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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Thistle and the Cedar of Lebanon, by
+Habeeb Risk Allah
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Thistle and the Cedar of Lebanon
+
+
+Author: Habeeb Risk Allah
+
+
+
+Release Date: February 18, 2011 [eBook #35322]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE THISTLE AND THE CEDAR OF
+LEBANON***
+
+
+This ebook was transcribed by Les Bowler.
+
+ [Picture: Portrait of the Author]
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE THISTLE
+ AND
+ THE CEDAR OF LEBANON,
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ BY
+ HABEEB RISK ALLAH EFFENDI,
+ M.R.C.S.,
+ AND ASSOCIATE OF KING’S COLLEGE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ “And Jehoash the king of Israel sent to Amaziah king of Judah,
+ saying, The thistle that was in Lebanon, sent to the cedar that was
+ in Lebanon, saying, Give thy daughter to my son to wife; and there
+ passed by a wild beast that was in Lebanon, and trode down the
+ thistle.”—2 Kings xiv. 9.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ SECOND EDITION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LONDON:
+ JAMES MADDEN, 8 LEADENHALL STREET.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ 1854
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LONDON:
+ PRINTED BY WERTHEIMER AND CO.
+ FINSBURY CIRCUS.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+TO THE FIRST EDITION.
+
+
+The following pages were written in compliance with the solicitations of
+many esteemed friends, who were desirous that I should lay before the
+public an outline of my life and travels, and give to the English nation
+a description of the domestic habits and religious opinions of my
+countrymen in Syria. However incompetent I may have proved for the task,
+I trust that what I have written may not be wholly uninteresting; and
+above all, it is my earnest hope, that my feeble efforts to arouse the
+generous interest of the English for the welfare and improvement of my
+native land, may not prove without use.
+
+In choosing the title which is prefixed to my humble work, I have acted
+upon the long-established usage of my countrymen of speaking
+parabolically, a practice which has existed from the days of Job down to
+the present time.
+
+I cannot conclude without offering my heartfelt thanks to my friend, the
+Rev. Wm. Frederick Witts, Fellow of King’s College, Cambridge, for the
+valuable assistance he has rendered me in revising these pages for the
+press.
+
+ R. A.
+
+18, _Cambridge-square_, _Hyde Park_,
+ _May_, 1853.
+
+ PREFACE
+ TO THE SECOND EDITION.
+
+One thousand copies, which constituted the First Edition of this work,
+having been disposed of within six months, I cannot allow another to go
+forth without expressing the satisfaction I feel at the liberal
+encouragement it has met with, and the gratitude I entertain towards my
+English readers for their indulgence towards it. My acknowledgments are
+also due to the Press, for the very favourable notices with which it has
+been invariably honoured by them.
+
+The same hope which animated my labours, and induced me to present them
+to the public, still cheers me on, namely, that of engaging the attention
+and exciting the interest of the English nation in the fate and prospects
+of Syria, my beloved country: a land dear to every thinking mind from its
+sacred associations, and richly meriting the attention of the man of
+business and the traveller, from its undeveloped material resources, and
+from its picturesque beauty and healthy climate.
+
+I can only allude to, in order to deplore, the state of war which now
+agitates and exhausts it; but in whatever manner the dispute may be
+settled, I have confidence that England and France will see justice done
+to an outraged country; and also, that the patriotic cause of our
+government will finally triumph over its enemies; for, under the generous
+and tolerant sway of Abdul Medjid Khan, and his enlightened ministers,
+far more is to be effected for the welfare of every class of his
+subjects, than are likely to arise from the interference of any foreign
+power; and I am sure that the more intelligent portion of the Orthodox
+Greek population are fully aware of this, and that they are, as they
+ought to be, loyally disposed towards the Sultan, their sovereign.
+
+As I am now on the eve of quitting England for the East, I take this
+opportunity of publicly giving expression to my heartfelt sense of the
+uniform kindness and courtesy I have met with from all ranks in this
+mighty empire; also, of once more expressing the earnest hope, that when
+this present contest shall have ceased, British energy, philanthropy, and
+capital, may be induced to promote the commercial and educational
+development of the population and resources of my native land. She
+possesses many natural treasures—she is eager for improvement—she is not
+far distant.
+
+If to this end the following pages shall have, even in the smallest
+degree contributed, I shall enjoy the high gratification of believing
+that neither my life nor my labour has been in vain.
+
+Many inaccuracies, I regret to say, occurred in the First Edition; these
+I have done my best to correct. Should any (I trust no material ones)
+have still escaped me, I must crave my reader’s indulgence for them.
+
+ _London_, _Feb._ 11, 1854.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ PAGE
+ INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER.
+ 1
+ CHAPTER I.
+Reminiscences of early Childhood—My Birth-place—Sheikh 5
+Faris Biridi—Early Tuition—Family Customs—Position of
+Shuay-fât, and Pastures—Inhabitants—Author quits for
+Beyrout
+ CHAPTER II.
+Beyrout—Piratical Attack—Flight to Mountains—Effects of 14
+the Assault upon the Inhabitants
+ CHAPTER III.
+Damascus—Author’s First visit to—Description of the 18
+Town—The Inhabitants—The Customs and Manners—The
+Ladies—Their Beauty and Freedom—Court-yards and
+Houses—Bazaars—Environs—Soirées—Games—Specimens of Poetry
+and Songs—Wonderful Legend—Refreshments—Entertainment
+given by the British Consul—Privileges of Christians—Padre
+Tomaso—American and British
+Missions—Population—Antiquity—Ravages by Cholera
+ CHAPTER IV.
+Return to Beyrout—American Mission—Original Difficulties 41
+they encountered—How overcome—The Estimation of
+Physicians—Anecdote of Mr. Zohrab—American
+Doctors—Introduction to School—Reminiscences of
+School-days—Anecdote of Sheikh Ahmed—Lists of
+Missionaries—Adventure of Mr. Bird—The Pacha’s
+Revenge—Description of the Rise of the Settlement and
+trade at Beyrout—Climate, Hints with regard to
+ CHAPTER V.
+Visit to Cyprus—Description of Voyage—Arrival at 57
+Larnaca—Visit to Nicosia and other towns—Cyprus
+Wines—Languages—Departure for Tersous—Arrival at
+Mersine—Scenery in Cilicia—Gardens—Buildings of
+Tersous—Streets—Climate—Inhabitants—Signor Michael
+Saba—Adana—Its Shops and
+Streets—Inhabitants—Fanaticism—Revolts—Pacha’s Service—The
+Pass of Kulek Bughas—Scenery—Departure for Ayas
+ CHAPTER VI.
+Ayas to Scanderoon—Scanderoon to Aleppo—Description of 71
+Journey—The Aleppines—Their Style and Polish—A Wedding
+described—Syrian Step-mothers—Jewish and Christian
+quarters—Earthquake of 1822—Pastimes and Garden
+Parties—Population—Commerce—Departure for Antioch—Gessir
+il Haded—Orontes—Antioch
+ CHAPTER VII.
+Antioch—Its Beauty and Fruitfulness—Visit to Suedia and 85
+Lattakia—Signor Mosi Elias—Hardships endured by Consular
+Agents—Anecdote of English Travellers—Uses and Abuses of
+the Protection System—Fanaticism of Moslem
+Populace—Produce—Lattakia to Tripoli—Oranges—Abu
+Rish—Signor Catsoflis—A fair Intercessor for Justice to
+the Injured—Results of the Appeal—Cedars of
+Lebanon—Baalbec—Anecdote of English Forces—Turjaman
+Bashi—Strange Character of Sayid Ali—Damascus—Djouni and
+Sidon—Lady Hesther—General Loustannau—Description of
+Sidon—Bombardment of St. Jean d’Acre—Kaipha and Mount
+Carmel—Mistaken Ideas of Love
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+First visit to England—Sail for Malta—Miseries of 122
+Seasickness—Arrival at Malta—The Emir Beschir—Late Bishop
+of Jerusalem—Steam Frigate Gorgon—Arrival at
+Portsmouth—Rev. Baptist Noel—London—Souvenir of
+Wimbledon—A Duel prevented—Anecdote of Druse Sheikh—Return
+to Syria—Sir George Otway—Arrival at Beyrout—War between
+Druses and Maronites—Stamboul—Emir Kasim, his History—Lord
+Cowley—Dr. Bennett—Mr. Goodall—Return to
+England—Malta—Marseilles—Adventure with French Officer—M.
+Guizot—Suliman Pacha—M. Thiers—Delicate Mission—Arrival in
+England—Prince Callimaki—Mr. Zohrab—Mr. B. Phillips—King’s
+College, London—Medical Profession—Lectures—Frightful
+Accident—Long Illness—Admission as Member of King’s
+College—The Mir Shahamet Ali and Sir C. Wade—Visit to
+Manufacturing Districts—Lamartine
+ CHAPTER IX.
+Visit to Paris—First Impressions—Boulevards—Champs 164
+Elysées—Description of a Lodging-house—Domestic Habits of
+the French—English and French Friendship—Departure for
+Constantinople _viâ_ Vienna
+ CHAPTER X.
+Reminiscences of Stamboul—Entertainments—Songs—The Tailor 170
+and the Sultan—The Sultan’s Condescension—Marriage of the
+Daughter of Prince Vogiredis—Turkish Navy—Present Crisis—A
+Renegade Girl
+ CHAPTER XI.
+Egypt—Abbas Pasha and his Improvements—The British 184
+Consul-General—Mr. Abet—Mr. Larking—Boghas
+Bey—Antiquities—Climate—Library—Advantages enjoyed by
+European Residents—Festivities—Fulfilment of Prophecy—Late
+Gift of Horses presented by Nubar Bey to her Majesty—The
+Hon. G. Massey—Impressions made on the Grooms
+ CHAPTER XII.
+Visit to Devonshire, Bath, and Cheltenham—Visit to Lady 197
+Rolle—Description of Bicton—Travelling by an Express
+Train—A Coachman’s Remarks—The Park—Arrival and
+Reception—Description of my Life—My Portrait
+taken—Amusements—Conversation with Mrs. P--- of Exeter
+about the Greek Church—English Young Ladies—Cottage
+Visiting—Buildings erected by Lady Rolle at Bicton—Amusing
+Anecdote of an Eastern Princess—Drive to
+Exeter—Equipage—Cathedral—Frescoes—Gaol—Child in Prison
+there—Female Department—Villagers’ Opinions of
+me—Bath—Beauties of Country reminded me of
+Syria—Springs—Arrival—Sir Claude Wade—Tour of the
+City—Society—Diversity of Religious
+Opinions—Service—Soirée—Agreeable Rencontre—Second Visit
+to Bath—Bachelor’s Ball—Lady Mayoress’s Ball at the
+Guildhall—Recognition as a Free-mason—Invitation to “The
+Lodge of Honour” to meet the Mayor—Meeting with Dr.
+Thompson—Lecture—Quoted from the Paper—Visit to
+Cheltenham—Rev. J. Brown—Rev. C. H. Bromley—Meeting—My
+Address—Appeal to send over for, and educate young Syrians
+at the Normal College at Cheltenham—Case of a young Syrian
+Lad—Lord Northwick—His Collection of
+Paintings—Conclusion—Reasons for appearing before the
+Public as an Author
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+Impressions of England—Letters to a Friend in the 216
+East—Voyage to England—Landing—Custom-house—Crowded
+Thoroughfares—English Activity—Hotel—Servants—Drive—Motley
+Groups—Squares—Park—Houris—Heart-aches—Dinner—English
+Splendour, but Syrian Ease and a Chibuk preferred—English
+Acquaintances—Society—Young Ladies—Their
+Freedom—Matrons—Their
+Acquirements—Etiquette—Dress—Widows—Gentlemen—English
+Sabbath—Public Schools and Colleges—The Queen—Missionary
+and Charitable Institutions—Great Wealth of the
+English—The Merchants—The Fashionable World—The
+Opera—Expensive Pleasure—Insatiable Craving for
+Riches—Desire for an English
+Home—Marriages—Children—Schooling—Absence of Reverence for
+Beards—Devotion of the Young Fair Sex to Uniforms—Kindness
+to Strangers—Interest in the Holy Land—Hospitality—Private
+Worth and Public Scheming
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+Life, Manners, and Customs of Syria—Ceremonies at 233
+Births—Christian Names—Remedies for Infantile
+Diseases—Early Instruction and Training—Syrian
+Manners—Reverential Treatment of Priests—Personal
+Cleanliness—Education—Betrothal—Marriage—Polygamy of
+Mahommedans—Education of Girls—Household Maxims—Domestic
+Snakes—Mourning for the Dead—A Lover’s Lament
+ CHAPTER XV.
+Syria and her Inhabitants—Description of the Southern 259
+parts of Palestine—The Misery of its Inhabitants—Their
+Disposition and Labours—Sea-coast Population—Their
+Habits—Scriptural Analogy—Sidon, Lebanon, Tripoli,
+Lattakia and Antioch—The Children of those Parts—Appeal to
+the British on behalf of Syria—Real State of the Turkish
+Empire—Safety of English Investments—The Turkish
+Dominions—How to purchase Property—English Emigrants would
+be welcomed in Syria—Mr. John Barker—Colonel
+Churchill—Lady Hester Stanhope—Fruits—Cultivation of the
+Soil—Advantages for the English Emigrant and Amelioration
+for Syria—Major Macdonald—His Discovery of Turquoises and
+Presentation of some to the Queen—Advice to Emigrants—All
+Particulars and Expenses of Voyage explained, Outlay,
+Working, Expenditure and Profits derivable—Climate
+recommended for Health
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+Syria, her Inhabitants and their Religion—Religious 279
+Teaching in Syria—American Missionaries—Their Zeal—Greek
+or Orthodox Eastern Church—Interview and Conversation with
+the Patriarch and Bishops at Constantinople—Letter from
+Syria—The Conversion of the Son of a Mufti to
+Christianity—Lord Shaftesbury and the Protestant College
+at Malta—Mahommedan Power and the Christian Churches in
+Syria—Claims of the Orthodox Eastern Church and its
+Affinity to the Protestant Churches of England—The Four
+Patriarchs—Education of the Syrian Priesthood—The Service
+of the Orthodox Eastern Church—Dissenters from it—Account
+of Karolus their Patriarch—Dispute about the Head-dress
+and reference to Constantinople—Decision—Jealousies of the
+Christian Sects—Political Animosities
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+The Maronites—Their Political Position—Anecdote connected 299
+with the Year 1821—Their Customs, Manners, and
+Religion—The Number of Roman Catholics in Syria—The
+Copts—The Nestorians
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+The Population of Syria continued—The Metoulis or 317
+Heterodox Followers of Mahommed—The Druses—The
+Nosairiyeh—The Yezidees
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+Appearance and Costume of the People—The Aleppine 338
+Greeks—The Dyers—The Armenians—The Yahoodee or
+Israelites—The Turkish Effendi—The Bedouins—The Fellaheen
+ CHAPTER XX.
+The Occupations of the People—Lebanon in April—The 352
+Mulberry Plantations—Anecdote—The Silkworms—The Wheat
+Harvest—Borghol—The Vintage—The Olive Winter—The Resources
+of Syria—The Small Capitalists in Syria
+ CHAPTER XXI.
+The Comparative Influences of the Roman Catholic and 370
+Protestant Faiths in Syria—The Roman Catholics—Their
+Convents—Greek and Armenian Monasteries—The Knowledge and
+Practice of Medicine—The Influence of the
+Hakeem—Anecdote—Conversions—The Sisters of Charity
+ CHAPTER XXII.
+The Remedy—The Early 384
+Apostles—Physicians—Missionaries—Introduction of the
+Silkworm from China—Incorporation of the Medical with the
+Clerical Profession—Proposed Society to be formed in
+England—Hospital—School-rooms—Dispensary—Purchase of
+Land—Its Cultivation—System of Education—Letter of Dr.
+Thomson—Mr. Cuthbert Young’s “Notes of a Wayfarer”
+ APPENDIX.
+Notes on the Geology of Syria, by Professor Forbes 397
+
+INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER.
+
+
+In presenting the British public with the following pages, containing a
+brief sketch of my life and travels, together with a description of the
+customs and present condition of my native land, I am actuated solely by
+motives which, I trust, a careful perusal of this work will prove to be
+disinterested.
+
+All nations are more or less patriotic; none more so than the inhabitants
+of the British isles. With them the inducements to this love of home are
+all-sufficient, for their religion is the purest, their government and
+laws the best in the world, and they are second to no people in the
+enjoyment of privileges and blessings, such as could be only enjoyed by a
+“peculiar people,” under the immediate protection of the Almighty
+Benefactor. Next to them we may rank, as promoters of freedom and
+enlightenment, the citizens of the United States, those other scions of a
+noble stock.
+
+Yet so peculiar is that innate love of man for the particular country and
+people with which are associated the early years of his childhood, that
+even the son of utter darkness, born and bred a savage, inured to every
+hardship and privation, who boasts of no city, scarcely professes a
+religion, whose home is the desert waste, his bed the warm sands of
+Arabia, even he, the wild Bedouin, in his untutored heart, sets boundless
+store by the place and people to which early attachment has rivetted his
+affections. Separate him from these and from his beloved mare, and no
+riches or pleasures could compensate him for the loss. This is also
+applicable to the humble and oftentimes oppressed natives who dwell in
+the towns and villages of Syria, Lebanon, and Palestine. Though for
+centuries they have been subjected to the heavy yoke of bondage, and of
+late years, like the Israelites of old, were bondsmen to Egypt; however
+much they may have deplored their hard fate, none have ever dreamt of
+quitting the dear land of their forefathers—those ancestors who were
+coeval with the patriarchs. Some till the ground where Abraham once
+tended his flocks; others cut timber where the men of Hiram and Solomon
+once hewed cedars for the temple at Jerusalem; but the boast and glory of
+all these is, that they dwell in the land where the Promise was
+fulfilled. One may be by birth a Nazarene, another a townsman of Cana.
+A day or two’s journey enables him to reach that very Bethlehem where the
+blessed Redeemer was born, to track His holy footsteps in His pilgrimage
+of mercy from place to place, to weep and bemoan Him on the site of the
+last closing scenes of His holy life, and to raise up their hearts with
+grateful thanksgivings for the great salvation wrought out for their
+souls by His glorious resurrection.
+
+Apart from these cherished associations of the spiritual with the
+temporal world, the native of the Holy Land is fondly attached to his
+country, because its climate is congenial to his manners, its soil
+productive, its inhabitants hospitable, its waters the purest, air the
+freshest, sun the brightest, fruits the most delicious, and flowers the
+sweetest and most wildly profuse. All these gifts in the greatest
+luxuriance are to be found within the Lebanon range—that Lebanon of which
+the inspired bard, the wisest of men and the best of kings, sings in his
+beautiful metaphor on Christian love. {3} “Thy plants are an orchard of
+pomegranates with pleasant fruits. . . A fountain of gardens, a well of
+living waters, and streams from Lebanon.”
+
+With such a past to dwell on, it is not surprising that the poor,
+neglected peasant of Syria may still proudly vaunt himself of his
+birthright and country. I, too, hope, kind reader, for your sympathy in
+my sharing this national characteristic, and for endeavouring, as far as
+in me lies, to promote the welfare, both temporal and eternal, of my
+fellow countrymen and native land. The former, alas! are gradually
+sinking deeper and deeper into the meshes of superstition and idolatry;
+the latter groans under a heavy yoke, rendered still less supportable by
+the grossest ignorance. The indefatigable propagators of the Romish
+faith are arousing the people from their pristine ignorance, only, I
+fear, to plunge them into a more fearful vortex of errors.
+
+I rush to the rescue; for God has blessed me far above my countrymen, by
+shedding the true light of the Gospel around my pathway, through the
+instrumentality of good and holy men, whom He has chosen for His especial
+service, and who have bestowed on me the priceless boon of a Christian
+education. I am willing and anxious to devote every hour of my life, and
+all my poor means, to the furtherance of His cause. Yet, though much may
+combine in my favour, I am inadequate to the accomplishment of the good I
+desire for my country, without the aid, wise counsel, and support of the
+Christian inhabitants of Great Britain.
+
+Reader! in the following pages I have endeavoured to depict as clearly as
+I can the evil and the remedy. I have glanced over the leading features
+of my life, to show how circumstances, trivial in themselves, appear to
+have combined in my favour, that I should be an humble instrument in the
+hands of my Maker, to work out a brighter and better hope for dear Syria.
+
+That “pearl of great price,” pure Christianity, has been cherished and
+nurtured within these isles till the true faith has reared itself up like
+a mighty mirror, reflecting the glorious light of the blessed truths of
+the Gospel far and wide. May one beam of charity, reflected from thence,
+alight upon the mother church of Syria—that church now sunk in misery and
+degradation, but from which (remember, O Christian of Great Britain) was
+derived the glorious knowledge of an eternal salvation.
+
+“The Thistle that _is_ in Lebanon” is the harassed, weak, yet simple
+disciple of the Eastern Church; and “the Cedar that was in Lebanon” is
+the true Church of Christ, whose seeds were first derived from those Holy
+shores, and are now firmly rooted in England. The Thistle has sent to
+ask thy daughter, Enlightenment, in marriage to her son, Simplicity. O
+refuse her not lest the _wild beast_ in Lebanon should tread down the
+Thistle and obtain the ascendancy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+SCENES OF EARLY CHILDHOOD.
+
+
+My earliest recollections are associated with the lovely and rural
+village of Shuay-fât, my birth-place, on the Lebanon; and where, if not
+the happiest, certainly the most innocent years of my childhood were
+passed. My late father had no fixed residence at that place, but he,
+with the rest of his family, usually resorted there to spend the summer
+months and part of the autumn and spring. In winter the cold became
+intense, owing to the elevated position of the village; consequently most
+of its inhabitants and summer visitors, including amongst these latter my
+own family, invariably wintered at Beyrout. My uncle, Sheikh Faris
+Biridi, filled the important and respected post of _katib_, or secretary
+to the Emir Beshir Shahab, the late prince of Lebanon, who resided at the
+village of Deyr-al Kamar, situated a few hours’ journey from Shuay-fât.
+At least three times a week my uncle’s duties compelled him to visit the
+Emir. Sheikh Faris was universally respected amongst the villagers; his
+house was the best—his grounds the most extensive, and he himself in
+reality, an intelligent and well-informed man. For a Syrian, he was
+deeply read and well skilled in the use of his pen; but above all, he was
+an earnest and devout Christian, a kind father, and a good friend—virtues
+which gained for him the esteem and love of all the neighbouring
+villagers, as well Moslems and Druses as the Christians.
+
+Under the favourable auspices of this kind man’s tuition, I first learned
+to read and write my native tongue; and, as I was afterwards informed,
+even at that early age, gave cheering proofs of an active mind, and
+evinced an aptitude and love for the acquirement of knowledge. I could
+not possibly have had a better guide, both as regards precept and
+example. So long as I remained under his hospitable roof, his great and
+chief care was to richly stock my young mind with doctrines well adapted
+to promote the welfare of the soul in after years on all important
+business. His household arrangements were an example for others. He was
+an early riser himself, and insisted on all his household following this
+healthful practice: his maxim was that sleep was for the dark hours of
+the night—work and recreation for the light—prayers and thanksgivings for
+all seasons.
+
+My uncle was accustomed when at home to repair every morning, during the
+spring and summer seasons, to the top of a neighbouring hill, which
+commanded a view over an extensive range of country. On these occasions
+it was my wont to accompany him. A servant preceded us carrying a small
+carpet and a cushion or two; I carried my uncle’s pipe and tobacco-pouch
+with flint, steel, and tinder, in one hand; in the other, the Kitab
+Mukaddas, or Arabic Bible, printed in England, by the Church Missionary
+Society. As soon as my uncle had seated himself, and assumed his pipe,
+he would make me sit at his feet and read out to him from the good Book,
+illustrating and commenting as opportunity occurred. The hundred and
+fourth Psalm, than which none could be better suited to the time and
+place, was usually his favourite.
+
+From our elevated position, we could command a view, not only of our own
+dearly cherished and beautiful hamlet, but also of many of the
+surrounding villages. At our feet lay Shuay-fât, with its neat little
+cottages and cleanly swept court-yards, surrounded by a dense little
+forest of mulberries, oranges, lemons, apricots, olives, countless vines,
+and many other fruits; the dark leaves of an occasional poplar lending
+variety to the beauty and shading of the foliage. Not a man, woman, or
+child, moved to and fro in the narrow little streets, but their names and
+occupations were well known to us. The dogs wagged their tails in happy
+recognition of my shrill sharp whistle, and a thousand echoes caught up
+the signal. The verdant hills and valleys that surrounded us were
+thickly dotted with cattle and sheep contentedly browsing upon the rich
+pasturage. Peeping over the densely wooded plantations, the tops of the
+little whitewashed houses pointed out the locality of some well-known
+village. Clear streams of water sparkling in the glowing sunlight, often
+intersected the plains and valleys, or rushed headlong down the steep
+sides of some deep dell, abounding with wild flowers and myrtle bushes.
+Far below, where the distant fields in square patches of variegated hues,
+green bespangled with blue and crimson flowers; sometimes covered, like a
+sheet of pure gold, with countless buttercups, and sometimes in
+uncultivated patches of sombre brown; but what I most dearly loved to
+gaze at was the broad blue sea in the distance, looking so pleasantly
+cool and calm, with here and there a patch of deeper blue, where the
+breeze sportively ruffled the waves. I always thought of Nabiy Yunas {8}
+and the great fish, and wondered if many such fish were yet taking their
+pastime in the deep. How little I imagined at that time that I was
+destined to traverse those mighty waters, and to suffer myself to be
+borne away on their waves hundreds of miles from shore, exposed to raging
+tempests in a fragile bark! Such a notion would then have been scouted
+by all my friends; and I myself should have been foremost in deriding the
+idea, and in opposing, that which has since proved conducive to my best
+interests, temporal, and I trust eternal; but I was then a child, and
+understood and acted as a child.
+
+From this pleasant spot, my uncle gazed with rapture upon the surrounding
+scenery, as the first rays of the sun peered above the snow-capped peaks
+of lofty Lebanon, and spread a golden mantle over the vast panorama; from
+my childhood, I have known how to appreciate the beauties of nature in
+all their poetry; and I admire them still, but with a milder and more
+subdued admiration.
+
+“He sendeth the springs into the valleys, which run among the hills.”
+This was a portion of a morning’s reading lesson; the force and beauty of
+the verse were illustrated by everything around me. My worthy preceptor
+would impress this fact upon my mind. The men, the cattle, the trees,
+shrubs, flowers, birds, butterflies, even the most insignificant insect
+that crawls upon the earth—all these are preserved, he argued, by the
+bounty and beneficence of the Creator—without this water how would nature
+subsist? In short the whole of that delightful Psalm seemed as though
+expressly composed to illustrate the country around us, especially that
+passage which says, “The cedars of Lebanon, which he hath planted; where
+the birds make their nests.”
+
+Thus profitably and pleasantly the early hours of the day would be
+consumed. I was then dismissed with sage advice, to remember throughout
+the day what I had read and heard; and my uncle being called away by his
+avocations, I was left to amuse myself with my play-mates in the village,
+until the hour of noon summoned us to our substantial mid-day meal. Like
+most boys, we were prone to mischief. I remember a favourite game
+amongst the village lads, which occasionally terminated in a squabble,
+and was known by the name of Al Cadi, or The Judge. The Cadi was chosen
+by lot, as were the officers of his court, and the imaginary plaintiffs
+and defendants. Squatted on the ground, under the pleasant shade of some
+mulberry-tree, we then held a court. Sentence was recorded and executed;
+and sometimes the boy who personated the imaginary criminal was sentenced
+to be bastinadoed. On these occasions, the executioners laid about them
+so smartly with the light switches of the mulberry and olive, that though
+the boy’s shoes were never removed, the lash penetrated to the sole of
+the foot, and then the pretended culprit, smarting from pain, would lose
+all command over his temper; a _melée_ would ensue, which outraged the
+dignity of the court, and usually terminated by all the members, the Cadi
+included, being summarily whipped for their naughtiness.
+
+When the hour of mid-day was announced by the striking of gongs, which in
+Syria are usually substituted for bells at some churches, all our family
+assembled for _futar_, and my uncle would enter, followed by the peasants
+employed about his plantations, together with his other servants. This
+was the signal for the cook and her assistant to carry into the centre of
+the yard a large iron cauldron, containing the _ruzz-mufalfal_, or
+whatever was prepared for the day for the supply of the whole household.
+Clean shining platters were ranged in piles round this cauldron, and a
+blessing having been first asked, the food was ladled out—a goodly
+portion for each—enough and no waste. The only distinguishing mark at
+this family meal was, that the members of my uncle’s family were all
+seated round a low circular table, and reclined upon carpets and against
+cushions. The others sat where their fancy dictated; but they chiefly
+crowded under that side of the court-yard wall which afforded a shade
+from the heat of the sun. In addition to the contents of the cauldron,
+there was generally a dish of stewed meat and vegetables; or (if the
+season was Lent), of the egg-vegetable, or _batinjan_, and the
+vegetable-marrow, sliced and fried in oil—with as many cucumbers,
+pickles, lettuces, radishes, and young onions, as any one wished and
+asked for. During the repast, one of the servants usually stood at the
+door to watch for any poor wayfarers who might pass, to ask them to
+partake of our hospitality. When all had finished, the fragments were
+divided into equal portions amongst the cats and dogs of the
+establishment; and what was left by them was given to the fowls and
+sparrows. Our evening meal differed but little from that of the morning,
+except on days when the national dish of _Kubbee_ {10} superseded
+everything else. Then we had Kubbees in soup made of _laban_, or curdled
+milk, and Kubbees fried, and Kubbees baked; for the Syrian can never tire
+of eating of this delicious dish. The interval between mid-day and the
+evening was occupied variously—but first came the indispensable siesta,
+indulged in by men, women, and children. The men would then return to
+their respective labours, while the women occupied themselves in
+household matters, and most of the children were sent to the village
+school; but for myself, my afternoons were occupied with our family
+spiritual adviser, an excellent old man, who came daily and instructed
+me, from the hours of two to four P.M. After supper, my uncle would sit
+in state and receive the visits of the neighbours, who usually dropped in
+for an hour or two every evening. They sat and smoked, and talked about
+agricultural matters or village affairs; and sometimes one of the party
+would tell an amusing story, and another would sing a song—sweetmeats,
+coffee, and other refreshments being from time to time handed round—and
+thus the evenings would be spent in pleasant harmless enjoyment. This,
+with very little variety, is a faithful picture of what was our every-day
+life at Shuay-fât: and so passed the years of my infancy.
