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English Pages [438] Year 1876
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THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES GIFT l^
rom the Estate ol Urie McClearv
lqix)Ljcn
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^^^..^
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x/^
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN IN
ALL AGES.
PKINTED BY BALI.ANTVNK KniNRI'Rr.H
HANSli.N
AND LONIldX
AND
CO.
Typoffraptilr
il*»
>..
Vts^hUztrh
HISTOIUE
LJIABITATION H U M A N E
Dh.
I
F
R
nXT
I
.
lands and pleasant dwellings at
fertile
the foot of the Sacred Mountains, not far from the place
where the great "
Our
fathers
river passes
had been
them
to flow southwards.
settled there for a great
number
But from the mountains and from the great
of years.
plateau which
is
on
this side to the north, there
came down
tribes desirous of enjoying the riches of the soil.
At
first
our fathers received them with pleasure, for they saw in
them brethren who spoke the same language and resembled themselves. At first there was no want of land, and all could have a share.
Fresh
tribes,
however, were always
you know that Mount the great cradle of the noble race. One day we
arriving from the mountains; for
Meron
is
were obliged to
tell
the new-comers that the land was
and they would not be able to southwards their course
in
find a place.
full
Many went
the hope of finding fresh lands; others bent
towards the
rising-
sun.
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
ii8
number contend with nations numerous " It
seems that a
Some perhaps went
torrent. less
fjrcat
pebbles of the
the
as
We
further.
were none the
subjected to constant embarrassments
consequence
in
number of tribes that continued to pass over our That was the cause of our disasters. We wanted
of the lands.
compel the mountaineers to follow another
to
We
and
took up arms, and for several seasons we caused our
But at
territory to be respected.
increasing
The
all sides.
witnessed the death of
my
last,
by
dint of ever-
numbers, these mountaineers ended
rounding us on of
route,
enjoyment of our possessions.
to leave us to the peaceful
I
perished, for they had to
my
struggle
father,
was
my
There
terrible.
brother,
sur-
in
and many
kin.
"The
victors then wished to
impose conditions upon us
;
rather than submit to them, having collected our flocks
and herds, and placed the women and children and our most valued property houses,
we
in
waggons, and
we might not encounter on our way
that
set
which had gone towards the
rising
among
to
our
order
that great
body
;
sun or towards the
and that we might not have to blush
south,
fire
and
in
quitted the land of our fathers
for
our defeat
them, we betook ourselves towards the setting sun,
keeping near the mountains." " It
is
" Yes,
died
;
twenty winters, you
say, since then
" .-^
twenty winters, and many of our number have
and children have been born.
In order to find the
means of living along our route we separated and we march at intervals of a year."
into twelve
bodies,
" Will
"
you give
When we
me
had
a
all
full
left
account of your adventures
" .'*
our possessions, our number
being about twenty thousand, including men, women, and children, hills,
we reached
after five or six
moons
a chain of high
which stretch from the Sacred Mountains towards the
THE GREA T MJGRA TIONS. .south.
We
had
lost
many
of our people
1
1
consequence of
\\\
the privations we had to suffer and the want of sufficient
nourishment
for
;
we had nothing
to live
and herds and what we found on our " There
we
resolved to stay and settle
country presented an stocked with "
in
on but our flocks
route.
We
subjugated them.
compelled them to
us,
my
violently.
easily
till
the ground,
We
had already
build houses, and the lands were apportioned
to
when
dared to attack
these wretches
That
they were very strong in numbers. lives in
rivulets.
we had
feeble,
tend our herds, and supply us with food.
among
the
Dasyus swarmed
In this country the cursed race of the
Timorous and
;
was well
it
;
game and watered by numerous
great numbers.
begun
possible
if
appearance
inviting
remembrance. It
was just
.
.
.
at the time
us,
night
fatal
for still
The wind was raging when the snows begin Confused
to disappear from the slopes of the mountains.
cries warned us of the danger, and
fires
soon broke out
Most of us inhabited the higher grounds, enabling us to see to a distance. Our people assembled in the
plain.
small bodies in haste, but the tempest prevented us
in
from hearing each other's voices and acting
Women came
Dasyus, armed with clubs, were killing .setting fire to
dwellings
howling furiously. lost, if
in concert.
running towards us wild with despair
— advancing
Thus suddenly
in
;
the
all
they met, and
a
compact mass,
attacked,
would be
all
the wretches should gain the heights.
Each group
perceived the danger, and without losing time in endea-
vouring to join that near ing "
it
thought only of bravely defend-
itself.
With waggons, unfinished
houses,
they made themselves a rampart
came on
like a
-every quarter
by
;
rocks,
and
trees,
and when the scoundrels
herd of wolves, they were assailed from darts, stones,
and sharp arrows.
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN. "
Having no plan of action, and seeing many of their number fall, they recoiled. This enabled those of us who were farthest
enough
from the attack to unite
off
We
to take the offensive.
made
bodies large
in
a great massacre
But advancing day showed us how
of the wretches.
numerous they were for some of the neighbouring had joined those among which we lived. ;
"
We
should
have
been wearied
we had gone on mowing down rushes of the marsh
;
to
no
purpose,
left to
if
these scoundrels like the
the mass was so dense that
always have f(jund some
tribes
We
kill.
we should
therefore retired
to the heights, taking with us our most valuable movables
Having held a council the following we resolved to pass the mountains, and to seek in
our waggons.
in
night,
the direction of the setting sun a less populous territory. "
Having
cut
down
trees to
form a rampart, we
left
behind us a thousand of our warriors, who were to stop the advance of the Dasyus while the retreat was being effected.
" In this passage across the mountains,
number
of horses
and waggons.
died of cold during the
not attempt to pursue
came down wanting. fishing
nights.
us.
At
we
Women
lost a great
and children
But the Dasyus did
the end of eight days
into a desert plain, but
we
where game was not
There we remained several moons,
living
and hunting and on what remained of our
by
cattle.
It was then that we resolved to pursue our search for homes towards the west taking care to go in separate bodies, so as not to exhaust the country, and that we might ;
always find game.
"What more flanks rivulets
we
of the
need
I
say
mountains,
or torrents narrow
also found wood,
so
.^
Keeping always on the we might meet only
that
enough
to be easily crossed,,
game, and sometimes
shelter in the
THE GREAT MIGRATIONS. forests.
Stopping where
was most tolerable we reached
life
this place."
"
And
did
many
"
We
"
Do you know
"
other detachments pass before you
form part of the
.''
last."
whether those who went before you
have taken- up a fixed residence.''" " They have done so for we have always kept up ;
by
a communication between the different detachments
messengers who travel several together." "
And what
have you learned by these means
.'
That our predecessors have settled in a fertile country, rivers, and bordered by two chains, of mountains, seven days' march apart, and both stretching towards the setting sun. On the northern side, beyond "
watered by numerous
one of these chains of mountains, water which
is
also great
our brethren have settled and have built houses."
"And "
There are
Near the mountains, on the southern
lakes of fresh water. side,
a vast extent of salt
is
the end of the earth.
men
did your brethren find
They found men with a dark
in these
skin,
countries?"
but they drove them,
away." "
And what
were the occupations of these men
"
They kept
flocks
skins of beasts.
reported to "
We
and herds and
This
is
made
of
travelling messengers
us,
are eager to reach that land where our brethren
by
are happy, surrounded families,
possessors
come from the south
man
men is
power over the accursed
numerous and prosperous
domains.
We
of the north,
to spoil
of noble race
the earth."
their
of vast
with them against the
the
lived in tents
what the
" }
them
shall
and those
of their goods
fight
who ;
for
born to fight to establish his races,
and
to be the master
of
CHAPTER
XII.
THE EARLIEST DWELLINGS OF THE ARYAS SETTLED IN UPPER MEDIA WERE CONSTRUCTED.
//OIK
THESE emigrants who
had made
and had
valley of Cashmere,
their
way from
the
on the
settled at first
upper course of the Indus, were thus slowly traversing the southern slopes of the long chain of mountains which
Mount Merou
stretches from
had
settled there in
a
They
to the Caspian Sea.
country, sheltered from
fertile
the
north wind by the Caspian Mountains, and from the south
wind by Mount Zagrus
—the
chain
bearing
being parallel to the Caspian Mountains. their custom
into tribes, they
had
that
name
Divided as
built small
towns,
between whose houses were spaces reserved
tillage
and pasture.
elevated position and
somewhat
:
is
crossed
cold in the winter season,
some
of
by mountains, though is
very hot
who kept
summer. in
this
living in caverns, hollowed
out by natural causes or laboriously excavated hills,
in
races already settled
them were
pied the slopes of the
for
This country, which occupies an
The emigrants had found country
is
straggling
and were black
to the plains, lived in tents,
;
;
they occuthe others,
were nomad
in their
and possessed numerous flocks and herds on which they subsisted. These had a yellow skin with hair and habits,
eyes black
no
;
they were daring and predatory, and followed
industrial pursuits.
Not being accustomed fight,
to
assemble
in large
numbers
to
they retired gradually before the Aryan emigrants in
EARL Y MEDIAN D WELLINGS OF AR YAS.
1
23
a northerly and westerly direction, not without having done
damage to the new settlers. The Aryas, therefore, soon found themselves isolated and In these regions obliged to provide for their own wants. they had no longer around them, as on the Upper Indus, a
all possible
whom
numerous and submissive native population
The
could compel to work. district before
this
them, had neither
cities
nor villages,
followed no industrial occupation, and despised labour.
they
pastoral race that occupied
all
manual
Proud and barbarous, and continually changing
the place of their abode,
it
was impossible either
to sub-
jugate or to plunder them, since they possessed nothing
but wandering herds.
As
to the black inhabitants of the mountains,
an abject in
any case unable
the will to do
number and
to assist the colonists, even
The
so.
they were
by the chase and on wild
race, subsisting
latter,
moreover,
still
herbs,
had they
too small in
too ignorant of the country, dared not risk
themselves in the mountain defiles occupied by the blacks.
Those of the Aryas who had attempted to penetrate into the gorges of the Zagrus range had not returned. I"or some time the Aryas were satisfied to live in huts such as had been their dwellings in the desert; but these habitations did not preserve
were
liable
to be
unfrequently
arose
them from heat
or cold, and
destroyed by the tempests that not
between the
two mountain
chains.
They wished therefore to erect houses like those of their fathers, wood being abundant. These dwellings, however, in
a country where extremes of temperature
prevailed,
scarcely sheltered their inhabitants better either against frost
or sun.
They had observed
lived nearest the valleys
could carry on barter constructed
for
—
— the
in
that the
blacks
who
only race with
whom
they
had by hollow-
default of natural caverns
themselves
actual
burrows,
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
124
ing out the ground, and raising round the ditch a wall of
and mud, placing across these very low walls
pebbles
trunks of trees covered with
layer of kneaded
a thick
earth.
These dwellings which were cool in summer and warm but always damp, low, and noisome, could not
in winter,
approve themselves to the Aryas
;
but reflecting that the
nearly equal temperature of these sordid abodes at
seasons of the year was owing
in
all
great part to the thick
layer of earth which served as roofing, they resolved to
employ the same method, though with
interiors not
below
the level of the ground.
Blows with a
stick,
and the prospect of a regular supply
number of the blacks to new dwellings of the Aryas. But the first attempts were not successful. The walls of mud and pebbles which, when scarcely so high as a man, would of food, induced a considerable
labour
in
building the
support the transverse trunks of trees that formed the ceiling,
raise
gave way under the load when
them
higher.
it
was attempted to
Moreover, the settlers wished to have
spacious rooms, and the mass of earth superposed
beams bend, rendering props these new dwellings presented, the
On
necessary.
made
the whole
in spite of the exertions
of the colonists, a very singular series of tentative efforts
when
caravan
of emigrants
Upper
the
last
first
thing to be done was to allot lands to the new-
arrived
in
Media.
The comers
whom Epergos
certain
degree of authority
had joined.
had acquired a
lie
among them,
for
on several
occasions the emigrants had had reason to congratulate
themselves on having adopted his suggestions. therefore, consulted as to
the
erecting houses with the materials at hand,
meet the requirements of the
He
was,
most suitable method of climate.
and so as to
Epergos remem-
EARL Y MEDIAN D WELLING S OF AR YAS.
1
25
bering the methods he had seen adopted on the Lower Nile,
and considering that the countr\' possessed wood
in
abundance, and that the Aryas had long been accustomed
employ sulted him to
material, spoke thus to those
this :
"
As
}-ou recognise the
who
con-
advantage of employ-
ing earth, both for raising walls and covering the ceilings of
your dwellings, to preserve you from cold and heat, while
you perceive that an support, because itself
—why do
erection
only substantial enough to
;
—
trees, so
with earth needs a
you not make a skeleton of timber, not resist
keep up the earthen walls and
rooms
made
has not consistence enough to sustain
it
well, then,
the storms, but also to
ceilings
?
You want
large
prop up the ceilings with trunks of
that the}' will not bend under the load.
In a
make a house of wood and cover it with earth." They set to work, therefore, and soon obtained satisfactory structures. The following is a description of one word,
of these houses, figure 42.
Conformably
Plan of Median House.
to the
custom of
Fig. 42.
the Aryas, the habitation being placed on an elevated spot, or on a raised platform,
commanded
a view of the vicinity.
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
126
A
room A was
large
set out,
and
to
support
its
heavy
trunks of trees forked at the top divided
ceiling, eight
Adjoining
into three bays.
this
was a passage
B,
it
communi-
cating with six chambers, and at the end a small sanctuary; for as the
Aryas had then temples and
priests, the religious
ceremonies were no longer performed
At D
a small court with
Interior uf
a kitchen
K,
a portico
terrace of the
A
flight of
every family. with
Median House. — Km
and the room
dependants.
in
\\ co'>^'i-""i''r>t-;"'^
s allotted to the servants
wooden
main building.
or
steps gave access to the
As
indicated in the plan,
the buildings were constructed with trunks of trees, placed vertically in double threes, leaving the thickness of a wall
EARL V MEDIAN D WELLING S OE AR YAS.
127
These posts
of earth between them, and of forked posts.
received on their fork (see figure 43, which represents the interior of the large room), a
end
On
split into two.
cap consisting of a thick trunk
each of these caps were laid three
horizontal trunks of trees, which were supported at their
ends by the three interior and the three exterior vertical
Next, on these cross timbers were placed other
trunks.
trunks longitudinally forming a ceiling within and a projection without, to protect the walls from the rain.
the whole building being raised in wood, they intervals with pebbles
and
earth,
and on the
Thus
filled
the
ceiling placed
a thick layer of earth and stubble well kneaded, and then of moistened clay and fine sand.
mats covered
Inside,
the floor of beaten earth.
Figure 44 gives a view of this habitation in perspective. During summer they put up tents on the terraces to enjoy the fresh air of the evening and
also to sleep there
method suggested by the habit acquired by the during their long sojourn in the desert, of passing nights under the tent, and in shutting
by
their feeling
a
;
colonists all their
uncomfortable
themselves up to sleep during the hot season.
Half a century
Upper Media,
after their settlement in
Aryas had attained a condition of prosperity, had become very numerous, and had begun to give some degree of elegance to their dwellings by dressing the wood with an axe and adorning the walls with paintings.
the
They were acquainted woollen
stuffs
with
the
art
of
manufacturing
variously dyed, and began to give them-
they had succeeded
selves
to culture
many
of the black inhabitants of the mountains,
defiles
;
for
in
enslaving
whose
were henceforth known to them, and used
for
hunting grounds. Several of their
number during the great expeditions
undertaken with a view to hunt wild animals and horses
THE HABITATIONS OF ATAN.
128
(of which there were
numbers
at large in the country),
had
sometimes crossed the Zagrus chain, and had observed
beyond
it
an immense and rich plain inhabited only by
who possessed large flocks. These Median who went out in large bodies, had sometimes even
shepherds hunters,
succeeded
in
carrying off
some
of these flocks
\
^^->.:
Medes
so that
..k-
%A^.^-'
•
the
;
"^- |(P> ^/:^v^tN^"v>-V;.^"fc:
nearest the mountains began to assemble in
considerable troops, and traversing the defiles, would
suddenly on the shepherds, and drive off the
cattle,
fall
which
they sold as soon as they returned to Media.
These repeated expeditions
irritated the shepherds,
and
EARL V MEDIAN D WELLINGS OF ARYAS.
129
having concerted a place of ambuscade, they attacked and
massacred a large body of hunters.
ment through
all
Media, and
it
Great was the excite-
was resolved
to take ven-
geance on the shepherds.
To
the
number of about
four thousand men, the
issued from the southern mountains,
the level country, carried off a considerable cattle,
and
The
killed all
the
fell
defiles,
their
turn,
passed
the
suddenly on the lands of the Medes killed
houses, and plundered the
women, whom they
number of
offered resistance.
shepherds, assembling in
mountains, and nearest
who
Medes
and spread through
carried
the inhabitants, fields.
burned
They spared only
away with
then).
the
the
CHAPTER
XIII.
THE NOMADIC AND THE STATIONARY SEMITES.
'TPALL
^
and
lean, with skin of bistre tint, slender limbs
and black
hair, the
Semites form that large pastoral
population which occupies Tigris
all
by the
the territory watered
They
and Euphrates.
live in tents,
and
cultivate
a few fields, sometimes at one spot, sometimes at another
accustomed to tarry
for the}' are not
They have
habits, their flocks sistence, dress,
made
and dwellings,
companion
;
for
— which are only tents of horse
they never travel on
foot.
them
go
to
pastures, or destro}'s their cattle.
large
bodies,
and
fall
is
in
stuffs
their faithful
They take
Sometimes the
wives as they can support.
place.
in their
suffice for their sub-
The
of the season obliges
same
Temperate
and scanty crops
of camels' hair and wool.
many
long- in the
neither cities nor villages.
search
as
dr}-ness
of distant
Then they assemble
in
upon the neighbouring country,
where they hope to find booty. harassed the peoples of the
Thus they have
Lower
Nile, for they
often
do not
hesitate to traverse the desert in search of plunder.
They maybe vanquished, but they cannot be since they are not attached to the
The
desert
is
theirs,
and
inhabited region, they drive
and turn
it
into a desert.
suits or arts,
address and
the}'
if
soil,
pursuit.
take possession of an
away or kill its inhabitants, They have no industrial pur-
though on occasions they
skill
subjugated,
and elude
than probity.
traffic
with more
Nevertheless, they practise
NOMADIC AND STA TIONAR Y SEMITES. and the stranger who
hospitality,
has nothing to
As
3
among them
he has no property.
fear, especially if
regards the stationary
admitted
is
1
they occupy the
Semites,
western region between the shores of the interior sea and
They engage
the right bank of the Upper Euphrates.
commerce and and
in certain
industrial
The
to distant lands.
sail
pursuits,
districts
have
in
ports,
they inhabit are
mountainous, dry, and arid
;
the year on which rain
and the torrents which descend
falls,
there are only sixty days in
from the mountains are quickly dried up. however,
is
cultivated
;
The
country,
for the inhabitants construct vast
tanks which receive water during the rainy season, and enable them to irrigate the ground.
Contrary to
Aryan custom,
the
their houses
are in
groups, and form cities or straggling towns surrounded walls to protect
them against the
Semites and the
men
incursions of the
of yellow race,
by nomadic
who sometimes make
an onslaught from the north.
They
also construct large ves-
sels, in
which they cross the
sea,
and carry on commerce along
On
the shores of the Delta.
the
south,
country
their
bounded by the extends
desert,
nearly
is
and
Lower
to
mj
Egypt.
The in
following
is
the
Bi
method
which they usually build
their
dwellings,
Around an area
figure
45. Plan of Primitive Southern Syrian Habita-
of
25 to 30
tipn.
Fig. 45.
cubits they build a thick wall of pise or dry stones, leaving
a void space in front, and forming a quadrangular space of
about 8 cubits on the opposite in the interior,
side.
Along
this wall,
they raise a platform of about 4 cubits
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
132
wide and two cubits
in
end the platform
little
is
a
At
at most.
iicic^ht
Small
higher.
the further
flights of steps
Only the recess a permanent way by means of
facilitate the ascent to these platforms.
at the
back
is
covered
in
trunks of palm-trees or cypress placed close together, on
which a
floor is
made
of kneaded earth.
It
is
there that
the family sleep at night, and shelter themselves by day
from the sun.
During the rainy season
light
frames of canes are erected,
on which mats are placed.
On
these platforms troughs
structed, in
of pise (at
which provisions are kept B.
the open side, and the entrance C
trunk placed across
end a cistern
is
it.
is
is
are
con-
circular
lighted in the
hedge protects
by a thorny
closed
Under the platform
excavated, to which there
the small flight of steps
A)
and a small
A fire for cooking. A thorn
fowl-house also of pise at
middle of the area
;
is
at the
back
a descent
by
F.
Figure 46 gives a view of these dwellings, which sometimes have very small gardens in front. possess larger dwellings, but which are
the same principle.
all
Rich families constructed on
In these, rich stuffs sometimes take
the place of mats, and woollen carpets cover the floor of the recess. Paintings on coatings of earth garnish the walls, and in place of a hedge are placed strong barriers of painted artistically
No
worked.
wood
Curtains shut in the recess.
great length of time had elapsed since the earliest
Medes into the territory of the Semites,, when fresh bodies of Aryan emigrants advanced along Land in sufficient quantity was the Caspian mountains. expeditions of the
no longer to be found, and the new-comers were not received as brothers, but as troublesome strangers. last in the field,
The
however, were not disposed to retrograde,.
NOMADIC AND STATIONARY SEMITES.
133
and saw with envious eyes the prosperous establishments of their predecessors.
This occasioned frequent contests
;
and as fortune favoured sometimes one party and sometimes the other, and peace was incessantly troubled without any advantage to either,
the
chiefs
of
the tribes
assembled, and came to the determination that since the
5^ View of Primitive Southern Syrian House. — Fig.
territory of
46.
Upper Media could not support
families, a great expedition
so
many
should be organised, to occupy
the lands on the south-east, beyond the mountains, and to drive
away the shepherds,
their depredations.
since they
had always
to dread
134
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
But on descending towards the south, on the shores of the Tigris and the Euphrates, longer nomadic peoples, but
the emigrants found no
cities
and
villages.
During a
long course of years the emigrants from Media had to carry on a struggle with the peoples settled on the fertile
shores of these two rivers, but at last they subjugated them,,
and were blended into one nation with them.
CHAPTER
XIV.
THE ASSYRIANS.
ALONG
time afterwards, the country watered by the
Tigris and Euphrates formed the rich and powerful kingdoms of Assyria and Babylon. They were conquered by Thoutmes III., a king of the eighteenth Egyptian
dynasty; but
this
conquest only brought into that country
elements of civilisation and to render
The
art,
which were
still
wanting
the queen of Western Asia,
it
Assyrians, however, did
querors without struggles
;
not submit to the con-
formed a league
and, having
with the other peoples of Asia, they ultimately enfran-
Ramses
chised themselves from Egyptian rule under
and Ramses
IT.
Soon afterwards they subjugated Media,
III.
their parent state. Till the like their
epoch of Egyptian supremacy, the Assyrians, neighbours the Medes, erected only very simple
They made
buildings, destitute of ornamentation.
make
principle not to
but
divinities;
necessitated
the
certain
it
a
sculptured representations of the
country which modifications
they occupied had in
the
structure
ot
their habitations.
The
shores of the Tigris and Euphrates present only
alluvial plains
ten
;
wood, suitable for building,
months of the
clearness
is
year,
no cloud appears
incomparable.
The
heat
is
in
is
rare.
For
a sky whose
oppressive and
incessant.
With
their taste for the arts, the
Egyptians had intro-
1
THE HA BITA TIONS OF MAN.
36
duced into these regions cal
knowledge, a
astronomical and geometri-
tlieir
some degree of
civilisation of
refinement,-
and an exact and rigorous administrative organisation. If
the
at
same time
the
Tigris
and
profit b}^ these advantages,
they
on
populations
Euphrates were able to
the
The
simple habits
families of
Aryan
origin
however, of preserving the purity of their
a point,
and were
blood,
of
those austere and
lost
which they once possessed.
made
shores
the
form alliances with the
unwilling to
subjugated natives.
Convinced of the superiority of the
Aryan
families
these
race,
an aristocratic
constituted
and, considering the smallness of their numbers compared with the subject people, they made it their object to become predominant, not only in intelligence and bravery, but also numerically. With this view, the caste
;
as
superior caste adopted polygamy, and rare
thing
to
find
in
surrounded by a hundred
means of
was, in
it
Assyria persons of or more.
children
the dominant
of
Semitic
maidens
were
sup.erior
In
race.
and
beautiful,
many
entered the harems of the Assyrian nobles generations,
the
considerably interfused.
With a
genius.
moderate aptitude
;
for
for
the
fact,
them
of
so that after
power
the
;
They
are
but they have only a
practice
of the
plastic
arts.
Semites, on the other hand, inclined to simple ideas,
contemplative,
adventurous,
special aptitude for all that
are
vidually;
with
this
they combine a passionate
poetic taste
brave, and ambitious
They
But
Aryan and Semitic blood were The Aryas possess an exalted
devotion to the study of natural phenomena.
The
no
increase impaired rather than strengthened the
prestige
some
fact,
noble race
commercial as a for
they do
a view to
not
and is
independent,
have
a
connected with calculation.
race,
and industrious
readily
form
a collective undertaking
;
indi-
combinations
they
are,
it
THE ASSYRIANS. must
also be observed,
contempt
artists,
and have a kind of
devote themselves to a manual
for those \\'ho
The
art.
not
137
two
alliance of the
always pro-
races, however,
duces the elements which are most favourable to the
development of the
plastic arts.
Epergos began to communicate head to Epergos,
Assyria,
into
who had
seen
Aryas, from the time race
till
on
this
companion Doxius, who had come with the
his
Egyptians
his observations
and
settled
the buildings
the\-
their settlement in
quitted
this
in
erected
country.
by the
the cradle of their
Media, had assured himself
that these works were far from having attained the value, in
point of
art,
by the Egyptians, or even same lapse of
of those raised
the yellow race of the far East, during the
He had
time.
also seen the buildings of the Semites on
reaching the banks of the Tigris, and during a journey he had made on the shores of the inland sea. He perceived,
men of this race did many centuries, and had
therefore, that the dwellings of the
not vary during the course of
no pretensions to
art.
Egyptians had made ture
of the
effected
two
by the
But since the influence of the
itself felt
in Assyria,
races,
Aryan and
force
of
Semitic,
circumstances,
began to attain a rare perfection, and with sculptures and paintings
was daily Doxius was
ings
and the mix-
;
to
was being
the buildings
be enriched
the luxury of their dwell-
increasing. listening to his companion's
remarks and
allowing him to go on, appearing to be thinking of some-
thing
else.
—
Epergos continued thus " Whence I should conclude that if the Egyptians have special aptitudes for the arts, :
it is
because they are the product of a mixture of Aryan
and Semitic
blood." Doxius looked at him sulkily. "And," continued Epergos, unmoved by this expression
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
138
of disapproval,
"
did \vc not see in
Egypt men and women
ruddy cheeks, and chestnut
of a fine complexion,
hair,
thus distinguishinfj them from the majority of their compatriots,
whose skin
these
that
Doxius
is
black as ebony
belonged
exceptions
shrugged
dingy and slightly copper-
of a
is
coloured hue, and whose hair
resumed Epergos, smiling
his
at
the higher caste,"
to
"A
shoulders.
his
Observe
?
strange
companion's
thing,"
gesture
"these Aryas readily change their opinions; they are as variable as the waves, incessantly in quest of novelties,
and tenacious faithful
in their desires
they
themselves,
;
nevertheless,
when
left
to the traditions
bequeathed by
their ancestors
The
regard to what concerns their domestic habits.
in
to
to-day as they did yesterday,
build
Semites, on the other hand, have no regard for progress,
they do not expect
little,
and
in
own
cither from their
it
from the lapse of time
;
efforts,
or
external things affect them but
the buildings they erect for their convenience,
they seek neither improvement nor change but when these ;
races are mingled, the race that
possessed by a passion for luxury, rated,
and contribute to
refinements, of
all
the pleasures, and even the this arise
wonder, causes these mysterious results "
Some
men
as
if
.-'
Who,
I
" ?
Eoolish thou hast been, foolish thou
art,
and
foolish
Thou speakest ot races among men.
"
thou wilt always be," replied Doxius. races of
is
houses are deco-
its
Whence does
life.
from the fusion
issues
there were different
are black, others white, others copper-coloured
;
what
has been the cause of these differences? Climate, the sun,
perhaps deterioration.
I
make no
except that of wise and unwise. like
my friends the
distinction
The
between men,
wise are those who,
Egyptians, hold fast for ages to the good
and serviceable which they have discovered, and interdict fools from changing anything in it. The unwise are those
THE ASSYRIANS. who, incessantly changing,
restless,
and agitated, abandon
the good to seek for the better, and to
And as
139
into the worse.
fall
thou fanciest that by mingling what thou considerest elements, such
different
follows
What
?
are governed
and
folly
by wise men
tranquillity,
Nations that
!
maintain themselves
in
purity
whatever be the colour of their skin.
Those who allow themselves spirits,
such a result inevitably
or
what blasphemy
!
and who, with
by thoughtless
to be guided
always fixed on the hazy
their eyes
what is just at their feet, are wretched, and advance only from one form of ruin to another. It is horizon, do not see
therefore to be wished that thou mayest never be called to
govern mankind "
" !
Canst thou never discuss a question without using this
strong language
and see
?
Answer my
this royal villa
just completing here, it
come workmen are
questions, or rather
which thousands of
and say
thou dost not perceive
if
the result of a prodigious effort, and at the
mixture of dissimilar elements, contrived, nevertheless, a
way which betokens
calls neither the
artistic
power
in
same time a in
— something which re-
Egyptian palaces nor the modest Median
dwellings, though related to both." " I
have
shall perceive that the inhabitants of this country
profited
by the
instructions
them by the
given
Egyptians," "
No,
it is
something
different
but come
:
" !
The companions soon reached a wide square platform^ surmounted by buildings which did not present a symmetrical appearance, but whose
by
arched gateways.
lofty walls
Epergos
the architect of the royal
villa,
were giving the finishing strokes.
were pierced
was acquainted with to which the workmen This architect, anxious
no doubt to secure the approbation of the two strangers^ offered to
show them every part
of this splendid dwelling.
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
I40
"This platform, which forms the (said the architect, while they "
steps on the south),
basis of the royal villa,"
were ascending the
and which
than twenty cubits above the banks of the entirely of unburnt bricks
;
its
flight of
a height of more
rises to
facing only
is
river, is built
made
of stone,
from the mountains that separate Assyria from Media.
Each
of
You
see
sides measures three
its
hundred and forty
cubits.
planes which enable
here at AA' the inclined
chariots to be driven even to the doors." " But,"
why this custom of men of "
remarked Epergos,
"Because
it is
the
their dwellings on elevated places
platform
noble race to build
may
it
;
" }
well be ima-
gined, therefore, that the king insists upon his palaces being
placed
in
commanding
a
the nobles raise "
How is
it
hills
This
is
it
supports
our method of proceeding
below the bed of the its fertility,
—There
the plain, and
in
rivers.
we dig
:
To
a great
" .''
is,
it is
you are
as
found even
irrigate the land,
number
and
to
of canals which
communication between the two
establish a
is flat,
of clay to build their houses upon."
aware, abundance of clay
secure
the country
that this enormous mass of clay has not sunk
under the weight of the buildings "
As
situation.
It is
rivers.
the clay taken from these canals that serves for buildings, so that the erection of a vast palace country, for
some
it
of the
is
a benefit to the
necessitates the digging of a canal.
workmen
others are ready to receive, and carefully beat basins
;
material
While
get clay out of the excavations, it
in large
then, being approved by the royal surveyors, this is
compressed
thrown into in these
flat,
square moulds, and beaten and
boxes; bricks are thus obtained which
are dried in the sun. "
A
few hours are
sufiicient for
this drying, since
undesirable that the bricks should lose for
if
they did so they would break
in
all their
it
is
moisture;
being used.
When
THE ASSYRIANS.
141
they have attained the proper condition, the bricklayers lay them, carefully crossing the joints, and slightly wetting
the subjacent bed, to
Thus they
make
the
new bed adhere thoroughly.
obtain a structure which experiences neither
settling nor rending, for as this clay
_l
I
kneaded and the
L.
Plan of Assyrian Palace.
bricks are jointed, the
is
mass
is
Fig. 47.
homogeneous.
You
observe,
however, that the walls and the platforms are faced with large stones, which form a kind of
box containing the
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
142
Moreover, part of these bricks are burned to form
bricks.
aqueducts, which circulate
under the platform, and
arches or piers which require great solidity
You
for
they are some-
;
some of these glazed bricks around and above the southern portals. But we will not linger over these details we shall have leisure to examine them later on. The persons who come in chariots leave their vehicles in the covered places which you see at a'a times even glazed.
see
;
for the
king alone has the privilege of entering the interior
Let us proceed to the principal gate
courts in a chariot. at
B, for
I shall
that on the south
is
"Allow me," this portal,
said Epergos, "to admire the exterior of
which
is
crowned by an
have never seen elsewhere.
Who,
only a secondary entrance, as
explain to you."
then, taught
you
this
It
is
Necessity.
extremely
;
earth
— Fin.
which
.'
48.
convey wood hither it
I
strangely.
Forests do not abound here as in Media
difficult to
makes timber quickly perish when clay
me
method of building
Construction of Assyrian Vaulting.
"
arch, a thing
surprises
is
;
;
it
besides heat
in contact
with
moreover, timber coverings, even when overlaid with
—the plan adopted
in
some regions
to the north
not afford a sufficiently cool temperature within. obliged, therefore, to
do without wood, and
— do
We
are
to build entirely
THE ASSYRIANS. with clay. cessors
It
came
M3
was only by gradual means that our predeSeeing that beams,
to invent this vaulting.
placed horizontally on the tops of the walls, bent under the
weight of the earth forming the roofing, and were destro}'ed
by
the numerous insects that infested them, the builders of
former times canes, which
first
conceived the idea of forming with the
abound on the
curvature was kept fixed
river
by
banks, arches whose
other canes placed below,
and diagonally
vertically, horizontally,
(fig.
Thus
48).
they composed a substantial piece of wicker work of large dimensions.
On
clay, following the
on the walls.
It
framework
wicker
this
lighter canes lengthwise
;
then a
first
form of the arch as
was allowed
Centering with Vaulting
in
they
placed
horizontal layer of soft it
to dry for
was rammed
rose,
When
one day.
Horizontal Layers.
— Fig.
it
49.
had hardened, a second layer of clay was placed on it, still following the form of the centre as it rose and thus, ;
proceeding by horizontal layers, to which, when
laid,
they
allowed time to dry, the arched wicker framework gradually
became completely covered with layers
As
each of these entire series
(fig. 49) and the builders removed the vertical, horizontal, and diagonal canes, leaving only
presented the section all
clay.
had been deposited horizontally, the ;
those which had given the clay
remained then a
series of rods,
its
curvature.
There
showing which they dared
not remove from under the vault, believing them necessary
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
144
to
its
support.
But
the process of drying, these canes
in
soon ceased to adhere to the clay, and that they were useless " Since
;
so they took
it
became evident
them away.
each layer of clay must be dried before the
following one was laid, these vaults took a long time to
Every other day, moreover, a sufficient quantity of clay must be tempered for ramming the new layer. Sometimes this clay was moistened too much, sometimes too little. Delay and even danger was the result, because
build.
the layers the work.
when
too wet would crack and risk the
fall
of
Moreover, when they were near the summit of
the vault, the portions of clay along the curves being very thin,
would dry much more rapidly than those
haunches of the thin parts moist. care,
vaults.
It
laid
on the
was necessary to keep these
All this required an excessive degree of
and success was never
certain.
already beginning to mould bricks as
They were, however, we mould them now.
was then that a man, held in great respect on account of his knowledge, and whom we call Kabu, proposed to build on the curved reeds in the same way as walls are " It
Vaulting made with Vousoirs.
built, that is to say,
50)
;
— Fic.
50.
laying the bricks as you see here
(fig.
consequently, to pass from the vertical direction in the curved direction of the
which the wall was
built to
arch, without leaving
any angle between the two directions
;
THE ASSYRIANS. in a word, to carry the arches
more and more.
to speak, curving over
Kabu had much difficulty in men pronounced him
appears that
his idea
adopted
asserting
that
moment
a wall ceased to
constructed a small
You
of
crazed,
to stand .
.
Epergos
;
" perhaps this
trivial."
means," replied Epergos; "it interests me, and
you
to hear
relate
it
;
and
I will
tell
you the sequel
continued he, looking askance at his companion
it,"
Doxius,
who was
evidently
ill
though
his principle
"
at ease.
a vault did not persuade the elders
Kabu's model of
the}' told
;
might hold good
in the
him that
small scale,
such a construction executed on a large scale would libly
the
But Kabu
arch according to his system.
smile," said the architect to
"By no
be able
the vertical.
account seems to you rather
I like
getting
the elder
;
deviated from
it
round by means of a com-
Tlius the wall would be continued, so
plete semi-circle.
" It
145
break down.
moulded of the
Then Kabu had wedge-shaped
size of ordinary bricks
;
infal-
bricks
and placing them
together dry, without the interposition of wetted clay, he
demonstrated by experiment that these bricks would hold together of themselves. " Zulul,
the most obstinately prejudiced
among the elders,
demanded nothing short of Kabu's banishment, since he was contravening the laws of nature by sorceries. .
Thou .
.
seest that
Kabu
Tigris
;
nevertheless
"
know
the story in
its
.
minutest details.
was, in fact, obliged to quit the shores of the
but
you on the
I
it
seems that
...
in
his ideas
spite of Zulul
have made their way ;
and
I
congratulate
fact.
Now, if thou wilt continue thy explanation of these we are attentive listeners." When they began to make bricks specially adapted for
marvels, "
the construction of arches, according to Kabu's suggestion,"
k
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
146
architect. "
resumed the
and glaze is,
was not
it
their faces, as they
difficult to
burn them
burn and glaze pottery.
It
baked and glazed bricks that we form
then, with these
the fronts of the archways which display their brilliant colours in the sunshine, the string-courses and tablets and
the surbases of the halls, and even the pavement of rooms.
But
let
us go
This principal gate
in.
ornamented with winged to a
first
whose jambs are
and a second vestibule, where the servants remain
who accompany Here
sence.
B,*
bulls cut in stone, gives admission
is
the persons
summoned
the greater court
C,
to the king's pre-
belonging to the suite
of apartments specially reserved for the king
On
the south side opens a
hall, in front
long court, and a thick wall in which
and a second smaller one.
