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singularly has the same design of two lions rampant and regardant as on the lion gateway at Mycenae, so that somehow there must have been a community of artistic tradition between the makers of both, distant as the places are. Among the numerous small ornaments of vitrified ware- -a substance also found at Mycena-is one with the figure of a sphinx, the design of which has every appearance of having been derived from Egypt or Assyria through the Phonicians. From Egypt also, and probably through the same channel, must have come the porcelain scarab with the cartouche of Thothmes the Third, who reigned about B. C. 1400. Can this object have such an antiquity? I think not, because this same cartouche occurs among the porcelain scarabs found in tombs at Camirus in Rhodes, along with other articles in porcelain, among which is a small vase with a Greek inscription, the palæography of which is not earlier than the sixth century B.C. The question, then, as regards Thothmes is the same as if we were to find, which may be common enough, a very ancient Chinese signature on a very modern piece of China ware.

Since the discoveries at Mycenæ an ancient sepulchre has been found at Spata, a village in Attica, at the foot of Mount Hymettos, and among its contents are certain ornaments, more or less of the same type as ornaments from Mycena. Without this comparison these objects would not have been very surprising, since with them were found things of more ambitious design in which, to judge from the engravings in the Athenaion, it is impossible not to trace the hand of a Phoenician craftsman, or some other working in the same vein. There is thus this difference between Spata and Mycenae, that in the former the figure drawing is excellent of its kind, though the patterns are indifferent, while at Mycenae the only skill recognisable is in the patterns. There is likely to be a variety of theories advanced as to the ancient inhabitants of Spata, but meantime I may cite the passage of Herodotus (vi. 137) tracing the story of the Pelasgians of Lemnos, who had formerly had a settlement at the foot of Mount Hymettos assigned them for having built the Pelasgic wall round the acropolis of Athens. This wall has always been supposed to have been built at the same time as the walls of Tiryns and Mycena.

After these digressions within digressions, which might have been multiplied many times without exhausting the various points of importance to archæology, we are ready to breathe freely again in the air of Mycenae. I had previously thought and said that the distinction of the antiquities from the acropolis into two classes, the one of a northern character, the other Phoenician or Pelasgic, and in part early Greek, was confirmed by this difference in the circumstances under which they were found, that the things from the tombs were exclusively of the northern type, while those met with in the soil above the tombs were of the other class. The difficulty of the lowermost objects being the most recent seemed to

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be not unnaturally explained on the theory that over the graves had been made, when the interment took place, a mound collected from the ancient soil of the immediate neighbourhood, this habit of making mounds over the dead having been a very common practice among northern peoples. The surface soil of Mycenae is rich in fragments of archaic workmanship. I still adhere to the probability of this explanation, though I must now admit, on the authority of Dr. Schliemann's record, that certain objects characteristically identical in design with things found in the tombs were also met with in the upper soil, and that contrariwise certain articles were yielded by the tombs no less akin, from an artistic point of view, with articles found above them. On the other hand, I am not assuming that the people who made these interments came in a night and vanished at daybreak, but in view of the evidence to which reference has been made at length, I would prefer to suppose that Mycenae, down to a comparatively late period, was inhabited for the most part by a people who, while retaining the semi-barbarous habits common to Ætolia, Epirus, and the more northern districts of Europe, had yet, like the people of these countries, as I have shown, utilised their opportunities of importing articles of luxury apparently through the Phoenicians, without at the same time having their own peculiarly northern system of decoration affected by their importations. But, it will be said, the obviously imported designs at Mycena fall in an undoubtedly early period, so far as they represent a vital stage in the development of art, yet if we take, as we may fairly enough, the latest possible date for this vital stage, we shall not be obliged to go beyond B.C. 500, and if we regard it as a possibility that certain designs peculiar to this stage had been perpetuated in a place like Mycenae, where there are no remains of the high art which flourished considerably before then in the great centres of Greece, we shall not, I think, be far from the mark. It is true that the only positive evidence of a late occupation of Mycenae points unmistakeably to a people who fully shared the artistic decline of the rest of Greece, as may be seen from some fragments of sculptured stela in the British Museum, brought from Mycenae many years ago by Mr. Inwood. They may be as late as Roman times, and in any case are not evidence of more than a few settlers. But why not, it may be asked, assume that the interments had taken place at some remote time, when the greater part at least of Greece must have been in a primitive condition, common probably to the rest of Europe? The obstacle to that is that among the designs in these graves, not to recall other peculiarities which have been pointed out, there are elements which appear to present conclusive proof of being debased from designs the origin of which cannot be traced to any very early period. A. S. MURRAY.

SADDLING THE RIGHT HORSE?

A DIALOGUE.

A. Have I read the debates? Read a hundred columns of condensed talk for and against the conduct of the Government? I read Cranbrook's despatch, and Beaconsfield's summing up. That was enough for me. The long and the short of the matter is, that the Government had no choice but to act as they did, unless they wished to see Russia mistress of Afghanistan. India would soon have followed. We ought to have done it long ago; but these peace-atany-price people, who make morality an excuse for cowardice and indecision, could not see their way to it. They ride their crotchets into everything. The idea of scrupling about the dignity of a miserable savage when the substantial good of millions of civilised people is in the question!

B. Ah, I am not a party man. I ask only for information. But can you tell me why the Conservatives didn't put Afghanistan on a proper footing when they were in office before?