+
+I have omitted to make any personal allusion to the various members of my
+family. I hope, however, that I shall be pardoned in making a slight
+reference to my uncle’s lovely daughters, nine in number; these fair
+cousins of mine outrivalled each other in beauty and amiable qualities,
+and each had a trait of beauty peculiar to herself. In Syria, it is the
+custom to distinguish the various members of a family by a soubriquet,
+which has reference to some perfection or failing. Thus our groom,
+Yusuf, who limped a little, was called “_Topal_,” or the lame; and one of
+my cousins, “_Al Shams_,” or the sun, owing to her very bright eyes;
+whilst another, who had mild blue eyes, was designated, “_Al Kamar_,” or
+the moon. _Al Kamar_ was so noted for her beauty and sweet disposition,
+that two of the chiefs of Lebanon sought her hand in marriage—and this,
+though they had never seen her; but _Al Kamar_ was not ambitious of
+honors and riches. The creed of the sheikhs also differed widely from
+her own; so she refused them both. All these nine daughters are now
+married and settled in life; so I take leave of them with a fervent
+prayer, that the Almighty may graciously watch over them, and crown their
+end with eternal happiness.
+
+Shuay-fât, like most of the surrounding villages, produces a large
+quantity of silk; but it is in particular celebrated for the excellence
+of its wine, its olives, and olive-oil. Of the first, I can affirm, that
+I have, in after-years, heard good judges of wine, when quoting its
+excellence, refer to it as verifying the words of Hosea (xiv. 7), “The
+scent thereof shall be as the wine of Lebanon.” It is certainly very
+odoriferous. The olives and olive-oil are not to be surpassed in all
+Syria.
+
+The inhabitants, both men and women, are a fine, healthy people, and the
+males are particularly athletic. To describe them well, I cannot use
+better or more appropriate language than that of the prophet Ezekiel
+(xxxi. 3), “Behold, the Assyrian was a cedar in Lebanon with fair
+branches, and with a shadowing shroud, and of a high stature.”
+
+Yet with all these combined advantages, of health, a delicious climate,
+and a fertile soil, many of the poor peasants are oppressed and
+miserable. This arises from the iniquitous system of extortion practised
+on them by land-owners and subordinate officers. It must, however, be
+confessed, that the mountaineers are, to a certain extent, more
+independent than the inhabitants of the plains, who are ridden over
+roughshod by the petty and tyrannical under-strappers in office.
+
+I had barely attained my tenth year, when, much to my grief, I was
+removed from the family of my kind uncle, and taken to Beyrout, there
+permanently to reside; but, alas for short-sighted mortals, an event was
+even then brewing, which burst like a tempest, over the Beyroutines, and
+which materially affected my father’s plans and wishes with regard to my
+future career in life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+PIRATICAL ATTACK ON BEYROUT.
+
+
+Months rolled on. Merchants were at that period carrying on a
+comparatively thriving trade at Beyrout. The novelty of the scene that
+presented itself on my first arrival there had gradually worn off. In my
+leisure hours I rambled along the sandy beach, gathering shells, and
+wading ankle deep into the surf, at first with ill-suppressed fear and
+trembling; but the example of other boys emboldening me to venture into
+the water, I finished by becoming quite an adept in the art of swimming.
+Then the ships were a source of wonder and surprise, as they sailed in
+and out of the harbour, like gigantic swans floating over the waves.
+These also had ceased to excite interest, for I had been on board,
+handled the tarry ropes, walked the deck, and suffered inconvenience from
+the disagreeable motion, so that these also had ceased to be a marvel.
+Thus time rolled on, and I had well nigh forgotten all my regrets at
+leaving Lebanon and the hospitable abode of my uncle, when the unexpected
+event alluded to in the foregoing chapter, transpired.
+
+It was on Palm Sunday, in, I think, the year 1828. The harbour had been
+deserted for some few days; there was not even an Arab boat at the
+anchorage: and on the eventful evening I am now describing, the eye might
+have vainly swept the horizon seeking for indications of an approaching
+sail. This, however, was no uncommon event in those days, when the
+commerce of Beyrout was yet in its infancy. None imagined, on retiring
+to rest that night, that impending danger was so close at hand. Midnight
+had, however, scarcely chimed, and the last occupant of the latest open
+coffee-house crept home to his hovel, when a tumult arose, and the night
+air was filled with shrieks and lamentations, mingled with the startling
+reports of fire-arms. There was a rush in the streets of many people
+running for their lives; and all the inmates of my father’s household
+being now thoroughly awakened, ran out also, and joined the flying
+multitude. The Bab Yacoob, leading to Damascus and Lebanon, was open and
+unguarded. We fled with the concourse towards the mountains, favored in
+our retreat by the obscurity of the night; nor did any one think of
+stopping to breathe or repose till they had gained the summit of one of
+the neighbouring hills. Here, finding no signs of pursuit, and the
+clamour and report of fire-arms having died away in the distance, the
+frightened populace halted anxiously to await the first dawn of day,
+which was to enable them to secure their retreat to the neighbouring
+villages. All were totally ignorant as to the cause of the sudden panic,
+but many laboured under the absurd notion that the place had been
+attacked by Russian troops. None, however, stopped to be better informed
+on the subject; but, renewing their flight with the first light of
+morning, each betook himself and family to that village with which he was
+best acquainted; and for the next few weeks the Lebanon district was
+inundated with the scared refugees from Beyrout.
+
+As for ourselves, we directed our steps to Shuay-fât, and accomplished
+the journey as best we could; arriving there weary and half-famished, to
+the utter astonishment and dismay of my uncle’s household, who were at
+first quite at a loss to account for our sudden appearance in so pitiable
+a condition. Soon after our arrival, official intelligence reached the
+mountains of what had transpired. A ruffianly horde of piratical Greeks,
+allured by the hopes of meeting with rich booty, had made this sudden
+descent upon the peaceful and unsuspecting inhabitants. They had entered
+the town without resistance, and once in possession of the Quai, had
+unhesitatingly commenced the work of despoliation. Whole warehouses were
+stripped—money and rich jewellery carried off—murder and every atrocious
+crime, the offspring of villany, had been perpetrated. To secure the
+gold coins and jewellery worn by the women on their heads, wrists, and
+ankles, the wretches never hesitated to make use of the knife; and
+ear-rings were wrenched forcibly from the ears of the hapless victims.
+When the pirates were satiated with plunder, they broke and destroyed
+what was left; and then, setting fire to different parts of the town,
+they betook themselves with their booty to their boats, and thus
+disappeared. Luckily for house-owners, most of the buildings were
+constructed of solid masonry, with domes and vaulted roofs, so that the
+fire, even where it had ignited, speedily exhausted its impotent rage.
+The Moslem rabble, disguised as Greeks, also joined in the general foray.
+
+By this calamity all the residents at Beyrout suffered more or less.
+Many were utterly ruined; and my poor father’s losses were so severe,
+that he at first wholly relinquished the idea of ever returning to that
+place. For many months afterwards we resided at Shuay-fât; but here also
+an outbreak amongst the mountaineers disturbed us again, and we were
+compelled to retrace our steps to Beyrout, which place, from that day
+forward, became my home.
+
+With regard to the marauders, they escaped scot-free and were neither
+detected nor punished, as this took place at the time of the Greek
+revolution and the battle of Navarino, when the government were doubtless
+too much occupied to notice it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+DESCRIPTION OF DAMASCUS.
+
+
+It now became necessary that I should seek out and steadfastly follow up
+some fixed profession or calling in life. There was more than one motive
+that urged this measure upon me as a necessity: in the first place, my
+father’s resources had been sadly crippled by the piratical affair;
+besides, I was of an age when youths in Syria earn their own livelihood,
+and my education was sufficiently advanced to enable me to enter upon the
+duties of life. I could read and write my own language; and this was all
+that was expected, and much more than many youths of my age could boast.
+I had no thought then of acquiring a knowledge of foreign languages. To
+escape from the thraldom of school is always a source of great delight to
+schoolboys.
+
+As far as my own views went, I was bent upon going to Damascus; and
+though my dear parents opposed this wish at first, I gradually coaxed
+them into a consenting mood; and perhaps the greatest inducement for them
+to yield to my wishes, was the fact of our having a wealthy and
+influential friend, then residing at Damascus, who had been a
+fellow-_katib_ of my uncle’s, and who occupied a high post in the service
+of the Pasha.
+
+To this worthy man’s care I was confided; and, taking leave of my dear
+parents, and accompanied by their blessing, I left Beyrout, and proceeded
+to Damascus; a city which existed before the patriarch Abraham’s time,
+being referred to as a well-known place, in Gen. xiv. It was the chief
+city of Syria, founded by Rezin, and was sacked by Jeroboam II., king of
+Israel. It is still a comparatively thriving and populous city, and has
+those natural resources of climate, soil, and abundance of water, which
+cannot fail to perpetuate its fame as the garden of the East. Here,
+shortly after my arrival, I was fortunate enough, through the influence
+of our friend, to procure a lucrative and rising situation. At this
+place I remained a considerable time, delighted with its climate and
+beauty, as also well pleased with my office and with my associates.
+
+No pen can give an adequate idea of the delights of Damascus. The
+nearest approach I can hope to make to a truthful description, will be
+simply to depict what I saw and experienced; and this perhaps will give
+the stranger a better conception of the place than the flowery rhapsodies
+of many of those writers, whose experience, resulting from a visit of a
+few days, has been skilfully converted into some dozen chapters of post
+octavo.
+
+Damascus, like most Eastern towns, has nothing to boast of in the outside
+appearance of its rough unwhitewashed houses. Its streets are narrow,
+dark and intricate—crowds of people—caravans of camels—mules—and troops
+of donkeys—are all perpetually on the move, though not with that rapidity
+of locomotion so striking to a foreigner on his first visit to London.
+
+The stranger is struck dumb with amazement and disappointment. He has
+heard so much and he sees so little, that his first exclamation is sure
+to be, “Can this really be Sham-al Sharif?—the much praised Damascus;—the
+so-styled paradise of the East!” Yes, stranger, this is the justly
+celebrated Damascus; but the secret cause of your amazement lies hid as
+the kernel in the shell of a nut, the outer surface of which is the walls
+of the houses, while within lies concealed the sweet kernel. Open the
+street-door of rough and unpolished wood; and after carefully closing the
+same, as if by magic, the whole train of your thoughts and your
+discontentment will be diverted into another channel, and you will be
+struck with surprise and admiration, as the hidden beauties of the city
+will then burst upon your view. The same may be said with regard to the
+ladies of Damascus, notoriously the handsomest women in the East—Houris,
+whose bright eyes have afforded an endless theme for the poet’s song!
+Forms carefully enveloped in white and coloured _izars_—features muffled
+up and completely disguised by white veils! That man must needs be a
+magician who could identify even his own wife or sister from amidst the
+herd of ghostly figures continually flitting to and fro in the streets;
+though now and then some Eastern _akruti_ (coquette), may even here be
+found slily contriving to allow the light of her sparkling eyes to beam
+through this dark screen. Here also is the same mystery, and the beauty
+lies concealed within the outer shell.
+
+Now standing in a spacious quadrangle, exquisitely paved with marble, we
+take a hasty survey of all around us. In the centre is a square basin of
+clear crystal-like water, in which gold and silver fish are playfully
+swimming about; and in the middle of this _birkat_ a fountain continually
+throws its sportive jets to return in showers of pearls upon the many
+pretty little flowers that are planted round the borders. An arcade,
+supported by elegant columns, runs round three sides; and the fourth side
+of the quadrangle is occupied by the lower apartments of the house. The
+_corna_ (or cornices), are all ornamented with Arabic inscriptions, both
+in poetry and prose, being invariably Scripture texts. {21a} In little
+_fistakiares_, or parterres, walled in with marble slabs, a few choice
+orange and lemon trees are carefully cultivated; and it is difficult to
+say whether the sweet odour of their blossoms is not rivalled, or even
+surpassed, by the delicious fragrance of the roses and rich _Baghdad ful_
+(or dwarf jessamine), which so thickly cluster about their roots. Of the
+interior of such a mansion no one could have given a better idea than did
+His Excellency Mahomed Pasha, {21b} the late ambassador to the court of
+St. James’s, who, during his residence in London, gave several balls,
+having some of the apartments at the Embassy, so fitted up, as exactly to
+resemble the interior of a house at Damascus. These rooms were the
+leading topic of chit chat among the fashionables of London for many
+weeks afterwards.
+
+I must crave the reader’s permission to conduct him into one of these
+houses; and in so doing to introduce him to the _mistaba_, or alcove, in
+the centre, from the back of which two trellised windows overlook a
+spacious fruit garden. A low divan runs round its three sides, while a
+soft carpet covers the marble floor. The cushions, and even the divan
+itself, are of the richest velvet stuffs: and the numerous _étagères_ in
+the _mistaba_ are filled with costly glass-ware, crystal cups, and
+elegant porcelain vases. On each side is a tray, covered with a snowy
+napkin, the edges worked with gold and silver flowers, upon one are
+handsome _finjans_ in filigree, silver coffee-cups and sugar-basins; on
+the other, cut-glass saucers full of delicious candied sweetmeats, of
+which the orange-flower, violet and rose are the most fragrant. Both
+trays rest on low stools, the feet of which are elegantly carved. One of
+the adjoining rooms is fitted up with handsome _narghilies_, and long
+pipes with amber mouth-pieces of great value. In this room there is also
+a small _mangal_, or brazier, in which a charcoal fire is perpetually
+burning for the double purpose of boiling the often-required coffee, and
+of supplying the smokers with fire for their pipes, or _narghilies_.
+Servants are constantly in attendance in this room, and the arrival of a
+visitor is the signal for activity amongst them. Lemonade is first
+offered, and then smoking materials are put in requisition; after this,
+the sweetmeats are handed round; and lastly, coffee is served. {22}
+
+In a Pasha’s house, when people call on official business, the appearance
+of coffee is a quiet hint to be off, or in other words, denotes a
+termination of that morning’s visit. The visitor sips his coffee,
+returns the _finjan_ to the attendant slave, touches heart, mouth and
+head to the Pasha, and then bows himself out. The room opposite to this
+smoking apartment, is usually the dormitory of the servants; its outside
+appearance is handsome, and the closed door is tastefully carved and
+painted, but the interior is by no means inviting—heaps of mattrasses are
+piled up on all sides, and perchance even a small store of provisions for
+domestic consumption. In this respect this lumber-room is quite
+different to the usual appearance of things in Damascus, for the outside
+is the best-looking part of it. So much for the interior of the houses;
+now let us see how the ladies look when they are within doors, and have
+laid aside the _izar_ and odious black handkerchief. We will first
+describe the daughter of the host; a very fair specimen of her sex in
+Damascus. Her eyes are beautifully dark, her eyelashes, eyebrows, and
+hair, of a glossy jet black, the latter tinged with _henna_, hangs down
+her back and reaches nearly to the ground in a succession of plaits, each
+terminating with black silk braid, knotted and interwoven with various
+sized golden coins, her features (excepting the eyes) are all small but
+compact. The nose is Grecian, the lips cherry, and slightly pouting, the
+chin dimpled, the form of the face oval, and the complexion clear with a
+rosy tint. The bust and figure are unexceptionable, the arms comely, the
+wrists and ankles well turned, and the feet and hands perfect models for
+a sculptor; yet this is one out of the many nondescript beings that we
+encountered out of doors covered with _izar_ and veil. Her face and
+figure are well set off by the head-dress and Oriental costume. On the
+top of her head she wears a small red cap, which is encircled by a
+handsomely flowered handkerchief, and over the latter strings of pearls
+and pieces of small gold money are tastefully arranged in festoons. In
+the centre of her red cap is a diamond crescent, from which hangs a long
+golden cord, with a blue silk tassel, usually ornamented with pearls: her
+vest fits tight, and admirably displays the unlaced figure. In summer,
+this vest is of blue or pink satin, bordered and fringed with gold lace;
+in winter, cloth, edged with fur, is substituted for the satin; and over
+the vest is worn a short grey jacket, chastely embroidered with black
+silk braid. The vest is confined to the waist by a _zunnar_, in summer,
+of a silk Tripoli scarf, in winter by a costly Cashmere shawl; and from
+under this a long robe reaches to her ankles, and is divided into two
+long lappels, lined with satin, and fringed with costly trimmings. This
+latter robe partially conceals the _shirwal_, or full trowsers, which
+hang loosely over, and are fastened round the ankles; the tastey mixture
+of colors, and the graceful arrangement renders the costume a perfect
+study. Latterly, European shoes have been much used by the Damascene
+ladies, especially those gaily-flowered kid shoes, imported into Syria
+from Marseilles. This completes the young lady’s toilet, and her walk
+and action are as graceful as her figure and face are prepossessing; but
+beyond the _naam_ (yes) and _la_ (no) of conversation, you can seldom get
+a word from her unless you are a very intimate friend of the family, and
+then these young ladies are as fond of a little romping or quizzing as
+their more accomplished and more elegant sisters of the North. It is a
+mistake to imagine that the men of the Turkish empire are wholly excluded
+from any friendly intercourse with the women of those countries, a tale
+which has gained credence, and been perseveringly maintained by
+travellers, few of whom have ever had an opportunity of testing the truth
+of the report by personal experience. In fact, in my opinion, the
+Eastern ladies have really far more liberty than their Northern sisters,
+inasmuch as they are able when veiled with the _izar_, to go where they
+please. These _izars_ being of the same form and colour, it is almost
+impossible to identify an individual; and a man may pass even his own
+wife, without recognising her. In illustration of this, I am tempted to
+give the following story, for the authenticity of which I can vouch. The
+wife of a Mahomedan merchant, of Cairo, suspecting her husband, paid him
+a visit in his shop, accompanied, as is usual, by a duenna, both
+enveloped in the folds of their _izars_. During the visit, while
+inspecting some muslin, the lady contrived to indulge the amatory
+merchant with a glimpse of her large dark eyes, which completely
+enchanted her unconscious lord. An interview was brought about, through
+the agency of the old woman; and the astonished husband discovered to his
+dismay, in the charmer, the features of his piqued and angry helpmate.
+
+Amongst the higher classes of Christians in particular, every freedom
+exists in doors; young ladies not only shew themselves, but, after
+serving the guest with coffee and sweetmeats, they will seat themselves
+on the edge of the divan, and soon manage to join in the conversation.
+This state of freedom exists to a greater or less degree till the young
+girl is betrothed; then it is not considered decorous that she should be
+present whenever her intended bridegroom visits the house, neither should
+she hear his name mentioned. Even amongst Turks, and more especially in
+the villages and smaller towns of Syria, the young Mahomedan sees and
+converses with the future object of his love, until she attains her
+eleventh or twelfth year, she is then excluded from the society of men;
+but womanhood has already begun to develop itself in the person of the
+girl of ten or eleven years old in these climates where they are
+oftentimes wives and mothers at thirteen. Hence love exists between the
+young couple before the destined bridegroom urges his mother to make the
+requisite proposals of marriage. He loses sight of his lady-love as soon
+as she enters upon womanhood, though he may, by means of a third party,
+catch an occasional glimpse of her features as she passes to and fro,
+strictly guarded by matrons and old duennas; but not a single word or one
+bewitching kiss can the despairing lover hope for until she is brought
+home to his house, his lawful consort and partner for life; then, and not
+till then, commences the great seclusion of the ladies of the Turkish
+hareem. Even in country places and villages, though the newly-married
+bride may be strictly guarded for a year or two, this feeling eventually
+wears off, and the women mix in the every-day occupations of the field or
+in the garden, unveiled and undistinguishable from their Christian
+neighbours. Of late years especially much progress has been made in this
+branch of civilisation, arising from the example set by the sultan’s
+ladies themselves at Stamboul, and by the increase of European ladies at
+Beyrout and other towns in Syria, often travelling about the country, and
+who, though unveiled, enjoy a high reputation for virtue and honesty,
+convincing proof to the Turks, that the face, which is the mirror of the
+heart, was meant to be studied as an example, not as a concealed vessel
+of craft and guile.
+
+But to return to Damascus. We have now taken a brief survey of the
+court-yards and lower portion of the houses; and having been served with
+sweetmeats by the pretty young lady, we follow the matron of the house up
+stairs, to reach which we have to cross the yard, for there is no
+communication between the lower and upper story, and we must pass into
+the arcade for the steps. Now that we have reached the upper story,
+there is a room on either side of the _mistaba_ communicating with a
+gallery: and these rooms are the sleeping apartments of the family in
+winter. In summer they serve as dressing-rooms and as a receptacle for
+the mattresses, etc., that are nightly spread on the top of the house for
+the family to sleep upon; for in summer almost every one sleeps on the
+terrace, from the lord and master of the house and the lowest menial down
+to the very cats and dogs, whose instinct causes them to seek for
+coolness in the more elevated parts of the house. These rooms are gaily
+painted, but contain little or no furniture; a divan or so, a mirror,
+some flower-vases, and ladies’ nic-nacs; these constitute the furniture.
+Mounting up to the terrace, we come upon a belvidere, surrounded on three
+sides by a wall lofty enough to prevent the possibility of the tallest
+man accidentally over-looking his neighbour’s court-yard; on the fourth
+side there is a wooden railing, from which we command a view of our own
+court-yard, catching a glimpse of some of the famed gardens of Damascus
+in the distance.
+
+The bazars of the city, crowded with busy purchasers, present a bustling
+scene to the stranger. After Constantinople, Damascus claims precedence
+for the quantity and richness of the stuffs displayed for sale in its
+bazars from all countries in the world. Indian manufactures, spices of
+Arabia, coffee from Mocha, and endless European wares, are hourly
+bartered and sold. The scent of sandal-wood and myrrh, the _attar_ of
+Mecca, the Indian’s curry ingredients, the rich drugs of the apothecary,
+the smoky perfumes of the scented _narghili_ and pipe of _Jabaliy_
+tobacco; all these tend to confuse and stupify the bewildered European,
+who, pushing his way through the dense multitude, follows us into a
+native restaurant, where iced lemonade and sweetmeats are tantalisingly
+exposed for sale. The pleasant cold water, playing in artificial jets,
+turns a small tin watermill, hung with little silver bells, whose
+pleasant music first attracts the attention of the busy stranger. Here,
+seated for a moment, we enjoy the passing scene, and are vastly refreshed
+by the good things around us. Among these we may notice a pleasant
+beverage, and one very much in request: it is made by bruising a certain
+quantity of raisins, on which water is poured; the liquid is afterwards
+strained, and ice is added to render it cool. The place is crowded with
+a thirsty multitude, all eager to partake of this; but the swarms of
+flies that alight on one’s face and hands, make quiet and repose
+completely out of the question; so we are up again, and hurrying through
+the bazars towards the environs of the city. The day is too hot and the
+distance too great for a walk, so we hire horses and a native cicerone.
+
+The beauty of the environs of Damascus I can only compare to some lovely
+landscape of fancy’s brightest imagining, in which is combined every rich
+and bountiful gift of Providence—flowers, fruits, waters, hills, plains,
+rivers; a cloudless, blue sky; a rich, brilliant sunlight; and the
+delicious zephyr breathing soft freshness over the scene. It may well be
+believed by the zealous Mussulmans of Damascus, that Mahomed, {28} as he
+beheld it from the western hills, declined to enter into the city, lest
+the luxurious richness of this earthly Paradise might induce him to
+forget the existence of another and an eternal one. Skilfully did the
+prophet make a virtue of necessity in this instance. He well knew his
+incapability of besieging the city. I am inclined to think that, had it
+been otherwise, Mahomed was far too eager after earthly enjoyments to
+have relinquished so fair a spot.
+
+Our guide fails not to point out to us two branches of the Barrada,
+reckoned to be Abana and Pharpar, rivers which Naaman, the leper, thought
+better than the waters of Jordan. The lions to be seen at Damascus are
+numerous. Amongst these, we visit the _Bab il Gharbi_, where Tamerlane
+heaped up a pyramid of heads after taking the city by storm; then the
+monument called _Nabiy Abel_, marking, it is said, the identical spot
+where Cain slew his innocent brother. The name of the city is presumed
+by some to be derived from this event, the word _damm_ signifying
+“blood”; but I must confess, I cannot see much ground for this
+presumption. If any truth be attached to this tradition, our first
+parents cannot well have wandered far from the lovely Garden of Eden when
+this first tragedy occurred; and Eden must have been situated to the west
+of Damascus, as it is said, that the angel of the Lord guarded the east
+end of the garden—a proof that our first parents were sent out eastward,
+and could only endeavour to return from that side. Some natives imagine
+that the Hammah and Hums of the present day are on the site of the
+beautiful garden of gardens. The eastern gate of the city, now walled
+up, is where St. Paul is supposed to have been let down in a basket; they
+shew us the very house from which he is said to have escaped. The
+Christian cemetery, containing the tomb of St. George, and the arch where
+St. Paul hid himself on escaping from Damascus; the wide road beyond the
+cemetery, still highly reverenced as the spot of the miraculous
+conversion; all these were familiar to me during my long stay in this
+fair city; and I mention them here for the benefit of strangers visiting
+the spot.
+
+During the summer evenings, the friends, at whose house I was staying,
+gave frequent entertainments to their numerous acquaintances amongst the
+inhabitants of Damascus. On these occasions, the ladies of the different
+families honoured us with their presence, and occasionally some of the
+European consuls and merchants were invited. A description of one
+evening party will describe the whole. First, then, we will introduce
+the stranger into the house where the _farah_ (feast) is to be held.
+Women are busily occupied washing out and sweeping the court-yard; the
+flowers and other plants are fresh watered; the marble fountain is
+decorated with coloured lanterns and festoons of flowers; carpets are
+spread, and divan cushions ranged against the wall; the _mistaba_ is
+tastefully lighted, and a highly inflammable torch, composed of the fat
+wood of fir, resin, and other ingredients, is planted in each of the four
+corners. In the smoking apartment of the _mistaba_, preparations are
+making on a grand scale. Large bags of ready-washed and prepared
+_timbac_ are hung upon nails in the wall, to filter and to be fit for
+immediate use when the _narghilies_ are called into requisition. Tobacco
+pouches are filled. Two additional _mangals_ of charcoal fire, and some
+additional coffee-pots are prepared. Decanters are filled with _arraki_,
+wine, liqueurs, orange-flower, and rose-water; and the cut-glass saucers
+replenished with candied preserves; whilst two maid-servants and a boy,
+assisted and superintended by the mistress of the house, are busy
+grinding coffee and decocting huge bowls of deliciously-iced lemonade.
+In addition to all this, a side-table is groaning under the weight of
+plates of sliced oranges and picked pomegranates, with numerous other
+fruits, and a great variety of pastry. By the time all these
+arrangements are completed the night sets in; the whole yard is
+illuminated; the members of the household and the servants are busily
+engaged donning their best attire, and the company of hired musicians
+arrive. The music striking up, is the signal for the nearest invited
+neighbours to make their appearance. They arrive, the men clad in long,
+loose silken robes; the women enveloped in their white _izars_; but these
+latter are speedily thrown aside at the invitation of the lady of the
+house, who assists in helping the guests to disrobe, and then confides
+their _izars_ to the trusty care of the handmaiden.
+
+Now these veils are all of the same make, and they have no initials or
+other distinguishing mark. Notwithstanding this, no confusion ensues on
+the breaking up of a party as to identification, every lady is quick to
+recognise her own peculiar _izar_ from the mass of white sheets that are
+folded and piled one above another upon the divan in the upstairs
+dressing-room. Soon the whole party have arrived, and the amusements of
+the evening commence with vocal and instrumental music. After this, some
+of the gentlemen stand up and go through the graceful attitudes of the
+Syrian dance, then some others volunteer the sword dance, or the Bedouin
+dance, some of the married ladies then take courage; but it requires
+coaxing and threats to induce the timid damsel to display her skill.
+Persuasion being out of the question, some old gentleman gets up and
+pretends that he is going to dance instead of her, and he goes through a
+few steps till he comes close up to some girl that he has singled out
+from the circle. Seizing her arm with no very gentle force, he whirls
+into the centre of the yard, and meanwhile, some one who has watched the
+manœuvre, acts the same part by some other blushing maiden. These are
+confronted face to face, and there is now no escape, so they commence at
+first timidly and bashfully, but getting gradually excited by the music,
+they lose all this pretended bashfulness, and do their best to outshine
+each other; and truly there is rarely a more graceful sight than two
+beautiful Damascene girls, elegantly dressed and bespangled with jewels,
+displaying their graceful figures to the best advantage, to the slow but
+becoming measures of the dance. All the other young ladies now follow
+their example, and as each couple retires at the termination of their
+efforts to please, they are hailed with shouts of applause, and liberally
+besprinkled with rose and orange-flower water. The old ladies evince
+their approbation by a peculiar vibrating scream, produced by the voice
+passing through the nearly closed lips, whilst the under lip is kept in a
+continual tremulous state by the rapid application of the back of the
+forefinger to that feature. When dancing is over for the evening,
+sometimes games of forfeit are introduced, and promote much mirth,
+especially one game called “_Tuthun Tuthun_, _min Tuthun_”—a game of
+Turkish origin, as its name denotes, and which is played thus:—Every one
+in the circle takes the name of a bird, a tree, or a flower, whilst the
+king of the game goes round and collects in a handkerchief some small
+article from each one present. These he afterwards shuffles together,
+and then drawing one out, which he carefully conceals in his hand, he
+fixes upon some one in the circle, to whom he puts the question “_Tuthun
+Tuthun_, _min Tuthun_?” or, “Tobacco tobacco, whose is it?” The party
+fixed upon is obliged to guess, and he names some bird or flower which he
+heard some one call himself; if the guess is wrong, he has to hold out
+his hand and receive three stripes from a closely knotted handkerchief,
+and then the party referred to is next obliged to guess to whom the
+“_Tuthun_” belongs, and so on all round the circle till the right name
+has been discovered. Then the king resigns his post and handkerchief,
+and is relieved in office by him or her that made the right guess.