— the
of which is
is
seraglio.
a second
a large doorway
In this hall and court assemble
the parties to causes submitted to the decision of the king.
The litigants of high birth enter by the great door, the rest by the small one but neither can be introduced into thehall D till they have given their names to the officer posted ;
At
at the small door F.
the hour fixed for the
trials, all
cross the court, and betake themselves to the halls on the north, F II,
and
and the
G.
The king
litigants, as
through the door lighted.
A
I.
is
seated on a throne placed at
they are successively called on, pass
You
see
how
the second hall
G
is
demi-cupola, open to the sky, rests on the vault
in the centre of the hall " (fig. 51.) " is
This
is
certainly very beautiful," said Epergos;
thy opinion of
quite in the
it,
wrong
Doxius in
wishing to prohibit this poor
from constructing arches
;
for this
ingenious application of that " In fact, since
more
difficult to
is,
in
truth, a
it
was scarcely
cupolas and demi-cupolas. * See
Kabu
new and
first idea.
they were making arches,
make
"what
Confess that the old Zulul was
?
fijjure 47.
But
this
Interior of a Hali,
in
the Asi^vrian Palace. — Kig.
51. \
lo face fctge
146.
Entrance of one of the Buildincs of the Assvrian Palace.— Fig.
52.
{To /ace fagt
147.
THE ASSYRIANS. one
skilfully
is
"Oh
Wert thou the
managed.
vaults of this kind
147
to adopt
first
" ?
no!" replied the
ture has long been
"This kind of strucstill more easy to
architect.
and they are
in use,
Here these demi-cupolas, opening
build than the arches.
on the terraces of the palace, have the advantage of pleasantly illuminating the interior of these halls, while they
prevent the sun's rays from being too powerful. curtains are is
subdued, and the
air circulates "
continued the architect, into the buildings
to
go again "
On
freely.
light
this side,"
there are no passages leading
on the northern
and we
side,
shall
have
into the great court."
Permit me," said Epergos,
"
to contemplate this door-
way of the first hall (fig. 52.) "What is the meaning of these winged faces,
Besides,
hung before these openings, and thus the
bulls with
human
which form the piers of the entrance, and between
whose
legs long inscriptions are engraved
"The
" ,''
inscriptions record the labours of the king
;
as for
the winged bulls, these representations belong to the class of sacred things, and "
Look above
it is
forbidden to speak of them."
at those palm-trees of
cedar-wood overlaid
with gold plates, and which accompany that enamelled painting representing a royal chase, and those poles ter-
minated by disks of gold. " It is all
wonderful
;
but
I
see that the walls are very
frequently ornamented with large vertical cylinders like
trunks of trees put close together."
"Yes, that ancestors,
gether
;
is
a tradition of the
first
constructions of our
which were made of trunks of trees placed
and though we now build with
bricks,
to-
we have
preserved the souvenir of that primitive structure. "
In
built."
fact, I
remember having seen
in
Media houses thus
THE HABirATlOXS OF MAN.
148
"The two
K
halls,
arranged like those you have just
L,*
and which arc assigned to the
seen,
household,
lead
courts, M,
N,
the
to
seraglio,
of the royal
officers
which comprises three
You
and the king's apartments.
O,
observe that this quarter
entirely shut
is
will
and only
off,
communicates with the north-.eastern buildings by a single door
These north-east buildings, which have two
a.
by the
P and R, are tenanted of the prince, S
by the
quarter
who have
officers
their private entrance at the gate
and the ascent
stairs b
courts,
attached to the service
for the
chariots
This
a'.
also isolated from the others."
is
"
Now
"
Observe that the only entrance from the outside
let
us pass to the south-east angle."
the door/, and from the court of the seraglio
The
g.
The
court T.
its
the most orderly
The
by
is
the door
provisions and the kitchens are in this quarter,
which has also in
by
manner
in
provisions are arranged
the storehouses
1 1
u
it
u.
servants convey the viands to the ro)-al table, passing
through the door g, and entering the large halls of the seraglio, where sometimes morning banquets are given to persons of distinction, or "
But
am
in
the private apartments.'
All these halls are ceiled with semi-circular vaulting. this
is
able to
the most interesting part of the
show
it
}'ou as
it is
harem, on the north-west angle.
and
villa,
not yet occupied.
It is
The only entrance
I
the
to this
by the door V, the little vestibule v', and the second vestibule v". Here at X is a long court, The harem properly in which the eunuch guards reside. so called has its court, on which open two small rooms c e part of the building
is
for the
women who have
halls
h reserved for the children, who remain
up
Jl
to the
women
age of
pass their
the care of the children, two large
two other
five,
da\-s,
in the
halls / / in
harem
which the
and the sacred apartments
* See figure 47.
;;/
///
THE ASSYRIANS. destined for the prince
when he
149
resides in his harem.
The
from the enclosure walls by
apartments are separated
courts communicating with the lodgings of the
isolating-
eunuchs p p p p p p"
Let us go out and
the observatory placed at the
visit
north-west angle of the platform at
120 feet high, and
is
base
its
is
This observatory
Z.
a square of 70 feet.
by
The
ascent to the platform at the top
is
whose aggregate length
This observatory, like
the
all
some
feet.
of unburnt bricks with a facing of stone
rest, is built
at the base,
820
is
The
first
you
like to
"With
it
the sixth
is
silvered,
shines in the sun.
Would
fifth scarlet,
See how
last gilded.
the walls
painted in a different
is
black, the second white, the third
is
orange, the fourth blue, the
and the
Each of
parts of glazed bricks.
of the inclines forming a stage colour.
inclined planes,
"
go to the top
?
pleasure," said Epergos,
and he began
to climb
the slopes at a brisk pace, while Doxius and the architect
were ascending more slowly.
Figure 53 presents a bird'seye view of a part of the palace, taken from the south-west angle.
The view from
the higher platform of the observatory
On
was charming.
the horizon to the south-east the city
of the Ninevites could be discerned, already of considerable extent,
and with
lofty walls,
palaces.
The
—
Tigris
between which
whose centre was occupied by
divided into several branches, from
emerged islands
covered
with
a
rich
vegetation, and with country houses exhibiting whitened walls
and terraces
numerous with
air,
bearing along on
circular rafts supported
its
Beyond the shores,
down
river,
their
a
provisions
of
rapid current
by leathern bags
each navigated by some half dozen
thus bringing
its
— was
all
filled
men who were
sorts
to the city.
chain of hills followed the course of
barren
summits
contrasting with
the
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
15°
expanse of dark verdure which covered
On
tlic
lower slopes.
immense plain, streaked in every by canals whose waters shone in the sun like silver plates, and from whose bosom mic^ht be seen rising at the intervals artificial mounds surmounted by buildings mansions of influential personages surrounded by wellthe east extended an
part
—
kept gardens.
On
Tigris lost itself
the north, the winding course of the
amid
belts of 'blue hills
which rose
in
succession towards an horizon of limpid clearness.
ZCh(>\U
View
of Assyrian Palace.
Fig. 53.
Epergos, supporting his chin on his hand, and leaning
on the upper balustrade, seemed
lost in
contemplation.
THE ASS YRIANS. "
Well
!
"
And
what
is
arm
said the architect touching his
that large square enclosure which
there, in the plain, the side of
I
which seems to
or thereabouts, and whose area
;
" is
not
But
tell
me
?
"
the earth too," replied Epergos.
5
"
heavens
this a fine situation for observing the "
1
see laid out
me
a furlong
quite bare of vegeta-
is
tion?" " It
is
the enclosure destined for the royal chase."
"What am I to understand by that " "At the present day, if the lion, formerly common ?
these plains,
to be hunted,
is
The king cannot
or westwards.
expeditions.
you must go
in
northwards
spare time for such distant
Servants, trained for the purpose, take large
cages and contrive
to entrap
domains
;
and
lions
lionesses in the
These are conveyed
mountains, without injuring them. the royal
far
and when
to
the sovereign wishes to
indulge in the pastime of the chase, he surrounds this
into
and the cages are then wheeled
The king then mounts
it.
at his side,
him.
spears,
large bucklers and
by
enclosure with soldiers, protected
armed with strong
a chariot, with his charioteer
and accompanied by two hunters selected by
The cages
are then opened
the soldiers utter loud
;
shouts; the wild beasts, bewildered
every direction
the
;
by the
uproar, run in
king pursues them, and from his
Sometimes the them with arrows. beasts, infuriated by their wounds, throw themselves on the horses or on the wheels, then the two assistants, armed
chariot
transfixes
with lances, slay them."
"But
this sport
seems to
me somewhat
"All depends on the charioteer
;
if
he
dangerous." is
skilful,
he can
elude the attack of the beasts, and afford his master an
opportunity for shooting them. great delight in this sport, and
sometimes
kills
The is
present king takes
very
skilful
at
it.
He
a dozen lions and lionesses in a single
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
152
Accordingly, great favours are bestowed by the
evening.
king upon a charioteer of experience and agihty.
—
the event of an accident,
course by
—
if
the king
"
Why
"
They
and so
?
is
imperilled
what happens
woe
oh, then,
:
him
to
But
arrested in
is
Hon fastening on the
furious
him to a cross, leave him to die."
"Are drivers "
some
the chariot
if
in its
horse's flanks,
to the driver
!"
?
or drive a stake into his breast,
nail
these tortures reserved for unskilful or unfortunate
.''
By no means
.
Look
.
.
Do
of this hunting-field.
.
.
a
!
little
to the right
you see those stakes and
— a great number of them "Yes, certainly
there
crosses,
" ?
and
.
I
fancy
I
see bodies too
attached to these stakes."
"Yes;
they are the bodies of eight hundred rebels
from the northern provinces brought here before the king, for
he alone can order their execution."
"
And
"
Certainly
he has done so !
Do you
" .-'
see also those flights of birds of
prey hovering over the gibbets "
"
Epergos turned away.
Oh, those are only the most guilty
architect, " ten
working
edifices, if
!
"
thousand have been kept as
at the canals, the walls,
materials.
How
could w;e get
we had not ;
unhealthy work.
making
continued the slaves,
bricks,
workmen
and are
and carrying
to build these vast
slaves in considerable
command ? Especially as many of them for working is
.-'
numbers
at our
these works shorten the lives of in
the
mud
during the hot season
Since this palace was begun,
we have
more than two thousand workmen." " But if a long peace deprived your sovereign of the means of furnishing his domains with a sufficient supply
lost
of slave labour, what would you do "
" .''
This has been the case sometimes
;
and then emissaries
THE ASSYRIANS.
155
are sent into the northern provinces, in the direction of
Media, and beyond, whose mission population of these districts the yoke
— to
revolt.
it
— which are
is
to
excite the
never easy under
Provoked by these agents, they
pay the tributes, or intercept the messages, or massacre some of the royal delegates. The king sends an army, the country is pillaged, and the whole population in this way our building works carried away into slavery refuse to
:
are
supplied with labour
who
;
are regarded as the
assembled
and the crucifixion of a few,
most
slaves, renders those
guilty, in presence of the
who
are spared submissive
girls, and they work without murmuring." "These are expensive palaces," whispered Epergos to Doxius and addressing the architect, he said " But the fear of torture does not make sculptors and painters." " Oh, as to fine work of that kind, it is different We have corporations of sculptors and painters subjected to
and docile as
:
;
!
severe rules
;
these artisans are instructed in schools taught
by masters under sacerdotal direction for nothing must be done which is not in accordance with religion. These men are free, and live together in quarters assigned them and ;
;
what they gain goes into the fund of the corporation, which
is
charged with the maintenance of each of
its
members." Just then a person presented himself on the platform,
and said something
to the architect.
must go down," said the latter to the visitors ; "a message has been brought me from the court; but you need not hurry. Here," said he, presenting them " I
with a small plate of lead on which certain characters
were
" this
marked,
palace without
me we ;
will
shall
enable
you
meet again
to
inspect
the
after sunset."
Epergos and Doxius remained on the platform a few
moments
longer.
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
154
The shadows were lengthening
in
the plain, and appeared
like sheets of lapis lazuli gradually outspread
The
of gold.
tions sparkled like
The whole
the slanting rays of the sun.
seemed aflame
;
upon a carpet
assumed leaden hues, while the habitatopazes amid verdure purple-tinted by
river
region of the west
and on the horizon, through the glowing
atmosphere, long ruddy streaks were
visible.
workmen and
were heard the songs of
rustics.
From
afar
Tinted by
the last rays of the setting sun, and the reflections of the sky, the terraces of the palace were beginning to assume lilac
hues
buried
in
and
;
courts
its
seemed so many wide basins
shade, whence emerged the tops of date-trees
flecked with gold.
Epergos, contrary to his habit, did not appear disposed to break the silence
and Doxius looked askance
;
from time to time with a
paragon of
him
when they began to descend the observatory, "what dost thou say of this
"Well." said the inclines of the
at
sinister smile.
latter,
civilisations
Art thou not proud of the
}
human
race, aided by thy precious making and especially that part" of it which has the good fortune to engage thy sympathies.'' Is it not
progress which the influence,
is
;
erecting splendid palaces, and diverting the course of rivers to irrigate
its fair fields
Does
.''
not transact
it
with the most admirable regularity as
profusely liberal
it is
faction desires "
Does such
.''
}
a
Why,
.-'
Is
it
all its afi*airs
not as economical
then, this look of dissatis-
success
still
fall
short
of
thy
.''
Doxius,
I
know thy
malice of old
;
now hold thy
peace." "
Why
wonder
should
I
}
Am
I
not,
like thyself, struck with
at the splendours of this abode,
so strongly urged
thou sayest
:
me
to visit
.-*
It is
which thou hast
somewhat
costly, as
provinces must be pillaged, and their inha-
THE ASSYRIANS. bitants reduced to slavery
155
masse, after
eji
some hundreds
of them have been hanged or empaled, to secure this industrial progress
;
satisfaction of one;
men must
thousands of
and
if
they are
labour for the
insufficient,
reason-
it is
able to set to work to provoke poor brutes to rebel against
view to get a pretext for making
this civilisation with a
them co-operate truce,
Doxius, to thy sarcasms
" Positively,
I
thou
hast
;
wherever
it
just
think
I
it
say no more
" !
Hast thou not
men who produce such admirable
not sought for and followed them
them
has pleased
Wert thou not
;
cannot understand thee.
lent thine aid to these
things
In fact,
"
very ingenious, for
"A
development.
in its
now
disperse
to
themselves
?
expatiating on their aptitudes
on the advantages of some supposed mixtures of races adapted to favour certain developments themselves superior to others
and
;
These men think
?
they are so
in fact
point of courage, industry, and love of order assert their superiority, considering other Is this
it is
cattle.
true."
Dost thou approve of
people
and they
men mere
true?"
"Yes, "
;
in
their
manner of
treating other
.''
"No." "Well, then, to what purpose, things,
is
the general order of
in
development of
this prodigious
improvement of the appliances of
life,
civilisation,
—
if
"
Hearken, Doxius
there
is
I
!
I
neither wish, nor
do not know.
something monstrous
.
in all this
this
some few only
reap the advantage, to the detriment of the mass
answer thee to-day.
—
am
able to
I
admit that
I
.
" .'
—something truly
in this frightful consumption of materials and of Yet what a grand race what power and energy! Consider what they have done! What
shocking
men.
!
—
.
.
.
.
.
.
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
iS6
progress ings." "
.
.
!
.
.
these vast
.
Oh, excellent
doubtless
constructions
.
.
these vault-
.
.
!
Vaulting
!
an admirable invention,
is
my
but do not deny that
founded when
presentiment was well
opposed the adoption of
I
warmly applauded by
Thou
thee.
these vaultings of thine
this fancy,
once so
what they
seest
cost,
human
The\' require heaps of
!
corpses for their foundations."
Thus
disputing, the
companions had re-entered the great
A few remaining warm tints
court of the palace.
ly gilded the higher parts of the buildings
;
all
still
faint-
the rest was
buried in a blue shade, and the sky was already glittering
The
with stars.
sculptures which adorned the
strange
Throne Hall
portals of the
;
those winged bulls which
seemed to be issuing from below the sombre vault, and whose human heads were still illumined by the twilight, irresistibly attracted
experienced,
They
the attention of the visitors.
presence of these mysterious figures, a
in
vague sensation of dread.
Epergos, buried in thought,
appeared himself a statue fixed in front of these colossi.
"Art thou expecting the winged speak to thee "
They
"
And what
"
Thou
?
"
do, in fact,
him on the shoulder.
speak to me," replied Epergos.
do they say to thee
shalt
For several
bulls of the palace to
said Doxius, slapping
" ?
know another time but :
da\'s,
travelling along the shores of the Tigris.
saw
well-cultivated,
let
us depart."
Epergos and Doxius were engaged because
in
Ever\'where they
well-irrigated
The
fields.
roads exhibited the most perfect order; and along them
might be seen vehicles continually passing, or herds of cattle quietly moving. irrigation,
this
Numerous
and were also
in
canals served the purpose of
constant use for navigation
means of transport being the
;
least laborious in that
country, where for a great part of the year the heat
is
most
THE ASSYRIANS. oppressive. all
built
The houses
157
scattered over the country were
The
on nearly the same model.
better class
had
vaulted roofs; the less pretentious were covered in with palm-
trunks and canes, upon which earth, beaten and plastered,
formed terraces where awnings were stretched out to form sleeping places
by
night,
and
These terraces were reached by
shade
for
inclines of
rH
Assyrian House.
in
Fig.
the daytime.
unburnt brick.
_ —
54.
Figure 54 represents one of these habitations. basements are generally made of stones (irregularly
The laid),
to withstand the floods which sometimes inundate the plain.
On
these are erected walls of unburnt bricks, with lintels of
wood over
the doors and windows.
Then
laree tree-trunks
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
iS8
are laid across, on the tops of the walls, and others smaller,
way
the contrary
next canes and clay, well-kneaded and
;
covered with lime plaster; for the Nineviteshave the art of converting certain lime stones into lime by burning
mixing
and excellent
They
plaster.
also procure
mountains to the west, which
between the baked
upon the terraces. them, and they use
When
the heat
is
bricks,
bitumen
fine
the
in
cement
they use as a
under pavements, and also
This bitumen it
and
;
make very
with fine river sand, they
this lime
is
of great service to
largely.
so intense as to
become
stifling
even in
the interiors of the dwellings, the well-to-do inhabitants have tents of thick white woollen stuffs placed on the terraces,
and servants are kept continually watering these tents outThus the sun, by causing this water to evaporate, side. rapidly produces an agreeable coolness beneath the tents.
"It
is
evident," said Doxius, "that in these countries the
enjoyment of
depends on being born among the domin-
life
Never have
ant and wealthy part of the community. a people
among v/hom
was more
seen
I
the condition of the poorer classes
pitiable."
"Must we not except Egypt? " replied Epergos. " No, indeed in Egypt there is a settled order of :
things
;
the several classes have their privileges, their rights, and their obligations
;
they are separated by
the meanest of these classes
is
strict
rules
treated paternally,
compare the treatment they receive with that which have to undergo, who are not of noble
but
;
we
if
all
here
race, or favoured
by
the great or by the king." " is
Yes,
I
agree with thee that the condition of this people
miserable
;
and unfeeling
that the dominant class ;
—
that
it
is
tyrannical, harsh,
shamefully abuses
observe, Doxius, a great
work
is
its
power.
going on here.
This
But is
a
vast laboratory, where the civilisations of the future are
THE ASSYRIANS. being prepared
159
thy friends the Egyptians
;
may be
superior
to these Assyrians with their large eyes, thick eyebrows,
bushy beards, stout Hmbs, and wide shoulders but Progress takes no account of the former, because they have never been ;
in
contact with the world, except incidentally they are fixed, ;
and
will
remain fixed, on the banks of the Nile.
It is quite
otherwise with the inhabitants of these countries
swallow up other peoples, and perhaps
up
in their
turn
;
but they
me
king's palace were saying to said
We
:
have taught
will
Thou wert asking me what
mankind.
represent
the
we have wings
;
To
!
who
thee,
our labour
— who
things to
They
the other evening.
we
is
work,
the
carry everywhere,
and
intelligent,
be unprofitable nor devoid of glory, for head
many
the colossi of the
patient, persistent
material strength and power which for
they
;
be swallowed
will
we have
will not
a
human
dreadest every step in advance,
maintainest that every attempt, every experiment,
every
efibrt, even,
leads to perdition,
— the
Egyptians ap-
pear to be the perfection of humanity." "
Yes, certainly," interrupted Doxius.
'*
Well
;
thy friends the Egyptians
people shut
in,
an exceptional race
remain
will is
it
:
that the great glory of humanity, which
and hoping people
and
— despite
its
its
contempt
superior caste
"Ah!
will
for,
I
have
its
spring of
fertilising
off again!
Vaultings,
them
course of glorious destinies
!
expecting
corruption
!
eternal immutability on the
of the
life."
—gimcracks,
dis-
then humanity enters on a Well,
thou predictest to
if
banks of the
to thee unproductive activity, ruins,
and
end or intermission, on these Assyrian "
among them
am
whereas from this
;
abuse of power, despite
coveries, as thou callest
me
I
for everything outside the pale
— may issue a
see,
birth
its
not
for ever a
Perhaps thou speakest truth
;
Nile, I predict
disasters,
without
plains,"
but the rest of the world
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
i6o
will live
for to live
;
dry up
thine will "
Egypt
is
is
to
be
in action,
like a lake that is
born to endure
and that Kgypt of
no longer
for ever
;
for
it
fed."
has the wisdom
inherent in eternal things, which are unchangeable."'
"Nothing is unchangeable, everything change of form." " That which changes dies." "
The
contrary
is
the real truth
sion of transformations."
;
for life
is
is
subject
to
only a succes-
CHAPTER
XV.
THE PELASGI.
THE
stream from the east had continued to spread
emigrants through Media speak, it
Aryan
up, so to
settled in that country,
could no longer spread southwards
small settlements of pure
dammed
but,
;
by the numerous populations
;
and while leaving
race on the banks of the
Araxes, and as far as the southern slopes of the Caucasus, it
spread farther and farther along the shores of the Euxine,
occupied the
fertile
countries which later on took the
name
of Armenia, Paphlagonia, and Bithynia, crossed the Bos-
phorus, and founded colonies in Thrace, Macedonia, and
Thessaly.
The
isles
of the iEgean sea were peopled
by
them, as also the Peloponnesus.
These settlements had already long existed
when
at the timt-
Epergos and Doxius were visiting the palace of the
Ninevite king.
On
the other hand, the
Aryan
peoples, mingled with
those of the Semitic race, had spread along a line parallel
Taurus chain, and were occupying
to the north of the
Phrygia, Caria, Lycia, Rhodes and Crete, or at least the ';ountries thus designated at
a later period.
Nomadic
or
rather migratory in their habits, they continued for a long
time without
fixed
settlements
;
they
did not
live
in
waggons like the Scythians, but dwelt temporarily in huts built amid the forests which covered all these countries and possessed herds of cattle and swine, and flocks of sheep and ;
geese.
They already
cultivated the ground in the plains
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
l62
but
in a
primitive
sowed seed
in
\va\'.
and
it
was not
till
later
on that they
ground prepared by the plough.
The
habi-
tations of these Pelasgi' consisted of a low circular wall,
formed of large stones, on which was erected a cone of branches of trees covered with reeds or twigs
The
^
fire
was made
in
the middle, and the
(fig.
smoke
55).
issued
^^^^^^^l^yig,;
House
of Pelasgian Peasant.
from the top of the cone.
A
Fig
55.
circular enclosure, likewise
constructed of large stones, surrounded each of these huts.
Having
lived '
among "Pelasgian
the mountains ever since they " signifies'old, ancient.
THE PELASGI. •quitted the plateaus of the Indus,
163
and having formed but a
sh'ght acquaintance with the already highly civilised peoples
settled in the south of Media, they
and simple character. vehicles
drawn by oxen or
and preserved the
had preserved
their rude
Like their ancestors, they
had
horses, lived together in tribes,
religious beliefs of the Aryas, slightly
modified during their migrations.
When
they settled on the west of the vEgean
sea, the
Pelasgi found in these regions barbarian aborigines,
first
who
Always on horseback, these
on acorns and milk-food.
lived
inhabitants drove their great herds of cattle before
them with long pointed Given to
sticks.
pillage, difficult to capture,
and inhabiting only
new comers
•caves or forest jungles, they obliged the
many
for
years to defend themselves against their aggressions
and these
struggles
left
such an indelible remembrance
;
in
the minds of the Pelasgi, that they continued to portray
on their public monuments those primitive contests with these beings
the
soil
The
— half-horse,
half-man
— who
had disputed
with them.
Pelasgian tribes prospered, however
wheat and the vine, extracted
oil
from the
themselves to agricultural pursuits.
;
they cultivated
and devoted
olive,
Those inhabiting the
coast and the islands had built vessels, were engaged in
commerce, and practised piracy.
Relations were thus esta-
blished between the populations of the opposite shores of
the
^gean
;
— relations which were not
which none the
less tended, in
many
always
pacific,
but
about
cases, to bring
the fusion of the two peoples.
Most of the inhabitants of the Asiatic coast were more Semitic than the Aryan race they
nearly akin to the
;
already possessed arts comparatively advanced metals
;
and were
and towns.
The
skilful in the art of
Pelasgi
;
worked
building large vessels
of Thessaly and
those of the
1
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
64
shores of the rdoponnesus, were obliged to concert measures for resisting the incursions of the peoples settled on
The
the Asiatic coast.
formed federations, and the
tribes
most powerful among them, or those whose most
intelligent,
coasts, they built
The in
towns and
countries inhabited
by high steep
various kinds
buildings.
were
soon acquired a marked preponderance.
In imitation of the piratical tribes
sected
chiefs
hills
who ravaged
their
citadels.
by the Northern and
ravines,
Pelasgi, inter-
were peculiarly rich
of stone suitable for
durable
erecting
Accordingly, the Pelasgi did not
to
fail
make
abundant use of these materials, avoiding tedious workmanship, however; for they
still
had only bronze
tools,
and
were therefore unable to give shapes of delicacy to these materials. little
As
for traditions of art,
they had none
had been able
instruction they
to faint recollections derived
to gather
;
and the
was limited
from the iMedes of the north
during their sojourn south of the Caucasus, and from the articles
they received from the Carians and Lycians
change
for the products of their soil.
These Pelasgian simplicity
of their
villages,
in
ex-
however, despite the extreme
buildings,
preserved
a character
of
strength and rude grandeur, in perfect accordance with the
unpolished manners and primitive habits of the people.
Taking advantage of naturally defended
positions, such
as promontories and acclivities, they surrounded these positions with thick walls built of large unsquared blocks of stone,
irregularly laid according
Tyrrhenians
;
to the
method of the
thus was formed the citadel, which enclosed
the treasure-house, one or more temples, and the habitations of the chiefs of the tribes.
Around
this citadel
were grouped the dwellings, which
were themselves surrounded by an enclosure.
The
men among them who had
the citadel.
not residences
in
leading
THE PEL A SGI. built their houses
X65
upon some commanding point of
difficult
access.
As were
the huts of the shepherd and the circular, so the
tiller
of the ground
dwelling of the rich preserved this
time-hallowed form, at least
in
one of
its
parts
;
for at that
time even the temples were built on a circular plan.
But
the dwellings of the rich were built almost entirely of stone,
— occasionally with a wooden
portico.
Figure 56 gives the plan of one of the most spacious
Plan of House of a Pelasgian noble.
and costly of
their houses.
eminence,
is
it
Fig. 56.
Built on the
summit
of a rocky
surrounded by a wall which crowns
levelled summit, following
all
its
natural sinuosities.
this
A
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
i66
flight of steps
AB
gives access to the platform
but at C a
;
gate shuts off the steps about the middle of the ascent.
D
is
At
a portico formed of trunks of trees roughly fashioned,
supporting a longitudinal beam, on which rest the joists
A
and the roof E,
single door gives entrance to the vestibule
which opens on the right into an apartment
servants and strangers remain
form at
II
;
and on the
left
occupied by the master
;
G,
where the
—with a kitchen of circular
to a similar apartment F,
which
and a small chamber
which
i,
is is
the family treasury.
From circular
the vestibule there
room
collecting
This
K.
and where meals
in
is
is
a direct entrance into the
the place for social gatherings,
common
and preserving the
are taken. rain-water.
At L is At M
a cistern are huts
for the servants.
The
following
the method according to which the
is
Pelasei construct their dwellings
:
jT
Section of
A, figure
of a Pelasgian noble.
— Fia.
57.'
57, gives the transverse section of the
and of the portico
As
House
:
B,
the entire edifice
room G
the section of the circular hall K. is
built with large stones, these are
THE PELASGI. lifted to their
inclines
when It
by main
place
167
strength, with the help of
formed of stones and earth, which are taken away
all is finished.
however, for the erection of the basement chiefly
is,
that materials of great size are used
when the workmen
;
reach the corbelled-out sloping walls they use lighter stones,
and
When
select flat ones.
the structure
complete
is
— care
being taken that every stone exactly covers the joints of those beneath
mixed with
— the upper
part
is
straw, so as to cover
plastered over with clay
the stones that present
all
slopes on the exterior.
The by
Pelasgi assert that these buildings were so designed
their ancestors
;
but
certain that they derived their
it is
—
what they saw on the shores of Asia in Caria and Lycia though in these countries there were two modes ideas from
;
of building
— one entirely with stone, which seems to belong
to the Tyrrhenians,
shown here
;
particularly to
There
and which much resembles what
the other with timber, which belongs
Aryan
the migrations of the peoples to is
lonians.
moreover, different versions of the history of
are,
given, but
though they
by the
traditions inherited
whose Aryan
whom
origin
may have been mixed
tions at a very
early period.
We
name
of lonians
cannot be
doubted,
the
with Semitic popula-
must suppose these
lonians to have passed from Asia into Europe
i.e.,
the Pelo-
ponnesus, and to have been driven out by the Achseans
some would have returned colonies
and
;
is
more
to Asia
;
where they founded
others would have sought refuge on the coast of
the Archipelago which preserves their name. But to return to the Pelasgian habitation of which the
Elis
in
plan has been given. with
its
Figure 58 presents
it
in perspective,
escarped enclosure crowned with large, rough stones
which form so many merlons, and the openings between
them
crenelations for defence.
On
the platform are a few
'
.-r '^ ^i^^
View
of
House
of a Pelasglan noble.
Fig. 58.
THE PELASGI. fig
and
The
olive-trees,
set apart for the servants.
wood and covered with reeds occupied by the family during the
portico, constructed of
and straw, day.
round the huts
169
is
the place
The space between the posts is partly closed with As stated above, these Pelasgi live in tribes more
wattling.
or less powerful, but which tend more and more to unite in
Their occupations are divided between the
federations.
cultivation of the
soil,
cattle-breeding,
They remained, however, contrasted with the progress tions of Asia.
and
made by
edifices, in
which, as
the original traditions and countries
the Ionian popula-
These, being in permanent connection with
nations already highly advanced in the
sumptuous
pii^acy.
of simplicity which
in a state
may be
said to
we
were building
shall presently see,
influences
have been
arts,
of the
reflected.
bordering
CHAPTER
XVI.
THE lONIANS OF ASIA, THE CARIANS AND LYCIANS.
THE
inhabited
countries
known
by the people
as
lonians, on the western shores of Asia opposite the
Peloponnesus, were rich and
fertile,
their
mountain slopes
at that time being covered with forests.
Wood and
suitable for building were in abundance.
We find ourselves
in
stones
a far different scene from that of the great alluvial plains
we behold a country broken up by mountains and furrowed by water-courses, and whose deeply indented of Assyria
;
shores presented bays and gulfs peculiarly suited for the
concealment of
piratical vessels.
on the south, was the
The
island of Rhodes,
of a series of isles which opposed
first
a kind of dyke, cut by passes, to the expeditions of invaders
from the west.
Most of these Rhodes,
islands,
commencing with
— were occupied by Ionian colonies.
cal position so
the largest,
A geographi-
favourable to agriculture, commerce, and
even piracy, with a
fine climate,
had afforded the lonians
an opportunity of rapidly developing their natural endow-
ments they were therefore becoming wealthy and powerful. As Epergos had correctly presaged, the mingling of the ;
two races
— Aryan and Semitic—was rapidly producing an
exceptionally energetic development of the arts the
Aryan branch was
;
and where
relatively vigorous, the arts, instead
of resting stationary as
in
Egypt, and even
in
the lands of
Assyria, were in a state of continual progress and transfor-
mation.
Now
these lonians had preserved the timber-
THE WNIANS OF ASIA,
ETC.
171
framed construction of Aryan traditions, and had adopted
from the Tyrrhenian Semites the method of building with In employing these two methods simul-
blocks of stone.
taneously, however, they did not
only placed them, as
it
mix them
;
were, in juxtaposition.
in fact,
From
they this
c^?^.
Plan of Ionian House.
Fig. 59.
procedure there resulted a very singular and incongruous style of art, but
whose consequences had a value the im-
portance of which
we
shall
soon be able to appreciate.
THE HA BITA TIONS OF MAN.
172
In the plans of their habitations, also, the lonians ex-
Aryan
the results of
hibited
combined with
traditions
Semitic influences.
This into
is
two
shown
Here the dwelling
in figure 59.
distinct parts
is
the one devoted to relations with
;
the external world, and the other to that interior
At A
concealed from view.
is
is
life
C
B,
;
one intended
in-
with two rooms
left
for the business of the proprietor,
every Ionian devotes himself to trade of some kind
the other for the lodging of the employes
A communicates with door
D,
which
is
unless admitted
The
b}'
strangers to the family,
by the master.
This door D opens into a court surrounded for provisions of every kind, ;
or
hall
the interior court only by a single
not passed
At E
supported by four columns.
portico
;
— servants
slaves who have to do with people out-of-doors.
the
and
on business.
for the reception of persons calling
This hall communicates right and
for
which
a kind of entrance-hall
relatively large, opening immediately from without,
tended
divided
at F
and which
room
the
is
in
b)'
porticos
the room intended is
entered only from
which the archives are
deposited, and where stands the altar of the gods.
At G
the place where the family assemble, as in the
Semitic
habitation.'
It is in this hall,
that the meals are taken
pass the
From
;
is
widely open to the portico,
and here the women and children
da}'.
the two sides of the portico at
chambers.
At K we have
I,
open the bed-
the kitchen with
its
offices,
communicating with the portico and the court M. This habitation is situated on the side of a hill, and in
directly
front
is
a platform
servants' quarters
L,
At M
with a low enclosure.
and
cattle sheds, with
opening on the platform, and the gardens ^
See
figs.
45, 46.
are the
a special court J,
to
which the
THE lONIANS OF ASIA, inhabitants of the house have
ETC.
175
immediate access by the
passage N. Figure 60 gives a view of the front of this habitation, whose walls are built of stone irregularly shaped or laid, but close-jointed, without mortar, and whose windowopenings, doorways, roofs, porticos, and ceilings are
wood, and the roof-covering of
Exterior view of Ionian House.
All the parts of the building in lively colours,
dominate. ness, "
among which
of
tiles.
made
Fig. 6o.
of
wood
are painted
yellow, red and white pre-
In the sunshine these colours lose their crude-
and harmonise
in the
most agreeable manner.
Here," said Epergos to his companion, as they were
passing
in front of this
dwelling, which belonged to a wealthy
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
»74
merchant, "is a beautiful residence, which
among
sembles what we saw on former occasions
low
on the Upper Indus,
race,
Egypt.
is it
;
"
not a
?
my
Let us not be
"The
candid opinion, this building seems to
a hurr\' to judge before
in
in
houses of
my
Egyptian friends appear to
on the
Why
Are houses
outside.-*
them, or for the passers
tempt
at display
more vain than "
We
we have
particularly."
it
every respect the most sensible. detail
in
this structure
incongruous."
little
examined
the yel-
"
not
"If you want
me
re-
Media, Ass}'ria, or
worth our while to examine
It is
in detail
in
no way
in
b}-
built for those
In
?
me
which makes
there
all this
me
in
profusion of
this
who is
live
an at-
suppose these people
wise."
shall see
:
but thou wilt perceive that the entrance
only of the habitation
specially decorated
is
Perhaps there
hibits great simplicity.
is
the rest ex-
;
a reason for the
particularly rich appearance of this entrance.
remember the dwellings which
Might not
this
be a tradition of those customs
.^
" }
discoursing, the companions were approaching the
central point of the front
Epergos,
"how
beyond the
(fig.
;
how
"See now," continued
6i).
that timber-work
of the two stone walls
how
Dost thou Aryas of the Upper Indus,
possessed a spacious hall intended for assemblies
all
Thus
of the
is
set in
between the ends
considerably that roof projects
front, so as to shelter the
ingeniously this projection
which bear on the ends of the
is
walls.
entrance well, and
supported by beams
And
these two posts
with their sculptured and painted caps, their lateral wooden partitions contrived.-*
and upper I
trellis-work,
do they not seem well
recognise here those round
which we formerly met with of the Indus and
among
in
wooden
joists
the buildings of the Aryas
the Medes.
But everywhere
else
Entrance of Ionian House.
Fig. 6i.
THE HABITATIONS
176
MAN.
01'
the timbers are carefully squared and covered with a thin
Then, again, see how well
coating admirably coloured.
those ends of the walls are built, with low, wide stones inter-
posed between pieces placed on end.
me
to
know what they
are about, and to
These men seem to do nothing without
good reason." "
We
had, indeed, the opportunity while passing along
their coasts, of seeing that they interests, are
proficients
when they
bargains
in
do not neglect
own
are not engaged in plundering their
Oh, they are clever enough
neighbours.
their
and can drive sharp
piracy,
It is
!
not surpris-
ing that with the profits they make, and the plunder they get,
they should build sumptuous dwellings."
At
this
moment
the owner of the house was just return-
ing home, accompanied by several servants.
young man
his face,
;
fully cleared
framed
in
He was
a
a short black beard care-
around the mouth, had an expression at once
genial and sensual.
The
nose, narrow
followed the line of the forehead
:
and of good
and
profile,
his eyes, slightly
turned up at the outer extremities, v/ere surmounted by delicate eyebrows regularly arched, as
drawn with a dant, and parted on
pencil.
A white, pointed broidered
all
if
they had been
His hair of ebony black, his forehead,
fell
abun-
silky,
behind his shoulders.
cap, slighth' curved back in front and
over with gold thread,
left
em-
A
the ears visible.
tunic fitting tight round the waist, with short sleeves, quite
covered with embroidered figures, over his
the neck bare
;
while
broad shoulders was thrown a kind of scarf
His
left
legs were covered with legging.s of fine white in little folds,
laced,
and
and with pointed toes
passed, he gave
something latter
in
stuff"
plaited
his feet enclosed in shoes of bright red,
slightly turned up.
a side-look at the
As he
companions, and said
an undertone to one of his servants.
