Little can be said of the passage
from Odessa to Constantinople; we continued out at
sea and did not land anywhere. The distance is
420 miles. The ship belonged to the Russian
government, it was named Odessa, was of 260 horse
power, and was handsome, clean, and neat.
In order that my parting with my dear
friends, the Russians, might not be too much regretted,
one of them was so good at the end of the passage
as to behave in a manner that was far from polite.
During the last night which was very mild and warm,
I went out of the close cabin on to the deck, and
placed myself not far from the compass-box, where
I soon began to sleep, wrapt in my mantle. One
of the sailors came, and giving me a kick with his
foot, told me to leave the place. I thanked
him quietly for the delicate way in which he expressed
himself, and requesting him to leave me at peace,
continued to sleep.
Among the passengers were six English
sailors, who had taken a new ship to Odessa, and were
returning home. I spoke with them several times,
and had soon quite won them. As they perceived
that I was without any companion, they asked me if
I spoke enough Turkish to be able to get what I wanted
from the ship’s people and porters. On
my answering that I did, they offered to manage everything
for me if I would go on shore with them. I willingly
accepted their offer.
As we approached land a customs’
officer came on board to examine our luggage.
In order to avoid delay I gave him some money.
When we landed I wanted to pay, but the English sailors
would not allow it; they said I had paid for the customs’
officer, and it was therefore their time to pay for
the boat. I saw that I should only have affronted
them if I had pressed them further to receive the
money. They settled with the porter for me, and
we parted good friends. How different was the
behaviour of these English sailors from that of the
three well-bred Russian gentlemen at Jalta!
The passage into the Bosphorus, as
well as the objects of interest in Constantinople,
I have already described in my journey to the Holy
Land. I went immediately to my good friend Mrs.
Balbiani; but, to my regret, found that she was not
in Constantinople; she had given up her hotel.
I was recommended to the hotel “Aux Quatre
Nations,” kept by Madame Prust. She was
a talkative French woman, who was always singing the
praises of her housekeeping, servants, cookery, etc.,
in which, however, none of the travellers agreed with
her. She charged forty piasters (8s.), and put
down a good round sum in the bill for servants’
fees and such like.
Since my last stay here a handsome
new wooden bridge had been erected over the Golden
Horn, and the women did not seem to be so thickly
veiled as on my first visit to Constantinople.
Many of them wore such delicately woven veils that
their faces could almost be seen through them:
others had only the forehead and chin covered, and
left their eyes, nose, and cheeks exposed.
The suburb of Pera looked very desolate.
There had been a number of fires, which were increased
by two during my stay; they were called “small,”
as by the first only a hundred and thirty shops, houses,
and cottages, and by the second, only thirty were burned
to the ground. They are accustomed to reckon
the number destroyed by thousands.
The first fire broke out in the evening
as we were seated at table. One of the guests
offered to accompany me to see it, as he thought I
should be interested by the sight if I had not seen
such a one before. The scene of the fire was
rather distant from our house, but we had scarcely
gone a hundred steps when we found ourselves in a
great crowd of people, who all carried paper lanterns,
by which the streets were lighted. Every
one was shouting and rushing wildly about; the inhabitants
of the houses threw open their windows and inquired
of the passers by the extent of the danger, and gazed
with anxiety and trembling at the reflection of the
flames in the sky. Every now and then sounded
the shrill cry of “Guarda! guarda!”
(take care) of the people, who carried small fire-engines
and buckets of water on their shoulders, and
knocked everything over that was in their way.
Mounted and foot soldiers and watchmen rushed about,
and Pashas rode down with their attendants to urge
the people on in extinguishing the fire, and to render
them assistance. Unfortunately almost all these
labours are fruitless. The fire takes such hold
of the wooden buildings painted with oil colours,
and spreads with such incredible rapidity that it is
stopped only by open spaces or gardens. One
fire often destroys several thousand houses.
The unfortunate inhabitants have scarce time to save
themselves; those who live some distance off hastily
pack their effects together and hold themselves prepared
for flight at any moment. It may easily be supposed
that thieves are not rare on such occasions, and it
too often happens that the few things the poor people
have saved are torn away from them in the bustle and
confusion.
