<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LVIII">CHAPTER LVIII<br/> <span class="subhead">THE CITY OF ATHENS</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">When</span> the Persians entered Athens they destroyed her
temples. Some of these temples had been hastily repaired,
others had been hastily built, when the Athenians returned
to their own city.</p>
<p>But now that peace had been made with the Persians,
Athens determined to show her gratitude to the gods by
building in the city, temples, ‘exceeding magnifical,’ more
beautiful indeed than any that had yet been built.</p>
<p>The most famous of these temples was the Parthenon or
Temple of the Virgin, built on the Acropolis, and sacred to
the virgin goddess Athene.</p>
<p>This marvellous temple was planned by a great architect
named Ictinus, and adorned by a yet greater sculptor called
Pheidias.</p>
<p>The architecture of the Parthenon was Doric, which was
the oldest, the strongest as well as the most simple, of the
four kinds of Grecian buildings. There were two rooms
in the Parthenon with no entrance from one to the other.</p>
<p>The figure of the goddess, fashioned by the magic hands
of the sculptor Pheidias, was a colossal one. Calm, majestic,
with a smile upon her face, she stood in her wondrous temple,
clad in a robe of gold.</p>
<p>On her head she wore a helmet, in her right hand she held
fast a little golden figure of the goddess of victory, while
her left lay upon her shield. At her feet a snake lay
coiled.</p>
<div id="if_i_196" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 29em;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_196.jpg" width-obs="1802" height-obs="2510" alt="" />
<div class="caption">The figure of the goddess was a colossal one</div>
</div>
<p>Neither of marble nor of bronze was the statue, but of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span>
ivory and pure gold, ivory being used for the flesh, gold for
the robe and armour, which was studded with precious
stones.</p>
<p>Nowhere was there so marvellous a statue as this of the
goddess Athene wrought by Pheidias, save perchance the Zeus
at Olympia, which was also moulded by the famous sculptor.</p>
<p>The statue of Zeus had a strange power over those who
gazed upon it.</p>
<p>‘Let a man sick and weary in his soul, who has passed
through many distresses and sorrows, whose pillow is unvisited
by kindly sleep, stand in front of this image; he will,
I deem, forget all the terrors and troubles of human life.’</p>
<p>Close to the Parthenon was an older temple, built not in
the Doric but in the Ionic style of architecture. It, too,
was sacred to Athene and also to Poseidon.</p>
<p>This temple, which was called the Erechtheum, was held
in awe and reverence by the Athenians, for in it was kept an
ancient wooden image of the goddess. So ancient was this
‘most holy idol’ of the people that it looked more like a
rough block of wood than a carved figure. The holy olive
tree, too, was there, which the Persians had cut down, but
which they had been unable to kill, as well as the living
snake, the symbol of the presence of the goddess.</p>
<p>The Erechtheum was to the Athenians a shrine, in
which lay hidden the story of their past, the Parthenon was
to them a sign of the power and the splendour of the age
of Pericles.</p>
<p>On the western side of the Acropolis rose a magnificent
marble wall called the Propylaea. The marble had been
pierced at intervals to make five great gateways, the centre
one being for chariots, those on either side leading by steps
to the Parthenon. Through these gateways the Athenians
marched in solemn procession on their feast days.</p>
<p>A great theatre, sacred to the god Dionysus, was finished
in the age of Pericles, and an Odeon or great hall of music
was added to it, where contests of song and music were held.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">198</span>
The roof of the Odeon was pointed like a tent, and was made
of the masts of ships that had been captured from the
Persians.</p>
<p>This pointed roof was said by the wits of Athens to be
like the helmet of Pericles, whose head was curiously formed,
and who often wore a helmet to conceal its strange shape.</p>
<p>‘Here comes Pericles,’ says a comic poet of those days,
‘with the Odeon set on his crown.’</p>
<p>Another great statue of Athene, called Athene Promachos,
or Athena Foremost in Battle, stood just within the
Propylaea. It was wrought in bronze and showed Athene
in armour, holding shield and spear outstretched. This
statue, also by Pheidias, was fifty feet high and stood on a
pedestal that raised it twenty feet higher, so that it towered
above the roofs of the temples. The golden plume on the
helmet of the goddess was seen by sailors far out at sea.</p>
<p>With these and many other great works of art, Pericles
adorned the city of his love. The Acropolis he said should
be no longer a fortress, but a sanctuary.</p>
<p>Some of the Athenians, among them Thucydides,
grumbled because Pericles spent the public money on these
beautiful buildings.</p>
<p>Pericles heard that the citizens were discontented, and
in the open assembly he rose and bade them tell him if they
thought he used more money than he ought, to adorn the
city.</p>
<p>‘Too much a great deal,’ was the speedy retort.</p>
<p>‘Then,’ said Pericles, ‘since it is so, let the cost not go to
your account but to mine, and let the inscriptions upon the
buildings stand in my name.’</p>
<p>But the people, surprised at his generosity, and perhaps
wishing to share in the glory of his work, were ashamed that
they had complained. They bade him spend as much of the
public money as he deemed right and ‘spare no cost until all
was finished.’</p>
<p>In 479 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> the Persians had reduced Athens to ruins.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span>
Fifty years later she had been built anew and adorned with
temples and statues that made her the wonder of the world.</p>
<p>Marble was found in Attica, gold and ivory were bought
with money out of the treasury, but without the magic hand
of Pheidias, marble, gold, and ivory had been bought in vain.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />