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  • July 1, 1876
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The Masonic Magazine, July 1, 1876: Page 45

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    Article THE TROAD. ← Page 3 of 5 →
Page 45

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Troad.

desponding Mussulman . Such a sweet , solitary home as Mr . Frederick Calvert has contrived to build for himself on that hallo ?' -p . d ground , close to the ruins of the Temple of the Thymbrian Apollo , such a farm as , with little capital and much industry , he is converting into a princely

estate , might well wean from the world many a weary heart , and clip the wings of many an unsatisfied ambition . And over this idyllic paradise where once a frail woman ' s beauty arrayed Asia and Europe in armsthe battles of Troy

, are once more fought by scholars bent on fishing historical truth out of the deep well of a poetical myth , bewildering themselves and the world by their dissertations as to what and where was Troy , and establishing theories where conjecture itself seems

almost hopelessly at fault . Was the site of Priam ' s Troy at Hissarlik , on the spot where Ilium Novum subsequently arose , and where Dr . Schliemann has lately opened the earth to so great a depth and extent , or was it on the more sublime ground near Bounarbashi , round the hill ofBalickgh , where men are supposed to have traced the circuit of the wall of Pergamus , and even

to have brought Hector ' s tomb into light ? All these questions have been and must be answered by the li ght of Homer ' s verse and by the bearings of the landmarks of Ida , the Scamander , Irnbros , Tenedos , the Sigteum , and other hills , ( fcreams , islands , and headlands to which frequent allusions

occur iu the great epic . Listen to Maclaren on one side and to Le Chevalier on the other , and see how satisfied every party leader and partisan is with his own view , how plausibly he stands by his own and demolishes his adversary ' s argument ; hear

how much has been , how much may be , said on both sides—as , indeed , on all sides of all questions—and then tell us who shall decide where so many aud such valiant doctors disagree ? "The identity of the site of Troy , " one will tell us , " may be

made out by two springs , one warm and one cold , flowing into , or from which flows the Scainander . '' Aye , but what if at Hissarlik the springs which must have been there have dried up , and those at Bounarbsishi are not two but forty , and all cold 1 " Round Homer ' s Troy , " says another , " flowed Scamander . " But what if the river has altered its course , and its

confluence with the Simois has been removed from its original spot ? What , besides , if the names are misapplied , if what we call Simois were Homer ' s Scamander , and if the sources of one river , whichit seemed natural to trace to the mountainslayafter allin

, , , the plain ? " Troy , " a third teaches us , " or at least its citadel , occupied a lofty , craggy , and conspicuous situation . " But what if time has smoothed down its

asperities , and the accumulation of the soil for 30 or 40 centuries has levelled its slope ? " Troy , " a fourth reasons , " was not too far aud not too near the sea . " But what if land has encroached upon the water , and the line of the shore has advanced far beyond its ancient limit ? Itisevenso . Everycritic

, like a bad tailor , strives to fit the ground to his own theory when at a lost how to shape the theory , so as to suit the particulars of the locality , Every one proves that his own pet Troy is Homer ' s Troy , or at least that it would be amazingly like it ,

had not untoward circumstances conspired to make it so unlike . Notwithstanding this irreconcilable discrepancy of opinion , however , it is not easy to deny that Dr . Schliemann , Mr . Frank Calvertandlastbut not leastMr .

Glad-, , , , stone , all partisans of Hissarlik , have good reasons in their favour , and that Bounarbashi seems , indeed , too far inland , and the ground of it too rugged to allow of chariot

races being run in its immediate vicinity , or of Achilles chasing the flying Hector three times round the walls of the city . But , on the other hand , the site of Hissarlik is mean and circumscribed to a small space not very loft y , and by no means craggy or rugged , and the area which is assigned to

the town is barely sufficient to accommodate a moderate-sized citadel , " about the size of Trafalgar-square , " as Dr . Schliemann himself said to Mr Gladstone . The world is doubtless greatly indebted to the good German doctor by whose rare energy and

at whose heavy expense such extensive excavations have been made , and so many valuable relics of antiquity have been brought into li ght . But it is difficult to look into the broad and deep trenches he has openedto view the mountains of

, rubbish he has heaped up , and to examine the basements and foundations of the buildings he has laid bare , without feeling as if the conclusions to which his dis-

