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  • July 1, 1876
  • Page 44
  • THE TROAD.
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The Masonic Magazine, July 1, 1876: Page 44

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    Article THE TROAD. ← Page 2 of 5 →
Page 44

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

The Troad.

A visit to the Troad will equally delight the traveller whether , like myself , what he most cares for is natural beauty , or whether he takes a strong interest in spots haunted by great memories , and bearing deep vestiges of the life of remote generations . Had even Hecuba been no more to me than

I to Hecuba , the Plain of Troy would still have been , in my eyes , a scene of rare loveliness , and I should have been content to gaze on the grand features of its vast surroundings , irrespectively of the historical or fabulous associations its very name

conjures up . The Plain of Troy is intersected from east to west by several mountain ridges of moderate height , formed by the spurs of Mount Ida , and enclosing valleys , through which flow three principal streams—the Doumbrek , or " Simois ; " the

Kemar , or " Thymbrius ; " and the Mendere , or " Scamander , "—all these classical names must be understood to rest on hypothesis—the former two flowing into the old or new bed of the last-named , as all other outlet to the sea is precluded b y a swelling ridge , which runs along the coast from Ujek , above Beshika Bay , to the Sigsaum Promontory , at the entrance of

the Hellespont . The lowlands in the plain and the valleys being thus shut in on all sides but one , are swampy , and , owing to the want of good drainage and culture , unhealthy and desolate . But the verdure of the fields and pastures , and the crops

growing here and there where patches of the soil have been but scratched , give evidence of unsurpassed fertility , and the brushwood on the hills , and the park-like groves of oak on the mountain slopes , conjure up to the imagination the dense forests b

y which the uplands must in primitive times have been mantled , feeding the moisture , checking the rush of the waters , and tempering the extremes of heat and cold in one of the most genial and salubrious climates on earth ' s surface , At every step as we

rode the freshness , the vastuess , the homeliness , the wildness of the region we traversed , delighted us by their unceasing variety , while , when we drew rein on the summit of any of the ridges , on any of the sites to which tradition attaches peculiar

importance , the panorama of land and sea which stretched before us , the great landmarks which dotted the horizon around us , called forth expressions of such rapture as

could hardly be expected of men at our time of life , and schooled to rein in any feeling which might tempt us to make fools of ourselves . East of us rose Ida , with her long diadem-like snowy crest of Mount

Garganus , enthroned as queen of the region , stretching forth , as her arms , woody slopes , some of which reach far down towards the sea , while the main cluster centres round the masses of Karadagh and Mount Dedeh , in the rear of that locality of Balidagh and

Bounarbashi , where , if Troy was not , it seems , at least , so natural to wish that Troy had been , West of us lay the coast , flanked all along by its high land , beyond which g leamed the blue waves of the open iEgeau Seawith its islands rising loftily here and

, there ; next to us , Tenedos , the ubiquitous , obtruding everywhere on the landscape ; further off , Leninos , vast and mountainous ; and more towards the north , where the waters contract themselves at the entrance of the Hellespontthe low ledge of Imbros

, , over which Neptune looked down upon Troy from the superior height of rocky Samothrace . North of us , across the plain , was the Hellespont , its deep-blue surface

all studded with white sails , and the sky lightly streaked by the vanishing smokewreaths from the funnel of many a steamer . Beyond that strait , on the European side , the coast of Thrace stretched low , bleak , and forbidding ; and far away , dimly perceptible in the thin haze of the seathe

, grand pyramid of Mount Athos , at 80 miles distance from us as the crow flies . Nothing in the world could be more enjoyable than the weather that befriended us throughout the trip . Nothing more fresh and vivid than the blossoms and

young foliage on every tree ; nothing more joyous than the music of lark and nightingale , alternating with the notes of frog and owl in that perpetual succession of sun and moonlight ; nothing more peaceful than the herds and flocks lowing and bleating iu

those levels , than the lowly stork-haunted habitations , and the peasants themselves , forgetting , as it were , all difference of race and creed , living in harmony and security with wide-open cottage doors , neutralizing , by their innocence , the baneful influence of their vile Government ; the Greek , by mere thrift and good courage , insensibly , and yet irresistibly , ousting the more indolent and

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-07-01, Page 44” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 10 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01071876/page/44/.
  • 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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Page 44

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

The Troad.

