. The near East; Dalmatia, Greece and Constantinople. near the AcropolisMuseum, behind the Parthenon. Other fine viewscan be had from Lycabettus, the solitary and fierce-looking hill against whose rocks the town seems al-most to surge, like a wave striving to overwhelm it,and from that other hill, immediately facing theAcropolis, on which stands the monument of Philo-pappos. It is easy to ascend to the summit of the Acropolis,even in the fierce heat of a summer day. A stroll upa curving road, the mounting of some steps, and youare there, five hundred and ten feet only above thelevel of the sea


. The near East; Dalmatia, Greece and Constantinople. near the AcropolisMuseum, behind the Parthenon. Other fine viewscan be had from Lycabettus, the solitary and fierce-looking hill against whose rocks the town seems al-most to surge, like a wave striving to overwhelm it,and from that other hill, immediately facing theAcropolis, on which stands the monument of Philo-pappos. It is easy to ascend to the summit of the Acropolis,even in the fierce heat of a summer day. A stroll upa curving road, the mounting of some steps, and youare there, five hundred and ten feet only above thelevel of the sea. But on account of the solitary situa-tion of the plateau of rock on which the temples aregrouped and of its precipitous sides, it seems verymuch higher than it is. Whenever I stood on thesummit of the Acropolis I felt as if I were on thepeak of a mountain, as if from there one must be ableto see all the kingdoms of the world and the glory ofthem. What one does see is marvelously, almost ineffa-bly beautiful. Herodotus called this land, with its 60. From a ph< THE THEATER OF DIONYSUS ON THE SOUTHERNSLOPE OF THE ACROPOLIS IN AND NEAR ATHENS stony soil and its multitudes of bare mountains, therugged nurse of liberty. Though rugged, andoften naked, nevertheless its loveliness—and thatsoft word must be used—is so great and so pure that,as we give to Greek art the crown of wild olive, so wemust give it surely also to the scenery of Greece. Itis a loveliness of outline, of color, and above all oflight. Almost everywhere in Greece you see mountains,range upon range, closing about you or, more often,melting away into far distances, into outlines ofshadows and dreams. Almost everywhere, or so itseemed to me, you look upon the sea. And as theoutlines of the mountains of Greece are nearly al-ways divinely calm, so the colors of the seas ofGreece are magically deep and radiant and over mountains and seas fall changing wondersof light, giving to outline eternal meanings,


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidneareastdalm, bookyear1913