1029] with the care of future
-races. Plato adopts these ghosts, and gives them admission into his
-Republic, where they perform an important part and receive peculiar
-honours.[1030] When they appeared, as sometimes they would, by day,
-their visages were pale and their forms unsubstantial like the
-creations of a dream.[1031] But, as among us, they chiefly affected
-the night for their gambols, and in Arcadia particularly, would appear
-to honest people returning home late in cross-roads, and such places
-whence they were not to be dislodged but by being pelted apparently by
-pellets made from bread crumb, on which men had wiped their fingers,
-carefully preserved for this purpose by the good folks about
-Phigaleia.[1032]
-
-Footnote 1029:
-
- Hes. Opp. et Dies, 121. seq. where see Goettling.
-
-Footnote 1030:
-
- De Rep. v. 15. t. i. 377. seq. The Magi, among whom supernatural
- sights and powers were most familiar, maintained that the Gods
- occasionally appeared to them, and that the atmosphere is filled
- with spectral shadows, which, floating about like mists or
- exhalations, are visible to the sharpsighted.—Diog. Laert. Pr. vi.
- 9. A similar belief prevailed among the early anchorites. “It was
- their firm persuasion, that the air which they breathed was peopled
- with invisible enemies; with innumerable dæmons who watched every
- occasion and assumed every form, to terrify, and, above all, to
- tempt, their unguarded virtue.”—Gibbon, vi. 263.
-
-Footnote 1031:
-
- Æsch. Agam. 68.—Klaus. Com. p. 108.
-
-Footnote 1032:
-
- Athen. iv. 31.
-
-The most remarkable prank played by any ancient ghosts, however, with
-whose history I am acquainted, did not take place in Greece, but in
-the Campagna di Roma, where, after a bloody battle between the Romans
-and the Huns, in which all but the generals and their staff bit the
-dust, two spectral armies, the ghosts of the fallen warriors, appeared
-upon the field to enact the contest over again. During three whole
-days did these valiant souls of heroes, as the Homeric phrase is,
-carry on the struggle; and the historian who relates the fact, is
-careful to observe that they did not fall short of living soldiers,
-either in fire or courage. People saw them distinctly charge each
-other, and heard the clash of their arms. Similar exhibitions were to
-be seen in different parts of the ancient world. In the great plain of
-Sogda,[1033] for example, spectral armies of mighty courage but
-voiceless, were in the constant habit of engaging in mortal combat at
-the break of day. Caria likewise possessed a favourite haunt of these
-warlike phantoms. But here the apparition was only occasional, and all
-its evolutions were performed in the air, which was the case in
-England, as we have been assured by very old people, before the
-breaking-out of the American war. Another fray of ghosts took place
-every summer in Sicily on the plain of the Four Towers, but in this
-case the whole business was carried on at noon, to the no small
-annoyance of Pan who usually takes his siesta at that hour,—that is,
-if they were as noisy in their battles as the Campanian
-spectres.[1034]
-
-Footnote 1033:
-
- Which had once been a lake.—Vit. Isidor. ap. Phot. Bib. p. 839.
-
-Footnote 1034:
-
- Phot. Bib. p. 339.
-
-Like the Roman Catholics, the Greeks had great faith in miraculous
-images, holy wells, &c. and their descendants still maintain the same
-creed. Near the Church of Haghia Parthenoë in Crete, is a most copious
-fountain deriving its name from the same holy and miracle-working
-virgins to whom the church is dedicated, and who also preside over the
-waters. “The worship of the headless body of Molos has also its
-parallel in modern times.”[1035] As the Cretan Christians for many
-years reverenced the head of Titus, though deprived of its body, so
-their heathen ancestors used annually to honour by a religious
-festival the body of Molos, the well-known father of Meriones, though
-deprived of its head. The legend, told to explain the ancient ceremony
-in which the headless statue of a man thus exhibited, was that “after
-Molos got possession of a nymph’s person without having first obtained
-her consent, his body was found, but his head had disappeared.”[1036]
-An image of the Virgin travelled by water from Constantinople to
-Greece, where it was shortly after seen standing up in the waves near
-Mount Athos. Similar legends obtained of old. Near Biennos in
-Crete,[1037] “has been dug up the bones and skulls of giants, many of
-whom were eight or ten times the size of common men.”[1038]
-
-Footnote 1035:
-
- Pashley, Travels in Crete, i. 88.
-
-Footnote 1036:
-
- Pashley, Travels in Crete, i. 177.—Plut. de Orac. Def.
-
-Footnote 1037:
-
- Herod. iv. 33.—Pashley, Travels in Crete, i. 192.
-
-Footnote 1038:
-
- Pashley, i. 278.
-
-Of the various modes of penetrating into the future,[1039] prevalent
-among the people, I may mention some few. Prophetesses are frequently
-spoken of in Scripture, and in the Acts of the Apostles[1040] is given
-an account of a young female slave who brought her master large sums
-of money by this trade, which was that of a gipsy. Others there were
-who, like many among the Orientals, professed to understand the
-language of birds. A slave, said to possess this knowledge, is
-celebrated, by Porphyry, and was probably from the East.[1041] One
-sort of divination was practised by pouring drops of oil into a vessel
-and looking on it, when they pretended to behold a representation of
-what was to take place. This in Egypt is still practised, merely
-substituting ink for oil, and a great many travellers appear to
-believe in it. Soldiers going to war were especially liable to fall
-into this kind of foolery.[1042]
-
-Footnote 1039:
-
- See Max. Tyr. Diss. iii. p. 31–38.
-
-Footnote 1040:
-
- C. xvi. v. 16. sqq.
-
-Footnote 1041:
-
- De Abstinentiâ, iii. Cf. Cedren. Michael, Compotat. εἰσὶ γὰρ τίνες
- οἱ ἐν ἐλαίῳ ὁρίοντες μαντεύονται.—Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 1093.
-
-Footnote 1042:
-
- Οἱ γὰρ ἐπὶ πόλεμον ἐξιόντες ἐπητήρουν τὰς διοσημείας.—Schol.
- Aristoph. Acharn. 1106.
-
-The use of holy water on entering temples is of great antiquity. This
-custom was called περίῤῥανσις, and the act was performed with the
-branch of the fortunate olive.[1043] There stood at the door of the
-temple a capacious lustral font, whose contents had been rendered holy
-by extinguishing[1044] therein a lighted brand from the altar; thence
-water was sprinkled on themselves, by worshipers or by the officiating
-priest. A similar apparatus stood at the entrance to the Agora, to
-purify the orators, &c. going to the public assembly. It was likewise
-placed at the door of private houses, wherein there was a corpse, that
-every one might purify himself on going out.[1045] Superstitious
-persons usually walked about with a laurel leaf in their mouth, or
-occasionally bearing a staff of laurel, there being a preserving power
-in that sacred shrub: hence arose the proverb δαφνίκην φορῶ
-βακτήριαν,—"I carry a laurel staff," when a man would say, I have no
-fear. Persons not thus protected it is to be presumed were terrified
-if a weasel or dog crossed their path; and the omen could only be
-averted by casting three stones at it, the number three being
-exceedingly agreeable to the gods. Certain fruits would not burst on
-the tree if three stones were cast into the same hole with the seed
-when the tree was planted. Two brothers walking on the way conceived
-it ominous of evil if they happened to be parted by a stone. On every
-trifling occasion altars and chapels were erected to the gods,
-particularly by women; no house or street was free from them. For
-example, if a snake crept into the house through the eaves, forthwith
-an altar was erected. At places where three roads met, stones were set
-up, to be worshiped by travellers, who anointed them with oil. If a
-mouse nibbled a hole in a corn-sack, they would fly to the portent
-interpreter, and inquire what they should do,—"Get it mended," was
-sometimes the honest reply. Horrid dreams[1046] might be expiated, and
-their evil effects be averted, by telling them to the rising sun. When
-the candles spit, it was a sign of rain.[1047] During thunder and
-lightning they made the noise called _Poppysma_,[1048] which it was
-hoped might avert the danger. On board ship sailors entertained the
-idea, that to carry a corpse would be the cause of shipwreck, as
-happened to the vessel which was bearing to Eubœa the bones of
-Pelops.[1049] The sailors of the Mediterranean, for this reason, will
-refuse to receive mummies on board.
-
-Footnote 1043:
-
- Ramo felicis olivæ.—Virgil. Æn. vi. 230.
-
-Footnote 1044:
-
- Athen. ix. 76.
-
-Footnote 1045:
-
- Casaub. ad Theophr. Char. p. 287. Eurip. Alcest. 99.
-
-Footnote 1046:
-
- Cf. Plut. Alcib. § 39.
-
-Footnote 1047:
-
- Casaub. ad Theophr. Char. p. 300.
-
-Footnote 1048:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 260. 262. 626.
-
-Footnote 1049:
-
- Pausan. v. 13. 4. Palm. Exerc. in Auct. Græc. d. 398.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK III.
- WOMEN.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
- WOMEN IN THE HEROIC AGES.
-
-
-There is no question connected with Grecian manners more difficult
-than that which concerns the character and condition of women.[1050]
-On so many points did they differ in this matter from us, that, unless
-we can conceive ourselves to be in the wrong, the condemnation of the
-whole Hellenic theory of female rights and interests and influence
-must, as a matter of course, ensue. I do not say that, after all, this
-is not the conclusion we should come to. Reason may possibly be on our
-side; but certainly it appears to me, that too little pains has
-hitherto been taken to arrive at the truth; and as it is a
-consideration by no means unimportant, I have bestowed on it more than
-ordinary attention in the hope of letting in additional light, however
-little, on this obscure and unheeded department of antiquities.
-
-Footnote 1050:
-
- Describing the approach to the temple of Aphrodite, Lucian says:
- εὐθὺς ἡμῖν ἀπ’ αὐτοῦ τοῦ τεμένους Ἀφροδίσιοι προσέπνευσαν
- αὖραι.—Amor. § 12. These gentle airs should breathe into the style
- and language of the author who treats of the women of Greece; but,
- in my own case, research I fear and the effects of fifty-two degrees
- of north latitude will prevent this consummation so devoutly to be
- wished.
-
-In form the Greek woman was so perfect as to be still taken as the
-type of her sex. Her beauty, from whatever cause, bordered closely
-upon the ideal, or rather was that which, because now only found in
-works of art, we denominate the ideal. But our conceptions of form
-never transcend what is found in Nature. She bounds our ideas by a
-circle over which we cannot step. The sculptors of Greece represented
-nothing but what they saw,[1051] and even when the cunning of their
-hand was most felicitous, even when loveliness and grace and all the
-poetry of womanhood appeared to breathe from their marbles, the
-inferiority of their imitations to the creations of God, in properties
-belonging to form, in mere contour, in the grouping and developement
-of features, must have sufficed to impress even upon Pheidias, that
-high priest of art, the conviction of how childish it were to dream of
-rising above nature. The beauty of Greece was, indeed, a creature of
-earth, but suggested aspirations beyond it. Every feature in the
-countenance uttered impassioned language, was rife with tenderness,
-instinct with love. The pulses of the heart, warm and rapid, seemed to
-possess ready interpreters in the eye. But, radiant over all, the
-imagination shed its poetic splendour, communicating a dignity, an
-elevation, a manifestation of soul, which lent to passion all the
-moral purity and enduring force that belong to love, when love is
-least tainted with unspiritual and ignoble selfishness.
-
-Footnote 1051:
-
- On the beauty of the modern Greek women I can speak from my own
- observation; but most travellers are of the same opinion, and Mr.
- Douglas, in particular, gives the following testimony in their
- favour: “Though the delicacy of her form is not long able to sustain
- the heat of the climate and the immoderate use of the warm bath, I
- can scarcely trust myself to describe the beauty of a young Greek
- when arriving at the age which the ancients have so gracefully
- personified as the Χρυσοστέφανος Ἥβη. Were we to form our ideas of
- Grecian women from the wives of Albanian peasants we should be
- strangely deceived; but the islands of Andro, Tino, and, above all,
- that of Crete, contain forms upon which the chisel of Praxiteles
- would not have been misemployed.”—Essay, &c. p. 159.
-
-I despair, however, of representing by words what neither Pheidias nor
-Polycletos could represent in marble or ivory. The women of Greece
-were neither large nor tall. The whole figure, graceful but not
-slender, left the imagination nothing to desire. It was satisfied with
-what was before it. Limbs exquisitely moulded,[1052] round, smooth,
-tapering, a _torso_ undulating upwards in the richest curves to the
-neck, a bosom somewhat inclined to fulness, but in configuration
-perfect, features in which the utmost delicacy was blended with
-whatever is noblest and most dignified in expression. Both blue eyes
-and black[1053] were found in Greece, but the latter most commonly.
-Even Aphrodite, spite of her auburn hair, comes before us in the Iliad
-with large black eyes, beaming with humid fire. No goddess but the
-Attic virgin has the cold blue eye of the North, becoming her maidenly
-character, reserved, firm, affectionate, with a dash of shrewishness.
-The nose was straight and admirably proportioned, without anything of
-that breadth which in the works of inferior sculptors creates an idea
-of Amazonian fierceness. Beauty itself had shaped the mouth and chin,
-and basked and sported in them. In these, above all, the Grecian woman
-excelled the barbarians. Other features they might have resembling
-hers, but seldom that Attic mouth, that dimpled, oval, richly-rounded
-chin, which imprinted the crowning characteristic of womanhood upon
-her face, and stamped her mistress of man and of the world.
-
-Footnote 1052:
-
- Cf. Winkelmann, iv. 4. 44.
-
-Footnote 1053:
-
- Plat. Repub. iv. t. vi. p. 167.—That black eyes were most common
- among the Greeks may be inferred from this, that, in describing the
- parts of the eye, they called the iris τὸ μέλαν, which is sometimes
- of one colour, and sometimes of another.—Arist. Hist. Anim. I. viii.
- 2. He observes, further on, that some persons had black eyes, others
- deep blue, others gray, others of the colour of goats.—§4. Other
- animals have eyes of one colour, except the horse, which has
- sometimes one blue eye. Eyes moderate in size and neither sunken nor
- projecting were esteemed the best.—§. 5. Large eyes, likewise, were
- greatly admired. Hence Hera is called βοῶπις by Homer. Aristœnetos,
- describing his Laïs, says: ὀφθαλμοὶ μεγάλοι τε καὶ διαυγεῖς καὶ
- καθαρῷ φωτὶ διαλάμποντες.—Scheffer ad Æl. Hist. Var. xii. 1. With
- respect to the colour of the hair see Winkelmann, iv. 4. 38. It was,
- of course, considered a great beauty to have it long, and,
- therefore, Helen, in honour of Clytemnæstra, cut off the points
- only.—Eurip. Orest. 128. seq.
-
-A creature thus fashioned and gifted with an intellect which, if less
-robust and comprehensive, is equally active with that of man and still
-more flexible, could scarcely be degraded into a domestic drudge and
-slave, and in Greece was not.[1054] Already, in the heroic ages, women
-occupied a commanding position in society, somewhat less honourable
-than is their due, but, in many respects, higher and more to be envied
-than was appropriated to them in the ignorant and corrupt times of
-chivalry which the Homeric period has been thought greatly to
-resemble. In those days, though fashion required more reserve in the
-female character than is consistent with the spirit of modern manners,
-persons of different sexes could meet and converse together without
-scandal. Gentlewomen of the highest rank went abroad under their own
-guidance. On the arrival of a foreign ship upon the shore we find an
-Argive princess descending without any male protector to cheapen
-articles of dress and trinkets, which however, as the event proved,
-was not without danger, for both she herself and a number of her maids
-were carried away captives by the perfidious strangers.[1055]
-
-Footnote 1054:
-
- On the respect paid to women, see Demosth. in Ev. et Mnes. § 11.
-
-Footnote 1055:
-
- Herodot. i. 1.
-
-Homer abounds with proofs both of the liberty women enjoyed and the
-high estimation in which they were held. They were quite as much as is
-consistent with prudence and delicacy the companions of men.[1056] And
-in more than one particular, as in the bathing[1057] and perfuming of
-distinguished male guests, the manners of those times allowed of or
-rather enjoined familiarities greater than the customs of any
-civilised modern nations permit. Ladies lived at large with their
-husbands and families in the more frequented parts of the house, dined
-and drank wine with them, rode or walked out in their company, or,
-attended by a female servant, and were, in fact, in the modern sense
-of the word, mistresses of the house and everything it contained.
-
-Footnote 1056:
-
- Athen. i. 18.
-
-Footnote 1057:
-
- Describing the beauty of Hippodameia, daughter of Anchises, Homer
- says, she excelled all the maidens of her age in beauty, skill in
- female accomplishments, and endowments of the mind, for which reason
- Alcathoos, the noblest man in Troy, chose her to be his wife.—Iliad,
- ε. 480. sqq. He must necessarily, therefore, have enjoyed
- opportunities of studying her character. Another illustration of the
- freedom of heroic female manners is furnished by the author of the
- Little Iliad, who relates that, when Aias and Odysseus were
- contending for the armour of Achilles, the Greeks, by the advice of
- Nestor, sent certain scouts to listen beneath the battlements of
- Troy to the conversation of the virgins who, in the cool of the
- evening, it may be presumed, were wont to walk upon the ramparts and
- converse frankly of the exploits of their illustrious enemies.—Sch.
- Aristoph. Equit. 1051. Cf. Il. ζ. 239.
-
-When the husband happened to be absent it was not, indeed, considered
-delicate, if the mansion was filled with youthful and petulant guests,
-for the wife to be seen much among them,[1058] though it still appears
-to have been incumbent upon married ladies to exercise the rites of
-hospitality, which sometimes, as in the case of Helen, opened the way
-to intrigue and elopement. A similar event, veiled in mythological
-obscurity, shipwrecked the virtue of Alcmena.[1059] Clytemnæstra, too,
-and Ægialeia the wife of Diomede, fell before the temptations afforded
-by the absence of their lords,[1060] while Penelope surrounded with
-youthful suitors, assailed by reports of her husband’s death,
-alternately soothed and menaced, remained true to her vows and became
-to all ages the pattern of conjugal fidelity.
-
-Footnote 1058:
-
- Hom. Odyss. α. 330. sqq.
-
-Footnote 1059:
-
- Apollod. ii. 4. 8.
-
-Footnote 1060:
-
- Ovid. Ibis. 349. seq. Tzetz. ad Lycoph. 384. 1093.
-
-The examples are many of the facility of their intercourse with
-strangers. Sthenobœa wife of Prœtos, king of Argos, must have enjoyed
-numerous occasions of being alone with Bellerophon before she could,
-like the wife of Potiphar, have tried his honour and forfeited her
-own.[1061] Helen after her return to Sparta, banquets and associates
-freely with strangers at the table of her husband, where, by her
-conversation and remarks, we discover how quick and penetrating the
-understanding of women was in those ages supposed to be. Nothing could
-be further from the mind of those heroic warriors than the idea of
-regarding woman merely as an object of desire, or as a household
-drudge.[1062] If she receives praise for her beauty, or industrious
-habits, still more is she celebrated for her mental endowments, for
-her wisdom, for her maternal love. Where in fiction or in life shall
-we find a lady more gentle, more graceful, more accomplished, more
-gifted with every charm of womanhood than Helen, who, nevertheless,
-falls a prey to seduction! Where more feminine tenderness, or truer
-love than in Andromache? Where more matronly sweetness and dignity
-than in the Phæacian Arete; more unblameable vivacity, blithe
-unreserve, greater sensibility, united with the noblest maiden
-modesty, self command and proud consciousness of virtue, than in that
-loveliest of poetical creations her daughter Nausicaa.
-
-Footnote 1061:
-
- Apollod. ii. 3. 7. Sch. Aristoph. Ran. 1041.
-
-Footnote 1062:
-
- Hesiod suggests a luxurious picture of female life in the heroic
- ages.—Opp. et Dies. 519. seq.
-
-Homer himself felt all the charm of this exquisite creation and
-lingered over it with the fondness of a parent. She is the very flower
-of the heroic age. In the rapid glimpse afforded us of her life, we
-discover what the condition and occupations of a noble virgin were in
-those primitive times, a felicitous mixture of splendour and
-simplicity, approaching nature in the rough energy of the passions,
-with feelings healthy and vigorous and happy in the utter absence of
-sickly sentimentality. Though daughter to a king Nausicaa does not
-disdain to care for the family wardrobe. Her nuptial day is not far
-distant, and, agreeably to the nature of her sex in all ages, she is
-desirous that her dress should on that occasion appear to the best
-advantage, but to her father modestly feigns to think principally of
-her brothers.[1063] Alcinoos aware of the feint, smiles inwardly while
-he approves of her solicitude. With his ready permission she piles the
-garments on the royal car drawn by mules, and then, mounting the seat
-whip in hand, departs for the distant rivulet accompanied by her
-maids. Of these girls, the poet says, two, clothed by the graces with
-loveliness, used to sleep in the Princess’s chamber one on either side
-the door.
-
-On reaching the secluded spot, the umbrageous embouchure of a mountain
-brook where they usually performed their lowly task, it was their
-first care to unharness the mules, which were turned loose to graze on
-the shore. Their labours occupy them but a portion of the morning, and
-these concluded, they dine sumptuously enough, in some shady nook
-overlooking the stream, on wine and viands brought along with them
-from the palace. To remove every idea of sordid toil and fatigue Homer
-is careful to represent them full of life and animal spirits, bounding
-sportively along the meadows, having first bathed and lubricated their
-limbs with fragrant oils. The game which engages them while their
-robes and veils are drying on the pebbly beach received in later ages
-the name of Phæninda,[1063] and consisted in throwing a ball
-unexpectedly from one individual to another of a large party scattered
-over a field. As it was uncertain to whom the person in possession of
-the ball would cast it, every one was on the watch, and much of the
-sport arose from the eagerness of each to catch it.
-
-Footnote 1063:
-
- See Book II. v2-Chapter III.
-
-In this game the princess takes part, laughing and singing with the
-rest, and it is a clumsy throw of hers which sends the ball into the
-river that excites the loud exclamation from her maids which awakens
-Odysseus. Her conversation with the hero thereupon ensuing suggests a
-high notion of female education at the period. The maids of honour
-terrified at his strange and grotesque appearance, unclothed, and
-deformed with ooze and mud, take to flight, but Nausicaa relying on
-the respect due to her father maintains her ground. Odysseus
-reverencing her youth and beauty prefers his petition from a distance.
-She grants far more than he seeks, and with many indications of female
-gentleness mingles so much self-possession, forethought, compassion
-for misfortune, consideration of what is due to her own character, and
-confidence in the generosity and unsuspicious goodness of her parents,
-that we are constrained to suppose the existence of much instruction,
-mental training, and knowledge of the world. And if such
-qualifications had not at that time been found in women, Homer had
-much too keen a sense of propriety to have hazarded his reputation and
-his bread by supposing their prevalence in his poems.[1064]
-
-Footnote 1064:
-
- Clytemnæstra, again, in Æschylus exhibits considerable knowledge of
- geography, which she could only have acquired from conversation with
- travellers or from the songs of the poets.—Agamemn. 287. sqq.
-
-How the women of the heroic times received their instruction it is not
-difficult to comprehend, though there has come down to us very little
-positive information on the subject. The poets, those prophetic
-teachers of the infancy of humanity, had already commenced their
-revelations of the good and beautiful. Wandering from town to town,
-under the immediate direction of Providence, they scattered far and
-near the seeds of civilisation. Their songs were in every mouth: both
-youths and maidens imbibed the wisdom they contained, and with their
-sprightly strains, as in the case of Nausicaa, enlivened their lighter
-moments when alone, or delighted the noble and numerous guests at
-their fathers’ board. Homer, indeed, nowhere introduces a lady singing
-at an entertainment, excepting in Olympos, where the Muses represent
-the sex; but Æschylus, a poet profoundly versed in antiquity, speaks
-of Iphigenia as performing this sweet office in her father’s
-hall.[1065] The daughter of Alcinoos, however, shares in the
-amusements and instruction supplied by the bard during the
-entertainment described by Homer, and converses freely with their
-illustrious guest.[1066]
-
-Footnote 1065:
-
- And Theocritus enumerates among the accomplishments of Helen, that
- she could sing and play upon the cithara.—Eidyll. xviii. 35. sqq. et
- Kiesling ad Theocrit. Cf. Æneid. vi. 647.
-
-Footnote 1066:
-
- Odyss. θ. 457. sqq.
-
-Footnote 1067:
-
- Apophthegms, Old and New, § 278.
-
-We have above seen that women in those ages were not creatures of mere
-luxury or show. Possessing considerable physical power and energy, and
-much skill in the elegant and useful arts of life, they were deterred
-by no false pride or ignorant prejudices from converting their
-capacity to the use of their families. The magnificence of their
-attire, their costly ornaments, or the consciousness of the highest
-personal beauty, nowise interfered with their thrifty habits; and Lord
-Bacon[1067] tells a very good anecdote to show that the same in former
-days was the case in England. There was a lady of the West country, he
-says, who gave great entertainments at her house to most of the
-gallant gentlemen of her neighbourhood, among whom Sir Walter Raleigh
-was one. This lady, though otherwise a stately dame, was a notable
-good housewife, and in the morning betimes she called to one of her
-maids that looked to the swine, and asked, “Is the piggy served?” Sir
-Walter’s chamber being near the lady’s, he heard this homely inquiry.
-A little before dinner the lady came down in great state to the
-drawing-room, which was full of gentlemen, and as soon as Sir Walter
-Raleigh saw her, “Madam,” says he, “is the piggy served?” To which the
-lady replied, “You know best whether you have had your breakfast.”
-
-An Homeric princess resembled this stately dame of the West, in
-thinking nothing beneath her which could contribute to the comfort or
-elegant adornment of those she loved. The employments of women in
-those ages, however, included some things which, in the present state
-of the useful arts, would seldom fall to their share, and among these
-were the labours of the loom, to excel in which was evidently
-considered one of their chiefest accomplishments and most necessary
-duties.[1068] In this occupation they took refuge from anxiety and
-sorrow; to this we find Hector with rough tenderness urging his
-beloved wife to have recourse, when her affection would withdraw him
-from his post;[1069] and Telemachus, in a tone somewhat too
-authoritative, recommends, in the Odyssey, the same course to his
-mother:[1070] and in the Eastern world the same tastes and habits
-continued to prevail down to a very late age. When Sisygambis, the
-captive Persian queen, was presented, however, by Alexander with
-purple and wool, she sank into an agony of grief and tears: they
-reminded her of happier days. But the conqueror, misunderstanding her
-feelings, and desirous to remove the notion that he was imposing any
-servile task, observed:—"This garment, mother, which you see me wear,
-is not merely the gift but the work also of my sisters."[1071] Similar
-presents passed between near relations in Persia; for in Herodotus we
-find Amestris, the queen of Xerxes, conferring upon her husband, as a
-gift of price, a richly variegated and ample pelisse, which the
-labours of her own fair hands had rendered valuable.[1072] Augustus,
-too, even when all simplicity of manners had expired with the
-republic, affected still to bring up the females of his family upon
-the antique model, and wore no garments but such as were manufactured
-in his own house.[1073]
-
-Footnote 1068:
-
- Alexand. ab Alexand. iv. 8.
-
-Footnote 1069:
-
- Iliad, ζ. 491.
-
-Footnote 1070:
-
- Odyss. α. 357.
-
-Footnote 1071:
-
- Q. Curt. v. 2. 18.
-
-Footnote 1072:
-
- Herod. ix. 188.
-
-Footnote 1073:
-
- Suet. in Vit. § 64. Conf. Feith. Antiq. Homer. iv. 34.
-
-To return: constant practice and the delight which familiar and
-voluntary labour inspires, had already in the heroic ages, enabled the
-Grecian ladies to throw much splendour and richness of invention into
-their fabrics. The desire also, perhaps, of excelling in works of this
-kind the ladies of Sidon, communicated an additional impulse to their
-industry. At all events, Homer makes it abundantly clear that they
-understood how to employ with singular felicity the arts of design,
-and to represent in colours brilliant and varied, cities, landscapes,
-human figures, and all the complicated movements of war.[1074] We
-must, no doubt, allow something for the poet’s own skill in painting;
-but, after every reasonable deduction, enough will remain still to
-prove that at the period of the Trojan war Greece had made remarkable
-progress in every art which tends to ameliorate and embellish human
-life.
-
-Footnote 1074:
-
- In northern Greece and Macedonia women could depict such scenes from
- the life, since they learned the use of arms, and engaged personally
- in war.—Athen. xiii. 10. Tradition relates that Queen Matilda and
- her maids wrought the tapestry of Bayeux, representing the conquest
- of England by her husband.
-
-Carding, also, and spinning entered into the list of their
-occupations. Even Helen though frail as fair, is laborious as a
-Penelope, plying her shuttle or her golden distaff, and surrounded
-habitually by a troop of she-manufacturers.[1075] Arete, queen of
-Phæacia, is likewise depicted sitting at the fire, distaff in hand,
-encircled by her maids;[1076] and the wife of Odysseus, famed for her
-household virtues, is seen in the Odyssey at her own door spinning the
-purple thread.[1077] The work-baskets of the ladies of that period, if
-we can rely on a poet’s word, were such as more modern dames might
-envy, formed of beaten gold and chased with figures richly wrought,
-and grouped with infinite taste and judgment.[1078] In these their
-balls of purple were deposited when spun, though probably reed baskets
-or osier work contented the ambition of ladies less aspiring than
-Europa.
-
-Footnote 1075:
-
- Iliad, ζ. 491.—Odyss. δ. 131.—Theocrit. Eidyll. xviii. 32. sqq.
-
-Footnote 1076:
-
- Odyss. ζ. 491. 38.—Feith by mistake introduces the name of Nausicaa
- instead of that of her mother.—Ant. Hom. iv. 3. 2.
-
-Footnote 1077:
-
- Odyss. υ. 97.
-
-Footnote 1078:
-
- Mosch. Eidyll. ii. 37. seq.
-
-Women also, but chiefly slaves, performed in those primitive times all
-the operations of the kitchen. They even in the great establishment of
-Alcinoos work at the mill, as they do also in the palace of Odysseus,
-where guided perhaps by the nature of the climate we find the young
-women preferring for this operation the cool of the night.[1079] Even
-in later ages, when juster ideas of what is due to the sex prevailed,
-this severe toil sometimes devolved upon female slaves, though in
-general it was the males, and of these the most worthless, who worked
-the mills, regarded at length almost in the light of correctional
-establishments.[1080] But the making of bread was very properly
-appropriated to women almost throughout the East. The Egyptians,
-indeed, an effeminate and servile people, very early, as we learn from
-Genesis, confounded the offices of the sex; but among the Lydians,
-even in the palace of Crœsos, we meet with a female baker,[1081] and
-the Persian armies carried along with them women to bake their bread
-in their longest and most dangerous expeditions.[1082] In Greece to
-preside over the oven, was up to a very late period the prerogative of
-the fair. One hundred and ten women had the honour of being locked up
-with the handful of warriors who during three years baffled the whole
-force of the Peloponnesos from the glorious walls of Platæa,[1083] and
-in the primitive ages of Macedonia the queen herself prepared the
-bread distributed among the royal shepherds.[1084]
-
-Footnote 1079:
-
- Odyss. η. 103. seq.—ο. 107.
-
-Footnote 1080:
-
- Theoph. Char. c. v.
-
-Footnote 1081:
-
- Herod. i. 51.
-
-Footnote 1082:
-
- Herod. vii. 187.
-
-Footnote 1083:
-
- Thucyd. ii. 78.
-
-Footnote 1084:
-
- Herod. viii. 139.
-
-The Sacred Scriptures have rendered familiar and reconciled to us the
-simplicity of patriarchal manners. To behold the daughter of Bethuel
-or of Laban coming forth to draw water for her flock, does not strike
-us as at all out of keeping with the opulence or dignity of her
-father, or with her own feminine delicacy; and we know that at this
-present day the wealthiest Bedouin Sheikh of the desert, though lord
-of a thousand camels, discovers nothing in his daughter’s condition
-which should relieve her from this healthful employment. Similar
-notions prevailed among the Greeks of the Heroic Age. For though in
-many cases slave-maidens[1085] are found engaged in drawing water from
-the springs, virgins of noble birth, nay the daughters themselves of
-kings, descend to the fountain with their urns, mingling there with
-female captives and young women of inferior rank. Thus, for example,
-the princess of the Lestrygons in Homer goes forth with her
-water-jar[1086] to the well, and even among the Athenians, where
-refinement of manners first sprang up, and civilisation made most
-rapid strides, the daughters of the citizens in early times used to
-descend to the fountain of Callirrhoe to draw water.[1087] But the
-task was commonly allotted to female captives and other slaves.
-Euryclea, Odysseus’ house-keeper, sends a troop of girls on this
-errand with orders to be quick in their movements, and Hector, in his
-deep fear for Andromache, already in apprehension beholds her toiling
-at the fountains of Argos.[1088]
-
-Footnote 1085:
-
- Eurip. Electr. 107. 309. sqq.
-
-Footnote 1086:
-
- Odyss. κ. 105.
-
-Footnote 1087:
-
- Herod. vi. 137—The historian uses the name of Enneacrounos given to
- the fountain by the tyrants. A similar practice is noticed by
- Arrian.—Anab. Alexand. ii. 3
-
-Footnote 1088:
-
- Odyss. φ. 153. seq.—Iliad. ζ. 59. seq.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
- WOMEN OF DORIC STATES.
-
-
-The women of Sparta were even in Greece remarkable for their personal
-beauty. Their education and exercises promoting their health and
-physical energies, aided, at the same time, the natural developement
-of the frame, with all its inherent symmetry and proportion. It is
-probable, however, that the charms of Helen may have led on this point
-to some misapprehension; but Helen belonged to the old heroic race,
-with which the Dorians of Sparta had nothing in common, that is, like
-so many other women celebrated by the poets of after times for their
-beauty, was an Achæan. Still, lovely they were, well-formed, brilliant
-of complexion, with features of much regularity, and eyes into which
-exuberant health infused a sparkling brightness irresistibly pleasing.
-But it would require to be peculiarly constituted to pronounce them
-the most beautiful women in all Greece.[1089] They were what in modern
-phrase would be termed fine women, but exceeding considerably what we
-deem true feminine proportions, being, in fact, a sort of female
-grenadiers, robust, vigorous, bull-stranglers, as Lysistrata[1090]
-somewhat ironically expresses it, their beauty was rather that of men,
-than of women. Some among the Greeks preferred, it is true, ladies of
-this large growth. Thus, we find Xenophon, in the Anabasis, expressing
-his apprehension that should his countrymen become acquainted with the
-fine tall women of Persia, they would, like the Lotos-eaters, forget
-the way to their country and their home.[1091] But this was a taste
-which never became general. The beauty which excited most admiration,
-where beauty constituted the noblest object of literature and art, was
-a kind totally different in character, exquisitely feminine, gentle,
-soft, retiring, modest, instinct with grace and delicacy, the parasite
-of the moral creation, clinging round man for support, but imparting
-more than it receives.
-
-Footnote 1089:
-
- See Müll. Dor. ii. 296.
-
-Footnote 1090:
-
- Ὧ φιλτάτη Λάκαινα, χαῖρε.
- οἷον τὸ κάλλος, γλυκυτάτη, σοῦ φαίνεται.
- ὡς δ᾽ εὐχροεῖς, ὡς δὲ σφριγᾷ τὸ σῶμά σου,
- κἂν ταῦρον ἄγχοις.
-
- Which may be thus translated:
-
- Beloved Laconian, welcome!
- How glorious is thy beauty, love! how ruddy
- The tint of thy complexion! Vigour and health
- So brace thy frame that thou a bull couldst throttle.
-
- Aristoph. Lysist. 78 sqq.
-
-Footnote 1091:
-
- Anab. iii. 2. 25.—Ἀλλὰ γὰρ δέδοικα μὴ, ἂν ἅπαξ μάθωμεν ἀργοὶ ζῇν,
- καὶ ἐν ἀφθόνοις βιοτεύειν, καὶ Μήδῶν δὲ καὶ Περσῶν καλαῖς καὶ
- μεγάλαις γυναιξὶ καὶ παρθένοις ὁμιλεῖν, μὴ, ὣσπερ οἱ λωτοφάγοι,
- ἐπιλαθώμεθα τῆς οἴκαδε ὁδοῦ.—And again, in the Cyropædia, Araspes
- praises Panthea for her majestic size. It appears from Homer that
- when Athena was desirous of making Penelope appear more lovely than
- ordinary, she added to her height.—Odyss. σ. 194.
-
-Such beauty, however, would have been inconsistent with the aim of
-Lycurgus. Like a well-known modern despot, this great legislator aimed
-solely at creating a nation of grenadiers, and to effect this, both
-the education, laws, and manners of Sparta received a military
-impress. Everything there breathed of the camp. The girls from their
-tenderest years, instead of being instructed as in other communities
-to entwine all their feelings round the domestic hearth, and expect
-their chiefest happiness at home, were systematically undomesticated,
-brought incessantly into contact with men, initiated in immoral
-habits, subversive of the female character,[1092] and taught to
-consider themselves designed to be the wives of the state rather than
-of individuals. Nature, the legislator was aware, has implanted the
-principles of love and modesty deep in the female heart; in general
-also, to eradicate one, is to root up the other; and both in the sense
-in which we contemplate them, being inimical to the purpose which his
-constitution was intended to promote, he sought to subvert the power
-of love by obliterating from the female mind every trace of maidenly
-modesty.
-
-Footnote 1092:
-
- Athen. xiii. 79.—Even Plutarch denominates the system of discipline
- observed by the Spartan women ἀναπεπταμένη καὶ ἄθηλυς,—"lax and
- unfeminine,"—and confesses that it afforded the poets an
- inexhaustible fund for ridicule. Ibycos, for example, called them
- φαινομηρίδες: and Euripides ἀνδρομανεῖς. Their education, in fact,
- rendered them coarse and domineering, “bold and mannish;”
- θρασύτεραι, and ἀνδριοδεῖς, are the words of Plutarch, who observes
- that they desired not only to rule by violence at home, but even
- audaciously to meddle with public affairs.—Compar. Lycurg. cum Num.
- § 3.
-
-The power of political institutions over the feelings of the heart,
-over manners, over habits, over conscience, and opinions, was never so
-strikingly exemplified as at Sparta. Whatever the legislator
-determined to be good was good.[1093] Example, affection, nature
-pleaded in vain. An iron system, strong as fate, encircled the whole
-scope of life, repressing every aspiration tending above the point
-prescribed, guiding every wish into a given channel, curbing every
-passion inconsistent in its full developement with the views of the
-legislator. Aristotle, indeed, maintains that while the men of Sparta
-conformed to the design of the constitution, the women refused to bend
-their neck to the yoke, and persisted in the enjoyment of a freedom
-constantly degenerating into licentiousness.[1094] He probably,
-however, supposes the existence in Lycurgus of a moral purpose, far
-loftier than he really aimed at. The virtues of a camp—and Sparta was
-nothing else—are never too rigid, nor must we look among female
-camp-followers for much of that delicacy, reserve, self-control, or
-keen sense of what is just and upright, of which none judge more
-accurately than well educated women. Doubtless the Doric lawgiver
-cherished no other design than to promote the happiness of his
-countrymen. It would be unjust to suppose otherwise. But how far the
-regulations by which he sought to effect this purpose were calculated
-to ensure success, is what we have to inquire.
-
-Footnote 1093:
-
- Philosophers, also, were found in antiquity as in modern times, who
- theoretically maintained this doctrine. Thus Archelaos contended,
- καὶ τὸ δίκαιον εἶναι καὶ τὸ αἰσχρὸν οὐ φύσει, ἀλλὰ νόμῳ.—Diog.
- Laert. ii. 4. 3. Here we discover the fundamental maxim upon which
- the whole system of Hobbes was constructed.
-
-Footnote 1094:
-
- Polit. ii. 9.
-
-It may at once be observed that Lycurgus’s system of female education
-was the furthest possible removed from common place. He contemplated
-both the sexes in nearly the same point of view. Their form he saw;
-and in many points their character, their affections, their virtues,
-their vices, bear a close resemblance; and in his conception,
-perfection would be attained, if all such discriminating marks as
-nature has set up could be removed, and every quality of what he
-considered the superior sex transferred to the inferior. Much
-misapprehension appears to exist on this point. Writers pretend that
-among the Dorians the female character stood in high estimation, while
-the reverse they suppose to have been the case in Ionic States. But
-the Dorians betrayed their contempt for women as they came from the
-hands of nature, by endeavouring to convert them into men; their
-neighbours the reverse, by contenting themselves with their purely
-feminine qualities, which among people of Ionic race were cultivated
-and improved, perhaps, as far as was consistent with domestic
-happiness.
-
-In the harems of the East the whip is of great service in
-maintaining order, and the same, it is evident, was the case at
-Sparta. Both youths and virgins from their tenderest years were
-subjected to a severe discipline; regular floggers, as at our own
-great schools, always attended the inspectors of public instruction;
-and in this the system was wise, that habits were more regarded than
-acquisitions.[1095] But of the habits cherished by the Spartan
-system we cannot always approve. Like the boys, the virgins
-frequented the gymnasia, where, naked as at their birth, they
-exercised themselves in wrestling, running, pitching the quoit, and
-throwing the javelin.[1096] To these accomplishments, others,
-according to a Roman poet, still less feminine were added. They
-contended, he says, in the ring with men, bound the cestus on their
-clenched fists, and boxed their future husbands like so many
-prize-fighters. No wonder that the partners of such women were
-henpecked. Horsemanship, the sword exercise, and the rough sports of
-the chase, affected by women of similar character in our own
-country, completed the circle of female studies,[1097] and rendered
-the Spartan maids something more than a match for their worse
-halves, whether after marriage or before.[1098]
-
-Footnote 1095:
-
- Jamblich. vit. Pythag. xi. 5. 6.—Müller. Dor. ii. 317.
-
-Footnote 1096:
-
- Plut. Lycurg. §. 14. Compare the remarks of Ubbo Emmius who adopts,
- however, too implicitly the notions of Plutarch.—iii. 22. seq.
-
-Footnote 1097:
-
- Propert. iii. 12. p. 261. iv. 13. p. 88. Jacob.—Cicero, after
- quoting certain verses from an old poet, describing the exercises of
- the female Spartans, adds in his own words: “ergo his laboriosis
- excercitationibus et dolor intercurrit nonnumquam; impelluntur,
- ponuntur, abjiciuntur, cadunt: et ipse labor quasi callum quoddam
- obducit dolori.” Tuscul. Quæst. ii. 36.—In remoter ages we find
- women celebrated for their skill in hunting, and there were those
- who in later times sought to recommend this taste to their
- countrywomen:—Οὐ μόνον δὲ, ὅσοι ἄνδρες κυνηγεσίων ἡράσθησαν,
- ἐγένοντο ἀγαθοὶ ἀλλὰ καὶ αἱ γυναῖκες, αἷς ἔδωκεν ἡ θεὸς ταῦτα
- Ἄρτεμις, Ἀταλάντη, καὶ Πρόκρις, καὶ εἴ τις ἄλλη. Xen. de Venat.
- xiii. 18. 345. Schneid. Cf. Callim. Hymn. in Dian. 209. 215. Spanh.
-
-Footnote 1098:
-
- Alluding to the political power of women at Sparta, Aristotle
- inquires: what signifies it whether women govern or men be governed
- by women? Polit. ii. 9.
-
-Some pains have in our own days been taken to pare away the
-roughnesses, and obliterate the peculiar features of the Doric
-educational institutions, in order to bring them into greater
-uniformity with modern notions. There is no probability, we are told,
-that either youths or men were permitted to be present at the
-extraordinary exhibition of the female gymnasia.[1099] But whence is
-this inference derived? From the delicacy of Spartan manners in other
-respects? And are we in fact reduced on this curious point to depend
-on inferences and probabilities? On the contrary, we are informed by
-antiquity that besides the personal advantages of health and vigour,
-derived to the women themselves, the legislator contemplated others
-little less important, the promotion of marriage and the recreation of
-all the useful portion of the citizens. For while the married men and
-youths intent on connubial happiness, enjoyed the free entry to these
-gymnasia,[1100] those sullen egotists called bachelors were very
-properly excluded. The former had some property in the young ladies,
-who were their daughters, sisters, or future spouses, but persons
-avowedly indifferent to the seductive influence of female charms could
-have no business there.
-
-Footnote 1099:
-
- Müll. Dor. ii. 333.
-
-Footnote 1100:
-
- Plut. Lycurg. § 14. 15. Müller, with the amusing partiality of an
- apologist, overlooks the passage, and introduces Plutarch affirming
- “that they only witnessed the processions and dances of the young
- (wo)men.” Note K. Dor. ii. p. 328. Here though _men_ be the printed
- word in the English translation women must be clearly meant. Even
- so, however, the assertion is unfounded, since we find that even
- strangers were admitted:—ἐπαινεῖται δὲ καὶ τῶν Σπαρτιατῶν τὸ ἔθος τὸ
- γυμνοῦν τὰς παρθένους τοῖς ξένοις. Athen. xiii. 20. The islanders of
- Chios would appear to have imitated this laudable practice, since
- the sophist speaks of it as a most pleasant spectacle to behold the
- youths and virgins wrestling together in the public place of
- exercise. Ibid.
-
-Admitting, therefore, that when the Spartan virgins[1101] performed in
-the gymnasia, for we must consider their exercises partly in the light
-of scenic exhibitions, the whole city, bachelors excepted, could be
-present, it remains to be seen what other accomplishments they could
-display for the public entertainment. Singing and dancing it has been
-shown were practised publicly by ladies of rank in the heroic ages,
-and this feature of ancient manners was preserved at Sparta, where not
-youths and maidens only, but even the grave and aged joined, during
-several great festivals, in the dance and the song.[1102] But we must
-beware how we apply to these performances the ideas suggested by those
-of modern times, or the gay and graceful movements of Ionian women. To
-dance at Sparta required great physical force.[1103] The maidens,
-unencumbered by dress, bounded aloft like an Anatole or a Taglioni,
-but instead of twirling round with one foot on earth, and the other
-suspended at right angles in air, the supreme merit of her performance
-consisted in slapping the back part of the body with her heel for the
-greatest possible number of times in succession.[1104] In this feat,
-which resembles strongly a Caribbee or Iroquois accomplishment, whole
-troops of men and women often united; an exhibition which with the
-shouts of laughter arising from the bystanders, the grins of the
-girls, and the wilful mistakes of young men who might send their feet
-in the wrong direction, must convey a curious idea of Spartan gravity.
-Such, however, was the celebrated dance called _Bibasis_,[1105] upon
-the frequent execution of which a Laconian girl prided herself no less
-than a modern lady on her activity in the indecent waltz.
-
-Footnote 1101:
-
- Cf. Plato. De Legg. t. viii. p. 85.
-
-Footnote 1102:
-
- Plut. Lycurg. §. 21.
-
-Footnote 1103:
-
- As now among the Galaxidiotes. Dodwell. i. 133. seq.
-
-Footnote 1104:
-
- Aristoph. Lysistr. 82.
-
-Footnote 1105:
-
- Pollux. iv. 102.
-
-But the other dances in which the Spartan maidens excelled were
-numerous. Among them was the _Dipodia_[1106] of which the nature is
-not exactly known, but it was accompanied by music and song and
-apparently consisted of a series of orgiastic movements, like those
-of the Bacchantes when, inspired by wine, they bounded fawnlike with
-dishevelled hair along the mountains.[1107] On other occasions their
-movements were designed to express certain passions of the mind,
-sometimes, as in the _Calabis_,[1108] highly wanton and licentious,
-though the latitudinarian spirit of paganism contrived to admit them
-among the religious ceremonies, and that too in honour of Artemis.
-Another of these lewd dances performed in the worship of Apollo and
-his sister, and accompanied by songs, conceived no doubt in the same
-spirit, was the _Bryallicha_[1109], which the historian of the Doric
-race finds some difficulty to reconcile with the worship of Apollo,
-as if their deity had been himself free from the inherent vices of
-the Olympian dynasts. There was another dance called the
-_Deicelistic_[1110], a kind of rude pantomime intermingled with
-songs supposed to have been performed by unmarried women[1111].
-
-Footnote 1106:
-
- Scaliger’s idea of the dance is peculiar: Erat et διποδία, in quâ
- junctis pedibus labore plurimo et conatu picas imitabantur. Poet. i.
- 18. p. 69.
-
-Footnote 1107:
-
- Aristoph. Lysistr. 1303. sqq.
-
-Footnote 1108:
-
- Athen. xiv. 29.
-
-Footnote 1109:
-
- Poll. iv. 104. Hesych. v. Βρυδαλίχα.
-
-Footnote 1110:
-
- Etym. Mag. 260. 42.
-
-Footnote 1111:
-
- Müll. Dor. ii. 335.
-
-To these dances may be added the _Hyporchematic_, which was executed
-by a chorus, while singing, for which reason Bacchylides says, “This
-is not the work of slowness or inactivity.” By Pindar it is described
-as a dance performed by Spartan girls; but in fact both young men and
-women united in the Hyporchema, and as this dance is said to have
-resembled or been identical with the Cordax[1112], it will assist us
-in forming a notion of female delicacy at Sparta, where young women
-could execute publicly in company with the other sex a dance scarcely
-less indelicate than the fandango or bolero[1113].
-
-Footnote 1112:
-
- Cf. Nonn. Dionys. xix. 265. sqq. Etym. Mag. 712. 53. 635. 2. Scalig.
- Poet. i. 18. Poll. iv. 99.
-
-Footnote 1113:
-
- Athen. xiv. 30.
-
-From such an education and such habits tastes essentially
-unfeminine would naturally spring. Accordingly we find Laconian
-ladies of the first rank,—Cynisca daughter of king Archidamos, for
-example,—attending to the breed of horses, and sending chariots to
-contend at the Olympic games. Nor was her masculine ambition
-condemned by the Greeks. A statue of the lady herself, together
-with her chariot, and charioteer, existed among other Olympian
-monuments in the age of Pausanias. Afterwards many other women,
-but chiefly among the half barbarous Macedonians, followed the
-example of Cynisca and Euryleonis another Spartan dame who had
-been honoured with a statue at Olympia for the success of her
-chariot at the games.[1114]
-
-Footnote 1114:
-
- Pausan. iii. 15. 1. 17. 6. Cf. Vandal. Dissert. vii. p. 562. seq.
-
-In strict keeping with the rough manners and masculine bearing of
-these ladies was the habit of swearing,[1115] to which in common with
-most other Greek women they were grievously addicted. At Athens,
-however, gentlewomen swore by Demeter, Persephone and Agraulos,[1116]
-an oath by divinities of their own sex[1117] being considered more
-suitable to female lips; but the viragos of Sparta spiced their
-conversation with oaths by Castor and Polydeukes. According, moreover,
-to the poet whose testimony is commonly adduced against the Athenian
-ladies, the women of Sparta drank[1118] as well as swore, and we know
-from authority altogether indisputable, that in the age of Socrates
-their licentiousness had already become universally notorious in
-Greece.[1119] A scholar, and a diligent inquirer, whose merits are too
-often overlooked, observes very justly that it was probably the
-austerity, or more properly the pedantry of Lycurgus’s institutions
-that gave rise to the notion that chastity was a common virtue at
-Sparta.[1120] It was supposed because occasionally subjected to
-violent exercise, that they must necessarily be temperate in their
-pleasures. But we might _à priori_ have inferred the contrary, and the
-uniform testimony of antiquity proves it. Their wantonness and
-licentiousness knew no bounds. Even during the ages immediately
-succeeding the establishment of their constitution, that is at the
-time of the Messenian wars, to preserve for any length of time their
-chastity while their husbands were absent in the field was beyond
-their power, and substitutes were selected and sent home to become the
-husbands of the whole female population.[1121]
-
-Footnote 1115:
-
- Aristoph. Lysistr. 81. sqq.
-
-Footnote 1116:
-
- Sch. Aristoph. Thesmophor. 533.
-
-Footnote 1117:
-
- But men we find likewise swore—Κατὰ ταῖν θεαῖν καὶ τῆς
- Πολιάδος..—Lucian. Diall. Hetair. vii. 1.
-
-Footnote 1118:
-
- Aristoph. Lysistr. 198. seq.
-
-Footnote 1119:
-
- Plat. de Legg. i. t. vii. p. 201. Bekk.
-
-Footnote 1120:
-
- Goguet. Orig. des Loix. t. v. p. 429.
-
-Footnote 1121:
-
- Dion. Chrysostom. Orat. i. 278. Justin. iii. 4.
-
-But for this ungovernable sway of temperament the institutions of the
-state were chiefly to blame.[1122] We have seen by the whole tenor of
-their education, modesty and virtue were sapped and undermined; no
-merit, it was visible, attached to them in the eye of the law; and
-shrewdly gifted as they were with good sense, they must quickly have
-discovered that marriage was a mere unmeaning ceremony, and that
-provided they gave good citizens to the state it would be of little
-consequence who might be their fathers.[1123] The ceremonies attending
-that lax union which for lack of a better term we must call marriage,
-resembled closely those which have been found to prevail among other
-savages in very distant parts of the world.
-
-Footnote 1122:
-
- Plut. Compar. Lycurg. cum. Num. § 3. Aristot. Polit. ii. 9. who
- observes:—ζῶσι ἀκολαστῶς πρὸς ἅπασαν ἀκολασίαν καὶ τρυφερῶς.—Hermann
- in his Political Antiquities § 27, reasoning consistently with these
- ancient authorities, observes that the system of Lycurgus “gradually
- effaced every characteristic of female excellence from the Spartan
- women.”
-
-Footnote 1123:
-
- βουλόμενος γὰρ ὁ νομοθέτης ὡς πλείστους εἴναι τοὺς Σπαρτιάτας,
- προάγεται τοὺς πολίτας ὄτι πλείστους ποιεῖσθαι παῖδας· ἔστι γὰρ
- αὐτοῖς νόμος τὸν μὲν γεννήσαντα τρεῖς υἱοὺς ἄφρουρον εἶναι, τὸν δὲ
- τέτταρας ἀτελή πάντων.—Arist. Polit. ii. 9. Cf. Ælian. Var. Hist.
- vi. 6, who substitutes the number five for four.
-
-Having gone through the ceremony of betrothment,[1124] in which the
-bride’s interest was represented by her father or brother, the lover
-chose some fitting occasion to seize and carry her away from amongst
-her companions. She was then received into the house of the
-bridesmaid, where her hair was cut short and her dress exchanged for
-that of a young man, after which custom directed that she should be
-left reclining on a pallet bed, in a dark chamber, alone. Thither the
-bridegroom repaired by stealth, and, afterwards, with equal secresy,
-returned to his companions, among whom he continued for some time to
-live as if no change in his condition had taken place. During this
-period, therefore, their union must be regarded rather as a
-clandestine intercourse than a marriage, since the husband continued,
-as at first, to steal secretly into the company of his wife and to
-effect his escape with equal care, it being considered disreputable
-for them to be seen together. Even the children springing from this
-connexion have been supposed to have ranked as bastards; but of this
-there is no sufficient proof.
-
-Footnote 1124:
-
- Cf. Xen. de Rep. Lac. i. 6. Plut. Lycurg. § 15.—Ubbo Emmius. Descr.
- Reip. Lacon. p. 96. seq.
-
-A different account is given by other authors of the marriage ceremony
-at Sparta, but, if properly examined, both relations may very well be
-reconciled. The above, in fact, appears to have been the ordinary mode
-when young women of property who had dowries[1125] to bestow upon
-their husbands, were to be disposed of. But the portionless girls,
-excepting, perhaps, the more beautiful, finding some difficulty in
-providing themselves with helpmates, a contrivance was hit upon by the
-legislator, calculated to give a fair chance to all. The unmarried
-damsels of the city, thus circumstanced, were shut up in the dark, in
-a spacious edifice,[1126] into which the young unmarried men were
-introduced to scramble for wives, the understanding being, that each
-was to remain content with the maiden he happened to seize upon. And
-it would appear that the awards of chance were, in most cases,
-satisfactory, since we read of no one but Lysander who abandoned the
-wife he had thus chosen. He, however, having been presented, by
-fortune, with a maiden of homely features, immediately deserted her
-for one more beautiful. The bad example thus set was not without its
-evil consequences, for the men who married his daughters put them away
-in like manner after his death.[1127] But, in both cases, fines for
-contumacy were exacted by the Ephori. According to the laws of Sparta,
-men were likewise fined for leading a life of celibacy,[1128] for
-marrying late, or for marrying unsuitably. Thus, king Archidamos was
-fined for selecting a little woman to be his queen, as if there was
-something regal in loftiness of stature.[1129]
-
-Footnote 1125:
-
- According to Justin, indeed, the Spartan legislator abolished the
- usage of dowries: Virgines sine dote nubere jussit, ut uxores
- eligerentur, non pecuniæ; severiusque matrimonia sua viri
- coërcerent, cum nullis dotis frœnis tenerentur, iii. 3. But
- Aristotle, who had deeply studied the polity of Sparta, gives a very
- different account:—ἔστι δὲ καὶ τῶν γυναικῶν σχεδὸν τῆς πάσης χώρας
- τῶν πέντε μερῶν τὰ δύο, τῶν τ᾽ ἐπικλήρων πολλῶν γινομένων, καὶ διὰ
- τὸ προῖκας διδόναι μεγάλας.—Polit. ii. 9.
-
-Footnote 1126:
-
- Athen. xiii. 2.
-
-Footnote 1127:
-
- Plut. Lysand. § 30.
-
-Footnote 1128:
-
- Athen. xiii. 1.
-
-Footnote 1129:
-
- Plut. Agis, § 2. Athen. xiii. 20. It was not without reason,
- perhaps, that the Ephori interfered with the marriages of their
- kings, since royalty has everywhere been capricious. But these
- honest magistrates were sometimes tyrannical in their ordinances and
- behaviour. Thus, when Anaxandrides married his niece for love,
- because she had no children he was compelled by them to take a
- second wife. When the first wife was confined they, fearing
- imposition, or feigning incredulity, sat about her bed.—Herod. v.
- 39–41.
-
-On almost every point connected with Spartan marriages the accounts
-transmitted to us are contradictory. Thus, we are by some told, as has
-been seen above, that the union of the bride and bridegroom took place
-secretly, and remained for some time almost unknown. Nevertheless,
-there are not wanting those who speak of public ceremonies which took
-place on the occasion, as for example Sosibios,[1130] who informs us,
-that the cake, called cribanos, shaped like the female breast, was
-eaten at that repast which the Lacedæmonian women gave in honour of a
-betrothed maiden when her youthful companions assembled in chorus to
-chaunt her praises. At Argos, another Doric state, it was customary
-before the bride joined her husband for her to send him, as a present,
-the cake called creion, which his friends were invited to partake of
-with honey. It was baked upon the coals as cakes are still in the
-East.
-
-Footnote 1130:
-
- Athen. xiv. 54.
-
-When at Sparta the state had recognised the marriage, by permitting
-cohabitation, no man could call his wife his own. Any person might
-legally claim the favour of borrowing her for a certain time, in
-order, if he did not choose to be burdened with a wife, to have a
-family by her while she remained in the house of her lord. An elderly
-man was sure to have his connubial privileges invaded in this way, and
-the most able and philosophical advocates of Lycurgus’s institutions
-inform us that the Spartan ladies highly approved of all these
-arrangements. Yet, famous and learned authors undertake to break a
-lance for the chastity of the Spartan dames, and maintain with
-infinite complacency that adultery was unknown among them. The truth
-is that the Spartan laws recognised no such offence.[1131] It was
-legal, common, of every day occurrence, though, from many
-circumstances, it would appear, that such Lacedæmonians as travelled
-into other parts of Greece, and learned in what light manners and
-morals so lax were by them viewed, blushed for their country’s
-institutions, and, in defence of them, put in practice those arts of
-delusion and hypocrisy which constituted so distinguished a part of
-their education.
-
-Footnote 1131:
-
- Xenoph. de Rep. Laced. i. 7. 8. 9.
-
-Much has been said of the stern virtue and patriotism of the Spartan
-women, and high praise has been bestowed on the callous indifference
-which they sometimes exhibited on learning the death of their
-sons;[1132] but English mothers, who have given birth to sons as brave
-as ever fought or bled for Sparta, will, I think, agree with me in
-rating very low their boasted stoicism, which, if properly analysed,
-might prove to be nothing more than a coarse and unnatural apathy. The
-reader of the Greek Anthologia will here remember her who meeting her
-son a fugitive among the flying from a victorious enemy, inflicted on
-him with her own hands the death he sought to shun. Had Nature, which
-is but the voice of God indistinctly heard, anything to do with virtue
-such as that? Supposing the youth to have been a coward, which the
-fact of his flying before the enemy by no means proves, was it for the
-hands that had nursed him to become his executioners? A mother,
-deserving of the name, would no doubt have sorrowed not to find her
-boy numbered among the brave, but her maternal heart would not the
-less have yearned towards the unhappy youth; she would have fled with
-him into obscurity, and uttered her mild reproaches and shed her tears
-there.
-
-Footnote 1132:
-
- Cic. Tusc. Quæst. i. 49.
-
-As often happens, however, these female stoics who were so lavish of
-the blood of their children, displayed no readiness to set them the
-example of making light of death when the fortunes of war afforded
-them an occasion of putting their heroic maxims in practice; for when
-the Theban army[1133] burst forth from the depths of the Menelaion,
-and swept down the valley of the Eurotas like a torrent, wasting
-everything before them with fire and sword, the women of Sparta, who
-had never before seen the smoke of an enemy’s camp, lost in a moment
-their presence of mind, and, instead of encouraging their sons and
-husbands calmly to rely upon their valour, ran to and fro through the
-streets, filling the air with their effeminate wailings, and
-distracting and impeding the movements of their natural protectors.
-Very different from this was the conduct of the female citizens of
-Argos. For when Cleomenes and Demaratos, after having defeated the
-Argive army, approached the city in the expectation of being able to
-take it by storm, the poetess Telesilla armed her countrywomen, who,
-hastening to the defence of the walls, repulsed the Lacedæmonian
-kings, and preserved the state. In commemoration of this event a
-festival was annually celebrated, in which the ladies appeared in male
-attire while the men concealed their heads beneath the female
-veil.[1134]
-
-Footnote 1133:
-
- Aristot. Polit. ii. 9. Xenoph. Hellen. vi. v. 27. It should be
- remarked, however, that on a future occasion, when Sparta was
- besieged by King Pyrrhus, the female disciples of Lycurgus behaved
- with more fortitude and energy; for when it was debated in the
- senate whether they should not convey their wives and children to
- Crete, and then, deriving courage from despair, determine to conquer
- or perish on the spot, Archidamia, daughter of the king, entered
- their assembly sword in hand, opposed their resolution, saying, it
- behoved the women of Sparta to live and die with their husbands. The
- female population was, in consequence, suffered to remain; and by
- digging with the men in the trenches, sharpening the arms, and
- attending on the wounded, so strongly excited the courage of the
- Spartans, that they at length succeeded in repulsing the Macedonians
- from their city. Cf. Plut. Pyrrh. § 27.—Polyæn. Stratagem. vii. 49.
-
-Footnote 1134:
-
- Plut. de Mulier. Virtut. t. ii. p. 195. Polyæn. Stratagem. viii. 33.
-
-Again, when the Thebans broke into Platæa during the night, the women,
-instead of delivering themselves up pusillanimously to fear, joined
-the men in defence of the city, casting stones and tiles from the
-housetops upon the enemy. Yet when defeated and flying for their
-lives, it was one of these same women who, with the characteristic
-humanity of her sex, supplied them with a hatchet to cut their way
-through the gates.[1135]
-
-Footnote 1135:
-
- Thucyd. ii. 4.
-
-But the most remarkable instance of self-devotion furnished by women
-in the whole history of Greece was, perhaps, that which is related of
-the Phocian ladies,[1136] who, when their countrymen, under the
-command of Diophantos, were about to engage with the Thessalians in a
-battle which it was felt must finally determine the destiny of Phocis,
-strenuously, with the concurrence of their children, exhorted him to
-persevere in the design he had formed, of causing them to be consumed
-by fire should the battle be lost. Examples of this terrible expedient
-for preserving the honour of women occur but too frequently in the
-history of India, where it is termed performing _johur_; and the
-Romans, in their Spanish wars, witnessed a similar act of
-self-sacrifice at Numantia.
-
-Footnote 1136:
-
- Plut. de Mulier. Virtut. t. ii. p. 192.
-
-It should, nevertheless, by no means be concealed that the annals of
-Sparta also contain some brilliant examples of female heroism, of
-which the most striking, perhaps, is that furnished by the wife of
-Panteus and her companions after the death of Cleomenes at Alexandria.
-“When the report of his death,” says Plutarch,[1137] “had spread over
-the city, Cratesiclea, though a woman of superior fortitude, sank
-under the weight of the calamity; she embraced the children of
-Cleomenes, and wept over them. The elder of them, disengaging himself
-from her arms, got unsuspected to the top of the house, and threw
-himself down headlong. He was not killed, however, though much hurt;
-and when they took him up he loudly expressed his grief and
-indignation that they would not suffer him to destroy himself. Ptolemy
-was no sooner informed of these things than he ordered the body of
-Cleomenes to be flayed, and nailed to a cross, and his children to be
-put to death, together with his mother and the women her companions.
-Among these was the wife of Panteus, a woman of great beauty and most
-majestic presence. They had been but lately married, and their
-misfortune overtook them amid the first transports of love. When her
-husband went with Cleomenes from Sparta, she was desirous of
-accompanying him, but was prevented by her parents, who kept her in
-close custody. Soon afterwards, however, she provided herself with a
-horse and a little money, and making her escape by night, rode at full
-speed to Tænaros, and there embarked on board a ship bound for Egypt.
-She reached her husband safely, and readily and cheerfully shared with
-him in all the inconveniences of a foreign residence. When the
-soldiers came to take Cratesiclea to the scaffold, she led her by the
-hand, assisted in bearing her robe,[1138] and desired her to exert all
-her courage, though she was far from being afraid of death, and
-desired no other favour than that she might die before her children.
-But when they arrived at the place of execution the children suffered
-before her eyes; and then Cratesiclea was despatched, uttering in her
-extreme distress only these words: ‘Oh! my children! whither are you
-gone?’
-
-“The wife of Panteus, who was tall and strong, girt her robe about her
-and in a silent and composed manner paid the last offices to each
-woman that lay dead, winding up the bodies as well as her present
-circumstances would admit. Last of all she prepared herself for the
-poniard by letting down her robe about her and adjusting it in such a
-manner as to need no assistance after death, then, calling the
-executioner to do his office, and permitting no other person to
-approach her, she fell like a heroine. In death she retained all the
-decorum which she had preserved in life, and the decency which had
-been so sacred with this excellent woman still remained about her.
-Thus in this bloody tragedy in which the women contended to the last
-for the prize of courage with the men, Lacedæmon evinced that it is
-impossible for fortune to conquer virtue.”
-
-Footnote 1137:
-
- Cleomen. § 38. I have here made use of the translation of Langhorne,
- because it would be no easy matter to furnish a better.
-
-Footnote 1138:
-
- Πέπλος.
-
-Another brief narrative given by the same historian exhibits in the
-most touching manner, the tenderness and self-devotion of a Spartan
-woman. Cleombrotos, in conjunction with other conspirators, had
-dethroned king Leonidas his father-in-law and possessed himself of the
-crown. Events afterwards restored the old man to his kingdom, upon
-which burning with resentment he hurried to take vengeance on his
-son-in-law. "Chelonis, the daughter of Leonidas, had looked upon the
-injury done to her father as done to herself, and when Cleombrotos
-robbed him of the crown she left him in order to console her father in
-his misfortune. As long as he remained in sanctuary she stayed with
-him, and when he fled, sympathising with his sorrow, and full of
-resentment against Cleombrotos, she attended him in his flight. But
-when the fortunes of her father changed she changed too. She joined
-her husband as a suppliant, and was found sitting by him with great
-marks of tenderness, and her two children one on each side at her
-feet. The whole company were much struck at the sight, and could not
-refrain from tears when they considered her goodness of heart and
-uncommon strength of affection.
-
-"Chelonis, then, pointing to her mourning habit and her dishevelled
-hair thus addressed Leonidas. ‘It was not my dear father compassion
-for Cleombrotos which put me in this habit and gave me this look of
-misery. My sorrows took their date with your misfortune and your
-banishment, and have ever since remained my familiar companions. Now
-you have conquered your enemies and are again king of Sparta should I
-still retain these ensigns of affliction or assume festival and royal
-ornaments, while the husband of my youth whom you yourself bestowed
-upon me falls a victim to your vengeance? If his own submission, if
-the tears of his wife and children cannot propitiate you he must
-suffer a severer punishment for his offences than even you require, he
-must see his beloved wife die before him. For how can I live and
-support the sight of my own sex, after both my husband and my father
-have refused to hearken to my supplications, when it appears that both
-as a wife and a daughter I am born to be miserable with my family. If
-this poor man had any plausible reasons for what he did I invalidated
-them all by forsaking him to follow you. But you furnish him with a
-sufficient apology for his misbehaviour by showing that a crown is so
-bright and desirable an object that a son-in-law must be slain and a
-daughter totally disregarded when it is in question.’
-
-“Chelonis, after this supplication, rested her cheek upon her
-husband’s head, and with an eye dim and languid through sorrow looked
-round on the spectators; Leonidas consulted his friends upon the
-point, and then commanded Cleombrotos to rise and go into exile, but
-he desired Chelonis to stay and not to forsake so affectionate a
-father who had kindly granted her husband’s life. Chelonis, however,
-would not be persuaded. When her husband had risen from the ground she
-put one child into his arms and took the other herself, and after
-having paid due homage at the altar where they had taken sanctuary
-went with him into banishment. So that had not Cleombrotos been
-corrupted by the love of false glory he must have thought exile with
-such a woman a greater happiness than a kingdom without her.”[1139]
-
-Footnote 1139:
-
- Plut. Agis §§ 17. 18. Moore in his Lalla Rookh has expressed the
- same idea.
-
- Fly to the desert, fly with me,
- Our Arab tents are rude for thee;
- But ah! the choice what heart can doubt,
- Of tents with love or thrones without?
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
- CONDITION OF UNMARRIED WOMEN.—LOVE.
-
-
-The condition of an Athenian lady it is far more important and, in
-proportion, more difficult to describe. Extremely erroneous
-impressions appear to exist on the subject, several writers of
-eminence having adopted the theory that they lived in total seclusion,
-and were little less ignorant and degraded than Oriental women are
-commonly supposed to be. My own opinion is somewhat different. After
-very patiently investigating the matter, the conclusions at which I
-have arrived are as follow:—
-
-In delineating a picture of this kind, positive testimonies are
-unquestionably required; but I appeal to the impartial reader, whether
-very great, I had almost said the greatest weight, should not, after
-all, be attributed to that conviction which grows up, gradually and
-silently, in the mind, during a long and habitual intercourse with the
-subject. In this way, new authorities are formed, for to have examined
-minutely and attentively what others have written, to have weighed
-authorities and scrupulously sifted their several pretensions, may be
-allowed to entitle a man, if anything can, to express an opinion of
-his own.
-
-The notion appears to prevail extensively, even among writers not
-otherwise ill-informed, that women occupied, among the Ionians
-generally, and more especially among the Athenians, a very mean
-position, were neglected and despised, and, consequently, exerted
-little or no influence on manners, morals, literature, or public
-affairs. With what design this error has been propagated it is not
-difficult to comprehend. But to pervert history for party purposes is,
-after all, an useless undertaking, since the facts always remain, and
-it is never too late to rescue truth from the fangs of sophistry.
-
-That the women of Athens were in the condition for which nature
-designed them, I will not affirm; a little more converse with the
-world might have improved their understandings, they might have been
-rendered more pleasing companions; but what they gained as social,
-they would probably have lost as domestic beings. No woman was ever
-rendered better as a wife or as a mother by that indiscriminate
-enjoyment of society, which, it is supposed, the gentlewomen of Athens
-lost so much by being deprived of.
-
-To form, however, a correct conception of their station, and the
-happiness within their reach, we must take into consideration several
-circumstances peculiar to ancient society. In those times something
-very different was understood by the word education from the meaning
-now attached to it. It signified rather the disciplining of the mind
-to certain habits than the imparting of different kinds of knowledge.
-It was the culture of the intellectual powers, and the sowing of the
-seed, rather than the transplanting of notions, half-grown, from one
-mind to another. More care was bestowed on the building up, than on
-the furnishing, of the mind. There was by far less acquisition, less
-accomplishment than in modern times; but the faculties were more
-surely impregnated, quickened sooner, and ripened into more vigorous
-maturity. Hence, among the ancients, there were few dreamers, either
-men or women. Exquisitely alive to all the peculiarities of their
-situation, they were, in the best sense of the word, a poetical
-people, gifted, indeed, with imagination, but possessing, too, the
-power to rein it in, to shape its course, and, on most occasions, to
-render it subservient to the dictates of judgment.
-
-Of the management of infancy I have already spoken. At the age of
-seven the sexes were separated, the girls still remaining in the
-nursery, while governors, kept expressly for the purpose, conducted
-the boys to the public schools.[1140] Too little is known of the
-material circumstances attending the mental and bodily training of the
-girls, or at what age they were taught to read and write. Much,
-however, in those ages was communicated orally. Their mothers imparted
-to them whatever notions they possessed of religion, performed in
-their presence several sacrifices and other pious rites, and gradually
-prepared them for officiating in their turn at their country’s
-altars.[1141] In a certain sense, therefore, every Athenian woman was
-a priestess, and though their piety was imperfect and their faith
-corrupt, it will still be admitted that important benefits must have
-been derived from imbuing the youthful mind with some principles of
-religion.
-
-Footnote 1140:
-
- From a passage in Terence (Phorm. i. 2. 30. sqq.) Perizonius
- concludes that even girls were sent to school. But he applies to
- Athenian maidens of free birth what in the Roman poet is related of
- a servile music girl: Ea serviebat lenoni impurissimo.—(Not. ad
- Ælian. Hist. Var. iii. 21.) It appears, however, from this passage,
- as Kuhn has already observed, that there existed public schools for
- girls at Athens, whatever might be the condition of the persons who
- frequented them. In Lambert Bos’s Antiquitates, (Pars. iv. c. 5. p.
- 216,) the error of Perizonius is repeated; that is, in the note;
- for, according to the text, the Attic virgins were closely confined
- to the house.
-
-Footnote 1141:
-
- Πολλὰς ἑορτὰς αἱ γυναῖκες ἔξω τῶν δημοτελῶν ἦγον ἰδία
- συνερχόμεναι.—Sch. Aristoph. Lysist. i. In Homer we find the Trojan
- women performing sacrifice to Athena—Il. ζ. 277. 310, just as the
- Athenian matrons did on the Acropolis.—Aristoph. Lysistr. 179.
-
-The performance of these pious duties commenced very early.
-Immediately on attaining the age of five years, they might be called
-on to officiate, clothed in saffron robes,[1142] in the rites of
-Artemis Brauronia, when a she-goat was sacrificed to the goddess,
-while professed rhapsodists chaunted select passages from the Iliad.
-Here they were initiated in the mysteries of their national
-piety,[1143] accompanied by all the charms of music, and of a style
-of declaiming no less impressive than that of the theatre. At this
-festival, celebrated every five years, all the ceremonies were
-performed by virgins, none of whom could be above ten years
-old;[1144] we must, therefore, infer that they underwent much
-previous training, and were instructed carefully respecting the
-object of the rites. Another religious festival at which youthful
-virgins only officiated, was the Arrhephoria, celebrated in honour
-of Athena or Herse. The ceremonies performed on this occasion appear
-to have required something more of preparation, since it was
-necessary that the youthful sacrificers should, at least, be seven
-years old and not exceed eleven. Four, selected for their noble
-birth and training, presided, and other two were chosen to weave the
-sacred peplos, while engaged in which they resided in the
-Sphæresterion, on the rock of the Acropolis, habited in white
-garments with ornaments of gold.[1145] The bread which they eat
-during their seclusion was called Anastatos.[1146]
-
-Footnote 1142:
-
- Suid. v. ἄρκτος. t. i. p. 425. c.—Sch. Aristoph. Lysistr.
- 645.—Meurs. Græc. Fer. lib. ii. p. 67.—During the dances performed
- in honour of this goddess, the women commonly played on brazen
- castanets.—Athen. xiv. 39.
-
-Footnote 1143:
-
- As Plato in his Republic appropriates to each sex a separate class
- of songs, it may be inferred that both in Athens and elsewhere in
- Greece, men and women habitually sung the same lays.—De. Legg. vii.
- t. viii. p. 30.
-
-Footnote 1144:
-
- Pollux. viii. 107.—Cf. Herod. vi. 138. Women practised various
- dances, to perform which with skill constituted a branch of their
- accomplishments. One of these dances was called the Apokinos, or
- Mactrismos, of which Cratinos made mention in his Nemesis,
- Cephisodoros in his Amazons, and Aristophanes in his Centaurs. These
- dances, however, appear to have been a particular class, and
- obtained the name of Marctypiæ. Athen. xiv. 26.
-
-Footnote 1145:
-
- Etym. Mag. 149, 13. sqq.—Suid. v. Ἁῤῥηνηφ. t. i. p. 222. c.
- Ἀῤῥηφορια—ἐπειδὴ τὰ ἀῤῥητα ἐν κίσταις ἔφερον τῇ θεῷ ὡι παρθένοι.
- idem. t. i. p. 423. c. et v. χαλκεῖα t. ii. p. 110 d. Harpocrat. v.
- ἀῤῥηφόρειν. p. 48 Maussac.—Aristoph. Lysistr. 643. et. schol.—Lys.
- Mun. Accept. Apollog. §. 1.—Plut. Vit. Dec. Orat. iv. t. v. p.
- 145.—Cf. Sch. Aristoph. Acharn. 241. In several religious
- processions the women except the canephori, followed not the
- pageant, but looked upon it from the housetop.
-
-Footnote 1146:
-
- Athen. iii. 80.
-
-I own it is not a little remarkable, that in proving the women of
-Athens to have received what in our times are regarded as the humblest
-elements of education, we should be compelled to rely on indirect
-evidence, or on mere inferences, or, indeed, that the point should
-require proof at all.[1147] This fact itself is decisive of their
-comparative seclusion. Had they mingled much in society, more
-occasions would have occurred of dwelling on their acquirements, and
-in dramatic compositions of representing them delivering opinions, and
-exhibiting tastes and preferences, obviously incompatible with an
-uncultivated intellect. But, though the difficulty of the investigator
-be augmented by the paucity and indistinct manner of the witnesses, we
-are still not left entirely without ground for coming to a decision,
-and if writers have, hitherto, so far as I know, overlooked some of
-the principal testimonies, that must be regarded only as an additional
-cause for bringing them forward now.[1148]
-
-Footnote 1147:
-
- Muretus has brought forward several passages to prove that learned
- women bore but an indifferent character in antiquity.—Var. Lect.
- viii. 21. The Hetairæ of course were taught to read. Of this we have
- abundant proof: τὰ ἐπὶ τῶν τοίχων γεγγραμμένα ἐν τῷ κεραμεικῷ
- ἀναγνοθὶ, ὅπου κατεστηλίτευται ὑμῶν τὰ ὀνομάτα—says the jealous
- lover to Melitta in Lucian.—Diall. Hetair. iv. 2. Nay even the
- servant maid of this Hetaira Acis is able to read; for desirous to
- ascertain whether there was any thing in the report of her lover,
- Melitta sends forth the girl to examine the walls, who discovers and
- reads the words “Melitta loves Hermotimos,” &c. which written there
- in jest by some wag had proved the cause of her lover’s jealousy and
- the quarrel that ensued.
-
-Footnote 1148:
-
- Cf. Telet. ap. Stob. Florileg. Tit. 108. 83. Gaisf.
-
-A report current in antiquity, and preserved by Marcellinus in his
-Life of Thucydides,[1149] represents the daughter of that great
-historian as the continuator of her father’s work, and as, in fact,
-the author of the whole eighth book. The biographer does not, indeed,
-receive the legend, but in rejecting it his assigned reasons are not
-that in the days of Thucydides Athenian ladies were not taught to
-read, and were, therefore, incapable of any species of literary
-exertion, but that the portion in question of the history bears
-evident marks of the same lofty and masculine mind to which we owe the
-rest, and no-wise resembles the productions of a woman. Had
-Marcellinus known the art of writing to have formed no part of an
-Athenian lady’s education, that could have been the proper reason to
-assign for his doubt. He might, under such circumstances, have
-ridiculed the folly of such a supposition. But no such objection
-occurred to him. He knew well that they could and did write, and had,
-therefore, recourse to the proper argument for establishing his point.
-
-Footnote 1149:
-
- P. xxi. For Plato’s views on the education of women, see De Legg. t.
- viii. p. 36.—Cf. Xen. Conviv. ii. 9, 10.
-
-Again, in that fragment of the oration of Lysias which he wrote for
-the children of Diodotos, an Athenian woman of rank is introduced
-defending, under very distressful circumstances, the rights of her
-children against her own father. Diodotos, it seems, had married his
-niece, and by her had several children. He was at length required by
-the commonwealth to proceed on a military expedition, during which he
-fell under the walls of Ephesos. Diogeiton, father of his wife, having
-been appointed guardian of the children, endeavours to defraud them of
-their property, and their mother, calling in the aid of impartial
-arbiters, pleads before them her children’s cause, and the orator,
-addressing one of the tribunals of Athens, does not hesitate to put in
-her mouth language worthy of a rhetorician. This, however, I am aware,
-cannot be regarded as a proof. But, in the course of her speech she
-discloses a circumstance which must be so considered. During the
-period of her stay in her fathers house, the old man removed from one
-street to another, and in the confusion a small memorandum book,
-dropped from among his papers, was picked up by one of the children
-and brought to their mother.[1150] It happened to contain the account
-of the money her husband had left on departing for the army; this she
-reads,[1151] and thus discovers the state in which the affairs of the
-family had been left on the departure of her husband.
-
-Footnote 1150:
-
- Lys. Cont. Diog. § 5. By τοὺς παῖδας: Reiske, however, understands
- the servants of Diogeiton, though these would have been more likely
- to carry the book to their master.
-
-Footnote 1151:
-
- See also in Demosthenes the account of a wife and husband examining
- a will.—Adv. Spud. § 8.
-
-Another proof that writing formed one of the accomplishments of women
-occurs in Xenophon. Ischomachos is laying open the road to domestic
-happiness and wealth. He enters, as elsewhere will be shown, into a
-variety of interesting details, and among other things, discusses the
-character and duties of a housekeeper; for in Greece the principal
-care of the household was always committed to women. Thus, going back
-to the Heroic ages, we find Euryclea the housekeeper of
-Odysseus,[1152] and Hector’s palace in Troy is also placed under the
-care of a woman.[1153] In the Cretan states, moreover, even the public
-tables had female inspectors,[1154] and at Athens, where domestic
-economy was so much better understood than in the rest of Greece,
-women necessarily obtained the government of the household,[1155]
-which men would have certainly managed more imperfectly. But in
-well-regulated families, the supreme control of everything rested with
-the wife, whom Xenophon[1156] represents engaging with her husband in
-taking a list of all the moveables in the house, and this afterwards
-remains in her hands as a check upon the housekeeper, which, had she
-not known how to read, it would not have been. Besides, she is spoken
-of as aiding in writing the catalogue, and displays throughout the
-dialogue so much ability and knowledge that it would not surprise us
-to find her discoursing with Socrates on household affairs. There is,
-moreover, a remark of Plato[1157] subversive at the same time of
-another error on this same subject, which exhibits women exercising
-their judgment in literary matters. Children, he says, may find comedy
-more agreeable, but educated women, youths, and the majority indeed of
-mankind, will prefer tragedy. Here we find the opinion corroborated
-that both the comic and tragic theatres were open to them, otherwise
-it could not have been known which they would prefer. But of this more
-elsewhere.
-
-Footnote 1152:
-
- Odyss. α. 428. β. 345, 361.
-
-Footnote 1153:
-
- Iliad. ζ. 381. 390.
-
-Footnote 1154:
-
- Athen. iv. 22.
-
-Footnote 1155:
-
- In the household of Pericles, however, we find mention made of a
- steward, and learn that the regulation of affairs was taken out of
- the hands of the women.—Plut. Pericl. § 16.
-
-Footnote 1156:
-
- Œconom. ix. 10. p. 57, Schneid. Similar business habits prevailed
- among our neighbours, the Dutch, while they enjoyed the advantages
- of republican institutions. Among the causes of their prosperity Sir
- Josiah Child enumerates, “the education of their children, as well
- daughters as sons, all which, be they of never so great quality or
- estate, they always take care to bring up to write perfect good
- hands, and to have the full knowledge and use of arithmetic and
- merchants’ accounts, the well understanding and practice whereof,
- doth strangely infuse into most that are the owners of that quality,
- of either sex, not only an ability for commerce of all kinds, but a
- strong aptitude, love and delight in it; and in regard the women are
- as knowing therein as the men, it doth encourage their husbands to
- hold on in their trades to their dying days. Knowing the capacity of
- their wives to get in their estates and carry on their trades after
- their deaths; whereas if a merchant in England arrive at any
- considerable estate, he commonly withdraws his estate from trade,
- before he comes near the confines of old age, reckoning that if God
- should call him out of the world while the main of his estate is
- engaged abroad in trade, he must lose one third of it, through the
- inexperience and inaptness of his wife to such affairs, and so it
- usually falls out.”—Discourse of Trade, p. 4.
-
-Footnote 1157:
-
- De Legg. l. ii. t. vii. p. 243. Bekk.—Ἐὰν δέ γ᾿ οἱ μείζους παῖδες,
- τὸν τὰς κωμῳδίας· τραγωδίαν δὲ αἵ τε πεπαιδευμέναι τῶν γυναικῶν καὶ
- τὰ νέα μειράκια καὶ σχεδὸν ἴσως τὸ πλῆθος πάντων.
-
-In all countries, a great part of a woman’s education takes place
-after marriage. But at Athens, where they entered so early[1158] into
-the connubial state, marriage itself must be reckoned among the
-principal causes of their mental developement. They came into the
-hands of their husbands unformed, but pliable and docile. The little
-they had been taught seemed rather designed to fit them to receive his
-instructions than to dispense with them.[1159] Their seclusion from
-the world preserved their character unfixed and impressionable. They
-passed from the nursery, as it were, to the bridal chamber, timid,
-unworldly, unsophisticated, and the husband, if he desired it, might
-fashion their mind and opinions as he pleased. In the women of Athens
-we, accordingly, observe the most remarkable contrast to the Spartans.
-Their influence, in effect greater, perhaps, acted invisibly, warming
-and impelling the ruder masculine clay, but without humbling their
-lords or exposing them to the ridicule of living under petticoat
-government. Yet in Themistocles we have an example of the sway they
-exercised. Fondling one day his infant son he observed, sportively,
-but with that ambitious consciousness of power ever present to the
-mind of a Greek—"This little fellow is the most influential person I
-know." His friends inquired his meaning—"Why, replied Themistocles, he
-completely governs his mother, while she governs me, and I the whole
-of Greece."[1160]
-
-Footnote 1158:
-
- The Roman ladies entered still earlier into the married state; at
- the age of twelve, says Plutarch, or under. Parall. Num. et Lycurg.
- § 4.
-
-Footnote 1159:
-
- Xenoph. Œconom. vii. 5. 6. sqq.
-
-Footnote 1160:
-
- Plut. Themist. § 18.
-
-The steps by which an Athenian girl might arrive at so envied a
-position are not unworthy our attention. From the age of fifteen she
-might look to become the mistress of a family; and it is probable that
-the maxim of Cleobulos,[1161] that women should approach their
-nuptials young in years but old in understanding, often governed their
-conduct. Love no doubt was not the only matchmaker at Athens.[1162] In
-general the heart, as in modern times, followed in the train of
-prudential calculation. But this arose, not so much from any
-impracticability[1163] of obtaining interviews, as from the habitual
-preference for gold, which, in all ages, has been found to actuate the
-conduct of the majority. To this day, in every country in Europe,
-marriage in the upper classes is too frequently a matter of mere
-bargain and sale, in which the feelings remain altogether unconsulted.
-And it was the same at Athens, though to suppose with Müller that
-interest was always the sole motive would be palpably to embrace an
-error, alike uncountenanced by history and philosophy.
-
-Footnote 1161:
-
- Diog. Laert. i. 6. 4.
-
-Footnote 1162:
-
- In Greece, as everywhere else, portionless girls had few admirers.
- Diog. Laert. v. 4. 1.
-
-Footnote 1163:
-
- Examples occur in the comic poets, of men choosing for themselves.
- Thus in Terence a young man declines the lady offered him by his
- father, and proposes to marry the mistress of his choice, to which
- both parents agree. Heautontimor. v. 5. sub. fin.
-
-When it is said that virgins in all Ionic states led an extremely
-secluded life, we are not thence to conclude that no opportunity of
-beholding, or even conversing with them, was enjoyed by men.[1164] It
-has already been seen that from the age of five years various
-ceremonies of their ancestral religion[1165] led females into the
-street, that they walked leisurely, arrayed with every resource of art
-and magnificence, in frequent processions to the temples, and it is
-known that numerous private occasions, such as funerals, marriages,
-&c., exposed them to the indiscriminate gaze of the public. Thus, we
-have in Terence a youth who from beholding a young lady with face
-uncovered and dishevelled hair lamenting at her mother’s funeral,
-falls desperately in love;[1166] and the wife in Lysias, whose frailty
-led to the murder of Eratosthenes,[1167] was first seen and admired
-under similar circumstances. Excuses, in fact, were never wanting to
-be in public, and occasions unknown to us were clearly afforded men
-for becoming acquainted with the temper and character of their future
-spouses, since we find Socrates conversing with men well acquainted
-with their country’s manners, jocularly feigning to have chosen
-Xantippe for her fierce, untameable spirit.[1168]
-
-Footnote 1164:
-
- Athen. xiii. 29.
-
-Footnote 1165:
-
- The religious rites in which the women of Athens officiated were
- numerous and important: 1. The orgiastic ceremonies in honour of Pan
- were performed with shouts and clamour, it not being permitted to
- approach that divinity in silence.—Sch. Aristoph. Lysistr. 2. They
- celebrated sacred rites in honour of Aphrodite Colias, id. ibid. 3.
- Another divinity, in whose honour they congregated together, was
- Ginesyllis a goddess in the train of Aphrodite, who obtained the
- name ἀπὸ τῆς γενέσεως τῶν παίδων. id. ibid. Cf. Luc. Amor. § 42. 4.
- The part they took in the orgies of Dionysos is well known. 5. They,
- too, were the principal actors in the festival of Adonis. Plut.
- Alcib. § 18. and to mention no more they may strictly be said to
- have constituted the principal attraction of the Panathenaic
- procession.
-
-Footnote 1166:
-
- Phorm. 2. 2. 40. sqq.
-
-Footnote 1167:
-
- Lys. De Cæd. Eratosth. § 2.
-
-Footnote 1168:
-
- Diog. Laert. ii. 5. 18.
-
-It has been supposed by many distinguished scholars, that, at
-Athens,[1169] the theatre—that great bazaar of female beauty in modern
-states—was closed against the women, at least the comic theatre. One
-principal ground of this opinion is the coarse and licentious
-character of the old comedy which, with its broad humour, political
-satire, and reckless disregard of decency, appears fitted for men
-only, and those not the most refined. But there are strange
-contradictions in human nature. The very religion of Greece teemed
-with indecency. Phallic statues crowded the temples and the public
-streets. Phallic emblems entered into many of the sacred ceremonies at
-which women, even in their maiden condition, assisted, and the poems
-chaunted at sacrifices, where they associated in every rite, were, in
-many parts, broader than an Utopian legislator would consider
-permissible. Besides, to prove the nullity of this objection, we need
-only note the history of our own stage. English women refused not,
-when they were in fashion, to behold, under the protection of a
-mask,[1170] the comedies of Massinger, Wycherly, Beaumont and
-Fletcher. They still read, and, on the stage, admire, Shakespeare, and
-from these the interval is not wide to Aristophanes, the lewdest and
-most shameless of ancient comic writers.[1171] And, further, it should
-never be forgotten, that their perverted religion flung its protecting
-wing over the stage. Plays exhibited during the festivals of Bacchos
-were, like our old mysteries and moralities, strictly sacred shows,
-and, consistently, women could no more have been excluded from them
-than from the other exhibitions connected with public worship.
-
-Footnote 1169:
-
- To prove the presence of the women at the theatre among the other
- Greeks, ample testimonies might be collected. Thus, when in Æolis, a
- certain Alexander exhibited dramatic performances, the people
- flocked thither from all the neighbouring towns and villages, upon
- which he surrounded the theatre with soldiers, made prisoners both
- men, women, and children, and only released them on payment of a
- large ransom.—Polyæn. Stratagem. vi. 10.
-
-Footnote 1170:
-
- To this Pope alludes:
-
- “And not a mask went unimproved away.”
-
- See also Swift, Tale of a Tub, § ix.
-
-Footnote 1171:
-
- On the coarseness of the German theatre, in the eighteenth century,
- frequented by the empress and the first ladies of the court, see
- Lady Montague’s Letters, ix.
-
-As on many other points, however, the positive and direct testimonies
-to be adduced in proof of the position I maintain are scanty, and of
-modern authorities nearly all are against me. Still, truth is not
-immediately to be deserted because there happens to be much difficulty
-in defending it. It will be time enough to run when we have exhausted
-all our resources. An unknown writer, but still a Greek,[1172] relates
-that, during the acting of the Eumenides, that awe-inspiring and
-terrible drama of Æschylus, the sight of the furies rushing
-tumultuously, like dogs of hell, upon the stage, with their frightful
-masks and blood-dripping hands, shed so deep a terror over the
-theatre, that children were thrown into fits, and pregnant women
-seized with premature birth-pangs. This, if admitted, would be
-evidence decisive as regards the tragic stage. But, because it is
-impossible to elude its force, modern critics boldly assume the
-privilege to treat the whole passage contemptuously, opposing scorn
-when they have no counterproof to oppose. Such a mode of arguing,
-however, by whomsoever pursued, must clearly bear upon the face of it
-the mark of sophistry, for in that way there is no position which
-might not be overthrown or established.
-
-Footnote 1172:
-
- Τινες δὲ φάσιν, ἐν τῇ ἐπιδείξει τῶν Εὐμενίδων σποράδην εἰσαγαγόντα
- τὸν χορὸν, τοσοῦτον ἐκπλῆξαι τὸν δῆμον, ὥστε τὰ μὲν νήπια ἐκψύξαι,
- τὰ δὲ ἔμβρυα ἐξαμβλωθῆναι.—Vit. Æschyl. p. 6.
-
-But our anonymous authority has not been left to encounter the attacks
-of the critics and historians alone. Other ancient authors, though
-their corroborative testimonies have, hitherto, been generally
-overlooked, furnish incidental hints and revelations which, duly
-weighed, will, I make no doubt, be admitted to amount to positive
-proof. Describing the temple of Demeter at Eleusis, Strabo observes,
-that so vast were its dimensions, that during the celebration of the
-mysteries, it would contain the whole multitude usually assembled at
-the theatre.[1173] Now, in the mysteries, we know that the Athenians
-of both sexes, and of all ages above childhood, were present, so that,
-if men only had been admitted to the theatre, it need not have been
-half the size of the Eleusinian temple, and, consequently, would have
-furnished the geographer with no proper subject of comparison. Again,
-in the passage quoted above, from Plato, the presence of women at both
-the tragic and comic theatres is indubitably presumed, since, to judge
-of both these kinds of exhibitions, it was necessary either to see
-them, or to read the plays. If they read the plays there could be no
-reason for restraining them from the theatre, since, whatever they
-contained of objectionable matter would thus be equally placed within
-their reach. It is to be presumed, therefore, even from this passage,
-that the theatre was free to women.
-
-Footnote 1173:
-
- Ὄχλον θέατρου δέξασθαι δυνάμενον.—Strab. ix. i. p. 238.—We have in
- Pollux, ii. 56. and iv. 121., θεάτρια “a spectatress,” and
- συνθεάτρια “a fellow spectatress,” a word used by Aristophanes, and,
- doubtless, applied to women forming part of a theatrical audience.
-
-But the philosopher is elsewhere more explicit. Treating in his
-Dialogue on Laws expressly of tragic poetry, and speaking always in
-reference to his imaginary state, he respectfully and with many
-flattering compliments proscribes this branch of the mimetic arts,
-not, however, without assigning his reasons. Assuming for the moment
-the part of leader of the legislative chorus, he informs the
-tragedians, that “we, also, in our way, are poets, and aim at
-producing a perfect representation of human life. You must regard us,
-therefore, as your rivals, and believe that we labour at the
-composition of a drama, which it is within the competence of perfect
-law only to achieve. You must not, accordingly imagine, that, as
-jealous rivals, we shall readily admit you into our city to pitch your
-tents in our agora, and, through the voice of loud-mouthed, actors to
-imbue our wives and children and countrymen with manners the very
-opposite to ours.”[1174] Now, what point, or, indeed, what sense would
-there be in this, if in the commonwealths actually existing dramatic
-poets had always been prohibited from addressing themselves to the
-women? Would it not have been just such another novelty as an
-ingenious philosopher of our days would hit upon, were he in a state
-of his own invention, to propose, as a great improvement on existing
-customs, that women should go to church?
-
-Footnote 1174:
-
- Plat. de Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 59. Bekk. Compare with this the song
- of the φαλλοφόρος..—Athen. xiv. 16.
-
- Σοὶ, Βάκχε, τάνδε μοῦσαν αγλαΐζομεν,
- Ἁπλοῦν ῥυθμὸν χεόντες αἰόλῳ μέλει,
- Καὶ μὰν, ἀπαρθένευτον. κ. τ. λ.
-
- His songs and his acting were, no doubt, little suited to the taste
- of a virgin; but if virgins had never frequented the theatre, and
- the comic theatre, too, where would have been the necessity for any
- such remark?
-
-This, therefore, were there no other proof, would, to me, appear
-convincing; but a still stronger remains. It is well known that the
-theatre was, among the ancients, parcelled out into several divisions,
-some more, some less honourable; and of these one whole division, by
-the decree of Sphyromachos, was appropriated to the female citizens,
-who would appear previously to have sat indiscriminately among the men
-and female strangers. To the latter the upper ranges of seats would
-appear to have been appropriated.[1175] On this point, therefore, the
-opinion received among the generality of writers is erroneous. Women
-were not debarred the amusement or instruction of the theatre,[1176]
-which, for good or for evil, influenced their education, and rendered
-their minds subservient or otherwise to the designs of the legislator
-and the welfare of the state.
-
-Footnote 1175:
-
- Aristoph. Eccles. 22. et Schol.
-
- Ἐνταῦθα περὶ τὴν ἐσχάτην δεῖ κερκίδα
- Ὑμᾶς καθιζούσας βεωρεῖν ὡς ξένας.
- Alexis, ap. Poll. ix. 44.
-
-Footnote 1176:
-
- An anecdote related by Plutarch, would of itself, in my opinion,
- suffice to prove the presence of women at the theatre, as well as
- that Athenian ladies habitually went abroad attended by a single
- maid-servant. For on one occasion, when an actor who played the part
- of a queen would have refused to appear upon the stage unless
- furnished with a splendid costume and a large suite of attendants,
- Melanthios, the manager, pushed him on the boards, saying, “Don’t
- you see the wife of Phocion constantly going abroad attended by but
- one maid? And wouldst thou affect superior pomp and corrupt our
- wives?” It is evident that the pride of this actor could not have
- exercised any evil influence on the women had they not been present
- to witness his ostentation. We must necessarily infer, therefore,
- that they were, and that they joined the theatre in the thunders of
- applause with which it received the observation of Melanthios, who
- had spoken so loud as to be heard by the whole audience.—Plut. Phoc.
- § 19. The passage of Alexis had not escaped Casaubon, who, in his
- notes on Theophrastus’ Characters, p. 165, has discussed the point
- with his usual learning and ability. A passage in the
- Thesmophoriazusæ of Aristophanes, seems however, but only seems, to
- make against this opinion. There a woman says that when men returned
- from seeing a play of Euripides, a “Woman-hater,” they used to
- search the house in quest of lovers; but when Euripides’ plays were
- acted they might be supposed to remain at home from pique.
-
-From all which it will be apparent that the sexes enjoyed at Athens
-abundant occasions of meeting; and in the other Ionian states similar
-customs and similar manners prevailed. For this we are reduced to rely
-on no obscure scholiast or grammarian. Thucydides himself, describing
-the second purification of Delos by the Athenians, and the institution
-of the Delian games, observes, that from very remote times the people
-of Ionia and the neighbouring islands had been accustomed to come with
-their wives and children to the sacred festivals there celebrated in
-honour of Apollo. On these occasions gymnastic exercises and musical
-contests took place; and of the chorusses who chaunted the praises of
-the god some were female. The whole of the ceremonies are described in
-the Homeric hymns to the tutelar divinity, where the poet very
-animatedly recapitulates the principal features of the games.
-
- To thee, O Phœbos! most the Delian isle
- Gives cordial joy, excites the pleasing smile,
- When gay Ionians flock around thy fane,
- Men, women, children,—a resplendent train:
- Where flowing garments sweep the sacred pile,—
- Where youthful concourse gladdens all the isle,—
- Where champions fight,—where dancers beat the ground,—
- Where cheerful music echoes all around,
- Thy feast to honour, and thy praise to sound.[1177]
-
-Footnote 1177:
-
- Thucyd. iii. 104. The version is Dr. Smith’s. Cf. Hom. Hymn. in
- Apoll. 146. sqq.
-
-Footnote 1178:
-
- I have, as the reader will perceive, adopted the verse proposed by
- Barnes:—
-
- Δηλιάδες δὲ τε κοῦραι Ἀπόλλωνος θεράπαιναι.
-
- Though Ernesti is perhaps right in supposing no addition necessary.
- See his note on v. 165. Franke, in his recent edition of the Hymns,
- has, with Ernesti, rejected the verse.
-
-The great historian who quotes this hymn, and unhesitatingly
-attributes it to Homer, brings forward to prove the occurrence of
-musical contests another passage, in which, as he observes, the poet
-speaks of himself:—
-
- But now, Apollo, with thy sister fair,
- Smile as the lingering bard prefers his prayer;
- And ye, O Delian nymphs,[1178] who guard the fane
- Of Phœbos, listen to my parting strain;
- Should some lone stranger, when my lay no more
- Floats on the breezes of the sacred shore,
- Demand who best, with soul-entrancing song,
- Earned blithe your praise, and bore your hearts along?
- Then answer with a warm approving smile—
- “The blind old man of Chios’ rocky isle.”[1179]
-
-Footnote 1179:
-
- Of these verses (Hymn. in Apol. v. 165. 172) I give my own
- translation, the last line excepted, which Byron had somewhere done
- ready to my hand.
-
-And down to the period of the Peloponnesian war similar games and
-sacred rites were performed at Ephesos, at which the Ionians with
-their wives and children were usually present.
-
-The Doric historian, to whom all these circumstances must be
-familiarly known, makes, however, no account of them, but consistently
-with his theory, if not with facts, remembers no well-authenticated
-instance in the annals of Attica of a person’s marrying for love. What
-he would admit to be well authenticated it were difficult to say. He
-rejects, whenever his particular notions seem to require it, the
-testimonies both of Herodotus and Thucydides, so that for a narrative
-resting on the authority of Polyænus, Plutarch, and Valerius Maximus,
-we can expect no quarter. Nevertheless, as these writers are at least
-faithful in their delineations of manners, the following romantic
-incident may be hazarded even on their authority. Thrasymedes, an
-Athenian youth, entertaining a strong passion for the daughter of the
-tyrant Peisistratos, had the hardihood one day as she walked in a
-religious procession to kiss her openly in the street. Her brothers,
-young men of a fiery temper, regarded the act as an affront almost
-inexpiable, and were apparently preparing to take vengeance on the
-offender, when the old prince allayed their anger by observing,—"If we
-punish men for loving us, how shall we conduct ourselves towards our
-enemies?" Escaping thus, Thrasymedes still cherished his love. He
-therefore determined on carrying away the lady by force; and gaining
-over a number of his associates, he seized the occasion of a sacrifice
-on the sea-shore in which the maiden was officiating, and rushing,
-attended by his followers with drawn swords, through the crowd, he
-succeeded in conveying her to a boat, and set sail for Ægina.
-Unfortunately, however, for his design, Hippias, eldest son of
-Peisistratos, happened at this moment to be cruising in the bay on the
-lookout for pirates, and perceiving a bark putting hastily out to sea,
-he bore down upon it, took the young men prisoners, and conducted them
-together with his sister back to Athens. Thrasymedes and his
-companions being brought before the tyrant, abated not a jot of their
-courage, but bade him, in determining their punishment, use his own
-discretion, since from the moment they resolved on the enterprise they
-had made light, they said, of life. Peisistratos, tyrant though he
-was, regarded their loftiness of soul with admiration, freely bestowed
-his daughter on Thrasymedes, and won them to his interest by
-gentleness and friendship. In this, says Polyænus, acting the part of
-a good father and a popular citizen rather than of a tyrant.[1180]
-
-Footnote 1180:
-
- Polyæn. Strat. v. 14. Meurs. Peisist. vi. p. 46. seq. Plutarch. in
- Apophthegm. Peisist. § 3. who calls the young man Thrasybulos.
- Valer. Max. v. 1.
-
-But supposing no instances remained on record, who can doubt that the
-heart prompted, and the hand followed its promptings, at Athens as
-elsewhere? Its walls, its columns, every plane-tree in the Academy,
-the Cerameicos, and other public walks, glowed with the language of
-the passions, and the names of virgins beloved for their beauty. There
-was, no doubt, some want of delicacy in this; but the manners of the
-Athenians, though they presented no insuperable bar to so much of
-intercourse as might serve to enkindle affection,[1181] opposed,
-nevertheless, that facility of communication which at Sparta existed,
-and in our own country is common. However, had the beloved been
-incapable of reading, to what purpose should her name, coupled with
-endearing epithets, have illuminated the bark of the smilax, or the
-marble skreens of the gymnasia? It was traced there in order that her
-bright eyes might peruse it, and learn who of all the youth of Athens,
-had singled her forth from the world to be the object of his love.
-Lucian, in his sarcastic humour, represents a mad lover of the goddess
-Aphrodite carving every tree and end of wall with her name.[1182] From
-a fragment of Callimachos it would seem too as if men had sometimes
-written the beloved syllables on the leaves of trees;[1183] which may
-well have been, since in our own days we have seen the English people
-inscribing in letters of gold the name of their youthful queen on
-leaves of laurel. Euripides, who lost no opportunity of venting his
-aversion for the sex, introduces one of his characters protesting that
-his opinion of women would not be bettered though every pine in Mount
-Ida were covered with their names.[1184]
-
-Footnote 1181:
-
- Schol. in Aristoph. Acharn. 144. Vesp. 98. Young men in love would
- appear to have played at dice, with fortune, to discover whether
- they should be successful or otherwise. Luc. Amor. § 16. Speaking of
- Ameipsias’ Sphendone, or Jewelled Ring, Hemsterhuis observes:—“Nomen
- habere potuerit hæc comedia ab annulo mutui amoris signo, atque
- arrha, cujus in palâ fuerit insculpta, quod haud apud antiquos
- insolens, amoris figura, quæque vario ut modo per aliorum manus
- vagata.” ad Poll. ix. 96. t. vi. p. 1123.
-
-Footnote 1182:
-
- Amor. § 16. Τοῖχος ἄπας ἐχαράσσετο, καὶ πᾶς μαλακοῦ δένδρου φλοιὸς
- Ἀφροδίτην καλὴν ἐκήρυσσεν.
-
-Footnote 1183:
-
- Callim. Frag. xxv. p. 241. Spanh.—Theoc. Epithal. Hell. 48.
-
-Footnote 1184:
-
- Ap. Eustath. Iliad, ζ. 490. Potter, Archæol. ii. 244.
-
-Another mode of declaring love, not quite unknown in modern times, was
-to clothe the language of the heart in verse. Poets, we are told,
-often disguised their own feelings by attributing them to the actors
-in a feigned narrative, which they would compose as an offering to the
-object of their attachment who, it is very obvious, to appreciate such
-a gift, must have been able to read it.[1185] They had likewise
-another fashion, particularly Greek, of making known their sentiments,
-which was to suspend garlands of flowers, or perform sacrifice before
-the door where the person possessing their heart resided.[1186]
-Sometimes they repaired to the spot and poured forth libations of wine
-as at the entrance of a temple, a practice alluded to by the Scholiast
-on Aristophanes, who relates that a number of Thessalian gentlemen
-being in love with Laïs,[1187] betrayed their passion by publicly
-sprinkling her doors with wine. Among the symptoms which disclosed the
-condition of the feelings, a garland loosely thrown upon the head was
-one.[1188] Women suffered their secret to escape them by being
-discovered wreathing garlands for their hair.[1189]
-
-Footnote 1185:
-
- Philostrat. Epist. xx. p. 921. Hermann. Com. in Arist. Poet. p. 87.
-
-Footnote 1186:
-
- Athen. xv. 9.
-
-Footnote 1187:
-
- Cf. Naïs according to Harpocrat. in v. p. 203. Sch. Aristoph. Plat.
- 179. Cf. Athen. xiii. 51.
-
-Footnote 1188:
-
- Athen. xv. 9.
-
-Footnote 1189:
-
- Aristoph. Thesmoph. 400.
-
-But in whatever way the existence of passion was externally
-manifested, a more interesting question is the modification which the
-passion[1190] itself underwent in the Greek mind.[1191] Numerous
-circumstances concur to mislead our judgment on this subject. In the
-first place, the writers who sprang up like fungi amid the corruption
-and profligacy which attended the decay of Hellenic society, standing
-nearer to us, obstruct our view. Among them a coarse unhealthy craving
-after excitement led to nefarious perversions of sentiment, and to
-countenance their own excesses they threw back their vile polluting
-shadows upon the loftier and brighter moral station of their
-forefathers. Even so early as the age of Æschylus this culpable
-practice began to prevail, for this great poet scrupled not to
-attribute to Achilles vices, which, in the Homeric period, were
-evidently unknown.[1192]
-
-Footnote 1190:
-
- Σὲ δέσποινα τῶν ὑπὲρ σοῦ λόγων, Ἀφροδίτη, σὲ βοηθὸν αἱ ἐμαὶ δεήσεις
- καλοῦσιν. Luc. Amor. § 19.
-
-Footnote 1191:
-
- See the whole question treated with peculiar ability by Maximus
- Tyrius viii. 105. sqq. Homer, in the opinion of this writer,
- exhibits especial felicity in his description of love, from the
- cool, timid dawn of passion to its fervid noon, pourtraying its
- operations, the age at which it is experienced, its forms, its
- feelings, chaste or unchaste. See too Lycophron Cassand. 104. with
- the commentary of Meursius, p. 1184. 1186. sqq.
-
-Footnote 1192:
-
- The friendship of Achilles for Patroclos is celebrated by Maximus
- Tyrius, viii. 106. Cf. Luc. Amor. 20.
-
-But rightly to comprehend the spirit of an age, we must by no means
-confide in the interpretation of the succeeding, or even in any one
-class of contemporary writers. Least of all, in the authors of comedy,
-who seldom paint men as they are, but run into exaggeration and
-caricature for the sake of effect. To the imaginative, spiritual,
-impassioned must we have recourse, if we would learn what the
-impassioned, spiritual and imaginative felt, and to such only in any
-age or country, is love, in the poetical sense of the word, familiar
-or indeed intelligible.
-
-In the apprehension of several modern writers, love among the Greeks,
-was not merely based upon physical elements, as it must everywhere be,
-but included little or nothing else.[1193] It had there, they suppose,
-none of these romantic features, nothing of that heroic self-devotion
-or lofty intercommunion of soul with soul, which among northern
-nations, more particularly in fiction, characterises this powerful and
-mysterious principle, which binds together in indissoluble union
-individuals of different sexes, and renders throughout life the
-contentment and happiness of the one, dependent on the well-being of
-the other.
-
-Footnote 1193:
-
- Maximus Tyrius has, on the origin of love, a very beautiful passage.
- “Its well-spring is the beauty of the soul gleaming upward through
- the body. And as flowers seen under water appear still more
- brilliant and exquisite than they are, so mental excellence seems to
- manifest additional splendour when invested with corporeal
- loveliness.” ix. 113. Euripides, whatever he may have written in his
- old age, was once an enthusiastic panegyrist of love, of which he
- has left a brilliant description. Athen. xiii. 11. In the gymnasia
- the statue of Eros was placed beside those of Hermes and
- Hercules—eloquence and strength. Love festivals Ἐρωτίδια were
- celebrated by the Thespians. Athen. xiii. 12. Before entering battle
- the Cretans and Spartans sacrificed to Eros, Id. xiii. 12. Alexis
- imitates Plato in describing this passion. Eros had two bows, the
- one of the graces producing happiness, the other engendering
- violence and wrong. Id. xiii. 14. On the power of love see § 74.
- Cleisophos of Selymbria fell in love at Samos with a statue of
- Parian marble. § 84.
-
-But I can discover in the Greeks nothing which, on this point, can
-distinguish them from other civilised races, except, perhaps, that
-there was in their love, more of earnestness and reality and less of
-dreaminess and fantastic affectation, than might be brought home to
-several modern nations. Their fables, however, and their poetry teem
-with ideas and examples of the loftiest and purest love, such love,
-I mean, as is natural to mankind, as harmonises with the structure
-of their minds, and the object and tendency of their passions,
-growing like the oak out of earth, but springing upward and rearing
-its majestic stature and beautiful foliage towards heaven. Thus
-Odysseus in Homer prefers the sunshine of a wife’s affection to
-immortality[1194] and the smiles of a sensual goddess. Hæmon with a
-tenderness carried to excess, spurns the blandishment of empire,
-nay, the very laws of duty and nature, that he may cling to the form
-of Antigone[1195] and join her in the grave. And Alcestis, rising
-above them all, quits in youth and health and beauty
-
- “The warm precincts of the cheerful day,”
-
-that she may preserve the existence of one beloved still more than
-life.[1196]
-
-Footnote 1194:
-
- Καὶ τὴν Πηνελόπην ἄλλως Ὀδυσσεὺς ὁρᾷ, ἄλλως ὁ Εὐρύμαχος.—Max. Tyr.
- ix. 115.
-
-Footnote 1195:
-
- Soph. Antig. 635. sqq.—Καὶ ἐν εὐτυχίαις συνευτύχει καὶ ἀποθανόντι
- συναποθνήσκει, Max. Tyr. ix. 116. We discover the same idea in our
- own marriage ceremony, where husband and wife are said to be joined
- together, “for better for worse, for richer for poorer, in sickness
- and in health.”
-
-Footnote 1196:
-
- Even Lucian could discover that there was something holy in love.
- Κοινὸν οὖν ἀμφοτέρῳ γένει πόθον ἐγκερασαμένη, συνέζευξεν ἄλληλοις
- θεσμὸν ἀνάγκης ὅσιον. Amor. § 19.
-
-Nay, to prove the elevated conceptions of love that prevailed in
-earlier Greece, we find a personification of this passion reckoned
-among the most ancient gods of its mythology. Altars were erected,
-festivals instituted, sacrifices offered up to it, as to a power, in
-its origin and nature divine.[1197] It breathed the breath of life
-into their poetry, it was supposed to elicit music and verse from the
-coldest human clay, like the sun’s rays from the fabulous Memnon—it
-allied itself in its energies with freedom—to love, in the imagination
-of a Greek, was to cease to be a slave,[1198]—it emancipated and
-rendered noble whomsoever it inspired,—it floated winged through the
-air, and descended even in dreams[1199] upon the mind of men or women,
-revealing to sight the forms of persons unknown, annihilating
-distance, trampling over rank, confounding together gods and men by
-its irresistible force.[1200] Much of the beauty of their fables is
-concealed from us by the atmosphere of triteness and familiarity with
-which our injudicious education invests them. Every puling sonneteer
-babbles of Eros. And Aphrodite, a creature of the imagination brighter
-and lovelier than her own star, has been rendered more common in
-modern verse, than the most celebrated of her priestesses in ancient
-Corinth. But the poets of Greece possessed the art of clothing their
-gods in colours warm as life, varied as the rainbow; and as to Love,
-never was his influence more delicately shadowed forth than by him who
-introduces Endymion slumbering with unclosed lids on Mount Latmos,
-that the divinity of sleep might enjoy the brightness of his
-eyes![1201]
-
-Footnote 1197:
-
- See too in Stobæus, the addresses of a bereaved husband to
- philosophy—ὦ φιλοσοφία, τυραννίκά σου τὰ επιτάγματα· λεγεις φίλει·
- κᾄν ἀποβάλῃ τις, λέγεις, μὴ λύπου. 34. Cf. Senec. Epist. 99.
- Scheffer, ad Ælian. 27. p. 471.
-
-Footnote 1198:
-
- Max. Tyr. x. 119. This author observes that the love depicted by the
- tragedians was a piece of ill-regulated passion rarely leading to
- happiness. Id. 123. 124. Cf. Luc. Amor. § 37.
-
-Footnote 1199:
-
- Ἐξ ὀνείρων ἐραστης. Max. Tyr. x. 126.
-
-Footnote 1200:
-
- See the invocation to Love in Lucian: σὺ γὰρ ἐξ ἀφανοῦς καὶ
- κεχυμένης ἀμορφίας τὸ πᾶν ἐμόρφωσας. κ. τ. λ. Amor. § 32.
-
-Footnote 1201:
-
- This thought occurs in a fragment of Licymnios
-
- Ὕπνος δὲ χαίρων ὀμμάτων
- αὐγαῖς, ἀναπεπταμένοις ὄσσοις,
- ἐκοίμιζεν κούρον.
-
- Athen. xiii. 17.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- =END OF THE FIRST VOLUME.=
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- PRINTED BY SAMUEL BENTLEY,
- 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.
-
-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 denote with ‘n’ and the
-original note number.
-
- 6.n1 Steph. Byzant. _v._ [Ἀ/Α]ἰτωλ. p. 71. Replaced.
- a.
- 23.24 not wide enough to contain[.] the whole Removed.
- 49.14 that were band[i]ed to and fro Inserted.
- 49.21 _petits-ma[í/î]tres_ Replaced.
- 54.34 like a huge uncrenalated _sic_: uncrenelated
- 68.14 but Sir Willia[n/m] Gell Replaced.
- 78.4 couchant s[y/p]hynxes Replaced.
- 155.35 like those of Hindùs[s]tân Removed.
- 166.29 the love of glory and independ[a/e]nce Replaced.
- 170.4 and where[-e]ver else it was thought fit Removed.
- 174.n1 Cf. Dion. Ch[r]ysost. Inserted.
- 176.6 to the latest times[,/.] Replaced.
- 178.n7 aremus osseo.[”] Added.
- 178.n8 calamis superata degit.[”] Added.
- 186.26 its moaning sounds to hear.[”] Added.
- 213.30 by heroic and fabulous associa[a]tions. Removed.
- 222.n2 as the Calydo[do]nian boar in Ovid Removed.
- 225.32 from his ophthalmia and his headach[e] Added.
- 234.32 εὐφυεῖς καὶ [ἰ/ἱ]κανοὶ Breathing corrected.
- 288.1 Bacchanalian character.[”] Added.
- 343.33 had the merit of extreme boldness[.] Added.
- 263.29 [ὄ/ὅ]τι ἀμαθία μὲν θάρσος Breathing corrected.
- 347.4 full of unstem[m]able currents Added.
- 359.15 By these means, likewise, Inserted.
- tran[s]gressors
- 360.8 in the case of lesser tran[s]gressions Inserted.
- 361.32 which only incidena[ta/at]lly Transposed.
- 371.n2 ὀφθαλμο[ι\ὶ] μεγάλοι τε καὶ διαυγεῖς Replaced.
- 357.37 it is a clumsy throw of her[’]s Removed.
- 379.16 the list of their occupations[,/.] Replaced.
- 391.32 τρεῖς υ[ἰ/ἱ]οὺς ἄφρουρον Breathing corrected.
- 393.14 regal in loftiness[s] of stature. Removed.
- 409.7 decisive of their comparative Added.
- seclusion[.]
- 418.n2 per aliorum manus vagata.[”] Added.
- 423.n1_1 συν[εζεἠ/έζευ]ξεν Replaced.
- 423.n1_2 ἄλληλοις θεσμὸν ἀνάγκ[ὴ/η]ς ὅσιον. Replaced.
-
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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 I (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 I (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 3, 2022 [eBook #67552]</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 I (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 class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='large'>MANNERS AND CUSTOMS</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>OF</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='xlarge'>ANCIENT GREECE.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c003' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>VOL. I.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c004' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Price</i> 31<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c005' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>NOTICE.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Proprietors of <span class='sc'>Circulating Libraries</span>
-in all parts of the country are compelled by
-the new Copyright Act to discontinue purchasing
-and lending out a single copy of a
-foreign edition of an English work. <em>The mere
-having it in their possession ticketed and marked
-as a library book</em>, exposes them to</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>A PENALTY OF TEN POUNDS.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c001'>Several clauses of the new Copyright Act
-award severe punishments for introducing and
-exposing for sale or hire pirated editions of
-English works, both in Great Britain and in
-the Colonies. The Government absolutely
-prohibits the introduction of these nefarious
-reprints through the Custom-houses on any
-pretence whatever. The public should be
-made fully and perfectly aware that, in consequence
-of a Treasury Order to that effect,
-even single copies of works so pirated, brought
-in a traveller’s baggage, which were formerly
-admissible, are so no longer, <em>unless they be cut,
-the name written in them, and, moreover, so</em> <span class='fss'>WORN</span>
-<em>and used as to render them unfit for sale</em>; and
-that if afterwards they are found in a Circulating
-Library, the Proprietor is subject to a
-severe penalty. Two clauses of the new Customs’
-Act, moreover, exclude them altogether
-after the commencement of the next financial
-year. These measures will, no doubt, be rigorously
-enforced both at home and in the Colonies.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<a href='images/frontispiece_large.jpg'><img src='images/frontispiece.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></a>
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>TOPOGRAPHY OF SPARTA.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c007'>THE HISTORY<br /> OF THE <br /> MANNERS AND CUSTOMS <br /> OF <br /> ANCIENT GREECE.</h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>BY J. A. ST. JOHN.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c008'>
- <div>IN THREE VOLUMES.</div>
- <div class='c000'>VOL. I.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c008'>
- <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 c008'>
- <div>LONDON:</div>
- <div><em class='gesperrt'>PRINTED BY S. AND J. BENTLEY, WILSON, AND FLEY,</em></div>
- <div>Bangor House, Shoe Lane.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>
- <h2 class='c009'>DEDICATION.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='large'>TO BAYLE ST. JOHN.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='sc'>I dedicate</span> the following work to you, my dear
-Son, as a token of my gratitude for the cheerful
-patience with which you have aided me in completing
-it, despite the calamity that overtook me
-in the midst of my labours. Whatever may be
-the fate of the publication it will always recall to
-me some of the happiest hours of my life, rendered
-so chiefly by beholding the contented serenity
-with which you subdued the irksomeness of studies
-so little suited to your years. At length, however,
-you are delivered from lexicographers and scholiasts.
-The final page has been written, the last
-proof read. I escape from a task commenced before
-you were born, and you from a four years’
-apprenticeship to the craft and mystery of authorship.
-All that now remains is to watch the reception
-which the fruit of our toil may meet with in
-the world. It has been produced and has grown up
-under very peculiar circumstances. Whithersoever
-we have travelled, the wrecks of Grecian literature
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_vi'>vi</span>have accompanied us, and the studies to which
-these pages owe their existence have been pursued
-under the influence of almost every climate
-in Europe. Nay, if I pushed my researches still
-further and visited the portion of Africa commonly
-supposed to have been the cradle of Hellenic civilisation,
-it was solely in the hope of qualifying
-myself to speak with some degree of confidence on
-the subject of those arts which represent to the
-Modern World so much of the grandeur and genius
-of Greece. Here, probably, the action of pestilential
-winds, and of the sands and burning glare of
-the desert commenced that dimming of the “visual
-ray,” which, in all likelihood, will wrap me gradually
-in complete darkness, and veil for ever from
-my sight those forms of the beautiful which have
-been incarnated, if I may so speak, in marble. This
-is a language which neither you nor your sister
-can read to me. All that sweet Olympian brood
-which used to smile upon me with kindly recognition
-when I was a solitary wayfarer in lands not
-my own, will, as far as I am concerned, be annihilated.
-Those twelve mystical transformations of
-Aphroditè into stone, which may be beheld all
-together at Naples, and appeared to me more lovely
-than its vaunted bay, or even the sky that hangs
-enamoured over it, will, I conjecture, be seen of
-me no more, or seen obscurely as through a mist.
-Homer, however, and Æschylus, with Plato and
-Thucydides and Demosthenes, will be able still
-through the voices of my children—voices more
-cheerful and willing than ministered to the old
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_vii'>vii</span>age and blindness of Milton—to project their
-beauty into my soul. I will not, therefore, repine;
-but, imitating the example of wiser and
-better men, submit unmurmuringly to the will of
-God. Had things been otherwise ordered, I might
-have continued these researches. As it is, I take
-leave of them here. Our friend, Mr. Keightley,
-who has visited Italy for the purpose, will perform
-for the Romans what I have endeavoured
-to accomplish for the Greeks; and his extensive
-and varied learning, the excellence of his method,
-and the pleasing vivacity of his style, will, probably,
-ensure for his work a still greater degree
-of popularity even than that which his very successful
-productions already enjoy.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c011'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Believe me, my dear son,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Ever affectionately yours,</div>
- <div class='line in22'>J. A. <span class='sc'>St.</span> JOHN.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c012'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in6'>London,</div>
- <div class='line'>October 13th, 1842.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_ix'>ix</span>
- <h2 class='c013'>INTRODUCTION.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Many moral phenomena appear to baffle the sagacity
-of statesmen, because, confiding too implicitly
-in experience, they omit to widen the range of
-their contemplation so as to embrace the whole
-circle of the people’s existence whose fortunes and
-character they desire to comprehend. To be successful
-in such an inquiry it is requisite to lay open,
-as far as possible, the influence on that people of
-climate and geographical position, to break through
-the husk and shell of customs, manners, laws, religions,
-that we may come to the kernel of its
-moral nature, to that inner organization, intellectual
-and physical, of which the external circumstances
-of its civil and political life are but so
-many fluctuating symbols.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To accomplish this, however, even in the case of
-a contemporary nation, among whom we may behold
-in full activity all the material movements of society,
-is no easy task. But the difficulty must be very
-much augmented, when, in addition to the obstacles
-which necessarily under the most favourable
-circumstances beset every avenue to a people’s
-inner life, those are added arising out of the distance
-on the track of time at which the nation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_x'>x</span>we are considering happens to stand, the scantiness
-and contradictory nature of the reports that
-reach us, and more, perhaps, than all, the atmosphere
-of prejudice through which we are apt to
-view whatever in any degree differs from our own
-manners and institutions. But this consideration,
-though it should bespeak indulgence for the unavoidable
-errors even of the most diligent investigator,
-can certainly be no reason for abstaining
-from all further investigation. For, notwithstanding
-the disadvantages under which we labour, it is still
-possible to extract from the fragments remaining of
-ancient literature materials for reconstructing something
-more than the skeleton of antiquity. We can
-invest the bones with sinews and muscles, clothe them
-with flesh and skin, spread over the whole colours
-that shall resemble life; and if we cannot steal from
-heaven celestial fire to kindle this image of surpassing
-beauty, that, at least, is the only thing which
-exceeds our power.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In saying this, I merely state my opinion of
-what is possible, not by any means what I conceive
-myself to have effected in the present work.
-I am but too sensible of how far the execution
-falls short of “the ample proposition that hope
-made,” when, many years ago, the idea suggested
-itself to me at that ardent and flattering season
-of life in which we are apt to imagine all things
-within our reach. But as</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Every action that hath gone before</div>
- <div class='line'>Whereof we have record, trial did draw</div>
- <div class='line'>Bias, and thwart; not answering the aim</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_xi'>xi</span>And that unbodied figure of the thought</div>
- <div class='line'>That gave ’t surmised shape;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>so, no doubt, in my own case, the realisation will
-be found to be a very imperfect embodying of the
-ideal plan.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Few subjects, however, abound more in interest
-or instruction than the one I have here ventured
-to treat. The inquiry turns upon the institutions
-and moral condition of a people to whose fortunes
-history affords no parallel; of a people that, like
-the cloud no bigger than a man’s hand, which
-the servant of the prophet saw from the top of
-Carmel, contained within itself the seeds of mightiest
-and most momentous events. The Hellenes
-can never, in fact, by any but the uninformed
-be regarded in the same light as ordinary political
-communities. Their power, vast and astonishing
-for the age in which they flourished, arose
-entirely out of their national character and the
-spirit of their institutions. It was the power of
-intellect. They were in reality the sun and soul
-of the ancient world, and darted far into the darkness
-around them those vivifying rays which, reflected
-from land to land, have since lighted up
-the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Athens, the wisest and noblest of Grecian states,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in16'>Mother of arts</div>
- <div class='line'>And eloquence,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c017'>was the great preceptress of mankind. The spirit
-of her laws, transmitted through those of Rome,
-still pervades the whole civilized world. Her wisdom
-and her arts form, in all polished communities,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xii'>xii</span>a principal object of study; and to comprehend
-and to enjoy them is to be a gentleman.
-Sallust, therefore, notwithstanding his genius and
-sagacity, took but a commonplace view of national
-greatness, when he considered that of Athens to
-be chiefly based on the splendour shed around her
-achievements by historians. Her triumphs, it is
-true, were not effected by vast military masses,
-such as those which many barbarous nations in
-different ages have put in motion for the purpose
-of spoil or conquest. Athens built her glory on
-other foundations. She could not, indeed, lead
-countless armies into the field, but she knew how,
-with a little band, to defeat those who could. In
-the days of her freedom no human force could
-subdue her. To effect this, every man within the
-borders of Attica must have been exterminated;
-for so long as an Athenian was left, the indomitable
-spirit of democracy would have survived in
-him and sufficed to kindle up fresh contests.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But the energies of Athens, how great soever,
-did not, like those of most other states, develope
-themselves chiefly in war. It is the characteristic
-of barbarians to destroy, but to create nothing.
-The delight and glory of the people of Athens
-consisted, on the contrary, in the exercise of creative
-power, in calling into existence new arts,
-founding colonies, widening the circle of civilisation,
-covering the earth with beautiful structures,
-sacred and civil; in producing pictures, statues,
-vases, and sculptured gems, of conception and delicacy
-of workmanship inimitable. Wherever the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xiii'>xiii</span>Athenian set his foot, the very earth appeared to
-grow more lovely beneath it. His genius beautified
-whatever it touched. His imagination vivified
-everything. He spread a rich mythological colouring
-over land and sea. Gods, at his bidding, entered
-the antique oak, sported in the waters of
-brook and fountain, scattered themselves in joyous
-groups over the uplands and through the umbrageous
-valleys, and their voices and odoriferous breath
-mingled with every breeze that blew.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the distant colonies whither he betook himself,
-when poverty had relaxed the chain that
-bound him indissolubly to the Attic soil, a few
-years saw a new diminutive Athens springing up.
-The Pnyx, the Odeion, the Theatre of Bacchos,
-the Prytaneion, the Virgin’s Fane, rose on a diminished
-scale around him, presenting an image,
-though faint, of his earlier home, the loveliest,
-undoubtedly, and, after Jerusalem, the most hallowed
-spot ever inhabited by man. Above all
-things, he was everywhere careful to enjoy the
-blessings of his ancestral institutions, and listened,
-as in the mother city, to those popular thunders
-which, thrice in every month, rolled from the bema
-over the assembled crowd, communicating pleasurable
-emotions to his mind, and rousing continually
-the passion for freedom.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It were needless to dwell at any considerable
-length on the naval and military achievements of
-the Athenians. The world is still full of the victories
-of Marathon, Salamis, and Platæa, and the
-soil, drenched in defence of liberty with Attic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xiv'>xiv</span>blood, is to this day sacred in the eyes of the most
-phlegmatic. I appeal in proof of this to every
-man’s daily experience: for does not the bare mention
-of any spot where the great Demos triumphed
-or suffered some national calamity, make the blood
-bound more rapidly and tingle in our veins?
-Even the grovelling and worldly-minded, who affect
-to consider nothing holy but Mammon, can have
-fire struck out of their cold natures by the spell
-of those glorious syllables; for virtue, and valour,
-and that religious link which binds the soul to the
-spot where a mother’s dust reposes, are found, and
-will ever be found, to kindle warm admiration in
-every heart. And never since society began did
-these great qualities develope themselves more visibly
-than among the people of Athens. For this
-reason, who can visit Syracuse, or the shores of the
-Hellespont, or the site of Memphis’s White Castle,
-without experiencing as he gazes on the scene an
-electrical thrill of mental anguish at the recollection
-of what Athenian citizens more than two
-thousand years ago suffered there? Even Thermopylæ,
-glorious as it is, scarcely stirs our nature so
-deeply as Marathon; for the coarser and more material
-genius and institutions of Sparta, the nurse
-of those heroes who fell at the Gates of Hellas
-inspire less of that fervent admiration which the
-great actions and great men of Athens awaken in
-every cultivated mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Of the political institutions which throughout
-Hellas influenced so powerfully the developement of
-the national character, it is not my design in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xv'>xv</span>present volumes to speak. I confine myself entirely
-to the other causes which rendered the ancient
-Greeks what they were; reserving the examination
-of their forms of government for a separate
-treatise. The subject here discussed possesses sufficient
-interest of itself. It has been my aim to open
-up as far as possible a prospect into the domestic
-economy of a Grecian family, the arts, comforts,
-conveniences, regulations affecting the condition of
-private life, and those customs and manners which
-communicated a peculiar character and colour to
-the daily intercourse of Greek citizens. For, in all
-my investigations about the nature and causes of
-those ancient institutions which, during so many
-ages constituted the glory and the happiness of the
-most highly gifted race known to history, I found
-my attention constantly directed to the circumstances
-of their private life, from which, as from
-a great fountain, all their public prosperity and
-grandeur seemed to spring.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Indeed, the great sources of a nation’s happiness
-and power must always lie about the domestic
-hearth. There or nowhere are sown, and for many
-years cherished by culture, all those virtues which
-bloom afterwards in public, and form the best ornaments
-of the commonwealth. Men are everywhere
-exactly what their mothers make them. If
-these are slaves, narrow-minded, ignorant, unhappy,
-those in their turn will be so also. The domestic
-example, small and obscure though it be, will impress
-its image on the state; since that which individually
-is base and little, can never by congregating
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xvi'>xvi</span>with neighbouring littleness, become great,
-or lead to those heroic efforts, those noble self-sacrifices,
-which elevate human nature to a sphere
-in which it appears to touch upon and partake
-something of the divine.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>By minutely studying, as far as practicable, those
-small obscure sanctuaries of Greek civilisation—the
-private dwellings of Attica--I hoped to discover
-the secret of that moral alchemy by which were
-formed</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Those dead, but sceptred sovereigns who still rule</div>
- <div class='line'>Our spirits from their urns.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>In these haunts, little familiar to our imagination,
-lay concealed the germs of law, good government,
-philosophy, the arts, and whatever else has tended
-to soften and render beautiful the human clay.
-That this was the case is certain; why it should
-have been so, we may perhaps be unable satisfactorily
-to explain; but that is what we shall at
-least attempt in the present work, and for this
-purpose, it will at the first glance be apparent, that
-the most elaborate delineation of the political institutions
-of Athens must prove altogether insufficient.
-These were but one among many powerful
-causes. The principal lay deeper in a combination
-of numerous circumstances:—a peculiarly perfect
-and beautiful physical organization; a mind fraught
-with enthusiasm, force, flexibility, and unrivalled
-quickness; a buoyancy of temper which no calamity
-could long depress; consequent, probably,
-upon this, a strong religious feeling ineradicably
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xvii'>xvii</span>seated in the heart; an unerring perception of the
-beautiful in art and nature; and lastly, the enjoyment
-of a genial climate, and an atmosphere
-pure, brilliant, and full of sunshine as their minds.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Races of men, though not in precisely the same
-manner as individuals, yet exhibit, at particular periods
-of their history, a freshness, a vigour, a disinterestedness,
-like that of youth; and, because
-this state of feeling may more than once occur in
-the course of their career, they seem to spring,
-like Æson, out of convulsions and apparent dissolution
-to a state of perfect rejuvenescence. Calamity
-and suffering purify whole communities as
-they do individuals. In the boiling and commotion
-of revolutions the impurities of the national
-character bubble upwards and are skimmed away
-by the iron hand of misfortune. These political
-convulsions are, in fact, so many efforts of nature
-to expel some disease lurking in the constitution,
-and which, though the race be immortal, might, if
-suffered to remain in the frame, produce a lethargy
-worse than death. This truth we should
-bear constantly in mind; for among the characteristics
-of the Athenian constitution, not the least
-remarkable are the many efforts it made to right
-itself, and adapt its framework to the changing
-circumstances of the times.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the present inquiry we must, as I have already
-said, discover, if we can, how much Hellas
-owed to its climate, to its position on the globe,
-and to the physical organization of its inhabitants.