The second fire broke out in the following
night. Every one had retired to sleep, but the
fire-watch rushed through the street, knocking with
his iron-mounted staff at the doors of the houses and
waking the people. I sprang terrified out of
bed, ran to the window, and saw in the direction of
the fire a faint red light in the sky. In a
few hours the noise and redness ceased. They
have at last begun to build stone houses, not only
in Pera but also in Constantinople.
I left Constantinople on the evening
of the 7th of October, by the French steamer Scamander,
one hundred and sixty-horse power.
The passage from Constantinople to
Smyrna, and through the Greek Archipelago is described
in my journey to the Holy Land, and I therefore pass
on at once to Greece.
I had been told, in Constantinople,
that the quarantine was held in the Piraeus (six English
miles from Athens), and lasted only four days, as
the state of health in Turkey was perfectly satisfactory.
Instead of this, I learnt on the steamer that it was
held at the island of AEgina (sixteen English miles
from Piraeus), and lasted twelve days, not on account
of the plague but of the cholera. For the plague
it lasts twenty days.
On the 10th of October we caught sight
of the Grecian mainland. Sailing near the coast,
we saw on the lofty prominence of a rock twelve large
columns, the remains of the Temple of Minerva.
Shortly afterwards we came near the hill on which
the beautiful Acropolis stands. I gazed for
a long time on all that was to be seen; the statues
of the Grecian heroes, the history of the country came
back to my mind; and I glowed with desire to set my
foot on the land which, from my earliest childhood,
had appeared to me, after Rome and Jerusalem, as the
most interesting in the earth. How anxiously
I sought for the new town of Athens it stands
upon the same spot as the old and famous one.
Unfortunately, I did not see it, as it was hidden
from us by a hill. We turned into the Piraeus,
on which a new town has also been built, but only
stopped to deliver up our passports, and then sailed
to AEgina.
It was already night when we arrived;
a boat was quickly put out, and we were conveyed to
the quay near the quarantine station. Neither
the porters nor servants of this establishment were
there to help us, and we were obliged to carry our
own baggage to the building, where we were shown into
empty rooms. We could not even get a light.
I had fortunately a wax taper with me, which I cut
into several pieces and gave to my fellow-passengers.
On the following morning I inquired
about the regulations of the quarantine they
were very bad and very dear. A small room, quite
empty, cost three drachmas (2d.) a-day; board,
five drachmas (3d.); very small separate portions,
sixty or seventy leptas (6d. or 7d.); the attendance,
that is, the superintendence of the guardian, two
drachmas a-day; the supply of water, fifteen leptas
daily; the physician, a drachma; and another drachma
on leaving, for which he inspects the whole party,
and examines the state of their health. Several
other things were to be had at a similar price, and
every article of furniture has to be hired.
I cannot understand how it is that
the government pays so little attention to institutions
which are established for sanitary purposes and which
the poor cannot avoid. They must suffer more
privation here than at home; they cannot have any hot
meals, for the landlord, who is not restricted in
his prices, charges five or six times the value.
Several artizans who had come by the vessel were
put into the same room with a servant-girl. These
people had no hot food the twelve days; they lived
entirely upon bread, cheese, and dried figs.
The girl, after a few days, begged me to let her come
into my room, as the people had not behaved properly
to her. In what a position the poor girl would
have been placed if there had not happened to be a
woman among the passengers, or if I had refused to
receive her!
Are such arrangements worthy of a
public institution? Why are there not a few
rooms fitted up at the expense of government for the
poor? Why cannot they have a plain hot meal once
in the day for a moderate price? The poor surely
suffer enough by not being able to earn anything for
so long a time, without being deprived of their hard
earnings in such a shameful manner!
On the second day the court-yard was
opened, and we were permitted to walk about in an
inclosed space a hundred and fifty paces wide, on
the sea-shore. The view was very beautiful; the
whole of the Cyclades lay before us: small,
mountainous islands, mostly uninhabited and covered
over with woods. Probably they were formerly
a part of the mainland, and were separated by some
violent convulsion of nature.
