Primary form of CARBONATED LIME developed by the fracture of LIMESTONE, CHAP. VII. DELPHI TO THE SUMMIT OF PARNASSUS, AND TITHOREA. Arracovia- Vineyards of Parnassus - Prospect-Condition of the inhabitants-Alteration of temperature-Traditions-Journey to the summit-Kallidia-Disappearance of the vegetation-Crater of Parnassus-Nature of the Peak-State of the thermometer upon the heights-Objects visible from the top of the mountain-Bearings by the compass-Adventure with the horses Geological features · Inference Singular effect of spontaneous decomposition in Limestone deduced from such phænomena -Plants of Parnassus Lugari, or Lycorea-Monastery of the Virgin-Caloyers-their devotional exercises Ignorance of those priests-Journey to VelitzaCachales torrent Discovery of the Ruins of Tithorea-its relative position with regard to Delphi Produce of Velitza-Simplicity of the natives-Their miserable condition-Antiquity of Tithorea Other CHAP. VII. Arracovia. Vineyards of Other memorabilia-Egyptian custom of embalming birds illustrated AFTER than than those of Arracovia, upon the south side of Parnassus. The land is most carefully weeded; and it is kept so clean and free from rubbish, that the stones are collected and placed in heaps; a little hollow space being left around each vine, to collect the moisture. The plants are all of them old stocks, from which they suffer only one scion to sprout for the year, and this is afterwards pruned again. The wine from these vineyards is excellent. The view throughout this journey, of all the Plain of Salona, and of the Bay, backed by the mountainous district of Achaia in Peloponnesus, cannot be described; for it would be idle to repeat continually the words grand, and magnificent, as applied to the sublimest appearances in ́nature, without being able thereby to suggest the slightest conception of the real scene1. CHAP. VII. Prospect. - p. 7ch. Condition of the The village of Arracovia is rich in comparison with Castri. It contains two hundred and fifty houses, inhabited by Inhabitants. Albanians and by Greeks," without a Turk" among them. This expression, "without a Turk," is throughout Greece a saying (1) This has been felt by all who have attempted to describe fine prospects without the pencil. "As far as language can describe, Mr. Gray pushed its powers," observes the Editor of his Memoirs. "Rejecting every general unmeaning and hyperbolical phrase, he selected the plainest, simplest, and most direct terms: yet, notwithstanding his judicious care in the use of these, I MUST OWN I FEEL THEM DEFECTIVE. (See Mason's Note to Gray's Letter to Wharton; Mathias's Edit. vol. I. p. 469. Lond. 1814.) Perhaps Gray never succeeded more happily, than when, laying aside description, he simply said, of a view in Westmoreland, "I saw in my glass a picture,, that if I could transmit to you, and fix it in all the softness of its living colours, would fairly sell for a thousand pounds." (Ibid. p. 455.) The most faithful descriptive language may present, it is true, a picture to the mind; but then it is not the identical picture. "The imagination," says Mason, "receives clear and distinct images, but not true and exact images." (Ibid.) CHAP. VII. Alteration of temperature. saying of exultation; and it is never uttered but with an and and we were much amused by the traditions they still entertained. The people of Delphi had told us that there were only five Muses, and that the opinion as to there being nine in number was a heresy. Such disputes about the number of the Muses existed in antient times, and the Arracovian Greeks reduced their number to three. The only thing that surprised us was, that any notion of the kind should yet remain upon the spot; although all the fountains of Parnassus, of Helicon, and of Pindus, were once sacred to them. We have before proved, in what we related of Plataea, that the memory of Antient Greece is not quite obliterated among its modern inhabitants; and some additional facts were gathered here, however unworthy of further notice, to confirm and strengthen our former observation. CHAP. VIL Traditions. the Summit. On Wednesday morning, December 16th, at nine o'clock, Journey to we set out, with four guides, for the SUMMIT OF PARNASSUS ; returning a short distance, by the road to Delphi, and then turning up the mountain towards the right, but with our faces towards Delphi, until we had climbed the first precipices. After an hour's ascent, we had a fine view of one of the principal mountains of the Morea, now called Tricălă; the Bay of Crissa looking like a lake, bounded by the opposite mountains of Peloponnesus. In fact, as we had formerly, from the Theatre at Sicyon, seen the very heights we were now climbing, so we were now looking back towards all that region of Achaia, and towards its more distant summits. After having surmounted the first precipices, we found a large crater, with a village in it, called Kallidia, or Kallidia. Callithea, |