-It would be absurd to infer with some writers,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xviii'>xviii</span>that the influence of these circumstances is imaginary,
-because Greece seems to remain where it
-was of old, and the constitution and temperament
-of the people to be likewise unchanged. But this
-is not the case. Greece no longer occupies in the
-map of the world the position it occupied in antiquity.
-It has been lifted out of the centre of civilisation,
-to be cast upon its outskirts, or, which
-is the same thing, civilisation has shifted its seat.
-Nor are the Greeks any longer what they formerly
-were, though perhaps by a fortunate combination
-of circumstances they might still be rendered
-so. At present there is the same difference
-between them and their ancestors as between a
-jar of Falernian, and an empty jar. The clay, indeed,
-is there, beautifully moulded, and the purple
-hue of life is on the cheek; but tyranny from
-the battle of Cheronæa,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in12'>“That dishonest victory</div>
- <div class='line'>Fatal to liberty!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>until now has been draining out the soul. In the
-day when Hellas was itself its children walked in
-light, in the first beautiful light of the morning, which
-long seemed to shine only upon them; and now,
-perhaps, after the revolution of a cycle almost equal
-to the Great Year, they may, probably, be approaching
-another dawn.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Comparing the several states of Greece together,
-it is customary to bestow the palm of energy
-and military valour upon the Spartans, who made
-war their sole profession, and passed their lives as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xix'>xix</span>it were in the camp from the cradle to the grave.
-But, in thus deciding, justice is scarcely done to
-the character of Athens; for, if the former excelled
-in discipline, to the latter belonged, indisputably,
-the superiority in native courage. Trained
-or not trained they faced whatever enemy presented
-himself, and won at least as many laurels
-from Sparta, on the ocean, as the Doric State, in
-all its wars, ever gathered on land. And, lastly, at
-Platæa, among which race, among Ionians or Dorians,
-was most activity manifested? In whose ranks
-was found the greatest ardour to engage? Who
-bore the first brunt of the Median horse, and broke
-the dreaded shock of that vaunted Asiatic chivalry
-which the Barbarian hoped would have trampled
-down with its innumerable hoofs the spirit of Grecian
-freedom? This was effected by the Athenians;
-by those gay and seemingly effeminate soldiers, who
-went forth from their beautiful city curled, perfumed,
-clad in purple, as to the mimic combats of
-the theatre. The spirit of their commonwealth, all
-splendour without and all energy within, urged
-them to the field. Their cry at the approach of
-the king was “Freedom or honourable graves!”—such
-as their countrymen had ever been wont
-to repose in.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In fact, the Athenians, under a free government,
-had learned what it was to live—had imbibed
-from their education the feeling, that if deprived
-of such a government, if reduced to bow beneath
-the yoke of despotism, to die, if the Apostle’s
-words may without blame be thus applied, would
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xx'>xx</span>be gain. It will readily be conceived that the citizens
-of such a state felt an impassioned attachment
-to their country,—an attachment unintelligible
-to persons living under any other form of
-civil polity. Athens was the cradle of their freedom
-and their happiness. There was a religion in
-the love they bore it; they had, according to mythical
-traditions, which they believed, sprung on that
-spot from the bosom of the earth. It stood, therefore
-to them in the dearest of all relations, being,
-to sum up everything holy in one word,—their <span class='sc'>Mother</span>;
-and they embodied their profound veneration
-for the sacred spot in every fond, every endearing,
-epithet their matchless language could supply. Even
-the gods, in their patriotic partiality, were believed
-to look on Athens as the most lovely, no less than
-the most glorious city on the broad earth,—an
-idea which they expressed by representing Poseidon
-and Athena contending for the honour of becoming
-their tutelar divinity.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To persons so thinking no calamity short of the
-entire extinction of their race could appear so intolerable
-as beholding that sacred city, with the
-tombs of their ancestors, the sanctuaries of their
-gods, the venerable but immoveable symbols of
-their faith and mythological history, delivered over
-to be trodden down or obliterated with sword and
-fire by barbarian slaves, strong only from their
-countless numbers. Yet even to this did the love
-of freedom reconcile the Athenian people. They
-abandoned their holy place, and, embarking on
-board the fleet with their wives and children, took
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxi'>xxi</span>refuge in Trœzen and Salamis. History has described
-in touching language the circumstances of
-this event, than which it has nothing more pathetic
-to record save, peradventure, the carrying away of
-Judea and her children into captivity. I will not
-disturb its archaic simplicity. No eloquence could
-heighten its effect. It goes at once to the heart
-and rouses our noblest sympathies. “The embarkation
-of the people of Athens was a very affecting
-scene. What pity, what admiration of the firmness
-of those men who, sending their parents and
-families to a distant place, unmoved with their
-cries and embraces, had the fortitude to leave
-the city and embark for Salamis! What greatly
-heightened the distress was the number of citizens
-whom, on account of their extreme old age, they
-were forced to leave behind. And some emotions
-of tenderness were due even to the tame domestic
-animals which, running to the shore with lamentable
-howlings, expressed their affection and regret
-for the persons by whom they had been fed. One
-of these, a dog belonging to Xanthippos, the father
-of Pericles, unwilling to be left, is said to have
-leaped into the sea and to have swam by the side
-of the galley till it reached Salamis, where, quite
-spent with toil, it immediately died. And they
-show, to this day, a place called Cynossema—‘the
-dog’s grave’—where they tell us it was buried.”<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c018'><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Athenian people, on this and similar occasions,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxii'>xxii</span>were enabled to resolve and perform boldly
-from the generous spirit inspired by their national
-system of education. Their institutions, also, were
-eminently calculated to bring into play the energies
-of every individual citizen, and to diffuse in
-consequence through the whole community a grandeur
-of sentiment and an heroic enthusiasm peculiar
-to free states. At Athens whoever possessed
-the means of serving his country could easily, whatever
-might be his rank, make those means known,
-and bring them into operation. If he were virtuous
-his virtue was remarked and placed him on the
-road to promotion. If genius constituted his title
-to distinction, if nature had gifted him with the
-power to serve the state, the state, without inquiry
-whether he were poor or rich, readily availed itself
-of his capacity, rewarded him during his life with
-political honours and authority, and, after his death,
-with imperishable glory. If in war he performed
-any act of superior conduct or courage, a general’s
-name was his reward; if he received wounds that
-name, or the hope of it, healed them; if in the
-achieving of any heroic deed he perished, his country,
-he knew, would honour his ashes, watch over
-his memory, and, with words powerfully soothing
-because embodying a nation’s sympathy, dry up the
-tears of his parents and beloved children. He knew
-that his glory, heightened by matchless masters of
-eloquence, would flash like lightning from the
-bema; that lovely bosoms would beat high at his
-name; that hands, the fairest in Greece, would
-yearly wreath his tomb with garlands; and that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxiii'>xxiii</span>tears would be shed for ever on the spot by the
-brave.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>If children remained behind him, the state would
-become their parent; every Athenian would share
-with them his salt; would impart to them their
-best inheritance—the feeling of patriotism and
-an inextinguishable hatred of tyranny; would repeat
-to them with unenvious pride the eulogy
-of their father, and point daily to the laurels
-which kept his grave ever green. The Athenian
-was taught, from the cradle, to consider death
-beautiful when met on the red battle-field in
-defence of his home. And, according to the creed
-of his country, he believed that his spirit would
-in such an event be numbered among the objects
-of public worship. Hence the sublimity, the thrilling
-power of that oath in Demosthenes, who, in
-swearing by the souls of those that fell at Marathon,
-accomplished their apotheosis and placed them
-among the gods of Athens.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That such were the habitual feelings of this
-most gallant and generous-minded people appears
-even from the admission of their bitterest enemies.
-“They,” observe, in Thucydides, the Corinthian
-ambassadors, when urging Sparta into the Peloponnesian
-war,—"they push victory to the utmost,
-and are least of all men dejected by defeat;
-exposing their bodies for their country as if they
-had no interest in them, yet applying their minds
-in the public service as if that and their private
-interest were one. Disappointment of a proposed
-acquisition they consider as a loss of what
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxiv'>xxiv</span>already belonged to them; success in any pursuit
-they esteem only as a step towards farther
-advantages; and, defeated in any attempt, they
-turn immediately to some new project by which to
-make themselves amends: insomuch, that, through
-their celerity in executing whatever they propose,
-they seem to have the peculiar faculty of at the
-same time hoping and possessing. Thus they
-continue ever amid labours and dangers, enjoying
-nothing through sedulity to acquire; esteeming
-that only a time of festival in which they
-are prosecuting their projects; and holding rest
-as a greater evil than the most laborious business.
-To sum up their character, it may be truly
-said, that they were born neither to enjoy quiet
-themselves, nor to suffer others to enjoy it."<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c018'><sup>[2]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The feeling that what they fought for was their
-own, which accounts for the heroism of Hellenic
-armies, likewise led, particularly at Athens, to the
-beautifying and adorning of the city, and the perfection
-of public taste. The people saw among
-them no palaces devoted to the private luxuries
-of a despotic court, where persons maintained at
-the public expense learn to look with contempt
-on the honest hands that support them. There,
-whatever was magnificent belonged to the people
-at large, no private individuals, during the best
-ages of the commonwealth, presuming, how great
-soever might be their talents or their influence,
-to arrogate to themselves more than can be due
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxv'>xxv</span>to individuals, or to enshrine their perishable bodies
-in buildings suited only to the worship of God.
-Yet, in genuine grandeur, no monarch, with the
-wealth of half a world at the disposal of his
-caprice, ever rivalled the Athenian people. True
-taste, the genuine sense of the beautiful and the
-sublime, will, while the world endures, refuse to
-be the subject of a tyrant, or to inhabit the
-same city with him; because no patronage, pensions,
-or lavish expenditure, can create in one
-state of society what belongs to another; and pure
-taste being nothing more than the cultivated popular
-feeling spontaneously expanding, can nowhere
-exist but in a free state. A prince may, doubtless,
-know what pleases him; but the people only
-can tell what pleases the people, which nothing
-certainly will unless it be produced expressly for
-them, without the slightest reference to any other
-person.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Such, in the best periods of Grecian history,
-were the Athenians. Among them Nature generally
-was allowed to make herself heard; from the
-cradle upwards it was their guide. A pure religion
-they had not, or pure morality. Far from it; they
-barely caught indistinct glimpses of what in faith
-and practice is true and beautiful. Nor could it
-be otherwise; for the sun had not then risen, and
-men but felt their way uncertainly and timidly
-amid the obscurities of the dawn. Nevertheless,
-the light vouchsafed them they did not spurn.
-According to the best notions then prevailing, they
-were of all men the most pious; and though of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxvi'>xxvi</span>this piety much, nay, the greater part, was superstition,
-yet, doubtless, God, according to the saying
-of the Apostle, accounted it unto them for righteousness,
-that, having not the law, they were a law
-unto themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Spartans, on the other hand, were mere monastic
-soldiers, brave, indeed, and true as their swords,
-but ungifted with those loftier and more exquisite
-sympathies which properly constitute the beauty
-of human character, and are alone the parents of love.
-Few, perhaps, were all things within their reach,
-would choose to be citizens of Sparta; while no
-one, for whom the poetry of life has any charms,
-would hesitate, after his own country, perhaps, to
-select Athens for his home. And that this is no
-scholastic fancy created by literary preferences is
-clear from the practice of antiquity. Every man
-possessing superior genius, whether sprung from
-Ionic or Doric race, betook himself to Athens, as
-to the Greece of Greece—the common country of
-letters, sciences, and arts. Thither, too, as now to
-London, fled the oppressed and persecuted of all
-lands, and there they found welcome and encouragement.
-It was the great asylum, the common
-city of refuge to all men. Strangers who could be
-content with hospitality and generous protection
-were never driven from thence. There every man
-might live as he pleased, think as he pleased, and
-utter freely what he thought. The recorded instances
-of persecution are barely sufficiently numerous
-to serve as exceptions to the general rule;
-and in Gorgias of Leontium, Polos, Protagoras,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_xxvii'>xxvii</span>Prodicos, Hippias, “and what the Cynic impudence
-uttered,” we discover to how great an extent the
-spirit of toleration was carried at Athens. It
-would be absurd to object the examples of Anaxagoras,
-Aspasia, and Socrates; for these were
-merely instances of the rage of party spirit, from
-which, while men continue men, no state will ever
-be free, and can no more be imputed to the
-Athenian people, or to the spirit of their government,
-than the execution of Sir Thomas More,
-or Cranmer, or Fisher, can be laid to the charge
-of the English Constitution.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_xxx'>xxx</span>
- <h2 class='c013'>CONTENTS <br /> OF THE FIRST VOLUME.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c019' />
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='11%' />
-<col width='80%' />
-<col width='7%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c020' colspan='3'>BOOK I.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'><span class='small'>CHAPTER</span></td>
- <td class='c022'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c023'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>I.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Original Inhabitants of Hellas</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>II.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Character of the Greeks</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_29'>29</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>III.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Geographical Outline</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_51'>51</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Capital Cities of Greece—Athens</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_70'>70</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>V.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Capital Cities of Greece—Sparta</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_92'>92</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c020' colspan='3'>BOOK II.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c020' colspan='3'>EDUCATION.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>I.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Theory of Education.—Birth of Children.—Infanticide</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_107'>107</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>II.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Birth-feast.—Naming the Child.—Nursery.—Nursery Tales.—Spartan Festivals</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_128'>128</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>III.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Toys, Sports, and Pastimes</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_144'>144</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Elementary Instruction</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_164'>164</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>V.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Exercises of Youth</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_189'>189</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>VI.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Hunting and Fowling</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_206'>206</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>VII.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Schools of the Philosophers and Sophists</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_233'>233</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>VIII.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Education of the Spartans, Cretans, Arcadians,&amp;c.</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_265'>265</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_xxxi'>xxxi</span>IX.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Influence of the Fine Arts on Education</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_289'>289</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>X.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Hellenic Literature</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_314'>314</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>XI.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Spirit of the Grecian Religion</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_349'>349</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c020' colspan='3'>BOOK III.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c020' colspan='3'>WOMEN.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>I.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Women in Heroic Ages</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_369'>369</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>II.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Women of Doric States</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_382'>382</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c021'>III.</td>
- <td class='c022'>Condition of unmarried Women.—Love.</td>
- <td class='c023'><a href='#Page_401'>401</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <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='c013'>BOOK I.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c024'>CHAPTER I. <br /> ORIGINAL INHABITANTS OF HELLAS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c014'>The country of the Hellenes, which, in imitation of
-the Romans, we denominate Greece, was to its own
-inhabitants known by the name of Hellas. But the
-signification of this term was not fixed, being sometimes
-confined to Greece Proper, at others, comprehending
-likewise the possessions of the Hellenes in
-Asia; that is, Hellas within and beyond the Ægæan,
-as we now say, India within and beyond the Ganges.<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c018'><sup>[3]</sup></a>
-The progress of the name seems to have been as follows:
-it designated, originally,<a id='r4' /><a href='#f4' class='c018'><sup>[4]</sup></a> a city of Thessaly,
-built by Hellen son of Deucalion; next, Phthiotis;
-the whole of Thessaly; all Greece, with the exception
-sometimes of Peloponnesos, sometimes of Macedonia,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>sometimes,—which is very remarkable,—of Thessaly
-itself; sometimes of Epeiros; then all Greece within the
-Ægæan; afterwards all countries inhabited by Greeks
-in whatever part of the world; and, lastly, it would
-appear to have been occasionally employed to signify
-Athens alone.<a id='r5' /><a href='#f5' class='c018'><sup>[5]</sup></a> The most ancient name, Pelasgia,
-sprang from the race who first, perhaps, peopled that
-part of Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Nearly all writers who treat of Grecian history
-or antiquities, have ventured more or less upon inquiries
-respecting the original inhabitants of the country,
-some contending that it was peopled by many independent
-races, while others content themselves with
-supposing one primary stock. To arrive at certainty
-in such investigations is scarcely to be hoped for, since,
-over the whole field, facts have moved in so close a
-conjunction with fables, “that the most which remaineth
-to be seen, is the show of dark and obscure
-steps where some part of the truth hath gone.”<a id='r6' /><a href='#f6' class='c018'><sup>[6]</sup></a> It
-appears, however, to be a fact established, that the
-Hellenes were not the first who occupied Greece.
-They were preceded by a number of tribes all apparently
-of Pelasgian origin. But who and what the
-Pelasgians were, how and whence they came into the
-country, and by what gradations and influences they
-were ripened into Hellenes, or were by these expelled
-from the land, are questions to which no satisfactory
-answers have ever been given, but must still
-be discussed whatever the result of the investigation
-may be.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Even the name of this people has opened up an
-endless labyrinth of conjecture, at least among the
-moderns, for the ancients when such points were to
-be cleared up, easily removed the difficulty by inventing
-a hero or a demigod, with an appellation exactly
-suited to their purpose. Thus from Hellen they derived
-the name of the Hellenes, from Heracles that of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>Heracleidæ, from Ion that of the Ionians, and from
-Pelasgos, the son sometimes of Zeus, sometimes of
-Poseidon, sometimes of Triops or Inachos or Lycaon
-or Palachthon or of the earth itself,<a id='r7' /><a href='#f7' class='c018'><sup>[7]</sup></a> that of the
-Pelasgi. An Attic writer, familiar with this question,
-and hinting at a part of the theory which I have adopted,
-imagines the name of Pelasgi to have been at first
-bestowed on the race because they usually made their
-appearance on the shores of Hellas like migratory
-birds in spring.<a id='r8' /><a href='#f8' class='c018'><sup>[8]</sup></a> But though conjecture in such matters
-may amuse, it is not likely, at this distance of
-time, to lead to truth.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The ancients had evidently formed no theory as to
-whence the Pelasgi came, but were satisfied with the
-notion of their autochthoneïty,<a id='r9' /><a href='#f9' class='c018'><sup>[9]</sup></a> which we cannot adopt.
-It must be acknowledged, however, that we are little
-able to trace them with certainty beyond the limits of
-Greece, before their arrival in that country. My own
-opinion is, that when the migrations began from that
-vast and lofty table land of Central Asia, which formed
-the primitive abode of mankind, and where the mother
-language of the Sanskrit, the Greek, and many other
-dialects was first spoken, the illustrious race, afterwards
-known under the name of Pelasgi, moved westward
-by the Caspian, along the Caucasian range,
-through Armenia and Kourdistân, until they descended
-into the plains of Asia Minor. Here we seem to
-touch upon the obscurest verge of Grecian fable, for the
-tradition which sent Argo to Colchis, at the Eastern extremity
-of the Black Sea, evidently contemplated the
-people of the land as a kindred race, of similar faith,
-character, and manners. By what precise channel the
-stream of population rolled westward, cannot be determined:
-but here and there, on the southern shores of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>the Euxine, we discover some obscure footsteps of the
-parents of the Greeks, as they continued their journeyings
-towards the land which they were afterwards to
-encircle with glory. Moving through Pontos, Paphlagonia,
-and Bithynia, they appear everywhere to have
-made settlements on the coast, until they reached the
-narrow stream of the Bosporos, over which they threw
-themselves into Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Up to this point we have little whereon to build our
-conclusions, save what is supplied by the general theory
-of ancient migrations, and what appear to be facts
-dimly seen within the extreme orbit of mythology.
-The ancients themselves seem to have obtained some
-uncertain glimpses of links connecting their ancestors
-with Asiatic Scythia, for there were those among them
-who represented the Caucons of Paphlagonia stretching
-along the banks of the Parthenios, and between the
-Maryandinians and the sea, as a nation of Scythian
-origin. Now the Caucons were undoubtedly Pelasgians,
-as were the Phrygians, the Carians, and the
-Leleges, who, united by the ties of blood, flocked to
-the defence of Troy.<a id='r10' /><a href='#f10' class='c018'><sup>[10]</sup></a> In a much remoter age, the
-heroes of the traditional Argo were, it is said, confounded
-by night at Cyzicos,<a id='r11' /><a href='#f11' class='c018'><sup>[11]</sup></a> in Mysia, with the warlike
-Pelasgi, even then masters of the sea, and accustomed
-with their galleys to vex the coast and plunder
-the settled inhabitants. I regard the working of the
-gold and silver mines on the southern shores of the
-Euxine, anterior to the Trojan war, as another proof
-of the settlement of the Pelasgi in that part of Asia
-Minor;<a id='r12' /><a href='#f12' class='c018'><sup>[12]</sup></a> and who but they, at a period beyond the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>reach of tradition, could have opened those gold mines
-on the shores of Thrace, which on his conquest of the
-country Philip of Macedon found to have been long ago
-worked and abandoned by some unknown people?<a id='r13' /><a href='#f13' class='c018'><sup>[13]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Be this as it may, it was over the Bosporos and
-through Thrace that the Pelasgi seem to have made
-their earliest approaches towards Greece. The Thracians
-themselves were of Pelasgian origin. Thracians
-inhabited both sides of the Bosporos; traces of Pelasgian
-settlements and Pelasgian names are likewise
-found on both sides. The stream of knowledge unquestionably
-poured through Thrace into Greece; and
-it is highly probable that the stream of population had,
-at a remoter period, flowed in the same channel. Once
-in Macedonia, the adventurers would be tempted
-southward by the beauty of the climate and country;
-so that while some moved up the valley of the Haliacmon,
-others, perhaps, took possession of the ridge of
-Olympos, Ossa and Pelion, where they were known
-under the names of Centaurs and Lapithæ.<a id='r14' /><a href='#f14' class='c018'><sup>[14]</sup></a> From
-these lofty ridges they looked down upon the great
-lake which in those ages covered the whole plain of
-Thessaly, and, following the ramifications of the mountains,
-peopled Pelasgian Argos, Phthiotis, and the
-roots of Œta, while the lowlands were still under
-water: thence, too, they crossed over into Eubœa,
-where they assumed the names of Macrones<a id='r15' /><a href='#f15' class='c018'><sup>[15]</sup></a> and
-Curetes. This latter tribe settling at Chalcis,<a id='r16' /><a href='#f16' class='c018'><sup>[16]</sup></a> and
-having been worsted in a contest for the Lalantian
-plain, fled across the Euripos, and traversing the whole
-of Bœotia, founded a new settlement about Pleuron in
-Ætolia, and gave the name of Curetis to the whole
-country. Hence, also, in process of time, they were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>driven by the Ætolians from Pisa in Elis, upon which
-they took refuge in Acarnania.<a id='r17' /><a href='#f17' class='c018'><sup>[17]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But the principal tribe, and that which subsequently
-spread throughout Greece, after filling with population
-the valley of the Haliacmon, traversing the Caulavian
-range, and descending along the course of the Aoös,
-seem on the banks of the Celydnos, to have turned
-their faces southward. Following that stream upwards
-towards its source, they found themselves in Epeiros, a
-land abounding with water brooks, with lovely mountains,
-and lovelier valleys, and at length settled, and
-erected themselves lasting habitations in the sacred
-neighbourhood of Dodona,<a id='r18' /><a href='#f18' class='c018'><sup>[18]</sup></a> where the first oracle
-known to the Hellenes flourished under the protection
-of the Pelasgian Zeus.<a id='r19' /><a href='#f19' class='c018'><sup>[19]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Up to this point we have been treading, with little
-or no light to guide us, over a soil shifting, unsure,
-and treacherous; but here we touch upon comparatively
-firm ground, while the light of poetry dawns
-around, and enables us to direct our footsteps towards
-the luminous terra firma of history.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It must not be denied that much of the foregoing
-theory is erected on inference and conjecture. Nevertheless,
-it rests in part on facts which an historian
-ought not to reject. For example, though it be nowhere,
-perhaps, distinctly stated that the Thracians
-were entirely of Pelasgian origin, we are compelled
-by various circumstances to believe that such was the
-case: first, Samothrace on the coast was undoubtedly
-peopled by Pelasgi;<a id='r20' /><a href='#f20' class='c018'><sup>[20]</sup></a> secondly, the Macedonians,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>plainly of the same stock with the Thracians, are acknowledged
-to have been Pelasgi;<a id='r21' /><a href='#f21' class='c018'><sup>[21]</sup></a> and since the
-Illyrians likewise were a kindred people,<a id='r22' /><a href='#f22' class='c018'><sup>[22]</sup></a> we have a
-line of Pelasgian settlements stretching along the
-whole northern frontier of Greece, the Ægæan, the
-Hellespont, and the Propontis, from the Adriatic to
-the Black Sea. The chain of proofs, indeed, is not
-complete, but appears and disappears alternately, like
-the stream of the Alpheios, though little doubt can
-be entertained of the existence of the links which
-happen to lie out of sight. In nearly every part of
-Macedonia the footsteps of the Pelasgi are clearly
-discernible; at Crestona,<a id='r23' /><a href='#f23' class='c018'><sup>[23]</sup></a> on the Echidoros in Pœonia;
-in Emathea, and Bottiœa;<a id='r24' /><a href='#f24' class='c018'><sup>[24]</sup></a> and looking at the
-language of the country, we find it at all times to
-have been identical with that of Greece. That the
-same thing must be predicated of Thrace, even in the
-remotest ages, appears indisputably from this, that
-her bards, Thamyris and Orpheus traversed the whole
-of Hellas, and sang their wisdom to its inhabitants;
-while Olen coming from Lycia, a Pelasgian settlement,<a id='r25' /><a href='#f25' class='c018'><sup>[25]</sup></a>
-likewise brought his kindred songs to the
-same tolerant and hospitable land.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But to follow the movements of the Pelasgi through
-Greece itself, where, though no chronology of events
-can be attempted, our views rest on a stable foundation.
-Much, however, of our reasoning will be confused
-or perhaps unintelligible, if it be not borne in
-mind that the name of the Pelasgi, like that of the
-Tartars or Arabs, was a general appellation applied to
-the whole race, while the several tribes bore separate
-denominations; as the Chaones,<a id='r26' /><a href='#f26' class='c018'><sup>[26]</sup></a> the Dryopes, the
-Leleges, the Caucons, the Cranaans, with many
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>others,<a id='r27' /><a href='#f27' class='c018'><sup>[27]</sup></a> precisely as among the Arabs, we find the
-Ababde, the Mahazi, the Beni Sakker, &amp;c. The Pelasgian
-tribe which first made its appearance, and
-became powerful in Epeiros, a country not to be separated
-from Greece, was that of the Chaones, whose
-chief seat was Cheimera,<a id='r28' /><a href='#f28' class='c018'><sup>[28]</sup></a> at the foot of the Ceraunian
-mountains. An obscure scholiast, indeed, denominates
-them barbarians;<a id='r29' /><a href='#f29' class='c018'><sup>[29]</sup></a> but as from the best authority we
-know them to have been Pelasgi, this shows the value
-of the term in the mouth of the later writers. Another
-class,—the Levites, perhaps, of those primitive
-people,—settled amid the oak forests which surrounded
-the lovely lake of Dodona, where under the name
-of Selli,<a id='r30' /><a href='#f30' class='c018'><sup>[30]</sup></a> they founded the most celebrated oracle of
-early antiquity. In their habits they remind us of
-the Sanyasis, and other religious anchorites of India,
-living from views of penance with unwashed feet, and
-sleeping on the bare ground. Other tribes renowned
-of old in Epeiros, and all Pelasgian,<a id='r31' /><a href='#f31' class='c018'><sup>[31]</sup></a> were the Thesprotians,
-the Molossians, the Perrhæbians, and the
-Dolopians, the last rough mountaineers inhabiting
-both the eastern and western slopes of Pindos.<a id='r32' /><a href='#f32' class='c018'><sup>[32]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When Epeiros had been thus thickly sprinkled with
-settlements, an earthquake appears to have produced
-in the range of Pelion the narrow precipitous gap,
-afterwards known as Tempe, by which the waters of
-the Thessalian lake discharged themselves into the
-sea. This happened, we are told, while one Pelasigos<a id='r33' /><a href='#f33' class='c018'><sup>[33]</sup></a>
-reigned over the mountaineers in the district of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>Hæmonia. They were celebrating a great feast, when
-a certain slave named Peloros, brought them tidings
-of what had come to pass, speaking with admiration
-of the vast plains which were appearing through the
-ebbing waters. In gratitude for the news he communicated,
-they caused the man to seat himself at
-table while both the king and his attendants, in the
-joy and fulness of their hearts ministered to him.
-This, it is said, was the origin of the Pelorian festival,
-afterwards, down to a very late period, celebrated with
-great pomp and magnificence in Thessaly, where, for
-the day, masters changed condition with their slaves,
-and became their servants.<a id='r34' /><a href='#f34' class='c018'><sup>[34]</sup></a> The same festival in the
-Pelasgian settlements of Italy was known down to the
-latest times, under the name of Saturnalia.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On the interior of Thessaly becoming thus habitable,
-the Pelasgian tribes of Epeiros, beginning to be
-straitened for room, and feeling still the original wandering
-impulse, poured over the heights of Pindos into
-the valleys of Histiæotis, and moved eastward along
-the foot of the Cambunian mountains, settling every
-where as they advanced. The tribe which took this
-direction bore the name of Perrhæbians, and left traces
-of their movements in the great Perrhæbian forest,
-stretching to the foot of Olympos, and in the name of
-the whole district extending from the Peneios to the
-northern limits of Thessaly. In this rich and fertile
-tract they became powerful, spreading their dominion
-along the banks of the Peneios, quite down to the
-sea. But the Lapithæ rising into consequence and
-overcoming the Perrhæbians in battle, reduced a portion
-of the tribes under their yoke, while the remainder,
-enamoured of independence, retreated inland,
-again crossed the Pindos, and established themselves
-in the upper valley of the Acheloös. About the same
-time, perhaps, a fragment of this tribe traversing the
-whole of Thessaly crossed over into Eubœa, where
-they subdued and took possession of Histiæotis. It
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>was possibly the entrance of these adventurers into
-the island, pushing fresh waves of population southward,
-that caused the contest for the Lalantian plain,
-and the emigration of the Curetes to the continent.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Other Pelasgian tribes established themselves, and
-became illustrious in Thessaly. The Centaurs, for
-example, a Lelegian clan inhabiting Mount Pelion,
-where they were, perhaps, the first tamers of the
-horse, whence the fable of their double form. Other
-sections of the Leleges were also found in Thessaly,<a id='r35' /><a href='#f35' class='c018'><sup>[35]</sup></a>
-as were also the Dryopes. In this country,<a id='r36' /><a href='#f36' class='c018'><sup>[36]</sup></a> notwithstanding
-that it must be regarded upon the whole as
-only the second stage of the Pelasgians in their migrations
-southward, we find more traces of their power
-and influence than anywhere else in Northern Greece.
-Here were two cities, called Larissa; here was Pelasgian
-Argos;<a id='r37' /><a href='#f37' class='c018'><sup>[37]</sup></a> here, too, was a great district known
-by the name of Pelasgiotis, while that of Pelasgia seems
-to have preceded Thessaly as the appellation of the
-whole province.<a id='r38' /><a href='#f38' class='c018'><sup>[38]</sup></a> This people, like most others, seem
-to have had a number of names, to which they were
-peculiarly attached, which we nearly always find reappearing
-wherever they formed a settlement. Generally,
-too, it may be regarded as certain that the
-more northern were the most ancient: thus we find
-Pelagonia in the kingdom of Macedon and in Thessaly;
-Larissa<a id='r39' /><a href='#f39' class='c018'><sup>[39]</sup></a> on the Peneios; Larissa Cremaste near
-the shore. The Dryopes,<a id='r40' /><a href='#f40' class='c018'><sup>[40]</sup></a> again, appear first in Epeiros,
-not far from Dodona; next we find them in Thessaly,
-then in Doris, finally in Peloponnesos; and Strabo is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>careful to remark that the last-mentioned were an off-shoot
-from those in the north.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>From Thessaly the tide of population rolled southward;<a id='r41' /><a href='#f41' class='c018'><sup>[41]</sup></a>
-different tribes of Pelasgi, under the name of
-Leleges, Hyantes, Aones, and Dryopes taking possession
-of the mountains and valleys of Doris, Locris,
-Phocis, and extending their migrations into the plains
-of Bœotia. From thence, across the isthmus, some
-few straggling hordes appear to have found their way
-into Peloponnesos, where, as shepherds, they gradually
-diffused themselves over its rich plains. All the Pelasgi
-in fact appear like the Arabs and Tartars to
-have been originally Nomades, different tribes of
-whom, as they were tempted by the beauty of particular
-regions, quitted their wandering life, as the
-Arabs have done in Egypt, Yemen, and elsewhere, and
-from shepherds became husbandmen. In process of
-time, the descendants of the settlers, accustomed to
-the easy and luxurious life of cities, learned to look
-back upon their wandering ancestors as a wretched
-and a barbarous race. Indeed, they sometimes speak
-of them<a id='r42' /><a href='#f42' class='c018'><sup>[42]</sup></a> after their arrival in Peloponnesos as cannibals,
-naked, houseless, ignorant of the use of fire,
-on a level, in short, with the fiercest and most brutal
-savages existing in the islands of the Pacific. But
-these erroneous ideas evidently arose from the theory of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>autochthoneïty which supposes man to have gradually
-ripened out of a beast into a man; whereas, the low
-savages discovered in various parts of the world, do
-not represent the original state of mankind, but are
-mere instances of extreme degeneracy. In fact, a
-different set of traditions also prevailed among the
-Greeks, which, referring evidently to the period when
-their ancestors were Nomades, spoke with rapture
-and enthusiasm of their happy and tranquil life, when,
-following their flocks from vale to vale and from
-stream to stream, they fed upon the spontaneous productions
-which nature spread before them. On this
-period the poets bestowed the name of the Golden
-Age, and, perhaps, if examined philosophically, there
-is no stage in the history of civilisation at which
-there is so much to enjoy and so little to suffer, as
-when the whole nation are shepherds, and happen
-to light upon a land where, as yet too few to inconvenience
-each other, they can live unmolested by
-foreign tribes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It has now been shown how Hellas might have
-been entirely peopled from the north; but certain traditions,
-prevailing from the earliest times, compel us
-to admit that some portion, at least, of its population
-reached it by a different route; that is, through
-Asia Minor and the islands. I have already alluded
-briefly to the existence of a Pelasgian tribe
-in Paphlagonia,<a id='r43' /><a href='#f43' class='c018'><sup>[43]</sup></a> that is to say, the Caucons, whose
-establishment in this region supplies a link in the
-chain of proofs by which we endeavour to connect
-the Pelasgi with the Scythians of Central Asia; for
-the Caucons are admitted to have been of Pelasgian
-origin, and an opinion prevailed among the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>ancients that they were likewise Scythians.<a id='r44' /><a href='#f44' class='c018'><sup>[44]</sup></a> Thus
-we find that certain Scythians settled in Paphlagonia,
-were called Caucons, that the Caucons were
-Pelasgi, and that the Pelasgi peopled Greece. The
-Greeks, therefore, by this account, traced their origin
-to Scythia. Circumstances connected with the
-geography of Asia Minor and of Hellas, seem to
-furnish traces of the route of the Pelasgi westward.
-It appears to have been among the primitive articles
-of their creed, that the deity delighted to abide on
-the summits of lofty and even of snowy mountains;
-and whenever in their settlements the features of
-the earth presented any such towering eminence,
-they seem to have bestowed on it the name of Olympos,
-or Celestial Mansion.<a id='r45' /><a href='#f45' class='c018'><sup>[45]</sup></a> Immediately south of
-the Cauconian settlements, on the limits of Bithynia
-and Galacia, we accordingly find a mountain of
-this name; again, travelling westward, we have
-another Mount Olympos, on the northern confines
-of Phrygia; a third meets us in the island of Lesbos;<a id='r46' /><a href='#f46' class='c018'><sup>[46]</sup></a>
-a fourth in Cypros, a fifth in Arcadia,<a id='r47' /><a href='#f47' class='c018'><sup>[47]</sup></a> a sixth
-in Elis, and a seventh, best known of all, near the
-cradle of the Hellenes in Thessaly. In Mysia,<a id='r48' /><a href='#f48' class='c018'><sup>[48]</sup></a> the
-footsteps of the race are numerous; Pelasgian cities—Placia,
-Scylace, Cyzicos, Antandros—studded the
-coast; inland there was a Larissa;<a id='r49' /><a href='#f49' class='c018'><sup>[49]</sup></a> and the lovely-leafed
-evergreen, which shaded the slopes and crags
-of the Trojan Ida, was named the Pelasgian laurel.<a id='r50' /><a href='#f50' class='c018'><sup>[50]</sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>Other facts there are connecting the Trojans with
-the Pelasgian stock: thus the Caucons, whom we
-find among their allies in Homer, are called a Trojan
-tribe; the language of Troy was evidently a Pelasgian
-dialect, closely allied to the Greek,<a id='r51' /><a href='#f51' class='c018'><sup>[51]</sup></a> which may
-likewise be predicated of the Phrygian, the Lydian,
-the Carian, the Lycian extending along the whole
-western coast of Asia Minor. The gods, oracles,
-rites, ceremonies of all these people appear in early
-times to have been identical with those of Hellas,
-and mythology represents the heroes of both continents
-as sprung from the same gods. Nay, positive
-testimony describes the Pelasgi as a great nation,
-holding the whole western coast of Asia Minor,
-from Mycale to the Hellespont;<a id='r52' /><a href='#f52' class='c018'><sup>[52]</sup></a> and speaks of
-the Leleges as inhabiting a part of Caria, where
-their deserted fortifications, called Lelegia,<a id='r53' /><a href='#f53' class='c018'><sup>[53]</sup></a> apparently
-of Cyclopian construction, were still found in
-the time of Strabo,<a id='r54' /><a href='#f54' class='c018'><sup>[54]</sup></a> together with their tombs, probably
-barrows, resembling those scattered through
-Peloponnesos, and called the “Tombs of the Phrygians.”<a id='r55' /><a href='#f55' class='c018'><sup>[55]</sup></a>
-Similar sepulchral relics of Carian dominion
-were found and opened by the Athenians in
-the purification of Delos.<a id='r56' /><a href='#f56' class='c018'><sup>[56]</sup></a> Possibly, too, the tumuli,
-existing to this day in Tartary, and occasionally rifled
-by the Siberians, mark the original seat of the Pelasgi
-in Asia; though similar monuments are found
-in other parts of the East, as in Nubia, where I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>counted a cluster of ten or twelve, and nearly all
-over Europe. Homer speaks of one on the plains
-of Troy, and the Greeks themselves cast up barrows
-over their heroes, as Ajax, where</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Far by the solitary shore he sleeps.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Not to omit any material facts, on which my view
-of Pelasgian history is founded, I shall proceed to
-mention in order the principal points on the Asiatic
-shore where the footsteps of the Pelasgi appear.
-We find, then, that they occupied the greater
-part of Lydia,<a id='r57' /><a href='#f57' class='c018'><sup>[57]</sup></a> and at the time of the Ionian migration
-held the citadel of Ephesos. They, too, in conjunction
-with the Nymphs were the founders of the
-temple of Hera at Samos,<a id='r58' /><a href='#f58' class='c018'><sup>[58]</sup></a> and crossing the Mæander
-they re-appear again at Miletos on the coast of Caria.
-Indeed this city<a id='r59' /><a href='#f59' class='c018'><sup>[59]</sup></a> was originally, from its inhabitants,
-called Lelegeis, though it afterwards was known under
-a variety of names, as Pituoussa from the surrounding
-pine woods, Anactoria, and lastly, Miletos. A little
-further southward was another Lelegian settlement
-at Pedasos on the Satneios.<a id='r60' /><a href='#f60' class='c018'><sup>[60]</sup></a> From a passage
-in Homer it has been supposed that the Carians and
-Lelegians were distinct races, but in reality the Carians
-were a Lelegian tribe;<a id='r61' /><a href='#f61' class='c018'><sup>[61]</sup></a> that is Pelasgi, who like
-the Hellenes in Greece, gradually acquired power and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>dominion, and eclipsed their brethren. This they were
-enabled to do by applying themselves passionately to
-the use of arms, a circumstance which at a later
-period led them to make a traffic of their valour and
-hire their swords to the best bidder. In earlier and
-better times they achieved conquests for themselves, and
-rivalling the Phœnicians in maritime enterprise and
-success, reduced under their sway the greater number
-of the Ægæan islands,<a id='r62' /><a href='#f62' class='c018'><sup>[62]</sup></a> and even some portion of the
-Hellenic continent itself.<a id='r63' /><a href='#f63' class='c018'><sup>[63]</sup></a> Certain clans of this martial
-race sought an outlet for their restless daring by
-joining the Cilicians<a id='r64' /><a href='#f64' class='c018'><sup>[64]</sup></a> in their piratical enterprises,
-and probably it was in this character that they first
-obtained possession of some of the smaller isles.
-Positive historical testimony there seems to be none
-for fixing the Pelasgi in Cypros,<a id='r65' /><a href='#f65' class='c018'><sup>[65]</sup></a> though we cannot
-doubt that it was included in their dominions, from
-the ruins of Cyclopian fortresses still found there,
-and the Olympian Mount already mentioned. In
-Rhodes, however, and Samos antiquity speaks of
-their settlements;<a id='r66' /><a href='#f66' class='c018'><sup>[66]</sup></a> they, too, were the earliest inhabitants
-of Chios,<a id='r67' /><a href='#f67' class='c018'><sup>[67]</sup></a> whence they sent forth a colony
-to Lesbos,<a id='r68' /><a href='#f68' class='c018'><sup>[68]</sup></a> which received from them the name of
-Pelasgia. They expelled the Minyans from Lemnos,<a id='r69' /><a href='#f69' class='c018'><sup>[69]</sup></a>
-which afterwards, through fear of Darius, their king
-ceded to the Athenians,<a id='r70' /><a href='#f70' class='c018'><sup>[70]</sup></a> and held Imbros<a id='r71' /><a href='#f71' class='c018'><sup>[71]</sup></a> and Samothrace<a id='r72' /><a href='#f72' class='c018'><sup>[72]</sup></a>
-in the north; Scyros, too, was originally
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>named Pelasgia.<a id='r73' /><a href='#f73' class='c018'><sup>[73]</sup></a> Andros was peopled by one<a id='r74' /><a href='#f74' class='c018'><sup>[74]</sup></a> of
-their colonies, and Delos, as we have already seen,
-held their bones until they were cast forth by the
-Athenians. But it is unnecessary to enumerate each
-separate point, since we know generally that all the
-Ægæan isles were anciently in their possession,<a id='r75' /><a href='#f75' class='c018'><sup>[75]</sup></a> and
-that even the great island of Crete formed, in remote
-ages, a portion of their empire. Here under the
-names of Curetes, Corybantes, Telchines and Dactyli,<a id='r76' /><a href='#f76' class='c018'><sup>[76]</sup></a>
-they flourished in the mythical times, and were the
-reputed preservers and nurses of the infant Zeus, a
-god pre-eminently Pelasgian, so that wherever his
-worship was found I regard it as a proof that the
-Pelasgi had settled there.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Passing thus from island to island in the very
-infancy of navigation, the Pelasgi appear by way
-of the Sporades and Cycladæ, to have migrated into
-Peloponnesos, first landing at Argos. Probably on
-their arrival they found there some few inhabitants
-who by the isthmus had entered and scattered themselves
-at leisure over the peninsula. But whether
-this was so or not, certain it is that the oldest legends
-of Hellenic mythology allude to the peopling of Argos
-by sea, representing Inachos, its first ruler, as a son
-of the ocean.<a id='r77' /><a href='#f77' class='c018'><sup>[77]</sup></a> From this chief, whether historical
-or fabulous, the principal river of Argos received
-its appellation, and members of his family bestowed
-their names on Argolis first, and afterwards on
-the whole of Peloponnesos, which from Apis was
-denominated Apia;<a id='r78' /><a href='#f78' class='c018'><sup>[78]</sup></a> from Pelasgos, Pelasgia;<a id='r79' /><a href='#f79' class='c018'><sup>[79]</sup></a> and
-from another prince so called, it received the name of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>Argos.<a id='r80' /><a href='#f80' class='c018'><sup>[80]</sup></a> In this division of Hellas, which the rays
-of poetry and mythology unite to render luminous, the
-Pelasgi<a id='r81' /><a href='#f81' class='c018'><sup>[81]</sup></a> seem early to have struck deep root, and
-made a rapid progress in civilisation. Here, accordingly,
-in historical times were found the most numerous
-monuments of their power and grandeur; and
-here, in the treasury of Atreus and the walls of
-Tiryns denominated Cyclopian, we still may contemplate
-proofs of their opulence and progress in the
-arts. Among them would appear to have existed a
-class or caste named Cyclops, addicted extremely to
-handicrafts, particularly building. These it was who
-erected the walls and citadel of Argos,<a id='r82' /><a href='#f82' class='c018'><sup>[82]</sup></a> on which
-they bestowed the name of Larissa, together with
-certain labyrinths, said to have existed in the neighbourhood
-of Nauplia. Mycenæ appears to have been
-the most ancient capital of the country, built while
-the site of Argos was yet a marsh,<a id='r83' /><a href='#f83' class='c018'><sup>[83]</sup></a> or perhaps under
-water; then came Tiryns, and lastly Argos. Other
-early seats of the Pelasgi were at Epidauros and
-Hermione.<a id='r84' /><a href='#f84' class='c018'><sup>[84]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But the province of Peloponnesos which the Pelasgi
-most delighted to consider their home, was the rough,
-wild, and elevated table land of Arcadia,<a id='r85' /><a href='#f85' class='c018'><sup>[85]</sup></a> resembling
-on a small scale their original seat in central Asia;
-belted round by mountains with many streams and
-rivers pouring down their sides: here long shut out
-from commerce with the rest of mankind they multiplied
-in ease and security, and became a great nation,<a id='r86' /><a href='#f86' class='c018'><sup>[86]</sup></a>
-who, to express the idea of their own extreme antiquity,
-professed themselves to be older than the
-moon.<a id='r87' /><a href='#f87' class='c018'><sup>[87]</sup></a> Having lost all tradition of their arrival in
-the country, they looked upon themselves as autochthons,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>and regarded their mountain-girt land as the
-great reservoir of Pelasgian population,<a id='r88' /><a href='#f88' class='c018'><sup>[88]</sup></a> whence its
-colonies like streams, flowed outwards, and peopled
-the rest of Hellas; and probably it was thence that
-the first emigrants descended into the valley of the
-Eurotas, spread themselves through Laconia, and
-found a mountain on which they bestowed the holy
-name of Olympos. In this province one of the most
-famous of the Pelasgian tribes, is by some traditions
-said to have had its origin; for Lelex,<a id='r89' /><a href='#f89' class='c018'><sup>[89]</sup></a> who gave
-his name to the Leleges, they fabled to have been
-an autochthon of Laconia, and down even to the times
-of Pausanias an heroum was shown at Sparta erected
-in honour of his name. Undoubtedly a mythical
-legend connected with this hero was deeply interwoven
-with the fabulous history of Laconia. His son
-Eurotas was the father of Sparta, wife of Lacedæmon,
-who gave his name to the country. He had two
-daughters, Amycla and Eurydice, the latter of whom
-became the wife of Acrisios.<a id='r90' /><a href='#f90' class='c018'><sup>[90]</sup></a> The Acarnanians, however,
-had among them a tradition which made Lelex
-an autochthon of Leucadia,<a id='r91' /><a href='#f91' class='c018'><sup>[91]</sup></a> and the people of Megara
-spoke of one Lelex<a id='r92' /><a href='#f92' class='c018'><sup>[92]</sup></a> who arrived in their country
-by sea from Egypt.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To proceed, however, with the traces of the Pelasgi
-in Peloponnesos. It has sometimes been supposed that
-no proof exists of their having held any part of this
-peninsula excepting Argos, Achaia and Arcadia;<a id='r93' /><a href='#f93' class='c018'><sup>[93]</sup></a>
-but erroneously, for we have seen the Leleges, a
-Pelasgian tribe, in Laconia; and we find a settlement
-of the Pelasgi in Messenia. Here also at Andania
-flourished the Pelasgian worship of the Dii Kabyri
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>from Samothrace;<a id='r94' /><a href='#f94' class='c018'><sup>[94]</sup></a> colony of Leleges, under Pylos,
-son of Cleison, settled at Pylos on the Coryphasian
-promontory.<a id='r95' /><a href='#f95' class='c018'><sup>[95]</sup></a> The Caucons held Cyparissos;<a id='r96' /><a href='#f96' class='c018'><sup>[96]</sup></a> that is
-both in the interior of Messenia and along the sea
-coast we find settlements of the race which peopled
-the whole peninsula. Passing northward into Elis, we
-immediately on crossing the Neda find Caucons in the
-Lepreatis,<a id='r97' /><a href='#f97' class='c018'><sup>[97]</sup></a> where, probably, in proof that the tribe
-originated there, they showed in Strabo’s<a id='r98' /><a href='#f98' class='c018'><sup>[98]</sup></a> time the
-tomb of Caucon. They had likewise a river Caucon<a id='r99' /><a href='#f99' class='c018'><sup>[99]</sup></a>
-in the north of Elis, and in short the whole country
-from the Neda to the Larissos bore anciently the
-name of Cauconia.<a id='r100' /><a href='#f100' class='c018'><sup>[100]</sup></a> Some, however, maintain that
-they were found only at three points on the coast,
-that is, in the south of Triphylia,<a id='r101' /><a href='#f101' class='c018'><sup>[101]</sup></a> in the north near
-Dyme, and at Hollow Elis on the Peneios, which
-Aristotle considered their chief seat.<a id='r102' /><a href='#f102' class='c018'><sup>[102]</sup></a> Nevertheless
-Antimachos regarded the Epeians as Caucons,<a id='r103' /><a href='#f103' class='c018'><sup>[103]</sup></a> and
-since these inhabited the whole western coast from
-Messenia northward, we must consider Elis as the
-principal though not the original seat of this tribe;
-for we find them represented as issuing from Arcadia,
-and we have already shown that they were settled
-in Paphlagonia, and were denominated a Trojan
-tribe.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Turning our faces eastward from the promontory
-Araxos, we discover along the coast a chain of Pelasgian
-settlements founded by Ionians from Athens.<a id='r104' /><a href='#f104' class='c018'><sup>[104]</sup></a>
-To complete our list of proofs that there was no spot
-in all Hellas not possessed by the Pelasgi, we find a
-prince of that race, and named Pelasgos, receiving the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>goddess Demeter at Corinth in the remotest periods of
-the mythology.<a id='r105' /><a href='#f105' class='c018'><sup>[105]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Thus, then, we have traced this illustrious people
-under various names through every region of Greece,
-save Attica; and there also they were found, but
-whether they arrived by land or sea, I profess myself
-wholly unable to determine. A modern historian<a id='r106' /><a href='#f106' class='c018'><sup>[106]</sup></a>
-who experienced the same difficulty, observes, that
-the Ionians appear to have dropped from heaven into
-Attica. Unquestionably we do not know whence
-they came, and as their own legends represent them
-as autochthons<a id='r107' /><a href='#f107' class='c018'><sup>[107]</sup></a> we can expect no aid from tradition.
-The most probable supposition is, that when the migratory
-hordes were pushing southward from Thessaly,
-some clans, more fortunate than the rest, traversing
-the heights of Cithæron soon found themselves in
-possession of this unfertile but lovely land, covered in
-those ages with forests, diversified by hill and dale,
-and breathing perfume from every thicket. The succeeding
-tide of emigration breaking against the ridge
-of Cithæron seems to have turned westward and
-flowed into the Peloponnesos, leaving Attica unmolested.
-Some have regarded its own barrenness
-as the rampart which protected it from invasion.
-But why may we not suppose that the inhabitants
-finding themselves thriving and tranquil, resolved
-early to fight for their possessions, and hedged themselves
-from invasion by courage and arms? be this as
-it may, Attica was the first part of Hellas that
-enjoyed permanent exemption from war, so that the
-olive, its principal ornament and riches, became in
-all after ages the emblem of peace. Once settled
-in this country the Pelasgi were never driven thence,<a id='r108' /><a href='#f108' class='c018'><sup>[108]</sup></a>
-nor did they ever receive any considerable mixture
-of foreign settlers. Individuals from time to time
-were permitted to take up their abode among them;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>but, in this favoured spot, unalloyed by foreign mixture,
-the Pelasgic genius completely developed itself,
-and reached the highest pitch of civilisation known to
-the ancient world.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The earliest name bestowed on the Pelasgian tribe
-which held Attica was that of Cranaans;<a id='r109' /><a href='#f109' class='c018'><sup>[109]</sup></a> but whether
-they were so distinguished before their migration
-thither, or, which is more probable, derived their
-appellation from the rocky nature<a id='r110' /><a href='#f110' class='c018'><sup>[110]</sup></a> of their country,
-does not appear. Like most of the ancient nations,
-however, they frequently changed their name: at first
-perhaps simply Pelasgi, next Cranaans, then Cecropidæ
-and Ionians; afterwards, under the reign of Erechtheus
-they obtained from their patron divinity the name
-of Athenians, by which they have been known down to
-the present day. Among the fables of the mythology
-we discover traces of several attempts at disputing
-with the Aborigines the sovereignty of Attica. Thus
-Eumolpos, with a colony of Thracians, is by one tradition
-said to have obtained possession of the whole
-country,<a id='r111' /><a href='#f111' class='c018'><sup>[111]</sup></a> while another and more probable legend
-represents him as settling with a small band at
-Eleusis, where his family during the whole existence
-of Paganism exercised the office of priests of Demeter.<a id='r112' /><a href='#f112' class='c018'><sup>[112]</sup></a>
-The Cretans again under Minos sought to
-obtain a footing in the country; but the close of the
-tradition which speaks of this invasion shows that
-though disgraceful to Attica it was without any
-permanent result. Afterwards, when the unsettled
-Pelasgi had degenerated into pirates and freebooters,
-a powerful band of them appears to have found its
-way thither, and obtained a settlement in the
-immediate neighbourhood of the capital,<a id='r113' /><a href='#f113' class='c018'><sup>[113]</sup></a> on condition,
-apparently, of labouring at the erection of
-walls round the Acropolis. A portion of the fortifications
-is said to have been completed by these marauders,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>and to have obtained from them the name of
-the Pelasgian wall. But even these strangers were
-not suffered to remain; quarrels arising either about
-the land which the Pelasgi had obtained on the slopes
-of Hymettos, or on account of violence offered to
-certain Athenian maidens descending to the fountain
-of Callirrhoë for water. The emigrants were expelled
-and took refuge in Lemnos. In revenge for what
-they regarded as an injury, they carried away a number
-of Attic virgins who were celebrating the festival of
-Artemis at Brauron, which led in after times to the
-capture of Lemnos by Miltiades.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It seems to result from the above inquiry that
-every district in Hellas was originally peopled by the
-Pelasgi, which the poets in after ages expressed by
-saying that a king of that nation reigned over the
-whole country as far northward as the Strymon in
-Thrace.<a id='r114' /><a href='#f114' class='c018'><sup>[114]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>We have shown that their dominions extended
-much further, and included not Thrace only, beyond
-the limits of Greece, but a great part likewise of Asia
-Minor and nearly every island in the Ægæan. But
-even these spacious limits were not wide enough to
-<a id='corr23.24'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='contain.'>contain</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_23.24'><ins class='correction' title='contain.'>contain</ins></a></span> the whole Pelasgian population; for traversing
-the Adriatic, they penetrated into Etruria,
-and there and elsewhere in Italy, under the name of
-Tyrrhenians, erected Cyclopian cities, and deposited
-the germs of its future civilisation.<a id='r115' /><a href='#f115' class='c018'><sup>[115]</sup></a> Hence the great
-resemblance which historians and antiquaries have
-observed between the Etruscans and the Greeks.
-Both were offshoots from the great Pelasgic stem;
-though the simplicity of the original race in religion
-and manners maintained longer its ground in Italy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>than under the warmer skies of Greece. In these
-more western settlements, however, new tribes sprang
-up, who in glory eclipsed the mother race, which they
-learned to regard with contempt, so that they bestowed
-the name of Pelasgi on their slaves. A similar
-circumstance had previously occurred in Asia Minor,
-where the Carians reduced to servitude such of their
-brethren as in later times retained the name of
-Leleges.<a id='r116' /><a href='#f116' class='c018'><sup>[116]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>If now we cast a rapid glance over the sciences and
-civilisation of the Pelasgi, we shall probably have
-acquired as complete an idea of that ancient people
-as existing monuments enable us to frame.<a id='r117' /><a href='#f117' class='c018'><sup>[117]</sup></a> Tradition
-attributed to them the invention of several arts
-of primary necessity, as those of building houses and
-manufacturing clothing, which they did from the skins
-of wild boars, the animals first slain by man for food.
-A relic of this primitive style of dress remained,
-we are told, to a very late age among the rustics of
-Phocis and Eubœa.<a id='r118' /><a href='#f118' class='c018'><sup>[118]</sup></a> Other traditions will have it
-that mankind fed on grass and herbs until the Pelasgi
-taught them the greater refinement of feeding upon
-acorns. But leaving these poetical fancies, we shall
-find in many genuine monuments and facts undisputed
-proofs of the power and knowledge of the
-Pelasgi. In the first place, they it was who bequeathed
-to their Hellenic descendants some knowledge,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>though imperfect and obscure, of the true
-God.<a id='r119' /><a href='#f119' class='c018'><sup>[119]</sup></a> In their minds the recognition of the unity of
-the Divine Being formed the basis of theology, and
-the philosophers of after ages who reasoned best
-and thought most correctly rose no higher on these
-points than their rude ancestors.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But the natural tendency of the human mind to
-error soon disturbed the simplicity of their faith;
-for as the tribes separated, each taking a different
-direction, they all in turns learned to consider the
-God as their patron, so that speedily there were as
-many gods as tribes, and polytheism was created.
-Thus the Pelasgi, who had at first like the polished
-nations of modern times no name for <em>the gods</em>, because
-they believed in but one, degenerated in the course
-of time, and invented that system of divinities and
-heroes which afterwards prevailed in Greece. They,
-too, it was, who in the developement of their superstition
-made the first steps towards the arts by
-setting up rude images of the powers they worshipped,
-and to them accordingly the introduction of the
-Hermæan statues at Athens is attributed.<a id='r120' /><a href='#f120' class='c018'><sup>[120]</sup></a> There
-was likewise in a temple of Demeter between mount
-Eboras and Taygetos, a wooden statue of Orpheus,
-supposed to be the workmanship of the Pelasgi.<a id='r121' /><a href='#f121' class='c018'><sup>[121]</sup></a>
-Evidently too, the worship of Demeter, and of all
-the rural gods grew up originally among them, as
-did likewise the adoration of supreme power and
-supreme wisdom in Zeus and Athena.<a id='r122' /><a href='#f122' class='c018'><sup>[122]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Usually the Pelasgi are considered as a much
-wandering people,<a id='r123' /><a href='#f123' class='c018'><sup>[123]</sup></a> though it would be more correct
-to represent them, like the Anglo-Saxon race in
-modern times, as the prolific parents of many settlements,
-spreading widely, but taking root wherever
-they spread. A proof of this still exists in the vast
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>structures<a id='r124' /><a href='#f124' class='c018'><sup>[124]</sup></a> which they reared, whose ruins are yet
-found scattered through Asia, Greece, and Italy.
-These Cyclopian buildings, palaces, treasuries, fortresses,
-barrows, were not the works of nomadic hordes, but of
-a people attached to the soil and resolute in defending
-it. Navigation, likewise, they cultivated, and were
-among the earliest nations who possessed a power
-at sea,<a id='r125' /><a href='#f125' class='c018'><sup>[125]</sup></a> which led necessarily to the study of astronomy,
-together with the occult science of the stars.<a id='r126' /><a href='#f126' class='c018'><sup>[126]</sup></a>
-Of their progress in the more ordinary arts of utility
-we have very little knowledge, but we find in the
-Iliad a Pelasgian woman staining ivory to be used
-as ornaments of a war-horse;<a id='r127' /><a href='#f127' class='c018'><sup>[127]</sup></a> the invention of the
-shepherd’s crook was attributed to them; so likewise
-was the religious dance called Hyporchema;<a id='r128' /><a href='#f128' class='c018'><sup>[128]</sup></a> their
-proficiency in music is spoken of;<a id='r129' /><a href='#f129' class='c018'><sup>[129]</sup></a> and their pre-eminence
-in war was signified by representing them
-as inventors of the shield.<a id='r130' /><a href='#f130' class='c018'><sup>[130]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On the language of the Pelasgi various opinions
-are entertained. Some, relying on particular passages
-in ancient writers, have imagined that it was very
-different from the Greek,<a id='r131' /><a href='#f131' class='c018'><sup>[131]</sup></a> but although in support
-of such an opinion much ingenuity may be exhibited
-there are circumstances which compel us to reject it.
-The Athenians and Arcadians, for example, though
-of Pelasgian origin, spoke, and that from the remotest
-times, the same language with the rest of the
-Greeks; and though the Æolic dialect,<a id='r132' /><a href='#f132' class='c018'><sup>[132]</sup></a> the most ancient
-in Arcadia, or indeed in all Greece, was transformed
-to Latin in Italy, we are not on that account
-to infer that Latin bore a closer resemblance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>than the Greek to the mother tongue of both. The
-Pelasgian language indeed appears to have been the
-Hellenic in the earlier stages of its formation, just
-as the Pelasgi themselves were Greeks under another
-name and in a ruder state of civilisation. Whether
-they possessed any knowledge of written characters
-before<a id='r133' /><a href='#f133' class='c018'><sup>[133]</sup></a> the introduction of the Phœnician we have
-now no means of ascertaining, the passages usually
-brought forward in behalf of such an opinion being
-of small authority. To them, however, tradition attributes
-the introduction of letters into Latium,<a id='r134' /><a href='#f134' class='c018'><sup>[134]</sup></a> and
-there can be no doubt that the use of written characters
-was known in Greece before its inhabitants
-had ceased to be called Pelasgi.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>I have now, I imagine, proved that the Pelasgi
-whencesoever they came, occupied, under one name
-or another, the whole continent of Greece and most
-of the islands. The Athenians, and consequently the
-Ionians, are on all hands acknowledged to have
-sprung from the Pelasgian stock. It only remains to
-be shown that the Dorians also traced their origin to
-this people, and we shall be satisfied that the whole
-of the illustrious nation, known to history under the
-name of Greeks, flowed from one and the same source.
-The Hellenes, of whom the Dorians were a tribe,<a id='r135' /><a href='#f135' class='c018'><sup>[135]</sup></a>
-occupied in later times the south of Thessaly, but at
-a much earlier period, along with the Selli,<a id='r136' /><a href='#f136' class='c018'><sup>[136]</sup></a> dwelt in
-the mountainous tracts about Dodona, where they
-were known under the name of Greeks or mountaineers,<a id='r137' /><a href='#f137' class='c018'><sup>[137]</sup></a>
-which was the original signification of the
-term. This district of Epeiros, it has been shown, was
-among the very earliest of the Pelasgian settlements,
-from which of itself it might be inferred that the
-Hellenes were Pelasgi. We are not left to rely
-in this matter on mere inference, since Herodotus
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>states distinctly that they were a fragment of the
-Pelasgi.<a id='r138' /><a href='#f138' class='c018'><sup>[138]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It will be seen that I have hitherto made no allusion
-to the received fables about Egyptian and Phœnician
-colonies.<a id='r139' /><a href='#f139' class='c018'><sup>[139]</sup></a> Nevertheless it is quite possible
-that on many occasions certain fugitives, both from
-Phœnicia and Egypt, may have taken refuge in Greece,
-and been permitted, as in after ages, to settle there.
-These persons, coming from countries farther advanced
-in civilisation, would undoubtedly bring along with
-them a superior degree of knowledge in many useful
-arts, which, in gratitude for their hospitable reception,
-they would undoubtedly communicate to the inhabitants.
-But the most active agent in the diffusion
-of civilisation was probably commerce, which, by
-bringing neighbouring nations into close contact, by
-enlarging the sphere of their experience, and teaching
-them the advantages to be derived from peaceful intercourse,
-has in all ages softened and refined mankind.
-When the use of letters began first to prevail
-in the East is not known, but it was probably communicated
-early to the Pelasgi, along with the materials
-for writing; and whatever inventions were made on
-either side of the Mediterranean passed rapidly from
-shore to shore, so that the civilisation of the Egyptians,
-Phœnicians, and Greeks, advanced simultaneously,
-though the beginnings of improvement were
-undoubtedly more ancient on the banks of the Nile
-and among the maritime Arabs than in Hellas. The
-amount, however, of eastern influences I conceive was
-not great, and as to colonies, properly so called, with
-the exception of those already described from Asia
-Minor, I believe there never were any.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>
- <h3 class='c024'>CHAPTER II.<br /> CHARACTER OF THE GREEKS.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Having in the foregoing chapter endeavoured to
-ascertain by what races Greece was originally peopled,
-we shall next speak of the character and physical organization
-of its inhabitants. In doing this it may
-be useful to consider them in three different stages of
-their progress: first, in the heroic and poetical times;
-secondly, in the historical and flourishing ages of the
-Hellenic commonwealth; thirdly, in their corrupt and
-degenerate state under the dominion of the Macedonians
-and Romans.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The most distinguishing characteristic of the
-Hellenes, when poetry first places them before us,
-is a profound veneration for the divinity and every
-thing connected with the service of religion. By the
-force of imagination heaven and earth were brought
-near each other, not so much, indeed, by elevating the
-latter, as by bringing down the former within the
-sphere of humanity. Gods and men moved together
-over the earth, cooperated in bringing about events,
-keeping up a constant interchange of beneficence;
-the god aiding, the mortal repaying his aid with gratitude;<a id='r140' /><a href='#f140' class='c018'><sup>[140]</sup></a>
-the god guiding, the mortal submitting to be
-directed, until, sometimes, as in the case of Odysseus
-and Athena, the feeling of grace and favour on the
-one side, and of veneration and gratitude on the other,
-ripened into something like friendship and affection.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>No man entered on any important enterprise without
-first consulting the gods, and throwing himself
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>upon their protection, by sacrifice, divination, and
-prayer.<a id='r141' /><a href='#f141' class='c018'><sup>[141]</sup></a> They conceived, according to the best lights
-afforded them by their rude creed, that although
-means existed of warping the judgment, perverting
-the affections, and vitiating the decisions of their divinities,
-yet upon the whole and in the natural order
-of things they were just and beneficent, mercifully
-caring for the poor and the stranger, the guardians of
-friendship and hospitality, and avenging severely the
-offences committed against their laws. Habitually,
-when not provoked to vengeance by impiety or crimes,
-the gods they believed were not only beneficent towards
-mankind, but given among themselves to cheerfulness
-and mirth, loving music, songs, and laughter,
-feasting jovially together in a joy serene and almost
-imperturbable, save when interrupted by solicitude for
-some favoured mortal. Philosophy, in more intellectual
-times, condemned this rude conception of divine
-things; but men’s ideas, like their offerings, belong to
-the state of society in which they live, and the Greeks
-of the heroic ages unquestionably attributed to their
-gods the qualities most in esteem among themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Next to religion the most prominent feeling in the
-mind of the early Greeks was filial piety.<a id='r142' /><a href='#f142' class='c018'><sup>[142]</sup></a> Nowhere
-among men were parents held in higher honour. The
-reverence paid to them partook largely of the religious
-sentiment. Regarded as the instruments by which
-God had communicated the mysterious and sacred gift
-of life, they were supposed by their children to be for
-ever invested with a high degree of sanctity as ministers
-and representatives of the Creator. Hence the
-anxiety experienced to obtain a father’s blessing and
-the indescribable dread of his curse. A peculiar set of
-divinities, the terrible Erinnyes, all but implacable and
-unsparing, were entrusted with the guardianship of a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>parent’s rights, and indescribable were the pangs and
-anguish supposed to seize upon transgressors. These
-were the powers who tracked about the matricides
-Orestes and Alcmæon, scaring them with spectral
-terrors and filling their palaces with the alarms and
-agonies of Tartaros. On the other hand, nothing can
-be more beautiful than the pictures of filial piety exhibited
-by the nobler characters of heroic times. The
-examples are innumerable, but none is so striking or
-complete as that of Achilles towards his father Peleus.
-Fierce, vehement, stern in the ordinary relations of
-life, towards his aged father he is gentle as a child.
-His heart yearns to him with a strength of feeling
-incomprehensible to a meaner nature. He submits to
-his sway and authority not from any apprehension of
-his power, not even from the fear of offending him,
-but from the fulness of his love, from the natural excellence
-and purity of his heart. He would erect his
-valour and the might of his arm into a rampart round
-the old man, to protect him from injury and insult;
-and even in the cold region of shadows beyond the
-grave this feeling is represented as still alive, so that
-in death, as in life, the uppermost anxiety of the hero’s
-soul is for the happiness of his father. Even in the
-government of his impetuous passions during his mortal
-career, in the choice of the object of his love,
-Achilles expresses a desire to render his feelings subordinate
-to those of his parent, thus verging on the
-utmost limits of self-denial and self-control conceivable
-in a state of nature. Homer understood his
-countrymen well when he gave these qualities to his
-hero. Without them, he knew that no degree of
-courage or wisdom would have sufficed to render him
-popular, and, therefore, we find him not only pre-eminent
-for his piety towards the gods, but at the
-same time the most affectionate and dutiful of sons,
-the warmest, most disinterested, and unchangeable of
-friends.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And this leads us to consider another remarkable
-feature of the Greek character,—its peculiar aptitude
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>for friendship. No country’s history and traditions
-abound with so many examples of this virtue
-as those of Greece. In truth, it was there regarded
-as the most unequivocal mark of an heroic and generous
-nature, being wholly inconsistent with anything
-base, sordid, or ignoble, and flourishing only
-in company with virtues rarest and most difficult of
-acquisition. Poetry, no doubt, has clad the friendship
-of heroic times with a splendour scarcely belonging
-to real life, but the experience of history
-warrants us in making but slight deductions. Nature
-in those ages appeared to delight in producing men
-in pairs, each suited to be the ornament and solace
-of the other, possessing different qualities, imperfect
-when apart, but complete, united. Men thus constituted
-were a sort of moral twins, an extension, if
-we may so speak, of unity, the same yet different,
-bringing two souls under the yoke of one will, desiring
-the same, hating the same, possessing the same,
-valuing life and the gifts of life only as they were
-shared in common, seeking adventures, facing dangers
-together, conforming their thoughts, opinions,
-feelings, each to the other, having no distinct interest,
-no distinct hope, but engrafting two lives on
-the chances of one man’s fortune, and both perishing
-by the same blow.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This feeling has by some been supposed to have
-owed its strength, in part at least, to the degraded
-position of women in society; a subject on which I
-shall have more to say hereafter, but may here remark
-that such an opinion is wholly incompatible
-with an impartial interpretation of the Homeric poems
-and the older traditions of Greece. Throughout fabulous
-times women are the prime movers in all
-great events; and the respect which as mothers, sisters,
-wives, and daughters they received, though expressed
-in uncourtly language, was perhaps as great
-as has ever been paid them in any age or country.
-Every distinguished woman in Homer is the centre
-of a circle of tender and touching associations. We
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>behold them beloved by their relatives, honoured by
-their dependants, enjoying every decent freedom,
-every becoming pleasure, with all the influence and
-authority appertaining to their sex. Thus Helen,
-both before and after her fall, is entire mistress of
-her house, and treated with all possible deference
-and delicacy: so Hecuba, Andromache, Penelope,
-Arete, Nausicaa, and Iphigeneia in their respective
-positions, are held in the highest esteem, and command
-as great a share of love from those whose duty
-it was to love and honour them, as any other women
-in history or fiction. Nor were due respect and
-tenderness confined to the high and the noble; for
-innumerable proofs occur in Homer that even among
-the humblest ranks, that delicate self-respect which
-is shown by respect to our other self, and may
-be regarded as the pivot of civilisation, was already
-in that age very generally diffused.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But if the Greeks of heroic times possessed the
-good qualities we have attributed to them, they were
-still more, perhaps, distinguished for others, which
-often obliterated the footsteps of their virtues, and
-appeared to be the guiding principles of their lives.
-Chief among these was their passion for war and
-violence,<a id='r143' /><a href='#f143' class='c018'><sup>[143]</sup></a> which engaged them in everlasting struggles
-with their neighbours, developed overmuch
-their fierce and destructive qualities, and threw into
-comparative shade such of their propensities as were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>gentler and more humane. War by land, piracy by
-sea, filled the whole country with incessant alarms.
-Commerce was checked and confined within very
-narrow channels, both travelling and navigation
-being exceedingly unsafe, while bands of marauders
-traversed land and sea in quest of rapine and plunder.
-In some states no other mode was known of
-arriving at opulence, and the humbler classes of society
-were wholly subsisted by it.<a id='r144' /><a href='#f144' class='c018'><sup>[144]</sup></a> The laws of war,
-too, were proportionably savage. It was customary
-either to give no quarter, or to devote all prisoners
-taken to servitude; and, accordingly, every petty
-state was filled with unfortunate captives, many of
-them of illustrious birth and qualities, reduced to
-the humblest conditions, being compelled to earn
-their bread by the sweat of their brow. In peace,
-too, and in their own homes their warlike habits
-led frequently to the perpetration of violence; their
-passions being strong and unbridled they resented
-insults on the spot, and numerous homicides were,
-in consequence, found flying from the country whose
-infant institutions their passions had sought to overthrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But in all stages of society it has been ordained
-by Providence that out of the wickedness of man
-some compensating good shall flow: thus, from the
-dangers and difficulties surrounding the stranger the
-virtue of hospitality<a id='r145' /><a href='#f145' class='c018'><sup>[145]</sup></a> sprang up in generous minds.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>From the distress and misery of the passionate or
-accidental slayer of man arose the merciful rites
-of expiation, and all the friendly ties which subsisted
-between the purifier and the purified. Wanderers
-driven from their home often found a better
-in a foreign land; and thus even the transgressions
-and misfortunes of men, by breaking down the narrow
-enclosures of families and clans, and connecting
-persons of distant tribes together by benefits and
-gratitude, hastened the progress of refinement and
-paved the way for the greatness and glory of succeeding
-ages.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It will, from what has been said, be seen that
-among the elements of the Greek character passion
-greatly predominated; but, even from the earliest
-times, the existence was apparent of other powerful
-principles, by the influence of which the nation
-was led to emerge rapidly from its period of barbarism.
-These were an innate love of magnificence,
-and a striking inclination towards all social enjoyments;
-the former leading to the cultivation of commerce
-and industry, the latter communicating an extraordinary
-impetus to the natural desire common
-to mankind for companionship and society. But
-in developing these principles nature pursued in
-Greece a peculiar route. Instead of establishing a
-common centre, towards which the energies of the
-whole nation might tend, society was broken up into
-numerous parts, each forming, when considered separately,
-a whole, but united with its neighbours by
-identity of origin, language, religion, and national
-character.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>Philosophers usually seek in geographical position
-a key to the fact of the formation of so many separate
-states as the Hellenic population was divided
-into; but the cause was probably of a different
-kind. Among every other people, a difficulty has
-always been experienced in discovering men capable
-of conducting public affairs; and, when any such
-have arisen, they have easily subdued to their will
-their less intellectual and, consequently, less ambitious
-neighbours. Among the Greeks the case
-was wholly different: every province, every district,
-nay, every town and village abounded with men endowed
-with the ability and passion for governing.
-These feelings begot the aversion to submit to the
-government of others; this aversion engendered strife;
-and it was only the accident of a numerical superiority
-existing in one division of the country, or
-of a statesman of extraordinary genius springing up,
-that enabled one village to subdue its neighbours
-for a few miles around, and thus establish a small
-political community.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>History rarely penetrates back so far as the period
-in which this state of things existed. But we have
-an example in the annals of Attica, where the twelve
-small municipal states, if one may so speak, were,
-partly by persuasion, partly by force, brought under
-the authority of one city, possessing the advantages
-of a superior position and wiser and more enterprising
-leaders.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>These diminutive polities once formed, many causes
-concurred to preserve their integrity, of which the most
-obvious and powerful was the pride of race, and, next to
-this, certain religious feelings and peculiarities, which
-stationed gods along the frontier line of states, and
-rendered it impious for the worshippers of other divinities
-to invade or dispossess them of their lands.
-Communities having at first been thus isolated, numerous
-circumstances arose to make eternal the separation.
-The ready invention of the people gave to
-each state its heroes and heroic traditions, based,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>perhaps, on the exploits of border warfare, in which
-the ancestors of one community had suffered or inflicted
-injuries on the ancestors of another. Poets
-sprang up who celebrated these deeds in song, and
-every assembly, every festival, every merry-making
-resounded with the commemoration of deeds as
-galling to one people as they were glorious to the
-other. These prejudices, this cantonal patriotism,
-this tribual vanity, if I may coin a new word to
-express a new idea, constituted a far more impassable
-barrier between the diminutive states of Greece,
-than either mountains or rivers; though, in process
-of time, some few cases occurred in which very small
-communities were immersed and lost in greater ones.
-The heroism, however, with which the smallest commonwealth
-struggled to preserve its separate existence,
-the watchful jealousy, the undying solicitude,
-the fierce and sanguinary valour by which it hedged
-round its independence, the indescribable agonies of
-political extinction, may be seen in the examples
-of Ægina, Megara, Platæa, and Messenia.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In fact the most remarkable peculiarity in the
-Greek character was a certain centrifugal force, or
-abhorrence of centralisation, which presented insurmountable
-obstacles to the union of the whole
-Hellenic nation under one head. The inhabitants
-of ancient Italy exhibited on this point an entirely
-dissimilar character. Though differing from each
-other widely in manners, customs and laws, they
-still possessed so much of affinity as enabled them
-successively to unite themselves with Rome, and melt
-into one great people. The causes lay in their moral
-and intellectual character: possessing little genius or
-imagination, but much good sense, they experienced
-less keenly the misery of inferiority, the anguish of
-defeat, the tortures of submission, and calculated
-more coolly the advantages of protection and tranquillity,
-and all the other benefits of living under a
-strong government. Where the masses are but
-slightly impregnated with the fire of genius they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>are naturally disposed to amalgamation, and form a
-vast body necessarily subjected to one head. But
-where a nation is everywhere pervaded and quickened
-by genius, where imagination is an universal attribute,
-where to soar is as natural as to breathe, where the
-principal enjoyment of life is the exercise of power,
-where men hunger and thirst more for renown than
-for their daily bread, where life itself without these
-imaginary delights is insipid and despicable, no force,
-while the vigour of the national character continues
-unbroken, can erect a central government, or achieve
-extensive conquests, that is, subject one part of the
-nation to the sway of the other. And perhaps it may
-be found when we shall farther have perfected the
-science of government, that in politics as in physics
-the largest bodies are not the most valuable, or the
-most difficult to be shattered. The diamond resists
-when the largest rock yields. The true tendency of
-civilisation, therefore, is to reduce unwieldy empires
-into compact bodies, which the light of education can
-penetrate and render luminous. Vast empires are
-but opaque masses of ignorance.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>From precisely the same causes arose the peculiar
-notions of the Greeks on the subject of government;
-that is, the citizens of each state applied to one another
-the principle which regulated the conduct of
-communities. Every man experienced an aversion to
-yield obedience to his neighbour, every man was
-ambitious to rule; but, as this was impossible, it
-became necessary to invent some means by which
-public business could be carried on without offering
-too much violence to the national character. Hence
-the origin of republicanism and the establishment of
-commonwealths, in which the sovereignty was acknowledged
-to reside in the body of the people, and
-where such of the citizens as by abilities, rank, friends,
-were qualified, might rule in vicarious succession.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But the various families of the Hellenes were not
-all equally endowed with the energy and intellect
-which belonged to their race; some possessed more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>of these qualities, others less, and there were besides
-in operation numerous peculiar and local causes which
-modified the forms of polity adopted by the various
-states of Greece. The heavier, the colder, the more
-inert naturally chose that form of government which
-would least tax their mental faculties, and most completely
-relieve them from the care of public affairs, in
-order the more sedulously to attend to their own;
-while the fierier, the busier, more active and buoyant
-preferred that political constitution which would afford
-their energetic natures most employment, and
-supply a legitimate outlet for the ardour and impetuosity
-of their temperament. Thus, in certain communities
-there was a leaning towards monarchy, in others
-towards oligarchy; in a third class towards aristocracy;
-while Athens and some few smaller states preferred
-the stir, bustle, and incessant animation of democracy.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Again these institutions, springing at first out of
-national idiosyncrasies, became in their turn among
-the most active causes which impressed the stamp of
-individuality on the population of each separate state:
-for the principle which animates a form of government
-is not a barren principle, but impregnates, leavens,
-and vivifies the community subjected to its influence,
-and produces an offspring analogous to the source from
-which it sprang. Thus, in monarchies the summits of
-a nation are rich with verdure and glorious with light;
-in aristocracies a broad table-land is fertilized and rendered
-beautiful; while in commonwealths, properly so
-called, the whole surface of society unrolls itself like a
-vast plain to the sun, and receives the light and comfort,
-and invigorating influence of its beams:—and all
-these various modifications of civil polity were at different
-times and in different parts of the country beheld
-in Greece, where they produced their natural
-fruits.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among the principal results of the causes we have
-enumerated were a high intellectual cultivation, the
-profoundest study of philosophy, the most ardent pursuit
-of literature, a matchless taste for the beautiful
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>in nature and in art, an irrepressible enthusiasm in
-the search after knowledge of every kind, and, joined
-with these, as their cause sometimes, and sometimes
-as their consequence, an invincible and limitless
-craving after fame. And these characteristic qualities
-of the people exhibited themselves in various ways.
-Sometimes, as in Thessaly, men sought to distinguish
-themselves by their wealth and the pomp by which
-they were surrounded:—sometimes their ruling passion
-urged them to pluck, amidst blood and slaughter,
-the laurels of war, as in Crete and Sparta, where military
-discipline was carried to its utmost perfection,
-where men lived perpetually encamped around their
-domestic hearths, cultivated the habits, preferences,
-tastes, and feelings of soldiers, and looked upon dominion
-as the supreme good:—sometimes religion, with
-its rites and pomp and sacrifices, absorbed a whole
-people, as in Elis, where the worship of supreme Zeus
-and the celebration of sacred games conferred a sanctity
-upon the land and people which all men of Hellenic
-blood respected:—elsewhere mountaineers,<a id='r146' /><a href='#f146' class='c018'><sup>[146]</sup></a> of indomitable
-valour, hired out their swords to the best bidder,
-and became, as it were, the journeymen of war:—elegant
-pleasures in many cities, and commerce and
-magnificence, occupied and depraved the whole community;
-while others,<a id='r147' /><a href='#f147' class='c018'><sup>[147]</sup></a> of grosser minds and more
-sordid propensities, passed their whole lives in indolent
-gluttony round the festive board, amid crowds of
-singers, flute-players, and dancers; or else, like the
-Delphians, were ever seen hovering amid the smoke
-of the altars, whetting their sacrificial knives or feasting
-on the savoury victims; and yet the triumphs of
-the Thebans proved that even the lowest of the Greeks,
-when circumstances led them to cultivate the arts of
-war, were capable of planning and executing great
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>designs, and acquiring lasting celebrity. The arts,
-however, by which the Greeks rose to greatness,<a id='r148' /><a href='#f148' class='c018'><sup>[148]</sup></a> and
-became the instructors and everlasting benefactors of
-mankind, flourished chiefly at Athens, and in the numerous
-colonies which she planted in various parts of
-Asia and the islands. To men of Ionian race we owe,
-in fact, the invention and most successful culture of
-poetry and philosophy, and those plastic and mimetic
-arts which added to the world of realities another
-world more beautiful still. If the Greeks borrowed,
-as no doubt they did, certain varieties and forms of
-art and learning from the barbarians, they immediately
-so refined and improved them, that the original inventors
-would no longer have recognised the works of
-their own hands. The glory of giving birth to several
-of the arts and sciences belongs to them: they were
-the inventors of the art of war; among them alone, in
-the ancient world, painting and sculpture assumed
-their proper dignity; and in politics and statesmanship,
-and that art of arts, philosophy, they led the
-way, and taught mankind the steps by which to arrive
-at perfection.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Greece, by the means we have described, was gradually
-reclaimed from the state of nature, covered
-with beautiful cities, harbours, docks, temples, palaces
-adorned with infinite variety of works of art, with
-sculpture in ivory and gold, with paintings, gems, and
-vases, which converted her principal cities into so many
-museums. Her plains, her dells, her mountain recesses
-were studded with sanctuaries and sacred groves,
-conferring the external beauty of religion on the whole
-face of the country. Public roads, branching from
-numerous capital cities, traversed the land in every
-direction; bridges spanned her rivers, agriculture covered
-her hills and plains with harvests, the vine hung
-in festoons from tree to tree, the foliage of the olive
-clothed the mountain sides, and a belt of beautiful
-gardens surrounded every city, town, and village.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>The primary cause of all this amazing activity
-has, by philosophers, been sought for in various circumstances
-of the condition of the Greeks, in the
-form of their institutions, in the rivalry of so many
-small communities, in the fact of their being inventors,
-and the consequent freshness of their pursuits. But
-although all these circumstances and many others contributed,
-as we have shown, to expedite the progress
-of the Greeks in civilisation, they were none of them
-the fountain head, which lies far beyond our ken. It
-were in fact as easy to tell why one star differs from
-another star in glory, as why one nation or one man
-rises in intellect above his fellows. But we are supplied
-with a link in the chain which connects the
-above effects with their cause, by the physical organisation
-of the Greeks, who possessed the most perfect
-forms in which humanity ever appeared. Their frame
-exhibiting all the beauty of which the human body is
-susceptible, uniting strength with lightness, dignity
-and elegance with activity, the utmost robustness of
-health with extreme delicacy of contour, the muscles
-developed by exercise, and developed over the whole
-structure alike, suggested the idea of power and indefatigable
-energy; the stature, generally above the
-middle size, the free and unembarrassed gait, the features<a id='r149' /><a href='#f149' class='c018'><sup>[149]</sup></a>
-full of beauty, the expression replete with intellect,
-and the eye flashing with a consciousness of independence:—all
-these united conferred upon the form
-of the Greek an elevation, a grandeur, a majesty which
-we still contemplate with admiration in their sculpture,
-and denominate the ideal. Above all things, the form
-of the Grecian head was most exquisite, with its smooth,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>expansive, almost perpendicular forehead and majestic
-outline, describing a perfect oval. Generally the complexion
-was of a clear olive, the hair and eyes black,
-the temperament inclined to melancholy, though numerous
-instances occurred of sanguine fair persons
-with light eyes and chesnut or auburn hair, which the
-youth wore, as now, in a profusion of ringlets falling
-to the shoulders. Instances likewise occurred among
-the Greeks of individuals, who, like our own Chatterton,
-had eyes of different colours. Thus the poet Thamyris<a id='r150' /><a href='#f150' class='c018'><sup>[150]</sup></a>
-is said to have had one eye grey, the other
-black. Nay, this peculiarity was even remarked
-among the inferior animals, more particularly the
-horses.<a id='r151' /><a href='#f151' class='c018'><sup>[151]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The characteristic beauty of the nation displayed itself
-in every stage of life, only assuming new phases in
-its progress from the beauty of infancy to the beauty
-of old age, inspiring the mingled feelings of love and
-admiration; and notwithstanding the effects of time,
-and inter-marriage with barbarous races, the same is
-the case still. For nowhere in Europe do we meet
-with infants so lovely, with youths so soft, so virginal,
-so beautiful in their incipient manliness, with old men
-so grave, stately, and with countenances so magnificent,
-as among the living descendants of the Hellenes, whose
-destiny may yet be, one day, as enviable as their
-forms.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To push our enquiry one step further; it may be
-questioned, whether the glorious organisation we have
-been describing was not itself an effect of air, climate,
-and soil.<a id='r152' /><a href='#f152' class='c018'><sup>[152]</sup></a> Certain at any rate it is, that the atmosphere
-of Greece is clearer, purer, more buoyant and
-elastic, than that of any other country in our hemisphere.
-At night, particularly, there is a transparency
-in the air, which appears to impart additional lustre
-and magnitude to the stars and moon. Its mountain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>tops, the intervening space being, as it were, removed,
-seem to mingle with the constellations which cluster
-in brightness on the edge of the horizon.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A principal cause of this clearness and pellucidness
-is the great prevalence of the north wind,<a id='r153' /><a href='#f153' class='c018'><sup>[153]</sup></a> which
-brings with it few or no vapours, but gathers together
-the clouds in heaps and rolls them from the land towards
-the Mediterranean. The reason why this wind
-so often prevails may be discovered in the geographical
-configuration of the country, which is not, like Italy,
-divided from the rest of the continent by a range of
-Alps that might have screened it from the colder
-blasts, but lies open like an elevated threshing-floor,
-to be purged and winnowed on all sides by the winds,
-which in many parts are so violent that no tree can
-attain to any great height, while the stunted woods
-throw all their branches in one direction, and the vines
-and other climbing shrubs are laid prostrate along
-the rocks. These winds, however, prevail not constantly,
-but the southern and western breezes, blowing
-at intervals, bring along with them the warm
-atmosphere of Syria or Egypt, or the cooling freshness
-of the ocean. Another cause, which greatly tends to
-promote the purity of the air, is the lightness, friability,
-and dryness of the soil, which, distributed for the most
-part in thin layers over ledges of rocks, permits no
-stagnation of moisture, but enables the rain that falls
-to trickle through, collect in rills and brooks, and find
-its way rapidly to the sea. The plains and irregular
-valleys, which form an exception to this rule, are not
-numerous enough, or of sufficient magnitude to affect
-the general proposition. There appear, moreover, to
-be many peculiar properties and virtues in the soil
-itself, causing all fruits transplanted thither to attain
-to speedy ripeness and superior flavour, while odoriferous
-plants and flowers, as the jasmine, the wild
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>thyme, and the rose exhale sweeter and more delicious
-fragrance. This is more particularly the case in
-Attica, which accordingly produced in antiquity, where
-due care was bestowed on gardening and agriculture,
-the finest fruits and sweetest honey in the world.<a id='r154' /><a href='#f154' class='c018'><sup>[154]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The same qualities in soil and climate which affect
-vegetation, likewise powerfully influence the character
-and temperament of men and animals. It is, for example,
-well known in the Levant, that the Bedouins inhabiting
-Arabia Proper and the Eastern Desert degenerate
-both in character and physical organisation when transplanted
-to the Libyan wastes on the western banks of
-the Nile. But if particular soil and situation engender
-particular diseases; if the air of fens and marshes blunt
-the senses and paralyse, to a certain degree, the intellectual
-faculties, the converse of the proposition must
-also hold good; so that it is conceivable that the light
-soil and pure air of Greece may have produced corresponding
-effects on the bodies and minds of its inhabitants.
-The experiment, in fact, is made daily; for
-strangers arriving there with the germs of disease in
-their constitution, are, in most cases, speedily destroyed
-by the force of the climate; while the healthy and
-vigorous acquire the vivacity, the cheerfulness, the
-nervous and impetuous energy of the natives themselves,
-and, like them, extend the term of life to its
-utmost span. Greece, indeed, has always been the
-habitation of longevity; its philosophers in antiquity,—its
-monks, anchorites, and rural population in modern
-times, furnishing, perhaps, more examples of
-extreme old age than could be found on the same
-extent of territory in any other part of the globe.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Now this excess of vitality, this superabundance of
-the principle of life, which constitutes what we intend
-by physical or moral energy, almost inevitably produces,
-among an ill-governed, ill-educated people, a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>large harvest of crime, and, accordingly, the modern
-Greeks have often been distinguished for audacious
-villany; the intrepid vigour of their character, controlled
-neither by religion nor philosophy, easily breaking
-through the restraints of tyranny and unjust laws
-in the chase after power or excitement. That Frenchman
-spoke more truly than he thought, who said the
-Greeks were still the same “canaille” as in the days
-of Themistocles: for, give them the same laws, the
-same education, the same incentives to virtue and to
-heroism, and they will probably be again as virtuous,
-as wise, and as heroic as their illustrious ancestors. I
-judge in this way partly from my own experience, for
-I have seldom become acquainted with a Greek,—and
-I have known many,—who has not improved upon acquaintance,
-won my esteem, and, in most cases, my
-affection, and impressed me with the firm belief that
-there is no nation in the varied population of Europe
-which, if ruled with wisdom and justice, would exhibit
-loftier or more exalted qualities. In these views I am
-happy to be borne out by the testimony of Monsieur
-Frederic Thiersch, whose facilities for studying the modern
-Greek have been far more ample than mine, and
-whose opinions are marked by the cautious acuteness
-of the statesman with the depth and originality of the
-philosopher.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In alluding to the causes which pervert the feelings
-and misdirect the energies of the existing race, I have
-touched also at the great source of crime among their
-ancestors,—I mean, defective laws and institutions;
-for although the Greek character was, in force and
-excellence, all that I have said, and more, it, nevertheless,
-contained other elements than those I have
-described, which it now becomes my duty to speak
-of. From a very early period there existed in Greece
-two political parties, variously denominated in various
-states, but upholding,—the one, the doctrine that the
-many ought to be subjected to the few; the other, that
-the few ought to be subjected to the many: in other
-words, the oligarchical and democratical parties. From
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>the struggles of these two factions the internal history
-of Greece takes its form and colour, as to them may
-be traced most of the fearful atrocities, in the shape
-of conspiracies, massacres, revolutions, which, instructing
-while they shock us, stain the Greek character
-with indelible blots.<a id='r155' /><a href='#f155' class='c018'><sup>[155]</sup></a> Ambitious men are nowhere
-scrupulous. To enjoy the delight imparted by the
-exercise of power, individuals have in all ages stifled
-the dictates of conscience; and where, as in modern
-Italy and in ancient Greece, numerous small states
-border upon each other, sufficiently powerful to dream
-of conquest though too weak to achieve it, the number
-of the ambitious is of necessity greatly multiplied.
-In proportion, however, to the thirst of power in one
-class was the love of freedom and independence in
-the other, so that the process of encroachment and
-resistance, of tyranny and rebellion, of usurpation and
-punishment, was carried on perpetually,—the oligarchy
-now predominating, and cutting off or sending into
-exile the popular leaders, while the democratic party,
-triumphing in its turn, inflicted similar sufferings on its
-enemies. By degrees, moreover, there sprang up two
-renowned states to represent these opposite principles,
-and the contests carried on by them assumed consequently
-many characteristics of civil war,—its obstinacy,
-its bitterness, its revenge.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In these struggles seas of blood were shed, and
-crimes of the darkest dye perpetrated. Cities, once
-illustrious and opulent, were razed to the ground;
-whole populations put to the sword or reduced to servitude;
-fertile plains rendered barren; men most renowned
-for capacity and virtue made a prey to
-treachery or the basest envy; the morals of great
-states corrupted, their glory eclipsed, their power
-undermined, and a way paved for the inroads of
-barbarian conquerors who ultimately put a period
-to the grandeur of the Hellenes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Examples without number might be collected of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>these horrors. It will be sufficient to advert briefly
-to a few, more to remind than to inform the reader.
-In the troubles of Corcyra<a id='r156' /><a href='#f156' class='c018'><sup>[156]</sup></a> the nobles and the commons
-alternately triumphing over each other, carried
-on with the utmost ruthlessness the work of extermination
-with abundant baseness and perfidy, some
-portion of which attached to the Athenian generals:
-the wrongs and sufferings inflicted by the Spartans on
-the brave but unfortunate inhabitants of Messenia,
-with the annual butchery of the Helots, the treacherous
-withdrawal of suppliants from sanctuary, and
-their subsequent slaughter,<a id='r157' /><a href='#f157' class='c018'><sup>[157]</sup></a> the extermination of the
-people of Hysia,<a id='r158' /><a href='#f158' class='c018'><sup>[158]</sup></a> the precipitating of neutral merchants
-into pits,<a id='r159' /><a href='#f159' class='c018'><sup>[159]</sup></a> the betrayal of the cities of Chalcidice
-and the islands, the massacre in cold blood of the
-Platæans, of four thousand Athenians in the Hellespont,<a id='r160' /><a href='#f160' class='c018'><sup>[160]</sup></a>
-the reduction of innumerable cities to servitude:
-by the Athenians, the extermination of the people of
-Melos,<a id='r161' /><a href='#f161' class='c018'><sup>[161]</sup></a> the slaughter of a thousand Mitylenians, the
-cruelties at Skione, Ægina, and Cythera;<a id='r162' /><a href='#f162' class='c018'><sup>[162]</sup></a> but beyond
-these, and beyond all, the fearful excesses of civil
-strife at Miletos where the common people called
-Gergithes having risen in rebellion against the nobles
-and defeated them in battle, took their children and
-cast them into the cattle stalls where they were crushed
-and trampled to death by the infuriated oxen; but
-the nobles renewing the contest and obtaining ultimately
-the victory, seized upon their enemies,—men,
-women, children, and covered them with pitch, to
-which setting fire they burnt them alive.<a id='r163' /><a href='#f163' class='c018'><sup>[163]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>From these glimpses of guilt and suffering, we may
-learn to what extremes the Greek was sometimes hurried
-by passion and the thirst of power. But propensities
-so wolfish were not predominant in his nature.<a id='r164' /><a href='#f164' class='c018'><sup>[164]</sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>On the contrary, in private life, even the Spartans and
-the Dorians generally put off their cruel and severe
-habits, and relaxed on all proper occasions into joviality
-and mirth. In their social intercourse, in fact, few nations
-have been more cheerful or addicted to jokes
-and pleasantry than the Greeks, and above all the
-Athenians, whose hours of leisure were one continued
-round of gossip, sport, and laughter.<a id='r165' /><a href='#f165' class='c018'><sup>[165]</sup></a> Never in any
-city were news-mongers, or even news-forgers, so numerous.
-In the mouth of young and old no question
-was so frequent as, “What is the news?” These were
-the sounds that circulated from rank to rank in the
-assembly of the people before the orators began their
-harangues, that were <a id='corr49.14'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='banded'>bandied</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_49.14'><ins class='correction' title='banded'>bandied</ins></a></span> to and fro in the Agora,
-that filled by their incessant repetition the shops of
-barbers and perfumers.<a id='r166' /><a href='#f166' class='c018'><sup>[166]</sup></a> Akin to this itching ear was
-the passion for show and magnificence, every man,
-from highest to lowest, affecting as far as possible
-spacious dwellings, superb furniture and costly apparel.
-Even the bravest of the brave, the heroes of Marathon,
-were <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>petits-<a id='corr49.21'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='maítres'>maîtres</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_49.21'><ins class='correction' title='maítres'>maîtres</ins></a></span></i></span> at their toilette, and went
-forth to the field in purple cloaks, their hair curled,
-adorned with golden ornaments, and perfumed with
-essences. The study of philosophy itself failed in
-most cases to subdue this ostentatious spirit. Plato
-loved rich carpets and splendid raiment. Even Aristotle
-was an exquisite, and Æschines an acknowledged
-coxcomb.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>From several of these weaknesses the Spartans
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>were free. They cared little for news, still less for
-dress, and less still for cleanliness; so that their beautiful
-long hair and waving beards swarmed with those
-autochthonal beasts, for the expulsion of which there
-was no law in Sparta. Though neither a knowing nor
-cleanly race, however, their wit was bright and piercing.
-No people uttered pithier or finer sayings, and
-their taste both in music and poetry was cultivated
-and refined. Probably, therefore, the dining halls
-and gymnasia and public walks of Sparta were enlivened
-by as much mirth as those of any other Grecian
-city, where usually cheerfulness was so prevalent,
-that “to be as merry as a Greek,” has become a proverb
-in all countries.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On the third period of the Greek character it is
-unnecessary to speak at any length. Most of their
-good qualities having departed with their freedom
-they degenerated into a dissembling, hypocritical, fawning
-and double-dealing race, with little or no respect
-for truth, without patriotism, and without genuine valour.
-The literature, painting, and sculpture, to which
-in their period of degradation they gave birth, bore
-evident marks of their degeneracy, and tended by the
-corruption they diffused to avenge them on their conquerors
-the Romans; whose minds and morals they
-vitiated, and whose career of freedom and glory they
-cut short. Through their vices, however, the fame of
-their more noble and virtuous ancestors has greatly
-suffered, for the Romans contemplating the Greeks
-they saw before them, and implanting their opinion
-throughout the whole civilised world, their false and
-unjust views have been bequeathed to posterity; for
-it is still in a great measure through the Romans that
-people study the Greeks.</p>
-
-<hr class='c025' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. Plutarch, Life of Themistocles, in Langhorne’s plain and vigorous
-translation.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. Mitford, History of Greece, iii. 53.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. Paus. v. 21. 10. Palm. Desc.
-Gr. Ant. p. 32. Exercit. p. 397.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. Il. β. 190. Strab. ix. 5.
-297. Tauchnitz. with the authorities
-quoted by Palmerius,
-Græc. Ant. i. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. Fisch. ad Theoph. Char. p. 5.
-L. Bos. Ant. Gr. Zeun. i. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r6'>6</a>. Hooker, Ecc. Pol. i. p. 95.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r7'>7</a>. Paus. viii. 1. 6; ii. 14. 4; 22.
-1. Herod, ii. 56. Æsch. Prom.
-859. Supp. 248. Nieb. Hist. of
-Rome, i. 24. Apollod. ii. 1. Serv.
-ad Æn. i. 628; ii. 83. Sch.
-Apol. Rhod. i. 580. Tzetz. ad
-Lyc. 177. 481. Natal. Com. p.
-96. and conf. Palm. Græc. Ant.
-p. 41. sqq. Exercit. p. 527. with
-Buttm. Lexil. p. 155.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r8'>8</a>. Philochor. Siebel. p. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r9'>9</a>. Marsh. Chron. Sec. ix. p. 130.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r10'>10</a>. Strab. viii. 3. p. 127.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r11'>11</a>. Apollod. i. 9. 18. The mythology
-describes the Pelasgi as
-driven out of Thessaly by the
-Æolians, and, under the guidance
-of Cyzicos, taking possession of
-the peninsula of that name previous
-to the Argonautic expedition.
-They fought with the Argonauts,
-and were afterwards expelled
-by the Tyrrhenians, who
-in their turn were driven out by
-the Milesians. Phot. Bib. p. 139.
-a. 25. Bekk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r12'>12</a>. Il. β 857.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r13'>13</a>. Payne Knight, on the Worship
-of Priapus, p. 147.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r14'>14</a>. Λέλεγας γάρ φασι πρότερον
-αὐτοὺς προσαγωρευομένους, διὰ τὸ
-ἀποκεντῆσαι τοὺς ἵππους προσαγορευθῆναι
-Ἱπποκενταύρους. Sch.
-Pind. Pyth. ii. 78. Cf. Schœll.
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Hist. de la Lit. Grecq.</span> i. 4. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r15'>15</a>. Sch. Apoll. Rhod. i. 1024.
-Cf. Winkel. Hist. de l’Art. i.
-317.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r16'>16</a>. Strab. x. 3. p. 349.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r17'>17</a>. Strab. x. 3. p. 349. Sch. Pind.
-Olymp. iii. 19. Pliny, iv. 2.
-Eustath. ad Il. β. 637. Certain
-ancient writers maintained that
-the Ætolians were called Curetes
-by Homer; and at a still earlier
-period Hyantes, and the country
-Hyantis.—Steph. Byzant. <i>v.</i> <a id='corr6.n1'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Ἀἰτωλ'>Αἰτωλ</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_6.n1'><ins class='correction' title='Ἀἰτωλ'>Αἰτωλ</ins></a></span>.
-p. 71. a. Palm. G. Ant. p.
-426.—Acarnania itself was formerly
-called Curetis.—Demet. ap.
-Steph. <i>v.</i> Ἀθῆν. p. 45. a. Hard.
-ad Plin. iv. 2. p. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r18'>18</a>. Strab. vii. 7. p. 124. seq. Hesiod.
-Frag. 54. et 124. Gœttl.—A
-second Dodona is supposed to
-have existed in Thessaly.—See
-Thirl. Hist. of Greece, i. 36.—Cf.
-Buttm. Diss. de orac. Dodon.
-Orat. Att. vii. 133. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r19'>19</a>. Il. π. 233.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f20'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r20'>20</a>. Herod. ii. 51.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f21'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r21'>21</a>. Justin. vii. 1. Thucyd. ii. 99.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f22'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r22'>22</a>. Müller, Dor. i. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f23'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r23'>23</a>. Herod, i. 57.—On the situation
-of this city see Poppo, Proleg.
-ad Thucyd. ii. p. 383.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f24'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r24'>24</a>. Justin, vii. 1. Æsch. Supp.
-p. 261. Cf. Thucyd. iv. 109.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f25'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r25'>25</a>. Diod. v. p. 396. Wesseling.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f26'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r26'>26</a>. Steph. Byz. <i>v.</i> Χαονία, p.
-753. g.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f27'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r27'>27</a>. Hermann, however, (Polit.
-Ant. p. 14,) imagines that the
-Caucons, Leleges, &amp;c. were independent
-races, though less civilised
-and illustrious than the Pelasgi.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f28'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r28'>28</a>. Plin. iv. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f29'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r29'>29</a>. Schol. ad Aristoph. Eq. 78.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f30'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r30'>30</a>. Aristot. Meteorol. i. 14. p.
-39.—Il. π. 234. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f31'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r31'>31</a>. Steph. Byz. <i>v.</i> Ἔφυρα, p.
-367. c. Strab. vii. 7 p. 119.
-See also Müll. Dor. i. 6.
-Plut. Pyrrh. 1.—See the authorities
-collected by Niebuhr, i. 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f32'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r32'>32</a>. Dolops was the son of Hermes,
-and dying in the city of Magnesia
-in Thessaly, had there a
-tomb erected by the sea-shore.
-Sch. Apoll. Rhod. i. 587. 558.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f33'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r33'>33</a>. Palmer. Exercit. p. 527.—Sch.
-Apoll. Rhod. i. 500.—Dion.
-Hal. i. 3. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f34'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r34'>34</a>. Athen. xiv. 45.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f35'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r35'>35</a>. Serv. ad. Æn. viii. 725.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f36'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r36'>36</a>. Paus. iv. 36. 1. Sch. Apoll.
-Rhod. ii. 1239.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f37'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r37'>37</a>. Pliny, iv. 14.—Even Phthiotis
-itself, one of the earliest cradles
-of the Hellenes, is recorded to
-have been a Pelasgian settlement.
-Sch. Apoll. Rhod. i. 14.—Cf. ad.
-i. 40. 580.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f38'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r38'>38</a>. Sch. Apoll. Rhod. iv. 26.; i.
-906. 580.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f39'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r39'>39</a>. Steph. Byzant. <i>v.</i> Λάρισσ. p.
-511. b, c, d. Sch. Apoll. Rhod. i.
-40.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f40'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r40'>40</a>. That the Dryopes were Pelasgi,
-appears from this:—they
-received their national appellation
-from Dryops, son of Lycaon, (Sch.
-Apoll. Rhod. i. 1218,) who was
-himself the son of Pelasgos.—Suid.
-<i>v.</i> Λυκ. Cf. Etym. Mag.
-154, 7. 288, 32. Paus. viii. 2. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f41'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r41'>41</a>. Just. xiii. 4.—The Epicnemidian
-Locrians were anciently
-called Leleges, and by them the
-channel of the Cephissos was
-opened to the sea.—Pliny, iv. 12.
-Solin. vii. p. 55. Bipont. Hesiod.
-Frag. 25. Gœttl. Strab. vii. 7. p.
-115; ix. 1. p. 248. Scymn.
-Chius, p. 24.—Phot. Bib. 321. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f42'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r42'>42</a>. Mnaseas of Patræ ap. Sch.
-Pind. Pyth. iv. 104.—Dion. Hal.
-(Ant. Rom. i. 31) is one of those
-writers who considers the Pelasgi
-miserable because they were
-wanderers. Upon this notion
-Palmerius remarks judiciously:
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Sed si tales migrationes miseræ
-sunt, miserrimi olim Galli majores
-nostri, qui usque in Asiam, post
-multas errores, armis victricibus
-penetrâsse historiæ omnes testantur,
-et hoc seculo miserrimi Tartari
-et Arabes, qui Nomadice
-vivunt, et sedes identidem mutantes,
-non se miseros existimant, et
-id genus vitæ Attalicis conditionibus
-mutare recusarent.”</span>—Græc.
-Antiq. p. 60.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f43'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r43'>43</a>. According to the reading of
-Callisthenes, Homer himself fixes
-their residence in Paphlagonia.—Cf.
-Strab. xiii. p. 16. viii. p.
-157. Sch. Hom. Υ. 329.—Unless
-we adopt this reading we
-must suppose with the Scholiast,
-that they were not separately
-mentioned in the catalogue, because
-Homer confounded them
-with the Leleges, or because they
-arrived late in the war.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f44'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r44'>44</a>. Οἱ μὲν Σκύθας φασὶν, οἱ δὲ τῶν
-Μακεδόνων τινὰς, οἱ δὲ τῶν Πελασγῶν. Strab. xiii. p. 16.—To
-the same tradition alludes the
-Scholiast: Ἔθνος Παφλαγονίας,
-οἱ δὲ Σκυθίας· οἱ δὲ τοὺς λεγομένους
-Καυνίους εἴπον. Il. κ. 429.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f45'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r45'>45</a>. In the dialect of the Dryopes,
-this mountain was known
-by the name of Βηλὸς, by which
-word the Chaldæans denoted the
-highest circle of the heavens.—Etym.
-Mag. 196. 19 seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f46'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r46'>46</a>. Plin. v. 39.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f47'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r47'>47</a>. Paus. viii. 38. 2. Sch. Apoll.
-Rhod. i. 599. Meurs. Cypr. i. 28.
-p. 76. Steph. Byzant. <i>v.</i> Ὄλυμπ.
-p. 612. e.—Mention, moreover, is
-made of an eighth Olympos in
-Cilicia. (Sch. Apoll. ut sup.)—A
-ninth in Lycia. (Plin. xxi. 7.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f48'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r48'>48</a>. Phot. Bib. 139. a. 12. 25.
-Herod. vii. 42. cf. i. 57. Pomp.
-Mela. i. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f49'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r49'>49</a>. Sch. Apoll. Rhod. i. 40.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f50'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r50'>50</a>. Pliny, xv. 39.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f51'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r51'>51</a>. Plato, Cratyl. <span class='fss'>I.</span> iv. p. 58.—See,
-likewise, Müller (Dor. i. 9–11),
-where, however, too much
-ingenuity by far is displayed.
-Another proof of relationship is
-supplied by Homer (Il. ρ. 288)
-who represents Hippothoös, a Pelasgian,
-insulting the body of Patroclos.—Strab.
-xiii. 3. p. 142.—Niebuhr
-(i. 28) conjectures that
-the Trojans were not a Phrygian,
-but a Pelasgian tribe; though,
-in reality, both Phrygians and
-Trojans sprang from the same
-stock.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f52'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r52'>52</a>. Strab. xiii. 3. p. 144.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f53'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r53'>53</a>. Paus. vii. 2. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f54'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r54'>54</a>. W. f. 7. p. 114.—The Carians
-themselves are said to have lived
-habitually amid inaccessible rocks.—Schol.
-Arist. Av. 292.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f55'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r55'>55</a>. Athen. xiv. 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f56'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r56'>56</a>. Thucyd. i. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f57'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r57'>57</a>. Paus. vii. 2. 8. Steph. Byzant.
-<i>v.</i> Ἀγύλλα, p. 30, d. Ed.
-Berkel.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f58'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r58'>58</a>. Athen. xv. 12. Thirl. Hist.
-of Greece, i. 43. Sch. Apoll.
-Rhod. i. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f59'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r59'>59</a>. Pliny, ii. 31. Steph. de Urb.
-<i>v.</i> Μίλετ. p. 559. b. c. Eustath.
-in Dion. Perieg. 825. 456. Sch.
-Apoll. Rhod. i. 186.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f60'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r60'>60</a>. Il. φ. 86. Cf. Sch. ad κ.
-429.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f61'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r61'>61</a>. A glimpse of this fact is obtained
-from a tradition preserved
-by Hecatæos:—Τοὺς δὲ Λέλεγας
-τινὲς μὲν τοὺς αὐτοὺς Καρσὶν
-εἰκὰζουσιν. Strab. vii. 7. p. 114.
-From other authorities we learn
-that the Carians were regarded
-as Pelasgians.—<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Habitator incertæ
-originis. Alii indigenas, sunt
-qui Pelasgos, quidam Cretas existimant.</span>
-Pomp. Mela, i. 16.—See
-likewise Barnes ad Eurip.
-Heracl. 317. But the strongest
-testimony is that of Herodotus, i.
-171.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f62'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r62'>62</a>. Strabo, xiv. 2. p. 208. Thucyd.
-i. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f63'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r63'>63</a>. Strabo, viii. 6. p. 204.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f64'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r64'>64</a>. Strab. ap. Palmer. Gr. Ant.
-i. 10, p. 65. Serv. ad Æn. viii.
-725. We again find these two
-people united at Troy; but not
-mentioned in the catalogue, because
-their leader had fallen and
-there were few of them left to be
-ranged under Hector. Their leaders
-were Helicon and his sons. Their
-capital city “Thebes with lofty
-gates” had been sacked by Achilles.
-Strab. xiii. 3. p. 141.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f65'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r65'>65</a>. Travels of Ali Bey.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f66'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r66'>66</a>. Phot. Bib. 141. a.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f67'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r67'>67</a>. According, however, to a
-tradition preserved by Ephoros,
-the city of Karides, in this
-island, was founded by those
-who escaped with Macar from
-the Deluge of Deucalion. Athen.
-iii. 66.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f68'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r68'>68</a>. Plin. v. 39.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f69'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r69'>69</a>. Paus. vii. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f70'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r70'>70</a>. Suid. <i>v.</i> Ἑρμώνιος χάρις. t.
-i. p. 1044.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f71'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r71'>71</a>. Herm. Pol. Antiq. p. 13. Herod.
-vi. 138, 140. v. 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f72'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r72'>72</a>. Herod. ii. 51.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f73'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r73'>73</a>. Thucyd. i. 98. cum not.
-Wass.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f74'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r74'>74</a>. Phot. Bib. 139. a.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f75'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r75'>75</a>. Phot. Bib. 141. a. Both the
-island of Lesbos, and its city
-Himera were called Pelasgia.
-Pliny, v. 39.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f76'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r76'>76</a>. Serv. ad Æn. iii. 131. Strabo,
-x. 3. Pelasgic remains are
-still found in the island. Pashley,
-Trav. in Crete, i. 152.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f77'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r77'>77</a>. Apollod. ii. 1. Keightley, Mythol.
-405.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f78'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r78'>78</a>. Cf. Athen. xiv. 63.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f79'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r79'>79</a>. Tzet. ad Lyc. 177. Plin.
-iv. 5. Sch. Apoll. Rhod. i. 1024.
-Nic. Damasc. in Exc. p. 492.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f80'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r80'>80</a>. Sch. Eurip. Orest. 1245.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f81'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r81'>81</a>. Æsch. Supp. 642. 919.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f82'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r82'>82</a>. Strab. viii. 6. p. 202. Müll.
-Dor. i. 90. Frag. Incert. Pind. p.
-660. Diss.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f83'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r83'>83</a>. Aristot. Meteorol. i. 14. p. 38.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f84'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r84'>84</a>. Strab. viii. 6. p. 204.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f85'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r85'>85</a>. Which Strabo (viii. 3, 157,)
-says was the original seat of the
-Caucons.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f86'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r86'>86</a>. Sch. Apoll. Rhod. iv. 264.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f87'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r87'>87</a>. Clem. Alex. i. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f88'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r88'>88</a>. Herod. i. 146. Pliny iv. 10.
-Nic. Damasc. in Exc. p. 494.
-Paus. viii. 1. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f89'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r89'>89</a>. Paus. iii. 12. 5.—i. 1. The
-country, moreover, obtained the
-name of Lelegia, iv. i. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f90'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r90'>90</a>. Apollod. iii. 10. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f91'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r91'>91</a>. Strab. vii. 7. p. 115.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f92'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r92'>92</a>. From whom the people were
-called Leleges. Paus. i. 39. 6.
-He was said to be the son of
-Poseidon and Libya, and his tomb
-was shown near the sea-shore,
-44. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f93'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r93'>93</a>. Thirl. Hist. of Greece, i.
-38.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f94'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r94'>94</a>. Paus. iv. 1. Müll. Dor. i.
-116.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f95'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r95'>95</a>. Paus. iv. 36. i.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f96'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r96'>96</a>. Strab. viii. 3. 156.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f97'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r97'>97</a>. Ibid. viii. 3. 152.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f98'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r98'>98</a>. Ibid. viii. 3. 157.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f99'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r99'>99</a>. Ibid. viii. 3. 151.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f100'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r100'>100</a>. Ibid. viii. 3. 157.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f101'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r101'>101</a>. Ibid. viii. 3. 151. The
-Caucons, however, mentioned by
-Athena in the Odyssey (θ. 366.)
-were different from those of Triphylia.
-The Triphylian Caucons
-held all the land lying
-south-east of Pylos on the way
-to Lacedæmon. Strab. viii. 3. 157.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f102'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r102'>102</a>. Strab. viii. 3. 157.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f103'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r103'>103</a>. Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f104'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r104'>104</a>. Herod. vii. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f105'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r105'>105</a>. Paus. i. 14. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f106'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r106'>106</a>. Müll. Dor. i. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f107'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r107'>107</a>. Sch. Arist. Acharn. 75.—Nubb. 971.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f108'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r108'>108</a>. Herod. i. 56. vii. 161. Lesbon.
-Protrept. ii. 22. f. Conf.
-Wessel. ad Herod. p. 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f109'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r109'>109</a>. Herod. i. 57. viii. 44.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f110'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r110'>110</a>. Suid. <i>v.</i> Κραν. t. i. p. 1518. d.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f111'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r111'>111</a>. Strab. vii. 7. p. 114.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f112'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r112'>112</a>. Palmer. Græc. Antiq. p. 62.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f113'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r113'>113</a>. Paus. ii. 8. 3. Philoch. p.
-13. Siebel. Herod. ii. 51. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f114'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r114'>114</a>. Æschyl. Suppl. 259. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f115'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r115'>115</a>. Gœttl. ad Hes. Theog. 311.
-1014. Οἱ Τυρσηνοὶ δὲ, Πελασγοί.
-Sch. Apoll. Rhod. 580. The Pelasgi
-were the founders of Agylla,
-afterwards Cære in Etruria.
-Steph. Byzant. v. Ἀγύλλα, p. 30. d.
-Plin. iii. 8. Serv. ad Æn. viii. 479,
-who also gives another tradition
-according to which Agylla was
-built by Tyrrhenians from Lydia.
-Cf. Vibius, Sequest. 421, who
-says that the Tuscans were Pelasgi.
-The Poseidoniatæ, a Tuscan
-tribe, entirely forgot their original
-language, the manners of
-their country, and all its festivals,
-save one, in which they assembled
-to repeat the ancient names
-of kings, and recall the remembrance
-of their original home.
-They then separated with groans,
-cries, and mingling together their
-tears.—Athen. xiv. 81. The
-Bruttii are said to have been
-driven out of their country by the
-Pelasgi (Plin. iii. 8); who also
-settled in Lucania and Bruttium
-(9, 10). Pelasgi came out of
-Peloponnesos into Latium, settled
-on the Sarna, called themselves
-Sarrhastes, and built, among
-others, the town of Nuceria.—Serv.
-ad Æn. vii. 738. A different
-tradition brings them from
-Attica; another from Thessaly,
-because of the many Pelasgian
-relics found there.—Idem. viii.
-600. Dion. Hal. i. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f116'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r116'>116</a>. Nieb. i. 22. Steph. Byzant.
-<i>v.</i> Χῖος, p. 758. b. Victor. Var. Lect.
-i. 10. Athen. vi. 101.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f117'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r117'>117</a>. See Nieb. i. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f118'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r118'>118</a>. Paus. viii. 1. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f119'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r119'>119</a>. Herod. ii. 32. 51. Plato,
-Tim. t. vii. 22–31. 96. 142.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f120'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r120'>120</a>. Herod. ii. 51.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f121'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r121'>121</a>. Paus. iii. 20. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f122'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r122'>122</a>. We find mention, too, of a
-Pelasgian Hera, Alex. ab. Alex.
-p. 321. Sch. Apol. Rhod. i. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f123'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r123'>123</a>. Strab. xiii. 3. p. 144.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f124'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r124'>124</a>. Serv. ad Æn. vi. 630. Winkelmann,
-ii. 557. On the Cyclopian
-walls of Crotona. Mus. Cortonen.
-pl. i. Rom. 1756.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f125'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r125'>125</a>. Palm. Gr. Ant. p. 60. Herm.
-Pol. Ant. p. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f126'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r126'>126</a>. Palm. Gr. Ant. p. 72.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f127'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r127'>127</a>. δ. 142. Sch. Apol. Rhod. iii.
-1323. Natal. Com. 611.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f128'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r128'>128</a>. Phot. Bib. 320. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f129'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r129'>129</a>. They were the inventors of
-the trumpet. Πελασγιὰς ἔβρεμε
-σάλπιγξ, Nonn. Dion. 47. 568.
-Cf. Paus. ii. 21. 3. Gœttl. ad
-Hes. Theog. 311.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f130'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r130'>130</a>. Serv. ad Æn. ix. 505.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f131'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r131'>131</a>. Nieb. i. 23.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f132'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r132'>132</a>. Palm. Gr. Ant. p. 55.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f133'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r133'>133</a>. See, however, the question
-discussed in Palmerius, Gr. Ant.
-p. 49. sqq. Conf. Eustath. ad Il.
-β. 841.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f134'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r134'>134</a>. Plin. vii. 56. Tacit. Annal.
-xi. 14. et Rupert ad loc. Hygin.
-Fab. 277. p. 336.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f135'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r135'>135</a>. Serv. ad Æn. ii. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f136'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r136'>136</a>. Aristot. Meteorol. i. 14. p. 39.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f137'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r137'>137</a>. Palm. Gr. Ant. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f138'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r138'>138</a>. I. 58.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f139'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r139'>139</a>. See Mitford (Hist. of Greece,
-81. ff.) who is full of these colonies.
-Herod. i. 2. Conf. Thirl.
-i. 185. Keightley, Hist. of Greece,
-p. 11. Müll. Dor. i. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f140'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r140'>140</a>. Cf. Plut. Pericl. § 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f141'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r141'>141</a>. See Man. Moschop. ap Arist.
-Nubb. 982.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f142'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r142'>142</a>. Respect for old age is still
-a remarkable feature in the Greek
-character. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Thiersch. Etat Actuel
-de la Grèce,</span> i. 292. On the
-same trait in their ancestors see
-Mitf. i. 186. Odyss. ω. 254.
-Plat. Repub. vi. p. 6. f. Æsch.
-cont. Tim. § 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f143'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r143'>143</a>. See Thirlwall i. 180. sqq. and
-Mitford i. 181.—Among the Sauromatæ,
-in the time of Hippocrates,
-even the women mounted
-on horseback and fought in battle.
-They were not allowed to marry
-until they had slain three enemies.—De
-Aër. et. Loc. § 78.
-A circumstance is related of the
-Parthian court, illustrative of the
-ferocity which prevailed generally
-in antiquity. The monarch, it
-is said, kept a humble friend,
-whom he fed like a dog, and
-whipped till the blood flowed,
-for the slightest offence at table,
-apparently for the amusement of
-the guests.—Athen. iv. 38. This
-trait of barbarism was imitated
-by the Czar Peter, by servile
-historians denominated the Great,
-who used brutally to maltreat
-the princess Galitzin before his
-whole court.—Mem. of the Margrav.
-of Bayreuth, vol. i. p. 34.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f144'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r144'>144</a>. Thucyd. i. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f145'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r145'>145</a>. Il. ρ. 212. seq. The word
-ξένος signified, actively and passively,
-the host and the guest.
-The rights of hospitality were
-hereditary, the descendants of
-men being compelled to entertain
-the descendants of those with
-whom their forefathers had contracted
-hospitable ties. Πρόξενοι
-sometimes signified persons who
-publicly received ambassadors, as
-Antenor among the Trojans.
-Agamemnon had hospitable ties
-with the Phrygians, because he
-came of Phrygian ancestors.
-Damm. <i>v.</i> ξένος. Sch. Aristoph.
-Eq. 347. Cf. Virg. Æn. viii. 165.
-et Serv. ad loc. Plat. Soph. t. iv.
-p. 125, where Socrates alludes
-to a passage in Homer, in which
-Zeus is said to be the companion
-of the wanderer, observing jocularly
-that the Eleatic stranger
-might probably have been some
-deity in disguise. Cf. Tomas.
-Tess. Hosp. c. 23. ap. Gronov.
-Thesaur. ix. 266. sqq. It was a
-proverb at Athens that the doors
-of the Prytaneion would keep out
-no stranger.—Sch. Aristoph. Ach.
-127. The Lucanians had a law thus
-expressed: “If a stranger arriving
-at sunset ask a lodging of
-any one, let him who refuses to
-be his host be fined for want of
-hospitality.” The object, I imagine,
-of the law, says Ælian
-(Var. Hist. iv. i.) was at once to
-avenge the stranger and Hospitable
-Zeus.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f146'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r146'>146</a>. According to Hippocrates, the
-inhabitants of lofty mountains,
-well watered, are generally hardy
-and of tall stature, but fierce and
-ferocious. In saying this, the
-philosopher describes the Arcadians
-without naming them. De
-Aër. et Loc. § 120.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f147'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r147'>147</a>. Athen. iv. 74.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f148'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r148'>148</a>. Clem. Alex. Strom. i. p. 355. l. 12. Wink. Hist. de l’Art, i. 316.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f149'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r149'>149</a>. Among the ancient Scythians
-an extraordinary uniformity of
-feature was observable, as also
-among the Egyptians, (the same
-is the case at present,) supposed
-to proceed, in the one case from
-the rigour, in the other from the
-extreme heat, of the climate. Hippoc.
-de Aër. et Loc. § 91. But in
-every country, the climate being
-alike for all, the same effect ought
-to be produced on the whole population.
-The similitude is chiefly
-to be traced to the absence of all
-mixture with foreign races; and
-the equal indevelopement of the
-mind.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f150'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r150'>150</a>. Poll. iv. 141.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f151'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r151'>151</a>. Aristot. de Gen. Anim. v. i.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f152'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r152'>152</a>. Cf. Hippoc. de Aër. et Loc.
-§ 125, seq. § 23, seq. Casaub.
-ad Theoph. Char. p. 94. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f153'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r153'>153</a>. This wind, wherever it prevails,
-increases the appetite; and
-the Greeks were a hearty-eating
-people.—Aristot. Probl. xxvi. 45.
-The wind Ornithias was often so
-cold as to strike birds dead on
-the wing. Schol. Aristoph. Ach.
-842.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f154'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r154'>154</a>. Aristot. Probl. xx. 20. The
-black myrtle, which is much larger
-than the white, grew wild about
-the hills. (xx. 36.) The southern
-breezes were considered highly
-salutary to the plants of the
-Thriasian plain. (xxvi. 18.)</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f155'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r155'>155</a>. See the savage anecdote of Stratocles in Plutarch. Demet. § 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f156'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r156'>156</a>. Thucyd. iii. 70. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f157'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r157'>157</a>. Ælian. Var. Hist. vi. 7. Cf.
-Eurip. Andr. 445. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f158'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r158'>158</a>. Thucyd. v. 83.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f159'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r159'>159</a>. Thucyd. ii. 67.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f160'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r160'>160</a>. Pausan. ix. 32. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f161'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r161'>161</a>. Thucyd. v. 126; iii. 50.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f162'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r162'>162</a>. Thucyd. v. 32; iv. 57.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f163'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r163'>163</a>. Heracl. Pont. ap. Athen. xii.
-26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f164'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r164'>164</a>. Cf. Wink. Hist. de l’Art, i.
-320. Thiersch, Etat. Act. de la
-Grèce, i. p. 290. sqq; and for
-their disinterestedness, Pashley,
-Trav. in Crete, i. 221.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f165'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r165'>165</a>. Loud laughter was nevertheless
-considered vulgar among the
-Greeks.—Plat. Repub. t. vi. 112.
-The Athenians were addicted to
-the language of shrugging and
-nodding, κ.τ.λ. To nod upwards
-was to deny, downwards
-to confess. Sch. Aristoph. Ach. 112.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f166'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r166'>166</a>. Aristotle says that the orators
-of Athens, who governed the
-people, passed sometimes the
-whole of the day seeing mountebanks
-or jugglers, or talking with
-those who had travelled as far as
-the Phasis or Borysthenes; and
-that they never read anything save
-the Supper of Philoxenos and that
-not all.—Athen. i. 10. It was in
-the opinion of these persons perhaps,
-that “a great book was a
-great evil.”—Id. iii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c025' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>
- <h3 class='c026'>CHAPTER III. <br /> GEOGRAPHICAL OUTLINE.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>To render still clearer the point we have been
-insisting on in the foregoing chapter, it may be useful
-to take a rapid survey of the geography of the country,
-and enter somewhat more at length into its
-peculiar configuration and productions.<a id='r167' /><a href='#f167' class='c018'><sup>[167]</sup></a> Considered
-as a whole, the most remarkable feature in the aspect
-of Greece consists in the great variety of forms which
-its surface assumes in the territories of the numerous
-little states into which the country was anciently
-divided. Of these no two resemble each other,
-whether in physical structure, climate or productions;
-so that it may be said that in general the atmosphere
-of Greece is mild,<a id='r168' /><a href='#f168' class='c018'><sup>[168]</sup></a> but not in every part, for within
-its narrow boundaries are found nearly all grades of
-temperature. The inhabitants of Elis and the valley
-of the Eurotas are exposed to a degree of heat little
-inferior to that of Egypt, while the settlers about
-Olympos, Pindos and Dodona, with the rough goat-herds
-of Parnassos, Doris and the Arcadian mountains
-experience the rigours of an almost Scandinavian
-winter. In this extraordinary country the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>palm tree and the myrtle flourish within sight of
-the pine, the larch, and the silver fir of the north.
-In several of the islands and on parts of the continent
-certain tropical birds, as the peacock and the
-golden pheasant, have long been naturalised, while
-in other districts snipes and woodcocks<a id='r169' /><a href='#f169' class='c018'><sup>[169]</sup></a> appear early;
-storms of sleet and hail are frequent, and the summits
-of mountains are capped with eternal snow.<a id='r170' /><a href='#f170' class='c018'><sup>[170]</sup></a> A no very
-elevated range of hills separates the marsh miasmata
-and wit-withering fogs of Bœotia,<a id='r171' /><a href='#f171' class='c018'><sup>[171]</sup></a> the home of gluttony
-and stupidity, from the bland transparent cheerful
-atmosphere and sweet wholesome soil of Attica,
-where, as a dwelling-place for man, earth has reached
-her highest culminating point of excellence, and
-where, accordingly, her noblest fruits, wisdom and
-beauty, have ripened most kindly.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To proceed, however, with an outline of the country:
-along the shores, more especially towards the west,
-rugged cliffs of great elevation impend over the deep,
-and in stormy weather present an appearance highly
-desolate and forbidding. But descending the Ionian
-sea, and doubling Cape Crio, the south westernmost
-promontory of Crete, the approach towards the tropics
-is felt both in the air and in the landscape. The
-nights are beyond description lovely, the stars appear
-with increased size and brilliancy,<a id='r172' /><a href='#f172' class='c018'><sup>[172]</sup></a> and morning
-spreads over both land and wave a beauty but faintly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>reflected even in poetry. Every rock and headland,
-clothed with the double light of mythology and the
-sun, emerges from the obscurities of the dawn glittering
-with dew and fresh as at the creation. The slopes
-of the mountains, feathered with hanging woods, lead
-the eye upwards to those aspiring peaks, the cradle of
-many a Hellenic legend, where snows pale and shining
-as those of Mont Blanc,<a id='r173' /><a href='#f173' class='c018'><sup>[173]</sup></a> descending on all sides in
-wavy gradations to meet the forests, rest for ever, and
-at the opening and the close of day exhibit that crimson
-blush which we observe among the higher Alps.
-All the lowlands at their base are meantime covered,
-perhaps, with heavy mists, while lighter and more
-fleecy vapours hang here and there upon the mountain
-tops, augmenting their grandeur by allowing the
-imagination like a Titan to pile them up as high as
-it pleases towards heaven. The coasts of eastern
-Hellas, including those of Eubœa, along the whole
-line of Thessaly to the confines of Macedonia, are
-bold and rocky, frowning like the ramparts of freedom
-upon the slaves of the Asiatic plains.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Traversed in almost every direction by mountain
-chains infinitely ramified and towering in many
-places to a vast height, Greece has, likewise, its
-elevated table-lands, lakes, bogs, morasses, with extensive
-open downs and heaths. Lying between the
-thirty-sixth and forty-first degrees of north latitude,
-and excepting on the Illyrian and Macedonian frontier
-everywhere surrounded by the sea, it may in
-many respects be said to enjoy the most advantageous
-position on the globe. From the barbarian countries
-of Macedonia and Illyria it is divided by a series
-of contiguous mountain ridges, which commencing
-with Olympos, (covered all the year round with
-snow, amid which the poet Orpheus<a id='r174' /><a href='#f174' class='c018'><sup>[174]</sup></a> was interred,)
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>and including the Cambunian range, with the lofty
-peak of Lacmos, stretches westward across the continent,
-and terminates in the stormy Acroceraunian
-promontory. The most northern provinces of Hellas,
-immediately within this boundary and west of the
-Pindos range, were Chaonia and Molossia, and towards
-the east Thessaly—a circular valley of exceeding fertility,
-encompassed by chains of lofty mountains. This
-province contains the largest and richest plains in
-Greece; and many of the names most hallowed by
-its religious traditions and most renowned in poetry,
-belong to Thessaly. Here, in fact, was the supposed
-cradle of the Hellenes. From hence sailed the Argo
-and incomparably the greatest of all the heroes who
-fought at Troy</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“—--mixed with auxiliar gods.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>The geography of Thessaly is remarkable. According
-to a tradition already mentioned it was once a
-mountain-girt lake, the waters of which augmented
-by unusual rains burst their stupendous barriers and
-tore themselves a way through opposing rocks to the
-sea. Among the tribes of northern Hindùstân a
-similar tradition prevails respecting the formation
-of the Vale of Kashmèr; and whether in these
-cases the voice of fame has preserved or not an
-historical truth, such events may be regarded as not
-improbable in countries abounding with mountain
-lakes whose beds lie considerably above the level
-of the sea. The lofty ridge which skirts the shores
-of the Ægæan, and is said to have been rent in remote
-antiquity by the waters of the lake, presents a highly
-varied aspect to the approaching mariner. First on
-sailing northward Pelion comes in sight: a broad
-ridge rising from the waves like a huge <a id='corr54.34'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='sic: uncrenelated'>uncrenalated</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_54.34'><ins class='correction' title='sic: uncrenelated'>uncrenalated</ins></a></span>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>wall, and covered in Homeric times with fiercely
-waving woods. To this succeeds Ossa, with its
-steep conical peak, clothed with durable snows and
-divided by a narrow dusky gap from Olympos. This
-gap is Tempe,<a id='r175' /><a href='#f175' class='c018'><sup>[175]</sup></a> whose savage beauties poets and
-sophists have vied with each other in describing,
-though the reality is still finer than their pictures.
