584 PELOPONNESUS. 
CHAP. On Sunday, November the fifteenth, there was 
" T ' * a fair in Corinth. We saw nothing worth 
Pandaan notice, except an Orcadian pipe, upon which a 
Horn. 
shepherd was playing in the streets. It was 
perfectly Pand&an; consisting simply of a goat's 
horn, with five holes for the fingers, and a 
small aperture at the end for the mouth. It is 
exceedingly difficult to produce any sound what- 
ever from this small instrument ; but the shep- 
herd made the air resound with its shrill notes : 
and we bought his pipe. This day we left 
Corinth entirely. The Bey positively refused to 
allow us to proceed by land to Megara : we 
therefore engaged with a couple of men who 
had a boat stationed in the harbour of Cenchrece, 
to take us along the coast. In our way to that 
harbour, we again visited the village of Hexa- 
millia; and, after passing the same, we per- 
ceived that the Stone Quarries, the remains of 
the Isthmian Wall, and of the Town of Isthmus 
at its eastern extremity, are seen forming a high 
ridge upon the left hand, parallel to the moun- 
tains upon the right. The Remains at CEN- 
Cenchrea. CURE IE faithfully correspond with the descrip- 
tion given by Pnusanias of the place 1 . We 
(l) Vid. Pausan. in Corinth, c. 2. p. 114. ed Kuhn. The place \% 
now called by its antieut name, pronounced Cenchri. 
