G THE DAILY EVENING ri ELIXilUl'II PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 2, 18G7. -4 ioiiii:ii. Pr. IyfT, whose Admirable work on the topography of Koine we noticud a yar auil a half ago, deserves tlm thauka of the. public for the talent and indiiHtry he has brought to bear ', upon a subject only second in importance to the Imperial ('ity itself the hmtory and anti quities of Pompeii. The book in its present form is based on one originally written for tho Society for the IMIlnsion of Useful Knowledge between thirty and forty years ago. Hut so great has been the progress pfl'eeted since In .the excavation of Pompeii, that the presnnt compilation may be regarded as almost a new and ii)depeudent work. Besides consulting carefully the best and most recent authorities, the author made frequent visits to Pompeii during a residence at NapU in the winter of WG5-6, and was thus ent.tled to correct his rreTious compilations by the aid of impres ts gained while the process of exhumatiou was still fresh or In progress before L.s eyes. The result is naturally to throw into the de scription an air of freshness and reality which waa hardly possible in the case of site or edi flwsso well worn as those of Rome. To those who have not access io the large and costly illustrations of the Niccolinis, or in the careful plans and monographs of the Commend atore Fiorelli, the present able and indefatigable director of the excavations, the little volume before ns will present in a mode rate compass, and in a very readable shape, the leading points of recent discovery, together with the conclusions of the best and latest archaeologists upon the questions of art or history thence arising. A summary of the literature connected with Pompeii enables the reader to follow the track of discovery from tho outset a century ago, and to pursue his studies by the light of the most approved ' authorities at every point. While serving as a succinct history of the progress of excava tion, the book is so arranged as to form a com plete and handy guide for the use of visitors on the Epot. The process of excavation, car ried on by fits and starts for more than a century, until pursued with some system and energy by the present administration, has resulted in laying open to view, up to the present time, a third part or so of the presumed area of the city, which originally comprised about one hundred and sixty acres. Its circuit was about two miles in extent, of an oval shape, the apex lying in the direction of the amphitheatre, or towards the southeast. The excavated part lying towards the western side seems to have been that which contained the principal public buildings the forum, the basilica, the theatres, the public baths, and the most conspicuous temples. It is scarcely to be hoped, in consequence, that the labors of future generations of excavators will be rewarded by any sensation equal to that produced in the years 1824 and 1858 by the disoovery of the spacious and elegant ther mal. Still there may remain work for our great-grandsons, with any amount of recom pense in treasures of art, or possibly of literature. Considering,, too, that the most Spacious and costly of private dwellings, the house of Diomedes, lies beyoud the walls, there is scarcely a limit to the area within which patient research may look for its harvest, particularly since the new and energetic directorate does so much to guide the steps of the excavator, and to pre serve the products of his toil. As it is, we are often left to sigh over the loss or waste of objects which the amount of intelligence and skill now at hand would most assuredly have spared to us. The style of the earliest remains found in Pompeii does much to bear out the legendary r half-mythical notices which assign to this town, as well as to its ueighbor and fellow victim, Ilerculaneum, a. Greek origin. To what date we are to attribute the Oscan occu pations spoken of by Strabo, and whether we are to follow him in identifying that people with the Tyrrhenians or Pelasgians, may be open to doubt. At an early though uncer tain period, Cumie was certainly founded fcy a colony from Chalcis, in Kulxaa; and Par thenope, afterwards Neapolis, now Naples, was an offshoot from thence. The name of Pompeii maybe held decisive of its Greek origin, though we need not commit ourselves to the etymology of Soliuu3 in tracing it to pompe, in allusion to the expedition of Her cules. The masonry of the city is in parts identical with that in use in early Greek for tifications, and characters have been met with upon some of the stones which are described , by MazoiB as either Oscan or early forms of the Greek