+
+After these games some one tells a story or recites a poem, a specimen of
+which I am enabled to introduce, literally translated.
+
+ I’ve gazed on many eyes, that shine
+ As bright; none ever yet so well
+ Have answered to my heart as thine,
+ My lovely, little, dear gazelle.
+
+ Oh give me but one smile, to tell
+ Of pity from those gentle eyes:
+ The thought shall ever with me dwell,
+ My love you did not all despise.
+
+ You move in beauty, while each charm
+ Subdues the more my amorous soul,
+ Until my fainting spirits warm
+ To strength beneath thy sweet control.
+
+ Hear then my prayer, to you alone
+ I bow—Let those who know me not,
+ Mock, if they will, at pangs unknown:
+ Your smile, though false, is ne’er forgot.
+
+ Mine eyes have often wearied long
+ To catch thine image passing by;
+ My saddened spirit grew more strong,
+ With thee one moment in mine eye.
+
+ But oh, if love should ever seek
+ Its seat within that beauteous breast,
+ Drive it afar; you see it wreak
+ On me its power to poison rest.
+
+ For bound beneath thy beauty’s sway,
+ My days in wasting sadness roll;
+ Though deaf to all, this dust can say,
+ You’ll meet in heaven, my parted soul.
+
+ Deign but my fevered heart to cool,
+ With but one passing word of hope,
+ Then shall my tortured spirit school
+ Itself, with all beside to cope.
+
+ But thought is useless, words are vain;
+ And my bewildered mind can fling
+ No effort from this maddening brain,
+ That can to thee its image bring.
+
+ For disappointed and beguiled,
+ I will not spend another sigh;
+ If you had never on me smiled,
+ No tear had ever dimmed mine eye.
+
+I will now endeavour to give my readers a specimen of an original Arabic
+tale in the familiar and colloquial style of these Oriental storytellers
+so famed for their amusing delivery and gesticulation.
+
+
+
+THE STORY OF THE JINN AND THE SCOLDING WIFE.
+
+
+Once upon a time, many years ago, when good people were rather scarce
+upon the earth, and such men as Noah had ceased to exist, there dwelt a
+certain poor man at the city of Aleppo, whose name was—I forgot now
+exactly what; but as his heirs might not take it in good part, we had
+best leave the name-part of the business alone altogether. However, he
+was fortunate enough to pick up with a pretty little wife, whose smiles,
+so thought the lover, were like the dew of Hermon; instead of which, they
+proved to be very mildew in every sense of the word. Yusuf—so was the
+man called, but, I forgot, we must not mention it—married the fair
+Ankafir. First week, honey and kaymak, and everything nice and sweet;
+second week, necklaces and other jewellery required; third week, funds
+low, dinners scant, temper sour; fourth week, squalls matrimonial from
+morning to night, from night to morning.
+
+“I tell you what it is, my dear,” quoth Yusuf, “either you must leave off
+blowing up, or I must take to bastinadoing: so just you choose the least
+evil.”
+
+To hear her talk of his inhumanity—to hear her talk of her rich relations
+and their influence with the Pasha—to hear her storm about broken hearts,
+and, what is a great deal more serious and matter-of-fact, broken heads—I
+say, to hear her jabber about all this, was enough to turn a quiet,
+sober-minded man into a misanthrope for life; but, to feel the argument
+in the shape of sundry manipulations, cuffs on the ear, scratches, etc.,
+this was beyond the endurance of a martyr; so thought Yusuf, so did his
+friends, and so did the evil counsellors that recommended him to resort
+to the use of water as an only alternative.
+
+Now, I don’t mean to say, mind you, that they suggested, that water, as
+an every-day kind of a beverage, was likely to be productive of very
+beneficial effects; neither did they hint that arraki and water, though
+this latter has often done the job, would facilitate in ridding Yusuf of
+his incubus. The river Euphrates was thought deep enough—a casualty in
+the upset of a boat, plausible. The desperate husband took the hint.
+One day he had a headache. Next day, change of air was thought
+requisite, and the water-side recommended. He went to Berijek thence to
+the river-side. A friendly old boatman hired him a boat and his own
+personal services, and
+
+ “Upon the stream they got ’em.
+ The wind blew high; he blew his nose,
+ And—sent her to the bottom.”
+
+She sunk, never again to rise, and the light-hearted husband leaped out
+of the boat and strolled along the river-side.
+
+By and bye, a damp-looking old customer, half Neptune, half I don’t know
+what you may call it, comes walking up the river, just as coolly as a
+ship of war might float on the ocean, and as fresh as though he had only
+just got in for a dip, instead of having floated ever so many hundred
+miles.
+
+“Salām alaykum,” says Yusuf, “I hope you’re well.”
+
+“Peace, thou son of a swine,” says the stranger; “What do you mean by
+sending her there to bother us?”
+
+“Who is it you mean, sir?”
+
+“Who,” said the fierce little man, who was nothing more or less than the
+Jinn, or Spirit of the Water, “why her, to be sure, that vixen of a wife
+of yours, who has completely defiled the water. Why there is no peace
+any more in those regions, and I have come forth to take a signal
+vengeance on you: now choose what death you like—hanging, tearing to
+pieces, or impaling.”
+
+“Sir,” said Yusuf, very humbly, “if you, who are possessed of so much
+power, cannot control her temper, how could I, a miserable mortal, hope
+to manage her?”
+
+There was so much truth in this assertion, that the Jinn calmed down
+amazingly. “My friend,” quoth he, “I see you’re a sensible man; you and
+I will henceforth unite our fortunes; so just have the kindness to step
+upon my shoulders, and we will be off like a lightning-flash for
+Baghdad.” Yusuf did as he was desired; and in the course of the next
+hour they were safely housed in Baghdad. Now the Caliph had an only
+daughter, who was reported beautiful as the morning star.
+
+“Would you like to have her,” quoth the Jinn, “for a wife?”
+
+“Who, me, sir; I am very much obliged to you,” quoth Yusuf; “but I don’t
+exactly see how that is to be accomplished.”
+
+“Oh, I will manage that part of the matter. You pass yourself off for a
+great _hakeem_. I will coil myself round the girl’s neck in the shape of
+a most venomous snake with two heads. No one shall be able to approach
+but you. You burn that bit of paper that I have written upon, and throw
+the ashes into water, and as it is demolished, so will I gradually
+disappear. The results will be the Caliph’s gratitude and his daughter’s
+hand and heart.”
+
+Yusuf was very willing to do as he was bid. The feat was accomplished.
+He married the girl and settled down for life in easy circumstances.
+Some time after, the Jinn fell desperately in love with the Vizier’s
+daughter, and displayed his attachment in the rather uncongenial form of
+a viper. Now the Caliph had borne in mind the notoriety of his
+son-in-law in this peculiar species of malady; so when the Vizier came
+moaning and complaining that Yusuf would not go and cure his daughter, he
+sent his compliments to Yusuf, with a silken cord and the alternative
+carefully tied up in an embroidered pocket-handkerchief—of immediate
+compliance with his will—an arsenic pill or strangulation. Yusuf had no
+remedy, though he had faithfully promised the Jinn never to intrude upon
+his felicity. He hit, however, upon a plausible excuse, and being
+introduced into the presence of the Vizier’s daughter, he bent over her
+neck and whispered to the Jinn—
+
+“I say, I’ve just dropped in to warn you that she is here in Baghdad, and
+looking for you.”
+
+“Why, you don’t mean her?” said the alarmed Jinn.
+
+“But I do though, sure as you are a ghost.”
+
+“I say, you wont say where I am off to, will you,” says the Jinn; “but if
+you will just pack up your salāms and any other light articles you may
+wish to send to your friends, I’ll be happy to be the bearer. I’m off.”
+
+“Are you, though?” says Yusuf
+
+“Yes I am,” said the Jinn.
+
+ “I’d rather stem an angry wave
+ Than meet a storming woman.”
+
+And so saying, he departed, and the Vizier’s daughter was healed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Refreshments have been served at intervals; and the smoking has been
+incessant, the married ladies, especially mothers of families, indulging
+in whiffs at the _narghili_. It is considered unbecoming in a young lady
+to smoke, and they never do so in public: but as they often serve the
+_narghili_ to distinguished guests, they are compelled to take some
+whiffs, as it is customary to present it lighted; and as this process
+does not appear to make them feel unwell, we naturally imagine that on
+the sly these young ladies frequently indulge themselves with a pipe.
+This, kind reader, is a fair sample of the manner in which the Damascus
+Christians amuse themselves during the evening.
+
+Once Mr. Farren, the then British Consul-General at Damascus, gave a
+grand entertainment to celebrate the king’s birth-day. To this, my
+relative and myself were invited, in common with several of the Mahomedan
+chiefs and Christian inhabitants of Damascus, who were utterly astounded
+at the magnificent display of European luxury. The rooms were decorated
+with flags of all nations, and splendidly furnished _à l’Anglaise_; and
+it was probably the first _fête_ of the kind that many of these people
+had ever witnessed. Every one was much charmed with the affable manners
+of the Consul, and impressed with the wealth and dignity of the nation he
+represented. And this kind of display was doubtless very beneficial in
+curbing the fanatical hatred of the Damascus Mahomedans towards _Kuffar_
+in general, which, at that time, raged to such a pitch, that no Christian
+could, without insult, traverse the streets of Damascus on horseback,
+especially with a white turban, till the interpreter of Mr. Farren
+ventured to break through the law. Amongst the Moslems in Syria, those
+only who are direct descendants of the prophet, or who have accompanied
+the Hajj or pilgrimage to Mecca, are permitted to wear a green turban,
+the other Mahomedans a white one. In the mountains, it is worn
+indiscriminately by all creeds. In Turkey, those born on Friday are
+entitled to wear green. This fact surprised an English friend at
+Constantinople, who seeing so many green turbans, and not being aware of
+this latter circumstance, observed, that the prophet must have a large
+family.
+
+During Ibrahim Pasha’s occupation of the country, he did much towards
+bringing the haughty Mahomedans to a due appreciation of their own
+nothingness; and the Damascus of to-day is very different to that of some
+twenty years back. Now Christians, and even Jews, in garbs and costumes,
+ride to and fro unmolested; and since the departure of the Egyptians, no
+small share of praise is due to the energy and exertions of Mr. Richard
+Wood, the present Consul, who is so much respected by the natives, as to
+be distinguished amongst them by the Turkish title of Bey, and who has
+successfully persevered in maintaining the privileges afforded to
+residents and strangers of all creeds, under the iron sway of Ibrahim
+Pasha.
+
+Whilst at Damascus, we heard the following story, characteristic of the
+manner in which Ibrahim Pasha sometimes administered retributive justice.
+A rich Mahomedan, who was an invalid, desired to make the pilgrimage to
+Mecca; but being prevented by his health, he offered to defray all the
+expenses of a poor and pious neighbour, provided he would undertake this
+journey for him. The poor man agreed to do so; and previous to his
+departure, he deposited his money, and the few valuables of which he was
+possessed, in a box, which he entrusted to the care of a friend, who was
+a banker. On his return from Mecca, the box was restored to him, but
+upon opening it, he discovered that the contents had been taken out. The
+man immediately went and laid his complaint before the Cadi, who ordered
+the banker to be brought before him. The accused, placing his hand on
+the Koran, swore that he had taken neither the money nor the rest of the
+property from the box; such a solemn declaration was considered
+unquestionable, and the poor man lost his cause. Being utterly ruined,
+he wandered about the city in despair; when one day, whilst seated
+outside the gate of Damascus, he observed Ibrahim Pasha on horseback. He
+immediately ran to him, and seizing his bridle-rein, stated his case to
+the Pasha, and fully described his sorrows and the ill-usage which he had
+received. Ibrahim Pasha listened to his story, and bestowing on him a
+few piastres, said, “After seven days come to me.” In the meanwhile,
+inquiries were made regarding the banker, and hearing that he had a son
+at a certain school, the Pasha went in disguise, accompanied by his
+secretary, and contrived to win the friendship and confidence of the
+master. One day, whilst the professor and his scholars were taking their
+customary siesta, the merchant’s son was carried off, and a young bear
+deposited in the place which the boy had occupied. When the rest awoke,
+great was their surprise at seeing such an animal amongst them; but their
+consternation was even greater, when after the lapse of a short time, the
+merchant’s son was nowhere to be found. The terror of the professor, and
+the affliction of the father, may easily be imagined. In his anger, the
+bereaved parent applied to Ibrahim Pasha, and demanded that the heaviest
+and most severe penalty should be inflicted on the master for his seeming
+negligence. “I know where your son is,” said the Pasha, “he is safe, and
+when you return the money and property which you have taken from the box
+of your friend, your child shall be restored to you.” The contents of
+the box were given up, and the banker was beheaded.
+
+The Roman Catholics have made comparatively few converts in Damascus, and
+the mysterious disappearance, a few years since, of Padre Tomaso and his
+servant, acts as a check upon the Jesuits, who mostly avoid those places
+where every security is not afforded, and where great temporal advantages
+do not accompany the success of their efforts at conversion.
+
+By the last published report of the British and Foreign Bible Society,
+the heart is cheered with the intelligence, that there are now
+established at Damascus three American and two Irish Missionaries. May
+their efforts be crowned with success; for Damascus is said to contain
+about 140,000 inhabitants, all, more or less, superstitiously ignorant
+and blind to the blessed light of the gospel!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+THE AMERICAN MISSIONARIES AT BEYROUT.
+
+
+After a residence of upwards of two years at Damascus, I was suddenly, in
+the spring of the year, recalled to Beyrout, this latter town having, in
+my absence, grown into considerable importance as a commercial sea-port.
+The traffic with European countries daily augmenting, had given an
+impetus to several enterprising young Syrians, who wished to acquire a
+knowledge of European languages; and as precedents were not wanting of
+this knowledge having led to preferment and subsequent opulence, my
+friends conceived the idea of placing me under the care of some of the
+excellent American Missionaries, for tuition in English and other
+European languages. It was not without reluctance that I obeyed the
+mandate of my friends, but as implicit obedience to their will was a
+primary consideration, bidding adieu to my many kind acquaintances, I
+retraced my steps, and in the course of a few days was once again in the
+bosom of my own dear family. The Americans have always numbered amongst
+their fraternity a medical officer; and it was mainly attributable to
+this fact, that myself, as well as many other Syrian lads, were happily
+blessed with the opportunity of receiving a good moral education. I was
+just entering on my sixteenth year when I first joined the American
+school; still too young to have any deeply rooted prejudices or ideas,
+though luckily old enough to appreciate the value of the opportunity thus
+afforded me, and consequently to endeavour to profit by it as much as lay
+in my power; but I must here explain how it happened that a physician
+was, through the blessing of Providence, the means of gaining for us so
+priceless a boon. When the American Missionaries first arrived in Syria,
+their advent gave rise to conjecture and suspicion among the natives.
+Bishops and priests warned their congregations to be on the alert, and
+guard against any efforts made by the Missionaries to convert the people;
+these admonitions and warnings were strengthened by reports spread by the
+crafty emissaries of the Pope, which were as false as they were
+calumnious. It was no part of Roman Catholic policy to countenance the
+good endeavours of these Missionaries to enlighten the natives of the
+country, by the establishment of schools and circulation of the holy word
+of God, as contained in Arabic Bibles, printed by the Church Missionary
+Society in London. Heretofore, the Papists had to grapple only with the
+superstitious but simple-minded followers of the Eastern Church. In
+Aleppo and Beyrout, they had already Syrian Roman Catholics, whose
+talents were employed to hinder the work of the Missionaries; but now
+they had formidable opponents to combat with—men as infinitely their
+superiors in wisdom and acquirements, as they were religiously steadfast,
+and persevering with all humility and patience to carry out their ends,
+for the accomplishment of which, they had left their distant country, and
+sacrificed home and every comfort. What the Roman Catholics had most to
+dread, was the establishment of Protestant schools, a measure which they
+clearly foresaw would tend to their ultimate confusion and defeat, and to
+overthrow which they left no means untried. Had not the Americans been
+possessed of great Christian patience, and matured sound judgment, they
+could not possibly have succeeded; but time proved their deeds and
+actions to be the purest; their morals, precepts, and examples, above
+praise; the blessing of God was with them, and they watched and prayed
+continually. At length an opportunity presented itself; and they, like
+careful sentries, availed themselves of it, and from that time up to the
+present date their schools have gone on progressing, and though they have
+not succeeded in making many converts, they have prevented much evil by
+their watchful care over the natives. Sickness is a leveller of many
+prejudices; and this is more particularly the case in Syria, where
+physicians are scarce and must be selected without regard to creed. From
+time immemorial the natives have placed implicit faith in the skill of
+Frank _hakeems_. Of late years I am sorry to say the Turkish empire has
+been inundated with numbers of soi-disant physicians, many of whom are
+political refugees and renegades, uneducated, and totally ignorant of the
+profession they have assumed, and have, by virtue of a piece of parchment
+(forged or purchased) and a few drugs, foisted themselves upon the notice
+of Syrians, as eminent practitioners; but their exorbitant charges and
+unsuccessful practice soon opened the eyes of the people as to their real
+position, yet not before these charlatans had worked out for their
+medical brethren so foul a reputation, that the natives have become
+suspicious of all new-comers, and would rather have recourse to the
+simple remedies prescribed by the village herb doctor, than entrust their
+lives to be experimentalised upon by foreign quacks.
+
+Apropos of this I may mention an anecdote that was related to me by Mr.
+Edward Zohrab, the respected Turkish Consul-General in London. This
+gentleman, once travelling in the interior of Turkey, had the misfortune
+to fall ill at a remote village where all hopes of succour were despaired
+of; whilst debating with the Sheikh of the village on the feasibility of
+despatching an express messenger to the nearest large town in search of
+medical aid, there arrived, most opportunely, a European traveller who
+had taken up his lodgings for the night at the public khan of the
+village; this grandee’s servant soon spread the fame of his master in the
+place.
+
+“He is,” said he, “the only learned Frank physician in Turkey. He has
+been _hakeem_ to all the great _pad-shahs_ of Europe, and is only
+travelling here to find some rare drugs and medicinal stones for the
+great emperor of Moscof.”
+
+“Is he?” said the delighted Sheikh, who had rushed to seek aid from the
+stranger. “Then for Allah’s sake bring him with all speed to my
+residence; for there is a _miri liwa_ dying there of fever; and if
+anything happens in my house what’s to become of me and my family?”
+
+The learned physician accompanied the Sheikh to his house, and in him Mr.
+Zohrab discovered, to his utter amazement and discomfort, the person of a
+once respectable Italian ship-chandler who had carried on business some
+years back at Constantinople, but who, subsequently failing, had donned
+the cap and cloak of a mountebank, and went about quacking the natives.
+It is needless to say that the discomfited doctor made a precipitate
+retreat from the village. But to return to the subject after this
+digression, the good done by the American physician was peculiarly
+instanced in my own family.
+
+A very near relative lay grievously ill at Beyrout—every effort of the
+native _hakeem_ to give him sleep proved abortive. Native astrologers
+came, and writing down the names and number of letters in each name of
+the patient and of his mother, multiplied and divided the sum total, and
+then tearing up the paper into fine shreds, swallowed the whole; but even
+this magic failed. After much discussion, it was finally determined,
+much to the disgust of my clerical uncle, to summon the American doctor,
+with whom or with whose brethren my family had heretofore carefully
+avoided intercourse.
+
+The doctor came—his mild gentle demeanour—his soft sweet words of
+consolation—his consummate skill—and his great talents as a man of
+learning—all these gained for him the deepest respect and regard, whilst
+his indefatigable attention to the invalid claimed our gratitude. We, in
+common with our neighbours, had entertained a vulgar prejudice against
+this good man, because it was generally asserted that wherever he could
+introduce himself under the cloak of his profession, to the sick and
+dying, he invariably profited by the opportunity to sow discord amongst
+the members of the family, by propagating doctrines strangely at variance
+with their creed. How false these accusations—how gross the calumnies
+heaped upon him, and through whose agency they had originated, now became
+clear to my family and their friends, and we now esteemed these kind
+Americans the better from a sense of having unjustly injured them, though
+it were only in thought. During my relative’s long and dangerous illness
+the doctor’s kindness was above praise—he never intruded a single
+question or made any reference to difference of creeds; but when the
+patient was convalescent, and when he saw that his visits were no longer
+necessary, on taking leave of us the doctor distributed a few tracts on
+religious subjects, for perusal amongst ourselves and neighbours, begging
+us at our leisure to do so. Had he done this before we had become
+acquainted with his intrinsic worth and merits, the chances are that
+these tracts would have been flung into the fire so soon as his back was
+turned. Now, however, we all felt persuaded that so excellent a man
+could never be guilty of propagating anything that was not good and
+moral. The result was that his gifts were treasured up and perused with
+attention, and whenever the doctor paid us a friendly visit he brought
+with him more delightful little stories; the print was so clear, the
+pictures and binding so pretty, that these tracts were much prized, and
+very soon much sought after. The children of the native Christians and
+those of the American missionaries became playmates; and the prejudices
+that had barred the doors of the American school-room against the former
+were gradually removed. It was at this period that I was sent for to
+Beyrout; and a few weeks after my arrival I was duly installed as one
+amongst other native students under the kind tuition of Messrs. Goodall
+and Whiting of the mission.
+
+I can never sufficiently express my deep sense of gratitude to these two
+excellent gentlemen. Under them I acquired the rudiments of a good
+general education; and as my knowledge of their language grew apace, I
+was afforded free access to such books, both amusing and instructive, as
+were well calculated to engraft a thirst after knowledge and develop the
+understanding. Generally speaking, all the native scholars, sooner or
+later, comprehended the wide difference existing between the Gospel
+truths as expounded in the Roman churches, and the true sense and
+comprehensive meaning of the Word of God as contained in the holy Bible,
+such as it was our custom to peruse, morning, noon, and night. We
+discovered that the Bible was a pleasant book, full of entertaining
+history and adventure, and abounding with illustrations of the marvelous
+mercy and love of the Creator for the creature; and that this book should
+be forbidden by the Romish priests at first appeared to us singular; then
+very wrong: and ultimately we felt convinced that in so doing they were
+guilty of a heinous offence.
+
+My education consisted in simple lessons, reading, writing, and
+arithmetic. However I made no great progress in worldly knowledge; but
+the precepts and examples of my kind instructors were, I trust, a good
+seed sown in season; they took root in the tender soil of childish
+simplicity; grew up with our growth and ripened with the years of
+maturity; and I humbly hope that, with the blessing of the Almighty, they
+may never hereafter be choked by those _tares_ sown by Satan—the sinful
+vanities and pleasures of this world.
+
+I remember, amongst the many anecdotes and incidents of those happy days,
+one which made a deep impression upon myself and my fellow-students.
+During the fruit season, as our school-house at Beyrout was situated
+amongst the gardens, we boys made frequent excursions in the night to
+pillage the neighbouring orchards of their superabundant loads of fruit;
+this was a common practice amongst all the lads of the town of Beyrout;
+and though doubtless very wrong, still fruit is so cheap and so plentiful
+that, even when detected by the proprietors, our punishment rarely
+exceeded a box or two on the ears, and many direful threats as to any
+future offence. Notwithstanding these threats, however, the fruit was
+too tempting to be so easily relinquished. {48} One night I sallied out
+with several other of my schoolfellows, and amongst these a young chief
+of the Druses, named Sheikh Ahmed,—a boy of undaunted courage, and who,
+in after-years, as I will explain further on, was the means of saving the
+life of one connected with the mission school. On this eventful night,
+sentries had been set to watch our movements, and we were all taken in
+the very act. The angry proprietor made us bear the brunt of all his
+losses; and so, after being very roughly treated and deprived of all our
+plunder, we were set free and permitted to run home again as best we
+could, with rueful faces and aching limbs.
+
+By some means a report of this transaction had reached the
+school-master’s ears by times next morning, though we were ignorant of
+this fact till breakfast-time arrived; then, with keen appetites, we
+resorted to our usual place at the breakfast-table, when lo! there were
+nothing but plates turned bottom upwards laid for such amongst us as had
+been engaged in the orchard-rifling affair. The rest of the boys, who
+were well supplied with dainties, were quite at a loss to account for
+this deficiency; but our guilty consciences plainly whispered to us the
+motives for this punishment; we therefore, sneaked out of the room,
+inwardly determined never to expose ourselves to such well-merited
+treatment again; and we firmly adhered to our resolution. This silent
+and mild method of punishing an offence had far more effect with us than
+rougher treatment; and the chances are that if we had been publicly
+upbraided, whipped, and tasked, we should not so quickly have mended.
+
+The Sheikh Ahmed, after having left school, whilst heading his own
+people, the Druses, during the war in Lebanon, one day suddenly came upon
+a group of angry villagers, who were about to wreak their vengeance upon
+an unhappy traveller who had fallen into their hands. The young Sheikh
+authoritatively interfered and swore by his beard no harm should be done
+to him. In the traveller, to his astonishment and joy, Sheikh Ahmed
+identified the Arabic professor of the mission school,—a simple, good
+man, to whose care and tuition we were all much indebted, and who, having
+been mistaken for a Maronite, was about falling a victim to mistaken
+identity. The name of this intelligent and excellent man was Tannoos
+Haddad, who had been converted to Christianity by the American
+missionaries, and has since been ordained, and is now assisting in the
+spread of the Gospel among his benighted countrymen. The head of the
+school at that time was Mr. Hubbard, who a few years after died at Malta,
+and many a young man now in Syria gratefully recalls his memory as having
+been the means of their education and advancement both in temporal and
+spiritual knowledge.
+
+At present, the following is a list of the missionaries at Beyrout:—Rev.
+Eli Smith, D.D.; Rev. B. Whiting; H. A. D. Forest, M.D.; Mr. Hurtes,
+superintendent of the printing department; Buttros Bistani, and Elias
+Fowas, native helpers. No one has ever replaced the late Mr. Winbolt,
+the much esteemed and regretted chaplain of Beyrout; and the Americans
+are about to remove to the mountains. Lord help the souls of the forty
+thousand inhabitants now living there, and put it in the hearts of the
+English people to establish schools and hospitals in this most promising
+field for missionary labour.
+
+Beyrout was, at the period of which I am now writing, under the Egyptian
+government, and the whole place was overrun by fierce Albanian soldiers
+and recruits, who were the terror of society. Many are the instances on
+record of the outrages committed by these men; but their treatment of the
+esteemed Mr. Bird, an American missionary, was perhaps the most glaring
+instance of unprovoked atrocity.
+
+Mr. Bird had a country-house in the environs of Beyrout, not far from
+where some of the troops were encamped. This house was surrounded by a
+large fruit-garden, and the produce was continually stolen and recklessly
+wasted; for which, however, there appears to have been no remedy. On one
+occasion, Mr. Bird’s native servant, seeing some soldiers pilfering from
+a fig-tree, threw a stone, which unfortunately took effect and slightly
+wounded one of them in the head. Hearing the uproar that ensued, and
+learning the cause from his servant, Mr. B--- immediately ran out with a
+few necessaries in his hands to examine and dress the wound. He was thus
+charitably occupied when a number of the man’s comrades who had been
+attracted by the noise, arrived upon the spot, and presuming it to be Mr.
+Bird who had wounded the man, made a ruffianly assault on that
+unoffending person, buffeted and bound him; and finally carried their
+cruel vengeance to such an extent, that they actually crucified him on a
+sycamore-tree, using cords in lieu of nails, but in every other respect
+blasphemously imitating the position of the figure upon the cross, as
+seen by them often in pictures and on crucifixes. Here, spit upon,
+slapped, and derided, Mr. Bird was left for some time suffering intense
+agony, both of mind and body, for the hot afternoon sun shone fiercely
+upon him, and the sharp stings of the sand-flies drove him almost to
+distraction; happily the servant had made his escape into the town, and
+flown to the residence of the consul. So flagrant an offence naturally
+excited the anger of all the Europeans in Beyrout; and consuls of every
+nation, accompanied by their retinue, all armed to the teeth, rode forth
+to the rescue. On seeing so large a cavalcade advance, the troops beat
+to arms; and affairs now assumed a most menacing attitude on both sides.
+A council was held among the Europeans; and it was speedily determined
+that a deputation should dismount and proceed on foot to the tent of the
+officer commanding the troops. This was according done; and the Pasha,
+having listened to the complaint, summoned the offenders into his
+presence, meanwhile issuing orders that Mr. Bird should be instantly
+released and brought before him, that he might speak for himself. The
+soldiers endeavoured to vindicate themselves, by asserting that the
+Franks had murdered a true believer of the prophet; and in proof of what
+they asserted, they had actually the audacity and folly to cause the
+wounded man to be carried on a few planks, hastily knocked together, and
+set down on the ground a few paces distant from the Pasha’s tent, where
+the impudent fellow so well maintained the rigidity of limb and face,
+that he really had much the appearance of a cold stiff corpse. The
+Pasha’s doctor (a European), however, was close at hand; and this officer
+was ordered to see whether the man was really dead or in a dying
+condition. The doctor, who was an acute man, soon saw how matters stood;
+and producing from his coat pocket a bottle of sal volatile, he
+dexterously applied it to the nose of the prostrate soldier, and with
+such good effect, that the man started up as though he had received an
+electric shock, and was seized with such a violent fit of sneezing, that,
+notwithstanding the serious position of both parties, it was found
+impossible to resist a simultaneous burst of laughter. The Pasha was too
+much enraged to join in this hilarity, which he speedily checked, by
+thundering out to his attendants to seize upon the ringleaders in this
+disgraceful riot, and have them hung on the same tree upon which Mr. Bird
+had been exposed—a threat that would doubtless have been put into
+immediate execution, but for the strenuous interference of good Mr. Bird,
+who, though still smarting from the severity of his treatment, was far
+too good a Christian to allow his enemies to be punished. He tried hard
+to beg them off altogether; but this the Pasha would not listen to, so
+the Europeans returned home to be out of hearing of the cries of the
+wretches as they underwent the severest bastinadoing ever inflicted,
+where flogging stops short of life.
