370 ATHENS. 
C !? AP - the exception of one which we afterwards found 
in a school-room, near the celebrated Temple of 
the Winds. It was inscribed upon a marble 
bas-relief, representing a female figure seated, 
holding by the hand an old man who is standing 
before her. As this brief inscription will be 
the last we shall notice in Athens, it may be 
here introduced, as a companion of those already 
given in this Chapter. The Reader is referred 
to Suidas and Harpocration for an illustration of 
the word AiyiXtevs. MGILIA was one of the 
Attic dqpoi, and belonged to the tribe Antiochis. 
PAM^IAOZMEiaEIAAOYAPXIPPH 
AiriAIEYZMEIZIAAOY 
Additional The sun was now setting, and we repaired to 
J^oTthe * ne Parthenon. This building in its entire state, 
Parthenon. e jt ner as a Heathen temple, or as a Christian 
sanctuary, was lighted only by means of lamps : 
it had no windows ; but the darkness of the inte- 
rior was calculated to aid the Pagan ceremonies 
erudition and critical acumen of that* accomplished scholar, and 
learned antiquary, Richard Payne Knigltt, Esq. As this marble was 
originally removed from the Acropolis, it may be proper here to add, 
that it preserves arecord of a very interesting nature; nothing less than 
the name of the architect who built the Ertctheum ; namely, PHILO- 
CLES OF AcHARNf. This part of the Inscription was recovered by 
IV. Jfilkins, Esq. who communicated the circumstance to the 
author. 
