a?
RUIN D.
Tins building is that which M. Fauvel supposed to be the stable for
the cars, but which M. de Choisetil has declared to be the remains of the
Aphesis, or barrier. If the respect doe to so distinguished a traveller
made me cautious in advancing' a decided opinion on the former part of
his theory, the veneration I feel for the ancients will not allow me to
acknowledge, in an insignificant brick building, the Aphesis of Olympia; for
were I even disposed to admit that the ancient Greeks adopted generally this
mode of construction, I should still refuse to recognise in these mean and
unimportant remains, the vestiges of an edifice, consecrated, by united
RUIN D.
Tins building is that which M. Fauvel supposed to be the stable for
the cars, but which M. de Choisetil has declared to be the remains of the
Aphesis, or barrier. If the respect doe to so distinguished a traveller
made me cautious in advancing' a decided opinion on the former part of
his theory, the veneration I feel for the ancients will not allow me to
acknowledge, in an insignificant brick building, the Aphesis of Olympia; for
were I even disposed to admit that the ancient Greeks adopted generally this
mode of construction, I should still refuse to recognise in these mean and
unimportant remains, the vestiges of an edifice, consecrated, by united