On the fourth day our range was extended,
we were allowed to walk as far as the hills surrounding
the lazaretto under the care of a guard. The
remains of a temple stand upon these hills, fragments
of a wall, and a very much decayed column. The
latter, which consisted of a single piece of stone,
was fluted, and, judging from the circumference, had
been very high. These ruins are said to be those
of the remarkably fine temple of Jupiter.
21st October. This was the day
we were set at liberty. We had ordered a small
vessel the evening before which was to take us to
Athens early in the morning. But my fellow-travellers
would insist upon first celebrating their freedom
at a tavern, and from this reason it was 11 o’clock
before we started. I availed myself of this
time to look about the town and its environs.
It is very small and contains no handsome buildings.
The only remains of antiquity which I found were
traces of the floor of a room in Mosaic work of coloured
stones. From what I could see of the island of
AEgina, it appeared extremely barren and naked, and
it does not show any indications of having been once
a flourishing seat of art and commerce.
AEgina is a Greek island, about two
square miles in extent, it was formerly a separate
state, and is said to have received the name of AEgina
from the daughter of AEsop. It is supposed that
the first money of Greece was coined in this island.
Our passage to the Piraeus occupied
a long time. There was not a breath of wind,
and the sailors were obliged to row; we did not land
at our destination until nearly 8 in the evening.
We were first visited by the health-officer, who
read through the certificates which we brought from
the quarantine very leisurely. There was unfortunately
nobody among us who was inclined to make it more understandable
to him by a few drachmas. Of course we could
not neglect going to the police-office; but it was
already closed, in consequence of which we dare not
leave the town. I went into a large fine-looking
coffee-house to look for night quarters. I was
conducted to a room in which half of the window-panes
were broken. The attendant said this was of no
consequence, it was only necessary to close the shutters.
In other respects the room looked very well but I
had scarcely laid down on the bed when certain animals
compelled me to take to flight. I laid down upon
the sofa, which was no better. Lastly, I tried
an easy chair, in which I passed the night, not in
the most agreeable position.
I had already been told in AEgina
of the great dirtiness and number of vermin prevalent
in the Piraean inns, and had been warned against passing
a night there; but what was to be done? for we could
not venture to leave the town without permission of
the police.
22nd October. The distance of
the harbour of the Piraeus from Athens is thirteen
stadia, or six English miles. The road leads
through olive-plantations and between barren hills.
The Acropolis remains continually in sight; the town
of Athens does not appear till afterwards. I
had intended to remain eight days in Athens, in order
to see all the monuments and remarkable places of the
town and environs leisurely; but I had scarcely got
out of the carriage when I heard the news of the breaking
out of the Vienna revolution of October.
I had heard of the Paris revolution
of the 24th February while in Bombay; that of March
in Germany, at Baghdad; and the other political disturbances
while at Tebris, Tiflis, and other places. No
news had astonished me so much in my whole life as
that from Vienna. My comfortable, peace-loving
Austrians, and an overthrow of the government!
I thought the statement so doubtful, that I could
not give full credit to the verbal information of the
Resident at Baghdad; he was obliged to show it to
me in black and white in the newspaper to convince
me. The affair of March so delighted and inspirited
me that I felt proud of being an Austrian. The
later occurrences of May, however, cooled my enthusiasm;
and that of the 6th of October completely filled me
with sadness and dejection. No overthrow of
a state ever began so promisingly. It would have
stood alone in history if the people had gone on in
the spirit of the March movement; and then to end
in such a way! I was so grieved and upset by
the result of the 6th of October, that I lost all enjoyment
of everything. Moreover, I knew my friends were
in Vienna, and I had heard nothing from them.
I should have hastened there immediately if there
had been an opportunity of doing so; but I was obliged
to wait till the next day, as the steamer did not start
till then. I made arrangements to go by it,
and then took a cicerone to show me all the objects
of interest in the town, more for diversion than pleasure.
My fate had been very unfortunate;
twelve days I had patiently endured being shut up
in the lazaretto at AEgina, in order to be able to
see the classic country, and now I was so anxious to
leave it that I had neither rest nor peace.
Athens, the capital of the former
State of Attica, is said to have been founded in the
year 1300, fourteen hundred years before Christ, by
Cecrops, from whom it then took the name of Cecropia,
which in after-times was retained only by the castle:
under Eriktonius the town was named “Athens.”
