234 
JOURNEY FROM 
little foundation as to render it very dangerous to enter them. In 
fact, the base of the rock in which these excavations have been made 
is perforated like a honeycomb by the continual action of the sea, 
which now washes through the hollows with a roar which may be 
heard at a considerable distance, and must in stormy weather be tre- 
mendous. In one of the chambers were several Greek inscriptions 
which have been written with ink on the walls ; but they are now 
so indistinct, that we could not succeed in copying more than a few 
words of one of them. 
They are written in what may be called the running-hand of the 
Greeks of the Eoman Empire, and it is probable that one much 
accustomed to this character might succeed, with the assistance of a 
strong and steady hght, and the frequent apphcation of water to the 
inscriptions, in making out more than we were able to do with the 
little time we had at our disposal, and the hght we were able to 
procure. In other parts of the rock were excavated tombs, some of 
which were entered by a quadrangular well, in the manner of those 
common in Egypt. We found nothing in any of them but scattered 
bones, from which we were not able to ascertain the mode of burial 
adopted. There can be no doubt that great part of the rock just 
described has already been washed away by the sea, which has here 
gained considerably on the land ; and several wells are now observable 
some feet under water, which were of course originally above its level. 
In the wall fronting the south, we observed part of an arch 
protruding itself from among the rubbish which encumbered it ; 
and found, on clearing it, that it had been constructed without a key- 
