484 THE POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY 



It is hard, perhaps, to comfort those who are in such a sorrow; grief is not 

 laid to rest by speech or by observance; rather is it for the nature of the 

 mourner and the nearness of the lost to determine the boundaries of anguish. 

 Still we must take heart and lighten pain as we may and remember not only 

 the death of the departed but the good name also that they have left behind 

 them. We owe not tears to their fate but rather great praises to their deeds. 

 If they came not to old age among men, they have got the glory that never 

 grows old and have been made blessed perfectly. Those among them who died 

 childless shall have as their inheritors the immortal eulogies of Greece and 

 those of them who have left children behind them have bequeathed a trust of 

 which their country's love will assume the guardianship. 



More than this, if to die is to be as though we had never been, then these 

 have passed away from sickness and pain and from all the accidents of the 

 earthly life; or if there is consciousness in the next world and if — as we con- 

 jecture — the care of the Divine Power is over it, then it may well be that they 

 who rendered aid to the worship of the gods, in the hour of its imminent desola- 

 tion, are most precious to that Power's Providence. 6 



Hardly less eloquent were the memorials perpetuated by the sculp- 

 tor's chisel in handsome marbles and enduring bronze. The matchless, 

 Athenian military relief, raised in the Ceramicus Cemetery to Dexileos, 

 one of the Glorified Five in the dashing cavalry charge in the Corinth- 

 ian War (394 b.c) still stands, a noble testimonial in marble to the 

 mighty triumph of The Last Battle, with its rearing charger and 

 exultant knight transfixing with his spear the fallen foe. Though this 

 may not be a monument erected by the nation, but the patriotic offering 

 of some friend or admirer, it is valuable for our purpose as one of the 

 few memorials to the individual as distinguished from the triumph of 

 the cause. 



But the long and notable list of monuments and trophies to the 

 heroic dead began a century before, soon after Marathon (490 B.C.), 

 with the dedication of the little Doric treasure-house, set up by the 

 Athenians out of the Persian spoils, in the holiest place of Greece, at 

 the oracle of Delphi, " the Center of the Earth," and the point of pil- 

 grimage of thousands, on religious mission bent, from all parts of the 

 ancient world. The remains of this, the noblest memorial of the vic- 

 tory at Marathon, have been found in recent years and the sculptured 

 reliefs of Pentelic marble, safely preserved, with their story of Theseus 

 and Hercules, and the battle of gods and giants — symbolic of the re- 

 cent contests — reveal a chaste grace that must have given an unique 

 architectural delicacy to the whole structure. 



The famous battle-pictures by Micon, in the Portico of Frescoes in 

 the Athenian market-place, painted a quarter of a century later, fur- 

 nished, however, a livelier idea and glorified most effectively the heroes 

 of this most celebrated battle of history. In one scene, the Athenians 

 charge the trousered Persians; in another, the Persians, in their con- 

 fusion, rush into the marsh in their flight to their ships; in still 



8 Hypereides in Jebb's " Attic Orators." 