The original town stood upon a rock in the centre
of a plain, which was afterwards covered with buildings;
the upper part was called the “Acropolis,”
the lower the “Katopolis;” only a part
of the fortress, the famous Acropolis, remains on the
mountain, where the principal works of art of Athens
stand. The principal feature was the temple
of Minerva, or the Parthenon; even its ruins excite
the astonishment of the world. The building is
said to have been 215 feet long, ninety-seven feet
broad, and seventy feet high; here stood the statue
of Minerva, by Phidias. This masterly work was
executed in gold and ivory; its height was forty-six
feet, and it is said to have weighed more than 2000
pounds. Fifty-five columns of the entrance to
the temple still remain, as well as parts of enormous
blocks of marble which rest upon them, and belonged
to the arches and roof.
This temple was destroyed by the Persians,
and was again restored with greater beauty by Pericles,
about 440 years after the birth of Christ.
There are some fine remains of the
temples of Minerva and Neptune, and the extent of
the amphitheatre can still be seen; there is but little
of the theatre of Bacchus remaining.
Outside the Acropolis stands the temple
of Theseus and that of Jupiter Olympus; the one on
the north, the other on the south side. The former
is in the Doric style, and is surrounded by thirty-six
fine columns. On the metope are represented the
deeds of Theseus in beautiful reliefs. The interior
of the temple is full of fine sculptures, epitaphs,
and other works in stone, most of which belong to
the other temples, but are collected here. Outside
the temple stand several marble seats which have been
brought from the neighbouring Areopagus, the former
place of assembly for the patricians. Of the
Areopagus itself nothing more is to be seen than a
chamber cut out of the rock, to which similarly cut
steps lead.
Of the temple of Jupiter Olympus so
much of the foundation-walls still remain as to show
what its size was; there are also sixteen beautiful
columns, fifty-eight feet in height. This temple,
which was completed by Hadrian, is said to have exceeded
in beauty and magnificence all the buildings of Athens.
The exterior was decorated by one hundred and twenty
fluted columns six feet in diameter and fifty-nine
in height. The gold and ivory statue of Jupiter
was, like that of Minerva, the production of the masterly
hand of Phidias. All the temples and buildings
were of pure white marble.
Not far from the Areopagus is the
Pnyx, where the free people of Athens met in council.
Of this nothing more remains than the rostrum, hewn
in the rock, and the seat of the scribe. What
feelings agitate the mind when it is remembered what
men have stood there and spoke from that spot!
It was with sadness that I examined
the cave near here where Socrates was imprisoned and
poisoned. Above this memorable grotto stands
a plain monument erected in memory of Philopapoe.
The Turks surrounded the Acropolis
with a broad wall, in the building of which they made
use of many fragments of columns and other remains
of the most beautiful temples.
No remnants of antiquity are to be
seen in the old town of Athens except the Tower of
the Winds, or, as others call it, Diogenes’
Lantern, a small temple in the form of an octagon,
covered with fine sculpture; also the monument of
Lysicrates. This consists of a pedestal, some
columns, and a dome in the Corinthian style.
The chapel Maria Maggiore, is said
to have been built by the Venetians, 700 years after
Christ. Its greatest peculiarity is that it
was the first Christian church in Athens.
The view of the whole country from
the Acropolis is also very interesting; there can
be seen the Hymetos, the Pentelikon, towards Eleusis,
Marathon, Phylae, and Dekelea, the harbour, the sea,
and the course of the Ilissus.
Athens contains a considerable number
of houses, most of which are, however, small and unimportant;
the beautiful country-houses, on the contrary, surrounded
by tasty gardens, have a very agreeable appearance.
The small observatory was built by
Baron Sina, the well-known banker in Vienna, who is
by birth a Greek.
The royal palace, which is of modern
date, is built of brilliant white marble, in the form
of a large quadrangle. On two sides, which occupy
a large part of the breadth of the wings, under a
peristyle, is a kind of small porch which rests upon
pillars. The one approach is for the ministers,
ambassadors, etc., the other for the royal family.