The
approached Epergos and Doxius, and asked them
if
THE lONIANS OF ASIA,
ETC.
177
they were foreigners, and whether they had any communication to
make
Epergos
to the proprietor of the dweUing.
having repHed
in the affirmative, the servant
admitted them
into the entrance hall.
This hall was wainscoted throughout, and covered with a Penetrating through the
panelled ceiling richly painted.
lattice-work of the entrance, a subdued diffused itself in the interior.
and tranquil
light
Mats were spread around on
a very low, wide bench; and the pavement, entirely com-
posed of small polished stones of divers shades, reflected the vivid colouring of the wainscot.
Epergos and Doxius had not been utes,
when the master
news do you countries,
in the hall
"We
bring.''" said he.
b}-
To
is
We
have
who tra-
impatient under the yoke of the
the north of Media, along the Caspian sea,
tribes are continually passing
form settlements as
on their way westwards, to
far as the
Euxine.
vigorous and poor, daring and intrepid the desire of occupying the Ninevites.
What
savage tribes
have no intercourse with the other nations. Assyrians.
"
have seen the eastern
and the high lands peopled
versed Media, which
man)- min-
of the house joined them.
They
fertile
;
These men are
and they burn with
domains of the prosperous
are following the line of the Anti-Taurus
mountains, and are descending into the plains to the west of that chain.
"Well " It
!
does
.
."
how does so,
that concern me,
inasmuch as
I pra)-.'
"
this stream, ever flowing west-
ward along the same course, will ultimately reach the coasts which you inhabit." " Have we not towns in strong positions and well fortified, to which we can retreat, and whence we shall be able to descend and crush them "You have what is still better superior weapons, war chariots, and the science of warfare but you are wealthy .''
—
;
M
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
178
and
and these barbarians covet possessions
prosijerous,
which they have tains,
As
not.
long as they inhabit their moun-
with no means of subsistence but the products of the
chase, and have not
tomed
come
into contact with nations accus-
to the luxuries of a refined existence, they remain
tranquil
moment they
but the
;
which accompany
benefits
overthrowing everything
torrents,
glimpse of the
a
they spread like their
in
behind them, and having nothing to
and
course,
Leaving nothing
nor death.
neither privations
fearing
get
civilisation,
lose,
they are seen
rushing in numerous and half-starved hordes upon the fertile plains
eager to defend the possessions they have
;
conquered, when they have once set foot upon a territory that pleases them, they never quit "
Are they
still
" Certainly
far
And many
!
it
again."
"
from us
.''
years will elapse before they
reach so far as your prosperous countries, for they have
enough
occupy them
to
"If that
And
the guests to take
you not traders and "
we need not be uneasy."
the case,
is
having sent
?
for a long while."
for
wine and cakes, the master invited
some refreshments, and then said are you not come to this country
"
to
Are buy
become
ac-
:
"
sell
.-*
No," replied Epergos; "our object
their occupations
of your dwelling,
is
to
make inquiries respecting is why we stopped in front which appeared more beautiful and better
quainted with the nations
and
arts
to
;
;
that
arranged than any other." " It
me
was
I
who had
great wealth.
it
He
built,
my father
having bequeathed
lived in a small
—
wooden house, quit. Now-a-
very old one, but which he was unwilling to
days we have Tyrrhenian workmen, very skilful in working stone, and who hire their labour to people rich enough to
employ them
;
we
therefore
make
use, as
you
see,
of stones
THE I ONIANS OF to raise the walls,
ASIA, ETC.
and so enclose the wooden buildings to
which we are accustomed,
in a
massive stone structure,
as a protection from heat and stormy weather.
to visit the other parts of the house, since
about our
arts,
there
is
the apartments which
and you
If
you
like
you are curious
nothing to prevent you from seeing
I
think proper to show to persons of
Interiur uf luiiiau
discretion,
179
shall
House.
— Fiu.
62.
be shown through them.
me, have you heard any news of the
fleet
"
we sent into the western seas ? "None; for we do not come from
But
tell
of galleys which
that quarter,"
rriE fTABITATIONS "
Bad news has been brought
fishermen
;
OF MAN.
to the countr>' b}'
some
but nothing certain."
The proprietor having bidden a slave to go and acquaint the women of the presence of strangers, Epergos and Doxius (fig. •
by a portico
court surrounded
were admitted into the 62).
In the middle of the area
left
open
to the
sk}--
was a
whose waters poured into a basin, and into channels which conveyed them by conduits into the garden. The portico, constructed entirely of wood, was painted, like small fountain,
The
the front, in vivid colours.
the roofs,
fell
into the
rain-water, discharged from
Opening
middle of the court.
into
the court at the further end was the room where the family
assembled, portico.
— raised
Around
two steps above the pavement of the
this
covered with rich
room were seats, very low and wide, It was on these scats that persons
stuffs.
reclined to take their meals, which were served on small tables
placed before each guest.
Above
these seats of
was a wainscot, also covered with inlays very beautifully executed. This room was lighted onh' by the open part of the court and this
wood
inlaid with
ivory
and
silver,
;
reflected light
gave a brilliancy to the vivid colours of the
ceiling, the walls,
proprietor
many
Epergos asked the
and the wainscoting.
questions, to which he replied apathetically,
and without appearing much
by the admiration
flattered
expressed by his guest. " I see,"
he said at
last, "
these matters of art; repl}- to all }'our
I
that
will
you take a
lively interest in
send for Eudexion, who will
questions better than
I
could
;
when you
weary of interrogating him, you shall come and see the gardens." On this he beckoned to a slave, and told him to are
go immediately
in search
of the architect
;
then with a
friendh' gesture to the visitors, he went in the direction ot
the crardens.
THE lONIANS OF ASIA, Left alone with Doxius, Epergos said
member the habitation many centuries ago ? " "
Why
"
Because
this question
of old
"
:
Dost thou
Vamadeva/ which we
re-
visited
?
find a certain relationship
I
ETC.
between
this build-
ing and those houses of the ancient Aryas." "
A
"
By no means
merely fortuitous resemblance." :
there
is
had, like
this, its
ing shelter,
large anterior hall,
We
its
;
Vamadeva
of the old
court with surround-
place set apart for the altar of the gods and
its
valuable treasures, and "
nothing fortuitous in this world
The house
everything has a cause.
its
bedrooms round the
portico."
have seen halls and porticos everywhere
— and
sleeping rooms everywhere."
we saw in Kgypt and in Assyria had no resemblance with what we see here. This timber framing, these wooden posts, the arrangement of these " Certainly
joists,
:
but what
these doors narrowed at the top,
distribution of the apartments,
— even
— everything,
the general
in fact,
though
with greatly improved means of execution, reminds one of
Vamadeva's house, and not
at all of the palaces of the
Egyptian monarch and of the Assyrian king." "Well.'" "
Well
!
I
should conclude from this similarity to the
one, and want of resemblance to the
others, that the Ionian
peoples belong to a branch of the Aryas that has preserved,
almost "
If,
Aryan
intact, the
traditions."
as thou maintainest, there are races of
possessing special aptitudes,
how should
men, each
these tribes, so far
removed from the Upper Indus, have preserved those traditions more faithfully than those nearer to the plateaus of Central Asia "
" .'*
The Medes and
the Assyrians are certainly less distant
from those plateaus than are the lonians ^
.See
plan figure
1
8.
;
and thou
assert-
1
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
82
Assyrian dwellings
est that the
differ essentially
from the
habitations of those ancient Aryas." "
The Mcdes, and
blished in
especially the Assyrians, long esta-
territory
tiic
which they occupy,
under influences from the
j^eoples
whom
those regions, and with
the other hand journeyed very
who
may have come
previously inhabited
they intermixed
much
further,
;
these on
but not having
halted on their route, might have brought their ancient traditions as far as these shores where they have settled down. "
Perhaps at
who continue
this day,
among
the numerous emigrants
travelling westwards, following the shores of
some destined away from their
the Caspian and Euxine, there arc
to carry
those early traditions
point of
still
further
departure." " I
do not sec the
least
resemblance between these
lonians, with their slightl)' coppery skin, black hair and eyes,
and the
fair-haired
Aryas
so that the hallucination which
;
leads thee to believe in different races of men, will bring thee
here into contradiction with thy theory."
"Not
women
so fast:
purity of blood
"Ah
!
that
"Yes, the "
have already noticed
" It is
is
is
better preserved in
in this
country
that
is
I
Aryan
women
than
in
;
and
men."
another of thy fancies."
result of
But what
to the
I
with very white skin and fawn-coloured hair
my
observations."
the drift of
find
among
stock,
all this
" t
these populations which are akin
when they have been merged
in
too
powerful a current of another race, elements of progress
which charm
me and
fill
me
with hope
;
whereas,
an Egyptian or even an Assyrian dwelling,
I
may
if I visit
retain a
profound impression of admiration, but nothing seems to remain to be attempted, nothing to be added, nothing to
be modified."
"Which
is
nothing more nor
less
than
saying, that
THE lONIANS OF i:hings which are perfect
mieht become so? "
ASIA, ETC.
charm thee
less
183
than those which
"
Exactly."
''I
knew what was in thy mind but I am happy to it. Answer me in thy turn Dost thou
well
;
hear thee express
remember
:
day in the remote past when, seated on a mountain, we saw creatures armed with sticks, killing each other
that
.''
remember
"
Certainh',
"
Everything was duly ordered by the Creator
I
were perfect and complete
it."
dry land, ever}'thing being
in
Nature,
the place assigned
thee to teach
some
of these creatures
the Creator had not given them, as well as
what was suitable
it
:
no-
The fancy seized to make a hut, as if
thing was disturbing the supreme law.
"
things
all
and productive, was peopling the waters and the
tranquil
beings,
;
the work was finished.
;
all
animated
to their kind,
Since then these creatures have called themselves men
urged on by a
minates selves
;
in
spirit
thee
falling
of infatuation
—that
spirit
;
which predo-
— they have not been able to restrain them-
one upon another, the hungry upon the
who had
the poor upon those
possessions,
full,
have
they
despoiled and hunted one another without truce or
rest.
Subsequently we have seen the strongest and most nume-
making them work to inthy hut of branches has become a
rous enslaving the weakest, and crease their comforts
;
house provided with everything,
— even
with slaves.
The
house has become a palace the palace has been surrounded ;
with defensive walls the more have
around.
And
;
and the greater the increase of
cupidity, envy,
so
we have seen
luxur}',
and hatred accumulated the inhabitants of the huts
uniting to overthrow the palace, and the towns and palaces uniting to get possession of countries more rich in palaces
and houses than progress
their own.
Is
that
what thou
callest
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
i84 "I
hear thcc express this indignation, Doxius
like to
but hearken.
Is
spark that
it tlie
is
combustible materials?'
flagration, or the accunuilation of I
admit that
have been and that
I
would become of
spark
this
materials in the spot where
how to they make
if
am
I
the spark
;
but what
did not find inflammable
it
falls
it
;
the cause of the con-
Were
?
I
show the
to
swallows
build nests of a different structure from
those
at present, they
tinue to fabricate the
Thou
at the eaves.
little
would none the
we
dwellings which
canst not but agree with
less
con-
see hanging
me
that man's
him to improve upon and alter the proadopted by his predecessors. The Creator, since
intelligence leads
cesses
Him
thou bringest it
should be so
question, has probably willed that
in
consequently,
;
our efforts should tend to
all
man
hasten this advance towards that better to which
work arrested in a path that has no issue, I may consider this work good in itself; it excites my curiosity and admiration but it rouses in me no enthusiasm; aspires.
If
see man's
I
;
it
docs not create
tion, since
it
comparison
:
in
me
the desire to aid in
when
I
transforma-
;
but
it
Well, then
industry.
their
dwellings of the HgN'ptians,
markable
;
but
thing which
is
when
I
find
perfect,
I
am
mode visit
them admirable and
all
if
you
that
it
will,
but which
can express.
of the re-
myself among men
find
obtained, but suggests to
more
ous, proportions :
here,
me
like these.
me by
hope
What we the result
more ingeniand harmonies more pleas-
conceptions
delicate, I
— as finished
It is quite diffe-
have before our eyes, not only charms
In a word
my
do not see how to transform or modify a
I
already expresses rent
I
when
!
I
does not occur to
to suggest to the bees a better or a different
employing
ing.
its
to revert to
consider the work of the bees,
struck with Avonder, and delighted
me
And
cannot be transformed.
;
here
I
still
feel
with the desire of making improvements.
myself seized
In those
Egyp-
THE lONIANS OF ASIA, and even
tian palaces,
in
ETC.
the Assyrian, there comes over
a sense of weariness and discouragement;
be no change revival
in
them, should these nations
hoped
to be
is
once cut down,
will
for there
we have
;
;
but observe,
also,
one to seek new ones,
late
" Is this
work
for there
last for ever.
a tree
me
could
No
whose trunk,
throw out no fresh shoots.
See how ingeniously the timbers of
"
arranged
185
how
more ingenious.
still
however
perfect,
simple majesty of Egyptian
framing are
this
these combinations stimu-
.''
No
it
;
has not the
nor the sturdy strength
art,
and indestructible aspect of the Assyrian buildings, but it ; one feels that here every workman must have con-
speaks
tributed his share of intelligence, and has
of his labour. effort of
We
left
do not behold here, as
the imprint
in Assyria, the
beings in vast numbers acting mechanically under
the master's rod, and piling up materials without knowing
what the result will be. Here each one must have worked with the consciousness of a motive for his labour, and
in
view of the
view
this
Dost thou not appreciate
final result.
.-'
"I cannot share an opinion which appears to
me
danger-
deem wise not him who is continually seeking, but him who having found the good, is concerned only how to preserve it." " But if thy opinion had been accepted ever since men have been upon the earth, the whole human race would be however seductive.
ous,
I
living scarcely sheltered
on roots and
me
for
having
reptiles
;
under
trees,
in the earliest
and would be feeding
now thou wert reproaching
for just
ages taught a few savages the
art of building themselves huts."
"Mischief was already done
how
to stop
confusion.
;
but the wise should
on an incline which I
like the Egyptians,,
is
know
leading to the abyss of
because they were able to
halt after having reached a wonderful degree of civilisation.
1
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
86
"What is progress, What is wisdom, if it preserving gress, I
is,
not the socking for a good?
is
not the keeping of this good, and
is
from every attack
it
a restless advance
is
do not
view
if it
word
like the
then, that
—
when
have been ascended,
it
;
my
What
?
thou callest pro-
idea of progress
does not express
my
.
it is
(but
,
my
summit
the steps that lead to the
advisable to stop at that summit;
down again " go down again to reach a summit
otherwise there must be a going "
.
notion)
.
!
.
.
farther Yes better off and still higher, than halt for to halt is to die, and though man is destined to repose in death, such is not the :
;
destiny of humanit}'."
At
this
off
by the
admiring the residence thou hast built
for that
point
the
discussion
was broken
entrance of the architect Eudexion.
"We were
wealthy personage,
whom
kind enough to send everything here
is
the gods protect.
for thee to satisfy
new
He
has been
our curiosity
to us," said Epergos.
"
;
for
Wilt thou
please to enlighten us ?"
"This habitation," answered Eudexion, others,
and
I
"
resembles
many
do not claim to have done anj-thing more
than conform to the customs of Ionia."
"That may be; but we have nowhere else observed art of framing timber; whence did )'ou derive it?" " Formerl}-,
as our elders
abundance of timber
relate,
there being a great
the countrj-, our fathers constructed
in
dwellings entirely composed of trunks of trees.
neighbours, the Tyrrhenians, built and lings with large stones,
The
this
which they
still
But our
build their dyvel-
skilfully joint
and work.
employment of these solid and durable materials has
been gradually adopted living in timber houses
to allow of
its
nevertheless the custom of b}- us was too general among the lonians ;
being abandoned.
W^e have therefore amal-
gamated the two systems, and ceasing
to treat timber
THE lONIANS OF
ASIA, ETC.
except as material which had to be inhabitants,
we have encased
left in
187
contact with the
this structure with stone, of
which the walls and the most
parts are composed.
solid
That is why you see our walls covered on the inside with wooden panelling. Columns, linings, and window frames of wood, such as these, were
roughly executed a century
all
now we have
workmen. First the unhewn posts were squared then the angles were taken off, and in this way these many-sided columns came to be fashioned. The rude caps which were placed on the top or so ago
;
but
skilful
;
of these posts, to relieve the bearing of the beams, were
carved at the ends as it.
you
see,
As
in volutes.
with painting,
\\
The whole has been
hich beautifies and preserves
regards the roofs and ceilings,
them of wood
;
covered,
we continue
to
make
though giving them a more and more
ele-
may suggest, and them with painting and even gilding. "To prevent these wooden columns from being affected at their lower extremity by the dampness of the soil, we place them on stone bases. In short, these new buildings are like those much older ones which you may still see in the country, and affect nothing more than to reproduce the older arrangements with more elegance and studied refinement in the execution of the details. We have the art of gant appearance, as the taste of each enriching
working metals
tin,
all
copper,
silver,
and gold, and giving
to these
workmen choose to adopt woodwork and furniture have been
the forms which the
you will observe how the
enriched with delicate ornamentation over, not very long since
walls with plaster.
We
we began
in
metal.
It
is,
to overlay the
morerough
derived this art from the countries
of the East, where they burn stone to
mixed with sand, enables us well adapted for painting on.
to get the
We
make
lime, which,
smooth surfaces so
even apply a
ver}^ light
coating of this lime, ground up with the fine dust of hard
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
1 88
stone or fine sand, upon our timber work, to preserve
it
from the action of the sun, and as a surface for painting
;
but this requires great care."
"And what wood do you employ thus?" " Cedar, cypress,
and s\'camore
beginning to become
wood
these kinds of
;
are
and already some wealthy
rarer,
persons have had columns cut in blocks of stone, exactly
made
adhering to the form of those
come when
The day
of wood.
the cappings also will be cut in stone
nothing to prevent this; but they must be to avoid their breaking
there
;
Would you
like to
inspect one of the bedchambers, while the family are ?
"
"You
"
With
This doorway
air.
in
the
pleasure."
observe that these chambers, which are small,
receive light only
the door
is
less projecting,
under the superimposed weight, for
stone has not the flexibility of wood.
garden
will
may
Each
is
by the doorway opening under the portico. closed by a wooden leaf and a curtain
;
therefore be
of these
open
left
chambers has a
at night to
admit fresh
ceiling of coloured
wood
the walls have their upper parts painted, and are wainscoted
A
below with costly wood.
bedstead, likewise of
laid with ivory, occupies the further
At
the side
is
wood
in-
end of the chamber.
a small table and a stool.
The
with mats very finely worked, and a lamp
floor is
is
covered
placed on a
bronze support." "
Contact with stone
" Certainly
;'
and
is
this,
manifestly avoided everywhere." as
I
was observing,
the long-continued habit of living of wood.
from
made
Besides, in this country, contact with stone
insalubrious, "
among
results
dwellings
and occasions pains
is
in the limbs.
To show you how careful we are
in this respect,
observe
those windows which light the two entrance-halls of the outer front. constructed.
Examine
(fig.
(il)
how
these openings are
THE lONIANS OF ASIA, "
and
The window forms consists of
ETC.
189
a box-frame built into the opening-,
two uprights
Window
two cross-pieces
A,
of Ionian House.
either side three tie-pieces C,
B,
and on
Fig. 63.
which constitute the thickness
of the stone wall, and are framed into other uprights on the inside. "
the
The
interspaces
soffit
and the
D
are filled
sill.
A
by wooden
cross-frame divides the
into four parts, in each of which
Thus the hand never comes The.se window-frames
panels, as well as
is
in
window
hinged a latticed sash
E.
contact with the stone.
have the additional advantage of
THE HAJUTATIONS OF MAN.
iQo
keeping up the irregular masonry which surrounds them.
The
beams
pieces f form cciHng
projecting outside and
carrying the plate G, which receives the rafters of the roof
— simple
round poles upon which, are nailed the planks
covered with are glazed readily,
The
b\'
compose the
that
tiles
to
fire
make
roofing.
These
tiles
the rain water run off more
and to prevent the dust from remaining on them.
roofings thus formed presenting clear and brilliant
colours,
and shining
in
the sun like gold or
are plea-
silver,
sant to the sight, and prevent the heat from penetrating as it
would " I
if
the tiles w^ere unglazed."
see that every arrangement has been
Do
dwellings agreeable and healthy.
these
made
to render
they never
build in this country with unburnt brick or clay as in Assyria "
and Egypt?"
No, never
;
because we have violent rains that
weeks, and the ground
"Our timber
is
often shaken
constructions
last
some
by earthquakes.
surrounded by stone are
proof against these shocks, and prevent the
damp from
penetrating into the interior.
"You
will
understand that these coffers of wood and
beams support the walls, and prevent them from disuniting.
Look how securely the portal is supported by this timber The two ends of the walls cannot stir, strongly
screen.
stayed as they
are,
and kept
in
Formerly
place everywhere.
walls of unburnt brick were built in our country as
by
the Medes, but they were soon injured fell
"
among
the damp, and
to pieces at the least agitation of the ground."
But
if
timber should
fail,
could you not employ stone,
not only for your columns and points of support, but also for lintels
and cornices
?
"
"
Probably
:
not been obliged to do so; moreover, as
we have before, we
hitherto I
said
prefer to avoid contact with stone in our dwellings, shall
always be obliged,
in
and we
conformity with local usage, to
line the interior surbases. at least, with
wood."
THE lONIANS OF At
ASIA, ETC.
this point in the conversation, the
191
master of the house
joined the three interlocutors, and asked them to go into
Shaded by the glossy
the garden.
foliage of lemon-trees,
and reclining on a carpet spread over a very
light
bronze
couch, was the mistress of the house, surrounded by three little
boys.
A female slave of the Semitic race was waving a
large fan of palm-leaves over the head of her mistress
another woman, seated at her the children,
A
who were
;
while
was singing to amuse
feet,
listening attentively.
was
rivulet, clear as crystal,
rippling along a channel
hollowed out of the trunk of a
tree,
and, separating into
small irrigation trenches, was lost amid the grass and flowers.
The
mistress
was
attired in a long white robe,
in brilliant colours, slit
on both
A
rous delicate folds.
embroidered
falling in
was adorned witha wide, rich, gold
Her
;
nume-
enveloped
closely-fitting corsage
the bust, reaching as far as the hip
wise over the breast.
and
sides,
the neck was bare, and
collar,
hair, of a
which
fell
crescent-
dark fawn colour,
fell
over her shoulders in long and luxuriant tresses, and a coiffure of transparent tissue, in
which gold threads were
interwoven, surrounded her head. cled her bare arms.
On
Bracelets of gold encir-
seeing Eudexion and the visitors
approach, she smiled courteously; then addressing the architect,
she said to him in a tone of indifference
not visited the treasurer's house
"It
is
large
covered with
and
beautiful,
fi.nely- wrought
from various quarters
Egyptian
bronzes, light,
;
:
"
Hast thou
" }
adorned with stone columns,
sculpture,
and many ornaments
you see Median vases, Tyrrhenian and Assyrian carpets, and
statues,
transparent hangings placed over the area of the
courts." " Is it
not shameful to
when one "
These
is
make such
entrusted with the public
articles are presents
a display of luxury,
money } "
from the merchants
sideration of a remission of duties.
It is
in
con-
a mere tasteless
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
192
accumulation
and
;
prefer this house,
I
in the place suited for
and costly
rare "
where everything though
to that one, filled
it is
;
built
"
"
yourself?
tiiis
No
but be-
;
has been arranged by a mistress of refined
it
is
with
objects."
Yes because you
cause
it,
and who can appreciate things
taste,
at their right value."
The lady smiled at this compliment, and addressing the " What do you think of Ionia, visitors said you who come from such remote parts, and have visited so many
—
:
countries
"that
?
" It
"
seems to
us,"
Epergos hastened to
reply,
the most beautiful country in the world, and in-
it is
habited by the most amiable and polished of nations."
"Thou flattcrcst me but never mind, for flattery is sweet when it is addressed to the country one loves." " And which is the envy of so many enemies," replied the master "for while we have to struggle with the Pelasgi, these strangers ;
;
announce an invasion of barbarians from the north-eastern " Indeed,"
mountains." "
"
wife.
Oh
!
"
said
you need not be anxious the lonians will not fight these barbarians until your children themselves
Epergos,
have to shall
responded his
have
;
left
the earth."
The lady became
A
pensive.
murmur
of voices was
heard without, and a slave came and whispered some words in the car of his master,
who immediately directed his
towards the entrance of the house.
"What
is
women.
then.''" said the beautiful Ionian addressing her *'
Some
Evidently
people on business," replied the singer.
Her husband,
disquieted, the mistress of the house arose.
pale and tottering, was re-entering the garden.
questioning looks of his wife his only reply was priests of Poseidon.
.
.
the fleet does not return.
are wanted to appease the god." "
Ah
!
"
Ten
"
And
and what victims
" .''
children of noble birth." .
.
.
thev are asking
for thine
."
.''
.
steps
the matter,
.
.
:
To
the
"
The
.victims
THE lONIANS OF ASIA, "
For one
"
Why
ETC.
193
" !
not for
now rousing and with an instinctive movement "
three
all
herself like a lioness,
said the mother,
!
enveloping her children in her long robe.
Overwhelmed with sorrow, his eyes fixed on the ground, his arms falling forwards, the master seemed incapable
and
And thou hast told these continued his wife, " that thy child was here, "
of a suggestion or a reply. priests,"
.
.
.
him up to them, But answer then
that thou wouldst give
hast said that
?
.
.
.
—
!
three didst thou point out?
decorate him for sacrifice
"I could say nothing
?
—
.
.
Which
.
.
not so
thou
?
which of the
.
.
Must
.
Which
?
could
I
.
Say!
.
is it
not
I
" ?
not answer
.
.
the
.
priests are waiting." "
Well
choose then
!
!
"
and with a hasty movement she
pushed forward her children, who uttering cries of terror and grief.
ing herself on these three
fell
at their father's feet,
But immediately throw-
her bare arms, and pressing them to her bosom
may come and
that they
have four
Go and
"
embrace, she added,
for the
;
tell
in
a stifling
the priests of Poseidon
take their victims,
— they
shall
to look
upon the scene
as
if
he were
apathy and the vague expression of
his
in
one they ask."
The master seemed a stranger
them up
creatures, taking
little
his
features contrasted with the violent gestures and the infu-
looks of the
riated at
some distance
mistress.
off,
.
,
.
Epergos and Doxius,
were inquiring of the slave the cause
of the trouble that had so suddenly befallen this family, so tranquil a few it
so
"
said Doxius.
!
clenched his "
Come
!
slumber,
wards
moments
fists.
" said
" If the
before.
Epergos shrugged Outside the
the master, as
"we must have done
if
gods
will
have
his shoulders
murmur was
and
increasing.
waking up from a heavy
with it!"
his wife with his eyes closed,
And
going to-
he took at hazard the
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
194
arm
of one of his children.
go,
and seeming- calmed
him, and
No
the poor
let
little
creature
once, followed her hus-
Arrived at the garden-gate, she placed herself before
band. "
She all at
!
others
"
then, shrieking, seized said she, " not
Doricmes
the ;
once
child
more.
take one of the two
" .
!
.
.
The gods have decided it." " Not Doricmes it shall not be Doricmes
"
!
;
"
"
Silence,
Well
And
!
woman
the gods have decided
;
take him then
;
it."
and woe be to thee
" !
while the father was entering the passage which
conducted to the court, the mother, with dishevelled hair
and
furious mien, returned to her
two other children who
the hands of the
women, snatched them
had remained
in
and regained the house. Next day this beautiful dwelling was a heap of cinders. Maddened by grief, and accusing the gods, their priests, and
hastih- away,
her husband, the wretched mother, after having suffocated
own hand them in their
with her
the two children that remained to her,
laid
little
beds, heaped around
playthings, their clothes, and
and
its
them
their
that belonged to them,
pyre of souvenirs. ...
set fire to this
On
all
smoking ruins the master was received by a fuiy " Doricmes will have had
with the reiterated exclamation
a splendid funeral
:
" !
Asiatic Ionian
CHAPTER
XXVII.
THE HELLENES.
THE
surge of
Aryan emigration was
rolling ever west-
wards, and numerous tribes belonging to this race had established themselves on the plateaus of Thessaly, Epirus, and Thrace. Energetic, hardy, and intrepid, they took possession of the countries already occupied
mingled with the Hellenes, the
latter,
by the
Pelasgi,
became
and occupied, under the name of
countries situated
between Thessaly and
Peloponnesus, part of the islands of the Archipelago, and
even some
districts of
Asia Minor.
Divided into four great branches, the Hellenes com-
and the European lonians. Arts, commerce, manufactures, and agriculture soon attained a most extraordinary development among these
prised the Achaeans, the vEolians, the Dorians,
active
gions
and warlike peoples, when they had
settled in those re-
— so favourable to the increase of wealth of
all
which had been previously occupied by the Pelasgi. the cities which rose on the Hellenic
soil,
its
commerce, and the singular aptitude of
for
works of
its
its
its
marine,
inhabitants
of every description.
Destroyed by the Persians, its
Among
Athens acquired
a marked preponderance from the importance of
skill
kinds
it
speedily rose again from
more beautiful and glorious than before. Around Acropolis covered by sacred buildings, the city extended ruins
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
196
far
and wide, with
and
temples,
its
public places and edifices,
houses intermingled with verdure.
its
No
its
city displayed greater activity
ing from Asia
coming
into
it
an
seemed as
if
in
;
for
Possessing, at the epoch of
ants' nest.
greatest power, the three ports of Munychia,
the Piraeus,
it
any one com-
entering Athens he was its
Phalerum and
covered a district whose circumference mea-
sured two hundred stadia (twenty-four miles).
But
it
around the Acropolis that the houses were crowded gether and the population always in activity.
was to-
There wag-
gons were passing to and
fro, filled
with merchandise from
the ports or conveying
thither.
The
it
streets
and public
places in which people passed their lives presented a busy
and noisy scene.
who came
Strangers,
to
buy or
to
sell,
were continually entering or leaving the shops and places of manufacture, and slaves were carrying messages or burdens.
Women
as well as
men were
to be seen in the streets,
going to the markets, the public games and the meetings of corporate bodies.
From
the earliest hours of the daylarge
numbers of peasants might be seen bringing in vegetables, fruit, and poultry, and crying their wares in the streets. Houses of the higher class occupied the second zone ;
they generally possessed a garden and sometimes outbuild-
Around them were to be seen clients and parasites, waiting for the hour when the master should make his appearance and whiling away the time ings of considerable extent.
;
in
discussing the news of the day, repeating the rumours,
true or false, that were current in the city to talk,
that
;
getting the slaves
and laughing among themselves at the strangers
happened to be passing, or addressing them with a
view to make fun of their accent, garb or dress.
The house zone,
of Chremylus, recently built in that second
was a subject of remark
who had
lately
for all the idlers.
Chremylus,
become wealthy by means of commerce,
THE HELLENES.
197
and of certain transactions of a more or
less creditable
character in the colonies, was an object of envy and
cism to most people, and of admiration for some
and energy.
justice to his intelligence
degree of influence liberality
;
He enjoyed
in the public assemblies
criti-
who
did
a certain
— thanks to
his
while he took care to secure the good graces of
the archons and to enrich the temples.
We
have
64) the ground-plan of the residence of
(fig.
Athenian
this
The entrance X opens on
citizen.
The
the pub-
bounded on either side by narrow This entrance X opens on the court O, which is streets. surrounded by porticos. At A is the porter's lodge, and at lic
road.
site
is
B the rooms for the slaves, with kitchen at C and latrines
From
at a.
which
this first court, in the centre of
is
a
small fountain with a basin which receives the rain water,
the passage
and
is
D
leads into the inner court E, which
H
tion-room, at
the
is
a large storeroom containing provi-
and wine and
at
I
;
the small dining-room itricliniuni)
the cooking-room for the family being at b.
larger
At F
private altar. sions
is
by porticos. At G is the recepstrong room for valuables, and at S the
likewise surrounded
The
large triclinium
is
at K.
to the gyiiczceiLin^ containing
common room
J
;
with latrines at
The passage
m
admits
the bedrooms P along the
women, with its small enclosed garden, and closets at e. The quarters for visitors are entered by the passage t, and consist of bedrooms V, a portico M, a
portico T, a small garden
for the
into the lane for the servants,
extend
in the direction
This house
is
At d is an opening when required. The gardens
and closets/.
Z.
situated on the slopes of the hill which to
the south-west looks towards the Acropolis
;
thus
it
is
sheltered from the violent winds which sometimes blow
from
this quarter.
From
the large dining-hall and from the terrace L, which
19S
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
Plan of Athenian House.
Fig. 64.
THE HELLENES. adjoins
there
it,
a charming prospect
is
of the garden
trees
this terrace
L there
left
is
The
about twelve steps.
winds.
From
above the
the
hill
of the Areopagus.
a descent to the garden by
was chosen with a view heat and the troublesome
position
to protection against the sun's
hills
for,
;
seen the city overlooked by the
is
Acropolis, and towards the
From
199
the portico of the gynaeceum are seen the
extending towards the north, covered with houses
surrounded by olive-trees Pentelicus,
;
and
in the
background Mount
whose bare and rugged flanks present the
changing colours of the opal. In the dwelling of Chremylus the various departments
were arranged at the proprietor's discretion, and the architect only
conformed
part of the house
is
to
give an account of the commissions they
have executed, or to receive orders. to speak to one of them, he takes
room
;
his
bedchamber being
women and younger
If
first
is
into his reception-
he can easily repair
gynseceum reserved
for
children.
off,
not being in communication with
court except through the passage
consecrated to
/.
All that part
beyond the wide entrance-hall domestic life and only the intimate
of the habitation which
D
him
master wishes
he entertain friends, they have their separate apart-
ments, which are shut the
If the
at R,
to that reception-room or to the
the
front
In this court O assemble the agents or factors
the owner.
who come
Thus the
to his instructions.
assigned to the external relations of
is
;
friends of the family are admitted into the second court; for
example,
if
they are invited to a banquet,
— which
is
held in the great hall K.
The master usually takes his meals one or two members of his famil}- who in the smaller
room
l,
with his wife and live in
the house,
the couches of which will hold six
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN. persons
;
whereas
fifteen guests
can be accommodated on
the couches of the great hall K.
Chremylus has spared nothing to render his house one The columns of most sumptuous in the city.
of the
Pentelican marble support architraves of wood, surmounted
by
and cornices overlaid with stucco and ornamented
friezes
Everywhere the walls arc coated and the
with delicate painting.
with fine smooth plaster, adorned with paintings
Epergos,
who on
had sojourned
several occasions
considerable time, in Hellas (for he liked
than any other he had
had not a
visited),
;
wrought and coloured.
ceilings are of timber artistically
its
for a
people more
little
contributed
to the progress of the arts and of manufacturing industry
among
the Athenians
while Doxius had remained nearly
;
He had
the whole time in Assyria and Egypt.
the
fall
rians,
witnessed
of Nineveh, the war of the Persians with the Assy-
and the termination of
was subjugated by Cyrus. to meet his
companion
of his criticisms on striving populations,
in Hellas,
all
empire which
this powerful
When Doxius
had happened
he had not been sparing
he saw done among
its
active
and
which were constantly changing their
government, and inclined to free themselves from their traditions.
whom
He had
predicted the ruin of the Hellenes,,
he regarded as unruly children, always citing Egypt
and Asia as the sources of
all wisdom though Egypt was and the Median empire was crumbling So during one of the last visits which Doxius ;
visibly declining
to pieces.
paid
to
Athens, after
its
destruction
by the army of
Xerxes, he was endeavouring to induce Epergos to quit for ever
these devastated
shores
;
but Epergos,
full
of
confidence in the genius of his friends the Athenians, set to
work again with them to
restore the
had formerly aided the Aryan
down by
the tempest.
burned
city, as
to restore his hut
he
thrown
Resides, Epergos liked discussion,.
THE HELLENES. and for
many
no other country had he had so
in
opportunities
as at Athens.
it
When
the Hellenes began to occupy a large part of
Greece, after having subjugated the Pelasgi, they brought
with them notions of arts of a very rude character, borrowed
The
from Asia.
Pelasgi,
on their
we have
structures of which
had made but
part,
when they
progress since the time
little
massive
built those
But the
seen a specimen.^
various relations which were soon established between the
Hellenes, the lonians, and the Lycians of the coasts of Asia, gave to the
were
like those
first
the notions of art in which they
They began
deficient.
therefore to build habitations
of their Asiatic neighbours, while preserving
Wood
something of Pelasgic customs. ing was however by no
suitable for build-
means abundant
in
Greek lands,
while there was a profusion of calcareous stone of rare beauty.
They began
capitals of stone or
therefore to substitute columns and
marble
for those of
then led to give these capitals a
than the lonians gave them, their burden.
much
lest
wood
they should break under
Their general form was however retained,
wood terminated by volutes and these For a long time, howthe name " Ionic."
that of a capital in capitals retained ever,
and were
;
smaller development
;
they contented themselves with this modification
in-
duced by the change of the material.
We
cannot say whether
it
was Epergos who
first
pointed
— a branch of the Hellenes, as stated — the want of relation between the form of Ionic capital and the material thenceforth employed — namely, out to the Dorians, above,
calcareous stone.
this
Certain
it is,
however, that these Dorians,
induced by considerations of this nature, abandoned the traditional form of the
wooden
capitals to adopt a
springing from the use of stone. ^
new one
There must have been
See figures 56, 57, and
58.
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
202
long discussions on this question
may
Hellas, though they
reason triumphed
;
among
the architects of
not have been preserved
but
:
the Ionic capital, derived from that of
wood, was abandoned, and that which was adopted took
name
"
Doric."
This sturdy
capital,
the
of
which projected considerably beyond
the shaft of the column received a finer profile
;
in its original
form, gradually
and, at the time
when Chremylus
had his house built, the Doric capital already presented the most delicate outline. Chremylus had an esteem for Epergos, and had often consulted him while his house was being built so when it was finished, and he had begun to live in it, he resolved to assemble some of his friends at a banquet within its walls :
;
for the
Athenians highly prize the pleasures of the triclinium,
when shared with
intelligent persons
whose conversation
is
worth hearing.
Chremylus had the selected
them with
art of enlivening his guests
care,
and
set
;
having
them talking on a sub-
ject adapted to excite their enthusiasm, he would, as a
man
of intelligence, be silent himself, and leave
discussion.
them
to the
If the conversation languished, or a loss of
per was impending, he would politely revive pleasant turn to acrid debate.
Any
it
tem-
or give a
one who was a guest
of Chremylus considered himself fortunate, for they were
chosen from the most refined society of Athens. this
was not the
least
of which the envious
of those occasions
made
And
of jealousy
a handle against the wealthy
parvenu.