+
+This account will appear a perfect fable to those who only know Beyrout
+in its present civilised state; and vast indeed must have been the change
+for the better, when ladies and children can wander about the place,
+singly and unprotected, at all hours of the day, and even, I may venture
+to assert, throughout the night.
+
+Since the expulsion of the Egyptians, in 1840–1, Beyrout has rapidly
+risen into considerable importance; and it may now be considered the
+chief entrepôt of Syrian commerce. At that period there were barely
+three or four European families established; and an English vessel only
+occasionally touched at the port; now, merchants, artizans, and
+shopkeepers, from all parts of Europe have flocked into the town; and
+scarcely a week passes by without three or more vessels arriving in the
+roads from different ports of Europe. The roadstead presents a gay
+appearance on Sunday, when all the different vessels display the ensigns
+of their respective nations, and corresponding flags are hoisted from the
+tops of the consulates on shore. English, French, Sardinian, Austrian,
+American, Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch, Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish
+ships are daily arriving at, or sailing out of the port, bringing
+manufactures from Manchester, colonial produce from London, sugar from
+Hamburg, assorted cargoes from France and Italy, and numberless
+requisites and necessaries from other parts of the world; whilst they
+export from Beyrout, silk reeled in the many factories situated in the
+immediate neighbourhood and on Lebanon, grain from the interior, raw
+silk, of which some portion is contributed from my native village, and
+lately an enterprising American has carried off ship-loads of our Beyrout
+and Syrian olive oil, timber, nuts, and specimens of dried and preserved
+fruits. The population is rapidly increasing, the wealth augmenting, new
+firms are being established, fresh channels of commerce discovered,
+houses being built, gardens enclosed, grounds purchased and planted, till
+the once quiet, secluded, and almost desolate-looking Beyrout, many of
+whose decayed and dilapidated ruins crumbled into dust under the severe
+shocks of the great earthquake of 1821, has been rapidly metamorphosed
+into a pleasant and flourishing town, replete with handsome buildings and
+luxuriant gardens, presenting, as viewed from the sea, one of the
+handsomest marine pictures possible for the pencil of the painter to
+depict, or the lay of the poet to celebrate.
+
+Please God, I hope yet to see the day when much loved Beyrout shall rival
+and surpass in every sense Smyrna, and even Stamboul. I often hear
+people in England talking about the beautiful azure skies of sunny Italy,
+and sighing for her shores; but I doubt very much if any part of the
+world can surpass some portions of Syria for climate or for beauty of
+scenery of every description. Those who are fond of romantic and wild
+scenery, have only to travel over the Lattakia mountains to gratify their
+tastes and inclinations. The quiet woodbine, the pleasant myrtle-shade,
+the jessamine and the rose, the murmuring stream and the lovely cot;
+these are to be met with all over Lebanon and North Syria—nature, in all
+her variety, collected, together—hills, valleys, rivers,
+fountains—gardens, ocean—snow and sunshine; all these may be included in
+one prospect surveyed from any of the many eminences in the immediate
+neighbourhood of Beyrout. As for cloudless skies, all Syria possesses
+this charm, and it has none of the drawbacks that Italy must lament—no
+Popish thraldom—no revolutionary crisis always on the eve of exploding,
+and always stained with innocent blood. The land, it is true, is the
+land of the Moslem; but the present enlightened Sultan has made it a land
+of perfect liberty to the stranger; and more than this, a land in which
+he enjoys privileges that he cannot hope for in his own native country.
+
+Beyrout is the spot for many reasons best adapted for missionary
+purposes; and I have long wished for the day when I may be enabled to lay
+before intelligent men a certain means of promoting the interests, both
+spiritual and temporal, of their Eastern brethren with little
+pains-taking or trouble to themselves, but with incalculable advantages
+to those whom they would benefit. Of this, however, more anon, in a
+chapter devoted expressly to the subject.
+
+A great advantage derivable to Europeans settling at Beyrout is the
+immediate proximity of the Lebanon range of mountains; for, though
+reputed an excellent climate, Beyrout is subject to great heats during
+the summer season, and it not unfrequently occurs that reckless strangers
+unnecessarily expose themselves to the fierce rays of the sun with
+nothing but a flimsy hat to protect their heads. The result is
+brain-fever and sometimes death. The latter is very unfairly attributed
+to the climate. One might as well say the same of London, where several
+instances of _coup de soleil_ have occurred during a late year; but as
+some constitutions cannot stand heat, however well sheltered indoors,
+these have only to pitch their tents, or to repair to a neighbouring
+village during the summer, a pleasant half-hour or hour’s ride from
+Beyrout. Here they may choose their own temperature, and not only this,
+but also gratify their own peculiar fancy with regard to scenery; and
+those who love field-sports will find endless amusement and occupation
+amongst the hares and partridges with which the neighbourhood is
+literally overrun.
+
+But the real fact of the case is, that the climate of Beyrout is
+extremely healthy; in proof of which I quote the general health of the
+natives and of those Europeans who have resided there long enough to
+adapt themselves to the customs of the country, who eat but little meat
+during the hot months, eschew spirits and inebriating liquors, avoid
+violent exercise or exposure to draughts and the intense heat of the
+mid-day sun; rise early, use frequent ablutions, take gentle horse
+exercise, and only use fresh and ripe fruit, and vegetables which are
+generally of the best. Even fish is considered by the natives as
+tantamount to poison during the months of July and August; and surely
+nature is bountiful enough in the supply of an endless variety of
+delicious fruits and vegetables to enable one to subsist without much
+heavy and unwholesome meat. Of the benefits arising from this diet and
+regimen, the robust natives of the villages give ample proof; their
+every-day meals consist principally of bread, fruit, vegetables, rice or
+burghal, and cold water; with a little cup of coffee and a pipe of mild
+tobacco after meals to promote digestion.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+EXCURSION TO CYPRUS.
+
+
+Quitting my kind friends the Americans in 1839, I was appointed by the
+Government to accompany a distinguished European, travelling on a
+diplomatic mission through the East. He was an affable, kind man; and
+though I have often since made the tour of the places we then visited, I
+never so much enjoyed a journey as in his pleasant and instructive
+company. Our plan of route was to first visit Cyprus and Asia Minor,
+then the northern towns and villages of Syria, and so travel southwards
+as far as the limits of Syria and Palestine. All things being prepared,
+we set sail from Beyrout late one evening in a small felucca, which,
+nevertheless, in fine weather, sailed remarkably well; and, upon the
+whole, we were pretty comfortable on board, the entire use of the boat,
+to the exclusion of other passengers, having been contracted for.
+
+The land breeze blew freshly all night, and at daylight next morning,
+when I staggered up, holding fast by the cords of the mast, there was not
+a vestige of Beyrout to be seen; indeed, my inexperienced eyes could
+discern nothing but sea and clouds, though the Arab _raīs_ (captain)
+positively affirmed, that what I mistook for clouds was the high land of
+Cyprus, looming right a-head. This was the first time in my life that I
+had ever found myself so far out at sea. At first the novelty of the
+sight, the lovely, cool, blue colour of the waves—the azure sky, tinged
+with a hundred brilliant hues, all harbingers of the rising sun—the fish
+sportively bounding into the air—the sea-gulls—the white sails of vessels
+in the distance; all these were a source of amusement and speculation for
+the mind; but when the sun rose, and its heat soon drove me to take
+shelter under the lee of the large mainsail—when I had nothing to do but
+to watch the little boat dipping and plunging into the water—when the
+smell of tar, pitch, tobacco-smoke, and fried onions, assailed my
+nostrils; then I was fairly and dreadfully sea-sick.
+
+I wrapped myself up in my _kaboot_, and only groaned out answers to the
+many kind enquiries made by my new friend and the assiduous boat’s
+company. These latter became an intolerable nuisance. First would come
+the fat, greasy-looking old _raīs_, with an abominable skewer of fried
+meat and onions in one hand, and a nasty, well-mauled piece of bread in
+the other. “Eat, my son,” he would say; “eat these delicious morsels,
+rivalling in flavour and richness the _Kabābs_ of Paradise; it will
+strengthen your heart.” A lizard or a toad could not have been more
+nauseous to me than was that man at that moment. Throughout the morning
+it was nothing but “_yar Ibn-i_, _koul_, _yar Ibn-i Risk Allah_” (O son,
+eat, O son Risk Allah). The heat grew intense towards midday. My
+European friend was almost as great a sufferer as myself. Happily the
+sea-breeze held on, and at eleven, P.M., that night our felucca was
+safely moored at Larnaca, the sea-port town of Cyprus.
+
+During our stay at Larnaca we were lodged with the English vice-consular
+agent at that time, a native of the island. He was an obliging old man,
+who did all in his power to make our stay agreeable. I was very much
+pleased with this place and its hospitable inhabitants; though only so
+short a distance from Beyrout, the change was very great. Here there
+were numerous carriages and other vehicles, drawn by horses and oxen; and
+a drive in an open carriage was both a treat and a novelty to me, who had
+never been accustomed to any other mode of locomotion than walking or
+riding on horseback. The Greeks and the Roman Catholics had neat
+churches here, and the loud chiming of the church bells on a Sunday was a
+clear proof that the Christians of this island enjoyed more privileges,
+and mixed more freely with the Turks than their brethren on the mainland.
+To such an extraordinary pitch is this neighbourly intercourse carried,
+that they intermarry with each other without any distinction of creed;
+the only part of the Turkish dominions where such a license exists. At
+Larnaca the houses were neatly built, and the streets cleanly swept;
+there were many pleasant rides and drives about the neighbourhood, but
+the climate is insalubrious and peculiarly ill adapted to European
+constitutions. The heat in the summer months is beyond endurance; and
+there are many salt-pits and marshes in the neighbourhood, which
+contribute greatly towards the sufferings of the inhabitants. I am sorry
+to say that what I saw of the natives, only helped to confirm me in those
+prejudices which exist against them in the East. The men are, for the
+most part, notorious gamblers and drunkards, and when drunk or excited,
+capable of any act of ferocity. Besides this, they are possessed of all
+the cunning of the fox, and are such lovers of mammon, that for the
+acquirement of wealth they would be guilty of any dishonesty or
+treachery, and sacrifice even the honor and virtue of their families, at
+the shrine of their household deity—gold. How painful to reflect that so
+many precious souls are thrown away for the want of better teaching and
+example; how sad to know that they have no opportunity offered them of
+throwing off the heavy yoke of sin, and of bursting the bonds of Satan.
+But their bishops and priests are a wicked set, full of conceit and
+sinful lusts, selling their own souls, as well as those confided to their
+care, for the acquirement of filthy lucre; and so long as they encourage
+the vices and dissipations of their flocks as a sure source of revenue to
+themselves (for however great the crime, absolution may be purchased, and
+slight penances imposed to expiate the most heinous sins); so long as
+such a sad state of affairs is permitted, there can be no hope of any
+amelioration in their degraded condition. I know not what the motives
+for it may be; but poor Cyprus has, so long as I can remember, been more
+neglected than other parts of the East by the Missionary Societies in
+England and America. This is much to be lamented, and may, I hope, soon
+be remedied. Doubtless for the first few years, missionaries would have
+almost insuperable difficulties to contend against; but, with God’s
+blessing, these would gradually disappear. The climate, though perhaps
+unfavourable to their constitution, would be favourable to their cause,
+and a skilful physician a boon to an island, where heretofore only quacks
+and charlatans have been within the call of suffering humanity. The late
+Doctor Lilburn has left a name behind him in Cyprus still reverenced by
+the poorer and sicklier inhabitants; his kind urbanity, his charity, and
+attention to the sufferings of the sick, and his skill as a physician,
+displayed in many extraordinary cures, all these contributed to work out
+for him a fame which would have gradually enlarged itself, and penetrated
+to the remotest corners of the island, had it pleased the Almighty to
+spare him yet awhile on earth; but he died, and we have every hope that
+his good Christian spirit is now reaping an eternal harvest of bliss.
+
+With all the crimes and vices attached to the character of the Cypriote
+Greeks, they are all staunch observers of the outward forms prescribed by
+the elders of their church. They are rigid observers of fast days, and
+the same man that would hardly hesitate to rob you of your life, would
+rather endure any torments of hunger, or any temptation, than break
+through the prescribed rules of abstinence. This, in conjunction with
+their frequent attendance at the confessional, clearly shews the implicit
+faith they place in the powers and virtues of their priests; and it
+appears to me that this strict command over certain lusts of the flesh
+might, if diverted into a proper channel, redound much to their credit,
+and these very ruffians become devoted Christians, when they have once
+learnt the instability of all human hopes, the impotency of man’s agency
+to avert a pending destruction, and to give all the glory to God, and no
+portion of it to princes or men.
+
+We visited severally Nicosia, the inland capital of the kingdom, Fuma
+Gosta, and a few other unimportant sea-side villages. Nicosia is a very
+handsomely built town, with beautiful gardens, and surrounded with
+strongly built fortifications. The streets are sufficiently wide, and
+for the most part kept in admirable repair; good roads are a rare thing
+to meet in the East. The _majlis_, or government council, of which the
+Pasha himself is president, is composed of Turks and Greeks; but the
+greater portion are Greeks. These are the wealthiest part of the
+community, and carry everything before them. In some caves attached to
+the houses of the most ancient Greek families, there are large supplies
+of old Cyprus _camandarea_, upwards of half a century in earthen jars.
+This wine is very expensive, and is only used as a luxury or for
+convalescent invalids. The supposed sites of Salamis and Paphos were
+pointed out to us; in the former place we are told, in the Acts of the
+Apostles, that Paul and Barnabas, who landed in Cyprus A.D. 44, preached
+Christ crucified; here also, Barnabas, who is reverenced as the principal
+Apostle and first Bishop of Cyprus, was stoned, being martyred by the
+Jews of Salamis: at Paphos St. Paul struck Bar-jesus with blindness, and
+the pro-consul embraced Christianity. The spiritual blindness of the
+people of the whole island is, alas! more appalling than that miraculous
+visitation on the blaspheming impostor. During our stay in the island,
+my friend was much occupied surveying and sketching, and from seeing him
+apparently so much attached to the elegant accomplishments, I first
+acquired a passion for drawing, but he had no time to instruct me; I had
+no means of improving myself; and so I was obliged to let the matter rest
+till a favourable opportunity should present itself.
+
+The prevailing language of the island is Greek—Turkish is also spoken,
+but Arabic is almost unknown in the interior; a strange circumstance,
+considering the proximity of Cyprus to the Syrian coast.
+
+After a month’s ramble in the island, we hired a native boat at Cyprus,
+and sailed over to Cilicia, a voyage which we were three days in
+accomplishing, owing to the then prevalent light winds and calms.
+Mersine, the seaport of Tarshish, or Tersous, the birthplace of St. Paul,
+and once a city of no mean repute, is a miserable little village
+consisting of some half a hundred huts, inhabited by fever-stricken,
+flea-bitten fellahs. There are many pleasant orange groves and citron
+walks in the village; and the water and shade, and verdure, form a
+picture of ease, and health, and comfort, that but ill accords with the
+really pestilential atmosphere of the neighbourhood. Small and
+unimportant as Mersine is in itself, it is of considerable importance to
+the commerce of Asia Minor, as being the nearest seaport to Tersous and
+Adana, whose merchants ship annually large quantities of linseed, wool,
+sessame, and cotton, the produce of the vast plains and valleys on either
+side of the Taurus range of mountains. From Mersine to Tersous is a
+distance of about four hours’ easy riding. We left Mersine the morning
+after our arrival an hour before sunrise, so that we reached our
+destination before the sun had waxed overpoweringly hot, or the
+horse-flies had become annoying. The beauty of the plains we rode over,
+their fertility and variegated aspect, and the whole scenery around us,
+is scarcely surpassed in any part of the world that I have visited,
+before or since. Troops of swift gazelles, and hares innumerable passed
+our track as we crossed the plains of Adana; whilst the surrounding
+bushes abounded with partridges, quails, and such like game; the marshes
+and lakes were literally teeming with water-fowl, from the majestic swan
+to the insignificant sandpiper and water-rail; foxes were plentiful, and
+so were jackals and hyenas; and the high range of mountains that
+encompasses the plain on all sides, save that which faces the sea, was
+plentifully stocked with chetahs, leopards, and other equally undesirable
+neighbours. The further we rode the higher the elevation of the ground
+became, and the land was well laid out in cultivation. Finally, we
+reached the really picturesque and vast gardens on the outskirts of the
+town, where we met occasional donkey-loads of the choicest fruits and
+vegetables. Heaps of cucumbers and lettuces were piled up near the
+garden-gates ready for transportation to the market, and the passers-by
+coolly helped themselves to some without any interference on the part of
+the owners or gardeners, so super-abundantly does nature there produce
+her choicest gifts.
+
+Tersous is in some parts handsomely built, in others it was disfigured by
+wretched hovels, whilst masses of putrifying vegetable and animal matter
+were all that met the eye or assailed the nostril. The inhabitants
+seemed equally distinct from each other. The occupants of the better
+sort of houses were stout, robust, and healthy-looking fellows, who lived
+upon the fat of the land, and inhabited Tersous only during winter, and a
+portion of autumn and spring, decamping with their families to the lofty
+and salubrious climates of Kulek Bughaz, and other pleasantly situated
+villages of the Taurus, as soon as the much-dreaded summer drew nigh.
+The inmates of the miserable hovels were, on the contrary, perfect
+personifications of misery and despair—sickly-looking, unfortunate
+_Fellahin_ Christians and Jews, who must work, and work hard too, to
+enable them to inhabit any home, however humble, and are, consequently,
+tied down to the place hot weather or cold, martyrs to fevers, dropsy,
+and a few other like horrible complaints common to Tersous at all times
+of the year, but raging to a fearful extent during the months of June,
+July and August. The fevers are occasioned partly from the miasma
+arising from the marshes in the neighbourhood and the many stagnant pools
+and gutters in the town itself, but chiefly from the frightful
+exhalations occasioned by the mounds of putrifying camels, cows, oxen,
+goats, horses, and mules, which annually die off from a murrain raging
+amongst them, and whose carcases are dragged to the outside of the city’s
+old walls, and there indiscriminately piled up in the dry ditches
+around—a carnival for jackals and glutted vultures who are so amply
+provided for, that even they and the packs of savage curs that infest the
+streets of the town, grow dainty in their pickings and become worthless
+scavengers from excess of feasting.
+
+This is a frightful but faithful picture of the suburbs of modern
+Tersous. The very streets are equally neglected; bestrewed with the
+disgusting remains of dogs, cats, and similar nuisances. Indeed, Tersous
+might be aptly termed a mass of corruption; and yet it has not been
+neglected by bountiful nature. The pleasant waters of the famed Cydnus,
+which murmur through the very heart of the town, render its banks on
+either side prolific with orange and lemon trees; the sweet odour from
+whose blossoms, the fever-wasted form, reclining in a pleasant shade on
+its banks, inhales with gusto, but alas! each breath is impregnated with
+the noxious poisons that float heavily on the atmosphere.
+
+The inhabitants are negligent and careless about what most vitally
+concerns their immediate welfare, vainly sweeping out and cleansing their
+own particular court-yards and houses, whilst the streets and the suburbs
+are teeming with the seeds of pestilence, and the dark night vapour is
+bestridden by direful disease and death. In Tersous there was only one
+resident Englishman, and that was the Vice-Consul, who had come there to
+die like his predecessors. There were no missionaries, not even a
+Catholic priest, though plenty of Italian and French Roman Catholics were
+attached to the various consulates, or employed as merchants and fishers
+of leeches. The native inhabitants, including a great many from Cyprus,
+were of all creeds, the greater part being Mahomedans.
+
+During our stay, we were the guests of a hospitable native Christian,
+Signor Michael Saba, a notable merchant of Tersous; but almost all of
+those whose acquaintance I made, are since dead, our worthy host among
+the rest. He, poor man, fell a victim to a virulent fever, that swept
+away hundreds besides himself, within the space of a fortnight. Sad
+indeed is the change for the worse in the Tersous of the present day, to
+what that town must have been in the primitive days of the Christian
+church, when it boasted of its wealth and commerce, and sent forth to the
+world such accomplished men as the great Apostle St. Paul; who, speaking
+of his native home, could call it _A city of no mean repute in Cilicia_.
+Our stay in Tersous did not exceed the time absolutely necessary for the
+completion of my friend’s drawings and surveys; and then, nothing loth,
+we turned our backs upon the place, crossing the large handsome bridge
+built over the river, and so speeded on towards Adana. The country lying
+between Tersous and Adana, was very similar to that which we had
+traversed between Mersine and the former place, a flat country
+imperceptibly rising as we advanced. Most of this country was more or
+less cultivated; and we passed countless Turcoman encampments forming
+large villages, the whole of whose population was almost exclusively
+occupied in making those carpets, for which they are so much renowned.
+The great brilliancy of colour and duration of these carpets have
+acquired for them a very just celebrity. The Turcoman dyes, brilliant
+yellow, green, and purple (the latter possibly the celebrated Tyrian dye,
+now lost to the world), are a secret, for the possession of a knowledge
+of which, the princely Manchester manufacturers would, I imagine,
+willingly loosen their purse-strings; but no one in the East has hitherto
+been possessed of sufficient energy and patient inquisitiveness to coax
+this secret from the breasts of these wild sons of the wilderness. _En
+route_ we passed many old wells which supplied these people and their
+flocks with water during the summer months. At some of these wells we
+stopped and begged water for ourselves and horses, which was cheerfully
+supplied by pretty maidens, who, like Rebecca of old, had come to the
+well to supply their father’s flocks with water.
+
+The town of Adana is of very unprepossessing aspect; its houses being
+very inferior, both in appearance and dimensions, to those of Tersous.
+They have, however, the advantage of being in a much healthier situation,
+though, owing to the inconvenient system of excluding windows, which
+might overlook the neighbours’ court-yards, the houses are insufferably
+close during the hot months; and have more the resemblance of miserable
+prisons, with well-secured doors, than of dwelling-houses. The Turks,
+who are seldom at home during the day, suffer very little inconvenience
+from the fact above alluded to. They, for the most part, have their
+little shops on either side of the prodigiously long street that
+constitutes Adana; and as these are covered in with thatch-work, and are
+moreover carefully watered by public water-carriers several times a day,
+the _Dukkans_ afford a desirable retreat from the mid-day heat. If their
+wives and families suffer inconvenience from the sultry closeness of the
+weather, they are at liberty to lock their doors and resort to any among
+the number of pleasant gardens that embellish the suburbs of the town,
+there to make _farah_, and enjoy themselves till the hour arrives when
+the _Dukkans_ are closed for the night, and the master of the house is
+expected home; then all scamper back to receive their hungry husbands,
+and if their dinner be not cooked, or be displeasing to their taste, to
+receive in addition a few lashes of the _corbash_, in the use of which
+they are pretty well skilled in Adana.
+
+The inhabitants are all Moslems—the most intolerably bigoted and
+ignorantly proud people to be met with in the whole of the Sultan’s
+dominions. No professor of another creed dares to settle in any quarter
+of the town, but have their houses scattered around its suburbs, and
+these are in general miserable, mean-looking hovels, tenanted by a
+wretchedly poverty-stricken people. Though Adana is the head-quarters of
+the Pasha of that Pashalik, no Europeans, consuls or merchants, reside in
+the place, from which fact alone arises the unbearable hauteur of the
+Turks of Adana, who are unaccustomed to mingle with more civilised
+people, or to bend to the yoke which the rules of official etiquette
+demand and obtain.
+
+Adana has often been the theatre of frightful convulsions and rebellions.
+The supreme power of the Sublime Porte has been on more than one occasion
+set at defiance, and though the results have been terrible, and the
+honour of the Sultan been vindicated in blood, time has worn off the
+impression, and rising generations have continued to grow up in insolence
+and insubordination, till the natives are so void of civility to the
+stranger, that, as a recent author truthfully observes, “it was difficult
+for any European to traverse the bazars, especially that part allotted to
+shoe-makers, without being disgustingly abused, and even spit at.” In
+all other parts, the residence of the Pasha is usually fixed upon as the
+residence of the consuls and consular agents; as, for instance, Damascus,
+Jerusalem, and Aleppo, the presence of European authorities being always
+a wholesome check upon the governors, who have an innate fear of them,
+which, notwithstanding their deadly hate and bigotry, they are compelled
+to acknowledge by civil words and acts; and if there is one thing that
+they fear more than another, it is the facility with which Europeans use
+their pens. “I will write to Stamboul,” is a terrible sentence to the
+conscience-smitten official. In it he pictures to his imagination an
+endless array of evils; first, the certainty of answers; then his being
+involved in a difficult correspondence, which is almost sure to
+terminate, if he does not speedily amend, in his recall, and possibly
+still more severe punishment.
+
+Adana had few inducements to hold out to us for remaining. The Pasha’s
+beautiful _serrai_ was the only object worthy of attention. This had
+been handsomely constructed, and was picturesquely situated on the banks
+of that rapid stream which flows through Tersous. Here also was a bridge
+of very fine structure, and apparently of very ancient date. The river
+itself was enlivened by a number of floating flour-mills, the rapid
+motion of whose wheels threw showers of clear water high up into the air,
+and gave a busy and stirring appearance to the, in all other respects,
+dull and monotonous town.
+
+We ventured as far north as Kulek Bughaz—that impregnable mountain-pass
+which Ibrahim Pasha so strongly fortified, and which modern travellers
+state, is now in a ruinous condition. Having, from this great elevation,
+taken a survey of the immense extent of plains both on the Konia and
+Adana side, we hastened to descend again, since the mountains were
+infested with lawless banditti, and the whole country around was in a
+very unsettled state, owing to recent warlike demonstrations between
+Mehemet Ali Pasha and the Sublime Porte.
+
+Reaching the plains, we once more skirted the river, till we arrived at a
+pathway, that led us, after two days’ weary journeyings, to the village
+of Ayas, on the northern side of the Gulf of Scanderoon; thus avoiding a
+passage through the territories of the descendants of that late notorious
+robber-chief, Kuchuk Ali Oglu, whose infamous name had spread terror far
+and wide throughout the Ottoman dominions.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+ALEPPO.
+
+
+Hiring an Arab boat at Ayas, we crossed over the Gulf of Scanderoon,
+passing close to the lagoons near that place, which are very dangerous
+for navigation; in fact, so much so, that in speaking of it we say in
+Arabic, “As dangerous as the Black Sea.” They, however, abound in fine
+turtle, such as would meet with a ready and profitable market in London.
+We landed at Scanderoon, a wretched and deserted village, surrounded with
+pestiferous marshes on all sides. The fever was at that period
+prevalent, so that our stay was limited to a few hours, during which
+brief interval horses were engaged to carry us to Antioch, and we partook
+of some slight refreshment at the residence of my friend, Suleiman Bey.
+
+Leaving Scanderoon, or Alesandretta, as it is also called, we rode for
+upwards of an hour through marshes, and hot, humid, unhealthy ground,
+till arriving at the foot of the Beilan mountains, we commenced their
+rather abrupt ascent, and after half an hour’s scrambling and hard work,
+reached an elevation from which we caught an uninterrupted view of the
+sea for many miles on either side, and so pushing forward, in three hours
+we reached the picturesque village of Beilan, which is situated on either
+side of a high mountain gorge, and is one of those natural barriers
+which, like Kulek Bughaz, afforded a stronghold in times of disturbance
+and war to several rebel chiefs, who from these fortresses set at
+defiance the invading armies from the neighbouring plains: but since the
+death of Kuchuk Ali Oglu, who so long reigned _in terrorem_ over the
+peaceful inhabitants of the plains, this class of people have been
+entirely exterminated; and Beilan, being on the highway from
+Constantinople to Aleppo, is now inhabited by a civilised though very
+poor class of Turks and Armenians, whose constant intercourse with
+Europeans and other merchants has tamed them into honesty, and taught
+them to respect and fear the prowess of all European nations, more
+especially the English, of whose fleets they have sometimes caught sight
+when cruizing about the Gulf, and the roar of whose cannon, echoing from
+mountain to dell, whispered to them not mildly of the power and valour of
+that surprising nation.
+
+From Beilan to Aleppo our journey occupied two days and a half; and as we
+travelled with our own tents, etc., we were entirely independant of such
+wretched accommodation as is usually afforded to travellers in the
+villages. Aleppo had much the appearance of Damascus when viewed from
+the distance. The bright foliage of the trees dotted with occasional
+domes and terraces—the lofty minarets, and the picturesque hill and
+castle in the centre, all contributed to render the tableau complete;
+besides which, around as far as the eye could stretch, the barren and
+desolate appearance of the mountains made Aleppo stand forth a perfect
+Oasis in a wilderness. On our arrival we were lodged at the Latin
+convent, but shortly afterwards removed to hired apartments in Jedida,
+the Christian quarter of the town, where I had the pleasure of forming
+the acquaintance of several wealthy native families.