With the exception of these two péristyles, the
whole building is very tasteless, and has not the least
ornament; the windows are in the ordinary form; and
the high large walls appear so naked, bare, and flat,
that even the dazzling white of the beautiful marble
produces no effect; and it is only on a close approach
that it can be seen what a costly material has been
employed in the building.
I regretted having seen this palace,
especially opposite to the Acropolis, on a spot which
has made its works of art as classic as its heroes.
The palace is surrounded by a rather
pretty though recently-formed garden. In the
front stand a few palms, which have been brought from
Syria, but they bear no fruit. The country is
otherwise barren and naked.
The marble of which this palace is
built, as well as the temples and other buildings
on the Acropolis, is obtained from the quarries of
the neighbouring mountain, Pentelikon, where the quantity
of this beautiful stone is so great that whole towns
might be built of it.
It was Sunday, and the weather was
very fine, to which I was indebted for seeing
all the fashionable world of Athens, and even the
Court, in the open promenade. This place is a
plain avenue, at the end of which a wooden pavilion
is erected. It is not decorated by either lawns
or flower-beds. The military bands play every
Sunday from five to six. The King rides or drives
with his Queen to this place to show himself to the
people. This time he came in an open carriage
with four horses, and stopped to hear several pieces
of music. He was in Greek costume; the Queen
wore an ordinary French dress.
The Greek or rather Albanian costume
is one of the handsomest there is. The men wear
full frocks, made of white perkal, which reach from
the hips to the knees, buskins from the knee to the
feet, and shoes generally of red leather. A
close-fitting vest of coloured silk without arms,
over a silk shirt, and over this another close-fitting
spencer of fine red, blue, or brown cloth, which
is fastened only at the waist by a few buttons or
a narrow band, and lays open at the top. The
sleeves of the spencer are slit up, and are either
left loose or slightly held together by some cords
round the wrists; the collar of the shirt is a little
turned over. The vest and spencer are tastily
ornamented with cords, tassels, spangles and buttons
of gold, silver or silk, according to the means of
the wearer. The material, colour and ornament
of the Zaruchi correspond with those of the spencer
and vest. A dagger is generally worn in the
girdle, together with a pair of pistols. The
head-dress is a red fez, with a blue tassel.
The Greek dress is, as far as I saw,
less worn by the women, and even then much of its
originality is lost. The principal part of the
dress consists of a French garment, which is open at
the breast, over this a close spencer is
drawn on, which is also open, and the sleeves wide
and rather shorter than those of the gown. The
front edges of the gown and spencer are trimmed
with gold lace. The women and girls wear on
their head a very small fez, which is bound round
with rose or other coloured crape.
24th October. I left Athens
by the small steamer Baron Kubeck, seventy-horse power,
and went as far as Calamachi (twenty-eight miles).
Here I had to leave the ship and cross the Isthmus,
three English miles broad. At Lutrachi we went
on board another vessel.
During the passage to Calamachi, which
lasts only a few hours, the little town of Megara
is seen upon a barren hill.
Nothing is more unpleasant in travelling
than changing the conveyance, especially when it is
a good one, and you can only lose by doing so.
We were in this situation. Herr Leitenberg was
one of the best and most attentive of all captains
that I had ever met with in my travels, and we were
all sorry to have to leave him and his ship.
Even in Calamachi, where we remained this day and
the following, as the ship which was to carry us on
from Lutrachi did not arrive, on account of contrary
winds, until the 25th, he attended to us with the
greatest politeness.
The village of Calamachi offers but
little of interest, the few houses have only been
erected since the steamers plied, and the tolerably
high mountains on which it lies are for the most part
barren, or grown over with low brambles. We took
several walks on the Isthmus, and ascended minor heights,
from whence on one side is seen the gulf of Lepanto,
and on the other the AEgean sea. In front of
us stood the large mountain, Akrokorinth, rising high
above all its companions. Its summit is embellished
by a well-preserved fortification, which is called
the remains of the Castle of Akrokorinth, and was
used by the Turks in the last war as a fortress.
The formerly world-famous city of Corinth, after which
all the fittings of luxury and sumptuousness in the
interior of palaces were named, and which gave the
name to a distinct order of architecture, is reduced
to a small town with scarcely a thousand inhabitants,
and lies at the foot of the mountain, in the midst
of fields and vineyards. It owes the whole of
its present celebrity to its small dried grapes, called
currants.