For
this inauguration
banquet the house had been deco-
rated with care, and the gardens
filled
with flowers.
The
guests arrived in the afternoon, elegantly apparelled, and
met beneath the first portico. There were ten of them for Chremylus was of opinion that for the party to be a pleasant ;
THE HELLENES. one
this
number should not be exceeded. They were no and among them were two philo-
strangers to each other
sophers of
;
high repute
two archons, a celebrated and Doxius. to be
203
It
in
Athens, a dramatic author,
painter, the architect,
was not the custom
present at banquets.
at that
Without keeping
Interior of Athenian House.
Epergos
time for
women
his guests
Fig. 65.
when he knew that they were assembled, came to receive them under the first portico, and introduced them into the second court, separated from the
waiting, Chremylus,
first
by curtains woven
in lively colours.
This second court.
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
204
also surrounded
by
porticos supported
white marble, more spacious than the
by Doric columns of first,
afforded a view
of the gardens and the city above them, through the
Towards the extremity of
colonnade at the further end.'
the open part of the court was a marble fountain with
an agreeable freshness (fig
basin, diffusing
65).
way from
two-thirds of the
finely fluted
coloured red on the lower part, which was
its
The columns, the top, were
left
smooth; while
the marble of the upper part was slightly tinted with a very pale yellow enriched with black and white ornamentation
under the ovolo of the
The
capital.
architrave,
composed
of pieces of cedar coupled together, was covered with a plaster coating as thin as an Q'g^ shell,
The
yellow.
and also coloured
was composed of triglyphs over each
frieze
— triglyphs which were only the ends of the beams
column
supporting the joists of the ceiling of the porticos
between them
fillings in
;
and
of thick planks of cedar covered
Next came the
with a delicately painted plaster coating.
projecting cornice, likewise of wood, carrying the gutter
made
of coloured terra cotta, which was pierced with several
openings to
mounted painted
let
the rain water through, and which was sur-
by carved heads in
light
The
of animals.
blue, contrasted with the
triglyphs,
tints
of the
decorations near them, which were in red, black, and white,
on a yellow ground.
The
brilliancy of the sunlight
and the azure of the sky
wonderfully harmonised this light and transparent colouring, set off
by the red and dark yellow background of the
portico walls.
The
guests did not
the architect
;
for
fail
to congratulate
they knew
had a great esteem for him. " address your compliments to ^
Chremylus and
the master of the house
tliat "
Yes,"
this
said
Chremylus,
good Eicos,
See the plan, figure 64.
for
I
have
THE HELLENES. sometimes made him very angry sive
!
that
is
my
.
— representing
the god Pan
but he
.
is
so expen-
excuse,"
After they had admired the triclinium
.
205
young
paintings of the small
girls
bringing offerings to
—and the refined beauty of the bronze couches,
with silver, they repaired to the garden which Chremylus had improvised. He had had trenches sunk in the living rock and filled with vegetable soil. There
inlaid
and the lemon-tree, rose-trees and
flourished the orange
and a profusion of aromatic
laurels,
Not only
plants.
so
great expense the master had had transplanted thither
grown
olives, fig-trees
and
;
at
full-
plane-trees.
Small channels nicely hollowed out
in
marble distributed
the water in every direction, and slaves were constantly
engaged
When
keeping the walks and shrubs
in
in order.
the supper was ready, they repaired to the larger
where each took his place (fig 66). The viands and wines were immediately brought by young slaves, the best to be found in Athens; whilst two flute-players, moving triclinium,
backwards and forwards hall, filled
lively
and
in the
gardens before the
now
the air with melodies
soft
and
festal
slow,
now
spirited.
Soon, thanks to the flagons of excellent Lesbian, the conversation became animated. " I
regard Athens as the queen of
''What
is
tedious
ceremonial,
the
magnificence of
compared
cities," said
the
to
Epergos.
Persians with
the
its
enjoyed
liberty
here?" "Licence," said Doxius.
"What," said Epergos, to provoke
his
companion, "are
those Egyptian banquets amid which a cofiin
about —
to
induce
the
guests
(say the
is
carried
inhabitants
of
Memphis) to be more eager in the enjoyment of the good things of earth and during which all the talk is of
—
THE HABITATJONS OF MAN.
206
bags of wheat and flocks of geese, compared with these social gatherings, in which one can scarcely say which is to be preferred, the
good cheer or the conversation
The Large
give
me some more
old wine
"By
—
'tis
Boy
Fig. 66.
of that partridge stewed in the lees of
a dish
Bacchus,"
Triclinium.
?
fit
for the
gods
said Doxius,
" !
"take care of thy
wits,
Epergos."
"Nonsense, Doxius!
my
ideas are as clear as this air
THE HELLENES. which allows us to see from
207
this spot
the
sentinels
oi>
interrupted one of the philosophers, "can
we
the ramparts of the Acropolis."
"Ah!"
ever affirm that
we
"I fancy so at
thou wilt allow that
it
we
the gods
all
it
;
does
here
!
me
.
" Therefore,
and takes again
for
"
!
only an appearance
is
" }
a cup
is
— and
it is
full
I
:
drink what
the cup
emptied
is
thy mind that experiences
granted
this
.
,
my
;
;
is
.
.
good
fellow,
.
Distasis off shall
house and couches and garden,
let
me
the
;
!
,
.
.
on appearances,
live
nothing but appearance
is
a
there-
Give him something to drink, or we
.
everything but himself, will have vanished, and
there
it
me
this pleasure
— nothing more."
good
said the other philosopher, "there
tumble into annihilation Well,
\
Art thou certain
."
.
"Ah!
friend; but
a great deal of good and gives
great deal of pleasure fore
see
good
really exists.
even of thy own existence
By
my
Epergos,
so, all
nothing proves that
contains
?
least."
"Yes, thou fanciest
"
"
see a thing
if
name makes no
difference to the thing." " is
But
does
it
make
a great difference
only an appearance residing
;
for if all
own
our
in
spirits,
we
see
a product
own mind, nothing exists but mind." "Yes it is all very well to say so after a good
of our
;
but
if
dinner
within twenty-four hours hence thou shouldst not
find the
appearance of a glass of wine and a
to repair thy appearance of a body,
I
slice
of
should like to
ham know
what would become of thy mind " Is it not more correct to say that the soul is only the harmony established by our organs duly performing their !
functions
.''
If
judge of things
thou hast caught a in the
same way
as
fever, if
does thy mind
thou wert
in
health
.'*
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
2o8
And
docs not an appearance of a stone falling on thy
appearance of a skull send thy mind packing?" "
Packing where
"Who frog!
can
perhaps into the
tell!
appearance of
a
."
.
.
" ?
"Come, do not discompose
thyself;
drink Chrcmylus'
health with me." "
"Well!
said Epergos, "if
we
let
our two philosophers
get wrangling on this ground, what shall
One wants
to persuade us that there
in the world,
we come
beautiful ceiling
what we sec
to
!
how
grateful
clearly. is
it
?
their time in
Let us hold by sound reason,
skin.
and keep
to
but a single soul
and the other that souls pass
changing their please,
is
.
.
.
to the eye,
if
you
What a and how
refreshing to be cool while this opening gives us a view
of the horizon
all
burning with
perfumes of the garden.
light,
Mayst
and admits to us the
thou, Chremylus, long
enjoy these good things thyself and make thy friends partakers of thy happiness the architect, "tell for
But," said he, addressing
!
doing everything
in the
not thou
make
just walking, of marble "
money
—
"Yet,
humour
why
didst
the entablatures of the porticos under which
replied Eicos, "
columns
in building
in the
very best manner,
we were
"Why!
thou wert
us, Eicos, since
in
" ?
Chremylus considered that even
marble
I
was spending too much
in fact, ruining him."
in
your temples," continued Epergos,
"among
all
the Dorians, you put entablatures of stone upon columns
of the same material
and these entablatures do not
differ
sensibly in appearance from those which thou hast
made
here of wood.
Is
;
it
logically consistent to give similar
forms to architectural members made of different materials
Among materials
}
Medes and in Ionia, I observed that the employed dictated the form adopted in the
the
THE HELLENES.
209
am
not finding fault
Understand me
architecture.
I
:
with thy porticos, which are admirable; but
I
should be
glad to hear what thou hast to say on the subject."
"Thou knowest more about the matter than I do, Epergos but thou wishest to make me talk the question ;
is
:
a complicated one, however, and
tire
I
am
afraid
should
I
you."
"By no
means," said the guests, "there
always some-
is
thing good to be got from a discussion between clever
people
:
go on therefore."
"Let me have a
Chremylus
tablet, then,
;
cannot
for I
explain myself without the help of a drawing."
One
of the slaves having brought one of those boards
painted
which
on
white,
merchants
reckon
up
their
accounts, and a piece of black stone, Eicos drew in a few
minutes the two diagrams
(fig.
6^^
;
then, having given the
board to the slave to hold, so that every one could see "
Those who have
it,
he spoke thus
:
ture adopted
by the Dorians, perhaps know from what a
on the architec-
reflected
variety of sources they have derived the elements of their
Epergos,
architecture.
world,
am.
is
more
Some
who
has seen
so
informed respecting
fully
much
this fact
the forms of the order adopted tion of those early structures.
anything of the kind of Asia, where they
wood a
I
assert that the buildings of the Dorians in
early times were originally constructed of wood,
in
of the
than
;
for
still
what
by them
For myself, I
and that
are only a tradiI
do not believe
have seen on the coasts
continued to build almost entirely
short time ago, does not resemble the style in
which we formerly
built here.
I
maintain, on the contrary,
that the necessity under which the Dorians lay of employ-
—countries — dictated the forms of certain
ing stone in the countries where they settled
which are not rich
in
timber
important parts of the order originated by them.
Thus,
lap! iELJ)
S a (SS fianl luE T-^u-?:
H
The Doric Order. — Fig
67.
THE HELLENES. example,
for
•capital
B
of the Doric If
a
to be placed on a post to support a beam,
is
to relieve
and
;
A
evident that the form
could not be giv^en to a capital in wood.
cap of wood
and
is
it
211
it,
its
those
in fact
section
would be as
who have
visited
I
have drawn at
Lycia and Caria
inay have seen wooden capitals of this form, and imitations
To
of them in stone, preserving that form.
decorate the
extremities of the capital, they have sculptured volutes
upon them
;
and
it is
of the Ionic capital.
with
capital,
its
to
them we must look
But
for the origin
very evident that the Doric
it is
round columns and
square abacus, has
its
no relation to the form that would be given to a piece of wood. "
That
in early
times they should often have
traves of wood, such as ings,
is
we
perfectly natural.
still
make
in
made
archi-
our private build-
Nevertheless, you will observe
that the intercolumniations of the Doric order, in our oldest
monuments, are very narrow
and that the reason of
;
their
being so was that too great a bearing should not be given to lintels or architraves of stone.
If these architraves
had
been made of wood, the columns need not have been brought so close together, nor so great a projection given to the echini of the capitals
the further
we go back
;
and we see
projection of these Doric capitals
column,
in
distinctly that
to antiquity, the greater
beyond the
is
the
shaft of the
order as far as possible to relieve the architraves,
which were then cut great tenacity
;
for the
most part from stone of no
whereas, as soon as they employed harder
stones, such as marble, they enlarged the intercolumniations,
and diminished the projection of the echinus of the capital. Moreover, if we employ neither stone nor marble for architraves, but wood, we make the intercolumniations wider, as
"Next
you have seen here let
in the courts.
us pass to the
frieze.
Some
have, in
like
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN. manner, asserted that the triglyphs which usually decorate the frieze in the Doric order represent the ends of the
wooden
which originally rested on the architrave
joists
no conclusion
more unwarranted.
is
In the
first
place, in
our most ancient Doric edifices there are triglyphs frieze
under the pediments, as there are
Now
friezes.
the
in
:
the
in
lateral
the joists had their bearings upon the
if
they could not at the same time bear upon the architraves in front and therefore their ends would not be visible there. It will be said that we have lateral architraves,
;
here an imitation the kind.
them we
—a
tradition
:
I
believe
it
is
nothing of
appeal again to our most ancient buildings.
I
In
often observe that the triglyphs are stone blocks
supporting the cornice, perpendicularly above each column, over the middle of the intercolumniation and the angles while the metopes these triglyphs "
The
— that
—remain
is
to say, the spaces left between
void.
on the other hand,
cornice,
sequence of the projection of sequently
its
to the
this original
employment of But
able time.
roof timbers
con-
;
form must have been partly suggested by the
predominance of wood be said that
evidently the con-
is
the
— and
But
the construction.
in
must
it
form was especially appropriated
stone,
and that
in this that
it is
for a very consider-
show
the Athenians
the versatility of their genius
—without
belying the forms
which the material ought to
dictate, a
Doric entablature
may be composed details "
A
excepted
Let us
first
;
as well with timber as with stone, a few
and these two drawings
take the structure
architraves B are laid,
stones
not be
is
—
imperfect, there
so.
in is
in
stone
two parts
;
will :
for
prove
it.
on the capital if
one of the
a chance that the other
may
These architraves bear from one column to
another, the joints being perpendicular to the centres of
these columns.
But then, as
I
was saying, the
inter-
THE HELLENES.
213
columniations must be narrow enough to prevent these stone architraves from having- too long a bearing.
and
we employ
There-
we do not allow more than two diameters (taken half-way down the column) between them, whereas if we adopt a wooden entablature tliese Next, the intercolumniations may be much wider. architraves being in place, we put over each column fore, if
in the
this material,
middle of each intercolumniation, a block of
which the name of triglyph
stone, to
is
given, because
it
is
usual to cut three vertical grooves on the exterior face of these blocks, to express their function as supports.
you
observe that when
will
of rigidity to a
example grooves
this
is
the vertical line
D
is
flutings,
On
we may
tween the triglyphs
;
or
lines,
these
tri-
many
little piers on the archiwhose projection and profile
placed,
remove the gutters E from the " This done,
— the columns, for
by
a matter relating to art.
glyphs which thus form so trave, the cornice
For
desire to give an appearance
or vertical support
stile
— we repeat
;
we
and put
work beneath.
faces of the
or leave void the spaces be-
fill-in
at the
projection receives the ceiling of
G, whose composed of
back a course
wood
H,
small beams which are covered with paintings or terra cotta,
— beams which carry the panels
joists
of glazed terra cotta,
receives the courses of stone
L of the
Upon
roofing.
I,
between which are placed
or of wood.
j K,
on which
these rafters are
small purlins M, which serve to carry the
them from
slipping.
You
The
cornice
rest the rafters
notched
tiles,
the
and hinder
observe that this structure
is
very simple, that each part serves a purpose, and that, while nothing
is
deficient, there
which could be suppressed as fore,
is
not a single
useless.
member
It is evident, there-
that everything here has been combined in rational
conformity with the nature of the material employed, namely, stone.
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
214
"Is
desired to construct with wood, for economy, or
it
because we want wide intercolumniations and a slighter structure
On
?
capital A, of stone or marble,
tlie
we put
the two girders P of wood, which form the architrave, then
the two
listel
beam
whose end
O,
Upon
cornice.
N
plates
we put the
over each column
;
forms a triglyph or support for the
o'
these triglyphs
we
place the plate Q, re-
ceiving the rafters R, which, overhanging, form a projection,
and receive
at their extremity a
of the eaves-drip, an upper plate terra cotta,
posing the
the gutters of
Between the
drip.
— may be inserted the planks V com-
It is in this
frieze.
forming the front
only show over the columns
in this case,
and not between them
S,
T, to receive
and the under part of the
—which,
triglyphs
board
manner that the entablature
of the portico in the great court of this house has been
The
made.'
timbers, being all in the free
spaces invariably
useless piece.
bearing, and
As
columns. tected
left
Here, as
decay.
in
and with
between them, cannot ferment or the stone structure,
The wooden serve
air,
there
is
not a
girders are relieved in their
no other purpose than to stay the
these timbers are
carefully painted, pro-
from the wet, and ventilated, they
may
last for
centuries. "
You
see, therefore, that
the form given to the entabla-
ture of the Doric order, can be adapted, with
some unim-
portant variations, to a structure in stone as well as to one of
wood
;
in neither case involving the necessity of falsifying
the form or the structure.
cially in
I will
some
architects
the fact for myself; that friezes this
is
not dissemble the circum-
combine the two methods, espeMagna Graecia, where I have been able to ascertain
stance that
is,
they do not hesitate to lay
and courses of stone upon architraves of wood but reprehensible, and is considered bad architecture. ;
^
See Figure 65.
THE HELLENES.
and compressible, crosswise cannot be suitable for bearing stone which is
Wood, which of the grain,
compact, " I
215
elastic, light,
is
and heavy.
inelastic,
say again
:
is
it
wooden
scarcely admissible that a
structure suggested the stone structure in the composition
of the Doric order
converse
;
;
indeed
especially since
I
should rather suppose the farther
the
we go back
into
antiquity the
more the entablatures of the Doric order
deviate from the style of a structure in wood, to conform that
to
by the use of
dictated
stone.
Still
must be
it
acknowledged that our architects have been able to adapt the
form to the structure
By Athene
"
!
" said
understands his art
!
Chremylus,
fill
his cup,
skilfully
both cases."
in
Eicos shows us that he
"
he must be thirsty
I
;
do
not regret having got him to put wooden entablatures on the columns of
my
porticos, since
that they are in place there.
he demonstrates so ably
But,
— the
rogue
!
— he
did
not tell me all this when we were talking about putting them up; indeed he assured me that it was a shame to
put these painted timbers on columns of marble " It
" !
would evidently have been better to complete them
with marble," replied Eicos.
"Yes, certainly
;
but could you protect
me
against the
who were beginning to croak like frogs after when they saw these marble columns carted here
informers rain,
.''
And what would
they have said
if,
after the columns, the
ox-teams had brought the entablatures of marble
" !
Allow me to ask thee one more question," said Epergos. saw among the Medes, and formerly in Assyria, as also
" " I
among the Tyrrhenians and even the Etruscans, vaultings made of brick, unburnt or burnt, and likewise of stone and ;
here
I
have often recommended
this
kind of construction,
which has the advantage of protecting buildings from
and preserving the
interior effectually
from heat and
fire,
cold.
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
2i6
Now
both the Hellenes and the Dorians of Sicily and of
Magna
Graecia have often seen vaultings
bouring peoples
;
why do
among
the neigh-
they decline to adopt them ?"
There are two principal reasons why they do not," " the first, that the Greeks do not like to replied Eicos "
;
adopt the methods of barbarians it
or, if
;
they do adopt them,
The second
with very considerable modifications.
is
that Greek artisans make a point of doing honour to labour,
and that vaultings require a coarse kind of
toil
is
their
which
Whether they are built of brick or of stone, recourse must be had to a great combination of apthick walls must be pliances, and a multitude of workmen is
not to their taste.
;
built,
the vaults must be turned, and the haunches
Now
thou must observe that we do not use lime or mortar
in
our masonry, as
is
the custom in
Media and
filled in.
in
Egypt,
but only to make plastering; and vaults cannot be built without mortar.
form
We
might certainly compel slaves to per-
work, which requires more sweat than intelligence,
this
but we are averse to doing in
engaged
in
Thus
slaves are
work requiring brute painters,
are organised
not like to see barbarians in
accomplishing
employed only
for carting, for
works which they take a pride
themselves.
ground.
Our workmen
so.
who do
jealous corporations,
force, or for
bringing materials to the
Our carpenters and stone-cutters, our sculptors and are free men, endowed moreover with an excessive
amount of amour-propre: they should be appreciated
workmen to show them
;
and
I
desire that
their labour
have often seen
take their friends along a building
common
newly
finished,
the stones they had cut, or the timbers they
had framed. "
The
capitals of the portico in this residence were turned
workmen be summoned into the
and cut by four
skilful
;
if
one of them should
may
be quite
sure he will cast a loving look at the parts wrought
by him.
chance to
house, you
THE HELLENES. He knows the
217
thoroughly well whether they are on the right or It is
left side.
owing to
which
this feeling of pride,
is
sometimes beyond bearing, that we are able to secure work
whose execution
is
perfect.
It is
quite sufficient to
tell
our artisans that the work of one of his comrades careful than his, to
make him
tined to attract observation
not des-
if it is
every one tries to shirk
;
more
is
But we have
surpass himself.
great difficulty in getting even tolerable work,
one of
such cases we are obliged to have recourse to slaves. too
is
the reason
edifices
why you do
No
such as those of Egypt.
"
There
.
.
and
..." I
.
.
.
how
see
the matter stands
antagonisms whose motives
this explains
You
the
love
arts
so well that
did
I
you
a point of keeping their various expressions within
easy grasp. of
in
matter for reflection here," said Epergos, after
not perceive.
make
one could be found to
birds."
is
a moment's silence. .
This
us enormous
which — on account of work — can only be appreciated by the
cut the crowning stones, the
the height
among
not see
In
it.
many
If
your
edifices are small
other nations,
it
their parts at a glance
is
—
compared with those
because you wish to enjoy
to
embrace
all
their ensemble easily.
Hellas has no such palaces to show as those of Babylon,
which are too vast "
You
for
one day's exploration."
Not only have we no
are right.
taste for edifices
of too vast a size, and which, consisting of
juxtaposition, do not possess that
require in every
work of
art
;
many
parts in
stamp of unity which we
but thou wilt observe that
the Greeks, in contradistinction to other nations, avoid a multiplicity
Whether
it
of architectural
features
in
their
buildings.
be a temple, a public building, or a private
house, moderation
is
the supreme law
;
and
the judicious arrangement of the structure
it is rather by and the study
of the proportions that these edifices seek to please, than
by the profusion
of the ornaments
and the accumulation of
2
THE HABITA TIONS OF MAN.
1
those striking details which gratify barbarians.
we
not be forgotten that sensitive to excess
expense.
;
inclined to criticism,
who
Citizens, therefore,
and sparing of
are so fortunate as to
possess large property, must be careful not to lic
display of
it,
of the nation
cite
;
make
a pub-
and not offend the democratic sentiments
Athens has many
by a show of luxury.
who might make
our host,
citizens, like
riches
must
It
are a free people, jealous and
a display of their
but what purpose would that serve except to ex-
envy and malevolent suspicions
A
?
stranger passing
through the streets of Athens might suppose that
all its
To
inhabitants lived in dwellings nearly equal in style.
mention only one example, the house of
Clito,
which
next
is
to this, presents to the public road an entrance greatly
Yet
resembling that of Chremylus.
who
lives
on chick peas.
The
Clito
are distinguished from each other only
poverty of the
interiors, into
are admitted.
Besides,
is
a poor fellow
dwellings of the Athenians
by
the luxury or
which intimate friends alone
we have not
the resources either in
gold or labour which the kings of Egypt and Persia can
command
we have not armies
;
vient to our orders
;
it
of slaves or a plebs subser-
would be impossible
for us to
or to surpass in extent or riches the public those.countries.
It
is,
therefore, in
equal
monuments of
beauty and excellence of
form that the Greeks have attained that superiority which is
conceded to them
in
works of
art."
But what dost thou say about the use of numbers, of " which the Egyptians are so fond } " In that department the Egyptians have been our "
teachers
;
and
historical traditions agree in affirming that
we have derived from them for a long "
And
the methods in use
among
us
time past."
so
you make use of these methods
of your buildings
" .-*
in the
design
THE HELLENES. " Certainly,
219
The
they are prescribed in our schools.
Doric order, for example, which plays so important a part
most of our
in
by
structures,
is
subjected to rules determined
Not
certain numerical relations.
only, however, should
weary you by going into details on the subject, but these are mysteries which our corporations do not allow us to reI
veal to the uninitiated." "
Thou
art very
coy with thy mysteries, Eicos," said one
everybody knows them or may know
of the philosophers;
"
them by measuring
a building
;
is
it
easy enough, then, to
discover these numerical relations." " It is not so it
is
easy as thou thinkest," replied Eicos
necessary
first
to
column
is
the echinus of the capital. the column
at
what points these
wider at
rela-
base than under
its
Well, then
!
to be a certain multiple of
is
" for
Thus, for example, thou art aware
tions are determined.
that the shaft of a
know
;
if
its
the height of
diameter,
is
it
at the foot, in the middle, at the upper end, or at the third
or fourth part of the shaft that thou wilt take this diameter or
modulus
moreover,
I
i*
—
tell
me
add that
Thou
!
canst not answer. ...
in certain cases the
taken at the base, and
in
modulus
will
If,
be
others at the middle or at a third
of the height of the shaft,
how
couldst thou discover the
method adopted by the architect of such a building At any rate, what tedious experiments must be undertaken to solve .-'
the questions
Thou
!
hast no
little difficulty in
learning the
who in his simplicity does not hide thee his thoughts, who is like an opened scroll before from thee, who obeys all his instincts, and who is always near thee. Thou believest him to be gentle and affectionate character of a child,
;
but some day thou discoverest that he
supposed gentleness irritable,
is
hypocrisy.
is
cruel,
and that his
Thou thoughtest him
yet on a certain occasion he surprised thee by
his patience.
.
.
.
And
yet thou wouldst presume to find
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN. measure
out,
wliich
hand,
in
how
a building has been designed,
perfectly silent, which neither feels nor manifests
is
any sentiment, but which,
every part of
in
its
plan, contains
man
the calculations, the thoughts and sentiments, of a
whom "
perhaps thou hast never seen
Bravo! Eicos
" !
said
!
Chremylus; "crush
this philoso-
pher who presumes to discover the m}'steries of thy
A
crown "
for the victorious Eicos
Stop a moment
who,
I
have not yet answered our
brethren,
his
like
!
art
" !
pretends
make
to
architect, art
his
sanctuary of the most formidable mysteries
— the centre
the most exalted intellectual emanations.
What
sa}',
" It is beautiful, assuredly,
which glows
in
with
of
dost thou
"
Eicos, to this Thessalian apple
brilliant tint
the
?
its
carmine skin of that
the cheeks of our country girls
when they quicken their steps to be early in the market." Good Thou wilt admit that this fruit is wonderfully ''-
!
adapted to touch
;
that
An
is
it
Now
parts.-*
enveloped "
satisfy the taste, the smell, the sight,
what produced
fairly
apple-tree, probabh'."
but dost, thou think that the apple-tree
;
Wouldst thou,
apple-tree
Why
of
relation
apple, the tension of
number and arrangement
"
pulp so
"
"Very good
"
this luxurious
in its
.''
knowingly calculated the this
and the
well proportioned as a whole and
of
its its
the
diameter
soft
and shining
pips
?
skin,
of the
"
by comparing me
to an
architects erect buildings which
charm
then, conclude
" ?
not
.?
You
us because you have been planted, cultivated, and grafted to
that end
;
as a plum-tree to produce plums, a doctor
to prepare drugs,
and an armourer to make arms.
All of
you are only intermediate agents of a superior intelligence and if thy productions are better than those of any of thy
THE HELLENES. brethren,
it is
that thou hast been planted, cultivated, and
grafted.
But
if
of the apples "
An
the apple-tree were to presume to be vain
we should laugh in
produced,
it
admirable conclusion
Eicos and
of us
all
who
"
said
!
think, act,
its
branches."
Epergos smiling
;
" so
and produce, are only
unconscious organisms,"
How dost thou
"
know," continued the philosopher,
vegetables are unconscious
not hear their voice
;
Thou
?
seest or thinkest thou
they do not move,
seest, as Distasis said, that
the imperfection of thy understanding. resides in all things
only
manifests
it
it is
;
dost
?
equal in value everywhere,
ways
itself in different
;
the living being
only a fragile envelope with which
itself is
— thou
At most only The Soul of the
what does that prove
World
" that
it is
pleased to
clothe itself in order to attain an end." "
And what
"
Well!
is
that end
.''
— the
"
objected Distasis.
life that is someThat portion of the soul of the world which is assigned to each being, returns when we are dead to the common reservoir, to be anew employed, as needed and according to its quality for we may have made that
thing,
it is
fancy
I
Life
perpetuity of
;
!
;
portion worse or better than us.
.
.
When
.
"
Eicos
this
Eicos
was confided to
rat.
he acknowledges that day he has been engaged in acquiring
the talent which charms
modicum
it
the apple-tree as well as
an excellent architect
is
from his birth to the
was when
mean
I say, zve, I
man, the dog, and the
it
;
But who
us.
will assure us that
of the world's soul with which our friend
endowed, did not begin by occupying the body of a bee, which by superior industry distinguished itself is
among those
its
of
hexagon cells
?
kind, its
is.^
and made
companions
And why
}
more regular than were Does a bee know what a
cells
does
it
always make hexagonal
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN. "
Eicos talks to us
now
of mysteries in which architects
are initiated, of the laws of numbers, and of geometric figures.
It is
the facts
as
;
my
if
made to fit by describ-
opinion that those laws were
the bee were
now
to
amuse
ing the properties of the hexagon, and
itself
how
it
is
of six equilateral triangles joined at the apexes.
World
the Soul of the
work of the
in the
I
discern
bee, as I discern
every work of art and in every product of nature.
in
it
composed
Distasis believes himself alone to be the intelligence that
evokes a world which does not really exist
;
that intelligence everywhere, perpetuating
which
ter
exists,
if
within mat-
but which would be inert without
to return to our starting-point,
friend Eicos,
for myself, I see life
he
will
I
And
it.
put a question to
will
my
allow me."
"
By
"
Did man invent numbers, or did numbers exist before Did man invent the circle, or did the circle exist
man
.'
man
before "
.-'
Numbers," replied Eicos,
man
that
all
means,"
all
has done
is
and to apply the other
" exist
as geometry exists
;
to take cognisance of the former,
to his requirements,
arts,
and
industrial occupations,"
"
Good
:
then
if
numbers and geometry
existed, the de-
ductions from numerical and geometrical relations existed also
;
for the
number twelve was
divisible
by two, by
three,
and by four without man's being wanted to demonstrate the fact existed
;
;
therefore
all
harmony
the laws of
in
numbers
and what your architects regard as mysteries, are
only borrowings from a tions of the
common
treasury,
by those
frac-
Soul of the World which occupy your archi-
tects' bodies," "
These are subtleties about which
myself," returned Eicos,
modicum
"
What
of the Soul of the
I
do not concern
can say
is,
that the
World which has
fallen to
I
THE HELLENES. my
223
share has sometimes great trouble in getting out of
to satisfy the caprices of my
means affiDrded us I have clients, and my own conceptions
of what should be done.
do not think that the apple-tree
difficulties,
when by the
aid of the
I
or even the bees can have these anxieties.
I
do
not, however,
my
the less thank thee for having assigned as
origin the
body of one of those deft little workers of Hymettus for it was not a very pleasant idea that I began life in the trunk But by Bacchus I am dying of thirst of an apple-tree. ;
!
give
me
"
something to drink
!
Thus passing from one subject to another, the conversation, now serious, now humorous, was prolonged till sunThen the guests went into the garden to breathe the set. cool and fragrant evening air. At night, each of them preceded by a slave carrying a lantern, returned to his abode.
A choice set of maniacs
"
when they were alone " Yes," replied
!
"
said
Doxius to
his
companion
in the street,
Epergos
—
"
beings with a mania for ideas,
a mania for discussion, a mania for investigation, a mania for criticism
and
a noble frenzy,
many
as
by
for the all
examination of everything.
the gods
;
It is
thy Persians do not turn up
ideas in a whole year, through
all
Babylon, as have been brought under discussion
the city of this
evening
at our friend Chremylus's." "
Assuredly
:
and they would have the good sense not to
suffer it." "
So thou
thinkest."
"Certainly! could
is
make head
there a single
community
of
men
that
against this torrent of extravagances, this
liberty of saying anything,
and discussing
ever}'thing, un-
less the magistrates of their state did their best to repress
such intellectual licence "
and
Nonsense, Doxius its
city
!
" .''
this people, with its small territory,
equal at most to one of the
quarters
of
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
224
Babylon,
men
longer in the nicuaory of
will live
than
all
thy Persians and Egyptians put together." "Yes,
it
may be
so,
—
to pervert their minds,
and turn
What are these philosophers, so highly esteemed in Athens, who have no regard for the gods, or for hallowed traditions, and who are continually them away from wisdom.
calling in question eternal truths
They "
and time-honoured
are spirits of darkness, destroyers.
Come," interrupted Epergos,
nonsense for
me
!
Thou
"
beliefs."*
."" .
.
none of
this
antiquated
hast been harping on this string
some thousands of years, yet the world of humanity, whose extinction thou art continually predicting, lives on, develops, and advances." for
" It "
does advance, certainly
my good
But
— over a heap of
ruins."
Doxius, does not the growing forest
on the deposits accumulated at the foot of the young
and are they not vigorous thickness of those deposits "
That decay gives thee
"
No
issue
;
but
I
turn
from amidst
my
it."
in
live
trees,
proportion to the age and
.-'
satisfaction, then
" t
gaze to the vigorous shoots that
CHAPTER
XVIII.
THE ROMANS.
IMMEDIATELY after
the
civil
wars,
sway of Augustus, was beginning formation. habitations,
among
all
The taste unknown
classes of citizens
or a merchant
catiis
who
undergo a trans-
luxury and
for
to
Rome, under the
to
the ;
Republic,
for
sumptuous
was spreading
and there was not an advo-
did not possess an abode
more
elegant and spacious than were the patrician dwellings in
the time of the Scipios.
Rome, whose population was composed of very diverse elements, was affected by the influence of the arts belonging to the peoples to which she owed her origin, and which she had successively conquered or chosen as allies. Her architecture, Etruscan in its origin, had been gradually enriched by additions from Magna Graecia, Sicily, Attica, and Asia Minor accordingly, at the commencement of ;
the imperial era,
it
exhibited a blending of arts differing in
whose
character moderation prevailed, was of opinion that
Rome
in their principles
and
in their form.
Augustus,
should be content with the conquests achieved under the Republic, governing the provinces by a wise administration
;
and that of these materials combined she should
found an impregnable empire, without overstepping limits
which he considered as
definitively settled.
During the Republican period, leisure to think of the arts,
Rome had
scarcely had
and of the pleasures and com-
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
226
fort of
At
which they afford the means.
the conclusion
of the Social War, however, a taste for the arts was diffused
among the inhabitants of the victorious city. The cities of Samnium Etruria and Lucania, which contained somany magnificent buildings, furnished, on their destruction by Sulla, an immense booty, whose artistic worth and importance exercised a very considerable influence on the character of the
The
Romans.
imbue the Romans, during the last years of the Republic, with a taste for the arts and after the wars of Sulla, there was not a Roman citizen of any consideration who was unacquainted treasures of Greece also contributed to
;
who
with the Greek language, and
did not desire to have
house some productions of Athenian skill. The far-sighted policy of Augustus suggested
in his
the
advantage to be derived from stimulating that growing taste for objects of art
the
Roman
of luxury
which was manifesting
aristocracy; well aware as he is
one of the most
effective
the upper classes in vassalage. lived simply himself
itself
among
was that the habit
means of holding
Therefore, although he
and continued
to inhabit a
modest
dwelling, he looked with favour on those of the patricians-
who in their habitations affected a luxury till then unknown, who gathered around them artists and poets, and adopted all the refinements of foreign introduction. He who builds himself a palace and adorns
it
with costly works of art
To encourage
not a conspirator.
this
emperor had the temples and public
edifices rebuilt
grander scale and with costly materials.
was followed by
all
favour of the prince
;
is
movement, the on a
This example
who were desirous of enjoying the for they knew that this was the most
advantageous mode of paying their court to him.
Not only was
the city of
Rome
changing
its
appear-
ance, and being covered with sumptuous buildings which
THE ROMANS.
227
delighted the gaze and occupied the attention of the multitude, but the country districts witnessed the erection of villcB
which contrasted, by their extent and magnificence,
Romans
with the country houses of the
these having been usually characterised plicity
;
by extreme simin
which
this display of
luxury
mere centres of farming operations
as
;
of the Republic
luxury had no place. It
must be observed, however, that
was dictated rather by vanity than by love of Art. Not far from Rome, on the slope of the mountains which separate ancient Latium from the country of the Volsci, and near a small town called Lanuvium, might be seen at the epoch referred to a
villa
of moderate size, recently built
Mumrnius, a wealthy
for a certain
patrician.
This
mius, after having played an active part in the has, like
many
Mum-
civil
others, finally selected his party
war,
on the
strength of those recent events which have invested Augustus with the life,
supreme power; and withdrawing from public
he has devoted himself to the tranquil enjoyment of the
good things that have His
villa
fallen to his share.
comprises a large extent of land, occupied
by vineyards and woods, and consisting, in part, of the plain, cultivated by coloiii. This beautiful estate, which is watered by the Lanuvius, is approached by the Appian way. Figure 68 presents the general plan of the villa. The
partly
open
fields in
ground
rises rather
abruptly towards the north-west, so
that the principal building
winds coming from the
A
sea,
is
sheltered from the violent
and the keen
blasts
from the
north.
The Lanuvius, which estate,
is
Marshes.
seen at
The
B,
rises at
a short distance from the
flowing southwards towards the Pontine
road, which branches off the
Appian way,
describes a wide curve at C in order to avoid the sudden
22}
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
General Plan of
changes of
level,
Ruman
Villa.
Fig. 68.
and abuts on the enclosed gardens at D. the north-east side at E as far
The woodland extends on
THE ROMANS. Appian way, while F
as the
occupied by vines.
is
are the orchards and kitchen gardens
From
being at H. gallery
I,
229
;
At G
the pleasure gardens
the principal building A, extends a long
with xystus (a covered promenade) to a smaller
building K, which serves as a retreat for the proprietor
when he wishes
At
to be alone.
I
are the quarters for the
slaves attached to the service of the house
who
A
near the entrance-gate.
while those
grove of olive trees extends
along the hillside at N, and at O
and wine
oil
;
have the care of the gardens, inhabit the building M, a small building for the
is
presses.
Let us now examine the abode of the proprietor, figure At A is a long vestibule, barrel-vaulted, and by it?
69.
position adapted for the convenience of visitors awaiting
an audience, who
may walk
about or
rest
on the benches
placed in the two exedrce (semicircular rooms or recesses)
This vestibule
at the ends.
The entrance B
a few paintings.
whose room
is
at
very simply decorated with
is
is
kept by the porter
C.
At D is a waiting-room for the accommodation of those who are not introduced into the atriuui E, with its iiiipluvitim in the centre.
when they
It is
there that the clients assemble
are waiting for the master to
anywhere, or to consult him on their impbiviimi
is
at F,
stone columns.
accompany him
The
affairs.
surrounded with porticos supported by
In the
centre
surmounted by a bronze
statue,
a basin
is
and fountain
and near the north end an
exedra of white marble looking due south, and where,
the air
is
great
cold, persons
may
rest
and converse
when
in the sun-
shine.