+
+The Aleppines are with truth styled polished; they are innately gentlemen
+and ladies, from the highest to the lowest; the graceful walk—the
+well-bred salutation—in short, the whole deportment is such as would well
+become, and even grace, an English aristocratic _re-union_. During our
+stay, Signor Fatallah, a wealthy neighbour, who was likewise proprietor
+of a silk manufactory, married his son to the daughter of an opulent
+fellow-townsman; preparations on a grand scale had long been going
+forward, and amongst a vast concourse of friends and acquaintances
+invited to celebrate the nuptials, we also were included. The auspicious
+moment arrived, and we proceeded to Fatallah’s house escorted by a band
+of native musicians whom we met going there. On arriving at the
+residence of the bridegroom, we were ushered into a long room in which
+guests were seated from the door to the upper part according to their
+rank in life; the chief guests being seated at the head of the divan on
+either side of the master of the house, others were ranged lower and
+lower, the poorest guests were close to the doorway, and one or two so
+poor that they did not even aspire to a place on the divan, but squatted
+themselves cross-legged on the ground. On the arrival of a fresh guest
+the master of the house would rise and come forward to receive him; and
+if, as happened on some occasions, the guest from mock humility would
+seat himself in a position lower than what his actual rank of precedence
+entitled him to, an absurd scuffle would ensue, in which the master of
+the house would endeavour to drag the other higher up into the room, and
+the guest with many “Stāfer Allahs” (God forbid) and many false
+protestations, would pretend reluctantly to yield to the distinction
+proferred him, and so gain honour in the sight of the assembled
+multitude. Such scenes brought vividly to my mind our Lord’s parable
+about the meek being exalted; and rendered it clearly evident that this
+etiquette, so strictly adhered to by the natives of all Syria to this
+present hour, existed in the time of the Redeemer, and has been practised
+from the Patriarchs downwards. The very costume—the method of
+salutation—the seats arranged methodically for the guests, all helped to
+contribute not a little in forcibly recalling to mind several portions of
+Scripture often read with pleasure in my childhood.
+
+After we had arrived and taken our seats, the musicians struck up some
+popular and lively Arabic air familiar to the ears of us Syrians, as
+connected with many pleasant recollections of like spectacles and
+occasions. Numberless servants were busily occupied in handing to the
+guests sherbet, pipes, narghilies, and a large assortment of candied and
+other sweetmeats. As the visitors continued rapidly arriving they were
+sprinkled by the bridesman with essences, and the scene in the court-yard
+outside the reception-room assumed a more animated appearance. Groups of
+young men in gaily-coloured and picturesque coats, were seated in
+separate circles each possessing a _kānūn_ or other instrument players of
+its own, emulous to surpass the notes of his neighbour. Occasionally one
+or two men from each circle would stand up and go through the wild but
+elegant figures of the Bedouin dances, whilst groups of pretty and timid
+girls, collected in knots round the walls of the house, watched with the
+deepest interest the wrestling matches of their lovers or brothers, and
+joined loudly in the plaudits which crowned a successful competitor with
+the full-blown honours of championship. As the evening advanced, their
+hilarity increased; strings of servants with heavily-laden trays were
+seen occasionally crossing the court-yard, bringing quantities of
+confectionery and other gifts of the friends and relations of the
+bridegroom, for it is always expected that everyone invited will
+contribute in some small way to set up the young couple in life. To this
+intent the presents comprise all sorts of articles, such as
+handkerchiefs, caps, scarfs, wax-tapers, coffee, sugar, sweet-meats, live
+fowls, wheat, tobacco, etc. Every one gives his mite; it costs the donor
+only a trifle, but in the mass very materially assists the newly married
+pair. This custom of friends sending presents is also adopted upon the
+accouchment of a lady; her friends, the ensuing week, send her various
+small presents on trays, such as a couple of roasted chickens, or some
+delicate tit-bit, well suited to the palate of an invalid. These small
+civilities are productive of much good will, and really cost nothing, but
+I wonder what any fashionable lady in London would say, if a friend,
+under similar circumstances, volunteered to send her a dish of roast
+fowl. I understand that among the middle and lower classes in England
+such presents are not unfrequent, though generally in cases not entirely
+above the reach of want; whereas, with us in Syria, when we have any dish
+that is particularly nice, or any early fruit that is very choice the
+custom of sending a portion to our neighbours is observed by all classes
+alike, as a mark of regard and delicate attention.
+
+But to return to the gay nuptials of our friend, Fatallah’s son, the
+bridegroom was nowhere visible, neither were there any signs of the fair
+bride or her attendant nymphs. Towards evening, however, the Greek
+bishop, marshalled in by three or four priests, made his appearance, and
+as soon as his reverence had been saluted and seated himself, servants
+appeared with low round tables, which they set before the guests, and
+covering them with heavily-laden trays, removed the napkins, and
+displayed to the hungry multitude the very choice collection of viands
+that had been cooked for the nuptial dinner.
+
+Richly flavoured soups, aromatic dishes of minced meat, gravies, and
+numerous other delicacies, both sweet and sour, were all plentifully
+supplied; the first course consisting chiefly of light dishes, in which
+vegetables and curdled cream figured in abundance; the second, comprising
+various kinds of meat; the whole repast terminating with one vast pillaf,
+kids and lambs roasted whole, and stuffed with pistachio nuts, currants
+and spices. Before commencing dinner, a small glass of arraki {76} was
+handed round to the guests; afterwards, an abundant supply of wine of
+Lebanon was at hand for those who wished to partake of it.
+
+Whilst this festivity was going forward indoors, those outside were not
+one whit behind in enjoyment. Sheep cooked whole, were set before the
+musicians and singers; also huge platters of pillaf, which made two men
+stagger under their weight. At the conclusion of dinner, all the guests
+were served with basins and ewers of water, and very liberally
+besprinkled with rose and orange-flower water.
+
+During the repast, the bridegroom, who had entered the room very meanly
+clad, was conducted by young men, his companions, into an adjoining
+apartment, and there having been shaved and washed, then stripped of his
+beggarly rags, he was clothed in splendid bridal attire and led back into
+the presence of the guests. Here he passed round from one to the other,
+humbly taking their hands and kissing them, commencing with the bishops
+and priests, until he had completed the circle; he then received the
+blessing; after which he was permitted to seat himself upon a low chair
+placed in the centre of the room, and there, with his head hanging down
+from feelings of bashfulness, the young man awaited the arrival of the
+propitious hour. After some little delay, the distant sound of darbekirs
+and firing off of muskets warned the assembly that the bride had quitted
+her home for the last time, and was now being escorted with all the pride
+of Eastern pomp through the streets to the residence of her destined
+husband. The road chosen on this, as on all similar occasions, is the
+longest and most circuitous, in order to show that the bride is in no
+hurry to arrive at the house of her beloved. No sooner did the shouts
+and acclamations reach the ears of the young men congregated in the
+court-yards, than these as though inspired by martial music, leapt up
+from the ground and seizing upon their fire-arms, rushed out into the
+streets accompanied by drums and other instruments, to be in readiness to
+receive the bride’s escort, and exchange with them _feux de joie_ of
+musketry.
+
+Some servants of the house now carried into the reception-room a common
+low table which was speedily covered with snow-white drapery, and on
+which were placed the bishop’s mitre, prayer-books, chalices, censers,
+etc., all to be in readiness for the consecration of the nuptials. The
+bishop and attendant priests were speedily arrayed in clerical costumes;
+two small crowns of olive branches richly gilt and decorated with flowers
+were placed upon the table; and these arrangements had scarcely been
+completed, when the bride was ushered in by her attendant nymphs,
+followed by a concourse of friends and relations, having previously
+thrown some yeast upon the outer door of the house, and broken a
+pomegranate over it. The former signifying that she is to be attached as
+closely to her husband as the yeast adheres to the door; while the latter
+figures that she is to be as fruitful a mother as this fruit is full of
+seed.
+
+The bride was covered from head to foot in a long, loose veil, white as
+snow; but of sufficiently thin texture to admit of her features being
+partly distinguishable, and to show that over her under garments, which
+were composed of richly embroidered silks and satins, she was literally
+bespangled with costly gems; large festoons of gold coins encircling her
+head, and falling over her shoulders, reached to the ground.
+
+The priest now lighted the candles placed on the temporary altar: {78}
+deacons with censers in their hands went the round of the room,
+sprinkling benedictions on all around; the bride and bridegroom were duly
+arranged before the bishops and priests—a bridesman and a bridesmaid
+stood behind, their right hands resting on the crowns which had now been
+placed on the heads of the young couple about to be married; the chaunt
+commenced, and the serious part of the ceremony began. As the nuptials
+progressed, the bridegroom and bride three times exchanged crowns; then
+the rings were placed upon the fingers of both, and the bishop made them
+drink out of the same cup of wine; once did they make the circuit of the
+altar-table; and then amidst a shower of small silver coins,
+confectionary, and flowers, which fell like heavy rain all around, the
+bishop gave his blessing; and the young couple were bound by indissoluble
+ties from that moment forward, throughout life, as man and wife. The
+bride was shortly after led away into an antechamber, where she was
+partly relieved of her many cumbrous veils, and where such of the friends
+of the family as desired, had a fair opportunity of admiring her pretty
+face. She then stepped forth and kissed the hands of male intruders, in
+token of her humble submission to one of their sex from that day forward.
+{79}
+
+The latter part of the evening was passed much in the same way as the
+earlier part of the day had been; with music, songs, and dancing. What
+added much to the general effect, was the numerous variegated lamps and
+brilliant torches, that cast a light upon and added greatly to the
+picturesque effect of the various costumes; for by this time many of the
+European residents were present, in some instances accompanied by their
+ladies, and some of the military and other officers in the government
+service, dressed in their respective uniforms. It was near upon midnight
+when we withdrew, but the festivities were kept up till daybreak; and
+then the wedding-feast terminated, the gaieties of which had been
+sustained with hardly any intermission throughout the three preceding
+days.
+
+Such is the general custom amongst our people; and even the poorest man
+on such joyful occasions, as they occur only once in a lifetime, will
+spend his last piastre in endeavours to make the ceremony as brilliant an
+affair as he can. When a widower or widow is married, all these
+rejoicings are abandoned—the simple nuptial ceremony, in the presence of
+a few relatives, is all that is expected or in fact deemed decorous; and
+this arises from a very honourable notion, that the memory of a deceased
+partner should be held in religious esteem; so as to prevent the
+outraging the feelings of their relatives upon the occasion of entering a
+second time into that estate, by any display or great rejoicing: indeed a
+man or a woman is supposed to marry a second time purely from motives of
+mutual advantage; to be a helpmate to each other, especially in the case
+of a man having had a family by his first wife, in which case, the
+children are often unavoidably neglected, as the husband’s occupations
+preclude the possibility of his devoting much time or thought to their
+welfare. A stepmother in Syria is not a proverb of harshness;
+stepmothers in that country, in direct contrariety to what is believed to
+be the case in Europe, are affectionate and kind to their step-children;
+and even in such rare instances as that of a man marrying again, when his
+first wife’s children are already nearly grown up, even then perfect
+harmony reigns between the different members of the family, for filial
+respect is so powerfully inculcated in a young Syrian’s breast, that
+however young the stepmother may be, she is always looked up to and
+respected as the wife of a father; and with regard to the wife herself,
+the rule acts the same, only vice versa, the children are regarded as the
+children of her husband; and however many children a second wife may
+have, the first one’s always claim the precedence. It is indispensable
+amongst all Syrian families, that every member should know and keep his
+or her respective place, and quarrels on this score are seldom if ever
+known.
+
+We remained long enough in Aleppo to become familiar with all its
+quarters, Christian, Jewish, and European; the latter reside principally
+at Kittab, a pleasant little hamlet of neatly constructed houses, which
+dates after the period of the shocking earthquake in 1822—an event which
+so alarmed the populace that for many weeks afterwards they thought
+themselves insecure within the walls of the city, many of the massive
+houses, though built upon arches, having given way, carrying everything
+before them, and crushing alike inmates and passers-by in the streets.
+Aleppo is perhaps the most fashionable town in the East, not even
+excepting Damascus. The fashions change there as often almost as they do
+in Paris, and all the young ladies are as particular about their dress as
+the more aristocratic belles in the North; the result of all this is,
+that an Aleppine lady proves usually an expensive wife; but I must
+acknowledge, that their extreme neatness, the snowy-white veils, and
+gaily-coloured tunics, add much to the picturesque appearance of the
+gardens on festive days, when the whole population throngs these
+favourite places of resort as much for air and exercise as from a wish to
+shew themselves, as it is only on this day many of them have an
+opportunity of escaping from the narrow and confined streets of the city.
+
+“Shamm al Hawa,” is a favourite expression of Aleppines, for they dearly
+love the open country, and delight to rove amongst trees and flowers;
+Aleppo is a country I should have great hopes for with regard to the
+success of missionary labour. The Aleppines are too courteous to mock at
+or hold in derision the tenets of any man, or to interrupt a man when he
+speaks, nor indeed to listen inattentively. Many amongst them are
+naturally intelligent: and did any schools or institutions exist from
+which their families might derive any clear and indisputable
+benefit—education for their children—instruction in any arts or
+sciences—physic and medical attendance for the sick and poverty-stricken
+(they are by no means an ungrateful people), their attention would most
+assuredly be arrested by such attentions to their own and their
+townsmen’s wants, and they would be brought to reflect that such kind
+benefactors must be trustworthy people, and people that love truth.
+
+The last Report of the British and Foreign Bible Society gives the
+population of Aleppo to be 90,000 souls, of which number 19,000 are said
+to be Christians of various denominations, and yet there was only one
+Protestant missionary on the spot; the Rev. Mr. Benton having been
+obliged to revisit America for the benefit of his health. When it is
+considered that at Aintab, a considerable town, only a day distant from
+Aleppo, the efforts of a single missionary, the Rev. Dr. Smith, of the
+American mission, have been crowned with unprecedented success, and that
+chiefly amongst the Armenians, of whom there are also numbers established
+in Aleppo, it cannot but be regretted that so favourable a field should
+be neglected. The fact of this missionary being also a physician is
+another proof in support of what I shall endeavour to prove in a
+subsequent chapter, namely, the advantages derivable from the wide
+establishment of Medical Missions, a subject which I trust, under the
+Almighty blessing, will attract the attention of the Christian
+inhabitants of Great Britain.
+
+Few towns in the East can rival Aleppo in a commercial sense. Every
+resident is more or less of a speculator; and thousands have lost and
+gained a fortune in the failures or successes of mercantile speculations.
+Even the women are imbued with this spirit of enterprise; and the female
+broker is no inconsiderable person in a merchant’s appreciation. She
+penetrates into the restricted precincts of the harem, and displays, to
+the admiring gaze of its fair secluded inmates, jewels and tinselled
+fineries, such as would barely merit a moment’s pause or attention in the
+over-crowded bazaars, but when presented by themselves, prove an
+inducement to purchase; and this is a means of no small profit, above all
+to the poorer class of speculators who are obliged to restrict their
+purchases to their very limited means. Even children hawk about minor
+commodities, and little urchins who have scarcely a rag to cover their
+nudity, will offer to the stranger carefully hoarded up bits of glass and
+old coins picked up in some of the most deserted and ruinous portions of
+the city, hoping that amongst them a valuable antique may invite his
+attention.
+
+We left Aleppo after a prolonged stay, and mounting our horses joined a
+caravan loaded with produce for the supply of the Antioch market. The
+first few hours, after leaving Aleppo, our road lay over a rocky pathway
+difficult to ride over, bleak and monotonous in the extreme; but soon the
+glorious plains of the Amuk spreading before us as far as the eye could
+reach, burst like a splendid panorama on our gaze. We rapidly descended
+to their level, and the remainder of our first day’s journeying was over
+a flat country, whose natural prolific soil, interspersed as it was at
+short distances with small tributary streams, would have been a sight to
+gladden the heart of any emigrant who should seek for rich pasturages for
+his cattle—abundant harvest of wheat and barley—rich orchards and
+valuable plantations.
+
+All these doubtless once existed at a time when the ruined cities,
+portions of whose past grandeur still remain to gratify the curious
+antiquarian, were in their zenith; indeed tradition reports the whole of
+this extensive plain (which it took us two days’ hard riding to
+traverse), at its narrowest breadth, to have been once an extensive
+forest, in some parts almost impenetrable. Now there is hardly a tree to
+be seen; immense pasturages and fields stretch on every side, and numbers
+of horses, cattle, and sheep, browse on the luxuriant herbage. We
+arrived on the third day at the Gessir il Haded, or iron bridge, where we
+first crossed the Orontes, and after skirting the river for a few
+minutes, struck off on a wide pathway leading over a mountainous country,
+richly dotted with trees, and verdant with wild thyme and lavender.
+Small herds of gazelles, startled from their resting-places by the echo
+of our horses’ tramp, darted across our pathway, and sought refuge on the
+further side of the many lofty hills that now surrounded us. The
+Orontes, in its meandering course, occasionally took a sweep and glided
+close under our elevated pathway; by and bye we closed in with the river;
+myriads of water-fowl and other game flew over our heads. There was a
+stately old ruined castle, on a bleak isolated hill; we passed under its
+deserted battlements, and in ten minutes afterwards were riding through
+the streets of the once famed city of Antioch.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+ANTIOCH AND LATTAKIA.
+
+
+In Antioch our stay was, much to our regret, comparatively short; for who
+would willingly quit so fair a spot—a perfect Paradise, and rich in the
+fairest gifts of nature? A healthy climate, a cloudless sky, luxuriant
+fruits and flowers, meadows and pasturages, high hills and valleys; the
+mountain and the plain bespangled with trees, the wild myrtle and other
+fragrant shrubs, intersected by a glorious river; the earth producing
+nourishment for droves upon droves of cattle, and domestic as well as
+wild fowl; the river abounding in eels, and the distant sea furnishing
+delicious fish of fifty varieties. What more could mortal man on earth
+desire? All these can Antioch boast of, besides the many pleasant
+reminiscences connected with the spot. Its primitive Christian Church,
+the great success that crowned the early efforts of those two devout and
+indefatigable apostles, Paul and Barnabas;—the city, the birthplace of
+St. Luke, the beloved physician, where originated the name of that faith,
+which is our pride, our boast, and the source of all our hope; these are
+ties which render Antioch, in the devout Christian’s estimation, second
+only to Jerusalem. When we were at this place many parts of the once
+famous walls of the city were still in perfect condition, a wonderful
+proof of the skill and persevering labours of those brave but alas
+unsuccessful men who strove permanently to plant the cross in the
+countries where it had first been raised, and had once triumphantly
+flourished. Though through so many succeeding generations the city has
+been subjected to every imaginable disaster, fire, invasion, revolt, and
+the terrible effects of violent earthquakes, yet nature still smiles upon
+the surrounding country as brightly as ever she shone in the zenith of
+her city’s glory. Its palaces and other magnificent buildings, the
+handiwork of mortal man, had, with man, all crumbled away to dust. Its
+millions of inhabitants have dwindled down to some few thousands, and in
+this respect the wreck is complete; but the fairness of the morning, and
+the freshness of the breeze, the beauty of the prospect, the flowers, and
+fruits, and trees, these continue the same as in the wealthiest era of
+the Seleucidæ. Man and man’s triumphant domes are nowhere to be seen; a
+few crazily built houses, and a few straggling inhabitants, are all that
+now constitute the modern town of Antakia.
+
+Yet, notwithstanding all this, the vast extent of land in the
+neighbourhood of Antioch which is devoted solely to the cultivation of
+mulberry-trees, and the great space of still uncultivated ground which
+might be devoted to a like purpose, gives ample assurance that, in the
+one article of silk alone, an immense revenue might be derived, and a
+very large population be maintained in easy, if not affluent,
+circumstances. As matters stand at the present day, the silk produced
+yields no inconsiderable revenue; but the plantations are the exclusive
+property of a few independent proprietors, who, themselves reaping more
+than a lion’s share, leave to the great herd of the inhabitants a paltry,
+miserable pittance, which can scarcely find them the very barest
+necessaries of life, although Antioch is acknowledged to be perhaps the
+cheapest place in the known world.
+
+Whilst at Antioch, we visited the water-mills now occupying the site of
+the once celebrated groves of Daphne, and thence returning, took horses
+and proceeded to Suedia over the selfsame ground once familiar to Paul
+and Barnabas, when those two apostles, like ourselves, went down to
+Seleucia to take shipping from thence. The whole space intervening
+between Antioch and Suedia, a distance of nearly twenty miles, is
+occupied by luxuriant mulberry plantations and orchards of delicious
+fruit-trees; fruits that are peculiar to this neighbourhood having been
+introduced and cultivated with great care, through a series of many
+years, by a philanthropic English gentleman, who distributed cuttings and
+grafts throughout the district.
+
+At Suedia we remained two days, the guests of this hospitable gentleman,
+visiting in that interval—the site where stood the pillar of Simeon
+Stylites—the delightful country seats of Mr. Barker at Bitias and
+Huderbey, and lastly, the splendid ruined tunnel and aqueduct, besides
+other remains of the once wealthy Seleucia. This done, we hired an Arab
+felucca, which, sailing out of the Orontes, and crossing the Gulf of
+Antioch in the short space of seven hours, carried us over to Lattakia,
+the ancient Laodicea.
+
+Arrived at Lattakia, we became the guests of the hospitable brothers
+Elias. Signor Mosi Elias is the British vice-consul at that port; and
+seldom have I had the happiness of meeting with a more worthy man; but,
+in fact, the whole of his family are distinguished for their great
+courtesy and hospitality to all strangers. This eulogy may fairly be
+extended to all the native agents established along the sea-coast of
+Syria; although, unfortunately, their humble efforts are not always duly
+appreciated. English gentlemen, accustomed to every comfort and luxury
+that wealth can command, little imagine the expense and trouble incurred
+by many of the humble Syrian agents in their efforts to afford
+hospitality to British travellers. Receiving no salary, and yet
+compelled to maintain a certain position to support the dignity of
+office, the means in their power must necessarily be limited; but as far
+as house-room goes—a bed, a dinner, breakfast, and supper, according to
+their limited means; these are always cheerfully offered to the
+traveller; and the poor consular agent, who has almost insuperable
+difficulties to contend with, so as to enable him to impress the local
+authorities with a due sense of the importance and respectability of his
+office, is glad to avail himself of the opportunity of having an
+Englishman as guest under his roof, to convince the neighbours and his
+fellow-townsmen of his influence with the British. I have known
+instances where a poor consular agent has even parted with some valuable
+family relic, so as to enable him to afford a hearty welcome to some
+Englishman of distinction; while, perhaps, the only return he has met
+with, was to be treated with supreme contempt and derision, even to his
+face; or to have his name bandied about to the world in some gaudily
+bound book of travels, in which authors have seen fit to make sport of
+men, who, in all probability, sacrificed a night’s rest and comfort to
+contribute both towards them in a strange land.
+
+While on this subject, I may record one instance which came to my
+knowledge, and which was really too scandalous not to be made known.
+
+A party of travellers, for I cannot style them gentlemen, five or six in
+number, were travelling through Syria and Palestine, accompanied by a
+retinue of servants with tents, baggage, and every luxury and comfort
+that money could command. Arriving at one of the seaport towns, where
+dwelt an English agent (a good old man, who was a Syrian by birth), they
+pitched their tents outside of the town, and sending their insolent
+dragoman to the agent, informed him that it was their intention to remain
+a couple of days in that neighbourhood, and commanded him to procure them
+guides to shew them over the town and its vicinity, so that they might
+see all that was worth being seen. To this, the agent really assented;
+and “on hospitable thoughts intent,” dressed himself for the occasion,
+and, preceded by his _cawass_, went to the travellers’ tents to pay his
+respects, and to offer them any little services in his power. Finding
+that they required no further aid, he then told them, that although they
+had placed the possibility of being useful to them beyond his reach, he
+trusted that they would not wholly deprive him of the pleasure of their
+company; and invited them to dine at his house at an early hour the next
+day. This invitation the travellers, who had barely treated the old man
+with civility, thought proper to accept, and the next day they duly made
+their appearance.
+
+Meanwhile, the poor consul, whose stock of crockery was rather scant, and
+whose knives and forks mustered but a meagre show, endeavoured, by buying
+or borrowing, to make things as tidy and complete as he possibly could;
+but it often happens, that in such small villages as that in which the
+agent resided, and where European vessels seldom resort, European
+merchandise is very rare; and such a thing as a plated spoon or a knife
+and fork, is not to be met with for love or money. This was precisely
+the case in the instance before us; and the poor agent was put to his
+wit’s end in discovering that, after every effort, his stock of knives
+still fell short of the necessary complement by a knife. In this
+dilemma, he was quite at a nonplus what to do; till, finally, he resolved
+to throw himself upon the known courtesy of an Englishman, and explain
+exactly how matters stood; begging of the guests on their arrival to let
+their servants fetch from their own tents such implements for table use,
+as were indispensably requisite for the accommodation of all.
+
+No sooner, however, had the poor agent explained the state of affairs by
+means of the interpreter, than the guests, one and all, fell into a
+violent passion, and asked the consul how he had dared to insult them by
+asking them to dinner, when he was not in a position to treat them as
+became persons of their rank and distinction. Saying this, they swept
+from the room in a towering passion, leaving the poor agent lost in
+amazement how to account for such conduct from persons who styled
+themselves English gentlemen, and overcome with shame and vexation that
+his neighbours should have been witness to such an outrage.
+
+This anecdote requires no comment. Happily such instances of gross
+misconduct are of rare occurrence, but it plainly exemplifies the absurd
+system followed by government in placing native agents all over Syria and
+Turkey, to whom they do not afford means of maintaining a position which
+ought to command respect.
+
+The present system of native agencies is altogether a mistake; they
+should be entrusted only to those who have previously had a European
+education. Most of those now employed have been reared in dread of the
+very name of the _local powers_, and are inefficient in cases of
+controversy between subjects of two nations.
+
+I may here be permitted to deviate a little from the subject of Lattakia
+and my travels, to make a few remarks on the uses and abuses of the
+protection-system, so largely practised all over Syria and Turkey.
+
+The abuses of the system are very great; this is much to be regretted,
+because in the main the arrangements existing between the Ottoman
+government and European powers with regard to this particular subject,
+viz., that of the privileges enjoyed by Europeans to protect a limited
+number of persons actually in the service of consuls, merchants, and
+others, is a very great boon to Europeans. Were it not for this
+privilege, Europeans residing in Syria would find it a very difficult
+matter to procure good and efficient servants at moderate wages.
+
+In some parts of Syria, where every creature-comfort or necessary is
+extremely cheap, the lower orders, who are generally of an indolent
+disposition, would much prefer remaining idle for one-half of the year to
+engaging in any occupation which might make it incumbent on them to go
+through a certain portion of daily labour; and this they can afford to
+do, as their habits are frugal, and the amount gained in one day by a
+labourer, will suffice to support himself and family for three days.
+This applies equally to the fellah or peasant employed in cultivation.
+His portion of the silk harvest is sufficient to maintain him till the
+wheat crop is gathered in, when he earns with his scythe a sufficiency to
+maintain him in idleness till the olive and grape harvests arrive, and
+then he is either paid in cash or allowed a certain quantity of wheat,
+oil, wine, aqua vitæ, _dibis_, {92} raisins, etc., as recompense for his
+labour. Of this store he lays by a sufficiency for the winter; the silk
+and the surplus of the wheat, etc., he either sells or barters for other
+household requisites, such as clothing, butter and charcoal. He brings
+his own fuel from the mountains, and, if he be at all a careful manager,
+can keep an ass or a mule of his own to carry goods and passengers to and
+from the nearest towns and villages. Thus, with a very small amount of
+labour, the peasant of Syria can afford to have an idle time of it, were
+he not in terror of government taxes; for although the system of taxation
+is fairly and justly arranged, and in reality the sums levied are small
+in proportion to the income, still there are understrappers, besides
+their own Christian Nazir and Sheikhs, who peculate to a large extent
+under the plea of some false necessity. This induces the peasant gladly
+to embrace any opportunity that may offer of entering into the service of
+a Frank; for from the hour of his employment he is, to all intents and
+purposes, the subject of another power; he is exempt from taxation, and
+the officials durst not intrude themselves upon the privacy of his
+household, under penalty of being at loggerheads with the consuls and
+pashas, and possibly of being exposed to the ignominy of the bastinado.
+
+Now the very possession of this power to protect is sufficient to raise
+an Englishman much in the estimation of the Turks, and other natives of
+Syria; and were this privilege used with moderation, and not abused, it
+would become, as I have already stated, a boon to Europeans.
+
+The great misfortune is that there is no existing line of distinction
+which might separate the herd of Syro-European inhabitants, from those
+really and virtually Europeans by birth and education. These two
+distinct classes are as separated from each other as light is from
+darkness, yet unfortunately possessing like powers and like privileges,
+the latter class, who fill the posts of consuls, merchants, clerks,
+missionaries, _doctors_, and a few tradesmen being strictly gentlemen in
+their principles.
+
+The former class consists of men, whose paternal ancestors were European,
+and who scrupulously claim their rights as such. Most of them have
+intermarried amongst their own peculiar class, so as to form a distinct
+and new race of inhabitants in Syria. They have inherited from their
+fathers in a lineal descent, their names, nationality, and wealth, and in
+many instances their consular dignity. Some few have inherited the
+consulates without proportionate means to support the dignity, and the
+mass of this class being linked together by marriage ties, almost every
+man is grandfather, uncle, cousin, nephew, father, brother, or son, or
+brother-in-law to his next-door neighbour. It is with this latter class
+in particular that the abuse of the protection system prevails to an
+alarming extent.
+
+There are in Syria few or none of that troublesome class of Europeans
+that so infest Constantinople, Smyrna, and Alexandria. I allude to
+political and other refugees: these find no occupation or encouragement
+in Syria, where there are no established gambling-houses, or other dens
+to which they can resort.