-On entering the defiles of the mountains a narrow
-glen hemmed in by precipitous rocks, bare in some
-places, in others verdant with hanging oaks, receives
-the waters of the Peneios, which, like the Rhone
-at St. Maurice and the Nile at Silsilis, in some
-places fill up the whole breadth of the pass, leaving
-scarcely room for a straitened road carried over rocky
-ledges. Farther on they diffuse themselves over a
-broad pebbly bed, and narrow prospects are opened
-up through woody vistas into soft pastural recesses,
-carpeted with emerald turf, and perfumed with
-flowers and shrubs of the richest fragrance. Anon
-the vale contracts again, gloomy cliffs frown over the
-stream and sadden its surface with their shadows,
-until at length the whole chain is traversed and the
-Peneios precipitates its laughing waters into the
-Ægæan.<a id='r176' /><a href='#f176' class='c018'><sup>[176]</sup></a> Crossing the great range of Pindos we enter
-Epeiros,<a id='r177' /><a href='#f177' class='c018'><sup>[177]</sup></a> a country anciently divided into many provinces,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>and partly inhabited by semi-barbarous tribes,
-where on the borders of a lake singularly beautiful
-and picturesque stood the fane and oracle of Dodonæan
-Zeus. Homer, accustomed to the mild skies of
-Ionia, speaks of its climate as rude and severe. But
-Byron, born among the hungry rocks of Caledonia,
-and habituated to the savage features of the north,
-was smitten with its wild charms, and thus describes
-one of the scenes in the neighbourhood near the
-sources of the Acheron.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>Monastic Zitza, from thy shady brow,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Thou small but favoured spot of holy ground,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Where’er we gaze,—around, above, below,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>What rainbow tints, what magic charms are found!</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Rock, river, forest, mountain,—all abound;</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And bluest skies that harmonize the whole.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Beneath, the distant torrent’s rushing sound</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Tells where the volumed cataract doth roll</div>
- <div class='line'>Between those hanging rocks which shock yet please the soul.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Clusters of islands clothed with poetical verdure
-stretch along the coast thickly indented by diminutive
-bays and embouchures of rivers. On a point of the
-Acarnanian shore<a id='r178' /><a href='#f178' class='c018'><sup>[178]</sup></a> in the mouth of the Ambracian
-gulf, the Commonwealth of Rome which had foundered
-so many rival states suffered final shipwreck, and
-the shores of avenged Hellas were strewed with the
-wrecks of Roman freedom. Ætolia, Doris, Locris,
-Phocis, in which was the mystic navel of Gaia,<a id='r179' /><a href='#f179' class='c018'><sup>[179]</sup></a>
-and the deep valley of Bœotia, divided from each
-other by mountains or by considerable rivers, minutely
-intersected by streams, and broken up into a perpetual
-succession of hill and dale, conduct us southward
-to the Corinthian Gulf and the borders of Attica.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Reserving this illustrious division of Hellas, and
-Megaris which originally formed a part of it, for the
-close of our rapid outline, we enter the Peloponnesos,—a
-country remarkable both for its physical configuration,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>and for the races which anciently inhabited
-it. Connected with the continent by the narrow
-isthmus of Corinth it immediately expands westward
-and southward into a peninsula of large dimensions,
-in form resembling a ragged plantain leaf or outstretched
-palm.<a id='r180' /><a href='#f180' class='c018'><sup>[180]</sup></a> Like the northern division of Hellas
-the Peloponnesos is rough with mountain chains, and
-belted round with cliffs. Towards the centre it swells
-into a lofty plateau, known to antiquity under the
-name of Arcadia. Foreign poets, misapprehending
-the nature of the country, have described this province
-as a succession of soft pastoral scenes.<a id='r181' /><a href='#f181' class='c018'><sup>[181]</sup></a> But its real
-character is very different, consisting chiefly of an
-extensive table-land, supported by vast mountain
-buttresses, which in some places tower into peaks
-of extraordinary elevation. It is broken up into
-innumerable valleys and deep glens, overhung with
-wild precipitous rocks, clothed with gloomy forests,
-and buried during a great part of the year in clouds
-and snow. The inhabitants were rough and unpromising
-as the soil, distinguished like the modern
-Swiss for no quality but bravery, which, like them
-too, they sold with a mercenary recklessness to the
-best bidder.<a id='r182' /><a href='#f182' class='c018'><sup>[182]</sup></a> Achaia is a slip of sea-coast sloping
-towards the north. Elis, a succession of beautiful
-plains with few eminences intervening, well watered
-and renowned for their fine breed of mares. This, the
-Holy land of the Hellenes, sacred every rood to
-Zeus, was to the Greeks a place of pilgrimage, as
-Mecca to the Arabs and Palestine to the Christians
-of the West. In the Homeric age it was confined
-within narrow limits, its sea-coast only extending from
-Buprasion to the promontory of Hyrminè, scarcely
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>indeed, so far, as Myrsinos is said to be its last city
-towards the north, and Buprasion is mentioned rather
-as a separate state. It was divided from Achaia by
-Mount Scollis, which Homer calls “the rock Olenia,”
-and Aleision is the boundary to the south; consequently,
-neither Mount Pholöe nor Olympia, nor the
-Alpheios was then included in Elis, still less Triphylia.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Argolis, on the opposite side of the peninsula, is
-traversed by a broad ridge of hills, which, branching
-off from Mount Cyllene and Parthenion in Arcadia,
-abounds in deep ravines and spacious natural caverns.
-It contains, however, several plains of much
-fertility; but, though marshy and subject to malaria,
-the neighbourhood of the capital is deficient in good
-water. The fame of Argos<a id='r183' /><a href='#f183' class='c018'><sup>[183]</sup></a> rests almost wholly on
-a fabulous basis: it was great in the infancy of
-Greece; it took the lead in the Trojan war; but,
-with the irruption of the half-barbarous Dorians into
-the Peloponnesos, the glory of the old heroic race</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“that fought at Thebes and Ilion,”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c017'>waned visibly, and Argos and its twin city, Mycenæ,
-sank into comparative insignificance.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Laconia consists of a hollow valley, enclosed between
-two mountain chains, proceeding from the
-great Arcadian barrier, Parnon and Kronios, and
-stretching southward to the sea. Down the centre
-of this vale flows the Eurotas, whose sources lie
-above Belemina, among the steep recesses of Taygetos.<a id='r184' /><a href='#f184' class='c018'><sup>[184]</sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>Though enlarged by several tributary brooks, it preserves,
-until some way below Sparta, the character
-of a mountain torrent; but after precipitating itself in
-a romantic sparkling cascade, appears for some time
-to be lost in a morass. Escaping, however, from the
-swamp, it flows during the remainder of its course
-over a firm gravelly bed to the Laconian gulf. Immediately
-above Sparta the valley narrows exceedingly;
-but, at this point, the hills receding suddenly
-on both sides, sweep round a small circular plain,
-and, a short distance below the city, again approach,
-and press upon the bed of the Eurotas.<a id='r185' /><a href='#f185' class='c018'><sup>[185]</sup></a> The site
-of Sparta, therefore, resembles on a small scale that
-of the Egyptian Thebes, which is similarly hemmed
-round by the Arabian and Libyan mountains. It
-follows, too, that the condition of the atmosphere
-must to a certain extent be alike in both places; for
-the ridges of Taygetos and Thornax rising to a great
-height, not only intercept the cooler breezes from the
-west and north, but, bending amphitheatrically round
-the plain, concentrate the sun’s rays, which, being bare
-and rocky, they reflect with great force. In summer,
-therefore, the heat is intense: in winter, on the other
-hand, their great elevation suffices morning and evening
-to exclude the slanting beams, thus causing a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>degree of cold little inferior, perhaps, to what is
-felt in the highlands of Arcadia.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But though lofty and bleak, the uplands of Laconia
-are not incapable of cultivation, and in many places
-were anciently covered with forests of plane trees.
-Their eastern slopes were likewise clothed with
-vines, irrigated, as in Switzerland and Burgundy, by
-small rills, conducted through artificial channels from
-springs high up in the mountains.<a id='r186' /><a href='#f186' class='c018'><sup>[186]</sup></a> The summits
-of Taygetos are waste and wild; rent and shattered
-by frequent earthquakes, lashed by rain-storms, and
-here and there bored and undermined by gnawing
-streams, working their way to the valley, it presents
-the aspect of a fragment of nature in its decrepitude.
-South, however, of Mount Evoras the country
-opens into a plain of considerable fertility, extending
-eastward towards Mount Zarax and the sea.
-On the Messenian frontier, also, are many valleys
-highly productive. This portion of Lacedæmon obtained
-in the time of Augustus the name, given
-perhaps in mockery, of the land of the Eleuthero
-Lacones, or “Free Laconians.”<a id='r187' /><a href='#f187' class='c018'><sup>[187]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Protected on the land side by mountains difficult
-to be traversed, and presenting towards the sea an
-inhospitable harbourless coast, Laconia seems marked
-out by nature to be the abode of an unsocial people.
-Like that of many Swiss cantons, its climate is generally
-harsh and rude, vexed by cold winds alternating
-with burning heats, and appears to communicate
-analogous qualities to the minds of its inhabitants,
-who have been in all ages remarkable for valour
-untempered by humanity. In such a country the
-nobler arts can never be completely naturalised. The
-virus imbibed from nature will find its way into the
-character, and defy the influence of culture and of
-government.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Messenia presents, in every respect, a contrast to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>Laconia. Along the sea-coast, indeed, particularly from
-Pylos to Cape Aeritas, its barrenness is complete; neither
-woods nor thickets, nor any vestige of verdure
-being visible upon the red cinder-like precipices beetling
-over the sea, or sloping off into grey mountains above.
-But having passed this Alpine barrier, we find the
-land sinking down into rich plains, which on the banks
-of the broad Pamisos were anciently, for their luxuriant
-fertility,<a id='r188' /><a href='#f188' class='c018'><sup>[188]</sup></a> denominated “the Happy.” North,
-and about the sources of the Balyra, the Amphitos, and
-the Neda the scenery grows highly romantic and picturesque,
-the eye commanding from almost every elevated
-point innumerable narrow meandering glens, each
-with its bubbling streamlet circling round green eminences,
-clothed to their summits with hanging woods.
-Messenia, which, as soon inhabited, must have been
-wealthy, appears to have been a favourite resort of
-poets in remote antiquity. Here the Thracian Thamyris,
-in a contest, as was fabled, with the Muses,
-lost his sight, together with the gift of song; and in a
-small rocky island on its coast,—the haunt, when I
-saw it, of sea-mews and cormorants,—Sparta received
-from an Athenian general of mean abilities one of the
-most galling defeats recorded in her annals.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Returning out of the Peloponnesos by way of the
-Isthmos, and quitting at the Laconian rocks the territories
-of Corinth, we enter the Megaris,<a id='r189' /><a href='#f189' class='c018'><sup>[189]</sup></a> originally,
-as I have before observed, a part of the Athenian territories.
-Attica is a triangular promontory, of small
-extent, projecting into the Myrtöan sea, between Argolis
-and Eubœa. A mountain chain, of no great
-elevation, forms, under several names, the boundary
-between this country and Bœotia; and Mount Kerata,
-in later times, divided it from Megaris. On every
-other side Attica is washed by the sea, which, together
-with nearly all the circumjacent islands, was, in antiquity,
-regarded as a part of its empire.<a id='r190' /><a href='#f190' class='c018'><sup>[190]</sup></a> This minute
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>division of Greece, fertile in nothing but great men,
-is seldom viewed with any eye to the picturesque.
-Satisfied that Athens stood there, we commonly ask
-no more. Genius has breathed over it a perfume
-sweeter than the thyme of its own hills,—has painted
-it with a beauty surpassing that of earth,—rendered
-its atmosphere redolent for ever of human greatness
-and human glory,—and cast so dazzling an illusion
-over its very dust and ruins, that they appear more
-beautiful than the richest scenes and most perfect
-structures of other lands.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Independently, however, of its historical importance,
-Attica is invested with numerous charms. Consisting
-of an endless succession of hill and dale,<a id='r191' /><a href='#f191' class='c018'><sup>[191]</sup></a> with many
-small plains interspersed; and swelling towards its
-northern frontier into considerable mountains, it presents
-a miniature of the whole Hellenic land.<a id='r192' /><a href='#f192' class='c018'><sup>[192]</sup></a> In
-antiquity its uplands and ravines and secluded hollows
-were clothed with wood,—oaks, white poplars,
-wild olive-trees, or melancholy pines. The arbutus,
-the agnus castus, wild pear, heath, lentisk, and
-other flowering shrubs decked its hill-sides and
-glens; on the brow of every eminence wild thyme,
-sweet marjoram, with many different kinds of odoriferous
-plants exhaled their fragrance beneath the
-foot;<a id='r193' /><a href='#f193' class='c018'><sup>[193]</sup></a> while rills of the clearest and sweetest water in
-the world, leaped down the rocks, or conducted their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>sparkling currents through its romantic and richly
-cultivated valleys. Southward, among the mountains
-of scoriæ of the mining district, springs of silver<a id='r194' /><a href='#f194' class='c018'><sup>[194]</sup></a> may
-be said to have usurped the place of fountains. The
-face of the country is nearly everywhere arid and barren,—the
-plains are parched,—the gullies encumbered
-with loose shingle,—the eminences unpicturesque
-and dreary; yet wherever vegetation takes
-place, the virtue of the Attic soil displays itself in the
-production of fragrant flowers, whence the bee extracts
-the most delicious honey in the world, superior
-in quality to that of Hybla or Hymettos.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Comparative barrenness may, however, upon the
-whole, be considered as characteristic of Attica. Indeed,
-Plato,<a id='r195' /><a href='#f195' class='c018'><sup>[195]</sup></a> in a very curious passage, likens to a
-body emaciated by sickness the hungry district round
-the capital, where the soil has collapsed about the rocks.
-But from this innumerable advantages have arisen.
-The earth being light and porous permits whatever
-rain falls immediately to sink and disappear, as in Provence,<a id='r196' /><a href='#f196' class='c018'><sup>[196]</sup></a>
-which, more than any other part of Europe,
-resembles Attica. Hence, except in some few inconsiderable
-spots,<a id='r197' /><a href='#f197' class='c018'><sup>[197]</sup></a> no bogs, no marshes exist to poison
-the air with cold effluvia: a ridge of mountains protects
-it against the northern blasts: mild breezes from the
-ocean prevail in almost all seasons: snow seldom lies
-above a few hours on the ground. The atmosphere,
-accordingly, kept constantly free from terrene exhalations,
-is buoyant and sparkling as on the Libyan
-desert, when, at noon, every elevated rock appears to
-be encircled by a luminous halo.<a id='r198' /><a href='#f198' class='c018'><sup>[198]</sup></a> In air so pure the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>act of breathing is a luxury which produces a smile
-of satisfaction on the countenance; the mind performs
-its operations with ease and rapidity; and life,
-everywhere sweet, appears to have a finer relish than
-in countries exposed to watery and unwholesome fogs.
-It was perfectly philosophical, therefore, in Plato,<a id='r199' /><a href='#f199' class='c018'><sup>[199]</sup></a> to
-regard Attica as a place designed by nature to bring
-the human intellect to the greatest ripeness and perfection,
-a quality extended by Aristotle to Greece at
-large. The same atmospheric properties were favourable
-to health and long life, warding off many disorders
-common in other parts of the country.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A learned and ingenious but fanciful writer<a id='r200' /><a href='#f200' class='c018'><sup>[200]</sup></a> considers
-Peloponnesos to have been the heart of Greece.
-Following up this idea, we must unquestionably pronounce
-Athens to have been the head, the seat of
-thought, the place where its arts and its wisdom
-ripened. But ere we touch upon the capital, which
-cannot be slided over with a cursory remark, it will
-be necessary to enter into some little detail respecting
-the demi or country towns of Attica,<a id='r201' /><a href='#f201' class='c018'><sup>[201]</sup></a> of which in the
-flourishing times of the republic there existed upwards
-of one hundred and seventy-four. Of these
-small municipal communities, of which too little is
-known, several were places of considerable importance,
-possessing their temples, their Agoræ, their
-theatres, filled with walks and surrounded by impregnable
-fortifications. The Athenians regarded Athens,
-indeed, as the Hebrews did Jerusalem, in the light
-of their great and holy city, the sanctuary of their
-religion and of their freedom. But this did not
-prevent their preferring the calm simplicity of a
-country life to the noisier pleasures of the town.
-Many distinguished families, accordingly, had houses
-in these demi, or villas in their vicinity. Here, also,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>several of the greatest men of Athens were born:
-Thucydides was a native of Halimos,<a id='r202' /><a href='#f202' class='c018'><sup>[202]</sup></a> Sophocles of
-Colonos, Epicurus of Gargettos, Plato of Ægina, Xenophon
-of Erchia, Tyrtæos, Harmodios, and Aristogeiton
-of Aphidnæ, Antiphon of Rhamnos, and Æschylus
-of Eleusis.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In other points of view, also, the towns and villages
-of Attica possessed great interest. They long
-continued to be the seats of the primitive worship
-of the country, where the tutelar deities of particular
-districts, of earth-born race, were adored with
-that affectionate faith and that fervency of devotion
-which peculiarly belong to small religious communities.
-The gods they worshipped appeared almost
-to be their fellow citizens, and to exist only for their
-protection. In fact, they were the patron saints of
-the villages. Fabulous legends and historical traditions
-combined with religion to shed celebrity over
-the Attic demi. There was hardly in the whole land
-a single inhabited spot which did not figure in their
-poetry or in their annals as the scene of some memorable
-exploit. Aphidnæ<a id='r203' /><a href='#f203' class='c018'><sup>[203]</sup></a> was renowned, for example,
-as the place whence the Dioscuri bore away
-their sister Helen, after her rape by Theseus, in
-revenge for which the youthful heroes devastated
-the whole district. “Grey Marathon,”<a id='r204' /><a href='#f204' class='c018'><sup>[204]</sup></a> as Byron
-aptly terms it, was embalmed for ever in Persian
-blood, and rendered holy by the vast barrows raised
-there by the state over the ashes of its fallen
-warriors. Rhamnos on the Attic Dardanelles became
-famous for its statue of Nemesis, originally of Aphrodite,
-the work of Diodotos or Agoracritos of Paros,
-not unworthy to be compared for size and beauty
-with the productions of Pheidias. The irruption of
-the Peloponnesians conferred a melancholy celebrity
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>on Deceleia,<a id='r205' /><a href='#f205' class='c018'><sup>[205]</sup></a> and Phylæ obtained a place in history
-as the stronghold where Thrasybulos gathered together
-the small but gallant band which avenged the
-cause of freedom upon the thirty. Of Eleusis,<a id='r206' /><a href='#f206' class='c018'><sup>[206]</sup></a> it
-is enough to say that there the ceremonies of initiation
-into the mysteries were performed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The capital of Megara, like Athens, stood a short
-distance from the sea; but was joined by long walls
-to its harbour Nisæa, protected from the weather
-by the Minoan promontory. In sailing thence to
-the Peiræeus we pass several islands, none of which,
-however, are of any magnitude, save Salamis, in
-remote antiquity a separate state governed by its
-own laws. The old capital, already deserted in the
-time of Strabo, stood on the southern coast over
-against Ægina; but the principal town of later times
-was situated on a bay at the root of a tongue of land
-projecting toward that part of Attica<a id='r207' /><a href='#f207' class='c018'><sup>[207]</sup></a> where Xerxes
-sat to behold his imperial armada annihilated by the
-republicans of Hellas. Salamis was known of old
-under various names,—Skiras, Cychræa and Pituoussa,
-from the Pitus, or pine tree, by which its rocks and
-glens were in many places shaded. Immediately
-before the engagement in which his navy was destroyed,
-the Persian monarch sought to unite Salamis
-to the continent by a dam two stadia in length; his
-project, had it succeeded, would have ruined the ferrymen
-of Amphialè, a class of individuals whose operations
-Solon judged of sufficient importance to be
-regulated by a particular article in his code. Of
-the smaller islets that form the outworks of the Attic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>coast, little need be said, since they were nearly all
-barren, and inhabited only by a few legendary traditions.
-The tomb of Circe was shown on the larger
-of the Pharmacoussæ; and the island of Helena, east
-of the Samian promontory obtained the reputation
-of having been the spot where the faithless queen
-of Menelaus consummated her guilt.<a id='r208' /><a href='#f208' class='c018'><sup>[208]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Ægina belonged to Attica only by conquest; but
-as when subdued its subjection was complete and lasting,
-it must not be altogether omitted in this glance
-over the home territories of the Great Demos. Like
-Attica itself, the island lying in the Saronic Gulf is
-of a triangular shape. By proximity it belongs to the
-Peloponnesos, being within thirty stadia of the Methanæan
-Chersonesos, while to Salamis is a voyage of
-ninety stadia, and to the Peiræeus one hundred and
-twenty. But the sea itself having been considered a
-part of Attica, whose flag, like that of England,
-streamed for ages triumphantly over its billows, the
-islands also which it surrounded fell one by one into
-the hands of the people, and this small Doric isle
-among the rest. A number of diminutive islets, or
-rather rocks, cluster round the shores of Ægina, some
-barren and treeless, others indued with a certain degree
-of fertility and verdant with pine woods.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The most remarkable objects in Ægina were placed
-at the angles of the island. The city and harbour
-towards the west, on the east looking towards Attica
-the temple of Athena, and, near its southern extremity,
-“a magnificent conical mountain, which from
-its grandeur, its form, and its historical recollections,
-is the most remarkable among the natural features
-of Ægina.”<a id='r209' /><a href='#f209' class='c018'><sup>[209]</sup></a> An eminence so lofty and in shape so
-beautiful would naturally be an object of much interest
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>in so small an island. The local superstitions
-would necessarily cluster round it, as around Ida in
-Crete and Olympos in Thessaly. Accordingly on the
-summit of this mountain the fables of Ægina represent
-King Æacos praying, in the name of the whole
-Hellenic nation, to Zeus for rain, as the prophet
-prayed for the Israelites, and with equal success.
-Here, therefore, a recent traveller has with great
-judgment fixed the site of the Panhellenion, near
-the spot where a chapel, dedicated to the prophet
-Elias, now stands. In dimensions Ægina, according
-to Scylax, ranked twelfth among the isles of Hellas.
-Strabo attributes to it a circumference of one hundred
-and eighty stadia; but Sir <a id='corr68.14'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Willian'>William</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_68.14'><ins class='correction' title='Willian'>William</ins></a></span> Gell, in his
-Argolis,<a id='r210' /><a href='#f210' class='c018'><sup>[210]</sup></a> considers its perimeter, not including the
-fluctuations of the bays and creeks, to be not less
-than two hundred and ten stadia, and its square
-contents three thousand one hundred and sixty-four
-stadia, or forty-one square miles.<a id='r211' /><a href='#f211' class='c018'><sup>[211]</sup></a> The interior is rocky,
-rough, and perforated with caverns, in which, according
-to fabulous legends, the Myrmidons resided, and
-Chabrias afterwards lay in ambush for the Spartan
-Gorgopos and his Æginetan allies.<a id='r212' /><a href='#f212' class='c018'><sup>[212]</sup></a> A light thin soil
-nourishes but sparing vegetation on the mountains,
-but several of the small valleys, filled with earth
-washed down by rains from the uplands, are rich and
-fertile, watered by springs and rivulets, and beautified
-with groves of imperishable verdure.<a id='r213' /><a href='#f213' class='c018'><sup>[213]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Much has been written on the extent and population
-of Attica, respecting which most of the philosophers
-of the last generation entertained very erroneous
-ideas. An examination of their statements might
-still, perhaps, be interesting; but it would lead me
-far beside the scope of my present work, and occupy
-space that can be better filled up. According to the
-most careful calculation Attica contained seven hundred
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>and twenty square miles, or taking into account
-the island of Salamis seven hundred and forty-eight.
-The whole of this extremely limited space swarmed,
-however, with population; for even so late<a id='r214' /><a href='#f214' class='c018'><sup>[214]</sup></a> as 317
-B. C. after all the calamities which the republic had
-undergone, Attica still contained five hundred and
-twenty-seven thousand six hundred and sixty persons,
-or nearly seven hundred and seventy-three to the
-square mile, a proportion much higher than is found
-in the most thickly peopled counties of England.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This, however, taking into account the form of
-government, the industrious habits, and extreme frugality
-of the people, is entirely within the bounds
-of probability. But in what is related of the
-population of Ægina, the calculations current among
-learned authors are so extravagant as to exceed all
-belief. Müller and Boeckh,<a id='r215' /><a href='#f215' class='c018'><sup>[215]</sup></a> who on other occasions,
-and sometimes very unseasonably affect scepticism,
-unhesitatingly admit the account in Athenæus, which
-attributes four hundred and seventy thousand slaves
-to the Æginetans.<a id='r216' /><a href='#f216' class='c018'><sup>[216]</sup></a> To these the former adds a
-free population of forty thousand, making the whole
-amount to upwards of half a million, or twelve thousand
-four hundred and fifty-seven to the square
-mile. Mr. Clinton,<a id='r217' /><a href='#f217' class='c018'><sup>[217]</sup></a> clearly perceiving the absurdity
-of this calculation, proposes to read seventy thousand,
-which will leave a population in the proportion of
-two thousand six hundred and eighty-two to the
-square mile. The passage in Athenæus is no doubt,
-as Bochart suspects,<a id='r218' /><a href='#f218' class='c018'><sup>[218]</sup></a> corrupt, and this being the case
-nothing is left but to determine from analogy the
-population of Ægina, which, supposing it equally
-dense with that of Attica would have amounted to
-something more than thirty thousand souls.</p>
-
-<hr class='c025' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f167'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r167'>167</a>. Cf. Hermann, Pol. Ant. § 6.
-Müll. Dor. ii. 425.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f168'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r168'>168</a>. Varro gave the preference to
-the soil and climate of Italy,
-where everything good was produced
-in perfection. He thought
-no barley to be compared with
-the Campanian, no wheat with
-the Apulian, no rye with the
-Falernian, no oil with the Venafran.
-The whole country was so
-thickly planted with trees that it
-seemed to be an orchard. Not
-even Phrygia itself abounded more
-in vineyards; nor was Argos so
-fertile as parts of Italy, though it
-was said to produce from ten to
-fifteen pipes the juger. De Re
-Rustica, i. 2. p. 46. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f169'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r169'>169</a>. “Woodcocks and snipes, I am
-informed, visited the neighbourhood
-of Attica during the winter
-in considerable quantities. I heard
-the curlew and the red shank cry
-along the marsh to the right of
-the Piræus.” Sibth. in Walp.
-Mem. i. 76.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f170'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r170'>170</a>. Cramer, Desc. of Greece, i. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f171'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r171'>171</a>. Βοιωτία ὗς. Pind. Olymp. vi.
-151. Cram. ii. 200.—Thick and
-foggy atmosphere. Hipp. de Aër.
-§ 55. Plat. De Legg. v. t. vii. p.
-410. seq—Cicero observes:—<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Etenim
-licet videre acutiora
-ingenia et ad intelligendum acutiora
-eorum, qui terras incolant
-eas, in quibus aër sit purus ac
-tenuis, quàm illorum, qui utantur
-crasso cœlo atque concreto.”</span> De
-Nat. Deor. ii. 16. “The purple
-and the grey heron frequent the
-marshes of Bœotia.” Sibth. in
-Walp. Mem. i. 76.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f172'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r172'>172</a>. I never saw the Pleiades appear
-so large as on the coast of
-Messenia. See Coray, Disc. Prel.
-ad Hipp. de Aër. et Loc. § 115.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f173'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r173'>173</a>. Even the Cheviot hills are
-sometimes (as in 1838) covered
-all the summer with patches of
-snow, on which occasions the peasants
-are said to pay no rent.
-<cite>Tyne Mercury</cite>, July 1, 1838.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f174'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r174'>174</a>. Paus. ix. 30. 9. Anthol. Græc.
-vii. 9. Menag. ad Diog. Laert.
-Proœm. § 5. Here, too, one of
-the three Corybantes, when he had
-been slain by his brethren, found a
-grave. Clem. Alex. Protrept. c.
-xi. t. i. p. 16. From the blood of
-this man sprang the herb parsley.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f175'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r175'>175</a>. Æl. Var. Hist. iii. 1. Holland
-291–95. Clarke iv. 290–97.
-Dodwell, 109. sqq. Gell.
-Itiner. of Greece, 280.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f176'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r176'>176</a>. Aristotle accounts for what
-every traveller will have remarked,
-the extreme blueness of this
-sea, which he contrasts with the
-whitish waves of the Pontos Euxeinos.
-In the latter case, he observes,
-the air, thick and whitish,
-is reflected from the surface of
-the turbid waters; while, in the
-Ægæan, the sea, transparent to a
-great depth, reflects the bright rich
-colour of the sky.—Prob. xxiii. 6.
-He adds that the sea is more
-transparent during the prevalence
-of the north wind.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f177'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r177'>177</a>. Though this country be not
-generally included by geographers
-within the limits of Hellas, I
-have considered it as a part of
-Greece, because Homer evidently
-so thought it. He reckons the
-Perrhæbi and Ænianes, and the
-dwellers about the cold Dodona,
-among the followers of Agamemnon,
-that is classes them among
-the Greeks.—Il. β. 749–755.
-The ancient name of the country
-is said to have been Æsa.—Etym.
-Mag. 39. 19. Cf. Steph. Byzant.
-<i>v.</i> Δωδών. p. 319. d. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f178'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r178'>178</a>. Where stood a celebrated
-Temple of Apollo.—Thucyd. i. 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f179'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r179'>179</a>. The “rocky Pytho” afterwards
-Delphi. Iliad, β. 519.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f180'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r180'>180</a>. Strb. viii. 2. 140. Dion.
-Perieg. ap. Palm. Gr. Ant. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f181'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r181'>181</a>. Cf. Palm. Gr. Ant. 61. On
-the climate of Arcadia see Aristot.
-Problem. xxvii. 60. He observes
-that the winds, blowing in from
-the sea, were not colder there
-than in other parts of Greece;
-but that during calms the exhalations
-from the stagnant waters
-were particularly chill. See also
-Hippoc. de Aër. et Loc. § 120.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f182'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r182'>182</a>. Cf. Steph. Byzant. <i>v.</i> Ἀρκας.
-p. 166. b. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f183'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r183'>183</a>. Il. β. 559. Mases, an Argive
-city, is mentioned by Homer in
-conjunction with Ægina, which
-island also belonged at that time
-to Argos. This place, in later
-ages, was the harbour of the
-Hermioneans.—Pausan. ii. 36,
-83. Cf. Müll. Æginet. p. 85.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f184'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r184'>184</a>. This mountain (which in one
-place Vibius Sequester converts
-into a river, p. 19, Cf. Virg. Georg.
-ii. 487,) was sacred to Bacchos.
-Serv. ad. Virg. ut sup.—Strabo
-describes it at length, and Pausanias
-observes that it was adapted
-to the chase. On its summit
-horses were sacrificed to the sun.—Paus.
-iii. 20. 2. Cf. Oberlin, ad
-Vib. Sequest. p. 375.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f185'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r185'>185</a>. Coronelli, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Mém. Hist. et Géog.
-du Roy. de la Morée, &amp;c.</span> p. 90.
-sqq. Poucqueville, Travels in the
-Morea, p. 87. Chateaubriand,
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Itinéraire</span>, t. i. pp. 102–118. Cf.
-Thiersch, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Etat Actuel de la Grèce,</span>
-i. 287, who gives the following
-romantic glimpse of the Laconian
-valley:—<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Oh! que ce pays
-était beau, lorsqu’au mois de
-Mai 1832, nous traversâmes ses
-ravissantes vallées au milieu des
-montagnes de la Laconie, et ses
-villages situés au bord de ruisseaux
-limpides et entourés d’arbres
-fruitiers tout en fleurs! Quelle
-était belle cette terre, lorsque, le
-soir, revenant des ruines de Sparte
-à Mistra, nous étions comme
-baignés de ces parfums qu’exhalent
-les orangers qui remplissent
-la plaine, et rafraichis par
-la brise délicieuse descendue des
-montagnes majestueuses du Taygète,
-dont les cimes, encore couvertes
-de neige, semblaient toucher
-le ciel parsemé d’étoiles!
-Nôtre sommeil fut interrompu la
-nuit par le chant mélodieux d’une
-troupe de rossignols.”</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f186'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r186'>186</a>. Aleman, ap. Athen. i. 57.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f187'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r187'>187</a>. Strab. viii. 6. p. 190. Paus.
-iii. 21. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f188'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r188'>188</a>. Cf. Sibth. in Walp. Mem. i. 60.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f189'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r189'>189</a>. Strab. ix. i. p. 232.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f190'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r190'>190</a>. Strab. ix. 1. Philoch. Siebel. p. 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f191'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r191'>191</a>. Mardonius, in fact, found
-Attica too hilly for the operations
-of cavalry:—οὔτε ἱππασίμη ἡ
-χώρη ἦν ἡ Ἀττική.—Herod. ix.
-13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f192'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r192'>192</a>. See, in Plato’s Critias, t. vii.
-p. 153. the eulogium of its beauty
-and fertility. At present “the
-plain of Attica, if we except the
-olive-tree, is extremely destitute
-of wood, and we observed, on our
-return, the peasants driving home
-their asses laden with Passerina
-hirsuta for fuel.”—Sibthorp in
-Mitchell, Knights, p. 155. But
-the description by no means applies
-to the whole country. At
-the foot of Cithæron there are still
-forests four hours in length.—Sibth.
-in Walp. Mem. i. 64.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f193'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r193'>193</a>. This is accounted for by the
-dryness and purity of the atmosphere;
-for, as Pliny remarks,
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“hortensiorum odoratissima quæ
-sicca; ut ruta, mentha, apium,
-et quæ in siccis nascantur.”</span>—Hist.
-Nat. xxi. 18. p. 46.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f194'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r194'>194</a>. Ἀργύρου πηγή τις αὐτοῖς
-ἐστι, βησαυρὸς χθονός.—Æschyl.
-Pers. 238. In all countries the
-waters of mining cantons are
-bad.—Hippocr. de Aër. et Loc.
-§ 35.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f195'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r195'>195</a>. Critias, t. vii. p. 154. Words.
-Athens and Attica, 62.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f196'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r196'>196</a>. Coray, Notes sur Hippoc. De
-Aër. et Loc. § 126. t. ii. p. 403.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f197'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r197'>197</a>. Vide Sch. Aristoph. Lys. 1032.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f198'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r198'>198</a>. Aristid. i. 187. Jebb. Aristophanes
-appears to speak of the
-brilliance of its atmosphere in the
-following verse (Ran. 155):</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>ὅψει τι φῶς κάλλιστον, ὥσπερ ἐνθάδε.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c017'>though Spanheim supposes him
-to mean the light of the world
-generally.—Not. in loc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f199'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r199'>199</a>. Plat. Tim. t. vii. pp. 12. 15. sqq.
-Bekk. Aristot. Pol. vii. 6. Cf. Coray,
-Disc. Prelim. ad Hippoc. De Aër.
-et Loc. p. cxxix. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f200'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r200'>200</a>. Müll. Dor. i. 76.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f201'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r201'>201</a>. See Col. Leake, Trans. Roy.
-Soc. Lit. i. 114–283.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f202'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r202'>202</a>. Poppo, Prolegg. in Thucyd. i.
-22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f203'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r203'>203</a>. Paus. i. 17. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f204'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r204'>204</a>. Paus. i. 32. 3. sqq. “We
-observed the long-legged plover
-near Marathon; the grey plover
-and the sand plover on the eastern
-coast of Attica.” Sibth. Walp.
-Mem. i. 76. Chandler, ii. 83.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f205'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r205'>205</a>. Where Sophocles and his ancestors
-were buried. Chandler,
-ii. 95.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f206'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r206'>206</a>. Clem. Alex. Protrept. § 2. t. i.
-p. 16. seq. where he relates the
-story of Demeter and Baubo.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f207'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r207'>207</a>. On one of the projecting roots
-of Mount Ægaleus, which anciently,
-according to Statius, was
-well-wooded, and clothed like
-Hymettos with thyme.—Theb.
-xii. 631. Suid. <i>v.</i> Μᾶσσον.
-This mountain produced likewise
-an abundance of figs (Theoc.
-Eidyll. i. 147), which were considered
-the best in Attica.—Athen.
-xiv. 66. Meurs. Rel. Att. c. i.
-p. 4. seq. Cf. Leake, Topog. 71.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f208'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r208'>208</a>. Il. γ. 445. where we find its
-ancient name to have been
-Kranäe.—Cf. Eurip. Helen. 1672.
-Strab. ix. 1. p. 245.—Pausanias
-(i. 35. 1) has preserved another
-tradition representing Helen
-as landing here on her return from
-Troy.—Chandler, ii. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f209'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r209'>209</a>. Wordsworth, Athens and Attica,
-p. 262.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f210'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r210'>210</a>. Ib. 28. ap. Müll. Æginet.
-p. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f211'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r211'>211</a>. Cf. Clint. Fast. Hellen. ii.
-335.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f212'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r212'>212</a>. Xen. Hellen. v. 1. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f213'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r213'>213</a>. Chandler (ii. 12) speaks of the
-whole island as covered with trees.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f214'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r214'>214</a>. Clint. Fast. Hellen. ii. 386.
-sqq. Cf. Boeckh, Pub. Econ. of
-Athens, i. 44. seq. On the number
-of the citizens <i>vide</i> Philoch.
-Siebel, p. 17. 28. Schol. Vesp.
-Aristoph. 709. Strab. ix. i. t. ii.
-p. 234. Hermann. Pol. Ant. § 18.
-Bochart, Geog. Sac. i. 286.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f215'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r215'>215</a>. Æginet. 128. Econ. of Athens,
-i. 55, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f216'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r216'>216</a>. Deipnosoph. vi. 103. Cf.
-Schol. Pind. Olymp. viii. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f217'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r217'>217</a>. Fast. Hellen. ii. 423.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f218'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r218'>218</a>. Geog. Sac. Pars Prior, l. iv.
-c. 20, p. 286.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c025' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>
- <h3 class='c024'>CHAPTER IV. <br /> CAPITAL CITIES OF GREECE.—ATHENS.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>From these more general considerations, into which
-it was perhaps necessary to enter, let us now pass to
-the picture antiquity has left us of the principal capitals,
-confining ourselves chiefly to Athens and Sparta,
-which may be regarded as the representatives of all
-the rest. The physiognomy of these, like the features
-of an individual, may in some respects be considered
-as a key to the character of the inhabitants; a remark
-which, with great truth, may be applied to all
-capitals.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the structure of the one, external and internal,<a id='r219' /><a href='#f219' class='c018'><sup>[219]</sup></a>
-there was everywhere visible an effort to embody the
-principle of beauty, improving the advantages and
-overcoming the difficulties of position. In the other
-little could be discovered indicative of imaginative
-power, of the thirst to create, of the yearning of the
-mind after the ideal, of the desire of genius to breathe
-a soul into stone, to live and obtain a perpetuity of
-existence in the works of its own hands, to gaze on
-its own beauty reflected on all sides from its own creations
-as from a concave mirror. At Athens everything
-public, everything which had reference to the
-united efforts of the people wore an air of grandeur.
-The Acropolis inhabited only by the gods appeared
-worthy to be the dwelling place of immortal beings:
-all the poetry of architecture was there; it seemed to
-have owed its birth to a concentration of the best religious
-spirit of the ancient world, aiming at giving
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>earth a resemblance to heaven; at peopling it with
-mute deities, speaking only through their beauty and
-surrounding these representatives of the invisible
-Olympos with everything most excellent, most valuable,
-most cherished among men. At Sparta a spirit
-of calculating economy entered into the very worship
-of the gods. They seemed, in the manner they lodged
-and entertained them, to have always had an eye to
-their common tables and their black broth. Between
-the temples of Athens and Sparta there was, in fact,
-the same contrast that now exists between St. Peter’s
-at Rome and a Calvinistic conventicle. Accordingly,
-several ancient writers have vied with each other in
-heaping encomiums upon Athens, which they regarded
-as at once the most glorious and the most beautiful of
-cities. Athenæus denominates it the “Museum of
-Greece;” Pindar, “the stay of Greece;” Thucydides,
-in his epigram upon Euripides, “the Greece
-of Greece;” and the Pythian Apollo, “the home
-and place of council of all Greeks.”<a id='r220' /><a href='#f220' class='c018'><sup>[220]</sup></a> By others
-it was termed “the Opulent;” though the principal
-part of its riches consisted in the wise and great men
-whom it produced, and whose achievements covered it
-with glory. In the same spirit the Arabs call Cairo
-the “Mother of cities;” and all nations concentrate
-more or less upon their capital, their affection and
-their pride.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The superior magnificence of Athens appears from
-this; that it was always the place to which the Greeks
-referred when desirous of magnifying the splendour of
-their own country, in comparison with what could be
-found elsewhere. Thus Dion Chrysostom<a id='r221' /><a href='#f221' class='c018'><sup>[221]</sup></a> affirms that
-Athens and Corinth in all that constitutes real grandeur
-surpassed the famous capitals of Persia, Syria,
-and Ecbatana, and Babylon, and the metropolis of
-Bactriana. Nay, in the opinion of this writer the
-Kraneion with its gymnasia, fountains, and shady
-walks, and the Acropolis with its Propylæa, antique
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>altars, temples, and population of gods, exceeded in
-magnificence the palaces of the Great King, though
-there was something exceedingly striking in the site
-and structure of what may properly be called the
-Acropolis of Ecbatana.<a id='r222' /><a href='#f222' class='c018'><sup>[222]</sup></a> The city itself was unwalled,
-but the citadel, which probably rose in the midst of it,
-occupied the slopes of a conical hill, not unlike Mount
-Tabor, and was girt by seven walls of different colours
-and elevation, rising in concentric circles above each
-other to the summit. The circumference of the
-lowest is said to have equalled that of Athens including
-the Peiræeus. The colour of this wall was
-white; the next being black for the sake of contrast,
-was succeeded by one of light purple, which was followed
-by walls of sky blue, of scarlet, of silver and of
-gold.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In mere magnitude the great capitals of the East far
-exceeded Athens. The circuit, for example, of Babylon,
-is said to have been at least four hundred stadia,
-while, according to the orator Dion, that of Athens
-was in round numbers two hundred stadia, or twenty-five
-miles. Aristeides probably adopted the same calculation
-when he pronounced it to be a day’s journey
-in compass. But there is some exaggeration in these
-accounts; for, according to Thucydides, the total extent
-of the walls did not exceed one hundred and
-seventy-eight stadia. The area, however, of the city
-was not proportioned to the vast range of its fortifications,
-consisting of two distinct systems of buildings,
-the Astu, or city proper, and the Peiræeus or harbour,
-connected together by three walls more than four
-miles in length. There were other capitals in the
-western world equal in dimensions, as Syracuse, one
-hundred and eighty stadia in circumference, and
-Rome, which in the time of Dionysios of Halicarnassos
-did not command a larger circuit, though the
-space included within the walls was much greater.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>In order, however, to convey a more complete idea
-of the ancient home of Democracy and the Arts, we
-must, as far as possible, open up a view into the
-interior of Athens, which, with its harbours, docks,
-arsenals, its market-places, bazārs, porticoes, public
-fountains and gymnasia, probably formed the noblest
-spectacle ever presented to the eye by a cluster of
-human dwellings. From whatever side approached,
-whether by land or by sea, the city appeared to be but
-one vast group of magnificence. In sailing up along
-the shore from the promontory of Sunium, the
-polished brazen helmet and shield of the colossal
-Athena,<a id='r223' /><a href='#f223' class='c018'><sup>[223]</sup></a> standing on the brow of the Acropolis, were
-beheld from afar flashing in the sun. On drawing
-nearer, the Parthenon, the Propylæa, the temple of
-Erectheus, with the other marble edifices crowning
-the Cecropian rock, glittered above the pinnacles
-of the lower city, and the deep green foliage of
-the encircling plain and olive groves. Among its
-principal ornaments in the later ages of the republic
-was a remarkable monument in the road to Eleusis,—the
-tomb of the hetaira Pythionica, who dying
-while her beauty still bloomed and her powers of
-fascination were unimpaired, the love she had inspired
-survived the grave and manifested itself by
-rearing a costly pile of marble over her ashes.<a id='r224' /><a href='#f224' class='c018'><sup>[224]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Upon sailing into the Peiræeus,<a id='r225' /><a href='#f225' class='c018'><sup>[225]</sup></a> where generally ships
-from every quarter of the ancient world lay at anchor,
-the stranger was immediately struck by manifestations
-of the people’s power and predilection for stateliness
-and grandeur. The entrance into the port, barely
-wide enough to admit a couple of galleys abreast, with
-their oars in full sweep, lay between two round towers,
-in which terminated on either hand the maritime fortifications
-of the city. Across the mouth vast chains
-were extended in time of war, rendering the Peiræeus
-a closed port;<a id='r226' /><a href='#f226' class='c018'><sup>[226]</sup></a> arrived within which, the pleased eye
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>wandered over the spacious quays, wharfs, and long
-ranges of warehouses extending round the harbour,
-with tombs and sepulchral monuments rising here and
-there in open spaces between. Among them was a
-cenotaph in the form of an altar, raised by the repentant
-people in memory of Themistocles,<a id='r227' /><a href='#f227' class='c018'><sup>[227]</sup></a> the founder of
-the naval power of Athens, whose bones however it
-has sometimes been supposed were brought thither
-from Magnesia. The Peiræeus consisted of three basins,
-Zea, Aphrodision, which was by far the largest, and
-Cantharos. On the western shore were the vast docks
-and arsenals of the commonwealth erected by Philon,<a id='r228' /><a href='#f228' class='c018'><sup>[228]</sup></a>
-in which, during peace, all that portion of the public
-navy not engaged in protecting its trade in distant
-colonies, was drawn up in dry docks, roofed over and
-surrounded by massive walls. Towards the centre of
-the town stood the Hippodameia,<a id='r229' /><a href='#f229' class='c018'><sup>[229]</sup></a> an agora or market
-place, which appears to have resembled Covent Garden,
-with ranges of stalls in the area and surrounded
-by dwelling-houses. This building derived its name
-from Hippodamos of Miletos, the architect who
-erected it, and laid out the whole maritime city in
-the regular and beautiful style of which he was the
-inventor.<a id='r230' /><a href='#f230' class='c018'><sup>[230]</sup></a> Here, also, were several other market-places
-or bazārs, among which may be reckoned a
-place<a id='r231' /><a href='#f231' class='c018'><sup>[231]</sup></a> resembling the Laura of Samos, the Sweet
-Ancon of Sardis, the Street of the Happy at Alexandria,
-and the Tuscan Street at Rome, in which fruit,
-confectionary, with delicacies and luxuries of every
-kind were exposed for sale. In these agora, as now in
-the bazārs of Cairo, Damascus, and Constantinople,
-were beheld, in close juxtaposition, the wines of Spain
-and Portugal, amber from the shores of the ocean, the
-carpets, shawls, and jewels of the East, fruit and gold
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>from Thasos, ivory and ostrich feathers from Africa,
-and beautiful female slaves from Syria, Dardania, and
-the southern shores of the Euxine, the Mingrelians
-and Georgians of the modern world.<a id='r232' /><a href='#f232' class='c018'><sup>[232]</sup></a> Around these
-singular groups the young men of Athens, in an almost
-oriental pomp of costume, might be seen lounging,
-some perhaps purchasing, others merely looking on,
-half in haste to return to the gymnasium or to the
-lectures of Socrates.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among the public buildings<a id='r233' /><a href='#f233' class='c018'><sup>[233]</sup></a> in the harbour were
-the Deigma<a id='r234' /><a href='#f234' class='c018'><sup>[234]</sup></a> or Exchange, where the merchants met
-to transact business, bringing along with them samples
-of their goods; the Serangion<a id='r235' /><a href='#f235' class='c018'><sup>[235]</sup></a> or public baths;
-the superb temples of Zeus and Athena adorned with
-exquisite pictures and statues, where in an open court
-seems to have stood the celebrated altar erected by
-Demosthenes<a id='r236' /><a href='#f236' class='c018'><sup>[236]</sup></a> in commutation of his fine of thirty
-talents; the Long Portico which served as an agora
-to those living near the shore;<a id='r237' /><a href='#f237' class='c018'><sup>[237]</sup></a> the theatre,<a id='r238' /><a href='#f238' class='c018'><sup>[238]</sup></a> and the
-court of Phreattys<a id='r239' /><a href='#f239' class='c018'><sup>[239]</sup></a> on the beach, where the accused
-pleaded his cause from a galley lying afloat. Somewhere
-in the Peiræeus was an altar to “the unknown
-Gods,”<a id='r240' /><a href='#f240' class='c018'><sup>[240]</sup></a> which, notwithstanding that the plural form is
-used, may possibly have been that to which Saint Paul
-alludes in his speech to the Athenians on the hill of
-Areiopagos.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Besides the Peiræeus, Athens possessed two other
-harbours Munychia and Phaleron, which were enclosed
-by the same line of fortifications, and in process
-of time formed but one city, superior in extent
-to the Astu itself. Of these the latter was the most
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>ancient, and from hence Mnestheus sailed for Troy and
-Theseus for Crete.<a id='r241' /><a href='#f241' class='c018'><sup>[241]</sup></a> The Munychian promontory,<a id='r242' /><a href='#f242' class='c018'><sup>[242]</sup></a>
-abounding in hollows and artificial excavations, and
-connected by a narrow neck of land with the continent,
-was the strongest position on the coast, and may
-be regarded as the key of Athens, since whoever held
-possession of it could command the city. In this
-Demos stood the Bendideion<a id='r243' /><a href='#f243' class='c018'><sup>[243]</sup></a> where shows were exhibited
-in honour of Bendis the Thracian Artemis, to
-behold which Socrates and his friends came down from
-the city, when at the house of Cephalos that conversation
-took place with Glaucon and Adimantos, out of
-which arose the Republic of Plato. This division of
-the port likewise possessed its theatre,<a id='r244' /><a href='#f244' class='c018'><sup>[244]</sup></a> and here were
-fought some of those battles with the thirty that re-established
-the liberty of the commonwealth.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Proceeding inland towards the Astu or city of
-Athens proper, the stranger beheld before him a
-straight street upwards of five miles in length, extending
-from the Peiræeus to the foot of the Acropolis,
-between walls<a id='r245' /><a href='#f245' class='c018'><sup>[245]</sup></a> of immense elevation and thickness,
-flanked by square towers at equal distances. Along
-the summit of these vast piles of masonry a terrace was
-carried, commanding superb views of the Saronic bay
-and distant coasts of Peloponnesos; and, on the other
-hand, of the city relieved against the green slopes
-of Lycabettos<a id='r246' /><a href='#f246' class='c018'><sup>[246]</sup></a>. The space between the long walls
-abounded with remarkable monuments. Here were
-the tombs of Diopethes, Menander, and Euripides, the
-temple of Hera, burned by the Persians, and left in
-ruins as a memento to revenge, and numerous cenotaphs
-and statues of illustrious men.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Spacious and lofty gates admitted you into the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>Astu, through a belt of impregnable fortifications:
-and the appearance of the interior,<a id='r247' /><a href='#f247' class='c018'><sup>[247]</sup></a> though the streets
-for military purposes were mostly narrow and winding,
-and the houses low, projecting over the pavement or
-concealed by elevated front-walls, surpassed in all
-probability the promise of its distant aspect. The
-grandeur which peculiarly belonged to the Athenian
-democracy was visible at every step. But it would
-weary the reader to lead him in succession through all
-the public places—the Pnyx, the Agora, the Cerameicos:
-let us ascend the Acropolis, from whose ramparts
-the plan of the whole city will unfold itself
-before us like a map.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Half the beauty of all civilised countries springs out
-of their religion. At Athens nearly everything costly
-or magnificent belonged to the Gods; even the Propylæa,<a id='r248' /><a href='#f248' class='c018'><sup>[248]</sup></a>
-apparently a mere secular or military structure,
-probably owed its erection in so expensive a style to
-the circumstance of its adorning the entrance to the
-sacred enclosure of Athena, and the other tutelary
-divinities of Athens, and spanning the road by which
-the pomp of the Panathenaic procession descended
-and ascended the mount. Be this as it may, a road<a id='r249' /><a href='#f249' class='c018'><sup>[249]</sup></a>
-which, by running zigzag up the slope, was rendered
-practicable for chariots, led from the lower city to the
-Acropolis, on the edge of the platform of which stood
-the Propylæa, erected by the architect Mnesicles in
-five years, during the administration of Pericles. A
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>pile of architecture, similar in name, is usually found
-at the entrance of the court of Egyptian temples, and
-the Propylæa Luxor and Karnak, with their aspiring
-obelisks, couchant <a id='corr78.4'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='syhynxes'>sphynxes</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_78.4'><ins class='correction' title='syhynxes'>sphynxes</ins></a></span>, and ranges of colossal
-statues, may be reckoned among the most chaste and
-beautiful monuments in the valley of the Nile. The
-Propylæa of Athens, richer in design and materials,
-and executed with a grace and perfection unknown
-to the Egyptians, enjoyed in its mere site an immense
-advantage over their noblest works which, the pyramids
-and the great temple of Koom Ombos excepted,
-stand on a dead level, while this occupies the brow of
-a precipitous rock, visible on every side from afar.
-Pillars, architraves, pediments, walls, and roof, were all
-of snow-white marble, with mouldings of bright red
-and blue, and ceilings of azure bedropped with stars.<a id='r250' /><a href='#f250' class='c018'><sup>[250]</sup></a>
-Externally, on either hand, were equestrian statues of
-the sons of Xenophon,<a id='r251' /><a href='#f251' class='c018'><sup>[251]</sup></a> placed on lofty square basements;
-and, overlooking the whole on the left, stood
-the colossal statue of Athena Promachos.<a id='r252' /><a href='#f252' class='c018'><sup>[252]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On entering through the gates of the Propylæa a
-scene of unparalleled grandeur and beauty burst upon
-the eye. No trace of human dwellings anywhere appeared,
-but on all sides temples of more or less elevation,
-of Pentelic marble, beautiful in design and exquisitely
-delicate in execution, sparkled like piles of
-alabaster in the sun. On the left stood the Erectheion
-or fane of Athena Polias; to the right that matchless
-edifice known as the Hecatompedon of old, but to later
-ages as the Parthenon. Other buildings, all holy to
-the eye of an Athenian, lay grouped around these master
-structures, and in the open spaces between, in whatever
-direction the spectators might look, appeared statues,
-some remarkable for their dimensions, others for their
-beauty, and all for the legendary sanctity which surrounded
-them. No city of the ancient or modern
-world ever rivalled Athens in the riches of art. Our
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>best filled museums, though teeming with her spoils,
-are poor collections of fragments compared with that
-assemblage of gods and heroes which peopled the
-Acropolis, the genuine Olympos of the arts, where all
-the divinities of the pagan heaven appeared grouped
-in immortal youth and beauty round the Thunderer
-and his virgin daughter. Many volumes were written
-in antiquity on the pictures, statues, and architectural
-monuments which thronged the summit of this rock,
-and though those works have perished, a long and curious
-list might still be given of the objects of this
-kind which we know to have existed there.<a id='r253' /><a href='#f253' class='c018'><sup>[253]</sup></a> It will,
-however, be sufficient to glance over a few of the more
-striking features of the scene.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On one side of the entrance stood a chariot drawn
-by four horses in bronze, and directly opposite a chapel
-of Aphrodite, containing a bronze lioness, with a statue
-of the goddess herself by Calamis; a little further
-the eye rested on Diitrephes, pierced like St. Sebastian
-with arrows; two figures of the goddess Health;
-a youth in bronze, by Lycios, bearing the Perirrhanterion,
-or brush for sprinkling holy water; Myron’s
-group of Perseus cutting off the head of Medusa, and
-the three Graces draped by Socrates,<a id='r254' /><a href='#f254' class='c018'><sup>[254]</sup></a> son of Sophroniscos.
-Advancing past the chapel of Artemis Brauronia
-you beheld, amid numerous groups of less striking
-monuments, the Attic conception of the Trojan
-horse; Athena smiting Marsyas; Heracles strangling
-the serpents in his cradle; Phrixos sacrificing the
-ram; and Theseus, the national hero, slaughtering the
-Minotaur in the Cretan labyrinth.<a id='r255' /><a href='#f255' class='c018'><sup>[255]</sup></a> Here, too, was an
-Athena issuing from the head of Zeus, together with
-the figure of a bull presented by the Senate of Areiopagos;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>and, a little beyond, an embodiment of a very
-pious and a very beautiful thought,—a figure of
-Earth, the mother of gods and men, praying to the
-ruler of Olympos for rain. Of Zeus, the Cloud-Compeller,
-there were numerous representations by
-artists of celebrity; the figure of Apollo, by Pheidias,
-standing before the eastern front of the Parthenon,
-was lighted up by the first rays of the
-morning. But the tutelar gods of Attica, Athena
-and Poseidon, the genii of political wisdom and
-maritime power, exhibited as struggling for the mastery
-over the Athenian mind, met the eye in various
-parts of the Acropolis,—the piety of the people delighting
-to reproduce with various attributes the objects
-of their affectionate adoration. Among these
-divinities, the statues of several poets, orators, and
-generals were found; Anacreon, Epicharmos, Phormio,
-Timotheus, Conon, Pericles, and Isocrates. On
-drawing near the Parthenon, its sculptured pediments
-and metopes, representing legends in the mythology
-and religious processions of Athens, excited
-admiration, and still excite it, by their original design
-and matchless workmanship: and, suspended
-from its highly painted friezes, and resting on its
-white marble architraves, were rows of highly burnished
-shields of gold.<a id='r256' /><a href='#f256' class='c018'><sup>[256]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Technical descriptions of buildings, whether religious
-or civil, would be out of place in the present work;
-but a compendious account of the Erectheion and Parthenon,
-the two great sanctuaries of the Acropolis,
-could not with propriety be omitted. To commence
-with the former, as the more ancient and sacred:—this
-edifice, of irregular design though highly beautiful, contained
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>three chapels, with the same number of porticoes.
-The chapel of Erectheus, entered through a
-portico of six columns, faced the east, where stood
-the altar of supreme Zeus, never stained by blood or
-libations of wine. The pavement of this portion of
-the edifice was raised eight feet above the level of the
-other chapels. Here the piety of Athens had erected
-altars to Erectheus, Poseidon, Butas, and Hephaistos,
-and pictures dedicated by the sacred family of the
-Eteobutadæ adorned the walls. In a subterraneous
-chamber beneath the floor lay the mortal remains of
-Ericthonios, a man sprung in a mysterious manner
-from the gods. The Erectheion being about twenty-four
-feet square, some have imagined it must have
-been hypæthral, unless the stone blocks of the roof were
-supported by pillars. But the ancients employed slabs
-of much greater dimensions in building and roofing
-their temples; for at the Egyptian quarries of Hajjar
-Silsilis and Essouan we observed blocks from forty-two
-to seventy feet in length and of suitable proportions,
-while others equally vast had been removed. Volney,
-too, as the reader will remember, found masses of no
-less magnitude in the walls of Syrian temples: besides,
-several obelisks, now on their pedestals, fall little
-short of a hundred feet in height.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Between the Erectheion and the chapel of Athena
-Polias there was no door of communication. Having
-surveyed the former, therefore, the stranger again
-issued into the open air, and turning to the left entered
-the stately portico leading from the north into the
-temple of Pandrosos, where, constructed of Pentelic
-marble, stood the altar of frankincense. Passing this,
-and traversing the Pandrosion, he entered the ancient
-sanctuary of Athena, unwindowed and gloomy, whither
-not even that “dim religious light” which contends
-with obscurity in our gothic cathedrals could find its
-way. This is the case in many Egyptian temples
-where the adyta are totally dark. But sunshine and
-the splendour of day would ill have suited the mystic
-rites here celebrated; for which reason these sacred
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>recesses were lighted up with lamps, magnificent in
-form and materials, that shed a soft pale ray over the
-worshippers. The many-branched<a id='r257' /><a href='#f257' class='c018'><sup>[257]</sup></a> golden candelabrum
-of Athena’s sanctuary was furnished with asbestos
-wicks, and, according to the temple-wardens, of
-sufficient dimensions to contain oil for a whole year.
-Once lighted, therefore, it burned with perennial
-flame, and the smoke was received and conducted to
-the roof by a hollow bronze palm tree reversed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This inextinguishable lamp was kindled and kept
-burning, through reverence for that antique image of
-Athena in wood of olive which constituted one of the
-palladia of Attica. In honour, moreover, of this
-primitive statue the Panathenaic procession is said
-to have been instituted, during which, like the velabrum
-of the temple of Mekka, the peplos,<a id='r258' /><a href='#f258' class='c018'><sup>[258]</sup></a> whatever
-this may have been, was dedicated with vast pomp
-and ceremony to the service of the goddess.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The principal argument, however, against supposing
-the peplos to have been designed for the gold and
-ivory statue of the Parthenon,—that it was not needed,
-is of very little weight. None of the ceremonies attending
-its presentation were necessary. The offering
-was a work of devotion; and however costly in itself
-and elaborately adorned, may have been simply designed
-to protect the image from dust and the action
-of the air. That Pheidias represented the goddess
-without her peplos, is no argument that his statue
-needed none, but the contrary. He may have omitted
-it expressly that it might be supplied by the piety of
-the state. Besides, the sculptured metopes of the Parthenon,
-representing the Panathenaic procession, are
-themselves a strong argument for connecting the presentation
-of the peplos and the other ceremonies of
-the festival with that more splendid structure and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>image rather than with the Erectheion. As the
-Athenians supposed the Islands of the blessed and
-the dwelling-place of their gods to have been somewhere
-in the regions of the west, they were accustomed
-to pray with their faces turned in that direction;<a id='r259' /><a href='#f259' class='c018'><sup>[259]</sup></a>
-and so also buried they their dead. For this reason,
-desiring to behold the countenance of their divinities
-during this religious service, the statues of the gods
-were generally set up with their faces eastward; and
-hence, too, the front of the temples looked in the
-same direction. This was the case with the olive-wood
-image of Athena Polias; and in the reign of
-Augustus the Athenians, rendered more superstitious
-than ever by their misfortunes, were vehemently terrified
-on finding that the goddess had turned her back
-upon them,<a id='r260' /><a href='#f260' class='c018'><sup>[260]</sup></a> as if preparing to seek her ancient home
-in the Atlantic Ocean. But her real presence had
-forsaken the city long before the battle of Chæroneia.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But Athena, though the principal, was not the sole
-inhabitant of her sanctuary. On one side of the door
-stood a phallic statue of Hermes, originally set up by
-the Pelasgians,<a id='r261' /><a href='#f261' class='c018'><sup>[261]</sup></a> and in later ages nearly concealed by
-a profusion of myrtle branches. Here, also, in a very
-extraordinary inmate were found traces of that animal
-worship which extended so widely over the ancient
-world. In a den constructed for its use lived a great
-serpent, considered as the guardian of the temple, and
-supposed to be animated by the soul of Ericthonios,
-who here performed the part assigned in the fane of
-Demeter to Cadmos, likewise believed to have undergone
-a similar transformation after death. The snake-god
-of the Acropolis received its daily sustenance from
-the priestess of Athena; and once every month was
-propitiated with pious offerings of cakes of the
-purest honey.<a id='r262' /><a href='#f262' class='c018'><sup>[262]</sup></a> Relics of this worship are still found
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>in Egypt. In a deep chasm, among the wild rocky
-mountains on the Arabian side of the Nile, we were
-shown a fissure in a hermit’s cell, whence a large
-reptile of this species is said to issue forth at stated
-days to receive the offerings of food brought him by
-the neighbouring peasants. This creature, as well as
-the guardian of the Athenian Temple, is supposed to
-possess a human soul, that of the holy Sheikh Haridi.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Like most other Hellenic sanctuaries, the chapel
-of the goddess was a kind of museum filled with
-memorials of Athenian victories and other remarkable
-objects. Here were shown curious or beautiful
-specimens of arms or armour, taken from the enemy;
-among which were the breast-plate and scimitar of
-Masistios,<a id='r263' /><a href='#f263' class='c018'><sup>[263]</sup></a> commander of the Median cavalry at
-the battle of Platæa. Close beside these warlike
-memorials, stood a folding camp-stool, the invention,
-it was said, and workmanship of Dædalos; the archetype
-of all those portable seats borne after the maidens
-of Attica by the daughters of aliens in the grand
-Panathenaic procession.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Not the least interesting portion of this extraordinary
-edifice dedicated to the worship of so many
-gods and heroes, was the small chapel of Pandrosos,
-where Pandora and Thallo were said to have lived,
-and where the ashes of Cecrops reposed. Here dwelt
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>the priestess, shut up for several months with the
-Ersephoræ. This cella may, therefore, be said to have
-belonged not only to Pandrosos, who was one of the
-earliest ministers of these rites, but to all who from
-her received the office. The building opened on
-the south into a portico, adorned with Caryatides
-instead of columns, and filled with ceremonial and
-religious associations. Here grew the Pancuphos,
-or sacred olive tree, which, burned by the Persians,
-shot up a cubit in a single night, and was thought
-to be endued with the power of undying vegetation,
-for, if the trunk were cut down, new shoots immediately
-succeeded. Near the sacred olive was the
-salt well, called the sea of Erectheus, which Poseidon
-is said to have produced by smiting the rock with
-his trident. In the hollow of this fountain, during
-the prevalence of the south wind, a sound like the
-murmuring of the waves was supposed to be heard.
-This well has not been discovered in modern times;
-but in another part of the citadel there existed
-a spring of brackish water, known by the name of the
-Clepsydra, which, about the rising of the dog-star,
-while the Etesian winds were blowing, overflowed;
-but on their cessation again subsided.<a id='r264' /><a href='#f264' class='c018'><sup>[264]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>We have perhaps too long lingered among the
-dusky recesses of this ancient fane, spell-bound by
-the charms of a beautiful mythology. We emerge
-now into the light of history, and approach that matchless
-structure erected by Ictinos where the Athenian
-people offered up their daily prayers to heaven.<a id='r265' /><a href='#f265' class='c018'><sup>[265]</sup></a> The
-Parthenon occupies the most elevated platform of the
-Acropolis, the pavement of its peristyle being on a
-level with the capitals of the columns of the Propylæa.
-It was constructed entirely of white Pentelic marble,<a id='r266' /><a href='#f266' class='c018'><sup>[266]</sup></a>
-and consisted of a cella surrounded by a Doric peristyle
-having eight columns on either front, and seventeen
-on the sides. These pillars, thirty-four feet in
-height, sprang from a pavement elevated three steps
-above the rocky platform, from whence the total height
-of the building was about sixty-five feet. The arrangement
-of the interior like that of the great temples of
-Egypt had reference rather to utility and the convenience
-of public worship, than to the effect which long
-ranges of lofty pillars, extending through unencumbered
-space, would have produced upon the mind: for the
-cella, sixty-two feet in breadth, was divided into two
-chambers of unequal size,—the western about forty-four
-feet in length, the eastern nearly one hundred.
-In both these chambers the ceiling was supported by
-columns.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Colonel Leake, to whose elaborate work I beg to
-refer the reader desirous of entering into minute details,
-concludes his general description as follows:—"Such
-was the simple construction of this magnificent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>building, which, by its united excellencies of materials,
-design, and decoration was the most perfect
-ever erected. Its dimensions of two hundred and
-twenty-eight feet by a hundred and two, with a
-height of sixty-eight feet to the top of the pediment,
-were sufficiently great to give an impression of grandeur
-and sublimity, which was not disturbed by any
-obtrusive division of parts, such as is found to diminish
-the effect of some larger modern buildings. In
-the Parthenon, whether viewed at a small or at a great
-distance, there was nothing to divert the spectator’s
-contemplation from the simplicity and majesty of
-mass and outline which forms the first and most remarkable
-object of admiration in a Greek temple;
-and it was not until the eye was satiated with the
-contemplation of the entire edifice that the spectator
-was tempted to examine the decorations with which
-this building was so profusely adorned; for the statues
-of the pediments the only elevation which was
-very conspicuous by its magnitude and position, being
-enclosed within frames, which formed an essential
-part of the design of either front, had no more obtrusive
-effect than an ornamental capital has to a
-single column."<a id='r267' /><a href='#f267' class='c018'><sup>[267]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That object of art, whatever its dimensions, is sufficiently
-great, which fills the mind with high ideas of
-grandeur and beauty. There is, moreover, in mere
-size, a point, beyond which if we proceed, the eye will
-fail to grasp the whole at a glance, and create a feeling
-of want of unity; but, in proportion as we fall
-short of that point will be our sense of the absence of
-sublimity. In this predicament, perhaps, the temples
-of Greece too generally stood. Considerations of expense,
-which in the end affected their habits of thinking,
-cramped the ideas of the architects, or forced
-them to direct their studies towards beauty of form
-unconnected with that grandeur which springs out of
-mass and elevation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>Among the barbarous nations of the East, where
-the whole resources of the country lay at the disposal
-of the monarch or of the priestly caste, as in Hindùstân,
-Persia, and Egypt, full scope, on the contrary, was
-given to the imagination of the architect, who, if his
-invention were equal to it, might give his structures
-the elevation of a mountain and the spaciousness of a
-vast city. Hence, the grandeur arising from magnitude,
-is, in most cases, found to belong to the sacred edifices
-of Egypt;<a id='r268' /><a href='#f268' class='c018'><sup>[268]</sup></a> and in some instances a feeling of symmetry,
-a sense of the beautiful, appears to have restrained
-the artist within due bounds, as in the great
-temple of Apollinopolis Magna, which, whatever may
-be the imperfections of its architectural details, is invested,
-as a whole, with an air of genuine magnificence
-and sublimity. Proceeding from the contemplation of
-these to the religious structures of Greece, there would
-be found, I imagine, in most minds a slight feeling of
-disappointment, and though afterwards, the delight imparted
-by the presence of extreme beauty,—a delight
-serene, soft, and inexpressibly soothing, may more than
-compensate for the want of awe and wondering admiration,
-their absence will still be felt.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But to proceed: in rich and elaborate decorations the
-Parthenon resembled the temple of Tentyris. Every
-part of its exterior, where ornament was admissible,
-presented to the eye some creation of Hellenic taste
-and fancy, figures in high and low relief, grouped in
-action or repose, conceived and executed in a style
-worthy of the prince of the mimetic art.<a id='r269' /><a href='#f269' class='c018'><sup>[269]</sup></a> Many
-wrecks of these matchless compositions are now protected
-from further defacements in the metropolis of
-Great Britain, but withal so mutilated and decayed
-that none but a practised eye can discern, through the
-ravages of age, all the sunshine of beauty and loveliness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>which beamed from them when fresh from the
-Pheidian chisel. One of the greatest works of this artist
-filled the interior of the Parthenon with the emanations
-of its beauty, the statue of Athena in ivory
-and gold,<a id='r270' /><a href='#f270' class='c018'><sup>[270]</sup></a> which, representing a form distinguished for
-all the softness and roundness belonging to womanhood,
-and a countenance radiant with the highest
-intellect, must in some respects have borne away the
-palm from the Olympian Zeus; for in the latter,
-after all, nothing beyond masculine energy, dignity,
-majesty could have existed. These indeed were so
-blended, so subdued into a glorious and god-like
-serenity, that this creation of human genius, like
-the august being of which it was a mute type,
-possessed in a degree the celestial power of chasing
-away sadness and sorrow, and shedding benignity
-and happiness over all who beheld it.<a id='r271' /><a href='#f271' class='c018'><sup>[271]</sup></a> But for men
-at least, the Zeus must have lacked some attributes
-possessed by the Athena. She was in all her etherial
-loveliness, a woman still, but without a woman’s
-weakness, or a single taint of earth. The Athenians
-paid the highest possible compliment to womanhood
-when they gave wisdom a female form; and
-the delicacy of the thought was enhanced by surrounding
-this mythological creation with an atmosphere
-of purity which no other divinity of the pagan
-heaven could lay claim to. Nor in beauty did Athena
-yield even to Aphrodite herself. Her charms partook
-indeed of that noble severity which belongs to
-virtue; and to intimate that she was rather of heaven
-than of earth, her eyes were of the colour of
-the firmament. Yet this spiritual elevation above
-the reach of the passions, only appears to have enhanced,
-in the estimation of the Athenians, the splendour
-of her personal beauty, which shed its chastening
-and ennobling influence among her worshippers like
-the droppings of a summer cloud.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>According to Philochoros,<a id='r272' /><a href='#f272' class='c018'><sup>[272]</sup></a> this colossus was set up
-during the archonship of Theodoros, that is, in the
-third year of the eighty-fifth Olympiad. The Athenians,
-it has been ingeniously conjectured, seized for
-the dedication of the statue, on the period of the
-celebration of the most gorgeous festival in their calendar,
-the greater Panathenaia, which like a kind
-of jubilee occurred but once in an Olympiad.<a id='r273' /><a href='#f273' class='c018'><sup>[273]</sup></a> What
-length of time Pheidias employed in finishing this
-statue we possess no means of determining; but
-as the Parthenon itself is supposed not to have been
-completed in less than ten years, the artist need
-not have been hurried in his work.<a id='r274' /><a href='#f274' class='c018'><sup>[274]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the temple of Zeus at Olympia and in every
-sacred structure we visited in Egypt and Nubia, there
-was a staircase conducting to the roof. No positive
-testimony remains to prove this to have been the
-case in the Parthenon, though antiquarians, with
-much probability, have supposed it to have been so.<a id='r275' /><a href='#f275' class='c018'><sup>[275]</sup></a>
-Let us therefore assume the fact, and ascending to
-the summit of the edifice survey the surrounding
-scene and the superb city encircling the rock at our
-feet. Few landscapes in the world are more rich or
-varied, none more deeply interesting. History has
-peopled every spot within the circle of vision with
-spirit-stirring associations; or if history has passed
-over any, there has poetry been busy, building up
-her legends from the scattered fragments of tradition.
-Carrying our eye along the distant edge of
-the horizon we behold the promontory of Sunium,
-Ægina rising out of the Myrtoan sea, Trœzen, the
-birth-place of Theseus the national hero, the mountains
-of Argolis, the hostile citadel of Corinth, with
-Phylæ and Deceleia rendered too famous by the
-Peloponnesian war. Nearer the shore is “sea-born”
-Salamis, and that low headland where the barbarian
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>took his seat to view the battle in the straits.
-Yonder at the extremity of the long walls are the
-ports of Munychia, Phaleron and Peiræeus; on our
-left is Hymettos with its bee swarms and odoriferous
-slopes;<a id='r276' /><a href='#f276' class='c018'><sup>[276]</sup></a> to the right Colonos, the grove of the
-terrible Erinnyes, and the chasm in the rock by
-which the wretched Œdipus, having reached the end
-of his career, descended to the infernal world.<a id='r277' /><a href='#f277' class='c018'><sup>[277]</sup></a> Beyond
-lies Eleusis and the Sacred Way.<a id='r278' /><a href='#f278' class='c018'><sup>[278]</sup></a> Yonder in
-the midst of groves is the Academy; here is the
-Cerameicos<a id='r279' /><a href='#f279' class='c018'><sup>[279]</sup></a> filled with the monuments which the
-republic erected to its heroes, there the Cynosarges
-and the Lyceium. The hill of Areiopagos, contiguous
-to the rock of the Acropolis, divides the Pnyx
-from the Agora planted by Conon with plane trees.
-Near at hand, encircled by ordinary dwellings, are
-the Leocorion, the temple of Theseus, the Odeion,
-the Stoa Pœcile, and the Dionysiac theatre, with
-various other monuments remarkable for their beauty
-or historical importance.<a id='r280' /><a href='#f280' class='c018'><sup>[280]</sup></a></p>
-
-<hr class='c025' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f219'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r219'>219</a>. Dem. Olynth. iii. 9. Palm. Exercit. in Auct. Græc. p. 622.
-Zander, De Luxu Athen. c. iii. 5, § 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f220'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r220'>220</a>. Athen. v. 12. Soph. Œdip. Col. 107. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f221'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r221'>221</a>. Orat. vi. t. i. p. 199.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f222'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r222'>222</a>. Herod. i. 98. Bochart, Geog.
-Sac. Pars Prior, l. iii. c. 14. p.
-222. Aristot. De Mund. ch. 6.
-Apuleius, p. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f223'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r223'>223</a>. Paus. i. 28. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f224'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r224'>224</a>. Athen. xiii. 67.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f225'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r225'>225</a>. Cf. Steph. De Urb. v. Πειραιός.
-p. 633. G. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f226'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r226'>226</a>. Leake, Top. of Ath. p. 311. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f227'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r227'>227</a>. Paus. i. 1, 2. Plut. Them. §
-32. Meurs. Pir. c. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f228'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r228'>228</a>. Strab. ix. 1. p. 239.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f229'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r229'>229</a>. Harp. <i>v.</i> Ἱπποδ. Xen. Hell. ii.
-4. Dem. in Timoth. § 5. Andoc.
-de Myst. § 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f230'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r230'>230</a>. Arist. Polit. vi. 8. p. 40. 16.
-vii. 11. p. 199. 25. Hesych. v.
-Ἱπποδ. νέμησις.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f231'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r231'>231</a>. Athen. xii. 57, 58. Animad.
-t. 11. p. 468. Sch. Aristoph. Pac.
-98.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f232'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r232'>232</a>. See for the authorities, Book
-vi. chapters 11 and 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f233'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r233'>233</a>. Meurs. Pir. c. 4, 5, 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f234'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r234'>234</a>. Harpocrat. in v. p. 74.
-Maussac. Etymol. Mag. 259. 51.
-Suid. in v. t. i. p. 665. Xen.
-Hellen. v. 1. 21. Aristoph. Eq.
-975. et Schol. Dem. adv. Lacrit.
-§ 7. Lys. cont. Tynd. frag. 120.
-Polyæn. Strat. vi. 2. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f235'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r235'>235</a>. Harpocrat. in v. p. 166.
-Suid. in v. t. ii. 734 a. Isaeus
-De Philoct. Hered. § 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f236'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r236'>236</a>. Meurs. Pir. c. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f237'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r237'>237</a>. Paus. i. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f238'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r238'>238</a>. Xen. Hellen. ii. 4. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f239'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r239'>239</a>. Paus. i. 28. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f240'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r240'>240</a>. Paus. i. 1. 4; v. 14. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f241'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r241'>241</a>. Paus. i. 1, 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f242'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r242'>242</a>. Strab. ix. 1. t. ii. p. 239.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f243'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r243'>243</a>. Xen. Hellen. ii. 4, 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f244'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r244'>244</a>. Thucyd. viii. 93. Lys. in
-Agorat. § 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f245'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r245'>245</a>. Of which there were three.
-Plat. Gorg. t. iii. p. 22. Wordsworth,
-Athens and Attica, p. 187.
-Dr. Cramer, Desc. of Greece, ii.
-346, seq. understands the long
-walls to have been but two in
-number.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f246'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r246'>246</a>. Marin. vit. Procl. p. 74. ed.
-Fabric.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f247'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r247'>247</a>. Boeckh, Pub. Econ. of Athens,
-i. 88. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f248'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r248'>248</a>. Suid. in v. t. ii. p. 611. d.
-Harpocrat. in v. p. 254. Paus.
-i. 22. 4. Leake, Topog. p. 177.
-Wordsworth, Athens and Attica.
-p. 112.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f249'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r249'>249</a>. Up this road goats were never
-allowed to ascend (Athen. xiii.
-51). Even crows were said never
-to alight on the top of the sacred
-rock; and Chandler (ii. 61) remarks,
-that although he frequently
-saw these birds flying about the
-Acropolis, he never observed one on
-the summit. “The hooded crow,
-which retires from England during
-the summer, is a constant inhabitant
-of Attica, and is probably
-that species noticed by the ancients
-under the name of κορώνη.
-It is the word applied at present
-to it by the Greek peasants, who
-are the best commentators on the
-old naturalists.” Sibthorp in
-Walp. Mem. l. 75.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f250'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r250'>250</a>. Wordsworth, Athens and Attica,
-p. 114.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f251'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r251'>251</a>. Paus. i. 22. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f252'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r252'>252</a>. Müll. De Phid. Vit. p. 18 seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f253'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r253'>253</a>. Somewhere in a cavern in the
-rock of the Acropolis was a slab
-called the pillar of infamy, on
-which were engraved the names
-of traitors and other public delinquents.
-Thrasybulos accused
-Leodamas of having had his name
-on this pillar.—Aristot. Rhet. ii.
-23.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f254'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r254'>254</a>. Paus. i. 22. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f255'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r255'>255</a>. On the labyrinth at present
-shown in Crete, see Tournefort,
-i. 76. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f256'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r256'>256</a>. They were votive offerings,
-and the impressions they made
-are still visible upon the marble.—Words.
-Athens and Attica, 117.
-Lachares afterwards, when Athens
-was besieged by Demetrius, carried
-them away with him into
-Bœotia.—Paus. i. 25. 7. To facilitate
-his escape, he is said to
-have scattered handfuls of golden
-Darics on the road, which, tempting
-the cavalry in pursuit, prevented
-his capture.—Polyæn. iii.
-7. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f257'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r257'>257</a>. A conjecture of Müller, Minerv.
-Pol. v. 25.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f258'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r258'>258</a>. Antiquarians have formed
-many ingenious conjectures; but
-to me it appears evidently to have
-been a female veil, such as Helenos
-in the Iliad (σ. 734) commands
-to be offered to the same goddess
-of citadels, by his mother and the
-other matrons of Troy.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f259'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r259'>259</a>. Plut. Sol. § 10. Visconti,
-Mem. p. 18. Müll. Minerv. Pol.
-p. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f260'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r260'>260</a>. Dion. Cass. iv. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f261'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r261'>261</a>. Herod. ii. 51.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f262'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r262'>262</a>. Herod. viii. 41. Combe,
-Terra-cottas of the British Museum,
-pl. 28. Petit. Radel, Musée
-Napol. iv. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f263'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r263'>263</a>. Paus. i. 27. 1. The Athenians
-in the age of this traveller
-confounded, it seems, Masistios
-with Mardonios, nothing very extraordinary
-several hundred years
-after the event referred to. Pausanias
-speaks of it as a mistake;
-Mr. Müller, who is less ceremonious,
-as a falsehood. Minerv. Pol.
-29. The passion for relics, which
-led to the preservation of these
-objects, existed in all its whimsicality
-among the ancients. But
-they were scarcely so ingenious
-as the Roman Catholics of the
-continent, whose sacred treasures
-include a number of feathers
-from the wings of the angel
-Gabriel, a small bone of one of
-the cherubim, and a few rays
-of the star by which the wise
-men of the East were led to
-Bethlehem. They have also a
-small phial, containing some of
-the darkness that overspread the
-land of Egypt. (Cf. Fabric. ad
-Cod. Pseud. epigr. v. i. p. 93. t. 11.
-and Christophori Carmen, ap Boissonade
-ad Eunap. p. 277. seq.) In
-the temples of antiquity relics
-nearly as curious were preserved:
-they had an egg of Leda, possibly,
-as Lobeck conjectures, an ostrich’s
-(Aglaoph. i. 52; Paus. iii. 16.
-1); the teeth of the Erymanthean
-boar (Paus. viii. 24. 2), whose
-spoils were also shown at Tegea
-(Lucian adv. Indoct. § 13); the
-teeth of the Calydonian boar were
-preserved at Beneventum (Procop.
-Bell. Goth. i. 15. 349. c);
-they had also the sword of Memnon
-(Paus. iii. 3. 6); the iron
-spear of Epeios (Justin. xx. 7),
-the brazen vessel in which Pelias
-was boiled, the arrows of Teucer,
-the chlamys of Odysseus, were preserved
-in the temple of Apollo at
-Sicyon. (Ampel. Memor. viii. 68.
-Beckm. Hist. of Invent. ii. 364.
-Germ. in Lobeck.) In the Troad
-the anvils were shown which
-Zeus suspended to the heels of
-Hera, when he hung her up between
-heaven and earth (Eustath.
-p. 15. l. 30); here, too, anyone
-might see the cithara of Paris.
-(Plut. Alex. § 15.) Like the
-Catholics, too, they showed the
-same thing in two or three places;
-for example, the hair of Isis might
-be seen at Koptos (Etym. Mag. <i>v.</i>
-κόπτος, 522. 12), and at Memphis.
-(Luc. adv. Ind. § 13.) The
-Romans, according to Horace
-(Carm. ii. 3. 21), possessed
-the bronze wash-hand-basin of
-Sisyphos. A much more extensive
-list may be found in Beckmann,
-Hist. of Inven. ii. 42. seq.
-<cite>Eng. Tr.</cite></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f264'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r264'>264</a>. This fountain was likewise
-called Empedo.—Sch. Arist.
-Vesp. 857. I may here mention,
-by the way, that most ancient
-cities were supplied with
-water by pipes underground, as
-Syracuse.—Thucyd. vi. 100. Cf.
-Sch. Arist. Achar. 1145.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f265'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r265'>265</a>. It is worthy of remark that
-from this temple all persons of
-Doric race were excluded. King
-Cleomenes, therefore, when desirous
-of obtaining admission, denied
-his birth-right, and called himself
-an Achæan.—Herod. v. 72.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f266'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r266'>266</a>. The quarries of this mountain,
-worked to so great an extent
-by the ancients, are now filling
-again with marble which grows
-rapidly.—Chandler, ii. 191. Cf.
-Magius, Var. Lect. t. iv. 182. b.
-<span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Gemme Fisica Sotterranea,</span> l. 1.
-c. ix. § 6. p. 87.—For the manner
-in which it is thought to vegetate,
-see Tournefort, i. pp. 225. 228.
-sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f267'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r267'>267</a>. Topog. of Athens, pp. 211, 212. See also Chandler, ii. 49. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f268'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r268'>268</a>. Of these temples Lucian says:
-ὅμοιαι ... τοῖς Αἰγυπτίοις ἱεροῖς:
-κᾀκεῖ γὰρ, αὐτὸς μὲν ὁ νεὼς κάλλιστός
-τε καὶ μέγιστος, λίθοις
-τοῖς πολυτελέσιν ἠσκημένος, καὶ
-χρυσῷ, καὶ γραφαῖς διηνθισμὲνος.
-ἔνδον δὲ ἢν ζητῆς τὸν βεὸν ἢ πιθηκός
-ἔστιν, ἢ ἴβις, ἢ τράγος, ἢ
-αἴλουρος. Imagin. § 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f269'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r269'>269</a>. Vid. Müll. De Parthenon.
-Fastig. p. 72, sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f270'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r270'>270</a>. Thucyd. ii. 13. Schol. t. v. p. 375. Bipont. Müll. De Phid. Vit. p. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f271'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r271'>271</a>. Arrian. Epict. I. 6. p. 27, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f272'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r272'>272</a>. Frag. ed. Siebel. p. 54. Müll.
-Phid. Vit. § 11. p. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f273'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r273'>273</a>. Boeckh. Corp. Inscrip. p. 182.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f274'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r274'>274</a>. Quatremère de Quincy, Jup.
-Olymp. p. 222.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f275'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r275'>275</a>. Leake, Topog. p. 215.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f276'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r276'>276</a>. About half a mile from
-Athens in this direction was a
-temple of Artemis (Ἄγρα), on the
-Ilissos, with an altar to Boreas;
-where, according to the fable, the
-god carried away Orithyia while
-playing on the rock with Pharmacia.—Plat.
-Phæd. i. 7. In consequence
-of the alliance thus contracted
-Boreas always felt a particular
-friendship for the Athenians,
-to whose succour he hastened
-with his aërial forces during
-the Median war.—Herod, vii. 189.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f277'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r277'>277</a>. Antigone, in Sophocles,
-(Œdip. Col. 14-18) speaks of
-the towers of Athens as seen from
-Colonos, and describes that village,
-the birth-place of the poet,
-as rendered beautiful by the sacred
-grove of the Eumenides, consisting
-of the laurel, the olive, and
-the vine, in which a choir of
-nightingales showered their music
-on the ear.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f278'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r278'>278</a>. Near this road stood the
-Hiera Suke. Athen. iii. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f279'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r279'>279</a>. Κεραμεικός, ἀπὸ τοῦ κεραμεύς.
-Etym. Mag. 504. 16. Cf.
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Suid. et Harpocrat. in voce.</span> Paris,
-in like manner, has given the name
-of Tuileries to its principal palaces
-and gardens, from the tiles (<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>tuiles</i></span>)
-which were anciently manufactured
-on the spot.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f280'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r280'>280</a>. Strab. ix. 1. 239–241.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c025' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>
- <h3 class='c024'>CHAPTER V. <br /> CAPITAL CITIES OF GREECE.—SPARTA.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>From what has been said, the reader will, perhaps,
-have acquired a tolerably correct idea of the city of
-Athens, its splendour and extent. But the remaining
-fragments of Hellenic literature do not enable us to
-be equally clear or copious in our account of Sparta.<a id='r281' /><a href='#f281' class='c018'><sup>[281]</sup></a>
-In fact so imperfect and confused is the information
-that has come down to us respecting it, so vague, unsatisfactory,
-and in many respects contradictory are
-the opinions of modern scholars and travellers, that
-after diligently and patiently examining their accounts,
-and comparing them with the descriptions of Pausanias,
-the hints of Xenophon, Livy, Polybius, and Plutarch,
-with the casual references of the poets, I am
-enabled to offer the following picture only as a series
-of what appear to me probable conjectures based upon
-a few indisputable facts.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The reader who has endeavoured to discover anything
-like order in Pausanias’ topography of Sparta,<a id='r282' /><a href='#f282' class='c018'><sup>[282]</sup></a>
-will fully comprehend the difficulty of constructing
-from his information anything like an intelligible plan
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>of the city. Nevertheless, by setting out from a fixed
-point, by laboriously studying the thread of his narration,
-by divining the secret order he seems to follow
-in enumerating and delineating the various public
-buildings of which he speaks, and by comparing his
-fragmentary disclosures with the present physiognomy
-of the site, I have formed a conception of the features
-of ancient Sparta which may, perhaps, be found to
-bear some resemblance to the original.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>We will suppose ourselves to have passed the Eurotas,
-and to be standing on the summit of the loftiest
-building of the Acropolis, the Alpion for example, or
-the temple of Athena Chalciœcos,<a id='r283' /><a href='#f283' class='c018'><sup>[283]</sup></a> from which we
-can command a view of the whole site of Sparta from
-the Eurotas, where it flows between banks shaded with
-reeds and lofty rose laurels<a id='r284' /><a href='#f284' class='c018'><sup>[284]</sup></a> on the east, to the brisk
-sparkling stream of the Tiasa, and the roots of the
-Taygetos on the west. North and south the eye
-ranges up and down the valley,<a id='r285' /><a href='#f285' class='c018'><sup>[285]</sup></a> discovering in the
-latter direction the ancient cities of Therapne<a id='r286' /><a href='#f286' class='c018'><sup>[286]</sup></a> and
-Amyclæ,<a id='r287' /><a href='#f287' class='c018'><sup>[287]</sup></a> celebrated for their poetical and heroic associations.
-Beyond the Eurotas eastward, occupying
-the green and well-wooded acclivities upwards, from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>the banks of the stream towards the barren and red-tinted
-heights of the Menelaion,<a id='r288' /><a href='#f288' class='c018'><sup>[288]</sup></a> lay scattered the villas
-of the noble Spartans, filled with costly furniture and
-every other token of wealth,<a id='r289' /><a href='#f289' class='c018'><sup>[289]</sup></a> while here and there, on
-all sides, embosomed in groves or thickets, arose the
-temples and chapels of the gods surrounded by a halo
-of sanctity and communicating peculiar beauty to the
-landscape.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Contracting now our circle of vision, and contemplating
-the distinct villages or groups of buildings of
-which the capital of Laconia anciently consisted,<a id='r290' /><a href='#f290' class='c018'><sup>[290]</sup></a> we
-behold the encampments as it were of the five tribes,
-extending in a circle about the Acropolis.<a id='r291' /><a href='#f291' class='c018'><sup>[291]</sup></a> The quarter
-of the Pitanatæ,<a id='r292' /><a href='#f292' class='c018'><sup>[292]</sup></a> commencing about the Issorion and
-the bridge over the Tiasa on the west, extended eastward
-beyond the Hyacinthine road<a id='r293' /><a href='#f293' class='c018'><sup>[293]</sup></a> to the cliffs overhanging
-the valley of the Eurotas above the confluence
-of that river with the Tiasa. Immediately contiguous
-to the dwellings of this tribe in the north eastern division
-of the city, opposite that cloven island in the
-Eurotas, which contained the temple of Artemis,
-Orthia, and the Goddess of Birth, dwelt the Limnatæ,<a id='r294' /><a href='#f294' class='c018'><sup>[294]</sup></a>
-who possessed among them the temple erected by the
-Spartans to Lycurgus. North again of these, and clustering
-around that sharp eminence which constituted
-as it were a second Acropolis, were the habitations of
-the Cynosuræ,<a id='r295' /><a href='#f295' class='c018'><sup>[295]</sup></a> whose quarter appears to have extended
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>from the old bridge over the Eurotas to the temple
-of Dictynna, and the tombs of the Euripontid kings
-on the west. From this point to the Dromos, lying
-directly opposite the southern extremity of the Isle of
-Plane Trees, formed by the diverging and confluent
-waters of the Tiasa, lay the village of the Messoatæ,<a id='r296' /><a href='#f296' class='c018'><sup>[296]</sup></a>
-where were situated the tomb of Alcman, the
-fountain Dorcea, and a very beautiful portico overlooking
-the Platanistas. The road extending from
-the Dromos to the Issorion formed the western limits
-of the tribe of the Ægidæ,<a id='r297' /><a href='#f297' class='c018'><sup>[297]</sup></a> whose quarter extending inward
-to the heart of the city, appears to have comprehended
-the Acropolis, the Lesche Pœcile, the
-theatre, with all the other buildings grouped about the
-foot of the ancient city.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The prospect presented by all these villages, nearly
-touching each other, and comprehended within a circle
-of six Roman miles, was once, no doubt, in the days
-of Spartan glory, singularly animated and picturesque.
-The face of the ground was broken and diversified,
-rising into six hills of unequal elevation, and constituting
-altogether a small table-land, in some places
-terminating in perpendicular cliffs;<a id='r298' /><a href='#f298' class='c018'><sup>[298]</sup></a> in others, shelving
-away in gentle slopes to meet the meadows on
-the banks of the surrounding streams. Over all
-was diffused the brilliant light<a id='r299' /><a href='#f299' class='c018'><sup>[299]</sup></a> which fills the atmosphere
-of the south, and paints, as travellers uniformly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>confess, even the barren crag and crumbling ruin with
-beauty.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The structures that occupied the summit of the
-Acropolis appear to have been neither numerous nor
-magnificent. The central pile, around which all the
-others were grouped, was the temple of Athena Chalciœcos,<a id='r300' /><a href='#f300' class='c018'><sup>[300]</sup></a>
-flanked on the north and south by the fanes
-of Zeus Cosmetas and the Muses. Behind it rose
-the temple of Aphrodite Areia, with that of Artemis
-Cnagia, and in front various other edifices and statues,
-dedicated to Euryleonis, Pausanias, Athena Ophthalmitis,
-and Ammon. Somewhere in the neighbourhood
-of the temenos of Athena stood two edifices, one
-called Skenoma and the other Alpion. The relative
-position of all these it is now extremely difficult, if
-not impossible, to determine. Let us therefore descend
-into the agora, and having briefly described the
-objects which there offered themselves to the eye of
-the stranger, endeavour to thread our way through
-the various streets of Sparta, pointing out as we go
-along the most remarkable monuments it contained.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In all Greek cities the point of greatest importance,
-next to the citadel, was the market-place, where the
-body of the citizens assembled not only to buy and
-sell, but to transact public business, and perform many
-ceremonies of their religion. Thus, in the agora of
-Sparta, in the centre of which probably stood an altar,
-surrounded by the statues of Apollo, Artemis, Leto,
-and the soothsayer Hagias who foretold the victory of
-Lysander at Ægospotamos, sacred chorusses and processions
-were exhibited during the Gymnopædia in
-honour of Phœbos Apollo, in consequence of which,
-a part at least of the place obtained the name of
-Choros: here, likewise, was a colossal statue, erected
-in honour of the Spartan Demos, with a group representing
-Hermes bearing the infant Dionysos in his
-arms, and a statue of King Polydoros, doubtless set
-up in the neighbourhood of his house, Boonetos,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>lying between the street Aphetæ and the steep road
-leading up to the citadel. The edifices by which the
-agora was encircled, though in most cases, perhaps,
-far from magnificent, when separately considered, presented
-a grand <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>coup-d’œil</i></span>. This will be made evident
-if, placing ourselves near the central altar, we enumerate
-and briefly describe them in the order in which
-they followed each other in the great circle of the
-agora. First, beginning on the right-hand corner of
-the street Aphetæ we behold the palace of the Bidiæi,
-the five magistrates who watched over the education
-of the youth; next succeeds that of the Nomophylaces,
-or guardians of the laws; then that of
-the Ephori; and, lastly, the senate-house, standing at
-the corner of the street leading to Therapne. Crossing
-over to the south-eastern side of the Agora we
-behold a spacious and stately portico called the Persian,
-because erected from the spoils of the Persians.
-Its columns of white marble were adorned with bassi
-relievi representing Persian warriors, among others
-Mardonios and Artemisia daughter of Lygdamis
-queen of Halicarnassos, who fought in person at the
-battle of Salamis. Beyond the road to Amyclæ,
-we meet with a range of temples to Gaia, Zeus
-Agoræos, Athena, Poseidon the Preserver, Apollo, and
-Hera; and traversing the western street opening into
-the Theomelida, and affording us a glimpse in passing
-of the tombs of the Agid kings we arrive at the
-ancient halls of the Ephori, containing the monuments
-of Epimenides and Aphareus. To this edifice
-succeed the statues of Zeus Xenios and Athena
-Xenia. Next follows the temple of the Fates, near
-which was the tomb of Orestes lying on the left hand
-of the road leading to the sanctuary of Athena Chalciœcos.
-On the other side stands the house of King
-Polydoros, which obtained in after ages the name of
-Boonetos because purchased of his widowed queen
-with a certain number of oxen. With this terminates
-the list of the buildings by which the Agora was encompassed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>Quitting, now, this central point, we proceed northward
-through the street called Aphetæ, and observe
-on the right hand at a short distance from each other
-three temples of Athena Keleuthia, together with the
-heroa of Iops, Lelex, and Amphiaraos. On the opposite
-side apparently, stood the temenos of Tænarian
-Poseidon, with a statue of Athena, erected by the
-Dorian colonists of Italy. We next arrive at a place
-called the Hellenion, probably nothing more than a
-large open space or square in which the deputies or
-ambassadors of foreign states assembled on extraordinary
-occasions. Close to this was erected the monument
-of Talthybios. A little further on were the
-altar of Apollo Acreitas, the Gasepton, a temple of
-earth, and another altar sacred to Apollo Maleates.
-At the end of the street, near the walls of the late
-city, was a temple of Dictynna, with the tombs of the
-kings called Eurypontidæ.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Returning to the Hellenion, and proceeding eastward
-up the great public road leading to the bridge Babyx,
-you saw the temple of Arsinoë, daughter of Leucippos,
-and sister to the wives of Castor and Polydeukes.
-Further on, near the Phrouria or Barriers, stood a
-temple of Artemis; and advancing a little you came
-to the monument of the Eleian soothsayers called
-Iamidæ, and the temple of Maron and Alpheios, who
-were among the bravest of those who fell with Leonidas
-at Thermopylæ. Beyond this stood the fane of
-Zeus Tropæos erected after the reduction of Amyclæ,
-when all the ancient inhabitants of Laconia had been
-brought under the yoke of the Dorians. Next followed
-the temple of the Great Mother and the heroic
-monuments of Hippolytos and Aulon. On a spot commanding
-the bridge stood the temple of Athena Alea.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Setting out once more from the Agora, and advancing
-up the street leading towards the east the
-first building on the left-hand was called Skias<a id='r301' /><a href='#f301' class='c018'><sup>[301]</sup></a> contiguous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>to the senate-house: it was of a circular form
-with a roof like an umbrella, and erected about seven
-hundred and sixty years before Christ, by Theodoros of
-Samos, inventor of the art of casting statues in iron.
-Here the Spartan people held their assemblies even so
-late as the age of Pausanias, who relates that the lyre
-of Timotheus<a id='r302' /><a href='#f302' class='c018'><sup>[302]</sup></a> the Milesian, confiscated as a punishment
-for his having added four strings to the seven
-already in use, was suspended in this building as
-a warning to all innovators. Near the Skias was
-another circular building erected by Epimenides, containing
-statues of Olympian Zeus and Aphrodite.
-On the other side apparently of the street, in front
-of the Skias, were the tombs of Idas and Lynceus,
-the temple of Kora Soteira, said to have been built
-by Orpheus, or Abaris the Hyperboræan, the tomb
-of Cynortas and the temple of Castor. Near these
-were the statues of Apollo Carneios, and Aphetæos,
-the latter of which marked the point whence the
-suitors of Penelope started in their race for a wife,
-running up the street Aphetæ, whence the name.
-Immediately beyond this was a square surrounded
-with porticoes, where all kinds of cheap wares were
-anciently sold. Further on stood altars of Zeus,
-Athena, and the Dioscuri, all surnamed Amboulioi;
-opposite which was the hill called Colona whereon
-was erected a temple of Dionysos, and close at hand
-a temenos sacred to the hero who conducted the
-god to Sparta. Not far from the Dionysion was
-a temple of Zeus Euanemos, giver of gentle
-breezes; and immediately to the right the heroon
-of Pleuron. On the summit of a hill at a little
-distance stood a temple of the Argive Hera, together
-with the fane erected in honour of Hera
-Hypercheiria, built by order of the oracle after
-the subsiding of an inundation of the Eurotas. In
-this edifice was a very ancient wooden statue of
-Aphrodite Hera. Close to the road which passed to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>the right of the hill was a statue of Etymocles many
-times victor in the Olympic games. In descending
-towards the Eurotas you beheld a wooden statue
-of Athena Alea, and a little above the banks a
-temple of Zeus Plousios. On the further side of
-the river were temples of Ares and Asclepios.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Once more retracing our steps to the Agora, and
-quitting it by a street leading towards the west, the
-first remarkable object that struck the eye was the
-cenotaph of Brasidas, and a little beyond it a spacious
-and beautiful theatre of white marble.<a id='r303' /><a href='#f303' class='c018'><sup>[303]</sup></a> Directly opposite
-were the tombs of Leonidas and Pausanias, and
-near these a cippus, on which were engraved the
-names of the heroes who fell at Thermopylæ, together
-with those of their fathers. At this spot games were
-annually celebrated, in which none but Spartans were
-allowed to contend for the prizes. Discourses were
-likewise here pronounced in honour of the dead. The
-multitudes at these games required a large clear space
-in which to congregate, and this I suppose to have
-been the place called Theomelida, opening on both
-sides of the road, and extending as far as the tombs
-of the Agid Kings, and the Lesche of the Crotoniatæ.
-Near this edifice stood the temple of Asclepios, the
-tomb of Tænaros, and temples of Poseidon Hippocourios,
-and Artemis Ægeinea. Turning back towards the
-Lesche, probably round the foot of the Hill of the
-Issorion,<a id='r304' /><a href='#f304' class='c018'><sup>[304]</sup></a> you observed on the slope of the eminence
-towards the Tiasa the temple of Artemis Limnæa
-the Britomartis of the Cretans, somewhere in the vicinity
-of which were temples of Thetis, Chthonian
-Demeter, and Olympian Zeus.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Starting from the crossroad at the north-west foot
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>of the Issorion, on the way to the Dromos, the first
-edifice which presented itself on the left was the
-monument of Eumedes, one of the sons of Hippocoon.
-A little further on was a statue of Heracles, and close
-at hand, near the entrance to the Dromos, stood the
-ancient palace of Menelaos, inhabited in Pausanias’
-time by a private individual. Within the Dromos itself
-were two gymnasia. This was the most remarkable
-building in the western part of the city, from whence
-branched off many streets, while numerous public
-structures clustered round it; to the north, for example,
-the temples of the Dioscuri, of the Graces, of Eileithyia,
-of Apollo Carneios, and Artemis Hegemona:
-on the east the temple of Asclepios Agnitas, and
-a trophy erected by Polydeukes after his victory over
-Lynceus. On the west towards the Platanistas were
-statues of the Dioscuri Apheterii, and a little further
-was the heroon of Alcon, near which stood the temple
-of Poseidon Domatites, near the bridge leading over
-to the island covered with plane trees. On the other
-hand apparently of the road a statue was erected to
-Cynisca, daughter of Archidamos, the first lady who
-ran horses at Olympia.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Along the banks of the Tiasa from the Dromos to a
-line extending westward from the temple of Dictynna
-to the upper bridge leading to the Platanistas, lay
-a road adorned with numerous public buildings, among
-others a portico, behind which were two remarkable
-monuments, the heroa of Alcimos and Enaræphoros.
-Immediately beyond were the heroa of Dorceus
-and Sebros, and the fountain Dorcea flowing between
-them. The whole of this little quarter obtained from
-the latter hero the name of Sebrion. To the right
-of the last mentioned heroon was the monument of
-the poet Alcman;<a id='r305' /><a href='#f305' class='c018'><sup>[305]</sup></a> beyond which lay the temple of
-Helen, and near it that of Heracles close to the
-modern wall.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>Hard by a narrow pathway, striking into the fields
-from the road leading eastward from the Dromos,
-was the temple of Athena Axiopænos, said to have
-been erected by Heracles.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Leaving the Dromos by another road running in
-a south-easterly direction through the midst of the
-quarter of the Ægidæ, we behold, on one hand, the
-temples of Athena and Hipposthenes, and directly
-opposite the latter, a statue of Ares in chains. At
-a short distance beyond these was the Lesche Pœcile,
-and in front of it, the heroon of Cadmos son of Agenor,
-those of two of his descendants, Œolycos and
-his son Ægeus, and that of Amphilocos. Farther
-on lay the temples of Hera Ægophagos, so called
-because she-goats were sacrificed to her, and at the
-foot of the Acropolis, near the theatre, the temples
-of Poseidon Genethlios, on either side of which probably
-stood an heroon, the one sacred to Cleodæos
-son of Hyllos, and the other to Œbalos.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>We must now return to the Lesche Pœcile, and
-following a road skirting round the hill of the Acropolis,
-towards the east-south-east, pass by the monument
-of Teleclos, and the most celebrated of all
-the temples of Asclepios at Sparta, situated close
-to the Boonetos. Traversing the street Aphetæ
-and proceeding along the road leading to the Limnæ,
-the first temple on the left was that of Aphrodite,
-on a hill, celebrated by Pausanias for having
-two stories. The statue of the goddess was here
-seated, veiled and fettered. A little beyond was
-the temple of Hilaeira and Phœbe wherein were
-statues of the two goddesses, the countenance of one
-of which was painted and adorned by one of the
-priestesses according to the later rules of art, but
-warned by a dream she suffered the other to remain
-in its archaic simplicity. Here was preserved an
-egg adorned with fillets and suspended from the
-roof, said to have been brought forth by Leda. In
-a building near at hand, certain women wove annually
-a tunic for the Apollo of Amyclæ, from which circumstance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>the edifice itself obtained the name of
-Chiton. Next followed the house of the Tyndaridæ,
-the heroa of Chilon and Athenæus, and the temple
-of Lycurgus, with the tomb of Eucosmos behind it.
-Near them was the altar of Lathria and Anaxandra,
-and directly opposite the monuments of Theopompos
-and Eurybiades and Astrabacos. In an island in the
-marshes were the temple and altar of Artemis Orthia,
-and the fane of Eileithyia.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On the road leading from the Agora to Amyclæ<a id='r306' /><a href='#f306' class='c018'><sup>[306]</sup></a>
-there were few remarkable monuments. One only,
-the temple of the Graces, is mentioned north of the
-Tiasa, and beyond it the Hippodrome; towards the
-west the temple of the Tyndaridæ near the road, and
-that of Poseidon Gaiouchos towards the river.<a id='r307' /><a href='#f307' class='c018'><sup>[307]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Let us now consider the proofs on which the above
-description is based. Pausanias informs us that the
-citadel was the highest of the hills of Sparta. Colonel
-Leake observes that the eminence found in the quarter
-which I have assigned to the Cynosuræ is equal in
-height to that immediately behind the theatre; but
-the former is pointed and appears to have retained its
-natural shape, while the summit of the latter has been
-levelled for building. Now if its height be still equal,
-it must have been considerably greater before the
-levelling process took place. Therefore the hill behind
-the theatre was the Acropolis. Admitting this,
-the spacious flat or hollow immediately at its foot on
-the south-east side must have been the Agora,<a id='r308' /><a href='#f308' class='c018'><sup>[308]</sup></a> for
-that the Agora was close to the citadel is clear from
-history, which represents Lycurgus and king Charilaos
-escaping thither from the market-place.<a id='r309' /><a href='#f309' class='c018'><sup>[309]</sup></a> Again
-we know from Pausanias that it lay a little to the
-east of the theatre, having nothing between them
-but the cenotaph of Brasidas. The position of the
-Agora being thus fixed beyond dispute, we arrive
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>with certainty at the direction of the four great
-streets that diverge from it; for, first, we know that
-the road to the Issorion lay towards the west; the
-road to Amyclæ towards the south. The street called
-Skias terminated at the extremity of the city between
-two small hills. These two hills are still there
-on the brink of the high ground overlooking the
-valley of the Eurotas on the east. This therefore was
-the direction of the Skias. As an additional proof,
-it may be mentioned that the temple of Hera Hypercheiria
-was erected in commemoration of the subsiding
-of an inundation of the Eurotas, which shows
-it must have been somewhere nearly within reach of
-the waters of that stream. For the street Aphetæ
-no direction is left but that towards the north-west
-or the north-east; but the latter led to the temple
-of Artemis Orthia in the Limnæ, the former to the
-temple of Dictynna. The street Aphetæ led therefore
-to the north-west, no other road being mentioned
-but that leading from Mount Thornax over
-the bridge Babyx, which was not the street called
-Aphetæ. Thus we have the direction of every one
-of the great streets of Sparta incontrovertibly determined.
-Proceed we now to establish the position,
-with respect to the citadel, of each of the five
-tribes who occupied as many quarters of the city.
-First we learn from Pausanias that the Pitanatæ
-inhabited the quarter round the Issorion:<a id='r310' /><a href='#f310' class='c018'><sup>[310]</sup></a> from Pindar<a id='r311' /><a href='#f311' class='c018'><sup>[311]</sup></a>
-and his scholiast that they dwelt likewise near
-the banks of the Eurotas. They possessed therefore
-the whole southern quarter of the city.<a id='r312' /><a href='#f312' class='c018'><sup>[312]</sup></a> As the
-Limnatæ obtained their name from the marshes near
-which they lived, the position of the Limnæ determined
-by the chain of reasoning given above, proves
-them to have occupied the eastern quarter of the
-city directly opposite the temple of Artemis Orthia.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>That the tribe of the Ægidæ inhabited all that part
-extending in one direction from the Issorion to the
-Dromos, and in the other from the banks of the
-Tiasa to the Boonetos, may almost with certainty be
-inferred from the circumstance that the tomb of
-Ægeus, their founder, was situated in this quarter,
-close to the Lesche Pœcile. The quarter of the Mesoatæ
-lay in the north-west, between the Dromos
-and the temple of Dictynna; for here was found the
-tomb of Alcman who belonged to that tribe. All the
-rest of the site being thus occupied, there remains
-only for the tribe of the Cynosuræ that part lying
-between the road to Thornax and the temple of Dictynna,
-where accordingly we must suppose them to
-have lived.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>With respect to the bridge Babyx, if bridge it
-really was, it appears very difficult<a id='r313' /><a href='#f313' class='c018'><sup>[313]</sup></a> to believe that
-it spanned the Tiasa, though we still find massive
-ruins of arches in the channel of that stream. There
-seems to be much stronger reason for supposing it to
-have been thrown over the Eurotas, where the road
-from the Isthmus traversed it.<a id='r314' /><a href='#f314' class='c018'><sup>[314]</sup></a> We should then
-understand by the oracle which commanded Lycurgus
-to assemble his people between Babyx and Cnacion,<a id='r315' /><a href='#f315' class='c018'><sup>[315]</sup></a>
-that he was to gather them together anywhere within
-the precincts of the city. Accordingly we find
-in the time of Lycurgus, that the Agora in the centre
-of Sparta was the place were the Apellæ<a id='r316' /><a href='#f316' class='c018'><sup>[316]</sup></a> were held.
-This, too, is evident, by the sense in which the matter
-was understood by Plutarch, who, speaking of the
-victory of the Bœotians over the Spartans at Tegyra,
-observes, that by this event it was made manifest that
-not the Eurotas, or the space between Babyx and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>Cnacion alone produced brave and warlike men.<a id='r317' /><a href='#f317' class='c018'><sup>[317]</sup></a>
-Now it appears to me, that a few meadows without
-the city on which assemblies of the people were
-occasionally convened could never be said to produce
-these people. I have therefore supposed that Babyx
-was the bridge by which travellers coming from the
-Isthmus entered Sparta.</p>
-
-<hr class='c025' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f281'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r281'>281</a>. The plan which accompanies
-the present chapter, based on the
-description of Pausanias, agrees in
-many of the main points with
-that given by Mr. Müller in his
-map of the Peloponnesos. M.
-Barbie du Bocage’s Essay on the
-Topography of Sparta, upon the
-whole faulty, is, nevertheless, in
-my opinion, right with respect to
-the portion of the bridge Babyx
-which Mr. Müller throws over
-the Tiasa, contrary to all the
-reasonable inferences to be derived
-from history. Colonel
-Leake’s plan, given in his travels
-in the Morea, conveys a different
-idea of Spartan topography; but
-I am unable to reconcile his views
-with the account of the city in
-Pausanias, though I very much
-regret that the plan I have adopted
-should not be recommended by
-the support of a writer so learned
-and so ingenious.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f282'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r282'>282</a>. III. 11–20. Cf. Polyb. v.
-22. Liv. xxxiv. 26. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f283'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r283'>283</a>. In the precincts of this temple,
-evidently the strongest place in
-the city, the Ætolian mercenaries
-took refuge after the assassination
-of Nabis.—Liv. xxxv. 36.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f284'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r284'>284</a>. Plut. Instit. Lacon. § 10. Chateaubriand,
-Itin. xi. 110. Poucqueville’s
-description of the stream
-is striking and picturesque: “The
-banks,” he says, “are bordered
-with never-fading laurels, which,
-inclining towards each other, form
-an arch over its waters, and seem
-still consecrated to the deities of
-whom its purity is a just emblem;
-while swans, even of a more dazzling
-whiteness than the snows
-that cover the mountain-tops above,
-are constantly sailing up
-and down the stream.”—Travels,
-p. 84. The Viscount Chateaubriand,
-however, sought in vain
-for these poetical birds, and,
-therefore, evidently considers them
-fabulous.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f285'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r285'>285</a>. Strabo’s brief description of
-the site deserves to be mentioned:
-ἔστι μὲν οὖν ἐν κοιλοτέρῳ χωρίῳ τὸ
-τῆς πόλεως ἔδαφος, καίπερ ἀπολαμβάνον
-ὄρη μεταξύ. viii. 5. t. ii.
-p. 185.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f286'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r286'>286</a>. Xen. Hellen. v. 5. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f287'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r287'>287</a>. At this ancient city Castor
-and Polydeukes were worshipped
-not as heroes but as divinities.
-Isoc. Encom. Helen. § 27. Cf.
-Pind. Pyth. xi. 60, sqq. Nem.
-x. 56. Dissen supposes these
-tombs to have been vaults under
-ground in the Phœbaion.—Comm.
-p. 508.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f288'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r288'>288</a>. Steph. de Urb. v. Μενέλαος,
-p. 551, a. Berkel.—Polyb. v. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f289'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r289'>289</a>. Xen. Hellen. vi. 5. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f290'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r290'>290</a>. Thucyd. i. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f291'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r291'>291</a>. See Müller, Dor. ii. 48.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f292'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r292'>292</a>. Paus. Olymp. vi. 27. Diss.
-ἡ Πιτάνη φυλή. Hesych. Cf. Herod.
-iii. 55. ix. 53. Eurip. Troad.
-1101. Thucyd. I. 20. et schol.
-Plut. de Exil. § 6. Apophth. Lacon.
-Miscell. 48. Plin. H. N. iv. 8.
-Athen. i. 57. Near this κώμη
-were the villages of Œnos, Onoglæ
-and Stathmæ, celebrated for
-their wines.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f293'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r293'>293</a>. Athen. iv. 74.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f294'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r294'>294</a>. Strab. viii. 4. p. 184. 5. p. 187.
-The marshes existing in this quarter
-anciently had been drained
-by the age of Strabo:—ἀλλ᾽ οὐδέν
-γε μέρος αὐτοῦ λιμνάζει· τὸ δὲ
-παλαιὸν ἐλίμαζε τὸ προάστειον,
-καὶ ἐκάλουν αὐτὸ Λίμνας· καὶ τὸ
-τοῦ Διονύσου ἱερὸν ἐν Λίμναις
-ἐφ᾽ ὑγροῦ βεβήκος ἐτύγχανε· νῦν
-δ᾽ ἐπὶ ξηροῦ τὴν ἵδρυσιν ἔχει. 5. p.
-185. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f295'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r295'>295</a>. Hesych. in v. Berkel. ad Steph.
-Byzant. p. 490. Schol. ad Callim.
-in Dian. 94. Spanh. Observ. in
-loc. p. 196.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f296'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r296'>296</a>. Steph de Urb. in v. p. 554. b.
-who refers to Strabo (viii. 6. p.
-187). The words of the geographer
-are Μεσόαν δ᾽ οὐ τὴς χώρας
-εἶναι μέρος, τῆς Σπάρτης δὲ καθάπερ
-καὶ τὸ Λιμναῖον. Paus. vii.
-20. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f297'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r297'>297</a>. Herod. iv. 149.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f298'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r298'>298</a>. Leake, Trav. in Morea, v. i.
-p. 154.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f299'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r299'>299</a>. Cf. Chateaub. Itin. i. 112.
-Similar, also, is the testimony of
-Mr. Douglas. “The mixture of
-the romantic with the rich, which
-still diversifies its aspect, and the
-singularly picturesque form of all
-its mountains, do not allow us to
-wonder that even Virgil should
-generally desert his native Italy
-for the landscape of Greece; whoever
-has viewed it in the tints of a
-Mediterranean spring, will agree
-with me in attributing much of the
-Grecian genius to the influence of
-scenery and climate.” Essay, &amp;c.
-p. 52.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f300'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r300'>300</a>. Plut. Apophtheg. Lacon. Archid. 6. Lycurg. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f301'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r301'>301</a>. Σκιὰς, τὸ ᾠδεῖον ἐκαλεῖτο
-τῶν Λακεδαιμονίων κατὰ τὴν
-ἀρχαίαν φωνήν. κ. τ. λ.—Etym.
-Mag. 717. 36. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f302'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r302'>302</a>. Cf. Plut. Agis, § 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f303'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r303'>303</a>. This theatre, as Mr. Douglas
-has observed, is the only remaining
-fragment of ancient Sparta,
-the other ruins still visible on its
-site, belonging all to Roman times.—Essay
-on certain Points of Resemblance
-between the Ancient
-and Modern Greeks, p. 23.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f304'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r304'>304</a>. Ἰσσώριον, ὄρος τῆς Λακωνικῆς
-ἀφ’ οὗ ἡ Ἄρτεμις Ἰσσωρία.—Steph.
-Byz. in v. 426. d. with
-the note of Berkel. Cf. Hesych.
-in v. Polyæn. Strat. ii. 1. 14.
-Plut. Agesil. § 32.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f305'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r305'>305</a>. Ἀλκμάν, Λάκων ἀπὸ Μεσσόας.—He
-was an erotic poet said
-to have been descended from servile
-parents.—Suid. i. p. 178. ed.
-Port.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f306'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r306'>306</a>. Οὗ τὸ τοῦ Ἀπόλλωνος ἱερόν.
-Strab. viii. 5. t. ii. p. 185.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f307'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r307'>307</a>. Xen. Hellen. vi. 5. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f308'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r308'>308</a>. Plut. Lycurg. § 11. Lacon.
-Apoph. Lycurg. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f309'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r309'>309</a>. Plut. Lycurg. § 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f310'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r310'>310</a>. Polyæn. Stratag. ii. 1. 14.
-with the notes of Casaub. and
-Maasvic.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f311'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r311'>311</a>. Olymp. vi. 28. Cf. Spanheim,
-ad Callim. in Dian. 172.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f312'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r312'>312</a>. Cf. Athen. i. 57.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f313'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r313'>313</a>. This, however, is the opinion
-of Mr. Müller, Dor. ii. 456.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f314'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r314'>314</a>. See the passage in which
-Xenophon (v. 5. 27), describes
-the advance of the Thebans upon
-Sparta.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f315'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r315'>315</a>. Plut. Lycurg. § 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f316'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r316'>316</a>. Gœttl. ad Aristot. Pol. Excurs.
-i. p. 464.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f317'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r317'>317</a>. Pelop. § 17.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c025' />
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>
- <h2 class='c013'>BOOK II. <br /> EDUCATION.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c024'>CHAPTER I.<br /> THEORY OF EDUCATION.—BIRTH OF CHILDREN.—INFANTICIDE.</h3>
-
-<p class='c014'>Whether on education the Greeks thought more
-wisely than we do or not,<a id='r318' /><a href='#f318' class='c018'><sup>[318]</sup></a> they certainly contemplated
-the subject from a more elevated point of view. They
-regarded it as the matrix in which future generations
-are fashioned, and receive that peculiar temperament
-and character belonging to the institutions that presided
-at their birth. Their theories were so large as to
-comprehend the whole developement of individual existence,
-from the moment when the human germ is
-quickened into life until the grave closes the scene,
-and in many cases looked still further; for the rites
-of initiation and a great part of their ethics had reference
-to another world. On this account we find
-their legislators possessed by extreme solicitude respecting
-the character of those teachers into whose
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>hands the souls of the people were to be placed, to
-receive the first principles of good or evil, to be
-invigorated, raised, and purified by the former, or by
-the latter to be perverted, or precipitated down the
-slopes of vice and effeminacy, by which nations sink
-from freedom to servitude. Among them, moreover,
-it was never matter of doubt, whether the light of
-knowledge should be allowed to stream upon the
-summits of society only, or be suffered to descend
-into its lower depths and visit the cottages of the
-poor. Whatever education had to impart was, in
-most states, imparted to all the citizens, as far as their
-leisure or their capacity would permit them to receive
-it. The whole object, indeed, of education among the
-Greeks was to create good citizens, from which it has
-by some been inferred that they confined their views
-to the delivering of secular instruction. But this is
-to take a narrow and ignorant view of the subject,
-since religion was not only an element of education
-but regarded as of more importance than all its other
-elements taken together. For it had not escaped the
-Hellenic legislators, that in many circumstances of life
-man is placed beyond the reach and scrutiny of laws
-and public opinion, where he must be free to act according
-to the dictates of conscience, which, if not
-rightly trained, purified, and rendered clearsighted by
-religion, will often dictate amiss. It is of the utmost
-moment, therefore, that in these retired situations man
-should not consider himself placed beyond the range
-of every eye, and so be tempted to lay the foundation
-of habits which, begun in secrecy, may soon acquire
-boldness to endure the light and set the laws themselves
-at defiance. Accordingly over those retired
-moments in which man at first sight appears to commune
-with himself alone, religion was called in to
-teach that there were invisible inspectors, who registered,
-not only the evil deeds and evil words they
-witnessed, but even the evil thoughts and emotions
-of the heart, the first impulses to crime in the lowest
-abysses of the mind. Consistently with this view of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>the subject, we discover everywhere in Greek history
-and literature traces of an almost puritanical scrupulousness
-in whatever appeared to belong to religion,
-so that in addressing the Athenians St. Paul himself
-was induced to reproach them with the excesses of
-their devotional spirit, which degenerated too frequently
-into superstition. But the original design
-with which this spirit was cultivated was wise and
-good, its intention being to rescue men from the
-sway of their inferior passions,—from envy, from avarice,
-from selfishness, and to inspire them with faith in
-their own natural dignity by representing their actions
-as of sufficient importance to excite the notice, provoke
-the anger, or conciliate the favour of the immortal
-gods. This religion, which base and sordid minds
-regard as humiliating to humanity, was by Grecian
-lawgivers and founders of states contemplated as a
-kind of holy leaven designed by God himself, to pervade,
-quicken, and expand society to its utmost dimensions.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The question which commands so much attention
-in modern states, viz. whether education should be
-national and uniform, likewise much occupied the
-thoughts of ancient statesmen, and it is known that
-in most cases they decided in the affirmative. It may
-however be laid down as an axiom, that among a
-phlegmatic and passive-minded people, where the government
-has not yet acquired its proper form and
-developement, the establishment of a national system
-of education, complete in all its parts and extending
-to the whole body of the citizens, must be
-infallibly pernicious. For such as the government is
-at the commencement such very nearly will it continue,
-as was proved by the example of Crete and
-Sparta. For the Cretan legislators, arresting the progress
-of society at a certain point by the establishment
-of an iron system of education, before the popular
-mind had acquired its full growth and expansion,
-dwarfed the Cretan people completely, and by preventing
-their keeping pace with their countrymen
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>rendered them in historical times inferior to all their
-neighbours. In Sparta, again, the form of polity
-given to the state by Lycurgus, wonderful for the age
-in which it was framed, obtained perpetuity solely
-by the operation of his pædonomical institutions. The
-imperfection, however, of the system arose from this
-circumstance, that the Spartan government was framed
-too early in the career of civilisation. Had its lawgiver
-lived a century or two later, he would have established
-his institutions on a broader and more elevated
-basis, so that they would have remained longer nearly
-on a level with the progressive institutions of neighbouring
-states. But he fixed the form of the Spartan
-commonwealth when the general mind of Greece had
-scarcely emerged from barbarism; and as the rigid and
-unyielding nature of his laws forbade any great improvement,
-Sparta continued to bear about her in the most
-refined ages of Greece innumerable marks of the rude
-period in which she had risen. From this circumstance
-flowed many of her crimes and misfortunes.
-Forbidden to keep pace with her neighbours in knowledge
-and refinement, which by rendering them inventive,
-enterprising, and experienced, elevated them to
-power, she was compelled, in order to maintain her
-ground, to have recourse to astuteness, stratagem, and
-often to perfidy.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Spartan system, it is well known, made at first,
-and for some ages, little or no use of books. But this,
-at certain stages of society, was scarcely an evil;<a id='r319' /><a href='#f319' class='c018'><sup>[319]</sup></a> for
-knowledge can be imparted, virtues implanted and
-cherished, and great minds ripened to maturity without
-their aid. The teacher, in this case, rendered wise
-by meditation and experience, takes the place of a
-book, and by oral communication, by precept, and by
-example, instructs, and disciplines, and moulds his
-pupil into what he would have him be. By this process
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>both are benefited. The preceptor’s mind, kept
-in constant activity, acquires daily new force and expansion;
-and the pupil’s in like manner. In a state,
-therefore, like that of Sparta, in the age of Lycurgus,
-it was possible to acquire all necessary knowledge
-without books, of which indeed very few existed.
-But afterwards, when the Ionian republics began to be
-refined and elevated by philosophy and literature,
-Sparta, unable to accompany them, fell into the background:
-still preserving, however, her warlike habits
-she was enabled on many occasions to overawe and
-subdue them.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among the Athenians,<a id='r320' /><a href='#f320' class='c018'><sup>[320]</sup></a> though knowledge was universally
-diffused, there existed, properly speaking, no
-system of national education. The people, like their
-state, were in perpetual progress, aiming at perfection,
-and sometimes approaching it; but precipitated by the
-excess of their intellectual and physical energies into
-numerous and constantly recurring errors. While
-Sparta, as we have seen, remained content with the
-wisdom indigenous to her soil, scanty and imperfect as
-it was, Athens converted herself into one vast mart,
-whither every man who had anything new to communicate
-hastened eagerly, and found the sure reward of
-his ingenuity. Philosophers, sophists, geometricians,
-astronomers, artists, musicians, actors, from all parts
-of Greece and her most distant colonies, flocked to
-Athens to obtain from its quick-sighted, versatile, impartial,
-and most generous people that approbation
-which in the ancient world constituted fame. Therefore,
-although the laws regulated the material circumstances
-of the schools and gymnasia, prescribed the
-hours at which they should be opened and closed, and
-watched earnestly over the morals both of preceptors
-and pupils, there was a constant indraught of fresh
-science, a perpetually increasing experience and knowledge
-of the world, and, consequent thereupon, a deep-rooted
-conviction of their superiority over their neighbours,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>an impatience of antiquated forms, and an audacious
-reliance on their own powers and resources which
-betrayed them into the most hazardous schemes of
-ambition.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But, by pushing too far their literary and philosophical
-studies, the Athenians were induced at length
-to neglect the cultivation of the arts of war, which
-they appeared to regard as a low and servile drudgery.
-And this capital error, in spite of all their acquirements
-and achievements in eloquence and philosophy,—in
-spite of their lofty speculation and “style of
-gods,” brought their state to a premature dissolution;
-while Sparta, with inferior institutions, and ignorance
-which even the children at Athens would have laughed
-at, was enabled much longer to preserve its existence,
-from its impassioned application to the use of arms,
-aided, perhaps, by a stronger and more secluded position.
-From this it appears that of all sciences that of
-war is the chiefest, since, where this is cultivated, a
-nation may maintain its independence without the aid
-of any other; whereas the most knowing, refined, and
-cultivated men, if they neglect the use of arms, will
-not be able to stand their ground against a handful
-even of barbarians. They mistake, too, who look upon
-literature and the sciences as a kind of palladium
-against barbarism,<a id='r321' /><a href='#f321' class='c018'><sup>[321]</sup></a> for a whole nation may read and
-write, like the inhabitants of the Birman empire, without
-being either civilised or wise; and may possess
-the best books and the power to read them, without
-being able to profit by the lessons of wisdom they
-contain, as is proved by the example of the Greeks
-and Romans, who perished rather from a surfeit of
-knowledge than from any lack of instruction. But it
-is time, perhaps, to quit these general speculations, and
-proceed to develope, as far as existing monuments will
-enable us, the several systems of education which prevailed
-in the different parts of Greece.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>Among Hellenic legislators the care of children
-commenced before their birth. Their mothers were
-subject while pregnant to the operation of certain
-rules; their food and exercises were regulated, and in
-most cases the laws, or at least the manners, required
-them to lead a sedentary, inactive, and above all a
-tranquil life.<a id='r322' /><a href='#f322' class='c018'><sup>[322]</sup></a> Physicians, guided by experience, prescribed
-a somewhat abstemious diet; and wine was
-prohibited, or only permitted to be taken with water,
-which, where reason is consulted, we find to be the
-practice at the present day. But Lycurgus, in the
-article of exercise, gave birth to, or, at least, sanctioned,
-customs wholly different.<a id='r323' /><a href='#f323' class='c018'><sup>[323]</sup></a> Even while <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>enceinte</i></span>
-his women were required to be abroad, engaged
-in their usual athletic recreations, eating as before and
-drinking as before.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On this occasion, too, as on all others, the deep-rooted
-piety of the nation displayed itself. Prayers
-and sacrifices were habitually offered up by all married
-persons for children, as afterwards by Christian
-ladies to the saints;<a id='r324' /><a href='#f324' class='c018'><sup>[324]</sup></a> and these of course were not
-discontinued, when it appeared by unequivocal signs
-that their desires had begun to receive their fulfilment.
-What the divinities were whom on these occasions
-the Athenian matrons invoked under the name
-of <em>Tritopatores</em>, it seems difficult to determine. Demon
-in Suidas<a id='r325' /><a href='#f325' class='c018'><sup>[325]</sup></a> supposes them to be the winds; but
-Philochoros, the most learned of ancient writers on
-the antiquities of Attica, imagined them to be the
-first three sons of Helios and Gaia. According to
-some they were called Cottos or Coros, Gyges or
-Gyes, and Briareus; according to others Amalcides,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>Protocles, and Protocleon, the watchers and guardians
-of the wind. There are authors, moreover, by whom
-they have been confounded with the Dii Kabyri of
-Samothrace.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>During the period of their confinement women
-were supposed to be under the protection of Eileithyia.
-This goddess, who by Olen the Lycian was considered
-older than Kronos,<a id='r326' /><a href='#f326' class='c018'><sup>[326]</sup></a> had the honour as certain mythical
-legends relate, of being the mother of love,<a id='r327' /><a href='#f327' class='c018'><sup>[327]</sup></a>
-though several ancient authors appear to have confounded
-her with Pepromene or Fate, others with
-Hera, and others again with Artemis or the moon.
-The traditions of the mythology respecting this divinity
-were various. Her worship seems to have made
-its first appearance among the Greeks in the island
-of Delos, whither she is said to have come from the
-country of the Hyperboreans, to lend her aid to Leto,
-when beneath the palm tree, which Zeus caused to
-spring up over her,<a id='r328' /><a href='#f328' class='c018'><sup>[328]</sup></a> she gave birth to the gods of
-night and day. From that time forward she was
-held in veneration by the Delians, who in her honour
-offered up sacrifices, chaunting the hymns of Olen,
-whence we may infer she was a Pelasgian deity.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>From thence her name and worship were diffused
-through the other islands and states of Hellas;
-though the Cretans pretended that she was born at
-Amnisos in the Knossian territory, and was a daughter
-of Hera. The Athenians, who erected a temple
-to Eileithyia appeared to favour both traditions, since
-of the two statues which were found in her fane the
-more ancient was said to have been brought from
-Delos by Erisicthon, while the second, dedicated by
-Phædra, came from Crete. Among the Athenians,
-alone, as an indication of the national modesty, the
-wooden images of this mysterious divinity were significantly
-veiled to the toes.<a id='r329' /><a href='#f329' class='c018'><sup>[329]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>The simple delicacy of remoter ages required
-women to be attended, while becoming mothers, by
-individuals of their own sex. But the contrary practice,
-now general among civilised nations, prevailed
-early at Athens, where the study of medicine, in
-which the accoucheur’s<a id='r330' /><a href='#f330' class='c018'><sup>[330]</sup></a> art is included, was prohibited
-to women and slaves. The consequences bear
-stronger testimony to the refined taste and truly
-feminine feelings of the Athenian ladies than a thousand
-panegyrics. Numbers, rather than submit to the
-immodest injunctions of fashion, declined all aid, and
-perished in their harems: observing which, and moved
-strongly by the desire to preserve the lives of her
-noble-minded countrywomen, a female citizen named
-Agnodice, disguised as a man, acquired a competent
-knowledge of the theory and practice of physic in the
-medical school of Herophilos; she then confided her
-secret to the women who universally determined to
-avail themselves of her services, and in consequence
-her practice became so extensive that the jealousy of
-the other practitioners was violently excited. In revenge,
-therefore, as she still maintained her disguise,
-they preferred an accusation against her in the court
-of Areiopagos as a general seducer. To clear herself
-Agnodice made known her sex, upon which the envious
-Æsculapians prosecuted her under the provisions
-of the old law. In behalf of their benefactress the
-principal gentlewomen appeared in court, and mingling
-the highest testimony in favour of Agnodice
-with many bitter reproaches, they not only obtained
-her acquittal, but the repeal of the obnoxious law,
-and permission for any free woman to become an
-accoucheuse.<a id='r331' /><a href='#f331' class='c018'><sup>[331]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mention is made by ancient writers of several rude
-and hardy tribes, whose women, like those of <a id='corr155.35'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Hindùsstân'>Hindùstân</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_155.35'><ins class='correction' title='Hindùsstân'>Hindùstân</ins></a></span>
-at the present day, stood in very little need of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>the midwife’s aid. Thus Varro,<a id='r332' /><a href='#f332' class='c018'><sup>[332]</sup></a> speaking of the
-rough shepherdesses of Italy, observes that among
-the countrywomen of Illyria, bringing forth children
-was regarded as a slight matter; for that, stepping
-aside from their work in the fields, they would return
-presently with an infant in their arms, having first
-bathed it in some fountain or running stream,
-appearing rather to have found, than given birth to,
-a child. Nor are the manners of these uncultivated
-people at all altered in modern times, as appears from
-an anecdote related to Pietro Vittore,<a id='r333' /><a href='#f333' class='c018'><sup>[333]</sup></a> by Francesco
-Sardonati, professor of Latin at Ragusa, who said that
-he saw a woman go out empty-handed to a forest for
-wood, and return shortly afterwards with a bundle
-on her head and a new-born infant in her arms. At
-Athens, however, where the women were peculiarly
-tender and delicate, the young mother remained within
-doors full six weeks,<a id='r334' /><a href='#f334' class='c018'><sup>[334]</sup></a> when the festival of the fortieth
-day was celebrated, after which she went forth,
-as our ladies do to be churched, to offer up sacrifices
-and return thanks in the temple of Artemis or some
-other divinity.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>New-born infants, when designed to be reared,
-were at Athens and in the rest of Greece bathed in
-cold water: at Sparta in wine, with the view of producing
-convulsions and death should the child be
-feeble, whereas, were its constitution strong and vigorous,
-it would thus they imagined, “acquire a
-greater degree of firmness, and get a temper in proportion,
-as Potter<a id='r335' /><a href='#f335' class='c018'><sup>[335]</sup></a> expresses it, like steel in the
-quenching.” Swaddling-bands<a id='r336' /><a href='#f336' class='c018'><sup>[336]</sup></a> also, in use throughout
-the rest of Greece, were banished from Sparta,
-which led the way therefore to that improved system
-of infant management advocated by Rousseau, Lacépède
-and others,<a id='r337' /><a href='#f337' class='c018'><sup>[337]</sup></a> and now generally adopted in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>this country, though but partially in France. The
-ceremonies and customs of the Greeks were a kind
-of symbolical language, many times containing important
-meaning, and always perhaps indicative of the
-character and familiar feelings of the race. Much
-stress was laid on the thing wherein the infant was
-placed upon its entrance into the world. This, among
-the Athenians, consisted of a wrapper adorned with
-an embroidered figure of the Gorgon’s head, the device
-represented on the shield of Athena, tutelar
-divinity of the state. From the beginning every
-citizen seemed thus to be placed under the immediate
-shelter of that goddess’s ægis which should be
-extended over him in peace and in war. In other
-parts of Greece the child’s first bed, and too frequently
-his last, was a shield.<a id='r338' /><a href='#f338' class='c018'><sup>[338]</sup></a> In accordance with
-this custom we find Alcmena cradling her twin boys
-Heracles and Iphicles in Amphytrion’s buckler; and
-the same practice prevailed, as might have been expected,
-at Sparta, where war constituted to men
-the sole object of life.<a id='r339' /><a href='#f339' class='c018'><sup>[339]</sup></a> Elsewhere other symbols
-spoke to the future sense rather than the present
-of the new citizen. In agricultural countries the
-military symbol was replaced by a winnowing van,
-not unfrequently of gold or other costly materials;<a id='r340' /><a href='#f340' class='c018'><sup>[340]</sup></a>
-though it may be doubted whether the word so
-rendered meant not rather a cradle in the form of
-that rustic implement.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In another custom, long on these occasions observed,
-we discern traces of that serpent-worship
-which at different epochs diffused itself so widely
-over the world. Among opulent and noble families
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>at Athens new-born children were laid on golden
-amulets in the form of dragons by which they were
-supposed to commemorate Athena’s delivery of Erichthonios
-to the care of two guardians of that description.<a id='r341' /><a href='#f341' class='c018'><sup>[341]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But under certain circumstances, instead of the
-joy and gladness by which the noble and the great
-are greeted on their entrance into the world, the
-birth of a child was, as in Thrace,<a id='r342' /><a href='#f342' class='c018'><sup>[342]</sup></a> an event fraught
-with sorrow and misery. It announced in fact the
-approach of an enemy, of one who, if he survived,
-must snatch from them a portion of what already
-would scarcely sustain life. Together with the announcement
-of his birth, therefore, came the awful
-consciousness that war must be made on him—that
-he must in short be cast forth, a scape-goat for the
-sins of society, not for his own—that his parents
-who should have cherished him, whose best solace
-he should have been, must steel their hearts and
-close fast their ears against the voice of nature, and
-become his executioners. The poor-laws of Greece,
-or rather their substitutes for poor-laws, were exceedingly
-imperfect, and foundling hospitals had not
-been introduced. They got rid of their surplus population,
-as many nations still do, by murder; for
-infanticide, under various forms, has more or less
-prevailed in all civilised countries, if the term civilised
-can properly be applied to nations among whom
-crimes so demoralising are habitually perpetrated.