A visit to the Troad will equally delight the traveller whether , like myself , what he most cares for is natural beauty , or whether he takes a strong interest in spots haunted by great memories , and bearing deep vestiges of the life of remote generations . Had even Hecuba been no more to me than

I to Hecuba , the Plain of Troy would still have been , in my eyes , a scene of rare loveliness , and I should have been content to gaze on the grand features of its vast surroundings , irrespectively of the historical or fabulous associations its very name

conjures up . The Plain of Troy is intersected from east to west by several mountain ridges of moderate height , formed by the spurs of Mount Ida , and enclosing valleys , through which flow three principal streams—the Doumbrek , or " Simois ; " the

Kemar , or " Thymbrius ; " and the Mendere , or " Scamander , "—all these classical names must be understood to rest on hypothesis—the former two flowing into the old or new bed of the last-named , as all other outlet to the sea is precluded b y a swelling ridge , which runs along the coast from Ujek , above Beshika Bay , to the Sigsaum Promontory , at the entrance of

the Hellespont . The lowlands in the plain and the valleys being thus shut in on all sides but one , are swampy , and , owing to the want of good drainage and culture , unhealthy and desolate . But the verdure of the fields and pastures , and the crops

growing here and there where patches of the soil have been but scratched , give evidence of unsurpassed fertility , and the brushwood on the hills , and the park-like groves of oak on the mountain slopes , conjure up to the imagination the dense forests b

y which the uplands must in primitive times have been mantled , feeding the moisture , checking the rush of the waters , and tempering the extremes of heat and cold in one of the most genial and salubrious climates on earth ' s surface , At every step as we

rode the freshness , the vastuess , the homeliness , the wildness of the region we traversed , delighted us by their unceasing variety , while , when we drew rein on the summit of any of the ridges , on any of the sites to which tradition attaches peculiar

importance , the panorama of land and sea which stretched before us , the great landmarks which dotted the horizon around us , called forth expressions of such rapture as

could hardly be expected of men at our time of life , and schooled to rein in any feeling which might tempt us to make fools of ourselves . East of us rose Ida , with her long diadem-like snowy crest of Mount

Garganus , enthroned as queen of the region , stretching forth , as her arms , woody slopes , some of which reach far down towards the sea , while the main cluster centres round the masses of Karadagh and Mount Dedeh , in the rear of that locality of Balidagh and

Bounarbashi , where , if Troy was not , it seems , at least , so natural to wish that Troy had been , West of us lay the coast , flanked all along by its high land , beyond which g leamed the blue waves of the open iEgeau Seawith its islands rising loftily here and

, there ; next to us , Tenedos , the ubiquitous , obtruding everywhere on the landscape ; further off , Leninos , vast and mountainous ; and more towards the north , where the waters contract themselves at the entrance of the Hellespontthe low ledge of Imbros

, , over which Neptune looked down upon Troy from the superior height of rocky Samothrace . North of us , across the plain , was the Hellespont , its deep-blue surface

all studded with white sails , and the sky lightly streaked by the vanishing smokewreaths from the funnel of many a steamer . Beyond that strait , on the European side , the coast of Thrace stretched low , bleak , and forbidding ; and far away , dimly perceptible in the thin haze of the seathe

, grand pyramid of Mount Athos , at 80 miles distance from us as the crow flies . Nothing in the world could be more enjoyable than the weather that befriended us throughout the trip . Nothing more fresh and vivid than the blossoms and

young foliage on every tree ; nothing more joyous than the music of lark and nightingale , alternating with the notes of frog and owl in that perpetual succession of sun and moonlight ; nothing more peaceful than the herds and flocks lowing and bleating iu

those levels , than the lowly stork-haunted habitations , and the peasants themselves , forgetting , as it were , all difference of race and creed , living in harmony and security with wide-open cottage doors , neutralizing , by their innocence , the baneful influence of their vile Government ; the Greek , by mere thrift and good courage , insensibly , and yet irresistibly , ousting the more indolent and

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