“Fata viam invenient.”
On a verdant slope of Mount Maenalus, in Arcadia, there stands an olive grove about the ruins
of a villa. Close by is a tomb, once beautiful with the sublimest sculptures, but now fallen
into as great decay as the house. At one end of that tomb, its curious roots displacing the
time-stained blocks of Pentelic marble, grows an unnaturally large olive tree of oddly repellent
shape; so like to some grotesque man, or death-distorted body of a man, that the country folk
fear to pass it at night when the moon shines faintly through the crooked boughs. Mount Maenalus
is a chosen haunt of dreaded Pan, whose queer companions are many, and simple swains believe
that the tree must have some hideous kinship to these weird Panisci; but an old bee-keeper who
lives in the neighbouring cottage told me a different story.

Many years ago, when the hillside villa was new and resplendent, there dwelt
within it the two sculptors Kalos and Musides. From Lydia to Neapolis the beauty of their work
was praised, and none dared say that the one excelled the other in skill. The Hermes of Kalos
stood in a marble shrine in Corinth, and the Pallas of Musides surmounted a pillar in Athens,
near the Parthenon. All men paid homage to Kalos and Musides, and marvelled that no shadow of
artistic jealousy cooled the warmth of their brotherly friendship.

But though Kalos and Musides dwelt in unbroken harmony, their natures were
not alike. Whilst Musides revelled by night amidst the urban gaieties of Tegea, Kalos would
remain at home; stealing away from the sight of his slaves into the cool recesses of the olive
grove. There he would meditate upon the visions that filled his mind, and there devise the forms
of beauty which later became immortal in breathing marble. Idle folk, indeed, said that Kalos
conversed with the spirits of the grove, and that his statues were but images of the fauns and
dryads he met there—for he patterned his work after no living model.

So famous were Kalos and Musides, that none wondered when the Tyrant of Syracuse
sent to them deputies to speak of the costly statue of Tyché which he had planned for
his city. Of great size and cunning workmanship must the statue be, for it was to form a wonder
of nations and a goal of travellers. Exalted beyond thought would be he whose work should gain
acceptance, and for this honour Kalos and Musides were invited to compete. Their brotherly love
was well known, and the crafty Tyrant surmised that each, instead of concealing his work from
the other, would offer aid and advice; this charity producing two images of unheard-of beauty,
the lovelier of which would eclipse even the dreams of poets.

With joy the sculptors hailed the Tyrant’s offer, so that in the days
that followed their slaves heard the ceaseless blows of chisels. Not from each other did Kalos
and Musides conceal their work, but the sight was for them alone. Saving theirs, no eyes beheld
the two divine figures released by skilful blows from the rough blocks that had imprisoned them
since the world began.

At night, as of yore, Musides sought the banquet halls of Tegea whilst Kalos
wandered alone in the olive grove. But as time passed, men observed a want of gaiety in the
once sparkling Musides. It was strange, they said amongst themselves, that depression should
thus seize one with so great a chance to win art’s loftiest reward. Many months passed,
yet in the sour face of Musides came nothing of the sharp expectancy which the situation should
arouse.

Then one day Musides spoke of the illness of Kalos, after which none marvelled
again at his sadness, since the sculptors’ attachment was known to be deep and sacred.
Subsequently many went to visit Kalos, and indeed noticed the pallor of his face; but there
was about him a happy serenity which made his glance more magical than the glance of Musides—who
was clearly distracted with anxiety, and who pushed aside all the slaves in his eagerness to
feed and wait upon his friend with his own hands. Hidden behind heavy curtains stood the two
unfinished figures of Tyché, little touched of late by the sick man and his faithful
attendant.

As Kalos grew inexplicably weaker and weaker despite the ministrations of puzzled
physicians and of his assiduous friend, he desired to be carried often to the grove which he
so loved. There he would ask to be left alone, as if wishing to speak with unseen things. Musides
ever granted his requests, though his eyes filled with visible tears at the thought that Kalos
should care more for the fauns and the dryads than for him. At last the end drew near, and Kalos
discoursed of things beyond this life. Musides, weeping, promised him a sepulchre more lovely
than the tomb of Mausolus; but Kalos bade him speak no more of marble glories. Only one wish
now haunted the mind of the dying man; that twigs from certain olive trees in the grove be buried
by his resting-place—close to his head. And one night, sitting alone in the darkness of
the olive grove, Kalos died.

Beautiful beyond words was the marble sepulchre which stricken Musides carved
for his beloved friend. None but Kalos himself could have fashioned such bas-reliefs, wherein
were displayed all the splendours of Elysium. Nor did Musides fail to bury close to Kalos’
head the olive twigs from the grove.

As the first violence of Musides’ grief gave place to resignation, he
laboured with diligence upon his figure of Tyché. All honour was now his, since the Tyrant
of Syracuse would have the work of none save him or Kalos. His task proved a vent for his emotion,
and he toiled more steadily each day, shunning the gaieties he once had relished. Meanwhile
his evenings were spent beside the tomb of his friend, where a young olive tree had sprung up
near the sleeper’s head. So swift was the growth of this tree, and so strange was its
form, that all who beheld it exclaimed in surprise; and Musides seemed at once fascinated and
repelled.

Three years after the death of Kalos, Musides despatched a messenger to the
Tyrant, and it was whispered in the agora at Tegea that the mighty statue was finished. By this
time the tree by the tomb had attained amazing proportions, exceeding all other trees of its
kind, and sending out a singularly heavy branch above the apartment in which Musides laboured.
As many visitors came to view the prodigious tree, as to admire the art of the sculptor, so
that Musides was seldom alone. But he did not mind his multitude of guests; indeed, he seemed
to dread being alone now that his absorbing work was done. The bleak mountain wind, sighing
through the olive grove and the tomb-tree, had an uncanny way of forming vaguely articulate
sounds.

The sky was dark on the evening that the Tyrant’s emissaries came to
Tegea. It was definitely known that they had come to bear away the great image of Tyché
and bring eternal honour to Musides, so their reception by the proxenoi was of great warmth.
As the night wore on, a violent storm of wind broke over the crest of Maenalus, and the men
from far Syracuse were glad that they rested snugly in the town. They talked of their illustrious
Tyrant, and of the splendour of his capital; and exulted in the glory of the statue which Musides
had wrought for him. And then the men of Tegea spoke of the goodness of Musides, and of his
heavy grief for his friend; and how not even the coming laurels of art could console him in
the absence of Kalos, who might have worn those laurels instead. Of the tree which grew by the
tomb, near the head of Kalos, they also spoke. The wind shrieked more horribly, and both the
Syracusans and the Arcadians prayed to Aiolos.

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 peristyle 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 Tyché, 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,
“Οἶδα!
Οἶδα!—I know! I know!”