-No doubt the sullen reluctance of a father to imbrue
-his hands in the blood of his child produced
-daily many a heart-rending scene; no doubt the sting
-of want must have been keenly felt before the habit
-of slaughter was confirmed;—but the fashion once
-set, children were thrown into an earthen pot and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>exposed in mountainous and desert places to perish of
-cold, or fall a prey to carnivorous birds<a id='r343' /><a href='#f343' class='c018'><sup>[343]</sup></a> or wolves,
-as coolly as they are murdered by their young and
-frail mothers in our own Christian land.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Under all circumstances, however, the parents thus
-criminal are objects of pity. Misery is blind, and crime
-is blind. But what shall we say to those priests of humanity,
-those sacred and reverend interpreters of nature,—the
-philosophers who come forward to sanction
-and justify the practice? It would be criminal to
-disguise the fact, that both Plato and Aristotle, the
-great representatives of the wisdom of the Pagan
-world,<a id='r344' /><a href='#f344' class='c018'><sup>[344]</sup></a> conceived infanticide, under certain circumstances,
-to be allowable. Near, therefore, as the former
-stood to the truths of Christianity, there was still
-a cloud between him and them. What he saw, he saw
-through a glass darkly. Christ had not then stamped
-the seal of divinity upon human nature, had not shed
-abroad that light by which alone we discover the true
-features of crime, no less than the true features of holiness.
-Philosophy is beautiful; but with the beauty
-of one involuntarily polluted. Religion alone, breathing
-of heaven, radiant with light, reflected on its whole
-form from the face of God, is lovely altogether without
-spot or blemish. The Greeks wanting this guide
-went astray. They looked at the question of population
-as coarse utilitarians,—all but the gross, unintellectual
-Thebans, who, relying on the vast fertility of their
-soil, or led by some better instinct, on this point soared
-high above their cultivated neighbours, an example of
-how the foolish things of this world, even in the unregenerate
-state of nature, may sometimes confound the
-wise. Among the Tyrrhenians,<a id='r345' /><a href='#f345' class='c018'><sup>[345]</sup></a> likewise, a people of
-Pelasgian origin, infanticide was unknown, probably
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>because among them it was accounted no disgrace to
-be the parents of illegitimate offspring; indeed the
-sense of shame could not, in any case, be very keen
-among a people whose female slaves served naked at
-table, and where even the ladies appeared at public
-entertainments in the same state, drinking bumpers
-and joining freely in the conversation of the men.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the modern world to take the life of an infant is
-a capital offence, yet we see with how little fear or
-ceremony the law is set at nought. It will, therefore,
-readily be supposed that in those countries of antiquity
-where neither law nor public opinion opposed
-the practice, but in some cases winked at, in
-others enjoined it, the number of child-murders must
-have been enormous. Sparta very naturally took the
-lead in this guilty course.<a id='r346' /><a href='#f346' class='c018'><sup>[346]</sup></a> Here it was not permitted
-to private individuals to make away with their offspring
-stealthily, and with those marks of shame and
-compunction inseparable from individual guilt. The
-state monopolized the right to Herodise, and by sharing
-the criminality among great numbers appeared to
-silence the objections of conscience. Fathers were
-compelled by law to bring their new-born infants to
-certain officers, old, grave men,<a id='r347' /><a href='#f347' class='c018'><sup>[347]</sup></a> who held their sittings
-in the Lesche of their tribe, and after due deliberation
-determined on the claim of each child to live
-or die. By what rules they decided, rude and ignorant
-of physiology as they were, it would now be impossible
-positively to affirm. Little skill no doubt had
-they in detecting the latent seeds of robustness and
-physical energy, still less those of splendid mental endowments
-lurking in the crimson countenance of helpless
-infancy. They who might have proved the wise
-and good of their generation no doubt often went
-instead of the mere animal. However, giving
-orders that the strong and apparently healthy should
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>be nursed, the weakly and delicate, often the noblest
-men, and the bravest soldiers, as witness Lucius Sulla,
-were condemned to be cast like so many puppy dogs
-into the Apothetæ, a deep cavern at the foot of Mount
-Taygetos. This den of death relieved the Spartans
-from the necessity of erecting workhouses or enacting
-poor-laws. The surplus population went into that pit.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To a certain extent, and in a mitigated form, the
-same practice prevailed at Athens. Here, however, it
-was more a matter of custom than of law, and in this
-respect differed materially<a id='r348' /><a href='#f348' class='c018'><sup>[348]</sup></a> from the practice of Sparta,
-that it was left entirely to the father to determine the
-fate of his children. Accordingly, the more cold-blooded
-had recourse to murder, while the less atrocious
-exposed them in jars in desert places to
-perish, or in the thronged and crowded quarters of
-the city in the hope that they might excite in others
-that compassion, which he, their father, denied them.<a id='r349' /><a href='#f349' class='c018'><sup>[349]</sup></a>
-And humane individuals were often found who, like
-our Squire Allworthy, would sympathise with these
-deserted creatures.<a id='r350' /><a href='#f350' class='c018'><sup>[350]</sup></a> Numerous examples occur in the
-comic poets. In these cases poverty was no doubt
-the motive, particularly when boys were exposed;
-but even wealthy persons, reasoning like the Rajpoots
-of northern India, would prefer exposing their daughters,
-to the care and expense of educating them to an
-uncertain destiny. On these occasions the child was
-dressed and swaddled more or less carefully, placed in
-a large earthen vessel called a chytra,<a id='r351' /><a href='#f351' class='c018'><sup>[351]</sup></a>—the same in
-which soup was made, and which ought, therefore, to
-have awakened humane associations,—and laid at
-the mouth of some cave without the walls, or in
-such situations as I have above described. To this
-custom allusion is made in the anecdote of a foundling,
-who amusing himself by rolling a chytra before
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>him with his foot, “What! exclaimed some one
-desirous of reminding him of his origin, have you
-the impiety to kick your mother in the belly?”<a id='r352' /><a href='#f352' class='c018'><sup>[352]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Sometimes when the object was rather to escape
-shame than to shun the expense of education, rings,
-jewels, or other valuable tokens were suspended
-about the child, or put along with it into the chytra.<a id='r353' /><a href='#f353' class='c018'><sup>[353]</sup></a>
-And in the comic writers these usually assist in
-bringing about a discovery. If they fell into the
-hands of the poor the costly marks of noble birth,
-always held in honour by the ignorant and needy,
-would perhaps tempt them to preserve and cherish
-the off-cast, as in the case of Shakespeare’s Perdita,
-or in the event of death, would defray the
-expenses of their funerals. Sometimes superstition
-operated on their minds, urging them into a mock
-show of sharing their possessions with the little
-wretches they abandoned.<a id='r354' /><a href='#f354' class='c018'><sup>[354]</sup></a> Thus Sostrata, wife of
-Chremes, in the Self-tormentor delivered along with
-her little daughter to the person who was to expose
-it, a ring from her own finger to be left with the
-child, that should it die it might not be wholly deprived
-of all share of their property. Such also is
-the behaviour of Creusa in Euripides; for Hermes,
-whom the poet introduces unfolding the argument
-of the drama, relates that when the young princess
-laid her new-born son to perish in the cavern, where
-he had been conceived, she took off her costly ornaments
-and with them decked her devoted boy.<a id='r355' /><a href='#f355' class='c018'><sup>[355]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>From another part of the same play it may be inferred
-that children were often exposed on the steps of
-Apollo’s temple at Delphi, and nurtured by the
-Pythoness.<a id='r356' /><a href='#f356' class='c018'><sup>[356]</sup></a> Indeed the priestess, on discovering Ion,
-who had been brought thither by Hermes from Attica,
-concludes at once that some unfortunate Delphian
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>girl<a id='r357' /><a href='#f357' class='c018'><sup>[357]</sup></a> is his mother, and adopts him under that impression.
-From the sequel it would appear that such children
-were the slaves of the temple, and under the
-immediate protection of the god.<a id='r358' /><a href='#f358' class='c018'><sup>[358]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the plain of Eleutheræ, near the temple of
-Dionysos, is a cavern, and close beside it a fountain.
-Here, according to the poets, Antiope brought forth
-Zethos and Amphion, twin sons of Zeus, whom,
-to conceal her shame, she abandoned where they
-were born. The infants were immediately afterwards
-discovered by a shepherd, who, having bathed
-them in the neighbouring spring, took them to his
-cot, where they were brought up as his own children.<a id='r359' /><a href='#f359' class='c018'><sup>[359]</sup></a>
-The catastrophe of many an ancient play
-was brought about by a discovery of the real characters
-of persons who had been exposed in infancy.
-Thus Œdipus, whose story is too well known to need
-repetition, was abandoned on Mount Cithæron. The
-daughters of Phineus,<a id='r360' /><a href='#f360' class='c018'><sup>[360]</sup></a> of whom nothing else has come
-down to us, had been cast forth in infancy and preserved,
-and were afterwards brought to be put to
-death on the same spot; by alluding to which their
-lives were saved. The sons,<a id='r361' /><a href='#f361' class='c018'><sup>[361]</sup></a> likewise, of Tyro, Peleus
-and Neleus, were deserted by their mother, who placed
-them in a little bark or chest on the banks of the
-Enipeus, a circumstance which served afterwards to
-reveal the parentage of the twins. The story of Romulus
-and Remus, who were thus abandoned by their
-vestal mother, is familiar to every reader; and from
-the example of Moses recorded in the sacred volume,
-we may infer that the exposing of children was common
-in remoter ages in Egypt. Pindar,<a id='r362' /><a href='#f362' class='c018'><sup>[362]</sup></a> in relating
-the birth of the prophet Iamos, presents us with a
-poetical picture of one of these unhappy transactions.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>Evadne, daughter of Poseidon by the river-nymph
-Pitana, dwelling at the court of Æpytos a king of
-Arcadia, going forth, like the daughters of the Patriarchs,
-to draw water from a fountain, is overtaken
-by her birth-pangs.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Her crimsoned girdle down was flung,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The silver ewer beside her laid,</div>
- <div class='line'>Amid a tangled thicket, hung</div>
- <div class='line in2'>With canopy of brownest shade;</div>
- <div class='line'>When forth the glorious babe she brought,</div>
- <div class='line'>His soul instinct with heavenly thought.</div>
- <div class='line'>Sent by the golden-tressed god,</div>
- <div class='line'>Near her the Fates indulgent stood,</div>
- <div class='line'>With Eileithyia mild.</div>
- <div class='line'>One short sweet pang released the child,</div>
- <div class='line'>And Iamos sprang forth to light.</div>
- <div class='line'>A wail she uttered; left him then,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Where on the ground he lay;</div>
- <div class='line'>When straight two dragons came,</div>
- <div class='line'>With eyes of azure flame,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>By will divine awaked out of their den;</div>
- <div class='line'>And with the bees’ unharmful venom they</div>
- <div class='line'>Fed him, and nursled through the night and day.</div>
- <div class='line'>The king meanwhile had come</div>
- <div class='line'>From stony Pytho driving, and at home</div>
- <div class='line'>Did of them all after the boy inquire</div>
- <div class='line'>Born of Evadne; for, he said, the sire</div>
- <div class='line'>Was Phœbos, and that he</div>
- <div class='line'>Should of earth’s prophets wisest be,</div>
- <div class='line'>And that his generation should not fail.</div>
- <div class='line'>Not to have seen or heard him they avouched,</div>
- <div class='line'>Now five days born. But he, on rushes couched,</div>
- <div class='line'>Was covered up in that wide brambly maze;</div>
- <div class='line in2'>His delicate body met</div>
- <div class='line'>With yellow and empurpled rays</div>
- <div class='line in2'>From many a violet:</div>
- <div class='line'>And hence his mother bade him claim</div>
- <div class='line'>For ever this undying name.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Generally, it would appear, illegitimate children were
-exposed in the neighbourhood of the Gymnasium, in
-the Cynosarges, because, as suggested by Suidas, Heracles,
-who was himself a bastard, had a temple there.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On the subject of infanticide the Thebans,<a id='r363' /><a href='#f363' class='c018'><sup>[363]</sup></a> as I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>have said, entertained juster sentiments than the rest
-of their countrymen. By their institutions it was
-made a capital crime; but because severe laws would
-not furnish the indigent with the means of supporting
-the children they were forbidden to kill, they by another
-enactment provided for their maintenance. If a
-poor man found himself unable to support an addition
-to his family, he was commanded to bear his children
-immediately from the birth, wrapped in swaddling-clothes,
-to the magistrates, who disposed of them for
-a small sum to wealthy people in want of children or
-servants: for, according to the Theban laws, they who
-undertook the charge of foundlings, if they may be so
-called, were entitled to their services in return for
-their nursing and education.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Connected with infanticide is another subject
-equally important, but of very difficult treatment;
-that is practices to destroy the infant before the
-birth.<a id='r364' /><a href='#f364' class='c018'><sup>[364]</sup></a> In modern nations all such offences are
-theoretically visited with very severe punishment by
-the law, and public opinion so strongly condemns
-them that no one solicitous of upholding a respectable
-character in society will dare to be their apologist.
-It was otherwise in antiquity. The greatest
-dread of a superabundant population was in many
-states felt, and led to customs and acts of a very
-nefarious nature; for some classes of which, if not
-for all, writers of highest eminence are found to
-plead. Thus Pliny,<a id='r365' /><a href='#f365' class='c018'><sup>[365]</sup></a> commonly a great declaimer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>in behalf of virtue, admits that some artificial limit
-should be put to female productiveness; and Aristotle,
-despite his far nobler and more generous ethics, had
-on this point no loftier views. The regulations also
-of the Cretan Minos—but let them remain in the
-obscurity which encompasses his entire code.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among the Romans several modern writers appear
-to suppose the existence of more humane feelings, for
-which it would certainly have been difficult to account.
-An ancient law attributed to Romulus has
-misled them. By this it was enacted that no male
-child should be exposed; and that of daughters the
-first should be permitted to live, while the others
-having been brought up till they were three years
-old, might then if judged expedient be destroyed.<a id='r366' /><a href='#f366' class='c018'><sup>[366]</sup></a>
-The legislator, it is argued, knew human nature too
-well to fear that parents who had preserved their children
-three years would after that take away their
-lives. But infants exceedingly mutilated or deformed
-might be killed at once, having first been shown to
-five neighbours, and these neighbours, like the overseers
-of murder at Lacedæmon, were probably lax in
-interpreting the law, which, acknowledging the principle,
-would easily tolerate variations in the practice.<a id='r367' /><a href='#f367' class='c018'><sup>[367]</sup></a>
-Be this, however, as it may, child-murder and child
-dropping were in imperial times of ordinary occurrence
-at Rome. There was in the Herb-market a
-pillar called the “Milky column,”<a id='r368' /><a href='#f368' class='c018'><sup>[368]</sup></a> whither foundlings
-were brought to be suckled by public nurses, or to be
-fed with milk—for the passage in Festus may be both
-ways interpreted, and their numbers would seem to
-have been considerable. The Christian writers constantly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>object the practice of infanticide to the Romans.
-“You cast forth your sons,” says Tertullian,<a id='r369' /><a href='#f369' class='c018'><sup>[369]</sup></a>
-“to be picked up and nourished by the first woman
-that passes.” And the poor, as Ambrose remarks,
-would desert and expose their little ones, and if
-caught deny them to be theirs.<a id='r370' /><a href='#f370' class='c018'><sup>[370]</sup></a> Others adopted
-more decisive measures, and instead of exposing
-strangled them.<a id='r371' /><a href='#f371' class='c018'><sup>[371]</sup></a> Probably, moreover, it was the
-atrocious device of legislators to get rid of their
-superabundant population that gave rise to the rite
-of child-sacrificing known to have prevailed among
-the Phœnicians, who passed their children through
-fire to Moloch; and among their descendants the
-Carthaginians,<a id='r372' /><a href='#f372' class='c018'><sup>[372]</sup></a> who offered up infants to their gods,
-as at the present day our own idolatrous subjects in
-the East cast forth their first-born infants on islands
-at the mouth of the Ganges, to be devoured by the
-alligators. In China Christianity has performed for
-infancy the same humane duty as in ancient Rome,
-as many of the converts made by the Jesuits consisted
-of foundlings whom they had picked up when
-cast forth by their parents to perish in the streets.</p>
-
-<hr class='c025' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f318'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r318'>318</a>. Dion Chrysostom tells a curious
-story respecting a blunder
-of the Athenians on this subject.
-Apollo once commanding them, if
-they desired to become good citizens,
-to put whatever was most
-beautiful in the ears of their sons,
-they bored one of the lobes, and
-inserted a gold earring, not comprehending
-the meaning of the
-God. But this ornament would
-better have suited their daughters
-or the sons of Lydians or Phrygians;
-but for the offspring of
-Greeks, nothing could have been
-intended by the God but education
-and reason, the possessors of
-which would probably become
-good men, and the preservers of
-their country.—Orat. xxxii. t. i.
-p. 653. sqq.—The popular maxim
-that knowledge is power may be
-traced to Plato.—De Rep. v. t. vi.
-p. 268.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f319'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r319'>319</a>. Montagne relates, in his Travels
-(t. iii. p. 51), an instance of
-how the mind may be cultivated,
-particularly in poetry, by persons
-ignorant of the art of reading and
-writing. His Lucchese improvisatrice
-may be regarded as a
-match for the ancient rhapsodists.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f320'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r320'>320</a>. Cf. Plat. De Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f321'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r321'>321</a>. Notwithstanding that Plato
-regards knowledge as the medicine
-of the soul.—Crit. t. vii. p.
-145.—Cf. t. viii. p. 2. seq.—Aristot.
-Ethic. vi. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f322'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r322'>322</a>. Plat. de Legg. l. vii. t. viii.
-pp. 4. et 11.—During the pregnancy
-of women great care was
-taken not to bring into the house
-the wood of the ostrya or carpinus
-ostrys, the appearance of
-which was ominous of difficult
-births, or even of sudden death.
-Theoph. Hist. Plant. iii. 10. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f323'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r323'>323</a>. Xenoph. de Rep. Laced. i. 3.
-Perizon. ad Ælian. Var. Hist. x.
-13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f324'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r324'>324</a>. Theodoret. iv. 921.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f325'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r325'>325</a>. <i>v.</i> Τριτοπ. t. ii. p. 947. b. seq.
-Cf. Siebel. ad Frag. Philoch. p.
-11. Meurs. Græc. Fer. p. 264.
-Lect. Att. iii. 1. Vales. in
-Harpoc. p. 223. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f326'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r326'>326</a>. Paus. viii. 21. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f327'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r327'>327</a>. Paus. ix. 27. 2. Cf. Cic. de
-Nat. Deor. iii. 23.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f328'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r328'>328</a>. Callim. ii. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f329'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r329'>329</a>. Paus. i. 18. 5. Cf. Keightley,
-Mythol. p. 193. In Arcadia,
-also, this goddess was so closely
-draped that nothing was visible
-but the countenance, fingers, and
-toes.—Paus. vii. 23. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f330'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r330'>330</a>. The duties of an accoucheuse
-are briefly enumerated by Max.
-Tyr. Dissert. xxviii. p. 333. Cf.
-Pignor. de Serv. 184.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f331'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r331'>331</a>. Hygin. Fab. 274.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f332'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r332'>332</a>. De Re Rust. ii. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f333'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r333'>333</a>. Var. Lect. xxxiv. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f334'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r334'>334</a>. Meurs. Græc. Fer. p. 260.
-sqq. Censor. de Die Natali. c. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f335'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r335'>335</a>. Antiq. ii. 320.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f336'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r336'>336</a>. Coray, ad Hippoc. de Aër. et
-Loc. ii. 309.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f337'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r337'>337</a>. Even so early as the age of
-Montaigne the necessity of some
-change was felt. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Les liaisons et
-emmaillottements des enfans ne
-sont non plus necessaires.”</span> He
-then alludes to the practice of the
-Spartan nurses.—Essais, ii. 12.
-However, in certain habits of
-body, swaddling is not merely
-useful, but necessary: as Hippocrates
-remarks in his account of
-the Scythians (de Aër. et Loc.
-§ 101), and as his able commentator,
-Coray, confirms by example.
-<i>ubi sup.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f338'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r338'>338</a>. Theoc. Eidyll. xxiv. 4. ἢ
-τὰν ἢ ἐπὶ τὰς. Plut. Lacæn.
-Apophtheg. t. ii. p. 187.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f339'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r339'>339</a>. Nonn. Dionys. xli. 168. seq.
-Sch. Thucyd. ii. 39.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f340'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r340'>340</a>. Callim. Hymn. in Jov. 48.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f341'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r341'>341</a>. Eurip. Ion. 15. sqq.—There
-were certain amulets, too, called
-περίαπτα which superstitious mothers
-hung about the necks of
-their children to defend them
-from fascination and the evil eye.
-Pollux, iv. 182. Vict. in Arist.
-Ethic. Nicom. p. 42.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f342'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r342'>342</a>. Sext. Empir. p. 186.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f343'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r343'>343</a>. Vict. (Var. Lect. ii. 3) has an
-useful chapter on the exposing of
-infants, in which he has collected
-several valuable testimonies.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f344'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r344'>344</a>. Plato, de Rep. v. § 9. p. 359.
-Stallb. Aristot. Pol. vii. 16. Cf.
-Lips. Epist. ad Belg. Cent. 1. c.
-85. with the work of Gerard Noodt,
-entitled “Julius Paulus,” in opp.
-Lugd. Bat. 1726. pp. 567, seq.
-591. seq. Elmenhorst. ad Minuc.
-Felic. Octav. 289. ed. Ouzel.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f345'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r345'>345</a>. Athen. xii. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f346'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r346'>346</a>. Compare the coolness of Hase.
-p. 190. Müller. ii. 313. with
-Lamb. Bos. p. 212. seq. and the
-humane remarks of Ubbo Emmius
-iii. 83. Potter, too (ii. 326. sqq.),
-seems to disapprove of the practice.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f347'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r347'>347</a>. Plut. Lycurg. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f348'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r348'>348</a>. Petit is of the contrary opinion,
-but his authorities by no
-means bear him out.—Legg. Att.
-lib. ii. tit. 4. p. 144.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f349'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r349'>349</a>. Paulus, ap. Petit. ubi sup.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f350'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r350'>350</a>. On the ceremony of adoption,
-see Potter ii. 335. Compare Lady
-Montague’s Works, iii. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f351'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r351'>351</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 289, or
-sometimes ὄστρακον, Ran. 1221.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f352'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r352'>352</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Thesmoph.
-509.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f353'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r353'>353</a>. Vict. Var. Lect. ii. 3. Aristot.
-Poet. xvi.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f354'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r354'>354</a>. Terent. Heautontim. iv. i.
-36 seq. Victor. Var. Lect. ii. 3.
-Cf. Ter. Hecyr. iii. 3. 31. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f355'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r355'>355</a>. Eurip. Ion, 26. seq. Cf. 15.
-sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f356'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r356'>356</a>. Conf. Hypoth. Ion.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f357'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r357'>357</a>. Δελφίδων τλαίη κόρη. κ. τ. λ.
-Ion, 44. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f358'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r358'>358</a>. Ion, 53. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f359'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r359'>359</a>. Paus. ii. 6. 4.—Cf. Casaub.
-Diatrib. in Dion. Chrysost. ii.
-469.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f360'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r360'>360</a>. Aristot. Poet. xvi. 8. cum not.
-Herm. p. 156.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f361'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r361'>361</a>. Arist. Poet. xvi. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f362'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r362'>362</a>. Olymp. vi. 39. sqq. Diss.
-I give the passage as it is elegantly
-translated by Mr. Cary.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f363'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r363'>363</a>. Ælian, Var. Hist. ii. 7.—Cf. Phil. Jud. de Legg. Special. p. 543.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f364'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r364'>364</a>. See in Pollux, ii. 7. and iv.
-208. a whole vocabulary of terms
-connected with this practice. In
-his note on the former passage,
-p. 297. Iungermann refers to
-the Commentaries of Camerarius,
-c. 32. Cf. Comm. in Poll. p.
-507. seq. p. 541. et 891. seq.
-Tim. Lex. Plat. v. ἐξαμβλοῦν.
-cum. not. Ruhnken. p. 62. ed.
-Lond. Plat. Theæt. t. iii. p. 190.
-Max. Tyr. xvi. p. 179. Jacob
-Gensius (<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Victimæ Humanæ</span>, pt.
-ii. p. 247. seq.), enters fully into
-the question of abortion, which at
-Rome, according to Justin, was
-procured to preserve the shape.
-The same practice prevails in
-Formosa.—Richteren, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Voyage de
-la Compagnie des Indes</span>, v. p.
-70. Compare Lactant. v. p. 278.
-Phocyl. v. 172. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f365'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r365'>365</a>. Hist. Nat. xxxix. 27. t. viii.
-p. 404. Franz. Impie satis, as
-Kühn observes in his note on
-Ælian, Var. Hist. ii. 7. Arist.
-Pol. vii. 15. 253. Gœttl. Cf.
-Foës. Œcon. Hippoc. vv. Ἀμβλῶσαι
-and ἀποφθορά.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f366'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r366'>366</a>. Dion. Hal. Ant. Rom. i. 81;
-ii. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f367'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r367'>367</a>. Seneca, de Irâ, l. i. Apuleius
-Metam. x. where a husband
-gives command for the destruction
-of his daughter immediately
-on her birth.—Ap. Lips. Epist.
-ad Belgas, Cent. i. p. 818. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f368'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r368'>368</a>. Fest. v. Lactaria Columna.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f369'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r369'>369</a>. Apolog. c. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f370'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r370'>370</a>. Hexæm. l. v. c. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f371'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r371'>371</a>. Arnob. cont. Gent. viii. Lactant.
-Instit. vi. 20. ap. Lips.
-Epist. ad Belg. 819.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f372'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r372'>372</a>. Vid. Festus, v. Puelli.—In
-Syria children were sacrificed to
-the goddess, in like manner with
-other victims, by being tied up in
-a sack and then flung down from
-the lofty propylæa of her temple,
-their parents, in the mean while,
-overwhelming them with contumely,
-and protesting they were
-not children, but oxen.—Lucian.
-De Syriâ Deâ, § 58.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c025' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>
- <h3 class='c024'>CHAPTER II. <br />BIRTH-FEAST—NAMING THE CHILD.—NURSERY—NURSERY <br /> TALES—SPARTAN FESTIVAL.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>To quit, however, this melancholy topic: while the
-poor, as we have seen, were driven by despair to imbrue
-their hands in the blood of their offspring, their
-more wealthy neighbours celebrated the birth of a
-child<a id='r373' /><a href='#f373' class='c018'><sup>[373]</sup></a> with a succession of banquets and rejoicings.
-Of these, the first was held on the fifth day from the
-birth, when took place the ceremony called Amphidromia,
-confounded by some ancient authors with the
-festival of the tenth day.<a id='r374' /><a href='#f374' class='c018'><sup>[374]</sup></a> On this occasion the
-accoucheuse or the nurse, to whose care the child
-was now definitively consigned,<a id='r375' /><a href='#f375' class='c018'><sup>[375]</sup></a> having purified her
-hands with water,<a id='r376' /><a href='#f376' class='c018'><sup>[376]</sup></a> ran naked<a id='r377' /><a href='#f377' class='c018'><sup>[377]</sup></a> with the infant in
-her arms, and accompanied by all the other females
-of the family, in the same state, round the hearth,<a id='r378' /><a href='#f378' class='c018'><sup>[378]</sup></a>
-which was regarded as the altar of Hestia, the Vesta
-of the Romans. By this ceremony the child was
-initiated in the rites of religion and placed under
-the protection of the fire goddess, probably with the
-same view that infants are baptized among us.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Meanwhile the passer-by was informed that a fifth-day
-feast was celebrating within, by symbols suspended
-on the street-door, which, in case of a boy, consisted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>in an olive crown; and of a lock of wool, alluding to
-her future occupations, when it was a girl.<a id='r379' /><a href='#f379' class='c018'><sup>[379]</sup></a> Athenæus,
-apropos of cabbage, which was eaten on this
-occasion, as well as by ladies “in the straw,”<a id='r380' /><a href='#f380' class='c018'><sup>[380]</sup></a> as
-conducing to create milk, quotes a comic description
-of the Amphidromia from a drama of Ephippos,
-which proves they were well acquainted with the
-arts of joviality.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in24'>“How is it</div>
- <div class='line'>No wreathed garland decks the festive door,</div>
- <div class='line'>No savoury odour creeps into the nostrils</div>
- <div class='line'>Since ’tis a birth-feast? Custom, sooth, requires</div>
- <div class='line'>Slices of rich cheese from the Chersonese,</div>
- <div class='line'>Toasted and hissing; cabbage too in oil,</div>
- <div class='line'>Fried brown and crisp, with smothered breast of lamb.</div>
- <div class='line'>Chaffinches, turtle-doves, and good fat thrushes</div>
- <div class='line'>Should now be feathered; rows of merry guests</div>
- <div class='line'>Pick clean the bones of cuttle-fish together,</div>
- <div class='line'>Gnaw the delicious feet of polypi,</div>
- <div class='line'>And drink large draughts of scarcely mingled wine.<a id='r381' /><a href='#f381' class='c018'><sup>[381]</sup></a>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>A sacrifice<a id='r382' /><a href='#f382' class='c018'><sup>[382]</sup></a> was likewise this day offered up for the
-life of the child, probably to the god Amphidromos,
-first mentioned, and therefore supposed to have been
-invented by Æschylus.<a id='r383' /><a href='#f383' class='c018'><sup>[383]</sup></a> It has moreover been imagined
-that the name was now imposed, and gifts were
-presented by the friends and household slaves.<a id='r384' /><a href='#f384' class='c018'><sup>[384]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But it was on the seventh day that the child generally
-received its name,<a id='r385' /><a href='#f385' class='c018'><sup>[385]</sup></a> amid the festivities of another
-banquet; though sometimes this was deferred till the
-tenth.<a id='r386' /><a href='#f386' class='c018'><sup>[386]</sup></a> The reason is supplied by Aristotle.<a id='r387' /><a href='#f387' class='c018'><sup>[387]</sup></a> They
-delayed the naming thus long, he says, because most
-children that perish in extreme infancy die before the
-seventh day, which being passed they considered their
-lives more secure. The eighth day was chosen by
-other persons for bestowing the name, and, this considered
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>the natal day, was solemnized annually as
-the anniversary of its birth, on which occasion it was
-customary for the friends of the family to assemble
-together, and present gifts to the child, consisting
-sometimes of the polypi and cuttle-fish<a id='r388' /><a href='#f388' class='c018'><sup>[388]</sup></a> to be eaten
-at the feast. However the tenth day<a id='r389' /><a href='#f389' class='c018'><sup>[389]</sup></a> appears to have
-been very commonly observed. Thus Euripides:<a id='r390' /><a href='#f390' class='c018'><sup>[390]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Say, who delighting in a mother’s claim</div>
- <div class='line'>Mid tenth-day feasts bestowed the ancestral name?”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Aristophanes, too, on the occasion of naming his
-Bird-city, which a hungry poet pretends to have long
-ago celebrated, introduces Peisthetæros saying,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“What! have I not but now the sacrifice</div>
- <div class='line'>Of the tenth day completed and bestowed</div>
- <div class='line'>A name as on a child?”<a id='r391' /><a href='#f391' class='c018'><sup>[391]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Connected with this custom, there is a very good
-anecdote in Polyænos, from which Meursius<a id='r392' /><a href='#f392' class='c018'><sup>[392]</sup></a> infers
-that there existed among the Greeks something like
-the office of sponsor. Jason, tyrant of Pheræ, most of
-whose stratagems were played off against members of
-his own family, had a brother named Meriones, extremely
-opulent, but to the last degree close-fisted,
-particularly towards him. When at length a son was
-born to Jason, he invited to the Nominalia many
-principal nobles of Thessaly, and among others his
-brother Meriones, who was to preside over the ceremonies.
-In these he was probably occupied the
-whole day, during which, under pretence, apparently,
-of providing some choice game for his guests, the
-tyrant went out for a few hours with his dogs and
-usual followers. His real object, however, soon appeared.
-Making direct for Pagasæ, where his brother’s
-castle stood, he stormed the place, and seizing
-on Meriones’ treasures, to the amount of twenty
-talents, returned in all speed to the banquet. Here,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>by way of showing his fraternal consideration, he delegated
-to his brother the honour of pouring forth
-the libations, and bestowing the name, which was the
-father’s prerogative. But Meriones receiving from
-one of the tyrant’s attendants a hint of what had
-taken place, called the boy “Porthaon,” or the “Plunderer.”<a id='r393' /><a href='#f393' class='c018'><sup>[393]</sup></a>
-At Athens the feast and sacrifice took place
-at night, with much pomp, and all the glee which such
-an occasion was calculated to inspire.<a id='r394' /><a href='#f394' class='c018'><sup>[394]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On the bestowing of the name Potter’s information
-is particularly full. He is probably right, too, in his
-conjecture, that in most countries the principal object
-of calling together so great a number of friends to
-witness this ceremony was to prevent such controversies
-as might arise when the child came out into
-the business of the world. But at Athens the Act of
-Registration<a id='r395' /><a href='#f395' class='c018'><sup>[395]</sup></a> rendered such witnesses scarcely necessary.
-The right of imposing the name belonged, as
-hinted above, to the father, who likewise appears to
-have possessed the power afterwards to alter it if he
-thought proper. They were compelled to follow no
-exact precedent; but the general rule resembled one
-apparently observed by nature, which, neglecting the
-likeness in the first generation, sometimes reproduces
-it with extraordinary fidelity in the second. Thus, the
-grandson inheriting often the features, inherited also
-very generally the name of his grandfather,<a id='r396' /><a href='#f396' class='c018'><sup>[396]</sup></a> and precisely
-the same rule applied to women; the granddaughter
-nearly always receiving her grandmother’s
-name.<a id='r397' /><a href='#f397' class='c018'><sup>[397]</sup></a> Thus, Andocides, son of Leagoras, bore the
-name of his grandfather; the father and son of
-Miltiades were named Cimon; the father and son of
-Hipponicos, Cleinias.<a id='r398' /><a href='#f398' class='c018'><sup>[398]</sup></a> The orator Lysias formed an
-exception to this rule, his grandfather’s name having
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>been Lysanias.<a id='r399' /><a href='#f399' class='c018'><sup>[399]</sup></a> In short, though there existed no law
-upon the subject, yet ancient and nearly invariable
-custom operated with the force of law.<a id='r400' /><a href='#f400' class='c018'><sup>[400]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The names of children were often in remote antiquity
-derived from some circumstance attending
-their birth, or in the history of their parents. Sometimes,
-too, their own deeds, as in the case of modern
-titles, procured them a name; or perhaps some misfortune
-which befell them. Thus, Marpissa, in Homer,
-being borne away<a id='r401' /><a href='#f401' class='c018'><sup>[401]</sup></a> by Apollo, obtained the name of
-Halcyone, because her mother, like the Halcyon, was
-inconsolable for the loss of her offspring.<a id='r402' /><a href='#f402' class='c018'><sup>[402]</sup></a> Scamandrios,
-son of Hector, was denominated Astyanax, because his
-father was τοῦ ἄστεος ἄναξ, “the defender of the city;”<a id='r403' /><a href='#f403' class='c018'><sup>[403]</sup></a>
-and Odysseus, metamorphosed by the Romans into
-Ulysses, is supposed to have been so called τοῦ ἄστεος ἄναξ
-διὰ τὸ ὀδυσσέσθαι τοῦ Αὐτολυκου, from the anger of Autolychos.<a id='r404' /><a href='#f404' class='c018'><sup>[404]</sup></a>
-Again, the son of Achilles, at first called Pyrrhos, as
-our second William, Rufus, from the colour of his hair,
-afterwards obtained the name of Neoptolemos, “the
-youthful warrior,” from his engaging at a very early
-age in the siege of Troy. It came, in aftertimes, to
-be considered indecorous for persons of humble condition
-to assume the names of heroic families. Thus,
-the low flatterer Callicrates, at the court of Ptolemy
-the Third, was thought to be audacious because he
-bestowed upon his son and daughter the names of
-Telegonos and Anticleia, and wore the effigy of Odysseus
-in his ring, which appeared to be claiming kindred
-with that illustrious chief. In fact, to prevent the profanation
-of revered names, the law itself forbade them
-to be adopted by slaves or females of bad character,<a id='r405' /><a href='#f405' class='c018'><sup>[405]</sup></a>
-though, in defiance of its enactments, we find there
-were hetairæ, who derived their appellation from the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>sacred games of Greece, Nemeas, Isthmias, and Pythionica.<a id='r406' /><a href='#f406' class='c018'><sup>[406]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But of this enough: we now proceed to the management
-and education of children, beginning with
-their earliest infancy. In old times the women of
-Greece always suckled their own offspring, and for
-the performance of this office they were excellently
-adapted by nature,<a id='r407' /><a href='#f407' class='c018'><sup>[407]</sup></a> since they had no sooner become
-mothers than their breasts filled so copiously with
-milk than it not only flowed through the nipple, but
-likewise transpired through the whole bosom. On the
-little derangements of the system peculiar to nurses the
-Greeks entertained many superstitious opinions; for
-instance, they conceived those thread-like indurations
-which sometimes appear in the breasts to be caused
-by swallowing hairs, which afterwards come forth with
-the milk, on which account the disorder was called
-Trichiasis.<a id='r408' /><a href='#f408' class='c018'><sup>[408]</sup></a> The nourishment supplied by mothers
-so robust and lactiferous was often so rich and abundant
-as, like over-feeding, to cause spasms and convulsions,
-supposed to be most violent when they happened
-during the full moon, and began in the back.
-The usual remedy among nurses would appear to have
-been wine, since Aristotle,<a id='r409' /><a href='#f409' class='c018'><sup>[409]</sup></a> in speaking of the disorder,
-observes that white, particularly if diluted with
-water, is less injurious than red, though even from
-the former he thought it better to abstain. The administering
-of aperient medicines and the absence
-from everything that could cause flatulence, he considered
-the only safe treatment. Nurses, however,
-sometimes placed much reliance on the brains of a
-rabbit.<a id='r410' /><a href='#f410' class='c018'><sup>[410]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In Plato’s Republic the nurses were to live apart
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>in a distinct quarter of the city, and suckle indiscriminately
-all the children that were to be preserved; no
-mother being permitted to know her own child.<a id='r411' /><a href='#f411' class='c018'><sup>[411]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Every one must have observed, as well as Plato,<a id='r412' /><a href='#f412' class='c018'><sup>[412]</sup></a>
-that children are no sooner born than they exhibit unequivocal
-signs of passion and anger, in the moderating
-and directing of which consists the chiefest difficulty
-of education. Most men, through the defect of nature
-or early discipline, live long before they acquire
-this mastery, which many never attain at all. Generally,
-however, where it is possessed, much may certainly
-be attributed to that training which begins at
-the birth, so that of all the instruments employed in
-the<a id='r413' /><a href='#f413' class='c018'><sup>[413]</sup></a> forming of character, the nurse is probably the
-most important. Of this the ancients generally appear
-to have been convinced, and most of all the Spartans
-and Athenians. The Lacedæmonian nurses, on whom
-the force of discipline had been tried, enjoyed a high
-reputation throughout Greece, and were particularly
-esteemed at Athens.<a id='r414' /><a href='#f414' class='c018'><sup>[414]</sup></a> They no doubt deserved it. To
-them may be traced the first attempt to dispense with
-those swathes and bandages which in other countries
-confined the limbs, and impeded the movements of infants,
-and by their skilful and enlightened treatment,
-combined with watchfulness and tender solicitude, they
-are said to have preserved their little charges from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>those distortions so common among children. But
-their cares extended beyond the person. They aimed
-at forming the manners, regulating the temper, laying
-the foundation of virtuous habits, at sowing in short
-the seeds, which in after life, might ripen into a manly,
-frank, and generous character. In the matter of food,
-in the regulating of which, as Locke confesses, there
-is much difficulty, the Spartan nurses acted up to the
-suggestions of the sternest philosophy, accustoming the
-children under their charge, to be content with whatever
-was put before them, and to endure occasional privations
-without murmuring. Over the fear of ghosts
-too they triumphed. Empusa and the Mormolukeion,
-and all those other hideous spectres which childhood associates
-with the idea of darkness, yielded to the discipline
-of the Spartan nurse.<a id='r415' /><a href='#f415' class='c018'><sup>[415]</sup></a> Her charge would remain
-alone or in the dark, without terror, and the same stern
-system, which overcame the first offspring of superstition,
-likewise subdued the moral defects of peevishness,
-frowardness, and the habit of whining and mewling,
-which when indulged in render children a nuisance to
-all around them. No wonder therefore, these Doric
-disciplinarians were everywhere in request. At Athens
-it became fashionable among the opulent to employ
-them, and Cleinias, as is well known, placed under the
-care of one of these she-pædagogues that Alcibiades,
-whose ambitious character, to be curbed by no restraints
-of discipline or philosophy, proved the ruin
-of his country and the scourge of Greece.<a id='r416' /><a href='#f416' class='c018'><sup>[416]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Plato, however, while framing at will an imaginary
-system, and though inclined upon the whole to laconise,
-adheres, in some respects, to the customs of his
-country, and ordains that infants be confined by swaddling
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>bands till two years old. From the mention of
-this age, it may be inferred that children commonly
-did not walk much earlier at Athens, which is the
-case in the East, as we may learn from the story of
-Ala-ed-deen Abushamet. Plato would also have nurses
-to be vigorous and robust women, much inclined to
-frequent the temples, in order, probably, to introduce
-into the minds of their charges early impressions of
-religion, and to stroll about the fields and public gardens
-until the children could run alone; and even
-then, and until they were three years old, he urged the
-necessity of their being frequently carried, to prevent
-crooked legs and malformed ankles. But because all
-this might press hard on one nurse, several were employed,
-as among ourselves,<a id='r417' /><a href='#f417' class='c018'><sup>[417]</sup></a> and a kind of Nursery
-Governess overlooked the whole. The Gerula or under-nurse
-was, in later times, the person upon whom
-fell the principal labour of bearing the infant about;
-but in remoter ages the Greeks, more particularly
-their royal and noble families, employed in this capacity
-a Baioulos<a id='r418' /><a href='#f418' class='c018'><sup>[418]</sup></a> or nurse-father, who, as in the case
-of Phœnix, was sometimes himself of illustrious birth.
-Cheiron, too, the Pelasgian mountain prince, performed
-this sacred office for the son of his friend Peleus.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Our readers, we trust, will not be reluctant to enter
-a Greek nursery,<a id='r419' /><a href='#f419' class='c018'><sup>[419]</sup></a> where the mother, whatever might
-be the number of her assistants, generally suckled her
-own children. Their cradles were of various forms,
-some of which like our own required rocking,<a id='r420' /><a href='#f420' class='c018'><sup>[420]</sup></a> while
-others were suspended like sailors’ hammocks from the
-ceiling, and swung gently to and fro when they desired
-to pacify the child or lull it to sleep:<a id='r421' /><a href='#f421' class='c018'><sup>[421]</sup></a> as Tithonos
-is represented in the mythology to have been suspended
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>in his old age.<a id='r422' /><a href='#f422' class='c018'><sup>[422]</sup></a> Other cradles there were in
-the shape of little portable baskets wherein they were
-carried from one part of the harem to another.<a id='r423' /><a href='#f423' class='c018'><sup>[423]</sup></a> It is
-probable, too, that as in the East the children of the
-opulent were rocked in their cradles wrapped in
-coverlets of Milesian wool.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Occasionally in Hellas,<a id='r424' /><a href='#f424' class='c018'><sup>[424]</sup></a> as everywhere else, the
-nurse’s milk would fail, or be scanty, when they had
-recourse to a very original contrivance to still the
-infant’s cries; they dipped a piece of sponge in honey
-which was given it to suck.<a id='r425' /><a href='#f425' class='c018'><sup>[425]</sup></a> It was probably under
-similar circumstances that children were indulged in
-figs; the Greeks entertaining an opinion that this
-fruit greatly contributed to render them plump and
-healthy. They had further a superstition that by
-rubbing fresh figs upon the eyes of children they
-would be preserved from ophthalmia.<a id='r426' /><a href='#f426' class='c018'><sup>[426]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Persians attributed the same preventive power
-to the petals of the new-blown rose.<a id='r427' /><a href='#f427' class='c018'><sup>[427]</sup></a> When a child
-was wholly or partly dry-nursed, the girl who had
-charge of it would under pretence of cooling its pap,
-commonly made of fine flour of spelt,<a id='r428' /><a href='#f428' class='c018'><sup>[428]</sup></a> put the spoon
-into her own mouth, swallow the best part of the nourishment,
-and give the refuse to the infant, a practice
-attributed by Aristophanes to Cleon, who swallowed,
-he says, the best of the good things of the state himself,
-and left the residue to the people.<a id='r429' /><a href='#f429' class='c018'><sup>[429]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>All the world over the singing of the nurse has
-been proverbial. Music breathes its sweetest notes
-around our cradles. The voice of woman soothes our
-infancy and our age, and in Greece, where every class
-of the community had its song, the nurse naturally
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>vindicated one to herself.<a id='r430' /><a href='#f430' class='c018'><sup>[430]</sup></a> This sweetest of all melodies—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Redolent of joy and youth”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>was technically denominated Katabaukalesis, of which
-scraps and fragments only, like those of the village
-song which lingered in the memory of Rousseau, have
-come down to us. The first verse of a Roman nursery
-air, which still, Pignorius<a id='r431' /><a href='#f431' class='c018'><sup>[431]</sup></a> tells us, was sung in his
-time by the mothers of Italy, ran thus:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lalla, Lalla; dorme aut lacte.</span></div>
- <div class='line'>Lalla, Lalla; sleep or suck.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>The Sicilian poet, whose pictures of the ancient
-world are still so fresh and fragrant, has bequeathed
-to us a Katabaukalesis of extreme beauty and brevity
-which I have here paraphrastically translated:<a id='r432' /><a href='#f432' class='c018'><sup>[432]</sup></a>—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Sleep ye, that in my breast have lain,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The slumber sweet and light,</div>
- <div class='line'>And wake, my glorious twins, again</div>
- <div class='line in2'>To glad your mother’s sight.</div>
- <div class='line'>O happy, happy be your dreams,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And blest your waking be,</div>
- <div class='line'>When morning’s gold and ruddy beams</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Restore your smiles to me.”<a id='r433' /><a href='#f433' class='c018'><sup>[433]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>The philosopher Chrysippos<a id='r434' /><a href='#f434' class='c018'><sup>[434]</sup></a> considered it of importance
-to regulate the songs of nurses, and Quintilian,<a id='r435' /><a href='#f435' class='c018'><sup>[435]</sup></a>
-with a quaint but pardonable enthusiasm, would
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>have the boy who is designed to be an orator placed
-under the care of a nurse of polished language and
-superior mind. He observes,<a id='r436' /><a href='#f436' class='c018'><sup>[436]</sup></a> too, that children
-suckled and brought up by dumb nurses, will remain
-themselves dumb, which would necessarily
-happen had they no other person with whom to
-converse. When the infant was extremely wakeful
-the soothing influence of the song was heightened
-by the aid of little timbrels and rattles hung
-with bells.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>A very characteristic anecdote is told of Anacreon
-apropos of nurses.<a id='r437' /><a href='#f437' class='c018'><sup>[437]</sup></a> A good-humoured wench with a
-child in her arms happening one day to be sauntering
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>more nutricum</i></span>, through the Panionion, or Grand
-Agora of Ionia, encountered the Teïan poet, who
-returning from the Bacchic Olympos, found the
-streets much too narrow for him, and went reeling
-hither and thither as if determined to make the most
-of his walk. The nurse, it is to be presumed, felt
-no inclination to dispute the passage with him; but
-Anacreon attracted, perhaps, by her pretty face,
-making a timely lurch, sent both her and her charge
-spinning off the pavement, at the same time muttering
-something disrespectful against “the brat.” Now,
-for her own part, the girl felt no resentment against
-him, for she could see which of the divinities was to
-blame; but loving, as a nurse should, her boy, she
-prayed that the poet might one day utter many words
-in praise of him whom he had so rudely vituperated;
-which came to pass accordingly, for the infant was the
-celebrated Cleobulos, whose beauty the Teïan afterwards
-celebrated in many an ode.<a id='r438' /><a href='#f438' class='c018'><sup>[438]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Traces of the remotest antiquity still linger in the
-nursery. The word baby, which we bestow familiarly
-on an infant, was with little variation, in use many
-thousand years ago among the Syrians, in whose nursery
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>dialect <em>babia</em><a id='r439' /><a href='#f439' class='c018'><sup>[439]</sup></a> had the same signification. <em>Tatta</em>,
-too, <em>pappa</em> and <em>mamma</em><a id='r440' /><a href='#f440' class='c018'><sup>[440]</sup></a> were the first words lisped by the
-children of Hellas. And from various hints dropped
-by ancient authors, it seems clear that the same wild
-stories and superstitions that still flourish there haunted
-the nursery of old. The child was taught to dread
-Empusa or Onoskelis or Onoskolon,<a id='r441' /><a href='#f441' class='c018'><sup>[441]</sup></a> the monster with
-one human foot and one of brass, which dwelt among
-the shades of night and glided through dusky chambers
-and dismal passages to devour “naughty children.”
-The fables which filled up this obscure part of Hellenic
-mythology, were scarcely less wild than those
-the Arabs tell about their Marids, their Efreets, and
-their Jinn; for Empusa, the phantom minister of
-Hecate,<a id='r442' /><a href='#f442' class='c018'><sup>[442]</sup></a> could assume every various form of God’s
-creatures, appearing sometimes as a bull, or a tree,
-or an ass, or a stone, or a fly, or a beautiful woman.<a id='r443' /><a href='#f443' class='c018'><sup>[443]</sup></a>
-Shakspeare, having caught, perhaps, some glimpse of
-this superstition, or inventing in a kindred spirit,
-attributes a similar power of transformation to his
-mischievous elf in the Midsummer Night’s Dream, located
-on Empusa’s native soil.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“I’ll follow you, I’ll lead you about, around,</div>
- <div class='line'>Through bog, through bush, through brake, through briar.</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>Sometimes a horse I’ll be, sometime a hound,</div>
- <div class='line'>A hog, a headless bear, sometimes a fire,</div>
- <div class='line'>And neigh, and bark, and grunt, and roar, and burn,</div>
- <div class='line'>Like horse, hound, hog, bear, fire at every turn.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>It was this spectral being that was said to appear
-to those who performed the sacrifices to the dead,
-to men overwhelmed with misfortune,<a id='r444' /><a href='#f444' class='c018'><sup>[444]</sup></a> and travellers
-in remote and dismal roads; as happened to the companions
-of Apollonios of Tyana who, in journeying on
-a bright moonlight night, were startled by the appearance
-of Empusa, which having stood twice or thrice in
-their way, suddenly vanished.<a id='r445' /><a href='#f445' class='c018'><sup>[445]</sup></a> To protect themselves
-against this demon the superstitious were accustomed
-to wear about them a piece of jasper, either set in a
-ring, or suspended from the neck.<a id='r446' /><a href='#f446' class='c018'><sup>[446]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Lamia, too, fierce and beautiful, the ancestress of
-our “White ladies,” and of the Katakhanas or Vampire
-of the modern Greeks, roamed through solitary places
-to terrify, delude, or destroy good folks, big or little,
-who might lose their way amid moonlit crags or
-shores made white with bones and sea-shells. They
-loved to relate “around the fire o’ nights,” how Lamia
-had once been a beautiful woman caressed and made
-the mother of a fair son by Zeus; how Hera through
-jealousy had destroyed the boy; and how, thereupon
-Lamia took to the bush and devoted her wretched
-immortality to the destroying of other women’s children.<a id='r447' /><a href='#f447' class='c018'><sup>[447]</sup></a>
-According to another form of the tradition
-there were many Lamiæ, so called from having capacious
-jaws, inhabiting the Libyan coast,<a id='r448' /><a href='#f448' class='c018'><sup>[448]</sup></a> somewhere
-about the Great Syrtis, in the midst of sand hills,
-rocks, and wastes of irreclaimable aridity. Formed
-above like women of surpassing beauty, they terminated
-below in serpents. Their voice was like the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>hissing of an adder, and whatever approached them
-they devoured.<a id='r449' /><a href='#f449' class='c018'><sup>[449]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Another race of wild and grotesque spirits were
-the Kobaloi,<a id='r450' /><a href='#f450' class='c018'><sup>[450]</sup></a> companions of Dionysos, who doubtless
-subsist still in our woods and forests under the name
-of goblins and hobgoblins. Our Elves and Trolls
-and Fairies appear likewise to belong to the same
-brood, though in these northern latitudes, they have
-become less mischievous and more romantic, delighting
-the eyes of the wayfarers by their frolics and
-gambols, instead of devouring him.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in24'>“Fairy elves,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whose midnight revels, by a forest side,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or fountain, some belated peasant sees,</div>
- <div class='line'>Or dreams he sees, while overhead the moon</div>
- <div class='line'>Sits arbitress, and nearer to the earth</div>
- <div class='line'>Wheels her pale course; they on their mirth and dance</div>
- <div class='line'>Intent, with jocund music charm his ear,</div>
- <div class='line'>At once with joy and fear his heart rebounds.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>Though, as we have seen, weak children were unscrupulously
-sacrificed at Sparta, they still made offerings
-to the gods in favour of the strong. The ceremony
-took place annually during certain festivals, denominated
-Tithenidia,<a id='r451' /><a href='#f451' class='c018'><sup>[451]</sup></a> when, in a moment of hospitality, they
-not only made merry themselves, but overlooked their
-xenelasia, and entertained generously all such strangers
-as happened to be present. The banquet given on this
-occasion was called Kopis, and, in preparation for it,
-tents were pitched on the banks of the Tiasa near the
-temple of Artemis Corythalis. Within these, beds
-formed of heaps of herbs were piled up and covered
-with carpets. On the day of the festival the nurses
-proceeded thither with the male children in their arms,
-and, presenting them to the goddess, offered up as victims
-a number of sucking pigs. In the feast which ensued
-loaves baked in an oven, in lieu of the extemporary
-cake, were served up to the guests. Choruses
-of Corythalistriæ or dancing girls, likewise performed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>in honour of the goddess; and in some places persons,
-called Kyrittoi, in wooden masks, made sport for the
-guests.<a id='r452' /><a href='#f452' class='c018'><sup>[452]</sup></a> Probably it may have been on occasions such
-as this that the nurses, like her in Romeo and Juliet,
-gave free vent to their libertine tongues, and indulged
-in those appellations which the tolerant literature of
-antiquity has preserved.<a id='r453' /><a href='#f453' class='c018'><sup>[453]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>When children were to be weaned, they spread, as
-the moderns do, something bitter over the nipple,<a id='r454' /><a href='#f454' class='c018'><sup>[454]</sup></a>
-that the young republican might learn early how—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Full in the fount of joy’s delicious springs</div>
- <div class='line'>Some bitter o’er the flower its bubbling venom flings.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c025' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f373'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r373'>373</a>. More particularly that of a
-son.—Casaub. ad Theophr. Char.
-p. 307.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f374'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r374'>374</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Lysist. 757.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f375'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r375'>375</a>. Etym. Mag. 89. 54.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f376'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r376'>376</a>. Suid. in v. t. i. p. 214. d.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f377'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r377'>377</a>. Hesych. in. v. δρομιάφιον.
-Meurs. Græc. Fer. p. 20. Brunck,
-in Aristoph. Av. 922.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f378'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r378'>378</a>. Harpocrat. in v. Cf. not. Gronov.
-p. 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f379'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r379'>379</a>. Hesych. ap. Meurs. Græc. Fer.
-p. 20.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f380'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r380'>380</a>. Potter, ii. 322.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f381'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r381'>381</a>. Athen. ix. 10. Cf. Ludovic.
-Nonn. De Pisc. Esu. c. 7. p. 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f382'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r382'>382</a>. Cf. Aristoph. Lys. 700. cum
-not. et schol.—Plaut. Truc. ii. 4. 69.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f383'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r383'>383</a>. Semel. fr. 203. Well.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f384'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r384'>384</a>. Meurs. Gr. Fer. p. 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f385'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r385'>385</a>. Alex. ab Alex. 99. a.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f386'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r386'>386</a>. Harpocrat. <i>v.</i> Ἑβδομ. p. 92.
-Cf. Lomeier, De Lustrat. Vet. Gentil.
-c. 27. p. 327. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f387'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r387'>387</a>. Hist. Anim. vii. 12. Bekk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f388'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r388'>388</a>. Suid. v. Ἀμφιδ. t. i. p. 214. d.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f389'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r389'>389</a>. Isæus, Pyrrh. Hæred. § 5.
-Dem. Adv. Bœot. §§ 6, 7. Lys.
-in Harpocrat. v. Ἀμφιδρομ. p. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f390'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r390'>390</a>. Ægei. Frag. i.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f391'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r391'>391</a>. Aves, 922. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f392'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r392'>392</a>. Græc. Feriat. p. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f393'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r393'>393</a>. Polyæn. Strat. vi. i. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f394'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r394'>394</a>. Suid. v. Δεκάτην ἑστιάσαν,
-t. i. p. 654. c. d.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f395'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r395'>395</a>. Harpocrat. v. Μεῖον, Poll. iii.
-53. Schol. ad Aristoph. Ran. 810.
-Etym. Mag. 533. 37. Meurs. Lect.
-Att. iii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f396'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r396'>396</a>. Palmer, Exercit. p. 754.
-Sluiter. Lect. Andocid. c. i.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f397'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r397'>397</a>. Isæus de Pyrrh. Hæred. § 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f398'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r398'>398</a>. Aristoph. Av. 284.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f399'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r399'>399</a>. Plat. Rep. l. i. t. vi. p. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f400'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r400'>400</a>. Dem. c. Macart. § 17. Taylor,
-Lect. Lysiac. c. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f401'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r401'>401</a>. See in Winkel. iii. p. 248,
-an account of a picture representing
-this transaction.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f402'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r402'>402</a>. Il. i. 552. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f403'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r403'>403</a>. Potter, ii. 225.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f404'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r404'>404</a>. Odyss. τ. 406. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f405'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r405'>405</a>. Athen. xiii. 51.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f406'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r406'>406</a>. Anim. ad Athen. t. xii. p. 170.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f407'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r407'>407</a>. When the case happened to
-be otherwise the remedies recommended
-by physicians were numerous,
-among which was the
-halimos, a prickly shrub found
-growing along the northern shores
-of Crete.—Dioscor. i. 120. Tournefort.
-i. 44.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f408'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r408'>408</a>. Arist. Hist. An. vii. 10. Foës.
-Œconom. Hippoc. v. Τριχίασις.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f409'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r409'>409</a>. Hist. An. vii. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f410'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r410'>410</a>. Dioscor. ii. 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f411'>
-<p class='c001'><a href='#r411'>411</a>. Plat. Rep. v. t. vi. p. 236.—The
-desire of the philosopher was,
-that the people, or the state,
-should be regarded as the father
-of the child. Among our ancestors
-illegitimate children were denominated
-“sons of the people,”
-which was then thought equivalent
-to being the sons of nobody.
-Hence the following distich:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Cui pater est populus, pater est sibi nullus et omnis,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Cui pater est populus, non habet ipse patrem.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c031'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Fortescue, Laud. Legg.</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Angl. c. 40.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f412'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r412'>412</a>. Repub. i. 315. Stallb.—On
-the harshness and severity of
-nurses, Teles remarks in that curious
-picture of human life, which
-he has drawn quite in the spirit of
-the melancholy Jaques. Stob.
-Floril. Tit. 98. 72.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f413'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r413'>413</a>. Cf. Cramer de Educ. Puer. ap.
-Athen. 9. Odyss. β. 361. seq.
-Terpstra, Antiq. Homer. 122. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f414'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r414'>414</a>. Plut. Alcib. § 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f415'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r415'>415</a>. Or if not, the Spartan legislator
-had recourse to other expedients
-for extirpating these superstitious
-terrors in after years. It
-being customary among the Laconians
-to drink moderately in the
-syssitia, says Plutarch, they went
-home without a torch, it not being
-lawful to make use of a light
-on these or any other occasions, in
-order that they might be accustomed
-to walk by night and in
-darkness boldly, and without fear.
-Instit. Lacon. § 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f416'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r416'>416</a>. Plut. Lycurg. § 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f417'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r417'>417</a>. Plat. de Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 5.
-Pignor. de Serv. p. 185.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f418'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r418'>418</a>. Pignor. de Serv. p. 186. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f419'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r419'>419</a>. See in Winkelmann, vignette
-to l. iv. ch. 3. a view of an ancient
-nursery, where the mother,
-the pædagogue, the nurse, &amp;c. are
-engaged in the work of education,
-t. i. p. 414. Cf. Max. Tyr. Diss.
-iv. p. 49. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 713.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f420'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r420'>420</a>. Pignor. de. Serv. p. 186.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f421'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r421'>421</a>. Schweigh. Animadv. in Athen.
-vi. 74.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f422'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r422'>422</a>. Eudoc. ap. Villois. Anecdot.
-Græc. t. i. p. 396. Tzetz. ad
-Lyc. v. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f423'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r423'>423</a>. Mus. Real. Borbon. t. i. pl. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f424'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r424'>424</a>. It was even then remarked
-that sucking children teethe much
-better than such as are dry nursed.—Aristot.
-de Gen. Anim. v. 8.
-Hist. Anim. vii. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f425'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r425'>425</a>. Sch. Arist. Acharn. 439.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f426'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r426'>426</a>. Athen. iii. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f427'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r427'>427</a>. Geopon. xi. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f428'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r428'>428</a>. Dioscor. ii. 114.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f429'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r429'>429</a>. Equit. 712. Casaub. ad Theoph.
-Char. p. 326.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f430'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r430'>430</a>. Ilgen. de Scol. Poes. p. xxvi.
-Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p. 204.
-seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f431'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r431'>431</a>. De Serv. p. 186. seq. Cf.
-Athen. xiv. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f432'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r432'>432</a>. A nurse’s lay prevalent among
-our own ancestors may not inaptly
-find a place here:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Now suck, child, and sleep, child, thy mother’s own joy,</div>
- <div class='line'>Her only sweet comfort to drown all annoy;</div>
- <div class='line'>For beauty, surpassing the azurèd sky,</div>
- <div class='line'>I love thee, my darling, as ball of mine eye.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c031'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>D’Israeli, Amenities of</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Literature ii. 287.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f433'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r433'>433</a>. Theoc. Eidyll. 24. 7. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f434'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r434'>434</a>. Quintil. i. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f435'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r435'>435</a>. Instit. Orat. i. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f436'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r436'>436</a>. Quintil. Inst. Orat. l. x. c. i.
-Herod. ii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f437'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r437'>437</a>. See in the Mus. Cortonens.
-pl. 35. the figure of a nurse
-bearing the infant Bacchos.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f438'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r438'>438</a>. Max. Tyr. Diss. xi. p. 132.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f439'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r439'>439</a>. Phot. Biblioth. 31. l. 11.
-Menage shrewdly supposes Baby,
-Babble, &amp;c. to have been derived
-from Babel.—D’Israeli, Amenities
-of Literature, i. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f440'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r440'>440</a>. Pignor. de Serv. p. 187. Sch.
-Aristoph. Nub. 1365.—Pac. 119.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f441'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r441'>441</a>. Lil. Gyrald. Synt. xii. Hist.
-Deor. 361 seq. Cf. Lucian. Ver.
-Hist. lib. 2 § 46. This spectre
-was said to glide before the sight
-of persons celebrating the rites
-of initiation, and therefore the
-mother of Æschines who performed
-a part in the rites, and
-also appeared to the initiated
-was, with much bad taste, called
-Empusa by Demosthenes.—De
-Coronâ, § § 41. 79. Adam Littleton
-in his Cambridge Dictionary
-supposes this to have been her
-real name, which, however, was
-Glaucis or Glaucothea. Stock.
-and Wunderl. ad loc. Cf. Harpoc.
-in. v. Sch. Aristoph. Concion. 1056.
-Ran. 293, 294. ὁρᾲς τὸν Αἰσχινην
-ὅς τυμπανιστρίας υἱὸς ἠν.
-Lucian. Somn. § 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f442'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r442'>442</a>. This goddess was also known
-by the name of Artemis Phosphoros.
-Aristoph. Concion. 444 et
-schol.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f443'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r443'>443</a>. Aristoph. Ran. 293. Epicharm.
-ap. Nat. Com. p. 854. See also
-Sch. Apol. Rhod. iii. 478. iv. 247.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f444'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r444'>444</a>. Meurs. Lect. Att. iii. 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f445'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r445'>445</a>. Philost. Vit. Apoll. Tyan.
-l. ii. c. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f446'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r446'>446</a>. Cf. De Boot, De Lap. p.
-251. sqq. on the properties and
-virtues of this stone.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f447'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r447'>447</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 1035.
-Philost. Vit. Apoll. Tyan. iv. 25.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f448'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r448'>448</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 1035.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f449'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r449'>449</a>. Lil. Gyrald. Hist. Deor.
-Synt. xv. 447. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f450'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r450'>450</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Plut. 279.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f451'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r451'>451</a>. Athen. iv. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f452'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r452'>452</a>. Meurs. Græc. Fer. 261. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f453'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r453'>453</a>. Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. 161.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f454'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r454'>454</a>. Athen. vi. 51.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c025' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>
- <h3 class='c024'>CHAPTER III. <br /> TOYS, SPORTS, AND PASTIMES.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c032'>Having described, as far as possible, the management
-of infants and young children, it may not be
-uninteresting to notice briefly their toys, sports, and
-pastimes; for, though children have been substantially
-the same in all ages and countries, the forms of their
-amusements have been infinitely varied, and where
-they have resembled each other it is not the less instructive
-to note that resemblance. The ancients<a id='r455' /><a href='#f455' class='c018'><sup>[455]</sup></a>
-have, however, bequeathed us but little information
-respecting the fragile implements wherewith the
-happiness of the nursery was in great part erected.
-Even respecting the recreations which succeeded and
-amused the leisure of boys our materials for working
-out a picture are scanty, so that we must content ourselves
-with little more than an outline. Nevertheless,
-though the accounts they have transmitted to posterity
-are meagre, they attached much importance to the
-subject itself; so that the greatest legislators and philosophers
-condescended to make regulations respecting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>it. Thus Plato, with a view of generating a profound
-reverence for ancient national institutions, forbade
-even the recreations of boys to be varied with reckless
-fickleness; for the habit of innovation once introduced
-into the character would ever after continue to influence
-it, so that they who in boyhood altered their
-sports without reason, would without scruple in manhood
-extend their daring hands to the laws and institutions
-of their country.<a id='r456' /><a href='#f456' class='c018'><sup>[456]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Amongst the Hellenes the earliest toy consisted, as
-in most other countries, of the rattle, said to be the
-invention of the philosopher Archytas.<a id='r457' /><a href='#f457' class='c018'><sup>[457]</sup></a> To this succeeded
-balls of many colours,<a id='r458' /><a href='#f458' class='c018'><sup>[458]</sup></a> with little chariots,
-sometimes purchased at Athens in the fair held during
-the feast of Zeus.<a id='r459' /><a href='#f459' class='c018'><sup>[459]</sup></a> The common price of a plaything
-of this kind would appear to have been an
-obolos. The children themselves, as without any authority
-might with certainty be inferred, employed
-their time in erecting walls with sand,<a id='r460' /><a href='#f460' class='c018'><sup>[460]</sup></a> in constructing
-little houses,<a id='r461' /><a href='#f461' class='c018'><sup>[461]</sup></a> in building and carving ships, in cutting
-carts or chariots out of leather, in fashioning pomegranate
-rinds into the shape of frogs,<a id='r462' /><a href='#f462' class='c018'><sup>[462]</sup></a> and in forming
-with wax a thousand diminutive images, which pursued
-afterwards during school hours subjected them
-occasionally to severe chastisement.<a id='r463' /><a href='#f463' class='c018'><sup>[463]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Another amusement which the children of Hellas
-shared with their elders was that afforded by puppets,<a id='r464' /><a href='#f464' class='c018'><sup>[464]</sup></a>
-which were probably an invention of the remotest
-antiquity. Numerous women appear to have earned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>their livelihood by carrying round from village to village
-these ludicrous and frolicsome images, which
-were usually about a cubit in height, and may be regarded
-as the legitimate ancestors of Punch and Judy.
-By touching a single string, concealed from the spectators,
-the operator could put her mute performers in
-action, cause them to move every limb in succession,
-spread forth the hands, shrug the shoulders, turn
-round the neck, roll the eyes, and appear to look at
-the audience.<a id='r465' /><a href='#f465' class='c018'><sup>[465]</sup></a> After this, by other contrivances
-within the images, they could be made to go through
-many humorous evolutions resembling the movements
-of the dance. These exhibitors, frequently of
-the male sex, were known by the name of Neurospastæ.
-This art passed, together with other Grecian
-inventions, into Italy, where it was already familiar
-to the public in the days of Horace, who, in speaking
-of princes governed by favourites, compares them to
-puppets in the hands of the showman.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Tu, mihi qui imperitas, aliis servis miser; atque</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Duceris, ut nervis alienis mobile lignum.”</span><a id='r466' /><a href='#f466' class='c018'><sup>[466]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>A very extraordinary puppet, in the form of a silver
-skeleton, was, according to Petronius Arbiter,<a id='r467' /><a href='#f467' class='c018'><sup>[467]</sup></a> exhibited
-at the court of Nero; for, like the Egyptians,
-this imperial profligate appears to have been excited
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>to sensual indulgences by the remembrance of the
-grave: “Let us eat and drink,” cried he, “for tomorrow
-we die.” The skeleton being placed upon the
-table, in the midst of the tyrant’s orgies, threw its
-limbs strangely about, and bent its form into various
-attitudes with wonderful flexibility, which having performed
-once and again, and then suddenly ceasing to
-move, the master of the feast exclaimed, “Alas, alas!
-what a mere nothing is man! Like unto this must we
-all be when Orcus shall have borne us hence. Therefore
-let us live while enjoyment is in our power.”
-But to return to the children of Hellas. Among the
-earliest sports of the Greek boy was whipping the
-bembyx or top,<a id='r468' /><a href='#f468' class='c018'><sup>[468]</sup></a> which would appear to have been
-usually practised in those open spaces occurring at the
-junction of several roads:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Where three ways meet there boys with tops are found,</div>
- <div class='line'>That ply the lash and urge them round and round.”<a id='r469' /><a href='#f469' class='c018'><sup>[469]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>Sometimes also, as with us, they spun their tops with
-cord. The amusement is thus described by Tibullus:<a id='r470' /><a href='#f470' class='c018'><sup>[470]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Namque agor, ut per plana citus tota verbere turben,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Quem celer assuetâ versitat arte puer.”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>The hoop, too, so familiar to our own schoolboys,
-formed one of the playthings of Hellenic children. It
-was sometimes made of bronze, about three feet in
-diameter,<a id='r471' /><a href='#f471' class='c018'><sup>[471]</sup></a> and adorned with little spherical bells and
-movable rings, which jingled as it rolled. The instrument
-employed to urge</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“the rolling circle’s speed,”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>as Gray expresses it, in his reminiscences of the Eton
-play-ground, was crooked at the point, and called a
-plectron: its exact representation may any day, in the
-proper season, be seen in the streets of London impelling
-forward the iron hoop of our own children.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>The passages of ancient authors, in which mention of
-the trochos occurs, appear to have been imperfectly
-understood before the discovery of a <span lang="it" xml:lang="it">basso-rilievo</span>, in
-marble, on the road from Rome to Tivoli, afterwards
-removed to the vineyard of the Cardinal Alexander
-Albani. On certain engraved gems also, in the cabinet
-of Stosch, are several representations of boys playing
-at hoop, where the trochos in some cases reaches
-to the waist, in others to the breast, and where the
-child is very small up to the chin. It has been conjectured
-by Winkelmann,<a id='r472' /><a href='#f472' class='c018'><sup>[472]</sup></a> that a circle represented in
-one of the paintings of Herculaneum was no other
-than an ancient trochos. Rolling the hoop formed a
-part of the exercises of the palæstra, which were performed
-even by very young children. Thus we find
-the nurse describing the sons of Medeia returning from
-playing at hoop the very day that they were slain by
-their mother.<a id='r473' /><a href='#f473' class='c018'><sup>[473]</sup></a> This amusement has been described
-briefly by the Roman poets. Thus Martial:<a id='r474' /><a href='#f474' class='c018'><sup>[474]</sup></a>—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Garrulus in laxo cur annulus orbe vagatur</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Cedat, et argutis obvia turba trochis.”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>Propertius<a id='r475' /><a href='#f475' class='c018'><sup>[475]</sup></a> notices the crooked form of the plectron,
-or clavis:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Increpat et versi clavis adunca trochi.”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>Horace<a id='r476' /><a href='#f476' class='c018'><sup>[476]</sup></a> likewise alludes to the game:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Indoctusque pilæ discive trochive quiescit.”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>This poet clearly informs us that the Romans received
-the game from the Greeks:<a id='r477' /><a href='#f477' class='c018'><sup>[477]</sup></a>—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in12'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Ludere doctior,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Seu Græco jubeas trocho,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Seu malis vetita legibus alea.”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>Another less innocent amusement was<a id='r478' /><a href='#f478' class='c018'><sup>[478]</sup></a> spinning goldchafers,
-which appears to have afforded the Greek
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>urchins the same delight as tormenting cockchafers
-does their successors of the north. This species of
-beetle making its appearance when the apple-trees
-were in bloom, was therefore called <em>Melolanthe</em>, or
-apple-blossom. Having caught it, and tied a linen
-thread about its feet, it was let loose, and the fun was
-to see it move in spiral lines through the air as it was
-twisted by the thread.<a id='r479' /><a href='#f479' class='c018'><sup>[479]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It was the practice among the children of Greece,
-when the sun happened to be obscured by a cloud,
-to exclaim, “Ἔξεχ᾽ ὦ φίλ᾽ ἥλιε!”—“Come forth, beloved
-sun!” Strattis makes allusion to this custom in
-a fragment of his Phœnissæ:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Then the god listened to the shouting boys,</div>
- <div class='line'>When they exclaimed, ‘Come forth, beloved sun!’”<a id='r480' /><a href='#f480' class='c018'><sup>[480]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>It is fortunate that our English boys have no such
-passion for sunshine; otherwise, as Phœbos Apollo
-hides his face for months together in this blessed climate,
-we should be in a worse plight than Dionysos
-among the frogs of Acheron, when his passion for
-Euripides led him to pay a visit to Persephone. In
-some parts of the country, however, the children have
-a rude distich which they frequently bawl in chorus,
-when in summer-time their sports are interrupted by
-a long-continued shower:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Rain, rain, go to Spain;</div>
- <div class='line'>Fair weather, come again.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>The Muïnda was our “Blindman’s-buff,” “Blind
-Hob,” “Hobble ’em-blind,” and “Hood-man-blind,” in
-which, as with us, a boy moved about with his eyes
-bandaged, spreading forth his hands, and crying “Beware!”
-If he caught any of those who were skipping
-around him, the captive was compelled to enact the
-blind-man in his stead. Another form of the game
-was for the seers to hide, and the blind man to grope
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>round till he found them; the whole probably being a
-rude representation of Polyphemos in his cave searching
-for the Greeks who had blinded him. A third
-form was, for the bystanders to strike or touch the
-blindfolded boy until he could declare who had touched
-him, when the person indicated took his place. To
-this the Roman soldiers alluded when they blindfolded
-our Saviour and smote him, and cried, “Prophesy who
-struck thee.”<a id='r481' /><a href='#f481' class='c018'><sup>[481]</sup></a> In the Kollabismos,<a id='r482' /><a href='#f482' class='c018'><sup>[482]</sup></a> the Capifolèt of
-the French, one person covered his eyes with his own
-hands, the other then gave him a gentle blow, and the
-point was, for the blindfolded man to guess with which
-hand he had been stricken. The Χαλκὴ Μυῖα,<a id='r483' /><a href='#f483' class='c018'><sup>[483]</sup></a> or Brazen
-Fly, was a variety of Blindman’s-buff, in which a
-boy, having his eyes bound with a fillet, went groping
-round, calling out, “I am seeking the Brazen Fly.”
-His companions replied, “You may seek, but you will
-not find it”—at the same time striking him with
-cords made of the inner bark of the papyros; and thus
-they proceeded till one of them was taken. Apodidraskinda
-(“hide and seek,” or “whoop and holloa!”)
-was played much as it is now. One boy shut his eyes,
-or they were kept closed for him by one of his suspicious
-companions, while the others went to hide. He
-then sallied forth in search of the party who lay concealed,
-while each of them endeavoured to gain the
-post of the seeker; and the first who did this turned
-him out and took his place.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Another game was the Ephedrismos, in which a
-stone called the Dioros was set up at a certain distance,
-and aimed at with bowls or stones. The one who
-missed took the successful player upon his back, and
-was compelled to carry him about blindfolded, until
-he went straight from the standing-point to the Dioros.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>This latter part of the game has been described by
-several ancient authors, under the appellation of Encotyle,
-though they are rightly, by Hesychius,<a id='r484' /><a href='#f484' class='c018'><sup>[484]</sup></a> considered
-as different parts of the same sport. The variety
-called Encotyle,—the “Pick-back” or “Pick-a-back,”
-of English boys, consisted in one lad’s placing
-his hands behind his back, and receiving therein the
-knees of his conqueror, who, putting his fingers over
-the bearer’s eyes, drove him about at his pleasure.
-This game was also called the Kubesinda and Hippas,<a id='r485' /><a href='#f485' class='c018'><sup>[485]</sup></a>
-though, according to the conjecture of Dr. Hyde, the
-latter name signified rather our game of “Leap-frog,”—the
-“mazidha” of the Persians, in which a number
-of boys stooped down with the hands resting on
-the knees, in a row, the last going over the backs of
-all the others, and then standing first.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In the game called Chytrinda, in English<a id='r486' /><a href='#f486' class='c018'><sup>[486]</sup></a> “Hot-cockles,”
-“Selling of pears,” or “How many plumbs
-for a penny,” one boy sat on the ground, and was
-called the chytra or pot, while his companions, forming
-themselves into a ring, ran round, plucking, pinching,
-or striking him as they went. If he who enacted the
-chytra succeeded in seizing upon one of the buffeters
-the captive took his place. Possibly it was during
-this play that a mischievous foundling, contrary to
-rule, poking, as he ran round, the boy in the centre
-with his foot, provoked from the latter the sarcastic
-inquiry, “What! dost thou kick thy mother in the
-belly?” alluding to the circumstance of the former
-having been exposed in a chytra.<a id='r487' /><a href='#f487' class='c018'><sup>[487]</sup></a> Another form of
-the Chytrinda required the lad in the centre to move
-about with a pot on his head, where he held it with
-his left hand, while the others struck him, and cried
-out, “Who has the pot?” To which he replied, “I
-Midas,” endeavouring all the while to reach some one
-with his foot,—the first whom he thus touched being
-compelled to carry round the pot in his stead.<a id='r488' /><a href='#f488' class='c018'><sup>[488]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>Another game, peculiar to girls, was the Cheli Chelone,
-or “the tortoise,” of which I remember no representative
-among English pastimes. It somewhat
-resembled the Chytrinda of the boys. For one girl sat
-on the ground and was called the tortoise, while her
-companions, running round, inquired “Tor-tortoise
-what art thou doing there in the middle?” “Spinning
-wool,” replied she, “the thread of the Milesian
-woof;” “And how, continued they, was thy son engaged
-when he perished?” “He sprang from his
-white steeds into the sea.”<a id='r489' /><a href='#f489' class='c018'><sup>[489]</sup></a> If this was, as the language
-would intimate, a Dorian play, I should consider
-it a practical satire on the habits of the other Hellenic
-women, who remained like tortoises at home, carding
-and spinning, while their sons engaged in the exercises
-of the palæstra or the stadium. Possibly, also, originally
-the name may have had some connection with
-καλλιχέλωνος “beautiful tortoise,” the figure of this
-animal having been impressed on the money of the
-Peloponnesians; in fact, in a fragment of the Helots
-of Eupolis, we find the obolos distinguished by the
-epithet of καλλιχέλωνος.<a id='r490' /><a href='#f490' class='c018'><sup>[490]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Kynitinda was so called from the verb κυνέω to
-kiss, as appears from Crates in his “Games,” a play
-in which the poet contrived to introduce an account of
-this and nearly all the other juvenile pastimes. The
-form of the sport being little known, the learned have
-sometimes confounded it with a kind of salute called
-the chytra in antiquity, and the “Florentine Kiss”
-in modern Italy, in which the person kissing took the
-other by the ears. Giraldi<a id='r491' /><a href='#f491' class='c018'><sup>[491]</sup></a> says he remembers, when
-a boy, that his father and other friends, when kissing
-him, used sometimes to take hold of both his ears,
-which they called giving a “Florentine kiss.” He
-afterwards was surprised to find that this was a most
-ancient practice, commemorated both by the Greek
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>and Latin authors. It obtained its name, as he conjectures,
-from the earthen vessel called chytra, which
-had two handles usually laid hold of by persons drinking
-out of it, as is still the practice with similar
-utensils in Spain. This writer mentions a present
-sent from the peninsula to Leo X, consisting of a
-great number of chytræ of red pottery, if we may
-so call them, of which he himself obtained one.
-Crates, as Hemsterhuis<a id='r492' /><a href='#f492' class='c018'><sup>[492]</sup></a> ingeniously supposes, introduced
-a wanton woman playing at this game among
-the youths in order that she might enjoy the kisses of
-the handsome.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Epostrakismos<a id='r493' /><a href='#f493' class='c018'><sup>[493]</sup></a> was what English boys call
-“Ducks and Drakes,” and sometimes, among our ancestors
-at least, “A duck and a drake and a white
-penny cake,” and was played with oyster-shells.
-Standing on the shore of the sea at the Peiræeus,
-for example, they flung the shells edgeways over the
-water so that they should strike it and bound upwards
-again and again from its surface. The boy
-whose shell made most leaps before sinking, won
-the game. Minucius Felix gives a very pretty description
-of this juvenile sport. “Behold, he says,
-boys playing in frolicsome rivalry with shells on
-the sea-shore. The game consists in picking up
-from the beach a shell rendered light by the constant
-action of the waves, and standing on an even
-place, and inclining the body, holding the shell flat
-between the fingers, and throwing it with the greatest
-possible force, so that it may rase the surface
-of the sea or skim along while it moves with gentle
-flow, or glances over the tops of the waves as they
-leap up in its track. That boy is esteemed the
-victor whose shell performs the longest journey or
-makes most leaps before sinking.”<a id='r494' /><a href='#f494' class='c018'><sup>[494]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Akinetinda was a contention between boys, in
-which some one of them endeavoured to maintain his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>position unmoved. Good sport must have been produced
-by the next game called Schœnophilinda, or
-“Hiding the Rope.” In this a number of boys sat
-down in a circle, one of whom had a rope concealed
-about his person, which he endeavoured to drop secretly
-beside one of his companions. If he succeeded,
-the unlucky wight was started like a hare round
-the circle, his enemy following and laying about
-his shoulders. But on the other hand, if he against
-whom the plot was laid detected it, he obtained possession
-of the rope and enjoyed the satisfaction of flogging
-the plotter over the same course.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Basilinda<a id='r495' /><a href='#f495' class='c018'><sup>[495]</sup></a> was a game in which one obtained
-by lot the rank of king, and the vanquished, whether
-one or many, became subject to him, to do whatever
-he should order. It passed down to the Christians,
-and was more especially practised during the feast of
-the Epiphany. It is commonly known under the
-name of Forfeits, and was formerly called “One penny,”
-“One penny come after me,” “Questions and
-commands,” “The choosing of king and queen on
-Twelfth night.” In the last-mentioned sense it is
-still prevalent in France, where it is customary for
-bakers to make a present to the families they serve,
-of a large cake in the form of a ring in which a small
-kidney bean has been concealed. The cake is cut up,
-the pieces are distributed to the company, and the
-person who gets the bean is king of the feast. This
-game entered in Greece likewise into the amusements
-of grown people, both men and women, as well as of
-children, and an anecdote, connected with it, is told of
-Phryne, who happened one day to be at a mixed party
-where it was played. By chance it fell to her lot to
-play the queen; upon which, observing that her female
-companions were rouged and lilied to the eyes,
-she maliciously ordered a basin and towel to be
-brought in, and that every woman should wash her
-face. Conscious of her own native beauty, she began
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>the operation, and only appeared the fresher and more
-lovely. But alas for the others! When the anchusa,
-psimmuthion, and phukos had been removed by the
-water, their freckled and coarse skins exposed them
-to general laughter.<a id='r496' /><a href='#f496' class='c018'><sup>[496]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Ostrakinda was a game purely juvenile. A
-knot of boys having drawn a line on the ground,
-separated into two parties. A small earthenware
-disk or ostrakon, one side black with pitch, the other
-white, was then produced, and each party chose a side,
-white or black. The disk was then pitched along the
-line, and the party whose side came up was accounted
-victorious, and prepared to pursue while the others
-turned round and fled. The boy first caught obtained
-the name of the ass, and was compelled to sit down,
-the game apparently proceeding till all were thus
-caught and placed hors de combat. He who threw
-the ostrakon cried, “night or day,” the black side
-being termed <em>night</em>, and the opposite <em>day</em>. It was
-called the “Twirling of the ostrakon.” Plato alludes
-to it in the Phædros.<a id='r497' /><a href='#f497' class='c018'><sup>[497]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Dielkustinda, “French and English,” was
-played chiefly in the palæstra, and occasionally elsewhere.
-It consisted simply in two parties of boys
-laying hold of each other by the hand, and pulling
-till one by one the stronger had drawn over the
-weaker to their side of the ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Phryginda was a game in which, holding a
-number of smooth and delicate fragments of pottery
-between the fingers of the left hand, they struck them
-in succession with the right so as apparently to produce
-a kind of music.<a id='r498' /><a href='#f498' class='c018'><sup>[498]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>There was another game called Kyndalismos, played
-with short batons, and requiring considerable strength
-and quickness of eye. A stick having been fixed up-right
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>in a loose moist soil, the business was to dislodge
-it by throwing at it other batons from a distance;
-whence the proverb, “Nail is driven out by nail, and
-baton by baton.”<a id='r499' /><a href='#f499' class='c018'><sup>[499]</sup></a> A person who played at this game
-was called by some of the Doric poets Kyndalopactes.<a id='r500' /><a href='#f500' class='c018'><sup>[500]</sup></a>
-A similar game is played in England, in which the
-prize is placed upon the top of the upright stick.
-The player wins when the prize falls without the hole
-whence the upright has been dislodged.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The game of Ascoliasmos<a id='r501' /><a href='#f501' class='c018'><sup>[501]</sup></a> branched off into several
-varieties, and afforded the Athenian rustics no small
-degree of sport. The first and most simple form consisted
-in hopping on one foot, sometimes in pairs, to
-see which in this way could go furthest. On other occasions
-the hopper undertook to overtake certain of his
-companions who were allowed the use of both legs.
-If he could touch one of them he came off conqueror.
-This variety of the game appears to have been the
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Empusæ ludus</span> of the Romans. “Scotch hoppers,”
-or “Fox to thy hole,” in which boys, hopping on one
-leg, beat one another with gloves or pieces of leather
-tied at the end of strings, or knotted handkerchiefs, as
-in the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><i>diable boîteux</i></span> of the French. At other times
-victory depended on the number of hops, all hopping
-together and counting their springs,—the highest of
-course winning. But the most amusing variety of the
-game was that practised during the Dionysiac festival
-of the Askolia. Skins filled with wine or inflated
-with air, and extremely well oiled, were placed upon
-the ground, and on these the shoeless rustics leaped
-with one leg and endeavoured to maintain a footing,
-which they seldom could on account of their slipperiness.
-However, he who succeeded carried off the
-skin of wine as his prize.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>A game, evidently also of rustics, was the Trygodiphesis,
-Tantali ludus, “Bobbing for cherries,” “Bob
-cherry,” in which something very nice was thrown
-into a bowl of wine lees, which the performer, with
-his hands behind his back, was to fish up with his
-lips. The fun was to see the ludicrous figure he
-cut with his face daubed and discoloured by the lees.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Phitta Maliades, Phitta Meliai, Phitta Rhoiai,
-“Hasten, nymphs!” may be regarded as exclamations
-of encouragement uttered by Dorian girls, when engaged
-in a race.<a id='r502' /><a href='#f502' class='c018'><sup>[502]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Playing at ball was common, and received various
-names. Episkyros, Phæninda, Aporraxis and Ourania.
-The first of these games was also known by the
-names of the Ephebike and the Epikoinos. It was
-played thus: a number of young men assembling together
-in a place covered with sand or dust, drew
-across it a straight line, which they called Skyros, and
-at equal distances, on either side, another line. Then
-placing the ball on the Skyros, they divided into two
-equal parties, and retreated each to their lines, from
-which they immediately afterwards rushed forward to
-seize the ball. The person who picked it up, then
-cast it towards the extreme line of the opposite party,
-whose business it was to intercept and throw it back,
-and they won who by force or cunning compelled
-their opponents to overstep the boundary line.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Daniel Souter<a id='r503' /><a href='#f503' class='c018'><sup>[503]</sup></a> contends that this was the English
-game of football, into which perhaps it may, in course
-of time, have been converted. This rough and, it
-must be confessed, somewhat dangerous sport, originally,
-in all probability, introduced into this country by
-the Romans, may still on Shrove Tuesday be witnessed
-in certain towns of South Wales. The balls consist
-of bulls’ bladders protected by a thick covering of leather,
-and blown tight. Six or eight are made ready
-for the occasion, every window in the town is shut by
-break of day, at which time all the youths of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>neighbourhood assemble in the streets. The ball is
-then thrown up in front of the town-hall, and the
-multitude, dividing into two parts, strive with incredible
-eagerness and enthusiasm to overcome their antagonists,
-each endeavouring to kick the foot-ball to
-the other extremity of the town. In the struggle
-severe kicks and wounds are given, and many fierce
-battles take place. The ball sometimes mounts thirty
-or forty feet above the tops of the highest houses
-and falls far beyond, or goes right over into the
-gardens, whither it is immediately followed by a
-crowd of young men. The sport is kept up all day,
-the hungry combatants recruiting their strength from
-time to time by copious horns of ale, and an abundant
-supply of the nice pancakes which the women sell in
-baskets at the corner of every street. To view this
-sport, thousands of persons assemble from all the country
-round, so that to the secluded population of those
-districts it is in some sort what the battle in the
-Platanistas was to the Spartans, or even what the
-Isthmian and Nemean games were to the whole of
-Greece.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Phæninda<a id='r504' /><a href='#f504' class='c018'><sup>[504]</sup></a> is supposed to have received its
-name either from its inventor, Phænides (called Phænestios
-in Athenæus<a id='r505' /><a href='#f505' class='c018'><sup>[505]</sup></a> and the Etymologicon Magnum),
-or from the verb Φενακίζειν<a id='r506' /><a href='#f506' class='c018'><sup>[506]</sup></a> “to deceive,” because,
-making as though they would throw at one person,
-they immediately sent it at another, thus deluding the
-expectation of the former. It appears at first to have
-been played with the small ball called Harpaston,
-though the game with the large soft one may afterwards
-perhaps have also been called Phæninda. The
-variety named Aporraxis consisted in throwing the ball
-with some force against the ground and repelling it
-constantly as it rebounded; he who did this most frequently,
-winning. In the game called Ourania, the
-player, bending back his body, flung up the ball with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>all his might into the air; on which there arose a contention
-among his companions who should first catch
-it in its descent, as Homer appears to intimate in his
-description of the Phæacian sport. They likewise
-played at ball in the modern fashion against a wall, in
-which the person who kept it up longest, won, and
-was called king; the one who lost, obtained the name
-of ass, and was constrained by the laws of the game
-to perform any task set him by the king.<a id='r507' /><a href='#f507' class='c018'><sup>[507]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>A game generally played in the gymnasia was the
-Skaperda. In this a post was set up with a hole near
-the top and a rope passed through it. Two young
-men then seized each one end of the rope, and turning
-their back to the post exerted their utmost strength
-to draw their antagonist up the beam. He who raised
-his opponent highest won. Sometimes they tried their
-strength by binding themselves together, back to back,
-and pulling different ways.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Himanteligmos, “pricking the garter,” in Ireland
-“pricking the loop,” was really an ingenious
-amusement. It consisted in doubling a thong, and
-twisting it into numerous labyrinthine folds, which
-done, the other party put the end of a peg into the
-midst in search of the point of duplication. If he
-missed the mark the thong unwound without entangling
-the peg; but if he dropped it into the right
-ring his peg was caught and the game won. Hemsterhuis<a id='r508' /><a href='#f508' class='c018'><sup>[508]</sup></a>
-supposes the Gordian knot to have been
-nothing but a variety of the Himanteligmos. He
-conjectures that the boys of Abdera were fond of
-this game, on which account the sophisms of Democritus
-were called ἱμαντελικτεαὶ, and hence probably a
-sophist, as one who twists words together, to <em>lash</em>
-others, was called Himantelicteus.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Another game, not entirely confined to children,
-was the Chalkismos, which consisted in twisting round
-rapidly on a board or table a piece of money, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>placing the point of the finger so dexterously on its
-upper edge as to put a stop to its motion without permitting
-it to fall. This was a favourite amusement of
-Phryne the hetaira, as building houses of cards was of
-La Belle Stuart.<a id='r509' /><a href='#f509' class='c018'><sup>[509]</sup></a> Some of these sports were peculiar
-to the female sex,<a id='r510' /><a href='#f510' class='c018'><sup>[510]</sup></a> as the Pentalitha, which is still
-played by girls in some remote provinces of our island,
-where it is called “Dandies.” The whole apparatus of
-the game consisted in five astragals—knuckle bones—pebbles,
-or little balls, which, gathered up rapidly,
-were thrown into the air and attempted to be caught
-in falling on the back of the hand or between the
-slightly spread fingers. If any fell it was allowable to
-pick them up, provided this were done with the fingers
-of the same hand on which the other astragals rested.<a id='r511' /><a href='#f511' class='c018'><sup>[511]</sup></a>
-The girls of France, according to Bulenger, still amuse
-themselves with the Pentalitha, there played with five
-little glass balls, which are flung in the air and caught
-so dexterously as seldom to fall either on the table or
-on the ground. I have never, however, seen it played
-myself in that country.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Astragalismos,<a id='r512' /><a href='#f512' class='c018'><sup>[512]</sup></a> which by the Romans was denominated
-talorum or taxillorum ludus, (by Hyde
-through the Greek πάσσαλος, derived from the Hebræo-Punic
-Assila,) by the Arabs Ka’b or Shezn, by the Persians
-Shesh-buzhûl bâzi, by the Turks Depshelìm,
-(played in their country both by girls and boys,) by
-the French Garignon or Osselets, in English “Cockall.”<a id='r513' /><a href='#f513' class='c018'><sup>[513]</sup></a>
-In the game of astragals the Persians, as is implied
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>in the name given above, often use six bones
-while the Greeks employed only four, which were
-thrown either on a table or on the floor. According
-to Lucian,<a id='r514' /><a href='#f514' class='c018'><sup>[514]</sup></a> the huckle bones were sometimes those of
-the African gazelle.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The several sides of the astragal or huckle bone had
-their character expressed by numbers, and obtained
-separate names, which determined the value of the
-throw.<a id='r515' /><a href='#f515' class='c018'><sup>[515]</sup></a> Thus, the side showing the Monas was called
-the Dog, the opposite side Chias, and the throw Chios.
-In cockall as in dice there are neither twos nor fives.
-The highest number, six, was called the Coan (συνορικὸς
-or ἑξίτης); the Dog or one was called the Chian or dog-chance;
-to which the old proverb alluded Κῶος πρὸς
-χῖον, six to one. To have the Dog turn up was to
-lose, hence, perhaps, the phrase, “going to the dogs,”
-that is, playing a losing game. The throw of eight
-was denominated Stesichoros, because the poet’s tomb
-at Himera consisted of a perfect octagon. Among
-the forty who succeeded to the thirty at Athens
-Euripides was one, and hence, if the throw of the
-astragals amounted to forty points, they bestowed
-upon it the name of Euripides. All animals in which
-the astragal is found have it in the hough or pastern of
-the hind legs. The τὸ πρανὲς, the gibbous side or blank,
-because it counts for nothing; the τὸ κοῖλον, the hollow
-side or “put in;” the χῶα, the tortuous side, "cockall,"
-or “take all,” so called because it wins the stake; the
-smooth side τα χῖα, “take half,” because of the money
-put in, it wins half. Among the Greeks and Romans
-the <em>put in</em> was called trias, the blank tetras, the half-monas,
-and the cockall hexas.<a id='r516' /><a href='#f516' class='c018'><sup>[516]</sup></a> By the Arabs they
-are denominated the thief, the lamb, the wezeer, and
-the sultan; by the Turks the robber, the ploughman,
-the kihaya, or the dog, and the bey; by the Persians
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>the robber, the rustic, the wezeer, and the schah; by
-the Armenians the thief, the ploughman, the steward,
-and the lord. The number of casts among the
-Greeks, according to Eustathius, amounted to thirty-five.<a id='r517' /><a href='#f517' class='c018'><sup>[517]</sup></a>
-Pliny<a id='r518' /><a href='#f518' class='c018'><sup>[518]</sup></a> speaks of a work of Polycletos representing
-naked boys playing at this game, and the reader
-will probably remember the mutilated group in the
-British Museum, in which a boy having evidently
-been beaten at astragals, is biting in revenge the
-leg of his conqueror.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>To play at Odd or Even<a id='r519' /><a href='#f519' class='c018'><sup>[519]</sup></a> was common; so that we
-find Plato describing a knot of boys engaged in this
-game in a corner of the undressing room of the gymnasium.
-There was a kind of divination by astragals,
-the bones being hidden under the hand, and the one
-party guessing whether they were odd or even. The
-same game was occasionally played with beans, walnuts,
-or almonds, or even with money, if we may credit
-Aristophanes, who describes certain serving-men playing
-at Odd or Even with golden staters.<a id='r520' /><a href='#f520' class='c018'><sup>[520]</sup></a> There was
-a game called Eis Omillan,<a id='r521' /><a href='#f521' class='c018'><sup>[521]</sup></a> in which they drew a circle
-on the ground, and, standing at a little distance, pitched
-the astragals at it; to win consisting in making
-them remain within the ring. Another form of the
-Eis Omillan was to place a trained quail within a circle,
-on a table for example, out of which the point was to
-drive it by tapping it with the middle finger. If it
-reared at the blow, and retreated beyond the line, its
-master lost his wager. The play called Tropa<a id='r522' /><a href='#f522' class='c018'><sup>[522]</sup></a> was
-also generally performed with astragals, which were
-pitched into a small hole, formed to receive such things
-when skilfully thrown. The common acorn, and fruit
-of the holm oak, were often substituted for astragals
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>in this game. The Ephentinda seems to have consisted
-in pitching an ostrakon into a circle, so as to
-cause it to remain there. The Skeptinda consisted in
-placing an ostrakon, or a piece of money, on the
-ground, and pitching another at it so as to make it
-turn.<a id='r523' /><a href='#f523' class='c018'><sup>[523]</sup></a></p>
-
-<hr class='c025' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f455'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r455'>455</a>. Plato had the utmost faith
-in the power of education over
-both mind and body; but his
-system embraced much more than
-is usually comprehended under
-the term, even taking charge of
-the infant before its birth, and
-immediately afterwards, in the
-hope of wisely regulating its physical
-developement. As the child
-grows most during the first five
-years, its size in the following
-twenty being seldom doubled,
-most care, he thought, should
-then be taken that the great impulses
-of nature be not counteracted.
-Much food is then consumed,
-with very little exercise;
-hence the multitude of deaths in
-infancy and diseases in after-life,
-of which the seeds are then sown.
-For this reason he would encourage
-the violent romping and
-sports of children, that the excess
-of nourishment may be got rid of.
-De Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 2. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f456'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r456'>456</a>. Plat, de Legg. vii. t. viii. p.
-21. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f457'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r457'>457</a>. Aristot. Polit. viii. 6. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f458'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r458'>458</a>. Dion. Chrysost. Nat. viii. p.
-281.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f459'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r459'>459</a>. Aristoph. Nub. 862. sqq. et
-Schol. Rav. in loc. Cf. Suid. v.
-Ἁμαξὶς, t. i. p. 194. b. Pollux, x.
-168.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f460'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r460'>460</a>. Damm. v. Ἄθυρμα.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f461'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r461'>461</a>. Lucian. Hermot. § 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f462'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r462'>462</a>. Aristoph. Nub. 877. sqq. et
-Schol.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f463'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r463'>463</a>. Lucian. de Somn. § 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f464'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r464'>464</a>. Buleng. de Theat. l. i. c. 36.
-sqq. Muret. ad Plat. Rep. p. 645.
-Eustath. in Odyss. δ. p. 176.
-Mount. Not. ad Dem. Olynth. ii. § 5.
-Perizon. ad Æl. Var. Hist. viii. 7.
-See also the article Marionnette
-in the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Encyclopédie Française</span>;
-and Caylus, Rec. d’Antiq. t. vi. p.
-287. t. iv. pl. 80. no. i.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f465'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r465'>465</a>. Aristot. de Mund. c. 6. translated
-by Apuleius, p. 20. Herod.
-ii. 48. See Comment. ad Poll. vii.
-189. Duport. ad Theophr. Char.
-p. 308. This juggler having, for
-his ill behaviour, been driven from
-Athens, flew to Philip, with whom
-such persons were always in favour.
-Dem. Olynth. i. § 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f466'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r466'>466</a>. Sat. ii. 7. 81. seq. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Plerumque
-simulacra de ligno facta nervis
-moventur.</span>—Vet. Schol.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f467'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r467'>467</a>. Satyric. p. 80. Helenop. 1610.
-Wouwer. Anim. p. 418. Erhard.
-Symbol. p. 611. Plut. Conv. Sept.
-Sap. ch. 2.—A story is told of an
-Ionian juggler who proceeded to
-Babylon to perform what he deemed
-a wonderful feat before the
-Great King, and the feat was this:
-fixing a long point of steel on a
-wall, and retiring to a considerable
-distance, he threw at it a number
-of soft round pellets of dough, with
-so nice an aim that every one of
-them was penetrated, the last pellet
-driving back the others. Max.
-Tyr. Diss. xix. p. 225. Anim. ad
-Poll. vii. 189. p. 532.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f468'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r468'>468</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 1517.
-Diog. Laert. i. 4. 8. Cf. Hyde
-Nerdilud. p. 259.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f469'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r469'>469</a>. Callim. Ep. i. 9. seq. p. 180.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f470'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r470'>470</a>. I. 5. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f471'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r471'>471</a>. Cf. Caylus, Rec. D’Antiq. t.
-vi. 318. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f472'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r472'>472</a>. Descr. des Pierres Grav. du
-Cab. de Stosch. 452. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f473'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r473'>473</a>. Eurip. Mod. 45. et Sch.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f474'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r474'>474</a>. L. xiv. Ep. 169.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f475'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r475'>475</a>. iii. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f476'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r476'>476</a>. Ars Poet. 380. where the
-ancient scholiast seems doubtful
-whether the trochus was a hoop
-or a top:—<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Trochus dicitur turben,
-qui flagello percutitur, et in
-vertiginem rotatur, aut rota quam
-currendo pueri scuticâ vel virgâ
-regunt.”</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f477'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r477'>477</a>. Carm. iii. 24. 56. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f478'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r478'>478</a>. On the games at present practised
-in Greece, see Dodwell, ii.
-37. sqq.; and Douglas, Essay on
-certain points of resemblance between
-the Anc. and Mod. Greeks, p. 127. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f479'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r479'>479</a>. Poll. ix. 124.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f480'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r480'>480</a>. Poll. ix. 123.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f481'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r481'>481</a>. This has been observed by
-Hemsterhuis, ad Poll. t. vi. p.
-1173, where his commentary
-alone can render the text intelligible.—Cf.
-Matthew, xxvi. 68.
-Mark, xiv. 64. Luke, xxii. 65.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f482'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r482'>482</a>. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Jeu de la main chaude.”</span>
-Steph. Thes. Ling. Græc. v. Κολλαβισμός.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f483'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r483'>483</a>. Hyde, Hist. Nerdilud. p.
-266.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f484'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r484'>484</a>. In v. Ἐφεδρίζειν.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f485'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r485'>485</a>. Hyde, Hist. Nerdilud. p. 241.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f486'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r486'>486</a>. Hyde, Hist. Nerdilud. p. 263.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f487'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r487'>487</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Thesm. 509.
-But see above, p. 122.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f488'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r488'>488</a>. Poll. ix. 114.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f489'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r489'>489</a>. Poll. ix. 125.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f490'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r490'>490</a>. Id. ix. 74. Cf. Suid. v. Καλλικολώνη
-t. i. p. 1359. c. Meurs.
-De Lud. Græc. p. 41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f491'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r491'>491</a>. Opp. ii. p. 880. Theocrit.
-v. 133. Wart.—Poll. x. 100.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f492'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r492'>492</a>. Comment. ad Poll. t. vi. p.
-1180.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f493'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r493'>493</a>. Poll. ix. 119.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f494'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r494'>494</a>. Seber ad Poll. t. vi. p. 1188.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f495'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r495'>495</a>. Poll. ix. 110.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f496'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r496'>496</a>. Galen. Protrept. § 10. Kühn.
-Compare the admirable note of
-Hemsterhuis ad Poll. t. vi. p.
-1066. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f497'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r497'>497</a>. Poll. ix. 111. seq. Plat. Phæd.
-t. i. p. 29. seq. Bekk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f498'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r498'>498</a>. Turneb. Advers. xxvii. 33.
-Poll. ix. 114. Comment. t. vi. p.
-1178.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f499'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r499'>499</a>. Vid. Vatic. Append. Proverb.
-Cent. ii. prov. 12. et Ib. not. And.
-Schotto. Kühn ad Poll. t. vi. p.
-1190.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f500'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r500'>500</a>. Meursius, Græc. Lud. p. 26.
-and after him Pfeiffer, Ant. Græc.
-iv. p. 120. read κινδαλοπαίκτης,
-which Hemsterhuis observes is contrary
-to the authority of the MSS.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f501'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r501'>501</a>. Phurnutus, De Nat. Deorum,
-c. 30. p. 217. seq. Gale.—Poll. ix.
-121. Sch. Aristoph. Plut. 1130.
-Kust.—Meurs. Græc. Fer. p. 52;
-Græc. Ludibunda, p. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f502'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r502'>502</a>. Poll. ix. 127. with the note
-of Hemsterhuis.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f503'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r503'>503</a>. Palamedes, iii. 4. p. 207.
-Alex. ab Alex. iii. 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f504'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r504'>504</a>. Cf. Souter. Palam. iii. 3. p.
-201.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f505'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r505'>505</a>. Deipnosoph. i. 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f506'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r506'>506</a>. Cf. Schweigh. ad Athen. t. vi.
-p. 248. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f507'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r507'>507</a>. Poll. ix. 106.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f508'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r508'>508</a>. Ad Poll. t. vi. p. 1186. sqq.
-Cf. Plut. Symp. i. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f509'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r509'>509</a>. Poll. ix. 118.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f510'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r510'>510</a>. The game of astragals, properly
-so called, was common to
-both sexes (Paus. vi. 24. 7), who
-saw in Elis one of the Graces, represented
-with an astragal in her
-hand, while her two companions
-held the one a rose, the other a
-branch of myrtle, symbolical of
-their relationship to Aphrodite.
-The poets sometimes transfer these
-sports of earth to the Olympian
-halls, where we find Eros and
-Ganymede playing with golden
-astragals—Cf. Apollon. Rhod. iii.
-117. seq. Cf. Odyss. α. 107. Il. χ.
-87. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f511'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r511'>511</a>. Poll. ix. 126.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f512'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r512'>512</a>. Children, according to Lysander,
-were to be deceived with astragals,
-and men with oaths.—Plut.
-Lysan. § 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f513'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r513'>513</a>. Hyde, Hist. Talor. § 2. t. ii.
-p. 314.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f514'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r514'>514</a>. Amor. § 16. Theoph. Char. c.
-5. See Nixon. Acc. of Antiq. at
-Hercul. Phil. Trans. vol. 50. pt. i.
-p. 88. Hyde. Hist. Talor. p. 137.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f515'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r515'>515</a>. Hyde. Hist. Talor. p. 141.
-sqq. Poll. ix. 100.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f516'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r516'>516</a>. Arist. Hist. Anim. ii. 2. p. 30.
-Bekk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f517'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r517'>517</a>. Meurs. Græc. Lud. p. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f518'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r518'>518</a>. xxxiv. 19. Vid. Calcagnin,
-Dissert. de Talis. J. Cammer. Comment.
-de Utriusque Ling. c. 846.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f519'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r519'>519</a>. Hyde, Hist. Nerdilud. p.
-261.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f520'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r520'>520</a>. Plut. 817. sqq. Cf. Sch. in loc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f521'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r521'>521</a>. Suid. et Hesych. in v. Poll.
-ix. 102. Cf. Meurs. Græc. Ludib.
-p. 69.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f522'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r522'>522</a>. Cf. Meurs. de Lud. Græc. p.
-61. Hesych. v. Τρόπα.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f523'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r523'>523</a>. Poll. ix. 117.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c025' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>
- <h3 class='c024'>CHAPTER IV. <br /> ELEMENTARY INSTRUCTION.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c032'>In Greece, as everywhere else, education<a id='r524' /><a href='#f524' class='c018'><sup>[524]</sup></a> commenced
-in the nursery; and though time has very much
-obscured all remaining traces of the instruction which
-the children there received, we are not left on this
-point wholly without information. From the very
-day of his birth man begins to be acted on by those
-causes that furnish his mind with ideas. As his intelligence
-acquires strength, the five sluices which let in
-all that flood of knowledge which afterwards overflows
-his mind, appear to be enlarged, and education
-at first, and for some time, consists in watching over
-the nature and quality of the ideas conveyed inward
-by those channels. It is difficult to say when actual
-instruction commenced: but among the earliest formal
-attempts at impressing traditionary knowledge on
-the infant mind was the repetition by mothers and
-nurses of fables and stories, not always, if Plato may
-be credited, constructed with a religious or ethical
-purpose.<a id='r525' /><a href='#f525' class='c018'><sup>[525]</sup></a> They, in fact, introduced into the minds of
-their children the legends of the mythology, under the
-forms of which truths of the greatest importance, such
-as Bacon has developed in his “Wisdom of the Ancients,”
-lay sometimes concealed, though more frequently,
-perhaps, they inculcated no useful lesson, but
-were the mere sportive creations of fancy, or if they
-contained any moral kernel the shell in which it was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>cased was too hard for the teeth of the vulgar.
-Such, for example, as the legend of Zeus in Hesiod
-mutilating his father Kronos, which, in Plato’s opinion,
-was not to be delivered to the empty-headed multitude
-or to untaught children; but, having sacrificed,
-not a hog, but the most precious victim, in mysterious
-secrecy to a few.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Wholly different from these, however, were the
-fables<a id='r526' /><a href='#f526' class='c018'><sup>[526]</sup></a> properly so called, which, invented apparently
-by Hesiod,<a id='r527' /><a href='#f527' class='c018'><sup>[527]</sup></a> (at least his Hawk and Nightingale is the
-oldest example extant in Hellenic literature,) were
-afterwards sprinkled by the greatest poets, through
-their writings, or spontaneously uttered in pressing
-emergencies to warn their countrymen against the
-approaches of tyranny. Archilochos’ Eagle and Fox<a id='r528' /><a href='#f528' class='c018'><sup>[528]</sup></a>
-was famous throughout antiquity, as was likewise
-the Horse and the Stag, related by Stesichoros<a id='r529' /><a href='#f529' class='c018'><sup>[529]</sup></a> to
-the people of Himera, to put them on their guard
-against the Machiavellian policy of Gelon. But the
-most complete, perhaps, of these ancient compositions
-is the fable of the lion, delivered by Eumenes to the
-Macedonian generals under his order, when they had
-been tampered with by Antigonos, who would have
-persuaded them to disband.<a id='r530' /><a href='#f530' class='c018'><sup>[530]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“It is said,” observed the Prince, “that once upon
-a time a lion falling in love with a young maiden
-came to make proposals of marriage to her father.
-The old man replied that he was quite ready to
-bestow on him his daughter upon one condition,
-namely, that he should pluck out his teeth and his
-claws, for that he feared his majesty might upon the
-wedding night forget himself and unwittingly destroy
-the bride. To these terms the lion consented, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>allowed his teeth and claws to be pulled out, upon
-which the father seeing he had lost the only things
-which rendered him terrible fell upon him with a club
-and beat him to death.” The Æsopic fables<a id='r531' /><a href='#f531' class='c018'><sup>[531]</sup></a> which
-Socrates a few days before his death amused himself
-by turning into verse,<a id='r532' /><a href='#f532' class='c018'><sup>[532]</sup></a> are known to us solely by
-comparatively modern imitations, and of those which
-were denominated Sybaritic we know nothing<a id='r533' /><a href='#f533' class='c018'><sup>[533]</sup></a> beyond
-the name; for though one scholiast informs
-us that the Sybaritic fables brought men upon the
-scene, as the Æsopic did animals, another states the
-direct contrary. In the earlier and ruder ages of
-Greece, however, these compositions were in great
-repute, as they are still among the people of the East.
-To the infancy of nations as of individuals the wisdom
-they contain is, in fact, always palatable; for which
-reason they were highly esteemed by Martin Luther
-as particularly adapted to the spirit of his times.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Doubtless we know too little of how the foundation
-of the republican character was laid in the ancient
-commonwealths; but it was laid by woman, and for
-centuries cannot have been laid amiss, as the glorious
-superstructure of virtue and patriotism erected upon
-it fully demonstrates. On this point we must reject
-the testimony of Plato’s academic dream. The historic
-fields of Marathon, Platæa, Thermopylæ, and a
-thousand others confute his fanciful theorising, proving
-incontestably that the love of glory and <a id='corr166.29'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='independance'>independence</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_166.29'><ins class='correction' title='independance'>independence</ins></a></span>
-could, in the very polities which lie least esteemed,
-achieve triumphs unknown to the subjects of other
-governments.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>At seven years<a id='r534' /><a href='#f534' class='c018'><sup>[534]</sup></a> old boys were removed from the
-harem and sent under the care of a governor to a
-public school, which, from the story of Bedreddin
-Hassan, we find to have been formerly the practice
-among the Arabs, even for the sons of distinguished
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>men and Wezeers. “When seven years had passed
-over him his grandfather, (Shemseddeen, Wezeer of
-the Sultan of Egypt,) committed him to a schoolmaster,
-whom he charged to educate him with great
-care.”<a id='r535' /><a href='#f535' class='c018'><sup>[535]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Mischievous no doubt the boys of Hellas were,
-as boys will everywhere be, and many pranks would
-they play in spite of the crabbed old slaves set over
-them by their parents; on which account, probably,
-it is that Plato considers boys, of all wild beasts the
-most audacious, plotting, fierce and intractable.<a id='r536' /><a href='#f536' class='c018'><sup>[536]</sup></a> But
-the urchins now found that it was one thing to nestle
-under mamma’s wing at home, and another to delve
-under the direction of a didaskalos, and at school-hours,
-after the bitter roots of knowledge. For the
-school-boys of Greece tasted very little of the sweets
-of bed after dawn. “They rose with the light,” says
-Lucian, “and with pure water washed away the remains
-of sleep, which still lingered on their eyelids.”<a id='r537' /><a href='#f537' class='c018'><sup>[537]</sup></a>
-Having breakfasted on bread and fruit, to which
-through the allurements of their pædagogues they
-sometimes added wine,<a id='r538' /><a href='#f538' class='c018'><sup>[538]</sup></a> they sallied forth to the didaskaleion,
-or schoolmaster’s lair as the comic poets jocularly
-termed it,<a id='r539' /><a href='#f539' class='c018'><sup>[539]</sup></a> summer and winter, whether the
-morning smelt of balm, or was deformed by sleet or
-snow, drifting like meal from a sieve down the rocks
-of the Acropolis.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Aristophanes has left us a picture, dashed off with
-his usual grotesque vigour, of a troop of Attic lads
-marching on a winter’s morning to school.<a id='r540' /><a href='#f540' class='c018'><sup>[540]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Now will I sketch the ancient plan of training,</div>
- <div class='line'>When justice was in vogue and wisdom flourished.</div>
- <div class='line'>First, modesty restrained the youthful voice</div>
- <div class='line'>So that no brawl was heard. In order ranged,</div>
- <div class='line'>The boys from all the neighbourhood appeared,</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>Marching to school, naked, though down the sky</div>
- <div class='line'>Tumbled the flaky snow like flour from sieve.</div>
- <div class='line'>Arrived, and seated wide apart, the master</div>
- <div class='line'>First taught them how to chaunt Athena’s praise,</div>
- <div class='line'>‘Pallas unconquered, stormer of cities!’ or</div>
- <div class='line'>‘Shout far resounding’ in the self-same notes</div>
- <div class='line'>Their fathers learned. And if through mere conceit</div>
- <div class='line'>Some innovation-hunter strained his throat</div>
- <div class='line'>With scurril lays mincing and quavering,</div>
- <div class='line'>Like any Siphnian or Chian fop—</div>
- <div class='line'>As is too much the fashion since that Phrynis<a id='r541' /><a href='#f541' class='c018'><sup>[541]</sup></a></div>
- <div class='line'>Brought o’er Ionian airs—quickly the scourge</div>
- <div class='line'>Rained on his shoulders blows like hail as one</div>
- <div class='line'>Plotting the Muses’ downfal. In the Palæstra</div>
- <div class='line'>Custom required them decently to sit,</div>
- <div class='line'>Decent to rise, smoothing the sandy floor</div>
- <div class='line'>Lest any traces of their form should linger</div>
- <div class='line'>Unsightly on the dust. When in the bath</div>
- <div class='line'>Grave was their manner, their behaviour chaste.</div>
- <div class='line'>At table, too, no stimulating dishes,</div>
- <div class='line'>Snatched from their elders, such as fish or anis,</div>
- <div class='line'>Parsley or radishes or thrushes, roused</div>
- <div class='line'>The slumbering passions.”<a id='r542' /><a href='#f542' class='c018'><sup>[542]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>The object of sending boys to school was twofold:
-first to cultivate and harmonise their minds by arts
-and literature; secondly, so to occupy them that no
-time could be allowed for evil thoughts and habits.
-On this account, Aristotle enumerating Archytas’
-rattle among the principal toys of children, denominates
-education the rattle of boys.<a id='r543' /><a href='#f543' class='c018'><sup>[543]</sup></a> In order, too,
-that its effect might be the more sure and permanent,
-no holidays<a id='r544' /><a href='#f544' class='c018'><sup>[544]</sup></a>, or vacations appear to have been allowed,
-while irregularity or lateness of attendance was severely
-punished.<a id='r545' /><a href='#f545' class='c018'><sup>[545]</sup></a> The theories broached by Montagne,
-Locke, and others, that boys are to be kept in
-order by reason and persuasion were not anticipated
-by the Athenians.<a id='r546' /><a href='#f546' class='c018'><sup>[546]</sup></a> They believed that to reduce the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>stubborn will to obedience, and enforce the wholesome
-laws of discipline, masters must be armed with
-the power of correction, and accordingly their teachers
-and gymnasiarchs checked with stripes<a id='r547' /><a href='#f547' class='c018'><sup>[547]</sup></a> the slightest
-exhibition of stubbornness or indocility.<a id='r548' /><a href='#f548' class='c018'><sup>[548]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Nor did their pædagogues<a id='r549' /><a href='#f549' class='c018'><sup>[549]</sup></a> or governors behave
-towards them with less strictness. These were persons,—slaves
-for the most part,—who at Athens as in
-the rest of Greece, Sparta not excepted, were from
-the earliest ages intrusted with the care of boys, and
-whose ministry could on no account be dispensed
-with. By Plato<a id='r550' /><a href='#f550' class='c018'><sup>[550]</sup></a> even these precautions were deemed
-insufficient. In his ideal state he would have the pædagogues
-themselves, as at Sparta, under the strictest
-inspection, making it the duty of every citizen to have
-an eye upon them, and arming him with the power to
-correct their delinquencies as well as those of the
-boys under their charge. There was to be, moreover,
-a general inspector intrusted with authority to punish
-neglect, by whichsoever of the parties committed.
-Upon these points the views of the Athenians were
-unquestionably judicious, for since boys did not
-amongst them pass at once from the hands of their
-mothers and domestic guardianship into those of the
-state as at Sparta, such governors were necessary to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>preserve their manners from defilement and contamination.<a id='r551' /><a href='#f551' class='c018'><sup>[551]</sup></a>
-Their principal duty consisted in leading the
-lad to and from school, in attending him to the
-theatre, to the public games, to the forum, and <a id='corr170.4'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='where-ever'>wherever</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_170.4'><ins class='correction' title='where-ever'>wherever</ins></a></span>
-else it was thought fit he should go.<a id='r552' /><a href='#f552' class='c018'><sup>[552]</sup></a> It has been
-by some conjectured that while the boys continued
-under the care of the schoolmaster the governors remained
-in the house, or in a building adjoining denominated
-the pædagogeion, to await their return; but
-the inference, drawn chiefly from the name of the edifice,
-is erroneous; pædagogeion was employed to signify
-the school itself,<a id='r553' /><a href='#f553' class='c018'><sup>[553]</sup></a> and we have the testimony of Plato
-to prove that the pædagogue having delivered the boy
-to the didaskalos, usually returned to his master’s
-house.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>On the character of these governors<a id='r554' /><a href='#f554' class='c018'><sup>[554]</sup></a> antiquity appears
-to have transmitted us more satire than information.
-If we may credit some writers, it was not
-merely slaves who were intrusted with the care of
-boys, but often the meanest and vilest of slaves,—base
-in mind, depraved in manners,—whose guardianship,
-when they chanced to be crabbed and morose, could
-be no other than disgusting to their charges; and,
-when inclined to indulgence, most pernicious. Nay,
-were they themselves corrupt, what could be of more
-evil tendency than their own example? They who
-take this view of the matter appear to me illogical
-and inconsistent.<a id='r555' /><a href='#f555' class='c018'><sup>[555]</sup></a> Though aware that these men
-were chosen by the parents to preserve their children
-from bad example, from the infection of corrupt
-manners, from the allurements of vicious companions,
-these writers persuade themselves that they voluntarily
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>gave them as companions and guardians men
-worse than whom could not be found. It is more
-reasonable to conclude that when these pædagogues
-proved unworthy of the trust reposed in them they
-were sufficient masters of hypocrisy to conceal their
-vices at home, and only revealed themselves to their
-young masters gradually as their lessons produced
-their evil fruits. Thus, it is clear, that the father
-whom the comic writer Plato, in his Fellow Deceiver,<a id='r556' /><a href='#f556' class='c018'><sup>[556]</sup></a>
-introduced reproaching the pædagogue who had corrupted
-his son, knew nothing of his evil ways when
-he delivered the lad to his keeping.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“The youth, O wretch, whom I intrusted to thee</div>
- <div class='line'>Thou hast perverted, teaching him vile habits</div>
- <div class='line'>Once stranger to his mind; for now he drinks</div>
- <div class='line'>Even in the morning, which was not his wont.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>With the greatest reason we may suppose, that
-of all the domestics in the family the most staid and
-sober, the most attached, the most faithful, were
-chosen to fulfil this important duty, such as Plautus
-describes an honest pædagogue,—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Eademque erat hæc disciplina olim, cum tu adolescens eras?</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Nego tibi hoc annis viginti fuisse primis copiæ,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Digitum longe a pædagogo pedem ut efferres ædibus,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ante solem exorientem nisi in palæstram veneras,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Gymnasii præfecto haud mediocres pœnas penderes.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Idque ubi obtigerat, hoc etiam ad malum arcessabatur malum</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Et discipulus et magister perhibebantur improbi.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ubi cursu, luctando, hasta, disco, pugillatu, pila,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Saliendo sese exercebant magis, quam, scorto aut saviis:</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ibi suam ætatem extendebant, non in latebrosis locis.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Inde de hippodromo et palæstra ubi revenisses domum,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Cincticulo præcinctus in sella apud magistrum assideres:</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Cum librum legeres. Si unam peccavisses syllabam,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Fieret corium tam maculosum quam est nutricis pallium</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;* Id equidem ego certo scio.</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Nam olim populi prius honorem capiebat suffragio,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Quam magistri desinebat esse dicto obediens.</span><a id='r557' /><a href='#f557' class='c018'><sup>[557]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>Lucian, too, speaking of the attendants of youths
-in the better times of the republic, describes them
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>as an honourable company who followed their young
-masters to the schools, not with combs and looking-glasses
-like the attendants of ladies, but with the
-venerable instruments of wisdom in their hands,
-many-leaved tablets or books recording the glorious
-deeds of their ancestors, or if proceeding to the
-music master bearing, instead of these, the melodious
-lyre.<a id='r558' /><a href='#f558' class='c018'><sup>[558]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In fact the fortunes of war often in those days
-reduced men of virtue and ability to the condition of
-slaves, when they would naturally be chosen as the
-governors of youth. Thus we find Diogenes the Cynic
-purchased by a rich Corinthian, who intrusted to him
-the education of his sons. The account which antiquity
-has left us of his sale, reception by his master,
-and manner of teaching, being extremely brief, we shall
-here give it entire. Hermippos<a id='r559' /><a href='#f559' class='c018'><sup>[559]</sup></a> who wrote a small
-treatise called the Sale of Diogenes, observes that
-when the philosopher was exposed in the slave-market
-and interrogated respecting his qualifications, he replied
-that “He could command men;” and then addressing
-himself to the herald, bade him inquire
-whether there was any one present who wanted a
-master. Being forbidden to sit down, he said “This
-matters nothing, for fish are bought in whatever way
-they may lie.” He remarked also, that he wondered
-that when people were buying a pot or a dish
-they examined it on all sides, whereas when they
-purchased a man they were contented with simply
-looking at him. Afterwards, when he had become
-the slave of Xeniades, he informed his owner that he
-expected the same obedience to be paid to him as
-men yield to a pilot or a physician.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It is further related by Eubulos, who likewise wrote
-a treatise on this incident, that Diogenes conducted
-with the utmost care the education of the children
-under his charge. In addition to the ordinary studies,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>he taught them to ride, to draw the bow, to use the
-sling, and to throw the javelin. In the palæstra,
-moreover, where, contrary to the Athenian practice
-he remained to watch over the boys, Diogenes would
-not permit the master of the Gymnasium to exercise
-them after the manner of the athletæ; but in those
-parts only of gymnastics, which had a tendency to
-animate them and strengthen their constitutions.
-They learned also by heart,<a id='r560' /><a href='#f560' class='c018'><sup>[560]</sup></a> under his direction, numerous
-sentences from the poets and historians, as well
-as from his own writings. It was his practice likewise
-very greatly to abridge his explanations in order that
-they might the more easily be committed to memory.
-At home he habituated them to wait on themselves,
-to be content with frugal fare, and drink water, from
-which it may be inferred that others drank wine. He
-accustomed them to cut their hair close, not to be
-fastidious in dress, and to walk abroad with him barefoot
-and without a chiton, silent and with downcast
-eyes.<a id='r561' /><a href='#f561' class='c018'><sup>[561]</sup></a> He also went out with them to hunt. On
-their part they took great care of him, and pleaded
-his cause with their parents. He therefore grew old
-in the family, and they performed for him the rites of
-sepulture.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Now what Diogenes was in the house of Xeniades
-numerous pædagogues were doubtless found to be in
-other parts of Greece. But the majority it is thought
-were open to blame; and so they are everywhere,
-and so they would be, though taken from the best
-classes of mankind. That is, they were men with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>many failings, far from what could be wished; but
-that their character upon the whole was respectable
-seems to me demonstrated by the powers delegated
-to them by the parents. For not only could they
-use upon occasion, as we have said, menace and harsh
-language,—they were even permitted to have recourse
-to blows, in order to preserve their pupils from vices
-which none would have sooner taught than they, had
-their characters been such as is commonly believed.
-For example, would they have made a drunkard the
-guardian of a boy’s sobriety? a thief the guardian of
-his honesty? a libertine of his chastity? a coarse and
-ribald jester the inculcator of modesty and purity of
-language?<a id='r562' /><a href='#f562' class='c018'><sup>[562]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>At home, of course, the influence and example of
-the parents surpassed all other influences, of the
-mother more especially, who up to their manhood
-retained over her sons the greatest authority. Of
-this a playful illustration occurs in the Lysis of
-Plato.<a id='r563' /><a href='#f563' class='c018'><sup>[563]</sup></a> Socrates, interrogating the youth respecting
-the course of his studies, inquires archly whether
-when in the harem he was not as a matter of course
-permitted to play with his mother’s wool basket, and
-loom, and spathe, and shuttle?</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“If I touched them,” replied Lysis, laughing, “I
-should soon feel the weight of the shuttle upon my
-fingers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“But,” proceeds the philosopher, “if your mother
-or father require anything to be read or written for
-them, they, probably, prefer your services to those
-of any other person?”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“No doubt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“And in this case, as you have been instructed in
-reading and spelling, they allow you to proceed
-according to your own knowledge. So likewise,
-when you play to them on the lyre, they suffer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>you, as you please, to relax or tighten the chords,
-to touch them with the fingers, or strike them
-with the plectron,—do they not?”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Certainly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>From this it would appear that the authority of the
-parents was equal; though generally at Athens, as
-Plato<a id='r564' /><a href='#f564' class='c018'><sup>[564]</sup></a> elsewhere complains, greater reverence was paid
-to the commands of the mother even than to those of
-the father. Indeed to be wanting in respect to her
-was there deemed the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>ne plus ultra</i></span> of depravity.<a id='r565' /><a href='#f565' class='c018'><sup>[565]</sup></a> The
-father, however, of necessity took a considerable share
-in the instruction and moral training of his son,<a id='r566' /><a href='#f566' class='c018'><sup>[566]</sup></a> who
-at home profited by his conversation, and, arrived at
-the proper age, accompanied him abroad.<a id='r567' /><a href='#f567' class='c018'><sup>[567]</sup></a> When reduced
-to the state of orphanhood the republic took
-children under its own protection, not considering it
-safe to intrust them to the sole guidance of masters or
-pædagogues.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Care, too, was taken lest those public schools, established
-for the advancement of virtue and morals, should
-themselves be converted into nurseries of vice. They
-were by law<a id='r568' /><a href='#f568' class='c018'><sup>[568]</sup></a> forbidden to be opened before sunrise, and
-were closed at sunset; nor during the day could any
-other men be introduced besides the teachers,<a id='r569' /><a href='#f569' class='c018'><sup>[569]</sup></a> though
-it appears from some of Plato’s dialogues that this
-enactment was not very strictly observed.<a id='r570' /><a href='#f570' class='c018'><sup>[570]</sup></a> To prevent
-habits of brawling, boys were forbidden to assemble in
-crowds in the streets on their way to school. Nor
-were these laws deemed sufficient; but still further to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>protect their morals ten annual magistrates called Sophronistæ,
-one from each tribe, were elected by show of
-hands,<a id='r571' /><a href='#f571' class='c018'><sup>[571]</sup></a> whose sole business it was to watch over the
-manners of youth. This magistracy, dated as far back
-as the age of Solon,<a id='r572' /><a href='#f572' class='c018'><sup>[572]</sup></a> and continued in force to the
-latest <a id='corr176.6'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='times,'>time.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_176.6'><ins class='correction' title='times,'>time.</ins></a></span> The Gymnasiarch, another magistrate,<a id='r573' /><a href='#f573' class='c018'><sup>[573]</sup></a>
-was intrusted with the superintendence of the Gymnasia,
-which, like the public games and festivals,
-appeared to require peculiar care; and, if we can receive
-the testimony of Plautus<a id='r574' /><a href='#f574' class='c018'><sup>[574]</sup></a> for the classical ages
-of the commonwealth, transgressors received severe
-chastisement.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It has sometimes been imagined that in Greece separate
-edifices were not erected as with us expressly
-for school-houses, but that both the didaskalos and the
-philosopher taught their pupils in fields, gardens or
-shady groves.<a id='r575' /><a href='#f575' class='c018'><sup>[575]</sup></a> But this was not the common practice,
-though many schoolmasters appear to have had no
-other place wherein to assemble their pupils than the
-portico of a temple<a id='r576' /><a href='#f576' class='c018'><sup>[576]</sup></a> or some sheltered corner in the
-street, where in spite of the din of business and the
-throng of passengers the worship of learning was publicly
-performed. Here, too, the music-masters frequently
-gave their lessons, whether in singing or on
-the lyre, which practice explains the anecdote of the
-musician, who, hearing the crowd applaud one of his
-scholars, gave him a box on the ear, observing, “Had
-you played well these blockheads would not have
-praised you.” A custom very similar prevails in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>East, where, in recesses open to the street, we often
-see the turbaned schoolmaster with a crowd of
-little Moslems about him, tracing letters on their
-large wooden tablets or engaged in recitations of the
-Koran.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But these were the schools of the humbler classes.
-For the children of the noble and the opulent spacious
-structures were raised, and furnished with tables,
-desks,—for that peculiar species of grammateion<a id='r577' /><a href='#f577' class='c018'><sup>[577]</sup></a>
-which resembled the plate cupboard, can have been
-nothing but a desk,—forms, and whatsoever else their
-studies required. Mention is made of a school at
-Chios<a id='r578' /><a href='#f578' class='c018'><sup>[578]</sup></a> which contained one hundred and twenty boys,
-all of whom save one were killed by the falling in of
-the roof. From another tragical story we learn that
-in Astypalæa,<a id='r579' /><a href='#f579' class='c018'><sup>[579]</sup></a> one of the Cyclades, there was a school
-which contained sixty boys. The incidents connected
-with their death are narrated in the romantic style of
-the ancients. Cleomedes, a native of this island,
-having in boxing slain Iccos the Epidaurian, was
-accused of unfairness and refused the prize, upon which
-he became mad and returned to his own country.