+
+To be classed as a European merchant in Syria, requires no very great
+outlay of capital; take, for example, the following instance:—
+
+Messrs. A--- and Co., a wealthy English firm, established at Beyrout or
+elsewhere, receive annually from three to four thousand bales of British
+manufactured goods, and they ship goods to an equally large amount. They
+necessarily require the services of not only household servants, but
+cashiers, native writers, and warehousemen. These men are very properly
+admitted to the privilege of temporarily enjoying the protection of a
+British subject.
+
+Perhaps the next-door neighbour to these gentlemen is a Mr. B--- who is
+also styled a merchant, because once, or perhaps twice in a twelvemonth,
+he goes through the form of receiving a solitary bale of goods; this
+bale, in all probability, being sent through his hands as a blind, by
+some wealthier relative, to impress the local authorities with an idea of
+his wealth, and to enable him to establish his claim to rank as a
+merchant. This man pretends to find occupation for as many people as the
+solid English house does, and every man in his employment, and under his
+protection (perhaps the cook only excepted) is a man of substance. It
+would be a problem hard to solve by any uninitiated traveller or stranger
+how to account for this; how this man who is notoriously poor, and whose
+miserable single bale of manufactures would barely counter-balance the
+expenditure of his household for a single week, can manage to support so
+vast a retinue, find occupation for so many people, and keep up such an
+appearance of state; but the secret lies in a nut-shell. In his case
+_the master is the hireling of the servant_. His warehouseman alone (who
+drives a thriving trade in the wealthiest bazaar) pays him perhaps, sixty
+pounds sterling per annum, to enjoy the privilege of European protection;
+so that at this rate, and as the list of protected is a long one, the
+Syro-European merchant is in the receipt of an excellent income; he keeps
+his horses and gives grand entertainments; but as far as conscience or
+honesty goes, these are two hard words not to be met with in his
+vocabulary.
+
+This is _infamous_! But even this is a trifle in comparison to what is
+done by such as are invested with authority as consuls. These have a
+long list of protected, and the consular secretary, and consular
+interpreter has each his own peculiar protégées; and so the number goes
+on gradually downwards, until we arrive at the consular _cawass_; and
+even he can boast of one or more on his list! Thus, in lieu of a consul
+only protecting a _dozen or fourteen_ individuals (which is about treble
+the number he is, strictly speaking, allowed), he in fact is the indirect
+means of affording protection to many _scores_ of individuals; each of
+whom is a dead loss to the treasury of the local government, and a
+burthen to his poorer and less fortunate brethren; and this because the
+exact amount of any given tax to be collected being beforehand fixed by
+the government, the Nazirs and Sheikhs allot to each man of the village
+his own portion; and what should have fallen on the shoulders of the
+exempted or protected man, is obliged to be made good by those persons
+who are subjected to the tax.
+
+But this is not all: the subordinate officers in some of the European
+Consulates are guilty of equally gross offences. The consuls are apt to
+be wheedled over by the cunning dragoman or chancellor, so completely,
+that at last they place a blind and implicit faith in their every word or
+suggestion, and will on no consideration listen to complaints often too
+justly founded against these upstart Jacks in office.
+
+An instance of this occurred to myself; but I will, from delicacy to the
+high official functionary mixed up with it, omit names of places and
+persons. A native Prince was anxious to call upon one of the
+authorities, but being unacquainted with the English language, he desired
+me to accompany him; not but that the authority in question was furnished
+with an interpreter, but simply, because the Prince wished, for privacy’s
+sake, that the matter of conversation should be confined to ourselves,
+without any prying ears being witness to the interview. Arriving at the
+office, we were shown in; but the interpreter ushering the Prince into
+one apartment, showed me into another. I was quite amazed at this
+strange proceeding; but as the dragoman immediately left the room, I
+could only conjecture that it was some sly trick of his own, or a wish to
+be possessed of information regarding the Prince. Whichever motive it
+might have been, the visit terminated without my seeing the official. On
+a subsequent occasion, however, I alluded to the matter; the dragoman was
+taxed with it but stoutly denied having done anything of the kind,
+declaring that I of my own accord had gone into another room. I brought
+the Prince’s testimony to prove how the man had slighted me; but
+notwithstanding all this, that lying interpreter had gained such
+influence with this high official, that our testimony was discarded, and
+he was believed.
+
+After this long digression from the subject, for which I beg the reader’s
+kind forgiveness, I now resume the thread of my narrative.
+
+The staple produce of Lattakia is wheat, silk, and tobacco; {97} of
+these, the latter is considered to be the finest and most odoriferous in
+the world; and the _aboo reah_, though many attempts have been made to
+introduce it into other parts of Syria, will grow nowhere else save at
+Jabaliy, a small seaport town about three hours to the southward of
+Lattakia, and where one of the Sultans who had abdicated his throne and
+withdrawn himself from the world, built a magnificent mosque, and some
+other public edifices, the ruins of many of which are still to be seen,
+and which render “Sultan Ibrahim,” as Jabaliy is from these circumstances
+styled, an object of interest to travellers.
+
+Whilst at Lattakia a messenger arrived with dispatches, summoning us to
+Beyrout. On our arrival there, we found the combined Austrian, Turkish,
+and English fleets anchored before the town, to compel the Egyptians to
+evacuate Syria, and at the invitation of my friend, Ahmed Bey, I paid him
+a visit on board of the Turkish Admiral’s vessel, who despatched me on a
+secret mission to the mountains; whilst there I was filled with
+consternation by hearing a report that Ibrahim Pasha, having obtained
+intelligence of my movements, had set a price upon my head. I
+immediately burnt all my papers, changed my dress, and travelled in
+disguise of a beggar, expecting every moment to be recognised and
+beheaded. At last I reached a village called Arrayah, near the road to
+Damascus; here I had some relations, and I immediately went to them for
+shelter.
+
+After I had been there a few days, the news of it reached the governor,
+and he immediately sent two _cawass_ to arrest me; but the servant of my
+friend, having received information that I was being pursued, hid me in
+the harem apartments, which are accessible to none but the head of the
+family, a priest, or a physician; here I was secreted, and on their
+arrival, they even sent in a priest to the harem to ascertain if I was
+there; but the vigilance of my protectors evaded them even in this, and I
+was let down from the window in a basket into the garden, from whence I
+escaped to a cave close by till midnight; I then made my way back to my
+relations, who told me of the close search the _cawass_ had made, and the
+disappointment they experienced at not finding me.
+
+A few days after this an English traveller passed through the place, and
+understanding a little of his language, I offered my services to
+accompany him to Beyrout, under the title of _turjaman_; and according to
+the laws of Turkey, I no sooner joined him than I was under British
+protection. By this means I reached Beyrout in safety; and finding that
+the Capitan Pasha had gone to Acre, I joined the English forces, and
+then, for the first time in my life, witnessed the consummate skill and
+accuracy with which the troops carried on the warfare.
+
+Nothing could have been more ingenious than the plan of attack. The
+Turkish troops, arriving in steamers and vessels of war, were during the
+night, with the utmost precaution, transhipped to the British vessel; and
+next morning, those vessels, supposed by the forces on shore to carry
+troops, were towed down by the “Geyser” and other steamers towards
+Ras-Beyrout, which occasioned the whole of the Egyptian forces to
+evacuate the town, and take up a strong position in that neighbourhood.
+When the steamers perceived this, they altered their course and proceeded
+to Dog River. Here a few Albanians had been stationed to oppose them.
+These were mown down by the heavy batteries of the frigates, who landed
+their troops and took unmolested possession of the place. Soon after
+they were joined by Beschir Kasir, with a body of men from the mountains,
+whom the English commandant supplied with arms, etc. And thus the
+victory was won.
+
+I remained with the army several weeks, and assisted in the operations
+against the Egyptians; and after the conclusion of peace, accompanied an
+English officer and a numerous body of attendants to Tripoli, or as we
+call it, Trablous, the beautiful orange garden of the world. People talk
+so much about St. Michael oranges; for my part, I have never seen any
+orange in the world whose flavour and scent could equal that of Trablous;
+besides which, they are so plentiful and cheap, that although all the
+sea-coasts, and the interior of Syria and Palestine, and even parts of
+Asia Minor, are supplied with boat-loads and camel-loads of oranges from
+Tripoli, there is still abundance left to cause them to be a cheap as
+well as a delicious luxury. Our duty here, as elsewhere, was to see that
+the people of the place and the neighbourhood were well governed—to hear
+complaints and bring them in a proper form before the local authorities,
+to the end that injured parties might obtain redress—and to enquire into
+and make notes of everything that occurred.
+
+The natives had christened my friend “Abu Rish,” which being literally
+translated, means “the father of a feather”; they gave him this name
+because he always sported a large feather in his cocked hat, which was
+seldom set aside in his journeyings. I have no doubt but that many of
+the ignorant and half wild natives of some of the villages that we passed
+through looked upon this hat and feathers in something the same light as
+the native of the savage island regarded that of Captain Cook,
+considering it to be a very strangely formed head, an abnormal
+amalgamation of the cock with the man.
+
+We were lodged at Tripoli, with the Signor Catsoflis, the British
+vice-consul, at whose house we experienced much hospitality. Signor
+Catsoflis and his brother, the Austrian vice-consul, are twins; and so
+strong is the resemblance between them, that it is barely possible for a
+stranger to distinguish the one from the other when apart. The wife of
+Signor Catsoflis, the Austrian vice-consul, is the sister of Signor
+Elias, the vice consul at Lattakia. I never before, or since, have set
+eyes on any woman that could rival her in beauty, and her disposition was
+as sweet as her face was lovely. This lady made a complaint to me on
+behalf of a fellow Christian, a poor peasant from the mountains, who
+accustomed to rove about free, and in such dress as his fancy dictated,
+amongst his own villagers, unwittingly made his appearance in the streets
+of Tripoli, dressed in a light robe of a greenish colour, which excited
+the wrath and indignation of some fanatics, who, saying that none but
+descendants from the prophet could be permitted to wear any colour
+approaching to green, tore the garment from the poor fellow’s back, beat
+and otherwise shamefully ill-treated him; this was the instance of the
+complaint. “And now,” said the fair advocate, addressing herself to me,
+“let me see if you and your friend are really possessed of such influence
+and authority as you vaunt yourselves of, by causing the wrongs of this
+poor unoffending man to be redressed.” If anything could have spurred me
+to the deed, it was certainly being thus taunted by one of the handsomest
+women in the world. I immediately agreed to comply with her wishes, and,
+girding on my sword, took the Cawass, and proceeded direct to Yusuf
+Pasha. Before going, however, I had donned a pair of Wellington boots
+that a European friend had lent me; and the brilliant emerald green of
+whose tops must have inspired the gaping Moslems in the streets with the
+utmost envy and rage.
+
+I entered into the presence of the governor without even announcing
+myself, an abrupt proceeding which not a little disconcerted His
+Excellency, who began anxiously to question me, hoping that I was the
+bearer of good, not of unfavourable, news. I stated the case to the
+governor, and he replied very civilly, that he regretted that it did not
+come within his jurisdiction, being purely a question of creed. The
+Cadi, however, being summoned to the divan, tried to shuffle out of the
+matter as best he could; he said it was decidedly against the law of the
+prophet, and that the aggressor merited the punishment. I asked him
+whether this law was intended to bear only upon certain individuals, or
+upon all. The Cadi replied, upon all; then, said I, if such be the case,
+you had better take me and give me a bastinadoing, for as you see,
+pointing to my boots, nothing can be a brighter green than those are;
+this completely confounded the Cadi. I insisted on having the men
+bastinadoed on the very spot where the outrage had been committed; the
+consequence was, that after some little demur, I carried the day, and
+they were punished as I had directed. This event occasioned immense
+sensation amongst the inhabitants, and impressed them with a due notion
+of the influence and power of the British nation, tending to keep the
+more fanatical within bounds, since no rank, or grade, or riches could
+protect them from punishment if they once gave offence to Europeans.
+
+After remaining some time at Tripoli, we proceeded to visit the famous
+cedars of Lebanon. There are at present eleven of these celebrated
+trees, seven of which are supposed to have existed from the time of the
+building of Solomon’s temple. I need scarcely inform my readers how
+conspicuously these trees have figured in Scriptural metaphors. The
+prophet Ezekiel speaks in glowing terms of their beauty. Again, Isaiah
+seems in a remarkable manner to predict their extinction, “The rest of
+the trees of this forest shall be few that a child may write them.” How
+literally has this prophecy been fulfilled!
+
+On my last visit to Syria I found the priest, to whom the charge of these
+trees is committed, had planted a number of seedlings, though with what
+success I have not yet heard. A church has also been built on the spot.
+The Arabs believe they were planted by the hands of the Almighty himself,
+and there are innumerable traditions connected with these trees, which I
+hope to give an account of in a future work. One of these cedars is of
+so great a diameter, that a monk actually hollowed it out and formed a
+sort of room in which he took up his abode. The trunks are covered with
+names of travellers, many of a very old date cut out with the knife.
+
+From the cedars we proceeded to the wonderful ruins of Baalbec; but these
+have been often described by various travellers. After a beautiful
+journey of two days over verdant hills and down deep ravines, we reached
+Damascus, where I was pleased beyond measure to meet my connexions and
+acquaintances. At this time several European officers were travelling
+over Syria in all directions on diplomatic missions. These endeavoured
+to ascertain the exact capabilities of every town and village, as regards
+the number of men that could bear arms; the number of cattle, horses,
+etc.; the arms and quantity of ammunition, and the proportion that the
+Moslem population bore to the Christians. Of these gallant officers, one
+was sent to Damascus, and whilst residing there, he was very much
+captivated by the beauty of the Moslem ladies. On first arriving, this
+gentleman was well received by the grey-bearded authorities; but he soon
+lost caste; reports and complaints were of every-day occurrence; this
+white stranger would persist in making love to the Moslem ladies, and the
+Moslem girls would persist in making love to him. This was a dreadful
+state of affairs; but this was not all, for even the old Armenian
+patriarch was roused into wrath by discovering that a timid little
+Armenian girl was actually head over ears in love with the
+feather-crowned stranger, or rather with his money. There was no
+standing this. The people said it was a crying shame, and reported it to
+the Cadi, who complained to Nedjid Pasha; and the Pasha, who was one of
+the old school, and a right down Frank hater, complained to the
+Commander-in-Chief of the forces at Beyrout. The Commander-in-Chief sent
+several officers up to Damascus to investigate the case, which was tried
+in open divan before the Pasha, who summoned such as had charges against
+the gallant officer to appear before him. The charges brought against
+him were twofold. First, that he had endeavoured to subvert the minds of
+the people from rendering due homage to Ottoman authority, by asking them
+such significant questions as, for instance, If the English or the French
+were to lay siege to the country, with which of the powers would you
+side? The second charge was, the heinous offence of making love to some
+score of Turkish damsels, besides the Armenian lady in question. The
+first charge was thrown out as frivolous, absurd, and annoying; the
+second was fully proved.
+
+I acted as turjaman Bashi to the Court of enquiry, and from the
+circumstance of the gentleman being in a foreign land, I was naturally
+disposed to lean rather to the side of the European. The Mahommedans
+observed this, and were very spiteful against me. The result of all this
+was, that the military gentleman was advised to leave Damascus; but he,
+availing himself of a moonless night, put a termination to the whole
+affair, by starting off for the sea-coast, carrying away with him a fair,
+young widow, who had captured his heart by her dancing, and to whom he
+was ultimately married; and, for aught I know to the contrary, they are
+to this day a very loving and happy couple. Strange to say, neither
+understood a word of each other’s language, and it would appear, from
+this example, that words are not necessary where such expressive things
+as eyes and flowers are brought into play.
+
+This romantic lady, after a lapse of time, settled at Beyrout, together
+with her affectionate husband; the story had preceded them to this place,
+but they soon mixed in society as though nothing had happened. The
+Syrians, though strictly moral, mingle humanity with their laws of
+etiquette; they do not, as in England, for ever exclude from society such
+as have been guilty of so trivial a peccadillo as this lady was guilty
+of. They remember that all are but frail mortals and apt to err.
+
+To me the English appear to be over severe. It is true, that in Turkey
+the Moslems are entitled to four wives, and that in England a man can
+only marry one; but I should like to know who is the greater delinquent,
+he that avowedly and opening admits of polygamy, or that man, who, as is
+often the case amongst society in England, and indeed all Europe, vowing
+solemnly at the altar that “_forsaking all others he will keep only with
+her_,” marries one wife, and at the same time continues to associate with
+half a dozen other women? For my part, whenever I hear of an English
+lady eloping, I cannot help fearing that she has been driven to it by the
+inconstancy or neglect of a wicked husband.
+
+In Damascus, at the period I am writing of, there dwelt an extraordinary
+man, well known to the English who visited the place as the proprietor of
+a large hotel, by the name of Sayed Ali; he also filled the office of
+chancellor to the English consulate. This extraordinary character could
+speak and write several languages with the utmost fluency, and no one
+could fathom out what countryman he was, or what creed he professed.
+With the English he was an Englishman, and none could doubt his
+pronunciation. This was the case with the French; whilst the Turks,
+listening in admiration to his high flow of Stamboline Turkish, and his
+profound knowledge of the Koran, ranked him amongst the most devout and
+most learned of their citizens. One thing only was positive with regard
+to Sayed Ali, and that was, that his wife was a Moslem, the daughter of
+some fanatical Sheikh. Sayed’s wife had an extremely handsome sister;
+who having been seen but once, had captivated the heart of an old English
+official, who at that time resided at Damascus; and this gentleman,
+notwithstanding the great disparity between them in every respect, in
+age, rank and creed, determined, cost what it might, to marry the girl.
+Female friends were employed as go-betweens, and these so effectually
+wrought upon the imagination of the fair lady, that she actually resolved
+to embrace Christianity, and fly for succour to the arms of her lover.
+Things had arrived at this pitch, when Sayed Ali accidentally got scent
+of what was going on; he subsequently declared to me, that had it not
+been for the high official position of the gentleman in question, he
+certainly would have shot him; as it was, he contented himself with
+calling at his sister-in-law’s house, and knocking at the door drew his
+sword; the girl responding to the knock, opened the door, when the
+infuriated Sayed Ali made a murderous attack upon her, and inflicted a
+wound on her shoulder, a repetition of which must have proved fatal. As
+this happened during the day, the noise attracted a crowd around the
+house, and the girl was rescued. Rendered desperate by this, Sayed Ali
+made a plunge at himself, and inflicted a wound in his abdomen of nearly
+an inch deep; not, however, relishing the sensation, the monster drew out
+his sword, and calling lustily for aid was forthwith carried away to his
+own house. Here he was attended by the English medical officers then at
+Damascus. I shortly after called to see him, and to inquire into the
+cause of this murderous onslaught. In reply, he told me that his motives
+were what I have already stated; he was determined that his name should
+not be defamed, or his wife’s family put to shame by the act of a
+thoughtless, capricious child, winding up, however, with—
+
+“I’m glad I have not killed her, and for my part I’ll never be such a
+fool again as to stab myself to please any one in Damascus.”
+
+The doctor dressed the wounds, and both shortly afterwards recovered,
+whilst the greatest delinquent in the affair suffered neither pain or
+inconvenience from his gross misconduct. He is now in high office under
+the government at Constantinople. This is a fair sample of the abuses
+practised by many of those in authority, who in lieu of holding out a
+pattern for imitation, both by example and precept, are unfortunately too
+prone to indulge their own vicious propensities, setting all propriety,
+honour, and justice at defiance. I do not mean to say that all incline
+in the same way—that all are addicted to falling desperately in love with
+every girl they meet; but this I assert, with very few exceptions, they
+have their peculiar fancies, for the gratification of which they stoop to
+many acts of meanness. In illustration of what I say, I may be permitted
+to quote one more instance,—a case widely different from the foregoing,
+and yet equally offensive to honourable minds.
+
+“One man, a sycophant, partly to curry favour with a great man whom he
+wished to oblige, partly to satisfy his avaricious propensities, delayed
+a steam packet twenty-four hours beyond its fixed time of departure,
+because the vessel chanced to sail upon a Saturday, and the great man in
+question was a Jew; he detained the steamer till Sunday morning to
+accommodate the fastidious Hebrew, and to profit by his commission on the
+lordly passage money.
+
+“Now this man is professedly a Christian, but he prefers breaking the
+Christian’s sabbath to inconveniencing his friend or his pocket; but
+apart from all this, we have still to calculate the losses arising from
+the expenses incurred by such a vessel lying unnecessarily idle—the risk
+of insurance, and the loss of time to money, cargo, and letters.” {107}
+
+But let us turn to a more pleasing subject. In these latter days of
+progression and civilisation, Damascus happily has kept pace with the
+other towns in Syria; there has been a large influx of European
+merchants. The Greek patriarch has, in the true spirit of civilization,
+and after great exertions, established a school which will be productive
+of much good.
+
+From Damascus we went down to Sidon, visiting, _en route_, the residence
+of the late Lady Hester Stanhope, at Djouni, which was even then fast
+falling to decay. Lady Hester I had known personally, and although
+clever and eccentric, with a head full of strange fancies, yet she had a
+heart not devoid of good feeling and kind intentions. For my part, I can
+always recollect, with grateful pleasure, the kind reception I met with
+at her house, and if there is any thing which I consider base, it is the
+conduct of her biographer (who was also her physician), and who has
+abused a sacred trust to pander to the inquisitiveness of the European
+world; or else to contribute to the depth and weight of his own purse,
+has raked up the ashes of one, who at least towards himself, was the best
+of friends and patronesses; and whether the book contains much of truth
+or much of imagination, it is either a breach of confidence of the very
+worst order, or a libel on the dead which there is none to controvert or
+dispute.
+
+At Sidon there, at that time, resided General Loustannau, whose life
+abounded more in romantic incidents than all the novels of our most
+celebrated writers. In India he had served under a native Prince with
+such courage and distinction, and through so long a period of years that
+he had amassed an immense fortune. He was at the time of my visit a
+half-witted mendicant, one of the many objects of the late Lady Hester
+Stanhope’s benevolence, and one who, like herself, was subject to many
+extravagant eccentricities. The story of Loustannau is so remarkable
+that I cannot refrain from quoting part of it from Mr. Kelly’s work on
+Syria:
+
+“General Loustannau was a native of Aidens, in the department of Basses
+Pyrénées; his family was not wealthy, and his youthful ardour impelled
+him to seek his fortune in foreign lands. Arriving at Bordeaux for the
+purpose of embarking for America, he found a vessel about to sail for
+India with M. de Saint Lubin, who was commissioned by Louis XVI. to
+propose to the Mahrattas a treaty of alliance, offensive and defensive,
+against the English. Loustannau took advantage of the opportunity, gave
+up his American project, and in due time found himself amongst the
+Mahrattas. This was in the year 1778, when he was twenty years of age.
+War had for some time existed between the Mahrattas and the English, and
+Loustannau, who wished to take service with the former, obtained a letter
+of recommendation to M. Norogue, a Portuguese officer, who commanded
+their forces. That General received him very courteously, but thought
+him too young to be entrusted with any command. Loustannau, however,
+accompanied the army in its movements, and was witness to the continual
+advantages afforded the English by the unskilfulness of General Norogue.
+The Mahrattas, though thrice outnumbering their enemies, were constantly
+forced to yield their ground; at last the prince succeeded in bringing
+the English to an engagement in a position unfavourable to the latter,
+inasmuch as it allowed of their being out-flanked by the superior number
+of their adversaries. But this did not avail them; the English
+entrenched themselves on an eminence from which their batteries committed
+great havoc among the Mahrattas. Loustannau observing a height which
+commanded the English position, immediately mentioned the fact to
+Norogue, who received this communication with supercilious indifference.
+Stung to the quick by this contemptuous treatment, Loustannau addressed
+himself to a Mahratta chief through an interpreter, and with the reckless
+enthusiasm of youth, pledged his head that he would be successful if he
+were given the command of a few pieces of cannon. Three thousand horse
+and ten guns were placed under his orders; the result surpassed his
+hopes, and the English were driven from their position with great loss.
+In spite of Norogue’s jealousy, a choncadar with a gold stick was soon
+sent in quest of the young Frenchman, who had rendered such essential
+service to the national cause. Loustannau was presented to the chiefs
+who exercised the regency, and received a magnificent present. He
+remained in the service of the Mahrattas, and soon had a corps of 2000
+men under his exclusive command. He took part in all the subsequent
+operations against the English, and was mainly instrumental in inflicting
+upon them those losses which for a while seemed to place our Indian
+empire in such imminent jeopardy.
+
+“At the battle of Chassepachrer, he routed our seapoys with great
+slaughter; the battle was ended, the English artillery alone continued to
+fire a few volleys in its retreat, in order to protect the fugitives,
+when a grape-shot struck Loustannau in the left hand and carried off the
+four fingers and half the thumb. It was long before he recovered from
+the effects of this wound. When the stump was healed, he had a silver
+hand of very ingenious workmanship fitted to it. The first day he
+appeared at the head of his troops with this new kind of hand, a priest
+threw himself prostrate before his horse’s feet, crying out, that the
+‘prophecy was fulfilled, since it was written in the temple of the God
+Siva, that the Mahrattas were to reach the summit of their glory under a
+man from the far west, who should have a silver hand, and prove
+invincible.’
+
+“Loustannau was thenceforth looked upon as something almost superhuman.
+Diamonds, precious stones, the richest presents of every kind, were
+lavished on him from all sides. He was assigned a magnificent palace,
+with all the appurtenances of royal luxury. His stables contained thirty
+elephants sumptuously caparisoned, and a hundred and fifty horses, the
+best that India could produce. His body-guard consisted of 2000 men,
+with four pieces of cannon; and the principal chief had two colossal
+silver hands planted before the entrance of the palace that all men might
+know, by that token, that the man of destiny was the leader of the
+national forces.
+
+“Another campaign took place, in which Loustannau was again successful,
+and which terminated greatly to the satisfaction of the Mahrattas. On
+his return to Azra, he was received with honours such as were used to be
+conferred only on princes and sultans; and the ruling prince solemnly
+declared him ‘The Lion of the State and the Tiger in War.’
+
+“Loustannau married the daughter of a French officer in India; he had now
+been eighteen years among the Mahrattas; he had several children, and his
+wife urged him to return to Europe to enjoy the fruits of his toils.
+
+“Notwithstanding his excessive generosity, the wealth he had accumulated
+was enormous; but, from the moment he quitted the territory of the
+Mahrattas, fortune, which till then had been so lavish to him of her
+favours, forsook him all at once, and the rest of his life was but one
+series of disasters and sorrows. He converted his whole fortune into
+paper, for he had not yet made up his mind where he would settle, and he
+did not wish to purchase any estates before his arrival. His homeward
+voyage was long and difficult; and he was several times in danger of
+shipwreck. When, at last, after a seven-month’s passage, he reached
+France, the assignats had fallen into such utter depreciation, that he
+found the 8,000,000 of francs he had remitted home dwindled down to
+220,000. This first blow made a terrible impression on a temper so
+violent as his, and so spoiled by prosperity; but he still possessed a
+considerable amount in diamonds, some of which he sold, and with the
+proceeds he settled in Tarbes with his family, consisting of two sons and
+three daughters. Shortly afterwards, he lost his favourite son, and his
+grief was such as to occasion him an attack of insanity, from which he
+did not completely recover for two years. When he was restored to his
+senses, he set about constructing extensive iron works on the frontiers
+of Spain, in order to afford his restless energies an object on which to
+employ themselves. For three years, his sole pleasure consisted in
+superintending his engineers and workmen, and watching the progress of
+the great constructions he planned.
+
+“Things were in this state when fresh misfortunes befell him. He was on
+the point of realising the profits of his enterprise, when war broke out
+between France and Spain. Immediately upon the first disasters of the
+French arms, his buildings were burned, his furnaces destroyed, and his
+hopes annihilated. The ruin of his fortune was almost complete, and he
+only supported himself by selling, one by one, the costly jewels he had
+brought from India. All these misfortunes impaired his reason; he had
+continued fits of overwrought devotion, amounting at times to insanity.
+His family lived on in this way until 1815, in a state of mediocrity very
+hard to endure after their brilliant condition and their opulence in past
+years.
+
+“In 1815, Loustannau’s only surviving son, who was a captain in the
+imperial guards, was dangerously wounded at Waterloo. His father saw
+himself on the point of losing him, and this shock seemed to restore to
+him the possession of his faculties. When he recovered, all the revived
+energies of his character were concentrated on the thought, how destitute
+would be the state of his family after his death; he determined,
+therefore to return to India, though many years had elapsed since he left
+it. His son wished to go in his stead, but he would not hear of this;
+and in 1816 he embarked for Egypt, having raised the necessary funds for
+his journey by pledging a ruby of rare value, the last gift of his
+Mahratta patron. Not finding in Egypt an opportunity of pursuing his way
+by the Red Sea, he crossed over to Syria, with the intention of joining
+the caravan from Damascus to Bassorah; but he fell dangerously ill at
+Acre, his brain being again affected; he squandered away all his money in
+his delirium, and destroyed bills of exchange and other valuable papers.
+After this, he suffered for awhile all the horrors of penury, and the
+renowned Loustannau—’The Lion of the State and the Tiger in War’—was
+reduced to earn his bread as a day-labourer. In this deplorable
+condition he was found by M. Catafago, a wealthy Levantine merchant, who
+relieved his wants and took him into his house.
+
+“Loustannau had occasionally lucid intervals, in which he talked of his
+past greatness, and related the history of his life and his afflictions;
+but he had the mortification of seeing that everything he uttered seemed
+to his hearers but an additional proof of his insanity. To make all
+sure, however, letters were written to France, requesting information
+respecting this extraordinary man; and at last his son, who had heard
+nothing of him for two years, made all haste to Syria, and found his
+unfortunate father almost wholly deprived of reason. His journey to
+India was henceforth clearly impossible. The Captain had gathered
+together the last remnants of his fortune; and he remained for some time
+in Syria, doing everything that affection could suggest, in the hope of
+restoring his father to himself.