At in
g,
an inner vestibule leads to the great triclinium G,
which from
accommodated. /
and
i
fifteen
The
to eighteen
guests
may
small private tricliniiim
two rooms serve
— one
for
is
be easily at H.
At
a cloakroom, the other
230
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
Plan of the Habitation of
for a pantry.
room
A
Roman
vaulted library
u, also vaulted
Villa
is
and receiving
—Kig.
by.
placed at lig-ht
I
;
and the
from a circular
THE ROMANS.
231
hemisphere, serves as
orifice contrived in the centre of the
a place for family gathering during the heat of the day, being cool and
At T
is
lofty.
a strong-room, in which plate and jewellery are
kept. -^The bed-chambers are at K.
The baths comprise a
first
a large basin of cold water
hot vapour, and the room
Over
t\\Q
frigidariuui
room or frigidariiim L, with two rooms M and m for
next,
;
N intended
is
At
the waters of the aqueduct w.
The vault
kitchen
is
placed at
The
specially attached
placed at
X
to
At R cellars,
arched, and
its
octagonal
dormitories of the slaves
who
are
the service of the proprietor are
and are stationed
under the porticos.
are two flights of stairs
;
one leading down to the
the other ascending to the upper story, which
whole of the north-west wing.
occupied by bed-chambers.
the garden side
it is
But several of them are every night on
X.
raised over the is
;
in the different parts of the house,
in the triclinmm, or
floor
V
by
s are the latrines.
terminated by a flue which carries off the odours
is
and the smoke.
guard
for tepid baths.
placed the reservoir supplied
are
all
A fosse
This
is
first
cuts off from
the eastern part of the dwelling, on which
the great
and
small
triclinia.
Vine-covered
trellises screen the alleys along the xystus, and in front of
the entrance.^
From prospect
the building K, which serves for a retreat, the is
delightful.
Over the woods, which slope down
towards the south, the view comprises nearly the whole course of the Lanuvius which winds
beyond, the Pontine Marshes, green carpet dipping into the
among tumbled
1
It
is
;
In the background,
sea.
the Volscian mountains and the rugged
Circsean promontory.
rocks
resembling an immense
summit of the
during the Saturnalia that
See the General Plan,
fig.
68.
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
232
the master for at that
is
most inclined to
time the house
is
retire to this little filled
sanctum
with noise and bustle.
This building contains a small triclinium, a room open towards the south, a small
library,
and a few bedrooms.
The long gallery and the museum afford a covered promenade in bad weather, since the museum is completely shut in on the western side, whence comes the rain and the sea-wind.
Even during the
later
summer
heats there
^
is
jaicds
nothingf to-
Rom.
W, Elevations of
Roman
Villa.
— F)G.
be apprehended from the pernicious
Marshes plain.
;
for the villa
is
70.
air
of the Pontine
considerably elevated above the
THE ROMANS.
235
Externally these buildings affect great simplicity, particularly
on the entrance
side, as the elevation
A
(fig.
70)
tricliniinn opens,
has
shows.
The
opposite front
more pretension interior all the
;
B,
but
more
on which the
Mummius
has
reserved
for
the
striking decorative features of the
mansion.
Interior
The exedra,
View
great court, with is
of
its
Roman
Villa.
imphivmm
one of the parts of the
particularly attractive
Fig.
appearance
71.
in the centre,
villa (fig.
and
its
which presents a 71).
Two aged
THE HABITA2U0NS OF MAN.
234
is,
Mummius
which
laurels,
these
new
has decided on preserving amid
buildings, afford a
little
shade
moreover, refreshed by the fountain of the
portico
in
the court, which
The
the centre.
in
north side, having to sustain
the story-
situated above, consists of columns attached to piers ter-
minated by brackets. These piers and columns are of stone, finely coated with stucco coloured red
and white
;
whilst
the walls at the back of the portico are covered with paint-
The
ing in which dark tones predominate. are, in like
entablatures
manner, made of stone stuccoed and painted.
All the walls are of brick, with coloured stuccos outside
and
inside.
The
large tricliniuin and library are certainly the finest
parts of this
country on
villa.
This triclinhim
tiiree sides,
(fig.
72)
commands
the
through three large arched openings
divided by marble columns surmounted by their entablature and
by
pilasters.
All the upper part of these open-
ings above the entablature, trellis-work of bronze,
closed with extremely fine
is
filled in
with coloured glass.
Eight
wood support, at the corners, a wooden ceiling covered with paintings of a subdued tone. The mosaic pavement is most carefully executed, and all
large brackets of carved
the walls are adorned with paintings.
On
the four narrow
sides of the octagon are left niches, each of which contains a statue of a
nymph, pouring water
into a
porphyry
basin.
In bad weather the openings between the columns are closed with thick curtains. shelters
it
;
hall
the villa being also sheltered
the mountain on the north
Mummius life,
this
from the disagreeable winds, as well as from the
excessive heat of the sun
public
But the aspect of
by
side.
having almost completely withdrawn from
pays only very short
the greater part of the year
visits to
in his
Rome, and passes
Lanuvian
villa,
devoting
Triclinium of
Roman
Villa.
— Fig.
72.
\Toface pagi
:t^^.
THE ROMANS.
235
himself to study and the chase, and entertaining a few
At
chosen friends there.
Antium, whence fish, spices,
all
The
than two hours' distance
life
so that
staff of slaves is required.
up by Mummius with
relations kept
museum Greek is
;
and only a
are readily obtained,
Greece have enabled him to collect
he
is
kinds of supplies can be procured,
all
and commodities from every quarter
the conveniences of
moderate
less
friends library
his
in
in
and
manuscripts, statues, and pictures, of which
a great amateur
;
and a portion of
his
means
to the acquisition of these works of art.
a fashion with the
Roman
It
is,
is
devoted
moreover,
aristocracy thus to collect the
marbles, pictures, and manuscripts which Athens continually
produces, and for which the
Mummius
Romans pay
pretty dearly.
has in his employ a Greek freedman,
instructs his children, acts as his secretary,
who
and takes care
of his collections.
This freedman, whose name
young man who has his satirical
is
an intelligent
ingratiated himself with
Mummius by
is
Caustis,
impromptus apropos of everything for Mumwho have retired from public life ;
mius, like most persons after
having taken an active part
the present state of
affairs,
and
it, is
inclined to criticise
likes to
be surrounded by
in
censors whose conversation does not spare the favourites of fortune.
Caustis,
who
is
often sent to
Rome
on business,
reports to his patron the news of the great city, the topics
of conversation uttered
ment
among
by the populace
the senators, and ;
and loud and long
the epigrams is
the merri-
that ensues,
Mummius
thus avoids those melancholy humours which,
as he thinks, solitude usually induces in
uated to active Caustis
knows everybody in Rome, and iswelcomed every-
where because he makes ;
minds long habit-
life.
it
his business, while flattering the
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
236
whose company he happens to be, to depreciate this with a grace and address that disarm resentment. This freedman is very intimate with Epergos persons
in
others
and
;
and Doxius, who are at present these three meet at the tavern there
settled in
Rome and when ;
when Caustis
visits
the city,
interminable talk about the past and the present,
is
about Greece and Rome.
At
heart Caustis
Greek, and beneath his perpetual banter
Romans
profound hatred of the
he himself
is
;
is
is
a thorough
concealed a
whose extent
a hatred of
perhaps not aware, but which seizes every
opportunity of showing up the oddities, the weaknesses, the pretensions, and the vices of the "great nation."
On den
a certain evening, Epergos
— who had divined the hid-
feelings of his acquaintance, at the
their intimacy
—
after
having
began to talk earnestly
let
to him,
commencement
him pour out
and to speak of the
days of Athens, and the genius of her people it
had achieved
in the
domains of
of
his whole heart, brilliant
— of the rank
intellect, of its influence
in the world, and, lastly, of its faults, the cause of its mis-
fortunes. ing, for
During
this discourse Caustis
was
silently
weep-
Epergos had deeply probed the ever-open wound
which the poor Greek had flow of raillery
;
for years concealed
beneath a
and from that moment these two were
united in a close friendship which the unrelenting bitterness of Doxius only served to increase.
Doxius, who found himself very much out of his element in this
world of perpetual progress, having been a witness
of the decay, one after another, of those powers which he
had so long considered as the guardians of
human
—
order, in the
and Persian empires, and the dynasties of Egypt, which had been regarded by him as the supreme embodiment of wisdom, had conceived an admiration for the Romans, whose unidirection
of
afl*airs,
the Assyrian
form administration, unyielding though protective
rule,
THE ROMANS. colossal works,
and great strength
—
237
for
Doxius was always
disposed to side with the strongest,
— seemed
ultimate and only form of well-being
among men. He
to
him the was,
therefore, little disposed to laugh at the sallies of Caustis,
when he was exposing any of the plague-spots on the body of Roman greatness. Then would ensue interminable discussions, in
which the wit of Caustis would
call
forth
bursts of laughter, in spite of the predictions of Doxius on
the fatal influence of the critical spirit of those incorrigible
Greeks.
The freedman had spoken
to
Mummius of his two
friends,
and of the pleasant hours they had passed together, of the extensive knowledge of Epergos
and the crotchets of
Doxius; so that the proprietor had a desire
to see them.
They were therefore invited to go to the villa. From Rome it was but a three hours' ride on and they reached
it
on a
fine
spring
horseback,
morning, by the
Appian Way, which was bordered with tombs half the
way
as far as
to Albano.
them to the rooms which had been prepared them on the ground-floor near the library; and about mid-day, Mummius received them with the urbanity of a After the siesta which followed the well-bred Roman. repast, he showed them all the parts of his villa, not omitting a single detail and when the heat of the day was over, Caustis took
for
;
they sat
in the
shade of the great triclinimn to enjoy the
landscape, which was exquisitely beautiful on that side,
and
to converse while waiting for the evening meal.
"So
then," said
villa will
Mummius,
compare with the
"it
is
thy opinion that
rural habitations
my
which thou hast
seen in thy travels through Greece and Italy." " Assuredly,
Mummius," answered Epergos,
built a beautiful residence, pleasant
"
thou hast
and convenient, worthy
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
238
both of a patrician and a philosopher who loves study, and
which
in
"
life
should pass tranquilly and agreeably."
And what
" If
my museum, Egypt ?
sayest thou of
traversed Greece, Asia, and
—thou who hast
thou wilt pardon a candid answer, Mummius,
confess that
that love for collections of works of art which
vogue
in
in
I
will
have not yet been able to reconcile myself to
I
the cultivated class of
Roman
in a gallery,
my
so
society.
to see works of art in their proper place; so that
them thus assembled
is
when
much I
like
I find
thoughts involuntarily
recur to the buildings from which they must have been carried off." "
Wait a moment, Epergos
;
all
the objects which thou
by me Caustis can tell thee what they have cost me, for it was he who succeeded in getting them, or who went to buy them for me." " Very true " said Caustis. " Can any one charge Mumhast seen were either given
me
or were purchased
!
mius with despoiling the buildings of Greece of works of
when the Athenians themselves were the first to remove them from their place with a view to selling them at Rome art
.-*
If
Mummius had
not bought them, they would have been
some other patrician we may as well them here as elsewhere." " That does not affect my remark," returned Epergos. " Forcibly carried off, or adroitly abstracted by covetous hands, and bought by enlightened amateurs, the result is in the possession of
;
see
the same.
made in
is
The
place for which these works of art were
deprived of them.
That which used
to
charm
me
Greece was the taste with which the temples, habitations,
and public buildings were embellished. These edifices, even in the minutest
details,
appeared
to-
form a whole so well composed that nothing could be taken
away
or added without destroying the general harmony.
THE ROMANS. you saw a
If
formed
statue,
itself in
thought
it
239
you might have supposed that it had it occupied, and would have
the very place
monstrous to replace
by anything
it
else,
might say the same of the smallest ornament.
Greek
edifices, of all orders,
trees in our orchards their kind
—whilst
I
These
might be compared to those
which produce the
museums always
affect
where the
like the sight of a fruit-stall
fruits
proper to
me more
or less
products of
finest
the gardens are carefully arranged, but separated from the
branch that bore them. that of a fruit-stall,
me
prevent
the sight of an orchard to
I prefer
—that
This, however, does not
is all.
from admiring beautiful
systematically
fruits
arranged on shelves." " Certainly," said Caustis
pumpkins by the
"Thou
art
fall
into
for the "
fulfil
" the great point is
severe, let
Epergos,"
many
so
their destined use
unworthy hands
Is
.''
Yes," added Caustis
Rome
;
priceless
it
lost,
or to
not better to collect them .'"'
"and observe, Epergos, that the far as
to
prevent
any other asylum.
to recognise the advantages offered
by having the presumption its
works which no
be allowed to be
succeeded so
objects of art from having
Mummius
resumed
study and admiration of connoisseurs
enemies of
not to put
side of almonds."
"should we then longer
;
to
By
many
refusing
by the Roman power,
withdraw themselves from
protecting laws, these enemies, contemptible or formid-
able,
sometimes drew down upon
too well deserved.
As
their cities chastisements
soon as order was restored,
Rome
was eager to collect so many precious objects with a view to hand them down to future generations. What a wealth of art did the victories of Sulla over the Italiotes,
who
—
trea-
rebelled against their
sures
own
interests,
bring to
which would have remained buried
country towns,
if
Rome had
Rome, in
miserable
not given them the most
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
240
munificent hospitality
— which gather " I
fruits
is
And
!
— to
let
to return to thy
it
and to enjoy
cannot say," returned Epergos every year
art,
in their
—
is it
:
" ?
but trees yield new
" ;
same with
the
at leisure
it
which
nations,
for a
which the pure and abundant sap which
after
Come now
corrupted
is
" interrupted Caustis
!
that the Athenians,
who under
Parthenon and carving
tympanums
comparison
existence seem capable of producing works
nourished them dries up or ''
—
the fruit decay on the tree, or to
time to preserve
in
it
moment of
better,
" wilt
;
Pericles
metopes,
its
?
thou assert
were building the
its
and the
friezes,
of its pediments, are no longer capable of pro-
works of art
Have they not are not able to keep up with the demand for on the part of rich Romans who order Phidiases
and pay
them
ducing works of art quite as beautiful studios that
for
in solid gold
Well
?
?
;
there
a plenti-
is
now-a-days, of these works of Phidias and the most accomplished connoisseurs do not know the differ-
ful supply,
;
Has not
ence.
the wealthy Licinius a gallery quite
filled
with them, and does he not consider them superior to the
Parthenon
friezes of the
a sculptor at Athens,
made
Bacchus, that
happy "
Well
?
who
to sell thee as
me
many
Doxius
;
what
is
Xantippus,
who
will
be most
as thou wishest to buy." tell
Licinius that, for he would
"
"
thou dost not open thy mouth,
thy opinion about museums
" I think," replied
to corrupt
my friend
behind the theatre of
!
Mummius,
" But," said
it is
those bas-reliefs, and
However, don't go and
never forgive
:
lives
men than
Doxius,
"
that works of art tend
to improve them,
would have done well to
let
.''"
all
more
and that the Romans
those works of art from
Greece, which they are so eager in collecting, stay where
they were.
ments of
I
art,
did not observe that these glorious achieve-
which Epergos so much admires, were useful
THE ROMANS. them
to the Athenians, or put
themselves discreetly.
amusement
I
the
way
" said
he
" if
Caustis,
Mummius
asties;
so their dynas-
;
lasted scarcely a century." !
chapter with Doxius,
him,
Eper-
thousands of years, whereas the glory of
ties lasted for
Oh
are
Such things would never
have been tolerated among the Egyptians
"
Gods
figure in ridiculous actions,
gos used to think this amusing.
Athens
of governing
could never bring myself to find
those Greek comedies in which the
in
and made to
scoffed at
in
241
;
he
is
it
is
we
enter on
Egyptian
the
over with us
all
do pray stop
;
going to enumerate
the dyn-
all
prove to us that the successors of Alexander
will
were incapable of conferring any benefit on the land of
and that the Greeks brought trouble there
crocodiles,
done wherever they have gone."
as they have "
That
only too true," replied Doxius
is
day that
decline beginning the very
its
Egypt saw country was
"
;
its
opened to the Greeks, under the twentj'-sixth dynasty." "
Did not
spares us the "
Upon my
I
tell
first
you so
t
— We
are lucky that
Doxius
twenty-five."
word, Caustis,
is
there anything for the Greeks
to be proud of in having founded the thirty-second dynasty in Egypt, "
ending with Cleopatra
What would have become
had not put a stop Ptolemies
.''
" .''
of Egypt, in fact,
" responded Caustis.
"
— would they
Octavius
Besides was not this also
the occasion of adding to our spoils these Egyptian spoils
if
daughter of the
to the freaks of that
.-'
But
— apropos
have the same corrupting influence on Rome, as thou butest to the works of Greece if
.''
—
it
of
thy opinion, Doxius,
in
attri-
would be a sad pity
the art productions of that nation of sages were as detri-
mental to morals as those of a nation of
Mummius, order me throw
it
into
to put all thy
the sea
;
I
museum
really feel
that
fools
!
Come
into carts this
!
and
range of
242
HABITATIONS OF MAN.
77//';
bronze and marble busts, these statues, tures,
and furniture
the very marrow of our bones "
Thou
works of
it
;
making
Rome was
its
did not spend
entire people
in criticising or praising this or that building
did not applaud
Avere being
who
stage-players
gods and the most respectable its
in
not thinking about working mar-
which the scaffolding and hoardings
Rome
would ask
I
time
conquered the world.
Rome was
ble or casting bronzes
whole days
but
;
its
more powerful nor more extensive than
originally neither
was Athens.
was by spending
Rome
art that
idle poets
sense about everything.
from
removed.
ridiculed the
Rome employed
citizens.
strength in forging arms and ploughshares
cumbered with
to-
" !
art in thy usual vein, Caustis
our host whether
bas-reliefs, pic-
inlaid with ivory, are corrupting us
it
;
was not
and philosophers talking non-
Its orators
occupied the attention
of the people only with fhe interests of the republic, and did
not pass their time discussing subjects which to
man to fathom and ;
so
Rome has
it is
forbidden
always been increasing,
has risen again more vigorous after every disaster, and has ultimately given laws to every nation known.
been respected everywhere, and there
upon earth than that of Roman friend
Caustis,
citizen.
Its
name has
not a nobler
is I
title
ask our sarcastic
what the Athenians have accomplished.
Anarchy ceased to prevail among them only to be replaced by tyranny. For a moment it was possible to imagine that they would become the head of a great nation. But it was only for a moment. A prey to fits of vanity, they undertook foolish and ruinous wars did
;
and
all their
hinder them from being duped
not
accepting the protection of Alexander. this period, they
by
;
Philip
and
Certainly, during
were producing marvellous works of art
they were the centre of attraction to youth novelty
intelligence
they w-ere
flattered,
admired,
in love
with
and treated as
THE ROMANS.
24:
spoiled children incapable of behaving themselves, until the
moment when Rome world
be quiet
:
said to
Why
'
!
them
:
'You
then should
are troubling the
Rome
go
in
quest
amused these children and them away from serious things ? Say Mummius." "Wilt thou allow me to answer him, Mummius ? " said
of the playthings which have
—
enticed
!
Caustis. "
one "
The
challenge
answer
;
True
Caustis
and
;
"
;
is
much
addressed to thee as
as
any
it."
confess
I
the Athenians
myself
nonplussed,"
big
are
replied
who
children,
allow
themselves to be deluded by dreams which vanish before
snow beneath the vernal sun. The Macedonians and, at a later period, the Romans, taught them how government ought to be carried on they silenced their philosophers, their pamphleteers, and their street orators, reality as the
;
Avho were disquieting the world with their theories, their satire,
and
well
these people,
in
if
order,
home.
Doxius
their clamours.
And
who know
all
would have been very
so well
had not allowed themselves
After
—since
convenient to
all,
however, this
the
senate
live at
may
how
to
keep others
to be enslaved at
be quite to
approves
it.
It
th\- liking,
is
ease, confiding the entire
ment of the commonwealth
to a dictator.
so vastly
manage-
His alone are
the incessant anxieties, the unrest, the responsibilities of
government. of the gods,
It is
who
a genius, a god, or at least a descendant
deigns to take charge of our interests
;
what can we do better than entrust ourselves to his divine Mummius smiled, and Caustis continued guidance " !
:
The Romans have said to the Greeks, and to many other Have done with your quarrels and discussions they hinder honest people from sleeping. The world was not made to be troubled by your clamours and disputes. "
nations
:
'
Here are our
;
legions, our laws,
and proconsuls who, from
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
244
time
forth, will
take care to
selves.'
One
day, however,
Romans
themselves
this
fine
' :
make you behave yourthree men said to the
Let us have done with these
tine dissensions, these cabals
intes-
and conspiracies against the
commonwealth, these firebrands of tribunes and this restless and ambitious oligarchy. The gods sent you Julius,
—
genius
Then
;
you have assassinated him. Go home and be
men
these three
cleverest, or the
two
otliers
the
Roman
out with each other, and the
fell
most fortunate of the
three, suppressed the
and secured the government
So that
to himself
people, which gives law to the world,
hands of a single man who imposes
is
in
his individual will
the
upon
an admirable arrangement, since everybody knows
It is
it.
quiet.'
that Octavius
is
a demi-god.
liappen that this demi-god,
But just suppose
who
alas
is,
should
it
mortal, should
!
descend into the realm of Pluto, and that a lunatic should
The Roman people and
take his place.
would be things
madman
what dost thou say about
;
it,
!
govern the nations, and
to
—a
the whole earth
pretty state of
Doxius
say that the gods designate the
" I is
the power of a
in
that
" .'
men whose
right
thy hypothesis
it is
inadmissible." '
But
perchance the gods should forget to trouble
if
themselves about what takes place within the walls of
Rome
on the day when Octavius submits to the
lot
of
mortals."
"The gods never " I
tect Ceesar,
and
his assassins
;
to
Thou
•'
It is precisely I
thou art
:
ward
off
trifling, ;
Caustis."
they forgot to pro-
from his breast the swords of
yet they might easily have done so."
"
that
forget
beg your pardon, wise Doxius
canst not fathom their decrees."
because
I
cannot fathom their decrees,
imagine the possibility of an insane emperor succeed-
ing the divine Augustus
;
perhaps,
in fact,
the gods intend
THE ROMANS.
show the Romans that
to indulge in this caprice only to is
it
imprudent to entrust the
245
the republic to
affairs of
an individual, and to presume to govern themselves are governed by a
"A capital
madman
answer, Caustis," said
fools while
Mummius, who
retained
us drop a discussion which
me
tell
would lead us too
candidly, Epergos, whether our
superior or inferior
to
but
far.
But
appear to thee
villa;
of the
buildings
" ;
the old republican leaven in the recesses of his heart let
they
or a blockhead."
same kind
in
Greece." " It is
very
the Greeks do pretensions
;
Mummius
answer,
difficult to
for
Romans,
because
not construct private buildings of such
Roman
inspiration
and
do not differ sensibly from building construc-
Formerly the houses of the wealthiest
Italy.
Athenians were, as compared with our extremely simple outside
A little sculpture,
;
very small and
some
parts of the interior.
painting of an inobtrusive kind and care-
fully executed, a well-considered
the
and rational system of
works of
construction, with a few in
villcs,
pretending to no other attrac-
tions but the delicate beauty of
and exactly
first,
and secondly, because the present works as
they are generally executed, under
tions in
:
place
suited
art in exquisite taste, for
them,
formed .the
The Athenian was accusand only went home to take his
decoration of these dwellings.
tomed
to live out of doors,
meals with his family and a few intimate friends, or to pass the night.
He
had, therefore, no need of galleries, vast
courts, great porticos,
The
and spacious
halls such as
these.
ancient dwellings of the Athenians, therefore, cannot
be compared with these. Sicily,
houses are
still
Attica, except that there in the use of art.
But
built is
in ancient
Campania and
in
which remind one of those of
not the same delicate discretion
The Romans
like
pomp and grandeur
;
an importation
;
their taste for art, properly so called,
is
2
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
46
that taste
not
is
in
their blood, as
is
shown by the
fact
employ Greek artists whenever they wish to give I can have no doubt, to their dwellings the aroma of art. Muniniius, that it was a Greek who was selected by thee to build thy porticos and arrange the details of thy villa." "That is true but it was I who prescribed the plan."
that tlicy
;
" I
can well understand that
Romans
the
:
are expert in
matters relating to general arrangements, and even construction
a Greek to decorate
in
call
but when they have planned the building they
;
buildings as
Romans due
also
\'our
in
Thus
it.
in all
your public
what belongs
houses,
to the
can be always distinguished from that which
to the intervention of the
Greek
is
Whereas dur-
artist.
ing the period of Athenian prosperity, the public buildings as well as the houses, both in their ensemble and their details,
form a harmonious whole which was so complete that
it
was
impossible to distinguish the structure from the decoration." "
So
interrupted Caustis, "if the
that,"
take care,
tlie
Greeks
will
impose
Romans do
their arts
not
on the masters
of the world." "
Not
at all
!
"
replied
Epergos
" ;
adopted vaulting, and the Romans architectural method, which
on the large
may
lavish
never be able to rob them of the
Agrippa
is
at the
thou
Is
the
—though Greek
grand Corinthiari portico
subject
ever}-where
Roman physiognomy
possible that the rotunda
it
edifice!'
me
express
else
.''
— Greek
art
cannot
but
in
Attica
it
will
come
artists are
in front of
have
in fact, Caustis,
in their
on the exterior or
building for his Thermae can ever
semble a Greek
on
so well adapted for buildings
masses erected by the Romans, they
interior of the gigantic
and character.
not abandon their
Whatever orders or decorations
scale.
particular taste the Greeks
will
is
the Greeks have never
will
my
it.
full
which to re-
working \\'ouldst
conviction
be transplanted
;
show a stunted
THE ROMANS.
247
growth, or will become a monstrosity.
The
truly belongs to a people cannot develop
itself
than on the ditions that
soil
art
it sprung, and under the conHast thou observed the two or
from which
produced
it.
three Greek temples which they have recently taken their
heads to build
beauty or
Egypt
in
any other respect
in
which
elsewhere
They
.''
to those
it
into
are not inferior in
which are
built in
presence of the
Egyptian monuments,
nothing could be more ridiculous.
A similar result would
Greece
yet,
;
in
any one should take a fancy to build in Rome a temple in the style of those of Thebes. Let us leave
ensue
if
things in the place in which they originated." " It is a
long time, Epergos," observed Doxius, " since
thou hast said anything so " ate,
sensible."
know what thou wouldst insinuand thou wouldst make me contradict myself. / say
Not
quite so fast
I
!
:
'Let us leave things
in the place
caused them to originate, but
let
where circumstances have us have the sense to take
advantage of what these things teach the
Romans found
Asia
in
which have enabled them, already possessed vaulted
in
many
combination with what they
from Etruria, to make
which we admire
constructions
have acted wisely
in
elements, because,
when we examine
we
For example,
us.'
architectural elements
;
those
taking advantage of these different the matter thoroughly
shall find that these elements are intimately related to
each other; but where the
Romans
Greek
so much,
architrave
I
is
with
cannot approve the judgment of in their
the
attempting to unite the
Asiatic
vaults.
These
contrary principles which can never be harmonised architectural work. to
noble
evidently they
impose a style of
If the art
Greeks should some
da}'
in
are
an
come
on the Romans, as they could no
longer adopt the architrave, which allows of only small •constructions,
we should
find that, considering the logical
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
248
tendency of
their minds, not being able to dispense with
the vault, they would abandon the lintel once for
they would be right
Mummius guests,
in
found pleasure
the conversation
in
and kept them several days
how
wanted
some
to visit
and
of his
same
the
in
Roman
large
place.
colonies, to see
the veterans, mingled with people of various origins,
As for Doxius,
lived in the midst of barbarians.
was
;
But Eper-
at his villa.
gos was not very fond of remaining long
He
all
so doing."
to return into Asia
—
to that vast
He had
now dismembered.
his desire
empire of the Persians
been assured that there at
no sensible change had taken place for centuries. While Epergos was attracted towards what was new, Doxius, on the other hand, was equally disposed to seek for
least
that fixed immutable point wliich he imagined must exist
somewhere
to enlighten feeble
returned to his patron,
humanity with
Rome
;
where Caustis,
steady
its.
Mummius and
They, therefore, took leave of
illumination.
the permission of
v.ith
accompanied them and remained some hours
longer with them
till
the
moment
of their departure.
Before going to dine at the tavern, Caustis wished to
show
his
Rome
two friends some of the quarters of
little
frequented by strangers, and which Epergos and Doxius
had not had
"You "
leisure to visit.
think
know Rome,"
you
because you have visited
ings,
its
Well
!
it
its
Forum, and some of is
only the ornamental
strangers are accustomed to see.
Rome visit
thoroughfares.
side
of
Rome
But there
that
an old
is
which the divine Augustus has not been able to
with the
some
public build-
its
finest
its
freedman,
the
said
temples,
hammer
of destruction.
Old Rome,
large houses belonging to the patricians
standing, though they take
now, but
let
them
good care not
to tenants
;
and where
— where
still
remain
to live in
may
them
be found
THE ROMANS. buildings of
all
249
ages, in every form of confusion
and super-
and tortuous alleys. This mass of most part of a mean and squalid appear-
position along narrow buildings, for the
ance,
by
inhabited
is
of
dealers
nations.
all
Jews,
Egyptians, Greeks, Armenians, and merchants from the Adriatic,
may
as
high as
The
be seen there.
traders speaking five
all
known
stories,
swarm with The houses reach
streets
languages.
and are inhabited from top to
was from these quarters that, in the times of the republic, those swarms of vagrants issued, who on bottom.
It
certain occasions filled the precincts of the
Campus Martius, intent on mischief." The three friends then went to visit
Forum
or the
the thoroughfares
which surround the Theatre of Pompey, and which the
^diles had the greatest ably passable.
waggons were unable
even
toler-
points the goods piled in front
shops nearly blocked up the
of the
sant.
difficulty in rendering
At some
to pass,
street.
Elsewhere
and the brawling was inces-
Itinerant dealers in fish or fruit were crying their
wares with deafening vociferation. built of
wood
Most
of the houses,
or brick, overhung the thoroughfare, and
would have embraced
their opposite neighbours but for
the timber props that kept
them
upright.
Doxius sighed, thinking of the
streets of the
Egyptian
whose houses, of no great height and for the most part having only a ground-floor, closed on the outside, and cities,
interspersed with courts and
little
gardens, had an appear-
ance of order and tranquillity which singularly contrasted with the deafening hubbub of this
human
Eper-
ant's nest.
gos recalled the streets of Athens which were also narrow
and crowded
;
but which were bordered by small neat
houses with lively colours glowing of so cheerful an aspect, even
And what
a difference
in
in
in
the sunlight, and
the poorest quarters.
the two populations
!
The
THE JIABITATJONS OF MAN.
250
remembrance which Epergos cherished of the pleasant
moments passed
in listening to the
jokes of the Athenian
populace, which were always truly humorous and improvised, and the facetious sallies of the peasants coming to sell their vegetables and fowls,
made
stand the talk of these people
He
could scarcely under-
who were
with anxious looks, for they spoke
Soon wearying of the
dialects.
Roman
the brutality of this
populace shocking by contrast.
jostling each other
all
kinds of corrupt
scene, the three friends
entered a tavern situated at the corner of one of the five centres of this populous quarter.
On
their right arose
one
of those lofty houses with several stones raised one over
another, presenting a
gloomy aspect on the whole,
not-
withstanding the rich balcony in front of the windows of the
Opposite the tavern a house of
story.
first
appearance formed the corner of the
street
less
dismal
(fig. 73).
While the repast ordered by the freedmcn was being Epergos was
prepared,
of which
contemplating this house with
and seeking to understand the various elements
curiosity,
it
was composed.
my
" It appears,
good
friend," said Caustis to him, "that
the house of Balbus has a special power of attracting thy attention.
For the building thou
other than the of Caesar.
art looking at
none
is
habitation of Cornelius Balbus the friend
Since his elevation, as
he no longer "
first
I
need
scarce!}' tell thee,
lives here.""
But Avhat a singular melange of architecture," observed
Epergos. "
Singular indeed.
It
was formerly not unusual
to put the lowest step of the stairs street, as here,
slightly raised clients
of a
in
house
Rome
in
the
allowing the erection of a covered porch
above the ground, and beneath which the
used to wait.
Recently the v^diles have prohibited
these projections because the}' obstruct the thoroughfare.
Street
View
in
Old Rome.
Fig. 73.
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
252 " If
me whence come
thou shouldst ask
stone which surround these steps,
no idea
;
these columns of
must reply that
I
made
but that they were certainly not
They
purpose they now serve.
building that has been destroyed.
I
for the
some
are brought from
Thou
have
wilt often observe
appropriations of this kind in the houses of the old quarters
many
of the city that have undergone
changes.
The
were originally quite covered with painted stucco
day we
find only traces of
"The
building
from
collected
with
in great
measure of debris
This balcony, for instance,
quarters.
balustrade of white marble, so fmel}' worked, and
its
whose
fronts at this
it.
composed
is
all
;
origin
must be looked
for
on the shores of Asia.
By
the side of this highly finished work, remark that third story with
its
projecting bay constructed in simple fashion
Then
with timber framing.
look above at the garret corri-
dor supported by small marble columns, that seem to have
come from Greece. Oh ver\' fastidious in
!
I
assure you the
such matters
purpose wherever they find
it
;
!
Romans
are not
the}' take what suits their
and there
is
not a merchant
galley that does not bring as ballast from Egypt, Greece, or
some columns or fragments, which they can sell at a very good price to the bourgeois who are having houses built. The mason manages to put them into the building, and each party gains something by the transaction those Asia,
;
who demolish some
old building no longer in use, to sell
remains, the merchant
pays
for
them, and the gaping idler
" In fact,
it
thus destroyed
is
only the
"Oh
!
artist
who has any
perhaps who admired
who
stares at them."
who designed
the building
reason to complain, and those
it."
as to that, the artist died long ago,'and
now most admired
is
its
who buys them, the bourgeois who
hard cash.
what
is
Greece itself—Greece so
THE ROMANS. proud of
monuments — sells them
public
its
and by auction
to
253
Roman
brokers
;
and
if,
in
fragments
perchance, an
earthquake destroys one of her temples once held
in
such
veneration, }'ou will see the municipal authorities bestirring
themselves, not to restore highest bidder
building to
;
and
it,
but to
the ruins to the
sell
of earthquakes they help the
in default
fall if its vitality is
too persistent.
important branch of Greek commerce no\v-a-days Avith
"
and
is
an
of the chef tVceuvrcs of Phidias,
the reproduction
Praxiteles,
This
— together
their compeers."
But the gods who were worshipped
those temples,
in
"
what do they say of this traffic t " Epergos, my good friend, there
god but one
— that
is
is
scarcely any other
the great, the incomparable Plutus.
Aristophanes used to say so at Athens even in his time,
and things are much worse now." " It
may
be so at Athens, perhaps, and
it,"
said
Doxius
at
:
"
but
Rome
am
I
not surprised
has a sense of respect for
the Deities, and scrupulously observes the sacred rites."
"Doubtless, doubtless," replied Caustis; "but some gods are gone out of fashion even in
Rome
;
and the
Roman
does not greatly concern himself as to whether the columns or friezes which he buys to adorn his dwelling are from a
temple or a portico." till
night,
The
when each went
three friends did not separate
his wa)'.
CHAPTER NORTHERN
MORE ian,
SYRIA.
than three centuries had passed away, and the
seat of
Byzantium,
XIX.
Roman
in the
empire had been estabh'shed at
midst of those Greek, Phrygian, Bithyn-
and Lydian populations which were formerly on the
Roman possessions, but which had tlien become the heart of the colossus. Rome believed that it had no more to fear from the Germans beyond the Danube but the eastern provinces were continually increased by the dense masses of barbarians who occupied all the counByzantium was the key tries to the north of the Euxine. confines of the
;
of Asia Minor, Armenia, Mesopotamia, and Palestine
;
and
Lower Danube formed a line easy to defend. The Empire therefore sought to secure its power for all time to come by abandoning Rome and settling on the shores the
of the Bosphorus.
Ever since the emperors had been
Byzantium,
installed at
the trade between the Persian Gulf and the coasts of the
yEgean had vastly increased.
Caravans were incessantly
traversing the long route which, ascending the Tigris, passed
by Hatra, Tharrana, Edessa, Hierapolis, Antioch, and the There the merchandise they shores of the gulf of Issus. brought was embarked in ships, which transported it to Other caravans coming from Arabia or Constantinople.
Egypt traversed
way
of
Palestine and also reached Antioch by
Damascus, Emesa, and Chalcis.
situated between the
Upper Euphrates
Now
— that
the country is
to say, be-
NORTHERN SYRIA. tween Hierapolis, Chalcis, and Antioch,
months of the
for during several
a single stream
—the
Chalcis
year,
is
it is
an arid region
At
;
watered only by
— which empties
lake near a city of the same name. it
255
itself into
the end of
a
summer
Nevertheless, to supply the wants
remains almost dry.
of the numerous caravans which traversed the country,
many
smiall
towns had been erected on
and enjoyed a degree of prosperity
this ungrateful soil,
for
;
they supplied
themselves with provisions from Antioch and sold their
commodities at a high price to the travelling merchants.
Of
agriculture there
northern Syria
;
was scarcely a trace
and only a few herds of
in this part of
ill-fed cattle
found
a scanty pasture during the winter and spring.
The population was of Greek origin
—
and
partly of Syrian, but predominantly it
was Greek that was spoken between
Antioch and the Upper Euphrates.
Doxius considered the Christians as disturbers of the Empire, and approved of the persecutions to which they
had been subjected under the reigns of certain emperors blaming the latter a sect which he
for not
deemed abominable, and which was tend-
ing to nothing short of the destruction of
When
;
having exterminated at one blow
Roman
society.
he understood that Constantine was abandoning
Paganism, he thought that the Western world was approaching the most frightful cataclysm the world had ever seen
and with
his heart full of sorrow
Egypt, hoping that itself to
was
its
population at least would not allow
be hurried towards the abyss.
religious,
His disappointment
and Alexandria seemed to him worse than
great,
Athens.
;
he returned to his dear
Of
that ancient order of things, political
and
which he had so much admired, there remained
not a trace.
The Greeks took
the lead, but at their side
were to be found sects religious and philosophical without number.
Everything was subjected to discussion, and the
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
2 56
people seemed to him struck with vertigo.
intention to return to Asia, he
ing him to accompany him.