-There, entering into the public school, he approached
-the pillar that supported the roof, and like another
-Sampson seized it in an access of frenzy, and wresting
-it from its basis brought down the whole building
-upon the children. He himself however escaped, but,
-being pursued with stones by the inhabitants, took
-sanctuary in the temple of Athena, where he concealed
-himself in the sacred chest. The people paying
-no respect to the holy place still pursued him and
-attempted to force open the lid, which he held down
-with gigantic strength. At length when the coffer
-was broken in pieces Cleomedes was nowhere to be
-found, dead or alive. Terrified at this prodigy they
-sent to consult the oracle of Delphi, by which they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>were commanded to pay divine honours to the athlete
-as the last of the heroes.<a id='r580' /><a href='#f580' class='c018'><sup>[580]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In the interior of the school there was commonly
-an oratory<a id='r581' /><a href='#f581' class='c018'><sup>[581]</sup></a> adorned with statues of the Muses, where,
-probably in a kind of font, was kept a supply of pure
-water for the boys. Pretending often, when they
-were not, to be thirsty, they would steal in knots to
-this oratory, and there amuse themselves by splashing
-the water over each other; on which account the
-legislator ordained that strict watch should be kept
-over it. Every morning the forms were spunged,<a id='r582' /><a href='#f582' class='c018'><sup>[582]</sup></a>
-the schoolroom was cleanly swept, the ink ground
-ready for use, and all things were put in order for
-the business of the day.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The apparatus<a id='r583' /><a href='#f583' class='c018'><sup>[583]</sup></a> of an ancient school was somewhat
-complicated: there were mathematical instruments,
-globes, maps, and charts of the heavens, together with
-boards whereon to trace geometrical figures, tablets,
-large and small, of box-wood, fir, or ivory<a id='r584' /><a href='#f584' class='c018'><sup>[584]</sup></a> triangular
-in form, some folding with two, and others with
-many leaves; books too and paper, skins of parchment,
-wax for covering the tablets, which, if we may
-believe Aristophanes,<a id='r585' /><a href='#f585' class='c018'><sup>[585]</sup></a> people sometimes ate when
-they were hungry.<a id='r586' /><a href='#f586' class='c018'><sup>[586]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>To the above were added rulers, reed-pens,<a id='r587' /><a href='#f587' class='c018'><sup>[587]</sup></a> pen-cases,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>pen-knives, pencils, and last, though not least,
-the rod which kept them to the steady use of all
-these things.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>At Athens these schools were not provided by the
-state. They were private speculations, and each
-master was regulated in his charges by the reputation
-he had acquired and the fortunes of his pupils. Some
-appear to have been extremely moderate in their
-demands.<a id='r588' /><a href='#f588' class='c018'><sup>[588]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>There was for example a school-master named Hippomachos,
-upon entering whose establishment boys
-were required to pay down a mina, after which they
-might remain as long and benefit by his instructions
-as much as they pleased. Didaskaloi were not however
-held in sufficient respect, though as their scholars
-were sometimes very numerous,<a id='r589' /><a href='#f589' class='c018'><sup>[589]</sup></a> as many for example
-as a hundred and twenty, it must often have happened
-that they became wealthy. From the life of Homer,
-attributed to Herodotus,<a id='r590' /><a href='#f590' class='c018'><sup>[590]</sup></a> we glean some few particulars
-respecting the condition of a schoolmaster in remoter
-ages.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Phemios it is there related kept a school at Smyrna,
-where he taught boys their letters and all those other
-parts of education then comprehended under the term
-music. His slave Chritheis, the mother of the poet,
-spun and wove the wool which Phemios received in
-payment from his scholars. She likewise introduced
-into his house great elegance and frugality, which so
-pleased the school-master that it induced him to marry
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>her. Under this man, according to the tradition received
-in Greece, Homer studied, and made so great a
-proficiency in knowledge that he was soon enabled to
-commence instructor himself. He therefore proceeded
-to Chios,<a id='r591' /><a href='#f591' class='c018'><sup>[591]</sup></a> and opened a school where he initiated
-the youth in the beauties of epic poetry, and, performing
-his duties with great wisdom, obtained many admirers
-among the Chians, became wealthy, and took
-a wife, by whom he had two sons.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The earliest task to be performed at school was
-to gain a knowledge of the Greek characters, large
-and small, to spell next, next to read. Herodes the
-Sophist experienced much vexation from the stupidity
-exhibited in achieving this enterprise by his son Atticus,
-whose memory was so sluggish that he could not
-even recollect the Christ-cross-row. To overcome this
-extraordinary dulness he educated along with him
-twenty-four little slaves of his own age, upon whom
-he bestowed the names of the letters, so that young
-Atticus might be compelled to learn his alphabet as
-he played with his companions, now calling out for
-Omicron now for Psi.<a id='r592' /><a href='#f592' class='c018'><sup>[592]</sup></a> In teaching the art of writing
-their practice nearly resembled our own; the master
-traced with what we must call a pencil (γραφὶς), a
-number of characters on a tablet, and the pupil following
-with the pen the guidance of the faint lines<a id='r593' /><a href='#f593' class='c018'><sup>[593]</sup></a>
-before him, accustomed his fingers to perform the requisite
-movements with adroitness.<a id='r594' /><a href='#f594' class='c018'><sup>[594]</sup></a> These things
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>were necessarily the first step in the first class of
-studies, which were denominated <em>music</em>,<a id='r595' /><a href='#f595' class='c018'><sup>[595]</sup></a> and comprehended
-everything connected with the developement
-of the mind; and they were carried to a certain extent
-before the second division called gymnastics was commenced.
-They reversed the plan commonly adopted
-among ourselves, for with them poetry<a id='r596' /><a href='#f596' class='c018'><sup>[596]</sup></a> preceded
-prose, a practice which coöperating with their susceptible
-temperament, impressed upon the national mind
-that imaginative character for which it was preëminently
-distinguished. And the poets in whose works
-they were first initiated were of all the most poetical,
-the authors of lyrical and dithyrambic pieces,
-selections from whose verses they committed to memory,
-thus acquiring early a rich store of sentences
-and imagery ready to be adduced in argument or
-illustration, to furnish familiar allusions or to be
-woven into the texture of their style.<a id='r597' /><a href='#f597' class='c018'><sup>[597]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Considerable difference however existed in the practice
-of different teachers. Some imagining that by
-the variety of their acquirements they would be rendered
-eloquent, recommended the indiscriminate study
-of the poets,<a id='r598' /><a href='#f598' class='c018'><sup>[598]</sup></a> whether they wrote in hexameter, in trimeter,
-or any other kind of verse, on ludicrous or on
-serious subjects. Certain poets there were who like
-Fenelon and the pretended Ossian, wrote their works
-in prose,<a id='r599' /><a href='#f599' class='c018'><sup>[599]</sup></a> respecting the use of whose compositions
-Plato was in some doubt.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>By other philosophers wandering unrestrained over
-the vast fields of literature was condemned. They
-desired to separate the gold from the dross, contending
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>that persons accustomed from their infancy to the
-loftier and purer inspirations of the muse will regard
-with contempt every thing mean or illiberal, whereas
-they who have learned to delight in low and vulgar
-compositions will consider all other literature tame
-and insipid. For so great is the force of imitation,
-that habits commenced from the earliest years pass
-into the manners and character of a man, affecting
-even his voice and corporeal developement, nay, modifying
-the very nature of the thoughts themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Among the other branches of knowledge<a id='r600' /><a href='#f600' class='c018'><sup>[600]</sup></a> most
-necessary to be studied, and to which they applied
-themselves nearly from the outset, was arithmetic,
-without some inkling of which, a man, in Plato’s
-opinion, could scarcely be a citizen at all. For, as
-he observes, there is no art or science which does not
-stand in some need of it, especially the art of war,
-where many combinations depend entirely on numbers.
-And yet Agamemnon in some of the old tragic
-poets was represented by Palamedes as wholly ignorant
-of calculation, so that possibly, as Socrates jocularly
-observes, he could not reckon his own feet.<a id='r601' /><a href='#f601' class='c018'><sup>[601]</sup></a> The importance
-attached to this branch of education, nowhere
-more apparent than in the dialogues of Plato, furnishes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>one proof that the Athenians were preëminently men
-of business, who in all their admiration for the good
-and beautiful never lost sight of those things which
-promote the comfort of life, and enable a man effectually
-to perform his ordinary duties. With the same
-views were geometry and astronomy pursued. For, in
-the Republic, Glaucon,<a id='r602' /><a href='#f602' class='c018'><sup>[602]</sup></a> who may be supposed to represent
-the popular opinion, confesses at once, upon the
-mention of geometry, that as it is applicable to the
-business of war it would be most useful. He could
-discover the superiority of the geometrician<a id='r603' /><a href='#f603' class='c018'><sup>[603]</sup></a> over the
-ignorant man in pitching a camp, in the taking of
-places, in contracting or expanding the ranks of an
-army, and all those other military movements practised
-in battles, marches or sieges. To Plato however
-this was its least recommendation. He conceived that
-in the search after goodness and truth the study of
-this science was especially beneficial to the mind, both
-because it deals in positive verities, and thus begets
-a love of them, and likewise superinduces the habit of
-seeking them through lengthened investigation and of
-being satisfied with nothing less.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In the study of astronomy<a id='r604' /><a href='#f604' class='c018'><sup>[604]</sup></a> itself a coarse and
-obvious utility was almost of necessity the first thing
-aimed at, and even in the age of Socrates, when philosophical
-wants were keenly felt in addition to those
-of the animal and civil life, there were evidently
-teachers who considered it necessary to justify such
-pursuits, by showing their bearing on the system of
-loss and profit. For when Socrates comes in his ideal
-scheme of education to touch on this science, Glaucon,
-the practical man, at once recognises its usefulness,
-not only in husbandry and navigation, but in affairs
-military. Nor are such fruits of it to be despised.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>But philosophy proposes a higher aim, insisting, in
-opposition to popular belief, that by means of such
-pursuits the soul may be purified, and its powers of
-discovering truth, overlaid and nearly extinguished by
-other studies, rekindled and fanned into activity like
-a flame.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The importance of music,<a id='r605' /><a href='#f605' class='c018'><sup>[605]</sup></a> in the education of the
-Greeks, is generally understood. It was employed to
-effect several purposes. First, to soothe and mollify
-the fierceness of the national character, and prepare
-the way for the lessons of the poets, which, delivered
-amid the sounding of melodious strings, when the soul
-was rapt and elevated by harmony, by the excitement
-of numbers, by the magic of the sweetest associations,
-took a firm hold upon the mind, and generally
-retained it during life. Secondly, it enabled the
-citizens gracefully to perform their part in the amusements
-of social life, every person being in his turn
-called upon at entertainments to sing or play upon
-the lyre. Thirdly, it was necessary to enable them to
-join in the sacred choruses, rendered frequent by
-the piety of the state, and for the due performance in
-old age of many offices of religion, the sacerdotal character
-belonging more or less to all the citizens of
-Athens. Fourthly, as much of the learning of a
-Greek was martial and designed to fit him for defending
-his country, he required some knowledge
-of music that on the field of battle his voice might
-harmoniously mingle with those of his countrymen,
-in chaunting those stirring, impetuous, and terrible
-melodies, called pæans, which preceded the first
-shock of fight.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>For some, or all of these reasons, the science of
-music began to be cultivated among the Hellenes,
-at a period almost beyond the reach even of tradition.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>The Bards, whom we behold wandering on the remotest
-edge of the fabulous horizon, have invariably
-harps or lyres in their hands; and the greatest of the
-heroes of poetry, the very acme of Epic excellence, is
-represented delighting in the performance of music,
-and chaunting on the shores of the Hellespont the
-deeds of former warriors. In those ages the music
-of the whole nation possessed evidently a grave and
-lofty character; but as that of the Ionians became
-afterwards modified by the influence of a softer climate
-and imitation of the Asiatic, while the Dorian
-measure remained nearly unchanged, the latter is supposed
-to have possessed originally the superiority over
-the former, which in reality it did not. In process of
-time, however, the existence of three distinct measures
-was recognised, the Dorian, the Æolian, and
-the Ionian: the first was grave, masculine, full of
-energy, and though somewhat monotonous peculiarly
-adapted to inspire martial ardour; the last distinguished
-by a totally different character, rich, varied,
-flexible, breathing softness and pleasure, adorning the
-hour of peace and murmuring plaintively through
-the groves and temples of Aphrodite, Apollo, and
-the Muses; while the second, which was fiery, with
-a mixture of gaiety, formed the intermediate step
-between the two measures, partaking something of
-the character of each. The Hypermixolydian and
-Hyperphrygian, at one time cultivated among the
-Ionians, were comparatively recent inventions.<a id='r606' /><a href='#f606' class='c018'><sup>[606]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Phrygian measure distinguished for its exciting
-and enthusiastic character,<a id='r607' /><a href='#f607' class='c018'><sup>[607]</sup></a> was much employed
-upon the stage, on which account Agias the
-poet used to say that the styrax burned on the altar
-in the orchestra had a Phrygian smell, because its
-odours recalled the wild Phrygian measures there
-heard. The national instrument of the Phrygians
-was the flute, and it is worthy of remark that up
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>to a very late period flute-players at Athens were
-usually distinguished by Phrygian names. Olympos
-the greatest musician known to the Greeks, was probably
-himself a native of Phrygia, since he is said to
-have been a pupil of Marsyas. In fact the barbarians
-of antiquity appear, though in a somewhat different
-way, to have made as much use of music as the
-Greeks themselves. They chaunted the songs of
-their bards in going to battle, sang funeral dirges
-at tombs, and even caused their ambassadors when
-proceeding on a mission to foreign states to be accompanied
-by music.<a id='r608' /><a href='#f608' class='c018'><sup>[608]</sup></a> No people, however, appear
-to have carried their love for music to so preposterous
-a length as the Tyrrhenians, who caused their
-slaves to be flogged to the sound of the flute.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The music of the flute<a id='r609' /><a href='#f609' class='c018'><sup>[609]</sup></a> was supposed to be peculiarly
-delightful to the gods, so that those who died
-while its sounds were on their ears were permitted
-to taste of the gifts of Aphrodite in Hades, as Philetæros
-expresses it in his Flute-lover:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“O Zeus! how glorious ’tis to die while piercing flutes are near</div>
- <div class='line'>Pouring their stirring melodies into the faltering ear;</div>
- <div class='line'>On these alone doth Eros smile within those realms of night,</div>
- <div class='line'>Where vulgar ghosts in shivering bands, all strangers to delight,</div>
- <div class='line'>In leaky tub from Styx’s flood the icy waters bear,</div>
- <div class='line'>Condemned, for woman’s lovely voice, its moaning sounds to <a id='corr186.26'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='hear.'>hear.”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_186.26'><ins class='correction' title='hear.'>hear.”</ins></a></span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>The teachers of music were divided into two
-classes: the Citharistæ, who simply played on the
-instrument, and the Citharœdi who accompanied
-themselves on the cithara with a song.<a id='r610' /><a href='#f610' class='c018'><sup>[610]</sup></a> Of these
-the humble and poorer taught, as we have already
-observed, in the corners of the streets, while the
-abler and more fortunate opened schools of music
-or gave their lessons in the private dwellings of the
-great. The Cithara, however, was not anciently in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>use at Athens, if we may credit the tradition which
-attributes to Phrynis its introduction from Ionia.<a id='r611' /><a href='#f611' class='c018'><sup>[611]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Damon the great Athenian musician<a id='r612' /><a href='#f612' class='c018'><sup>[612]</sup></a> used to observe,
-that wherever the mind is susceptible of powerful
-emotions there will be the song and the dance,
-and that wherever men are free and honourable their
-amusements will be liberal and decorous, where men
-are otherwise the contrary. A very judicious remark
-was likewise made by Caphesias the flute-player.
-Observing one of his pupils striving to produce loud
-sounds, he stamped on the ground and said,—"Boy,
-that is not always good which is great; but that is
-great which is good."<a id='r613' /><a href='#f613' class='c018'><sup>[613]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The power of music in assuaging passion and anger
-is well illustrated by an anecdote of Cleinias the Pythagorean
-philosopher, a man distinguished for his
-virtue and gentleness. If at any time he felt himself
-moved to wrath, taking up his lyre he would touch
-the chords and chaunt thereto some ode, and if any
-questioned why he did so, he would reply, “I am in
-search of serenity.”<a id='r614' /><a href='#f614' class='c018'><sup>[614]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Like the Hebrews, also, the people of Hellas attributed
-to music still more marvellous virtues,<a id='r615' /><a href='#f615' class='c018'><sup>[615]</sup></a> conceiving
-it to be able to cure diseases both of the mind
-and body. Thus the sounds of the flute were supposed
-to remove epilepsy, and sciatica, and faintness,
-and fear, and paroxysms of long-established madness,<a id='r616' /><a href='#f616' class='c018'><sup>[616]</sup></a>
-which will probably remind the reader of David
-playing before Saul, when his mind was troubled.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In the later ages of the commonwealth drawing
-likewise, and the elements of art entered into the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>list of studies pursued by youths, partly with the view
-of diffusing a correct taste, and the ability to appreciate
-and enjoy the noble productions of the pencil
-and chisel, and partly, perhaps, from the mere love
-of novelty, and the desire which man always feels
-to enlarge the circle of his acquirements. Aristotle,<a id='r617' /><a href='#f617' class='c018'><sup>[617]</sup></a>
-indeed, suggests a much humbler motive, observing
-that a knowledge of drawing would enable men to
-appreciate more accurately the productions of the
-useful arts; but this perhaps was said more in deference
-to that spirit of utilitarianism then beginning
-to show itself than from any conviction of
-its soundness.</p>
-
-<hr class='c025' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f524'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r524'>524</a>. Among the ancient writers on
-education, of which the greater
-number have perished, was Clearchos
-of Soli, on whom see Voss.
-de Hist. Græc. i. Athen. xv. 54.
-Men. in Diog. Laert. p. 4. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f525'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r525'>525</a>. Rep. ii. t. vi. p. 94.—Cf.
-Adolph. Cramer, 8, 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f526'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r526'>526</a>. Cf. Suid. v. Καὶ τὸ τοῦ λύκου.
-i. 1427.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f527'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r527'>527</a>. Opp. et. Dies, 202–212.
-Quintil. v. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f528'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r528'>528</a>. Plat. Rep. l. ii. cap. 8. c. p.
-117. Schol. Aristoph. Av. 652.
-Philostrat. Imag. i. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f529'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r529'>529</a>. Phot. Bib. 139. b. 8. Hor.
-Epist. i. 10. Gyraldi, de Poet.
-Histor. p. 462. a. sqq. Aristot.
-Rhet. ii. 20.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f530'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r530'>530</a>. Diod. Sic. l. xix. c. 25.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f531'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r531'>531</a>. Aristoph. Pac. 128. Vesp.
-1392, sqq. et Scholia.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f532'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r532'>532</a>. Diog. Laert. ii. 5. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f533'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r533'>533</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Av. 471. Sch.
-Vesp. 1251.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f534'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r534'>534</a>. Aristot. Polit. vii. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f535'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r535'>535</a>. Arabian Nights, i. 286.
-Lane’s Translation.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f536'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r536'>536</a>. De Legg. vi. t. viii. p. 41.
-Creuzer. de Civ. Athen. p. 556.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f537'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r537'>537</a>. Amor. § 44.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f538'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r538'>538</a>. Athen. xiii. 61. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f539'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r539'>539</a>. Poll. iv. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f540'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r540'>540</a>. Cf. Plato, de Legg. vii. t.
-viii. p. 41. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f541'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r541'>541</a>. For an account of this musician,
-see Pollux iv. 66. with the
-notes of Kühn and Iungermann,
-t. iv. p. 709. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f542'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r542'>542</a>. Aristoph. Nub. 961. sqq. Cf.
-Plaut. Bacchid. iii. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f543'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r543'>543</a>. Polit. viii. 6. 268. Gœttl.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f544'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r544'>544</a>. Casaub. ap. Theoph. Char. p.
-273.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f545'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r545'>545</a>. Plaut. Bacchid. iii. 3. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f546'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r546'>546</a>. Plato, indeed, at one time
-entertained a similar fancy.—De
-Rep. t. vi. p. 385. (Cf. Muret. in
-Aristot. Ethic. 71.) But, afterwards,
-in his old age, adopted the
-general conviction of mankind,
-that he who spares the rod spoils
-the child.—De Legg. t. viii. p. 12.
-seq. Varro, however, who wrote
-much on education, observes, that
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“remotissimum ad discendum
-formido, ac nimius timor, et omnis
-perturbatio animi. Contra delectatio
-pro telo ad discendum.”</span> Victor.
-Var. Lect. l. xv. c. 2. Theodoric,
-the Gothic king of Italy, had
-another reason for sparing the rod
-in education. The child, he
-said, who had trembled at a rod
-would never dare to look upon a
-sword.—Gibbon vii. 19. This
-Gothic prince was not, therefore,
-acquainted with the Spartan system
-of education.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f547'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r547'>547</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 959.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f548'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r548'>548</a>. Cf. Cressoll. Theat. Rhet. v.
-6. p. 471. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f549'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r549'>549</a>. On these and the other persons
-engaged in the education of
-youth, see Bergmann, ad Isoc.
-Areop. § 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f550'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r550'>550</a>. De Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 42.
-See p. 11 of Cramer’s excellent
-little pamphlet, which I have
-frequently found extremely useful.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f551'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r551'>551</a>. Xenoph. de Rep. Laced. ii.
-1. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f552'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r552'>552</a>. Plat. Lysis. t. i. p. 118. De
-Legg. iv. t. viii. p. 325. De Rep.
-iii. t. vi. p. 128.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f553'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r553'>553</a>. Poll. iv. 19. Ulp. ad Demosth.
-de Cor. § 78. Orat. Att. t. x. p.
-113. Plat. Lysis. t. i. p. 145.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f554'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r554'>554</a>. Plut. de Lib. Educ. § 7. The
-Athenians sought to create a high
-idea of this class of persons by annually
-offering sacrifice to Connidas,
-the reputed pædagogue of
-Theseus.—Plut. Thes. § 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f555'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r555'>555</a>. Cram. de Educ. Puer. ap.
-Athen. p. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f556'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r556'>556</a>. Athen. xiii. 61. 63.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f557'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r557'>557</a>. Plaut. Bacchid. Act iii. Sc. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f558'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r558'>558</a>. Amor. §. 44.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f559'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r559'>559</a>. Diog. Laert. Vit. Diog. vi. ii.
-4. sqq. with the observation of
-Menage, t. ii. p. 138.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f560'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r560'>560</a>. I may say with Herault de
-Sechelle <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Apprendre <i>par cœur</i>;
-ce mot me plait. Il n’y a guère
-en effet que le cœur, qui retienne
-bien, et qui retienne vîte.”</span>—Voyage
-à Montbar, &amp;c. p. 77.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f561'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r561'>561</a>. Cf. Luc. Amor. § 44. Καὶ
-χλανίδα ταῖς ἐπωμίαις περόναις
-συῤῥάψας ἀπὸ τῆς πατρῴας
-ἑστίας ἐξέρχεται κάτω κεκυφὼς,
-καὶ μηδένα τῶν ἀπαντών τῶν ἐξ
-ἐναντίου προσβλέπων. In his exhortation
-to Demonicos, Isocrates
-has thrown together numerous
-precepts which almost constitute
-a code of morals and politeness.
-They are far superior to Lord
-Chesterfield’s even where the
-Graces only are recommended;
-and have the advantage of almost
-always subjoining the reason to
-the rule.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f562'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r562'>562</a>. Cf. Dion. <a id='corr174.n1'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Chysost'>Chrysost</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_174.n1'><ins class='correction' title='Chysost'>Chrysost</ins></a></span>. ii. p. 261;
-i. 299.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f563'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r563'>563</a>. Opp. t. i. p. 118. The influence
-of imitation over the gesture,
-voice, and thoughts of youth
-is forcibly pointed out in the
-Republic.—t. vi. p. 124.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f564'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r564'>564</a>. Repub. viii. 5. t. ii. p. 182.
-Stallb.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f565'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r565'>565</a>. Aristoph. Nub. 1443. Δυοῖν
-δ᾽ ὀνομάτοιν σεβασμίοιν πᾶσαι τιμαι
-μένουσιν, ἐξίσου παρτὶ μητέρα
-προσκυνούντων.—Luc. Amor. §
-19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f566'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r566'>566</a>. On the force of example and
-imitation see Plato, de Rep. t. vi.
-p. 124.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f567'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r567'>567</a>. Plat. Lach. t. i. p. 269.—Among
-the public places to which
-a father might take his sons the
-courts of law were not included,
-though we find Demosthenes, when
-a boy, contriving to introduce himself,
-where unseen of the judges he
-might listen to the eloquence of
-Callistratos.—Victor. Var. Lect. l.
-xxx. c. 20.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f568'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r568'>568</a>. Æsch. cont. Timarch. § 5,
-6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f569'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r569'>569</a>. See Theoph. Char. c. 5. Sch.
-Aristoph. Nub. 180.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f570'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r570'>570</a>. Lysis. t. i. p. 145. Theætet.
-t. iii. p. 179.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f571'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r571'>571</a>. Etym. Mag. 742. 38.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f572'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r572'>572</a>. Cramer de Educ. Puer. ap.
-Athen. p. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f573'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r573'>573</a>. Vandale Dissert. pp. 584–727.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f574'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r574'>574</a>. Bacchid. iii. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f575'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r575'>575</a>. See Coray, Disc. Prelim. sur
-Hippoc. de Aër. et Loc. § 41. t.
-i. p. 46. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f576'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r576'>576</a>. In the <span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Antichita di Ercolano</span>
-(t. iii. p. 213.) we find a representation
-of one of these schools
-during the infliction of corporal
-chastisement. Numerous boys
-are seated on forms reading, while
-a delinquent is horsed on the back
-of another in the true Etonian
-style. One of the carnifices holds
-his legs, while another applies the
-birch to his naked back. Occasionally
-in Greece we find that
-free boys were flogged with a leek
-in lieu of a birch. Sch. Aristoph.
-Ran. 622. Schneid. ad Theoph.
-Hist. Plant. vii. 4. 10. p. 574.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f577'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r577'>577</a>. Poll. iv. 18, 19. x. 57. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f578'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r578'>578</a>. Herod. vi. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f579'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r579'>579</a>. Called the Table of the Gods,
-from its beauty and amenity.—Steph.
-de Urb. in v. p. 189. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f580'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r580'>580</a>. Paus. vi. 9. 6. seq. Plut.
-Rom. § 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f581'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r581'>581</a>. Sch. Æsch. cont. Tim. in Orator.
-Att. t. xii. p. 376 a.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f582'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r582'>582</a>. Dem. de Cor. § 78. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f583'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r583'>583</a>. Pollux, iv. 19. Cf. Herod. vii.
-239. ii. 21. Sch. Aristoph. Vesp.
-529.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f584'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r584'>584</a>. Poll. i. 234. Lucian. Ner. § 9.
-Amor. § 44. Antich. di Ercol. t. ii.
-p. 55. t. iii. p. 237.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f585'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r585'>585</a>. Poll. x. 58, 59.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f586'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r586'>586</a>. On this subject Isidorus
-Hispal. vi. 9. has a curious passage:
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Ceræ literarum materies,
-parvulorum nutrices. Ipsæ dant
-ingenium pueris primordia sensus,
-quarum studium primi Græci tradidisse
-produntur. Græci enim et
-Thusci primum ferro in ceris scripserunt.
-Postea Romani jusserunt,
-ne graphium ferreum quis haberet.
-Undè et apud scribas dicebatur,
-Ceram ferro ne lædito. Postea institutum
-est, ut in cerâ ossibus
-scriberent, sicut indicat Alsa in
-Satyrâ dicens: Vertamus vomerem
-in ceram, mucroneque aremus
-<a id='corr178.n7'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='osseo.'>osseo.”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_178.n7'><ins class='correction' title='osseo.'>osseo.”</ins></a></span></span> Cf. Pfeiffer, Antiq.
-Græc. p. 413.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f587'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r587'>587</a>. It was as the instrument of
-literature that the reed subdued
-half the world, though Pliny
-only celebrates its conquest as
-an arrow. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Ac si quis Æthiopas,
-Ægyptum, Arabas, Indos, Scythas,
-Bactros, Sarmatarum tot
-gentes et Orientis, omniaque Parthorum
-regna diligentiùs computet,
-æqua fermè pars hominum in
-toto mundo calamis superata <a id='corr178.n8'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='degit.'>degit.”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_178.n8'><ins class='correction' title='degit.'>degit.”</ins></a></span></span>—Hist.
-Nat. xvi. 65.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f588'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r588'>588</a>. Which was the case even
-among the sophists, as we find
-Proclos granting a perpetual admission
-to his lectures for a hundred
-drachmæ.—Philost. Vit.
-Soph. ii. 21. § 3. This he was
-the better enabled to do from his
-carrying on the business of a merchant.—§
-2. Professors’ charges
-appear to have been often disputed,
-as we find mention, in
-many authors, of law-suits between
-them and their pupils.—Lucian.
-Icaromenip. § 16. “The
-wages of industry are just and
-honourable, yet Isocrates shed
-tears at the first receipt of a
-stipend.”—Gibbon, vii. 146.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f589'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r589'>589</a>. Athen. xiii. 47.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f590'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r590'>590</a>. Vit. Hom. §§ 5. seq. 25. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f591'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r591'>591</a>. Speaking of the antiquities of
-this island Chandler remarks:
-“The most curious remain is that
-which has been named, without
-reason, <em>The School of Homer</em>. It
-is on the coast at some distance
-from the city, northward, and appears
-to have been an open temple
-of Cybele, formed on the top of a
-rock. The shape is oval, and in
-the centre is the image of the
-goddess, the head and an arm
-wanting. She is represented, as
-usual, sitting. The chair has a
-lion carved on each side, and on
-the back. The area is bounded
-by a low rim or seat, and about
-five yards over. The whole is
-hewn out of the mountain, is
-rude, indistinct, and probably of
-the most remote antiquity.” i. 61.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f592'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r592'>592</a>. Philost. Vit. Soph. ii. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f593'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r593'>593</a>. Quint. i. 1. Poll. vii. 128.
-Aristoph. Thesm. 778.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f594'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r594'>594</a>. Plat. Protag. t. i. p. 181.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f595'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r595'>595</a>. See Plat. de Rep. ii. t. vi. p.
-93. seq. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 188.
-seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f596'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r596'>596</a>. In the Homeric age men, we
-are told, received their mental instruction
-from the bards, and their
-physical at the gymnasium.—Athen.
-i. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f597'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r597'>597</a>. Cf. Plat. de Rep. t. i. p. 149.
-Stallb.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f598'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r598'>598</a>. Cf. Plato de Legg. t. viii. p.
-44. sqq. On the style of declamation
-used in the Greek and Roman
-schools, see Schömann, de
-Comit. p. 187.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f599'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r599'>599</a>. There were likewise poems
-written in the language of the
-common people.—Athen. xiv. 43.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f600'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r600'>600</a>. Cf. Plat. de Legg. t. viii. p. 62.
-where he describes the Egyptian
-method of teaching arithmetic by
-rewards and allurements. Locke,
-however, condemned the practice.
-“He that will give to his son
-apples or sugar-plums, or what
-else of this kind he is most delighted
-with, to make him learn
-his book, does but authorise his
-love of pleasure, and cocker up
-that dangerous propensity, which
-he ought by all means to subdue
-and stifle in him.” Education §
-52. Vid. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p.
-340. seq. Muret. Orat. iv. 43.
-Sir Josiah Child has some good
-remarks on the value of arithmetic
-as a branch of education: “It
-hath been observed in the nature
-of arithmetic, that, like other
-parts of the mathematics, it doth
-not only improve the natural faculties,
-but it inclines those that
-are expert in it to thriftiness and
-good husbandry, and prevents
-both husbands and wives in some
-measure from running out of their
-estates, when they have it always
-ready in their heads what their
-expenses do amount to, and how
-soon by that course their ruin must
-overtake them.”—Discourse of
-Trade, p. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f601'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r601'>601</a>. Plat. de Rep. vii. t. vi. p.
-340. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f602'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r602'>602</a>. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 349.
-seq. De Legg. t. viii. p. 371. Sch.
-Aristoph. Nub. 180. Cf. Cicero
-de Orat. iii. 32. t. ii. 319. ed.
-Lallemand.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f603'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r603'>603</a>. See in Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 181.
-an anecdote of Thales cutting a
-new channel for the river Halys.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f604'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r604'>604</a>. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 357.
-seq.; de Legg. t. viii. p. 370. Sch.
-Aristoph. Nub. 860. 208.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f605'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r605'>605</a>. Vid. Ilgen. de Scol. Poes.
-xiv.—<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Post Persica demum
-bella musicæ assidue operatos
-Græcos dicit. Et præmia diebus
-festis nonnullis constituta iis
-pueris adolescentibusque, qui
-lyrica carmina Solonis aliorumque
-optime cecinissent.”</span>—Creuzer.
-de Civ. Athen. Omn. Hum.
-Par. p. 55. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f606'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r606'>606</a>. Athen. xiv. 20. sqq. Cf. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 984. Clem. Alex.
-i. 3. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f607'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r607'>607</a>. Luc. Nigrin. § 37.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f608'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r608'>608</a>. Athen. xiv. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f609'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r609'>609</a>. On the effect of music on the
-mind, see Magius, Var. Lect. p.
-204 b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f610'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r610'>610</a>. Kühn ad Poll. iv. p. 711.
-Cf. Plat. de Legg. t. viii. p. 49.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f611'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r611'>611</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 958;
-Vesp. 574.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f612'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r612'>612</a>. Cf. Plat. Repub. t. vi. p.
-133.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f613'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r613'>613</a>. Athen. xiv. 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f614'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r614'>614</a>. Πραΰνομοι. Cham. Pont. ap.
-Athen. xiv. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f615'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r615'>615</a>. Thus demons were expelled
-by the sound of brass bells.—Magius,
-Var. Lect. p. 205. b.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f616'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r616'>616</a>. Athen. xiv. 18. Apollon.
-ap. Schweigh. Animad. xii. p.
-399. on the story, and bronze
-votive offerings on the Tænarian
-promontory of the musician
-Arion.—Herod. i. 23. seq. Dion.
-Chrysost. Orat. xxxvii. p. 455.
-Pausan. i. 24. Ælian. de Nat.
-Animal. xii. 45.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f617'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r617'>617</a>. Polit. viii. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c025' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>
- <h3 class='c024'>CHAPTER V. <br /> EXERCISES OF YOUTH.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c032'>Simultaneously with the above studies,<a id='r618' /><a href='#f618' class='c018'><sup>[618]</sup></a> that highly
-intricate and artificial system of exercises denominated
-gymnastics occupied a considerable portion
-of the time of youth. Among northern nations the
-influence of education is requisite to soften the manners
-and check ferocity; but in the south hardihood
-must in general be the fruit of discipline, and flourishes
-only while assiduously cultivated. Thus we find
-that the Persians,<a id='r619' /><a href='#f619' class='c018'><sup>[619]</sup></a> by acting on the advice of Crœsos,
-and teaching the Lydians to become musicians and
-shopkeepers, uprooted entirely their martial spirit.
-In Greece, however, during the flourishing period of
-her history there was more danger that the passion
-for war should drown all others, than that its influence
-should be too feeble. Among the Athenians particularly,
-that restless energy of character, so marvellous
-and so distasteful to the Dorians, sought vent in dangerous
-and distant wars and stupendous schemes of
-ambition. This characteristic trait is adduced by
-Plato for the purpose of suggesting a contrast with
-the rival race. He had been dwelling, to his Cretan
-and Spartan companions, on the exercises necessary
-for pregnant women,<a id='r620' /><a href='#f620' class='c018'><sup>[620]</sup></a> and observing their astonishment,
-he could understand, he said, how it might
-appear extraordinary to them, but at Athens his
-recommendation would be perfectly intelligible; for
-there, people were rather too active than otherwise.
-The difficulty always was to find becoming employment.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>Accordingly, for lack of something better,
-not merely boys but grown-up men, comprehending
-nothing of the <span lang="it" xml:lang="it"><i>dolce far niente</i></span>, employed themselves
-in breeding cocks, quails, and other birds for fighting,
-and the care of these imposed on them the necessity
-of much exercise. To be sure, these cock-fighters,
-during their professional perambulations, presented a
-spectacle infinitely ludicrous. All regard to appearances
-was abandoned. With a couple of small cocks<a id='r621' /><a href='#f621' class='c018'><sup>[621]</sup></a>
-in their hands, and an old one under either arm, they
-sallied forth, like vagabonds who had been robbing
-a henroost, to give their favourite animals air and
-gentle exercise, and thus laden often strolled several
-miles into the country.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>To such a people the gymnasium opened up a
-source of peculiar delight, and in the end became
-a passion prejudicial to the cultivation of the understanding.
-But within the bounds of moderation it
-was prescribed by philosophers in lieu of physic,
-and as an antidote against those pale faces and emaciated
-frames, too common where intellectual studies
-are ardently pursued.<a id='r622' /><a href='#f622' class='c018'><sup>[622]</sup></a> It was a law of Solon, that
-every Athenian<a id='r623' /><a href='#f623' class='c018'><sup>[623]</sup></a> should be able to read and to swim;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>and the whole spirit of Attic legislation, leaving the
-poor to the exercise of industrious and hardy occupations,
-tended to create among the opulent and the
-noble a taste for field-sports, horsemanship, and every
-martial and manly exercise.<a id='r624' /><a href='#f624' class='c018'><sup>[624]</sup></a> The difficulty, of course,
-was to render them subordinate to mental cultivation,
-and to blend both so cunningly together as
-to produce a beautiful and harmonious system of
-discipline, well fitted to ripen and bring to greatest
-perfection every power and faculty of body and
-mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The practises of the gymnasium may be traced
-backward to the remotest antiquity, and probably
-commenced among the warriors of the heroic ages,<a id='r625' /><a href='#f625' class='c018'><sup>[625]</sup></a>
-in the peaceful intervals occurring between expeditions,
-from the desire to amuse their leisure by mimic
-representations of more serious contests. At first, no
-doubt, the exercises, frequently performed in honour
-of the gods,<a id='r626' /><a href='#f626' class='c018'><sup>[626]</sup></a> were few and rude; but by the age of
-Homer they had assumed an artificial and regular
-form, and comprehended nearly all such divisions
-of the art as prevailed in later times. Other views
-than those with which they were instituted, caused
-them to be kept up. When reflection awoke, it was
-perceived that in these amicable contests men acquired
-not only force and agility, a martial bearing,
-the confidence of strength, beauty, and lightness of
-form; but, along with them, that easy cheerfulness
-into which robust health naturally blossoms.<a id='r627' /><a href='#f627' class='c018'><sup>[627]</sup></a> In fact,
-so far were the legislators of Greece from designing
-by gymnastics to create, as Montesquieu<a id='r628' /><a href='#f628' class='c018'><sup>[628]</sup></a> supposes,
-a nation of mere athletes and combatants, that they
-expressly repudiate the idea, affirming that lightness,
-agility, a compactly knit frame, health, but chiefly
-a well-poised and vigorous mind, were the object of
-this part of education. In order the better to attain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>this point, Plato in his republic ordains that boys
-be completed in their intellectual studies, which in
-his ideal state they were to be at the age of sixteen,
-before they entered the gymnasium, the exercises
-of which were to be the companions of simple music.
-From converting their citizens into athletes they
-were prevented by experience; for it was quickly
-discovered that those men who made a profession of
-gymnastics acquired, indeed, by their diet and peculiar
-discipline a huge stature and enormous strength,
-but were altogether useless in war, being sleepy, lethargic,
-prodigious eaters, incapable of enduring thirst
-or hunger, and liable to the attacks of sudden and
-fatal diseases if they departed in the least degree
-from their usual habits and regimen.<a id='r629' /><a href='#f629' class='c018'><sup>[629]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Already in the Homeric age, gymnastics, though
-not as yet so named, constituted the principal object
-of education, and many branches of the art had even
-then been carried to a high degree of perfection.<a id='r630' /><a href='#f630' class='c018'><sup>[630]</sup></a>
-The passion for it descended unimpaired to the
-Spartans, whose polity, framed solely for the preservation
-of national independence and the acquisition
-of glory in war, inspired little fondness for
-mental pursuits, but left the youth chiefly to the
-influence of the gymnasia, which gradually created
-in them a temper of mind compounded of insensibility
-and ferocity,<a id='r631' /><a href='#f631' class='c018'><sup>[631]</sup></a> not unlike that of the North
-American Indians. This, however, they above all
-things prized, though as has been justly observed
-their exercises could in no sense be considered among
-the aids to intellectual cultivation.<a id='r632' /><a href='#f632' class='c018'><sup>[632]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>At Athens they came later into vogue, though
-common in the age of Solon. When, however, this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>ardent and enthusiastic people commenced the study
-of gymnastics, admiring as they did strength and
-vigour of frame, when united with manly beauty,
-their plastic genius soon converted it into an art
-worthy to be enumerated among the studies of youth.
-In very early ages they imitated the Spartan custom
-of admitting even boys into the gymnasia. But this
-was soon abandoned, it being found more profitable
-first to instruct them in several of the branches of
-study above described, and a class of men<a id='r633' /><a href='#f633' class='c018'><sup>[633]</sup></a> called
-pædotribæ or gymnasts arose, who taught the gymnastic
-art privately, in subordination to their other studies,
-and were regarded as indispensable in the progress
-of education.<a id='r634' /><a href='#f634' class='c018'><sup>[634]</sup></a> These masters gave their instructions
-in the palæstræ,<a id='r635' /><a href='#f635' class='c018'><sup>[635]</sup></a> which generally formed
-a part of the gymnasia, though not always joined with
-those edifices, and to be carefully distinguished from
-them. It is not known with certainty at what age
-boys commenced their gymnastic exercises, though it
-appears probable that it was not until their grammatical
-and musical studies were completed, that is somewhere
-perhaps, as Plato counsels, about the age of sixteen.
-For it was not judged advisable to engage
-them in too many studies at once, since in bodies
-not yet endowed with all their strength over-exertion
-was considered injurious.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Before we enumerate and explain the several exercises
-it may be proper to introduce a description of
-the gymnasia themselves. Of these establishments
-there were many at Athens;<a id='r636' /><a href='#f636' class='c018'><sup>[636]</sup></a> though three only, those
-of the Academy, Lyceum, and Cynosarges have acquired
-celebrity. The site of the first of these gymnasia
-being low and marshy was in ancient times
-infested with malaria, but having been drained by
-Cimon and planted with trees it became a favourite
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>promenade and place of exercise.<a id='r637' /><a href='#f637' class='c018'><sup>[637]</sup></a> Here, in walks
-shaded by the sacred olive, might be seen young men,<a id='r638' /><a href='#f638' class='c018'><sup>[638]</sup></a>
-with crowns of rushes in flower upon their heads,
-enjoying the sweet odour of the smilax and the
-white poplar, while the platanos and the elm mingled
-their murmurs in the breeze of spring. The meadows
-of the Academy, according to Aristophanes the grammarian,
-were planted with the Apragmosune,<a id='r639' /><a href='#f639' class='c018'><sup>[639]</sup></a> a sort
-of flower so called as though it smelt of all kind of
-fragrance and safety like our Heart’s-ease or flower of
-the Trinity. This place is supposed to have derived
-its name from Ecadamos, a public-spirited man who
-bequeathed his property for the purpose of keeping
-it in order. Around it were groves of the moriæ
-sacred to Athena, whence the olive crowns used in
-the Panathenaia were taken. The reason why the
-olive trees as well as those in the Acropolis were
-denominated moriæ must be sought for among the
-legends of the mythology, where it is related that Halirrothios
-son of Poseidon formed the design of felling
-them because the patronship of the city had been
-adjudged to Athena, for the discovery of this tree.
-Raising his axe, however, and aiming a blow at the
-trunk the implement glanced, and he thus inflicted
-upon himself a wound whereof he died.<a id='r640' /><a href='#f640' class='c018'><sup>[640]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The name of the Lyceum<a id='r641' /><a href='#f641' class='c018'><sup>[641]</sup></a> sometimes derived from
-Lycus, son of Pandion<a id='r642' /><a href='#f642' class='c018'><sup>[642]</sup></a> probably owed its origin to
-the temenos of Lycian Apollo there situated. It
-lay near the banks of the Ilissos, and was adorned
-with stately edifices, fountains and groves. Here
-stood a celebrated statue of Apollo, in a graceful
-attitude, as if reposing after toil, with his bow in the
-left hand, and the right bent negligently over his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>head. The walls, too, were decorated with paintings.
-In this place anciently the Polemarch held his court<a id='r643' /><a href='#f643' class='c018'><sup>[643]</sup></a>
-and the forces of the republic were exercised before
-they went forth to war.<a id='r644' /><a href='#f644' class='c018'><sup>[644]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Appended to the name of the Cynosarges, or third
-gymnasium surrounded with groves<a id='r645' /><a href='#f645' class='c018'><sup>[645]</sup></a> was a legend
-which related that when Diomos was sacrificing to
-Hestia, a white dog snatched away a part of the
-victim from the altar, and running straightway out
-of the city deposited it on the spot where this gymnasium
-was afterwards erected.<a id='r646' /><a href='#f646' class='c018'><sup>[646]</sup></a> Here were several
-magnificent and celebrated temples to Alcmena,
-to Hebe, to Heracles, and to his companion Iolaos.
-Its principal patron, however, was Heracles,<a id='r647' /><a href='#f647' class='c018'><sup>[647]</sup></a> who,
-lying himself under the suspicion of illegitimacy, came
-very naturally to be regarded as the protector of
-bastards, half citizens, and in general all persons of
-spurious birth, who accordingly in remoter ages resorted
-thither to perform their exercises.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Themistocles afterwards, by prevailing upon several
-of the young nobility to accompany him to the Cynosarges,
-obliterated its reproach, and placed it on the
-same level with the other gymnasia.<a id='r648' /><a href='#f648' class='c018'><sup>[648]</sup></a> Here anciently
-stood a court in which causes respecting illegitimacy,
-false registry, &amp;c. were tried. But to proceed to the
-general description. “The gymnasia were spacious
-edifices, surrounded by gardens and a sacred grove.
-The first entrance was by a square court, two stadia
-in circumference, encompassed with porticoes and
-buildings. On three of its sides were large halls, provided
-with seats, in which philosophers, rhetoricians,
-and sophists assembled their disciples. On the fourth
-were rooms for bathing and other practices of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>gymnasium. The portico facing the south was double,
-to prevent the winter rains, driven by the wind, from
-penetrating into the interior. From this court you
-passed into an enclosure, likewise square, shaded in
-the middle by plane-trees. A range of colonnades
-extended round three of the sides. That which fronted
-the north had a double row of columns, to shelter
-those who walked there in summer from the sun.
-The opposite piazza was called Xystos, in the middle
-of which, and through its whole length, they contrived
-a sort of pathway, about twelve feet wide and nearly
-two deep, where, sheltered from the weather, and
-separated from the spectators ranged along the sides,
-the young scholars exercised themselves in wrestling.
-Beyond the Xystos was a stadium for foot-races.”<a id='r649' /><a href='#f649' class='c018'><sup>[649]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The principal parts of the gymnasium were,—first,
-the porticoes, furnished with seats and side-buildings
-where the youths met to converse. 2. The Ephebeion,<a id='r650' /><a href='#f650' class='c018'><sup>[650]</sup></a>
-that part of the edifice where the youth alone
-exercised. 3. The Apodyterion, or undressing-room.<a id='r651' /><a href='#f651' class='c018'><sup>[651]</sup></a>
-4. The Konisterion, or small court in which was kept
-the haphe, or yellow kind of sand sprinkled by the
-wrestlers over their bodies<a id='r652' /><a href='#f652' class='c018'><sup>[652]</sup></a> after being anointed with
-the ceroma, or oil tempered with wax. An important
-part of the baggage of Alexander in his Indian expedition
-consisted of this fine sand for the gymnasium.
-5. The Palæstra, when considered as part of the gymnasium,<a id='r653' /><a href='#f653' class='c018'><sup>[653]</sup></a>
-was simply the place set apart for wrestling:
-the whole of its area was covered with a deep stratum
-of mud. 6. The Sphæristerion,<a id='r654' /><a href='#f654' class='c018'><sup>[654]</sup></a>—that part of the gymnasium
-in which they played at ball. 7. Aleipterion
-or Elaiothesion,<a id='r655' /><a href='#f655' class='c018'><sup>[655]</sup></a> that part of the palæstra where the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>wrestlers anointed themselves with oil. 8. The area:
-the great court, and certain spaces in the porticoes,
-were used for running, leaping, or pitching the quoit.
-9. The Xystoi have been described above. 10. The
-Xysta<a id='r656' /><a href='#f656' class='c018'><sup>[656]</sup></a> were open walks in which, during fine weather,
-the youths exercised themselves in running or any
-other suitable recreation. 11. The Balaneia or baths,
-where in numerous basins was water of various degrees
-of temperature, in which the young men bathed
-before anointing themselves, or after their exercises.
-12. Behind the Xystos, and running parallel with
-it, lay the stadium,<a id='r657' /><a href='#f657' class='c018'><sup>[657]</sup></a> which, as its name implies, was
-usually the eighth part of a mile in length. It resembled
-the section of a cylinder, rounded at the ends.
-From the area below, where the runners performed
-their exercises, the sides, whether of green turf or
-marble, sloped upwards to a considerable height, and
-were covered with seats, rising behind each other to
-the top for the accommodation of spectators.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Such were the buildings which Athens appropriated
-to the exercises of its youth; and if we consider the
-conveniences which they contained, the large spaces
-they enclosed, and the taste and magnificence which
-they exhibited, we shall probably conclude that no
-country in the world ever bestowed on the physical
-training of its citizens so much enlightened care.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The first step in gymnastics was to accustom the
-youth to endure, naked, the fiercest rays of the sun
-and the cold of winter, to which they were exposed
-during their initiatory exercises.<a id='r658' /><a href='#f658' class='c018'><sup>[658]</sup></a> This is illustrated
-in a very lively manner by Lucian, where he introduces
-the Scythian Anacharsis anxious to escape from
-the scorching rays of noon to the shade of the plane-trees;
-while Solon, who had been educated according
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>to the Hellenic system, stands without inconvenience
-bareheaded in the sun. The step next in order was
-wrestling, always regarded as the principal among
-gymnastic contests, both from its superior utility and
-the great art and skill which the proper practice of it
-required. To the acquisition of excellence in this
-exercise the palæstra and the instructions of the pædotribæ
-were almost entirely devoted; while nearly every
-other branch of gymnastics was performed in the gymnasium.
-These, according to Lucian, were divided
-into two classes, one of which required for their performance
-a soft or muddy area, the other one of sand,
-or an arena properly so called.<a id='r659' /><a href='#f659' class='c018'><sup>[659]</sup></a> In all these exercises
-the youth were naked, and had their bodies anointed
-with oil.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>To render, however our account of the exercises
-more complete, it may be proper to give a separate
-though brief description of each. The first or most
-simple was the Dromos or Course,<a id='r660' /><a href='#f660' class='c018'><sup>[660]</sup></a> performed, as has
-been above observed, in the area of the stadium, which,
-in order to present the greater difficulty to the racers,
-was deeply covered with soft and yielding sand. Still
-further to enhance the labour, the youth sometimes
-ran in armour, which admirably prepared them for the
-vicissitudes of war, for pursuit after victory, or the
-rapid movements of retreat. The high value which
-the Greeks set upon swiftness may be learned from
-the poems of Homer, where likewise are found the
-most graphic and brilliant descriptions of the several
-exercises. Some of these we shall here introduce
-from Pope’s version, which in this part is peculiarly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>sustained and nervous. Speaking of the race between
-Oilean Ajax, Odysseus, and Antilochos, he says:—<a id='r661' /><a href='#f661' class='c018'><sup>[661]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Ranged in a line the ready racers stand,</div>
- <div class='line'>Pelides points the barrier with his hand.</div>
- <div class='line'>All start at once, Oileus led the race;</div>
- <div class='line'>The next Ulysses, measuring pace with pace,</div>
- <div class='line'>Behind him diligently close he sped,</div>
- <div class='line'>As closely following as the mazy thread</div>
- <div class='line'>The spindle follows, and displays the charms</div>
- <div class='line'>Of the fair spinster’s breast and moving arms.</div>
- <div class='line'>Graceful in motion, thus his foe he plies,</div>
- <div class='line'>And treads each footstep ere the dust can rise;</div>
- <div class='line'>The glowing breath upon his shoulder plays,</div>
- <div class='line'>Th’ admiring Greeks loud acclamations raise,</div>
- <div class='line'>To him they give their wishes, heart, and eyes,</div>
- <div class='line'>And send their souls before him as he flies.</div>
- <div class='line'>Now three times turned, in prospect of the goal,</div>
- <div class='line'>The panting chief to Pallas lifts his soul;</div>
- <div class='line'>Assist, O Goddess, (thus in thought he prayed,)</div>
- <div class='line'>And present at his thought descends the maid;</div>
- <div class='line'>Buoyed by her heavenly force he seems to swim,</div>
- <div class='line'>And feels a pinion lifting every limb.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>Next in the natural order, proceeding from the
-simplest to the most artificial exercises, was leaping,
-in which the youth among the Greeks delighted to
-excel. In the performance of this exercise they usually
-sprang from an artificial elevation (βατὴρ), and descended
-upon the soft mould, which, when ploughed
-up with their heels, was termed ἐσκαμμένα.<a id='r662' /><a href='#f662' class='c018'><sup>[662]</sup></a> The
-better to poise their bodies and enable them to bound
-to a greater distance, they carried in their hands
-metallic weights, denominated <em>halteres</em>,<a id='r663' /><a href='#f663' class='c018'><sup>[663]</sup></a> in the form of
-a semi disk, having on their inner faces handles like
-the thong of a shield, through which the fingers were
-passed. Extraordinary feats are related of these ancient
-leapers. Chionis the Spartan and Phaÿllos the
-Crotonian, being related to have cleared at one bound
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>the space of fifty-two, or according to others, of fifty-five
-feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>With the latter account agrees the inscription on
-the Crotonian’s statue:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Phaÿllos leaped full five and fifty feet,</div>
- <div class='line'>The discus flung one hundred wanting five.”<a id='r664' /><a href='#f664' class='c018'><sup>[664]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>Homer briefly describes leaping among the sports
-of the Phæacians:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Amphialos sprang forward with a bound,</div>
- <div class='line'>Superior in the leap a length of ground.”<a id='r665' /><a href='#f665' class='c018'><sup>[665]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>To this succeeded pitching the quoit, which in the
-Homeric age would appear to have been practised
-with large stones or rude masses of iron. On ordinary
-occasions it has been conjectured that one
-discus only was used. But Odysseus, desirous of exhibiting
-his strength to the Phæacians, converts into a
-quoit the first block of stone within his reach.<a id='r666' /><a href='#f666' class='c018'><sup>[666]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Then striding forward with a furious bound</div>
- <div class='line'>He wrenched a rocky fragment from the ground,</div>
- <div class='line'>By far more ponderous and more large by far</div>
- <div class='line'>Than what Phæacia’s sons discharged in air;</div>
- <div class='line'>Fierce from his arm the enormous load he flings,</div>
- <div class='line'>Sonorous through the shaded air it sings;</div>
- <div class='line'>Couched to the earth, tempestuous as it flies,</div>
- <div class='line'>The crowd gaze upwards while it cleaves the skies.</div>
- <div class='line'>Beyond all marks, with many a giddy round,</div>
- <div class='line'>Down rushing it upturns a hill of ground.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>The disk<a id='r667' /><a href='#f667' class='c018'><sup>[667]</sup></a> in later times varied greatly both in
-shape, size, and materials. Generally it would seem
-to have been a cycloid, swelling in the middle and
-growing thin towards the edges. Sometimes it was
-perforated in the centre and hurled forward by a
-thong, and on other occasions would appear to have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>approached the spherical form, when it was denominated
-solos.<a id='r668' /><a href='#f668' class='c018'><sup>[668]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Other of these exercises were shooting with the bow
-at wisps of straw stuck upon a pole,<a id='r669' /><a href='#f669' class='c018'><sup>[669]</sup></a> and darting the
-javelin, sometimes with the naked hand and sometimes
-with a thong wound about the centre of the
-weapon. In the stadium at Olympia, the area
-within which the pentathli leaped, pitched the
-quoit, and hurled the javelin, appears to have been
-marked out by two parallel trenches: but if these
-existed likewise in the gymnasia, they must have
-been extremely shallow, as we find in Antiphon<a id='r670' /><a href='#f670' class='c018'><sup>[670]</sup></a> a
-boy meeting with his death by inconsiderately running
-across the area while the youths were engaged in this
-exercise. Instead of throwing for the furthest, they
-would seem, from the expressions of the orator, to
-have aimed at a mark.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Wrestling<a id='r671' /><a href='#f671' class='c018'><sup>[671]</sup></a> consisted of two kinds, the first, called
-Orthopale, was that style, still commonly in use, in
-which the antagonists, throwing their arms about each
-other’s body, endeavoured to bring him to the ground.
-In the other, called Anaclinopale, the wrestler who
-distrusted his own strength but had confidence in his
-courage and powers of endurance, voluntarily flung
-himself upon the ground, bringing his adversary along
-with him, and then by pinching, scratching, biting,
-and every other species of annoyance, sought to compel
-him to yield.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>An example of wrestling in both its forms occurs in
-Homer, where Ajax Telamon and Odysseus contend in
-the funeral games for the prize.<a id='r672' /><a href='#f672' class='c018'><sup>[672]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Amid the ring each nervous rival stands,</div>
- <div class='line'>Embracing rigid, with implicit hands;</div>
- <div class='line'>Close locked above, their heads and arms are mixt;</div>
- <div class='line'>Below their planted feet at distance fixt.</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>Like two strong rafters which the builder forms</div>
- <div class='line'>Proof to the wintry winds and howling storms;</div>
- <div class='line'>Their tops connected, but at wider space</div>
- <div class='line'>Fixed on the centre stands their solid base.</div>
- <div class='line'>Now to the grasp each manly body bends,</div>
- <div class='line'>The humid sweat from every pore descends,</div>
- <div class='line'>Their bones resound with blows, sides, shoulders, thighs</div>
- <div class='line'>Swell to each gripe, and bloody tumours rise.</div>
- <div class='line'>Nor could Ulysses, for his art renowned,</div>
- <div class='line'>O’erturn the strength of Ajax on the ground;</div>
- <div class='line'>Nor could the strength of Ajax overthrow</div>
- <div class='line'>The watchful caution of his artful foe.</div>
- <div class='line'>While the long strife even tires the lookers-on,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thus to Ulysses spoke great Telamon:</div>
- <div class='line'>Or let me lift thee, Chief, or lift thou me,</div>
- <div class='line'>Prove we our strength and Jove the rest decree.</div>
- <div class='line'>He said; and straining heaved him off the ground</div>
- <div class='line'>With matchless strength; that time Ulysses found</div>
- <div class='line'>The strength t’ evade, and where the nerves combine</div>
- <div class='line'>His ankle struck: the giant fell supine.</div>
- <div class='line'>Ulysses following on his bosom lies,</div>
- <div class='line'>Shouts of applause run rattling through the skies.</div>
- <div class='line'>Ajax to lift Ulysses next essays;</div>
- <div class='line'>He barely stirred him but he could not raise.</div>
- <div class='line'>His knee locked fast the foe’s attempt defied,</div>
- <div class='line'>And grappling close they tumbled side by side,</div>
- <div class='line'>Defiled with honourable dust they roll,</div>
- <div class='line'>Still breathing strife and unsubdued of soul.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>Boxing, which has very properly been called a rough
-exercise, though condemned by physicians and philosophers,
-was still practised in the gymnasium, sometimes
-with the naked fist but more frequently with the cestus,
-which consisted of a series of thongs, bound round
-the hand and arm up to the elbow, or even higher.<a id='r673' /><a href='#f673' class='c018'><sup>[673]</sup></a>
-This exercise, however, seems to have been little practised,
-except by those who designed to become athletæ
-by profession. Homer has described the combat with
-the cestus in its most terrible form.<a id='r674' /><a href='#f674' class='c018'><sup>[674]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Amid the circle now each champion stands,</div>
- <div class='line'>And poises high in air his iron hands:</div>
- <div class='line'>With clashing gauntlets now they firmly close,</div>
- <div class='line'>Their crackling jaws re-echo to the blows,</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>And painful sweat from all their members flows.</div>
- <div class='line'>At length Epeus dealt a weighty blow</div>
- <div class='line'>Full on the cheek of his unwary foe.</div>
- <div class='line'>Beneath that ponderous arm’s resistless sway</div>
- <div class='line'>Down dropped he powerless, and extended lay.</div>
- <div class='line'>As a large fish, when winds and waters roar,</div>
- <div class='line'>By some huge billow dashed against the shore,</div>
- <div class='line'>Lies panting, not less battered with his wound,</div>
- <div class='line'>The bleeding hero pants upon the ground.</div>
- <div class='line'>To rear his fallen foe the victor lends</div>
- <div class='line'>Scornful his hand, and gives him to his friends,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whose arms support him reeling through the throng,</div>
- <div class='line'>And dragging his disabled legs along.</div>
- <div class='line'>Nodding, his head hangs down his shoulders o’er,</div>
- <div class='line'>His mouth and nostrils pour the clotted gore.</div>
- <div class='line'>Wrapped round in mist he lies, and lost to thought,</div>
- <div class='line'>His friends receive the bowl too dearly bought.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>Among the exercises of the gymnasium which Hippocrates
-advises to be practised during winter<a id='r675' /><a href='#f675' class='c018'><sup>[675]</sup></a> and
-bad weather, when it is necessary to remain under
-cover, is walking on the tight rope. This feat seems
-to have been so great a favourite among the youths of
-antiquity, that they applied themselves to it with constant
-assiduity, and arrived at length at a degree of
-skill little inferior to that of our mountebanks. It
-seems, in fact, to have been a common practice in the
-gymnasium to run upon the tight rope. The Romans,
-seeking in something to outdo the Greeks, taught an
-elephant to perform a similar exploit.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Another branch of gymnastics consisted in the various
-forms of the dance, to be ignorant of which was
-at Athens esteemed a mark of an illiberal education.
-To excel in this accomplishment was nearly by all the
-Greeks<a id='r676' /><a href='#f676' class='c018'><sup>[676]</sup></a> considered absolutely necessary, either as a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>preparation for the due performance of the movements
-and evolutions of war, sustaining a proper part in the
-religious choruses, or regulating the carriage with the
-requisite grace and decorum in the various relations
-of private life. Thus the Cretans, the Spartans, the
-Thessalians, and the Bœotians, held this division of
-gymnastics in especial honour, chiefly with a view to
-war, while the Athenians, and Ionians generally, contemplated
-it more as a means of developing the beauty
-of the form, and conferring ease and elegance on the
-gait and gesture. But because in treating of the theatre
-I design fully to describe the several varieties of
-scenic dances, I think it proper to throw together in
-that place whatever I may have to say on this subject.<a id='r677' /><a href='#f677' class='c018'><sup>[677]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>To all these branches of gymnastics the Grecian
-youth<a id='r678' /><a href='#f678' class='c018'><sup>[678]</sup></a> applied themselves with peculiar eagerness, and
-on quitting the schools devoted to them a considerable
-portion of their time, since they were regarded
-both as a preparation for victory in the Olympic and
-other games, and as the best possible means for promoting
-health and ripening the physical powers. Nor
-could anything be easily conceived better suited to the
-genius of their republics. In the first place, as I have
-already observed, the wild and headstrong period of
-youth was withdrawn by these agreeable exercises
-from the desire and thoughts of evil, while a wholesome
-feeling of equality was cultivated, and something
-like brotherhood engendered in men destined to live
-and act together. Besides what could more admirably
-prepare them for fulfilling their duties as citizens and
-more especially for defending their country, than a
-system of physical training, which at the same time
-brought to perfection their strength, their vigour, and
-their manly beauty, and fitted them for the acquisition
-of that peculiar species of glory which success in
-the sacred games conferred? The acquisition, moreover,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>of robust health and that vigour of mind which
-accompanies it, was a consideration second to none.
-And it will readily be conceived that a judicious system
-of exercises, such as we have described, would necessarily
-render men patient of labour, inaccessible to
-fear, and be productive at once of graceful habits and
-lofty and honourable sentiments.</p>
-
-<hr class='c025' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f618'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r618'>618</a>. Cf. Plato, de Rep. t. vi. p.
-139, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f619'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r619'>619</a>. Herod. i. 155. Cf. Polyæn.
-vii. 6. 4. Justin, i. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f620'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r620'>620</a>. De Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 3. cf.
-p. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f621'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r621'>621</a>. Plato, de Legg. vii. t. viii.
-p. 3. seq.—On the practice of
-quail-fighting, see Poll. vii. 16.
-Comm. p. 237. Büd. Com.
-Ling. Græc. p. 615. Paris. Iungermann
-ad Poll. vii. 136. p.
-427, observes that it was customary
-to exhibit public quail-fights
-at Athens. But Lucian
-who states this (Anach. § 37),
-confounds the quail with the
-cock-fighting.—Ælian. V. H. ii.
-28. Cf. Ludovic. Nonn. de Re
-Cib. ii. 22. p. 228. Poliarchos,
-an Athenian, buried his dogs and
-cocks magnificently.—viii. 4. In
-the same spirit, a French lady
-erected a mausoleum to her cat
-with this epitaph:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Ci-gît une chatte jolie,</span></div>
- <div class='line in2'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sa maîtresse qui n’aima rien</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’aima jusques à la folie.</span></div>
- <div class='line in2'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Pourquoi le dire? On le voit bien.”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>The dog who detected the robber
-of Asclepios’s temple, received
-while he lived the marks of public
-gratitude, and was maintained
-like a hero at the people’s expense.—Ælian.
-V. H. vii. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f622'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r622'>622</a>. Aristoph. Nub. 185. Plat.
-Repub. t. vi. p. 146.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f623'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r623'>623</a>. Petit. de Legg. Att. l. ii.
-tit. iv. p. 162. Æsch. cont. Tim.
-§ 2–4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f624'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r624'>624</a>. Plat. de Legg. vii. t. viii.
-17. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f625'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r625'>625</a>. Cf. Athen. i. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f626'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r626'>626</a>. Hom. Hymn. Apoll. 149.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f627'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r627'>627</a>. Plat. Gorg. t. iii. p. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f628'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r628'>628</a>. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Esprit des Loix</span>, l. iv. c. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f629'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r629'>629</a>. Cf. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 151.—To
-express the sweat gained
-by exercise or labour, the Greeks
-used to say ξηρὸς ἱδρὼς, or ‘dry
-sweat.’—Phæd. t. i. p. 26. Runners,
-it was observed, had large
-legs; wrestlers small.—Xenoph.
-Conv. ii. 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f630'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r630'>630</a>. Feith, Antiq. Homer. iv. 6.
-304. Cramer. p. 35.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f631'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r631'>631</a>. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. 154.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f632'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r632'>632</a>. Hermann. Polit. Antiq. §
-26. n. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f633'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r633'>633</a>. Cf. Æsch. cont. Tim. § 37.
-Casaub. ad Theophr. Char. p.
-200.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f634'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r634'>634</a>. Cramer, p. 36.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f635'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r635'>635</a>. Poll. iii. 149.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f636'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r636'>636</a>. There was a gymnasium
-sacred to Hermes, near the Peiraic
-gate.—Leake, Topog. of Attica,
-p. 124.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f637'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r637'>637</a>. Cf. Xenoph. de Off. Mag.
-Equit. iii. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f638'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r638'>638</a>. Aristoph. Nub. 1001.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f639'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r639'>639</a>. Sch. ad Aristoph. Nub. 1003.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f640'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r640'>640</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 992.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f641'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r641'>641</a>. Pausan. i. 19. 3. Harpocrat.
-v. Λύκειον, p. 190.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f642'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r642'>642</a>. Here Aristotle taught (Cic.
-Acad. Quæst. i. 4.) as he had
-previously done at Stagira, where
-the stone seats and covered walls
-of his school remained in the age
-of Plutarch.—Alexand. § 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f643'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r643'>643</a>. Suid. v. Ἄρχων. i. p. 452. c.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f644'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r644'>644</a>. Aristoph. Pac. 355. seq.
-Suid. v. Λύκειον, t. ii. p. 66. b.
-Xenoph. de Off. Magist. Equit.
-iii. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f645'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r645'>645</a>. Liv. xxxi. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f646'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r646'>646</a>. Suid. v. Κυνόσαργ. t. i. p.
-1550. e.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f647'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r647'>647</a>. In the gymnasia, the statue
-of Eros was generally placed beside
-those of this divinity and
-Hermes.—Athen. xiii. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f648'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r648'>648</a>. Plut. Them. § 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f649'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r649'>649</a>. Barthel. Trav. of Anach. ii.
-p. 133. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f650'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r650'>650</a>. Vitruv. v. 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f651'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r651'>651</a>. Plin. xxv. 13.—Even old men
-performed their exercises naked.—Plat.
-de Rep. t. vi. p. 221.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f652'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r652'>652</a>. Casaub. ad Theoph. Char. p.
-172.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f653'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r653'>653</a>. Poll. iii. 149.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f654'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r654'>654</a>. Suet. Vesp. c. 20. with the
-note of Torrentius, p. 375.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f655'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r655'>655</a>. In the Gymnasium of Asclepios
-at Smyrna, Heracleides the
-sophist erected an anointing-room,
-containing a fountain or well of
-oil, and adorned with a gilded
-roof.—Philostr. de Vit. Sophist.
-ii. 26. p. 613.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f656'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r656'>656</a>. Vitruv. v. 11. Cf. on the
-Xystoi, Xenoph. Œconom. xi. 15.—Cicero,
-Acad. iv. 3; ad Att.
-l. 8. Of this covered walk Aristeas
-makes mention in a fragment
-of his Orpheus:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Ἦν μοὶ παλαίστρα καὶ δρόμος</div>
- <div class='line in5'>ξυστὸς πέλας.</div>
- <div class='line in19'>Poll. ix. 43.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f657'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r657'>657</a>. Potter, Book i. chap. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f658'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r658'>658</a>. Lucian, Amor. § 45. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f659'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r659'>659</a>. Lucian, Anach. § § 1–3. 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f660'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r660'>660</a>. Accumenes, the friend of Socrates,
-advised persons to walk on
-the high-road in preference to the
-places of exercise, as being less
-fatiguing and more beneficial.—Plat.
-Phæd. t. i. p. 3. On the
-rapidity of public runners see Herod.
-vi. 106. Cf. on the Pentathlon
-West, Dissert. on the Olympic
-Games, p. 77. They appear to
-have acquired so equable and
-steady a pace that time was measured
-by their movements, as distance
-is by that of caravans in
-the East. Thus Dioscorides, ii.
-96. gives direction that gall should
-be boiled while a person could
-run three stadia.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f661'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r661'>661</a>. Il. ψ. 754. sqq. Cf. Odyss. η.
-119.—As an illustration of the necessity
-there was of going through
-all the various exercises, it is
-mentioned by Xenophon that runners
-had large legs, wrestlers
-small ones.—Conviv. ii. 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f662'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r662'>662</a>. Poll. iii. 151.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f663'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r663'>663</a>. Paus. v. 26. 3; 27. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f664'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r664'>664</a>. Eustath. ad Odyss. θ. 128.
-Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 210.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f665'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r665'>665</a>. Odyss. θ. 128.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f666'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r666'>666</a>. Odyss. θ. 186. sqq. Cf. Il.
-ψ. 836. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f667'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r667'>667</a>. Schol. Hom. Il. β. 774.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f668'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r668'>668</a>. Schol. Hom. Il. β. 774.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f669'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r669'>669</a>. Lucian. Hermot. § 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f670'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r670'>670</a>. Tetral. ii. 1. Cf. Plat. de Legg.
-t. viii. p. 51. sqq. 142.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f671'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r671'>671</a>. Cf. Sch. Aristoph. Eq. 569.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f672'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r672'>672</a>. Il. ψ. 708, sqq. et Heyne ad
-loc.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f673'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r673'>673</a>. Theoc. Eidyll. xxii. 3. et 80.
-Mercurial. de Art. Gymnast. ii.
-9. Virg. Æn. v. 401. sqq. Paus.
-viii. 40. 3. Poll. ii. 150. Scalig.
-Poet. i. 22. p. 92.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f674'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r674'>674</a>. Il. ψ. 684. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f675'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r675'>675</a>. But Galen cautions youth
-against useless acquisitions, which
-he says are not arts at all: such
-as πεττευριπτεῖν, throwing the tali,—walking
-over a small tight
-rope,—whirling round without
-being giddy, like Myrmecides the
-Athenian and Callicrates the Spartan.—Protrept.
-§ 9. p. 20. Kühn.—He then speaks very slightingly
-of gymnastic exercises. The
-studies he recommends are: medicine,
-rhetoric, music, geometry,
-arithmetic, dialectics, astronomy,
-grammar, and jurisprudence, to
-which may be added, modelling
-and painting.—§ 14. Cf. Foës.
-Œcon. Hip. p. 366.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f676'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r676'>676</a>. Vid. Aristot. de Poet. i. 6.
-Herm.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f677'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r677'>677</a>. See Book iv. Chapter 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f678'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r678'>678</a>. Cf. Plat. de Legg. t. viii. p.
-97.—The gymnasia in the later
-ages of Greece were so little frequented,
-that their area was sown
-with corn. Dion. Chrysos. i. 223.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c025' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>
- <h3 class='c024'>CHAPTER VI.<br /> HUNTING AND FOWLING.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c032'>Among the sports and pastimes of the Greeks,
-which may be considered as a kind of supplement to
-gymnastics, we must class first the chase, which
-Xenophon vainly hoped might be made to operate
-as a check on the luxurious and effeminate habits
-of his contemporaries.<a id='r679' /><a href='#f679' class='c018'><sup>[679]</sup></a> But each age having its own
-distinctive characteristic, it profits very little to aim
-at engrafting the customs of one period of civilisation
-upon another. The world will go its own gait.
-Chuckfarthing and Pricking the Loop might as well
-be recommended to young gentlemen and ladies dying
-for love, as hunting to the population of a vain and
-foppish city, to whom wild boars and wolves must
-seem certain death. However, the country gentlemen,
-and the agricultural population generally, long
-in their own defence continued the practice of the
-chase, though in Attica the absence of wild animals,
-consequent upon a high and careful cultivation, had
-reduced it at a very early period to a matter of mere
-amusement.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But in remoter times, and in those parts of the
-country where game always continued to abound,
-there were never wanting persons who delighted in
-the excitement of the chase. Herdsmen, particularly,
-and shepherds, considered it part of their occupation.<a id='r680' /><a href='#f680' class='c018'><sup>[680]</sup></a>
-Thus we find Anchises a young Trojan chief, who
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>inhabited the hill country, making his lair of bears
-and lion-skins, the spoils of his own lance.<a id='r681' /><a href='#f681' class='c018'><sup>[681]</sup></a> Sport, of
-course, it would furnish to bold and reckless young
-men, as lion and tiger hunting still does to our countrymen
-in Northern India; but from this recreation
-proceeded in some measure their safety, since where
-wild beasts are numerous they not only devastate the
-country,<a id='r682' /><a href='#f682' class='c018'><sup>[682]</sup></a> trampling down the corn-fields and devouring
-herds and flocks, but occasionally, if they chance to
-find them unarmed, dine also upon their hunters.
-Thus the chase of the Calydonian boar, the tally-ho’s
-and view-halloes of which still sound fresh in song,
-was undertaken by the Ætolians and Curetes, for the
-purpose of delivering the rustic population from a
-pest;<a id='r683' /><a href='#f683' class='c018'><sup>[683]</sup></a> and precisely the same motive urged Alcmena’s
-boy into the famous conflict with the Nemean lion,<a id='r684' /><a href='#f684' class='c018'><sup>[684]</sup></a>
-which he brought down with his invincible bow and
-finished with his wild olive club. In like manner
-Theseus, his rival in glory, slew the Marathonian bull;
-and delivered the Cretans from another monster of
-the same kind.<a id='r685' /><a href='#f685' class='c018'><sup>[685]</sup></a> He engaged, too, with a sow of
-great size at Crommyon on the confines of Corinthia,
-and slaughtered the pig, an achievement of much
-utility and no little glory.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The arms and accoutrements of these primitive
-sportsmen corresponded with the rough service in
-which they were engaged. Sometimes, to the attack
-of the wild bull or the boar, they went forth with
-formidable battle-axes.<a id='r686' /><a href='#f686' class='c018'><sup>[686]</sup></a> But when their game was
-fleet and innocuous a handful of light javelins and
-the bow sufficed, as when Odysseus and his companions
-beat the country in search of wild goats.<a id='r687' /><a href='#f687' class='c018'><sup>[687]</sup></a> In the
-Æneid, too, we find the hero doing great execution
-among a herd of deer with his bow. Boar-spears also
-were in use ere the period of the Trojan war, as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>Odysseus, who appears to have been excessively addicted
-to the chase, is represented going thus armed
-to the field with the sons of Autolycos when he
-was wounded by the hog.<a id='r688' /><a href='#f688' class='c018'><sup>[688]</sup></a> With the same weapon
-we find Adrastos engaged in the same sport, killing
-the son of Cr&oelig;sos.<a id='r689' /><a href='#f689' class='c018'><sup>[689]</sup></a> The chase of the lion, which
-in Xenophon’s time could no longer be enjoyed in
-Greece Proper, required the most daring courage
-and the most formidable weapons, spears, javelins,
-clubs, and burning torches, with which at last they
-repelled him at night from the cattle stalls. Homer,
-as usual, represents the contest to the life:<a id='r690' /><a href='#f690' class='c018'><sup>[690]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“He turned to go, as slow retreats the lion from the stalls,</div>
- <div class='line'>Whom men and dogs assault while round a shower of javelins falls.</div>
- <div class='line'>They all night watch about their herds, lest he intent on prey</div>
- <div class='line'>Should bear the flower of all their fields, the fattest bull away.</div>
- <div class='line'>Onward impetuously he bounds—the hissing javelins fly</div>
- <div class='line'>From daring hands, while torches send their blaze far up the sky.</div>
- <div class='line'>He dreads, though fierce, the dazzling flames thick flashing on his sight,</div>
- <div class='line'>And hungry still and breathing rage, retires with morning’s light.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>The existence of wild beasts in a country has by some
-been enumerated among the causes of civilisation, and
-it may, under certain circumstances, deserve to be so
-considered, though generally such modes of accounting
-for things are exceedingly unphilosophical. Mitford,
-who advances it,<a id='r691' /><a href='#f691' class='c018'><sup>[691]</sup></a> needed but to cast a glance across the
-Mediterranean to dissipate his whole theory, since nowhere
-are there more wild beasts or men less civilised
-than in Africa. Egypt, Chaldæa, Assyria, the earliest
-peopled countries, enjoyed few of these helps to refinement.
-The reasons of Greek civilisation lay neither
-in their country or in the accidents of it, but in the
-race itself, which, as one family in a nation is distinguished
-from its neighbours by superior genius, was
-thus distinguished from other races of men. However,
-the lion, as we have seen, formerly existed among
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>them, though never probably in great numbers, and
-even in the age of Herodotus was still found in a wild
-tract of country extending from the Acheloös in Acarnania
-to the Nestos in Thrace,<a id='r692' /><a href='#f692' class='c018'><sup>[692]</sup></a> where in fabulous
-times Olynthos, son of Strymon,<a id='r693' /><a href='#f693' class='c018'><sup>[693]</sup></a> is said to have been
-slain in a lion hunt. In the age of Dion Chrysostom,
-however, this fierce animal was no longer known in
-Europe.<a id='r694' /><a href='#f694' class='c018'><sup>[694]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Dogs, all the world over and from the remotest
-times, have been man’s companions in the chase, and
-Homer, the noblest painter of the ancient world, has
-bequeathed us many sketches of the antique hunting
-breed. It has above been seen that in company with
-man they feared not to attack even the lion. Odysseus’
-famous dog Argos was a hound that</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Never missed in deepest woods the swift game to pursue</div>
- <div class='line'>If once it glanced before his sight, for every track he knew.<a id='r695' /><a href='#f695' class='c018'><sup>[695]</sup></a>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>And again when the same sagacious Nimrod makes
-his rounds in quest of “belly timber,” a brace of dogs
-runs before him “examining the traces,” while with
-boar-spear in hand he follows close at their heels.<a id='r696' /><a href='#f696' class='c018'><sup>[696]</sup></a>
-But already, even in those days, the habit of keeping
-more cats than catch mice had got into fashion—that
-is among the great—since we find grandees with their
-κύνες τραπεζῆες or “table dogs,”<a id='r697' /><a href='#f697' class='c018'><sup>[697]</sup></a> valued simply for
-their beauty. Patroclus maintained nine of these
-handsome animals, and Achilles understanding his
-tastes, cast two of them into the flames of his funeral
-pile, that their shades might sit at his board
-in the realms below.<a id='r698' /><a href='#f698' class='c018'><sup>[698]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Fowling too, if we may depend upon Athenæus,<a id='r699' /><a href='#f699' class='c018'><sup>[699]</sup></a>
-entered into the list of heroic amusements. It is
-clear, however, that the sportsmen of those days were
-arrant poachers, for, not content with attacking their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>prey in open fight, they condescended to spread nets
-for them and set gins for their feet. But being accomplished
-bowmen, however, they could occasionally,
-when pressed for provisions, fetch down a thrush, a
-pigeon, or a dove with an arrow, dexterously as that
-Jew in Eusebius<a id='r700' /><a href='#f700' class='c018'><sup>[700]</sup></a> who exhibited his marksmanship to
-demonstrate the fallacy of augury. For in the funeral
-games of Patroclus, we find one of the heroes hitting
-from a considerable distance a dove which had
-been tied by a small cord to the summit of a mast.<a id='r701' /><a href='#f701' class='c018'><sup>[701]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>They were given moreover not only to fishing
-with nets—a practice in nowise unbecoming a hero
-when in want of a dinner—but even to angling
-with “crooked O’Shaughnessies,”<a id='r702' /><a href='#f702' class='c018'><sup>[702]</sup></a> as Homer expresses
-it; though the passage in the Iliad, indeed,
-where a net is mentioned, cannot well be adduced
-in corroboration, since it may refer to fowling as
-well as to fishing.<a id='r703' /><a href='#f703' class='c018'><sup>[703]</sup></a> Certain verses in the Odyssey,
-however, prove beyond a doubt that the Greeks
-had already begun to derive a great part of their
-sustenance from the sea;<a id='r704' /><a href='#f704' class='c018'><sup>[704]</sup></a> and the Homeric heroes
-even understood the value of oysters, which, as appears
-from the Iliad, were procured by diving.<a id='r705' /><a href='#f705' class='c018'><sup>[705]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Nevertheless these ancient heroes, though by no
-means averse as we have seen to pigeons or oysters,
-delighted chiefly in the chase of the larger animals,
-in which article of taste they agreed with Plato, who
-considered all other kinds as unworthy of men.
-He appears to have entertained an especial aversion
-for the Isaac Waltons of the ancient world, and in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>his advice to youth earnestly exhorts them to eschew
-hooks and fish-traps, which he slily classes with piracy
-and house-breaking: and so he does fowling. Nor
-would his generous philosophy countenance poaching
-with nets and gins and snares. His sportsmen,
-modelled after the old Homeric type, were to mount
-their chargers,<a id='r706' /><a href='#f706' class='c018'><sup>[706]</sup></a> and accompanied by their dogs come
-to close quarters with their wild foes in open daylight,
-and subdue them by dint of personal courage.<a id='r707' /><a href='#f707' class='c018'><sup>[707]</sup></a> Precisely
-similar views prevailed in the heroic age, when
-the chiefs and principal men were exercised from boyhood
-in the chase, as appears from the examples of
-Achilles and Odysseus;<a id='r708' /><a href='#f708' class='c018'><sup>[708]</sup></a> of whom the former, according
-to Pindar, tried his hand at a lion at the age of
-six years, ἐξέτης τοπρῶτον. Being swift of foot as
-those Arabs of Northern Africa, who, as Leo<a id='r709' /><a href='#f709' class='c018'><sup>[709]</sup></a> says,
-are a match for any horse, he used without the aid of
-dogs to overtake and bring down deer with his javelin,
-and whatever prey he took he carried to his old
-master Cheiron. This passage Mr. Cary has translated
-in the following vigorous and elegant manner:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“In Philyra’s house a flaxen boy</div>
- <div class='line'>Achilles oft in rapturous joy</div>
- <div class='line'>His feats of strength essayed.</div>
- <div class='line'>Aloof like wind his little javelin flew,</div>
- <div class='line'>The lion and the brinded boar he slew;</div>
- <div class='line'>Then homeward to old Cheiron drew</div>
- <div class='line'>Their panting carcases.</div>
- <div class='line'>This when six years had fled;</div>
- <div class='line'>And all the after time</div>
- <div class='line'>Of his rejoicing prime</div>
- <div class='line'>It was to Dian and the blue-eyed Maid</div>
- <div class='line'>A wonder how he brought to ground</div>
- <div class='line'>The stag without or toils or hound.</div>
- <div class='line'>So fleet of foot was he.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>Similar manners, if we may confide in Virgil,<a id='r710' /><a href='#f710' class='c018'><sup>[710]</sup></a> prevailed
-among the old inhabitants of Latium, and Xenophon<a id='r711' /><a href='#f711' class='c018'><sup>[711]</sup></a>
-in his monarchical Utopia trains the youth
-in the same habits.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>On hunting,<a id='r712' /><a href='#f712' class='c018'><sup>[712]</sup></a> as practised in the civilised ages of
-Greece, we possess more ample details, and it is
-chiefly by the minuter touches that a picture of this
-kind can be invested with interest and utility. Xenophon,
-an aristocratic country gentleman, who living
-in a corrupt age was, as I have said, wisely partial
-to the nobler manners of the past, considers the chase
-as a branch of education.<a id='r713' /><a href='#f713' class='c018'><sup>[713]</sup></a> He does not, however,
-entertain upon this subject the heroic views of Plato,
-but, looking solely to utility, not only describes the
-physical conditions and mental qualities of the hunter,
-but the nets, poles, arms, and every implement made
-use of by the ancients in the chase.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Not to interfere with the discipline of the schools
-and the gymnasia, the youths were exhorted to betake
-themselves to field-sports about the age of twenty.
-Their notions of a sportsman’s costume differed materially
-from our own, for instead of decking themselves
-like our fox-hunters in scarlet, they selected the
-soberest and least brilliant colours both for their
-cloaks and chitons. The latter were in general extremely
-short, reaching merely to the hams, as Artemis
-is usually represented in works of art. But
-the chlamys was long and ample, that it might be
-twisted round the left arm in close contest with the
-larger animals. Their hunting boots reached to the
-knee, and were bound tight round the leg with
-thongs. Probably also, as in travelling, they covered
-their heads with a broad-brimmed hat.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The apparatus of a Greek sportsman would appear
-somewhat cumbersome, and perhaps a little ludicrous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>to a modern Nimrod. But understanding their own
-object they went their own way to work; their arms
-and implements, varying with the chase in which they
-were engaged, consisted of short swords, hunting
-knives<a id='r714' /><a href='#f714' class='c018'><sup>[714]</sup></a> for the purpose of cutting down brushwood
-to stop up openings in the forest, axes for felling
-trees, darts furnished with thongs for drawing them
-back when they had missed their aim, bows, boar-spears,
-weapons peculiarly formidable, nets small and
-large, some for setting up in the plains, some for traversing
-glades or narrow alleys in the woods, and
-others shaped like a female head-net, to be placed in
-small dusky openings, where being unperceived the
-game sprang into them as into a sack, which closed
-about it by means of a running cord, net-poles, forked
-stakes, snares, gins, nooses, and leashes for the dogs.<a id='r715' /><a href='#f715' class='c018'><sup>[715]</sup></a>
-The darts used on these occasions had ashen or beechen
-handles, and the nets were usually manufactured
-with flax imported from Colchis on the Phasis, Egypt,
-Carthage, and Sardinia.<a id='r716' /><a href='#f716' class='c018'><sup>[716]</sup></a> Generally, too, they took
-along with them the Lagobalon, a short, crooked stick
-with a knob at one end, with which they sometimes
-brought down the hare in its flight.<a id='r717' /><a href='#f717' class='c018'><sup>[717]</sup></a> This practice,
-common enough among poachers in our country, is
-by them denominated <em>squailing</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Without the aid of dogs, however, hunting is a poor
-sport. The ancients, therefore, much addicted to this
-branch of education, paid great attention to the breed
-of these animals, of which some were sought to be
-rendered celebrated by heroic and fabulous <a id='corr213.30'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='associaations'>associations</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_213.30'><ins class='correction' title='associaations'>associations</ins></a></span>.
-Thus the Castorides, it was said, sprang<a id='r718' /><a href='#f718' class='c018'><sup>[718]</sup></a> from
-a breed to which the twin god of Sparta was partial;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>the Alopecidæ were a cross between a dog and a
-she-fox; and a third kind<a id='r719' /><a href='#f719' class='c018'><sup>[719]</sup></a> arose from the mingling
-of these two races. Among modern sportsmen, there
-are also good authorities who prefer harriers with a
-quarter of the fox-strain.<a id='r720' /><a href='#f720' class='c018'><sup>[720]</sup></a> Other kinds of hounds, as
-the Menelaides and Harmodian derived their appellation
-from the persons who reared them.<a id='r721' /><a href='#f721' class='c018'><sup>[721]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But the whole breeds of certain countries<a id='r722' /><a href='#f722' class='c018'><sup>[722]</sup></a> were
-famous, as the Argive, the Locrian, the Arcadian,
-the Spanish, the Carian, the Eretrian; the Celtic or
-greyhound (not known<a id='r723' /><a href='#f723' class='c018'><sup>[723]</sup></a> in more ancient times); the
-Psyllian, so called from a city of Achaia; the dog
-of Elymæa, a country lying between Bactria and
-Hyrcania; the Hyrcanian, which was a cross with
-the lion; the Laconian, of which the bitch was more
-generous,<a id='r724' /><a href='#f724' class='c018'><sup>[724]</sup></a> sometimes crossed with the Cretan, which
-was itself renowned for its nose, strength and courage,<a id='r725' /><a href='#f725' class='c018'><sup>[725]</sup></a>
-those which kept watch in the temple of Artemis
-Dictynna having been reckoned a match even
-for bears; the Molossian, less valued for the chase
-than as a shepherd’s dog, on account of its great fierceness
-and power to contend with wild beasts;<a id='r726' /><a href='#f726' class='c018'><sup>[726]</sup></a> the
-Cyrenaic, a cross with the wolf, and lastly the Indian,
-on which the chief reliance was placed in the
-chase of the wild boar. This breed, according to
-Aristotle, was produced by crossing with the tiger,
-probably the Cheeta.<a id='r727' /><a href='#f727' class='c018'><sup>[727]</sup></a> The first and second removes
-were considered too fierce and unmanageable, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>it was not until the third generation that these tiger-mules
-could be broken in to the use of the sportsman.
-Some sought in mythology the origin of this
-noble animal; for, according to Nicander, the hounds
-of Actæon, recovering their senses after the destruction
-of their master, fled across the Euphrates and
-wandered as far as India. Strange stories are related
-of this breed, of which some it is said would
-contend with no animal but the lion. Alexander’s
-dog, which he purchased in India for a hundred minæ,
-had twice overcome and slain the monarch of the
-forest.<a id='r728' /><a href='#f728' class='c018'><sup>[728]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Let us, therefore, now imagine the hounds exactly
-what they ought to be, and observe under what circumstances
-they were led afield. As in England,
-their principal sport was the hare. In winter,<a id='r729' /><a href='#f729' class='c018'><sup>[729]</sup></a>
-it was observed that puss, from the length of the
-nights, took a wider circuit, and therefore afforded
-the dogs a better chance of detecting her traces.<a id='r730' /><a href='#f730' class='c018'><sup>[730]</sup></a>
-But when in the morning the ground was covered
-with ice or white with hoar-frost, the dogs lost their
-scent, as also amidst abundant dews or after heavy
-rains. The sportsman accordingly waited till the
-sun was some way up the sky, and had begun to
-quicken the subtile odours communicated to the
-earth.<a id='r731' /><a href='#f731' class='c018'><sup>[731]</sup></a> The west wind,<a id='r732' /><a href='#f732' class='c018'><sup>[732]</sup></a> which covers the heavens
-with vast clouds and fills the air with moisture,
-and the south blowing warm and humid, weaken
-the scent; but the north wind fixes and preserves
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>it.<a id='r733' /><a href='#f733' class='c018'><sup>[733]</sup></a> By moonlight, too, as the old sportsmen remark,
-and the warmth it emits, the scent is affected;
-besides that when the moon shines brightly, in their
-frolicsome and sportive mood the hares, in the secluded
-glades of the forest, take long leaps and
-bounds over the green sward, leaving wide intervals
-between their traces.<a id='r734' /><a href='#f734' class='c018'><sup>[734]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>From a remark of Xenophon it appears that at
-least on one point the sportsmen of antiquity were
-less humane than the modern, since they pursued
-the chase even in breeding time.<a id='r735' /><a href='#f735' class='c018'><sup>[735]</sup></a> They, however,
-spared the young in honour of Artemis;<a id='r736' /><a href='#f736' class='c018'><sup>[736]</sup></a> the spirit
-even of false religion, on this, as on many other occasions,
-strengthening the impulses of humanity.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Several causes coöperated to render hares unplentiful
-on the Hellenic continent,—the number of sportsmen,
-of foxes which devoured both them and their
-young, and of eagles that delighted in its lofty and
-almost inaccessible mountains, and shared its game
-with the huntsman and the fox. Homer, in a
-few picturesque words, describes the war carried on
-against puss by this destructive bird.<a id='r737' /><a href='#f737' class='c018'><sup>[737]</sup></a> On the
-islands, whether inhabited or not, few of these obstacles
-to their increase existed. Sportsmen rarely
-passed over to them, and in such as were sacred to
-any of the gods the introduction of dogs was not
-permitted, so that, like the pigeons and turtle-doves
-of Mekka, they multiplied in those holy haunts prodigiously.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It was prohibited by the laws of Attica<a id='r738' /><a href='#f738' class='c018'><sup>[738]</sup></a> to commit
-the slightest trespass during the chase. The sportsman
-was not allowed to traverse any ground under
-cultivation, to disturb the course of running water, or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>to invade the sanctity of fountains. The scene of
-action accordingly lay among the woods and mountains,
-the common property of the republic, or, if not,
-abandoned by general consent to the use of the sportsman.
-Such were, for example, the woodland districts
-of Parnes and Cithæron on the borders of Bœotia. Towards
-these the huntsman, well shod, plainly and
-lightly dressed,<a id='r739' /><a href='#f739' class='c018'><sup>[739]</sup></a> and with a stick in his hand, set out
-about sunrise in winter, in summer before day.<a id='r740' /><a href='#f740' class='c018'><sup>[740]</sup></a> On
-the road strict silence was observed<a id='r741' /><a href='#f741' class='c018'><sup>[741]</sup></a> lest the hare
-should take the alarm and to her heels. Having
-reached the cover, the dogs were tied separately that
-they might be let slip the more easily, the nets were
-spread in the proper places, the net-guards set, and
-the huntsman with his dogs proceeded to start the
-game, first piously making a votive offering of the
-primitiæ to Apollo and Artemis,<a id='r742' /><a href='#f742' class='c018'><sup>[742]</sup></a> divinities of the
-chase.<a id='r743' /><a href='#f743' class='c018'><sup>[743]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>And now, exclaims the leader of the Ten Thousand,
-I behold the hounds, joyous and full of fire, spring
-forward in the track of their game. Eagerly and
-ardently do they pursue it—they traverse—they run
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>about in a circle—they advance now in a straight
-line, now bounding away obliquely—they plunge into
-the thickets, across the glades, through the paths,
-known or unknown, hurrying one before the other,
-shaking their tails, their ears hanging low,<a id='r744' /><a href='#f744' class='c018'><sup>[744]</sup></a> their eyes
-flashing with fire. Drawing near the game they indicate
-the fact to their master by their movements,
-kindling up into a warlike humour, bounding emulously
-forward, scorning all thought of fatigue,—now
-in a body, now singly,—till reaching the hiding-place<a id='r745' /><a href='#f745' class='c018'><sup>[745]</sup></a>
-of the hare they spring towards it all at once. In the
-midst of shouts and barking the swift animal glances
-from her form with the hounds at her heels. The
-huntsman, his left hand wrapped in his chlamys, follows
-staff in hand, animating his dogs, but avoiding,
-even if in his power, to head the game.<a id='r746' /><a href='#f746' class='c018'><sup>[746]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>A singular species of chase, now common in our
-own rabbit-warrens, appears to have passed over from
-Africa to the Balearic Isles, in an ancient account of
-which the first mention of it occurs. Those islands,
-it is said, were almost entirely exempted from vermin,
-but, on the other hand, contained prodigious numbers
-of rabbits, which almost destroyed every herb and
-plant by biting their roots. At length, however, they
-discovered a remedy for this evil. They imported
-ferrets from Africa, which, having first muzzled them,
-they let loose in the rabbit-warrens. Creeping into
-the holes they scared forth the inmates, which were
-caught by the sportsman. Strabo, who relates the
-circumstance, calls the ferret a “wild cat.” Pliny,
-having likewise described the devastations of the
-rabbits, speaks of it under the name of <em>viverra</em>, and
-says it was held in great estimation for its utility in
-this chase, which in the seventeenth century was practised
-in the island of Procida, where they procured
-the animal from Sicily, and denominated it Foretta,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>whence the English name. The common Italian appellation
-was donnola.<a id='r747' /><a href='#f747' class='c018'><sup>[747]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It is clear, however, that in classic times the
-ferret was unknown in Greece, otherwise we should
-never have heard of the proverb of the Carpathian
-and his Hare<a id='r748' /><a href='#f748' class='c018'><sup>[748]</sup></a> applied to persons who brought evil
-upon themselves. Originally, we are told, the
-Island of Carpathos<a id='r749' /><a href='#f749' class='c018'><sup>[749]</sup></a> was, like Ithaca, entirely
-destitute of hares; but a pair having been at
-length introduced, multiplied so prodigiously that
-they almost depopulated the island by devouring the
-fruits of the earth. A similar fact is related of the
-island Porto Santo, near Madeira, for Prince Henry of
-Portugal, immediately after its discovery, “sent Bartholomew
-Perestrello with seeds to sow and cattle to
-stock the place; but one couple of rabbits put in
-among the rest increased so prodigiously that all
-corn and plants being destroyed by them it was
-found necessary to unpeople the place.”<a id='r750' /><a href='#f750' class='c018'><sup>[750]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>A peculiar kind of hare is commemorated by the
-ancients as found in Elymœa. It is said to have been
-little inferior in size to the fox, to have been elongated
-and slender in shape, and blackish in colour, with a
-long white tip at the end of the tail. It is remarked
-by the same writer that the scent left by leverets
-on the ground is stronger and more pungent than that
-of the grown hare, so that the dogs become furious on
-getting wind of it.<a id='r751' /><a href='#f751' class='c018'><sup>[751]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>From the chase of the hare and rabbit we pass on
-to that of the fawn and the stag, in which they made
-use of Indian dogs,<a id='r752' /><a href='#f752' class='c018'><sup>[752]</sup></a> animals of great strength, size,
-speed, and courage. Fawns<a id='r753' /><a href='#f753' class='c018'><sup>[753]</sup></a> were hunted in spring,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>the season of their birth. The first step was for the
-sportsman to beat up the woods to discover where the
-deer were numerous; and having found a proper
-place he returned thither before day, armed with javelins,
-and accompanied by a game-keeper with a pack
-of hounds. The dogs were kept in leash afar off, lest
-they should give tongue at the sight of the deer. He
-himself took his station on the look-out. At break of
-day<a id='r754' /><a href='#f754' class='c018'><sup>[754]</sup></a> the does, with their yellowish and richly-speckled
-skins, were seen issuing from the thickets, followed
-by their still more delicately-spotted fawns, which
-they led to the places<a id='r755' /><a href='#f755' class='c018'><sup>[755]</sup></a> where they usually suckled
-them, while the stags stationed themselves at a distance,
-as an advanced guard, to defend them from all
-intruders. The graceful creatures then lay down to
-perform their matronly office, looking round watchfully
-the while to observe whether they were discovered.
-This pleasing task completed, they, like the
-stags, posted themselves in a circle about their fawns
-to protect them. Sportsmen have no sentiment. At
-the very moment when this most beautiful exhibition
-of mute affection would have warmed with sympathy
-the heart of the philosopher or the poet, the dogs
-were let loose, while their master and his companions,
-armed with javelins, closed upon the game. The
-fawn itself, unless chilled and drenched by the dew—in
-which case it frisked about—would remain still in
-its place and be taken. But on hearing its cries the
-doe rushed forward to deliver it, and was smitten
-down by the javelins or torn to pieces by the dogs.
-The chase of the female elephant in Africa exhibits
-the same traits of affection in the brute and ferocity
-in man. In this case the young will fight for his
-mother, or the mother for her young till death.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>When the fawn had attained any considerable size,
-and begun to feed among the herd, the chase of it
-became more arduous. The fidelity of instinctive
-love, opposed to human sagacity, exhibited all its
-force. Closing round their young and drawing up
-in front of them, the stags, emboldened by affection,
-trampled the dogs under their feet, frequently to
-death, unless the huntsman, dashing into the midst
-of them, could succeed in detaching a single animal
-from the herd. But, supposing this done, the hounds
-at first remained far behind the fawn, which, terrified
-at finding itself alone, bounded along with incredible
-velocity, though, its strength soon failing, it in the
-end fell a prey to the hunter.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The object of the ancients, however, in the chase
-not being simple sport, but to obtain possession by
-the shortest method possible of the game, they set
-snares in the narrows of the mountains, around the
-meadows, near the streams and freshes, and in the
-thickets—wherever, in short, stags could be taken.
-Pitfalls, too, were dug, as in Africa for the lion,<a id='r756' /><a href='#f756' class='c018'><sup>[756]</sup></a>
-and most of those stratagems resorted to which the
-Nubians and Egyptian Arabs put in practice against
-the gazelle. It was in fact common to erect, with
-rough stones or wood, a sort of skreen, perhaps semicircular,
-like those behind which the hunters of
-the desert hide, to conceal themselves when lying
-in wait for the game.<a id='r757' /><a href='#f757' class='c018'><sup>[757]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>For the chase of the wild boar,<a id='r758' /><a href='#f758' class='c018'><sup>[758]</sup></a> at once a manly
-and a useful sport, somewhat complicated preparations
-were necessary. In this the dogs of India, of Crete,
-of Locris, of Sparta, hunted side by side, and the
-sportsman took the field armed with strong nets,
-javelins, hunting poles, and snares. The boar-spears
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>of the ancients<a id='r759' /><a href='#f759' class='c018'><sup>[759]</sup></a> were most carefully fashioned, with
-a broad sharp head and handle of tough wood. So
-likewise were their hunting-poles armed with long
-iron points, fixed in brazen sockets, with a shaft of
-service wood. Footsnares of great strength were set
-at intervals. This was not the sport of a solitary
-hunter. They went out in considerable numbers,
-and kept close together, finding still, for lack of fire-arms,
-no small difficulty in coping with the foe. On
-reaching the spot where they supposed the hog to
-be ensconced, the dogs were all led carefully in leash
-with the exception of one Spartan hound, which was
-let loose and accompanied in all his movements.
-When he appeared to have found the track, they
-followed him, and he thus took the lead in the chase.
-Numerous signs also directed the movements of the
-hunter; in soft places the track, broken branches in
-thickets, and in forests the wounds on the bark of
-trees, given by the boar in sharpening his tusks as
-he passed.<a id='r760' /><a href='#f760' class='c018'><sup>[760]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Generally the traces were found leading to some
-sheltered nook, warm in winter, in summer cool, where
-the boar made his lair. On discovering him the dog
-gave tongue, but the animal in general refused to rise.
-The hound was then withdrawn and put in leash with
-the others, and every opening, save one, leading to the
-place, closed with nets, the upper ends of which were
-passed over the forks of trees. The nets were hung
-so as to belly outwards, and carefully disposed so that
-they could be seen through. Bushes cut hastily supported
-them on either side, and closed every aperture
-through which the game could attempt to force a way.
-This done the hounds were all slipped, and the hunters,
-armed with pikes and spears, entered the netted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>enclosure. One of the boldest and most experienced
-led the dogs; the others followed at intervals, leaving
-an ample space between them for the boar, which if
-closely hemmed in might have inflicted on his opponents
-the fate of Adonis. Presently the hounds sprang
-all at once upon the game, which rising in sudden
-alarm tossed the first it encountered into the air, and
-breaking through the pack made away towards the
-nets, followed by men and dogs in full cry. On finding
-the unaccustomed opposition, he would, if running
-down hill, plunge right forward to force his way
-through; if in a plain he would stand still, glaring
-fiercely around.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The dogs, however, soon closed upon his track, while
-the hunters galled him with javelins and stones, approaching
-closer and closer till he was driven by his
-own impetuosity into the nets. Upon this the most
-daring of his pursuers drew near, pike in hand, and
-sought to put an end to the contest by piercing
-him in the head. Sometimes, notwithstanding all
-they could do, instead of plunging into the toils he
-would turn upon them; in which case some dexterous
-sportsman, armed with spear or pike, usually presented
-himself to receive his charge with one foot advanced,
-impelling the weapon with the right hand, directing
-it with the left. Instead, however, of rushing on at
-once the hog would perhaps pause a moment to
-reconnoitre, when it behoved his antagonist carefully
-to mark every movement of his head or glance of his
-eye.<a id='r761' /><a href='#f761' class='c018'><sup>[761]</sup></a> For in the very moment that a blow was aimed
-at him, he would sometimes dash the spear aside with
-tusk or snout, and the next moment be upon his
-enemy, whose only chance of safety now consisted in
-throwing himself instantaneously on his face, and holding
-fast by whatever he could grasp, since, the tusks
-of the boar curving upwards, he found it difficult to
-gore his enemy thus lying, and failing to turn him
-over would in his fury trample on him. A second
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>hunter now rushed forward to deliver his companion,
-and usually drew off the hog by dexterous attacks in
-flank. The fallen sportsman, recovering at the same
-time his feet and his spear, must by the laws of the
-chase return to the combat, and could only secure
-his reputation by immolating his foe. By this time,
-indeed, the task had generally become easier; for, rendered
-reckless by fury, he would throw himself impetuously
-on their pikes, which, but for the protecting
-guards at the head, would have gone through him
-handle and all. His whole frame now appeared to be
-kindled with rage, his blood boiling, his eyes flashing,
-and his tusks so nearly on fire that if brought in contact
-with hair at the moment of death, they would
-frizzle it like a red-hot iron.<a id='r762' /><a href='#f762' class='c018'><sup>[762]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Of the hunting of the bear<a id='r763' /><a href='#f763' class='c018'><sup>[763]</sup></a> the ancients have left
-us no exact description. As this animal abounded,
-however, in most parts of Greece, where it was extremely
-troublesome and destructive, particularly to
-the fruit-trees, various expedients were hit upon for
-taking and destroying it. Sometimes it was pursued
-as game and brought down by the bow; but the common
-method appears to have been to make use of
-traps and snares. They dug, for example, a deep
-trench round one of those trees in the fruit of which
-the bear particularly delighted, and covering it with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>reeds or brittle branches, they sprinkled thereon a thin
-layer of earth, and concealed the whole apparatus with
-fresh grass. The bear, proceeding as usual towards
-the tree on his thievish errand, broke in the roof of
-the pit with his weight, and was caught. Even in the
-most civilised times this animal had not been wholly
-extirpated from Attica,<a id='r764' /><a href='#f764' class='c018'><sup>[764]</sup></a> but, as well as the boar, was
-found on Mount Parnes. In Laconia also, through
-the whole range of Taygetos, it abounded, together
-with hogs, deer, and wild goats. Bruin was sacrificed
-in Achaia to Artemis Laphria. In Thrace the white
-bear was found.<a id='r765' /><a href='#f765' class='c018'><sup>[765]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Respecting the habits of the Grecian bear the
-ancients have left us some few facts which may be
-worth repeating. When it comes forth from the
-den,<a id='r766' /><a href='#f766' class='c018'><sup>[766]</sup></a> where it has passed the winter, it is said to
-chew bits of wood, and to feed on snake-weed, wake-robin,
-or cuckoo-pint (arum maculatum<a id='r767' /><a href='#f767' class='c018'><sup>[767]</sup></a>), which has a
-purgative power. These operations performed, its
-ravenous appetites immediately awake, and it commences
-its devastations in the farm-yard, the orchard
-and the apiary. Delighting greatly in honey
-it attacks and overthrows the hives which it tears to
-pieces in order to devour the combs, though Pliny<a id='r768' /><a href='#f768' class='c018'><sup>[768]</sup></a>
-adduces another reason for this fact, exceedingly
-characteristic of that writer. He says that the bear,
-after his winter sleep, finding his eyes dim and his
-head heavy, applies to the bees as to skilful oculists,
-that in revenge for robbing them of their honey,
-sting him angrily about the face, which by letting
-much blood relieves him at once from his ophthalmia
-and his <a id='corr225.32'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='headach'>headache</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_225.32'><ins class='correction' title='headach'>headache</ins></a></span>. The bear, it is well known,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>is omnivorous like man. He accordingly plunders the
-bean-fields, and feeds on every kind of pulse. In
-robbing orchards,<a id='r769' /><a href='#f769' class='c018'><sup>[769]</sup></a> too, his courage and ability are
-great, being as I have said as complete an adept
-as a school-boy in climbing trees, out of which when
-he has satisfied himself he descends, like the aforesaid
-mischievous beast, feet foremost. When none of
-the delicacies above enumerated was within his reach,
-the bear would feed on ants, crabs, or any kind of
-vermin, but preferred of course the flesh of the
-larger animals, such as the stag, the wild boar, and
-the bull. His mode of taking his prey was curious.
-Upon the boar and stag he probably dropped from
-his hiding place in the trees, but the stratagem by
-which he usually got the bull into his power was
-this.<a id='r770' /><a href='#f770' class='c018'><sup>[770]</sup></a> Throwing himself on the ground directly in
-his way he provoked the lord of the herd to gore
-him, upon which, seizing his horns, and fastening ravenously
-upon his shoulder, he brought him to the
-ground, where he fed upon his carcass at leisure.
-When flying from the more terrible face of man,
-the female usually drove her young before her, or
-taking them up in her mouth or on her back, she
-would endeavour to escape with them into the trees.<a id='r771' /><a href='#f771' class='c018'><sup>[771]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>As the lion was not found in Greece in the
-civilised periods of its history, the chase of it cannot
-be said to have formed an Hellenic amusement.<a id='r772' /><a href='#f772' class='c018'><sup>[772]</sup></a>
-They might, however, by proceeding a little beyond
-the borders in their colonies of Thrace and Asia
-Minor, on Mount Pangæos, on the Mysian Olympos,
-and in Syria, enjoy this dangerous pastime if they
-desired it. In all those countries, however, both
-the lion,<a id='r773' /><a href='#f773' class='c018'><sup>[773]</sup></a> the panther, the pard, the lynx, and other
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>animals of this destructive class had been confined
-to the mountains, where, as an acute and experienced
-observer has remarked, they lose much of
-their force and ferocity. The expression made use
-of by Xenophon proves in fact that the dread of
-man had driven them almost into inaccessible fastnesses,
-whither they could not be pursued by the
-hunter, so that they were chiefly taken in their
-descent to the lowlands by poisoning, with aconite,<a id='r774' /><a href='#f774' class='c018'><sup>[774]</sup></a>
-the waters or the baits which they set for them:
-sometimes, indeed, when want compelled them into
-the plains, parties of hunters on horseback, and
-armed to the teeth, would assault and destroy them,
-not without imminent peril. Pitfalls, too, of ingenious
-construction were dug for them, having an
-earthen pillar in the centre on which a goat was
-tied.<a id='r775' /><a href='#f775' class='c018'><sup>[775]</sup></a> The encircling moat, like that above described,
-destined for the bear, was concealed by a
-covering of slender bushes which, breaking under
-them, they were precipitated to the bottom and
-there killed. The wolf, though a sacred animal<a id='r776' /><a href='#f776' class='c018'><sup>[776]</sup></a>
-in Attica, had by the laws a price set upon his
-head, at which Menage<a id='r777' /><a href='#f777' class='c018'><sup>[777]</sup></a> wonders, though the Egyptians
-also slaughtered their sacred crocodiles, when
-they exceeded a certain size.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In the chase of the wild goat the bow, among
-the mountains of Crete, was made use of, and so
-skilful as marksmen were the Cretans<a id='r778' /><a href='#f778' class='c018'><sup>[778]</sup></a> that from
-the depths of the valleys they would bring down
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>their game from the pinnacles of the loftiest cliffs.<a id='r779' /><a href='#f779' class='c018'><sup>[779]</sup></a>
-They were fabled to have been taught the art of
-hunting by the Curetes, and, practising it constantly
-in steep and difficult places, they acquired great
-suppleness and agility of body, and were exceedingly
-swift of foot.<a id='r780' /><a href='#f780' class='c018'><sup>[780]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Macedonians, too, were both practised and
-enthusiastic sportsmen, and delighted in the amusement
-even whilst engaged in their most toilsome
-expeditions. Thus during the campaigns of Alexander
-in Asia, we find the generals Leonatos and
-Menelaos or Philotas<a id='r781' /><a href='#f781' class='c018'><sup>[781]</sup></a> carrying about among their
-baggage, linen skreens, ten or twelve miles in length,
-which during their halts they caused to be stretched
-round a given district, where they hunted as in a
-park. An anecdote is related strikingly illustrating
-the high estimation in which the chase was held
-at the court and among the nobles of Macedonia,
-where it was customary for the son to sit upright
-on a chair at his father’s table and not to recline
-among the guests until he had slain a wild boar
-out of the toils. Cassander, son of Antipater, continued,
-it is said,<a id='r782' /><a href='#f782' class='c018'><sup>[782]</sup></a> up to his thirty-fifth year bolt
-upright at the regal board, because, though a brave
-man and a skilful hunter, fortune had constantly
-denied him the pleasure of despatching the hog after
-the prescribed fashion.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>There is one department of the chase, and that
-perhaps the most curious and interesting, which was
-not practised by the Greeks of classical times, though
-it cannot be said to have been unknown to them;
-I mean falconry, described by several ancient writers
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>as it was pursued in India and in Thrace. If I
-give a short description of it, therefore, it must be
-regarded as a digression introduced for the purpose
-of completing, as far as possible, the circle of ancient
-amusements. Ctesias,<a id='r783' /><a href='#f783' class='c018'><sup>[783]</sup></a> who was contemporary
-with Socrates, and published his Indian history four
-hundred years before Christ, seems to be the
-oldest writer by whom falconry is mentioned. He
-tells us that among the Hindùs hares and foxes
-were hunted with kites, ravens, and eagles, and minutely
-describes the way in which the birds were
-broken in. Having been caught while young, they
-were first taught to fly at tame hares and foxes
-in the following manner. The animals with pieces
-of flesh tied to them were started in sight of the
-falcons, which were immediately let loose and sent
-in pursuit. When they caught and brought back
-the game the flesh was given them as their reward,
-and by this bait and allurement they were encouraged
-to persevere. When sufficiently trained, they
-were taken to the mountains and flown against wild
-hares and foxes. The passion for falconry is still
-kept alive in the East, particularly in Persia, where
-the shâh-baz, or royal falcon, is flown against hares
-and antelopes, occasionally invested with leathers,
-which protect him from being torn asunder.<a id='r784' /><a href='#f784' class='c018'><sup>[784]</sup></a> But
-the most daring and dangerous service in which falcons
-have ever been employed is the chase of the
-wild horse by the Turcomâns of Khiva on the eastern
-shores of the Caspian.<a id='r785' /><a href='#f785' class='c018'><sup>[785]</sup></a> A more detailed description
-of ancient falconry than that given by Ctesias
-is found in a work attributed to Aristotle.<a id='r786' /><a href='#f786' class='c018'><sup>[786]</sup></a> It is
-said, observes this writer, that the youth of Thrace,
-who were addicted to hunting, pursued their game
-by the assistance of hawks. On arriving upon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>the ground, the falcon, which had evidently been
-trained for the purpose, obeyed the calls of the
-sportsmen and chased the birds into the thickets,
-where they were knocked down with hunting-poles
-and taken. Even when the falcons themselves captured
-the game, they brought it to the hunters,
-who as in modern times gave them, as a reward,
-some portion of the animal.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In their fowling they made use of great cruelty:—Pigeons
-and turtle-doves were commonly blinded,
-to be used as decoys, and in this condition would
-sometimes live eight years.<a id='r787' /><a href='#f787' class='c018'><sup>[787]</sup></a> Partridges were employed
-for the same purpose in a different manner.
-The male bird having been tamed was put out in
-the neighbourhood of a covey, upon which the boldest
-of the wild birds came forward to fight him,
-and was secured with the net. The challenge was
-usually accepted by every male bird in the covey
-until one after another they were all taken. When
-the female was employed she drew them successively
-to the nets by her call.<a id='r788' /><a href='#f788' class='c018'><sup>[788]</sup></a> The first that is deluded
-is generally the principal cock in the covey, which
-the others collecting together seek to drive away.
-To elude their pursuit the leader sometimes drew
-near the decoy in silence, that he might not have
-to contend with the other males. Not unfrequently
-they would descend and allow themselves at such
-times to be caught on the roofs of the houses.<a id='r789' /><a href='#f789' class='c018'><sup>[789]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Greeks established at Alexandria had, according
-to Athenæus, who was a native of Egypt, a kind
-of chase peculiar to themselves, viz. that of the
-horned owl. The sophist of Naucratis has indeed
-been suspected of confounding the ὠτὸς with the ὠτὶς,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>that is, the owl with the bustard;<a id='r790' /><a href='#f790' class='c018'><sup>[790]</sup></a> but it having
-been in his power to examine what he relates, I shall
-lay his account before the reader, who will judge
-for himself. This bird, it is said, is found in great
-numbers in the desert near Alexandria, (though I
-myself saw none there,) and is as much given to
-mimicry as a monkey. Above all things he is
-ambitious of imitating man, and, as far as possible,
-will do whatever he sees done by the fowler. Aware
-of his propensity in this way, these gentlemen, when
-desirous of taking an owl, carried along with them
-into the desert a thick tenacious glue, with which
-on coming within eyeshot of the Otos they affected
-to anoint their eyes. Then laying down the glue-pot
-on the sand they retreated to some hollow for concealment.
-Upon this the owl having watchfully observed
-their movements, approached, and covering his eyes
-with the treacherous ointment was blinded and taken.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Another mode of catching this bird also prevailed.
-It having been discovered that he was as partial as
-the Bedouin Arab to the company of a horse, the
-fowlers covered themselves with horses’ skins, and
-in this disguise approaching the flock were enabled
-to catch as many as they pleased. A third method
-of taking the Otos was one which exposed the
-unfortunate bird to the ridicule of the comic poets.
-The fowlers setting out upon the chase in pairs,
-separated at coming in sight of the game. One of
-the two then stepped out in front of the game and
-commenced a jig, upon which the thoughtless mimic
-immediately did the same, beating exact time with
-his feet, and keeping his eye fixed upon his wily
-teacher. While the merry victim was thus engaged,
-capering, springing, and pirouetting like a feathered
-Taglioni, the other bird-catcher approached from
-behind and seized him by the neck.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The same story is related by other writers of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>Scops or mocking-owl, in imitation of whose movements,
-the ancients had a celebrated dance.<a id='r791' /><a href='#f791' class='c018'><sup>[791]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Quails in certain seasons of the year frequent
-Greece in vast numbers, as they do Egypt and Southern
-Italy.<a id='r792' /><a href='#f792' class='c018'><sup>[792]</sup></a> It has been supposed that the island of
-Delos received the name of Ortygia from the quails
-(ὄρτυγες), which alighted on it in great numbers during
-their migration towards the north. They were likewise
-plentiful in Phœnicia,<a id='r793' /><a href='#f793' class='c018'><sup>[793]</sup></a> where they sacrificed them to
-Heracles. Numerous contrivances were resorted to
-for catching this bird. During pairing time it was
-taken as follows: mirrors were set up in the fields with
-snares in front of them, and the quail running towards
-the imaginary bird was there entrapped. Clearchos
-of Soli describes a curious mode of capturing jackdaws.
-In places frequented by those birds they used, he says,
-to lay broad vessels filled to the brim with oil.
-Presently the jackdaws, curious and prying in their
-temper, would alight on the edges, and, being vastly
-pleased with the reflection of their own beauty, would
-chuckle over it and clap their wings, till becoming
-saturated with oil the feathers stuck together and
-they could no longer fly.</p>
-
-<hr class='c025' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f679'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r679'>679</a>. In the early ages of the
-world, hunting we are assured
-led to the establishment of monarchy
-by accustoming youth
-whose brains were in their sinews
-to pay implicit obedience to their
-leaders in the chase.—Bochart,
-Geog. Sac. t. i. p. 258.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f680'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r680'>680</a>. Iliad, λ. 547.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f681'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r681'>681</a>. Hom. Hymn in Vener. 160.
-seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f682'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r682'>682</a>. Paus. i. 27. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f683'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r683'>683</a>. Iliad, ι. 547. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f684'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r684'>684</a>. Theocrit. xxv. 211. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f685'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r685'>685</a>. Paus. i. 27. 9. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f686'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r686'>686</a>. Iliad, ρ. 520. seq. Feith.
-Antiq. Hom. iv. c. 2. § 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f687'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r687'>687</a>. Odyss. ι. 155. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f688'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r688'>688</a>. Odyss. ι. 465. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f689'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r689'>689</a>. Herod. i. 43.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f690'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r690'>690</a>. Il. ρ. 657. Cf. Aristot. Hist.
-Anim. ix. 31. Oppian Cyneget.
-iv. 131. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f691'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r691'>691</a>. Hist. of Greece, i. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f692'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r692'>692</a>. Herod. vii. 125. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f693'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r693'>693</a>. Conon, Dieg. iv. ap. Phot.
-131. Rüdig. Prolegg. ad Dem.
-Olynth. p. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f694'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r694'>694</a>. Orat. 21. t. i. p. 501. Reiske.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f695'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r695'>695</a>. Odyss. ρ. 316. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f696'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r696'>696</a>. Id. τ. 436. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f697'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r697'>697</a>. Id. ρ. 310.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f698'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r698'>698</a>. Iliad ψ. 173. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f699'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r699'>699</a>. Deipnosoph. i. 22. et 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f700'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r700'>700</a>. Præp. Evang. l. ix. c. 4. p.
-408. d.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f701'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r701'>701</a>. Iliad, ψ. 853. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f702'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r702'>702</a>. Γναμπτοῖς ἀγκιστροίσιν. Odyss.
-μ. 331. seq. Ludovic. Nonn.
-de Re Cibar. iii. 4. p. 294.
-Plut. de Solert. Anim. § 24. Cf.
-Antich. di Ercol. t. i. tav. 36. p.
-191. From an expression of Augustus,
-if we can regard it as anything
-more than a figure of speech,
-it may be inferred that to increase
-the luxury of the sport by converting
-it into a species of gambling,
-people sometimes fished
-with golden hooks.—Polyæn.
-Strat. viii. 24. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f703'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r703'>703</a>. Iliad, γ. 487. seq. Eustath.
-ad Odyss. χ. 386.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f704'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r704'>704</a>. Odyss. χ. 386.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f705'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r705'>705</a>. Iliad, π. 747. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f706'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r706'>706</a>. Cf. Poll. Onom. v. 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f707'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r707'>707</a>. De Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 71.
-seq.—In his Republic boys were
-to be permitted when they could
-do so with safety to proceed to
-the field of battle, and there to
-approach sufficiently near the
-scene as to be able like young
-hounds to taste, so to speak, of
-blood.—t. vi. p. 367.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f708'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r708'>708</a>. Pind. Nem. iii. 43. seq. Diss.
-Odyss. τ. 429. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f709'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r709'>709</a>. Descrip. Afric.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f710'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r710'>710</a>. Æneid, ix. 605.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f711'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r711'>711</a>. Cyneg. ii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f712'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r712'>712</a>. To form a proper idea of the
-sporting vocabulary of the Greeks,
-the reader should consult Julius
-Pollux, Onomasticon, v. 9.-94.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f713'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r713'>713</a>. Cyneg. ii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f714'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r714'>714</a>. Poll. v. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f715'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r715'>715</a>. Cf. Grat. Falisc. Cyneg. p.
-14. Wase.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f716'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r716'>716</a>. Xen. Cyneg. ii. 3. Grat.
-Falisc. Cyneg. p. 6. Wase. Pollux,
-v. 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f717'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r717'>717</a>. Spanh. Obs. in Callim. Hymn.
-in Dian. ii. p. 122. Poll. v. 20.—Hares
-are hunted with sticks in
-South Guinea by the blacks.—Barbot.
-iii. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f718'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r718'>718</a>. Poll. v. 39. Xen. Cyneg.
-iii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f719'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r719'>719</a>. Arist. Hist. Anim. viii. 28.
-Poll. v. 39.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f720'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r720'>720</a>. Letters on Hunting, p. 60.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f721'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r721'>721</a>. Poll. v. 40.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f722'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r722'>722</a>. Arist. de Gen. Anim. v. 2.
-p. 344. Virg. Georg. iii. 405.
-See the enumeration by Gratius,
-Cyneg. p. 20. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f723'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r723'>723</a>. Arrian, de Venat. c. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f724'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r724'>724</a>. Arist. Hist. Anim. ix. 1.
-Soph. Ajax, 8. Virg. Georg. iii.
-405. Λάκαιναι σκύλακες, Plat.
-Parmen. t. ii. p. 7. had long
-noses. Arist. de Gen. Anim. v.
-2. 344.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f725'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r725'>725</a>. Æl. De Nat. Anim. iii. 2.
-Pashley, Travels in Crete, i. 33.
-Hughes, Travels, &amp;c. i. 489, 501.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f726'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r726'>726</a>. Arist. Hist. Anim. ix. i.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f727'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r727'>727</a>. Arist. Hist. Anim. viii. 28,
-with the observations of Camus,
-t. ii. p. 215. Cf. Scalig. de Subtilitat.
-x. p. 383. Æl. de Nat. Anim.
-viii. i.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f728'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r728'>728</a>. Æl. De Nat. Anim. viii. 1.
-Poll. Onom. v. 42. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f729'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r729'>729</a>. See on the subject of scent,
-Sport. Mag. Jan. 1840, and compare
-Essay on Hunting, p. 1.
-et seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f730'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r730'>730</a>. Cf. Poll. v. 11. Σύμβολα ἐν
-τετυπωμένα τῇ γῇ.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f731'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r731'>731</a>. The phrase in Pollux is ἀποφέρεται
-ἀπ᾽ αὔτων (τῶν ἰχνῶν) τὸ
-πνεῦμα. v. 12. The author of the
-Essay on Hunting (p. 15.) enumerating
-the several kinds of scent,
-speaks of them as stronger,
-sweeter, or more distinguishable
-at one time than another; and
-Pollux makes use of much the
-same language: ἄνοσμα, δύσοσμα,
-εὔοσμα, κ. τ. λ. l. c.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f732'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r732'>732</a>. Arist. Prob. xxvi. 23—Falling
-stars were regarded as a prognostic
-of high winds, 24. Letters
-on Hunting, p. 106.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f733'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r733'>733</a>. Cf. Xen. Cyneg. viii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f734'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r734'>734</a>. Xen. Cyneg. v. 4. Poll.
-v. 67.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f735'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r735'>735</a>. See also Spanh. Obs. in Callim.
-t. ii. p. 123.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f736'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r736'>736</a>. Xen. Cyneg. v. 14. Klaus.
-Com. in Agam. p. 114.—Leverets,
-properly λαγίδια, were often in
-common with the young of all
-other wild animals denominated
-ὀμβρίαι and ὀμβρίκια by the
-poets.—Poll. v. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f737'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r737'>737</a>. Il. χ. 308. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f738'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r738'>738</a>. Xen. Cyneg. v. 34.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f739'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r739'>739</a>. Poll. v. 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f740'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r740'>740</a>. The pleasure experienced on
-these occasions is thus enthusiastically
-described by Christopher
-Wase:—"What innocent and
-natural delights are they, when
-he seeth the day breaking forth,
-those blushes and roses which
-poets and writers of romances
-only paint, but the huntsman
-truly courts! When he heareth
-the chirping of small birds perched
-upon their dewy boughs, when
-he draws in that fragrancy of the
-pastures and coolness of the air!
-How jolly is his spirit when he
-suffers it to be imported with the
-noise of bugle-horns and the baying
-of hounds which leap up and
-play around him!"—Pref. to Tr.
-of Gratius, p. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f741'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r741'>741</a>. See, in the Cyropædia, i. 6.
-40, an extremely interesting passage
-on the chase of the hare.—Cf.
-Oppian. de Venat. iv. 422.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f742'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r742'>742</a>. Hence the goddess obtained
-many of the epithets bestowed on
-her by the poets, as: ἀγροτέρα,
-καὶ κυνηγέτις, καὶ φιλόθηρος, καὶ
-ὀρεία, ἀπὸ τῶν ὀρῶν· καὶ Ἰδαία,
-ἀπὸ τῆς Ἴδης, καὶ δίκτυνα, ἀπὸ
-τῶν δικτύων· καὶ ἑκηβόλος, ἀπὸ
-τοῦ ἑκὰς τὰ θνρία βάλλειν· καὶ
-πολλὰ ἄλλα ὀνόματα ἀπὸ θήρας.—Poll.
-v. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f743'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r743'>743</a>. Xen. Cyneg. vi. 1. seq. Poll.
-v. 13.—It was customary, moreover,
-to nail the head or a foot
-of the game to some tree in honour
-of Artemis.—Sch. Aristoph.
-Ran. 143.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f744'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r744'>744</a>. C. Poll. v. 61.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f745'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r745'>745</a>. Οἱ θάμνοι, the technical term for covert. Poll. v. 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f746'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r746'>746</a>. Xen. Cyneg. vi. 14–17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f747'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r747'>747</a>. Vict. Var. Lect. xxxi. 20.
-p. 883. seq. Cf. Plin. Hist. Nat.
-viii. 8, cum notis. Strab. iii. 2.
-p. 231.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f748'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r748'>748</a>. Suid. v. Λαγώς. t. ii. p. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f749'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r749'>749</a>. This island now abounds in
-cattle and game, particularly
-quails and partridges.—Dapper,
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Descrip. des Iles de l’Archip.</span> p.
-173.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f750'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r750'>750</a>. Hist. of Navig. prefixed to
-Church. Coll. of Voy. and Trav.
-vol. i. p. xx.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f751'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r751'>751</a>. Poll. v. 74.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f752'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r752'>752</a>. Xen. Cyneg. ix. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f753'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r753'>753</a>. The terms by which, in our
-old hunting vocabulary, the stag
-was known at the different periods
-of his life are as follow:—1.
-a fawn; 2. a pricket; 3. a
-sourell; 4. a soure; 5. a buck of
-the first head; 6. a buck. Wase.
-Pref. to Gratius, p. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f754'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r754'>754</a>. Xen. Cyneg. ix. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f755'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r755'>755</a>. That is on the ὀργάδες or
-lawns, which, according to Pollux
-they chiefly frequented, v. 15.
-Cf. Schneid. ad Xen. Cyneg. ix.
-§ 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f756'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r756'>756</a>. Xen. Cyneg. ix. 14. sqq.—Ælian
-describes another method
-of taking these animals not much
-practised by modern sportsmen;
-that is to say by the charms of music,
-as the Egyptian Psylli captured
-serpents.—De Nat. Anim. xii. 46.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f757'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r757'>757</a>. Poll. v. 36.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f758'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r758'>758</a>. Cf. Aristoph. Vesp. i. 202. seq.
-Xen. Cyrop. i. 6. 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f759'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r759'>759</a>. Xen. Cyneg. x. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f760'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r760'>760</a>. The huntsmen give judgment
-of the wild boar by the print of
-his foot, by his rooting; a wild
-swine roots deeper than our ordinary
-hogs, because its snout is
-longer, and when he comes into
-a corn-field, as the <a id='corr222.n2'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Calydodonian'>Calydonian</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_222.n2'><ins class='correction' title='Calydodonian'>Calydonian</ins></a></span>
-boar in Ovid, turns up
-one continued furrow, &amp;c.—Wase,
-Illustrations, V. p. 64.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f761'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r761'>761</a>. Cf. Poll. v. 23. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f762'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r762'>762</a>. Οὕτω δὲ πολλὴ ἡ δυναμίς
-ἐστιν αὐτοῦ, ὥστε καὶ, ἃ οὐκ ἂν
-οἴοιτό τις, πρόσεστιν αὐτῷ· τεθνεῶτος
-γὰρ εὐθὺς ἐάν τις ἐπὶ τὸν
-ὀδόντα ἐπιθῇ τρίχας, συντρέχουσιν·
-οὑτως εἰσὶ θερμοὶ· ζῶντι δὲ
-διάπυροι, ὅταν ἐρεθίζηται· οὐ γὰρ
-ἂν τῶν κυνῶν, ἁμαρτάνων τῇ
-πληγῄ τοῦ σώματος, ἄκρα τὰ τριχώματα
-περιεπίμπρα.—Xen. Cyneg.
-x. 17. Cf. Poll. v. 80. Oppian.
-Venat. iii. 379. seq. Scalig.
-Poët. v. 14. p. 698.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f763'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r763'>763</a>. Pausanias mentions the bear
-as an inhabitant of Pendeli. “About
-three years since one was shot in
-the mountains of Parnassos, and
-brought to Aracooa. The lynx,
-the wild cat, the wild boar, the
-wild goat, the stag, the roebuck,
-the badger, the martin, and squirrel
-inhabit the steeper rocks of
-Parnassos, and the thick pine
-forests above Callidia. The rough
-mountains about Marathon are
-frequented by moles, foxes, and
-jackals; weasels are sometimes
-taken in the villages and out-houses;
-hares are too numerous
-to be particularised.” Sibthorp in
-Walp. Mem. i. 73.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f764'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r764'>764</a>. Paus. i. 32. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f765'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r765'>765</a>. Paus. iii. 20. 4. vii. 18. 13.
-viii. 17. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f766'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r766'>766</a>. Aristot. Hist. Anim. ix. 6. viii.
-17. vi. 30. Ælian de Nat. Anim.
-vi. 3. Cf. Buffon, Hist. Nat. t.
-viii. p. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f767'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r767'>767</a>. This now we find is the food
-of swine. “Leaving Pyrgo (in
-Bœotia), we advanced along the
-plain to Eremo Castro; in our
-road we observed droves of pigs
-tearing up the ground for the roots
-of the cuckow-pint (<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">arum maculatum</span>)
-which was called by the
-swineherds δρακοντίο.”—Sibth. in
-Walp. i. 65.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f768'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r768'>768</a>. Nat. Hist. viii. 54.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f769'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r769'>769</a>. Aristot. Hist. Anim. viii. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f770'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r770'>770</a>. Ælian. de Nat. Anim. vi. 6.
-Aristot. ut sup.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f771'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r771'>771</a>. Aristot. Hist. Anim. ix. 6.
-Ælian. de Nat. Anim. vi. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f772'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r772'>772</a>. Xen. Cyneg. xi. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f773'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r773'>773</a>. Pollux (v. 14.) observes that in
-his time lions were chiefly found in
-mountainous tracts as wild boars
-were in marshes and pardales in
-the depths of the woods.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f774'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r774'>774</a>. Xen. Cyneg. xi. 2. Poll. v. 82.
-Plin. viii. 27. Dioscor. iv. 77.
-Foxes were supposed to be killed
-by baits steeped in the juice
-of bitter almonds (Id. i. 176);
-wolves, panthers, dogs, &amp;c. by
-dog’s-bane.—Id. iv. 81.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f775'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r775'>775</a>. Oppian. de Venat. iv. 85. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f776'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r776'>776</a>. Cf. Hesych. v. Λυκαβ.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f777'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r777'>777</a>. Ad D. Laert. p. 20. b. c.
-Meurs. Solon, c. 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f778'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r778'>778</a>. The very name of the Cretans
-has by some been derived from
-the use of the bow. Κρῆτες, παρὰ
-τὸ ἐπὶ κέρασι βιοτεύειν· κυνηγετικοὶ
-γάρ. Etym. Mag. 537. 54.
-See in Homer a description of
-the bow of Pandaros where we
-are told it was made from the
-horns of a wild goat.—Il. δ. 105.
-sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f779'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r779'>779</a>. Ælian. Var. Hist. i. 10. On
-the cothurnos which these hunters
-wore, see Spanheim ad Callim. in
-Dian. 16. p. 142. sqq. Bœttig.
-Les Furies, p. 37. The high half-boot
-worn by Artemis in the
-chase is represented in Mus. Chiaramon.
-pl. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f780'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r780'>780</a>. Athen. xii. 28. Meurs. Cret.
-p. 177.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f781'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r781'>781</a>. Athen. xii. 55. Plut. Alex. §
-40. See in Wase’s Illustrations,
-p. 68. an account of the Polish
-royal hunts in which, on a smaller
-scale, the same practice prevailed.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f782'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r782'>782</a>. Athen. i. 31.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f783'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r783'>783</a>. Ap. Ælian. de Nat. Anim.
-iv. 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f784'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r784'>784</a>. Sir John Malcolm’s Sketches
-of Persia.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f785'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r785'>785</a>. Anthony Jenkinson in Hackluyt,
-v. i. p. 368.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f786'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r786'>786</a>. De Mirab. Auscult. 128.
-Beckm. Hist. of Discov. and Inven.
-i. p. 321.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f787'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r787'>787</a>. Arist. Hist. Anim. ix. 8.
-Xenoph. Cyrop. i. 6. 39. has introduced
-many particulars respecting
-fowling.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f788'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r788'>788</a>. Cf. Xen. Memorab. ii. 1. 4.
-Their nets were denominated
-νεφέλαι, Schol. Aristoph. Av.
-194. Cf. Schol. Pac. 1144. The
-man who watched the nets bore
-the name of λινόπτης.—Aristot.
-ap. id. ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f789'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r789'>789</a>. Athen. ix. 42.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f790'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r790'>790</a>. Alexand. Myndius calls it the
-λαγωδίας in which case it may
-probably mean the <em>Ptarmigan</em>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f791'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r791'>791</a>. Athen. ix. 44. seq. Arist.
-Hist. Anim. viii. 12 ad fin.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f792'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r792'>792</a>. They are taken in so great
-numbers in the island of Capri
-that they constitute the chief
-source of revenue to the bishop
-of that island.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f793'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r793'>793</a>. Phanodem. l. iii. ap. Ath. ix.
