110
BEAUTIES OF THE BOSPHORUS.
glance from its dizzy height upon the fairy wonders of the surrounding objects;
the busy breathing city—the sweet still valley—the ocean-channel, linking two
quarters of the globe as with a silver string—and the wide sea, the unfathomable,
trackless, mysterious sea, bounding the vision, where it blends in one deep, rich,
purple tint, with the far horizon.
THE RIVEN TOWER,
(near THE TOP-KAPOUSI.)
“ 'Twas studded with old sturdy trees,
That bent not to the roughest breeze ;
*****
But these were few, and far between,
Set thick with shrubs more young and green.
Luxuriant with their annual leaves,
Ere strown by those autumnal eves
That nip the forest's foliage dead,
Discolour'd with a lifeless red,
Which stands thereon like stiffen'd gore
Upon the slain when battle's o'er."
Byron.
This very remarkable object overhangs the fosse, or ditch, surrounding the
city, and is one of the two hundred and eighteen towers surmounting the walls,
it is a singular monument of the last siege, when it was stricken by one of the
marble balls used by the Turks in their heavy pieces of ordnance ; which it is
supposed must have been partially spent ere it fell upon the tower, as although
its weight rove it to the very earth, cleaving through the solid masonry, and
forcing the two portions asunder, it failed to overthrow either; and there, after
the lapse of centuries, still stands, or rather leans, the ruin, nodding over the moat
like the remnant of some feudal castle, amid the wild fig-trees and luxuriant foliage
which now choak up the ditch, fill every rift and chasm of the mouldering walls,
and contend with the dense coating of ivy, lichens, and other creeping plants by
which they are clothed. This striking monument of the fall of the Greek
Empire stands near the Top-Kapousi, or " Gate of the Cannon," and, conse-
quently, not far from the spot where fell the last and bravest of the Paleologi;
and beside it grows a splendid specimen of the Pistacia Terebinthus, of unusual
BEAUTIES OF THE BOSPHORUS.
glance from its dizzy height upon the fairy wonders of the surrounding objects;
the busy breathing city—the sweet still valley—the ocean-channel, linking two
quarters of the globe as with a silver string—and the wide sea, the unfathomable,
trackless, mysterious sea, bounding the vision, where it blends in one deep, rich,
purple tint, with the far horizon.
THE RIVEN TOWER,
(near THE TOP-KAPOUSI.)
“ 'Twas studded with old sturdy trees,
That bent not to the roughest breeze ;
*****
But these were few, and far between,
Set thick with shrubs more young and green.
Luxuriant with their annual leaves,
Ere strown by those autumnal eves
That nip the forest's foliage dead,
Discolour'd with a lifeless red,
Which stands thereon like stiffen'd gore
Upon the slain when battle's o'er."
Byron.
This very remarkable object overhangs the fosse, or ditch, surrounding the
city, and is one of the two hundred and eighteen towers surmounting the walls,
it is a singular monument of the last siege, when it was stricken by one of the
marble balls used by the Turks in their heavy pieces of ordnance ; which it is
supposed must have been partially spent ere it fell upon the tower, as although
its weight rove it to the very earth, cleaving through the solid masonry, and
forcing the two portions asunder, it failed to overthrow either; and there, after
the lapse of centuries, still stands, or rather leans, the ruin, nodding over the moat
like the remnant of some feudal castle, amid the wild fig-trees and luxuriant foliage
which now choak up the ditch, fill every rift and chasm of the mouldering walls,
and contend with the dense coating of ivy, lichens, and other creeping plants by
which they are clothed. This striking monument of the fall of the Greek
Empire stands near the Top-Kapousi, or " Gate of the Cannon," and, conse-
quently, not far from the spot where fell the last and bravest of the Paleologi;
and beside it grows a splendid specimen of the Pistacia Terebinthus, of unusual