A. Because the Viceroys and other officials whose business it was never let them know that there was any danger. Mere red-tapism. They had got into a groove about India and the frontier and so forth, and never looked out of their nests to see what was going on in Central Asia. As Lord Beaconsfield said in his last speech-thorough-going speech that was—they were not fit to be Viceroys.'

B. But did the Viceroys make no suggestions about Central Asia to Mr. Gladstone's Government?

A. They sent home see-saw minutes and things. But of course Gladstone did nothing. They all put their timid heads together, and came to the conclusion that things were very well as they were. That was their policy of masterly inactivity. Masterly rubbish!

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B. Did you read Gladstone's speech at Greenwich?

A. Oh! Gladstone is only jealous of Dizzy. We should have made him an Earl at the same time, and then we should have heard nothing of this.

B. But did you read his speech?

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A. I should think not. Who cares what Gladstone says? Accusing the Government of misrepresentation and what not. Surely they are English gentlemen. You don't mean that I am to believe that her Majesty's Ministers are not to put too fine a point upon itliars?

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B. Hush! No such thing. All men are liars,' up to a certain point, without meaning any harm. When a man is his own advocate, he is apt to see things through a coloured medium. However, without entering into a dissertation about truth, I will say this much, that the account given by her Majesty's Ministers of what took place before they entered on office does not correspond in all material respects with what I have read in the Blue-books. If their account is accurate-if it is the case that all Viceroys before Lord Lytton's time were blind or indifferent to what was going on in Central Asia-if the present frontier was fixed at haphazard without reference to any danger from Russia, I admit that their defence is complete, and that, as you say, they had no choice but to do what they have done. Have you looked into the Blue-books?

A. Why should I? Hasn't Lord Cranbrook given a summary of them? And have not the Times, and the Telegraph, and the Standard, and half a dozen other papers said that it is correct? Perhaps you want me to believe that they also are

B. Coloured mediums. Well, we will put that on one side. At least, you will admit that in the Blue-books

A. Blue-books! Blue-books! I am tired of hearing about Bluebooks. What do I take my newspaper for, if not to be saved the trouble of reading that sort of thing for myself?

B. Blue-books are cheap-almost cheaper, bulk for bulk, than the newspapers-and some of them are very entertaining. In a matter of this sort, being a simple record of facts, they have the advantage of being colourless. I should like to go over some of the main points with you. I won't trouble you with details. Can you spare me an hour or so, and let us go over them together each armed with a copy?

A. What is the good? Time is too precious.

B. Even when the substantial good of millions of civilised people is at stake?

A. Well, business is rather slack at present. I don't mind if I do give you half an hour or so since you wish it.

B. Will you meet me at the club to-morrow? I will bring the books.

A. Agreed-though I don't see the use of it after all that has been said.

B. I think you said yesterday that the Viceroys before Lord

Lytton never alluded to the progress of Russia in Central Asia as a thing to be considered with reference to our Afghanistan frontier?

A. Well, they might have sent minutes and things.

B. They did, and now let us see what they sent. The subject was first brought under the notice of the Home Government by Sir John (now Lord) Lawrence and his Council, in a despatch dated the 3rd of September, 1867. You will find the passage at p. 20:

The intelligence now communicated suggests the discussion of another subject, which has latterly from time to time forced itself on our attention. We allude to the present position of Russia in Central Asia. From circumstances which Russia alleges to have been to a great degree beyond her control, and to have forced upon her an aggressive policy, her advances have been rapid. And by the late victory she is reported to have achieved over Bokhara, her influence will no doubt soon, if it has not already, become paramount at Samarcand and Bokhara, as it has for some time past been in Kokand. However, some of her own statesmen assert that the true interests of Russia do not consist in the expansion of her posts and frontiers among the bigoted and uncivilised populations south of the Oxus, and they aver that the late advances have been prosecuted, not in fulfilment of any predetermined line of aggressive progress, but by the hostile attitude and schemes of Bokhara, and in opposition to her normal policy. If these representations be a correct exposition of the views of Russia, then it is as much in harmony with her interests as it is with those of British India, that up to a certain border the relations of the respective Governments should be openly acknowledged and admitted as bringing them into necessary contact and treaty with the tribes and nations on the several sides of such a line. If an understanding, and even an engagement of this nature, were come to, we, on the one hand, could look on without anxiety or apprehension at the proceedings of Russia on her southern frontier, and welcome the civilising effect of her border government on the wild tribes of the Steppe, and on the bigoted and exclusive governments of Bokhara and Kokand; while Russia, on the other hand, assured of our loyal feeling in the matter, would have no jealousy in respect of our alliance with the Afghan and neighbouring tribes.

If such be the line of policy advantageous to the interests of both Empires, the time would now appear to have come when the subject might with great advantage be brought under discussion in Her Majesty's Cabinet. And should you coincide with us in these views, we would respectfully suggest that a communication might be made in the sense of what we have now written to Her Majesty's Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs.

A. That seems tolerably thorough. And what was the answer of the Government?

B. You will find that at p. 25, in a letter from the Secretary of State to the Governor-General :

Having thus conveyed to your Excellency the general views of Her Majesty's Government, I have only to add that they place the most implicit confidence in your prudence, and in your intimate acquaintance with the political condition of Afghanistan, and feel assured that they may safely leave it to your discretion to act as you may think right upon any emergency that may arise.

I now proceed to the second question, to which your Excellency refers, namely, whether it is desirable to make any communication to the Government of Russia, in order to obviate any possible inconvenience that might be apprehended from the progress of that Power in Central Asia.

Upm this point Her Majesty's Government see no reason for any uneasiness or

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