+
+“It was at this period that the old man’s melancholy story reached the
+ears of Lady Hester Stanhope. She was then in the hey-day of her fame,
+and she offered Loustannau and his son an asylum in her house. At the
+first sight of the latter, she was struck with the resemblance that he
+bore to the gallant lover she had lost. From the lines of his hand, the
+form of his foot, and the aspect of the stars, she gathered that the life
+of Captain Loustannau was destined to be inseparably connected with her
+own. The Captain, however, had not lost sight of his Indian project, for
+he still hoped to recover some remains of the vast property his father
+must have left in that country. Lady Hester dissuaded him from going to
+India, and undertook to employ every possible means of recovering what
+remained of the old General’s property or fortune; but great changes had
+occurred since the old man had left the country. Wellesley’s
+(Wellington) victories had put the English in possession of a great
+portion of the Mahratta territory; Loustannau’s princely protectors were
+no more, and his property had passed into other hands.
+
+“It was a singular chance that brought together in a corner of Syria two
+beings so remarkable as General Loustannau and Lady Hester Stanhope; they
+had long, mystical conversations together, and Lady Hester looked on
+Loustannau as a prophet who was come to prepare the way for her, and to
+be the forerunner of her triumph. The Captain sought to beguile the
+tedium of his existence by managing the household and the pecuniary
+affairs of Lady Hester. She treated him with the most assiduous kindness
+until his death, which happened, I believe, in 1825. Her feelings
+towards him were those of pure friendship, tinged by the memory of her
+youthful affections and stimulated by the fantastic notion that a secret
+bond irrevocably united his destiny with her own. After his death, she
+had him buried in her garden, and twice every day she visited his grave,
+decorated it with flowers, and remained by it absorbed in long reveries.
+
+“General Loustannau’s insanity became more intense after his son’s death,
+his delusions being greatly augmented by his intercourse with Lady Hester
+Stanhope. Celestial music floated round him; for a while he believed
+himself called to give battle to Bonaparte, who, he said, had returned to
+the earth under the form of Antichrist; and in 1831 he declared it his
+destiny to become king of Jerusalem when the fulness of time should have
+been accomplished. He had now warm altercations with Lady Hester; for he
+asserted his right to the bay mare with the natural saddle, whilst her
+ladyship was to have the white mare, and to ride with him into the Holy
+City as his wife, her place being at his left-hand and a little behind
+him.
+
+“Her ladyship very soon saw it written in the stars that Loustannau and
+herself were to part. Accordingly she had a house fitted up for his
+reception at Abra, a village within five miles of her own residence, on
+the road to Sidon. But she continued her benevolent protection towards
+him, and did not let him want for anything requisite for his comfort.
+
+“Lady Hester died in June, 1839, a few days before the battle of Neizeb,
+which she had foretold with rather surprising accuracy. Her wealth was
+all gone. She even left considerable debts, and her property was
+instantly seized by her creditors. Loustannau being thus once more
+reduced to entire destitution, the French consul of Sidon took charge of
+him, and gave him a humble lodging in the French khan. Thus this
+venerable old man, who had once possessed immense wealth, commanded great
+armies, and enriched multitudes of Europeans, now subsisted on charity.
+It has long been generally supposed that he was dead, as asserted by M.
+Jouay. He is dead, it is true, to all purposes of active life, but he
+has still a few lucid intervals in the midst of his harmless religious
+insanity. Happily for him, he has almost wholly lost his memory, and of
+all his past greatness he recollects nothing distinctly except the title
+he bore in India. Often does he proudly repeat that they called him
+formerly ‘The Lion of the State and the Tiger in War;’ and then, sadly
+reverting to his present condition, he subjoins, ‘And now I am nothing
+but an unfortunate beggar.’”
+
+Such is the admirable account given by Mr. Kelly of this singular
+individual, who passed through all the stages from happiness and
+affluence to misery and destitution. Loustannau is now dead, not only to
+purposes of active life, but dead in the literal sense of the word, and
+his bones repose in the European cemetery at Sidon; the life of this man
+and the site of his troubles affording a fresh incentive for strangers to
+visit Sidon, in addition to its ancient fame as a city of the days of
+Solomon.
+
+Sidon is perhaps the most delightfully situated town in all Palestine.
+Abounding with pleasant gardens, and rides and walks; the climate is
+healthy, and the commerce of the place is rising into importance, and the
+harbour capable of great improvement. In May, 1851, the families of two
+American missionaries established themselves in this neighbourhood, and
+already the schools and the works of the mission are prospering.
+
+From Sidon we visited Tyre!—poor, solitary, desolate Tyre—in whose meagre
+forsaken town and bare rugged rocks, we had manifest proof of the
+never-failing veracity of Scripture prophecy. How else would the once
+greatest city of the earth, whose ships visited all parts, whose
+merchants had a world-wide reputation, be now an utter desolation,
+inhabited only by a few traders and wretched fishermen and their
+families, whose daily occupation of spreading out the nets to dry are so
+many consecutive proofs of the fulfilment of the words of the prophet.
+But so many modern travellers have described these parts, that it would
+be useless for me to dwell upon the subject in this work: so we quitted
+Sur, the modern Tyre; and a night’s pleasant sail in a small shaktoor
+brought us to Acre. St. Jean d’Acre was at this period still suffering
+much from the explosion of the powder magazine, which so much assisted
+Admiral Napier in his siege; the houses were all tottering ruins, the
+mosques minus their minarets, and the stench from the accumulated mass of
+decomposed matter, the carcases of camels, sheep and oxen, and in some
+places the sun-bleached bones of unhappy beings, in the twinkling of an
+eye as it were hurried into eternity; these were a loathsome and
+melancholy spectacle.
+
+I may here state, that I was present at the bombardment of Acre, and from
+a favourable situation witnessed the terrific result of the “Geyser”
+bombshells, which were thrown with such unerring certainty, that, knowing
+the position of the powder-magazine, they fired upon it with so nice an
+aim, that each succeeding shell struck upon the last in such a manner
+that the first thrown was thus forced through the wall, and occasioned
+the explosion; but I may further state what is yet a hidden mystery to
+the British public, and which in a great measure accounts for the
+facility with which this almost impregnable fortress was captured, and
+that is, that the Imams and the Cadi of Acre secretly warned the soldiery
+not to resist the arms of the British force there assembled, _because_
+they were fighting for the Sultan, whom it was their duty, as Mahomedans,
+to obey; and, moreover, that in the sight of God and the prophet, there
+was no other lawful Moslem king; none to be acknowledged, save the Sultan
+of the Sublime Porte, Abdul Medjid; and that if they acted against his
+interests, then the Prophet would utterly forsake them, and such as fell
+in battle might fully make up their minds to be hurled into eternal
+perdition, and that such as fought in his favour would assuredly go to
+heaven. Such an exhortation and threat, at such a peculiar time, was
+sure to have the desired effect. {119}
+
+Not only did the soldiers fight without spirit, but many of the artillery
+actually spiked their guns. Of this latter fact I myself had ocular
+demonstration when the engagement was over, and the allied forces landed
+at Acre. After this fact, it becomes not the English admiral to boast
+too much and compare his success with the failure of Napoleon.
+
+From Acre, still journeying southward, we passed the famous brook Kedron,
+so often alluded to in Holy Writ, and passing through the miserable
+village of Kaipha, ascended Mount Carmel, and sojourned a couple of days
+in the hospitable convent of the Carmelite monks. Leaving Carmel, we
+passed through Cæsarea, now an utter desolation, and visited Jaffa and
+Gaza, and from the latter place, striking inland, took in succession
+Hebron, Jerusalem, Bethlehem, the Dead Sea and the Jordan, besides
+visiting all the other towns of any note or importance, all of which have
+been often described by European travellers, so that the best thing I can
+do is to avoid repetition, and content myself with observing, that the
+reality far exceeded my expectations as regards the beauty of the scenery
+and the wild picturesque position of almost every town of note in
+Palestine. At the same time I deem it most essential to warn the English
+travellers to be very careful in the choice of a guide-book, as many,
+even up to a very late date, have been published with apparently no other
+aim than to puff up the author’s vanity, containing mostly a tissue of
+unaccountable misrepresentations from first to last. If the traveller,
+in a spirit of knight-errantry, goes forth to visit the holy shores of
+Palestine and Syria, hoping there to bask under the bright light of large
+sunny-loving eyes—if he thinks to lead the Arab maid captive by the
+heart—to win over the smiles of the Grecian, or scampering over desolate
+mountains—to fall in with untutored Syrian maids, who sally forth and
+carry him from his horse, fatigued and fever-smitten, to be watched over
+and cared for by female philanthropists,—if, I say, the traveller quits
+England with any such notions, he will return to these shores grievously
+disappointed.
+
+Although myself a native of the country, dressed in the costume, and
+speaking the language, still, with all these advantages, the maidens
+always fled at our approach, not even if they mastered their coyness,
+would they ever exchange a syllable with us strangers. Possibly, my
+friend and myself were not possessed of that charm which a recent gallant
+author, according to his own account, seems to have carried about with
+him wherever he went; for he says, that in many parts fathers of families
+rushed out and endeavoured to force him into a marriage with their
+daughters, or else the maidens themselves, in _villages he had never
+before visited_, came forth, having heard of his notoriety (this in parts
+where there is no post, and where news travels at the rate of a mile a
+week), to meet him with timbrel and dance, and other welcomings. The
+only note that ever welcomed us to such villages, was the angry tongue of
+a scolding harridan, or else the hooting of the owls, or the cry of the
+jackal.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+FIRST VISIT TO ENGLAND.
+
+
+It sometimes happened that the naval officers belonging to the
+ship-of-war stationed at Beyrout, took up their temporary residence with
+some friend on shore, being always welcome guests at the houses of the
+inhabitants. It was in this way that I first came to cultivate an
+acquaintance with the captain of Her Majesty’s steamer, “Hecate,” so that
+we were much thrown together. On one occasion, whilst he was a guest at
+our house, he proposed that I should accompany him on a pleasure cruise
+as far as Malta; a proposition I gladly acceded to, more particularly as
+the Emir Beschir, with his family and a relation of my own, were at that
+time residing on the island. I had long had a desire to see Malta, for
+many had described it to me as a species of little world, where one might
+sit down in a _café_ and study the characters of every European nation.
+
+The alarm and grief of my relations on learning my determination was only
+to be equalled by the envious jeerings of my companions, who, whilst they
+pretended to pity my infatuation, would, I feel persuaded, have parted
+with every para in their possession for a portion of my good luck.
+
+The steamer was to sail at the end of the week; and I was so busy making
+preparations, packing and taking leave, that I really had not a moment’s
+leisure for calm meditation,—and I am very glad I had not, for the
+chances are, that this, in conjunction with some of the melancholy
+forebodings of my friends, would have unnerved me for the trip. Seeing,
+however, that I was determined on starting, my neighbours changed their
+annoying prognostications into good acts, which acts consisted in
+inundating me with as many presents of sweetmeats, biscuits, etc., as
+would have kept me during a twelvemonths’ passage round the world. I
+selected some of the best of them for the officers’ mess, and at last the
+word ready being given, got my luggage together and embarked; the
+dispatches being received on board, and the “Hecate” soon after getting
+up her steam, we proceeded on our voyage to Malta accompanied by the
+prayers and blessings of a multitude of friends and relations assembled
+at Ras-Beyrout to witness our departure.
+
+The day after we had sailed, I awoke at early dawn and crept up upon deck
+as best I could. The motion of the vessel was so strange and violent,
+that I reeled and staggered like a tipsy man, and felt confused,
+miserable, weak and sick. The horrible sensations I experienced on first
+awaking that morning cannot be easily erased from my mind. I was awoke
+by a singular and deafening noise, which seemed to proceed from directly
+overhead, which, as I afterwards discovered, was occasioned by the daily
+process of holy-stoning the decks. I managed to reach the main-deck just
+in time to be handed to the larboard gangway by the officer of the watch,
+who there left me alone in my misery with my head hanging over the
+bulwarks—a wretched victim to sea-sickness.
+
+Bitterly, during that moment, did I lament having ever quitted Beyrout.
+My sufferings were so intense that I thought I must have died during the
+day. This was the first time I had ever found myself so far out at sea.
+There was no land in sight. The morning was gloomy and boisterous; and
+altogether my spirits felt so depressed that I resigned myself to Allah,
+and wrapping the loose folds of my large Cyprus cloak carefully around
+me, I sat down cross-legged in a corner behind the man at the helm, and
+vainly endeavoured to fall off to sleep. A nice cup of coffee which the
+captain’s steward kindly brought, in a great measure revived me; this
+relief, however, was only temporary, the dreadful odour of the victuals
+cooking for breakfast, fried fish, ham and eggs, etc., these made me feel
+so ill that I was compelled to retire to my berth, and there I lay more
+dead than alive during the whole passage, utterly callous as to what
+became of me, and as to whether the vessel was steadily pursuing her
+voyage in safety or was in imminent danger of going to the bottom.
+
+Some Capuchin friars were on board, returning from Jerusalem to Malta,
+accompanied by two young Syrian females who were going to Rome to be
+educated in the principles of the Roman Catholic religion, and they not
+only enjoyed the passage amazingly, being possessed of capital appetites,
+but they very uncharitably, though not very unlike human nature, mocked
+at my calamities and tried to heighten my alarm and sufferings by
+frightening me with false reports as to the vessel’s danger, and as to my
+own weak state of health.
+
+After intense sufferings and encountering much really rough weather, we
+had at length the satisfaction of finding ourselves safe at anchor in the
+harbour of Valetta. I doubt whether any of the passengers that
+accompanied St. Paul on his disastrous voyage and shipwreck, suffered
+greater fear or pain than I had undergone; certainly they could not have
+rejoiced more than I did at its happy termination. Blessed be God, who
+is not forgetful of His children, even in the vast unruly deep!
+
+On arriving at Malta, we had eleven days’ quarantine to perform; but the
+tediousness of this imprisonment was much alleviated by the kindness and
+attention of the good Mr. Schlicnz, whom I had known in Syria, and who
+now daily visited me at the Lazaretto, supplying me with books to fill up
+the tedium of dull hours. On the eleventh day, being admitted to
+pratique, I accepted the hospitable invitation of that gentleman to take
+up my quarters at his house. I was, through his politeness, introduced
+into the society of several of the leading families at Malta. On leaving
+Beyrout, I had been furnished with letters of introduction to Sir
+Frederick Bouverie, the then governor. His excellency received me with
+the utmost urbanity and kindness, and, indeed, I shall ever have cause
+gratefully to remember Sir Frederick’s polite attention, as it was mainly
+through his instrumentality that I first visited the shores of Great
+Britain.
+
+One of my first visits was, of course, to the Emir Beschir of Lebanon,
+who, with his family, were then residing there as political exiles. I
+had several long conversations with this once-powerful prince; and the
+Emir suggested that his wife and son should accompany me to London, there
+to exert their influence in endeavouring to prevail upon Her Majesty the
+Queen to interpose her influence on their behalf. They communicated with
+the British Government, both at home and in the island on this subject;
+but no encouragement was held out by the authorities there or in England
+for the furtherance of this scheme; and the subject, after a long
+correspondence, was, therefore, reluctantly dropped. The Emir, being
+hurt and displeased at this apparent neglect, sent his son to
+Constantinople, who, being well received by the Ottoman Government,
+wrote, at its suggestion, to invite his father to the Porte, an
+invitation he readily accepted; upon which the governor of Malta placed
+at his disposal a British war-steamer, and the Emir and his family
+immediately quitted the island.
+
+I may here be permitted to deviate a little from my journal to give a
+brief description of these Emirs, their origin and end. The family of
+the Emirs were originally Moslems, natives of Shaahbah, a village on the
+southern plain of Lebanon; and they are said to be descended in a direct
+line from the renowned Moslem Prophet, and to have ruled over the Lebanon
+for many years. The founder of the family, Yusuf al Husn, or the
+handsome or beautiful Yusuf, so called from his great personal
+attractions, was, on account of his bravery and influence, chosen by the
+mountaineers of Lebanon to be their prince.
+
+Before consenting to the choice, however, he himself stipulated that the
+power of life and death should be invested in his hands; and this having
+been agreed to, he was duly elected Emir, came to the mountains, and
+settled amongst his people, over whom he was to rule with a despotic
+sway. During the time this prince held the supreme power, he preserved
+the greatest order amongst the unruly tribes over whom he was placed, and
+travellers passed and repassed with the greatest safety. Some time after
+he had settled amongst the Druses and Maronites, after mature
+consideration, he came to the resolution of embracing the Christian
+religion, although such a measure was sure to prove disadvantageous to
+him, by estranging the Druses and occasioning the Sultan’s displeasure;
+he, however, retained undisputed the right of his position and authority,
+and on dying, was succeeded by his son, the Emir whom I then met at
+Malta.
+
+The cause of this second Emir’s disgrace was his having fallen into
+disrepute with the government, by not immediately joining the Seraskier
+Pasha on the occasion of the expulsion of the Egyptians from Syria. But
+the cause of the poor man’s conduct was one that few can help
+sympathising with. His son was at that time with Ibrahim Pasha; and had
+it been known to that warrior that the Emir had joined the forces against
+him, there is little doubt but that he would have caused the son to be
+cut to pieces. Under these circumstances, the Emir was constrained to
+remain on the mountains till the expulsion of the Egyptian troops had
+been effected. He then went down to Sidon and surrendered himself to the
+English, and was by them conveyed in a frigate to Beyrout.
+
+The Seraskier having given out that he was in possession of a Firman, by
+the authority of which, could he lay hold of the Emir, he would
+undoubtedly behead him, and send his head as a trophy to Constantinople,
+the English authorities strongly recommended his departure for Malta,
+where once on English ground his safety would be ensured. The Emir
+accordingly came to that island, and was very well received by the
+governor, who placed a palace at his disposal. I must acknowledge that
+all that the Emir said about Sir Frederic Bouverie redounded much to his
+Excellency’s credit. He spoke of him as a humane and kind governor, and
+one who knew how to respect fallen dignity.
+
+I have already said the Emir ultimately left Malta for Constantinople.
+On arriving at Stamboul he was exiled to Zafron Boli, a place notorious
+for the animosity of its inhabitants towards Christians, and where his
+eldest son, pining on account of the miseries endured by his father, soon
+succumbed to misfortune. Here he remained some time subjected to much
+mental suffering. Often in after years he told me, in familiar
+conversation, that what afforded him some small consolation was the
+similitude between his own fate and that of the late King Louis Philippe.
+
+After some time, through the kind intervention of one of the European
+ambassadors, the Emir was brought to Broussa, and ultimately removed to
+Constantinople, where, within a short time, himself and his remaining son
+sunk into the grave. Every respect was paid to his memory; by the
+Sultan’s order a public funeral was awarded him, and masses said for the
+repose of his soul at the government expense, a striking proof of the
+liberality and toleration of the government of the Sublime Porte.
+
+During my stay at Malta, the late Dr. Alexander, the first Protestant
+bishop in Jerusalem, arrived at that island, accompanied by his family
+and suite, _en route_ for his new see. I shall never forget my amazement
+on being introduced to that prelate, to find that he wore no beard. A
+bishop without a beard was a perfect marvel to me, and a thing unheard of
+in the East; in short, perfectly fabulous. This excellent man
+condescended to ask my opinion on many points connected with the East,
+and I made so bold as to tell him, that if he wished to pass for a bishop
+amongst the natives of Syria, he must let his beard grow without further
+delay.
+
+Malta was a great novelty to me—the beauty of the scenery—the bustle of
+the place—the frigates, steamers, schooners, boats, carriages, soldiers,
+bands of music, friars, nuns, and a vast concourse of people in every
+imaginable costume, and speaking every known tongue. All these
+perplexed, astonished, and delighted me at one and the same time; and a
+drive in the environs of Valetta was a perfect treat. At Malta I first
+got an idea of European manners; and I must own, my astonishment was very
+great to see the females, with faces perfectly uncovered, chatting in the
+greatest familiarity with the opposite sex, and it was to me quite
+incomprehensible. But my greatest astonishment was excited at a ball to
+which I was invited. The waltzing, polkaing, etc., appeared to me a most
+ridiculous and indecent exhibition; and it was a long time before this
+feeling wore off. I have to this day been unable to find out how any
+pleasure can be derived from a constant spinning round like the sails of
+a mill.
+
+It was not without much regret that I quitted the island—a perfect scene
+of enchantment—and the kind, hospitable acquaintances I had formed during
+my brief stay. His excellency the governor had been good enough to exert
+his influence in procuring me a passage on board of a war-steamer on the
+point of leaving for England. Such an opportunity was not to be thrown
+away, so hurrying down to the water-side, I embarked, on board H. M.’s
+steam-frigate Gorgon, Captain W. H. Henderson, C.B., 28th February, 1842.
+I had leisure to survey the busy scene around us before the vessel
+finally started. Shore-boats were plying around, offering for sale
+fruits, cigars, and canary birds. On board all was order and silence;
+around, all confusion, shouting, and quarrelling, and whilst mentally
+occupied in drawing this comparison, the anchor was weighed and we
+steamed rapidly away from the pleasant shores of the island of Malta.
+
+After an agreeable voyage, marked by no particular incident, we duly
+arrived at Portsmouth. On my arrival, I was made happy by meeting the
+Rev. Mr. Marshall, chaplain of Nelson’s ship, the Victory, and whose
+acquaintance I had the pleasure of forming when that gentleman was
+travelling in Syria. Mr. Marshall and all the officers of the ship were
+extremely kind to me, and shewed me over the old ship of the renowned
+admiral. At this place I landed, and having got a permit, was kindly
+shewn over the splendid dockyards. Here also I tasted some water twenty
+years in cask. I afterwards went round in the same steamer to Woolwich,
+and having shewn my letters of introduction to the captain, he kindly
+undertook to advise me. He recommended me to proceed at once to the
+house of the Honourable and Rev. Baptist Noel; and acting upon his
+advice, I came to London, and thence proceeded to Hornsey, at that time
+the residence of my reverend friend.
+
+Confused and amazed as I was with the noise and bustle around me in so
+vast a place as London, I was sufficiently alive to my own interests to
+have my eyes open, so that I should not be cheated. This led to a
+ludicrous altercation between myself and a toll-collector at a turnpike.
+The man insisted on his money being paid; I, on the other hand, as
+obstinately refused, assuring him that, though a foreigner, I was well
+acquainted with the tricks practised upon travellers; in short, I thought
+the man was asking for what, in my own country, is termed a _bakhsheesh_,
+which means nothing more or less than a present. Some gentlemen,
+however, came up and explained how matters stood, and then I paid the
+trifle and bade the driver proceed.
+
+Nothing could exceed the Christian brotherly reception I met with at the
+excellent Mr. Noel’s house. He actually busied himself with helping to
+carry in my baggage; and I was lost in admiration to observe how, in the
+bosom of his own family, he would play and sport with his own children,
+doing anything for their amusement and to make them happy. His early
+rising and great taste for gardening quite astonished me. Pleasant
+indeed were the days that I spent under his hospitable roof; and if any
+in this world have a claim upon my esteem and gratitude, it surely must
+be Mr. Noel and his amiable lady.
+
+Leaving my kind host’s house, which I did with unfeigned regret, I lived
+some time in London with Mr. W. Brown, in order to make myself familiar
+with the many sights so well worthy of visiting; and I then proceeded to
+Wimbledon, in order that, under the care and tuition of the Rev. William
+Edelman, the clergyman of the place, I might improve myself in English,
+and be prepared for a college education. I was placed there by the
+kindness of the Rev. W. Neven and the Hon. Capt. Maude, belonging to the
+committee of the society raised to promote education in Syria, by Assaod
+Y. Kayet’s exertions, and also noted for their civility to all my
+countrymen that have ever visited England. In Mr. Edelman’s house, I
+found a happy home, for I was considered and treated in every respect as
+one of the family. Mrs. Edelman was a very accomplished lady; she kindly
+undertook to teach me drawing, and she was well versed in Latin and
+classics. Of the many kind friends I met with during my stay at
+Wimbledon, I may particularise and thank the kind-hearted Mrs. Marryatt,
+mother of the celebrated novelist, who, at the advanced age of eighty,
+looks as blooming as though she were in the prime of life. The venerable
+lady is a great botanist and very fond of gardening. Mrs. Russell and
+her two daughters shewed me great civility, as did the gifted Mrs.
+Hudson, who is unfortunately blind. I am also much indebted to the
+attention and civility of Major Oliphant, one of the East India directors
+and to Mr. Mallison, Mr. Jones, and Mr. Peach, and their kind families;
+in short, without enumerating their names, I thank all my good friends at
+Wimbledon, and in the neighbourhood.
+
+One day at church I was surprised and gratified at recognising in the
+person of a very tall gentleman sitting in a pew some distance from me,
+the late Captain Murray of the Rifles, an old friend who had been a
+visitor at our house in Syria; he was as pleased as myself at the
+recognition, and having introduced me to his mother and sisters, insisted
+on my going home with him to lunch. Such acts of attention and kind
+civility were of daily occurrence during my stay at Wimbledon; but I must
+not forget to thank Miss C---, who was so good as to be at the trouble of
+taking my portrait.
+
+I witnessed a cavalry review before His Royal Highness Prince Albert; the
+dazzling splendour of the accoutrements surprised me very much. Here
+also I was once nearly being made eye-witness to a detestable duel. The
+circumstances of this adventure were as follows, viz.:—I was one day
+walking with Mr. Walmsley, now of the Foreign-office, and Captain John
+Nunn, a military officer from Ireland, when passing near
+Wimbledon-common, we saw some people busily occupied in measuring the
+ground. Imagining them to be engineers occupied in a survey, I was glad
+of the opportunity likely to be afforded me of improving myself in this
+science by closely watching their proceedings. With this intention I
+asked my friends to approach nearer to them; judge then of my horror when
+informed by them, that these preliminaries were evidently being arranged
+for a duel about to take place between two gentlemen, who had probably
+quarrelled about some trifle, or possibly _un affaire de cœur_, and who
+were going to settle their difference in this disgraceful manner. One of
+my friends ran and fetched a constable, who speedily terminated the
+proceeding by virtue of his staff of office.
+
+I cannot say how detestable and absurd this crime appeared in my
+eyes—such bloodshed to occur in civilised England appeared to me
+marvellous—in a country professedly Christian. I really began to wish
+myself back in Syria again; for if this was to be the result of
+civilization and education, ignorance were bliss indeed.
+
+On my first arrival in England, and for many months afterwards, I was
+greatly at a loss to comprehend the many idioms of the language; and the
+result was that I was perpetually the victim of some ludicrous error in
+either speaking or misunderstanding the English. Previous to my
+departure from Syria, I had become acquainted with Captain Charles
+Shadwell, in Her Majesty’s navy, the son of the late respected
+vice-Chancellor, Sir Launcelot Shadwell. On our parting he had desired
+me, should I ever visit England, to call upon his father, from whom I
+could readily obtain his address. Soon after my arrival I bethought
+myself of this invitation, and called at the court-house at Westminster.
+On enquiring of an attendant if Sir Launcelot was within, the man replied
+in the affirmative, but at the same time gave me to understand that Sir
+Launcelot was _sitting_, and that therefore I could not hope to see him.
+
+This reply naturally very much amazed me, and I therefore persisted in my
+request.
+
+“I tell you, Sir, that Sir Launcelot is _sitting_,” was again the answer
+of the servant.
+
+This rather annoyed me. “Well, Sir,” rejoined I, “I know that Sir
+Launcelot is _sitting_; I never supposed for an instant that he was lying
+down or asleep at this hour of the day, and that is just the very reason
+why I have called to see him.”
+
+I need not say that my reply as much astonished the official as I was
+confounded at his obstinacy. After some little altercation, however, I
+was made to understand that the term _sitting_, as used in this instance,
+referred to Sir Launcelot’s official occupations, and not a little
+abashed, I apologised for the error, at the same time explaining to the
+man the motives of my visit. I begged him to take in my card, and in the
+mean time walked into the court, not however, without a fresh difficulty
+occurring, for the official requested me to take off my cap, for I then
+wore what I have been accustomed to all my life, the _fez_ or _tarboush_.
+On this request being repeated, I told the man that I would much sooner
+take off my boots, as it was disrespectful in my country to go bareheaded
+into the presence of one’s superiors. I suppose the man had never seen
+such a curious customer as I seemed to him to be; he however implored me
+not to remove my boots, and without further demur, allowed me to remain.
+
+I afterwards saw Sir Launcelot in the private office of the Chancellor.
+He received me with stiff _hauteur_ and distant politeness, and on making
+known my errand, regretted that he could not give me his son’s address,
+but said that if I left my own, he would forward it to his son. This I
+did, and rather hurt at the frigidity of his manner, speedily withdrew.
+
+A few days after this, I received a very kind letter from Sir Launcelot,
+enclosing me one from his son, and in which Sir Launcelot, after
+apologising for the apparent want of courtesy displayed in his reception,
+which he justly attributed to the impostures often practised by persons
+of foreign appearance on the credulity of English gentlemen, concluded by
+hospitably inviting me to dinner, when I should have the happiness of
+once again meeting my friend, his son.
+
+About the same time that I had come to England, there also arrived a
+young Druse Sheikh from the mountains of Lebanon, who, attended by his
+two servants, had left his home to be educated; and government had placed
+him under the tuition of the Rev. Mr. ---. Some time afterwards, one of
+the servants from some misunderstanding, attempted to stab that
+gentleman, but was fortunately prevented. A great disturbance, however,
+occurred, and the police were obliged to interfere and disarm them. In
+1843 the Prince went raving mad, and was sent back to his friends. One
+day, paying a visit to Aali Effendi, at that time Turkish ambassador
+here, he suddenly flung a beautiful and expensive watch which he wore
+into the fire, exclaiming that he would no longer carry the devil in his
+pocket. I afterwards met him on one occasion on the Lebanon, and he told
+me that he was very ill, as the English had put a charm into his stomach;
+and he begged of me to give him an English lancet to perform an operation
+and cut the charm. Luckily there are instances directly opposite to this
+case, or else one might be discouraged in carrying out the good cause of
+Syrian education. The fate of Assaad Shidiac (whose brother is
+considered one of the first Arabic and English scholars, and has been for
+many years employed by the Church Missionary Society in translating the
+Bible from English into Arabic), who fell a martyr to the cause, shews
+triumphantly that few people can be more sincere converts than the Syrian
+Christians.