Eperjos was
when Doxius intimated
pleased with Alexandria, and
had great trouble
in
his
induc-
However, the disappointment
of his companion amused him, and he did not wish to leave
him
Both took the road to Babylon, and on the Avay Doxius had abundance of time to discourse on the approaching fall of the communities of the West, and the alone.
glorious future reserved for the nations
who had
and respect
to preserve the principles of authority
and who did not waste
traditions,
the sense for
their time in idle discus-
sions about everything. " But,"
responded Epergos,
we were among
while
glory, thou didst accuse
was
visit
we paid
in question,
think
I
remember
that
the Ninevites at the epoch of their
me of urging them Thou
of things that were then new.
ber a
" I
to the application
canst not but
to the palace of the king.
and thou gavest
me
remem-
Vaulting
a complete demon-
stration that the erection of those gigantic constructions,
human lives, was an abuse men over their fellows."
thousands of
at the cost of
of
the power accruing to certain " I
did not approve those things then, and
approve them now
;
and
in
I
do not
view of the deluge of new ideas
overwhelming the West, the vertigo that seems to have seized on those nations, and the calamities that arise that
is
from
it,
I
maintain
that
the
principle
of
uncontested
authority, and an absolute respect for tradition, are
still
preferable to that love of change which has taken possession
of the Western world, and of which those detestable Greeks
were the " is
first
promoters."
The admiration thou now
therefore onh' relative
"Certainly
;
of two evils
"Well: dost thou
expressest for these Asiatics
" .'*
also
it
is
better to choose the less."
remember thy question one
NORTHERN SYRIA. •evening while
human heads
which question
"I think
now
me
:
I
did not reply
I
with
and to
to me,
later on."
till
The
finish that reply.
we
;
bulls
are strong
seemed
us and above us
We are a pebble
.'*
also to say to
and durable
this strength as against the piles of clay
tain of earth
— bulls
remember."
We are stone
'
at the Colossi
decorated the portals of the same
what those monsters were saying
palace,
" I
was looking
I
—which
257
;
but what
is
which stand around
by the
moundust. Our
side of a
which time must soon reduce to
strength and durability will not be able to hinder the vast
and irreparable ruin of that which we seem
to support.'
Meanwhile, the farther they advanced, the more desert
One might have imagined
the country became.
nomades who, previous
to
the Assyrian
that the
Empire, alone
traversed these vast plains, had returned to take possession of the country.
Sometimes they came upon
little
towns
half in ruins, deserted villages, and uncultivated fields.
Babylon no longer existed save of this
immense
city,
ever will exist, was
name
;
and the
site
the largest that ever did, or probably
marked only by mounds of clay
mingled with fragments of terra
and but
in
cotta.
A
inter-
forlorn-looking
partially inhabited collection of houses occupied
the thousandth part of the area once surrounded
by those
ramparts that were formerly the admiration of the world.
The
scene was so depressing that Epergos had not the
heart to rally his companion on his chagrin.
Dejected and
silent,
Doxius wished
and Epergos made no objection. the
to depart next day,
Accordingly, ascending
Euphrates, they bent their steps towards Palmyra.
whose splendour they had witnessed under the rule of Diocletian, when that Emperor had vast edifices and what little built there, was sadly shorn of its glory But
this city,
life
was kept up
;
there,
was due
to the caravans
R
which
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN. called there on their
Antioch.
They
way from
Damascus or
Seleucia to
towards the
their course
therefore bent
latter.
"
What we have
seen within the last itw months," said
Epergos, while they were crossing regions which were "
almost desert, friend
men rise
:
ought to convince thee of
that liberty only
elevated and
made
is
fruitful,
— that
Have we
better.
this truth,
by
it
my
alone are
ever seen nations
and acquire a noble moral energy under despotic rule?
What has Egypt become, despite the wisdom and
uniformity
—
The receptacle of all the known world. What have the empires of Almost a desert. We visited Assyria and Persia become
of
its
government
theocratic
?
corruption of the
.-•
Rome
in all
her glory, when, tired of
she confided the direction
emperor.
What
more audacious his
civil
of the
body
will
factions,,
in
to an
she become^
of her's, in face of the
enterprises of the barbarians
speech Doxius only replied
companion
wars and
commonwealth
has she become, and what
>with that unwieldy
To this
—
more and
" .''
monosyllables, and
failed to rouse him.
They went on
till
they came one evening to the large
country-town of Androna, whose well-constructed, rectangular houses,
the
all
with terrace-roofs, were built nearly on
same model.
Most
of the habitations of
like those of all the inhabited centres of
afford
since
this town,,
Northern Syria,
lodging to strangers and supply them with food the country produces literally nothing, and
is
;
so
completely devoid of streams, that the rain-water has to be collected in large tanks during the rainy season, which lasts
about two months
and
;
this
is
the supply for the whole
year.
The house the largest.
at
which the companions stopped was one of
Here
spacious court, A,
is
is
the plan of
it,
figure 74.
A somewhat
entered, at the end of which
is
a large
NORTHERN SYRIA. hall, B.
are
The dwelling-rooms
rooms intended
sions.
The kitchen
of the family are at
for various uses, is
at o,
259
and
at
and
K
Plan of North Syrian Stone-roofed House.
for
c.
At D
keeping provi-
a flight of steps con-
Fig.
74.
ducts to the upper story, which rises on the buildings only as far as the line a b. The large hall occupies the height of the ground-floor and of the upper story. Strangers admitted into the habitation enter at G, and are
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
j6o
accommodated
in
as dormitories. stalls for the
The
the hall
At L
animals at
horses enter
is
F,
E,
and the rooms
r,
which serve
the stable, under cover, with the
and mangers between the
by the door
H.
At
is
I
leading on to the terrace that covers the stable.
tower affording a view of the country this
tower
is
;
pillars.
a flight of steps
At V
is
a
the upper terrace of
reached by wooden ladders.
But these habitations present
this peculiarity in their
Section of North Syrian Stone-roofed House.
Fig. 75.
construction, that they are built entirely of large stones,
there being no available timber in the country.
This ac-
counts for the arrangement of the plan, which presents only
NOR THERN S YRIA
261
rooms of narrow dimensions, or divided by one or more semicircular arches that receive the large slabs forming floor
and
roof.'
Figure 75, which gives a perspective section of the large and the hall E in plan, explains this method of con-
hall,
We said
struction.
that the great hall occupied the height
of the ground-floor and A,
which form
its ceiling,
and tempered
At B
is
story
first
;
accordingly the slabs
support the terrace
made
of gravel
clay.
seen the room which, on the
first floor,
comes over
the hall E of the plan.
Cupboards are made
in
the walls of most of the rooms
for the furniture consists only of very
;
low wide benches
covered with mattresses, along the walls, with mats fastened to these walls forming a back
— a few small tables and some
of the most indispensable utensils of pottery and bronze.
Wood made
so scarce in the country that the doors are often
is
of stone slabs turning on pivots.
Figure
"j^
represents the exterior view of this habitation.
Its proprietor is a
and receives
Greek
;
he
is
affable, a
good
his guests with cordial politeness.
talker,
When
the
horses are stabled, the servants go to fetch water from the
tank under the court, and to which there K.
This tank
is
built exactly in the
rooms
;
which
rest the arches that
that
is
is
a flight of steps
same way
support the slabs and the coarse
concrete which composes the area of the court.
water
As
is
The
rain-
by means of stone channels. nine months of the year the country
led into the tank
during eight or
very hot, these houses,
is
as the
to say, with a longitudinal central wall, on
made
entirely of stone, afford their
inhabitants a perfectly cool retreat, and preserve an equable
temperature during the rainy and variable season. ^
The double
lines intersecting the
can-ying stone ceilings.
rooms indicate the plan of these arches
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
262
Epergos, when examining this building, could not help
remarking the arrangement of the plan, which reminded him,
in
miniature, of that of the Ninevitc habitations which
he had formerly
visited.
It
had nothing
in
common
with
the Greek dwellings; and yet most of these habitations
View
varj'ing
in
of
size,
North Syrian Stone-roofed House.
Fig. 76.
but designed on the same plan
— were
inhabited by Greeks.
In the centre of the town was a Christian basilica; for the country had been Christian
more than a century; and
not far from the church was a monastery also with a chapel.
NOR THERN S YRIA Epergos wished
to visit this estabhshment,
and
his host
The
pretending fatigue, remained within the house.
idea of finding himself able.
.
.
.
was
Doxius, more depressed than
wiUing to accompany him. ever,
263
in a Christian
But whither could he
country was unbear-
The world
retreat.''
seemed tobe undergoing a transformation or rather seemed to him to be rushing into an obscurity full of danger and ;
Tuin.
The monastery
scarcely differed, either in plan or aspect,
from the large houses of the town story was divided into
by
cells,
;
except that the upper
the great hall was replaced
a chapel, and the courts were larger.
These monks received
travellers
who were
too poor to
pay for lodging and entertainment. For this purpose they had erected a special building and their means of livelihood were the gifts bestowed by the wealthy inhabitants ;
-of
the district
;
the caravans even contributing,
returned satisfied with the results of their
Accompanied by of appreciating the of the inhabitants,
and
living
on so
his host,
Epergos had an opportunity
affability
and
intellectual
development
surrounded as they were by deserts a
sterile
soil.
Although
their dwellings
were very simple, they were convenient; and liad
when they
traffic.
in
those which
most pretensions, the luxury consisted only of beauwoven stuffs and of exquisitely-wrought utensils
tifully
brought by the caravans coming from Persia. ^maintained
among them
Slaveiy was
in spite of the Christian
must be remarked that
law; but
had rather the character of domestic service imposed without severity, and that the it
slaves
made
recreation ^'illages,
part of the
which
the
it
family.
inhabitants
The only
possessing no gardens and
route of the caravans, could indulge
these
of
out-of-door
towns
and
scattered along the in,
was that of
killing
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
264
the birds of passage in spring and autumn, and huntingbeasts of prey and the gazelle.
These expeditions were, it must be understood, conducted on horseback for none but the poor went on foot. ;
For transport, camels and asses were employed. Life, tlierefore,
was not spent
in idleness; for the continual
passage of caravans, the necessity of providing subsistence,
and
traffic,
diffused
through that
little
town.
But
Eager
for gain,
whom
for their
constant animation
this picture
had
its
shadows
Obliging and obsequious to
they expected to
they were hard
profit,
and unpitying towards those who were unable to pay
The
services they solicited.
extortionate usury
;
for the
wealthiest practised the most
and Christianity had done
little
to
Besides, most of the Greeks living
mitigate these abuses. in this
!
both rich and poor got as much as they
could out of the travellers. those by
a
country came there only to enrich themselves as
quickly as possible.
As
soon as they had amassed large
sums, they would spend the
remainder of their
lives in
B\zantium or on the Asiatic coast of the .^gean.
The
conditions, therefore, on which the prosperity of the country
depended were unchangeable
;
and
its
inhabitants were
obliged to be contented with such gains as could be
from the caravans on two or three
lines.
made
Outside these
was the desert in all its solitude. Having rested for three days, the travellers took leave of their host, who made them pay a full equivalent for the hospitality they had enjoyed and they continued their
lines
;
route northwards.
As
they approached Antioch, the country gradually
assumed a
less
naked
aspect.
Here and there might be
seen olive-trees and vines on the hill-slopes, a few rustic
dwellings where a poorly-productive cultivation was carried
NORTHERN on,
and
flocks in the bottoms,
SYRIA.
265
where grew dry scanty
grass,
and where thorny bushes were abundant. to Chalcis, lying in a comparatively
They soon came near attractive region.
To
the
left,
the horizon was broken
a long chain of blue mountains
;
and towards the
by
right,
©Q
THE JIABITA2V0NS OF MAN.
266
sparingly watering these gardens during the hot season,
A
few white houses, with their
tiled roofs,
the dull green curtain of the olive-trees,
those innumerable
little
walls
;
brightened up
which was cut by
thus forming something like
immense staircase. Epergos and Doxius halted in a
the steps of an
walk from Chalcis
;
for their host
of introduction to one of his
recommending them not
large village
two hours'
had given them a
friends
who
lived
to sojourn in the town,
letter
there;
where
they would be very badly lodged just now, on account of a great market which was being held there. fact,
the junction point of
like those of tiling;
with
and
in
is,
in
to Antioch.
of the village were not covered with terraces
The
Androna.
olive, fig,
Chalcis
the routes which forni the
and the north-east approaches
south, the east,
The houses
all
roofs,
made
of timber, carried
every habitation, a small garden, planted
pomegranate, orange
trees,
and
vines,
gave
these dwellings an aspect of cheerfulness, which contrasted
with the barrenness of the small towns our travellers had just quitted.
The house
of Theagenes, better arranged than that of
the wealthy proprietor of Androna, consisted of an arched
entrance A forming a porch on the highway (Fig. yj), of a fore-court B opening into the principal court C, bordered
a portico D, and three chambers bers, a flight of steps
to the house
I,
M
were
first
story, arranged
fore-court B also gave
with quarters L for those attached
and large stable
space H, and at
The
by
In one of these cham-
ascended to the
similarl}' to the ground-floor.
entrance into the yard
V..
at K.
Gardens occupied the
latrines.
Figure 78 gives a bird's-e\'e view of this habitation, taken
from the point X.
The
floors
were made of stone,
like
those of the houses at Androna, and the rafters of the roof
were carried by arches.
It
must be remarked that the
NORTHERN
SYRIA.
267
double portico gave to these buildings an appearance of elegance not possessed by those of which we have just seen
A
a specimen.
mingling of Asiatic and Greek traditions
was observable which highly pleased Epergos.
View
Well
built
of the
North Syrian Timber-roofed House.
with large stones laid
building had an aspect of solidity
valued
in a
b}^
//
without mortar, the
no means to be under-
country where earthquakes are frequent.
tanks situated beneath the rooms F and
a and
Fig.
led down, afforded ^
means
See figure
for
77.
L, to
Two
which the steps
watering the gardens
;
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
268
they were supplied during a considerable part of the
for
}'ear b\' a
strata
The
stream of water
through the calcareous
filtering
on which the buildings stood. interiors of this habitation did not otherwise differ
Androna same display
at all from those of the houses of
same very simple
As
furniture, the
there was the
;
of rich stuffs.
was
to the inhabitants, although their chief occupation
the supplying of the caravans, and
traffic,
they nevertheless
and
cultivated a few olive-groves, vines, and orange-trees,
were not obliged to buy or get from a distance necessaries of
Accordingly they were
life.
less
the
all
greedy
for
gain than were the people of the wild, dusty country which
Epergos and Doxius had just
Theagenes was short monds, were
left.
two black dia-
his eyes, bright as
continual motion, and his whole person
in
seemed moved by the
;
He welcomed
springs.
same time giving orders
the travellers,
to his servants,
— at
busying himself
with everything, inquiring about everything, and answering
all
questions
show the
to
in
To have
a breath.
the horses stabled,
visitors their quarters, to question
them
as to
the purpose of their journey, and give orders for the repast,
was but an affair of a iQ.\\i moments. And while Epergos and Doxius were resting in the shade beneath the portico, and were being served with cold water and
man went
hither and thither, calling the
fruit,
the
little
women, scolding
the grooms, remarking that such or such a piece of furniture
was out of
certain caravan for
place, that a sheep
its
was behind
its
time,
must be and that
it
killed, that a
was the hour,
watering the garden.
Thanks spotlessly
to
the activity of the master, the house was
clean.
without a stain
Theagenes,
ways
;
vi^ere
differed so
The
walls,
lime-washed
inside,
were
and the servants, taking example from not at rest for a moment.
much from
These
active
the nonchalant habits of the
NORTHERN SYRIA. Orientals,
among whom
269
the travellers had lived for the
few months, that they wondered whence
last little
man
this stirring
could possibly have sprung.
When, during the evening meal, the family were assembled, Epergos and Doxius,
having answered the numerous
after
questions of their host, could not refrain from complimenting him on his activity and the excellent order of his dwelling, or
"Oh, I
from asking him
if he was born in the countr\-. Theagenes " I was born at Samos.
no," answered
;
have long been engaged
in trade,
Having made a
to Tyre.
Smyrna
money, and wishing to
little
spend the remainder of my days
coasting from
came here knowing that on these highways from Persia to Antioch, one may, with energy, double his substance in a short time. I rebuilt this house, which was dilapidated when I bought it and I hope, in a few years, to return to Samos with a in tranquillity, I
;
;
fair fortune."
" So," said Epergos, " "
No, certainly
passage, where
men
you do not belong what can one do here
.''
;
life is
hard, where
more
to the country.'' It is
One must make a
sible,
and to do
otherwise one estates
you see
who have if this
that, is
a place of
thieves than honest
are to be found, and where the population
changing.
is
continually
fortune as quickly as pos-
keep a constant and sharp look-out
quickly ruined.
in this
"
;
Three-fourths of the
country are in the hands of usurers,
ultimately dispossessed the original owners
;
and
goes on, the whole land will belong to the wealthy
people of Antioch, of interest.
They
who let
lend their
money only
at a dear rate
their estates at a high rent to
Greeks and Armenians, who
find
it
very
difficult to
both ends meet, and often decamp without paying.
the
make Thus
the love of gain and the want of money, which each day
makes
itself felt
Antioch, tend
to
more and more among the people of deprive that fine city of
its
source of
2
THE HABITATIONS OTMAN.
70
wealth
;
what would become of Antioch without
for
these stations, which enable caravans to
numbers across Arabia, Persia
convey
come
thitiier
such great
in
the products of
?
And
"
to
can you suppose that
men
will
continue to live
these sterile regions, unless they can hope
in
profits
for great
?
But," interrupted Doxius,
"
tion of Antioch, Christian
"Assuredly
;
" is
not this wealthy popula-
" ?
but Christianity has not caused the people
lose its usurious habits, in spite of the bishops
to
all
and
councils that have tried in vain to cure this Asiatic plague
among the new converts. toms among us, that many
But so inveterate are these cus-
among the most considermeans Thus of keeping up their rank and fortunes than usury. free men, who live their toil, all by see their most of the families
able and affluent have had for generations no other
gains
fall
into the
hands of the
people of their
idle rich
great cities which are resplendent with luxury.
It is
not
less true that the stations situated between Palmyra, Epi-
At the same commenced against certain Christian Byzantium was made the seat of empire, have
phania, and Antioch are being depopulated. time, persecutions sects, since
brought back to these countries families that were forced to leave the capital."
"What!"
returned
Doxius, "are Christians already
They have been dominant in Empire only for a itw years " Theagenes merely smiled, and wishing his guests " Good-night," alleging that he had to get up very early the next morning, he left them persecuting one another
!
the
!
to their rest.
When plans.
go
.*
alone,
Epergos and Doxius discussed
What should they do The West had nothing new
.**
their future
Where should they to offer
them
;
they had
NORTHERN SYRIA. visited every
quarter of
it.
They,
271
therefore,
determined
to continue their explorations eastwards, passing north of
ancient
Media and Bactriana, crossing the upper courses of
the Indus and the Ganges, keeping along the range of the
Emodi mountains, and continuing eastwards to
the extrem-
This plan was agreeable to Doxius, who had taken a dislike to the west, especially since the Empire had embraced Christianity.
ity of the earth.
"We
"
what has become of our friends of the Upper Indus their habits must have changed since the time we visited them." "Let us hope they have not," said Doxius. shall see, in passing," said
Epergos, ;
CHAPTER BUDDHIST *'
^
I -*-
XX.
INDIA.
^O what purpose, then, did Siddhartha, the Buddha, come among you inculcating poverty and the
renunciation of earthly goods in a tattered
;
why
did he clothe himself
shroud taken from a corpse
;
to
what purpose
did he enjoin charity on the rich, patience on the poor,
and acquiring
fasting for six }-ears
at the foot of the
Buddha and
attaining the Triple Science,
— since
Tree
name
of Understanding the character entitling to the
of
behold
I
throughout the country nothing but sumptuous palaces, temples magnificently decorated, convents provided with the comforts of
all
those
who
life,
proud priests taking no thought
for
are without shelter or food, Schatriyas bent only
on war and the destruction of men, and privileged castes
who hold in contempt their less Thus spoke Doxius amidst
fortunate brethren
a
?
numerous assemblage
gathered at Benares to discuss certain points of doctrine.
His words were received with murmurs of disapprobation.
"
Doxius continued
'AH human
:
"
What
says Siddhartha
.''
beings, whether of the lower, the middle, or
the upper castes, whether excellent, indifferent, or detest-
able in point of character, one-third is
a
in the
man
is
in
Error,
and
may
be ranged in three classes:
will continue in
Truth; one-third remains
it
;
one-third
in uncertainty.
Thus
standing on the shore of a pool sees lotuses below
the water, others at the water.
its
Whether
I
surface, others again elevated
above
teach or do not teach the law, those
BUDDHIST who
INDIA.
know it. Whether I who are settled in the
Error will not
are settled in
teach or do not teach the law, those
Truth if I
know
will
it
who
but those
;
273
are in uncertainty will,
teach the law, become acquainted with
do not teach the
know
law, they will not
it
;
whereas
if I
Who among
it.'
you, then, are the lotuses that are on the level of the water,
and that
above
flourish
undecided
surface
its
no one recognises the law, or
if
i*
— the are
good and the
in
Error:
he does know
it,
is
since willing
Charity, taught
by Buddha and practised
himself, ought to extinguish
every selfish feeling in
to submit to
by
who
see only those
I
.''
the
human
it.
heart
whereas
;
among you none Buddha says that we
see that
I
thinks of any one but himself
ought not to utter falsehoods, or even indulge frivolous discourse
whereas
;
in
vain and
have heard nothing but
I
deceitful or idle talk.
"Siddhartha preached humility of heart, and said to the professors of religion
your
sins
;
'
:
'
Conceal your good works and avow
yet no one confesses his sins twice a month,
with a loud voice, in presence of the congregation.
law of Buddha stand buried
On
it
is
simple and definite, a child can under-
But you
it.
in
!
What have you done
obscure casuistry.
this, cries
The
t
you have
." .
.
and threats succeeded murmurs, so that
Epergos had great
difficulty in getting his friend safe out of
the assembly. " I
must
say," observed Epergos,
a place of safety, "that proceedings.
When we
had no great share zeal for " It
is
in
Buddha and
I
when they had reached
cannot at
were
in
all
understand thy
the West, the Christians
thy esteem, and now thou art his precepts of morality
thou," replied Doxius, "
who never
full
of
" !
seest further
Buddhism is true, for it tends to arrest what thou callest the upward impulse of the human mind
than thy nose.
;
2
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
74
it
tends to thrust
man back
should never have quitted
into the nothingness wliich
and when
;
I
see th6se
Buddha, much
fess to follow the precepts of
who
pro-
eager to
less
Nirvana than to build sumptuous temples
attain
he
and
monasteries for their monks, and palaces for their nobles,
and giving themselves up to "
Ah
follow
!
my
friend,
I
kinds of pleasure,
all
not repress an indignation which
is
beg you once
deserved."
for all to let
humanity
Thousands of years have passed away when we were on the plateaus of Mount
destiny.
its
since the time
IM^rou, and
all
thy
efforts,
thy wrath, and thy counsels,
have not arrested the progress of that humanity.
mayst perhaps have been able the torrent
and hast fancied that the current was going
made
abandon Buddhism
will
;
for a
moment,
to stop.
These
to resign themselves to
the supreme good.
nothingness, and to consider that as
only in this world, but
Thou
throw a few pebbles into
to
thou hast seen the water boil up
:
beings, believe me, are not
They
can-
I
much
only too
for
they wish to
live,
not
in eternity."
Doxius's invective, which had excited the anger of a great part of the assembly, produced nevertheless a some-
what profound impression upon the mind of some of those present.
Kalanta.
Among them was a very rich merchant, named He had founded several sangharamas (places of
assembly) for those
he practised
who wished
charity,
The words
persons.
of
Doxius aroused
a great desire to have a person to
know
inspired
to discourse on the law
and had a great in
his
;.
affection for holy in
Kalanta's mind
house who seemed
the law so well, and whose solemn deportment
him with
respect.
He
sought him out therefore,
enjoining on his messengers to show the greatest deference for
Doxius's knowledge, and to entreat him to take up his
abode
for
some days
might consecrate
it
in
the palace of Kalanta, that he
by instructing
his family.
Prostrate
B UDDHIS T INDIA
275
on the ground, the messengers informed Doxius of
who wished
Epergos,
master's desire.
their
to take advantage
of this occasion to see the palace of one of the richest
inhabitants of Benares, joined his entreaties to those of the
envoys of Kalanta
;
two companions, mounted
so that the
on an elephant brought
in
the
Epergos passed
of this splendid abode.
in front
mansion
for the
— found themselves
of Kalanta was outside the city,
evening
—
for the purpose,
for Doxius's secretary.
The
vast gardens of the palace of Kalanta extend as far
as the Ganges,
From there
and venerable
overshadow
trees
banks.
its
the habitation, situated on slightly elevated ground, is
a view of the broad
verdure.
river, losing
the west
itself in
covered with vegetation of the most brilliant
in a plain
Towards the north appear the first slopes of the lost in a warm haze and on the west, the city
Himalayas
;
of Benares, with the wall that surrounds buildings, shining in the sun,
moored along
its
houses and
its
it,
storied
and the thousands of boats
its
squares covered with tents,
great parasols, and awnings of
The
all kinds.
purity of
the air enables one to distinguish, even at this distance, the
crowd moving along the banks of the great
river.
Arrived at the turn of the road that leads to Kalanta's residence, this magnificent
panorama
befose the eyes of our travellers,
is
suddenly displayed
who cannot
refrain
from
giving utterance to their admiration. "
Here," said Epergos, "
made an to wait
And
we have
a holy
upon earth
excellent choice of a place for annihilation,
to
man who
which he doubtless
in
has
which
aspires.
thou seriously believest, Doxius, that when one has
such a spectacle daily resign himself to quit " Silence
!
it
Epergos
end of their probation
!
;
before for
his
Nirvana all
who
eyes,
he can easily
"
Nirvana
!
is
are
to
human
beings the
endowed with wisdom
C
c
ii
4J
^
(1
O
10
Plan of Hindoo Palace.
GX_-
,20
— Fig.
79.
O
-
Q-
BUDDHIST INDIA.
277
ought to desire to reach the threshold of that palace which is
the termination of "
Come,
our host
and
;
all evils."
mood
see that thou art exactly in the
I
if
he does not take thee
for
to edify
Buddha, he must
be very unreasonable." "
"
Cease thy scoffing
"
Oh, don't be alarmed
The
travellers
and
!
!
A is thrown
across
not compromise thee."
They soon
number
it
will
which
their escort enter the gardens,
are admirably well kept.
canal supplied by a
I
reach the banks of a
of fountains
(fig.
A bridge
79).
entrance to the
in front of the principal
Epergos and Doxius having dismounted from
habitation.
their elephant, are introduced into the portico
On
for a vestibule to the palace.
portico, the
rooms C are appointed
B,
which serves
the two sides of the open for the porter's lodging,
and as places where the master's orders may be waited
From
these rooms there
steps to
the
is
an approach and an ascent by
main building through the porticos
through the court
The
with a fountain.
porticos
E,
or
by a basin abut on two small rooms F,
ornamented
D,
for.
in the centre
where the servants await their master's
exit,
and an elevated
portico G, which gives entrance to the great hall of assembly H.
To
the
a range of
left
of this hall, at
pillars,
I,
which serves
is
another
for a
for provisions.
Two
At
S
At K
conduct to the
story which contains, above the apartments
rooms opening on a projecting balcony
I
and
vestibule for the servants, with
its
steps
K,
first
bed-
at the side of the
At L
great hall, for the latter rises from the bottom.
At R
some
are
and T are kitchens and stores
flights of stairs M,
rising to the level of the
divided by
promenade, and where
the servants of the palace habitually stay. of the dwelling rooms.
hall,
N and
upper garden which
is
the
a terrace O,
is
are exterior porticos or covered promenades.
a platform.
Figure 80
exhibits a section through VX, which shows the arrangement
THE
278
J/.ini7'A770XS
OF MAN. The
of the rooms and of the great hall. light
and
air
latter receives
from above the terraces which form the roof-
ing of the apartments of the to the level of
The
first story.
stairs
ascend
two platforms, whence a view can be obtained
of the whole country.
Figure 8i gives the interior of the
great hall towards the far end.
Kalanta, seated in the portico G, with his legs crossed, on a rich carpet, was awaiting his guests.
Section of Hindoo Palace.
Without
he
rising
Fig. 8o.
signed to Doxius to scat himself opposite to him, wliile
Epergos and the persons of his suite remained standing. "
My
Thy
dwelling, Doxius,
discourse
is
is
honoured by thy presence.
that of a saint, and
I
am
anxious to con-
verse with thee respecting the interpretation of the law."
Then having made
a sign to his attendants, they
left
the
master and his guest alone.
Epergos,
more curious
know what the two he followed those who had
it
would seem, was
to visit the palace than to
sages said to each other
conducted him
thither,
;
for
under the pretext of arranging
Doxius's apartment conformably to his simple habits.
We
do not know what Kalanta and Doxius found to say to each other during the two long hours that followed. We must suppose that their conversation had a great interest for
Intkkiok of Hindoo PALACi£. — Fig.
3i. [
To face pag-e
27S.
B UDDHIST themselves, since
INDIA.
279
gave Epergos time to go over the palace
it
from top to bottom, accompanied by a person who acted
and was very desirous of exhibiting the beauties
as steward, •of
The
the mansion to the pretended secretary of the saint.
The
whole structure was of stone, bricks, and wood.
col-
umns, cut out of hard stone, were eight-sided, polished with the greatest care, and surmounted
The
sculptured.
up
•outside
and within
to the height of a ;
by
capitals delicately
walls, built of bricks, with facings of stone
man, were plastered without
the ceilings were composed of pieces of timber
;
corbelled out and ornamented with sculpture.
Notwithstanding the external beauty of
Epergos did not
to observe that
fail
ciple the rude structures
it
this building,
resembled
in prin-
which he had seen formerly on
Upper Indus. The composition of the great hall attracted His special admiration. The timber corbellings, so well adapted to
the shores of the
relieve the bearing of the great
outside
beams, and to form shelters
the arrangement of the interior balcony which
;
gave access to the bedrooms of the double gallery which closed
in
admirable distribution of light
first
story
;
in
the
in a soft half-light;
the comparative coolness of this lower part; ;
;
this vast interior, the
whole of whose lower part was immersed spread with carpets
the sort of
the back of the hall
the floor
the sobered brilliance of the paintings
;
the rich appearance of the ceiling resplendent with gold and
azure
;
and the quiet of the
into his
On
place,
mind a kind of vague but
—
all
tended to breathe
delightful ecstasy.
the pretext of arranging certain very important notes
which Doxius had entrusted to him, he asked the steward to leave
on one
him alone
for a
few moments, and seating himself
of the divans which occupied the corners of the hall,
he began to meditate.
"What
a strange being
is
man!"
said he to himself
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
28o
"
he can forget nothing
and
;
the vast improve-
in spite of
ments which the course of time introduces into the trace of his •he w'as
or of the
first efforts,
The
first
it
other
in
the one reaching Media, the
;
bears with
struction in w^ood, but
branches diverge
in a south-westerly, the
a south-easterly direction
other India.
his works,
influences to which
Two
subjected, always recurs.
from the same trunk, one
first
is
peoples
who hollow
raise a
kind of den of clay
traditions of a con-
it
developed
out their dwellings ;
it
the midst of
in in
the ground, or
constructs those Assyrian
palaces with their vaultings and their thick earthen walls, exhibiting of
all
the time in this concrete structure the trace
wooden buildings. The other branch is among those races which are inferior in power mind, but among which the handicrafts have reached a its
primitive
developed of
considerable degree of perfection faithful to its traditions,
ed by the peoples
some
it
whom
;
and while remaining
makes use of the means employIs there not here
subjugates.
it
vestige of the construction which
I
formerly observed
that, too,
Fau who showed us the door, and mingled with the Aryan traditions of the con-
querors
And
in
the house of that fat
.'
did not the Ionian architecture itself exhibit
some
striking relations with
hall,
the courts
features which
among
I
what we see here
surrounded find
among
b\-
porticos,
The
t
are
great
persistent
the Aryas at their very cradle,
the Egyptians, the lonians, the Greeks and the
Romans,
and again
here.
All present differences,^
and yet are substantially the same.
Infinite variety in unity.
in Persia,
"And why do
those primary elements of construction
reach a purer form
among
the Greeks, whereas elsewhere
they tend to become obscured
t
Why among
the Greeks
do we find that rational selection and moderation to form, that sobriety which
is
in regard
so charming, and which
leaves the wish for fuller development
.^
Why
do we
find
BUDDHIST INDIA. here this profusion of strange and sometimes grotesque sculpture which suggests abuse and satiety this
be so
?
Greek
settled in
those
What
cause
is its
Why
?
their
should
because the Aryas
it
mingled with a certain
soil
who took up
Is
?
who
race, whilst
abode here found another already
Must we consider the products of human
powerful?
intelligence as proportioned to the special aptitudes of each
race and
admixtures
its
complicated and
appear to
me
And
!
The more
?
difficult of solution
in
I
the course of ages,
which are scarcely known to each have frequent and intimate
observe, the
more
do these problems if all
these nations
other, should
come
to
what will be the result of the mingling of these traditions and of these various
influences
Will
it
?
Will
it
be
relations,
for the better, or for the
worse
?
be the irremediable decay or the culmination of the
products of
human
intelligence
" ?
monologue for some Kalanta and Doxius had not entered
Epergos would have continued considerable time,
if
his
Their conversation must have
the great hall.
left
a deep
impression on their minds, for neither of them appeared to
be conscious of the beauty of the place
The sun now
themselves.
near
its
last rays in a horizontal direction,
lofty
openings of the hall
the ceiling,
all
;
in
which they found
setting
was darting
its
through the large and
and above the luminous
sparkling with gold, appeared to
rise to
dust,
a pro-
Every projection shone forth in brilliant and the pavement seemed a mirror reflecting the
digious height. relief,
mixture of colours with which the walls were covered.
Epergos advanced to meet the very ground,
humble secretary consider for a
he
is."
his eyes.
said
:
"
of the sage
moment
his host,
and bowing down to
Give permission.
Doxius
to
beg
Sire,
his
to
the
master to
the splendour of the place in which
Doxius, appearing to start from a dream, raised
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN. " It
is,
in truth,"
said he, " very beautiful
comparison with the Triple Science
in
"Well," said Epergos to himself, "he
any
or at
rate he
but what
;
is it
?
is
decidedly insane,
endeavouring to render our host more
is
insane than he was before."
During the three following days' sleep alone interrupted Epergos
the conversations between Kalanta and Doxius.
took advantage of the mystic absorption of his companion to visit the environs of this beautiful
and was not greatly surprised
abode
:
he ascertained
at the fact, that the houses
of the inhabitants belonging to the inferior castes were of
very different character to the magnificent palace of his
For the most
host.
bamboos
of
"
part,
made
they were wretched huts
or of tempered clay with rushes or thatch.
can very well understand," said he to Doxius one
I
evening,
"how
who occupy
the inhabitants of this country
the miserable dwellings
visited this morning, should
I
be
eager to accept the law of Buddha, and that they should aspire to annihilation as the end of their miseries
can scarcely believe that Kalanta and can long remain letter,
the
first
its
adherents.
all
who
they followed
If
it
ed
in
them on a footing
of equality.
persuading Kalanta to do so
to the
thou wouldst know that
all
and to
Hast thou succeed-
" .-*
" If thou wast acquainted with the doctrine of
Buddha,
creatures, in proportion to their
merits or faults, pass through successive states less
I
him
thing incumbent upon them would be to
distribute their wealth to all these poor wretches, live like
but
;
live like
more or
approaching or removed from perfect knowledge and
wisdom.
Nirvana
Kalanta
If in
in
a
position
complete security and
because he has already trials
is
in
free
to
from
in
which he
is
cares,
it
is
other bodies passed through the
necessary for attaining that degree
humanity,
meditate on
in
the scale of
able to repose and meditate until
BUDDHIST INDIA. his death.
may
he
If
whom
the precepts of the law,
all
fulfil
thou hast been speaking
by searching earth,
to
fails
back into the miserable condition
fall
those are of these,
upon
he
283
to
it
in
men
for all are not placed
;
all
duty to
facilitate their acquisition of the
"
And
"
Nirvana is
at the top of the ladder
and it is even a means of so doing,"
that
is
to say, the
what
:
to be found
is
end of
trials,
?
—that
end
the nothingness from which the world issued."
is,
then, not worth while to
"Thou for
;
But he
can ascend higher in the scale in
the series of transmigrations they undergo
"It
Buddha
same grade of wisdom and knowledge.
preached Charity; for
which
and similarly
;
a better condition.
never preached equality amongin the
which
during their time of probation
for truth
may return
in
wilt never
mount
so high."
comprehend these mysteries, Epergos
thou art narrow-minded and altogether absorbed
;
in
earthly things, and affectest to disdain supreme wisdom." "
What
dost thou say
of these mysteries,
!
We
we have
have already seen so
listened to so
many who have
pretended to the knowledge of absolute wisdom
they were scarcely agreed it
resides
—that for my
as thou allegest,
I
as to thyself, have
may I
among themselves
part,
many
— though
as to
where
without being narrow-minded,
reasonably have
my
doubts.
not seen thee embracing
in
And
turn and
proclaiming as the acme of wisdom the theogony of the Egyptians, the theology of the Assyrians, and subsequently the politico-religious system of the find thee a Buddhist.
Very good;
Romans I
.''
see no
and now
harm
I
in it;
me the liberty of belonging to none of them, without calling me narrow-minded." " What thou callest an infatuation for different forms of Truth, is in fact in my case — as with human beings
but do allow
only a desire to
know and
Like other thinking beings,
to attain that absolute truth. I
am
ascending the steps of
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
284
the ladder, and wliat thou imaginest to be contradiction
is
only transformation." " I
must not be
the doctrine of
surprised, then,
Buddha
nearer to absolute truth "
Possibly
"
Thou
coming
if I
see thee
" ?
" !
art in doubt, therefore,
and we are not
Buddha
merge
lead to absolute
Nirvana
in
—
if
How
could truth
there might possibly be
another teaching, wiser or truer than that doctrine, therefore,
is
only relative
;
and
This system of
.'*
is it
to doubt the absolute validity of that which "
Thy
from
far
wisdom and
to an understanding with each other.
the teaching of
— which
abandoning
another which thou deemest
for
not allowable is
relative
" .'
mind, Epergos, has been profoundly corrupted
by staying too long among the Greeks
:
I
observe
it
con-
tinually." "
to
me
when thou art come the end of thy arguments, thou art wont to have Permit
to say, Doxius, that
recourse to abuse
thy sojourn
;
among
and
this
has been thy wont, not since
the Egyptians or the Assyrians merely,
but ever since the beginning of the world."