alphabet. The lower portions of the wall are of the rough and irregular kini, called by the ancients opus incertum, while the Tipper and most modern portions are com posed of the isodomum, or more regular courses of Greek work. Like the most ancient fortresses of Greece, those of Tiryns and Myceme, they were without towers, which seem to have been inserted at regular intervals during the Roman period. The gates of which seven are traceable, be sides what is called the Porta della marina, on the western side, now the principal en trance are of Roman construction. In the area of the forum trianyulare, on the west side of the larger theatre, are the re mains of a temple much dilapidated, of un questionably Greek character. The capi tals of the columns are of Greek Doric, of which order is also the small monopteral building close at hand covering a puleal, from whence the water required in the temple was drawn. This temple, which, from its situation, size, arrangement, and style of art, is one of the most important build ings in Pompeii, is dated by the Count de CUrao as early as the eighth oentury, B. C. It must in that case be regarded as one of the most ancient specimens of Greek art extant, and must have been erected by the Greek colonists long before the subjuga tion of the city by the Romans. It is sup posed to have been dedicated to Hercules. It is thought that the basement of the tem ples both of Jupiter and Venus may be likewise of Greek construction. The greater number of the publio buildings, however, are of Roman date, or at all events have been modified or rebuilt by Romans, as the inscriptions in many cases testify. The theatres and amphitheatres, the baths, and triumphal arches are entirely of this most recent order. The forum, with its splendid colonnades, lias ceen carried down by Over beck as possibly later even than the earth qu'.ke of 03 A. D. These buildings will be found minutely described in Dr. Dyer's pages, with the aid of admirable woodcuts of their present state and occasional restora tions of much skill and taste. The second part of the volume treats of the domestic architecture of Pompeii as illustrated by its private houses, shops, and the works of art and utility found iu them. The reader is thus enabled to realize with extreme vividness the ordinary daily life of a Roman city. Among other objects of new and curious inte rest we may mention tli characteristic signs which mark out the variouB shops, taverns, IS places of business. These are in some "anes figured in baked clay and colored in others painted on the walls. Over wine-shop, JwoVn carry an amphora slung on a pole. (Tver JWrtJr gati nntSs& to innate the trade of a milkman. Here a largo statue of rriapus points out the shop of an amulet-maker. A rude painting of two men fighting, while the master stands by holding a laurel crown, marks a fencing establish-' ment, or school of gladiators. A painting of one boy horsed on another's back, and undergoing flagellation, is an ominous Indi cation thut the schoolmaster was there at home. An iun in t-he newly-discovered Via del I.vpanare bore the sign of an elephant enveloped by a large serpent, and tended by a pigmy. This no longer exists. On the door-posts of another tavern were painted some checkers. Into the edifice of ill-repute which cave Its name to that street, the writer, for obvious reasons, forbears to conduct his readers. That a similar degree of caution was .not unknown at the time when the golden youth of Pompeii might plead the authority of Cato for venturing within those dangerous precincts, we have a highly curious prcof. On the walls of a villa hard by the forum Boarium, or cattle market, was found an inscription, by way of advertisement, to the effect that " on the estate of Julia Felix, daughter of ypurius, aro to let a bath, a venereum, nine hundred shops, with booths and garrets, lor a term of live con tinuous years from the first to the sixth of the ides of August." The notice concludes with the formula S. Q. D. L. K. N. C, which is taken by Romanelli to stand for si ui.i domi lawcinium exerciat nr. condurito "let no one apply who keeps a brothel." We get many a curious insight into the common or lower life of Pompciaus from the numerous yrojfiti, or rude scratchings and scribblings iii chalk or paint, with which the walls abound. Many a party cry or political dislike, or even the rough PtSoenniue chaff of the streets, has here come down to us in expressive, though often very dubious, Latim'ty, or is embodied iu outlines of a rude but often highly grotesque art. A more than common refinement of taste is met with when, in the back-room of a therniopolium, is scrawled