-47.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c025' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>
- <h3 class='c024'>CHAPTER VII.<br /> SCHOOLS OF THE PHILOSOPHERS AND SOPHISTS.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c032'>Having thus drawn as complete a picture as the
-plan of our work would permit, of the physical training
-of the Greeks in all its branches, comprehending
-Gymnastics properly so called, together with those
-other exercises which under the name of field-sports
-were enjoyed rather than studied under the lead of
-no master but experience, we now return to that
-mental discipline, which for the most part exerted
-its influence in the developement of the intellectual
-faculties at the same time that the foregoing bodily
-discipline brought forth all the energies of the frame.
-We shall thus have traversed the whole circle of Hellenic
-education, when we shall have exhibited the
-youth passing through the schools of the philosophers
-and sophists into the world.<a id='r794' /><a href='#f794' class='c018'><sup>[794]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Their mode of teaching differed very materially
-from ours. It scarcely seemed an object with them
-to devour large quantities of learning, but going
-leisurely again and again over the same ground they
-appeared to give the lessons they received time to
-sink like gentle rain into their minds. Some advantage,
-too, arose from their method of teaching, as far
-as possible, orally. The master was to them instead
-of a library. A book has but one set of phrases for
-all. But the living teacher, if he found his pupils
-could not rise to his language, could lower it to meet
-them half-way, could be brief or expansive, or general
-or minute, as the necessities of the moment required.
-There was a familiarity, too, in the relation,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>scarcely compatible with our manners. The youth
-forgot he was learning, and rather supposed himself
-to be searching in the company of a friend for truths
-equally unknown to both. This appears to have been
-more particularly the case in their moral studies,<a id='r795' /><a href='#f795' class='c018'><sup>[795]</sup></a> at
-least in the Socratic schools, where all the pomp of
-wisdom was laid aside that it might be the more
-popular.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It has been already remarked that the first lessons
-in morals were learned from the poets, whom, in my
-opinion, Plato wrongs most egregiously when he arraigns
-their fables as so many sources of immorality.<a id='r796' /><a href='#f796' class='c018'><sup>[796]</sup></a>
-He appears, in fact, wilfully to confound them with
-those impostors, the purificators and diviners, who
-furnished the Popes with the original hint of penitences
-and indulgencies, and expiating crimes by
-proxy. But this is unjust. It is visiting the sins
-of low and sensual versifiers upon the divine heads of
-bards whom heaven itself had inspired. However
-this may be, upon the Greeks young and old no
-teachers exercised so powerful an influence as the
-poets, who, from Homer down to Callistratos,<a id='r797' /><a href='#f797' class='c018'><sup>[797]</sup></a> whether
-in epic or after-dinner song, wielded the empire
-of their feelings despotically, prompting them to actions
-pregnant with renown. And the avidity with
-which their lessons were imbibed, is compared to that
-of a swarm of bees alighting (ἐπιπτομένοι)<a id='r798' /><a href='#f798' class='c018'><sup>[798]</sup></a> on a bed
-of spring flowers. In fact, what Jason of Pheræ said
-of himself,—that he was devoured by the love of empire<a id='r799' /><a href='#f799' class='c018'><sup>[799]</sup></a>—appears
-to have been true of the Athenian
-youth, in their irrepressible thirst after knowledge.
-Such of them, at least, as were εὐφυεῖς καὶ <a id='corr234.32'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='ἰκανοὶ'>ἱκανοὶ</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_234.32'><ins class='correction' title='ἰκανοὶ'>ἱκανοὶ</ins></a></span>, are said
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>to have hungered fiercely after philosophy, and that
-not for any particular part but for the whole. And
-Socrates declares that he who while young is fastidious
-in his studies, rejecting this, disliking that, before
-mature reason has taught him which is useful and
-which is not, may consider himself what he pleases,
-but can never be great in learning or philosophy. To
-excel in these it is necessary insatiably to covet
-every kind of instruction, and joyfully to enter on
-the acquisition of it. He says, indeed, that they resemble
-sight-seers, greedy of every spectacle; or
-musical people, who are led by the ear wherever
-fiddling and singing are going forward; except that,
-with the latter pleasure is the sole motive, with the
-former an exalted passion for truth.<a id='r800' /><a href='#f800' class='c018'><sup>[800]</sup></a> But what
-truths are the object of philosophy? Those which
-have regard to the nature and attributes of goodness,
-from which, as from a fountain, flow all the usefulness
-and advantages of virtue. Philosophy in Greece comprehended
-religion, and to be religious was to act
-justly, benevolently, mercifully towards men, humbly
-and piously towards God. To live thus, that is, to
-be virtuous, they considered it necessary to possess a
-knowledge of the whole theory of ethics, since virtue,
-in their opinion, is incompatible with ignorance.
-But man, besides being a moral being, accountable to
-God, is a political being, accountable to the laws of
-his country. He has duties also to perform towards
-that country. To perform these properly he must
-comprehend the nature of a state, and the relations
-subsisting between the state and the individuals who
-compose it; that is, he must be acquainted with the
-science of politics. Again in all free states, reasoning
-and persuasion, not blind will and brute force,
-are the instruments of government. The citizen
-must, therefore, be versed in logic and eloquence,<a id='r801' /><a href='#f801' class='c018'><sup>[801]</sup></a>
-that he may think correctly and explain clearly and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>forcibly to others the convictions which determine
-his own judgment. We have thus a cycle of Greek
-studies with the reasons on which they were founded.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>With regard to their religious education, which
-commenced in the nursery and was interwoven with
-every other study, it may be observed that without
-it no person at Athens could rise to any eminence,
-or command, even in private life, the respect of his
-fellow-citizens. To be in favour with them a man
-must be supposed to stand well with the gods. They
-conceived, in fact, that while conscience remained
-unstifled, there would be a sense of religion, and that
-when this went, probity, for the most part, and honour
-fled along with it. For regarding the deity in the
-light of a parent,—"we are all his offspring,"—irreligion
-appeared to them something like a disposition
-to parricide, a compound of injustice with the
-basest and most atrocious ingratitude. Arrived at this
-pitch, a man to compass his ends would scruple at
-nothing. They, therefore, regarded every symptom
-of impiety as a blow aimed at the democracy, of
-which Zeus was king. He who tramples on his
-country’s religion, which is the basis of all its laws,
-will infallibly, if it be in his power, trample next
-on those laws themselves, and next on his fellow-citizens
-whom the laws protect. Hence the terror,
-the vengeance, and, indeed, the cruelty arising out
-of the mutilation of the Hermæ, and the profanation
-of the mysteries, and the prosecution which followed,
-of Alcibiades, Andocides, and the rest. An
-attempt had been made to break down that enclosure
-of reverential sanctity which surrounded the
-commonwealth, and commended it to the protection
-of heaven. They considered the act a formal renouncing
-of the Almighty, and feared,—so imperfect
-were their notions,—lest the impiety of the few
-should redound to the detriment of the whole.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The remark is common in the mouths<a id='r802' /><a href='#f802' class='c018'><sup>[802]</sup></a> of men
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>that the education of the people should be conformable
-to the spirit of their institutions. But this is
-a mere truism, and means no more than this,—that
-men should not be enjoined one thing by their laws
-and political constitution, and another by the habits
-and maxims taught in youth. The grand difficulty,
-however, always has been to make them so to harmonise
-in practice that they should be but two parts
-of the same system.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In monarchies<a id='r803' /><a href='#f803' class='c018'><sup>[803]</sup></a> a spirit of exclusion, something
-like that on which the system of castes is built,
-must pervade the whole business of education.
-The nobility must have schools to themselves,
-or, if wealthy plebeians be suffered to mingle
-with them, superior honour and consideration must
-be yielded to the former. The masters must look
-up to them and to their families, not to the people
-for preferment and advancement; and the plebeians,
-though superior in number, must be weak in influence,
-and be taught to borrow their tone from the privileged
-students.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In an oligarchy, properly so called, there should be
-no mingling of the classes at all. Schools must be
-established expressly for the governors, and others
-for the governed. The basis of education should be
-the notion that some men were born for rule and
-others for subjection; that the happiness of individuals
-depends on uninquiring submission to authority;
-that their rulers are wise and they unwise; that all
-they have to do with the laws is to obey them;
-and all teachers must be made to feel that their
-admission among the great depends on the faithful
-advocacy of such notions.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In free states, again, the contrary course will best
-promote the ends of government; the schools must
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>be strictly public, and not merely theoretically but
-practically open to all. There should be no compulsion
-to attend them, but ignorance of the things
-there taught should involve a forfeiture of civil
-rights as much as being of unsound mind; for in
-truth, an ignorant man is not of sound mind, any
-more than one unable to use all his limbs is of sound
-body. Here the discipline must be very severe.
-A spirit rigidly puritanical must pervade the studies
-and preside over the amusements. Every tendency
-irreligious, immoral, ungentlemanly, as unworthy the
-dignity of freedom, should be nipped in the bud. The
-students must be taught to despise all other distinctions
-but those of virtue and genius, in other words
-the power to serve the community. They should
-be taught to contemplate humanity as in other respects
-wholly on the same level, with nothing above
-it but the laws. The teachers must be dependent
-on the people alone, and owe their success to
-their own abilities and popular manners. And this
-last in a great measure was the spirit of Athenian
-education.<a id='r804' /><a href='#f804' class='c018'><sup>[804]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The best proof<a id='r805' /><a href='#f805' class='c018'><sup>[805]</sup></a> that could be furnished of the
-excellence of a system of education would be its
-rendering a people almost independent of government,
-that is swayed more by their habits than by
-the laws. This was preëminently the case with
-the Athenians. They required to be very little
-meddled with by their rulers. Instructed in their
-duties and the reason which rendered them duties,
-accustomed from childhood to perform them, they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>lived as moral and educated men live still, independent
-of the laws.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>This was the effect. The causes must be sought
-in their discipline and studies. I have observed
-that among them a principal subject of investigation
-was the science of politics, that is the science
-according to the principles of which states are
-framed and preserved. Nor did they, as some do,
-conduct their studies in that cold manner in which
-men investigate matters of mere curiosity, or things
-they are never to do more than converse or write
-about. They studied it as a profession, as a means
-of rising to power, and through power to fame, that
-is with all the ardour and earnestness of which enthusiastic
-youth is capable. Education by this means
-exerted an influence unknown under other forms of
-government. A consciousness that they were engaged
-in a sort of sacred contest, of which all
-Greece was spectator, pervaded the youth of every
-rank, and impelled them irresistibly into that course
-of studies which promised the greatest probability
-of success. Hence, no doubt much of the enthusiasm
-with which philosophy was cultivated. It was
-often not so much the abstract love of wisdom as
-a conviction of the political value of that wisdom
-which filled the schools of the great men who
-taught at Athens, whether they were physiologists,
-mathematicians, masters of music, of strategy, or of
-eloquence. The example of Pericles applying himself
-to natural philosophy under Anaxagoras, and
-deriving thence those streams of pure and masculine
-eloquence which overflowed the Pnyx, operated
-forcibly on public opinion. By the same arts and
-studies men hoped to mount to equal elevation,
-forgetting that Anaxagoras only watered the plant
-spontaneously produced by nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>However, the hopes and aspirations I have described
-filled the schools first of the philosophers, then of
-the sophists. And this is the natural course of
-things. Few pursue wisdom for its own sake, in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>order that it may purify and render holy their own
-minds. And by this dispensation of Providence society
-is a gainer; for, as man is constituted, no sooner
-does he possess any mental excellence, any knowledge
-or art or experience, which can be rendered
-available, than he comes eagerly forward with
-it to extort praise or reward from the community
-by conferring benefits upon it. The examples of
-reserve in this matter are few, nor, in fact, are they
-to be commended who in this or in any thing else
-hide their light under a bushel; and therefore Plato
-is wrong when he teaches that wise men will as a
-rule abstain from intermeddling with state affairs,
-unless constrained thereto by fines and menaces.
-He confesses, indeed, that the worst of all punishments
-is to be governed by evil men, and that to
-avoid this even philosophers will consent to hold
-the reins of government.<a id='r806' /><a href='#f806' class='c018'><sup>[806]</sup></a> But where they do not,
-they are always in free states the masters of those
-who do. Their schools were the colleges and universities
-of the ancient world, and so long as freedom
-endured the great object of their philosophy was to
-create able citizens and a happy state. On this account
-their remains are still instinct with life. Their
-object was gradually to ripen human nature into
-perfection by perfecting its education and its institutions.
-They knew how completely a people is
-in the power of its teachers for good or for evil,
-and accordingly, with some few exceptions, applied
-themselves to elevate the conceptions, the moral
-tone, the feelings of their countrymen, seldom descending
-to trifling disquisitions excepting for relaxation
-in the intervals of more important inquiries.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The physical sciences,<a id='r807' /><a href='#f807' class='c018'><sup>[807]</sup></a> save in the case of their
-earliest cultivators, were regarded as simple handmaids
-to ethics and politics. Nevertheless, in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>study of them much earnestness was exhibited.
-For, where knowledge is at all held in honour,
-men will always be found sufficiently prone to the
-palpable and visible. But even these pursuits assumed
-a peculiar form in Greece. The genius of
-the nation, essentially creative, developed its force
-and its peculiar energy in framing systems of physics,
-explaining the origin of the world, the birth of the
-human race, its early fortunes and fabulous history.
-Every great philosopher became, like an intellectual
-sun, the centre of a system of physics, and his disciples
-like satellites revolved around him, receiving
-and reflecting his light. This, despite of some inconveniences,
-was highly favourable to science. It
-compelled men to the study of the philosophical
-art of attack and defence. Each school became
-the reviewers and critics of its rivals, sought out
-their weak points, studied them profoundly, called
-up all its acuteness, all its subtlety, both to assault
-others and defend itself; and thus, whatever became
-of the system, the professors of it carried, as
-far as might be towards perfection, their intellectual
-powers, invested their reasonings with every grace
-of which they were susceptible, culled from the
-most recondite arts and hidden resources of style
-and eloquence.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But, while this golden currency was circulating
-through Greece, enriching its mind and augmenting
-its chances of independence and happiness, a race
-of men sprang up, who brought into use a number
-of ingenious and beautiful counters,—I mean the
-sophists.<a id='r808' /><a href='#f808' class='c018'><sup>[808]</sup></a> The influence of these men in the education
-of the Greeks has seldom been correctly appreciated.
-It has been more common to vituperate
-than to study them. They corrupted, we are told,
-the mind and manners of youth. But how? No
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>one, as far as I know, has observed that to them
-is to be traced the extinction of the republican
-spirit and the opening of a way for despotism.<a id='r809' /><a href='#f809' class='c018'><sup>[809]</sup></a>
-That they created the yearning after innovation I
-will not affirm; but their epoch constituted a period
-of transition from republican to monarchical institutions,
-and the only way in which they can be
-said to have corrupted the youth was by undermining
-that love of liberty and of country, the feeling
-of disinterestedness on which chiefly a commonwealth
-must be founded, and inculcating in lieu
-thereof a system of ethics more in conformity with
-the modifications of civil polity prevalent in modern
-times. In this way only did they corrupt and undermine
-the morals of their country. But in so
-far they effected it, and that the more easily, in
-that circumstances conspired, about the time they
-arose, to fling the whole business of teaching into
-their hands, insomuch that to be a sophist, and to
-teach youth, grew to be synonymous terms.<a id='r810' /><a href='#f810' class='c018'><sup>[810]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>They were themselves, however, but a corruption
-of what in its origin was good, and always continued
-in the opinion of the undiscerning to be confounded
-with the men they aped.<a id='r811' /><a href='#f811' class='c018'><sup>[811]</sup></a> Whether we have sophists
-among us at the present day, I will not determine;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>but this is the way they arose in Greece. It was
-soon discovered by shrewd and calculating men, that
-since philosophy excited much admiration and rendered
-its teachers objects of mark and reverence, it
-might by a little ingenuity be converted into a source
-of profit.<a id='r812' /><a href='#f812' class='c018'><sup>[812]</sup></a> But by what means?—The philosophers
-at the outset were in possession of the popular ear,
-more through the sanctity of their lives, of which all
-could judge, than through their doctrines, necessarily
-comprehended in their fullest extent by few. They
-despaired, therefore, of the people. There existed,
-however, in Greece, and will ever exist in free states,
-young men of immeasurable ambition, who, impatient
-of the restraint of laws, would gladly cast them off,
-seize the reins of government, and become the tyrants
-of their country. The mere conception of such a
-design implies the possession of wealth and powerful
-friends. Eager for any help they enthusiastically
-welcomed all who seemed capable of promoting their
-views, and when the sophists appeared, enriched with
-a variety of knowledge, specious, eloquent, unscrupulous,
-they eagerly threw themselves into their arms,
-became their pupils, and in conjunction with them
-framed the subjugation of Greece.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In tracing this class of men to their origin, we must
-look back a great way, and endeavour to detect them,
-under a variety of forms, different from that in which
-they ultimately settled. They arose with the first
-philosophers, or the first poet who made self the centre
-of his researches, and sought to render the investigation
-of science a means of personal aggrandisement.
-Protagoras describes in Plato the rise of his own art;
-where, though a side blow be wrongfully aimed at
-poetry itself, the truth of the accusation against a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>number of poets cannot be denied. He makes good
-at the very outset what I have asserted above. They
-travelled, he says, over all Greece, alluring the noblest
-youths to abandon the company of their friends and
-fellow-citizens, to become their pupils, and be guided
-wholly by their maxims, the nature of which I shall
-presently unfold. The feelings they thus excited, he
-denominates envy and malevolence, though in truth
-it was nothing more than that patriotic and parental
-jealousy and hatred experienced by the good when
-they behold those they love led astray. The better
-to escape this hostility, the ancient sophists adopted
-various disguises, sometimes enveloping their art in
-the folds of poetry as Homer, Hesiod, and Simonides,
-on other occasions affecting to be the interpreters of
-foreign rites and oracles, as Orpheus and Musæus;
-while a third class concealed the features of their
-art under the less suspected mask of gymnastics, such
-as Iccos of Tarentum, and that Herodicos of Silymbria
-a man of Megarean origin who in the art of
-sophistry was second to none of his age. Occasionally
-they made their entrance into cities as professors of
-music. In this capacity Damon conversed with
-Pericles, and Agathocles, an Athenian by birth,
-diffused through the state the seeds of sophistry;
-Pythocleides, too, the Coan, pursued the same course;
-and thus a youth, while ostensibly engaged in gaining
-a proficiency on the lyre or cithara, was initiated in
-the mysteries of tyranny, irreligion and injustice.<a id='r813' /><a href='#f813' class='c018'><sup>[813]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>By degrees, however, it was discovered that all
-disguise might be very safely laid aside.<a id='r814' /><a href='#f814' class='c018'><sup>[814]</sup></a> In fact the
-object at first aimed at,—to escape the notice of men
-in power,—was found impracticable; and as to the
-people, against whom all these shafts were directed, it
-was easy to delude them, since what their leaders
-recommended they praised. Protagoras, accordingly,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>boldly professed himself a sophist, trusting for safety
-to his eloquence, and that growing laxity of manners
-which was rapidly undermining the old republican
-constitution and preparing the way for a new order
-of things. His candour was praiseworthy, but lamentable
-were the circumstances which rendered it
-safe.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>I would not, however, be understood to share the
-opinions of those, who can discern nothing but evil
-in the doctrines of the sophists. On many points
-their notions harmonised altogether with those of
-the wisest philosophers. Accordingly it was not precisely
-what they inculcated, but the principles which
-regulated their teaching, that rendered them sophists.
-They taught with a view to enrich themselves, which
-is wholly incompatible with a strict allegiance to truth;
-since, with such views, men will always be found to
-prophesy agreeably in order that they may effect their
-purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>This circumstance has not been sufficiently considered
-by the writers who undertake their apology.
-They compare them with the literary men of modern
-times, and imagine this comparison a defence. But
-does it not rather substantiate the accusation? It is
-true that, like modern literary men, they haunted the
-houses of the great, whom they regarded as their
-patrons; that to them, rather than to the people, they
-looked for support; that, like them, they worshipped
-wealth and abhorred poverty; that their studies, their
-discourses, their writings, diffused far and wide through
-society a taste for arts and elegance; that they furnished
-the public in their declamations, satires, novels,
-of which they were the inventors, with inexhaustible
-sources of amusement:—but what virtue did they inculcate?
-On whom did they urge the necessity of
-sacrificing private to public good? On what occasion
-did they dare to stem the torrent of immorality, of
-impiety, of unpatriotic maxims, which the base and
-the selfish were pouring forth against the old bulwarks
-of freedom? That among them there were men of a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>very high order of genius, it is impossible to deny.
-Gorgias of Leontium, from whose name we have borrowed
-an epithet to express whatever is most glorious
-in nature or dazzling and elaborate in art, Protagoras,
-Prodicos, Hippias of Elis, Polos of Agrigentum, Thrasymachos
-of Chalcedon, have left behind them an imperishable
-memory;<a id='r815' /><a href='#f815' class='c018'><sup>[815]</sup></a> but so have Busiris and Phalaris
-and Catiline. They are remembered for the
-good they might have done, and the evil they did.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Since, however, the sophists acted so important a
-part in the education of the Greeks, the space I devote
-to them is clearly their due: it is necessary to the
-thorough comprehension of the subject. Almost from
-the moment they arose they aimed at a monopoly of
-the art of teaching, and the father of the art, properly
-so called, was Gorgias. Few names of antiquity, as Geel<a id='r816' /><a href='#f816' class='c018'><sup>[816]</sup></a>
-has well observed, are better known or more celebrated
-than that of this distinguished sophist, among the
-causes of whose amazing popularity must be reckoned
-the number of great men whom he instructed in eloquence,
-and the splendid vices of style which his example
-and precept brought into vogue. The exact
-date of his birth is not known:<a id='r817' /><a href='#f817' class='c018'><sup>[817]</sup></a> he is, however, supposed
-to have been born at Leontium in Sicily, about
-the seventy-third Olympiad. His father’s name was
-Charmantes.<a id='r818' /><a href='#f818' class='c018'><sup>[818]</sup></a> Nearly all the particulars of his early
-life are unknown, the ancients having been as much
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>too negligent as we are too lavish of biographical
-details. Under whom he studied, with whom he conversed,
-how much he owed to others, and how much
-to his own genius and industry, are points not easy to
-be determined, though we cannot adopt the opinion of
-Ælian,<a id='r819' /><a href='#f819' class='c018'><sup>[819]</sup></a> who sends him to school to Philolaos; or of
-Diogenes Laertius, who will have Empedocles to have
-been his teacher, since the latter was very little older
-than himself, and the former much younger. Empedocles
-is indeed said to have invented the art of rhetoric,
-in which case we might suppose Gorgias to have
-been his scholar. But how invented? He may have
-been the first who sought to reduce it into an art, or
-who so called it; but as Aristotle observes, every man
-who reasons persuasively is a rhetorician, whether his
-eloquence be based on the formal study of the art or
-not. In philosophy, indeed, he would seem<a id='r820' /><a href='#f820' class='c018'><sup>[820]</sup></a> to have
-been the disciple of Empedocles; but in rhetoric they
-both very probably derived instruction from Corax and
-Tisias, who flourished and taught rhetoric in Sicily
-about the period of their youth.<a id='r821' /><a href='#f821' class='c018'><sup>[821]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>These, however, are mere conjectures. He would
-probably have died in obscurity, and been forgotten
-with the kings who reigned <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>ante Agamemnona</i></span>, had not
-the misfortunes of his country brought him, in old age,
-to the great workshop of Fame. The immediate occasion
-was this; the people of Leontium having engaged
-and been worsted in war by the Syracusans,
-sent ambassadors to demand succour of the Athenian
-people, and among these the principal speaker was
-Gorgias. Practised in a style of oratory new at
-Athens, indulging in a profusion of metaphors and
-other figures bordering on the licences of poetry, he
-immediately hurried away captive his hearers, fulfilled
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>the desires of his fellow citizens, and established for
-himself a reputation<a id='r822' /><a href='#f822' class='c018'><sup>[822]</sup></a> where all men most desired to
-possess one. To augment his glory it has not been
-unusual to enumerate Pericles and Thucydides among
-those who became his scholars. But this embassy
-took place in the fifth year of the Peloponnesian war
-when Pericles had been dead two years. That Thucydides
-heard him, however, is not at all improbable,
-since his exile did not take place<a id='r823' /><a href='#f823' class='c018'><sup>[823]</sup></a> till the eighth year
-of the war. Among his admirers are mentioned two
-other men, whose principles and history afford the best
-illustration of what fruit the teaching of the sophists
-was likely to produce,—Critias and Alcibiades, whose
-ability, courage, and profligacy rendered them the
-scourges of their country. It has been with great
-probability supposed that, having on his return to Leontium
-rendered an account of his mission, he quitted
-Sicily for ever, for the purpose of becoming a professor
-of eloquence in Greece. This is Diodorus’s account,
-but the Scholiast on Hermogenes supposes him to have
-remained at Athens. Whether this was the case or
-not, he soon considered one city, however great or
-celebrated, too confined a theatre for the display of
-his merit. He, therefore, adopted the profession of an
-itinerant lecturer, with the double view of gratifying
-his vanity and filling his purse. And he thoroughly
-understood the art of dazzling mankind, for, not supposing
-it enough to unfold before his auditors his magazines
-of tropes and figures, stored up, like theatrical
-thunder and lightning, to be introduced at the proper
-moment, he had recourse to other dramatic arts for
-producing effect, appearing in magnificent attire, flowing
-purple robes, embroidered sandals, his fingers sparkling
-with gold and gems. But though the oldest of
-the sophists, he was not the first who adopted this
-course. Protagoras, and perhaps others, had previously
-commenced their peregrinations, and begun to practise
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>on the credulity and weakness of the multitude.
-Among the Athenians they were paid chiefly with
-praise; “the solid pudding” was to be sought elsewhere.
-And accordingly we find, as Plato sarcastically
-expresses it, that upon the advent of the sophists,
-the Thessalians, usually celebrated for their full purses
-and fine horses,<a id='r824' /><a href='#f824' class='c018'><sup>[824]</sup></a> grew all at once remarkable for their
-love of wisdom, that is, paid the sophists handsomely,
-in the hope of thus enticing knowledge to remain
-among them. In fact they supposed that wisdom is
-like a candle and lantern, by which you may have
-light,—or a saint’s shirt, by wearing which you infallibly
-become holy,—or the lamp of Epictetus, which a
-rich man bought at three thousand drachmas, in the
-hope that it would light him into the very adyta of philosophy.
-However this may be, it is very certain that
-the Thessalians became the patrons of the sophists, who
-disposed in that country of more wisdom and eloquence
-than in any other part of Greece, and the principal
-purchasers of it were of the rich family of the Aleuadæ,
-the earliest Mæcenases, I believe, on record.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But the sophists, to their credit be it acknowledged,
-were no misers. What they easily gained they spent
-freely; and not merely so, but in many instances converted
-the effects of their personal vanity into public
-ornaments of the whole country. Thus Gorgias, enriched
-by the spoils of Thessaly, erected at Delphi a
-golden statue<a id='r825' /><a href='#f825' class='c018'><sup>[825]</sup></a> of himself, which argued a more generous
-spirit than he would have shown by setting it
-afloat in the channels of trade or husbandry or usury,
-in the hope of rendering himself a great capitalist.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Gorgias was long absent from Athens, and visited
-during his travels the most considerable cities of
-Greece. Among other places he came to Delphi,
-where from the steps of the altar, probably during
-the games, he delivered that oration called the Pythian,
-in celebration of which he erected the above-mentioned
-statue.<a id='r826' /><a href='#f826' class='c018'><sup>[826]</sup></a> From thence perhaps,—for the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>chronology of his journey is not exactly known,—he
-proceeded to Olympia, where he also assisted at the
-games for the purpose of exhibiting his oratorical
-talents in the presence of all Greece, and reaping
-as it were in an hour a harvest of glory. This declamation,
-delivered during the Peloponnesian war,
-had at least the recommendation of being patriotic.
-Standing in front of the temple of Zeus, the god
-of concord and of peace, he earnestly recommended
-union and harmony.<a id='r827' /><a href='#f827' class='c018'><sup>[827]</sup></a> If war they must have, there
-were the barbarians,—let their arms be turned against
-them. With what success he spoke, history has informed
-us; but the satirists of antiquity, ever naturally
-addicted to scandal, are careful to remark
-that this great advocate of concord and unanimity
-kept up a civil war in his own house, where the
-charms of some beautiful-cheeked θεραπαινίδιον<a id='r828' /><a href='#f828' class='c018'><sup>[828]</sup></a> excited
-the jealousy of Madame. At the same time
-the old gentleman, to adopt the most moderate computation,
-must have been hard upon three-score and
-ten, though some would make him eighty.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Over the latter days of Gorgias<a id='r829' /><a href='#f829' class='c018'><sup>[829]</sup></a> hovers the same
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>darkness which conceals from view the commencement.
-It is known with no degree of certainty
-where he spent the close of his long life or where
-he died, though as no account exists of his return
-to Sicily, it probably was in Greece.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Next to Gorgias in reputation was Protagoras,
-whose history is still less known. In the opinion
-of some writers he was the oldest of the sophists.
-Though the date of his birth be later than that
-of Gorgias, he preceded him in the profession of
-the art. He was certainly, I think, born much earlier
-than is supposed either by Clinton or by Geel,
-who take him to have been almost exactly of Socrates’
-age, that is to have come into the world
-about 479 <span class='fss'>B. C.</span> But in this opinion I cannot concur.
-It is in direct contradiction with a passage in Plato<a id='r830' /><a href='#f830' class='c018'><sup>[830]</sup></a>
-who, however careless in matters of chronology, would,
-I am persuaded, never push his negligence so far as to
-make one man say to another, born in the same year
-with himself, that he was old enough to be his father.
-To me, therefore it appears necessary that
-we throw back ten or twelve years the date of his
-birth. He was ten years, it is admitted, older
-than Democritos. The latter, who had made considerable
-progress in philosophy when he saw Protagoras
-in the capacity of a wood-carrier and undertook
-to initiate him in his system, could hardly
-have been less than seven or eight and twenty, so
-that the former was little short of forty. He exercised
-the profession of sophist during forty years,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>and died about 406 <span class='fss'>B. C.</span> He must therefore have
-been born about 484–485 <span class='fss'>B. C.</span><a id='r831' /><a href='#f831' class='c018'><sup>[831]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But I cannot here pursue the history of the sophists,
-which no further belongs to my work than
-as it is connected with the subject of education.
-On their writings, however, and manner of teaching
-it is necessary that I should be more explicit. Whether
-Gorgias first published or Protagoras is of little
-moment; both evidently wrote with the same aim,
-which was to confound truth and error, right and
-wrong, not perhaps through any enmity to truth or
-to virtue, but from the sheer vanity of being thought
-capable of any thing, and the desire of converting
-their talents to account. One distinguishing quality
-of the class was fertility. They piqued themselves
-on being able to pour forth volume after volume,
-treatise after treatise, speech after speech. This, indeed,
-it was that constituted their principal claim
-to superiority over the philosophers, a pains-taking
-race, among whom the period of intellectual gestation
-was longer than that of the elephant; whereas
-your true sophist, without meditation, study or experience,
-astonished his admirers by the copiousness
-of his invention, by imagery, gorgeous and glittering,
-generally stolen from the poets, and by a piquant
-air of profoundness and originality, which the art of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>seeming to doubt all that other men believe never
-fails to confer.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Besides, comprehending enough of human nature
-to know that whoever amuses is listened to, whatever
-atrocities he may utter, they were careful to
-invest their doctrine with a light and graceful exterior.
-No man ever excelled them at a joke. They
-in fact managed matters so that in their hands every
-thing became a joke, and to overthrow an antagonist
-demanded nothing more than to be able to raise a
-laugh at his expense; for, all the world over, in
-the opinion of the vulgar, whoever is ridiculous is
-wrong. From calculation, they eschewed the uphill
-task of correcting error, or advancing truth, or reforming
-manners. To upbraid men for their faults
-and counsel amendment, is to incur their enmity.
-Reformers, prophets, apostles of truth have always
-been persecuted, often put to death. The sophists
-felt no ambition to be martyrs. Poverty, too, and
-obscurity, spare diet, a coarse mantle, and the
-solitude in which the poor great man walks the
-world, they could not away with. To their happiness
-crowds of admirers, opulence, costly robes<a id='r832' /><a href='#f832' class='c018'><sup>[832]</sup></a>
-and all the refinements of luxury formed a <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>sine
-quâ non</i></span>; and accordingly in the choice of their
-doctrines they were guided by one consideration
-only, viz. how they might amuse mankind, and
-reap all the advantages of popularity.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The eloquence which statesmen employed to recommend
-their measures, the sophists applied to fictitious
-uses, imagining themselves in impossible circumstances,
-reversing times, confounding manners, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>attacking or defending men long since dead. In all
-such cases the interest would chiefly depend on the
-novelty or ingenuity of the thoughts and the subtle
-artifices of style. Hence the extravagance, the coldness,
-the perversion of imagery, the distortion and
-monkey tricks of language, for which their manner
-of compositions became remarkable. The false position
-they took up led, in philosophy, to results equally
-disastrous. To aim at truth, would have been to
-throw themselves into the wake of the philosophers,
-to share, without worldly compensation, their dangers,
-labours, and comparative insignificance. They struck
-out, therefore, a new course for themselves. Taking
-philosophy as it was, they undertook to dispute on all
-and every part of it; to show that for a skilful dialectician
-there was no proposition that might not
-with nearly equal facility be attacked or defended;
-that by means of syllogisms or enthymemes, artfully
-arranged, darkness may be proved to be light, and
-light darkness; that between lying and speaking the
-truth there is no difference; that in fact both veracity
-and falsehood are nonentities, all our notions being
-mere arbitrary fictions; and that to beat your dog
-and to beat your father is the same thing.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Of this novel and ingenious style of argumentation,<a id='r833' /><a href='#f833' class='c018'><sup>[833]</sup></a>
-in which Hudibras was an adept, we are furnished
-with abundant examples by Plato, more especially in the
-Euthydemus, where two old fellows, with arguments
-longer than their beards, luxuriate in the felicitous
-inventions by which, like another Circe, they are
-enabled to transform their hearers into hogs and bulldogs.
-In humorous extravagance the dialogue scarcely
-falls short of an Aristophanic comedy or a Christmas
-pantomime. Socrates<a id='r834' /><a href='#f834' class='c018'><sup>[834]</sup></a> plays the Clown, Ctesippos
-the Harlequin, and the blows dealt upon the magicians
-in the course of the piece, are such as, were they fully
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>comprehended, would set all Drury Lane or Covent
-Garden in a roar. But the length of the scenes prevents
-their transplantation into my pages, and the
-abridgment of a joke is a very dull thing. Let
-us, however, hear by what logic they proved Socrates
-to have been a second “man without a navel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Answer me,” cried Dionysidoros.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Well then,” replied Socrates, “I answer that
-Iolaus was the nephew of Heracles, and, as far as I
-can see, no nephew of mine. For my brother Patrocles
-was not his father, but quite another guess sort of
-person, Iphicles the brother of Heracles.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“And Patrocles was your brother?”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“By the mother, not by the father.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Then he was your brother, and not your brother?”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“By the father’s side he was not,” answered Socrates,
-“since he was the son of Charidemos, and I of Sophroniscos.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“But Sophroniscos, no less than Charidemos, was
-a father.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Exactly; the former was my father, the latter
-Patrocles’.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Then was Charidemos other than a father?”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“He was other than mine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Then he was a father, and not a father? But,
-come, are you the same thing as a stone?”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“I fear,” replied Socrates, “I shall appear to be no
-better in your hands, though I do not discover the
-identity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Well, being other than a stone, you are not a
-stone; being other than gold, you are not gold. And
-must not the same thing happen to Charidemos?
-Being something else than a father, he is not a father.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“So it seems,” replied the philosopher.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“And what is true of Charidemos,” replied the
-younger sophist, “must be true of Sophroniscos.
-Being other than a father, he is not a father: from
-which, my good friend, it follows that you never had
-any father at all!<a id='r835' /><a href='#f835' class='c018'><sup>[835]</sup></a>”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>Socrates being thus placed on a level with the first
-man, his friend Ctesippos took up the ball, and sent it
-with so much force into the face of the sophists, that
-it somewhat startled them.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Come, then,” said he, “is not your own father in
-precisely the same circumstances? Is he not different
-from my father?”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Not at all,” answered Euthydemos.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“What, then, he is the same?”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Exactly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“I should be sorry to think so. However, is he my
-father only, or is he everybody else’s father?”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Everybody’s, of course; for can you imagine him
-to be a father, and not a father?”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“I should have thought so,” answered Ctesippos.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“What! that gold is not gold, and that a man is
-not a man?”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Not so, friend Euthydemos; but you do not, as
-the saying is, mingle flax with flax; and your assertion,
-that your father is the father of all men, seems
-very extraordinary.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“But he is, though.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Very good; but is he not only the father of
-men but of horses and every other animal?”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Of everything!”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“And your mother, in like manner, is the mother
-of all things?”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Certainly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Then she is the mother of the sea-hedgehog.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“And so is yours!”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“And you are the full brother of gudgeons, cubs,
-and sucking-pigs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“So are you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“And your father is a dog.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“And yours, too!”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It was now evident they were in anger, and accordingly
-Dionysidoros interposed, and observed jocularly,—</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Provided you will answer me, Ctesippos, I undertake
-to make you confess that your father is just
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>what my brother has said. So, tell me, have you
-a dog?”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“I have, and a snappish cur he is, too.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“And has he young ones?”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Ay, and they are more snappish than himself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Well, now, is not the dog their father?”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“No doubt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“And the dog is yours?”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Certainly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“It follows then, if he be a father and yours, that
-he must be your father; so that his cubs are your
-brothers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Before the young man could reply to this compliment
-the sophist proceeded:</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Answer me, Ctesippos, a little longer. Do you
-ever beat that dog?”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“That I do,” replied Ctesippos laughing; “and I
-wish I could administer the same discipline to you
-in your turn.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Then you beat your own father!”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“The beating,” answered the young man, “would
-be more justly inflicted on yours, for having knowingly
-let loose two such sages upon mankind!”<a id='r836' /><a href='#f836' class='c018'><sup>[836]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But these, after all, were but laughing sophists, who,
-though they had succeeded in confounding and obliterating
-from their own minds every trace of difference
-between right and wrong, fell short of that superb
-degree of wickedness at which Polos, Callicles, and
-Thrasymachos arrived, at least in speculation. The
-former were mere babblers, who corrupted a pupil or
-two whom bad luck threw in their way. Thrasymachos
-flew at higher game. His sophistry was political,<a id='r837' /><a href='#f837' class='c018'><sup>[837]</sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>and his aim the destruction of freedom, by extinguishing
-that sense of justice on which it must ever
-be based. The genius of the man was considerable.
-He had deep thoughts, and investigated boldly; but
-his sympathies having somehow been early perverted,
-he grew sombre, fierce, and unsociable, and without the
-slightest disguise advocated, like our Hobbes,<a id='r838' /><a href='#f838' class='c018'><sup>[838]</sup></a> tyrannical
-maxims and morals. Money, like the rest, he
-of course worshipped. Nay, in the conversation at
-the house of Cephalos he even ventures to sneer rudely
-at Socrates’ poverty; upon which Glaucon<a id='r839' /><a href='#f839' class='c018'><sup>[839]</sup></a> observes:—"Don’t
-fear to go unpaid for the instruction you
-may give him, for we will enter into a subscription on
-his behalf."<a id='r840' /><a href='#f840' class='c018'><sup>[840]</sup></a> Thrasymachos, however, was still more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>vain than avaricious. He thirsted to exhibit his notions
-in order to enjoy the satisfaction arising from
-shocking those who heard him. He maintained that
-justice is nothing more than what in any state the
-rulers think proper to establish; and that, consequently,
-the ordinances of a tyrant are as binding and as just
-as the laws of a free state, since by nature all actions
-are indifferent.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It was, in fact, a part of the sophistical doctrine, to
-maintain in politics, what Hobbes afterwards advocated,
-the right of the stronger:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>—--"The good old rule, the simple plan,</div>
- <div class='line'>That they should take who have the power,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And they should keep who can."</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>But because there is in every man’s heart a rooted
-prejudice in favour of justice, they were fain to argue
-that all governors, in as far as they deserved the name,
-would ordain what was best for themselves, and that,
-whatever it might be, was just:<a id='r841' /><a href='#f841' class='c018'><sup>[841]</sup></a> a very satisfactory
-doctrine, which has never grown wholly out of
-fashion. They laughed to scorn, as persons who required
-nurses to look after them and wipe their noses,<a id='r842' /><a href='#f842' class='c018'><sup>[842]</sup></a>
-whomsoever they found entertaining the notion that
-governments were instituted for the good of the
-governed.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Their staple comparison was always a flock or a
-herd. What shepherd, they inquired, ever looked
-after his flock for their benefit, and not for his own
-use? In like manner magistrates, who, as is proper,
-hold the chief place in cities, look on the public
-exactly as if they are so many sheep or oxen, and
-think of nothing, night or day, but how they may derive
-most advantage from them. Justice, therefore,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>is what promotes the interests of the governors,
-though it may be loss to the governed. The man,
-esteemed just and pious and holy by the philosopher,
-was merely, in their opinion, a fool. Whenever anything
-is to be gained he gets less than any man, and
-when anything is to be done for the community he
-does more. He is always ready with his purse whenever
-anything is to be paid; always out of the way
-when gain is afloat. The unjust man, on the contrary,
-knows what he is about. He pays and does as
-little as possible for the public, and takes from it all
-he can. The former renders himself disagreeable to
-his friends and domestics, by refusing to commit any
-unjust action on their behalf. The latter, on the other
-hand, unscrupulous in acquisition, is able to oblige
-many by his wealth if he happens to require their
-services. Thus even in private life and small matters
-injustice is to be preferred; but when it operates on
-a grand scale, plunders whole cities, and usurps over
-them supreme authority, it reaches the acme of felicity,
-is saluted by the name of prince, and becomes
-an object of envy to all mankind.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Nor did they pause even here. It was not enough
-to show the happiness of vice as vice; they undertook
-to prove that vice is virtue and virtue vice, which may
-be considered as their magnum opus. They went to
-work boldly, but, like the fox of Archilochos,<a id='r843' /><a href='#f843' class='c018'><sup>[843]</sup></a> always
-kept something of their figure concealed, that, if any
-necessity arose, they might be able to retreat by
-treating their whole chain of argumentation as a mere
-rhetorical exercise. “You appear to be in earnest,”
-observed Socrates on one occasion. “What does it
-signify to you whether I am in earnest or not,” replied
-the sophist, “if you cannot refute what I advance?”
-With this prudent reserve, they taught that
-injustice is a powerful and beautiful principle, reckoning
-it among the virtues, and attributing to it all the
-characteristics usually attributed to justice.<a id='r844' /><a href='#f844' class='c018'><sup>[844]</sup></a> Pascal,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>in developing the morals of the Jesuits, describes their
-principles exactly. They patronised even cutting
-purses, providing the operator had the ingenuity to
-conceal his performance. No doubt, in thus arguing,
-they did violence to their secret convictions, and might,
-by an able dialectician, be made to feel, though never
-to acknowledge, the deformity of their doctrines, as
-Thrasymachos, driven up in a corner by the logic
-of Socrates, blushes and is chap-fallen;<a id='r845' /><a href='#f845' class='c018'><sup>[845]</sup></a> but as sophistry
-was their occupation, the misery and degradation
-was, that, convinced or not convinced, they
-must still sing the old song. It is evident, in fact,
-that, like many sophists of other days, they were bold
-with the lips while the heart within trembled. The
-light of conscience could not be wholly quenched.
-They conceived the gods to be armed with power and
-disposed to exert it, not only against evil doers but
-against evil speakers also. Pressed upon this point, whether
-the bad be not obnoxious and the good agreeable
-to the deities, Thrasymachos would not deny it. And
-why? Lest he should render himself hateful to them,
-ἴνα μὴ τοῖς δὲ ἀπέχθωμαι. So that in the worst times
-of paganism, religion, how corrupt soever, failed not
-to preserve some influence over men’s minds, to save
-them from the bestial recklessness into which they
-seemed desirous to plunge.<a id='r846' /><a href='#f846' class='c018'><sup>[846]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Nevertheless, the sophists on many points did but
-methodise, condense and embody in florid language
-the maxims and modes of thinking current in corrupt
-ages among the vulgar. Their doctrines were
-but an echo of what was heard in the ecclesiæ, in
-the law courts, in the theatres, and in the camps.
-It would have been to little purpose, therefore, to
-have silenced them, unless, at the same time, the
-above schools could have been purified, wherein
-young and old, men and women, imbibed the opinions,
-maxims, prejudices, which constituted the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>system of the sophists.<a id='r847' /><a href='#f847' class='c018'><sup>[847]</sup></a> And Plato, who observes
-this, supplies us, in doing so, with a fresh proof that
-women frequented the theatre. In one of these
-four places, he says, they were corrupted: but they
-were not soldiers, and, therefore, not in the camp;
-they were not dicasts, and, therefore, not in the
-law courts; they were neither orators nor voters,
-and, therefore, not in the ecclesiæ. The evil doctrines
-they imbibed, therefore, must have been
-imbibed at the theatre.<a id='r848' /><a href='#f848' class='c018'><sup>[848]</sup></a> Here, too, the youth, disciplined
-and principled in better things by his philosophical
-teachers, received a new education which
-overthrew the former. Deeds and words, condemned
-by his teachers, he often found to be greeted here
-with rapturous applause, re-echoed by rocks and
-walls; while hisses, sneers, or vociferous vituperation
-would, perhaps, be showered on things he had
-been taught most to revere. In his feelings, therefore,
-and internal convictions a revolution was soon
-effected. He grew ashamed of the notions implanted
-in him at school. Every lingering sentiment of
-honour seemed to him an unfortunate prejudice
-despised by men of the world, and he hastened
-to shift his notions as a clown does his dress to
-prepare for admittance into fashionable company.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The sophists, skilled in the study of mankind, soon
-discovered, that to please and ultimately to rule the
-ignorant, it was necessary to humour their failings,
-and, in appearance at least, to adopt their opinions.
-In a commonwealth, governed by wholesome principles,
-great men obtain influence, not by resembling
-the majority but by differing from them. They are
-popular by the authority of their virtues. They are
-reverenced with the reverence due to a father from
-his child, who confides in him from long experience
-in his love and implicit faith in his honour, and will
-submit to be rebuked and chastised, and determined
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>by him in his actions from the conviction that his
-superior wisdom and probity and affection entitle
-him to rule. But the sophists, and their political
-disciples, despaired of thus governing the people.
-In their manners there was none of the dignity, in
-their minds none of the wisdom, in their resolutions
-none of that inflexible firmness arising from consciousness
-of right, which neither threats nor clamour
-can subdue. They regarded the populace as a huge
-beast, whose ways and temper they must study, whose
-passions and desires they must know how to raise and
-how to satisfy; by what arts they might safely enter his
-den, stroke his terrible paws, or mount, if they thought
-proper, on his back and direct his irresistible might
-against their enemies. And this they esteemed as
-wisdom, and upon those who excelled in it they bestowed
-the name of statesmen and philosophers.<a id='r849' /><a href='#f849' class='c018'><sup>[849]</sup></a>
-Among the arts by which this influence was acquired
-were flattery and boasting; by the former
-they disposed people to listen, by the latter they
-sought to justify them for listening, by dwelling on
-the wonders they could perform. If they might be
-believed, they could convert fools into wise men,
-which philosophers regarded in the light of a miracle.
-This disposition τὸ θρασὺ καὶ τὸ ἰταμὸν,<a id='r850' /><a href='#f850' class='c018'><sup>[850]</sup></a> as Basilius
-expresses it, is admirably painted by Plato in the
-character of Thrasymachos. And the contrast afforded
-by Socrates makes good, as Muretus observes, the
-wise remark of Thucydides <a id='corr263.29'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='ὄτι'>ὅτι</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_263.29'><ins class='correction' title='ὄτι'>ὅτι</ins></a></span> ἀμαθία μὲν θάρσος, φρόνησις
-δ᾽ ὄκνον φέρει.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Such, however, as they were, the reputation of
-the sophists spread far and wide. Even among the
-barbarians of Asia a desire was felt to have the
-ear tickled by their eloquence, as we may gather
-from the letter of Amytocrates, an Indian king, to
-Antiochos, requesting him to ship off for India as
-soon as possible, some boiled wine, dried figs, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>a sophist, observing that he would very willingly
-pay the price of him. But Antiochos, either loth
-to part with so useful a servant of the monarchy,
-or out of pity for the Indians, whom he suspected
-to be already sufficiently tormented, replied, that as
-for boiled wine and figs he might be supplied to
-his heart’s content, but that with respect to sophists
-the law prohibited their exportation.<a id='r851' /><a href='#f851' class='c018'><sup>[851]</sup></a> He had all
-the while, however, without knowing it, abundant
-specimens of the race in his own realms, where the
-Brahmins have, time out of mind, cultivated and
-thriven by the same arts, and maintained the same
-opinions, as conferred celebrity on the followers of
-Gorgias and Protagoras. Their practices, indeed, as
-well as those of the Yoghis, are in India modified
-by the state of society and public opinion. The
-wonder which among the Greeks was excited by
-the advocacy of monstrous doctrines, on the banks
-of the Ganges, arises out of physical pranks. The
-Greek sophist tortured his mind, the Indian tortures
-his body for the edification of the public, but
-the result is the same; the practitioners thus contrive
-to subsist in idleness on the earnings of the
-industrious and credulous.</p>
-
-<hr class='c025' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f794'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r794'>794</a>. Cf. M. Ant. Muret. Orat. vii. p. 70. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f795'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r795'>795</a>. Vid. Ant. Muret. Orat. iv.
-43. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f796'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r796'>796</a>. Plat. de Rep. ii. t. i. p. 112.
-sqq. Stallb. Cf. Hardion, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Dissert.
-sur l’Eloquence</span>, iii. Biblioth. Academ.
-t. iii. p. 194. p. 210. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f797'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r797'>797</a>. See Schoel. Hist. de la Lit.
-Grecq. i. 288. Lowth. Poes. Sacr.
-Hebr. p. 12. Leipz.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f798'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r798'>798</a>. Plat. de Rep. ii. t. i. p. 115.
-Stallb. On the ardent and noble
-temperament of Athenian youth,
-see the note of Valckennaer, ad
-Xenoph. Mem. iii. 3. 13. p. 286.
-Schneid. Cf. Plat. de Rep. v. t. i.
-p. 345.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f799'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r799'>799</a>. Aristot. Polit. iii. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f800'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r800'>800</a>. Plat. de Rep. v. t. i. p. 393.
-seq. Stallb.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f801'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r801'>801</a>. Plat. Gorg. t. iii. p. 27. De
-Rep. t. vi. p. 358. sqq. Bekk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f802'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r802'>802</a>. See on this part of the subject
-Destutt de Tracy. Com.
-sur l’Esprit des Loix, p. 25.
-sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f803'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r803'>803</a>. In an ill-constituted state,
-observes Muretus, a good man
-cannot be a good citizen, for he
-will desire to alter the government,
-which being bad he cannot
-respect.—In Aristot. Eth. p. 398.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f804'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r804'>804</a>. The advantages of which were
-so much coveted by foreigners,
-that they sent their children in
-crowds to be educated at Athens.—Æsch.
-Epist. Orat. Att. xii. 214.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f805'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r805'>805</a>. A commonwealth, says Plato,
-once well constituted will proceed
-like an ever rolling circle. For by
-persevering in good training and
-instruction, the minds and disposition
-of the people will be rendered
-good, and these again in
-their turn will improve the system
-of training and instruction,
-and even the race of man itself,
-as the breed of other animals, is
-rendered more excellent by care.—De
-Rep. t. vi. p. 173. Cf. Isocrates,
-Areop. § 14. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f806'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r806'>806</a>. Repub. i. t. vi. p. 42. seq.
-Bekk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f807'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r807'>807</a>. Vid. Athen. ii. 18.—That
-geography entered but very little
-into their studies may be inferred
-from Thucydides, vii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f808'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r808'>808</a>. Vid. Herod. i. 29. And Cf.
-Schœll. Hist. de la Lit. Grecq. ii.
-134. Isoc. de Perm. § 26. Muret.
-in Arist. Ethic. p. 477. Menag.
-ad Diog. Laert. p. 5. a. b.
-&amp;c.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f809'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r809'>809</a>. Hobbes, the great representative
-of this class of men in modern
-times, living under the despotism
-of the Stuarts, sought to
-turn the tables upon the philosophers,
-and accused them of corrupting
-the minds of youth. “As
-to rebellion, in particular against
-monarchy, one of the most frequent
-causes of it is the reading
-of the books of policy and histories
-of the ancient Greeks
-and Romans; from which young
-men, and all others that are unprovided
-of the antidote of solid
-reason, receiving a strong and
-delightful impression of the
-great exploits of war, achieved
-by the conductors of their armies,
-receive withal a pleasing
-idea of all they have done besides;
-and imagine their great
-prosperity not to have proceeded
-from the emulation of particular
-men, but from the virtue
-of their popular form of government.”—Leviathan,
-pt. ii. c.
-29. vol. iii. p. 315.—Edition of
-Sir William Molesworth.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f810'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r810'>810</a>. Poll. iv. 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f811'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r811'>811</a>. Plat. de Rep. t. vi. p. 286.
-seq. Cf. Schol. Aristoph. Nub.
-331.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f812'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r812'>812</a>. That money was the sole object
-of the sophists is observed by
-Isocrates, Hel. Encom. § 4. Elsewhere,
-with a stroke of sly humour
-not usual with him, he says, they
-would sell anything short of immortality
-for three or four minæ.—Cont.
-Sophist. § 3, p. 576. See
-on the whole subject of the Sophists,
-Hard. Dissert. v. Bibl.
-Acad. t. iii. p. 240. sqq. Muret.
-in Arist. Ethic. p. 533. Cressol.
-Theat. Rhet. v. iii. p. 447.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f813'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r813'>813</a>. Plat. Protag. t. i. p. 163. seq.
-Bekk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f814'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r814'>814</a>. At a late period, by a decree
-of Sophocles, the sophists were
-driven out of Attica.—Athen.
-xiii. 92. Cf. Cressol. Theat.
-Rhet. i. 12. p. 87.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f815'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r815'>815</a>. Muretus considers the word
-sophist to be synonymous with a
-teacher of eloquence: “Sophista,
-id est, dicendi magister;” and,
-speaking of this same Thrasymachos,
-cites a passage from Cicero
-which attributes to him the invention
-of the rhetorical style.
-Orat. § 12. Suidas regards Thrasymachos
-as the first who made
-use of the period and the colon;
-and supposes him to have been
-pupil to Plato and Isocrates,
-whereas he preceded both.—Muret.
-Comm. p. 631. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f816'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r816'>816</a>. Hist. Sophist. p. 13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f817'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r817'>817</a>. Clinton, Fast. Hellen. ii. 28.
-65. 67. Geel (Hist. Sophist. p. 14)
-assumes the seventieth Olympiad
-as the date of his birth; but as it
-seems to result from the text of
-Pausanias that he was still living
-in 380. <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> this would extend
-the duration of his life beyond
-that assigned to it by any ancient
-writer.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f818'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r818'>818</a>. Of whom, as Muretus (Comm.
-p. 631. seq.) observes, no mention
-occurs save in Plato de Repub. i.
-§ 2. t. i. p. 8. Stallb.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f819'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r819'>819</a>. Var. Hist. i. 23. Diog. Laert.
-viii. 58.—Mr. Clinton, however,
-adopts the opinion of Diogenes
-(Fast. Hell. ii. 365); and, to render
-it probable, supposes Empedocles
-to have been a few years
-older than his pupil.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f820'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r820'>820</a>. Plat. Men. p. 14. g.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f821'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r821'>821</a>. Cic. Brut. § 12. Geel, Hist.
-Sophist. p. 15. seq. Sext. Empir.
-p. 306. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f822'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r822'>822</a>. Diod. Sicul. xii. 53.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f823'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r823'>823</a>. I cannot, therefore, see the
-reason of Geel’s doubt.—Hist.
-Sophist. p. 18. Cf. Clint. Fast.
-Hellen. ii. p. 68.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f824'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r824'>824</a>. Plat. Hip. Maj. t. v. p. 416.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f825'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r825'>825</a>. Cressol. Theat. Rhet. i. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f826'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r826'>826</a>. Geel, Hist. Sophist. p. 23.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f827'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r827'>827</a>. They sometimes selected more
-humble subjects for their panegyric,
-for example, the bumble-bee,
-or salt.—Isocrat. Hel. Encom.
-§ 4. p. 461. Plutarch, too,
-speaks of a learned work on salt,
-which he considered very edifying.—Sympos.
-§ 5. A French author
-of the same class devoted twenty
-years of his life to a treatise on
-the nightingale. Another member
-of this confraternity is celebrated
-by Rousseau:—<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“On dit
-qu’un allemand a fait un livre sur
-un zeste de citron; j’en aurais fait
-un sur chaque gramen des prés,
-sur chaque mousse des bois, sur
-chaque lichen qui tapisse les
-rochers; enfin, je ne voulais pas
-laisser un poil d’herbe, pas un
-atome végétal qui ne fût amplement
-décrit.”—Réveries</span>, t. iii. p.
-106. On the verbal trifling of
-the sophists see Muret. in Aristot.
-Ethic. p. 79. By Le Conte, in
-his Commentary on the Anabasis,
-Gorgias is transformed into “a
-prudent and experienced officer,”
-because Proxenos is said to have
-studied under him.—t. i. p. 246.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f828'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r828'>828</a>. Plut. Conj. Præcept. § 43.
-whom Geel follows.—Hist. Sophist.
-p. 25. But Isocrates, who
-had been himself a hearer of Gorgias
-in Thessaly (Cic. Orat. § 22),
-relates that he was never married,
-and had no children.—De Permut.
-§ 26. 10. Another tradition however
-speaks of his son Philip as
-having been condemned by the
-Heliasts.—Schol. Aristoph. Av.
-1700.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f829'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r829'>829</a>. See Athen. xii. 71.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f830'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r830'>830</a>. Addressing Socrates, among
-many others, he says in one place,
-ἀλλὰ πότερον ὑμῖν, ὡς πρεσβύτερος
-νεωτέροις, μῦθον λέγων ἐπιδείξω.
-κ. τ. λ.—Protag. i. 170.
-But this is nothing to what he
-elsewhere says: οὐδενὸς ὅτου οὐ
-πάντων ἂν ὑμῶν καθ᾽ ἡλικίαν
-πατὴρ εἴην.—Id. p. 165.—which
-without extreme absurdity a man
-could not say to a person exactly
-of his own age. Meiners. (Hist.
-des Arts et des Sciences, iii. 258),
-evidently refers to this passage;
-as does also Hardion. Dissert.
-vii. Bib. Acad. iii. 295. Yet it
-must have wholly escaped Geel,
-who (Hist. Sophist. p. 71) says:
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Deinde <em>nescimus</em> quomodo efficiatur
-e Platonis Protagorâ, sophistam
-ejusdem nominis <em>multo</em>
-majorem fuisse Socrate.”</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f831'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r831'>831</a>. Diog. Laert. ix. 55. observes
-that, according to some writers,
-he died, at the age of 90, during
-a journey.—Geel, p. 81. It is sufficiently
-remarkable that most of
-the Sophists attained to a very
-great old age, and the same thing
-may be said generally of the philosophers
-of antiquity. Lord Bacon
-undertakes to account for the fact.
-Having given the palm of long
-life to hermits and anchorites, he
-says: “Next unto this is a life
-led in good letters, such as was
-that of Philosophers, Rhetoricians,
-Grammarians. This life is
-also led in leisure, and in those
-thoughts which, seeing they are
-severed from the affairs of the
-world, bite not, but rather delight
-through their vanity and
-impertinency: they live also at
-their pleasure, spending their
-time in such things as like them
-best, and for the most part in
-the company of young men,
-which is ever the most cheerful.”—History
-of Life and
-Death, p. 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f832'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r832'>832</a>. Herault de Sechelles, who,
-had he lived, would have excelled
-Boswell in biography, describes
-with singular felicity the
-passion of that arch-sophist, Buffon,
-for the splendours of dress.
-Even among the peasants of
-Montbar, a race of primitive
-simplicity, the French Hippias
-would never appear but in an
-embroidered suit, curled and decorated
-as if at court. He had
-nicely calculated the effect of external
-appearances on the mind;
-and we must forgive him, since
-he shared the weakness with
-Lord Bacon and Aristotle.—See
-Voyage à Montbar, p. 42, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f833'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r833'>833</a>. Another example may be
-found in Athen. iii. 54.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f834'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r834'>834</a>. Socrates has been confounded
-with the Sophists, because he frequented
-their company to refute
-them; but there was between
-them the same difference, as between
-a thief-taker and a thief.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f835'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r835'>835</a>. Plat. Opp. iii. 444, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f836'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r836'>836</a>. Plat. Opp. t. iii. p. 245.—The
-amusing manner of teaching introduced
-by these sophists was
-sometimes imitated by the philosophers.
-Thus Theophrastus, who,
-before proceeding to his school,
-used to anoint himself with oil
-and perform his exercises, had
-recourse to extraordinary drollery
-for the purpose of charming his
-pupils, adapting all his gestures
-and movements to his discourses;
-so that when describing the manners
-and character of a glutton,
-he used, like a comic actor, to
-thrust out his tongue and lick his
-lips.—Athen. i. 38.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f837'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r837'>837</a>. Cf. Dem. Lacrit. § 10. Sch.
-Aristoph. Nub. 113.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f838'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r838'>838</a>. The modern Thrasymachos
-is as frank in his hatred of philosophers
-as the ancient. He compares
-their enthusiasm in favour
-of freedom to the virus imparted
-by the bite of a mad dog, imagining
-that nothing is so sedulously
-to be guarded against as
-liberty. He would, if possible,
-have the study of ancient statesmen
-and historians prohibited, or
-at least that care should be taken
-to counteract their maxims by the
-teaching of discreet sophists. “I
-cannot imagine,” he says, “how
-anything can be more prejudicial
-to a monarchy than the allowing
-of such books to be publicly read,
-without present applying such
-correctives of discreet masters, as
-are fit to take away their venom;
-which venom I will not
-doubt to compare to the biting
-of a mad dog, which is a disease
-the physicians call <em>hydrophobia</em>,
-or <em>fear of water</em>. For, as he
-that is so bitten has a continual
-torment of thirst, and yet abhorreth
-water, and is in such an
-estate, as if the poison endeavoured
-to convert him into a
-dog; so, when a monarchy is
-once bitten to the quick, by
-those democratical writers, that
-continually snarl at that estate,
-it wanteth nothing more than a
-strong monarch, which, nevertheless,
-out of a certain <em>tyrannophobia</em>
-or fear of being strongly
-governed, when they have him,
-they abhor.”—Leviathan, Pt. ii.
-c. 29. iii. 315. Count Capo D’Istrias,
-if he was ignorant of the
-language of ancient Greece, appears
-at least to have understood
-something of the spirit of ancient
-philosophy, for, designing to establish
-a tyranny, he prohibited the
-reading of Plato in the public
-schools. He may possibly have
-learned his maxims of government
-from Hobbes, as well as that the
-master of the academy deserved
-his hatred.—Thiersch. Etat. Act.
-de la Grèce, ii. 121.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f839'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r839'>839</a>. Plat. Rep. i. § 11. t. i. p. 41.
-Stallb.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f840'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r840'>840</a>. Ἔρανος. Cf. Sympos. t. iv.
-p. 379. Bekk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f841'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r841'>841</a>. Upon this point Father Paul
-observes:—"We must reduce
-under the title of justice everything
-that may contribute to the
-service of the state; for the prince
-has no greater justice than to
-preserve to himself the quality
-of prince, and, in order to this, to
-keep his subjects in a dutiful subjection
-to his authority."—Max.
-of the Gov. of Venice, chap. i. § 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f842'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r842'>842</a>. Plat. Rep. t. vi. p. 34.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f843'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r843'>843</a>. Plat. Rep. t. vi. p. 72. Bekk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f844'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r844'>844</a>. Id. i. t. vi. p. 44. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f845'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r845'>845</a>. Plat. de Rep. vi. 49. i. 76.
-Stallb. Cf. Vict. Var. Lect. iii. v.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f846'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r846'>846</a>. Plat. Rep. t. vi. p. 52.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f847'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r847'>847</a>. Id. vi. 290.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f848'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r848'>848</a>. Plat. Rep. vi. t. vi. p. 289.
-Cf. Athen. ii. 54.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f849'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r849'>849</a>. Plat. de Rep. vi. 293.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f850'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r850'>850</a>. Plat. de Rep. vi. 333. Cf.
-Muret. Adnot. in Repub. p. 667,
-seq. 677, seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f851'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r851'>851</a>. Athen. xiv. 67.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c025' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>
- <h3 class='c024'>CHAPTER VIII. <br /> EDUCATION OF THE SPARTANS, CRETANS, <br /> ARCADIANS, ETC.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c032'>A different picture is presented to us by the
-education of the Spartans,<a id='r852' /><a href='#f852' class='c018'><sup>[852]</sup></a> which, almost perfect in
-its kind, aimed chiefly at unfolding the powers of
-the body. Mental acquirements in the states of
-Doric origin were few, and the object even of these
-seems to have been rather connected with the developement
-of the animal than the spiritual nature
-of man, though they were not utterly destitute of
-all those arts and accomplishments which embellish
-a life of peace. Little stress, however, can be laid
-on the elaborate divisions of youth into numerous
-classes, the intention of which is not stated. There
-can, nevertheless, be no doubt that much art, reflection
-and wisdom was exhibited in the forming
-of the system whose object was the creation of a
-military character, and through this the enjoyment
-of the hegemonia or lead in the public affairs of
-Greece, an honour which Sparta attained to and
-held during many years.<a id='r853' /><a href='#f853' class='c018'><sup>[853]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>A modern writer has correctly remarked that
-by permitting the state to decide on the lives of
-infants, the institutions of Lycurgus recognised the
-authority of the community to regulate, how it
-pleased, the education they were to receive. The
-authority of parents over their children was thus
-all but annihilated, for, although the recognition
-and feeling of relationship continued after the state
-had undertaken the training of youth, their influence
-was exceedingly weakened, a circumstance to
-which may be attributed the seeming heroism of
-the Spartan women, who could stoically bear the
-death of their sons because they had been in a
-great measure estranged from them.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>As, however, the institutions of Lycurgus differed
-in all things else from those of other Grecian legislators,
-it is not surprising they should also differ on
-the subject of education. But it may greatly be
-doubted whether we altogether comprehend his system.
-The accounts transmitted to us are in many
-points contradictory, and it may in general be remarked
-that on no subject whatever do modern ideas differ
-so much from those prevalent in antiquity, as on the
-subject of education. Plutarch and Xenophon, or
-rather the sophist who assumed his name, two of the
-authors on whom in this discussion most reliance is
-usually placed, were prejudiced and credulous, and
-often, to speak frankly, extremely ignorant. Both
-were unwilling, even if they possessed the power, to
-criticise the system, and yet by modern writers their
-opinions have generally without scruple been adopted.
-Xenophon himself, as well as the sophist who here
-apes him, was in predilections a Spartan, and as
-strongly disposed to satirise and underrate the institutions
-of his own country as to exaggerate the
-merits of the Laconian. Even were the trifling
-essay on the Lacedæmonian republic proved to be
-his, we should yet lay little stress upon its testimony,
-unless when corroborated by the evidence of
-other and better writers.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Elsewhere in Greece,—observes the author of this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>tract,<a id='r854' /><a href='#f854' class='c018'><sup>[854]</sup></a> whoever he was,—persons, the most solicitous
-respecting the education of their children, placed
-over them at the first dawn of intellectual developement,
-pædagogues, who at the outset undertook their
-instruction, and afterwards conducted them to the
-schools where letters, music, and gymnastics were
-taught. In this respect, however, as a modern writer
-has shown, the institutions of Sparta were in no
-degree superior, since Helots were there the instructors
-of young children; and, on this account,
-he rejects the story of Plutarch,<a id='r855' /><a href='#f855' class='c018'><sup>[855]</sup></a> that they were
-compelled to intoxicate themselves, to exhibit to the
-youths a practical proof of the deformity of drunkenness.<a id='r856' /><a href='#f856' class='c018'><sup>[856]</sup></a>
-It was contrary, he says, to common sense.
-But as common sense had very little to do with
-any part of the system, this is a poor argument,
-and will not weigh against positive testimony.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Another evil which the Pseudo-Xenophon discovers
-in the common Hellenic plan of training,<a id='r857' /><a href='#f857' class='c018'><sup>[857]</sup></a>
-was that lads were indulged with the use of shoes,
-and rendered effeminate by frequent changes of clean
-linen, while their appetite, generally keen in boyhood,<a id='r858' /><a href='#f858' class='c018'><sup>[858]</sup></a>
-was suffered to be the measure of what they
-ate. Lycurgus, he remarks, managed all these
-things differently. Instead of remaining under the
-superintendence of their parents, and frequenting
-what schools and masters they might judge proper,
-boys at Sparta passed under a sort of camp discipline
-regulated by the laws and intrusted to the
-guardianship of a particular magistrate, whom they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>denominated a Pædonomos. This part of the system
-Xenophon<a id='r859' /><a href='#f859' class='c018'><sup>[859]</sup></a> prefers to the Athenian practice of intrusting
-youth to the care of servile pædagogues.
-The Pædonomos, however, resembled in many respects
-the Athenian Gymnasiarch, and, so far as I
-can perceive, possessed no superiority over him, except
-that his authority extended beyond school hours.
-He was, indeed, a kind of despot, vested with the
-power to call the boys together when he pleased,
-and inflict chastisement, at his own discretion, on any
-whom he detected exhibiting the least symptom of
-effeminacy. To enable him to carry his resolutions
-instantly into effect he marched about the town like
-an executioner, attended by men having whips, who
-at his nod seized the boy delinquent and subjected
-him at once to the torture. Thus possessing the
-power of enforcing obedience, a great show at least
-of reverence attended him.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The privilege of sharing the paternal cares of the
-Pædonomos was not rigidly confined to the sons of Spartans
-(πολιτικοὶ παῖδες);<a id='r860' /><a href='#f860' class='c018'><sup>[860]</sup></a> the Mothaces also, Spartans of
-half blood, and even strangers might share it. Who
-the Mothaces were it is extremely difficult to determine.
-Some contend that they were slaves brought
-up in the family.<a id='r861' /><a href='#f861' class='c018'><sup>[861]</sup></a> But Athenæus, and Phylarchos
-whom he quotes, state most distinctly that they were
-free, ἐλεύθεροι μέν εἰσί. In order to remove the unfavourable
-impression made on mankind by the accounts transmitted
-to us of Spartan slavery, it has been pretended
-that they, as well as the Neodamodes, were Helots. Of
-the Neodamodes, however, the very author on whom
-reliance is placed asserts the contrary. They were originally
-slaves indeed, he says, but different from the
-Helots, ἑτέρους ὄντας τῶν εἱλώτων. With respect to the
-Mothaces,<a id='r862' /><a href='#f862' class='c018'><sup>[862]</sup></a> notwithstanding the testimony of Hesychius
-and other grammarians, it seems clear that they were
-the sons of free though poor Laconians, who, desirous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>of obtaining for them the rights of Spartans, sent
-them to be the companions of such youthful citizens
-as would consent to receive them. It is moreover added
-that the youth, according to their means, chose one,
-two, or more of these companions; which shows that
-although the right of controlling the studies of its children
-was vested in the state, the expenses, in whole or
-in part, devolved upon the parents.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Mothaces, or Mothones as they are sometimes
-called, were identical with the σύντροφοι:<a id='r863' /><a href='#f863' class='c018'><sup>[863]</sup></a> but the
-τρόφιμοι were such youthful strangers—for example,
-the sons of Xenophon<a id='r864' /><a href='#f864' class='c018'><sup>[864]</sup></a> and Phocion—as, by submitting
-to the severities of Spartan discipline, acquired
-the freedom of the city, the privilege of aspiring to
-political distinction, and, according to some writers,
-even a share of the land. This, if true, would render
-credible the statement of the philosopher Teles,<a id='r865' /><a href='#f865' class='c018'><sup>[865]</sup></a> who
-affirms that even Helots, by the means above described,
-could rise to the rank of Spartans; while they who
-in this point disobeyed the laws, were they even the
-children of kings, sank to the condition of Helots, and
-of course forfeited their estates, otherwise there would
-have been no land to bestow on the military neophytes.
-Three of the most remarkable men in Spartan story,
-Lysander, Gylippos, and Callicratidas were Mothaces,
-whose fathers were obscure.<a id='r866' /><a href='#f866' class='c018'><sup>[866]</sup></a> It will be seen that
-we have here the original of that system of education
-sketched by Xenophon in his Persian Utopia, and
-designed to recommend monarchy to his countrymen,
-as that of Sir Thomas More was framed for the contrary
-purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>According to the laws of Lycurgus the heir-apparent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>to the throne was exempted from the necessity of
-mixing with his fellow-citizens in the public schools,
-though the younger members of the royal family occupied
-the same level with other boys.<a id='r867' /><a href='#f867' class='c018'><sup>[867]</sup></a> That this was
-an unwise regulation, however, will be at once evident,
-since no man stands so much in need of severe discipline
-as a prince, who in spite of correction is too apt
-to be guided by his unbridled passions. Fact, too,
-bears out this view, for two of the noblest sovereigns
-of Sparta, Leonidas and Agesilaos, had been subjected,
-while boys,<a id='r868' /><a href='#f868' class='c018'><sup>[868]</sup></a> to the correction of their teachers.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It has been already remarked that the spirit of
-Spartan education was severe. It was, in fact, precisely
-the same as that which, in the last generation,
-pervaded the discipline of the Seneka and Mohawk
-Indians, and produced those numerous examples of
-patience, fortitude, and magnanimity, together with
-that force, agility and suppleness of body so greatly
-admired and, perhaps, envied by civilised nations.
-It was this stern and martial system that constituted
-the secret model, according to which Locke fashioned
-his plan of youthful training, designed rather to
-produce a sound mind in a sound body than to
-shatter and enervate the latter by the piling up in
-the brain of miscellaneous and often useless knowledge.
-But in his attempts at hardening the frame
-and rendering it invulnerable to the stings of suffering,
-our countryman did not dare to go the lengths
-of the Spartan legislator, who in this, at least, exhibited
-superior wisdom, that he did not consider the
-chastisement of stripes to have any tendency towards
-creating a base and servile habit of mind.<a id='r869' /><a href='#f869' class='c018'><sup>[869]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Consistently with the general aim of his institutions,
-Lycurgus, instead of ordaining, like Locke,
-that his alumni should wear leaky shoes, dispensed
-with the incumbrance altogether. And, certainly,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>in a soldier, the habit of trampling with the naked
-foot on ice and snow and the sharpest rocks, is
-worthy of acquisition.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Institutions are generally based on the actual circumstances
-of society. Lycurgus legislated for a
-people to whom it was important to be able easily
-to climb steeps, or descend them with a sure foot,
-to spring forward also, to run, to bend, and perform
-innumerable acts of personal dexterity. He, therefore,
-commenced with boyhood the inculcating of those
-habits and exercises which their manhood would imperatively
-require of them.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It has been seen that for change of linen an
-especial aversion was entertained at Sparta. Children
-were, therefore, taught to be content with one
-clean shirt per annum, at the termination of which period
-it was probably as well peopled as the Emperor
-Julian’s beard, particularly as, during all that time,
-it was considered low and unfashionable to bathe or
-make use of the ordinary ointments, an indulgence
-permitted to them but for a few days in the course
-of the year. All this time, however, they might
-more properly, perhaps, be said to be shirtless, since
-the himation only was left them, the chiton being
-taken away.<a id='r870' /><a href='#f870' class='c018'><sup>[870]</sup></a> They were compelled also, as incipient
-soldiers, to lie hard on pallet beds, made with the
-tops of reeds collected, perfunctorily, without the help
-of the knife or dagger, from the banks of the Eurotas.
-To this, as an especial indulgence, they were in winter
-permitted to add a quantity of thistle-down, which
-material was supposed to contain much warmth.<a id='r871' /><a href='#f871' class='c018'><sup>[871]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The initiation into these accomplishments commenced
-at the age of twelve. At the same time,
-acting upon the Galenian maxim, that “a fat stomach
-makes a lean wit,” the boys were reduced to
-short commons, the Bouagor, or leader of the juvenile
-troop, being instructed to pinch them as closely
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>as possible on that score, in order that when the
-chances of war should reduce them to the necessity
-of subsisting on famine rations, they might be prepared
-without murmuring to submit to it. Persons
-so educated, moreover, would be little delicate in
-the choice of provisions. Anything, from a sea
-hedgehog to a snail, would suit their stomachs; and
-it would be hard indeed if war could ever place
-them in circumstances where such food as they were
-accustomed to might not be found. Health, too,
-and light spirits, as Lycurgus well understood, are
-the offspring of an abstemious diet. The spare warrior,
-clean-limbed and agile, would leap round the
-man puffed out and bloated with overfeeding, and,
-therefore, to be fat was at Sparta an offence punishable
-at law.<a id='r872' /><a href='#f872' class='c018'><sup>[872]</sup></a> However, not to be too hard on the
-young gentlemen, it was always permitted, when
-hunger grew troublesome, to have recourse to what,
-for want of a fitter name, we must call stealing.<a id='r873' /><a href='#f873' class='c018'><sup>[873]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In modern times it would be thought a poor compliment
-to any system of education to represent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>it as an admirable method for rendering a man an
-accomplished thief. But the Spartan sophists, whose
-wisdom Plato, in a jocular mood, so greatly extols,
-held a different theory. They did not undertake the
-teaching of morals, but such habits as became a
-soldier, among which thieving always maintains a
-distinguished place. Xenophon, however, is careful
-to guard us against the supposition that this habit
-of appropriation arose from want. The object of the
-legislator was, without the incurring of moral guilt,
-to nourish all the useful habits commonly found in
-a thief,—as, the power to watch by night, to wear
-the mask of honesty by day, craftily to lay snares,
-and even to set spies upon the individual to be
-plundered. To men designed to spend their lives
-in war such qualities are, doubtless, of the highest
-importance, since they enable them to procure provisions
-and overreach the enemy.<a id='r874' /><a href='#f874' class='c018'><sup>[874]</sup></a> To this practice
-Xenophon alludes in the Anabasis, where the army
-is placed in circumstances of much difficulty. “I
-understand,” he says to Cheirisophos, “that among
-you Lacedæmonians the habit of stealing is carefully
-cultivated from childhood; and that, so far from
-being disgraceful, it is considered a necessary
-accomplishment, so long as you keep within the
-bounds prescribed by law. When detected, however,
-it is equally lawful to be scourged.”<a id='r875' /><a href='#f875' class='c018'><sup>[875]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Were they scourged, then, for stealing? Not at
-all, but simply for being caught; and Xenophon is
-right in remarking, that, in all human arts, they who
-unskilfully perform what they undertake are punished,
-and so should a bungling thief.<a id='r876' /><a href='#f876' class='c018'><sup>[876]</sup></a> The passage
-immediately following is mutilated or inextricably
-corrupt,<a id='r877' /><a href='#f877' class='c018'><sup>[877]</sup></a> but, from an attentive examination,
-it would appear that the boys detected on these
-occasions were selected to be flogged<a id='r878' /><a href='#f878' class='c018'><sup>[878]</sup></a> during the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>festival of Artemis Orthia, or Orthosia, whose altar
-was thus annually smeared with human blood. This
-impartial superstition extended its empire over all
-ranks and conditions of men, servile or free, from
-the beggar to the prince; for here, we are told,
-Helots had sometimes the honour to be scourged
-in company perhaps with a scion of the Eurypontid or
-Agid kings. At Alea, in Arcadia, women, by the
-command of an oracle, were subjected to the same
-discipline. “Here,” says Pausanias,<a id='r879' /><a href='#f879' class='c018'><sup>[879]</sup></a> “during the festival
-of Dionysos women, by command of an oracle,
-were flogged like the youth of Sparta at the altar
-of Artemis Orthia.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The above ordinance of Lycurgus led in the next
-instance to the hybernation of the youth upon the
-mountains:<a id='r880' /><a href='#f880' class='c018'><sup>[880]</sup></a> to inure them still further to hardships,
-and, practically to teach them the art of providing
-for themselves, they were sent forth with a roving
-commission to prowl about the highlands and less
-frequented parts of Laconia, armed for self-protection,
-and that they might be able to bring down their
-game. At first, perhaps, they confined themselves
-within the limits prescribed by law. But almost
-of necessity they would become involved in quarrels
-with the Helots, by plundering whose farms and villages
-they chiefly subsisted. The Helots would sometimes
-resist and sometimes resent their incursions.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>Ill blood would be engendered. Hot and fiery
-youths, abandoned to their own guidance, would
-easily discover excuses for cruelty and revenge. From
-quarrels they would proceed to blows—from blows
-to assassination; and beaten, perhaps, by day, they
-would fall suddenly on the defenceless peasants in
-the dead of night, and butcher whole hamlets to
-avenge an affront offered to them perhaps by an
-individual. Thus, out of a custom blameless enough
-in its origin, grew the terrible institution of the
-Crypteia,<a id='r881' /><a href='#f881' class='c018'><sup>[881]</sup></a> or annual massacre of the Helots, denied
-by some modern writers, but too well authenticated,
-and too much in keeping with the Spartan character
-and general policy, to allow of our indulging in any
-scepticism on the point.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But, in addition to the above, there were other
-branches of education taught at Sparta,—that is
-gymnastics and music. Writers, desirous of enhancing
-the mental acquisitions of the Dorians, adhere
-somewhat too strictly to the meaning often affixed by
-the Greeks to the word <em>music</em>, which they employed
-to signify literature. But Xenophon, in his treatise
-on the Lacedæmonian Commonwealth, appears invariably
-to use it in its limited and modern signification.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>To gymnastics the Dorians, upon the whole an unintellectual
-people, were naturally much addicted,—far
-too much according to ancient writers; but here
-again their modern historian steps in to their defence.
-He will have it, that it was in later times that they
-became philogymnasts, and quotes Dion Chrysostom
-as if he was the principal witness. Plato, to be sure, is
-referred to as a parasitical authority, and so is Aristotle;<a id='r882' /><a href='#f882' class='c018'><sup>[882]</sup></a>
-but then the latter only says, that their constant
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>violent exercises rendered them brutal, in which the
-historian appears to discover no harm. “This want of
-moderation, however, though it occurred in later
-times, is never perceivable in the maxims and ideas
-of the Dorians, who in this, as in several other
-cases, know how to set bounds to youthful ardour,
-and check its pernicious effects.”<a id='r883' /><a href='#f883' class='c018'><sup>[883]</sup></a> This, it appears
-to me, is the language of an apologist. If they had
-such knowledge, how culpable must they have been
-not to check it in the matter of the Crypteia?</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It may be observed, however, that though they devoted
-to gymnastics too much of their leisure, the fault
-lay in them, not in the system of exercises, which was
-in itself one of extreme beauty and simplicity. Its
-object,—which it was excellently calculated to attain,—was
-not to create athletæ but soldiers, not gigantic
-strength, but an elastic, agile, beautiful frame, adapted
-for all the movements of war. Boxing, accordingly,
-and the pancration<a id='r884' /><a href='#f884' class='c018'><sup>[884]</sup></a> were banished from their gymnasia,
-a regulation evincing at the same time their wisdom
-and their taste; the former being the most barbarous
-and useless, the latter the most unseemly portion of
-gymnastics, often exhibiting the antagonists rolling
-and struggling, like savages or animals devoid of reason,
-on the ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>As the ancient idea of education included every
-thing employed to develope the powers of body or
-mind, we must regard in this light the military games
-peculiar to the Spartans and Cretans.<a id='r885' /><a href='#f885' class='c018'><sup>[885]</sup></a> Among the
-former the youth, having sacrificed to Ares in a temple
-at Therapne, passed over into an island dyked
-round and called Platanistas, where, dividing off into
-separate parties, they engaged in a contest which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>wanted nothing but arms to render it a genuine
-battle. A learned historian, seldom sparing of words,
-avoids describing this interesting scene; and wherefore?—Because
-a faithful description of it must convey
-a striking idea of Spartan ferocity. “They exerted”
-says he, “every means in their power to obtain
-the victory.”—Exactly; but what were those means?
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Adolescentium greges Lacedæmone vidimus ipsi indibili
-contentione certantes, pugnis, calcibus, unguibus,
-morsu denique; quum exanimarentur priusquam
-se victos faterentur.<a id='r886' /><a href='#f886' class='c018'><sup>[886]</sup></a>”</span> Yet were these battles carried
-on under the eyes of magistrates, the five Bidiæi<a id='r887' /><a href='#f887' class='c018'><sup>[887]</sup></a> appointed
-to superintend these exercises as well as those
-performed elsewhere. The little island where they
-fought was a spot of great natural beauty, encircled by
-a sheet of clear water, and approached on all sides
-through thick and lofty groves of platane trees. A
-bridge thrown over the canal led to the island on both
-sides, and on the one stood a statue of Heracles, on
-the other of Lycurgus. This battle was reckoned
-among the institutions of the latter, and under the
-protection probably of the former. The preliminaries
-to the fight were as follow. They first sacrificed in
-the Phœbaion which stands without the city, not far
-from Therapne. Here each of the two divisions of
-the youth offered up a dog’s whelp to Ares, the
-bravest of domestic animals, sacred in their opinion to
-the bravest of the Gods. No other Grecian people
-sacrificed the dog excepting the Colophonians, who
-offered up a black bitch to Hecate. In both cities
-the sacrifice was performed by night. After the ceremony
-two tame boars were brought forward, one by
-each party, which they compelled to fight; and they
-whose brute champion proved superior, thence augured
-that victory awaited them in the Platanistas.
-On the following day, a little before noon, they entered
-by the bridges into the island, one party by
-one bridge, the other by the other. But the
-choice was not left to them, having been determined
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>on the preceding night by lot. Being arrived, they
-faced each other, and commenced the battle, striking
-with the fist, kicking, leaping on each other, tearing
-one another with their teeth, and gouging after the
-most approved Kentucky fashion. Thus they struggled,
-man to man, urging forward together and thrusting
-each other into the water.<a id='r888' /><a href='#f888' class='c018'><sup>[888]</sup></a> From these words, as
-well as from the testimony of Cicero cited above, it is
-clear the combat was conducted with no other arms
-than those furnished by nature, though Lucian, misemploying
-the verb ὁπλομάχειν,<a id='r889' /><a href='#f889' class='c018'><sup>[889]</sup></a> would lead us to a different
-conclusion. But this kind of battle is always
-enumerated among the gymnastic exercises or contests;
-and what necessity would there have been to have recourse
-to fists, feet, teeth, and nails, had they been
-permitted the use of arms? Fatigued with this violent
-exertion they betook themselves for a short time
-to repose, refreshed by which they resumed their exercises,
-dancing in most intricate measures to the
-sound of the pipe.<a id='r890' /><a href='#f890' class='c018'><sup>[890]</sup></a> Akin in spirit to the contests in
-the Platanistas were the ever-recurring battles fought
-by the young men with the three hundred followers of
-the Hippagretæ; three inferior magistrates appointed
-by the Ephori, who selected each one hundred followers
-from among the healthiest and bravest of the
-youthful population. Against this chosen band all the
-other young men of the city were bound by custom to
-make war; and, but that they could be parted by any
-citizen who might happen to be passing by, it is probable
-that these fierce boxing matches would often
-have terminated fatally.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Similar customs prevailed in Crete, where, as in
-most other parts of Greece, the business of education
-appears to have commenced at the age of seven years,
-when the cake called Promachos was given to the
-boys, because, as it has been conjectured, they were
-thenceforward to be trained for fighting. Up to the
-age of seventeen they were denominated Apageli,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>since they were not until then admitted into those
-Agelæ<a id='r891' /><a href='#f891' class='c018'><sup>[891]</sup></a> or bands, in which they thenceforward performed
-their exercises. Here, as in Sparta, the greatest
-possible care was taken to extirpate from the character
-every germ of effeminacy. They ate whatever
-food was given them squatting on the ground, not
-being permitted to join their elders at the board, and
-went abroad in all weathers clad in a single garment,
-like the boys of Sparta during their hibernation. However,
-the youth of the several Agelæ, armed with stones,
-and iron weapons, marching to the sound of flutes, and
-assailing each other, converted their exercises into
-something very like real warfare. Our cudgel-playing,
-single-stick, &amp;c. are pastimes of the same description;
-and boxing now nearly exploded, can plead classical
-precedent. They were habituated, says Ephoros, to labours
-and arms, and taught to despise both heat and
-cold, rough roads and cliffs, and the blows they received
-in the gymnasium and their mock battles. The use of
-the bow formed part of their education, as well as the
-armed dance, at first taught by the Curetes, and afterwards
-named the Pyrrhic; so that a warlike spirit
-breathed through the whole system of their education.<a id='r892' /><a href='#f892' class='c018'><sup>[892]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>With all these facts before him, though many of
-them he has suppressed, the historian of the Doric
-race, in direct contradiction to Plato and Aristotle,
-contends naïvely that it would be erroneous to conclude
-that the aim of bodily exercise among the Dorians
-was war, or that in their result they rendered the
-youth either brutal or ferocious. Their object, in his
-opinion, was to obtain something like ideal beauty of
-form, strength, and health, which, he says, they accordingly
-attained, being, about <span class='fss'>B. C.</span> 540, the healthiest of
-the Greeks and most renowned for beautiful men and
-women. But Xenophon whom, on the subject of
-health he quotes, does not authorise his superlative:—"It
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>would not be easy," are his words, “to find
-healthier or more active men.”<a id='r893' /><a href='#f893' class='c018'><sup>[893]</sup></a> Again, the language
-of Herodotus by no means bears him out. He, indeed,
-affirms that Callicrates, a Spartan, was the handsomest
-man in the army at Platæa, but says nothing of the
-Spartans being handsomer than the other Greeks; but
-rather the contrary. He was not merely the handsomest
-man among his countrymen, but, which he evidently
-considered more remarkable, among all the
-other Greeks.<a id='r894' /><a href='#f894' class='c018'><sup>[894]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Not, however, to insist on such points as these,
-let us proceed to examine the intellectual cultivation
-of the Dorians.<a id='r895' /><a href='#f895' class='c018'><sup>[895]</sup></a> That the art of writing never
-flourished very generally at Sparta appears to be
-on all hands admitted, though we can by no means
-doubt that among them numerous individuals possessing
-this accomplishment might always be found.
-Thus, in the old story of the combat of the three
-hundred Spartans and Argives, it is related that
-Othryades, the sole survivor of the Laconian band,
-having remained last on the field of battle, erected
-a trophy and wrote upon it with his blood Λακεδαιμόνιοι
-κατ᾽ Ἀργείων, immediately after which he
-died of his wounds.<a id='r896' /><a href='#f896' class='c018'><sup>[896]</sup></a> Generally, however, no great
-stress was laid on a knowledge of the art of writing,
-which, in the opinion of some authors, was of comparatively
-little value where the people were taught
-to chant their laws as well as their songs. Similar
-customs and regulations prevailed on this head in
-Crete, where, nevertheless, letters appear to have
-been viewed with a more favourable eye.<a id='r897' /><a href='#f897' class='c018'><sup>[897]</sup></a> In addition
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>to their body of legal poetry, which was probably
-less voluminous than a metrical version of the
-statutes at large, the youth were taught to sing
-hymns in honour of the gods and the praises of
-illustrious men.<a id='r898' /><a href='#f898' class='c018'><sup>[898]</sup></a> In music, too, they were permitted
-to make some proficiency, though generally, we
-are told, it was their ambition to excel rather in
-the regularity of their manners than in the extent
-of their acquirements.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>With respect to the Spartans it is probable,
-though the testimony of ancient writers be sufficiently
-contradictory, that no great stress was laid
-even on the ability to read; for, while Plutarch<a id='r899' /><a href='#f899' class='c018'><sup>[899]</sup></a>
-conceives this art to have been among their ordinary
-acquirements, Isocrates, a grave and more
-competent authority, is decidedly of the opposite
-opinion.<a id='r900' /><a href='#f900' class='c018'><sup>[900]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Ælian,<a id='r901' /><a href='#f901' class='c018'><sup>[901]</sup></a> too, coming in the rear of Plutarch, observes
-that the Lacedæmonians were ignorant of
-mental culture (μουσικῆς) meaning evidently as Perizonius
-has already observed, not “music” as Kühn
-would translate it, (for in this they were learned,)
-but a knowledge of poetry and eloquence.<a id='r902' /><a href='#f902' class='c018'><sup>[902]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>That the Spartans were noted for their indifference
-to literature, is well known. Even Xenophon,
-their apologist, instituting a comparison between their
-system of education and that prevailing among the
-other Greeks, observes that the latter sent their boys
-to school that they might learn their letters, music,
-and the exercises of the palæstra, while the former
-placed them under the care of a grave man
-who might punish them if slothful and inactive, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>inculcate great modesty and obedience in lieu of the
-usual accomplishments. Plato also, in the Greater
-Hippias,<a id='r903' /><a href='#f903' class='c018'><sup>[903]</sup></a> having observed that their laws were averse
-from the reception of foreign learning, adds immediately
-after that the majority of them were even ignorant
-of arithmetic. In another place,<a id='r904' /><a href='#f904' class='c018'><sup>[904]</sup></a> indeed, the
-philosopher appears to hold a different language, and
-is literally understood by Perizonius. But the reader
-who examines the passage attentively, will probably
-agree with me in considering it nothing more than
-one of those profoundly ironical strokes in which,
-above all writers, he abounds. He in fact remarks,
-what in another sense may have been very true,
-that no countries were more fertile in sophists than
-Crete and Lacedæmon, but that they dissembled their
-wisdom and feigned ignorance, lest they should appear
-to excel all their countrymen in sapience, of
-which in reality there was very little danger. He
-observes, however, no less ironically, that those rude
-and unrhetorical nations were of all men most philosophical
-and eloquent, and that it had long been
-understood by a great many that to <em>laconise</em>, or act
-the Spartan, was rather to be a philosopher than
-a diligent student of gymnastics. Perizonius,<a id='r905' /><a href='#f905' class='c018'><sup>[905]</sup></a> indeed,
-conceives that all this is to be understood of natural
-sound sense, applied to morals and those brief and
-pithy sayings or λογοὶ, which constituted the science
-of laconics.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But, after all, there never was, as Cicero observes,
-a single orator among the Spartans; nor could it
-be otherwise, since all the arts which beget and
-foster eloquence, and, more important still, every
-political institution which favours it, were unknown
-in their state. Nay, so far did they push their
-aversion for the oratorical art, that if any citizen
-of Sparta acquired, in his experience abroad, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>skill artificially to wield a syllogism or a trope, he
-was subjected to punishment,<a id='r906' /><a href='#f906' class='c018'><sup>[906]</sup></a> while rhetoricians were
-expelled the city.<a id='r907' /><a href='#f907' class='c018'><sup>[907]</sup></a> Ignorance, therefore, of whatever
-learned nations prize, was their chief boast. To
-them the sublime speculations of the Academy, and
-the logic, sharp and irresistible, of the Lyceum,
-were equally strangers; yet their discipline, and the
-habits of youth, imparted to them what in modern
-jargon is termed a kind of practical “philosophy.”
-They understood the great art, at least among them,
-how to command their passions; as Maximus Tyrius<a id='r908' /><a href='#f908' class='c018'><sup>[908]</sup></a>
-relates of Agesilaos who, though educated in no
-school of philosophy, was nevertheless not a slave
-to love, which therefore the sophist infers could not
-be a matter of great difficulty. However there were
-limitations to their aversions for learning. They
-opened in their state an asylum for those antique
-teachers of mankind, the poets,<a id='r909' /><a href='#f909' class='c018'><sup>[909]</sup></a> proscribed by Plato,
-and were in this respect so superior in good taste
-to that philosopher, that they at length, in imitation
-of the Great Preceptors of Greece, instituted
-public recitations of Homer. And this, Maximus
-Tyrius adduces as a proof that many well-constituted
-states had existed in which Homer was not publicly
-studied, for he could not mean that he was
-once entirely unknown at Sparta.<a id='r910' /><a href='#f910' class='c018'><sup>[910]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Into the character of the Greeks, generally, there
-entered an element but faintly discernible in the
-moral composition of modern nations, I mean a most
-exquisite and exalted sensibility, which rendered them
-to the last degree susceptible, and liable to be swayed
-irresistibly for good or for evil by poetry and music.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>And this characteristic distinguished in some degree
-the Doric as well as the Ionic race. They could be
-excited, past belief, by the agency of sound. Music,
-therefore, with us at least a mere source of enjoyment,
-among them was invested with a moral character,
-and employed in education as a powerful means
-of harmonising, purifying, ennobling the principles
-and the affections of the heart. For this reason the
-government, which in Greece was in reality a Committee
-of Public Safety,<a id='r911' /><a href='#f911' class='c018'><sup>[911]</sup></a> watched over the music
-no less sedulously than over the morals of the people,
-which it powerfully influenced. It must, nevertheless,
-be confessed that many ancient authors are little
-philosophical in relating or reasoning upon the effects
-of music. They often confound consequences
-with causes. Thus, in the example which certain
-authors undoubtingly adduce of the Sicilian Dorians,<a id='r912' /><a href='#f912' class='c018'><sup>[912]</sup></a>
-whose morals we are told were corrupted by their
-fiddlesticks, they omit to inquire whether it was not
-rather the natural and necessary degeneracy of a
-wealthy people, which corrupted the music. This is
-my interpretation. For, in the history of the ancient
-Sicilians, I can discover causes enough of lax and
-imperfect morals, without calling in the aid of lyre
-or cithara. But some writers on this point have an
-easy faith. They suppose that the strict domestic
-discipline of Sparta “would hardly have been preserved”<a id='r913' /><a href='#f913' class='c018'><sup>[913]</sup></a>
-without the old-fashioned music.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In whatever way we decide on the metaphysics
-of the matter, certain it is that in old times music
-was an universal accomplishment in most parts of
-Greece; but this was when it was little more than
-the chanting of savages, in which, however ignorant,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>any one may join. Exactly in proportion as it rose
-into an art its cultivators diminished in number,
-until, when a high degree of perfection had been
-attained, it was abandoned almost wholly to professional
-musicians. The Athenians had been commanded
-by the Pythian oracle to chant chorically
-in the streets, a divine service in honour of Bacchos.<a id='r914' /><a href='#f914' class='c018'><sup>[914]</sup></a>
-At Sparta similar performances took place during
-the gymnopædia, when choruses of naked men and
-boys, with crowns of palm leaves on their heads,
-proceeded through the streets singing the songs of
-Thaletas and Alcman and the pæans of Dionysidotos.<a id='r915' /><a href='#f915' class='c018'><sup>[915]</sup></a>
-Mr. Müller, who loves to complete or round off the
-accounts he finds in ancient authors, says that, <em>doubtless</em>,
-a large portion of the inhabitants of the city
-took part in these exhibitions. Perhaps they did,
-but we have no authority for such a supposition.
-The place in the agora which contained statues of
-Apollo, Artemis and Leto, was called <em>Choros</em>,<a id='r916' /><a href='#f916' class='c018'><sup>[916]</sup></a> because
-there the Ephebi danced in choruses in honour of
-Apollo. On these occasions unwarlike persons were
-sometimes thrust into the least honourable places,<a id='r917' /><a href='#f917' class='c018'><sup>[917]</sup></a>
-while bachelors were excluded; so that, as Schneider
-has well remarked, cowardice was less dishonourable
-than celibacy. But it does not at all appear that
-the Spartans themselves were ever good musicians,
-though they were not incapable of relishing good
-music;<a id='r918' /><a href='#f918' class='c018'><sup>[918]</sup></a> and hence the foreign musicians who flocked
-thither found a welcome reception. The developement
-of the warlike constitution of the state threw
-the favourable side of their discipline into the shade.<a id='r919' /><a href='#f919' class='c018'><sup>[919]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Arcadians, likewise, made great use of music
-in their system of education, and, though otherwise a
-rude race, continued to practise it up to the age of
-thirty. Among them alone, in fact, were children
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>accustomed from infancy to sing, in certain measures,
-hymns and poems, in which they celebrated the
-praises of the gods and heroes of their country.
-After this, observes Polybius,<a id='r920' /><a href='#f920' class='c018'><sup>[920]</sup></a> they learned the <em>nomoi</em>
-of Timotheus and Philoxenos, and every year
-during the Dionysia formed choruses in the theatre,
-where they danced to the sound of the flute. Here
-boys contended with antagonists of their own age,
-and the young men with those more advanced towards
-their prime. During the whole of their lives
-they frequented these public assemblies, where they
-instructed each other by their songs, and not by
-means of foreign actors. With respect to other
-branches of education they considered it no disgrace
-to profess themselves ignorant; but not to know how
-to sing would, in Arcadia, have been a mark of
-extreme vulgarity. They habituated themselves to
-walk with gravity to the sound of the flute,
-and, having been thus instructed at the expense of
-the state, proceeded once a year in public procession
-to the theatre. Their ancestors introduced these
-customs, not with any view to pleasure, or that they
-might grow rich by the exercise of their talents, but
-in order to soften the austerity of character which
-their cold and murky atmosphere would otherwise
-have engendered. For the character of nations is
-invariably analogous to the air they breathe, and it is
-the geographical position of races which determines
-alone their temper of mind and the colour and configuration
-of their bodies.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Besides what has already been said of the Arcadians,
-it may be added, that it was customary among
-them for the men and women to unite in chanting
-certain odes, and to offer up sacrifices in common.
-There were also dances in which the youth of both
-sexes joined, and their object was to create and
-diffuse humane and gentle manners.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But the same habits were not prevalent throughout
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>the whole country. The Kynæthes made no progress
-in these humanising arts, and as they dwelt in the
-rudest districts of Arcadia, and breathed the crudest
-air, their ferocity became proverbial; they addicted
-themselves to strife and contention, and degenerated
-into the fiercest and most untameable savages in
-Greece. In fact, obtaining possession of several cities,
-they shed so much blood that the whole nation
-was roused, and at length united in expelling them
-the land. Even after their departure the Mantinæans
-thought it necessary to purify the soil by sacrifices,
-expiations, and the leading of victims round the whole
-boundary line.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Dancing very naturally constituted a separate
-branch of education at Sparta as in Crete. In both
-places the execution of the Pyrrhic appears to have
-been regarded as a necessary accomplishment, the
-youths, from the age of fifteen or earlier, having been
-taught to perform it in arms.<a id='r921' /><a href='#f921' class='c018'><sup>[921]</sup></a> It was or is—for the
-Pyrrhic still lingers in Greece,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Ye have the Pyrrhic dance as yet—”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>an exhibition purely military. The dancers, accoutred
-with spear and shield, went gracefully and vigorously
-through a number of movements, wheeling,
-advancing, giving blows or shunning them, as in real
-action.<a id='r922' /><a href='#f922' class='c018'><sup>[922]</sup></a> In other parts of Greece, however, the
-Pyrrhic quickly degenerated in character, becoming
-little better than a wild dance of Bacchanals.<a id='r923' /><a href='#f923' class='c018'><sup>[923]</sup></a> It
-has been rightly observed that at Sparta “the chief
-object of the Gymnopædia was to represent gymnastic
-exercises and dancing in intimate union, and, indeed,
-the latter only as the accomplishment and
-end of the former.”<a id='r924' /><a href='#f924' class='c018'><sup>[924]</sup></a> One of the dances, resembling
-the Anapale, partook of a Bacchanalian <a id='corr288.1'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='character.'>character.”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_288.1'><ins class='correction' title='character.'>character.”</ins></a></span><a id='r925' /><a href='#f925' class='c018'><sup>[925]</sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>The youth, also, when skilled in these exercises,
-danced in rows behind each other to the
-music of flutes, both military and choral dances, at
-the same time, repeating an invitation in verse to
-Aphrodite and Eros to join them, and an exhortation
-to each other.<a id='r926' /><a href='#f926' class='c018'><sup>[926]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It will be seen from the above details that the object
-of education at Sparta was rather the formation of
-habits and the disciplining of the mind to act in exact
-conformity with the laws, than to develope to their
-fullest extent the intellectual powers of individuals.
-They desired to amalgamate the whole energies of
-the people into one mass, upon the supposition that
-being thus impelled in any particular direction they
-would prove irresistible. No account was made of
-private happiness. Everything seems to have been
-devised for the effecting of national purposes, though
-from the known laws of the human mind even the
-restraint and tyrannical interference of such a system
-would with time be reconciled to the feelings and
-contribute to individual content. But very much
-of what renders life sweet, was sacrificed. Letters
-and arts, that subordinate creation, that world within
-a world which the beneficence of Providence has permitted
-man to call into existence, were at Sparta
-unknown. They enjoyed little or nothing of that
-refined delight which arises from multiplying the
-almost conscious fruits of the soul, from sending
-winged thoughts abroad to move, enchant, electrify
-millions, from deifying truth and confounding error,
-from ascending to the greatest heights of mortality,
-and diffusing from thence a light and a glory to
-warm and illuminate and gladden the human race
-for ever. This greater felicity was reserved for the
-education of Athens, which must, therefore, in all
-enlightened times, bear away the palm of excellence
-and utility.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>CHAPTER IX.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>INFLUENCE OF THE FINE ARTS ON EDUCATION.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It behoves us now to quit the circle of studies,
-which, taken together, are commonly supposed to
-constitute the whole of education, and consider the
-influence exercised by other elements on the minds
-of the Hellenic youth. Even in these days we
-speak intelligibly and correctly of that experience
-which young men gain on their first entrance into
-life, from travel and fashionable society, as of a
-particular stage in their education, it being during
-that period that they learn to estimate the value
-of their school acquirements, how advantageously to
-conceal or display them according to circumstances,
-and to bend the neck, perchance, of their lofty theories
-and sublime speculations to the yoke of the
-world. But in Greece this was more palpably the
-case; for, though escaped from the formal rule of
-preceptors and pædagogues, the youth had still to
-master several departments of study, either by their
-own independent exertions or under the guidance
-of judicious friends: I mean those infinitely varied
-creations of art and literature, which, as they are
-in harmony with them or otherwise, confirm or subvert
-the principles and discipline of the schools.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Thoroughly to comprehend, therefore, the nature
-and extent of that sway which the state and its
-institutions directly or indirectly exerted over the
-minds of the citizens, it is necessary briefly to inquire
-into the character of the plastic and mimetic
-arts which found encouragement in the Grecian commonwealths,
-and afterwards to examine for a moment
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>the stores of thought and sentiment and passion,
-and piety and virtue, which the literature and
-religion of Greece laid open to the contemplation
-of those who were entering upon the career of life.
-We shall begin with the arts, as they were the inculcators
-of the principle of the beautiful, advance
-next to literature, the teacher of wisdom and patriotism,
-concluding with religion, which opened up
-to their view a prospect, though dim, of heaven,
-and directed their footsteps thitherward.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It is certain that, to the generality, the vast superiority
-of the Greeks in the arts, which like an
-universal language need no translation, is more palpable
-and apparent than their superiority in literature;
-though Demosthenes be in reality as much
-above any orator, Thucydides above any historian,
-Plato above any philosopher, Homer above any epic
-poet, Milton perhaps excepted, who has since written,
-as Pheidias, or Polycletos, or Praxiteles rose above
-any sculptor of the north. Nor can we account for
-this any more than we can explain why Shakespeare
-was superior to Ford or Massinger. Nature infused
-more genius into their souls. They loved
-or rather worshiped the beautiful. It breathed
-within and around them: their minds were pregnant
-with it, and, when they brought forth, beauty
-was their offspring. Thus Aristophanes<a id='r927' /><a href='#f927' class='c018'><sup>[927]</sup></a> insinuates,
-that even the gods borrowed much of their majesty
-and splendour from the human mind, when
-he says, that heaven-born peace derived her loveliness
-from some relationship to Pheidias.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Religion, in one sense, may be called the parent of
-the fine arts; but it would perhaps be more philosophical
-to consider religion and the arts as twin sisters,
-both sprung from that yearning after the ideal which
-constituted the most marked feature in the Hellenic
-mind. We must carry back our investigations very
-far, if we would discover them radiant with loveliness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>in their cradle; but when they issued thence it was
-to shed light over the earth, a light derived from the
-skies. For man does not originate his ideas of the
-beautiful, which fall like images from heaven on the
-speculum of his mind; he gives back but what he
-receives. The conception of beauty is an inspiration,
-a thing which does not come when called upon; or
-rather, shining on all, it is lost on the dull and opaque
-fancy, and is reflected only from the luminous and
-bright.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Man needs companionship always, and the creative
-and imaginative make to themselves companions
-of their own ideas, and clothe them in material forms
-to render the illusion more complete. There is an
-impassioned intercourse between the soul and its offspring.
-We love nothing like that which has sprung
-from ourselves, and in this we are truly the image of
-God, who saw all things that he had made, and, behold,
-they were very good. And he loved his creation;
-and from him we inherit, as his children, the
-love we bear to our creations. Hence the enthusiasm
-for art, hence the power and the inspiration of poetry.
-They are not things of earth. They are the seeds of
-immortality ripening prematurely here below; and
-therefore we should love them. They are the warrant,
-the proof that we are of God; that we are
-born to exercise an irresistible sway over the elements;
-that our thrones are building elsewhere;
-that in the passion for whatever is spiritual we exhibit
-instinctively indubitable tokens that spirits we
-are, and in a spiritual world only can find our home.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It does not belong to this work to attempt a history
-of Grecian art, which in a certain sense has been
-already written. My object, if I can accomplish it, is
-to describe the spirit by which that art was created
-and sustained, and this I should do triumphantly if
-love were synonymous with power; for never, since
-the fabled artist hung enamoured over the marble he
-had fashioned, did any man’s imagination cleave more
-earnestly to the spirit that presided over Grecian art,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>not the plastic merely but every form of it, from the
-epic in poetry and sculpture down to the signet ring
-and the drinking song. But the thing is an ample
-apology for the enthusiasm. There, if anywhere, we
-discover the culminating point of human intellect and
-human genius;—there</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“The vision and the faculty divine”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>meet us at every step. Even the fragments of her
-literature and her art are gathered up and treasured
-in all civilised countries, as if the fate of our race were
-mystically bound up in them. And so it is: for
-when we cease to love the beautiful, of which they are
-the most perfect realisation we know, our own race of
-glory and greatness will have been run: we shall be
-close on the verge, nay, within the pale of barbarism.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Socrates used to say, that whatever we know we
-can explain; but not so always with what we feel.
-There is in the ideal of beauty, which formed the vivifying
-principle of Greek art, a certain subtile and fugitive
-delicacy, a certain nameless grace, a certain volatile
-and fleeting essence, which defy definition, and, rejecting
-the aid of language, persist in presenting themselves
-naked to the mind. And by the mind only,
-and only, moreover, by the inspired mind, can they
-be discerned.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It was in the attempt, however, to chain this
-spirit, and to imprison it in durable forms, that all
-the poetry and arts of Greece consisted. They beheld
-within them a world of loveliness, of living
-forms which knocked at the golden door of fancy,
-and demanded their dismissal from the spiritual to
-the material universe. All their studies were but
-how to dress these celestial habitants in fitting habiliments
-to go abroad in; and their lives were often
-spent in the throes of creatures big with immortal
-beauty. It is a privilege to the world to converse
-with minds of such a nature. It is ennobling to
-approach them. Their energy, their vivifying power
-continues ever active, ever operating, and if high art
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>be ever to flourish and command, not admiration,
-but love in England, it can only be by kindling
-here the lamp removed from Greece, but essentially
-Greek, that is, essentially beautiful.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The proof that religion issued with art from the
-same womb in Greece, and was not its parent, is
-supplied by every other country. There is religion
-elsewhere, while nowhere is there art like that of
-the Greeks. But religion had nevertheless much
-to do with the forms in which the creative faculty
-there developed itself, as it invariably has with whatever
-is great or beautiful among men. The persuasion
-arose in them that the inhabitants of Olympos
-could be represented by material forms, and as they
-found their own reverence for the divine being represented,
-augment in proportion to the beauty or grandeur
-of its image, the conclusion was natural that
-the deity himself would be pleased by the same rule,
-so that their piety was their first and most powerful
-incentive to excellence. They hoped to recommend
-themselves to the gods, as they did to their countrymen,
-by the greatness of their workmanship;
-and veneration from without, and piety from within,
-united in urging them forward. And this, with the
-poet equally as with the artist, inflamed the desire
-to excel.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>There are, as has already been observed,<a id='r928' /><a href='#f928' class='c018'><sup>[928]</sup></a> three
-periods in the history of art: 1st. that, in which the
-necessary is sought; 2ndly, that in which the study
-of the beautiful is pursued; and 3dly, the period
-of superfluity and extravagance. But in some countries
-men appear to pass from the first to the third,
-without traversing the second. Thus, in Egypt,
-Persia, Etruria, in Germany, Holland, France, England<a id='r929' /><a href='#f929' class='c018'><sup>[929]</sup></a>
-the wild, the grotesque, the terrible have been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>aimed at, seldom the beautiful. Even in Italy,
-where in modern times art has taken firmest root
-and most luxuriantly flourished, the object sought
-to be attained has lain on a lower level. Among
-the northern nations the grotesque variously disguised
-or modified is the spirit of art; among the
-Italians it is voluptuousness, among the Greeks the
-beautiful. Hence no Greek statue of the flourishing
-period of art is indecent.<a id='r930' /><a href='#f930' class='c018'><sup>[930]</sup></a> Naked it may be,
-but like the nakedness of infancy, it is chaste as
-a mother’s love. Our thoughts are instantly carried
-away by it to the regions of poetry; the soft influence
-of the ideal descends like dew upon our fancy;
-we are elevated above the region of the passions
-to heights where all is sunny and calm and pure.
-The beautiful is chaste as an icicle, yet warm as
-love. It breathes in Raffaelle’s virgins which we
-regard as some “bright particular star,” things to
-inspire a holy affection, a love not akin to earth.
-Yet this beauty is not distanced from us by its
-severity: no! but by its intense innocence, by its
-unsullied purity, by its inexpressible concentration
-and mingling up of maternity and girlhood. It was
-this beauty that Milton sought in his Comus to
-express, when he represents chastity as its own
-guard. And this is preëminently the spirit breathing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>through Grecian art. In the Artemis, in the
-Athena, nay, even in Aphrodite or Leda, or an orgiastic
-Bacchante, the overruling sense of beauty,
-after the first flutter of sensation, hurries the imagination
-far beyond all considerations of sex or passion.
-The root of all the pleasures we feel, seems to be
-hidden under the load of three thousand years, not
-because the things are old, but because they are
-the material representatives of a period when the
-foot of the beautiful rested on the earth.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>No doubt we come prepared to regard them with
-eyes coloured, and a fancy haunted by the beauties
-of Grecian literature. Possibly, it is under the spell
-of Homeric verse that our eyes grow humid with
-delight at the aspect of Aphrodite, that we behold
-divinity in Zeus or Phœbos Apollo; but this only
-proves that the fragments of Hellenic civilisation
-throw a light upon each other, and are parts of one
-great whole. Perhaps, too, no man ever enjoyed
-the sculpture of Greece as he should, unless conversant
-with her poetry—the right hand of her art.
-In this we find the first seeds and increments of
-those ideas, which were afterwards transplanted and
-bore fruit in another field. We discover, therefore,
-but half the subject when we see only the sculpture.
-It is unknown to us whether the artist has fulfilled
-the conditions into which he entered, by undertaking
-to clothe in marble, thoughts already invested with
-the forms of language. Hence the little sympathy
-between Hellenic art and the people generally of
-modern nations. The figures they behold are dumb
-to them. To a Greek, on the contrary, or to a man
-with a Greek’s soul, a thousand sweet reminiscences,
-a thousand legends, a thousand dim but cherished
-associations appear clustering round them. Every
-time they flash upon him, he lives his youth over
-again. The briery nook, the dewy lanes, the dim
-religious forests, the pebbly or wave-fretted shore,
-where the poetry of Greece first opened its eyes
-upon him in boyhood, sweep in procession over his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>fancy. He starts to see the hamadryad or the faun
-or the mountain nymph, before him but one remove
-from life; to him art speaks not merely in an intelligible,
-but in an impassioned tongue. He comprehends
-all the mysteries she has to reveal, and loves
-her because in a land as it were of foreigners they
-can converse with each other, and speak of the past
-and the future.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It is scarcely philosophical to regard poetry, sculpture,
-and painting, as the offspring of pleasure, though
-pleasure in some sense be as necessary to man as food.
-Man possesses creative and imitative faculties, and
-must, at certain stages of society, employ them. The
-moment his merely animal wants are provided for, he
-begins to feel that he has others which demand no
-less imperiously their gratification. First, he desires
-to clothe with material forms the things he worships,
-and hence the first-born of art are gods. At the
-outset, indeed, (and this is a strong argument against
-their having borrowed their arts from the East,)<a id='r931' /><a href='#f931' class='c018'><sup>[931]</sup></a>
-the Greeks were content with setting up rude stones,
-as symbols rather than representations of their divinities;
-then followed the head upon a rude pillar;
-then, the indications of the sex; next, the round
-thighs began to swell out of the stone; to these succeeded
-legs and feet; and, lastly, arms and hands
-completed the figure. Dædalos, a mythological personage,
-is supposed to have been the first who carried
-the art to this point of improvement. His
-figures were of wood, and already executed with
-considerable skill, though they would have been
-despised in the days of Socrates.<a id='r932' /><a href='#f932' class='c018'><sup>[932]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>For some ages, perhaps, a stiff, unanimated manner,
-not unlike the Egyptian, prevailed; but the
-impulse, once given, went on increasing in strength.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>One improvement imperceptibly followed another.
-Artists, together with their experience, acquired professional
-learning, the results of which soon became
-visible in their productions. Movement and variety
-of position succeeded. But though knowledge of art
-was enlarged and strict rules laid down, there still
-remained a hard, square massiveness in the style,
-resembling what we find in modern sculpture as
-improved by Michael Angelo. And this manner
-became the type of the Æginetan school, which expressed
-the character of the Doric mind, powerful
-but rude, harmonious but heavy, wanting in grace,
-wanting in elegance, and aiming rather at effect
-than beauty.<a id='r933' /><a href='#f933' class='c018'><sup>[933]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Numerous causes, however, concurred in ripening
-the principle of art in Greece,—the climate, the
-form of government, the happy taste of the people,
-and, lastly, the high respect which was there paid to
-artists. Nor is it at all paradoxical to affirm, that
-moral causes concurred powerfully with physical, in
-begetting that radiant beauty of countenance which
-distinguished the nation. The consciousness of freedom
-and independence produces satisfaction in the
-mind; the serenity thus originated communicates
-itself to the features; thence arise harmony and
-dignity of aspect and mien; these are so many elements
-of beauty, and such feelings long indulged
-would operate powerfully on the countenance, and,
-seconded by the tranquillising influences of external
-nature, end by creating symmetry and proportion,
-which, joined with intellect, are beauty. Artists in
-such a country, besides that they must themselves
-involuntarily be impressed with a veneration for it,
-would soon discover the reverence paid to beauty and
-the value set upon accurate representations of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Of the high estimation in which beauty was held
-innumerable proofs exist in Greek literature. At
-Ægion in Achaia, the priest of Zeus was chosen
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>for the splendour of his personal charms, to determine
-which a sort of contest was instituted. This office
-he held till his beard began to appear, when the
-honour passed to the youth then judged to excel<a id='r934' /><a href='#f934' class='c018'><sup>[934]</sup></a>
-in the perfection of his form. So, also, at Tanagra,
-the youth selected to bear the lamb round the walls
-in honour of Hermes was supposed to be the first
-for beauty in the city.<a id='r935' /><a href='#f935' class='c018'><sup>[935]</sup></a> Of the involuntary power
-of beauty history has recorded various instances.
-Phrynè, accused of impiety and on the point of being
-condemned, obtained her acquittal through the hardihood
-of her advocate, who bared her bosom before
-the judges. Another example is said to have
-been afforded by Corinna, sole poetess of Tanagra,
-who, contending with Pindar for the prize of verse,
-obtained the victory more by her beauty, (she being
-the loveliest woman of her time,) and the sweetness
-of the Æolic dialect in which she wrote, than by
-the greatness of her genius.<a id='r936' /><a href='#f936' class='c018'><sup>[936]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In another instance heroic honours were paid to
-a man after death for the beauty of his person.<a id='r937' /><a href='#f937' class='c018'><sup>[937]</sup></a>
-This happened at Egestum in Sicily, where Philippos,
-a native of Crotona, obtained this distinction,
-which Herodotus observes never fell to any other
-man’s lot before.<a id='r938' /><a href='#f938' class='c018'><sup>[938]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It was to its artists that Greece delegated, at least
-in some instances, the privilege of deciding on the
-rival pretensions of the fair and beautiful. They
-were permitted to select from the loveliest women
-of the land models for their female divinities, and
-at other times made their mistresses the representatives
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>of goddesses. Pains were taken, by filling
-their apartments with beautiful statues, to impress
-upon the imagination of pregnant women the perfect
-forms of gods and heroes, as of Nireus, Narcissos,
-Hyacinthos, Castor and Polydeukes, Bacchos
-and Apollo.<a id='r939' /><a href='#f939' class='c018'><sup>[939]</sup></a> This was at Sparta. In other parts
-of the Peloponnesos a species of Olympic contest for
-the prize of beauty took place, instituted, it is said,
-by Cypselos, an ancient king of Arcadia. Having
-founded a city in the plain on the banks of the
-Alpheios, in which he fixed a colony of Parrhasians,
-he dedicated a temple and altar, and instituted a
-festival in honour of Eleusinian Demeter, during
-which the women of the neighbourhood disputed
-with each other the prize, and received from some
-circumstance connected with the contest the name
-of Chrysophoræ. The first woman who won was
-Herodice, wife of the founder Cypselos. This institution
-flourished upwards of fourteen hundred years,
-having been established in the time of the Heracleidæ,
-and still existing in the age of Athenæus.<a id='r940' /><a href='#f940' class='c018'><sup>[940]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>A similar practice prevailed in the islands of Tenedos
-and Lesbos, where likewise the ebullitions of
-vanity were concealed beneath the veil of religion.
-The exhibition took place in the temple of Hera,
-to whom, as the goddess of marriage, beauty should
-be dear. Priapos, however, was in some places supposed
-to be the deity who awarded the prize of
-loveliness in the Callisteia, on which account Niconoë,
-a Bacchante perhaps, dedicated to him her fawn-skin
-and golden ewer.<a id='r941' /><a href='#f941' class='c018'><sup>[941]</sup></a> But the ladies were not
-singular in these displays. For among the Eleians,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>who had as favourable an opinion of themselves as
-Oliver Goldsmith, a similar show took place, and the
-pretensions of the male candidates were as carefully
-sifted as if they had been to take academical honours
-on their figures. And honours in fact they did take.
-They were presented with a complete suit of armour,
-which the winner consecrated with extraordinary pomp
-and rejoicing in the temple of Athena, whither he
-was led garlanded with fillets by his triumphant
-friends. According to Myrsilos, he was likewise decorated
-with a myrtle crown.<a id='r942' /><a href='#f942' class='c018'><sup>[942]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In some places, not named by historians, a contest
-was instituted which, though unconnected with the
-arts, we will intreat the reader’s permission to introduce
-here, for its extraordinary nature. This was
-a contest in prudence and good housewifery, in which
-certain barbarian nations followed the example. And,
-to show that character and mental qualifications were
-properly esteemed by the Greeks, it is added by Theophrastos<a id='r943' /><a href='#f943' class='c018'><sup>[943]</sup></a>
-that it is these that render beauty beautiful,
-and that without them it is apt to degenerate
-into wantonness. Winkelmann, who has noticed several
-of these facts, is betrayed into some errors.
-He speaks of an Apollo of Philesia<a id='r944' /><a href='#f944' class='c018'><sup>[944]</sup></a> at whose festival
-a prize was bestowed on the youth who excelled
-in kissing. The contest took place under the inspection
-of a judge, he supposes, at Megara. Meursius,
-though under the name of Diocleia he notices the
-Megarean festival, overlooks the writer who gives
-the fullest account of it;—I mean the scholiast on
-Theocritus, who observes that Diocles was an Athenian
-exile who took refuge at Megara. In a battle
-in which he was engaged, he fought side by side
-with a friend, whose life he saved at the expense of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>his own. He was interred by the Megareans, who
-instituted an annual festival in his honour, where
-the youth who excelled his companions was crowned
-and led in triumph to the arms of his mother.<a id='r945' /><a href='#f945' class='c018'><sup>[945]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The exercises, discipline, and moral notions of the
-Greeks had doubtless much effect on their form; for
-in the decline of their states, when despotism had succeeded
-to freedom, and vice to virtue, beauty became
-exceedingly rare. Cotta, in the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">De Naturâ Deorum</span>,
-observes that he found few handsome youths at
-Athens, where in the age of Demosthenes the most
-beautiful in Greece flourished;<a id='r946' /><a href='#f946' class='c018'><sup>[946]</sup></a> and Dion Chrysostom
-observes that in his time there were scarcely any
-that could be so considered.<a id='r947' /><a href='#f947' class='c018'><sup>[947]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>If we come now to the other causes which account
-for the progress of the arts in Greece, we shall find
-the principal of these to have been the high consideration
-and esteem<a id='r948' /><a href='#f948' class='c018'><sup>[948]</sup></a> in which artists were held. Riches,
-no doubt, obtained credit there as elsewhere, but not
-to the exclusion of other recommendations as in modern
-Europe, or at least in England. Winkelmann
-scarcely comprehends the irony of Socrates, however,
-when he supposes him seriously to mean that artists
-alone were wise; though, since the sage had himself
-been a sculptor, he had some reason to think well of
-them. It is, nevertheless, perfectly true that men of
-this profession might become legislators or generals,
-or even behold a statue erected to them beside those
-of Miltiades and Themistocles, or among the gods
-themselves.<a id='r949' /><a href='#f949' class='c018'><sup>[949]</sup></a> The historian of art observes with pride
-that Xenophilos and Straton were permitted at Argos
-to place their own statues, even in a sitting posture,
-near those of Asclepios and Hygeia.<a id='r950' /><a href='#f950' class='c018'><sup>[950]</sup></a> Cheirisophos,
-who sculptured the Apollo at Tegea, dedicated in the
-same fane a statue of himself in marble, which was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>erected close to his great work.<a id='r951' /><a href='#f951' class='c018'><sup>[951]</sup></a> The figure of Alcamenes
-occupied a place among the bassi-rilievi on the
-temple of Demeter at Eleusis. Parrhasios and Silanion
-shared the reverence paid to their picture of
-Theseus; and Pheidias affixed his name to his Olympian
-Zeus, the nearest approach perhaps which the
-arts have ever made to perfection.<a id='r952' /><a href='#f952' class='c018'><sup>[952]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>If the satisfaction of beholding a whole nation, I
-might say a whole world, smitten with delight and
-wonder at his performance, would repay an artist for
-years of toil and study, Pheidias had his reward. And
-not to the narrow circle of his life was this admiration
-confined; for six hundred years after his death pilgrims
-from all parts of the civilised world flocked to Olympia<a id='r953' /><a href='#f953' class='c018'><sup>[953]</sup></a>
-to behold his matchless performance; for to die
-without having partaken of this enjoyment was considered
-a misfortune. But neither praise, nor encouragement,
-nor honour, nor gain will suffice to bring the
-arts to perfection. To ensure this, the nation to which
-the arts address themselves must comprehend their
-language. For, if the people be incapable of deciding
-when an artist has succeeded and when he has failed,
-it is very certain that he will seldom succeed at all.
-Men soon find the uselessness of producing what no
-one around them can appreciate. Even in the matter
-of virtue and vice, few will soar very high in countries
-where a low standard of morals prevails generally;
-and, in the arts, no one will devote himself to the creation
-of forms which he knows will be dumb to the
-public eye.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In Greece every condition required to ripen the
-genius of an artist existed. He knew that his reputation
-and fortune would depend on the caprice of no
-particular individual or class of individuals. He perceived
-among his countrymen at large the knowledge,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>the taste, and the enthusiasm which just decisions in
-art demand, and laboured fearlessly for them, not
-doubting that he should obtain the reward his genius
-merited. There were public exhibitions, as among
-us, both at Corinth and at Delphi;<a id='r954' /><a href='#f954' class='c018'><sup>[954]</sup></a> but, instead of converting
-them into a sordid traffic, the whole world was
-invited to behold their performances, and judges were
-appointed to decide upon the merits of the exhibitors.
-Instances no doubt there were of artists showing their
-performances for money: at least the memory of one
-example has come down to us. Zeuxis of Heraclea,
-having finished his picture of Helen, opened an exhibition
-and fixed a certain admission price, by which he
-cleared a large sum of money; but to mark their disapprobation
-of such conduct, his contemporaries bestowed
-on his picture the name of the courtesan.<a id='r955' /><a href='#f955' class='c018'><sup>[955]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In the public exhibitions they appear to have
-looked solely to merit, and not to have allowed themselves
-to be dazzled by great names; for when Panænos,
-brother of Pheidias, entered the lists, neither his
-own reputation, nor that of the illustrious sculptor,
-could obtain for him the preference over Timagoras,
-who was allowed to have excelled. A like spirit prevailed
-among the judges of Olympia, whither artists
-sometimes brought their pictures during the games to
-delight assembled nations, and reap a harvest of joy
-and glory in a day. Thus when Ætion appeared with
-his “Marriage of Alexander and Roxana,” before the
-Hellanodicos Proxenides,<a id='r956' /><a href='#f956' class='c018'><sup>[956]</sup></a> he not only obtained the
-credit due to his genius, but that magistrate, more
-emphatically to express his admiration, bestowed on
-him the hand of his daughter. And Lucian, who had
-seen the picture in Italy, has left a description of it
-which justifies the enthusiasm of Proxenides.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>I have already in a former chapter accounted in
-some measure for the diffusion of a correct taste among
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>the great body of the people. It formed with them
-an indispensable branch of study. The arts of design
-were cultivated by the philosopher, the politician, in
-short, by every one who claimed to be considered a
-gentleman.<a id='r957' /><a href='#f957' class='c018'><sup>[957]</sup></a> Nay, gentlewomen also enjoyed these advantages,
-and instances are recorded of their arriving
-at professional excellence and celebrity; for example,
-Timarete,<a id='r958' /><a href='#f958' class='c018'><sup>[958]</sup></a> daughter of the younger Micon, an Athenian,
-and Helen an Alexandrian Greek, who painted
-the “Battle of the Issos,” afterwards consecrated in
-the temple of Peace.<a id='r959' /><a href='#f959' class='c018'><sup>[959]</sup></a> It was in the nature of things,
-that artists moving in such a moral atmosphere should
-partake largely of the national grandeur of sentiment,
-and look rather to the perpetuation of their name than
-to any sordid considerations of gain, above which they
-were elevated by the form which the national gratitude
-assumed. For we may be sure that what is related
-of the great historian of Halicarnassos was, to a
-certain extent, true of great artists. Men pointed at
-him, we are told, as he moved through the public assemblies,
-exclaiming, “That is he! That is the man
-who has celebrated our victories over the Barbarians!”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Winkelmann, who understood human nature no less
-than the arts, enumerates similar facts among the
-causes why art flourished in Greece;<a id='r960' /><a href='#f960' class='c018'><sup>[960]</sup></a> and though
-sometimes mistaken, as in so large a work was to be
-expected, his reasoning generally, and his illustrations,
-deserve that every lover of art should be familiar with
-his writings.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>This distinguished historian, however, is not sufficiently
-guarded in his expressions, when he contends
-that the productions of art were consecrated solely
-to the deity or to public utility; for, though they were
-principally directed to these ends, many individuals
-possessed collections in their houses,<a id='r961' /><a href='#f961' class='c018'><sup>[961]</sup></a> which were by
-no means the humble dwellings he supposes. However
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>the public constituted the great patron of art, and
-uniting in itself natural aptitude, acquired knowledge,
-and an inherent leaning towards grandeur, communicated
-to those who laboured to gratify it corresponding
-taste and elevation. In many cases the whole population
-of a city identified its own glory with that of
-some celebrated picture or statue within its walls.
-Olympia, though peopled by works of art of surpassing
-excellence, still looked upon the Pheidian Zeus<a id='r962' /><a href='#f962' class='c018'><sup>[962]</sup></a> as the
-apex of its glory; and even Athens, where probably
-more objects of art were crowded together than in any
-other city of the world, the colossal statue of Athena
-stood preëminently the ornament of the Acropolis.
-In one respect we have begun to imitate the Greeks,
-who often erected by general subscription the statue
-of a divinity, or of some Athletæ victorious in the sacred
-games. Some minor cities are solely remembered
-for the works of art they contained: for example, that
-of Aliphera which owed its celebrity entirely to its
-statue of Athena in bronze, the work of Hecatodoros
-and Sostratos.<a id='r963' /><a href='#f963' class='c018'><sup>[963]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Winkelmann supposes that both sculpture and painting
-arrived earlier at a certain degree of perfection
-than architecture, and, assuming the fact, proceeds
-philosophically to account for it. But his theory itself,
-on this point, appears to be erroneous. In Egypt,
-at least, where the mind would necessarily be guided
-by the same laws as in Greece, it is certain that while
-sculpture and painting never escaped from the swaddling
-bands of infancy, architecture advanced to a very
-high degree of perfection. The force of necessity,
-which leads to the creation of architecture, communicates
-a far more lasting impulse than the instinct of
-imitation. Men must everywhere build to protect
-themselves from the fury of the elements; and the first
-step thus made, and leisure supervening, that sense of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>proportion and symmetry and arrangement, which is
-almost an instinct, would soon lead to the contemplation
-of the ideal and the creation of architecture as an
-art. Sculpture sprang later into existence, and still
-later painting; but like the children of one family,—of
-whom some are older, others younger,—all the arts
-flourish nearly together, and nearly together decay.
-Nevertheless we may subdivide this period into minuter
-cycles, when we shall find that architecture and
-sculpture reached almost like twins their acme together,
-while, like a younger sister, painting attained its greatest
-beauty when the former two had fallen something
-from their perfection. Thus, the Zeus of Pheidias and
-the Hera of Polycletos, two of the most celebrated
-statues of antiquity, already existed, while Hellenic
-painting exhibited no knowledge of chiaro-scuro and
-was wholly destitute of harmony.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Apollodoros and after him Zeuxis, master and disciple,<a id='r964' /><a href='#f964' class='c018'><sup>[964]</sup></a>
-who flourished about the ninetieth Olympiad, were
-the first who rendered themselves remarkable for a
-knowledge of light and shade.<a id='r965' /><a href='#f965' class='c018'><sup>[965]</sup></a> But, arrived at this
-pitch, the beauty of the art began to be felt, picture
-galleries were commenced in various temples,<a id='r966' /><a href='#f966' class='c018'><sup>[966]</sup></a> and,
-a new world of forms and colours disclosing itself to
-the imagination, the versatile Greeks transferred to
-it a large share of the admiration hitherto monopolised
-by sculpture. Painting, in fact, speaks a more
-popular language. It tells a story, while sculpture
-can but embody a thought or fix an incident. Its accessories
-realise events more completely. The Apollo,
-in sculpture, has bent his bow and discharged his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>arrow—the remainder of the action the imagination
-must shape for itself. Painting gives us the whole
-scene teeming with life,—the writhing dragon, the
-rocks, the woods, the mountain, the sky, with all
-the illusions spread before the eye by many-coloured
-light. Sculpture furnishes the nucleus of glorious
-associations, but ’tis we that must group them into
-sublime beauty. It asks more knowledge, more
-fancy, more in short of every element of genius in
-its admirers than does painting. Hence the latter
-will always number, and justly, more partisans. In
-most persons a preference for sculpture would be
-mere affectation. It cannot equally please the many.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>However, in proportion as the public became more
-enlightened, and, to justify its admiration and enthusiasm,
-imposed harder conditions on artists, the
-latter enlarged the circle of their studies, which gradually
-expanded until it embraced a certain portion
-of metaphysics, the science of form and colours,
-with that art of grouping and arrangement which
-constitutes a species of narrative in painting. A
-complete exposition of their studies would be the
-best manual which could be put into the hands of
-contemporary artists, and at the same time would
-furnish the best explanation of their seemingly inexplicable
-superiority. But such an exposition would
-be out of place here. My object is simply to hint
-at what may be done, not to attempt it myself; and
-to show, that if the Greek nation afforded encouragement
-to its artists, it was because those artists
-met their countrymen more than half way, and laboured
-to deserve encouragement.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>There existed in Greece a philosophy of art, that
-is, a perfect theory of what its object is, and of
-all the means by which that object may be accomplished.
-Now the object of art is delight, a
-delight which aggrandises and ennobles the mind,
-and such delight is only to be obtained through the
-contemplation of the beautiful. This conviction established,
-the studies of the Greek artist were directed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>to the discovery of the elements of the beautiful,
-not such as it exists in the original types of
-the intellectual world (which he abandoned to the
-philosopher), but such as we find it in material developements
-of the ideal, and chiefly in the forms
-of our own species.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Their researches, conducted in a philosophical spirit,
-by degrees taught them that perfect beauty, like perfect
-happiness, consists in absolute serenity and repose.
