Page:Discovery and Decipherment of the Trilingual Cuneiform Inscriptions.djvu/50

Rh a lion tearing a bull, so well represented that art can add nothing to its perfection: it is impossible indeed to discover the slightest defect.' Having ascended the stairs, he reached a court on which he observed a ruined building, consisting of several parts, each part about sixty feet long by twelve feet wide. This is the first distinct mention of what is now known as the Palace of Darius. The walls are six or seven feet thick and twenty-four feet high, and are so profusely adorned with figures in relief that it would require several days to examine them adequately, and several months to describe them in detail. The one that struck him most was the representation of a 'venerable personage,' sometimes seated 'on an elevated bench,' sometimes walking, accompanied by two attendants holding a parasol and a fly-chaser over his head. He was greatly impressed by the 'perfection and vivacity' of the figures; and 'especially by the drapery and dress of the men.' They are cut in 'white marble and incorporated in the black stone,' the latter being of such exquisite polish that it reflects as clearly as a mirror — so much so indeed that the Ambassador's dog, Roldan, shrank back in terror from the reflection of his own ferocitv. This perfection of polish is the more remarkable, considering the great antiquity of the work, which must date from the monarchy of Assyria, or even earlier. He noted the strange peculiarity that among the immense number of figures there was not a single representation of a woman. He observed inscriptions in some places, but 'the characters,' he said, 'are wholly unknown, and are no doubt more ancient than those of the Hebrews, Chaldeans and Arabians, with which they have no relation; and their resemblance to those of the Greeks and Latins is still less.' The ruins of the Palace of Xerxes seem to have escaped his