Next morning
the travellers
quitted their host,
who
loaded them with presents, and entreated Doxius to come to see law.
him
often,
and confirm him
in the
knowledge of the
CHAPTER
XXI.
A JOURNEY THROUGH THE FAR EAST.
ON
leaving
Ganges
;
Benares, our
travellers
ascended
remarkable beauty,
for
it
seemed as
if
the charms of all the
climates of the globe were united in this region. in
the
they came to mountainous countries of
Sometimes,
wide valleys, was to be seen a luxuriant tropical vege-
tation
;
while a few hours' walk would bring
them
to forests
and larches on the slopes of the mountains, to wild gorges and peaks covered with eternal snows. Enormous
of
firs
edifices cut in the rocks in
the faith of the people results of
human
;
honour of Buddha,
to revisit the
see whether this ancient cradle
many or
wood and Upper Indus, to of the Aryas, whence so
industry were miserable huts of
Epergos was anxious
reeds.
testified to
and by the side of these prodigious
nations had issued, preserved
had suffered a transformation.
its
primitive simplicity,
The
travellers reached
the valley of Cashmere, which they had descended centuries before.
ence
in
They could
scarcely observe
any
many differ-
the customs of the dwellers in these highlands
;
they were building their houses just as they built them formerly.
Their physiognomy was the same as
they had
retained
the simplicity of their manners, and
tribes continued to
emigrate westwards, since towards the
it
had been,
south the land was already occupied.
Having ascended the course
of the Indus, they reached
the plateaus of Thibet; there nothing had been changed
houses of the villages were detached as formerly.
No
;
the.
cities
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
286
were to be seen, and the inhabitants were engaged only
in
the chase, the breeding of cattle, and the exchange of certain
products of their
own country
for
wrought metals and im-
plements of various kinds which they obtained from CashIn the countries where
mere.
wood abounded,
the houses
— trunks of
were made of timber at the corners
with bark.
— and
trees piled up and framed by projecting roofs covered where wood was scarce, these
protected
In the deserts,
houses were constructed of rubble stone put together with a poor kind of mortar, or with clay in
when
there was
neighbourhood, and covered with trunks of
the
any
trees,
brushwood, and a thick layer of rammed earth.
There
is
no sight gloomier than these abodes, always them from the winds which
built against the rock to protect
at these altitudes are terribly violent, buried
snow into
months
for eight
in
the year, and lost amid solitudes
which the traveller dares not venture.
steep slopes are covered with verdure
months which found on the
this season lasts,
mowing
store as possible of the
The
difificulty
;
In
summer the
and during the four
numerous
loftiest of the prairies,
lose no time in
beneath the
flocks are to be
while the inhabitants
the lower parts to lay
in as large
a
abundant forage which they produce.
of sustaining
life
in
such inhospitable
regions has from time immemorial induced their energetic
Epergos inhabitants to go in search of milder climates. and Doxius therefore came across the track of bodies of these emigrants,
who were
to be seen, like their ancestors,
coming down from their moimtains with waggons, in which were the women, the children, and such movables as they were obliged to carry with them.
While they were ance was
in perfect
Epergos said "
resting in a village
to his
harmony with
whose rude appear-
the country
(fig.
82),
am
that
companion:
Well, art thou not as strongly convinced as
I
t
,3*
~~'
-t
^ ^
-^f-^ase:-^-*^-
Himalayan'
ViLL-\Gr-
—Fig
iIl^>v
A JOURNEY THROUGH THE FAR EAST.
287
these Aryas cannot develop'the qualities with which Nature
has endowed them, except
contact with other races
in
?
Here, in the vicinity of their cradle, things are as they were
many thousands as
if
tile,
of years ago, or nearly
they, like their
but destined to
would seem
It
so.
mountain home, were rude and
fertilise
Look
the plains.
at those
infer-
snow-
clad summits, those far-stretching heaps of rocky debris, the ruins of the peaks, this valley strewed with pebbles through
muddy
which run those tortuous streams of a
torrent, these
occasional breadths of verdure, these ravines worn ice,
and these rocks rent by the lightning only.
and death
tacle suggests only dislocation
to these ruins
;
by the
This spec-
yet
it is
owing
and snows that vast regions are covered with
a fertile alluvium."
"Yes," said Doxius.
"And how
immense
must have been the work of valleys, and thus converting the ruins of rocks, that seem unchangeable, into a fine dust spread over immense spaces, which are soon Nature
smoothing down these
in
covered with a rich vegetation
men they must descend from ;
!
.
.
And
.
thus
with
it is
the heights and mingle with
foreign elements, to constitute the finest civilisations."
"To what
retorted
purpose.''"
What " Have " Thou
travail of
is I
thy reason not seen
it
and error
}
?
often
enough
hast, like myself, seen
"since
these
"
for this assertion
civilisations lead to corruption
"
Doxius,
" .-'
only one part of the great
Nature, yet thou art always ready to draw sweep-
ing inferences and final conclusions from the observations of the
moment.
Here
is
a torrent which
—
in this valley,
nothing only heaps up pebbles and them along. It seems disorderly, useless, devastating. Must we thence conclude that this torrent is only an agent of destruction } Go ten days' march down the plain certainly, produces
whirls
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN. and thou
made
wilt see these waters,
turbid b\- the
tri-
turation
of the
pebbles incessantly fretting against one
another,
become
tranquil and limpid,
their shores the alluvium in
then be
Do
a hurry to judge or to infer from partial
in
when thou knowest not what " I
and depositing on
which the lotus grows. be the
will
not
effects,
final results."
cannot admit principles which would tend to nothing
short of justifying everything, and regarding error itself as
necessary." "
Remark,
I
pray, that
my
deductions
—
I
it is
My
that are in question.
not principles, but observations
method
to observe, reserving
is
my
do not say
conclusions
observations throw light upon a series of
Doxius, thou concludest a
thee,
temper
if
but
;
irresistible force.
"
losest
my for
thy
;
and thou regardest
all
mechanism moved by
Truth and Error
attract
thy attention
and thou dost not seek to make the one prevail
equally,
and
As
but thou never observest anything
that strike thy senses
that exists in this world as a kind of
an
and
till
observations run counter to thy conclusions."
"Yes, thou observcst facts
prioj-i,
—
facts.
to suppress the other."
Suppress
we must
suppress
!
It is
I
easy to talk about
is
very mischievous
in its course;
;
but
That torrent down
takes for error ma}' not be truth. there
it
know, before suppressing, whether what one
first
it
:
it
destroys ev^erything that
lies
renders sterile a valley that might be cover-
ed with verdure
if it
did not indulge
its
humour
for incess-
antly moving those heaps of pebbles from one bank to
another
;
suppose
I
suppress
it,
then
are no longer irrigated, nor fertilised it
;
— the plains of India
by the alluvium which
elaborates." "
Thou always
supportest thy reasoning on the order of
things in the material world." "
And
on what, then, wouldst thou have
me
base
it ^
On
JOURNEY THROUGH THE FAR EAST
A T\^irvana I
Can
?
be assured that there
I
be assured that the souls of
men
it ?
"We
upon these
"
shall never agree
Probably not
The
a Nirvana
?
Can
pass into a succession
"
bodies before reaching
•of
is
289
subjects."
" !
their course for a considerable
travellers directed
time along the chain of the Himalayas, then, having crossed
Mien mountains occuThence they went down to the countries formerh^ visited by them and inhabited by men of the yellow race. There they ascertained that progress was very gradual. On the banks of the rivers bamboos continued to be used in building, and the dwellings the Brahmapootra, they passed the
by savage
pied
tribes.
scarcely differed in point of construction from those of the fat
The
Fau.
oped
;
art of carpentry, however,
had been devel-
and advancing towards the north-east, they found following the arts and less remote from
peoples
improvements
in
them which a long
those of the south.
those
practice secures, than
Usualh^, however, the houses of these
peoples were built very slightly and simply.
Wood, which
these countries furnished in abundance, was almost exclusively
employed, with
brick,
in
burnt or sun-dried.
Many
of
more than a covered space closed
these houses were nothing
with walls of wood, within which, as occasion required,
the\' set
up
partitions
formed of mats. The dwellings of the
wealth}' consisted of a series of pavilions
more
or less apart
from each other— each containing only one or two apart-
ments
— isolated,
wooden
galleries.
or
communicating by means of
Thus
light
these dwellings, w4ien extensive,
resembled a village interspersed with gardens carefully planted and cultivated. a rich
man
anew.
If
it
to pull
was
was a
It
down
falling into
ted himself with erecting
rare thing for the son of
his father's
house and build
it
decay through age, he conten-
by the
side of the old buildings,
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
290
new
pavilions differing very slightly from those which
was abandoning
he
These houses consisted only of
to ruin.
a ground-floor, covered with very projecting roofs artistically wrought.
In this country, more than in any other, the traditions of the past were religiously preserved
were not allowed to sojourn through
in
Buddhism had been
it.
;
strangers, therefore,
scarcely even to pass
it,
widel)' diffused
among
these peoples, but in a diluted form, being limited certain superstitious practices. its
doctrines was obscured
legends.
Doxius observed
The
by a host
of this
this with pain,
but his companion
fruits
houses
studying the
in
patient, laborious, nature-loving
Never had Epergos seen so many rare flowers never so many paintings and carvings in the
people.
and
industrious,
and ridiculous
of crude
only laughed, and was greatly interested arts
to
elevated character of
;
;
never so
many
articles of
domestic use elaborated
con amove ; never such a masterly use of the metals.
seemed
him as
to
if
these
men
delighted
in
creatinsc
It
an
endless variety of wants, in order to have the pleasure of
them by the most complicated and singular methods. They wove silken stuffs of marvellous beauty and delicacy, and skilfully ornamented them with metallic threads. The ceramic art was carried among them to the
satisfying
utmost limits of perfection and their white clay pottery was enamelled with the most brilliant colours, and embelThey especially lished with the most graceful designs. excelled in representing the flowers and elegant plants of ;
their gardens,
and domestic animals
—
as
if
accustomed to
meditate on the productions of nature, and love them with passion.
In Cathay, where our travellers stopped for a consider-
able time, countries,
Epergos to study the manufactures
of
its
and Doxius to endeavour to preach the law of
A JOURNEY THROUGH THE FAR EAST.
291
Buddha, they hired a small house, which was only one of the pavilions before mentioned, consisting of
with some indifferent
This pavilion
(fig.
Z'^
accommodation
was constructed
two apartments,
for
the
servants.
entirely of wood, and'
placed upon a platform of dry stone-work, with a small flight of steps before the single door.
Cathayan House.
ture,
In point of struc-
Fig
nothing could be more simple: posts, connected by
stays, carried horizontal beams projecting outside, by brackets, and kept in place by a system of wall-plates strengthened by braces. On the ends of the clips
and
relieved
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
292
beams rested the eave-plates which received tlie rafters. All was so curiously fashioned, perforated, and painted, that the aspect of this pavilion, amid the verdure, was delightful to the e)-c. The windows were filled in with upright bars of turned wood, behind which curtains of stuff
were drawn at night
The
if it
w^as desired to
in
cold.
roof was entirely covered with very thin plates of
copper ingeniously turned up ]^y
keep out the
means of
in
the
same manner
shutters which opened above the
as
tiles.
windows
the height of the wall-plates, ventilation could be obtained
through the intervals
left
between them,
for the ceiling
was
placed upon the bracketed beams.
The
spaces between the posts, and beneath the windows
were closed
in
with boards.
Epergos, though he reflected that these wooden structures
were derived from the early buildings he had formerly seen erected by the Aryas, and to whose improvement he
had contributed, did not conceal from himself that
this love
of the complicated, this elaboration of details, this multitude of minute precautions, were a peculiarity of the }'ellow race.
The
Arj-as he concluded had been able to exercise
only an ephemeral influence over this race, which was
developing
at
arts in conformity with its
its
He began
to recal
Athens, and
of the
immense
in
own
genius.
^hat he had seen during
his sojourn
the cities of Hellas, and assured himself
interval that separated the
works of these
descendants of the Aryas from those of the yellow races of
Greeks had
the extreme East.
While
fully simplified the
forms suggested by the structure and
the materials emplo}'ed
;
his friends the
skil-
while they were moderate in the
use of ornament, and used discrimination in reproducing material objects, the }-ellow races of the East seemed to
take
pleasure
plicated,
to
in
making the simplest
be lavish of ornament, and
structure to
com-
delight in
A JOURNEY THROUGH THE EAR EAST. representations of strange monsters reflected further,
— could
it
lers
in
to impression than the
this
country are
little
they
know
little
?
Have they
Greeks?
a
No, assuredly; the dwelprone to seek the higher
Their written works do not exhibit
any excess of imagination. satisfied
— Epergos
be admitted that the inhabitants
greater love for the stupendous
spheres of thought.
and yet
more hvely imagination, a mind
of these countries had a
more open
;
293
Their mind
is
practical,
of heroism or of lofty ambitions
;
and
they are
with a quiet and obscure existence, provided they
Whence comes
enjoy material comforts.
works of
art
it
then that their
sometimes display a bold, fantastic
Time
disordered imagination.'*
passes on and
spirit,
a
new peoples
come under my observation while the problems which at first seemed to me easy of solution are becoming obscure. The preaching of Doxius among these peoples had not the success he expected so when Epergos told him he wished to visit other countries, he made no objection. ;
;
CHAPTER
XXII.
THE NAHUAS AND TOLTECS.
DIRECTING
their course to the north-cast,
and Doxius inhabited
b)'
men
Epergos
for a long while traversed vast regions
of the yellow race.
But on advancing
to the north, they reached the limit of the inhabited countries,
and found themselves
in the
midst of icy deserts.
Having crossed an arm of the sea, they set foot on a new continent. For a long time the\- pursued a descending course towards the south along the western slopes of a long chain of desert mountains,
when they reached a
region of
remarkable beauty.
There they found busy races of peoples, among civilisation
had reached a considerable development.
They belonged
evidently to two very distinct races, one
very superior to the other and holding
The
whom
inferior race, in
the yellow race
;
some
it
in
particulars, strikingly
subjection.
resembled
not that which then occupied Cathay, but
the peoples settled in the great islands of the Pacific Ocean the superior race, whose skin was copper-coloured, was
and robust, and pretended
to a divine origin.
It
tall
could not,
however, be confounded with that of the Ar}as, any more than with that of Ancient Egypt.
This vast country, wonderfully favoured sents a great gulf on the side
and
is
b)-
Nature, pre-
washed by the Atlantic Ocean,
crossed from north to south-east
by
a lofty chain of
mountains, whence flow numerous streams fed by great lakes.
THE NAHUAS AND TOLTECS. The
295
elevation of these mountains, and of the plateaus
that form their base, causes a variety of climate.
For,
though the plains are extremely warm, the elevated parts •are
temperate, while the tops of the mountains are covered
with snow.
As
there
is
no want of water
lower lands are immensely
during the hot season,
The
fertile.
•encloses the gulf on the south,
is
in
any
part, the
peninsula, which
the only part dried up
mountains are of no great
for its
height; but deluging rains water this district during three
months of the
year, and the inhabitants have succeeded in
constructing large tanks which preserve the water, or have
hollowed out great caverns into which flow deep under-
ground natural watercourses, which are hidden from view dry season.
in the
priests,
who
The lower
class
These people are governed by kings and •
are versed in astronomy and sacred lore.
are absolutely dependent, and are subjected to the most painful labours
;
for the
country possesses neither horses
nor beasts of burden, and the -are
employed
in
manual labour.
men
of the inferior class
the porterage of goods, and in
They
all
kinds of
are gentle and submissive; whilst
the chiefs of the various states that occupy this region are •often at
war with each
other.
Epergos and Doxius found -cities,
where
all
testimony to a isation
important
in these countries
the arts had been long cultivated, and bore civilisation of ancient date.
been developed
imported from abroad
were very ancient;
Had
in these countries, or
.''
It
was evident that
for at the
visited the country of the
this civil-
had its
it
been
sources
time when our travellers
Olmecas and the Nahuas, they
had proof that the buildings contained records of
traditions
.already corrupted.
Epergos, inquisitive as usual, wished to learn the opinion •of
the priests and sages of the country respecting their
TIJE lIAJUrATIONS
296
and
origin,
curiosity
;
OF MAN.
easily found an opportunity for satisfying his for these
peoples are not hostile to foreigners,
having never had occasion to complain of ill-treatment from
One
them.
named Nimak, who discharged
of these sages
Uxmal
the functions of supreme judge at cities
(one of the chief
of the peninsula), contracted a friendship with the
travellers,
and undertook to inform them of the origin of
the Olmecas.
"In the beginning," said Nimak, " all was immovable; calm and void was the immensity of heaven. There was then neither valleys
man
nor beast, no woods, birds,
The
the heaven alone existed.
;
was covered by peaceful waters. nothing moved
The
darkness.
;
stones, or
fish,
face of the earth
Nothing was connected
no sound was heard.
;
All remained in
Creator, the Former, the Ruler, the Serpent
covered with feathers, and the germs alone, were on the
They concerted with each
water.
earth to rise out of the waters
;
on
other and caused the
trees to shoot forth, the waters to flow
to stand erect to each
:
;
they caused
this earth
and the mountains
then they created beasts, assigning
its
place
but these could not utter the names of the gods nor
do them homage. of red earth
;
Then they determined
to create
man
but this was not successful, and the body
was dissolved in the water. They afterwards made men of wood these spoke, reasoned, and reproduced their kind but they had not intelligence, and did not retain the ;
;
remembrance of their Former and Creator; yet they existed in large numbers on the earth. All the creatures rose against them and they were almost all destroyed. Their posterity
may
be seen
woods, because their "
There was
little
in the little
flesh
apes that
was of wood
light
on the face of the earth, for
man was made of
flesh
of his power, and ruled over the apes
and
the sun was dim, and
live in the
alone.
;
he was proud
all
the beasts..
THE NAHUAS AND TOLTECS. When
they had greatly multiphed, these
from the north
in tribes,
297
men came down
and occupied these
countries, as
also a great land situated towards the rising sun
the sea
But
for
;
knew already how to make use land was swallowed by the waters
they
this great
a flood destroyed
all
men alive." "You are certain
beyond
of boats. .
.
.
and
the cities of the Nahuas, leaving only
a few
"
Our
"
Ah
said "
"
"
}
objected Epergos.
Nimak.
was not this land that was swallowed up Atlantis
Another
his
so,"
Greek
story
;
friends," replied Doxius.
continued Epergos; "but here are
who have never heard
same Then
of Plato, and
yet relate
be so good as to continue, sage Nimak."
and
to raise
them
;
but he was killed by
and Xbalanque, who were the
civilisers of
first
Hunahpu men, and
Similarly in our time
destroyed the power of Xiballa.
Nahuas have conquered the Chichemecas-Ouinames,
whose tyranny they could no longer endure.
who rebuilt the cities of the Peninsula." "And how were those cities built which the conquests of the "
who
the giant Cabrakou began to shake the mountains,,
to depress
the
.'"
companion.
fable of thy
"I was thinking
the
it
writings say so," replied !
Epergos to
people
of
Nahuas
It
was they
existed before
" .''
Their houses were rude and built of wood and unhewn
stone joined by mortar."
"And who had
taught those primitive peoples to build
"
way } The conquerors of Xiballa." " And who were these conquerors
in that "
"Men of great "And whence
stature
" ?
and wickedness."
did they come?"
"
From
"
And whence came
the North." the
Nahuas
" .''
THE
298 "
H.iBJTA'JJONS
Also from the North.
who
into tribes
elect chiefs,
OF MAN.
They were and
the Jackal, the Parrot and the Crow, the "
What
" It is
still
are divided
and who are masters of the Fox,
Ant and
the Toads."
"
are thc\-
?
we designate
thus that
the indigenous tribes that
have been subjugated, and whose labour supplies us with all It is they who cultivated the white the necessaries of life. maize and the
\-ello\v
maize which serves for food
;
it
was
they who once showed us the road to Paxil." '•
Where
is
"
Paxil
.'
the fertile and marshy countr)' watered by the
" It is
Uzumaciata and the Tabasco, between
tributaries of the
the sea and the mountains." "
And
"Yes
was
it
;
where the
b\'
And
"
for
On
fire
Nahuas came
the North,
hither.''"
— from countries
from the cold, and where
of the god Tohil."
what consideration did the god Tohil grant "
the tribes
fire to
down from
tribes suffered greatly
they obtained the "
that route that the
they came
.''
the condition
that
the}'
human
should sacrifice
victims to him." "
And do you
continue to offer these sacrifices
"
We
it
fire
and
do
for
;
was on
and the principle of to give us light.
been invoked, and
fire
this condition that
all life
we
— the sun to warm
Those who
" .''
received
all
nature
lived before Tohil
had
obtained, were in darkness and
ice."
Well, but Doxius and I not long ago traversed dark and frozen countries and came southwards, just as your tribes did in former times we have not sacrificed any human being to Tohil, and }'et the sun does not refuse us "
;
either
its
heat or
its light."
" Certainly, but the people generally do not look at things in that
way
:
the)'
must have a
nothing from the divinity
if
visible sign,
they
offer
and they expect
nothing to him.
THE NAHUAS AND TOLTECS. Besides, the sun
weather, as
withdraw
is
sometimes extinguished
light
He
and heat from them.
be implored since he threatens, and
demanded human
in the clearest
men
Tohil were threatening
if
299
that he would
must, therefore,
was he himself who
it
victims before our entrance into Paxil."
"
Art thou certain of
"
The
Nimak
it,
sacred signs indicate
it
;
" t
and the signs can never
deceive men, since the}- are exhibited in order to teach
them
Besides,
the truth.
deluge, which destroyed
it is
all
certain that at the time of the
men — except
refuge on the sacred mountain
ness which lasted twenty-fi\'c suns
and
all
those
who took
—there was a period ;
of dark-
and the human beings,
the beasts that had not taken refuge on the sacred
mountain, were changed into stone."
Epergos did not attempt to discuss these strange tions,
which greatly perplexed him;
agreed with those of other nations •country,
for in
far
Some days
tradi-
points they
remote from
and who could not have had, as
connection with
some it
this
appeared, any
it.
Nimak,
afterwards,
travellers, secured an
at the request
of our
opportunity of showing them one of
the finest palaces of the city of
Uxmal — the
residence of
governor Nahualt.
its
must be stated that these
It
cities
of the peninsula are
very extensive, their streets wide and laid out that the houses of the people are
made
of
in
line,
wood and
cla}-,
very low, and covered entirely by terraces which comso that while one may traverse may also go through the city on these many cases these houses are partly hollowed
municate with each other streets,
its
terraces.
out
in
At
;
one In
the ground to mitigate the heat.
various distances, wide flights of steps, hollowed out
in the rock, lead
down
to tanks or rivulets below, thus afford-
ing a supply of excellent fresh water.
But
at the close of
300
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
summer, these concealed but always abundant springs, wliich exist at a deptli of thirty cubits
had recourse
and more, must be
to.
The dwellings belonging to persons of distinction among Nahuas are built on wide platforms, under which tanks
the
are hollowed out in the rock, or built of stone and carefully
Plan of Nahuaii Palace.
Fig. 84.
These palaces are all built of stone and are very sumptuous. Figure 84 gives the plan
lined with a very hard cement.
THE NAHUAS AND TOLTECS.
301
of the residence of Chumucil-Chunil (Principal centre). is
situated at one of the extremities of the city, and
It is
surrounded by gardens.
Near it is a tcocalli, or great truncated pyramid, surmounted by a temple. The avenue which leads to the palace is wide, and overlaid with cement.
ends
It
in a fine flight of
steps giving an ascent to the platform and the principal
entrance A, which passes through a building
Next we have a great
court
B,
in front.
with a cemented alley
in
the middle, along which are poles for the support of awnings.
At
the farther end of the court
some
building D, raised E,
are
steps above
two other buildings nearly
it.
is
On
alike.
the principal cither side, at
At C
are the
openings of the two great tanks which extend under the court.
made under the main building to The noble owner lives in the range of farther end. The three other ranges are dependants and menials. At F are two down to the gardens.
Cellars are also
store provisions
building at the occujDied
by the
descents leading
in.
These blocks of building, arranged
Section of Naliuan Palace.
present the section figure 85.
in
the
same way,
— Fig.
The
structure consists of a
great mass of rubble-concrete united by excellent mortar,
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
302
with stones exhibiting designs and carvings of the strangest
The
description,
interiors,
which are Hghted only by the
doors, are constructed with stone facings laid overhanging
and supporting a narrow
These
ceiling.
The
covered with paintings and hieroglyphics.
made
the doors arc nature.
Two
wood
of a very hard red
are
interiors
lintels of
of a durable
long beams projecting from the two sides of
the principal doors are designed to support an awning for
The The aspect
shelter.
roofs are terraced
and cemented.
of this mass of buildings
is
carefully deter-
mined. Figure 86 gives a bird's eye view of the main building, with the extremity of the two lateral buildings, the platforms, the secondary entrances, and the great tcocalli close by, the gardens, &c.
avenue
is
It will
be observed that the central
covered with awnings fastened to poles, and
ending with the projecting shelter of the central portal.
This group of buildings did not impression on our travellers, for
it
fail is
to
produce a lively
immense
to have been the work of
many
in extent, It
seemed
generations, yet
Nimak
and covered almost completely with carvings.
assured them that this palace had not taken more than four years to build.
Epergos was astonished
to find such
a simple arrangement of plan with so advanced a style of art
;
the latter appearing to be even on the decline.
examined the facades of these ranges diftered
from each other, but were
all
He
of building,
which
very splendid.
The
drew wooden
exterior decoration of the principal range especially his attention
;
for
it
consisted of an imitation of
brackets, with trellis-work in the interspaces, although
was
entirely of stone.
Here there was doubtless the
tion of a structure of wood.
stones, side
by
At
it
tradi-
other points, billet-shaped
side in a vertical position, evidently repre-
sented an assemblage of trunks of trees close together.
View of Nahuan
Palace.
— Fic
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
304
But the facade of the western building especially attracted above each of the doors was carved the
his observation, for
most singular decoration imaginable
87); and, above
(fig.
the surbase, a wide frieze formed of alternate scrolls and trellis-work.
Each
like the pieces
stone, with
carving,
its
Some
on a chess-board.
had been placed
of these environ-
ing stones above the doors were hieroglyphs, which
Nimak
explained to the travellers.
At each
of the corners of the blocks of building were
carved, one above the other, three enormous and grotesque heads.
who remembered
Epergos,
Greek, and Indian
art,
the productions of Egyptian
surveyed
all
this with
more aston-
ishment than admiration. Doxius, on the contrar\%
who had
felt
no great
interest in
the accounts given by Nimak, remarked an air of grandeur, ])ower, majest}', order, It
and
should be observed that
by painting which,
regularit}all
that
at a distance,
gave
this decoration the
appearance of a most magnificent carpet. the pieces of furniture,
made
charmed him.
these carvings were relieved
In the interior,
of wood, were likewise covered
with these strange carvings and colouring, enriched with
gold and
silver.
The
furniture consisted of beds or very
wide benches, with a great number of small
ornamented gilded.
stools,
and vessels of
The apartments occupied
tables, highly-
terra-cotta, painted b}'
and
the master and his
family, dift"ered from the others only in a greater richness
and profusion of these pieces of with which they were covered
;
furniture,
and the
stufifs
which were finely woven
of wool, bark of trees, or fibre of aloes, while elsewhere
mats replaced these
What
room distinguished "
siufts.
especially struck Epergos,
Where
in size
from the
are assemblies held
.'"'
was the absence of a rest.
he asked of Nimak.
^toiiJi(y^^—1-^-" Portion of Exterior of
Nahuan
Palace.
Fig. 87.
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
3o6
"Chimucil- Chunil, the master of the house," replied Nimak, "following the custom of the great men of the Nahuas when he wishes to assemble a considerable and he never assembles any but number of persons, All our his peers, convokes them in this vast court.
—
—
—
assemblings are held out of doors, at sunset or sunrise the daytime the heat
for in
of persons remaining thus in the open
apartments are used only
it
under tents
is
solemn
certain
occasions
Or
were eaten, but prepared
are
this
—
ever}'-
;
we have meals
if
sacrifices
for
in
abandoned.
is
to
Tohil
The
viands
by specially-appointed
and brought to each guest, according to
In
example.
victims sacrificed
custom
outside
closed
but that takes place only on
human
times the
ancient
:
The
air.
for meals
for rest or
one takes his repasts at home.
common,
;
too oppressive to allow
is
his
servants,
rank and
quality."
"I understand; but the Nahuas did not bring " architecture and this skill in art with them
this
.-*
No
"
;
countries
lower class of
the
people that
were already advanced
Nahuas conquered the country was or
by
these
but what they produced
The
have brought these artisans to work voluntarily force,
built for
and so have had temples,
cities,
and palaces
them, worthy of the race of the Nahuas.
have established rules as the rest.
for everything
They have appointed
— buildings
any one from transgressing them. ments of dwelling-houses, even cannot be altered for the law ;
exactly as you
see.
The
They as well
councils of sages,
are commissioned to maintain these rules,
rules,
in
when the
and unworthy of the conquerors.
irregular
latter
;
live
in the arts,
and
who
to prevent
Thus the arrange-
for persons of distinction,
directs that they shall
sculpture itself
which every one must observe.
It is
is
be
subjected to
the
same with
THE NAHUAS AND TOLTECS.
307
the style of building, and the construction of tanks and
When
roads.
a building
undertaken, the master-builder
is
One
gives each one his task.
the smooth stones,
cuts
another the carved stones, and each must finish within the day what
prescribed him
is
these parts of the
;
then
work put together
the
master has
in front of
the rubble
backing." " I
cannot help remarking," said Epergos,
" that these
which are of pretty much the same size, are none them bonded together, but are placed side by side, and one upon another without breaking-joint." " These facings are held by the mortar of the rubble stones,
of
backing." "
But
me, Nimak, do
tell
principal building,
of timber " In
former times, buildings were
why we
But what
" Because
in
fact thus
and corbelling out
is
the good of that,
when
the material has
seen ancient buildings thus fashioned,
remembrance of them,"
have you ceased to use timber
your palaces and temples
many
in building
" .-•
them were destroyed by because they harbour serpents, ants, and all Only the poor now employ wood vermin. Because
of
houses, and they are careful to plaster
returning to their lodging,
companion "
Do
is
"
to preserve the
And why
On
made
that
;
.-'
we have
and we wish
"
the
preserve this appearance."
been changed
"
that
t
of timbers, superimposed
"
you not think
though of stone, simulates a structure
it
fire
and
;
sorts in
of
their
with earth."
Epergos said to
his
:
not these nations appear to thee, Doxius, to have
passed without transition from infancy to old age
"Why
so
" .''
" .-'
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
3o8 "
Because these
Httle
removed
state of things,
in
edifices
we have been looking
at are
point of arrangement from a primitive
and yet
in structure
and decorations present
symptoms of decadence. " That grotesque sculpture, monotonous
in its profusion,
mode
of
construction adopted, denotes an art corrupted before
it
and reproducing forms which do not belong
to the
was developed. "
This can only be explained by the tyranny of a
superior caste over a population of craftsmen and artists
already advanced in the use of
arts,
dictates of blind unreflecting caprice.
everything in a
is
the absence of reasoning
What then are we among the Nahuas
dream.
grandees cells, all
one seems to be
or Toltecans
.''
And
life
of these
who
live in
yet these habits, which by impli-
are so simple, are accompanied
exterior tive,
;
to think of the
exactly alike, just as compartments for animals
would be made cation
who follow the What shocks me in
but
show of luxury
—
a
luxury which
and has no concern with
have seen nothing
like
it
by a prodigious is
simply decora-
an}' real requirement.
We
on the face of the earth."
Doxius looked grave and did not answer. He was asking himself whether these men would be in a condition to comprehend and accept the law of Buddha for he was still inflamed with the apostolic zeal which had proved so ;
unsuccessful
in Catha}'.
Doxius attempted,
therefore, to
but the chiefs and the to understand, that
if
Nahuan
his
preach to the people
priests
gave his companion
proceedings were continued, they
would be under the necessity of tearing his heart from his bosom, as an offering to Tohil and Doxius took the hint. ;
The}', therefore, diverged westwards, to the shores of the Pacific.
There they found populations of harmless
position, of
whiter
skin than the Nahuas, subjected
dis-
to
THE NAHUAS AND TOL TECS. a sacerdotal government, and
who appeared
a purer branch of the same race.
309
to belong- to
In this country, as in
the peninsula of Yucatheca, there existed an inferior class,
W>'^i
Peruvian House.
Kig.
brown-skinned, short, robust, and subjected to labour of all
kinds.
The ordinary
habitations of the country consisted of a
walled inclosure built of unhewn dry stones, covered with
THE HA BITA 1 IONS OF MA N.
31o
trunks of trees Avhich
and on
laid close together horizontally,
was compacted together a thick bed of earth mixed
with gravel and carefully plastered
(fig. %Z).
The doors and windows of these dwellings were formed of two stones meeting at the top the interior, divided into ;
two or three compartments, gave
shelter to a family.
Despite his regard for authority and dislike for discussion,
Doxius himself experienced an excessive weariness
amidst these inert populations. to preach his
;
words glided from
He
marble.
There also he attempted
they listened or appeared to
felt
their
minds
like
him, but
listen to
water on polished
away
that his labour was thrown
contrary to what was generally the case,
;
and,
was he who
it
persuaded Epergos to make a move, and to quit
this
continent.
Beneath
this lovely sky,
beauty, Epergos began
To him ful ease
this ;
and amidst scenery of enchanting to meditate
on
all
he had seen.
country seemed like a garden formed
he reviewed
his recollections
and
let
glide by, looking at the flowers in the fields,
through the forest,
for rest-
the days
and the sky
foliage, listening to the countless voices of the
and asking himself whether he had not found the
Elysian Fields of the Greeks.
When Doxius
informed him of his wish to quit this land,
Epergos smiled and contented himself with answering "
Let us
jTo
" !
:
CHAPTER
XXIII.
THE SCANDINAVIANS. ^/^~\UR
travellers returned along the western shore
^-^
crossing
they
bent their
countries
way
by
occupied
through
eastwards
;
then
mountains,
lofty
wild
regions
inhabited only by tribes dwelling in the midst of forests,
and
living
of stature
on the products of the chase and
and copper-coloured, they had no
inhabited huts
made
Keeping along
the
of branches shores
of
the
river,
arm
on a land inhabited by
set foot
tint,
with
hair
black and
made
of dwarfish stature,
straight,
of pebbles and earth,
They
seal or rein-deer skins. fish
they came to of the sea, and
and repulsive
Scattered thinly along the coasts, they lived in
features.
conical huts
and
men
and
leaves.
which they
ocean,
•countries of arctic climate, crossed an
olive
arts,
covered with
reached again after passing a wide
Tall
fishing.
;
for the
and covered with
subsisted exclusively on fat
country produces nothing, even during the
months of summer, but grass and lichens, which serve as food for herds of rein-deer. Epergos and Doxius did not tarry long in these regions and having three or four
;
again crossed the sea, countries in
:
they reached the Scandinavian
thus, after a long absence, they found themselves,
the seventh century of our era, again in Europe.
Many
changes had occurred
since their sojourn in
Rome.
in this part of the
The
few provinces around Constantinople, had, fallen into the
globe
empire, reduced to a in
the West,
hands of barbarians who had come from
3
THE
1
the iiorth-cast of Islam
But
and
;
from Arabia.
Scandinavia,
—the
OF MAN.
the East, had yielded to the hosts
in
invadin;::^ it
in
Northmen,
— the
travellers
land of
Danes and
the
were out of hearing of these
There they found a population remarkably active
events.
and
JIA BITA IJOXS
and
enterprising, inhabiting a cold
sterile
soil,
and
undertaking expeditions to the neighbouring coasts more
The young men passed
favoured by climate. sea
;
for
their time at
they possessed the art of building strong vessels of
considerable length, in which they did not fear to face the
tempests.
Even during the rough weather of Autumn and
Spring they were seen preparing their expeditions.
Then
putting to sea, they would steer towards the coasts of Britain or the land of the Franks, enter the rivers, land
unexpectedly
villages, abbeys,
and
into their hands,
and
neighbourhood of
in the
towns, carry off everything that
fell
immediately re-embark to secure
their booty.
They would
often even stay on the coasts, in
out-of-the-way cove
would
;
some lonely
and, taking advantage of the position,
fortify the heights,
and swoop down
like birds of
prey upon the inhabited places. Intrepid, formidable fearless of death, they tion,
who dared
bi)th
in
stature
and vigour, and
were the dread of the coast popula-
not attack them
in their holds.
Their vessels then served them for dwellings Left dry on the shore at high
and oars the
sailors
tide,
(fig.
89).
with the help of masts
formed a sort of roof over them, on
which were stretched two triangular
sails,
for
they had
always one to spare.
When
they had acquired booty enough to satisfy them,
they betook themselves to sea again and returned home. In their country there were towns whose houses were built entirely of pine
the mountains.
wood, which was very abundant on
THE SCANDINA VIANS. Epergos was not a
little
surprised to find in these habi-
by him, and even
tations the structural elements observed
improved under
313
his direction,
many
centuries before on the
Upper Indus. But the habit of building vessels, acquired by the inhabitants, had introduced considerable improve-
Norman
ments
in the
Boat.
Fig.
execution of these timber houses.
The fram-
and strongly joined some were even ornamented with carvings bearing a rude resemblance tothose which decorated the buildings of Northern India. ings were carefully
It
was the same with the woven
;
stuffs fabricated
among
THE HABITATIONS 01 MAN.
314
them
their colouring
;
and designs incontestably resembled
those of the fabrics woven on the slopes of the Himalayas.
The
religious beliefs of the Scandinavians also resem-
With the
ble the earlier beliefs of the Aryas.
latter,
they
imagine that the men who are the bravest and most
dis-
tinguished by their noble actions on earth, are elevated,
beyond the tomb,
to the rank of
not dread death, but even seek
gods
it
in
;
that
some
is
why they do
glorious exploit.
human beings to propitiate the gods, and the males of beasts. The body of the victims is suspended in the sacred wood near the temple of Upsal, not far from They
sacrifice
wood
the town of Birka, and the trees composing this
are
regarded as sacred. Tiiey acknowledge the authority of military chiefs or kings,
and have among them noble families descended from
heroes.
These kings do not exercise a despotic authority, but are obliged to assemble and consult with the most illustrious of the nobles before engaging in any enterprise.
The men
of Scandinavia unite with this courage and
intrepidity which nothing can daunt, a love of gain,
extraordinary cunning.
All are skilled
in
and
discovering the
means of eluding the most solemn oaths, if the fulfilment of them is prejudicial to their interests. With a view to this there is
no subterfuge or finesse they
Those who reckon upon
their simplicity,
of their manners, to entrap
ensnared themselves
;
bition, their rapacity,
them
in
will
not employ.
and the naivete
any way, are
infallibly
for their penetration equals their
and
am-
their prudence.