-Thus, the heavens are beautiful when in the
-noon of a summer’s day their blue depths are unstained
-by a cloud, and not a breath is heard among
-the trees. Thus, the ocean is beautiful when the
-most perfect calm broods upon it, and has smoothed
-down every ripple and converted it into a mirror for
-reflecting the cerulean purity of the sky. And this
-is what the poets signify when they represent Aphrodite,
-the very soul of beauty and of love, springing
-up from the level and glittering surface of such a
-sea. In the same state the human countenance is
-most beautiful, when every feature in the most perfect
-equilibrium breathes of calm, joy, and serenity,
-and by the force of sympathy converts all who approach
-it into so many mirrors reflecting its absolute
-bliss. This is the secret of that beauty which exists
-in Grecian sculpture.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It was a maxim of Greek philosophy, that the
-magnanimous man is seldom, under any circumstances,
-disturbed. In action, therefore, he would exhibit the
-same tranquil countenance as when at rest. Thus,
-Socrates at Potidæa, at Delion, in the Prison of
-the Eleven about to quaff the hemlock, would in
-looks be much the same. And this self-command,
-observable in one great man, art attributed generally
-to the gods and heroes, who, in whatever actions
-they might be engaged, would still retain a self-possessed
-and serene aspect. Hence, even the battle-pieces
-of the Greeks are beautiful. Men fight
-and die, but under the guidance of duty. We
-behold none of those demoniacal passions, nothing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>of that animal ferocity, or of that succumbing to
-pain which convert so many modern pictures into
-slaughter-house representations. We feel that the
-actors contemplated death only as the distributor of
-imperishable glory,—that imagination had coloured
-everything around them with its rainbow tints,—that
-by anticipation they enjoyed the panegyric which
-would be pronounced over them in the hearing of
-all they loved,—the monument which would be
-raised over their ashes,—the deathless reward which
-would be bestowed on their patriotism and valour
-in the historic page. To men, so feeling and so
-thinking, where was the sting of death? They could
-compress eternity into a moment, and grasp all future
-time, and live through it by the irresistible force of
-imagination.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>To be able to represent such forms and features,
-it was necessary to study simultaneously the conceptions
-of the poets, and the progressive developement
-of the human figure from infancy to age.
-From this study resulted a body of experience, the
-fruit of innumerable comparisons, out of which sprang
-that gradually corrected and improved and elevated
-conception of the human figure which is denominated
-<em>the ideal</em>. Instances, isolated from the great
-body of artistic study, have crept into ordinary books,
-and been thereby invested with an air of vulgarity.
-But this will not hinder the philosopher or the artist
-from including them in his scheme of study and converting
-them into germs of utility. In this part of
-their progress religion stepped in to the aid of the
-artist. The several goddesses represented each a
-style of women of whom they might be considered
-the original type. Aphrodite, for example, represented
-the impassioned and tender,<a id='r967' /><a href='#f967' class='c018'><sup>[967]</sup></a> naturally parasites
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>of man and too often frail; Hera, the chaste
-matron, dignified, authoritative, energetic, but inclined
-to violence and self-will; Artemis, reserved,
-modest, retiring, like a nun, was the prototype of
-unspotted maidenhood, revered for its own purity;
-Athena, perfect in intellect as in form, uniting the
-loveliness of Aphrodite, the majesty of Hera, the
-delicacy and chastity of Artemis with the wisdom
-of Zeus, constituted properly the ideal of womanhood,
-loftier than Eve before the fall and such as
-it can exist only in the imagination.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In search, however, of female forms to represent
-these ideal originals artists travelled through the
-whole of Greece, gathering up as they went those
-fragments of beauty which, when united, were to
-approach perfection. They resembled Isis in search
-of the limbs of Osiris. Sometimes, as at Crotona
-and Agrigentum, parents did not scruple to expose
-their daughters naked to their eyes, that from them
-they might fashion that loveliness which was to represent
-to their senses the divine being they worshiped.
-But this excess of superstition was rare.
-In general the Hetairæ, their mistresses and companions,
-served for the models after which the soft
-divinities of Greece were moulded:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“If Queensberry to strip there’s no compelling,</div>
- <div class='line'>’Tis from a handmaid we must take a Helen.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>Thus Phryne, idealised by art, became Aphrodite,
-Anadyomene in the hands of Apelles, or Aphrodite
-of Cnidos in those of Praxiteles.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Childhood obtained its representative in Eros the
-god of love. Thus, from infancy upwards, even to
-old age, the human form in all its phases became
-the object of study to the Greek artist, not to be
-servilely copied, but to be idealised, to be clothed
-with poetry, to be divested of everything mean,
-gross, unspiritual, and embalmed in eternal beauty.
-And their success is proved by this, that, even with
-their works before them, modern artists have never
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>been able satisfactorily to imitate their excellences.
-Of this Winkelmann<a id='r968' /><a href='#f968' class='c018'><sup>[968]</sup></a> mentions some examples which
-have not come under my own notice. “Although
-the best modern artists,” he says, “have striven to
-imitate exactly the celebrated Medusa of the Strozzi
-cabinet at Rome, which, nevertheless, is not a
-countenance of the highest beauty, an experienced
-antiquary will always be able to distinguish the
-original from the copy.” The same thing is true,
-he says, with respect to the Pallas of Aspasios,
-engraved by Natter and others. But this is perfectly
-intelligible. The original artist, working after
-his own ideas and comprehending thoroughly his own
-object, would impart to his creations a flexibility, a
-grace, a freedom, not to be reached by one whose
-type existed out of his own mind. For even in
-literature it is thus—language, malleable, expansive,
-obedient to control in the hands of the original
-writer, who breathes into it his own ideas and requires
-it only to drape them, becomes a stiff unmanageable
-mass with the imitator like a corpse put
-in motion by galvanism.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>To be conversant with the arts of Greece, is to
-move among a race of gods endued with eternal
-youth. In the goddesses the small neck, the undeveloped
-bosom convey the idea of virgin innocence.
-The nipple shrinking inward retreats from
-the eye. Over the visage a radiance indescribable
-appears to play; the form, whether draped or undraped,
-suggests the idea of divine unfleeting existence—of
-the poetry of life and love—such as youth
-dreams of in its purest aspirations. For the gods our
-feelings are in a slight degree different. Zeus, invested
-with the majesty of Olympos, in the fulness
-of manhood, powerful, beautiful, sublime, awakens in
-us a mingling of reverence and love, as towards a
-father. Apollo towers like an elder brother above
-our heads. Hades, Poseidon, Ares are powers whom
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>we do not love. Mighty they were, but strangers
-whom our sympathies do not cling to. But Dionysos,
-with his vine garland and beautiful face of
-friendship, with Eros and Heracles and the heroic
-twins and Hephæstos and Seilenos, and the Fauns,
-with every haunter of grove, or spring, or mountain
-seem familiar all and formed to inspire and
-repay affection. They are spirits of joy every one
-of them. They have lived from boyhood in our
-dreams, they have constituted one principal link in
-binding us to the past, one principal argument in
-favour of Grecian genius: and who can do otherwise
-than love them? Nay, in some measure, when
-we consider their manifold escapes from time and
-barbarism, they appear to us as Othello to Desdemona—we
-“love <em>them</em> for the dangers they have
-passed,”—and it asks no faith in miracles to persuade
-us that they “love <em>us</em> that we do pity them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Winkelmann, who on so many questions connected
-with art has put forward opinions highly just and
-philosophical, appears to have fallen short of his
-wonted acumen in the theory he had formed of the
-beauty of the goddesses. His language in fact descends
-to puerility where he says:—"Since on the
-subject of female beauty there are few observations
-to be made, it may be concluded that the
-study of it is less complicated and far easier for
-the artist. Nature itself appears to experience
-less difficulty in the formation of women than of
-men, <em>if it be true</em> that there are born fewer boys
-than girls."<a id='r969' /><a href='#f969' class='c018'><sup>[969]</sup></a> Since the direct contrary is true,
-this imaginary difficulty of Nature (not to hazard
-a more sacred word) may be dismissed with contempt;
-but the remark by which it is ushered in
-requires to be confuted. Artists are well aware, and
-Winkelmann himself admits, that the beau ideal of
-heroic beauty (that for example of Achilles or of
-Theseus) is merely the blending of feminine loveliness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>with masculine power, so as to leave it undetermined,
-from the countenance, to which sex it belongs. And
-still the beauty of the Grecian youth, where they
-are beautiful, consists in a near approach to that of
-the female, so near indeed that they might be easily
-mistaken for women. If, therefore, the beauty of
-men when highest and most perfect, consists chiefly
-in what it borrows from that of woman, the latter
-necessarily constitutes the apex of human beauty;
-and the artist whom this conviction guides in his
-creations, will be the first to rival the great masters
-of antiquity. Another observation which it is
-strange to find in the Historian of Art, is that artists
-draped their female figures because of the little difficulty
-there is in imitating the naked form. But
-was it the extreme facility of representing paternal
-grief that led Timanthes to veil the face of his
-Agamemnon? In draping their goddesses and heroines,
-artists were guided by other reasons, of which
-the principal was their desire to conform to the
-ideas of the poets and to popular belief.</p>
-
-<hr class='c025' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f852'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r852'>852</a>. See Müll. Dor. ii. 313, sqq.
-Cf. Pfeiff. Ant. ii. 57. p. 370.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f853'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r853'>853</a>. To destroy the power of
-Sparta the Achæans could imagine
-no better means than to
-change their system of education.—Plut.
-Vit. Philop. § 16. Paus.
-vii. 8. 5. The Mityleneans, too,
-desirous of breaking the military
-spirit of certain of their allies, forbade
-them to give the least instruction
-to their children.—Ælian,
-V. H. vii. 15. With the
-same view the Emperor Julian
-closed the public schools against
-the Christians.—Gibbon, iv. 111.
-Among our ancestors, too, when
-a blow was meditated against
-Dissenters, no measure more severe
-could be devised than to
-deprive them of education.—Lord
-John Russell, Hist. of Eur.
-i. 273.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f854'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r854'>854</a>. Rep. Lac. ii. 1. Cf. Pfeiff.
-Ant. p. 370.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f855'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r855'>855</a>. Lycurg. 28. Müll. Dor. ii.
-39. Commonly, also, the nurses
-of the kings were Helots.—Plut.
-Ages. § 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f856'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r856'>856</a>. Plut. Inst. Lac. § 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f857'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r857'>857</a>. De Rep. Laced. ii. 5. Cf.
-Plut. Lycurg. § 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f858'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r858'>858</a>. And keen it must needs have
-been before they could have relished
-their black broth, with a
-dose of which Dionysios once made
-an experiment upon his stomach.
-Having put a spoonful of the compound
-into his mouth, he instantly
-spat it out again, declaring that
-he could not swallow it, for it
-was the filthiest stuff he had ever
-tasted; upon which his Spartan
-cook remarked, “You should
-have first bathed in the Eurotas.”—Plut.
-Inst. Lac. § 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f859'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r859'>859</a>. De Rep. Lac. ii. 2. Lycurg.
-§ 17. Cf. Hesych. v.
-Παιδονόμος.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f860'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r860'>860</a>. Athen. vi. 102.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f861'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r861'>861</a>. Müll. ii. 314.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f862'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r862'>862</a>. Harpocrat. v. Μόθωνες.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f863'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r863'>863</a>. De Rep. Lac. iii. 3. 3.
-Schneid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f864'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r864'>864</a>. Diog. Laert. ii. c. vi. § 10.
-Xen. Hellen. v. 3. 9. Plut. Ages.
-§ 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f865'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r865'>865</a>. Ap. Stob. Florileg. 40. 8.
-Gaisf. Cf. Plut. Inst. Lac. § 21,
-22. Athen. vi. 103. Müll. Dor.
-ii. 315. note p.—In Xenophon’s
-Persian Utopia such citizens as
-were too poor to maintain their
-children at school lost the benefits
-of public training; but, according
-to law, the advantages of the Spartan
-system were open to all.—Arist.
-Polit. iv. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f866'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r866'>866</a>. Ælian, Var. Hist. xii. 43.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f867'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r867'>867</a>. Plut. Ages. § i.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f868'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r868'>868</a>. Müll. Dor. ii. 315.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f869'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r869'>869</a>. On the democratic tendency
-of Spartan discipline see Bœckh.
-in Plat. Min. 181. sqq. Isocrat.
-Areop. § 14–16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f870'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r870'>870</a>. Plut. Lycurg. § 17. Inst. Lac. § 5. Xen. de Rep. Lac. ii. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f871'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r871'>871</a>. Plut. Inst. Lac. § 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f872'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r872'>872</a>. Ælian. V. H. xiv. 7. Plut.
-Inst. Lac. § 13. Athen. xii. 74.—Apropos
-of this subject, the
-ancients have left us a very curious
-anecdote. Dionysios, son of
-Clearchos, the first tyrant of Heraclea,
-having succeeded to the
-government of his country, became
-insensibly so corpulent by his
-daily excess and extreme niceness
-in the choice of his viands, that he
-was nearly suffocated by the
-enormous mass of his fat. Every
-time he fell into a deep slumber
-it was feared he would never
-wake again; and, to rouse him
-from his lethargy, the physicians
-were often compelled to thrust
-long, sharp needles into his body
-until they reached the quick,
-upon which he would again exhibit
-signs of animation. Of this
-prodigious obesity his majesty
-was so much ashamed, however,
-that, when transacting business
-or giving audience to strangers,
-he would ensconce himself behind
-a large trunk, so that no part of
-him was visible but his face.
-Yet, in spite of this infirmity, he
-lived fifty-five years and reigned
-thirty-three; and, to the honour
-of corpulence be it remarked,
-that no tyrant ever before exhibited
-so much mildness and
-moderation.—Id. xii. 72.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f873'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r873'>873</a>. Xen. Rep. Lac. ii. 6.—This
-writer observes, that what might
-be filched was determined by law.—Anab.
-iv. 6. 14. And Plutarch
-explains, that they might take as
-much food as they could.—Inst.
-Lac. § 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f874'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r874'>874</a>. Xen. de Rep. Lac. ii. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f875'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r875'>875</a>. Anab. iv. vi. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f876'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r876'>876</a>. De Rep. Lac. ii. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f877'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r877'>877</a>. Schneid. in Xen. de Rep.
-Lac. ii. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f878'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r878'>878</a>. Sometimes to death.—Plut.
-Inst. Lac. § 39. Vit. Aristid. §
-17. Pausan. iii. 16. 6. Sext.
-Empir. Pyrrh. Hypot. iii. 24. p.
-153. c. Spanheim ad Callim. in
-Dian. 174. The Scholiast on
-Pindar derives this name of Artemis
-from Mount Orthion or
-Orthosion in Arcadia.—Olymp.
-iii. 54. Cf. Lycoph. 1330. with
-the Schol. of Tzetzes. Schol.
-Plat. de Legg. p. 224. Ruhnk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f879'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r879'>879</a>. Arcad. viii. 23. 1. Meurs.
-(Græc. Fer. p. 256,) understands
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>sese flagellabant</i></span>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f880'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r880'>880</a>. The Platonic Scholiast confounds
-this practice with the
-Crypteia, so called, he says,
-because the youth were compelled
-to conceal themselves
-while they subsisted on plunder.
-Ἀπολύοντες γὰρ ἕκαστον γυμνὸν,
-προσέταττον ἐνιαυτὸν ὅλον ἔξω ἐν
-τοῖς ὄρεσι πλανᾶσθαι, καὶ τρέφειν
-ἑαυτὸν διὰ κλοπῆς, καὶ τῶν τοιούτων,
-οὕτω δὲ ὥστε μηδενὶ κατάδηλον
-γενέσθαι· διὸ καὶ κρύπτεια ὠνόμασται·
-ἐκολάζοντο γὰρ οἱ ὅπου δήποτε
-ὀφθέντες.—Ad Legg. p. 225.
-Ruhnk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f881'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r881'>881</a>. For a fuller account of this
-institution see Book V. Chapter
-VIII.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f882'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r882'>882</a>. Polit. viii. 3. 3.—To this
-may be added the testimony of
-Plato, who evidently, without naming
-them, means to describe the
-Spartans, where he speaks of a
-people wholly given up to the
-study of bodily exercises, and by
-that means becoming brutal and
-ferocious.—De Rep. t. vi. p. 154.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f883'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r883'>883</a>. Dorians, ii. 319. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f884'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r884'>884</a>. Ταῦτα μόνα μὴ κωλύσαντος
-ἀγωνίζεσθαι τοὺς πολίτας, ἐν οἷς
-χεὶρ οὺκ ἀνατείνεται.—Plut. Lycurg.
-§ 19. The exercises, in
-which the admission of being vanquished
-was made by holding up
-the hand, are elsewhere named:—Πυγμὴν
-δὲ καὶ παγκράτιον ἀγωνίζεσθαι
-ἐκώλυσεν, ἵνα μηδὲ παίζοντες
-ἀπαυδᾷν ἐθίζωνται.—Reg.
-Apophtheg. Lycurg. 4. Apophtheg.
-Lacon. Lycurg. 23.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f885'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r885'>885</a>. Müll. ii. 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f886'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r886'>886</a>. Cic. Tusc. Disput. v. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f887'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r887'>887</a>. Paus. iii. 11. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f888'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r888'>888</a>. Paus. iii. 14. 8. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f889'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r889'>889</a>. Anachars. § 38.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f890'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r890'>890</a>. Cf. Ubb. Emm. Antiq. Græc.
-iii. 89. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f891'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r891'>891</a>. Ἀγέλη for the boys, συσσίτιον
-for the men.—Strab. x. 4. p.
-379. Müll. (Dor. ii. 326.) uses
-both indiscriminately.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f892'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r892'>892</a>. Strab. x. 4. p. 380. seq.—This
-agrees with what Plato relates
-of the Cretan polity.—De
-Legg. t. vii. p. 260. t. viii. p. 86.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f893'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r893'>893</a>. De Rep. Lac. v. 9.—At a
-later period the reputation of being
-the handsomest men in Greece
-was enjoyed by certain young men
-of Athens.—Æschin. cont. Tim.
-§ 31.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f894'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r894'>894</a>. Herod. ix. 72.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f895'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r895'>895</a>. Cf. Ælian. Var. Hist. xii. 50.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f896'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r896'>896</a>. Stob. Florileg. vii. 67.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f897'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r897'>897</a>. Plut. Inst. Lac. § 14. seq.—The
-Spartans sacrificed to the muses
-before going to battle in order that
-they might perform something worthy
-of notice by them.—Id. § 16.
-It is remarked of king Cleomenes
-that he studied philosophy under
-Sphæros the Borysthenite who was
-likewise permitted to impart his
-system to the other youth.—Id.
-Cleom. § 2.—Cf. Diog. Laert. vii. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f898'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r898'>898</a>. In later times learning grew
-to be more highly valued. Thus
-it was ordained by law that the
-youth should assemble annually
-in the Hall of the Ephori to hear
-the work of Dicæarchos on the constitution
-of their country read to
-them.—Suid. v. Δικαίαρχ. t. i. p.
-730. d.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f899'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r899'>899</a>. Inst. Lac. § 4. Lycurg. § 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f900'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r900'>900</a>. Panathen. § 83. Τοσοῦτον
-ἀπολελειμμένοι τῆς κοινῆς παιδείας
-καὶ φιλοσοφίας εἰσιν ὥστ᾽
-οὐδὲ γράμματα μανθάνουσιν.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f901'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r901'>901</a>. Var. Hist. xii. 50.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f902'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r902'>902</a>. So again in Ælian. Var. Hist.
-iv. 15. Gelo, king of Syracuse, an
-illiterate person is termed ἄμουσος.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f903'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r903'>903</a>. T. v. p. 418.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f904'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r904'>904</a>. Protag. t. i. p. 209.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f905'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r905'>905</a>. Not. ad Ælian. xii. 50.—From
-an ironical passage of Plato we
-may likewise infer that they were
-able genealogists and story-tellers.—Hipp.
-Maj. t. v. p. 419.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f906'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r906'>906</a>. The laws of Sparta were in
-this respect, as in many others,
-merely imitations of those of Crete.—Sext.
-Empir. adv. Mathemat.
-l. ii. p. 68. Plutarch having remarked
-that they did learn to read,
-adds—τῶν δὲ ἄλλων παιδευμάτων
-ξενηλασίαν ἐποιοῦτο, οὐ μᾶλλον
-ἀνθρώπων ἢ λόγων.—Instit. Lac.
-§ 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f907'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r907'>907</a>. Cressol. Theat. Rhet. i. 12.
-p. 88.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f908'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r908'>908</a>. Dissert. ix. p. 118.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f909'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r909'>909</a>. Cf. Athen. xiv. 33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f910'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r910'>910</a>. Dissert. vii. p. 91.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f911'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r911'>911</a>. Plut. Inst. Lac. § 17.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f912'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r912'>912</a>. Max. Tyr. iv. p. 54. Cic. de
-Legg. ii. 15.—Cicero, though apt
-in most cases to defer to the
-opinion of Plato, hangs back here.
-He does not, indeed, consider it a
-matter of indifference what songs
-are sung, or what airs prevail in
-a state; but neither does he credit
-the inferences drawn too subtilely
-by the great philosopher from his
-musical theory.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f913'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r913'>913</a>. Dorians. ii. 340.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f914'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r914'>914</a>. Demosth. in Mid. § 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f915'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r915'>915</a>. Athen. xv. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f916'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r916'>916</a>. Paus. iii. 11. 9.—Müller, ii.
-341., supposes the whole agora
-may have been thus denominated.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f917'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r917'>917</a>. Xen. de Rep. Lac. ix. 5.
-Plut. Lycurg. § 15.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f918'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r918'>918</a>. Aristot. Pol. viii. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f919'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r919'>919</a>. Cf. Müll. Dor. ii. 342.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f920'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r920'>920</a>. iv. 20. 7. Athen. xiv. 21. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f921'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r921'>921</a>. Athen. xiv. 29.—The armed
-dance was in particular favour
-with Plato.—De Legg. vii. t.
-viii. p. 17. Boys danced in armour
-during the Panathenaia at
-Athens.—Sch. Aristoph. Nub.
-935.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f922'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r922'>922</a>. Plat. de Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 54.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f923'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r923'>923</a>. Athen. xiv. 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f924'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r924'>924</a>. Müll. Dor. ii. 351.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f925'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r925'>925</a>. Creuz. Com. Herod. i. 230.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f926'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r926'>926</a>. Lucian de Saltat. § 10. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f927'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r927'>927</a>. Pac. 614. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f928'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r928'>928</a>. By Winkelmann, Hist. de
-l’Art, i. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f929'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r929'>929</a>. It is remarked by Winkelmann
-that Rubens painted the
-figures of Flemings after many
-years’ residence in Italy.—i. 60.
-The Greek grew up from infancy
-in the presence of the beauty he
-afterwards represented: his mother,
-his sisters, his father, and
-all around him. What he saw
-constituted the basis of what he
-painted or sculptured. In most
-modern nations the school models
-of our youth are Greek; but their
-home models, and which are to
-them models from the cradle, are
-of a different style. Hence they
-are under two sets of influences,
-the one neutralising the other, and
-producing that coldness which the
-mock classical exhibits. This may,
-perhaps, be one cause of the slow
-progress of art among us.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f930'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r930'>930</a>. Plato, jocularly perhaps, bestows
-the same praise on Egyptian
-art, and Muretus seriously
-adopts his notions: <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Meritoque
-Ægyptios commendat Plato, apud
-quos et pictorum et musicorum
-licentia legibus coërcebatur,
-quod permagni interesse judicarent,
-ut adolescentes à teneris
-annis honestis picturis, et
-honestis cantibus assuefierent.”</span>—In
-Aristot. Ethic. p. 249.
-But perhaps Plato had not looked
-very narrowly into the sacred
-sculptures of Egypt which in
-reality abound with images offensive
-to decency.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f931'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r931'>931</a>. See Winkel. t. i. p. 7.—Pollux
-gives a list of the names under
-which the representations of the
-gods were classed.—i. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f932'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r932'>932</a>. Plat. de Repub. t. vi. p. 354.
-Cf. Hipp. Maj. t. v. p. 410.—Winkelmann
-slightly misinterprets
-the sense of Plato.—Hist.
-de l’Art, t. i. p. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f933'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r933'>933</a>. Cf. Winkelmann, t. i. p. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f934'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r934'>934</a>. Paus. vii. 24. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f935'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r935'>935</a>. Id. ix. 22. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f936'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r936'>936</a>. Id. ix. 22. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f937'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r937'>937</a>. Euripides, speaking of course
-as a poet, pronounces beauty to be
-worthy of supreme power. But
-many ancient nations were seriously
-of this mind, and chose the
-finest person among them to be
-their king: which was the practice
-of those Ethiopians called the
-Immortals.—Athen. xiii. 20. If
-by Ethiopians be meant the people
-now known under the name of
-Nubians, I am sure they had
-very good reason to encourage
-beauty, than which there is, at
-this day, nothing more rare in
-their country.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f938'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r938'>938</a>. V. 47.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f939'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r939'>939</a>. Opian. Cyneg. i. 357. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f940'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r940'>940</a>. Deipnosoph. xiii. 90. Eustath.
-ad Il. τ. 282. relates briefly
-the same facts, concluding with
-the very words made use of by
-Athenæus. Palmerius, who, in
-his remarks on Diogenes Laertius
-quotes them, immediately adds:
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“quæ non dubito Eustathiun ab
-aliquo auctore antiquo accepisse.”</span>—Exercit.
-in Auct. Græc.
-p. 448. In which conjecture he
-was right; and that ancient author
-was Nicias in his history of
-Arcadia.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f941'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r941'>941</a>. Schol. ad Il. ι. 129. Cf.
-Meurs. Gr. Fer. p. 177. Hedyl. in
-Anth. Gr. vi. 292. Athen. xiii. 90.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f942'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r942'>942</a>. Athen. xiii. 90.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f943'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r943'>943</a>. Ap. Athen. xiii. 90.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f944'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r944'>944</a>. Lutat. ad Stat. Theb. viii.
-178. Cf. Barth. iii. 828. Hist.
-de l’Art, i. 319. Carlo Fea with
-a simplicity rare in an Italian,
-remarks upon this: <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Il est question
-ici de baise-mains!”</span> The
-Apollo intended is Apollo Philesias,
-whose statue was sculptured
-in Æginetic marble by Canachos.—Plin.
-Hist. Nat. xxxiv. 19. 14.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f945'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r945'>945</a>. Sch. in Theocrit. xii. 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f946'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r946'>946</a>. Æschin. cont. Tim. § 31.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f947'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r947'>947</a>. Orat. 21. t. 1. p. 500. sqq.
-Reiske.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f948'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r948'>948</a>. At the same time the earnings
-of inferior sculptors were
-small.—Luc. Somm. § 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f949'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r949'>949</a>. Cf. Plut. Thes. § 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f950'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r950'>950</a>. Pausan. ii. 23. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f951'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r951'>951</a>. Pausan. viii. 53. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f952'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r952'>952</a>. Id. v. 10. Wink. iv. 1. § 12.
-p. 332.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f953'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r953'>953</a>. Εἰς Ὀλυμπίαν μὲν ἀποδημεῖτε
-ἵν᾽ εἰδῆτε τὸ ἔργον τοῦ Φειδίου·
-καὶ ἀτύχημα ἕκαστος ὕμων
-οἴεται, τὸ ἀνιστόρητον τούτον
-ἀποθανεῖν.—Arrian. Com. in
-Epict. l. i. p. 27.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f954'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r954'>954</a>. Plin. Hist. Nat. xxxv. 35.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f955'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r955'>955</a>. Ælian, Var. Hist. iv. 12.
-Cf. Meurs. ad Lycoph. Cassand.
-131. p. 1189. and Val. Max.
-iii. 7.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f956'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r956'>956</a>. Lucian. Herod. § 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f957'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r957'>957</a>. Diog. Laert. iii. 5.—Aristot.
-Pol. viii. 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f958'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r958'>958</a>. Plin. Hist. Nat. xxxv. 35.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f959'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r959'>959</a>. Phot. Bib. p. 149.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f960'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r960'>960</a>. Hist. de l’Art, l. iv. c. 1. §
-13.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f961'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r961'>961</a>. Galen, Protrept. § 8. t. i. p.
-19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f962'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r962'>962</a>. On the interior of this statue
-inhabited by rats and mice. See
-Luc. Som. seu. Gall. § 24.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f963'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r963'>963</a>. Polyb. iv. 340. d. Winkel. iv.
-1. 15. The Eros of Thespiæ, also,
-and the Aphrodite of Cnidos, were
-famous. Luc. Amor. § 11. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f964'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r964'>964</a>. Winkel. iv. 1. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f965'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r965'>965</a>. Quintil. xii. 10. Plin. Hist.
-Nat. xxxv. 36.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f966'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r966'>966</a>. In the Stoa of Dionysos, at
-Rhodes, there was a picture gallery
-filled with historical and
-mythic pieces.—Luc. Amor. § 8.
-Similar exhibitions appear to have
-existed at Cnidos, in the portico
-of Sostratos.—§ 11. Works of
-art, sacred to the gods, were likewise
-treasured up at home.—§ 16.
-In some temples, we learn, even
-pictures of immoral tendency, by
-Parrhasios and others, were admitted.—Lobeck,
-Aglaopham. p. 606. Aristotle takes from this
-circumstance occasion to sneer at
-the religion of paganism which
-patronised such excesses.—Polit.
-vii. 15. p. 255. Gœttl.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f967'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r967'>967</a>. An ancient author has the
-following expression: οὐκοῦν τὸ
-θῆλυ, κᾄν λίθινον ᾖ, φιλεῖται· τί
-δ᾽ εἴ τις ἔμψυχον εἶδε τοιοῦτον
-κάλλος;—Luc. Amor. § 17.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Something very like which is
-found in Byron:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“There, too, the Goddess <em>loves in stone</em>, and fills</div>
- <div class='line'>The air around with beauty.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f968'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r968'>968</a>. Hist. de l’Art, iv. 2. 23.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f969'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r969'>969</a>. Hist. de l’Art, iv. 2. 67.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c025' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>
- <h3 class='c024'>CHAPTER X.<br /> HELLENIC LITERATURE.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c032'>From the arts the transition is natural to the
-literature<a id='r970' /><a href='#f970' class='c018'><sup>[970]</sup></a> of Greece, which in the historical period
-necessarily constituted the principal agent in ripening
-and stamping their peculiar character upon the
-fruits of education among the people. Literature
-is in fact the school-mistress of nations. In it so
-long as it remains entire, we may contemplate the
-whole character, intellectual and moral, of the race
-out of whose passions, yearnings, tastes, and energies
-it may be said to be fashioned. And this, true
-of all literature, is especially applicable to that of
-Greece, which more than any other bears the impress
-of nationality. Every idea, every image, every
-maxim, every reflection seems to emanate from one
-source. Nothing is foreign. Neither the inspiration,
-nor the spirit which regulated it and moulded
-it into beauty, borrowed a single impulse from anything
-existing beyond the circle of Hellenic thought.
-Greece supplied at once the matrix and the materials,
-the active power and that delicate sense of
-beauty and perfection which presided over its organisation
-and rendered it the delight of mankind.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In characterising this literature many singular notions
-have been broached. We have been told that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>its spirit is exclusively masculine, which means, of
-course, that while it abounds with strength and energy,
-with sublimity of speculation and impassioned
-and impetuous impulses, it is wanting in that sweetness,
-delicacy, grace, and tenderness which confer
-on the intellectual offspring of some modern nations
-a feminine aspect. Grecian literature, however, is
-neither masculine nor feminine, but androgynous like
-the son of Aphrodite and Hermes. There is no excellence
-of thought or language, of which, even in
-its present fragmentary state, it does not offer us
-some example. There is a predominance, doubtless,
-of stern grandeur and colossal elevation of thought;
-but, beside these, we discover frequently modifications
-of light and airy beauty, infantine purity of
-sentiment, ease, grace, felicitous negligence, and a
-dreamy luxury of speculation not to be outdone by
-the most subtile and fanciful literature existing. If
-there be a deficiency of any thing, it is of spirituality.
-The imagination of the Greeks confined itself
-too rigidly perhaps to this “bank and shoal of time.”
-Not being able to lift the veil which curtains the
-realms beyond the grave, it busied itself too little
-about those things with which the disembodied soul
-must converse for ever. In most Greek writers
-there is a visible reluctance to walk amid the forms
-of Hades. Their fancy will not be conducted beyond
-the limits of the visible universe, but shudders,
-rears and reverts its eyes towards the light where
-alone it finds firm footing for speculation. But on
-the other hand if it refuse to quit this earthly scene
-of existence, how glorious is the flood of sunshine
-and splendour which it pours over it! It is in
-these walks of literature that we discover truly the
-freshness and the loveliness of morning. The very
-clouds that hover over the landscape only add to its
-majesty, by diversifying the prospect and introducing
-those shadows and contrasts which the mind delights
-everywhere to discover.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>Poets,<a id='r971' /><a href='#f971' class='c018'><sup>[971]</sup></a> it is constantly repeated, commence in
-every country the mental movement which evolves
-civilisation out of the chaos of barbarism; but it remains
-a mystery how and by what they themselves
-are moved. There may possibly be something more
-than a figure of speech in the old affirmation that
-they were inspired of heaven. Their imagination
-towered to so great a height that it was kindled by
-the lamps of the firmament, and may be regarded
-as that fabled Prometheus who applied the flame
-of science to the human clay. I do not therefore
-see what objection can be urged against our maintaining
-the old doctrine that poets partook and partake
-still, when their minds are pure, of a divine
-impulse—that to the infant nations of the earth they
-were teachers commissioned from on high.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The condition of the mind in those early ages
-when poets were the only oracles, it is difficult for
-men surfeited with the luxuries of a prolific literature
-to comprehend. Among the Arabs of the desert
-we may still perhaps discover something similar.
-Deprived of books, but enjoying much leisure, they
-eagerly treasure up in their memories the moral
-distich, the apologue, the tale which instructs while
-it delights, and thus mentally furnished with a few
-weapons they are often wiser in deliberation, more
-persuasive in discourse, more ready in action than
-persons of education in civilised countries, whose intellectual
-armoury is so full that in the moment of
-danger they know not what weapon to choose. Poets,
-among such a race and under such circumstances,
-feel that they have a high mission to fulfil; their
-endeavours are not by polished rhythmical trifles to
-amuse a few rich and noble persons, but to clothe in
-befitting language and marry to immortal verse those
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>great central truths, upon which the whole system
-of the future world of civilisation must revolve. We
-find them always curiously adapting their revelations
-to the times. First, the great fundamental truths
-of religion, the basis of the social structure, are infused
-into the public mind. Next the rudiments of
-politics and legislation, the precepts of agriculture,
-the leading rules of the useful arts, the observances
-of civil life, and the first faint whispers of the passions
-and affections are treasured up in their lays.
-Then, growing bolder by degrees, they aim at subduing
-the whole empire of knowledge, and impetuously,
-with numerous charms and allurements, hurry
-mankind forward in a sort of orgiastic rapture to
-the very threshold of philosophy.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Among the earliest names in the literary traditions
-of Hellas are those of Olen, Pamphos, Musæos
-and Orpheus,<a id='r972' /><a href='#f972' class='c018'><sup>[972]</sup></a> who, for their wisdom, are said to be
-sprung from the gods. They were sacred bards,
-whose genius obtained for them an ascendency over
-the minds of their countrymen. Yet all they attempted,
-perhaps, was to teach the doctrine of prayer,
-thanksgiving, sacrifice, which, being afterwards misunderstood,
-caused them to be confounded with those
-impostors and incantation-mongers, who, in more recent
-times, granted absolutions and sold indulgences
-both to individuals and states, with a hardihood
-worthy of Giovanni di Medici. Musæos, older probably
-than Orpheus, though sometimes regarded as
-his disciple, is said by certain traditions to have been
-a teacher of ethics, who delivered a body of moral
-precepts in four thousand verses. His country is
-unknown,—for he is now represented as an Athenian,
-now as a Thracian,—but his name and the name of
-Orpheus and Eumolpos are associated with the expiations,
-orgies, mysteries, celebrated during many
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>ages in honour of Demeter and Dionysos.<a id='r973' /><a href='#f973' class='c018'><sup>[973]</sup></a> We must
-rest content, however, with very imperfect notions
-of what they were, for, in looking back at these
-great men, whom we behold on the edge of the
-horizon, enlarged like the sun at its setting by
-misty exhalations, but by the same means rendered
-dim and obscure, we can form no just idea of their
-character.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>These, however, and such as these, were the men
-who fabricated the first link in that chain of thought
-and beauty, which, stretching over the gulf of time
-and fastened to the skies, still holds up the nations
-of the earth from sinking into barbarism. Literature
-is degraded when contemplated as an art or
-as an amusement. It is a paradise, into which the
-best fruits of the soul, when arrived at their greatest
-maturity and beauty, are transplanted to bloom in
-immortal freshness and fragrance. It is the garner
-wherein the seeds of religion, virtue, morals, national
-greatness and individual happiness are preserved for
-the use of humanity. It is a gallery, where the likenesses
-of all the great and noble souls who have shed
-light and glory on the earth, are treasured up as the
-heirloom and palladium of the human race. It is
-impossible, therefore, for any but the most sordid
-minds to look back towards the venerable fathers
-of literature without a deep thrill of filial reverence
-and love, conjoined with the generous impulse and
-yearning desire to enlarge and add fresh brightness
-to the halo which encircles their names. They were
-not, what since too many have been, the instruments
-and panders to the pleasures of worldlings. Conscious
-of the holy mission wherewith, according to
-their creed, the father of gods and men had intrusted
-them, they stood forward as the apostles of truth,
-encircled by the majesty which a sense of divine
-inspiration must impart. They felt a harmony within
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>their souls which, in manifesting itself, sought the
-aid of harmonious language; and hence the precepts
-of wisdom, distilling from their lips like honey from
-the honeycomb, moulded themselves naturally into
-verse, at whose sound the fountains of the great deep
-of knowledge were broken up, and the windows of
-heaven opened, and a deluge of philosophy and science
-and intellectual delight poured forth upon the
-amazed world.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In what age or province of Greece arose the first
-minister of this poetical revelation, it is not now possible
-to decide. The art of writing, however, which
-the Egyptian king regarded as the enemy of memory,
-had not passed the Ægæan. The songs men heard were
-wafted on the wings of music from tongue to tongue,
-and, by degrees, the professors of this marvellous art,
-by which the wisdom and the glory of the past were
-embalmed in the sweets of verse, embodied themselves
-into a distinct order called Aoidoi or Singers.<a id='r974' /><a href='#f974' class='c018'><sup>[974]</sup></a> The
-life of these men in the remote ages of antiquity is
-little known to us. Wanderers, however, for the most
-part they were, in some respects not unlike the Jongleurs
-and Troubadours of the middle ages, though
-occupying a higher station and guided by a higher
-aim. Their first and ostensible object was, doubtless,
-to delight; but it is of great importance to inspire
-men with a delight in lofty and ennobling conceptions,—to
-withdraw them for a moment from pursuits sordid
-or brutalising or unmanly, to the contemplation
-of heroic acts,—of honour, of patriotism, of friendship,—of
-the great and solid advantages accruing from
-peace and commerce, and the experience of travel and
-adversity.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>What were the rewards they obtained it is easy to
-conjecture. They consisted, principally, in the rays of
-joy reflected back upon them by a thousand happy
-countenances at once. Gain they neither would nor
-could regard. He who renders multitudes wise and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>happy must be happy and wise himself; and wisdom
-scorns to measure its gifts against gold. The truly
-wise and great man, therefore, if fortune have originally
-befriended him, will shower his benefactions, as
-God his rain, liberally and without distinction upon all;
-and if necessity compel him to receive some return,
-his moderation will content itself with the least possible
-amount. Embraced within the circle of refinement
-which they themselves had created, however,
-they gradually became secularised, though we must be
-careful to distinguish them from their successors of a
-later age. The prodigious admiration which they and
-their songs excited may be learned from those passages
-in Homer where Phemios and Demodocos are introduced,
-and from that animated dialogue of Plato, in
-which the rhapsodist Ion describes his office and his
-audience. It has been justly remarked, that if this
-man, a mere actor, could hurry into whatever channel
-he pleased the affections of a whole theatre, melt them
-into tears, fire them with indignation, or clothe their
-countenances with the smiles of joy, much more would
-the poets themselves work upon their passions by an
-art far nearer nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Care must, no doubt, be taken not to confound the
-Rhapsodists with the Aoidoi who preceded them,
-though it be certain that the manners and condition
-of the later race may serve to throw considerable light
-on those of the earlier. Both have recently much
-occupied the attention of the learned; and Wolff in
-particular deserves credit for his defence of the Rhapsodists,
-into which, however, he was chiefly led by the
-requirements of his celebrated theory. They were certainly,
-at first, a remarkable order of men, whom it
-would be injurious to confound with their frivolous
-representatives in the age of Plato and Xenophon.
-Nevertheless, the above distinguished scholar is perhaps
-inclined to exaggerate their merits, since to them,
-in his opinion, we owe it that the great Homeric
-poems have come down to us. But this is taking for
-granted the matter in dispute between him and his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>opponents, who maintain that the author of the Iliad
-and Odyssey possessed both the knowledge and the
-materials for writing. He, with reason however, assumes
-that both theatrical and oratorical action found
-a way opened for them by the rhapsodic art, though its
-professors were neither actors nor orators, but men
-exercising an office connected with a peculiar state of
-society, and no longer existing in modern times.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It has often been supposed, grounding the opinion
-on a false interpretation of the word <em>rhapsodist</em>, that
-the members of this fraternity were mere compilers or
-patchers up of poems from fragments pilfered out of
-various authors. And, to augment the absurdity, the
-practice of a recent age has been attributed to remote
-antiquity, when, as some imagine, the great rhapsodists
-like a modern lecturer, carried about with them pictures
-of the subject they were upon, and pointed out
-to the audience with a stick<a id='r975' /><a href='#f975' class='c018'><sup>[975]</sup></a> the various characters
-or incidents they might be describing. Another error
-much insisted on by Wolff, is the supposition that the
-Homeric poems alone were chanted by the older
-Rhapsodists, which no doubt is contrary to the testimony
-of antiquity and to common sense. For, as
-might naturally be concluded, not only the songs of
-Hesiod<a id='r976' /><a href='#f976' class='c018'><sup>[976]</sup></a> and the whole epic race were thus publicly
-sung, but those likewise of the lyric and iambic poets,
-and the very laws of the state when the legislator
-happened to have composed them in verse. It must
-nevertheless be remarked, (though of this Wolff takes
-no notice,) that so much did recitations of Homer’s
-works predominate over all others, that Rhapsodists
-and Homerists were often regarded as synonymous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>terms;<a id='r977' /><a href='#f977' class='c018'><sup>[977]</sup></a> and even in later ages, when at any rate the
-art of writing was not unknown, Demetrius Phalereus
-introduced upon the stage a class of reciters, who,
-down to the days of Athenæus, enjoyed the name of
-Homerists. Still, as I have observed above, the works
-of other good poets were at times recited, as Hesiod,
-Archilochos, Mimnermos, and Phocylides. Nay, the
-Rhapsodist Mnasion, as Lysanias relates, used to recite
-the Iambics of Simonides; Cleomenes, the Purifications
-of Empedocles, and Hegesius the comedian,
-the Histories of Herodotus; that is, some portions of
-them I presume. Certain authors delivered their own
-productions in this way,<a id='r978' /><a href='#f978' class='c018'><sup>[978]</sup></a> as Xenophanes, who composed
-both epics, elegies and iambics.<a id='r979' /><a href='#f979' class='c018'><sup>[979]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It has with reason been observed that although the
-name of the rhapsodic art would seem to have been
-invented posterior to Homer, the thing itself existed
-long before, and was held in greater honour than at
-any subsequent period. In fact, the poets of those
-times were themselves Rhapsodists, and for many ages
-the only ones, if it be true that Hesiod<a id='r980' /><a href='#f980' class='c018'><sup>[980]</sup></a> was the first
-who reduced the chanting of other men’s poems into
-an art. Afterwards, from the age of Terpander the
-Lesbian (Olymp. 34) down to Cynæthos of Chios
-(Olymp. 69) supposed to have been the author of the
-Homeric Hymn to Apollo, and a man of distinguished
-genius, the Rhapsodists sometimes chanted the poems
-of others, sometimes their own, and occasionally perhaps
-interpolated new verses into the golden relics of
-the past, as our modern actors often foist their one-legged
-jokes into the stage text of Shakespeare. There
-appears, however, to be no foundation for the notion,
-that nearly every one of these chanters was likewise a
-clever poet, which no ancient writer, I believe, asserts,
-and which the assertions of fifty would not render
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>credible, though the probability is, that of those numerous
-rhapsodists some were themselves poets, and
-others desirous, without the genius, of being thought
-such; so that it is quite as likely that their vanity
-frequently laid claim to the works of others, where detection
-could be escaped, as that others were suffered
-to rob them of their just fame.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>They who contend for the flourishing of the system
-of castes in Greece, would probably maintain that
-the Rhapsodists constituted from the first <em>a clan</em>, as
-the Homeridæ are said to have been in Chios.<a id='r981' /><a href='#f981' class='c018'><sup>[981]</sup></a>
-Among the few arts which commanded the undivided
-time and study of numerous professors in
-those ages, that of the Aoidos or Poet, was certainly
-one, and that, too, the most honoured and revered.
-Doubtless their characters were pure and noble, to
-overcome the envy which superior abilities usually
-inspire. For whether at home or abroad, in their
-native cities no less than in the public assemblies,
-and at the festive boards of kings, they were regarded
-as dear to gods and venerable to men. The Rhapsodists
-likewise enjoyed the same estimation and led
-the same kind of life until other studies and other
-manners, with that most debasing of all passions, the
-love of gain, brought contempt on their profession
-and pursuits.<a id='r982' /><a href='#f982' class='c018'><sup>[982]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In the Homeric poems themselves we discover
-abundant proofs of the high honour in which the
-professors of the poetical art were held by their
-countrymen. They fulfilled in Greece<a id='r983' /><a href='#f983' class='c018'><sup>[983]</sup></a> the office
-performed among the Hebrews by the Schools of the
-Prophets,<a id='r984' /><a href='#f984' class='c018'><sup>[984]</sup></a> or the solitary possessors of the vaticinatory
-power who revealed to their countrymen the will of
-heaven, and taught by what practices it might be
-propitiated. Some institution of this kind probably
-existed, as I have already observed, from the very dawn
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>of civilisation which it principally created. Most
-princes, like Agamemnon, Alcinoüs and Odysseus,
-retained in their palaces a man at once their chaplain
-and their laureate, who, when guests foreign or
-domestic assembled at their board, might administer
-instruction and delight, by chanting the praises of
-the gods, the exploits or greatness of their ancestors,
-or even by delivering precepts in morals or the
-useful arts. To a poet, also, as to the holiest of
-guardians, kings entrusted the care of their wives and
-families,<a id='r985' /><a href='#f985' class='c018'><sup>[985]</sup></a> when departing on distant expeditions; and
-so great was the veneration paid to their character,
-that we find Clytemnæstra banishing the poet before
-she dares to become the paramour of Ægisthos.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But those men of great original genius whose fame
-spread rapidly, and who probably found superior
-enjoyment in the independence of a wandering life,
-not content with the patronage of a single prince, or
-the admiration of a single people, moved perpetually
-from land to land, enhancing at once their glory and
-experience. We in fact discover in Homer, Pindar,
-and other original poets proofs that the flowers from
-which they collected the honey of their melodies
-grew not all on one spot. Odysseus was a type of
-the bard who sang his adventures, and looking still
-further back we find the Thracian Thamyris, whom
-the Muses were said to have punished for his vanity,
-penetrating into the obscurest parts of Peloponnesos,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>protected by the sanctity of his character and the
-reverence due to his profession.<a id='r986' /><a href='#f986' class='c018'><sup>[986]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>With respect to Homer, both ancient tradition and
-the form and spirit of his poems, require us to consider
-him in this light, though there is no ground for
-supposing him with Payne Knight to have celebrated
-the different heroes of Greece for the purpose of
-ingratiating himself with their descendants.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Those writers who imagine the works of Homer
-to have been composed fortuitously by a club of poets,
-all actuated by a blind instinct to produce a number
-of parts which, when completed, should fit as well together
-as the several members of a statue, are necessarily
-desirous to establish two points: first, that
-the Aoidoi recited their works from memory, and that
-because, secondly, the art of writing was unknown.
-By far too much ingenuity has already been expended
-on this question to allow it to be any longer tempting
-from its novelty. Wolff and Heyne have obtained
-all the credit they sought by their visionary hypothesis,
-and the echoes of their scepticism are not
-yet silenced in the academies and universities. The
-argument, derived from the practice of the Rhapsodists,
-of repeating from memory, is attended by two
-inconveniences: first, it cannot be shown that the
-order arose before the art of writing was common;
-second, these recitations were equally made from memory,
-not only in the age of Pericles, but down to
-the latest period of their flourishing. It may, therefore,
-without the slightest risk to the argument, be
-granted the academic sceptics that the Rhapsodists
-recited from memory, even when we know with certainty
-that they learned the poems from written
-copies.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>To render more credible the notion that the art
-of writing in the age of Homer was not yet known,
-great stress is laid on the powers of memory in
-certain individuals, though from these nothing can
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>in reality be inferred, except, that when necessary,
-men can certainly remember a great deal. It matters
-little, however, for my present purpose, whether the
-Iliad and Odyssey were written by one man or by
-a hundred; the grandeur of the poetry remains, and
-to it as a great fountain-head may be traced several
-principal streams of Hellenic civilisation.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Plato, indeed, who laboured so assiduously in enlarging
-the empire and corroborating the powers of
-the human understanding, at times maintained the
-fancy that little benefit had been conferred on Greece
-by her bard. He observes, but in a manner so ironical
-that it is difficult to determine his meaning, that
-if Homer and Hesiod had possessed the gift of improving
-their contemporaries in virtue they would
-never have been suffered to wander about chanting
-their poems. People, he thinks, would have constrained
-them by benefits to remain with them, or,
-not succeeding in this, would have quitted their homes
-to attend their footsteps, as in his age many did in
-the case of the sophists.<a id='r987' /><a href='#f987' class='c018'><sup>[987]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>At the same time he admits the general opinion
-to have been that Homer was the great preceptor
-of Hellas, who taught the sciences of politics and
-ethics, together with the whole discipline and economy
-of human life.<a id='r988' /><a href='#f988' class='c018'><sup>[988]</sup></a> Perhaps, notwithstanding his
-great wisdom and his genius, he looked upon the
-question from a wrong point of view, regarding
-poetry as the rival rather than the precursor of
-philosophy. The mission of the former had, however,
-in his time been in a great measure accomplished,
-as far, I mean, as concerned positive teaching;
-and he did not consider that as civilisation
-advances and materialises nations the curb of poetry
-is the more required to check their downward tendencies,
-and direct their head towards the skies.
-The object of poetry is to keep alive in the human
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>breast the love of whatever is noble and beautiful,
-to dazzle the worldling from the worship of gold
-by showing him something more glorious than anything
-that gold can purchase, to accomplish the
-apotheosis of pure affection, of virtue, of disinterestedness,
-of great passions, of patriotism,—and in
-Homer all this is effected with a spontaneous energy,
-which like the ocean appears equal to bear the whole
-weight of humanity clothed with all its attributes
-upon its breast.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Greece has no poet worthy to be compared with our
-Shakespeare and our Milton but Homer, who possesses
-some advantages over them both. Shakespeare, buoyant
-and full of life as was his spirit, felt evidently
-the waves of his imagination lapse at times from
-about him and leave his mind stranded and bare
-on the shores of the immeasurable universe. Melancholy
-creeps over him, like a black vapour, concealing
-the Titanian head wont to tower above the
-region of the clouds. Even over Milton’s soul, serene
-in its fiery brightness as it usually is, I think
-I discover something which at times obscures his
-faith in himself and human nature, and produces a
-flagging of the fancy. But in Homer this never appears.
-Cheerfully and joyously he pursues his course
-with eternal sunshine on his brow, and a heart beating
-full and true, as if the life of all the world were
-within him. There is no end of his vitality. He
-seems as if he could never grow old. His strength
-is inexhaustible. Equal to whatever may happen,
-he nowhere seems to be hurried by his subject, or
-compelled to strain a nerve to accomplish what he
-desires. In himself he appears happy as a god, and
-only to sympathise in human suffering from the boundlessness
-of his charity. He comes forth as the sun in
-the morning, full of brightness, showing all the tears
-that sprinkle the earth and drying them too, but shedding
-none. We call him old, though in reality he
-is all youthfulness and love. Every function of life
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>goes on harmoniously in his frame. He enjoys whatever
-nature brings within the circle of his experience.
-He drinks in with rapture the freshness of
-dawn,—basks smilingly in the blaze of noon,—welcomes
-the stillness of evening—the solemn grandeur
-of night. Sleep, too, has for him inexpressible
-charms, and on the pleasures we taste among its
-bowers he has bestowed every grateful, every endearing
-epithet. Milton is far more spiritual, and careers
-in a course nearer the stars. Shakespeare, in his
-metaphysical subtlety and yearning to pierce beyond
-the grave, suggests stranger thoughts, and calls up
-a wilder world of fancies. But Homer, as if admitted
-behind the veil, never doubts for a moment.
-Habitually, too, his thoughts are of action, of man
-as he is, of the virtue of the citizen, of the soldier,
-of the husband, of the father, of the son, of the wife.
-He loved the world and all that it contains. His
-eye could detect beauty where the atrabilious sceptic
-beholds nothing but deformity.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Hence the universal fame and admiration of his
-writings. For, wherever a well-spring of delight
-exists, the world will discover it and have recourse
-to it for ever. The tragic poets who took up his
-mantle differed widely from him both in temper and
-character. The experiment of civilisation had been
-tried, and been the cause of less happiness than at
-the outset it seemed to promise. A spirit of dissatisfaction
-had consequently grown up in society, which,
-shaken by convulsions within and assaulted from without
-by storms, appeared to be fast resolving into its
-original elements. Upon the minds of the tragic
-poets there accordingly fell a gloomy shadow. They
-looked backwards and around them, and were saddened
-by the view of terrible pictures which the
-dark pencil of Fate was constantly filling up. The
-inexplicable influence of events upon the inner organisation
-of man had caused them too, and their
-contemporaries equally, to delight in gloom, in slaughter,
-in revenge, in exhibitions of suffering, analogous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>in many cases to what they beheld their countrymen
-inflict upon each other.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Observe the creations of Æschylus:<a id='r989' /><a href='#f989' class='c018'><sup>[989]</sup></a> in them, pregnant
-all with Miltonic haughtiness, energy, grandeur,
-we already discover symptoms of profound discontent
-with the character of actual existence and an invincible
-yearning towards the past. He seemed desirous
-to haunt the imaginations of his contemporaries with
-gigantic phantoms, quarried out of the wrecks of a
-vanished ethical system, in which such greatness
-found congeniality and sympathy. His ideas seemed
-to clothe themselves spontaneously in language of
-massive structure, like a Cyclopean wall, such as before
-or since no man ever used. He projected himself
-by the force of meditation into the heroic spheres,
-conversed there with mighty shades, acquired among
-them stern principles of action, of thought, of belief,
-of composition; and with these he sought to inspire
-the men of his own time. His object seems less to
-delight than to overawe, to persuade than to command.
-His ideas move along the highest arch of
-imagination which spans the universe from pole to
-pole, or rise out of a sea of darkness which they
-illuminate for a moment like lightning flashes in their
-passage.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>All Æschylus’s more marked characters come before
-us invested with marvellous attributes, and their
-voices awake a thrilling mysterious echo in the
-depths of the soul. Prometheus, for example,—who
-or what in poetry is like him? Some features
-of resemblance he may have to the Satan of “Paradise
-Lost,” but only in his indomitable energy, in his
-unconquerable will; in all other respects he stands
-differenced from that “archangel ruined” by qualities
-the most remarkable. Towards mankind he appears
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>in the relation of supreme love. For their sake
-alone he braves the anger of Zeus, who, in the tempest
-of vengeance which he pours upon the naked
-form of this beneficent god, is presented to the mind
-as a tyrannical oppressor. Again, in the Erinnyes,
-what mysterious phantoms does he conjure up! The
-whole scene, where black and blood-dripping they
-rise before the fancy in the shrine of Delphi, is, beyond
-imagination, awe-inspiring and sublime. Like
-Orestes himself, the fancy is haunted, as we read, by
-an uneasy consciousness of their presence. They
-appear like the summits of the infernal world, thrust
-up visibly into the world of reality. They are frightful
-dreams endued with form and vitality, and walking
-abroad to scare us even while waking. Never
-did faith in visionary beings equal in strength the
-faith which he constrains us to have in these his
-creations. The scent of blood fills the nostrils as
-we read. We pant,—we shudder,—we expect to hear
-their footsteps on the carpet behind us. Nevertheless
-the effect of Æschylus’ poetry is not, like Byron’s,
-to humiliate or depress. On the contrary, it imparts
-to us its energy as we read. It fills,—it expands,—it
-aggrandises,—it elevates the mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Sophocles presents us with a wholly different
-type of genius. His conceptions, without being gigantic,
-are still great, and have a richness and roundness
-something like the form of woman. To him,
-as to Raffaelle, the world appeared pregnant on all
-sides with beauty. Yet, there was a vein of pensiveness
-in his fancy which, running through all his
-works, imparts to them a witchery independent of
-the amount of intellect displayed. He never, like
-Æschylus, transports us into the dim twilight of
-mythology amidst the nodding ruins of systems and
-creeds. However antique may be the subject which
-he treats, his invention gives it completeness, and he
-brings it out fresh, glossy, distinct, and beautiful as
-the creations of to-day. Æschylus carries us back
-to the past, Sophocles brings the past forward to us.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>By a vigorous exertion of genius he breathes life
-into things dead; melts away from about them by
-his warm touch the hoar of antiquity; fills up the
-outline; freshens the colours; converts them into contemporary
-existencies. All his sympathies, healthy
-and true, cling to the things around him: the religion,
-the form of polity, the climate, the soil of
-Attica, invested with the beauty which they assumed
-in his plastic vision, satisfied his desires. What he
-found not in realities he bestowed upon them. He
-idealised his contemporaries. His poetry is sunny
-as the Ægæan in spring, and a breeze as healthful
-and refreshing breathes over it. Like the nightingale,
-whose music he loved, it comes to us full of forgotten
-harmonies, re-awakening all the associations, all
-the delights, all the hopes and aspirations of youth.
-Sweet and musical, and replete with tenderness, are
-his marvellous chorusses. They burst upon the heart
-like the first note of the cuckoo<a id='r990' /><a href='#f990' class='c018'><sup>[990]</sup></a> in the depths of a
-forest, curling round the mossy trunks of the meditative
-old trees upon the ear.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>And then his female characters, in which above all
-things he excels. Not Imogen herself, whose breath
-like violets perfumes the page of Shakespeare, rises
-before us a more exquisite vision than Antigone,
-in her maiden purity, her unfathomable tenderness,
-her holy affection, filial and fraternal. Even Œdipos,
-supported and led into the light by such a daughter,
-appears glorious as a god, his involuntary stains
-worked off by years of suffering, his reverend old age
-garlanded by calamity, wreathed with the tendrils
-and snowy blossoms of a daughter’s love. And Tecmessa,
-does she not seem to be Desdemona ripened
-into a mother? There is no poet who has pourtrayed
-a wife of more unmingled gentleness, or who
-has better sounded the depths of a mother’s heart.
-Her affection expands like an atmosphere round the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>boy Eurysaces, menaced at once by treacherous enemies
-and by his father’s madness, and casts a pure
-and bright ray over the sea of blood and stormy
-passion and guilt that floats around her. His Dejanira,
-likewise, is a character of great beauty; but in
-the Clytemnæstra and Electra, in the Chrysothemis
-and Ismene, he has been less successful. Among
-his male characters Œdipos is the masterpiece. Compounded
-of ungovernable passion, a powerful will, a
-resolution invincible by suffering, extreme in love
-or hate, he stands before us in heroic grandeur, and
-like the sun’s orb dilates as he descends beneath
-the horizon. Next to him in originality and beauty
-are Neoptolemos and Teucer, youths of the greatest
-nobleness of soul, who contrast strikingly with his
-fox-like Odysseus and the mean-souled imperial
-brothers.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>To Sophocles succeeds Euripides,<a id='r991' /><a href='#f991' class='c018'><sup>[991]</sup></a> whose genius
-inspired Milton with the deepest admiration, as it
-had before inspired Aristotle. Resembling Sophocles
-as little as the latter resembles Æschylus, he
-is more deeply imbued than either with the tragic
-spirit, interprets more unerringly the language of
-passion and the heart, and unlocks more surely the
-hidden springs of pity. In him, however, poetry is
-less an instinct than an art. His intellect, lofty,
-powerful, penetrating, ranged through the most untrodden
-paths of nature and philosophy, grasped at
-all learning, at all experience, enriched itself with
-prodigious stores of reflections, observations, imagery,
-over which it possessed the most perfect mastery,
-to render them subservient to the purposes of the
-drama. Other poets learned in effects, may exhibit
-action with no less truth and skill; Euripides dares
-to unveil causes, to give the wherefore and the why
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>of actions, to descend into the abysses of the mind
-and lay bare the curious mechanism, and, so to say,
-central fires which produce and ripen our resolutions
-and our demeanour.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Without the stern grandeur or the rich physical
-imagery of his predecessors, he could more surely
-touch the feelings and create an intense interest in
-the story of his tragedies. No man, moreover, has
-given birth to nobler sentiments. A moral beauty
-broods over his scenes; he elevates,—he enlarges,—he
-purifies the affections. Truths of greatest importance
-make themselves wings of melody in his
-verse, and fly across the gulf of two thousand years
-from him to us. Above all things, he may almost be
-said to have discovered the inexhaustible mine of
-love, whence he drew the gold that fashioned the
-divine image of Alcestis, the noblest mixture of
-earth’s mould that ever bore the name of woman.
-It is true this image is but dimly beheld. Perhaps
-no genius, not even Shakespeare’s, could have filled
-up the outline of unearthly beauty which Euripides
-dared to draw. It embodies all the imagination
-ever conceived of love. Pure as the celestial Artemis,
-impassioned to perfect disinterestedness, all
-devotion as a wife, all tenderness as a mother,—content
-to die, yet jealous of posthumous love,—sacrificing
-everything for her husband’s life, yet haunted
-by the fear that death might snap the golden links
-of affection, she issues forth like a celestial vision
-to take her farewell of the sun. Euripides might
-well be proud of this creation. Not Andromache,
-not Nausicaa, not even the far-famed consort of
-Odysseus can exceed in truth and beauty his conception
-of Alcestis. Yet this is the poet whom
-Aristophanes had the bad taste to overwhelm with
-unceasing ridicule, and whom numerous critics, borrowing
-their canons from him, have rashly pronounced
-languid and insipid.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Moving on a level below this is the character of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>Electra in the Orestes. In the Alcestis we have rather
-the results than the developement of inexpressible
-love, which</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“raised a mortal to the skies.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>But Electra’s affection unfolds itself before us. There
-she watches beside her brother’s bed, contending with
-the inexpiable guilt of matricide, sharing his remorse
-but comforting him, herself oppressed, yet courageously
-bearing up for his sake against the worst</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“ills that flesh is heir to.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>With the most supreme delicacy is Polyxena conceived;
-and generally, whatever may be said of Euripides’
-aversion for the sex, it may be affirmed that no
-poet has more ably or more nobly painted the female
-character.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Passing next to comedy, of which Aristophanes
-must be regarded as the representative, we have a
-department of literature peculiar to Greece, for its
-comedy resembles that of no other country. It has
-never, perhaps, been fairly characterised. They who
-take part with the poet against the philosopher exaggerate
-his merits: the admirers of Socrates, in revenge
-for the unjust death of that great man, generally
-undervalue them. Let us endeavour to be just. Aristophanes
-was a poet of vast genius, quick to perceive,
-and powerful to paint the imperfections, vices, follies,
-weaknesses, miseries of man in society. He was greedy,
-too, of reputation, in the acquisition of which he spared
-neither men nor institutions. The youthful, the gay,
-the thoughtless, reckoning laughter and amusement
-among the real wants of life, (as to the weak and
-frivolous perhaps they are,) he undertook to build his
-fame on easing the human character of those moral
-excrements which pass off in grinning and mirth.
-There is, in fact, a load of small malignity and mischief
-in most mental constitutions, which, if not
-expelled, might obstruct the healthful play of the
-faculties. Mirth is the form it assumes in its exit,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>and comedy is one of the means provided by Nature
-for promoting its discharge.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Aristophanes, who comprehended at least this part
-of philosophy, found an abundant harvest of follies in
-his fellow-citizens. He saw, too, that of all men they
-possessed the most inexhaustible good-nature,—to forgive
-if they could not profit by the satire which was
-directed against themselves. No one could complain
-of them on this score. Their risible muscles were at
-every man’s service who could coin a joke, or make
-faces, or draw a caricature or enact one. Athens was,
-in fact, the home of laughter: it was the weak side
-of the national character; and never, since merry-making
-was invented, did a more skilful manufacturer
-of this autochthonal production exist than Aristophanes.
-He could make round things square, or straight
-crooked; he could invest the noblest and most sacred
-things with burlesque and ridicule; he could convert
-patriotism into a laughable weakness, genius into puerility,
-virtue into a farce. He knew how to make the
-brave man (as Lamachos) seem a mere gasconader;
-the man of genius (as Euripides) a dealer in rhythmical
-jingles; the possessor of highest wisdom and most
-unsullied integrity a babbling impostor and a thief.
-Such were his prodigious powers. Another excellence
-he had, not unakin to the former; he could, when it
-suited his purpose, place the most nefarious vices on
-the same level with very harmless foibles, so that both
-should appear equally laughable or equally odious.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But the Athenians must have been a base people
-had these been the qualities which rendered him popular.
-They were not: on the contrary, they formed
-the great drawback on his reputation. His attack on
-Socrates caused the first cast of the Clouds to be
-hooted off the stage. But great and crying as were
-his delinquencies against morals and philosophy, his
-genius triumphed, and he became popular in spite of
-them; and in spite of them he has continued to be a
-favourite among scholars down to the present day.
-No mean amount of creative power could have achieved
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>a triumph like this. He possessed, in fact, the quality,
-whatever it be, which confers vitality on the offspring
-of the mind. Each of his plays, however extravagant
-its conceptions, however improbable the plot or wild
-the scene or fantastic the characters, still developes a
-distinct cycle of existences into which the breath of
-everlasting life has been breathed. To every individual
-whom he brings upon the stage has been assigned
-a distinct type of character, a marked individuality, a
-moral and intellectual physiognomy as peculiar to
-himself as his mask. No man exhibits greater variety
-in a small compass. When he is working out a character
-every word tells, and his ease is infinite. Nothing
-appears to have proceeded from him in a hurry.
-Like the wind, which now rises in gusts, now sinks to
-a whisper, but never suggests the idea of weakness,
-Aristophanes may trifle, but always because he desires
-to trifle.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Moreover, however barren the subject may be, however
-rugged, bleak, intractable, he pours over it the
-dews of poetry, and clothes it magically with flowers
-and verdure. Look at the comedies of the Frogs and
-the Birds. By whom but Aristophanes could they
-have been rendered tolerable? And yet what marvellous
-effects grow out of them in his hands! How
-completely is the imagination detached from the
-common everyday world, and sent drifting down the
-dreamy intoxicating streams of poetry! Not in the
-island of Prospero or Philoctetes, not in the savage-encircled
-nest of Robinson Crusoe, not in the most
-visionary vale that opens before us its serene bosom
-in the Arabian Nights, do we breathe more at large,
-or more fresh and wholesome air, than among the
-fogs and fens of Acheron, or the eternal forests of the
-Hoopoo king.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>With an art, in which Shakespeare was no mean
-proficient, he opens up a more culpable source of interest
-in the frequent satire of vices, condemned as
-commonly as they are practised. He unveils the
-mysteries of iniquity with a fearless and by no means
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>an unreluctant hand. No abyss of wickedness was
-too dark for his daring muse. He ventured fearlessly
-upon themes which few since or before have touched
-on, despising contemporary envy and vindictiveness
-and the stern condemnation of posterity. To be plain,
-he evidently shared in the worst corruptions of his
-age, and, like many other satirists, availed himself joyfully
-of the mask of satire as an apology for entertaining
-his own imagination with the description of them.
-No one with the least clearsightedness or candour can
-fail to perceive and acknowledge the depraved moral
-character of this comic writer. Only less filthy than
-Rabelais, his fancy runs riot among the moral jakes and
-common sewers of the world, over which, by consummate
-art and the matchless magic of his style, he contrives
-unhappily to cast a kind of delusive halo, and
-to breathe a fragrance which should never be found
-but where virtue is.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Upon the subject of his attack on Socrates his defenders
-must grant one of two things—that he libelled
-him ignorantly, or that he exhibited a degree of
-wickedness capable, under other circumstances, of
-rising to the enormity of Judas Iscariot. Socrates,
-both for genius and for virtue, stands at the head of
-the pagan world. He whom Plato admired must have
-stood on a higher level than Plato,—that is, have
-occupied the apex of mere humanity: and in that
-position we find him in the Gorgias, the Republic,
-the Euthyphron, and the Phædon. Many charlatans,
-since the days of Aristophanes, have endeavoured to
-puff upward at him the smoke of their ignorance or
-their envy; and from those who tread the mire with
-them have for a moment hidden the all but divine
-serenity that smiles on humankind from that lofty
-and immovable basis where the homage of a world
-has placed him; but the next breeze has cleared away
-the stinking vapours, and left both him and them
-where they were,—the one on the highest, the others
-on the lowest step of the ladder which connects human
-nature with the skies.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>Upon the dramatic poets whose fragments only remain,
-it is in this place unnecessary to dwell. I
-therefore pass to the historians and orators, who, no
-less vividly than her poets, reflect the genius of
-Greece. The first age of prose composition, there
-as elsewhere, exhibited the natural characteristics of
-dawning art—indecisiveness and timidity. Herodotus,
-properly speaking, was her earliest historian, and even
-he still walks within the gigantic shadow of epic
-fable which stretched far over the civilised and cultivated
-ages of Greece, as doth that of Memnon at
-dawn over the Theban plains. His character as a
-writer is very remarkable. He narrates like a prophet.
-His language everywhere bears the impress
-and image of the supernatural world wrought into
-its very substance. He had formed to himself a
-poetical standard of human character and human
-action, which accordingly in his work develope themselves
-in poetical forms. Long and profound meditation
-had spread out the past before him like a
-map, on which he could trace every fluctuation in
-the stream of events with something like the skill
-of a diviner. Men, past or present, may be interpreted
-by meditation, if we comprehend the science
-of human nature. Herodotus understood much of
-this science. Indeed his chief greatness lies in his
-wisdom.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Ordinary readers, who are always wiser than their
-dead instructors, discovering him to be frankly superstitious,
-to have faith in oracles, in dreams, in prodigies,
-to chronicle many trivial actions, many trivial
-remarks, feel or affect for him a species of contempt.
-But they know very little of what is contained in
-that vast treasury of epic events. Little do they
-suspect with how many great statesmen, generals
-and heroic kings the eloquent Halicarnassian could
-render them familiar. In his pages alone, perhaps,
-do we view in his true proportions that man of men,
-Themistocles, who overtops by a head and shoulders
-all the other statesmen of the ancient world. There,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>too, may we best discover the character of his contemporaries,
-those extraordinary personages who connect
-the heroic with the historical period, and constitute
-the steps by which we descend from the heights
-of mythos and fable to the stern level of realities.
-Such an epoch required an historian of peculiar character.
-In him were to be united the power to
-comprehend poetical motives to action, and the solemn
-eloquence fittingly to describe deeds springing
-from such a source. Both were found in Herodotus.
-He beheld Providence leading man as it were into
-the light from the wilderness of mythological times,
-still invested with many of his heroic habits and
-his forehead beaming with visionary splendours, but
-prepared to doff them one by one, and in their stead
-to substitute the iron theory and practice of civilisation.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Thucydides, a few years only younger than Herodotus,
-found himself placed in the midst of events
-the most extraordinary, produced by a system of
-civilisation prematurely decaying. Greece had not
-been suffered to grow wise and great according to
-the laws which usually regulate the ripening of
-states. She had been scorched into fruit-bearing
-by the fiery conflicts of the Median war; and her
-strength thus brought into play, and found to be
-great beyond calculation, was immediately by ambitious
-statesmen seized upon, parcelled out into lots
-which were directed against each other, and thus
-exhausted in petty struggles. In Greece we have
-an example of a state whose energies, turned inwards,
-corroded themselves by concentration; affording
-a contrast with Rome whose energies, worked
-outward and were gradually weakened and lost by
-expansion. The genius of the people begot corresponding
-historians. Rome, had its perspicuous ornate,
-diffuse, haughty and sublime Livy; Athens
-her Thucydides full of poetry indeed, and haughtier
-and more sublime, but condensed as an oracle, and
-as an oracle obscure.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>Few have measured the greatness of this man.
-Ordinary critics missing the ostentatious display of
-what is termed philosophy, appear to imagine that
-Thucydides is not a philosophical historian, reserving
-this praise for Gibbon, Hume, or Voltaire. But
-each of these great writers would have contemned
-the praise of such persons. Thucydides in historical
-writing stands above rivalry or comparison. The
-political atmosphere in which he lived, dusky with
-thunderclouds and continual storms, his eye could
-penetrate through, and discover all the very extraordinary
-figures that moved beneath it. Calmly,
-from heights of speculation never trodden before,
-he contemplated the various groups of generals and
-statesmen dispersed over his horizon, pierced through
-every disguise into their characters, detected their
-motives, unravelled their plots, gave their secret
-maxims a tongue, weighed and described their actions
-with an impartial sagacity which among historians
-belongs to him alone. In this consists his
-philosophy. The society, whose developement he
-studied, was torn by two antagonist principles—aristocracy
-and democracy, whose struggles, undying
-in free states, were then more fierce than at any
-other period in the history of the world. To enable
-his countrymen and posterity to comprehend
-the whole chain of events, he opened up a long
-vista into the past, to the point at which those
-adversaries appeared upon the scene, and threw a
-broad light upon all their movements down to the
-time when Providence removed him from his post.
-His conception of an historian’s duty, somewhat
-different from that now entertained, was adopted
-by all antiquity, in which every succeeding writer
-bore testimony to his superiority by imitating him.
-He thought it not enough to narrate and describe,
-but, throwing open the council chamber and stilling
-the tumultuous agora, he brings the living statesman
-or demagogue upon the stage, developing in
-our hearing his views, his conceptions of surrounding
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>circumstances and characters, his projects, his
-means for accomplishing them. That the speeches
-found in his history were actually in that form delivered,
-I will by no means affirm. He probably
-obtained but the substance from report, and himself
-clothed it in those vivid expressions which two
-thousand years have not stripped of their freshness.
-Nevertheless, the more trifling the amount of what
-he owed to the relations of others, the greater must
-appear his genius, his unerring sense of fitness, his
-dramatic power of projecting himself successively
-into a whole gallery of characters, and truly interpreting
-the opinions, maxims, feelings of each; for
-no one pretends that he has ever misrepresented
-a single individual. And if those speeches be examined
-on the score of eloquence, whether of thought
-or language, it will I think be found, that in almost
-every excellence they may rank with those of Demosthenes.
-In each a peculiar economy is observed
-in the management of the arguments, in the sentiments,
-in the opinions, in the logical tone, in the
-manifestations of individuality which diffuse themselves
-over the whole and give a colour to it.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The defects—for such there are—resolve themselves
-into a certain magisterial air, indicating a
-consciousness of superiority, sure, more or less, to
-offend in all cases, and a certain imperspicuity of
-style arising principally from the loose manner in
-which the drapery of language is flung over his
-ideas, which is chiefly observable in the orations, his
-narrative for the most part being free from this imperfection.
-Besides, whatever be the series of facts
-he relates, their importance appears to be enhanced
-by his manner of handling them. He casts aside,
-as unworthy both of himself and the reader, whatever
-is of inferior moment. These, in fact, the
-mere chaff of human affairs, only cling round the
-grain of action to conceal it, and must be blown
-aside by the reader if the historian neglect to do it.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The circumstances of the times conferred upon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>his subject all the interest and the gloom of tragedy.
-But it thus suited him the better. His genius delighted
-in terrible pictures: battles, plagues, earthquakes,
-general massacres, the storming of cities, the
-annihilation of great armies. His fancy vividly realised
-all,—the plague-tumbril rumbling, choked with
-dead, towards the sepulchral suburbs,—the streets of
-Corcyra streaming alternately with democratic and
-aristocratic blood,—the expected slaughter of Mitylene,—the
-reality at Melos,—two thousand Helots
-cut off by the perfidy of Sparta,—the butchery at
-Platæa,—at Skione,—in Sicily! Through all these
-scenes we are precipitated forward, shuddering, compassionating,
-detesting by turns. But we are neither
-overwhelmed nor inspired with disgust for human
-nature. Our sympathies cling closer and closer to
-the historian, who spares no villany, gratifies no malice,
-tramples on no noble principle, succumbs to
-no temptation of partiality. Faithful to his trust he
-deals forth truth to all, to none the slightest flattery.
-Not even for his country will he lie. It was she, in
-fact, with her heroic ethics and grandeur of sentiment,
-that had taught him his high principles, and
-he repaid her by recording all her errors, all her
-wrongs, all her imperfections: in which he acted like
-a great and a wise man. He would have sacrificed
-for her his life,—he would not sacrifice his conscience.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>To him succeeds Xenophon, a writer whom it is
-difficult to characterise. There was in the temper
-of his mind something parasitical, which led him to
-lean on others for support,—on Socrates, on Cyrus,
-on Agesilaos. Incapable of acting in a republic the
-part of a good citizen, he would have been that rare
-thing—a virtuous courtier. From this the tone of
-his writings may be conjectured. Almost everywhere
-we discover a degree of gentleness, sweetness,
-modesty, which steals imperceptibly into the heart,
-and creates the impression that he was a man highly
-amiable and upright. His piety, likewise, causes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>itself to be felt. He never mentions the gods but
-with due reverence, exhibits a strong reliance upon
-Providence, and, according to his best apprehensions,
-justifies its ways to men with earnest solicitude. The
-style of his composition, necessarily harmonising with
-the qualities of his mind, is full of suavity, polished
-elegance, gentlemanliness, bonhomie, the very characteristics
-of a popular writer. Readers of moderate
-understanding can everywhere perceive his drift,
-can accompany him without feeling out of breath.
-He is communicative, sensible, rational, indulges in
-no cloudy flights, never dives out of sight in the
-ocean of speculation.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Xenophon, however, misunderstood himself when
-he conceived that it was for him to continue the
-history of Thucydides. It was as if Andrea del Sarto
-had undertaken to complete a picture left in parts
-unfinished by Michael Angelo. He had neither the
-penetrating sagacity necessary to comprehend the internal
-plan of the picture, the vivifying energy to
-preserve the intense tragedy of the action, nor the
-colours to harmonise with what he found painted.
-Still, considered by himself, he has great merits.
-Several scenes in his history, the trial, for example,
-of the generals, the death of Theramenes, the battles
-on the Hellespont, exhibit a force of conception and
-a scope and flexibility of style uncommon in any
-literature; and the Anabasis, without comparison his
-greatest work, reads like a chronicle of the most
-chivalrous knight-errantry. The attempt, however
-flagitious on the part of Cyrus, had the merit of
-extreme <a id='corr343.33'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='boldness'>boldness.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_343.33'><ins class='correction' title='boldness'>boldness.</ins></a></span> It was the model expedition
-which disclosed the secret of Asia to Alexander,
-and showed with how little danger its vast empires
-might be shattered to pieces. Xenophon who, young
-and adventurous, accompanied the Persian prince and
-the heroic mercenaries in his pay, contemplated with
-delight the physical aspect of the East, its luxurious
-population, its roving tribes, with the triumphs of
-his disciplined and warlike countrymen over innumerable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>barbarian hosts. This we discover from the
-interest and animation of his narrative, in which stern
-realities exceed in grandeur and wildness the creations
-of romance. But it is equally clear that he did
-not fully comprehend the moral of the scene. For,
-otherwise, he could never, with these facts before
-him, have endeavoured by his Cyropædia, to recommend
-to his countrymen those institutions which
-rendered Persia, with all its wealth, a constant prey
-to the small republics of Greece.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Of the other writings of Xenophon little need be
-said: they are the parsley and the rue of Greek literature,
-bordering and adorning its entrance, and therefore
-beheld of all. But most of these have their
-beauty. Even in the hunting treatise, amid the
-breeding of dogs, and nets, and knives, and boar-spears,
-and the slaughter of animals, we catch
-glimpses of better things,—of glades where the hare
-frolics by moonlight, and grassy uplands, dewy and
-fragrant, where does, poetical as she of Rylstone,
-lead forth their fawns at break of day. The treatises
-on the states of Athens and Sparta have, I trust,
-been falsely attributed to this able and accomplished
-writer. They are contemptible productions, conceived
-in the spirit of a servile flatterer of the Dorians,
-and of a satirist, equally servile and stupid, of the
-greater and infinitely more intellectual Ionic race.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>I pass over the historians known to us only by
-a few scanty fragments, that I may at once come
-to the orators, the peculiar ornament and pride of
-Greece, whose greatest statesmen were equally great
-as speakers, more especially at Athens, where, as an
-art, eloquence was most assiduously cultivated, and
-achieved its greatest triumphs. Tradition attributes
-to Themistocles, to Pericles, to Alcibiades consummate
-skill in guiding the currents of human sympathy,
-and a sense of their glory lingered on the
-high places of society like sunshine on the Alps
-long after they had quitted the world. But as
-they did not augment the stores of their country’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>literature, we can have nothing to speak of them
-here. The orators whose fragments time has been
-unable to destroy are however sufficient, if not to
-satiate our thirst of admiration, at least to show,
-by the grandeur of their proportions, how great and
-glorious Attic eloquence, when entire, must have been.
-More than any other department of literature it is
-the growth of patience and toil. A man may be
-born with the instincts of eloquence,—fancy, constitutional
-fire, vehemence,—but unless these instincts
-be broken in and trained by consummate art, nature
-will in vain have bestowed her gifts. These truths
-were early understood at Athens. It was perceived
-that without eloquence political distinction was unattainable,
-and therefore all who aspired to</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“wield at will that fierce democracy,”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>subjected themselves to a course of laborious study,
-to which our more phlegmatic natures would not
-submit.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The results we may, in part, still contemplate in
-that body of Athenian oratory, which to the author
-and the statesman is in itself a library. Every legitimate
-form of eloquence is there beheld. In Antiphon
-and Andocides it appears in rough simplicity,
-employing contrivance and art, but employing them
-awkwardly. Lysias makes considerable advances beyond
-them, clothes his style with grace, constructs
-his narrative with extraordinary skill, and moves the
-passions by considerable pathos. Isocrates it is common
-with the moderns, who echo one another, to underrate:
-their delicate ears, offended by his too nicely
-balanced periods, his antitheses, his monotonous cadences,
-refuse to relish that stately harmony, and
-majestic flow of language, which recommend the
-thoughts of this “old man eloquent,” whose greatest
-panegyric is pronounced by Plato<a id='r992' /><a href='#f992' class='c018'><sup>[992]</sup></a> in the Phædros.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>In Isæos we have an argumentative, able pleader;
-in Deinarchos a vigorous accuser; in Demades the
-power of splendid improvisation; in Lycurgus noble
-sentiments clothed in poetical language, haughty patriotism,
-the rough virtues of a stoic; in Æschines
-an union of magnificent style, thoughts full of weight,
-admirable arrangement, warmth, vivacity, wit. Yet
-Demosthenes soars far above Æschines,—far above
-all. On him nature had bestowed every quality
-which constitutes an ingredient of eloquence,—originality,
-love of labour, a clear head, a warm heart, a
-judgment all but unerring, with an impetuous vehemence
-perfectly irresistible.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>A very extraordinary impression is created by the
-study of this writer. He seems never to put forth
-all his strength. You see him, indeed, bear down
-every thing before him, overwhelming the arguments
-and the gold of Philip, crushing his rivals, annihilating
-his enemies; but the persuasion rests with you
-that he could have done more. You discover amid
-the waves and foam of his terrible eloquence indications
-that that vast ocean had never been stirred
-to the bottom, that occasion had never called forth
-all its latent powers of destruction. He measures
-himself with his antagonist, and is secure of victory.
-He presents a front bristling with the deadliest points
-of logic, like the spears of the Macedonian phalanx,
-and wherever he moves he is invincible. Nevertheless
-he appears to advance nothing for the sake
-of effect, to be in search of none of the beauties
-of style, but rather to avoid them. He is neither
-draped, nor painted, nor adorned; but a naked colossus
-whose sublimity springs from the perfection
-and greatness of its proportions.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Other orators persuade, Demosthenes enforces conviction.
-They who listen to him have no choice,—they
-must believe. Without offending the reader’s
-pride, he makes him ashamed to hesitate. He
-reminds one of the Nile at the cataracts, where,
-confined by rocks within too narrow limits, it pours
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>resistlestly along, swelling, deep, with scattered whirlpools
-and foam scarcely visible on its vast surface,
-seemingly calm at a short distance, but, to those
-who look near, agitated, angry, full of <a id='corr347.4'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='unstemable'>unstemmable</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_347.4'><ins class='correction' title='unstemable'>unstemmable</ins></a></span>
-currents and boiling motion. He had profoundly
-studied human nature, chiefly, of course, as it developes
-itself in free states, and, better than any man,
-knew by what motives it may, in spite of corruption
-and degeneracy, be impelled to strenuous action,
-though but for a brief space. His language, flashing
-through the moral gloom around him, called
-forth bright reflections from whatever was brilliant
-or polished, and kindled the fragments of patriotic
-emotions into a flame. If genius could regenerate,
-could pour the blood of youth into the veins of
-age, could substitute loftiness of sentiment, heroic
-daring, disinterested love of country, religious faith,
-spirituality, for sensual self-indulgence, for sordid
-avarice, for a base distrust in Providence, Demosthenes
-had renewed the youth of Athens. The
-spirit of the old democratic constitution breathes
-through all his periods. He stands upon the last
-defence of the republican world, when all else had
-been carried, the representative of a noble but perished
-race, fighting gallantly, though in vain, to preserve
-that fragment sacred from the foot of the
-spoiler. The passion and the power of democracy
-seem concentrated in him. He unites in his character
-all the richest gifts of nature under the
-guidance of the most consummate art, and, doubtless,
-Hume was right when he said that, of all
-human productions, his works approach the nearest
-to perfection.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Beyond this point it is irksome to proceed in our
-view of Grecian literature, which, after the battle of
-Cheronæa, was overshadowed by despotism and dwindled
-gradually into insignificance. Not that genius
-wholly and suddenly disappeared. The soil of Hellenic
-intellect was not entirely exhausted, but the
-fruit it bore was comparatively insipid. A courtly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>stamp was set upon every thing. Men no longer
-obeyed their genuine impulses. It was dangerous
-generally, and always profitless to be frank and manly.
-Instead of addressing themselves to the healthy
-natural sympathies of the people, writers servilely
-laboured by conceit and flattery to wring reluctant
-patronage from princes. The spirit of affectation,
-accordingly, for the first time made its appearance.
-Men tortured their ingenuity to invent smart things.
-Enthusiasm and passion and earnestness, characteristics
-all of popular writers, are never fashionable
-among courtiers, who consider sincerity vulgar, and
-hypocrisy a virtue. In the later Greek writers,
-therefore, who all wrote for some court or other,
-we discover the usual frigidity and extravagance
-which invariably deform the literature of such states.
-Along with these faults, others also are found far
-more pernicious: the inculcation of selfishness, gross
-sensuality, base maxims, a depraved taste. Man in
-the savage state is a garden in which noxious weeds
-and the most beautiful flowers and useful plants grow
-together; civilised and free, he is the same garden
-cleared, as far as possible, of its weeds; but, when
-verging a second time into barbarism, the weeds
-again become luxuriant, and entirely choke or conceal
-the flowers. And thus too it is in literature.
-In the literatures of Greece, Rome, and modern
-Italy we can now contemplate the complete process;
-in our own, a part only, how great a part—it
-is not here my business to inquire.</p>
-
-<hr class='c025' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f970'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r970'>970</a>. Speaking of the influence of
-literature on education Plato remarks,
-that persons accustomed
-from their infancy to the loftier
-and purer inspirations of the muse
-will regard with contempt everything
-mean or illiberal; whereas
-they who have always been familiar
-with low and vulgar compositions
-will look upon all other
-literature as tame and insipid.—De
-Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f971'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r971'>971</a>. Cf. Lil. Gyrald. Opp. t. ii. p.
-2. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Nihil traditum videbis in
-religionibus et mysteriis, nihil in
-theologiâ et philosophiâ aliisque
-bonis artibus à principio fuisse
-sine poeticâ, ita ut hoc verè me
-tibi dicturum existimem, ex
-omnibus disciplinis unam hanc
-divinam extitisse, quasi totius
-vitæ magistram.”</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f972'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r972'>972</a>. Plato de Repub. t. ii. p. 113.
-seq. Stallb.—De Legg. t. vii. p. 243.
-Bek. Athen. i. 24. Paus. ix.
-27. 2. Diog. Laert. Proœm. iv. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f973'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r973'>973</a>. Muret. in Plat. Rep. p. 699. seq. Cf. Lil. Gyrald. ii. 5. Wolf.
-Proleg. in Homer. p. 51.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f974'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r974'>974</a>. Cf. Wolf. Proleg. in Hom. p. 73. 93. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f975'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r975'>975</a>. Anim. ad Athen. xii. p. 371.
-Cf. Suid. v. Ῥαψῳδοί. t. ii. p.
-678. Etym. Mag. 703. 32. Aristoph.
-Concionat. 674.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f976'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r976'>976</a>. Ῥαψῳδὸν δὲ, καλῶς Ἰλίαδα
-καὶ Ὀδυσσεῖαν ἢ τι τῶν Ἡσωδείων
-διατιθέντα, τάχ᾽ ἂν ἡμεῖς οἱ
-γέροντες ἥδιστα ἀκούσαντες νικᾷν
-ἂν φαῖμεν πάμπολο.—Plat. de
-Legg. ii. t. vii. p. 243. Bekk.
-Again: Ἅμα δὲ ἀναγκαῖον εἶναι
-ἔν τε ἄλλοις ποιηταῖς διατρίβειν
-πολλοῖς κᾀγαθοῖς καὶ δὴ καὶ μάλιστα
-ἐν Ὁμήρῳ, κ. τ. λ. Ion.
-Plat. Opp. t. ii. p. 172.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f977'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r977'>977</a>. Ὅτι δ᾽ ἐκαλοῦντο οἱ ῥαψῳδοὶ
-καὶ Ὁμηρισταὶ Ἀριστοκλῆς
-εἴρηκε, κ. τ. λ.—Athen. xiv. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f978'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r978'>978</a>. Athen. xiv. 12.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f979'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r979'>979</a>. Diog. Laert. ix. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f980'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r980'>980</a>. Ῥαψωδῆσαι φησὶ πρῶτον τὸν
-Ἡσιοδὸν Νικοκλῆς.—Schol. Pind.
-Nem. ii. 1. Cf. Dissen. ad loc.
-Wolf. Proleg. p. 96. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f981'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r981'>981</a>. Schol. Pind. Nem. ii. 1.
-Etym. Mag. 623. 50.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f982'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r982'>982</a>. Payne Knight, Proleg. in
-Hom. § 13. 28.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f983'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r983'>983</a>. Athen. i. 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f984'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r984'>984</a>. Cf. Sigon. de Rep. Hebræorum
-v. 9. Godwin, Moses et Aaron,
-i. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f985'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r985'>985</a>. But the δόμων προφῆται in
-Æschylus (Agam. 377 Klausen,)
-were household prophets, who not
-only disclosed the secrets of the
-future and interpreted dreams,
-but acted also the part of counsellors
-in present emergencies, and
-treasured up the records of the
-past. Apollo is called the Prophet
-of Zeus, because he receives oracles
-from him.—Eum. 19. 618.
-So Amphiaraos is denominated a
-great prophet.—Sept. c. Theb. 611.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>See the comment of Klausen,
-Agam. p. 143. seq.-Notice of the
-household interpreters of dreams
-δόμων ὀνειρόμαντες and again
-κριταὶ τῶν ὀνειράτων (Choep.
-36. 39), is found in several parts
-of Æschylus, who loved to furnish
-traits of these old superstitions.
-In the Persians we find Atossa
-speaking of the τῶν ἐνυπνίων
-κριτὴς (226) as a person of supernatural
-powers.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f986'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r986'>986</a>. Iliad β. 590. sqq. Payne Knight, Proleg. § 74.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f987'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r987'>987</a>. De Rep. x. 4. t. ii. 318.
-Stallb.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f988'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r988'>988</a>. De Rep. x. 7. t. ii. 336.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f989'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r989'>989</a>. The plays of this poet, like
-those of Shakespeare, were, in
-succeeding ages, altered for the
-stage—Quint. Instit. Orat. x.
-1. The orator, Lycurgus, procured
-a decree, ordering the tragedies
-of the three poets to be
-copied, and statues to be erected
-in their honour.—Plut. Vit. x.
-Orat.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f990'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r990'>990</a>. In Greece heard early in the spring.—Sibthorp, in Walp.
-Mem. i. 75.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f991'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r991'>991</a>. This writer, like most of his
-poetical contemporaries, used constantly
-to wear a tablet and
-stylus suspended to his dress.—Athen.
-xiii. 45. The use in
-fact of memorandum books was
-common.—Sch. Aristoph. Vesp.
-529.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f992'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r992'>992</a>. Opp. t. i. p. 105. seq.—He is
-said to have received a thousand
-drachmas for each of his pupils.—Dem.
-cont. Lacrit. § 11.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c025' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>
- <h3 class='c024'>CHAPTER XI. <br /> SPIRIT OF THE GRECIAN RELIGION.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c032'>Whether the Greeks received their earliest system
-of philosophy from the East, as is commonly believed,
-or themselves invented it, as to me seems most probable,
-there can I think be little doubt that once
-engaged in philosophical speculations they exhibited
-in the pursuit a degree of boldness and originality,
-a patience of research, a power of combination rarely
-if ever equalled in succeeding times. For some ages,
-it is true, from the days of Thales down to those of
-Socrates (<span class='fss'>B. C.</span> 600 to <span class='fss'>B. C.</span> 450) physical investigations
-and researches chiefly occupied the philosophers
-of Greece. They conceived it to be within
-the power of man to discover the nature of the
-principal elements which compose the world, and
-the law’s that regulated its formation.<a id='r993' /><a href='#f993' class='c018'><sup>[993]</sup></a> The origin
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>likewise of the human race, of which nothing is yet
-known but that which has been revealed, naturally
-awakened their curiosity and led to many theories
-wild and fantastic in the extreme.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Into any consideration of these it is not my design
-to enter; but the Greeks had another philosophy,
-which, resting on the basis of theology, comprehended
-religion, morals, and politics, and may be
-regarded as the instrument, the soul, and the measure
-of their civilisation. It seems to be a truth
-frequently overlooked, that man is civilised exactly
-in proportion as he is religious; at least this was
-the case in Greece, where the highest developement
-of the national mind concurred in Socrates and
-Plato with the utmost developement of the religious
-instinct, and began immediately to decline in
-Aristotle and his successors, arriving at the lowest
-degradation among the grovelling sophists of the
-lower empire. This division of philosophy occupied
-among the Greeks the place, which in modern
-times is assigned to religion,<a id='r994' /><a href='#f994' class='c018'><sup>[994]</sup></a> that is, it was their
-guide through this life, and their preparation for a
-better. It may, indeed, be regarded as the spiritual
-part of paganism, teaching man his duties, and explaining
-the grounds and motives which should lead
-to their performance.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>There is one article of faith without which no
-religion can of course exist—the belief in God. Devoid
-of this, it may be doubted whether an individual
-or a nation ought not rather to be classed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>among the inferior animals than among men. It
-is superfluous, therefore, to say that the Greeks, preëminently
-endowed with the highest attributes of
-humanity, were a religious people, and held firmly
-all the doctrines which entitle a people to such an
-appellation. From their ancestors, the Pelasgi,<a id='r995' /><a href='#f995' class='c018'><sup>[995]</sup></a> they
-inherited a pure and lofty theism, which seems to
-have always continued to be the religion of the
-more enlightened; while among the mass of the
-people, this central truth of religion was gradually
-surrounded by a constantly expanding atmosphere of
-fable, which obscured its brightness, and in a great
-measure concealed its form. Mr. Mitford, whose
-acute and philosophical mind clearly discerned this
-verity, also seems to have understood the cause.
-“A firm belief both in the existence of the Deity, and
-in the duty of communication with him, appears
-to have prevailed universally in the early ages.
-But religion was then the common care of all
-men, a sacerdotal order was unknown.”<a id='r996' /><a href='#f996' class='c018'><sup>[996]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The institution of an order of priests, however effected,
-almost necessarily corrupted the simple truths
-of religion, but it is unphilosophical in the highest
-degree to consider those ancient priests as impostors
-on this account, or to speak of their propagation
-of error as craft. Meditating, in seclusion and solitude,
-on the few truths which had come down to
-them by tradition or been discovered by reason, they
-soon bewildered their own wits, and wandered into
-superstition.<a id='r997' /><a href='#f997' class='c018'><sup>[997]</sup></a> As was too natural, they conceived
-that the Divinity must be desirous of giving them
-signs, marking what was to be done and what avoided.
-The mistake of concomitance for causation,
-often made in more learned and refined ages, would
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>confirm them in this view. They would, for example,
-find that in the order of time the flight of
-certain birds over their heads, the appearance of a
-serpent in their path, the apparition of certain objects
-in a dream, was followed by certain misfortunes;
-while other apparitions were succeeded by
-contrary events. Out of these observations the
-science of augury, divination, &amp;c. arose. Yet the
-inventors were not therefore impostors, but rather,
-in their intentions, benefactors of mankind; and to
-be respected accordingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The generation of polytheism is to be in like manner
-explained. It was an abuse of the inductive
-method of philosophy. Men perceived, as soon as
-they began to observe nature and draw inferences
-from what they beheld, that the sun and moon<a id='r998' /><a href='#f998' class='c018'><sup>[998]</sup></a>
-exert extraordinary influence, beneficial or hurtful,
-upon mankind and the world they inhabit; and the
-supposition was neither unnatural nor absurd that
-those glorious bodies, by whose rising and setting,
-by whose approximation or retreat, they were in
-turn affected with gladness or melancholy, with comfort
-or discomfort, with good or evil, must be themselves
-possessed of intelligence as well as power, or
-at least be inhabited and directed by beings on
-whom they bestowed the name of gods. The air,
-too, “which bloweth where it listeth while thou canst
-not tell whence it cometh or whither it goeth,”
-sweeping around them invisibly, and appearing only
-in its effects, soon obtained the rank of a deity,<a id='r999' /><a href='#f999' class='c018'><sup>[999]</sup></a> as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>did the ocean which appears to be alive in all its
-extent, and the earth on whose inexhaustible bounty
-we subsist.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Out of these elements the sacerdotal families of
-Greece framed its religion, which, however, is by
-no means to be considered a system of materialism.
-They conceived every portion of nature to be animated
-by its particular soul, just as they believed
-the whole, as a whole, to have one universal soul, the
-source of all the others. Their mythology was based
-on unity. At every step backwards we find the
-number of gods diminish, till at length we arrive at
-the Great One, surrounded by the unfathomable
-splendours of eternity. This is the θεὸς ὁ θεῶν Ζεὺς,
-of whom Plato<a id='r1000' /><a href='#f1000' class='c018'><sup>[1000]</sup></a> and Aristotle constantly speak when
-they employ the expression τὸ δαιμόνιον.<a id='r1001' /><a href='#f1001' class='c018'><sup>[1001]</sup></a> Philosophy,
-indeed, considered it to be its chiefest task to deliver
-men from their multitudinous errors respecting
-the nature of God, and of our duties towards
-Him; so that, in their speculative notions, very little
-difference from our own can be detected. Above
-all men, Plato sought to elevate the sphere of philosophy.
-In his works, in truth, it moves frequently
-within the confines of theology, and seldom quits
-them except for the purpose of infusing spirituality
-into politics and morals.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>This great man, whose profound veneration for the
-Deity equalled, perhaps, that of Newton himself,
-conceived that human happiness consists wholly in
-the knowledge of God, concerning whose character
-and attributes he was anxious that no unworthy
-ideas should be entertained. His doctrine was, “that
-we should ever describe God such as he is.” But,
-as Muretus has well observed, this was requiring
-too much of human nature, for, most assuredly, we
-should never speak of God if we waited to discover
-language befitting His majesty. “For the mind of
-man is incapable of comprehending the essence
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>of God; the nature of God is known to God
-alone; he alone perfectly understands himself, and
-in himself all things. The mind of man waxes
-dim, beholding that stupendous light whose brightness
-excels all other lights; and, in proportion as
-it endeavours more daringly to soar, is it conscious
-of falling below its great aim.”<a id='r1002' /><a href='#f1002' class='c018'><sup>[1002]</sup></a> The Egyptians
-expressed the same conviction in the celebrated epigraph
-on the base of the veiled statue of Neith at
-Saïs: “I am whatever has been, is, or shall be,
-and no mortal has drawn aside my veil.” To the
-same purpose was the saying of Simonides to Hiero,
-“that the more he contemplated the Divine Nature
-the less he appeared to comprehend it.” And
-Socrates, in the Philebos of Plato, observes that he
-shuddered as often as the Great Name was to be
-pronounced lest he should bestow upon it some
-unworthy epithet.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It would appear, indeed, that the idea which the
-theologians of Greece had formed of the Almighty
-was very nearly the same as our own; though, in
-compliance with popular prejudices, they often made
-use of the plural for the singular. Goodness, power,
-and knowledge were his characteristics, which in substance
-are the same as the types of the theologians
-of modern times—goodness, immutability, truth,—goodness
-leading the van in both cases, and the remaining
-conditions answering perfectly to each other.
-For in supreme power and supreme wisdom must
-be immutability and truth, since the Almighty can
-do all he wills and must ever will what is right.<a id='r1003' /><a href='#f1003' class='c018'><sup>[1003]</sup></a>
-In accordance with these views, the spiritual philosophy
-of Greece maintained that the Deity is the
-source of no evil, though traces of a far different
-theory are here and there discoverable among the
-poets. Thus, speaking of the calamities arising from
-the anger of Achilles, Homer says</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Διὸς δ᾽ ἐτελείετο βουλή.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>And, again—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Ζεὺς δ᾽ ἀρετὴν ἄνδρασιν ὀφέλλει τε, μινύθει τε</div>
- <div class='line'>Ὅππως κεν ἐθέλησιν.<a id='r1004' /><a href='#f1004' class='c018'><sup>[1004]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>So, again, the two vases in the palace of Zeus,
-out of which he distributed good and evil to mankind.<a id='r1005' /><a href='#f1005' class='c018'><sup>[1005]</sup></a>
-Hesiod also introduces Zeus, boasting that instead of
-fire he will give men a curse:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Τοῖς δ᾽ ἐγὼ ἀντὶ πυρὸς δώσω κακόν</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>But in all ages men lay their misfortunes at the
-door of Providence. However, though the notions
-men entertain of God be ever so just, their conduct
-will not be thereby influenced, or a religion, properly
-speaking, created, unless several other truths be equally
-believed. It must be established not only that the
-maker of the universe still regards his workmanship,
-and will punish all those who seek to disorder the
-machine, by entailing remorse upon transgression, but
-that man is not a fugitive being, who can escape out
-of the hands of God by shrinking into annihilation,
-but a creature who, in accordance with his will, must
-run the vast circle of eternity, co-lasting with God
-himself.<a id='r1006' /><a href='#f1006' class='c018'><sup>[1006]</sup></a> This is the great keystone of religion: without
-this, men will believe that even the Almighty can
-have no hold upon them; that they die, and their
-accountability ceases. The doctrine of immortality,
-however, has everywhere opened the skies to man,
-and set him upon the discovery of the steps leading
-thither, and, at the same time, has checked his daring,
-and poisoned his guilty pleasures.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>From the remotest ages the immortality of the soul
-constituted a leading dogma in the religion of Greece,
-and was necessarily accompanied by the persuasion,
-that to the good that immortality would bring happiness,
-and to the evil the contrary.<a id='r1007' /><a href='#f1007' class='c018'><sup>[1007]</sup></a> Homer is full of this,
-and the fables, wherein the enemies of God, parricides,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>murderers, the perpetrators of impiety and wrong, are,
-after death, banished to the depths of Tartarus, while
-various degrees of glory and happiness, not altogether
-unlike what is sublimely shadowed forth by St. Paul,
-are attributed to the good. That part, for example,
-of Heracles, which is divine, ascends to Heaven: Achilles
-enjoys the everlasting serenity of the Islands of the
-Blessed; and, generally, every virtuous man who rightly
-performed his duty ascended to the mansion prepared
-for him in the stars, there to live for ever in
-happiness.<a id='r1008' /><a href='#f1008' class='c018'><sup>[1008]</sup></a> They taught, moreover, that the spirit of
-man is of heavenly birth: without this we had lived
-as so many animals. But God bestowed upon us an
-immortal soul, to watch as a guardian angel over the
-body, and placed it in the loftiest part of our frame,
-to teach us to look upward, and remember our birth,—that
-men are not creatures of clay but children of
-God and heirs of immortality.<a id='r1009' /><a href='#f1009' class='c018'><sup>[1009]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It will not, however, surprise those who comprehend
-the constitution of human nature, to find that
-the Greeks, deprived as they were of revelation, were
-not content with the simple dogma of immortality,
-rendered happy or otherwise by rewards and punishments,
-but imagined a return of the soul to earth, and
-its passage through a long succession of bodies, until
-the stains,<a id='r1010' /><a href='#f1010' class='c018'><sup>[1010]</sup></a> contracted during its first sojourn, had been
-obliterated: properly, therefore, their Hell was a kind
-of Purgatory, and, no doubt, suggested the original
-idea of that intermediate place to the Church of
-Rome. The religious part of the pagan world, those
-especially who went through the ceremonies of expiation
-and initiatory rites, firmly believed that bad men
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>met in the realms of Hades with a just retribution for
-their crimes, and were again launched into the career
-of life, that they might receive from others that which
-they had done unto them.<a id='r1011' /><a href='#f1011' class='c018'><sup>[1011]</sup></a> Though even in those
-days there were not wanting persons who affected to
-possess the power of absolution, nay, of granting for
-a moderate sum of money indulgences and licences to
-sin. These ragged impostors, of course, patronised
-only rich sinners, over whose heads vengeance might
-be hanging for crimes committed either by themselves
-or their ancestors, (since the Greeks also believed that
-the sins of the parents are visited upon the children
-to the third and fourth generations,<a id='r1012' /><a href='#f1012' class='c018'><sup>[1012]</sup></a>) professing to be
-masters of arts and incantations by which the gods
-were compelled to grant their prayers.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But while the vulgar and the superstitious were
-thus deluded, they who possessed superior education
-and superior minds, united, with a belief in the future,
-a more cheerful faith in the justice and beneficence of
-the Deity. They discovered, even by the light of reason,
-that human nature has been perverted from its
-original perfection,—that an evil principle has been
-introduced into our inmost essence,—that in our sinful
-state we are at enmity with God and all goodness,—and
-must by prayers and sacrifices be purified and
-reconciled to him ere we can taste of happiness. On
-the subject of prayer the wiser Greeks entertained notions
-not wholly unbecoming a Christian.<a id='r1013' /><a href='#f1013' class='c018'><sup>[1013]</sup></a> They well
-enough understood, that it is not to be considered as
-an importuning of God for wealth or fame or wisdom,
-or, as ignorant persons suppose, an impious desire that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>He would for our sakes depart from his eternal purposes;
-but merely the nourishing in our minds of a
-profound veneration for the Almighty, a trust in his
-Providence and wisdom, an habitual disclosure voluntarily
-made of our inmost thoughts and desires, which
-must be known to him whether we will or not.
-Hence the great philosopher of antiquity<a id='r1014' /><a href='#f1014' class='c018'><sup>[1014]</sup></a> simply
-prayed for those things which it might please God
-to send, and that if he asked for anything wrong it
-might be denied him.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It is no doubt true, as Mr. Mitford<a id='r1015' /><a href='#f1015' class='c018'><sup>[1015]</sup></a> has observed,
-that the Gods in Homer are sometimes introduced
-favouring the perpetrators of injustice. But this is in
-contradiction to the general tone of the Greek religion;
-according to the tenets of which, every injured
-person had his Erinnyes who avenged whatever
-wrongs or violence he might suffer. Nay, even animals
-were comprised within the protecting circle of
-this beneficent superstition; and the God Pan was
-intrusted with the punishment of excesses perpetrated
-against them,<a id='r1016' /><a href='#f1016' class='c018'><sup>[1016]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“When vultures that, with grief exceeding measure,</div>
- <div class='line'>Lament their heart’s lost treasure,</div>
- <div class='line'>And o’er their empty nest, in torturing woe,</div>
- <div class='line'>Pass to and fro,</div>
- <div class='line'>Borne on their oarlike wings,</div>
- <div class='line'>Missing the task that brings</div>
- <div class='line'>Joy with it, send their piercing wail on high,</div>
- <div class='line'>Apollo, Pan, or Zeus hearing the cry,</div>
- <div class='line'>Charges th’ Erinnyes, though late,</div>
- <div class='line'>The penalty decreed by Fate</div>
- <div class='line'>To visit on the spoilers far or nigh.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>Another doctrine, which we might scarcely expect
-to discover in paganism, constituted, nevertheless, a
-part of the Greek religion,—I mean the power of penitence.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>In all cases, indeed, this would not avail. The
-laws of nature (πεπρωμένη, fate) would have their course
-whatever might be the conduct or disposition of man;
-but in all other cases, tears<a id='r1017' /><a href='#f1017' class='c018'><sup>[1017]</sup></a> shed in secret, solemn acts
-of religion, and deep contrition were supposed to appease
-the anger of Heaven. Besides, when afflictions
-fell upon men, they were not necessarily regarded as
-evils; for by suffering, the soul, they thought, is purified,
-chastened, endued with wisdom,—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Sweet are the uses of adversity;”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>and, hence, of those trials which ignorance regards as
-evils, most, if not all, are but so many dispensations of
-mercy, designed to work off the dross of sin, and restore
-the spirit to its original brightness.<a id='r1018' /><a href='#f1018' class='c018'><sup>[1018]</sup></a> By these
-means, likewise, <a id='corr359.15'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='trangressors'>transgressors</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_359.15'><ins class='correction' title='trangressors'>transgressors</ins></a></span> were believed to make
-some atonement for their crimes. Remembrance
-haunted them even in sleep. Their miseries rose up
-before them, compassed them round, and urged them
-by invisible stripes into her track, “whose ways are
-ways of pleasantness, and all whose paths are peace.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But over the impenitent wicked vengeance for ever
-impended; nor could wealth or rank purchase impunity,
-as the bare-footed friars and ass-mounters of the
-time were fain to persuade the credulous and weak-minded.
-Long withheld, the anger of the Gods descended
-at length in showers, utterly extirpating the
-evil-doers.<a id='r1019' /><a href='#f1019' class='c018'><sup>[1019]</sup></a> Thus perished Paris, the violator of
-marriage and of hospitable rites; thus Clytemnæstra
-and Ægisthos, adulterers and murderers; thus the
-whole house of &OElig;dipos, involved in an unutterable
-cycle of misery and crime. The interval, moreover,
-between the commission of guilt and its final punishment,
-was given up to the Erinnyes,<a id='r1020' /><a href='#f1020' class='c018'><sup>[1020]</sup></a> those dire and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>mysterious powers of vengeance, whose breathless
-chace after crime is pourtrayed with so much sublimity
-by Sophocles. These divinities, starting into instant
-birth, whenever blood was unlawfully shed,
-walked perpetually beside the murderer to his grave,—to
-him alone visible, to him alone audible.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The gross and carnal-minded contrived, indeed,
-in the case of lesser <a id='corr360.8'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='trangressions'>transgressions</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_360.8'><ins class='correction' title='trangressions'>transgressions</ins></a></span>, to remain blind
-to this deformity, while youth and health and prosperity
-cast their illusions over their path. But age
-in this matter sharpened their sight. On drawing
-near the brink of the grave, the vices, hitherto so
-blythe and comely, appeared to grow more shrivelled
-and hideous and unlovely than their own impure
-countenances, and they would then fain have parted
-company with them. But, no! Having been comrades
-of their own choosing, Zeus chained them to
-their side to the last, unless repentance severed the
-link; and their fearful howlings, night and day, broke
-their repose, harrowed up their feelings, augmented
-tenfold their terrors, while sweat and tears, and agonising
-shrieks burst from them even in their dreams.
-The wicked, therefore, in the deepest darkness of
-paganism, were not left wholly to the error of their
-ways. But God reserved himself a witness in their
-hearts, and set up a light by which they might
-rightly, if they chose, direct their footsteps. It is
-true that the cardinal verities of religion were then
-but very imperfectly perceived, that, to get at them
-at all, men had to break through the shells of many
-fables, and that, when found, they must be for the most
-part enjoyed in secret, far from the din of ambition.
-Not, indeed, that the people refused their sympathy
-to virtue,—public opinion is never so far corrupted,—but
-that in the world there has always existed a
-strong current bearing men far from the track of
-duty and holiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>There was, no doubt, some degree of fanaticism
-mixed up with all this. The priesthood, an order of
-men much calumniated, but without whom society
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>would be worse by far than it is, found it necessary
-to allure men into the bosom of their church by
-imposing ceremonies, by sacrifices, and by the mysterious
-disclosure of certain truths in the performance
-of certain rites. It will be seen that I allude to the
-mysteries. On the occasion of initiation, as if to
-intimate that men cannot be virtuous or religious
-by proxy, each individual became his own priest and
-sacrificed<a id='r1021' /><a href='#f1021' class='c018'><sup>[1021]</sup></a> for himself. But in what initiation itself
-consisted, no man knows. Antiquity has revealed
-nothing, and nothing can we discover. The
-hypotheses of scholars are, therefore, so many dreams,
-and a mere waste of ingenuity; for, if they should by
-chance hit the mark, there exist no means of proving
-that they have done so. But of this we are sure,
-that a persuasion was widely spread that a blissful
-immortality awaited the initiated. A greater degree
-of holiness was supposed to attach to them,—there
-was a spell shed around their persons,—in situations
-of danger they experienced less of the fear of death.
-In storms, for example, at sea, when the ship seemed
-about to sink—"Have you been initiated?" was
-the question men asked each other. Still, among
-philosophers, the wisest and best sometimes neglected
-this popular consummation of a pious life.
-Socrates belonged not to this communion, a circumstance
-which rendered it more easy to fasten upon him
-the charge of impiety, in those days more atrocious
-than now, since, to be esteemed inimical to the gods,
-was the surest way to make enemies of men. Further
-than this, it is not necessary that I enter into
-the gentile faith, which only <a id='corr361.32'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='incidenatally'>incidentally</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_361.32'><ins class='correction' title='incidenatally'>incidentally</ins></a></span>, as it affected
-morals, belongs to my subject.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But there exists in all countries a minor cycle of
-superstitions, which, more strongly perhaps than anything
-paints the peculiarities of the national character.
-In the north, as we know, this indigenous belief has
-survived all changes in the public creed, and will subsist
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>to the last, lingering among our woods, our ruins,
-our moonlit meadows, our churchyards, by our firesides.
-Fairies, witches, ghosts, goblins can by no advances
-in civilisation be put to flight. They sail in our
-steamers on the ocean, ride at quickest speed along
-the railroads, go to bed with the first lady in the
-land, and even nestle beneath the statesman’s vest.<a id='r1022' /><a href='#f1022' class='c018'><sup>[1022]</sup></a>
-With us these aërial beings, or spectres of crime,
-too commonly assume an aspect grotesque or devilish,
-but they nevertheless keep alive in the popular
-mind the spirit of romance and poetry, one of the
-never-failing handmaids of religion. Mythology
-rarely penetrates down to these primitive superstitions,
-which, however, constitute the basis of the
-whole science, and in Greece assumed, in many
-cases, forms of beauty analogous to its loftier and
-more poetic fables.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The place occupied in our own popular mythology
-by the “light-sandalled fays,” was in Greece filled
-by the Hamadryads and Nymphs.<a id='r1023' /><a href='#f1023' class='c018'><sup>[1023]</sup></a> No wood or
-grove or solitary tree, no fountain or rill in moss-grown
-cell or rustic cavern, existed without its co-existent
-divinity, female generally, and instinct with
-beauty and beneficence. These creatures, the Jinn
-and Jinneh of the Arabs, extended their dominion
-over all minor streams, and sported, in the softness
-and stillness of night, athwart the billows silvered
-by the moon; but the deities of great rivers, as the
-Acheloös, the Peneios, and others, were male. Being
-only a few degrees raised above humanity, they were
-often enamoured of mortals, to whom they appeared
-arrayed in loveliness, amid the glimmering forests,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>at dawn or twilight, or when</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in6'>“overhead the moon</div>
- <div class='line'>Wheels her pale course.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>It was not always, however, that the love of a
-nymph proved a blessing. There were occasions
-when, having for a moment revealed their superhuman
-charms to some shepherd in his romantic
-solitude, or to some poet worshiping the muses alone,
-beside the inspiring mount or spring, they again capriciously
-withdrew, and left him vision-smitten to
-pine or, perchance, to die.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Nor were the Greeks wholly devoid of belief in
-evil spirits, for the demon Alastor,<a id='r1024' /><a href='#f1024' class='c018'><sup>[1024]</sup></a> which was a
-deification of the principle that incites to crime and
-afterwards brings vengeance, can in no way be regarded
-as good. Typhon, too, with the Giants and
-Titans, had at least a predominance of evil in their
-character, but these are treated of at length by the
-mythologists. Several superstitions, commonly supposed
-to be wholly Oriental, were current in Greece,
-such as that men had the power by using certain
-spells to quit their mortal forms and roam disembodied
-through the earth. By magic rings, too,
-and helmets they might be rendered invisible, and,
-thus protected, enter into the secret chambers of
-kings, pollute their wives, and rifle their treasures.<a id='r1025' /><a href='#f1025' class='c018'><sup>[1025]</sup></a>
-Means, moreover, they had, confounded in those ages
-with supernatural power, of charming poisonous serpents,
-as to this day is done by the subjects of our
-Eastern empire, and the snake-catchers of Egypt;
-and though it be now known that opium constitutes
-no small portion of this charm, the people
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>generally, both in the East and West, conceive other
-influences to be employed than those of legitimate
-art.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>There was not in later times, perhaps, that boundless
-faith in spells and transformations still subsisting
-in the East. But in the earlier ages, and in the
-gloomy mountain recesses of Arcadia, events equally
-strange were supposed to have happened. Thus Lycaon
-having sacrificed an infant to Zeus Lycæos,
-and sprinkled the blood upon the altar, immediately
-became a wolf;<a id='r1026' /><a href='#f1026' class='c018'><sup>[1026]</sup></a> and it was reported that any one
-who performed this dreadful sacrifice, and afterwards
-by accident tasted of the human entrails, when mingled
-with those of other victims, forthwith underwent
-the same transformation.<a id='r1027' /><a href='#f1027' class='c018'><sup>[1027]</sup></a> Thus we find the
-gloomy legend of the Breton forests existing in the
-heart of the Peloponnesos, where there can, I fear,
-be little doubt, that human victims were habitually
-offered up. Another ancient superstition, which found
-its way into Italy, was, that a person first seen by
-a wolf lost his voice, whereas if the man obtained
-the prior glimpse of the animal no evil ensued.<a id='r1028' /><a href='#f1028' class='c018'><sup>[1028]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The belief in ghosts, coeval no doubt with man,
-flourished especially among the Greeks. Hesiod
-entertained peculiar notions on this subject, which
-some suppose to have been borrowed from the East,
-that is, he believed that the good men of former
-times became, at their decease, guardian spirits, and
-were entrusted<a id='r1029' /><a href='#f1029' class='c018'><sup>[1029]</sup></a> with the care of future races. Plato
-adopts these ghosts, and gives them admission into
-his Republic, where they perform an important part
-and receive peculiar honours.<a id='r1030' /><a href='#f1030' class='c018'><sup>[1030]</sup></a> When they appeared,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>as sometimes they would, by day, their visages were
-pale and their forms unsubstantial like the creations
-of a dream.<a id='r1031' /><a href='#f1031' class='c018'><sup>[1031]</sup></a> But, as among us, they chiefly affected
-the night for their gambols, and in Arcadia particularly,
-would appear to honest people returning home late
-in cross-roads, and such places whence they were not
-to be dislodged but by being pelted apparently by
-pellets made from bread crumb, on which men had
-wiped their fingers, carefully preserved for this purpose
-by the good folks about Phigaleia.<a id='r1032' /><a href='#f1032' class='c018'><sup>[1032]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The most remarkable prank played by any ancient
-ghosts, however, with whose history I am acquainted,
-did not take place in Greece, but in the Campagna di
-Roma, where, after a bloody battle between the Romans
-and the Huns, in which all but the generals
-and their staff bit the dust, two spectral armies, the
-ghosts of the fallen warriors, appeared upon the field
-to enact the contest over again. During three whole
-days did these valiant souls of heroes, as the Homeric
-phrase is, carry on the struggle; and the historian who
-relates the fact, is careful to observe that they did not
-fall short of living soldiers, either in fire or courage.
-People saw them distinctly charge each other, and
-heard the clash of their arms. Similar exhibitions
-were to be seen in different parts of the ancient world.
-In the great plain of Sogda,<a id='r1033' /><a href='#f1033' class='c018'><sup>[1033]</sup></a> for example, spectral
-armies of mighty courage but voiceless, were in the
-constant habit of engaging in mortal combat at the
-break of day. Caria likewise possessed a favourite
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span>haunt of these warlike phantoms. But here the
-apparition was only occasional, and all its evolutions
-were performed in the air, which was the case in
-England, as we have been assured by very old people,
-before the breaking-out of the American war. Another
-fray of ghosts took place every summer in Sicily
-on the plain of the Four Towers, but in this case the
-whole business was carried on at noon, to the no small
-annoyance of Pan who usually takes his siesta at that
-hour,—that is, if they were as noisy in their battles
-as the Campanian spectres.<a id='r1034' /><a href='#f1034' class='c018'><sup>[1034]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Like the Roman Catholics, the Greeks had great
-faith in miraculous images, holy wells, &amp;c. and their
-descendants still maintain the same creed. Near the
-Church of Haghia Parthenoë in Crete, is a most
-copious fountain deriving its name from the same
-holy and miracle-working virgins to whom the church
-is dedicated, and who also preside over the waters.
-“The worship of the headless body of Molos has
-also its parallel in modern times.”<a id='r1035' /><a href='#f1035' class='c018'><sup>[1035]</sup></a> As the Cretan
-Christians for many years reverenced the head of Titus,
-though deprived of its body, so their heathen ancestors
-used annually to honour by a religious festival the
-body of Molos, the well-known father of Meriones,
-though deprived of its head. The legend, told to
-explain the ancient ceremony in which the headless
-statue of a man thus exhibited, was that “after Molos
-got possession of a nymph’s person without having
-first obtained her consent, his body was found, but
-his head had disappeared.”<a id='r1036' /><a href='#f1036' class='c018'><sup>[1036]</sup></a> An image of the Virgin
-travelled by water from Constantinople to Greece,
-where it was shortly after seen standing up in the
-waves near Mount Athos. Similar legends obtained
-of old. Near Biennos in Crete,<a id='r1037' /><a href='#f1037' class='c018'><sup>[1037]</sup></a> “has been dug up
-the bones and skulls of giants, many of whom were
-eight or ten times the size of common men.”<a id='r1038' /><a href='#f1038' class='c018'><sup>[1038]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>Of the various modes of penetrating into the future,<a id='r1039' /><a href='#f1039' class='c018'><sup>[1039]</sup></a>
-prevalent among the people, I may mention
-some few. Prophetesses are frequently spoken of
-in Scripture, and in the Acts of the Apostles<a id='r1040' /><a href='#f1040' class='c018'><sup>[1040]</sup></a> is
-given an account of a young female slave who
-brought her master large sums of money by this
-trade, which was that of a gipsy. Others there
-were who, like many among the Orientals, professed
-to understand the language of birds. A slave, said
-to possess this knowledge, is celebrated, by Porphyry,
-and was probably from the East.<a id='r1041' /><a href='#f1041' class='c018'><sup>[1041]</sup></a> One sort of
-divination was practised by pouring drops of oil into
-a vessel and looking on it, when they pretended to
-behold a representation of what was to take place.
-This in Egypt is still practised, merely substituting
-ink for oil, and a great many travellers appear to
-believe in it. Soldiers going to war were especially
-liable to fall into this kind of foolery.<a id='r1042' /><a href='#f1042' class='c018'><sup>[1042]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The use of holy water on entering temples is of
-great antiquity. This custom was called περίῤῥανσις,
-and the act was performed with the branch of the
-fortunate olive.<a id='r1043' /><a href='#f1043' class='c018'><sup>[1043]</sup></a> There stood at the door of the
-temple a capacious lustral font, whose contents had
-been rendered holy by extinguishing<a id='r1044' /><a href='#f1044' class='c018'><sup>[1044]</sup></a> therein a
-lighted brand from the altar; thence water was
-sprinkled on themselves, by worshipers or by the
-officiating priest. A similar apparatus stood at the
-entrance to the Agora, to purify the orators, &amp;c.
-going to the public assembly. It was likewise placed
-at the door of private houses, wherein there was a
-corpse, that every one might purify himself on going
-out.<a id='r1045' /><a href='#f1045' class='c018'><sup>[1045]</sup></a> Superstitious persons usually walked about
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>with a laurel leaf in their mouth, or occasionally
-bearing a staff of laurel, there being a preserving
-power in that sacred shrub: hence arose the proverb
-δαφνίκην φορῶ βακτήριαν,—"I carry a laurel staff,"
-when a man would say, I have no fear. Persons
-not thus protected it is to be presumed were terrified
-if a weasel or dog crossed their path; and the
-omen could only be averted by casting three stones
-at it, the number three being exceedingly agreeable
-to the gods. Certain fruits would not burst on the
-tree if three stones were cast into the same hole with
-the seed when the tree was planted. Two brothers
-walking on the way conceived it ominous of evil if
-they happened to be parted by a stone. On every
-trifling occasion altars and chapels were erected to
-the gods, particularly by women; no house or street
-was free from them. For example, if a snake crept
-into the house through the eaves, forthwith an altar
-was erected. At places where three roads met, stones
-were set up, to be worshiped by travellers, who
-anointed them with oil. If a mouse nibbled a hole
-in a corn-sack, they would fly to the portent interpreter,
-and inquire what they should do,—"Get it
-mended," was sometimes the honest reply. Horrid
-dreams<a id='r1046' /><a href='#f1046' class='c018'><sup>[1046]</sup></a> might be expiated, and their evil effects be
-averted, by telling them to the rising sun. When
-the candles spit, it was a sign of rain.<a id='r1047' /><a href='#f1047' class='c018'><sup>[1047]</sup></a> During
-thunder and lightning they made the noise called
-<em>Poppysma</em>,<a id='r1048' /><a href='#f1048' class='c018'><sup>[1048]</sup></a> which it was hoped might avert the
-danger. On board ship sailors entertained the idea,
-that to carry a corpse would be the cause of shipwreck,
-as happened to the vessel which was bearing
-to Eub&oelig;a the bones of Pelops.<a id='r1049' /><a href='#f1049' class='c018'><sup>[1049]</sup></a> The sailors of
-the Mediterranean, for this reason, will refuse to
-receive mummies on board.</p>
-
-<hr class='c025' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f993'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r993'>993</a>. Cf. Diog. Laert. Pr. iii. 4.
-Ἀρχαῖος μὲν οὖν τις λόγος καὶ
-πάτριος ἐστὶ πᾶσιν ἀνθρώποις,
-ὡς ἐκ θεοῦ τὰ πάντα, καὶ διὰ θεοῦ
-ἡμῖν συνέστηκεν.—Aristot. de
-Mund. c. 6. In c. 7. we have a
-curious list of the various epithets
-of Zeus, whose name the Pseudo-Aristotle
-conceives to signify the
-root of all existence: ὡς κᾄν εἰ
-λέγοιμεν, δἰ ὅν ζῶμεν. This
-thought St. Paul expresses by the
-well-known words—"in whom
-we live and move and have our
-being." The author of the
-Treatise De Mundo then quotes
-from the Orphic fragments a passage,
-the doctrine of which strongly
-resembles the Pantheism of
-Pope:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Ζεὺς πρῶτος γένετα, Ζεὺς ὕστατος ἀρχικέραυνος·</div>
- <div class='line'>Ζεὺς κεφαλὴ, Ζεὺς μέσσα· Διὸς δ᾽ ἐκ πάντα τέτυκται·</div>
- <div class='line'>Ζεὺς πυθμὴν γαίης τε καὶ οὐρανοῦ ἀστερόεντος·</div>
- <div class='line'>Ζεὺς ἄρσην γένετο, Ζεὺς ἄμβροτος ἔπλετο, νύμφη·</div>
- <div class='line'>Ζεὺς πνοιὴ πάντων, Ζεὺς ἀκαμάτου πυρὸς ὁρμή·</div>
- <div class='line'>Ζεὺς πόντου ῥίζα· Ζεὺς ἥλιος, ἠδὲ σελήνη·</div>
- <div class='line'>Ζεὺς βασιλεὺς· Ζεὺς ἀρχὸς ἁπάντων ἀρχικέραυνος·</div>
- <div class='line'>Πάντας γὰρ κρύψας αὖτις φάος ἐς πολυγηθὲς</div>
- <div class='line'>Ἐξ ἱερῆς κραδίης ἀνενέγκατο μέρμερα ῥέζων.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>Cf. Orphic. fragm. 6. p. 138.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f994'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r994'>994</a>. “Do good to all,” an evangelical
-precept (Plat. Rep. i. § 9.
-p. 33. Stallb.), forming part of
-that philosophy which taught the
-Greeks what was honourable and
-what base, what just and what
-unjust, what was above all things
-to be desired and what avoided,
-how they were to demean themselves
-towards the gods, towards
-their parents, their elders, the laws,
-strangers, magistrates, friends,
-wives, children, slaves: to wit,
-that they were to reverence the
-gods, honour their parents, respect
-their elders, obey the laws,
-love their friends, be affectionate
-to their wives, solicitous for their
-children, compassionate towards
-their slaves.—Plut. de Educ. Puer.
-§ 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f995'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r995'>995</a>. Herod. ii. 52.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f996'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r996'>996</a>. History of Greece, i. 97.
-Dioscorides in Athenæus observes
-that no sacrifice is so acceptable
-to the gods as that which is offered
-up by members of a family
-living in unison.—i. 15. In the
-earliest ages of the world the first-born
-of every family was esteemed
-a prophet.—Godwin, Moses et
-Aaron, i. 6. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f997'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r997'>997</a>. Plato, Crit. t. vii. 146.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f998'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r998'>998</a>. Plat. de Legg. t. viii. p. 182.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f999'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r999'>999</a>. The air was Zeus.—Lycoph.
-Cassand. 80. Meurs. Comm. p.
-1179. To some particular state
-of which the ancients alluded
-when they spoke of Kronos seeking
-to devour his children and
-swallowing stones instead of them.
-For the teeth of time which produce
-no effect on the air appear
-to devour whatever is composed
-of the element of earth. Mythologists,
-however, have generally
-omitted to remark that the stones
-which Kronos mistook for his
-children were not ordinary blocks
-of basalt or granite but rather so
-many statues of children endued,
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>pro tempore</i></span>, with life.—Ἔτι δέ,
-φησὶν, ἐπενόησε θεὸς Οὐρανὸς
-βαιτύλια, λίθοις ἐμψύχοις μηχανησάμενος.—Sanchon.
-ap. Euseb. Præp. Evang. l. i. c. 10. p. 37.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1000'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1000'>1000</a>. Crit. t. vii. p. 173.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1001'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1001'>1001</a>. Poll. i. 5.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1002'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1002'>1002</a>. Muret. ad Plat. Rep. p. 726.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1003'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1003'>1003</a>. Muret. ad Plat. Rep. p. 727.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1004'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1004'>1004</a>. Iliad, υ. 242. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1005'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1005'>1005</a>. Iliad, ω. 527. seq. Cf. Muret.
-p. 737.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1006'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1006'>1006</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Nub. 95.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1007'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1007'>1007</a>. Among the people of the
-East we even discover traces of
-the doctrine of the resurrection:—Καὶ
-ἀναβιώσεσθαι, κατὰ τοὺς
-Μάγους, φησὶ (Θεόπομποσ) τοὺς
-ἀνθρώπους, καὶ ἔσεσθαι ἀθανάτους.—Diog.
-Laert. Pr. vi. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1008'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1008'>1008</a>. Plato, Tim. Opp. vii. 45. Cf. p.
-97.—Is there not some allusion in
-the following passage to the scriptural
-account of the creation of
-man before woman? Ὡς γάρ ποτε
-ἐξ ἀνδρῶν γυναῖκες καὶ τἄλλα
-θηρία γενήσοίντο ἠπίσταντο οἱ
-ξυνιστάντες ἡμᾶς.—Tim. Opp.
-t. vii. p. 111.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1009'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1009'>1009</a>. Plato, Tim. Opp. t. vii. p. 137.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1010'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1010'>1010</a>. Even among the ancient
-Christians this doctrine was not
-wholly exploded. Origen believed
-it:—Λέγει δὲ καὶ ἄλλα
-παραλογώτατα· καὶ δυσσεβείας
-πλήρη μετεμψυχώσείς τε γὰρ ληρωδεὶ
-καὶ ἐμψύχους τοὺς ἀστέρας
-καὶ ἑτέρα τούτοις παραπλησία.—Phot.
-Bib. p. 3. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1011'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1011'>1011</a>. Plato de Legg. ix. Opp. viii.
-152. seq. Cf. 172. seq. 191. seq.
-De Rep. i. Opp. vi. 9. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1012'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1012'>1012</a>. De Rep. ii. 7. t. i. p. 112.
-sqq. Stallb.—The belief that children
-suffered for the crimes of
-their parents, which widely pervaded
-the pagan world, is nowhere
-more clearly stated than
-by Plato:—Γὰρ ἐν Αἵδου δίκην
-δώσομεν ὧν ἂν ἐνθαδε ἀδικήσωμεν,
-ἢ αὐτσὶ ἢ παῖδες παῖδων.—Id. c.
-8. p. 119.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1013'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1013'>1013</a>. Cf. Mitford, Hist. of Greece,
-i. 115. 8vo.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1014'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1014'>1014</a>. Xen. Mem. i. 3. 2. Cf.
-Plut. Inst. Lac. § 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1015'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1015'>1015</a>. Hist. of Greece, i. 108.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1016'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1016'>1016</a>. Æsch. Agam. 55. sqq. with
-the commentary of Klausen. p.
-104.—There occurs in the
-Scriptures a like sentiment, “He
-who stilleth the young ravens,
-when they cry.” So also the Mahomedan
-tradition, that in the
-midst of a battle-field, where two
-mighty hosts were engaged, God
-preserved from the hoofs of the
-chargers, and from the feet of men,
-the lapwing’s nest.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1017'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1017'>1017</a>. Πηγὴ δακρύων—Soph. Trach.
-852. Antig. 802. A Scriptural
-expression, “O that mine eyes
-were a <em>fountain of tears</em>.” Æsch.
-Agam. 68. sqq. Eumen. 900.
-Suppl. 1040.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1018'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1018'>1018</a>. Æsch. Agam. 160. sqq.—Klaus.
-Com. p. 120. Hence the
-proverb, παθήματα μαθήματα.—Blomfield.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1019'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1019'>1019</a>. Pind. Pyth. iii. 11. Æsch.
-Agam. 342. sqq. Klausen. Com.
-p. 140.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1020'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1020'>1020</a>. Cf. Æsch. Eum. 859. seq.—Schol.
-ad Æsch. Tim. Orat. Att.
-t. 12. p. 384.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1021'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1021'>1021</a>. Schol. Aristoph. Acharn. 712.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1022'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1022'>1022</a>. See, for example, Lord Castlereagh’s
-vision of the fire-devil
-in Mr. Lockhart’s Life of Sir
-Walter Scott.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1023'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1023'>1023</a>. The same superstitions, a
-little modified, are still found in
-many parts of Greece. “The
-religious feelings of the Cretan,
-in the nineteenth century, differ
-very little, if at all, from those
-entertained for the Naïads by
-his heathen ancestors.”—Pashley,
-Trav. in Crete, i. 89.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1024'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1024'>1024</a>. Cf. Poppo, Proleg. in Thucyd.