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-07-01, Page 45” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 2 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01071876/page/45/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
TO OUR READERS. Article 2
INDEX. Article 4
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 7
SONNET. Article 7
A PCEAN. Article 8
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 10
THE BROKEN TESSERA. Article 13
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 14
A WORD FOR OUR BOYS. Article 17
SONNET. Article 19
TRIADS IN MASONRY. Article 19
NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTE BOOKS OF THE BRITISH UNION LODGE, No. 114, IPSWICH. A.D. 1762. Article 20
AN ITALIAN COUNT. Article 24
WHISTLE DOWN THE BRAKES. Article 28
ZOROASTRIANISM AND FREEMASONRY. Article 28
THE OLD FISHER'S TALE. Article 32
FAIRY TALES UTILISED FOR, THE NEW GENERATION. Article 32
SPRING. Article 35
THE EDUCATION OF SOCIETY. Article 35
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 37
Untitled Article 41
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 42
THE TROAD. Article 43
A STRICKEN HEART. Article 47
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 47
THE NEW SCHOOL DIRECTOR. Article 49
REVIEW. Article 50
MASONIC CYCLOPAEDIA. Article 54
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Troad.

desponding Mussulman . Such a sweet , solitary home as Mr . Frederick Calvert has contrived to build for himself on that hallo ?' -p . d ground , close to the ruins of the Temple of the Thymbrian Apollo , such a farm as , with little capital and much industry , he is converting into a princely

estate , might well wean from the world many a weary heart , and clip the wings of many an unsatisfied ambition . And over this idyllic paradise where once a frail woman ' s beauty arrayed Asia and Europe in armsthe battles of Troy

, are once more fought by scholars bent on fishing historical truth out of the deep well of a poetical myth , bewildering themselves and the world by their dissertations as to what and where was Troy , and establishing theories where conjecture itself seems

almost hopelessly at fault . Was the site of Priam ' s Troy at Hissarlik , on the spot where Ilium Novum subsequently arose , and where Dr . Schliemann has lately opened the earth to so great a depth and extent , or was it on the more sublime ground near Bounarbashi , round the hill ofBalickgh , where men are supposed to have traced the circuit of the wall of Pergamus , and even

to have brought Hector ' s tomb into light ? All these questions have been and must be answered by the li ght of Homer ' s verse and by the bearings of the landmarks of Ida , the Scamander , Irnbros , Tenedos , the Sigteum , and other hills , ( fcreams , islands , and headlands to which frequent allusions

occur iu the great epic . Listen to Maclaren on one side and to Le Chevalier on the other , and see how satisfied every party leader and partisan is with his own view , how plausibly he stands by his own and demolishes his adversary ' s argument ; hear

how much has been , how much may be , said on both sides—as , indeed , on all sides of all questions—and then tell us who shall decide where so many aud such valiant doctors disagree ? "The identity of the site of Troy , " one will tell us , " may be

made out by two springs , one warm and one cold , flowing into , or from which flows the Scainander . '' Aye , but what if at Hissarlik the springs which must have been there have dried up , and those at Bounarbsishi are not two but forty , and all cold 1 " Round Homer ' s Troy , " says another , " flowed Scamander . " But what if the river has altered its course , and its

confluence with the Simois has been removed from its original spot ? What , besides , if the names are misapplied , if what we call Simois were Homer ' s Scamander , and if the sources of one river , whichit seemed natural to trace to the mountainslayafter allin

, , , the plain ? " Troy , " a third teaches us , " or at least its citadel , occupied a lofty , craggy , and conspicuous situation . " But what if time has smoothed down its

asperities , and the accumulation of the soil for 30 or 40 centuries has levelled its slope ? " Troy , " a fourth reasons , " was not too far aud not too near the sea . " But what if land has encroached upon the water , and the line of the shore has advanced far beyond its ancient limit ? Itisevenso . Everycritic

, like a bad tailor , strives to fit the ground to his own theory when at a lost how to shape the theory , so as to suit the particulars of the locality , Every one proves that his own pet Troy is Homer ' s Troy , or at least that it would be amazingly like it ,

had not untoward circumstances conspired to make it so unlike . Notwithstanding this irreconcilable discrepancy of opinion , however , it is not easy to deny that Dr . Schliemann , Mr . Frank Calvertandlastbut not leastMr .

Glad-, , , , stone , all partisans of Hissarlik , have good reasons in their favour , and that Bounarbashi seems , indeed , too far inland , and the ground of it too rugged to allow of chariot

races being run in its immediate vicinity , or of Achilles chasing the flying Hector three times round the walls of the city . But , on the other hand , the site of Hissarlik is mean and circumscribed to a small space not very loft y , and by no means craggy or rugged , and the area which is assigned to

the town is barely sufficient to accommodate a moderate-sized citadel , " about the size of Trafalgar-square , " as Dr . Schliemann himself said to Mr Gladstone . The world is doubtless greatly indebted to the good German doctor by whose rare energy and

at whose heavy expense such extensive excavations have been made , and so many valuable relics of antiquity have been brought into li ght . But it is difficult to look into the broad and deep trenches he has openedto view the mountains of

, rubbish he has heaped up , and to examine the basements and foundations of the buildings he has laid bare , without feeling as if the conclusions to which his dis-

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