14 REMARKABLE AQUEDUCTS. 



lowing it on the left side of those isolated 

 craggy mountains at the entrance to the plain, 

 on the right side of which we came down." 



Mr. Daniell had no sooner returned to Adalia, 

 after this visit to Climax, — during which he had 

 been made very uncomfortable by the miscon- 

 duct of his Greek surigees, who, though the 

 best of their race we had ever met, proved 

 tainted with the dishonest and lying spirit 

 which has been ever a characteristic of their 

 nation, — than he prepared to start anew to seek 

 for Selge in Pisidia, respecting the position of 

 which important city, as determined by Sir 

 Charles Fellows, he had many doubts. 



He first went from Adalia to the pass of 

 Gule-Look, and revisited Termessus, in order 

 to complete a drawing of that most interest- 

 ing city which he had commenced when there 

 with us in April. " From Gule-Look," he 

 writes, " I followed the mountains to see what 

 the Termessus - of Koehler would prove to be. 

 I came to an extraordinary duct cut in the 

 solid rock of the plain, from twelve to fifteen 

 feet wide, but I cannot say how deep. I crossed 

 it by a bridge formed by leaving the rock 

 uncut above, and hollowing it out into an arch 