Like their Aryan ancestors,
it
is
their
custom
to build a
great hall in their dwellings, in which they assemble their equals and retainers.
There they
deliberate, settle differ-
and give banquets which are prolonged for several days and nights, and which frequently i.ssue in brawls. ences,
THE SCANDINAVIANS. If
315
an expedition to a neighbouring territory promises
great
we select, as commanded by
they
results,
unfrequented
beach,
mouth
peninsula at the
some
above,
said
promontory or
a
of the river, and
there
fortify
themselves so as to have a place of refuge and defence in the event of a failure, until another expedition comes to
hence they are very careful always to keep
their relief:
communication with the
themselves
in
them and
their
people
is
booty from
ing the sea so rapidly, as these
The
men
no other
for
;
or capable of cross-
of the North.
among them
group of buildings of various dimensions and
arranged without symmetry, but with reference to the
The most
convenience of each. ble villages
small
life,
which secures
habitations of persons of distinction
consist of a uses,
pursuit
all
so inured to a maritime
sea,
or
;
for
large,
each apartment
extensive of them, resem-
— or nearly so —
according to the
is
a house^
requirements.
These
juxtaposition, just touching at one
houses are either
in
point, or apart, in
which case they communicate by very
low wooden passages.
Roofed with pine shingles or slabs of
schist, these dwell-
ings are of one floor only, and are often even partly sunk in
the ground to secure the inhabitants more effectually from the cold.
Palisading, hedges,
dwelling, for the their
men
independence
;
and ditches surround the
of this country are very tenacious of
and even the towns rather resemble
an agglomeration of establishments, each with than a collection of houses v/ay.
in
its
inclosure,
juxtaposition along the high-
To prevent the accumulation made very steep.
of
snow upon the
roofs,
they are
The Scandinavians breed horses, and are good riders. The broad meadows of their country supply forage for these animals, which are, moreover, inured to hardship.
In their maritime expeditions they do
not hesitate to
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
3i6
take their horses with them
in
their capacious boats,
they carry off those which they meet with they invade
;
in
and
the country
thus they readily form bands of formidable
upon the hamlets they pillage, and rejoining the main body of their
cavalry, falling unawares
and then
armed
retiring
force.
Figure 90 gives the plan of one of the above-mentioned
detached habitations.
At A
is
the entrance, a foot-bridge
Flan of Scandinavian HLlU^c.^FIG. 90.
across a fosse, on whose escarpment
hedge.
At
B, is
the great
hall,
is
planted a^quickset
whose roof
is
supported by
a double row of posts.
A
wooden porch
of which a hearth
gives access to a hall is
constructed.
It
is
C, in
the middle
there that
the
THE SCANDINAVIANS.
317
family stay in winter, and the viands are prepared. inhabitants
even
severe cold.
At
sleep
in
these
D, are the living
ing the temperate season. servants and for strangers.
The
apartments during the
rooms of the famih' dur-
At E, the hall At F, a large
reserved for the stable
and barn
for forage.
Figure 91 presents the view of this habitation from the
View
point
P.
filled in
To
of Scandinaviiiii Hull^e.
The openings which
— Fig.
light
91.
the
apartments are
with perforated wood, presenting fanciful designs.
prevent draughts, sheets of
talc, in
the dwellings of the
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
3i8
wealthy, or of asses' skin in those of the poor, are fastened
on the insides of these openings, admitting a dim
The smoke roof,
escapes through wide openings
and sheltered by a kind of movable
lowered at pleasure to close the
As
previously mentioned,
light.
left
louvre,
the is
orifice.
the roofs are covered with
shingles of pine-wood overlapping like scales, or in districts
in
which
some
with large slaty stones.
The timbers are painted in very lively colours forming The elders among the Scandinavians assert
interlacings.
that the dwellings of their forefathers were circular.
The Scandinavians have
a great regard for trees, and
their habitations are surrounded
bv them.
CHAPTER
XXIV.
GAUL UNDER THE MEROVINGIANS AND CARLOVINGIANS.
TN J-
Gaul the empire of
Rome
memory.
survived only in
This large and beautiful country had been invaded
by the hordes from the
north-east, which,
assuming
first
the character of allies of the empire, had gradually settled
by permission
by
or
force, in the basins of the
Marne, the Oise, and the Seine, Senones, afterwards on the
country of the
the
in
Loire and
Meuse, the
in
Southern
the
provinces.
These immigrants brought with them none traditions of art,
vaguest
to those of the Gauls.
but
and handicrafts very
the
inferior
In the course of two centuries,
mingled with the peoples of Gaul, they had been converted to Christianity
but they did not the
;
incessant struggles with each other,
less
keep up their
by which the
latter
days of the empire had been ensanguined.
Divided into tribes attached to their these
barbarians,
nevertheless,
in
several
chiefs,
accordance with
the
customs which had been for ages preserved among them^
had not
settled in the
districts
;
and recognising at chiefs
The
whom
in
the rural
;
first
no other authority but that of the
they had chosen.
ancient
existence
Gallo-Roman towns, but
thus forming isolated and independent groups,
Roman
they were
vill(B
were adapted to
accordingly occupied,
this
kind of
and these
barbarians took possession of the lands surrounding them
;
endeavouring to extend their borders at the expense of
weaker neighbours.
TJIE
320
HABITATIONS OF MAN.
Thus it came to pass that some of them acquired a marked preponderance, and set up as petty sovereigns, making war on their own account, with the aid of the inferior chiefs who were their vassals, their retainers, and the coloni, or cultivators of the soil which they had The Gallo-Roman unity was, however, suffiappropriated. ciently compact to oblige the new owners of the soil to reckon with it. That splitting-up of authority was disliked by the nation, and the ablest of the Frank chiefs, supported by
its
traditional tendencies, succeeded
selves proclaimed kings
Gaul was thus able
to
organisation, the chiefs in their habits,
by
recover a
in
of the
part
who governed
having them-
While, politically,
their peers.
it
Roman
made no change
but resided almost always away from the
centre of population.
The power which
those
first
kings
had arrogated to themselves was incessantly contested, and was with
difficulty transmitted.
Dagobert was the
men
first
who
— relying on
the support of
of the free class, and of the nations which cherished
the recollections of the prosperous times of the empire,
and vanquished the great
attacked
vassals,
and could
regard himself as sovereign. It
was
at this
epoch that Epergos and Doxius landed on
the territory of the Franks. forget
his
Doxius had had time
dislike of Christianity.
traditions of
to
The mythical Aryan
which the Scandinavians had preserved only
rude remains, appeared to him no longer able to sustain themselves.
On the
other hand, the confusion which prevailed in Gaul
among the nations that had remained Gallo-Roman and the new rulers, and the ruin of that Imperial organisation which he had once so greatly admired, had brought new light to his mind.
Perceiving the determination with which some
of the bishops of Gaul struggled to maintain, amid this
GAUL UNDER THE MEROVINGIANS, dismemberment of law, morality
became a
and
society,
321
what remained of civil liberties, Doxius did not hesitate. He
civilisation,
Christian,
convictions
ETC.
and an enthusiastic one.
His new
soon became tinctured with the somewhat
intolerant spirit natural to him.
Epergos, according to his wont, contented himself with observing; not believing in anything as fixed, but seeing in
every phase of humanity only a transition towards a worse
Our two companions were further than ever from agreeing. Doxius saw no salvation for or a better condition.
society except in the establishment of a theocratic regime
;
and denounced the obstacles which the character of the warrior chiefs, and the
Romanised spirit of the people were it. Epergos was continually subject, proving to him by facts of
bringing to bear against rallying
him on
this
daily occurrence that the influence of the bishops over the
people at large and the higher classes increased
in
propor-
tion as they confined themselves to their pastoral functions
and did not aspire vassals
to power.
Besides, those great Frani-c
and Dagobert himself, Christian as they were,
could not be said to observe the moral precepts of Christ.
They had
slaves,
and as many wives as they could keep
they displayed a barbarian ostentation, and,
if
;
they gave
and churches with one hand, they pillaged with the other. monasteries and churches
to monasteries
The
royal court presented a strange spectacle
;
there
were to be seen persons distinguished by their sanctity side
by
side with courtesans, favourite slaves
living at the
expense of the prince
;
and ruined
vassals,
and envoys of courts
mingling with vagabonds ready for every crime.
Devotion and debauchery were equally conspicuous, and there
was but a step from the
altar to the scene of riotous
dissipation.
Dagobert habitually resided
in his vilke,
sometimes
in
^^8!%^"^^^^^»-"^
^
View of Merovingian
I'illa.
— Fig
'j2.
GAUL UNDER THE MEROVINGIANS, one, in
sometimes
in another,
ETC.
the provisions accumulated
till
those great agricultural centres were consumed.
full
323
Doxius,
of the zeal of a neophyte, had been taken notice of
Elis^ius,
a
Christian,
whom
man
by
of sense, a skilful worker in gold, a sincere
and favoured with the confidence of the king,
The knowledge possessed by Epergos was also appreciated by Eligius, who was curious in all matters pertaining to art and handicraft. Our he continually attended.
travellers were, therefore, invited to villcB to
sent
spend a
them
iz'N
go to one of those royal
days with Eligius, who wished to pre-
Dagobert as distinguished personages who
to
could give him information respectingthe northern countries.
The a
hill,
villa in question, figure 92, situated
on the slopes of
not far from the banks of the Oise, was surrounded
by woods abounding court
in
hunted.
often
game,
in
which the king and
Notwithstanding
exterior aspect of the dwelling
its
his
the
extent,
was very simple, and
re-
minded them of Gallo-Roman establishments of a similar kind. The principal entrance closed by palisading, consisted of a court of no great size, with two buildings containing the porter's lodge, and some waiting-rooms for strangers.
This led into a second court of larger dimensions
surrounded by low wooden porticos, fronting the apart.
ments of the persons directly attached to the prince.
At one
corner of this court
This
high.
upper story
is
is
the
is
a square tower four stories
special residence of the
From
The
by a passage,
by a
portico
It is in this hall that
court.
is
On
the
one
side,
an immense kitchen.
On
frequent assemblings and banquets are held. it
is
the ground-floor of this tower
a communication with the great hall
which overlooks a third
and joined to
king.
only a covered platform, from which there
an extensive view. there
is
the other side, a portico running along the court of the stables,
which are lower, with a special entrance
;
and again,
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
324
beyond, a building allotted to strangers, with
its
special
entrance.
These erections are
built of small
with mortar.
All the roofing
Roman
The
tiles.
is
squared stones jointed
of timber, covered with
interiors are coated with painted plas-
tering and lined with rude wainscoting
;
the timbers are
also coloured.
At some
distance off
is
a large chapel, and next to this
are the dwellings of the coloni, which are low, thatched, and
mean
in
king's
vi/lcB,
appearance. yet
it
This
is
one of the smallest of the
contains accommodation for two or three
hundred persons, including the household slaves and dependents
—
for the latter sleep generally
In the absence of the king,
showed our villa.
under the porticos.
who was
hunting, Eligius
travellers the various buildings constituting the
Their curiosity rather than their admiration was
excited by what they saw, for they met with nothing that
was new to them. These buildings rudely resembled the
Romans
;
rural houses of the
and the ornaments that decorated
their interiors
By
presented a singular mixture of luxury and poverty.
the side of Oriental fabrics of inconceivable richness, with
which the beds and benches were spread, were walls covered with barbarous paintings executed by the most unskilful hands.
The woodwork and
plunder or
relics
furniture were the spoils of
from some ancient buildings
brought delicate works of
;
and they
art face to face with the
produc-
tions of rude handicraft.
Eligius
made
a point of calling his visitors' attention to
certain pieces of furniture decorated
by him with
plates of
and which he thought very beautiful
gold and
silver,
Epergos
felt his
attempted eulogiums stick
and Doxius said not a word, thinking been more profitabK- employed
this
;
but
in his throat,
gold would have
in relieving
the misery that
GAUL UNDER THE MEROVINGIANS, abounded.
who was
Eligius,
ETC.
325
a good-natured man, did not
take offence at this lack of enthusiasm on the part of his
—though he intended
guests,
some time
to ask their opinion
or other.
An
at table.
Epergos, addressing Eligius said
opportunity presented
when they were "Thou art too
itself
:
enlightened a man, Eligius, not to be able and willing to satisfy m}^ curiosity
pened that the
on one point.
.
tlu'self that,
among
columns that
How
.-'
is
it
.
still
"" !
childhood
Roman
what the
rival
.
,
.
Why
canst thou
left
us,
are rude
us and of which
"^
replied Eligius, " in
wilt
"
have specimens
Alas
a high
For thou
that the various articles,
compared with what those pagans have "
.
and ornamental, which thou hast shown
useful
we
.
hap-
the works of art which
and admiring the purity of the work. not produce the like
it
Thou wert showing me capitals came from a pagan monument,
empire bequeathed to you. shafts of
.''
none that can
this villa contains, there are
and
has
Rome, which had attained
arts of
degreeof perfection, have thus declined have observed
How
.
.
I
my
have worked ever since
the hope of attaining that perfection which
and have been able to secure but
art exhibits,
imperfect results.
Schools are wanting
;
the disasters which
Gaul has experienced have distracted attention from the practice of the
much
During a long period,
arts.
as people could
what purpose would
do to preserve it
was as
And
to
have been to erect buildings or to
fabricate furniture or jewellery ited
it
their lives.
.''
Any dwelling
that exhib-
an appearance of luxury was plundered and reduced
to ruins.
Hence the
artists
and craftsmen of
earlier times
died without having a chance of transmitting their art or skill to
the next generation.
Ignorant, therefore, and unac-
quainted with any other calling than that of
knows, what kind of war!
— they have
Avar,
fallen
— and God
back into a
condition of barbarism as ""ross as that of the hordes
who
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
326
invade our country.
It
but recently that
is
The Frank
able to resume the arts of peace.
fond of luxurious display
Emperors of the
of the
they attempt to
:
we have been
They must have
East.
apparel and furniture, and jewels set in gold
fancy that
chiefs are
rival the
pomp
splendid
and they
;
they arc covered with the precious metals
if
in
such quantity that they can scarcely walk, they are displaying their power and their love for the beautiful. "
But thou,
Eligius, canst not
and obtrusive luxury king,
why
this coarse
dost thou not endeavour to show him that true
dignity requires ing.s,
;
be seduced by
and since thou hast the ear of the
him
to be simple in his apparel
and that the grandeur of a prince
perfection of the arts practised " If thou wert to live
by
and dwell-
consists in the
his subjects
" .''
some time among us, Epergos, thou by which Gaul is
wouldst
know
afflicted,
and wouldst ask thyself
the extent of the evils
— as
I
have often asked
—whether this people are not a chosen race
myself
.
.
.
since
they have survived such an amount of shame and disaster.
"The hope
of seeing Gaul rise again one day from
degradation sustains experienced,
—
me
m\-self,
in the
most of
midst of the I
all.
am
trials
its
we have
witness here to a
thousand reprehensible and criminal deeds.
Christians in
name, these people commit acts which pagans would have reprobated
violence, cunning,
;
in the courts
this people
among
and treachery predominate
those Frank chiefs
examples of wisdom,
for sacred things.
who ought
self-restraint,
to give
and respect
All, in spite of the decrees of the Church,
take a number of wives, reduce-wholc peoples to slavery,
and freely indulge sensualists
by a
their passions
;
prodigal and avaricious,
and devotees, destitute of
faith yet panic-struck
portent, they appear alternately arrogant
inebriate
or
penitent.
.
.
Sprung from the people,
.
I
What
can
I
and humble,
do
therefore
love the people, and close
t
my
GAUL UNDER THE MEROVINGIANS, eyes to so to relieve I
can
of
it,
much violence and crime it when occasion offers.
effect
is
but
little;
but
since he sees that
as
am
I
may endeavour aware that what
God takes account
it is,
making the best of the generous among our rulers. For you
and when
;
give themselves up to
is
God
is
my
witness that
retirement to the part
heap of corruption I
am
The king,
evil.
as they
much
in spite of so
perverse, often shows glimpses of a noble soul made
to govern. fer
to virtu-
such arise in their hearts the\^
them with the same passion
display in the pursuit of that
my
discover
I
must not suppose that these men are inaccessible ous sentiments
327
cannot do more, and that
I
efforts are all directed to
impulses which
little
tliat I
ETC.
rewarded
compliance.
God and
.
I
.
.
justice,
I
should infinitely pre-
play at court; but
if
from
this
can sometimes extract a fine pearl,
my
for
I
patience, which
many deem
guilty
Those who, full of zeal for the cause of have assumed the part of bitter censors
of our rulers' morals, have
had only the empty
satisfaction
of unburdening their hearts; shamefully proscribed, persecuted,
and even
killed,
they have had the
glor}' of
martyr-
dom, but they have not broken a single chain or alleviated a single calamity. otherwise.
I
I
have thought
therefore close
every opportunity of doing a "
But," objected Doxius,
"
my
it
more
beneficial to act
eyes to the
evil,
and
seize
good."
little
thou art none the
the
less in
enjoyment of the comforts and advantages which the confidence of the prince, and the rank thou holdest at court,
secure to thee."
"Thou
speakest like a novice," replied Eligius
hast never lived at court,
— certainly not
;
"and
at the court of a
Frank king. Know then that there cannot be a more irksome condition to him who pursues the good, the splen;
dours and pleasures of the court wear a veil of sadness
most dainty viands are nauseous
;
sleep
is
;
the
disturbed
by
THE JIABITATIONS OF MAN.
328
painful dreams,
and even the marks of the
surrounds us with ambition,
who
He who
thorns.
prince's favour
only pursues his
seeks to supplant his rivals and to triumph
in their humiliation,
and who sees
his wealth increased
by
the favour of his master, may, perhaps, enjoy days of frenzied pleasure too often followed b}' a bitter reaction for
him who
ence of his
desires to preserve the purity
soul,
and who
is
promote
justice
neither rest
and console misfortunes
nor
joy
the good
:
never complete, for he has to
sand
rapacious hands
they can tries to
seize.
If
but
avails himself of the royal favour
not to increase his wealth to the detriment of his to
;
and the independ-
that
he perseveres
in
secure the triumph of what he
to
rivals,
but
him there
he accomplishes
rescue
clutch
;
it
from the thou-
at every shred of his
is
it
endeavours and
deems
just,
it is
by
blandishments alone that he can obtain the slightest favour.
At court, while the most impudent solicitations on one's own behalf are thought perfectly justifiable, suspicion and liatred are the lot of him who asks that a wrong may be redressed; since ever\' case of reparation
who
unmasks
generally has the ear of the prince, and
a thousand calumnies to ruin you. ... If
Doxius,
him the
I
I
who
a criminal will invent
had an enemy,
would bring him to court and endeavour
prince's favour.
." .
.
to gain
CHAPTER
XXV.
THE SARACENS. ^zy Sicily a pre}^ to IN Empire of Constantinople fell
jewels
The
in its
Moslem
inv^asion,
and the
thus lost one of the finest
crown.
Saracens, as the invaders were then called, far from
ravaging the countr}- and pillaging the towns, introduced into the island an
advanced
civilisation,
and succeeded
in
establishing various branches of industry which enriched
the country
;
silken tissues in
especially the fabrication of those beautiful
inwoven with gold and
demand throughout
the West.
silver
They
which were then
divided the island
into three valley districts administered b}' cadis,
government of a supreme chief who resided
under the
either at
Messina
or Palermo.
Greek and
Roman
art in Sicily
had
fallen,
under the
last
emperors of the East, into the lowest stages of decadence.
The Saracens resuscitated these arts, though giving them a new direction, and without in any way imitating the remains of ancient buildings still extant. They brought with them methods of construction then
in
use in Egypt, and on the
coasts of Africa, of which they had been masters for three centuries.
Palermo, Messina, and Catania were beginning to recover
from the degradation into which the government of the Eastern emperors had allowed them to
fall.
The
ancient
walls were repaired, roads were opened, aqueducts were
bringingthe water from the mountains into these
cities,
and
sumptuous palaces and mosques were replacing the ruins
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN,
330
caused by the devastations of the Vandals, by time, and by the carelessness of the inhabitants
districts,
and
who were
distracted
by
Nevertheless, the population of the country
dissensions.
and even of the
preserved their customs
cities,
religion without interference
from the Aglabites, or the
who succeeded them.
Fatimites
this period, the
Contrary to the habit of the Christians of
power did not persecute the conquered peoples
Mussulman
on account of
their religion
but contented
;
itself
with
exacting from them an absolute submission to authority,
and a
They were allowed
tax.
worship, on condition of not
to preserve their form of
making
a display of
it
outside
their temples.
Saracenic buildings and Christian churches and dwellings
were therefore to be seen side by side
in
the
peoples might be seen in juxtaposition, as
each
in its
own
cities.
it
Two
were, living
fashion, devoted to manufactures
and com-
merce, under an arbitary but wise and prudent authority,
and not supposing that there was any advantage
in oblig-
ing people to believe in this or that dogma, provided they fulfilled their duties as citizens
Epergos and Doxius
was
and
lived peaceable lives.
visited this island
at the height of its prosperity-,
cupidity of
the
stalled in Italy,
terrible
about 1050.
It
and was exciting the
Normans who were already
in-
where they had been warring, sometimes as
mercenaries, sometimes on their
own
account, since the
year 1035. Since the time of their conversation with Eligius, our travellers
had had many adventures, and
the principal
— to mention only
— Epergos had been entrusted with important
missions in the East and in Spain by Charlemagne,
high value on his extensive knowledge.
commissioned to bring
He
who
set
had been
to the emperor's court certain
Greek
and Arab manuscripts, and to translate them with a view to
THE SARACENS. promoting tivated of
331
the monasteries the study of the sciences cul-
in
among
the Orientals, and teaching geometry, the art
making conduits
for water,
improving the land, cultivat-
ing fruit-trees, building, and painting, in conventual estab-
Thus during nearly the whole of Charlemagne's Epergos had been fully occupied, and had had but
lishments. reign, little
intercourse with his friend Doxius,
retired
—the
latter havincf
convent and disapproving the novelties
a
into
introduced by the emperor. " It so
happened that Christianity," Doxius would say to him when they chanced to be together, " was introduced into the world at the
moment when
was yielding
tottering to
its
barbarians.
It is this that
God
fall,
the
Roman
to the onslaught of the
proves the divinity of
thus clearly showed that
He
Empire,
its origin.
reprobates, as a deviation
from the course traced out for humanity by Him, those civilisations
but which
His Son
was
clear
which have been so greatly admired by
all
said, ;
end '
in the
most abject corruption.
Blessed are the poor in
!
spirit
'
thee,
Has not The field
primitive man, like a mighty river overflowing
its
banks, was beginning to inundate the lands in which tares
had been sown broadcast. comprehensible by
'
Behold
all intellects,'
my
law, simple
said Christ;
and
his
and
Father
soon proceeded to diffuse over the ancient world those
pri-
mitive natures which alone could accept and follow
Is
it.
it
not opposing the decrees of Providence and running counter to
its
manifest intentions, thus to endeavour to knit again
the broken threads of the pretended science of the ancients,
preserved
among
the spirit of evil infidels,
of
who are evidently instigated by The emperor goes to fight against the
nations '^.
yet he asks from them those elements of pride and
knowledge by which men have been ruined.
who knowest whither
this vain science leads
And
thou,
them, art not
content with obeying the orders of the prince, but must
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
332
encourage him to give them Satan possesses thee "
Come, come
my
have devoted
me
done
thou art well aware that this
mine
to aid
is
All rcvoir
At
Thy
.'*
I
:
vocation
in its
it
am
unrest of
good Doxius, don't be angry.
services to Satan
the honour to acquaint
thou have
The
done.
!
my
!
it is ill
;
"
is
course
off to
— who,
me
I
with his intentions
nothing new
is
If
however, has not
;
what wouldst
to stop the terrestrial machine, ;
what
Bagdad
is
the use of disputing.^
!
had been present at the invasion by the Normans he had had another
a later date, Epergos
Frank
of the
territory
;
glimpse of those rude, cunning, rapacious, grasping, unbelieving
men
he had recognised his former acquaintance
:
the Scandinavians,
who were endowed
persistent energy
and would reply
;
with a powerful and
who was
to Doxius,
then lamenting over the burning of the convents and the
towns: "But, friend Doxius, of what dost
pillage of the
thou complain
Is not this the latest surge of that flood
.-'
by Providence, and which is invading anew by us ? Your convents were too rich. We had taken too much advantage of the knowledge which the renowned Charlemagne wished to diffuse through the West. Thou wert blaming him then that famous emperor for sending me to the East to search for
of barbarians raised
the
cultivated
soil
—
—
the remains of the ancient civilisations and of the school of Alexandria.
Probably thou wert
men coming
in
the right
;
since
we
—
work with Observe some occathe permission of God, doubtless. sional shortcomings in thy understanding, respected combehold primitive
rade.
Now
saries
of hell,
thou sayest that these Normans are the emisbecause
the}'
convent, and destroying what plish,
—
in
to destroy our
are driving
thee from thy
we had been able
to
thy opinion, at the instigation of Satan
Whenever the
accom"
!
discussion took a turn of this kind, Doxius
THE SARACENS.
333
always began a volley of vituperation, and Epergos
left
the
whistling on his thumb-nail.
field
When As
on Prankish
fairly established
had shown themselves
in
the
soil,
Normans
an altogether different character.
soon as the land became their own, they took good
care not to leave
it
fallow
;
in fact,
they had
it
cultivated,
gave themselves to the breeding of cattle and horses, built
good
fortresses to protect the country, entered
upon com-
mercial relations with their neighbours, amassed wealth for
which they found a useful employment, and having been converted to Christianity, constituted themselves the zeal-
ous defenders of the Church as far as with their interests.
became one of the
it
did not interfere
The province they occupied soon
richest
and best governed
in
France
;
but
as the population continued to increase, they were obliged
to seek their fortune elsewhere. tensive
good
enough
Normandy was
not ex-
many, especialh' as they had Having lost none of their energy, and
to feed so
appetites.
finding themselves
straitened
in
the quarters they had
secured for themselves in Gaul, they endeavoured to pass their limits,
pressed,
As
and so came
— a game
at
in
contact with populations equally
which as much might be
lost as gained.
a prudent and practical race, and knowing
how
ta
calculate chances, they therefore remained comparatively at
peace on their
find support
Thus
soil
and sent those who could not
to carry on
bodies of partisan warriors
Italy, hired its
frontiers,
on the
war
at
a distance.
betook themselves to
out their swords to the various competitors for
possession,
and
at last
began to
fight
on their own
felt
conciliated to-
account, and settled in Apulia. It
need not be said that Doxius had
wards them as soon
as,
instead of plundering the convents
of others, they set themselves to build convents for
of their own.
monks
^^^ HABITATIONS OF MAN.
334
Our
travellers
had seen the Normans
how they comported themselves employing stratagem or accomplish their ends
force, as
;
in Italy,
there
as
and knew elsewhere
occasion suggested, to
terrible destroyers of the property
;
of others when they had no hope of making use of it, but excellent guardians of that property when they had the prospect of turning
it
or other, for this
enormous
They knew
to advantage.
was the wish of the Normans
to seize on Sicily
that
it
some time
country promised to satisfy their
fertile
appetite.
Epergos, who had not ceased to keep up his intercourse with
Saracens,
the
had
letters
of
introduction
to
one
of the wealthiest inhabitants of Palermo named Moafa. He was a man of probity, greatly esteemed, and already
advanced
in years.
walls of the
city, in
He
lived in a palace not far from the
a charming vicinity.
This residence consisted of a large
pile
of building,
several stories high, substantially built of dressed stone,
and completely surrounded by gardens.
According
to
custom, certain slightly built erections, at some distance
from the palace, furnished dwellings
for
the servants,
kitchens, baths, stables, and porticos to receive strangers,
with small chambers adjoining.
Figure 93 presents the ground-floor of the plan of this wide opening A gives entrance to a long vesti-
A
palace.
bule
B, at
the extremities of which are two apartments, one
for the attendant out,
the
who
waits on persons
other which serves
apartments
in
hall,
coming
in or
going
antechamber to the
which the proprietor receives strangers.
Opposite are two rooms
a large
as an
for the domestics.
In the centre
is
opening to the court, vaulted, with four recesses.
In that occupying the centre
is
a marble fountain, from
which issues a sheet of water which pours into a central channel broken by small square basins.
THE SARACENS. In the two lateral recesses are divans,
335
and two doors com-
municating with the apartments at the
side.
There
is
a
passage at the back for the servants, uniting these two
Two
parts of the palace. first
fine flights of stairs lead to the
story which occupies only the two extremities of the
buildincr
:
for the vault of the central hall rises as hisfh as
\10' I
I
I I
I
I
I
Plan of Saracen Palace.
— Fig.
The
the floor of the second story.
93.
first
story
is
occupied
by the women. The second story exhibits the same arrangement as the ground-floor, except that the great central hall opens at its two ends, looking out on the country. It is there that the master lives. Above are also some small rooms for the servants, and a terrace from which there is a splendid view.
From buildings,
this
lofty
point,
the
and the minarets of
mosaics set
in s^old
— stands
city its
with
its
crenelated
mosques covered with
out against the azure of the
THE HABITATIONS OF MAX.
336
On
sea.
the
rises the
left
abrupt mountain which forms a
promontory, and where rocks of saffron-tinted white seem to
emerge from a garden of
On
fig-trees.
the side opposite to the sea the upper part of the valley
presents
itself,
covered with the rich verdure of orange and
lemon-trees, and terminated
At
and
olive-trees, palms,
various distances lofty
by a crown of broken peaks. piles of masonry indicate the
course" of springs, the water from
which
conveyed to
is
all
the habitations, and raised even to the top of the buildings
by these siphons
masonry constructed
of
keep the water
intervals to
The gardens
at
an elevated
at proper
level.
that surround the palace, of which figure
94
presents the exterior view on the entrance-side, are planted
with
artistic
taste,
marble conduits
in
and intersected by a number of small which clear fresh water
The imposing mass
is
of the palace, gilded
flowing.
by the sun and
seen through the verdure, has a striking
effect.
construction, with no carvings, but with
its
arranged,
it
is
decorated only in
its
Simple
upper part by a wide
string-course, serving as a balustrade, occupied outside
a beautiful inscription in
relief,
in
parts skilfully
by
and by battlements, whose
denticulation, shining in the sun, sets off the azure glory of
the sky.
Introduced into the gardens by order of the proprietor,
and waiting unwearied
at the palace gate, in their
Epergos and Doxius were
admiration of the order and smiling
tranquillity of this residence,
which contrasted so strongly
with what they had just seen in the West.
Doxius especi-
ally did not fail to extol the grave serenity of a scene so
favourable to meditation, and which seemed to be a reflex of a perfectly well-ordered existence.
According to
his wont,
he did not omit,
in
dwelling
upon this impression, to criticise severely the turbulent manners of those western nations whom he had just quitted,
PRllf/r.lPE
View
of Saracen Palace.
—
Fift. 94.
338
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
and among
whom
monks, to
it
was not possible, even
for cloistered
live in tranquillit)-'.
"Well," said Epergos to him, when he had ended his
comparison between these opposite social conditions.
"become
Mussulman!"
a
Doxius was
silent,
but looked
askance at his companion.
A
at the threshold of the portal
and made a sign to the com-
black slave soon appeared
panions to enter, Tliey
left their
shoes
in
the vestibule, and putting on the
Oriental slippers that were presented to them, were intro-
duced into the great central
Above
hall
(fig.
95),
the fountain, on a gold ground, a delicate mosaic
decorates the large niche. This, like the
two
others,
is
terminated by corbellings
of small arcades, which resemble the stalactites of certain grottos, or the cells of the
white,
pomegranate.
Gold, azure, green,
and black are distributed with the most harmonious
effect in these
myriads of
cells.
Painted arabesques form
the borders of the vault, surround the tops of the niches,
and blend with conspicuous inscriptions above the higher string-course.
The lower
string-course
mosaics which surround
ornamented with
is
fine
fillets
of
columns of white marble
placed at the angles, and return on the plinth.
The pave-
ment is made of squares of marble alternating with mosaics. The water circulating in the conduit and the basins keeps up a delightful coolness liglited
only
Moafa
is
b}'
in
this tranquil abode,
which
is
the great opening that forms the entrance.
seated. Oriental fashion, on the divan in one of
the great lateral recesses, the front of which a magnificent carpet.
Without
rising
is
spread with
he makes a sign to
the travellers to take their places on the divan opposite to
him
;
then taking the
letters,
he reads them
in silence
deliberately while a slave brings refreshments.
and
Interior of Saracen Palace.— Fio.
95. [7'o face
page
338.
THE SARACENS. The
339
slave having noiselessly disappeared through the
door at the back of the
Moafa, after a silence of
recess,
;some duration, said "
Which
of you
" I," said "
the
And who
" Doxius, "
Are you
named Epergos
is
" ?
latter.
is
my
the other
?
"
added Moafa.
companion."
Christians
" .-"
"Yes." "
From
^'
Yes."
the
West
" .-'
"What brings you "The fame of its
to
Palermo
" '^.
industrial energy, the beauty of the
wisdom of its rulers." Then, after another interval of silence, Moafa resumed "Christians do not travel to seek wisdom where it really exists, still less to imbue their imagination with the beauty country, and the
of a country; but to enrich themselves or to discover the
may
vulnerable side of a nation, so that they
by
subjugate
it
force or cunning."
"Possibly," continued Epergos are travelling for information,
Then he
"but we
;
our part
for
and have no armies
at our
some of the long undertaken and himself. The details journeys by Doxius of his adventures seemed to interest Moafa, who was listenWhen Epergos had finished, Moafa said ing attentively. "Very good but thou art not a Christian back."
related to his host
:
.''
;
" It
matters very
a Christian.
We
little
to thee whether
are eager to learn, and
I
we
am
or
love
am
not
mankind
;
we have given proof by continually traversing the w^orld in order to become acquainted with men, and to seek for what is good among them, that we may instruct of which
the ignorant, or induce people to love what
shouldst thou seek to
know more
" .''
is
good
;
why
THE HABITATIONS OT MAN.
340 " It is
my
by
infested
Sicily
is
of the
men
spies from Italy,
We
of the North.
"Yes;
But know that
offence.
which " ?
have lived among them."
I
Dost thou know anything of their projects
know
" I
the power
in
is
are obliged to be suspicious.
Hast thou seen these men of the North "
and
impolite to ask such a question of one's host,
words should not give thee
that they are impelled
tion
and
will
wish to seize Sicih', then
insatiable greed
that
;
if
by
" .''
a boundless ambi-
they subdue
Italy,
Africa, then
the Greek
they
empire, S}Tia, and the whole world."
Moafa
Silence intervening again,
Great "
is
said,
" If it is
;
!
!
my
Wilt thou allow me, Moafa, to express
" Say on. them it is
written
"
Allah
Imprudent words for thee to
injure only
know whether
"
thought
him who
.-'
utters
to speak or to
be
silent." "
Well then
their destiny
these
;
men
written
is
of the North do not believe that
by the hand
of Allah.
and barbarous they always go straight
on.
Reckless
Far from sub-
mitting to an overpowing destiny, they take upon to force that destiny,
submit to their
courage .
;
The
so far as to believe
himself to aid their projects, by
they are conquered,
they say that
.
God
them
presumptuous audacity, to
and persistence."
dint of prayers
.
their
They go even
desires.
that they can bring
" If
by
is
if
their designs are frustrated,
because they have been wanting
in skill
or
but they begin again, and never yield to Destiny. true believers, led
illustrious successors,
by Mahomet, Omar, and
were impressed with the belief that
they were to conquer the ancient world, that written ;" and
full
their
"
it
was
of this faith in the words of the master,
they spread themselves over Asia, Africa, and a part of
Europe.
They had an
invincible
weapon
for
war and con-
THE SARACENS. •quest
341
the sacred word and the destiny traced out for
in
them."
"But
is
same when
the
it
— the only question
been reached
been acquired,
if
menaced,
is
it it,
is
What
?
power having
limits of
how
a check should occur,
velopment of that power -determined
—the
keep what has
to
— an
arrest in the de-
Islam has acquired
is
not fatal to believe that Destiny has thus
and that no human power can prevail against
You have no doubt that the insatiable ambition of the men of the North is urging them towards your shores. What are decrees written beforehand
its
you doing
Book
the Eternal
in
to prevent this invasion
?
?
Are you arming your
? Are them? Are }-ou stationing guards on your coasts? No; you are waiting till the hour of attack appointed by Allah
you constructing formidable engines to repel
cities
has struck will perish
fortresses
then }-ou will defend yourselves bravely, and
;
—
unsuccessful otherwise.
if
must be so
it
it is
because
if it is
he said
that
this defence it
is
could not be
it
is
then after a long
to be driven
back into
The designs of much perhaps
issued.
first
We
;
have sinned
;
wish to punish us and take us back to our cradle,
argument no palace,
if
—
:
we may renew our youth
The
written,'
written that Islam
Allah are impenetrable.
may
was
it
to reflect profound h'
the deserts from whence
he
'
.
Moafa seemed But
the ruins of your
." .
silence, smiling sadly, "
—beneath
but with the conviction that
;
!
"
Epergos pressed the
further.
travellers
remained some days
Moafa having
allotted
in
this delightful
them two rooms belonging
to the exterior buildings.
Their host seemed to take an increasing interest versing with them.
He explained
ings were erected b}' Sicilian
to
them
in
con-
that their dwell-
workmen, under the direction
THE HABITATIONS OF MAN.
342
of architects educated
ploy
it,
Egypt, that stone abounded
in
country, and that these
workmen being accustomed
the
in
to
em-
these dwellings were constructed with that material
mode
on the outside, while they reserved the Oriental building
— that
is,
rubble-work plastered
of
— for the interiors,
which were covered with paintings, mosaic, and marble.
The
architect of the
whom
palace,
Epergos had an
opportunity of meeting, proved to him that
all his
methods
of setting-out were deduced from very simple geometrical formula;, and that the vaults of the recesses in the great hall, so
complicated
in
appearance, were drawn with the
methods that were easy
aid of
to understand
Epergos remembered that
in
and to apply.
Ancient Egj^pt he had
observed the architects thus drawing their plans, and
determining the minutest architectural details with the help of geometrical formuhx}
;
and he asked himself the ques-
tion whether these traditions had not been preserved in
the schools of Alexandria, to be employed, though in the
by these ^lussulman Omar, might be supposed
service of a very different style of art, architects who, since the time of to have been educated at Cairo
He
and on the Lower
also verified certain relations in point of plan
this residence
times
;
and
reflection.
and the palaces of Asia and Persia
all
this
furni.-