the first lino of the lineid. Perhaps, of all the relics of eighteen centuries here laid bare, what most touches the feelings is the reproduction in plaster of the group of bodies found in the year 18(i;j. By the skill of iSignor Fiorelli in filling up the cavity left in the soft lapilli by the decay of these human forms, the figures are moulded in all the ghastly reality of the death-struggle. In the pair engraved by Dr. Dyer, which is probably familiar to many of our readers as a stereoscopic group, the 'profile of the young girl is plainly to be traced. Her little hands clench her veil round her head in the last struggle to keep the mouth free. while her feet are drawn up in agony. The smooth young skin looks ir. the plaster like polished marble. The woman, probably the mother, who lies feet to feet with her, lies quietly ou her side. Her arm3 hung loosely ' down. Her finger still bears her coarse iron ring. Besides this group, Nicolini gives the hgure of a man of the lower classes, perhaps a soldier, of colossal size, who has laid him self down calmly on his back to await death. 'His dress consists of a short coat or jerkin, and tight-fitting breeches of some coarse stuff, perhaps leather. Heavy sandals, with soles studded with nails, are laced tightly round his ankles." On one finger is seen his iron ring. His features are strongly marked, the mouth open as in death. Some of the teeth still remain, and even part of tho moustache adheres to the plaster." We are sorry to find the affecting story of the sentry found erect in his box, still grasping his lance, dismissed as a fable. Much doubt has been attached to the recent report of an amphora of stone having been met with, closely sealed, half full of water. It may be remarked, how ever, that the bronze cock of a water-pipe was found at Capri in which the metal joints had been hermetically closed by rust for seventeen or eighteen centuries, yet which, on being shaken, gives audible proof of the water being still unabsorbed within. It may be added that the numerous metal pipes met with in Pom peii, together with the general arrangements of the fountains, place beyond doubt ti e tact, which has so frequently been questioned, that the property of water to find its level wa3 well known at that epoch. It has naturally been throughout a ques tion of the liveliest interest whether Pom peii might be found to yield any trace of the new religion pushing its way among the inmates of the classical Pantheon. On this important point the ruins have heretofore been silent. The only indication of Christianity which ha3 ever been held plausible depends upon an unsatisfactory story told by Mazois. In one of the row of small shops extending along one side of the so-called house of Pansa, when newly discovered, there was found on the wall of the passage leading to the posticum a Latin cross marked in bas-relief upon a panel of white stucco. This wall, being at the end of the passage, and directly facing the street, was in full view of the passers-by. On this symbol Mazois founded the conjecture that the owner of the shop was a Christian. No vestige of the cross now remains, and we find it difficult, with ,Dr. Dyer, to conceive, even were the cross in use at that time among Christians, that any one should have ven tured to exhibit that sign of the religion so publicly as this. Mazois himself, too, was puzzled to account for the juxtaposition of this symbol with the ordinary Pagan emblems. Could the same man at once bow bofore the cross of Christ, and pay homage to Janus, Ferculus, Limentinus, Cardia, the deities of the thresholds and the hinges of doors f Still more, could he adore it in combination with the guardian serpent3 of Fsculapius, or with the obscene emblem of an incomprehensible worship, possibly Orphic or Mithraio, which is over the hearth. The Commendatore Fiorelli explicitly denies that any Christian symbols have been discovered at Pompeii. " It is said, indeed," writes Dr. Dyer, "that in a house in this Via del Lupanare may be traced written in charcoal a yrajjito with the letters, . . NI GAUDII. . .' IIRISTIANI; which have with so slight probability been supplemented i 7nt yaudc, Chrissiane ("rejoice in the fire, Christian"). Dr. Dyer has clearly not seen this inscription himself, and neither the reading itself nor the interpretation seems to us at all satisfactory. If rightly read, the words proceeded at all events from a Pagan, and they may have reference, Dr. Dver sug gests, to the burning of Christians at Rome iu the time of Nero. They are as likely to refer to the charge of setting Rome ou fire brought against the Christians. We should like more direct