Page:Troy-and-its-remains by Heinrich Schliemann.djvu/158
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- Interruptions from Rain
- Last works of the season, 1871
- The supposed ruins of Troy reached
- Great blocks of stone
- Engineering contrivances
- Excavations at the "Village of the Ilians:" no traces of habitation, and none of hot springs
- Results of the excavations thus far
- Review of the objects found at various depths
- Structure of the lowest houses yet reached
- Difficulties of the excavations
- The object aimed at
- Growth of the Hill of Hissarlik.
On the Hill of Hissarlik, November 24th, 1871.
Since my last report, of the 18th and 21st instant, I have had three days' work in spite of the continual wet weather; but unfortunately I find myself now compelled to cease the excavations for the winter, intending to begin again on the 1st of April, 1872. It is not likely that winter will set in before the middle of December, and I should gladly have continued my work till then, in spite of the rain, especially as I now most firmly believe that I am already among the ruins of Troy. Since the day before yesterday, I find on the whole extent of my excavations scarcely anything but. large stones—sometimes hewn, sometimes unhewn—and some of them are enormous blocks. This morning, for instance, I worked for three hours with 65 workmen in removing a single threshold by means of ropes and rollers.
I have been obliged to abandon the two large side-passages, when already at a depth of 23 feet, and I have since caused all the rubbish and small stones to be brought in baskets and wheel-barrows through the large exit-channel, and thrown down at its end upon the sides of the steep declivity. This channel—the walls of which have a slope of 67½ degrees—is now, at the present depth of 33 feet,