In the sunshine of the morning the proxenoi led the Tyrant's
messengers up the slope to the abode of the sculptor, but the night wind had
done strange things. Slaves' cries ascended from a scene of desolation, and no
more amidst the olive grove rose the gleaming colonnades of that vast hall
wherein Musides had dreamed and toiled. Lone and shaken mourned the humble
courts and the lower walls, for upon the sumptuous greater peri-style had fallen
squarely the heavy overhanging bough of the strange new tree, reducing the
stately poem in marble with odd completeness to a mound of unsightly ruins.
Strangers and Tegeans stood aghast, looking from the wreckage to the great,
sinister tree whose aspect was so weirdly human and whose roots reached so
queerly into the sculptured sepulchre of Kalos. And their fear and dismay
increased when they searched the fallen apartment, for of the gentle Musides,
and of the marvellously fashioned image of Tyche, no trace could be discovered.
Amidst such stupendous ruin only chaos dwelt, and the representatives of two
cities left disappointed; Syracusans that they had no statue to bear home,
Tegeans that they had no artist to crown. However, the Syracusans obtained after
a while a very splendid statue in Athens, and the Tegeans consoled themselves by
erecting in the agora a marble temple commemorating the gifts, virtues, and
brotherly piety of Musides.
But the olive grove still stands, as does the tree growing out of
the tomb of Kalos, and the old bee-keeper told me that sometimes the boughs
whisper to one another in the night wind, saying over and over again. "Oida!
Oida! -I know! I know!"
-The End-
Check out my two
short stories, now published on Amazon Kindle:
TRAILER PARK FROM
HELL
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