evidence of the basis of the whole story. Evidences of Egyptian worship are not infrequent. An elegant temple disin terred next to that of Fsculapius is shown by an inscription over the entrance to have been dedicated to Itsis, to have been overthrown by an earthquake, and to have been restored by Nuineiius (or Nonnius) Popidius Celsinus, at his own ex pense. This earthquake was probably that of the year C',5 A. D., sixteen years before the destruction of the city. From this temple w ere taken the Liuioua Isiao table of basalt now in the Museum at Naples. This line relief contains fourteen figures, thirteen of which are turned towards the first, which is supposed to represent Osiris. Beneath are twenty-five lines of hieroglyphics, which have Wen Interpreted by M. Chanipolllon Jls to be an invocation of Miris or Isia. Jt isr how- ever, denounced by Overbeck aft a sham. In a niche on the court wall fronting the temple stood a painted figure of Higaloon or Hurpo crates, otherwise called Orus, the nonof Osiris. Beneath this was a shelf, intended perhaps to receive offering), and under it a board, sup posed to be for the knees of the worshippers. In another part of the court was found a loau tiful statue of Isis, with the sistrum and the key of the Nile sluices, her drapery painted purple, and in part gilt. From several of the pictures and bas-reliefs we obtain inter esting evidence of the influence exercised by classic symbolism upon Christian art. An instance of this occurs in the ugly conven tional glory with which the heads of sacred personages are commonly encircled. This usage was borrowed by the Italian painters from the Greek artists of the lower Fuapire, in whose paintings it generally assumes the ap pearance of a solid plate of gold. In a small Louse at Pompeii, decorated with subjects from the Odyssey, a painting of Ulysses and Circe was copied by Mazois in 1812, which is remarkable as exhibiting the head of Circe crowned with a halo of aureole of this precise kind. The outer limb or circumference is solidly , and sharply defined, not shaded off, and divided into rays, as we usually see it in woiks of the Italian school. This painting has since perished. A similar aureole sur rounds the grand figure of Jupiter in the house of Zephyrus and Flora. The god is here sit ting in a contemplative attitude, the eagle at his feet, and his golden sceptre in his hand. His mantle is of violet color, and lined with azure, the throne and footstool are golden, or namented with picturesque stones, a green drapery covering tho back of the throne. These pictures, like most of those discovered at Pompeii, were executed on the plaster of the wall. It appears, however, that movable pictures were not unknown. In the handsome house in the street of Stabi.'c, excavated in 1847, and as signed on the evidenee of an inscription to M. Lucretius, a Flamen of Mars and Decurio of Pompeii, the walls of the tabtinum are painted with architectural subjects. Among these are spaces for two large paintings, which have been either carried away, or had not yet been fixed in their places when Pompeii was overwhelmed. A full account of the principal paintings and sculptures, together with a critical discussion of the methods and mate rials in use among the artists of the age, i3 given by Dr. Dyer. Of these, the noblest mosaic Is beyond comparison that discovered in the house of the Faun, not less than 18 feet long by 9 broad, supposed to represent one of the battles of Alexander and Darius, probably that at the Issus. Few paintings of any age can excel in fire and animation the celebrated head of Achilles giving up Briseis, in the house of the tragic poet. And statuettes like those of the dancing Faun, the Silenus, and those of sundry animal figures, are not sur passed by the finest remains of classic art. We lay down Dr. Dyer's work with regret at not being able to afford Bpace for a more com plete epitome of its multifarious points of interest. Saturday Review. TOBACCO. ONE KUKDRED DOLLARS A DAY! CEBTUR7 TOBACCO, IN TIN FOIL. In order to", overcome a natural prejudice that always exists against New York Tobaccos, and being fully convinced that where the CENTURY brand Is once used Its superior qualities will be recognized, we have adopted the plan of putting money In the papers as an extra Inducement to consumers to give it a trial. Instead of a single Hundred Dollar Note In one paper, an we have done heretofore, we have con cluded to vary the amount, but In all caaea to allow the aggregate to be the same, viz : ONE IHINDBEI) DOLLARS A DAY On MONDAYS we will place a HUNDRED DOLLAR (One Paper.) NOTE In a paper of Century On TUESDAYS we will plnce