-i. 14. Xenarchos observes
-that the home perishes when conflicting
-fortunes attach to the
-master, and into which the Alastor
-creeps:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in9'>φθίνει δόμος</div>
- <div class='line'>ἀσυντάτοισι δεσποτῶν κεχρημένος</div>
- <div class='line'>τύχαις, ἀλάστωρ τ᾽ εἰσπέπαικε.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>Ap. Athen. ii. 64. seq. See
-also Æsch. Choeph. 119. Eumen.
-560. 802. with Klausen. Æsch.
-Theolog. i. 9. 56. seq. et ad
-Agam. p. 119. The Egyptians
-had their Babys or Typhon, a
-god of evil.—Athen. xv. 25.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1025'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1025'>1025</a>. Plat. Rep. ii. § 3. Stallb.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1026'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1026'>1026</a>. Paus. viii. 2, 3. Cf. Plat.
-Rep. viii. 16. Stallb.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1027'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1027'>1027</a>. Plat. Rep. viii. 16. t. ii. p.
-223. Stallb. Cf. Bœckh in Platon.
-Minoem. p. 55. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1028'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1028'>1028</a>. Muret. ad Plat. Rep. i. p.
-670. where, with much ingenuity,
-he detects an allusion to this superstition
-in a hasty glance of the
-philosopher.—Plin. Hist. Nat. viii.
-34. Schol. ad Theocr. xiv. 21.
-Virg. Ecl. ix. 53. Donat. in Ter.
-Adelph. iv. 1. 21. et Stallb. ad
-Plat. Rep. i. 37.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1029'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1029'>1029</a>. Hes. Opp. et Dies, 121. seq.
-where see Goettling.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1030'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1030'>1030</a>. De Rep. v. 15. t. i. 377. seq.
-The Magi, among whom supernatural
-sights and powers were
-most familiar, maintained that
-the Gods occasionally appeared
-to them, and that the atmosphere
-is filled with spectral shadows,
-which, floating about like mists
-or exhalations, are visible to the
-sharpsighted.—Diog. Laert. Pr. vi.
-9. A similar belief prevailed
-among the early anchorites. “It
-was their firm persuasion, that
-the air which they breathed was
-peopled with invisible enemies;
-with innumerable dæmons who
-watched every occasion and assumed
-every form, to terrify, and,
-above all, to tempt, their unguarded
-virtue.”—Gibbon, vi. 263.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1031'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1031'>1031</a>. Æsch. Agam. 68.—Klaus.
-Com. p. 108.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1032'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1032'>1032</a>. Athen. iv. 31.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1033'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1033'>1033</a>. Which had once been a lake.—Vit.
-Isidor. ap. Phot. Bib. p.
-839.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1034'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1034'>1034</a>. Phot. Bib. p. 339.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1035'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1035'>1035</a>. Pashley, Travels in Crete, i.
-88.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1036'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1036'>1036</a>. Pashley, Travels in Crete,
-i. 177.—Plut. de Orac. Def.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1037'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1037'>1037</a>. Herod. iv. 33.—Pashley,
-Travels in Crete, i. 192.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1038'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1038'>1038</a>. Pashley, i. 278.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1039'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1039'>1039</a>. See Max. Tyr. Diss. iii. p.
-31–38.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1040'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1040'>1040</a>. C. xvi. v. 16. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1041'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1041'>1041</a>. De Abstinentiâ, iii. Cf. Cedren.
-Michael, Compotat. εἰσὶ
-γὰρ τίνες οἱ ἐν ἐλαίῳ ὁρίοντες
-μαντεύονται.—Schol. Aristoph.
-Acharn. 1093.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1042'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1042'>1042</a>. Οἱ γὰρ ἐπὶ πόλεμον ἐξιόντες
-ἐπητήρουν τὰς διοσημείας.—Schol.
-Aristoph. Acharn. 1106.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1043'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1043'>1043</a>. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ramo felicis olivæ.</span>—Virgil.
-Æn. vi. 230.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1044'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1044'>1044</a>. Athen. ix. 76.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1045'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1045'>1045</a>. Casaub. ad Theophr. Char.
-p. 287. Eurip. Alcest. 99.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1046'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1046'>1046</a>. Cf. Plut. Alcib. § 39.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1047'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1047'>1047</a>. Casaub. ad Theophr. Char. p.
-300.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1048'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1048'>1048</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Vesp. 260.
-262. 626.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1049'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1049'>1049</a>. Pausan. v. 13. 4. Palm.
-Exerc. in Auct. Græc. d. 398.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c025' />
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>
- <h2 class='c013'>BOOK III. <br /> WOMEN.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c024'>CHAPTER I. <br /> WOMEN IN THE HEROIC AGES.</h3>
-
-<p class='c032'>There is no question connected with Grecian
-manners more difficult than that which concerns
-the character and condition of women.<a id='r1050' /><a href='#f1050' class='c018'><sup>[1050]</sup></a> On so
-many points did they differ in this matter from
-us, that, unless we can conceive ourselves to be in
-the wrong, the condemnation of the whole Hellenic
-theory of female rights and interests and influence
-must, as a matter of course, ensue. I do not say
-that, after all, this is not the conclusion we should
-come to. Reason may possibly be on our side; but
-certainly it appears to me, that too little pains has
-hitherto been taken to arrive at the truth; and as
-it is a consideration by no means unimportant, I
-have bestowed on it more than ordinary attention
-in the hope of letting in additional light, however
-little, on this obscure and unheeded department of
-antiquities.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In form the Greek woman was so perfect as to
-be still taken as the type of her sex. Her beauty,
-from whatever cause, bordered closely upon the ideal,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>or rather was that which, because now only found
-in works of art, we denominate the ideal. But our
-conceptions of form never transcend what is found
-in Nature. She bounds our ideas by a circle over
-which we cannot step. The sculptors of Greece
-represented nothing but what they saw,<a id='r1051' /><a href='#f1051' class='c018'><sup>[1051]</sup></a> and even
-when the cunning of their hand was most felicitous,
-even when loveliness and grace and all the poetry
-of womanhood appeared to breathe from their marbles,
-the inferiority of their imitations to the creations
-of God, in properties belonging to form, in mere
-contour, in the grouping and developement of features,
-must have sufficed to impress even upon Pheidias, that
-high priest of art, the conviction of how childish it
-were to dream of rising above nature. The beauty
-of Greece was, indeed, a creature of earth, but suggested
-aspirations beyond it. Every feature in the
-countenance uttered impassioned language, was rife
-with tenderness, instinct with love. The pulses of
-the heart, warm and rapid, seemed to possess ready
-interpreters in the eye. But, radiant over all, the
-imagination shed its poetic splendour, communicating
-a dignity, an elevation, a manifestation of
-soul, which lent to passion all the moral purity and
-enduring force that belong to love, when love is
-least tainted with unspiritual and ignoble selfishness.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>I despair, however, of representing by words what
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>neither Pheidias nor Polycletos could represent in
-marble or ivory. The women of Greece were neither
-large nor tall. The whole figure, graceful but
-not slender, left the imagination nothing to desire.
-It was satisfied with what was before it. Limbs
-exquisitely moulded,<a id='r1052' /><a href='#f1052' class='c018'><sup>[1052]</sup></a> round, smooth, tapering, a <em>torso</em>
-undulating upwards in the richest curves to the neck,
-a bosom somewhat inclined to fulness, but in configuration
-perfect, features in which the utmost delicacy
-was blended with whatever is noblest and
-most dignified in expression. Both blue eyes and
-black<a id='r1053' /><a href='#f1053' class='c018'><sup>[1053]</sup></a> were found in Greece, but the latter most
-commonly. Even Aphrodite, spite of her auburn
-hair, comes before us in the Iliad with large black
-eyes, beaming with humid fire. No goddess but the
-Attic virgin has the cold blue eye of the North,
-becoming her maidenly character, reserved, firm,
-affectionate, with a dash of shrewishness. The nose
-was straight and admirably proportioned, without
-anything of that breadth which in the works of inferior
-sculptors creates an idea of Amazonian fierceness.
-Beauty itself had shaped the mouth and chin,
-and basked and sported in them. In these, above
-all, the Grecian woman excelled the barbarians.
-Other features they might have resembling hers, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>seldom that Attic mouth, that dimpled, oval, richly-rounded
-chin, which imprinted the crowning characteristic
-of womanhood upon her face, and stamped
-her mistress of man and of the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>A creature thus fashioned and gifted with an intellect
-which, if less robust and comprehensive, is
-equally active with that of man and still more
-flexible, could scarcely be degraded into a domestic
-drudge and slave, and in Greece was not.<a id='r1054' /><a href='#f1054' class='c018'><sup>[1054]</sup></a> Already,
-in the heroic ages, women occupied a commanding
-position in society, somewhat less honourable than
-is their due, but, in many respects, higher and more
-to be envied than was appropriated to them in the
-ignorant and corrupt times of chivalry which the
-Homeric period has been thought greatly to resemble.
-In those days, though fashion required more
-reserve in the female character than is consistent
-with the spirit of modern manners, persons of different
-sexes could meet and converse together without
-scandal. Gentlewomen of the highest rank went
-abroad under their own guidance. On the arrival of
-a foreign ship upon the shore we find an Argive
-princess descending without any male protector to
-cheapen articles of dress and trinkets, which however,
-as the event proved, was not without danger,
-for both she herself and a number of her maids were
-carried away captives by the perfidious strangers.<a id='r1055' /><a href='#f1055' class='c018'><sup>[1055]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Homer abounds with proofs both of the liberty
-women enjoyed and the high estimation in which
-they were held. They were quite as much as is consistent
-with prudence and delicacy the companions
-of men.<a id='r1056' /><a href='#f1056' class='c018'><sup>[1056]</sup></a> And in more than one particular, as in
-the bathing<a id='r1057' /><a href='#f1057' class='c018'><sup>[1057]</sup></a> and perfuming of distinguished male
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>guests, the manners of those times allowed of or
-rather enjoined familiarities greater than the customs
-of any civilised modern nations permit. Ladies
-lived at large with their husbands and families in the
-more frequented parts of the house, dined and drank
-wine with them, rode or walked out in their company,
-or, attended by a female servant, and were,
-in fact, in the modern sense of the word, mistresses
-of the house and everything it contained.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>When the husband happened to be absent it was not,
-indeed, considered delicate, if the mansion was filled
-with youthful and petulant guests, for the wife to be
-seen much among them,<a id='r1058' /><a href='#f1058' class='c018'><sup>[1058]</sup></a> though it still appears to
-have been incumbent upon married ladies to exercise
-the rites of hospitality, which sometimes, as in the case
-of Helen, opened the way to intrigue and elopement.
-A similar event, veiled in mythological obscurity,
-shipwrecked the virtue of Alcmena.<a id='r1059' /><a href='#f1059' class='c018'><sup>[1059]</sup></a> Clytemnæstra,
-too, and Ægialeia the wife of Diomede, fell before
-the temptations afforded by the absence of their
-lords,<a id='r1060' /><a href='#f1060' class='c018'><sup>[1060]</sup></a> while Penelope surrounded with youthful
-suitors, assailed by reports of her husband’s death,
-alternately soothed and menaced, remained true to
-her vows and became to all ages the pattern of conjugal
-fidelity.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The examples are many of the facility of their
-intercourse with strangers. Sthenobœa wife of Prœtos,
-king of Argos, must have enjoyed numerous
-occasions of being alone with Bellerophon before
-she could, like the wife of Potiphar, have tried his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>honour and forfeited her own.<a id='r1061' /><a href='#f1061' class='c018'><sup>[1061]</sup></a> Helen after her
-return to Sparta, banquets and associates freely with
-strangers at the table of her husband, where, by her
-conversation and remarks, we discover how quick
-and penetrating the understanding of women was
-in those ages supposed to be. Nothing could be
-further from the mind of those heroic warriors than
-the idea of regarding woman merely as an object
-of desire, or as a household drudge.<a id='r1062' /><a href='#f1062' class='c018'><sup>[1062]</sup></a> If she receives
-praise for her beauty, or industrious habits,
-still more is she celebrated for her mental endowments,
-for her wisdom, for her maternal love. Where
-in fiction or in life shall we find a lady more gentle,
-more graceful, more accomplished, more gifted with
-every charm of womanhood than Helen, who, nevertheless,
-falls a prey to seduction! Where more feminine
-tenderness, or truer love than in Andromache?
-Where more matronly sweetness and dignity than
-in the Phæacian Arete; more unblameable vivacity,
-blithe unreserve, greater sensibility, united with the
-noblest maiden modesty, self command and proud
-consciousness of virtue, than in that loveliest of poetical
-creations her daughter Nausicaa.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Homer himself felt all the charm of this exquisite
-creation and lingered over it with the fondness
-of a parent. She is the very flower of the heroic
-age. In the rapid glimpse afforded us of her life,
-we discover what the condition and occupations of
-a noble virgin were in those primitive times, a felicitous
-mixture of splendour and simplicity, approaching
-nature in the rough energy of the passions, with
-feelings healthy and vigorous and happy in the utter
-absence of sickly sentimentality. Though daughter
-to a king Nausicaa does not disdain to care for
-the family wardrobe. Her nuptial day is not far
-distant, and, agreeably to the nature of her sex in all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span>ages, she is desirous that her dress should on that
-occasion appear to the best advantage, but to her
-father modestly feigns to think principally of her
-brothers.<a id='r1063' /><a href='#f1063' class='c018'><sup>[1063]</sup></a> Alcinoos aware of the feint, smiles inwardly
-while he approves of her solicitude. With
-his ready permission she piles the garments on the
-royal car drawn by mules, and then, mounting the
-seat whip in hand, departs for the distant rivulet
-accompanied by her maids. Of these girls, the poet
-says, two, clothed by the graces with loveliness, used
-to sleep in the Princess’s chamber one on either
-side the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>On reaching the secluded spot, the umbrageous
-embouchure of a mountain brook where they usually
-performed their lowly task, it was their first care
-to unharness the mules, which were turned loose to
-graze on the shore. Their labours occupy them
-but a portion of the morning, and these concluded,
-they dine sumptuously enough, in some shady nook
-overlooking the stream, on wine and viands brought
-along with them from the palace. To remove every
-idea of sordid toil and fatigue Homer is careful to
-represent them full of life and animal spirits, bounding
-sportively along the meadows, having first bathed
-and lubricated their limbs with fragrant oils. The
-game which engages them while their robes and
-veils are drying on the pebbly beach received in
-later ages the name of Phæninda,<a href='#f1063' class='c018'><sup>[1063]</sup></a> and consisted in
-throwing a ball unexpectedly from one individual
-to another of a large party scattered over a field.
-As it was uncertain to whom the person in possession
-of the ball would cast it, every one was on
-the watch, and much of the sport arose from the
-eagerness of each to catch it.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In this game the princess takes part, laughing
-and singing with the rest, and it is a clumsy throw
-of <a id='corr357.37'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='her’s'>hers</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_357.37'><ins class='correction' title='her’s'>hers</ins></a></span> which sends the ball into the river that
-excites the loud exclamation from her maids which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>awakens Odysseus. Her conversation with the hero
-thereupon ensuing suggests a high notion of female
-education at the period. The maids of honour terrified
-at his strange and grotesque appearance, unclothed,
-and deformed with ooze and mud, take to
-flight, but Nausicaa relying on the respect due to
-her father maintains her ground. Odysseus reverencing
-her youth and beauty prefers his petition
-from a distance. She grants far more than he
-seeks, and with many indications of female gentleness
-mingles so much self-possession, forethought,
-compassion for misfortune, consideration of what is
-due to her own character, and confidence in the
-generosity and unsuspicious goodness of her parents,
-that we are constrained to suppose the existence of
-much instruction, mental training, and knowledge of
-the world. And if such qualifications had not at
-that time been found in women, Homer had much
-too keen a sense of propriety to have hazarded his
-reputation and his bread by supposing their prevalence
-in his poems.<a id='r1064' /><a href='#f1064' class='c018'><sup>[1064]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>How the women of the heroic times received their
-instruction it is not difficult to comprehend, though
-there has come down to us very little positive information
-on the subject. The poets, those prophetic
-teachers of the infancy of humanity, had already commenced
-their revelations of the good and beautiful.
-Wandering from town to town, under the immediate
-direction of Providence, they scattered far and near
-the seeds of civilisation. Their songs were in every
-mouth: both youths and maidens imbibed the wisdom
-they contained, and with their sprightly strains,
-as in the case of Nausicaa, enlivened their lighter
-moments when alone, or delighted the noble and
-numerous guests at their fathers’ board. Homer, indeed,
-nowhere introduces a lady singing at an entertainment,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>excepting in Olympos, where the Muses
-represent the sex; but Æschylus, a poet profoundly
-versed in antiquity, speaks of Iphigenia as performing
-this sweet office in her father’s hall.<a id='r1065' /><a href='#f1065' class='c018'><sup>[1065]</sup></a> The daughter
-of Alcinoos, however, shares in the amusements and
-instruction supplied by the bard during the entertainment
-described by Homer, and converses freely with
-their illustrious guest.<a id='r1066' /><a href='#f1066' class='c018'><sup>[1066]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>We have above seen that women in those ages
-were not creatures of mere luxury or show. Possessing
-considerable physical power and energy, and much skill
-in the elegant and useful arts of life, they were deterred
-by no false pride or ignorant prejudices from converting
-their capacity to the use of their families. The
-magnificence of their attire, their costly ornaments,
-or the consciousness of the highest personal beauty,
-nowise interfered with their thrifty habits; and Lord
-Bacon<a id='r1067' /><a href='#f1067' class='c018'><sup>[1067]</sup></a> tells a very good anecdote to show that the
-same in former days was the case in England. There
-was a lady of the West country, he says, who gave
-great entertainments at her house to most of the gallant
-gentlemen of her neighbourhood, among whom
-Sir Walter Raleigh was one. This lady, though otherwise
-a stately dame, was a notable good housewife,
-and in the morning betimes she called to one of her
-maids that looked to the swine, and asked, “Is the
-piggy served?” Sir Walter’s chamber being near the
-lady’s, he heard this homely inquiry. A little before
-dinner the lady came down in great state to the
-drawing-room, which was full of gentlemen, and as
-soon as Sir Walter Raleigh saw her, “Madam,” says
-he, “is the piggy served?” To which the lady replied,
-“You know best whether you have had your
-breakfast.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>An Homeric princess resembled this stately dame
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span>of the West, in thinking nothing beneath her which
-could contribute to the comfort or elegant adornment
-of those she loved. The employments of women in
-those ages, however, included some things which, in
-the present state of the useful arts, would seldom fall
-to their share, and among these were the labours of
-the loom, to excel in which was evidently considered
-one of their chiefest accomplishments and most necessary
-duties.<a id='r1068' /><a href='#f1068' class='c018'><sup>[1068]</sup></a> In this occupation they took refuge
-from anxiety and sorrow; to this we find Hector with
-rough tenderness urging his beloved wife to have
-recourse, when her affection would withdraw him from
-his post;<a id='r1069' /><a href='#f1069' class='c018'><sup>[1069]</sup></a> and Telemachus, in a tone somewhat too
-authoritative, recommends, in the Odyssey, the same
-course to his mother:<a id='r1070' /><a href='#f1070' class='c018'><sup>[1070]</sup></a> and in the Eastern world the
-same tastes and habits continued to prevail down to a
-very late age. When Sisygambis, the captive Persian
-queen, was presented, however, by Alexander with
-purple and wool, she sank into an agony of grief and
-tears: they reminded her of happier days. But the
-conqueror, misunderstanding her feelings, and desirous
-to remove the notion that he was imposing any
-servile task, observed:—"This garment, mother,
-which you see me wear, is not merely the gift but the
-work also of my sisters."<a id='r1071' /><a href='#f1071' class='c018'><sup>[1071]</sup></a> Similar presents passed
-between near relations in Persia; for in Herodotus we
-find Amestris, the queen of Xerxes, conferring upon
-her husband, as a gift of price, a richly variegated and
-ample pelisse, which the labours of her own fair hands
-had rendered valuable.<a id='r1072' /><a href='#f1072' class='c018'><sup>[1072]</sup></a> Augustus, too, even when all
-simplicity of manners had expired with the republic,
-affected still to bring up the females of his family
-upon the antique model, and wore no garments but
-such as were manufactured in his own house.<a id='r1073' /><a href='#f1073' class='c018'><sup>[1073]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>To return: constant practice and the delight which
-familiar and voluntary labour inspires, had already in
-the heroic ages, enabled the Grecian ladies to throw
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>much splendour and richness of invention into their
-fabrics. The desire also, perhaps, of excelling in
-works of this kind the ladies of Sidon, communicated
-an additional impulse to their industry. At all events,
-Homer makes it abundantly clear that they understood
-how to employ with singular felicity the arts of
-design, and to represent in colours brilliant and varied,
-cities, landscapes, human figures, and all the complicated
-movements of war.<a id='r1074' /><a href='#f1074' class='c018'><sup>[1074]</sup></a> We must, no doubt, allow
-something for the poet’s own skill in painting; but,
-after every reasonable deduction, enough will remain
-still to prove that at the period of the Trojan war
-Greece had made remarkable progress in every art
-which tends to ameliorate and embellish human life.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Carding, also, and spinning entered into the list
-of their <a id='corr379.16'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='occupations,'>occupations.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_379.16'><ins class='correction' title='occupations,'>occupations.</ins></a></span> Even Helen though frail as
-fair, is laborious as a Penelope, plying her shuttle
-or her golden distaff, and surrounded habitually by
-a troop of she-manufacturers.<a id='r1075' /><a href='#f1075' class='c018'><sup>[1075]</sup></a> Arete, queen of Phæacia,
-is likewise depicted sitting at the fire, distaff
-in hand, encircled by her maids;<a id='r1076' /><a href='#f1076' class='c018'><sup>[1076]</sup></a> and the wife of
-Odysseus, famed for her household virtues, is seen in
-the Odyssey at her own door spinning the purple
-thread.<a id='r1077' /><a href='#f1077' class='c018'><sup>[1077]</sup></a> The work-baskets of the ladies of that
-period, if we can rely on a poet’s word, were such
-as more modern dames might envy, formed of beaten
-gold and chased with figures richly wrought, and
-grouped with infinite taste and judgment.<a id='r1078' /><a href='#f1078' class='c018'><sup>[1078]</sup></a> In
-these their balls of purple were deposited when spun,
-though probably reed baskets or osier work contented
-the ambition of ladies less aspiring than
-Europa.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span>Women also, but chiefly slaves, performed in those
-primitive times all the operations of the kitchen.
-They even in the great establishment of Alcinoos
-work at the mill, as they do also in the palace of
-Odysseus, where guided perhaps by the nature of the
-climate we find the young women preferring for
-this operation the cool of the night.<a id='r1079' /><a href='#f1079' class='c018'><sup>[1079]</sup></a> Even in later
-ages, when juster ideas of what is due to the sex
-prevailed, this severe toil sometimes devolved upon
-female slaves, though in general it was the males,
-and of these the most worthless, who worked the mills,
-regarded at length almost in the light of correctional
-establishments.<a id='r1080' /><a href='#f1080' class='c018'><sup>[1080]</sup></a> But the making of bread was very
-properly appropriated to women almost throughout
-the East. The Egyptians, indeed, an effeminate and
-servile people, very early, as we learn from Genesis,
-confounded the offices of the sex; but among the
-Lydians, even in the palace of Crœsos, we meet with
-a female baker,<a id='r1081' /><a href='#f1081' class='c018'><sup>[1081]</sup></a> and the Persian armies carried along
-with them women to bake their bread in their longest
-and most dangerous expeditions.<a id='r1082' /><a href='#f1082' class='c018'><sup>[1082]</sup></a> In Greece to
-preside over the oven, was up to a very late period
-the prerogative of the fair. One hundred and ten
-women had the honour of being locked up with the
-handful of warriors who during three years baffled the
-whole force of the Peloponnesos from the glorious walls
-of Platæa,<a id='r1083' /><a href='#f1083' class='c018'><sup>[1083]</sup></a> and in the primitive ages of Macedonia
-the queen herself prepared the bread distributed
-among the royal shepherds.<a id='r1084' /><a href='#f1084' class='c018'><sup>[1084]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Sacred Scriptures have rendered familiar and
-reconciled to us the simplicity of patriarchal manners.
-To behold the daughter of Bethuel or of Laban coming
-forth to draw water for her flock, does not strike
-us as at all out of keeping with the opulence or dignity
-of her father, or with her own feminine delicacy; and
-we know that at this present day the wealthiest
-Bedouin Sheikh of the desert, though lord of a thousand
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span>camels, discovers nothing in his daughter’s condition
-which should relieve her from this healthful
-employment. Similar notions prevailed among the
-Greeks of the Heroic Age. For though in many
-cases slave-maidens<a id='r1085' /><a href='#f1085' class='c018'><sup>[1085]</sup></a> are found engaged in drawing
-water from the springs, virgins of noble birth, nay the
-daughters themselves of kings, descend to the fountain
-with their urns, mingling there with female captives
-and young women of inferior rank. Thus, for example,
-the princess of the Lestrygons in Homer goes forth
-with her water-jar<a id='r1086' /><a href='#f1086' class='c018'><sup>[1086]</sup></a> to the well, and even among the
-Athenians, where refinement of manners first sprang
-up, and civilisation made most rapid strides, the
-daughters of the citizens in early times used to
-descend to the fountain of Callirrhoe to draw water.<a id='r1087' /><a href='#f1087' class='c018'><sup>[1087]</sup></a>
-But the task was commonly allotted to female
-captives and other slaves. Euryclea, Odysseus’ house-keeper,
-sends a troop of girls on this errand with orders
-to be quick in their movements, and Hector, in
-his deep fear for Andromache, already in apprehension
-beholds her toiling at the fountains of Argos.<a id='r1088' /><a href='#f1088' class='c018'><sup>[1088]</sup></a></p>
-
-<hr class='c025' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1050'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1050'>1050</a>. Describing the approach to
-the temple of Aphrodite, Lucian
-says: εὐθὺς ἡμῖν ἀπ’ αὐτοῦ τοῦ
-τεμένους Ἀφροδίσιοι προσέπνευσαν
-αὖραι.—Amor. § 12.
-These gentle airs should breathe
-into the style and language of
-the author who treats of the
-women of Greece; but, in my
-own case, research I fear and the
-effects of fifty-two degrees of
-north latitude will prevent this
-consummation so devoutly to be
-wished.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1051'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1051'>1051</a>. On the beauty of the modern
-Greek women I can speak from
-my own observation; but most
-travellers are of the same opinion,
-and Mr. Douglas, in particular,
-gives the following testimony in
-their favour: “Though the delicacy
-of her form is not long
-able to sustain the heat of the
-climate and the immoderate
-use of the warm bath, I can
-scarcely trust myself to describe
-the beauty of a young Greek
-when arriving at the age which
-the ancients have so gracefully
-personified as the Χρυσοστέφανος
-Ἥβη. Were we to
-form our ideas of Grecian women
-from the wives of Albanian
-peasants we should be
-strangely deceived; but the
-islands of Andro, Tino, and,
-above all, that of Crete, contain
-forms upon which the chisel
-of Praxiteles would not have
-been misemployed.”—Essay,
-&amp;c. p. 159.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1052'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1052'>1052</a>. Cf. Winkelmann, iv. 4. 44.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1053'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1053'>1053</a>. Plat. Repub. iv. t. vi. p. 167.—That
-black eyes were most common
-among the Greeks may be
-inferred from this, that, in describing
-the parts of the eye,
-they called the iris τὸ μέλαν,
-which is sometimes of one colour,
-and sometimes of another.—Arist.
-Hist. Anim. I. viii. 2.
-He observes, further on, that
-some persons had black eyes,
-others deep blue, others gray,
-others of the colour of goats.—§4.
-Other animals have eyes of one
-colour, except the horse, which has
-sometimes one blue eye. Eyes
-moderate in size and neither sunken
-nor projecting were esteemed
-the best.—§. 5. Large eyes,
-likewise, were greatly admired.
-Hence Hera is called βοῶπις by
-Homer. Aristœnetos, describing
-his Laïs, says: <a id='corr371.n2'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='ὀφθαλμοι'>ὀφθαλμοὶ</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_371.n2'><ins class='correction' title='ὀφθαλμοι'>ὀφθαλμοὶ</ins></a></span> μεγάλοι
-τε καὶ διαυγεῖς καὶ καθαρῷ
-φωτὶ διαλάμποντες.—Scheffer ad
-Æl. Hist. Var. xii. 1. With
-respect to the colour of the hair
-see Winkelmann, iv. 4. 38. It
-was, of course, considered a great
-beauty to have it long, and,
-therefore, Helen, in honour of
-Clytemnæstra, cut off the points
-only.—Eurip. Orest. 128. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1054'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1054'>1054</a>. On the respect paid to women,
-see Demosth. in Ev. et
-Mnes. § 11.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1055'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1055'>1055</a>. Herodot. i. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1056'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1056'>1056</a>. Athen. i. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1057'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1057'>1057</a>. Describing the beauty of Hippodameia,
-daughter of Anchises,
-Homer says, she excelled all the
-maidens of her age in beauty,
-skill in female accomplishments,
-and endowments of the mind,
-for which reason Alcathoos, the
-noblest man in Troy, chose her
-to be his wife.—Iliad, ε. 480. sqq.
-He must necessarily, therefore,
-have enjoyed opportunities of
-studying her character. Another
-illustration of the freedom of heroic
-female manners is furnished
-by the author of the Little Iliad,
-who relates that, when Aias and
-Odysseus were contending for the
-armour of Achilles, the Greeks,
-by the advice of Nestor, sent
-certain scouts to listen beneath
-the battlements of Troy to the
-conversation of the virgins who,
-in the cool of the evening, it may
-be presumed, were wont to walk
-upon the ramparts and converse
-frankly of the exploits of their
-illustrious enemies.—Sch. Aristoph.
-Equit. 1051. Cf. Il. ζ. 239.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1058'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1058'>1058</a>. Hom. Odyss. α. 330. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1059'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1059'>1059</a>. Apollod. ii. 4. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1060'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1060'>1060</a>. Ovid. Ibis. 349. seq. Tzetz.
-ad Lycoph. 384. 1093.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1061'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1061'>1061</a>. Apollod. ii. 3. 7. Sch. Aristoph.
-Ran. 1041.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1062'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1062'>1062</a>. Hesiod suggests a luxurious
-picture of female life in the heroic
-ages.—Opp. et Dies. 519. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1063'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1063'>1063</a>. See Book II. v2-Chapter III.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1064'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1064'>1064</a>. Clytemnæstra, again, in Æschylus
-exhibits considerable knowledge
-of geography, which she
-could only have acquired from
-conversation with travellers or
-from the songs of the poets.—Agamemn.
-287. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1065'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1065'>1065</a>. And Theocritus enumerates
-among the accomplishments of
-Helen, that she could sing and
-play upon the cithara.—Eidyll.
-xviii. 35. sqq. et Kiesling ad
-Theocrit. Cf. Æneid. vi. 647.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1066'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1066'>1066</a>. Odyss. θ. 457. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1067'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1067'>1067</a>. Apophthegms, Old and New,
-§ 278.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1068'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1068'>1068</a>. Alexand. ab Alexand. iv. 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1069'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1069'>1069</a>. Iliad, ζ. 491.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1070'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1070'>1070</a>. Odyss. α. 357.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1071'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1071'>1071</a>. Q. Curt. v. 2. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1072'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1072'>1072</a>. Herod. ix. 188.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1073'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1073'>1073</a>. Suet. in Vit. § 64. Conf.
-Feith. Antiq. Homer. iv. 34.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1074'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1074'>1074</a>. In northern Greece and Macedonia
-women could depict such
-scenes from the life, since they
-learned the use of arms, and
-engaged personally in war.—Athen.
-xiii. 10. Tradition relates
-that Queen Matilda and her
-maids wrought the tapestry of
-Bayeux, representing the conquest
-of England by her husband.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1075'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1075'>1075</a>. Iliad, ζ. 491.—Odyss. δ.
-131.—Theocrit. Eidyll. xviii.
-32. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1076'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1076'>1076</a>. Odyss. ζ. 491. 38.—Feith by
-mistake introduces the name of
-Nausicaa instead of that of her
-mother.—Ant. Hom. iv. 3. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1077'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1077'>1077</a>. Odyss. υ. 97.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1078'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1078'>1078</a>. Mosch. Eidyll. ii. 37. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1079'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1079'>1079</a>. Odyss. η. 103. seq.—ο. 107.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1080'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1080'>1080</a>. Theoph. Char. c. v.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1081'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1081'>1081</a>. Herod. i. 51.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1082'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1082'>1082</a>. Herod. vii. 187.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1083'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1083'>1083</a>. Thucyd. ii. 78.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1084'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1084'>1084</a>. Herod. viii. 139.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1085'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1085'>1085</a>. Eurip. Electr. 107. 309. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1086'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1086'>1086</a>. Odyss. κ. 105.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1087'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1087'>1087</a>. Herod. vi. 137—The historian
-uses the name of Enneacrounos
-given to the fountain by the
-tyrants. A similar practice is noticed
-by Arrian.—Anab. Alexand. ii. 3</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1088'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1088'>1088</a>. Odyss. φ. 153. seq.—Iliad. ζ.
-59. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class='c025' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span>
- <h3 class='c024'>CHAPTER II.<br /> WOMEN OF DORIC STATES.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c032'>The women of Sparta were even in Greece remarkable
-for their personal beauty. Their education and
-exercises promoting their health and physical energies,
-aided, at the same time, the natural developement
-of the frame, with all its inherent symmetry and
-proportion. It is probable, however, that the charms
-of Helen may have led on this point to some misapprehension;
-but Helen belonged to the old heroic
-race, with which the Dorians of Sparta had nothing
-in common, that is, like so many other women celebrated
-by the poets of after times for their beauty,
-was an Achæan. Still, lovely they were, well-formed,
-brilliant of complexion, with features of much regularity,
-and eyes into which exuberant health infused
-a sparkling brightness irresistibly pleasing. But it
-would require to be peculiarly constituted to pronounce
-them the most beautiful women in all Greece.<a id='r1089' /><a href='#f1089' class='c018'><sup>[1089]</sup></a>
-They were what in modern phrase would be termed
-fine women, but exceeding considerably what we
-deem true feminine proportions, being, in fact, a sort
-of female grenadiers, robust, vigorous, bull-stranglers,
-as Lysistrata<a id='r1090' /><a href='#f1090' class='c018'><sup>[1090]</sup></a> somewhat ironically expresses it, their
-beauty was rather that of men, than of women. Some
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span>among the Greeks preferred, it is true, ladies of this
-large growth. Thus, we find Xenophon, in the Anabasis,
-expressing his apprehension that should his
-countrymen become acquainted with the fine tall
-women of Persia, they would, like the Lotos-eaters,
-forget the way to their country and their home.<a id='r1091' /><a href='#f1091' class='c018'><sup>[1091]</sup></a> But
-this was a taste which never became general. The
-beauty which excited most admiration, where beauty
-constituted the noblest object of literature and art,
-was a kind totally different in character, exquisitely
-feminine, gentle, soft, retiring, modest, instinct with
-grace and delicacy, the parasite of the moral creation,
-clinging round man for support, but imparting more
-than it receives.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Such beauty, however, would have been inconsistent
-with the aim of Lycurgus. Like a well-known
-modern despot, this great legislator aimed
-solely at creating a nation of grenadiers, and to effect
-this, both the education, laws, and manners of Sparta
-received a military impress. Everything there breathed
-of the camp. The girls from their tenderest years,
-instead of being instructed as in other communities
-to entwine all their feelings round the domestic
-hearth, and expect their chiefest happiness at home,
-were systematically undomesticated, brought incessantly
-into contact with men, initiated in immoral
-habits, subversive of the female character,<a id='r1092' /><a href='#f1092' class='c018'><sup>[1092]</sup></a> and taught
-to consider themselves designed to be the wives of
-the state rather than of individuals. Nature, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span>legislator was aware, has implanted the principles
-of love and modesty deep in the female heart; in
-general also, to eradicate one, is to root up the other;
-and both in the sense in which we contemplate them,
-being inimical to the purpose which his constitution
-was intended to promote, he sought to subvert the
-power of love by obliterating from the female mind
-every trace of maidenly modesty.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The power of political institutions over the feelings
-of the heart, over manners, over habits, over conscience,
-and opinions, was never so strikingly exemplified
-as at Sparta. Whatever the legislator determined
-to be good was good.<a id='r1093' /><a href='#f1093' class='c018'><sup>[1093]</sup></a> Example, affection,
-nature pleaded in vain. An iron system, strong as
-fate, encircled the whole scope of life, repressing
-every aspiration tending above the point prescribed,
-guiding every wish into a given channel, curbing
-every passion inconsistent in its full developement
-with the views of the legislator. Aristotle, indeed,
-maintains that while the men of Sparta conformed
-to the design of the constitution, the women refused
-to bend their neck to the yoke, and persisted in the
-enjoyment of a freedom constantly degenerating into
-licentiousness.<a id='r1094' /><a href='#f1094' class='c018'><sup>[1094]</sup></a> He probably, however, supposes the
-existence in Lycurgus of a moral purpose, far loftier
-than he really aimed at. The virtues of a camp—and
-Sparta was nothing else—are never too rigid,
-nor must we look among female camp-followers for
-much of that delicacy, reserve, self-control, or keen
-sense of what is just and upright, of which none judge
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>more accurately than well educated women. Doubtless
-the Doric lawgiver cherished no other design
-than to promote the happiness of his countrymen.
-It would be unjust to suppose otherwise. But how
-far the regulations by which he sought to effect this
-purpose were calculated to ensure success, is what
-we have to inquire.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It may at once be observed that Lycurgus’s system
-of female education was the furthest possible removed
-from common place. He contemplated both the sexes
-in nearly the same point of view. Their form he saw;
-and in many points their character, their affections,
-their virtues, their vices, bear a close resemblance;
-and in his conception, perfection would be attained,
-if all such discriminating marks as nature has set up
-could be removed, and every quality of what he considered
-the superior sex transferred to the inferior.
-Much misapprehension appears to exist on this point.
-Writers pretend that among the Dorians the female
-character stood in high estimation, while the reverse
-they suppose to have been the case in Ionic States.
-But the Dorians betrayed their contempt for women
-as they came from the hands of nature, by endeavouring
-to convert them into men; their neighbours the
-reverse, by contenting themselves with their purely
-feminine qualities, which among people of Ionic race
-were cultivated and improved, perhaps, as far as
-was consistent with domestic happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In the harems of the East the whip is of great
-service in maintaining order, and the same, it is evident,
-was the case at Sparta. Both youths and virgins
-from their tenderest years were subjected to a
-severe discipline; regular floggers, as at our own
-great schools, always attended the inspectors of public
-instruction; and in this the system was wise, that
-habits were more regarded than acquisitions.<a id='r1095' /><a href='#f1095' class='c018'><sup>[1095]</sup></a> But
-of the habits cherished by the Spartan system we cannot
-always approve. Like the boys, the virgins frequented
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>the gymnasia, where, naked as at their birth,
-they exercised themselves in wrestling, running, pitching
-the quoit, and throwing the javelin.<a id='r1096' /><a href='#f1096' class='c018'><sup>[1096]</sup></a> To these
-accomplishments, others, according to a Roman poet,
-still less feminine were added. They contended, he
-says, in the ring with men, bound the cestus on their
-clenched fists, and boxed their future husbands like
-so many prize-fighters. No wonder that the partners
-of such women were henpecked. Horsemanship,
-the sword exercise, and the rough sports of the
-chase, affected by women of similar character in our
-own country, completed the circle of female studies,<a id='r1097' /><a href='#f1097' class='c018'><sup>[1097]</sup></a>
-and rendered the Spartan maids something more than
-a match for their worse halves, whether after marriage
-or before.<a id='r1098' /><a href='#f1098' class='c018'><sup>[1098]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Some pains have in our own days been taken to
-pare away the roughnesses, and obliterate the peculiar
-features of the Doric educational institutions, in
-order to bring them into greater uniformity with
-modern notions. There is no probability, we are
-told, that either youths or men were permitted to be
-present at the extraordinary exhibition of the female
-gymnasia.<a id='r1099' /><a href='#f1099' class='c018'><sup>[1099]</sup></a> But whence is this inference derived?
-From the delicacy of Spartan manners in other respects?
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_387'>387</span>And are we in fact reduced on this curious
-point to depend on inferences and probabilities? On
-the contrary, we are informed by antiquity that besides
-the personal advantages of health and vigour,
-derived to the women themselves, the legislator contemplated
-others little less important, the promotion
-of marriage and the recreation of all the useful portion
-of the citizens. For while the married men
-and youths intent on connubial happiness, enjoyed
-the free entry to these gymnasia,<a id='r1100' /><a href='#f1100' class='c018'><sup>[1100]</sup></a> those sullen egotists
-called bachelors were very properly excluded.
-The former had some property in the young ladies,
-who were their daughters, sisters, or future spouses,
-but persons avowedly indifferent to the seductive
-influence of female charms could have no business
-there.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Admitting, therefore, that when the Spartan virgins<a id='r1101' /><a href='#f1101' class='c018'><sup>[1101]</sup></a>
-performed in the gymnasia, for we must consider
-their exercises partly in the light of scenic exhibitions,
-the whole city, bachelors excepted, could
-be present, it remains to be seen what other accomplishments
-they could display for the public entertainment.
-Singing and dancing it has been shown
-were practised publicly by ladies of rank in the
-heroic ages, and this feature of ancient manners was
-preserved at Sparta, where not youths and maidens
-only, but even the grave and aged joined, during
-several great festivals, in the dance and the song.<a id='r1102' /><a href='#f1102' class='c018'><sup>[1102]</sup></a>
-But we must beware how we apply to these performances
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_388'>388</span>the ideas suggested by those of modern
-times, or the gay and graceful movements of Ionian
-women. To dance at Sparta required great physical
-force.<a id='r1103' /><a href='#f1103' class='c018'><sup>[1103]</sup></a> The maidens, unencumbered by dress,
-bounded aloft like an Anatole or a Taglioni, but instead
-of twirling round with one foot on earth,
-and the other suspended at right angles in air, the
-supreme merit of her performance consisted in slapping
-the back part of the body with her heel for
-the greatest possible number of times in succession.<a id='r1104' /><a href='#f1104' class='c018'><sup>[1104]</sup></a>
-In this feat, which resembles strongly a Caribbee or
-Iroquois accomplishment, whole troops of men and
-women often united; an exhibition which with the
-shouts of laughter arising from the bystanders, the
-grins of the girls, and the wilful mistakes of young
-men who might send their feet in the wrong direction,
-must convey a curious idea of Spartan gravity.
-Such, however, was the celebrated dance called
-<em>Bibasis</em>,<a id='r1105' /><a href='#f1105' class='c018'><sup>[1105]</sup></a> upon the frequent execution of which a
-Laconian girl prided herself no less than a modern
-lady on her activity in the indecent waltz.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But the other dances in which the Spartan maidens
-excelled were numerous. Among them was
-the <em>Dipodia</em><a id='r1106' /><a href='#f1106' class='c018'><sup>[1106]</sup></a> of which the nature is not exactly
-known, but it was accompanied by music and song
-and apparently consisted of a series of orgiastic movements,
-like those of the Bacchantes when, inspired
-by wine, they bounded fawnlike with dishevelled
-hair along the mountains.<a id='r1107' /><a href='#f1107' class='c018'><sup>[1107]</sup></a> On other occasions their
-movements were designed to express certain passions
-of the mind, sometimes, as in the <em>Calabis</em>,<a id='r1108' /><a href='#f1108' class='c018'><sup>[1108]</sup></a> highly
-wanton and licentious, though the latitudinarian spirit
-of paganism contrived to admit them among
-the religious ceremonies, and that too in honour of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_389'>389</span>Artemis. Another of these lewd dances performed
-in the worship of Apollo and his sister, and accompanied
-by songs, conceived no doubt in the same spirit,
-was the <em>Bryallicha</em><a id='r1109' /><a href='#f1109' class='c018'><sup>[1109]</sup></a>, which the historian of the Doric
-race finds some difficulty to reconcile with the worship
-of Apollo, as if their deity had been himself
-free from the inherent vices of the Olympian dynasts.
-There was another dance called the <em>Deicelistic</em><a id='r1110' /><a href='#f1110' class='c018'><sup>[1110]</sup></a>, a
-kind of rude pantomime intermingled with songs
-supposed to have been performed by unmarried
-women<a id='r1111' /><a href='#f1111' class='c018'><sup>[1111]</sup></a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>To these dances may be added the <em>Hyporchematic</em>,
-which was executed by a chorus, while singing,
-for which reason Bacchylides says, “This is not
-the work of slowness or inactivity.” By Pindar
-it is described as a dance performed by Spartan
-girls; but in fact both young men and women
-united in the Hyporchema, and as this dance
-is said to have resembled or been identical with
-the Cordax<a id='r1112' /><a href='#f1112' class='c018'><sup>[1112]</sup></a>, it will assist us in forming a notion
-of female delicacy at Sparta, where young women
-could execute publicly in company with the other
-sex a dance scarcely less indelicate than the fandango
-or bolero<a id='r1113' /><a href='#f1113' class='c018'><sup>[1113]</sup></a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>From such an education and such habits tastes
-essentially unfeminine would naturally spring. Accordingly
-we find Laconian ladies of the first rank,—Cynisca
-daughter of king Archidamos, for example,—attending
-to the breed of horses, and sending
-chariots to contend at the Olympic games. Nor
-was her masculine ambition condemned by the
-Greeks. A statue of the lady herself, together
-with her chariot, and charioteer, existed among
-other Olympian monuments in the age of Pausanias.
-Afterwards many other women, but chiefly
-among the half barbarous Macedonians, followed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_390'>390</span>the example of Cynisca and Euryleonis another Spartan
-dame who had been honoured with a statue at
-Olympia for the success of her chariot at the games.<a id='r1114' /><a href='#f1114' class='c018'><sup>[1114]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In strict keeping with the rough manners and
-masculine bearing of these ladies was the habit of
-swearing,<a id='r1115' /><a href='#f1115' class='c018'><sup>[1115]</sup></a> to which in common with most other
-Greek women they were grievously addicted. At
-Athens, however, gentlewomen swore by Demeter,
-Persephone and Agraulos,<a id='r1116' /><a href='#f1116' class='c018'><sup>[1116]</sup></a> an oath by divinities of
-their own sex<a id='r1117' /><a href='#f1117' class='c018'><sup>[1117]</sup></a> being considered more suitable to
-female lips; but the viragos of Sparta spiced their
-conversation with oaths by Castor and Polydeukes.
-According, moreover, to the poet whose testimony
-is commonly adduced against the Athenian ladies,
-the women of Sparta drank<a id='r1118' /><a href='#f1118' class='c018'><sup>[1118]</sup></a> as well as swore, and
-we know from authority altogether indisputable, that
-in the age of Socrates their licentiousness had already
-become universally notorious in Greece.<a id='r1119' /><a href='#f1119' class='c018'><sup>[1119]</sup></a> A scholar,
-and a diligent inquirer, whose merits are too often
-overlooked, observes very justly that it was probably
-the austerity, or more properly the pedantry of Lycurgus’s
-institutions that gave rise to the notion
-that chastity was a common virtue at Sparta.<a id='r1120' /><a href='#f1120' class='c018'><sup>[1120]</sup></a> It
-was supposed because occasionally subjected to violent
-exercise, that they must necessarily be temperate
-in their pleasures. But we might <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><i>à priori</i></span> have inferred
-the contrary, and the uniform testimony of
-antiquity proves it. Their wantonness and licentiousness
-knew no bounds. Even during the ages
-immediately succeeding the establishment of their
-constitution, that is at the time of the Messenian
-wars, to preserve for any length of time their chastity
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_391'>391</span>while their husbands were absent in the field
-was beyond their power, and substitutes were selected
-and sent home to become the husbands of
-the whole female population.<a id='r1121' /><a href='#f1121' class='c018'><sup>[1121]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But for this ungovernable sway of temperament
-the institutions of the state were chiefly to blame.<a id='r1122' /><a href='#f1122' class='c018'><sup>[1122]</sup></a>
-We have seen by the whole tenor of their education,
-modesty and virtue were sapped and undermined; no
-merit, it was visible, attached to them in the eye of
-the law; and shrewdly gifted as they were with good
-sense, they must quickly have discovered that marriage
-was a mere unmeaning ceremony, and that
-provided they gave good citizens to the state it
-would be of little consequence who might be their
-fathers.<a id='r1123' /><a href='#f1123' class='c018'><sup>[1123]</sup></a> The ceremonies attending that lax union
-which for lack of a better term we must call marriage,
-resembled closely those which have been
-found to prevail among other savages in very distant
-parts of the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Having gone through the ceremony of betrothment,<a id='r1124' /><a href='#f1124' class='c018'><sup>[1124]</sup></a>
-in which the bride’s interest was represented
-by her father or brother, the lover chose some
-fitting occasion to seize and carry her away from
-amongst her companions. She was then received
-into the house of the bridesmaid, where her hair
-was cut short and her dress exchanged for that of
-a young man, after which custom directed that she
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_392'>392</span>should be left reclining on a pallet bed, in a dark
-chamber, alone. Thither the bridegroom repaired
-by stealth, and, afterwards, with equal secresy, returned
-to his companions, among whom he continued
-for some time to live as if no change in his condition
-had taken place. During this period, therefore,
-their union must be regarded rather as a clandestine
-intercourse than a marriage, since the husband continued,
-as at first, to steal secretly into the company
-of his wife and to effect his escape with equal care,
-it being considered disreputable for them to be seen
-together. Even the children springing from this
-connexion have been supposed to have ranked as
-bastards; but of this there is no sufficient proof.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>A different account is given by other authors of
-the marriage ceremony at Sparta, but, if properly
-examined, both relations may very well be reconciled.
-The above, in fact, appears to have been
-the ordinary mode when young women of property
-who had dowries<a id='r1125' /><a href='#f1125' class='c018'><sup>[1125]</sup></a> to bestow upon their husbands,
-were to be disposed of. But the portionless girls,
-excepting, perhaps, the more beautiful, finding some
-difficulty in providing themselves with helpmates, a
-contrivance was hit upon by the legislator, calculated
-to give a fair chance to all. The unmarried damsels
-of the city, thus circumstanced, were shut up in the
-dark, in a spacious edifice,<a id='r1126' /><a href='#f1126' class='c018'><sup>[1126]</sup></a> into which the young
-unmarried men were introduced to scramble for
-wives, the understanding being, that each was to remain
-content with the maiden he happened to seize
-upon. And it would appear that the awards of
-chance were, in most cases, satisfactory, since we
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_393'>393</span>read of no one but Lysander who abandoned the
-wife he had thus chosen. He, however, having
-been presented, by fortune, with a maiden of homely
-features, immediately deserted her for one more beautiful.
-The bad example thus set was not without
-its evil consequences, for the men who married his
-daughters put them away in like manner after his
-death.<a id='r1127' /><a href='#f1127' class='c018'><sup>[1127]</sup></a> But, in both cases, fines for contumacy were
-exacted by the Ephori. According to the laws of
-Sparta, men were likewise fined for leading a life
-of celibacy,<a id='r1128' /><a href='#f1128' class='c018'><sup>[1128]</sup></a> for marrying late, or for marrying unsuitably.
-Thus, king Archidamos was fined for selecting
-a little woman to be his queen, as if there
-was something regal in <a id='corr393.14'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='loftinesss'>loftiness</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_393.14'><ins class='correction' title='loftinesss'>loftiness</ins></a></span> of stature.<a id='r1129' /><a href='#f1129' class='c018'><sup>[1129]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>On almost every point connected with Spartan
-marriages the accounts transmitted to us are contradictory.
-Thus, we are by some told, as has been
-seen above, that the union of the bride and bridegroom
-took place secretly, and remained for some
-time almost unknown. Nevertheless, there are not
-wanting those who speak of public ceremonies which
-took place on the occasion, as for example Sosibios,<a id='r1130' /><a href='#f1130' class='c018'><sup>[1130]</sup></a>
-who informs us, that the cake, called cribanos, shaped
-like the female breast, was eaten at that repast which
-the Lacedæmonian women gave in honour of a betrothed
-maiden when her youthful companions assembled
-in chorus to chaunt her praises. At Argos,
-another Doric state, it was customary before the
-bride joined her husband for her to send him, as a
-present, the cake called creion, which his friends
-were invited to partake of with honey. It was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_394'>394</span>baked upon the coals as cakes are still in the
-East.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>When at Sparta the state had recognised the marriage,
-by permitting cohabitation, no man could call
-his wife his own. Any person might legally claim the
-favour of borrowing her for a certain time, in order,
-if he did not choose to be burdened with a wife, to
-have a family by her while she remained in the house
-of her lord. An elderly man was sure to have his
-connubial privileges invaded in this way, and the
-most able and philosophical advocates of Lycurgus’s
-institutions inform us that the Spartan ladies highly
-approved of all these arrangements. Yet, famous
-and learned authors undertake to break a lance for
-the chastity of the Spartan dames, and maintain
-with infinite complacency that adultery was unknown
-among them. The truth is that the Spartan laws
-recognised no such offence.<a id='r1131' /><a href='#f1131' class='c018'><sup>[1131]</sup></a> It was legal, common,
-of every day occurrence, though, from many circumstances,
-it would appear, that such Lacedæmonians
-as travelled into other parts of Greece, and learned
-in what light manners and morals so lax were by
-them viewed, blushed for their country’s institutions,
-and, in defence of them, put in practice those
-arts of delusion and hypocrisy which constituted so
-distinguished a part of their education.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Much has been said of the stern virtue and patriotism
-of the Spartan women, and high praise has been
-bestowed on the callous indifference which they sometimes
-exhibited on learning the death of their sons;<a id='r1132' /><a href='#f1132' class='c018'><sup>[1132]</sup></a>
-but English mothers, who have given birth to sons
-as brave as ever fought or bled for Sparta, will, I
-think, agree with me in rating very low their boasted
-stoicism, which, if properly analysed, might prove to
-be nothing more than a coarse and unnatural apathy.
-The reader of the Greek Anthologia will here remember
-her who meeting her son a fugitive among the
-flying from a victorious enemy, inflicted on him with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_395'>395</span>her own hands the death he sought to shun. Had
-Nature, which is but the voice of God indistinctly
-heard, anything to do with virtue such as that? Supposing
-the youth to have been a coward, which the
-fact of his flying before the enemy by no means
-proves, was it for the hands that had nursed him to
-become his executioners? A mother, deserving of the
-name, would no doubt have sorrowed not to find her
-boy numbered among the brave, but her maternal
-heart would not the less have yearned towards the
-unhappy youth; she would have fled with him into
-obscurity, and uttered her mild reproaches and shed
-her tears there.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>As often happens, however, these female stoics who
-were so lavish of the blood of their children, displayed
-no readiness to set them the example of making light
-of death when the fortunes of war afforded them an
-occasion of putting their heroic maxims in practice;
-for when the Theban army<a id='r1133' /><a href='#f1133' class='c018'><sup>[1133]</sup></a> burst forth from the
-depths of the Menelaion, and swept down the valley
-of the Eurotas like a torrent, wasting everything
-before them with fire and sword, the women of Sparta,
-who had never before seen the smoke of an enemy’s
-camp, lost in a moment their presence of mind, and,
-instead of encouraging their sons and husbands calmly
-to rely upon their valour, ran to and fro through the
-streets, filling the air with their effeminate wailings,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_396'>396</span>and distracting and impeding the movements of their
-natural protectors. Very different from this was the
-conduct of the female citizens of Argos. For when Cleomenes
-and Demaratos, after having defeated the Argive
-army, approached the city in the expectation
-of being able to take it by storm, the poetess Telesilla
-armed her countrywomen, who, hastening to the
-defence of the walls, repulsed the Lacedæmonian
-kings, and preserved the state. In commemoration
-of this event a festival was annually celebrated, in
-which the ladies appeared in male attire while the
-men concealed their heads beneath the female veil.<a id='r1134' /><a href='#f1134' class='c018'><sup>[1134]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Again, when the Thebans broke into Platæa during
-the night, the women, instead of delivering themselves
-up pusillanimously to fear, joined the men in defence
-of the city, casting stones and tiles from the housetops
-upon the enemy. Yet when defeated and flying
-for their lives, it was one of these same women who,
-with the characteristic humanity of her sex, supplied
-them with a hatchet to cut their way through the
-gates.<a id='r1135' /><a href='#f1135' class='c018'><sup>[1135]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But the most remarkable instance of self-devotion
-furnished by women in the whole history of Greece
-was, perhaps, that which is related of the Phocian
-ladies,<a id='r1136' /><a href='#f1136' class='c018'><sup>[1136]</sup></a> who, when their countrymen, under the command
-of Diophantos, were about to engage with the
-Thessalians in a battle which it was felt must finally
-determine the destiny of Phocis, strenuously, with
-the concurrence of their children, exhorted him to
-persevere in the design he had formed, of causing
-them to be consumed by fire should the battle be lost.
-Examples of this terrible expedient for preserving
-the honour of women occur but too frequently in the
-history of India, where it is termed performing <em>johur</em>;
-and the Romans, in their Spanish wars, witnessed a
-similar act of self-sacrifice at Numantia.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It should, nevertheless, by no means be concealed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_397'>397</span>that the annals of Sparta also contain some brilliant
-examples of female heroism, of which the most striking,
-perhaps, is that furnished by the wife of Panteus
-and her companions after the death of Cleomenes at
-Alexandria. “When the report of his death,” says
-Plutarch,<a id='r1137' /><a href='#f1137' class='c018'><sup>[1137]</sup></a> “had spread over the city, Cratesiclea,
-though a woman of superior fortitude, sank under
-the weight of the calamity; she embraced the children
-of Cleomenes, and wept over them. The elder
-of them, disengaging himself from her arms, got
-unsuspected to the top of the house, and threw himself
-down headlong. He was not killed, however,
-though much hurt; and when they took him up
-he loudly expressed his grief and indignation that
-they would not suffer him to destroy himself. Ptolemy
-was no sooner informed of these things than
-he ordered the body of Cleomenes to be flayed, and
-nailed to a cross, and his children to be put to
-death, together with his mother and the women her
-companions. Among these was the wife of Panteus,
-a woman of great beauty and most majestic presence.
-They had been but lately married, and their
-misfortune overtook them amid the first transports
-of love. When her husband went with Cleomenes
-from Sparta, she was desirous of accompanying him,
-but was prevented by her parents, who kept her
-in close custody. Soon afterwards, however, she
-provided herself with a horse and a little money,
-and making her escape by night, rode at full speed
-to Tænaros, and there embarked on board a ship
-bound for Egypt. She reached her husband safely,
-and readily and cheerfully shared with him in all
-the inconveniences of a foreign residence. When
-the soldiers came to take Cratesiclea to the scaffold,
-she led her by the hand, assisted in bearing her
-robe,<a id='r1138' /><a href='#f1138' class='c018'><sup>[1138]</sup></a> and desired her to exert all her courage,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_398'>398</span>though she was far from being afraid of death, and
-desired no other favour than that she might die
-before her children. But when they arrived at the
-place of execution the children suffered before her
-eyes; and then Cratesiclea was despatched, uttering
-in her extreme distress only these words: ‘Oh! my
-children! whither are you gone?’</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“The wife of Panteus, who was tall and strong,
-girt her robe about her and in a silent and composed
-manner paid the last offices to each woman
-that lay dead, winding up the bodies as well as
-her present circumstances would admit. Last of
-all she prepared herself for the poniard by letting
-down her robe about her and adjusting it in such
-a manner as to need no assistance after death,
-then, calling the executioner to do his office, and
-permitting no other person to approach her, she
-fell like a heroine. In death she retained all the
-decorum which she had preserved in life, and the
-decency which had been so sacred with this excellent
-woman still remained about her. Thus
-in this bloody tragedy in which the women contended
-to the last for the prize of courage with
-the men, Lacedæmon evinced that it is impossible
-for fortune to conquer virtue.”</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Another brief narrative given by the same historian
-exhibits in the most touching manner, the
-tenderness and self-devotion of a Spartan woman.
-Cleombrotos, in conjunction with other conspirators,
-had dethroned king Leonidas his father-in-law and
-possessed himself of the crown. Events afterwards
-restored the old man to his kingdom, upon which
-burning with resentment he hurried to take vengeance
-on his son-in-law. "Chelonis, the daughter
-of Leonidas, had looked upon the injury done to
-her father as done to herself, and when Cleombrotos
-robbed him of the crown she left him in order
-to console her father in his misfortune. As long
-as he remained in sanctuary she stayed with him,
-and when he fled, sympathising with his sorrow,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_399'>399</span>and full of resentment against Cleombrotos, she
-attended him in his flight. But when the fortunes
-of her father changed she changed too. She
-joined her husband as a suppliant, and was found
-sitting by him with great marks of tenderness, and
-her two children one on each side at her feet.
-The whole company were much struck at the sight,
-and could not refrain from tears when they considered
-her goodness of heart and uncommon
-strength of affection.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>"Chelonis, then, pointing to her mourning habit
-and her dishevelled hair thus addressed Leonidas.
-‘It was not my dear father compassion for Cleombrotos
-which put me in this habit and gave me
-this look of misery. My sorrows took their date
-with your misfortune and your banishment, and
-have ever since remained my familiar companions.
-Now you have conquered your enemies and are
-again king of Sparta should I still retain these
-ensigns of affliction or assume festival and royal ornaments,
-while the husband of my youth whom
-you yourself bestowed upon me falls a victim to
-your vengeance? If his own submission, if the
-tears of his wife and children cannot propitiate
-you he must suffer a severer punishment for his
-offences than even you require, he must see his
-beloved wife die before him. For how can I live
-and support the sight of my own sex, after both
-my husband and my father have refused to hearken
-to my supplications, when it appears that both
-as a wife and a daughter I am born to be miserable
-with my family. If this poor man had any
-plausible reasons for what he did I invalidated
-them all by forsaking him to follow you. But
-you furnish him with a sufficient apology for his
-misbehaviour by showing that a crown is so bright
-and desirable an object that a son-in-law must be
-slain and a daughter totally disregarded when it
-is in question.’</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>“Chelonis, after this supplication, rested her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_400'>400</span>cheek upon her husband’s head, and with an eye
-dim and languid through sorrow looked round on
-the spectators; Leonidas consulted his friends upon
-the point, and then commanded Cleombrotos to rise
-and go into exile, but he desired Chelonis to stay
-and not to forsake so affectionate a father who
-had kindly granted her husband’s life. Chelonis,
-however, would not be persuaded. When her husband
-had risen from the ground she put one child
-into his arms and took the other herself, and after
-having paid due homage at the altar where they
-had taken sanctuary went with him into banishment.
-So that had not Cleombrotos been corrupted
-by the love of false glory he must have
-thought exile with such a woman a greater happiness
-than a kingdom without her.”<a id='r1139' /><a href='#f1139' class='c018'><sup>[1139]</sup></a></p>
-
-<hr class='c025' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1089'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1089'>1089</a>. See Müll. Dor. ii. 296.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1090'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1090'>1090</a>. </p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Ὧ φιλτάτη Λάκαινα, χαῖρε.</div>
- <div class='line'>οἷον τὸ κάλλος, γλυκυτάτη, σοῦ φαίνεται.</div>
- <div class='line'>ὡς δ᾽ εὐχροεῖς, ὡς δὲ σφριγᾷ τὸ σῶμά σου,</div>
- <div class='line'>κἂν ταῦρον ἄγχοις.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>Which may be thus translated:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Beloved Laconian, welcome!</div>
- <div class='line'>How glorious is thy beauty, love! how ruddy</div>
- <div class='line'>The tint of thy complexion! Vigour and health</div>
- <div class='line'>So brace thy frame that thou a bull couldst throttle.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in22'>Aristoph. Lysist. 78 sqq.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1091'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1091'>1091</a>. Anab. iii. 2. 25.—Ἀλλὰ γὰρ
-δέδοικα μὴ, ἂν ἅπαξ μάθωμεν
-ἀργοὶ ζῇν, καὶ ἐν ἀφθόνοις βιοτεύειν,
-καὶ Μήδῶν δὲ καὶ Περσῶν
-καλαῖς καὶ μεγάλαις γυναιξὶ καὶ
-παρθένοις ὁμιλεῖν, μὴ, ὣσπερ οἱ
-λωτοφάγοι, ἐπιλαθώμεθα τῆς
-οἴκαδε ὁδοῦ.—And again, in the
-Cyropædia, Araspes praises Panthea
-for her majestic size. It
-appears from Homer that when
-Athena was desirous of making
-Penelope appear more lovely than
-ordinary, she added to her height.—Odyss.
-σ. 194.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1092'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1092'>1092</a>. Athen. xiii. 79.—Even Plutarch
-denominates the system of
-discipline observed by the Spartan
-women ἀναπεπταμένη καὶ ἄθηλυς,—"lax
-and unfeminine,"—and
-confesses that it afforded the
-poets an inexhaustible fund for
-ridicule. Ibycos, for example,
-called them φαινομηρίδες: and
-Euripides ἀνδρομανεῖς. Their
-education, in fact, rendered them
-coarse and domineering, “bold
-and mannish;” θρασύτεραι, and
-ἀνδριοδεῖς, are the words of
-Plutarch, who observes that they
-desired not only to rule by violence
-at home, but even audaciously
-to meddle with public
-affairs.—Compar. Lycurg. cum
-Num. § 3.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1093'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1093'>1093</a>. Philosophers, also, were found
-in antiquity as in modern times,
-who theoretically maintained this
-doctrine. Thus Archelaos contended,
-καὶ τὸ δίκαιον εἶναι καὶ
-τὸ αἰσχρὸν οὐ φύσει, ἀλλὰ νόμῳ.—Diog.
-Laert. ii. 4. 3. Here we
-discover the fundamental maxim
-upon which the whole system of
-Hobbes was constructed.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1094'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1094'>1094</a>. Polit. ii. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1095'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1095'>1095</a>. Jamblich. vit. Pythag. xi. 5. 6.—Müller. Dor. ii. 317.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1096'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1096'>1096</a>. Plut. Lycurg. §. 14. Compare
-the remarks of Ubbo Emmius
-who adopts, however, too
-implicitly the notions of Plutarch.—iii.
-22. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1097'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1097'>1097</a>. Propert. iii. 12. p. 261. iv.
-13. p. 88. Jacob.—Cicero, after
-quoting certain verses from an
-old poet, describing the exercises
-of the female Spartans, adds in
-his own words: <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“ergo his laboriosis
-excercitationibus et dolor
-intercurrit nonnumquam; impelluntur,
-ponuntur, abjiciuntur,
-cadunt: et ipse labor quasi callum
-quoddam obducit dolori.”</span>
-Tuscul. Quæst. ii. 36.—In remoter
-ages we find women celebrated
-for their skill in hunting, and
-there were those who in later
-times sought to recommend this
-taste to their countrywomen:—Οὐ
-μόνον δὲ, ὅσοι ἄνδρες κυνηγεσίων
-ἡράσθησαν, ἐγένοντο ἀγαθοὶ
-ἀλλὰ καὶ αἱ γυναῖκες, αἷς ἔδωκεν
-ἡ θεὸς ταῦτα Ἄρτεμις, Ἀταλάντη,
-καὶ Πρόκρις, καὶ εἴ τις ἄλλη.
-Xen. de Venat. xiii. 18. 345.
-Schneid. Cf. Callim. Hymn. in
-Dian. 209. 215. Spanh.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1098'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1098'>1098</a>. Alluding to the political
-power of women at Sparta, Aristotle
-inquires: what signifies it
-whether women govern or men be
-governed by women? Polit. ii. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1099'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1099'>1099</a>. Müll. Dor. ii. 333.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1100'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1100'>1100</a>. Plut. Lycurg. § 14. 15. Müller,
-with the amusing partiality of an
-apologist, overlooks the passage,
-and introduces Plutarch affirming
-“that they only witnessed the
-processions and dances of the
-young (wo)men.” Note K. Dor.
-ii. p. 328. Here though <em>men</em> be
-the printed word in the English
-translation women must be clearly
-meant. Even so, however, the
-assertion is unfounded, since we
-find that even strangers were
-admitted:—ἐπαινεῖται δὲ καὶ τῶν
-Σπαρτιατῶν τὸ ἔθος τὸ γυμνοῦν τὰς
-παρθένους τοῖς ξένοις. Athen.
-xiii. 20. The islanders of Chios
-would appear to have imitated
-this laudable practice, since the
-sophist speaks of it as a most
-pleasant spectacle to behold the
-youths and virgins wrestling together
-in the public place of exercise.
-Ibid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1101'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1101'>1101</a>. Cf. Plato. De Legg. t. viii. p. 85.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1102'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1102'>1102</a>. Plut. Lycurg. §. 21.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1103'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1103'>1103</a>. As now among the Galaxidiotes.
-Dodwell. i. 133. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1104'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1104'>1104</a>. Aristoph. Lysistr. 82.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1105'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1105'>1105</a>. Pollux. iv. 102.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1106'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1106'>1106</a>. Scaliger’s idea of the dance is
-peculiar: <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Erat et</span> διποδία, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">in quâ
-junctis pedibus labore plurimo et
-conatu picas imitabantur.</span> Poet.
-i. 18. p. 69.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1107'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1107'>1107</a>. Aristoph. Lysistr. 1303. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1108'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1108'>1108</a>. Athen. xiv. 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1109'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1109'>1109</a>. Poll. iv. 104. Hesych. v.
-Βρυδαλίχα.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1110'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1110'>1110</a>. Etym. Mag. 260. 42.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1111'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1111'>1111</a>. Müll. Dor. ii. 335.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1112'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1112'>1112</a>. Cf. Nonn. Dionys. xix. 265.
-sqq. Etym. Mag. 712. 53. 635.
-2. Scalig. Poet. i. 18. Poll. iv. 99.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1113'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1113'>1113</a>. Athen. xiv. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1114'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1114'>1114</a>. Pausan. iii. 15. 1. 17. 6.
-Cf. Vandal. Dissert. vii. p. 562.
-seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1115'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1115'>1115</a>. Aristoph. Lysistr. 81. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1116'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1116'>1116</a>. Sch. Aristoph. Thesmophor.
-533.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1117'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1117'>1117</a>. But men we find likewise
-swore—Κατὰ ταῖν θεαῖν καὶ τῆς
-Πολιάδος..—Lucian. Diall. Hetair.
-vii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1118'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1118'>1118</a>. Aristoph. Lysistr. 198. seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1119'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1119'>1119</a>. Plat. de Legg. i. t. vii. p.
-201. Bekk.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1120'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1120'>1120</a>. Goguet. Orig. des Loix. t. v.
-p. 429.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1121'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1121'>1121</a>. Dion. Chrysostom. Orat. i.
-278. Justin. iii. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1122'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1122'>1122</a>. Plut. Compar. Lycurg. cum.
-Num. § 3. Aristot. Polit. ii. 9.
-who observes:—ζῶσι ἀκολαστῶς
-πρὸς ἅπασαν ἀκολασίαν καὶ τρυφερῶς.—Hermann
-in his Political
-Antiquities § 27, reasoning consistently
-with these ancient authorities,
-observes that the system
-of Lycurgus “gradually effaced
-every characteristic of female excellence
-from the Spartan women.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1123'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1123'>1123</a>. βουλόμενος γὰρ ὁ νομοθέτης
-ὡς πλείστους εἴναι τοὺς Σπαρτιάτας,
-προάγεται τοὺς πολίτας
-ὄτι πλείστους ποιεῖσθαι παῖδας·
-ἔστι γὰρ αὐτοῖς νόμος τὸν μὲν
-γεννήσαντα τρεῖς <a id='corr391.32'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='υἰοὺς'>υἱοὺς</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_391.32'><ins class='correction' title='υἰοὺς'>υἱοὺς</ins></a></span> ἄφρουρον
-εἶναι, τὸν δὲ τέτταρας ἀτελή
-πάντων.—Arist. Polit. ii. 9. Cf.
-Ælian. Var. Hist. vi. 6, who
-substitutes the number five for
-four.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1124'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1124'>1124</a>. Cf. Xen. de Rep. Lac. i. 6.
-Plut. Lycurg. § 15.—Ubbo Emmius.
-Descr. Reip. Lacon. p. 96.
-seq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1125'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1125'>1125</a>. According to Justin, indeed,
-the Spartan legislator abolished
-the usage of dowries: <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Virgines
-sine dote nubere jussit, ut uxores
-eligerentur, non pecuniæ; severiusque
-matrimonia sua viri coërcerent,
-cum nullis dotis frœnis
-tenerentur</span>, iii. 3. But Aristotle,
-who had deeply studied the polity
-of Sparta, gives a very different
-account:—ἔστι δὲ καὶ τῶν
-γυναικῶν σχεδὸν τῆς πάσης χώρας
-τῶν πέντε μερῶν τὰ δύο, τῶν τ᾽
-ἐπικλήρων πολλῶν γινομένων, καὶ
-διὰ τὸ προῖκας διδόναι μεγάλας.—Polit.
-ii. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1126'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1126'>1126</a>. Athen. xiii. 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1127'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1127'>1127</a>. Plut. Lysand. § 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1128'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1128'>1128</a>. Athen. xiii. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1129'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1129'>1129</a>. Plut. Agis, § 2. Athen. xiii.
-20. It was not without reason,
-perhaps, that the Ephori interfered
-with the marriages of their kings,
-since royalty has everywhere
-been capricious. But these honest
-magistrates were sometimes
-tyrannical in their ordinances
-and behaviour. Thus, when
-Anaxandrides married his niece
-for love, because she had no
-children he was compelled by
-them to take a second wife.
-When the first wife was confined
-they, fearing imposition,
-or feigning incredulity, sat about
-her bed.—Herod. v. 39–41.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1130'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1130'>1130</a>. Athen. xiv. 54.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1131'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1131'>1131</a>. Xenoph. de Rep. Laced. i. 7. 8. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1132'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1132'>1132</a>. Cic. Tusc. Quæst. i. 49.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1133'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1133'>1133</a>. Aristot. Polit. ii. 9. Xenoph.
-Hellen. vi. v. 27. It should be
-remarked, however, that on a
-future occasion, when Sparta was
-besieged by King Pyrrhus, the
-female disciples of Lycurgus behaved
-with more fortitude and
-energy; for when it was debated
-in the senate whether they should
-not convey their wives and children
-to Crete, and then, deriving
-courage from despair, determine
-to conquer or perish on the spot,
-Archidamia, daughter of the king,
-entered their assembly sword in
-hand, opposed their resolution,
-saying, it behoved the women of
-Sparta to live and die with their
-husbands. The female population
-was, in consequence, suffered to
-remain; and by digging with the
-men in the trenches, sharpening
-the arms, and attending on the
-wounded, so strongly excited the
-courage of the Spartans, that they
-at length succeeded in repulsing
-the Macedonians from their city.
-Cf. Plut. Pyrrh. § 27.—Polyæn.
-Stratagem. vii. 49.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1134'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1134'>1134</a>. Plut. de Mulier. Virtut. t. ii.
-p. 195. Polyæn. Stratagem. viii.
-33.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1135'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1135'>1135</a>. Thucyd. ii. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1136'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1136'>1136</a>. Plut. de Mulier. Virtut. t. ii.
-p. 192.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1137'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1137'>1137</a>. Cleomen. § 38. I have here
-made use of the translation of
-Langhorne, because it would be no
-easy matter to furnish a better.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1138'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1138'>1138</a>. Πέπλος.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1139'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1139'>1139</a>. Plut. Agis §§ 17. 18. Moore in his Lalla Rookh has expressed
-the same idea.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Fly to the desert, fly with me,</div>
- <div class='line'>Our Arab tents are rude for thee;</div>
- <div class='line'>But ah! the choice what heart can doubt,</div>
- <div class='line'>Of tents with love or thrones without?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<hr class='c025' />
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_401'>401</span>
- <h3 class='c024'>CHAPTER III. <br /> CONDITION OF UNMARRIED WOMEN.—LOVE.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c032'>The condition of an Athenian lady it is far more
-important and, in proportion, more difficult to describe.
-Extremely erroneous impressions appear to
-exist on the subject, several writers of eminence
-having adopted the theory that they lived in total
-seclusion, and were little less ignorant and degraded
-than Oriental women are commonly supposed to be.
-My own opinion is somewhat different. After very
-patiently investigating the matter, the conclusions
-at which I have arrived are as follow:—</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In delineating a picture of this kind, positive testimonies
-are unquestionably required; but I appeal
-to the impartial reader, whether very great, I had
-almost said the greatest weight, should not, after
-all, be attributed to that conviction which grows
-up, gradually and silently, in the mind, during a long
-and habitual intercourse with the subject. In this
-way, new authorities are formed, for to have examined
-minutely and attentively what others have
-written, to have weighed authorities and scrupulously
-sifted their several pretensions, may be allowed
-to entitle a man, if anything can, to express
-an opinion of his own.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The notion appears to prevail extensively, even
-among writers not otherwise ill-informed, that women
-occupied, among the Ionians generally, and
-more especially among the Athenians, a very mean
-position, were neglected and despised, and, consequently,
-exerted little or no influence on manners,
-morals, literature, or public affairs. With what design
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_402'>402</span>this error has been propagated it is not difficult
-to comprehend. But to pervert history for
-party purposes is, after all, an useless undertaking,
-since the facts always remain, and it is never too
-late to rescue truth from the fangs of sophistry.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>That the women of Athens were in the condition
-for which nature designed them, I will not
-affirm; a little more converse with the world might
-have improved their understandings, they might have
-been rendered more pleasing companions; but what
-they gained as social, they would probably have lost
-as domestic beings. No woman was ever rendered
-better as a wife or as a mother by that indiscriminate
-enjoyment of society, which, it is supposed, the
-gentlewomen of Athens lost so much by being deprived
-of.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>To form, however, a correct conception of their
-station, and the happiness within their reach, we
-must take into consideration several circumstances
-peculiar to ancient society. In those times something
-very different was understood by the word
-education from the meaning now attached to it.
-It signified rather the disciplining of the mind to
-certain habits than the imparting of different kinds
-of knowledge. It was the culture of the intellectual
-powers, and the sowing of the seed, rather than
-the transplanting of notions, half-grown, from one
-mind to another. More care was bestowed on the
-building up, than on the furnishing, of the mind.
-There was by far less acquisition, less accomplishment
-than in modern times; but the faculties were
-more surely impregnated, quickened sooner, and
-ripened into more vigorous maturity. Hence, among
-the ancients, there were few dreamers, either men
-or women. Exquisitely alive to all the peculiarities
-of their situation, they were, in the best sense of
-the word, a poetical people, gifted, indeed, with imagination,
-but possessing, too, the power to rein it in,
-to shape its course, and, on most occasions, to render
-it subservient to the dictates of judgment.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_403'>403</span>Of the management of infancy I have already
-spoken. At the age of seven the sexes were separated,
-the girls still remaining in the nursery, while governors,
-kept expressly for the purpose, conducted the boys
-to the public schools.<a id='r1140' /><a href='#f1140' class='c018'><sup>[1140]</sup></a> Too little is known of the material
-circumstances attending the mental and bodily
-training of the girls, or at what age they were taught
-to read and write. Much, however, in those ages was
-communicated orally. Their mothers imparted to
-them whatever notions they possessed of religion,
-performed in their presence several sacrifices and
-other pious rites, and gradually prepared them for
-officiating in their turn at their country’s altars.<a id='r1141' /><a href='#f1141' class='c018'><sup>[1141]</sup></a> In
-a certain sense, therefore, every Athenian woman
-was a priestess, and though their piety was imperfect
-and their faith corrupt, it will still be admitted that
-important benefits must have been derived from
-imbuing the youthful mind with some principles of
-religion.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The performance of these pious duties commenced
-very early. Immediately on attaining the age of
-five years, they might be called on to officiate,
-clothed in saffron robes,<a id='r1142' /><a href='#f1142' class='c018'><sup>[1142]</sup></a> in the rites of Artemis
-Brauronia, when a she-goat was sacrificed to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_404'>404</span>goddess, while professed rhapsodists chaunted select
-passages from the Iliad. Here they were initiated
-in the mysteries of their national piety,<a id='r1143' /><a href='#f1143' class='c018'><sup>[1143]</sup></a> accompanied
-by all the charms of music, and of a style of declaiming
-no less impressive than that of the theatre.
-At this festival, celebrated every five years, all the
-ceremonies were performed by virgins, none of whom
-could be above ten years old;<a id='r1144' /><a href='#f1144' class='c018'><sup>[1144]</sup></a> we must, therefore,
-infer that they underwent much previous training,
-and were instructed carefully respecting the object
-of the rites. Another religious festival at which
-youthful virgins only officiated, was the Arrhephoria,
-celebrated in honour of Athena or Herse. The
-ceremonies performed on this occasion appear to
-have required something more of preparation, since
-it was necessary that the youthful sacrificers should,
-at least, be seven years old and not exceed eleven.
-Four, selected for their noble birth and training,
-presided, and other two were chosen to weave the
-sacred peplos, while engaged in which they resided
-in the Sphæresterion, on the rock of the Acropolis,
-habited in white garments with ornaments of gold.<a id='r1145' /><a href='#f1145' class='c018'><sup>[1145]</sup></a>
-The bread which they eat during their seclusion was
-called Anastatos.<a id='r1146' /><a href='#f1146' class='c018'><sup>[1146]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_405'>405</span>I own it is not a little remarkable, that in proving
-the women of Athens to have received what
-in our times are regarded as the humblest elements
-of education, we should be compelled to rely on
-indirect evidence, or on mere inferences, or, indeed,
-that the point should require proof at all.<a id='r1147' /><a href='#f1147' class='c018'><sup>[1147]</sup></a> This
-fact itself is decisive of their comparative <a id='corr409.7'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='seclusion'>seclusion.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_409.7'><ins class='correction' title='seclusion'>seclusion.</ins></a></span>
-Had they mingled much in society, more occasions
-would have occurred of dwelling on their acquirements,
-and in dramatic compositions of representing
-them delivering opinions, and exhibiting tastes and
-preferences, obviously incompatible with an uncultivated
-intellect. But, though the difficulty of the
-investigator be augmented by the paucity and indistinct
-manner of the witnesses, we are still not
-left entirely without ground for coming to a decision,
-and if writers have, hitherto, so far as I know, overlooked
-some of the principal testimonies, that must
-be regarded only as an additional cause for bringing
-them forward now.<a id='r1148' /><a href='#f1148' class='c018'><sup>[1148]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>A report current in antiquity, and preserved by
-Marcellinus in his Life of Thucydides,<a id='r1149' /><a href='#f1149' class='c018'><sup>[1149]</sup></a> represents
-the daughter of that great historian as the continuator
-of her father’s work, and as, in fact, the author
-of the whole eighth book. The biographer does
-not, indeed, receive the legend, but in rejecting it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_406'>406</span>his assigned reasons are not that in the days of
-Thucydides Athenian ladies were not taught to
-read, and were, therefore, incapable of any species
-of literary exertion, but that the portion in question
-of the history bears evident marks of the same
-lofty and masculine mind to which we owe the rest,
-and no-wise resembles the productions of a woman.
-Had Marcellinus known the art of writing to have
-formed no part of an Athenian lady’s education,
-that could have been the proper reason to assign
-for his doubt. He might, under such circumstances,
-have ridiculed the folly of such a supposition. But
-no such objection occurred to him. He knew well
-that they could and did write, and had, therefore,
-recourse to the proper argument for establishing his
-point.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Again, in that fragment of the oration of Lysias
-which he wrote for the children of Diodotos, an
-Athenian woman of rank is introduced defending,
-under very distressful circumstances, the rights of
-her children against her own father. Diodotos, it
-seems, had married his niece, and by her had several
-children. He was at length required by the
-commonwealth to proceed on a military expedition,
-during which he fell under the walls of Ephesos.
-Diogeiton, father of his wife, having been appointed
-guardian of the children, endeavours to defraud them
-of their property, and their mother, calling in the
-aid of impartial arbiters, pleads before them her children’s
-cause, and the orator, addressing one of the
-tribunals of Athens, does not hesitate to put in her
-mouth language worthy of a rhetorician. This, however,
-I am aware, cannot be regarded as a proof.
-But, in the course of her speech she discloses a circumstance
-which must be so considered. During
-the period of her stay in her fathers house, the old
-man removed from one street to another, and in the
-confusion a small memorandum book, dropped from
-among his papers, was picked up by one of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_407'>407</span>children and brought to their mother.<a id='r1150' /><a href='#f1150' class='c018'><sup>[1150]</sup></a> It happened
-to contain the account of the money her husband
-had left on departing for the army; this she reads,<a id='r1151' /><a href='#f1151' class='c018'><sup>[1151]</sup></a>
-and thus discovers the state in which the affairs
-of the family had been left on the departure of her
-husband.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Another proof that writing formed one of the
-accomplishments of women occurs in Xenophon.
-Ischomachos is laying open the road to domestic happiness
-and wealth. He enters, as elsewhere will be
-shown, into a variety of interesting details, and among
-other things, discusses the character and duties of
-a housekeeper; for in Greece the principal care of
-the household was always committed to women.
-Thus, going back to the Heroic ages, we find Euryclea
-the housekeeper of Odysseus,<a id='r1152' /><a href='#f1152' class='c018'><sup>[1152]</sup></a> and Hector’s
-palace in Troy is also placed under the care of a
-woman.<a id='r1153' /><a href='#f1153' class='c018'><sup>[1153]</sup></a> In the Cretan states, moreover, even the
-public tables had female inspectors,<a id='r1154' /><a href='#f1154' class='c018'><sup>[1154]</sup></a> and at Athens,
-where domestic economy was so much better understood
-than in the rest of Greece, women necessarily
-obtained the government of the household,<a id='r1155' /><a href='#f1155' class='c018'><sup>[1155]</sup></a>
-which men would have certainly managed more imperfectly.
-But in well-regulated families, the supreme
-control of everything rested with the wife,
-whom Xenophon<a id='r1156' /><a href='#f1156' class='c018'><sup>[1156]</sup></a> represents engaging with her husband
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_408'>408</span>in taking a list of all the moveables in the
-house, and this afterwards remains in her hands as
-a check upon the housekeeper, which, had she not
-known how to read, it would not have been. Besides,
-she is spoken of as aiding in writing the catalogue,
-and displays throughout the dialogue so much ability
-and knowledge that it would not surprise us to find
-her discoursing with Socrates on household affairs.
-There is, moreover, a remark of Plato<a id='r1157' /><a href='#f1157' class='c018'><sup>[1157]</sup></a> subversive
-at the same time of another error on this same
-subject, which exhibits women exercising their judgment
-in literary matters. Children, he says, may
-find comedy more agreeable, but educated women,
-youths, and the majority indeed of mankind, will
-prefer tragedy. Here we find the opinion corroborated
-that both the comic and tragic theatres
-were open to them, otherwise it could not have
-been known which they would prefer. But of this
-more elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In all countries, a great part of a woman’s education
-takes place after marriage. But at Athens,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_409'>409</span>where they entered so early<a id='r1158' /><a href='#f1158' class='c018'><sup>[1158]</sup></a> into the connubial
-state, marriage itself must be reckoned among the
-principal causes of their mental developement. They
-came into the hands of their husbands unformed,
-but pliable and docile. The little they had been
-taught seemed rather designed to fit them to receive
-his instructions than to dispense with them.<a id='r1159' /><a href='#f1159' class='c018'><sup>[1159]</sup></a>
-Their seclusion from the world preserved their character
-unfixed and impressionable. They passed from
-the nursery, as it were, to the bridal chamber, timid,
-unworldly, unsophisticated, and the husband, if he
-desired it, might fashion their mind and opinions as
-he pleased. In the women of Athens we, accordingly,
-observe the most remarkable contrast to the
-Spartans. Their influence, in effect greater, perhaps,
-acted invisibly, warming and impelling the ruder
-masculine clay, but without humbling their lords
-or exposing them to the ridicule of living under
-petticoat government. Yet in Themistocles we have
-an example of the sway they exercised. Fondling
-one day his infant son he observed, sportively, but
-with that ambitious consciousness of power ever present
-to the mind of a Greek—"This little fellow is
-the most influential person I know." His friends
-inquired his meaning—"Why, replied Themistocles,
-he completely governs his mother, while she governs
-me, and I the whole of Greece."<a id='r1160' /><a href='#f1160' class='c018'><sup>[1160]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The steps by which an Athenian girl might arrive
-at so envied a position are not unworthy our
-attention. From the age of fifteen she might look
-to become the mistress of a family; and it is probable
-that the maxim of Cleobulos,<a id='r1161' /><a href='#f1161' class='c018'><sup>[1161]</sup></a> that women
-should approach their nuptials young in years but
-old in understanding, often governed their conduct.
-Love no doubt was not the only matchmaker at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_410'>410</span>Athens.<a id='r1162' /><a href='#f1162' class='c018'><sup>[1162]</sup></a> In general the heart, as in modern times,
-followed in the train of prudential calculation. But
-this arose, not so much from any impracticability<a id='r1163' /><a href='#f1163' class='c018'><sup>[1163]</sup></a>
-of obtaining interviews, as from the habitual preference
-for gold, which, in all ages, has been found
-to actuate the conduct of the majority. To this
-day, in every country in Europe, marriage in the
-upper classes is too frequently a matter of mere
-bargain and sale, in which the feelings remain altogether
-unconsulted. And it was the same at Athens,
-though to suppose with Müller that interest was
-always the sole motive would be palpably to embrace
-an error, alike uncountenanced by history and
-philosophy.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>When it is said that virgins in all Ionic states
-led an extremely secluded life, we are not thence
-to conclude that no opportunity of beholding, or
-even conversing with them, was enjoyed by men.<a id='r1164' /><a href='#f1164' class='c018'><sup>[1164]</sup></a>
-It has already been seen that from the age of five
-years various ceremonies of their ancestral religion<a id='r1165' /><a href='#f1165' class='c018'><sup>[1165]</sup></a>
-led females into the street, that they walked leisurely,
-arrayed with every resource of art and magnificence,
-in frequent processions to the temples, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_411'>411</span>it is known that numerous private occasions, such
-as funerals, marriages, &amp;c., exposed them to the indiscriminate
-gaze of the public. Thus, we have in
-Terence a youth who from beholding a young lady
-with face uncovered and dishevelled hair lamenting
-at her mother’s funeral, falls desperately in love;<a id='r1166' /><a href='#f1166' class='c018'><sup>[1166]</sup></a>
-and the wife in Lysias, whose frailty led to the
-murder of Eratosthenes,<a id='r1167' /><a href='#f1167' class='c018'><sup>[1167]</sup></a> was first seen and admired
-under similar circumstances. Excuses, in fact, were
-never wanting to be in public, and occasions unknown
-to us were clearly afforded men for becoming
-acquainted with the temper and character
-of their future spouses, since we find Socrates conversing
-with men well acquainted with their country’s
-manners, jocularly feigning to have chosen
-Xantippe for her fierce, untameable spirit.<a id='r1168' /><a href='#f1168' class='c018'><sup>[1168]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>It has been supposed by many distinguished scholars,
-that, at Athens,<a id='r1169' /><a href='#f1169' class='c018'><sup>[1169]</sup></a> the theatre—that great bazaar
-of female beauty in modern states—was closed
-against the women, at least the comic theatre.
-One principal ground of this opinion is the coarse
-and licentious character of the old comedy which,
-with its broad humour, political satire, and reckless
-disregard of decency, appears fitted for men only,
-and those not the most refined. But there are
-strange contradictions in human nature. The very
-religion of Greece teemed with indecency. Phallic
-statues crowded the temples and the public streets.
-Phallic emblems entered into many of the sacred
-ceremonies at which women, even in their maiden
-condition, assisted, and the poems chaunted at sacrifices,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_412'>412</span>where they associated in every rite, were,
-in many parts, broader than an Utopian legislator
-would consider permissible. Besides, to prove the
-nullity of this objection, we need only note the
-history of our own stage. English women refused
-not, when they were in fashion, to behold, under
-the protection of a mask,<a id='r1170' /><a href='#f1170' class='c018'><sup>[1170]</sup></a> the comedies of Massinger,
-Wycherly, Beaumont and Fletcher. They still
-read, and, on the stage, admire, Shakespeare, and
-from these the interval is not wide to Aristophanes,
-the lewdest and most shameless of ancient comic
-writers.<a id='r1171' /><a href='#f1171' class='c018'><sup>[1171]</sup></a> And, further, it should never be forgotten,
-that their perverted religion flung its protecting wing
-over the stage. Plays exhibited during the festivals
-of Bacchos were, like our old mysteries and moralities,
-strictly sacred shows, and, consistently, women
-could no more have been excluded from them than
-from the other exhibitions connected with public
-worship.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>As on many other points, however, the positive
-and direct testimonies to be adduced in proof of
-the position I maintain are scanty, and of modern
-authorities nearly all are against me. Still, truth
-is not immediately to be deserted because there
-happens to be much difficulty in defending it. It
-will be time enough to run when we have exhausted
-all our resources. An unknown writer, but still a
-Greek,<a id='r1172' /><a href='#f1172' class='c018'><sup>[1172]</sup></a> relates that, during the acting of the Eumenides,
-that awe-inspiring and terrible drama of
-Æschylus, the sight of the furies rushing tumultuously,
-like dogs of hell, upon the stage, with their
-frightful masks and blood-dripping hands, shed so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_413'>413</span>deep a terror over the theatre, that children were
-thrown into fits, and pregnant women seized with
-premature birth-pangs. This, if admitted, would be
-evidence decisive as regards the tragic stage. But,
-because it is impossible to elude its force, modern
-critics boldly assume the privilege to treat the whole
-passage contemptuously, opposing scorn when they
-have no counterproof to oppose. Such a mode of
-arguing, however, by whomsoever pursued, must
-clearly bear upon the face of it the mark of sophistry,
-for in that way there is no position which
-might not be overthrown or established.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But our anonymous authority has not been left
-to encounter the attacks of the critics and historians
-alone. Other ancient authors, though their corroborative
-testimonies have, hitherto, been generally
-overlooked, furnish incidental hints and revelations
-which, duly weighed, will, I make no doubt, be
-admitted to amount to positive proof. Describing
-the temple of Demeter at Eleusis, Strabo observes,
-that so vast were its dimensions, that during the
-celebration of the mysteries, it would contain the
-whole multitude usually assembled at the theatre.<a id='r1173' /><a href='#f1173' class='c018'><sup>[1173]</sup></a>
-Now, in the mysteries, we know that the Athenians
-of both sexes, and of all ages above childhood,
-were present, so that, if men only had been admitted
-to the theatre, it need not have been half the size
-of the Eleusinian temple, and, consequently, would
-have furnished the geographer with no proper subject
-of comparison. Again, in the passage quoted
-above, from Plato, the presence of women at both
-the tragic and comic theatres is indubitably presumed,
-since, to judge of both these kinds of exhibitions,
-it was necessary either to see them, or to
-read the plays. If they read the plays there could
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_414'>414</span>be no reason for restraining them from the theatre,
-since, whatever they contained of objectionable matter
-would thus be equally placed within their
-reach. It is to be presumed, therefore, even from
-this passage, that the theatre was free to women.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But the philosopher is elsewhere more explicit.
-Treating in his Dialogue on Laws expressly of tragic
-poetry, and speaking always in reference to his imaginary
-state, he respectfully and with many flattering
-compliments proscribes this branch of the
-mimetic arts, not, however, without assigning his reasons.
-Assuming for the moment the part of leader
-of the legislative chorus, he informs the tragedians,
-that “we, also, in our way, are poets, and aim at
-producing a perfect representation of human life.
-You must regard us, therefore, as your rivals, and
-believe that we labour at the composition of a
-drama, which it is within the competence of perfect
-law only to achieve. You must not, accordingly
-imagine, that, as jealous rivals, we shall readily
-admit you into our city to pitch your tents
-in our agora, and, through the voice of loud-mouthed,
-actors to imbue our wives and children
-and countrymen with manners the very opposite
-to ours.”<a id='r1174' /><a href='#f1174' class='c018'><sup>[1174]</sup></a> Now, what point, or, indeed, what sense
-would there be in this, if in the commonwealths
-actually existing dramatic poets had always been
-prohibited from addressing themselves to the women?
-Would it not have been just such another
-novelty as an ingenious philosopher of our days
-would hit upon, were he in a state of his own invention,
-to propose, as a great improvement on existing
-customs, that women should go to church?</p>
-
-<p class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_415'>415</span>This, therefore, were there no other proof, would, to
-me, appear convincing; but a still stronger remains.
-It is well known that the theatre was, among the
-ancients, parcelled out into several divisions, some
-more, some less honourable; and of these one whole
-division, by the decree of Sphyromachos, was appropriated
-to the female citizens, who would appear previously
-to have sat indiscriminately among the men
-and female strangers. To the latter the upper ranges
-of seats would appear to have been appropriated.<a id='r1175' /><a href='#f1175' class='c018'><sup>[1175]</sup></a> On
-this point, therefore, the opinion received among the
-generality of writers is erroneous. Women were not
-debarred the amusement or instruction of the theatre,<a id='r1176' /><a href='#f1176' class='c018'><sup>[1176]</sup></a>
-which, for good or for evil, influenced their education,
-and rendered their minds subservient or otherwise
-to the designs of the legislator and the welfare of the
-state.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_416'>416</span>From all which it will be apparent that the sexes
-enjoyed at Athens abundant occasions of meeting;
-and in the other Ionian states similar customs and
-similar manners prevailed. For this we are reduced
-to rely on no obscure scholiast or grammarian. Thucydides
-himself, describing the second purification of
-Delos by the Athenians, and the institution of the
-Delian games, observes, that from very remote times
-the people of Ionia and the neighbouring islands had
-been accustomed to come with their wives and children
-to the sacred festivals there celebrated in honour
-of Apollo. On these occasions gymnastic exercises
-and musical contests took place; and of the chorusses
-who chaunted the praises of the god some
-were female. The whole of the ceremonies are described
-in the Homeric hymns to the tutelar divinity,
-where the poet very animatedly recapitulates the principal
-features of the games.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>To thee, O Phœbos! most the Delian isle</div>
- <div class='line'>Gives cordial joy, excites the pleasing smile,</div>
- <div class='line'>When gay Ionians flock around thy fane,</div>
- <div class='line'>Men, women, children,—a resplendent train:</div>
- <div class='line'>Where flowing garments sweep the sacred pile,—</div>
- <div class='line'>Where youthful concourse gladdens all the isle,—</div>
- <div class='line'>Where champions fight,—where dancers beat the ground,—</div>
- <div class='line'>Where cheerful music echoes all around,</div>
- <div class='line'>Thy feast to honour, and thy praise to sound.<a id='r1177' /><a href='#f1177' class='c018'><sup>[1177]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>The great historian who quotes this hymn, and unhesitatingly
-attributes it to Homer, brings forward
-to prove the occurrence of musical contests another
-passage, in which, as he observes, the poet speaks of
-himself:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>But now, Apollo, with thy sister fair,</div>
- <div class='line'>Smile as the lingering bard prefers his prayer;</div>
- <div class='line'>And ye, O Delian nymphs,<a id='r1178' /><a href='#f1178' class='c018'><sup>[1178]</sup></a> who guard the fane</div>
- <div class='line'>Of Phœbos, listen to my parting strain;</div>
- <div class='line'>Should some lone stranger, when my lay no more</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_417'>417</span>Floats on the breezes of the sacred shore,</div>
- <div class='line'>Demand who best, with soul-entrancing song,</div>
- <div class='line'>Earned blithe your praise, and bore your hearts along?</div>
- <div class='line'>Then answer with a warm approving smile—</div>
- <div class='line'>“The blind old man of Chios’ rocky isle.”<a id='r1179' /><a href='#f1179' class='c018'><sup>[1179]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>And down to the period of the Peloponnesian war
-similar games and sacred rites were performed at
-Ephesos, at which the Ionians with their wives and
-children were usually present.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>The Doric historian, to whom all these circumstances
-must be familiarly known, makes, however, no
-account of them, but consistently with his theory, if
-not with facts, remembers no well-authenticated instance
-in the annals of Attica of a person’s marrying
-for love. What he would admit to be well authenticated
-it were difficult to say. He rejects, whenever
-his particular notions seem to require it, the testimonies
-both of Herodotus and Thucydides, so that for a
-narrative resting on the authority of Polyænus, Plutarch,
-and Valerius Maximus, we can expect no quarter.
-Nevertheless, as these writers are at least faithful
-in their delineations of manners, the following romantic
-incident may be hazarded even on their authority.
-Thrasymedes, an Athenian youth, entertaining
-a strong passion for the daughter of the tyrant Peisistratos,
-had the hardihood one day as she walked
-in a religious procession to kiss her openly in the
-street. Her brothers, young men of a fiery temper,
-regarded the act as an affront almost inexpiable, and
-were apparently preparing to take vengeance on the
-offender, when the old prince allayed their anger by
-observing,—"If we punish men for loving us, how
-shall we conduct ourselves towards our enemies?"
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_418'>418</span>Escaping thus, Thrasymedes still cherished his love.
-He therefore determined on carrying away the lady
-by force; and gaining over a number of his associates,
-he seized the occasion of a sacrifice on the sea-shore
-in which the maiden was officiating, and rushing, attended
-by his followers with drawn swords, through the
-crowd, he succeeded in conveying her to a boat, and
-set sail for Ægina. Unfortunately, however, for his
-design, Hippias, eldest son of Peisistratos, happened
-at this moment to be cruising in the bay on the lookout
-for pirates, and perceiving a bark putting hastily
-out to sea, he bore down upon it, took the young
-men prisoners, and conducted them together with his
-sister back to Athens. Thrasymedes and his companions
-being brought before the tyrant, abated not
-a jot of their courage, but bade him, in determining
-their punishment, use his own discretion, since from
-the moment they resolved on the enterprise they
-had made light, they said, of life. Peisistratos, tyrant
-though he was, regarded their loftiness of soul with
-admiration, freely bestowed his daughter on Thrasymedes,
-and won them to his interest by gentleness
-and friendship. In this, says Polyænus, acting the
-part of a good father and a popular citizen rather than
-of a tyrant.<a id='r1180' /><a href='#f1180' class='c018'><sup>[1180]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But supposing no instances remained on record,
-who can doubt that the heart prompted, and the hand
-followed its promptings, at Athens as elsewhere? Its
-walls, its columns, every plane-tree in the Academy,
-the Cerameicos, and other public walks, glowed with
-the language of the passions, and the names of virgins
-beloved for their beauty. There was, no doubt, some
-want of delicacy in this; but the manners of the
-Athenians, though they presented no insuperable bar
-to so much of intercourse as might serve to enkindle
-affection,<a id='r1181' /><a href='#f1181' class='c018'><sup>[1181]</sup></a> opposed, nevertheless, that facility of communication
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_419'>419</span>which at Sparta existed, and in our own
-country is common. However, had the beloved been
-incapable of reading, to what purpose should her
-name, coupled with endearing epithets, have illuminated
-the bark of the smilax, or the marble skreens
-of the gymnasia? It was traced there in order that
-her bright eyes might peruse it, and learn who of all
-the youth of Athens, had singled her forth from the
-world to be the object of his love. Lucian, in his
-sarcastic humour, represents a mad lover of the goddess
-Aphrodite carving every tree and end of wall
-with her name.<a id='r1182' /><a href='#f1182' class='c018'><sup>[1182]</sup></a> From a fragment of Callimachos
-it would seem too as if men had sometimes written
-the beloved syllables on the leaves of trees;<a id='r1183' /><a href='#f1183' class='c018'><sup>[1183]</sup></a> which
-may well have been, since in our own days we have
-seen the English people inscribing in letters of gold
-the name of their youthful queen on leaves of laurel.
-Euripides, who lost no opportunity of venting his
-aversion for the sex, introduces one of his characters
-protesting that his opinion of women would not be
-bettered though every pine in Mount Ida were covered
-with their names.<a id='r1184' /><a href='#f1184' class='c018'><sup>[1184]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Another mode of declaring love, not quite unknown
-in modern times, was to clothe the language
-of the heart in verse. Poets, we are told, often disguised
-their own feelings by attributing them to
-the actors in a feigned narrative, which they would
-compose as an offering to the object of their attachment
-who, it is very obvious, to appreciate such
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_420'>420</span>a gift, must have been able to read it.<a id='r1185' /><a href='#f1185' class='c018'><sup>[1185]</sup></a> They had
-likewise another fashion, particularly Greek, of making
-known their sentiments, which was to suspend
-garlands of flowers, or perform sacrifice before the
-door where the person possessing their heart resided.<a id='r1186' /><a href='#f1186' class='c018'><sup>[1186]</sup></a>
-Sometimes they repaired to the spot and
-poured forth libations of wine as at the entrance
-of a temple, a practice alluded to by the Scholiast
-on Aristophanes, who relates that a number of
-Thessalian gentlemen being in love with Laïs,<a id='r1187' /><a href='#f1187' class='c018'><sup>[1187]</sup></a> betrayed
-their passion by publicly sprinkling her doors
-with wine. Among the symptoms which disclosed
-the condition of the feelings, a garland loosely thrown
-upon the head was one.<a id='r1188' /><a href='#f1188' class='c018'><sup>[1188]</sup></a> Women suffered their
-secret to escape them by being discovered wreathing
-garlands for their hair.<a id='r1189' /><a href='#f1189' class='c018'><sup>[1189]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But in whatever way the existence of passion was
-externally manifested, a more interesting question
-is the modification which the passion<a id='r1190' /><a href='#f1190' class='c018'><sup>[1190]</sup></a> itself underwent
-in the Greek mind.<a id='r1191' /><a href='#f1191' class='c018'><sup>[1191]</sup></a> Numerous circumstances
-concur to mislead our judgment on this subject. In
-the first place, the writers who sprang up like fungi
-amid the corruption and profligacy which attended
-the decay of Hellenic society, standing nearer to us,
-obstruct our view. Among them a coarse unhealthy
-craving after excitement led to nefarious perversions
-of sentiment, and to countenance their own excesses
-they threw back their vile polluting shadows upon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_421'>421</span>the loftier and brighter moral station of their forefathers.
-Even so early as the age of Æschylus this
-culpable practice began to prevail, for this great
-poet scrupled not to attribute to Achilles vices,
-which, in the Homeric period, were evidently unknown.<a id='r1192' /><a href='#f1192' class='c018'><sup>[1192]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But rightly to comprehend the spirit of an age,
-we must by no means confide in the interpretation
-of the succeeding, or even in any one class
-of contemporary writers. Least of all, in the authors
-of comedy, who seldom paint men as they
-are, but run into exaggeration and caricature for the
-sake of effect. To the imaginative, spiritual, impassioned
-must we have recourse, if we would learn
-what the impassioned, spiritual and imaginative felt,
-and to such only in any age or country, is love, in
-the poetical sense of the word, familiar or indeed
-intelligible.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>In the apprehension of several modern writers,
-love among the Greeks, was not merely based upon
-physical elements, as it must everywhere be, but included
-little or nothing else.<a id='r1193' /><a href='#f1193' class='c018'><sup>[1193]</sup></a> It had there, they suppose,
-none of these romantic features, nothing of that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_422'>422</span>heroic self-devotion or lofty intercommunion of soul
-with soul, which among northern nations, more particularly
-in fiction, characterises this powerful and
-mysterious principle, which binds together in indissoluble
-union individuals of different sexes, and renders
-throughout life the contentment and happiness
-of the one, dependent on the well-being of the
-other.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>But I can discover in the Greeks nothing which,
-on this point, can distinguish them from other civilised
-races, except, perhaps, that there was in their
-love, more of earnestness and reality and less of
-dreaminess and fantastic affectation, than might be
-brought home to several modern nations. Their
-fables, however, and their poetry teem with ideas
-and examples of the loftiest and purest love, such
-love, I mean, as is natural to mankind, as harmonises
-with the structure of their minds, and
-the object and tendency of their passions, growing
-like the oak out of earth, but springing upward
-and rearing its majestic stature and beautiful foliage
-towards heaven. Thus Odysseus in Homer
-prefers the sunshine of a wife’s affection to immortality<a id='r1194' /><a href='#f1194' class='c018'><sup>[1194]</sup></a>
-and the smiles of a sensual goddess. Hæmon
-with a tenderness carried to excess, spurns
-the blandishment of empire, nay, the very laws of
-duty and nature, that he may cling to the form
-of Antigone<a id='r1195' /><a href='#f1195' class='c018'><sup>[1195]</sup></a> and join her in the grave. And Alcestis,
-rising above them all, quits in youth and
-health and beauty</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“The warm precincts of the cheerful day,”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'><span class='pageno' id='Page_423'>423</span>that she may preserve the existence of one beloved
-still more than life.<a id='r1196' /><a href='#f1196' class='c018'><sup>[1196]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c027'>Nay, to prove the elevated conceptions of love
-that prevailed in earlier Greece, we find a personification
-of this passion reckoned among the most
-ancient gods of its mythology. Altars were erected,
-festivals instituted, sacrifices offered up to it, as
-to a power, in its origin and nature divine.<a id='r1197' /><a href='#f1197' class='c018'><sup>[1197]</sup></a> It
-breathed the breath of life into their poetry, it
-was supposed to elicit music and verse from the
-coldest human clay, like the sun’s rays from the
-fabulous Memnon—it allied itself in its energies
-with freedom—to love, in the imagination of a
-Greek, was to cease to be a slave,<a id='r1198' /><a href='#f1198' class='c018'><sup>[1198]</sup></a>—it emancipated
-and rendered noble whomsoever it inspired,—it floated
-winged through the air, and descended even in
-dreams<a id='r1199' /><a href='#f1199' class='c018'><sup>[1199]</sup></a> upon the mind of men or women, revealing
-to sight the forms of persons unknown, annihilating
-distance, trampling over rank, confounding
-together gods and men by its irresistible force.<a id='r1200' /><a href='#f1200' class='c018'><sup>[1200]</sup></a>
-Much of the beauty of their fables is concealed
-from us by the atmosphere of triteness and familiarity
-with which our injudicious education invests
-them. Every puling sonneteer babbles of Eros. And
-Aphrodite, a creature of the imagination brighter and
-lovelier than her own star, has been rendered more
-common in modern verse, than the most celebrated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_424'>424</span>of her priestesses in ancient Corinth. But the poets
-of Greece possessed the art of clothing their gods
-in colours warm as life, varied as the rainbow; and
-as to Love, never was his influence more delicately
-shadowed forth than by him who introduces Endymion
-slumbering with unclosed lids on Mount
-Latmos, that the divinity of sleep might enjoy the
-brightness of his eyes!<a id='r1201' /><a href='#f1201' class='c018'><sup>[1201]</sup></a></p>
-
-<hr class='c025' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1140'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1140'>1140</a>. From a passage in Terence
-(Phorm. i. 2. 30. sqq.) Perizonius
-concludes that even girls
-were sent to school. But he applies
-to Athenian maidens of free
-birth what in the Roman poet is
-related of a servile music girl: <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ea
-serviebat lenoni impurissimo.</span>—(Not.
-ad Ælian. Hist. Var. iii. 21.)
-It appears, however, from this
-passage, as Kuhn has already observed,
-that there existed public
-schools for girls at Athens, whatever
-might be the condition of the
-persons who frequented them. In
-Lambert Bos’s Antiquitates, (Pars.
-iv. c. 5. p. 216,) the error of
-Perizonius is repeated; that is, in
-the note; for, according to the
-text, the Attic virgins were closely
-confined to the house.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1141'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1141'>1141</a>. Πολλὰς ἑορτὰς αἱ γυναῖκες
-ἔξω τῶν δημοτελῶν ἦγον ἰδία συνερχόμεναι.—Sch.
-Aristoph. Lysist.
-i. In Homer we find the Trojan
-women performing sacrifice to
-Athena—Il. ζ. 277. 310, just
-as the Athenian matrons did
-on the Acropolis.—Aristoph.
-Lysistr. 179.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1142'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1142'>1142</a>. Suid. v. ἄρκτος. t. i. p. 425.
-c.—Sch. Aristoph. Lysistr. 645.—Meurs.
-Græc. Fer. lib. ii. p. 67.—During
-the dances performed in
-honour of this goddess, the women
-commonly played on brazen castanets.—Athen.
-xiv. 39.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1143'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1143'>1143</a>. As Plato in his Republic appropriates
-to each sex a separate
-class of songs, it may be inferred
-that both in Athens and elsewhere
-in Greece, men and women habitually
-sung the same lays.—De.
-Legg. vii. t. viii. p. 30.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1144'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1144'>1144</a>. Pollux. viii. 107.—Cf. Herod.
-vi. 138. Women practised various
-dances, to perform which with
-skill constituted a branch of their
-accomplishments. One of these
-dances was called the Apokinos,
-or Mactrismos, of which Cratinos
-made mention in his Nemesis,
-Cephisodoros in his Amazons, and
-Aristophanes in his Centaurs.
-These dances, however, appear to
-have been a particular class, and
-obtained the name of Marctypiæ.
-Athen. xiv. 26.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1145'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1145'>1145</a>. Etym. Mag. 149, 13. sqq.—Suid.
-v. Ἁῤῥηνηφ. t. i. p. 222. c.
-Ἀῤῥηφορια—ἐπειδὴ τὰ ἀῤῥητα ἐν
-κίσταις ἔφερον τῇ θεῷ ὡι παρθένοι.
-idem. t. i. p. 423. c. et v. χαλκεῖα t.
-ii. p. 110 d. Harpocrat. v. ἀῤῥηφόρειν.
-p. 48 Maussac.—Aristoph.
-Lysistr. 643. et. schol.—Lys.
-Mun. Accept. Apollog. §. 1.—Plut.
-Vit. Dec. Orat. iv. t. v. p.
-145.—Cf. Sch. Aristoph. Acharn.
-241. In several religious processions
-the women except the canephori,
-followed not the pageant,
-but looked upon it from the
-housetop.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1146'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1146'>1146</a>. Athen. iii. 80.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1147'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1147'>1147</a>. Muretus has brought forward
-several passages to prove that
-learned women bore but an indifferent
-character in antiquity.—Var.
-Lect. viii. 21. The Hetairæ
-of course were taught to
-read. Of this we have abundant
-proof: τὰ ἐπὶ τῶν τοίχων γεγγραμμένα
-ἐν τῷ κεραμεικῷ ἀναγνοθὶ,
-ὅπου κατεστηλίτευται ὑμῶν τὰ
-ὀνομάτα—says the jealous lover
-to Melitta in Lucian.—Diall.
-Hetair. iv. 2. Nay even the
-servant maid of this Hetaira Acis
-is able to read; for desirous to
-ascertain whether there was any
-thing in the report of her lover,
-Melitta sends forth the girl to
-examine the walls, who discovers
-and reads the words “Melitta loves
-Hermotimos,” &amp;c. which written
-there in jest by some wag had
-proved the cause of her lover’s
-jealousy and the quarrel that
-ensued.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1148'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1148'>1148</a>. Cf. Telet. ap. Stob. Florileg.
-Tit. 108. 83. Gaisf.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1149'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1149'>1149</a>. P. xxi. For Plato’s views on
-the education of women, see De
-Legg. t. viii. p. 36.—Cf. Xen.
-Conviv. ii. 9, 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1150'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1150'>1150</a>. Lys. Cont. Diog. § 5. By
-τοὺς παῖδας: Reiske, however,
-understands the servants of Diogeiton,
-though these would have
-been more likely to carry the
-book to their master.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1151'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1151'>1151</a>. See also in Demosthenes the
-account of a wife and husband
-examining a will.—Adv. Spud.
-§ 8.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1152'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1152'>1152</a>. Odyss. α. 428. β. 345, 361.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1153'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1153'>1153</a>. Iliad. ζ. 381. 390.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1154'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1154'>1154</a>. Athen. iv. 22.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1155'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1155'>1155</a>. In the household of Pericles,
-however, we find mention made
-of a steward, and learn that the
-regulation of affairs was taken
-out of the hands of the women.—Plut.
-Pericl. § 16.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1156'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1156'>1156</a>. Œconom. ix. 10. p. 57,
-Schneid. Similar business habits
-prevailed among our neighbours,
-the Dutch, while they enjoyed
-the advantages of republican institutions.
-Among the causes of
-their prosperity Sir Josiah Child
-enumerates, “the education of
-their children, as well daughters
-as sons, all which, be they of
-never so great quality or estate,
-they always take care to
-bring up to write perfect good
-hands, and to have the full
-knowledge and use of arithmetic
-and merchants’ accounts,
-the well understanding and
-practice whereof, doth strangely
-infuse into most that are the
-owners of that quality, of
-either sex, not only an ability
-for commerce of all kinds, but
-a strong aptitude, love and delight
-in it; and in regard the
-women are as knowing therein
-as the men, it doth encourage
-their husbands to hold on in
-their trades to their dying days.
-Knowing the capacity of their
-wives to get in their estates
-and carry on their trades after
-their deaths; whereas if a
-merchant in England arrive at
-any considerable estate, he
-commonly withdraws his estate
-from trade, before he comes
-near the confines of old age,
-reckoning that if God should
-call him out of the world while
-the main of his estate is engaged
-abroad in trade, he must
-lose one third of it, through the
-inexperience and inaptness of
-his wife to such affairs, and so
-it usually falls out.”—Discourse
-of Trade, p. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1157'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1157'>1157</a>. De Legg. l. ii. t. vii. p. 243.
-Bekk.—Ἐὰν δέ γ᾿ οἱ μείζους παῖδες,
-τὸν τὰς κωμῳδίας· τραγωδίαν
-δὲ αἵ τε πεπαιδευμέναι τῶν γυναικῶν
-καὶ τὰ νέα μειράκια καὶ σχεδὸν
-ἴσως τὸ πλῆθος πάντων.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1158'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1158'>1158</a>. The Roman ladies entered
-still earlier into the married state;
-at the age of twelve, says Plutarch,
-or under. Parall. Num.
-et Lycurg. § 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1159'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1159'>1159</a>. Xenoph. Œconom. vii. 5. 6.
-sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1160'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1160'>1160</a>. Plut. Themist. § 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1161'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1161'>1161</a>. Diog. Laert. i. 6. 4.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1162'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1162'>1162</a>. In Greece, as everywhere else,
-portionless girls had few admirers.
-Diog. Laert. v. 4. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1163'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1163'>1163</a>. Examples occur in the comic
-poets, of men choosing for themselves.
-Thus in Terence a young
-man declines the lady offered him
-by his father, and proposes to marry
-the mistress of his choice, to
-which both parents agree. Heautontimor.
-v. 5. sub. fin.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1164'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1164'>1164</a>. Athen. xiii. 29.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1165'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1165'>1165</a>. The religious rites in which
-the women of Athens officiated
-were numerous and important:
-1. The orgiastic ceremonies in
-honour of Pan were performed
-with shouts and clamour, it not
-being permitted to approach that
-divinity in silence.—Sch. Aristoph.
-Lysistr. 2. They celebrated
-sacred rites in honour of Aphrodite
-Colias, id. ibid. 3. Another
-divinity, in whose honour they
-congregated together, was Ginesyllis
-a goddess in the train of Aphrodite,
-who obtained the name
-ἀπὸ τῆς γενέσεως τῶν παίδων. id.
-ibid. Cf. Luc. Amor. § 42.
-4. The part they took in the
-orgies of Dionysos is well known.
-5. They, too, were the principal
-actors in the festival of Adonis.
-Plut. Alcib. § 18. and to mention
-no more they may strictly be said
-to have constituted the principal
-attraction of the Panathenaic procession.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1166'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1166'>1166</a>. Phorm. 2. 2. 40. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1167'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1167'>1167</a>. Lys. De Cæd. Eratosth. § 2.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1168'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1168'>1168</a>. Diog. Laert. ii. 5. 18.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1169'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1169'>1169</a>. To prove the presence of the
-women at the theatre among the
-other Greeks, ample testimonies
-might be collected. Thus, when
-in Æolis, a certain Alexander
-exhibited dramatic performances,
-the people flocked thither from
-all the neighbouring towns and
-villages, upon which he surrounded
-the theatre with soldiers, made
-prisoners both men, women, and
-children, and only released them
-on payment of a large ransom.—Polyæn.
-Stratagem. vi. 10.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1170'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1170'>1170</a>. To this Pope alludes:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“And not a mask went unimproved away.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>See also Swift, Tale of a Tub,
-§ ix.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1171'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1171'>1171</a>. On the coarseness of the German
-theatre, in the eighteenth
-century, frequented by the empress
-and the first ladies of the court,
-see Lady Montague’s Letters, ix.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1172'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1172'>1172</a>. Τινες δὲ φάσιν, ἐν τῇ ἐπιδείξει
-τῶν Εὐμενίδων σποράδην εἰσαγαγόντα
-τὸν χορὸν, τοσοῦτον
-ἐκπλῆξαι τὸν δῆμον, ὥστε τὰ μὲν
-νήπια ἐκψύξαι, τὰ δὲ ἔμβρυα
-ἐξαμβλωθῆναι.—Vit. Æschyl.
-p. 6.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1173'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1173'>1173</a>. Ὄχλον θέατρου δέξασθαι δυνάμενον.—Strab.
-ix. i. p. 238.—We
-have in Pollux, ii. 56. and
-iv. 121., θεάτρια “a spectatress,”
-and συνθεάτρια “a fellow spectatress,”
-a word used by Aristophanes,
-and, doubtless, applied
-to women forming part of a theatrical
-audience.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1174'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1174'>1174</a>. Plat. de Legg. vii. t. viii. p.
-59. Bekk. Compare with this
-the song of the φαλλοφόρος..—Athen.
-xiv. 16.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Σοὶ, Βάκχε, τάνδε μοῦσαν αγλαΐζομεν,</div>
- <div class='line'>Ἁπλοῦν ῥυθμὸν χεόντες αἰόλῳ μέλει,</div>
- <div class='line'>Καὶ μὰν, ἀπαρθένευτον. κ. τ. λ.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>His songs and his acting were,
-no doubt, little suited to the taste
-of a virgin; but if virgins had
-never frequented the theatre, and
-the comic theatre, too, where
-would have been the necessity for
-any such remark?</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1175'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1175'>1175</a>. Aristoph. Eccles. 22. et Schol.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Ἐνταῦθα περὶ τὴν ἐσχάτην δεῖ κερκίδα</div>
- <div class='line'>Ὑμᾶς καθιζούσας βεωρεῖν ὡς ξένας.</div>
- <div class='line in21'>Alexis, ap. Poll. ix. 44.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1176'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1176'>1176</a>. An anecdote related by Plutarch,
-would of itself, in my opinion,
-suffice to prove the presence
-of women at the theatre, as well
-as that Athenian ladies habitually
-went abroad attended by a single
-maid-servant. For on one occasion,
-when an actor who played
-the part of a queen would have
-refused to appear upon the stage
-unless furnished with a splendid
-costume and a large suite of attendants,
-Melanthios, the manager,
-pushed him on the boards,
-saying, “Don’t you see the wife
-of Phocion constantly going abroad
-attended by but one maid? And
-wouldst thou affect superior pomp
-and corrupt our wives?” It is
-evident that the pride of this
-actor could not have exercised any
-evil influence on the women had
-they not been present to witness
-his ostentation. We must necessarily
-infer, therefore, that they
-were, and that they joined the
-theatre in the thunders of applause
-with which it received the
-observation of Melanthios, who
-had spoken so loud as to be heard
-by the whole audience.—Plut.
-Phoc. § 19. The passage of
-Alexis had not escaped Casaubon,
-who, in his notes on Theophrastus’
-Characters, p. 165, has discussed
-the point with his usual learning
-and ability. A passage in the Thesmophoriazusæ
-of Aristophanes,
-seems however, but only seems,
-to make against this opinion. There
-a woman says that when men returned
-from seeing a play of Euripides,
-a “Woman-hater,” they
-used to search the house in quest of
-lovers; but when Euripides’ plays
-were acted they might be supposed
-to remain at home from pique.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1177'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1177'>1177</a>. Thucyd. iii. 104. The version
-is Dr. Smith’s. Cf. Hom.
-Hymn. in Apoll. 146. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1178'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1178'>1178</a>. I have, as the reader will
-perceive, adopted the verse proposed
-by Barnes:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Δηλιάδες δὲ τε κοῦραι Ἀπόλλωνος θεράπαιναι.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c030'>Though Ernesti is perhaps right
-in supposing no addition necessary.
-See his note on v. 165.
-Franke, in his recent edition of
-the Hymns, has, with Ernesti,
-rejected the verse.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1179'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1179'>1179</a>. Of these verses (Hymn. in
-Apol. v. 165. 172) I give my own
-translation, the last line excepted,
-which Byron had somewhere done
-ready to my hand.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1180'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1180'>1180</a>. Polyæn. Strat. v. 14. Meurs.
-Peisist. vi. p. 46. seq. Plutarch.
-in Apophthegm. Peisist. § 3.
-who calls the young man Thrasybulos.
-Valer. Max. v. 1.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1181'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1181'>1181</a>. Schol. in Aristoph. Acharn.
-144. Vesp. 98. Young men in
-love would appear to have played
-at dice, with fortune, to discover
-whether they should be successful
-or otherwise. Luc. Amor. § 16.
-Speaking of Ameipsias’ Sphendone,
-or Jewelled Ring, Hemsterhuis
-observes:—<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Nomen habere potuerit
-hæc comedia ab annulo
-mutui amoris signo, atque arrha,
-cujus in palâ fuerit insculpta, quod
-haud apud antiquos insolens,
-amoris figura, quæque vario ut
-modo per aliorum manus <a id='corr418.n2'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='vagata.'>vagata.”</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_418.n2'><ins class='correction' title='vagata.'>vagata.”</ins></a></span></span>
-ad Poll. ix. 96. t. vi. p. 1123.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1182'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1182'>1182</a>. Amor. § 16. Τοῖχος ἄπας
-ἐχαράσσετο, καὶ πᾶς μαλακοῦ
-δένδρου φλοιὸς Ἀφροδίτην καλὴν
-ἐκήρυσσεν.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1183'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1183'>1183</a>. Callim. Frag. xxv. p. 241.
-Spanh.—Theoc. Epithal. Hell. 48.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1184'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1184'>1184</a>. Ap. Eustath. Iliad, ζ. 490.
-Potter, Archæol. ii. 244.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1185'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1185'>1185</a>. Philostrat. Epist. xx. p. 921.
-Hermann. Com. in Arist. Poet. p.
-87.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1186'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1186'>1186</a>. Athen. xv. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1187'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1187'>1187</a>. Cf. Naïs according to Harpocrat.
-in v. p. 203. Sch. Aristoph.
-Plat. 179. Cf. Athen. xiii. 51.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1188'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1188'>1188</a>. Athen. xv. 9.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1189'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1189'>1189</a>. Aristoph. Thesmoph. 400.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1190'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1190'>1190</a>. Σὲ δέσποινα τῶν ὑπὲρ σοῦ
-λόγων, Ἀφροδίτη, σὲ βοηθὸν αἱ
-ἐμαὶ δεήσεις καλοῦσιν. Luc. Amor.
-§ 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1191'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1191'>1191</a>. See the whole question treated
-with peculiar ability by Maximus
-Tyrius viii. 105. sqq. Homer, in
-the opinion of this writer, exhibits
-especial felicity in his description
-of love, from the cool, timid dawn
-of passion to its fervid noon, pourtraying
-its operations, the age at
-which it is experienced, its forms,
-its feelings, chaste or unchaste.
-See too Lycophron Cassand. 104.
-with the commentary of Meursius,
-p. 1184. 1186. sqq.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1192'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1192'>1192</a>. The friendship of Achilles for
-Patroclos is celebrated by Maximus
-Tyrius, viii. 106. Cf. Luc.
-Amor. 20.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1193'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1193'>1193</a>. Maximus Tyrius has, on the
-origin of love, a very beautiful
-passage. “Its well-spring is the
-beauty of the soul gleaming upward
-through the body. And
-as flowers seen under water appear
-still more brilliant and exquisite
-than they are, so mental
-excellence seems to manifest
-additional splendour when invested
-with corporeal loveliness.”
-ix. 113. Euripides,
-whatever he may have written
-in his old age, was once an enthusiastic
-panegyrist of love, of which
-he has left a brilliant description.
-Athen. xiii. 11. In the gymnasia
-the statue of Eros was placed beside
-those of Hermes and Hercules—eloquence
-and strength. Love
-festivals Ἐρωτίδια were celebrated
-by the Thespians. Athen. xiii.
-12. Before entering battle the
-Cretans and Spartans sacrificed to
-Eros, Id. xiii. 12. Alexis imitates
-Plato in describing this passion.
-Eros had two bows, the one of
-the graces producing happiness,
-the other engendering violence
-and wrong. Id. xiii. 14. On the
-power of love see § 74. Cleisophos
-of Selymbria fell in love at
-Samos with a statue of Parian
-marble. § 84.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1194'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1194'>1194</a>. Καὶ τὴν Πηνελόπην ἄλλως
-Ὀδυσσεὺς ὁρᾷ, ἄλλως ὁ Εὐρύμαχος.—Max.
-Tyr. ix. 115.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1195'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1195'>1195</a>. Soph. Antig. 635. sqq.—Καὶ
-ἐν εὐτυχίαις συνευτύχει καὶ
-ἀποθανόντι συναποθνήσκει, Max.
-Tyr. ix. 116. We discover the
-same idea in our own marriage
-ceremony, where husband and wife
-are said to be joined together,
-“for better for worse, for richer
-for poorer, in sickness and in
-health.”</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1196'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1196'>1196</a>. Even Lucian could discover
-that there was something holy in
-love. Κοινὸν οὖν ἀμφοτέρῳ γένει
-πόθον ἐγκερασαμένη, <a id='corr423.n1_1'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='συνεζεἠξεν'>συνέζευξεν</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_423.n1_1'><ins class='correction' title='συνεζεἠξεν'>συνέζευξεν</ins></a></span>
-ἄλληλοις θεσμὸν <a id='corr423.n1_2'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='ἀνάγκὴς'>ἀνάγκης</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_423.n1_2'><ins class='correction' title='ἀνάγκὴς'>ἀνάγκης</ins></a></span> ὅσιον.
- Amor. § 19.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1197'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1197'>1197</a>. See too in Stobæus, the addresses
-of a bereaved husband to
-philosophy—ὦ φιλοσοφία, τυραννίκά
-σου τὰ επιτάγματα· λεγεις
-φίλει· κᾄν ἀποβάλῃ τις, λέγεις,
-μὴ λύπου. 34. Cf. Senec.
-Epist. 99. Scheffer, ad Ælian.
-27. p. 471.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1198'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1198'>1198</a>. Max. Tyr. x. 119. This
-author observes that the love depicted
-by the tragedians was a
-piece of ill-regulated passion rarely
-leading to happiness. Id. 123.
-124. Cf. Luc. Amor. § 37.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1199'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1199'>1199</a>. Ἐξ ὀνείρων ἐραστης. Max.
-Tyr. x. 126.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1200'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1200'>1200</a>. See the invocation to Love in
-Lucian: σὺ γὰρ ἐξ ἀφανοῦς καὶ
-κεχυμένης ἀμορφίας τὸ πᾶν ἐμόρφωσας.
-κ. τ. λ. Amor. § 32.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1201'>
-<p class='c027'><a href='#r1201'>1201</a>. This thought occurs in a fragment of Licymnios</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c028'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Ὕπνος δὲ χαίρων ὀμμάτων</div>
- <div class='line'>αὐγαῖς, ἀναπεπταμένοις ὄσσοις,</div>
- <div class='line'>ἐκοίμιζεν κούρον.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c033'>Athen. xiii. 17.</div>
-</div>
-<hr class='c025' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div><b>END OF THE FIRST VOLUME.</b></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c034'>
- <div>LONDON:</div>
- <div>PRINTED BY SAMUEL BENTLEY,</div>
- <div>Bangor House, Shoe Lane.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<p class='c027'><a id='endnote'></a></p>
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c035'>
- <div><span class='large'>Transcriber’s Note</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c027'>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='c027'>Minor punctation errors and inconsistencies in the footnote apparatus
-have been corrected with no further mention here.</p>
-
-<p class='c027'>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 denote with ‘n’ and the original note
-number.</p>
-
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='11%' />
-<col width='58%' />
-<col width='29%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_6.n1'></a><a href='#corr6.n1'>6.n1</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>Steph. Byzant. <i>v.</i> [Ἀ/Α]ἰτωλ. p. 71. a.</td>
- <td class='c037'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_23.24'></a><a href='#corr23.24'>23.24</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>not wide enough to contain[.] the whole</td>
- <td class='c037'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_49.14'></a><a href='#corr49.14'>49.14</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>that were band[i]ed to and fro</td>
- <td class='c037'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_49.21'></a><a href='#corr49.21'>49.21</a></td>
- <td class='c022'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>petits-ma[í/î]tres</em></span></td>
- <td class='c037'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_54.34'></a><a href='#corr54.34'>54.34</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>like a huge uncrenalated</td>
- <td class='c037'><i>sic</i>: uncrenelated</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_68.14'></a><a href='#corr68.14'>68.14</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>but Sir Willia[n/m] Gell</td>
- <td class='c037'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_78.4'></a><a href='#corr78.4'>78.4</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>couchant s[y/p]hynxes</td>
- <td class='c037'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_155.35'></a><a href='#corr155.35'>155.35</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>like those of Hindùs[s]tân</td>
- <td class='c037'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_166.29'></a><a href='#corr166.29'>166.29</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>the love of glory and independ[a/e]nce</td>
- <td class='c037'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_170.4'></a><a href='#corr170.4'>170.4</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>and where[-e]ver else it was thought fit</td>
- <td class='c037'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_174.n1'></a><a href='#corr174.n1'>174.n1</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>Cf. Dion. Ch[r]ysost.</td>
- <td class='c037'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_176.6'></a><a href='#corr176.6'>176.6</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>to the latest times[,/.]</td>
- <td class='c037'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_178.n7'></a><a href='#corr178.n7'>178.n7</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>aremus osseo.[”]</td>
- <td class='c037'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_178.n8'></a><a href='#corr178.n8'>178.n8</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>calamis superata degit.[”]</td>
- <td class='c037'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_186.26'></a><a href='#corr186.26'>186.26</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>its moaning sounds to hear.[”]</td>
- <td class='c037'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_213.30'></a><a href='#corr213.30'>213.30</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>by heroic and fabulous associa[a]tions.</td>
- <td class='c037'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_222.n2'></a><a href='#corr222.n2'>222.n2</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>as the Calydo[do]nian boar in Ovid</td>
- <td class='c037'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_225.32'></a><a href='#corr225.32'>225.32</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>from his ophthalmia and his headach[e]</td>
- <td class='c037'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_234.32'></a><a href='#corr234.32'>234.32</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>εὐφυεῖς καὶ [ἰ/ἱ]κανοὶ</td>
- <td class='c037'>Breathing corrected.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_288.1'></a><a href='#corr288.1'>288.1</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>Bacchanalian character.[”]</td>
- <td class='c037'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_343.33'></a><a href='#corr343.33'>343.33</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>had the merit of extreme boldness[.]</td>
- <td class='c037'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_263.29'></a><a href='#corr263.29'>263.29</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>[ὄ/ὅ]τι ἀμαθία μὲν θάρσος</td>
- <td class='c037'>Breathing corrected.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_347.4'></a><a href='#corr347.4'>347.4</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>full of unstem[m]able currents</td>
- <td class='c037'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_359.15'></a><a href='#corr359.15'>359.15</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>By these means, likewise, tran[s]gressors</td>
- <td class='c037'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_360.8'></a><a href='#corr360.8'>360.8</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>in the case of lesser tran[s]gressions</td>
- <td class='c037'>Inserted.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_361.32'></a><a href='#corr361.32'>361.32</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>which only incidena[ta/at]lly</td>
- <td class='c037'>Transposed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_371.n2'></a><a href='#corr371.n2'>371.n2</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>ὀφθαλμο[ι\ὶ] μεγάλοι τε καὶ διαυγεῖς</td>
- <td class='c037'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_357.37'></a><a href='#corr357.37'>357.37</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>it is a clumsy throw of her[’]s</td>
- <td class='c037'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_379.16'></a><a href='#corr379.16'>379.16</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>the list of their occupations[,/.]</td>
- <td class='c037'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_391.32'></a><a href='#corr391.32'>391.32</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>τρεῖς υ[ἰ/ἱ]οὺς ἄφρουρον</td>
- <td class='c037'>Breathing corrected.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_393.14'></a><a href='#corr393.14'>393.14</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>regal in loftiness[s] of stature.</td>
- <td class='c037'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_409.7'></a><a href='#corr409.7'>409.7</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>decisive of their comparative seclusion[.]</td>
- <td class='c037'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_418.n2'></a><a href='#corr418.n2'>418.n2</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>per aliorum manus vagata.[”]</td>
- <td class='c037'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_423.n1_1'></a><a href='#corr423.n1_1'>423.n1_1</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>συν[εζεἠ/έζευ]ξεν</td>
- <td class='c037'>Replaced.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c036'><a id='c_423.n1_2'></a><a href='#corr423.n1_2'>423.n1_2</a></td>
- <td class='c022'>ἄλληλοις θεσμὸν ἀνάγκ[ὴ/η]ς ὅσιον.</td>
- <td class='c037'>Replaced.</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 I (OF III) ***</div>
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