<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</SPAN><br/> <span class="small">SCUTARI.</span></h2>
<p>Open the atlas once more at the map of
Russia, and look downward from the
Crimea, across the Black Sea toward the
southwest. You see a narrow strait
marked "Bosporus" leading from the Black Sea to
the Sea of Marmora; and on either side of the strait
a black dot, one marked "Constantinople," the other
"Scutari." It is to Scutari that we are going, but
we must not pass the other places without a word,
for they are very famous. This is the land of story,
and every foot of ground, every trickle of water,
has its legend or fairy tale, or true story of sorrow
or heroism.</p>
<p>Bosporus means "the cow's ford." It was
named, the old story says, for Io, a beautiful maiden
beloved of Zeus. To conceal her from the eyes of
Hera, his jealous wife, Zeus turned Io into a snow-white
heifer; but Hera, suspecting the truth, persuaded
him to give the poor pretty creature to her.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</SPAN></span>
Then followed a sad time. Hera set Argus, a giant
with a hundred eyes, to watch the heifer, lest she
escape and regain her human form. The poor
heifer-maiden was so unhappy that Zeus sent
Hermes to set her free; and the cunning god told
stories to Argus till he fell asleep, and then cut off
his head, hundred eyes and all. Hera took the eyes
and put them in the tail of her sacred peacock, and
there they are to this day. Meantime Io ran away
as fast as she could, but she could not escape the
vengeance of the jealous goddess. Hera sent a gadfly
after her, which stung her cruelly, and pursued
her over land and sea. The poor creature fled wildly
hither and thither; swam across the Ionian Sea,
which has borne her name ever since; roamed over
the whole breadth of what is now Turkey, and finally
came to the narrow strait or ford between the
two seas. Here she crossed again, and went on her
weary way; and here again she left—not her own
name, but that of the animal in whose form she
suffered. Poor Io! one is glad to read that she was
released at last, and given her woman's body again.
True? No, the story is not true, but it is very
famous. Those of you who care about moths will<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</SPAN></span>
find another reminder of Io in the beautiful <i>Saturnia
Io</i>, which is named for the Greek maiden and
her cruel foe, Saturnia being another name for Hera
or Juno.</p>
<p>The scenery along the banks of the Bosporus is
so beautiful that whole books have been written
about it. On either side are seven promontories and
seven bays; indeed, it is almost a chain of seven
lakes, connected by seven swift-rushing currents.
The promontories are crowned with villages, towns,
palaces, ruins, each with its own beauty, its own interest,
its own story; but we cannot stay for these;
we must go onward to where, at the lower end of
the passage, with its long, narrow harbor, the Golden
Horn, curling round it, lies Constantinople, the
wonder-city.</p>
<p>Here indeed we must stop for a moment, for this
is one of the most famous cities of history. In
ancient days, when Rome was in her glory and long
before, it was Byzantium that lay shining in the
curve of the Golden Horn; Byzantium the rich, the
powerful, the desired of all; fought over through
successive generations by Persian, Greek, Gaul and
Roman; conquered, liberated, conquered again. In<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</SPAN></span>
the second century of our era it was besieged by
the Roman emperor Severus, and after a heroic resistance
lasting three years, was taken and laid waste
by the conqueror. But the city sprang up again,
more beautiful than ever, and a century and a half
later the emperor Constantine made it the capital of
the Roman Empire, and gave it his own name.</p>
<p>Constantinopolis, the City of Constantine; so it
became in the year 330, and so it remains to this
day, but not under the rule of Romans or their descendants.</p>
<p>"Blessed shall he be who shall take Constantinople!"
So, three hundred years later, exclaimed
Mohammed, the prophet and leader of men. His
disciples and followers never forgot the saying, and
many wars were fought, many desperate attempts
made by the Mohammedans to win the wonder
city. It was another Mohammed, not a prophet but
a great soldier, surnamed the Conqueror, who finally
conquered it, in 1453, after another tremendous
siege, of which you will read in history. There is
a terrible story about the entry of this savage conqueror
into the city. It is said that its inhabitants,
mostly Christians, though of various nationalities,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</SPAN></span>
took refuge in the great church of St. Sophia,
and were there barbarously slaughtered by the ferocious
Turks. In the south aisle of the church the
dead lay piled in great heaps, and in over this dreadful
rampart rode Mohammed on his war horse; and
as he rode, he lifted his bloody right hand and smote
one of the pillars, and there—so the story says—the
mark may be seen to this day.</p>
<p>From that time to our own Constantinople has
been the capital city of the Turkish Empire. Again,
I wish I might tell you about at least a few of its
many wonders, for I have seen some of them, but
again I must hasten on.</p>
<p>The city is so great that it overflows in every
direction; in fact, there are three cities in one: Stamboul,
the central division, filling the tongue of land
between the Golden Horn and the Sea of Marmora;
Galata, on the farther bank of the Horn; and Scutari,
on the opposite shore of the Bosporus. It
is to the last-named that we are going.</p>
<p>Although actually a suburb of Constantinople,
Scutari is a town in itself, and a large and ancient
one. In the earliest times of the great
Persian monarchy, it was called <i>Chrysopolis</i>, the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</SPAN></span>
Golden City. Its present name means in Persian a
courier who carries royal orders from station to
station; that is because the place has always, from
its earliest days, been a <i>rendezvous</i> for caravans,
messengers, travelers of every description. Here
Xenophon and his Greeks, returning from the war
against Cyrus, halted for seven days while the soldiers
disposed of the booty they had won in the
campaign. Here, for hundreds of years, stood the
three colossal statues, forty-eight feet high, erected
by the Byzantians in honor of the Athenians, who
had saved them from destruction at the hands of
Philip the Lacedæmonian. Here, to-day, are
mosques and convents, palaces and tombs, especially
the last; for the burying ground of Scutari is one of
the largest in the world, and its silent avenues hold,
some say, twenty times as many dwellers as the gay
and noisy streets of Stamboul.</p>
<p>It is a strange place, this great burying ground.
Beside each tomb rises a cypress tree, tall and majestic.
The tombs themselves are mostly pillars of
marble, with a globe or ball on the top; and perched
atop of this globe is in many cases a turban or a fez,
carved in stone and painted in gay colors. This<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</SPAN></span>
shows that a man lies beneath; the women's tombs
are marked by a grapevine or a stem of lotus,
also carved in marble. At foot of the column is a
flat stone, hollowed out in the middle to form a
small basin. Some of these basins are filled with
flowers or perfumes; in others, the rain and dew
make a pleasant bathing and drinking place for the
birds who fly in great flocks about the quiet place.</p>
<p>Not far from this great cemetery is another place
of burial, that of the English; and this is laid out like
a lovely garden, and watched and tended with loving
care; for here rest the brave men who fell in this
terrible war of the Crimea, or who wasted away in
the great building that towers foursquare over all
the neighborhood. We must look well at this building,
the Barrack Hospital of Scutari, for this is
what Florence Nightingale came so far to see.
Through all the long, wearisome journey, I doubt
whether she gave much heed to the beauties or the
discomforts of the way. Her eyes were set steadfastly
forward, following her swift thoughts; and
eyes and thoughts sought this one thing, this gaunt,
bare building rising beside the new-made graves.
Let us follow her and see what she found there.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</SPAN></span></p>
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