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Abstract
The walls of Tyrins, on the edge of the Argolic Gulf, are 7 metres thick. In Greek legend these, and the nearby fortress of Mycenae, were built by the race descended from the Cyclops (hence the architectural term ‘Cyclopean’ for ‘huge or massive’). Like the architects of the 1960s, the builders of Mycenae were louts, but they had good three-dimensional vision. Polyphemus, the most famous of his homicidal and gloomy race, could deal impressively and destructively with moving objects: ‘Neither reply nor pity came from him, but in one stride he clutched at my companions and caught two in his hands like squirming puppies to beat their brains out, spattering the floor.
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