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قراءة كتاب Vacation days in Greece
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Transcriber’s Note
The photographs and maps been repositioned, where necessary, to fall at a paragraph or chapter break.
Larger versions of the two maps can be viewed using the link provided below the image.
Please see the transcriber’s notes at the end of this text for a more complete account of any other textual issues and their resolution.
VACATION DAYS
IN GREECE
BY
RUFUS B. RICHARDSON
FORMERLY DIRECTOR OF THE AMERICAN SCHOOL OF
ARCHÆOLOGY, ATHENS
ILLUSTRATED
NEW YORK
CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
1903
Copyright, 1903, by CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
Published, September, 1903
TROW DIRECTORY PRINTING AND BOOKBINDING COMPANY NEW YORK
To
MY SON
THE COMPANION OF
MY TRAVELS
PREFACE
During a residence of eleven years in Greece I have formed the habit of writing to certain periodicals descriptions of my journeys. The occasion for making a book out of these articles was the suggestion on the part of many members of the American School of Classical Studies, at Athens, who had shared these journeys with me, that I should do so, and so make the descriptions accessible to them. I yielded to this suggestion all the more readily from the consideration that my wanderings have taken me into many nooks and corners not usually visited by those whose stay in the country is short.
Having seen the sunrise from most of the mountain-tops of the country, having forded many of its rivers, and having caught the indescribable color at early dawn and at evening twilight, from the deck of coasting steamers, all along these fascinating shores, I felt it only right that I should try to convey to others, less fortunate than myself, some picture, however inadequate, of all this experience and enjoyment. All that is here set down is, however, but a part of a larger picture that is ever present in my memory.
For the most part I have avoided what has been most frequently described. Athens, Olympia, and the much-visited Argive plain, I have not touched upon, because I did not wish to swell the book by telling thrice-told tales. I tell of what I have most enjoyed, in the hope that readers may feel with me the charm of this poet’s land, which has, more than any other, “infinite riches in a little room.”
The slight alterations that I have made in the original form of the descriptions was made with the design of bringing them, in a measure, up to the present time. I have also arranged them on a geographical thread, running from the Ionian Islands, through Northern Greece to the Peloponnesus. The two larger articles, on Sicily and Dalmatia, are not simply tacked on. They belong to the subject, inasmuch as Sicily was an important part of Hellas, as the Greeks called their country, and inasmuch as Greek colonies once skirted the greater part of the coast of Dalmatia.
In regard to the spelling of proper names, I have tried to shun unusual appearances. But I have great objection to changing all the Greek endings in os into us, just because the Romans did so. I also object to changing the Greek k into c where it will surely be pronounced as an s. In the case of names that have become a part of our English speech, I have, however, admitted these changes. The result may not seem satisfactory, on account of the lack of a rigid system; but I trust that it will be pardoned.
CONTENTS
PAGE | |
Corfu | 3 |
A Day in Ithaca | 13 |
Delphi, The Sanctuary of Greece | 24 |
Dodona | 34 |
The Bicycle in Greece | 47 |
Acarnania | 54 |
Ætolia | 65 |
Thermopylæ | 79 |
Thessaly | 90 |
An Ascent of the Highest Mountain in Greece | 104 |
A Journey from Athens to Eretria | 111 |
Taygetos and Kithæron | 119 |
Styx and Stymphalus | 128 |
An Unusual Approach to Epidauros | 140 |
Messene and Sandy Pylos |