In each of TWO papers (Two Papers.) of Century a FIFTY DOLLAR NOTE. On WEDNESDAYS we will place In each of FIVE (Five Papers.) papers of Century a TWENTY DOLLAR NOTE On THUBFDAYS we will place in each of TEN (Ten Papers.) papers of Century a TEN DOL LAR NOTE On FRIDAYS we will place In each of TWENTY (Twenty Puperu.) papers of Ceutury a FIVE DOL LAR NOTE. On SATURDAYS we will .place In each of FIFTY (Fifty Papers.) papers of Century a TWO DOL LAR NOTE. P. A . LOBIIXABD, R. A. VAN siCHAM'K, 8 21 tut.t,sl3t No. 1 S. FRONT St., Philadelphia. REMOVAL. REMOVAL. C. W. A. TRUIdPLER HAS REMOVED HIS MUSIO STORE 1 IC4M1 NKVF.NT1I AXR CIIES.MJT' HT' TO No. 926 CHESNUT STREET, 8 12tfrp PHILADELPHIA. PRESERVING CANS AND JARS. p R U I T JARS. PROTECTOR FRTIT JARS. They are made Air-tight with Certainty and Ease. Are Rapidly Opened Without Injury to the Cover. Each Cover fits all the Jars. Manufacturers and Patentees F. A J. BOIUNE, FINANCIAL. E7 OTATE LOAN. THE NEW SIX PEH CENT STATE LOAN, Free from all State, County, and Municipal Taxation, Will bef nrclidifxl in enina to suit, on applies. Hon to either of the tmUnrslKned:- PBEXEL CO 7B2nHpJ E. W. fUKH A CO. BANKING HOUSE CM? JayCooee&!j). 112 and m So. THIRD ST. PHILAP'A. Dealers in all Government Securities. OLD 6-SOs WANTED M EXCHANGE FOR HEW. A LlIiERAL, DIFFERESCK ALLOWED. Compound Interest Notes Wanted. IXTEKEST ALLOWED OX DEPOSITS. Collections made, Blocks bought ana sold on Commission. Special business accommodations reserved for 'adles. f 0 34 8m UE UNDERSIGNED HAVE PURCHASED THB NEW SIX PER CENT. 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UlHphain, jLdward ii. Oriie, William F.rvlen, Oxgood Welsli, Frederick A. Hoyt, Win, H, Rhawn. WM, H. RHAWN, President, JjtUe CatMer of the Omtral National BcuJt JOB. P. MUMFORD Cashier, 5 liJ jf.au oflfit i'hUudtlphia National Bank pARTIES HOLDING GOVERNMENT SECURITIES For Investment may now realize a haudaome profit by converting them Into THE UNION PACIFIC IIAILHOAD FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS Which carry the same interest, viz., SIX PER CENT, IN GOLD. The difference In your Javor to-day, Ausubt 14, to as follows; For 5-2 of I8ti2 we pay JuSO'lO on each thousand. t For of IhM we iwy tui'i iil oil encti thousand. For b-tti of IMio we uy t'&n'Vl on etioli tliousauil. Fir of July we pny 4l8(i-6 on euoh thousand. For IkhIh we pay fJHrlti on each thousand. For (i-4i we puy SI IK 1 on each thousand. For 7'Xi s. I'd series, we pay Iiho HI on eucli thouRand. or 7 30b. 8d xf'H-o, we jiuy f 174H1 on each thoibaud. fculjucl to slight variations liom day to day. ' . , ' W. PAINTKIl & CO. IBPFCIAL AGtNTS OF THE COMPANY, SIM - flv. H Hi 1'UJWJ SUSVti HNANC1AL. IJ O T I C C TO T11K HOLDERS FTH1 LOANS CF THE COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, Due Aitor July 2, ItSOO. Holders of the following LOANS OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA are requested to present tbtm for payment (Principal and Interest) at The Farmers' Mechanics' Katlastal Bank of Philadelphia, Loan of March 1, 1H33, doe April 10, 1803. AprU 5, 1834, due July 1, 1862. " April 13, 1835, due July 1, 1805. " February 0, 1839, due July 1, 1864. " March 16, 1839, due July 1, 1864. " June 27, 1839, due June 27, 1864. " January 23. 1840, due January 1, 1863. All of the above LOANS will oeaso to draw Interest after September 30, 1867. JOHN W. dCABT GOVEivNOR, JOHN P. HARTRANFT, AUDITOR-GENERAL. WILLIAM II. KBMBLK, STATE TREASURER. 8 10 fmwtS30 j ORTH MISSOURI RAILROAD riRST MORTGAGE SEVEN PER CENT. BONDS. 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W ILL I AM WITTFELD, MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN CABINET FURNITURE, NOS.64, 60 AND 68 AORTU SECOND ST., Below Arch, West Bide, Philadelphia, Calls attention to bis extensive assortment ot FIRST CLASS FURNITURE, comprising; SOLID ROSEWOOD, SOLID WALNUT, PARLOR SUITB OF PLUSH, TERRY, REPS, AND HAIR CLOTH, ELEGANT CHAMBER AND COTTAGE SUITS BEST DINING BOOM AND KITCHEN FURNITURE. ALSO. WRITING DESKS, MARBLE-TOP STANDS, ETC., All of which are manufactured by ourselves, of the best materials, and will be sold for cash only, at much lowerrates than are oQered elsewhere. N. B. Goods packed and shipped to all parts of the country. Bltsmthim TO HOU SEKEEPERS. I have a large stock of every variety ol FURNITURE. Which I will sell at rednced prices, conslstlnc of PLAIN AND MARBLE TOP OOTlAUE fcUriTS. WALNUT CHAMBER SUITS, PARLOR SUns IN VluLVET PLUSH. PARLOR SUITS IN HAIR CLOTH. PARLOR SUITS IN REi-a Sideboards, Extension Tables, Wardrobes, Book oases, Mattresses, Lounges, etc, etc P. 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