Their Calm Broods Over This Plain, Gives To
It A Personal Atmosphere Which Sets It Quite Apart From Every Other
Flat Space Of The World.
There is no place that I know on the earth
which has the peculiar, bright, ineffable calm of the plain of these
Colossi.
It takes you into its breast, and you lie there in the
growing sunshine almost as if you were a child laid in the lap of one
of them. That legend of the singing at dawn of the "vocal Memnon," how
could it have arisen? How could such calmness sing, such patience ever
find a voice? Unlike the Sphinx, which becomes ever more impressive as
you draw near to it, and is most impressive when you sit almost at its
feet, the Colossi lose in personality as you approach them and can see
how they have been defaced.
From afar one feels their minds, their strange, unearthly temperaments
commanding this pastoral. When you are beside them, this feeling
disappears. Their features are gone, and though in their attitudes
there is power, and there is something that awakens awe, they are more
wonderful as a far-off feature of the plain. They gain in grandeur
from the night in strangeness from the moonrise, perhaps specially
when the Nile comes to their feet. More than three thousand years old,
they look less eternal than the Sphinx. Like them, the Sphinx is
waiting, but with a greater purpose. The Sphinx reduces man really to
nothingness. The Colossi leave him some remnants of individuality. One
can conceive of Strabo and AElius Gallus, of Hadrian and Sabina, of
others who came over the sunlit land to hear the unearthly song in the
dawn, being of some - not much, but still of some - importance here.
Before the Sphinx no one is important. But in the distance of the
plain the Colossi shed a real magic of calm and solemn personality,
and subtly seem to mingle their spirit with the flat, green world, so
wide, so still, so fecund, and so peaceful; with the soft airs that
are surely scented with an eternal springtime, and with the light that
the morning rains down on wheat and clover, on Indian corn and barley,
and on brown men laboring, who, perhaps, from the patience of the
Colossi in repose have drawn a patience in labor that has in it
something not less sublime.
From the Colossi one goes onward toward the trees and the mountains,
and very soon one comes to the edge of that strange and fascinating
strip of barren land which is strewn with temples and honeycombed with
tombs. The sun burns down on it. The heat seems thrown back upon it by
the wall of tawny mountains that bounds it on the west. It is dusty,
it is arid; it is haunted by swarms of flies, by the guardians of the
ruins, and by men and boys trying to sell enormous scarabs and
necklaces and amulets, made yesterday, and the day before, in the
manufactory of Kurna.
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