It is said that no town of Greece
had so many beautiful statues of stone and marble
as Corinth. It was upon this isthmus, which
consists of a narrow ridge of mountains, and is covered
with dense fig-groves, in which stood a beautiful
temple of Neptune, were held the various Isthmian
games.
How greatly a people or a country
may degenerate! The Grecian people, at one time
the first in the world, are now the furthest behind!
I was told by everyone that in Greece it was neither
safe to trust myself with a guide nor to wander about
alone, as I had done in other countries; indeed, I
was warned here in Calamachi not to go too far from
the harbour, and to return before the dusk of the
evening.
26th October. We did not start
from Lutrachi until towards noon, by the steamer Hellenos,
of one hundred and twenty-horse power.
We anchored for a few hours in the
evening near Vostizza, the ancient AEgion, now an
unimportant village, at the foot of a mountain.
27th October, Patras. That portion
of Greece which I had already seen was neither rich
in beauty, well cultivated, nor thickly inhabited.
Here were, at least, plains and hills covered with
meadows, fields, and vineyards. The town, on
the Gulf of Lepanto, was formerly an important place
of trade; and before the breaking out of the Greek
revolution in 1821, contained 20,000 inhabitants;
it has now only 7,000. The town is defended by
three fortresses, one of which stands upon a hill,
and two at the entrance of the harbour. The
town is neither handsome nor clean, and the streets
are narrow. The high mountains pleased me better;
and their chain can be followed for a considerable
distance.
I saw grapes here whose beauty and
size induced me to buy some; but I found them so hard,
dry, and tasteless, that I did not even venture to
give them to a sailor, but threw them into the sea.
28th October. Corfu is the largest
of the Ionian Islands, which formerly belonged to
Greece, and lie at the entrance to the Adriatic sea.
Corfu, the ancient Corcyra, has been subject to England
since 1815.
The town of Corfu is situated in a
more beautiful and fertile country than Patras, and
is far larger. It contains 18,000 inhabitants.
Adjoining the town are two romantic peaks of rock,
with strong fortified works, upon which stand the telegraph
and the lighthouse. Both are surrounded by artificial
ditches, with draw-bridges leading across.
The immediate environs of the town, as well as the
whole island, are rich in delightful groves of olive
and orange trees.
The town contains handsome houses
and streets, with the exception of the bye-streets,
which are remarkably crooked and not very clean.
At the entrance of the town stands a large covered
stone hall, in which on one side are the stalls of
the butchers; on the other, those of the fishermen.
In the open space in front are exposed the choicest
vegetables and most beautiful fruits. The theatre
presents a very pretty appearance; it would seem,
from the sculptures upon it, to have been used for
a church. The principal square is large and
handsome; it is intersected by several avenues, and
one side faces the sea. The palace of the English
governor stands here; a fine building in the Grecian-Italian
style.
The famous and much-visited church
of St. Spiridion is but small; it contains many oil-paintings,
some are good specimens of the old Italian School.
In a small dark chapel at the furthest end of the
church lies, in a silver sarcophagus, the body of St.
Spiridion, who is held in great veneration by the
Ionians. The chapel is always full of devotees
who tenderly kiss the sarcophagus.
On the 29th of October we saw the
low mountain-country of Dalmatia, and on the 30th
I entered Trieste, whence I hastened on to Vienna
the day following. I was obliged to pass several
days in the greatest anxiety before the town, as it
had been taken by storm on the last day of October
and was not opened until the 4th of November.
It was not until I had seen that all my relations
were safe that I was able to return thanks with a
grateful heart to the good Providence which, in all
my dangers and troubles, had so remarkably protected
and preserved me in health and strength. With
equal gratitude I remembered those people who had treated
me with such kindness, had so disinterestedly received
me, and through whose help I had been enabled to overcome
the frequent great hardships and difficulties I encountered.
From my readers I hope for a charitable
judgment upon my book, which in simple language describes
what I have experienced, seen and felt, and makes
no higher pretension than that of being sincere and
trustworthy.