+
+This admirable young man was originally a Maronite, but having been
+educated by the missionaries, was led to see the errors of the Romish
+faith. While travelling amongst his own native villagers he was seized,
+and the people tried to force him to renounce the faith he had adopted.
+On his refusal, they imprisoned and otherwise ill-treated him. A
+merchant residing at Beyrout very soon flew to his rescue; but alas! he
+arrived too late, the noble soul of Shidiac had fled for ever, and the
+immediate cause of his death remains to this day enveloped in mystery.
+
+I remember well that on first arriving in England I had a habit of
+sitting cross-legged on a chair or an ottoman. This position used to
+amuse my English friends very much, and on one occasion when I detected a
+number of young ladies laughing among themselves and pointing at me, I
+anxiously enquired the cause of their merriment, and one of them
+volunteered to tell me that it was only tailors in this country that
+resorted to the use of such a droll position. I assured them that in
+Syria the nobles of the land sat cross-legged; but thanking them for this
+gentle correction, I ever after endeavoured to sit as much like an
+Englishman as I could, a task which I at first found both difficult and
+disagreeable.
+
+At this time I received intelligence of the death of a very dear friend
+and relative, and this melancholy news urged on me the necessity of
+returning to Syria. I accordingly began to make preparations, and was so
+fortunate as to meet Sir George Otway, who was going up the Mediterranean
+in command of the “Virago” steamer, and who very kindly gave me a passage
+as far as Malta.
+
+On board the “Virago” I had the happiness of meeting those amiable
+noblemen, the Marquis of Worcester and Lord Clarence Paget. We touched
+at Gibraltar, and were there joined by the bishop of that diocese who was
+about to pay a visit to Malta. We had a remarkably pleasant voyage out,
+and on arriving once more at Malta, I immediately occupied myself in
+preparations for landing, not displeased at the idea of once again
+visiting that pleasant little island for a few days. In the midst of all
+this, my attention was suddenly attracted to the constant succession of
+flags that were being rapidly hauled up and down and changed. I was of
+course ignorant as to the motives of these signals. In a short time,
+however, Sir George Otway enlightened me on this subject by informing me
+with a smile on his countenance, that the “Medea” steam frigate, Captain
+Warden, with the Lycian expedition, was about to leave for Rhodes, and
+that he was glad to say he had been successful in procuring me a passage
+by her. Accordingly, taking a hearty leave of the excellent commander
+and gallant officers of the “Virago,” and bidding adieu to my noble
+fellow-passengers, I was quickly transferred from one vessel to the
+other.
+
+On the deck of the new steamer I was delighted to recognise the features
+of my old acquaintance Mr., now Sir Charles Fellowes, who was then
+proceeding to conduct the expedition to Lycia in Asia Minor. In a few
+days the steamer landed me at Rhodes. I joined the Austrian boat at that
+island, and was soon, to my great joy and satisfaction, safely landed at
+Beyrout.
+
+On joining my old acquaintances, I was much amused at the ridiculous
+reports in circulation as to the results of my visit to England. Some
+imagined I had been made a bishop, whilst others stated that I had given
+myself out as the Prince of Syria, and had persuaded the English
+government to grant me a fleet to conquer the country. I was frequently
+asked by the chiefs when I expected the ships to arrive. All concluded
+that I was thoroughly versed in medicine, as the people of Syria imagine
+all Europeans, and those who visit that country, to be well acquainted
+with this science.
+
+After I had been a short time at Beyrout, I went on a visit to the
+mountains, when a desperate war broke out between the Maronites and the
+Druses, through the machinations of the priests. The Druses immediately
+made a desperate attack upon the village of Deyr Al Kamar, where at that
+time the Emir Kasim was residing at the palace. The village was nearly
+destroyed, and much blood was shed. The palace was sufficiently strong
+to resist their attack. The government was so amazed at this outbreak,
+that the Emir was ordered to go to Beyrout, whence he was sent to
+Constantinople. I myself remained a short time at Beyrout to arrange
+some private affairs. This being settled to the satisfaction of all
+concerned, I took my passage to Constantinople on board of one of the
+Austrian steamers, and after a prosperous voyage was duly landed at
+Stamboul. This was the first time I had ever visited the great Moslem
+capital; but I came here after having seen and been resident at London,
+and it consequently had few charms for me, though I must admit, that as
+seen from the sea in approaching it, I thought Stamboul one of the most
+lovely spots I had ever set eyes on.
+
+Here I soon joined my old acquaintance the Emir Kasim. The story of this
+prince is as follows:—
+
+His childhood was passed on Lebanon, and ultimately he became possessed
+of large landed estates, to the cultivation of which he devoted much of
+his time. Living in a fine mansion in the village of Hadded, about four
+hours’ journey from Beyrout, the greater portion of which belonged to
+him, his house was at all times open to the traveller, whether poor or
+rich; and, indeed, no person ever passed his door without experiencing
+the hospitality of the owner. The chief objects of the Emir’s attention
+were silkworms, of which he kept immense numbers. He was also celebrated
+for his fine breed of Arabian horses. Devoted to the pleasures of
+hunting wild boars in the neighbourhood of Damascus, and shooting, his
+great delight was a _battue_ of partridges; for the perfect enjoyment of
+which an excellent system had been established. The unfortunate birds
+(of the red-legged species), having been gradually accustomed to be fed
+in a small open spot, whenever the Emir felt inclined for the sport, he
+ensconced himself snugly behind a bush especially prepared for the
+purpose, and blazed away at his victims at his ease. It is quite certain
+that the Emir had not had the advantage of a sporting education in
+England, but it cannot be denied that the natural cunning of the man had
+led him to imitate closely a European practice. In other respects he was
+an ignorant and unlettered man; his only accomplishments being a little
+reading and writing.
+
+When the Emir Beschir had been called upon to join the allies with his
+forces against Ibrahim Pacha, but was unable to comply with the call,
+Kasim collected all his followers and went down to the sea-coast to join
+Sir Charles Napier, who, in return, promised to make him Prince of
+Lebanon, and to add Beyrout and Sidon to his principality; his losses in
+money and property were immense for Syria, but he listened to the
+promises of the English, which were to the effect that he should be amply
+recompensed. These promises were, however, never fulfilled. The title
+of Prince of Lebanon was certainly granted him; but the disturbance
+before narrated broke out, and his removal was the result. It was
+imagined at the time that the political influence of another power
+outweighed that of England, and caused this measure to be brought about.
+On his arrival at Constantinople from Beyrout, the Prince was brought
+before the divan and called upon to answer certain charges brought
+against him. This he succeeded in doing to the satisfaction of the
+authorities, and he was accordingly acquitted; but it was thought that
+his presence amongst the mountaineers might again cause a revolt, and the
+government, therefore, ordered him to remain in Turkey.
+
+While in Stamboul I had laid his case before Lord Cowley, the British
+ambassador, who, upon ascertaining the real state of affairs, promised to
+exert himself in his favour, which promise his lordship fulfilled to the
+utmost. The prince, not understanding the integrity of his lordship’s
+character, and being a total stranger to the system of European
+diplomacy, wished to force on his lordship the acceptance of some very
+valuable Arab horses, which present, of course, was instantly refused.
+This very much astonished the Emir, who had all his life been accustomed
+to Oriental tactics in policy, in which such an argument was the only one
+ever likely to be productive of beneficial results. This, in fact has
+been the system practised from the earliest ages up to the present date.
+We read in the Bible of the wife of Nabal riding forth from Carmel,
+accompanied with donkey-loads of presents, to meet David, in order that
+by soft words and rich presents she might propitiate the king in her
+favour, and turn his wrath away from her husband. The meeting between
+Jacob and Esau gives another instance of this method of conciliating
+favour being resorted to.
+
+The Emir remained for some time under surveillance at Constantinople,
+when, through the strenuous exertions of Lord Cowley, a small pension was
+obtained from the Government. Some time after this, when I was in
+England, I received some letters and enclosures from him.
+
+After perusing the whole of the letters, I came to the resolution of
+delivering one intended for Sir Charles Napier personally. Sir Charles
+received me with the rough cordiality of an English sailor, and after a
+long conversation about the affairs of Syria, told me, that now he much
+regretted the part he had taken in Eastern politics, and promised to
+exert himself in favour of the Emir Beshir Kasim, and of Syria, at the
+same time exhibiting great interest for the welfare of its inhabitants.
+He applied to Lord Palmerston in behalf of the prince, and through his
+influence, after a long correspondence, instructions were forwarded to
+Sir Stratford Canning to exert himself in his favour; but, during this
+interval, a severe illness had deprived my unfortunate friend of his
+sight. At length, through the kindness of Aali Pasha, the then minister
+for foreign affairs, permission was obtained for his return to Syria,
+upon the Emir undertaking to live there strictly as a private individual,
+and to interfere in no way with the politics of the country. He is now
+living on Mount Lebanon, where, at the advanced age of about eighty
+years, he exerts himself as far as age will permit, in promoting the
+happiness of those around him. But to return to my narrative.
+
+During my stay at Constantinople, I was fortunate enough to make the
+acquaintance of many warm friends, and among others, of the late lamented
+Lord William Clinton, who, at that time, was fulfilling the duties of
+secretary to the embassy, also of Mr. Wood and Mr. Allison, a gentleman
+distinguished by his profound acquaintance with the languages, customs,
+and manners of the East, also attached to the embassy, Mr. Cumberbatch,
+the consul-general, and his brother. I further had the pleasure of
+making the acquaintance of the late Doctor Bennet, chaplain to the
+embassy, a truly good man, and one who did credit to his creed.
+
+Dr. Bennett had a large family of sons and daughters, all scattered about
+over the world. One is, I believe, now high in the East India Company’s
+service in Bengal, another attached to the consulate at Varna; and there
+is one, I believe, in England, who has embraced his father’s profession
+and entered the ministry. Mrs. Bennett was a most exemplary wife. From
+her I received my first impression in favour of English wives; her
+never-tiring and affectionate attendance upon the good doctor when seized
+with his last fatal illness, seemed to me, who was then unaccustomed to
+the devotion displayed by English women in time of sickness, truly
+angelic, and quite disheartened me when drawing a comparison between them
+and my own countrywomen, ignorant of reading and writing, though
+doubtless, if educated, susceptible of all the more refined feelings of
+civilisation.
+
+Though on the point of falling desperately in love with one of the fair
+daughters of the land, this consideration effectually checked my
+enthusiasm. A lady-friend had given me an eloquent description of a
+young Greek damsel, to which I was more than half inclined to listen,
+when the example I have already quoted made me suddenly remember that
+such things were not to be hoped for save in an English wife.
+
+During my stay at Stamboul, I renewed my acquaintance with the Rev. Mr.
+Goodall, my former kind instructor, who had left Syria and come to reside
+in that city, where, in conjunction with the other American missionaries,
+he carried on his arduous duties with unremitting zeal. Though not long
+resident at Constantinople, I was witness, on more than one occasion, to
+the havoc committed by the fires that are incessantly occurring. From
+one of these I myself was a severe sufferer. Once, while spending the
+evening with Lord W. Clinton, a fire broke out in the house next to his.
+As mine was only a few doors further off, I hastened away to rescue my
+property, and with the assistance of the _hammahls_, or porters,
+succeeded in removing it into the centre of a neighbouring field, where
+it would be out of harm’s way. Having done this, I returned immediately
+to Lord William’s to give him what assistance I could in helping to
+remove his property to a place of safety. The fire committed fearful
+ravages. A whole quarter of Pera was destroyed. When it was at last
+extinguished, I hastened to look after my own property, but such had been
+the devastation committed by the flames, that the whole face of the
+district was changed; and I found it utterly impossible to recognise any
+spot or mark which might afford the slightest clue as to the whereabouts
+of my late quarters, and thus lead to the recognition of the field.
+After a long and unsuccessful search, I was obliged to give the matter
+up; and I was thus deprived of the whole of my personal effects. This
+was in the winter of 1846.
+
+After some months’ residence at Constantinople, through Lord Cowley’s
+kind exertions with the Turkish government, I was sent to England, and
+was furnished with letters to Prince Callimaki, then ambassador at the
+court of St. James’s. Lord Cowley gave me a passage to Malta in an
+English war-steamer. We touched at Corfu, where I was so fortunate as to
+make the acquaintance of Lord Seaton, who at that time held the office of
+Lord High Commissioner of the Ionian Isles. Both himself and family
+treated me with the greatest hospitality. During my short stay, I had
+time to discover that his lordship’s popularity amongst the residents was
+very great.
+
+From Corfu we came to Malta, where I had the pleasure of meeting several
+dear friends again. I stayed here for a fortnight; and on one occasion,
+I regret to say, I witnessed conduct most unusual in British officers,
+who, with few exceptions, I have found ever mindful of their position as
+gentlemen. One evening, at the theatre, a number of the junior officers
+were present, and, in spite of the quiet remonstrances of the audience,
+persisted in placing their feet on the ledge in the front of the boxes.
+The Maltese at length became so exasperated that a number of them left
+the house and awaited the departure of the officers, when they assailed
+them in a most furious manner, and would certainly have inflicted serious
+injury upon them had not a guard arrived opportunely to separate the
+combatants. At the height of the riot my curiosity was much excited on
+observing a peasant, who had struck down an officer, and seemed
+apparently about to follow up his attack, suddenly desist and render the
+utmost assistance to his late foe. Being acquainted with the gentleman,
+I next day enquired what could have caused this change, and was much
+surprised to find that this strange occurrence arose from the peasant
+having, by a secret sign, discovered that the officer was a brother
+mason. I could not but admire a system productive of such benevolent
+results, and a few evenings after, happening to be dining with my friend,
+Captain Ford of the artillery, and understanding from him that he was
+engaged to attend a lodge on the island, I begged he would procure me
+admission. This he kindly consented to do, and I was, therefore, duly
+initiated. The kind feeling and brotherly love I have met with among
+masons, has rendered this event one of the happiest of my life.
+
+From Malta I came to England through France, _viá_ Marseilles. At
+Marseilles I put up at the Hotel de l’Europe. Being at that time
+ignorant of the language, I found myself awkwardly situated, for shortly
+after my arrival, having washed my hands, I could find no place wherein
+to empty the basin, and being amongst strangers, I felt great diffidence
+in making known my wants. In this dilemma, I resorted to the expedient
+of throwing the water out of the window. I did so, and was chuckling at
+the success of my plan, when my attention was attracted by a great noise
+in the street, and, to my surprise, I heard foot-steps and angry voices
+approaching my bed-room door.
+
+On their entering, I found that the water had unfortunately alighted on a
+French officer, who at that moment chanced to be passing in full-dress
+uniform. His indignation was such that I expected to be annihilated on
+the spot. I presume, however, that the people of the hotel would not
+permit him to wreak his vengeance on me, and so he contented himself by
+giving me into the charge of the police, who desired me the next day to
+appear before the magistrate (the complainant appearing in person). I of
+course made ample apologies through an interpreter, and the matter was at
+length satisfactorily settled. This officer and myself afterwards became
+very good friends; he explained to me that he had imagined I was an Arab
+from Africa, who had thus sought to revenge myself for injuries I might
+have received from their hands whilst in Algeria, and that this had
+determined him to have me punished, adding that had he known that I was a
+Syrian, and above all from Mount Lebanon, he would certainly have been
+disposed to be more lenient. This _contretemps_ shewed me the necessity
+of being acquainted with the customs and languages of the places through
+which I might be necessitated to travel.
+
+I left Marseilles by the diligence, and was very surprised at the slow
+method of travelling adopted by the French. As compared to the railroad
+transit in England, they seemed a century behind. The idea seems quite
+absurd that a country like France, which aspires to rivalry in arts and
+sciences no less than in accomplishments, should compel unhappy
+travellers to lose three days in performing a distance that could almost
+be done in a few hours in England.
+
+I made a short stay at Paris, where I met with great kindness from the
+Ottoman ambassador, Suliman Pasha, and was fortunate enough while there
+also to make the acquaintance of that celebrated statesman and profound
+scholar, M. Guizot. M. Thiers, also honoured with his friendship. With
+this last eminent statesman I had a long and interesting conversation
+respecting the Syrian campaign of 1840–41, and he evinced a most lively
+interest in the fortunes of the grand Emir Beschir. Under the pretence
+of collecting money for the sufferers of Mount Lebanon, an association
+was formed at that time in Paris, with the secret intention of making a
+tool of one of the Emir’s family, and through his instrumentality
+exciting a rebellion amongst the inhabitants, and then taking advantage
+of their civil discord.
+
+Being a native of those parts, the ambassador thought that I could
+without exciting suspicion gain some information as to the real projects
+of these people. I obtained possession of a pamphlet, in which their
+benevolent views were set forth as a blind to their proceedings, from the
+treasurer of the society, with whom I was formerly acquainted, but who,
+ignorant of my intentions, declared its real purposes. Their object was
+to excite commotions, and through the medium of these civil discords to
+increase the influence of France in those parts.
+
+On my arrival in England in October, 1847, I presented my letters of
+introduction to Prince Callimaki, who introduced me to the members of his
+suite. After some deliberation, the Prince and my English friends
+thought it would be better for my interests to study a profession than to
+remain simply attached to the Embassy: but they left it to me to choose
+what that profession should be. After mature reflection, I fixed upon
+surgery, which I thought would more than any other render my services of
+use to my fellow-countrymen. On making my choice known, the Prince and
+Mr. Zohrab kindly undertook to consult with Mr. Benjamin Phillips, the
+eminent surgeon of Wimpole-street, now retired from practice, and living
+at Hendon, to whom I was furnished with a letter of introduction. The
+parental conduct of this gentleman towards me I shall ever call to mind
+with the deepest veneration, and in the phraseology of my countrymen,
+_the ashes of my bones will not cease to retain this feeling_. It was at
+last determined that I should reside with Mr. Drewitt, of Curzon-street,
+May-fair; this gentleman and his kind-hearted lady exerted themselves to
+the utmost to procure my comfort and further my views, and whilst under
+their hospitable roof, I enjoyed every domestic happiness.
+
+In order still further to advance my interests, the Prince Callimaki, Mr.
+Phillips, and other friends, most kindly addressed letters to the
+Directors of King’s College, introducing me to them, and stating my
+earnest wish to attend the valuable lectures of this institution. In
+reply, the much respected principal, Dr. Jelf, immediately sent me an
+admission to the College, and he himself received me in the most generous
+and noble manner, and exhorted me to use my endeavours to persuade my
+countrymen to follow my example.
+
+I now regularly attended these lectures, and from both professors and
+students received every civility and attention. At first my repugnance
+to the dissecting-room was so great and overpowering, that I went to the
+prince and earnestly besought of him to let me relinquish the profession,
+telling him that I thought it quite an act of barbarity thus to mutilate
+the dead. The prince, however, after many arguments, induced me to
+persevere a little longer. I took his advice, and soon found that this
+feeling of repugnance gradually subsided; nay, more than this, I began to
+take peculiar pleasure in the study, when the whole magnitude of its
+wonderful philosophy burst upon my understanding. One day a trifling
+accident occurred to me—trifling in appearance, but which very nearly
+terminated fatally. The event, however, was productive of one good
+result, it shewed me the sincere and unaffected esteem of English
+friends, and made me happy in the knowledge that I was fortunate enough
+to have hundreds, even in England, deeply interested in my welfare.
+
+Whilst assisting in the dissecting-room in November 1849, I accidentally
+pricked my finger with a poisoned knife, but being engaged on that day to
+dine with the excellent and good Lord Cranworth, the present Lord
+Chancellor, the hospitalities of that nobleman, and the cheering music of
+his lady and her sister, Lady Eardley, entirely drove the circumstance
+from my memory. This was the ninth of November, and I was engaged to
+join the festivities at the Guildhall in the evening. At midnight,
+whilst in the midst of my enjoyment, I was seized with sudden illness,
+and my good friend, the late Sir Felix Booth, immediately sent me home in
+his carriage. After a night of extreme wretchedness and misery, I next
+morning summoned around me a host of my medical acquaintances; but these,
+alas! were but Job’s comforters, for they one and all assured me, that
+should erysipelas supervene, death would be the certain result. I need
+not here relate the depressing effect this news had upon my already
+exhausted spirits.
+
+My English friends may smile at what I am now about to relate, but the
+impression made at that period on my mind was so great, that I cannot
+refrain from mentioning the matter.
+
+While in my own country (according to the universal custom of the
+inhabitants), I had sought to dive into the secrets of futurity through
+the aid of a _munajjim_, or magician, who predicted that on a Friday I
+should be seized with a dangerous illness or be shot, either purposely or
+by accident, and that in all probability either misfortune would prove
+fatal to me. In my almost helpless state, this circumstance coming
+vividly to my mind, was all-sufficient to have brought about the foretold
+result, for it certainly for some time hindered my recovery. I sent for
+a Syrian friend and made my will, and he committed to paper all my good
+wishes towards my kindred at home.
+
+During this sad time, my first English friend, the Hon. and Rev. Baptist
+Noel, was most indefatigable in his attentions; and this good man
+comforted me with prayers, and taught me to lean on the word of God for
+comfort and succour, not only in this affliction, but in every
+tribulation. I likewise received a visit from Cardinal Wiseman, who,
+meeting my friend and medical adviser, Mr. Phillips, at the door, asked
+permission to see me. This was reluctantly granted, and only upon
+condition that the cardinal should attend to my spiritual concerns, and
+leave my corporeal cure to Mr. P. My illness continued for three months;
+but at last, through the untiring labours of Mr. Phillips, and under the
+Divine blessing, I was once more restored to health.
+
+My apartments were every day besieged by numbers of kind friends, who
+called to ascertain the state of my health, and to leave me fruits, and
+such tokens of esteem as they thought most acceptable to an invalid.
+
+I well remember that, at a period during the most dangerous part of my
+illness, I called to mind, that in my country a superstition was
+prevalent, that the broth made from a young black cock, whose head must
+be severed by a knife with one stroke from the body, was very efficacious
+in curing such cases as mine; and my strict injunctions and earnest
+entreaties to those around me to prepare me this broth, must have made
+them imagine me imbecile.
+
+Before quitting this subject, I must here record my grateful thanks to
+Mr. Zohrab, the Turkish consul-general, and his lady, whose friendship
+and kindness to me upon all occasions I can never sufficiently
+acknowledge. On my partial recovery, they insisted on my taking up my
+abode at their mansion at Hampstead; and owing to their kind attentions
+and _recherché_ fare, I soon recovered my strength.
+
+The 12th of April, 1850, was one of the proudest days of my life. On
+that day I had the great honour of being admitted a member of the Royal
+College of Surgeons of London; and whilst yet blushing beneath my new
+honours, more came pouring upon my head. I went to King’s College on the
+27th of the same month to witness the distribution of prizes, and there I
+had the pleasure of meeting the amiable and learned professor, Doctor
+Jelf; from him I was surprised and delighted to learn, that, listening to
+his kind recommendation of my attention to studies and lectures, His
+Grace the Archbishop of Canterbury had been graciously pleased to confer
+upon me the honour of being an associate of the college.
+
+Having thus been admitted among the surgical staff of England, I am
+naturally jealous, as well for the honour and privileges, as for the
+efficiency of the profession, in this great country; and I think it will
+not be out of place if I briefly record the opinions entertained by a
+foreigner on the anomalous and unsatisfactory position which it at
+present occupies.
+
+Although, then, the medical profession, as a body, is held by the people
+in very considerable estimation and respect, and although the individual
+practitioners are received in the families, whose confidence or
+friendship they have obtained, with the utmost cordiality and unreserve,
+giving place only to ministers of religion, nevertheless, they have good
+reason to complain of the manner in which they are treated by the
+Government, and the little care that is taken of their interests. Being
+all of them men of somewhat extended education,—with very few exceptions,
+gentlemen by birth—and very many of them deeply versed in various
+scientific subjects, it would not be too much to expect that the
+Government would at least throw around them the shield of its protection,
+even if it did not stimulate them to increased activity and exertion, by
+holding out honours and rewards, as prizes for the most distinguished.
+Yet how stands the fact? The law permits any man to call himself
+surgeon, and to perform the most capital operations; moreover, the
+Executive will not take the trouble to publish a list of the authorised
+practitioners in the three kingdoms. No authentic document exists,
+enrolling in one compendium the names of all who are entitled to practise
+in their respective departments, and, consequently, the public are kept
+in ignorance of those whom in medical matters they may with safety trust.
+Nor is this all. It absolutely encourages unlicensed and ignorant
+pretenders, by permitting the sale of quack medicines for a paltry duty
+on each parcel vended. It derives, indeed, no small revenue from this
+disgraceful source, not only to the injury of the regular members of the
+profession, but to the imminent danger of the community also. In legal
+matters, no man can give you advice without being duly licensed to do so;
+but in medicine and surgery any man may prescribe the most deadly poison,
+or amputate a leg without the least authority, and, unless death result
+from his temerity, without being amenable to any penalty.
+
+As a proof of the contemptuous treatment to which the profession is
+exposed at the hands of the authorities of the nation, great and small,
+reference need merely be made to the surgeons attached to the Poor-law
+unions, and to the assistant-surgeons of the navy. The latter—gentlemen
+who have passed through their education, and must of necessity be in
+their twenty-third year—are not allowed a separate cabin, in which to
+prosecute their studies, until after three years of service, but are
+doomed to the noise and inconvenience of the midshipmen’s berth. They
+are thus put on an equality with youths, six or seven years younger than
+themselves, and who are still in a state of pupilage. Whilst from the
+former, for the most part, is exacted a quantity of physical labour,
+sufficient to exhaust the stoutest frame, for a stipend considerably less
+than would be accepted by a skilled artisan; the threat having been in
+many instances put forth against the established practitioner of the
+neighbourhood, that if he will not undertake the duty on the terms
+proposed, the “Board” will invite some fresh man into the district, to
+whom, of course, an opportunity would be given of shouldering his elder
+rival off his stool, and acquiring for himself a part, at least, of the
+professional emolument of the place.
+
+Again; who would have presumed, that in this intelligent country the
+General Board of Health would only contain in its composition one medical
+man? Who would have believed that the important sanitary affairs, which
+come under its jurisdiction, should be investigated and adjudicated upon
+by a committee of gentlemen, with that one solitary exception, totally
+unconnected with medicine?
+
+One great drawback against entering upon the duties of medical life, as a
+profession, will be acknowledged in the fact, that there are no high
+places of honour or emolument set apart for the members of that
+profession as there are for divines and lawyers. The utmost a medical
+man can hope for, because it is the highest point he can possibly attain
+to, is to have the honour of knighthood or a baronetcy conferred upon
+him—distinctions which are bestowed upon Lord Mayors and Sheriffs with a
+much more profuse hand than on the scientific portion of the community.
+The Archbishop of Canterbury ranks next to the members of the Royal
+Family, and the Bishops take precedence of all temporal Barons. The Lord
+Chancellor’s rank is next in order to the Archbishop; and thus the two
+highest offices in the realm are open to the ambition of the most obscure
+student in divinity and law, while to the professors of medicine not even
+a commissionership is ever offered.
+
+With an equally niggardly hand are pecuniary grants and pensions
+distributed. There must indeed be something very extraordinary in the
+case that would induce a minister to recommend to the Sovereign a grant
+of money, as a pension or otherwise, to any member of the medical
+profession, however benefited mankind might have been by his discoveries,
+and however old and indigent he might himself have become. Nor do widows
+and children fare much better. Should a pension be vouchsafed to the
+family of a distinguished professional man, left in straitened
+circumstances, it is, for the most part, comparatively inconsiderable in
+amount.
+
+Successful soldiers are titled and pensioned, and any man who has
+invented a destructive weapon of war is held in high veneration; while
+those who have devoted their lives to the mitigation of human suffering,
+and have even discovered a certain means of abrogating pain under the
+most severe surgical operations, are passed by as unworthy of regard.
+
+Unfortunately, the remarks I have penned above are applicable, for the
+most part, to all literary men, equally with the professors of medicine.
+In no country is literature more highly prized by the people, or less
+patronised by the Government.
+
+Such is surely a suicidal as well as narrow-minded policy, because it
+tends to drive young men of high talent and promise, who might otherwise
+be disposed to seek medicine as a profession, into some other walk of
+life. Every encouragement, on the contrary, ought to be held out to the
+flower of the rising generation to enter into the medical profession as a
+study, since the health, and, consequently, the happiness of the
+community are entrusted, under Providence, to their keeping. One would
+suppose, indeed, that if no higher motive was the actuating principle, a
+selfish regard for their own well-being would induce those in power to
+render it worth the while of youths of genius and extensive acquirements
+to devote themselves to this noble pursuit. For this purpose some posts
+of distinction should be put aside, or new ones created, and appropriated
+to the professors of medicine; and in that case it would soon be
+discovered, that a preliminary scientific education, and the knowledge
+acquired in the intimate intercourse with society, enjoyed by the medical
+practitioner, by no means disqualified him to undertake places of trust,
+and to execute delicate and important services.
+
+Another complaint, that the profession might justly make, is, the want of
+any representatives of their interest in the lower House of Parliament.
+Both in the Lords and Commons assembly the law possesses a large and even
+overwhelming force; and although the constitution of the country
+precludes the ministers of religion from holding seats in the Commons,
+yet that want is well supplied by the talent and eloquence of the members
+sent by the universities of Oxford and Cambridge into that chamber; and
+the omission is, moreover, fully and excellently made up by the number,
+learning, and energy of the bishops having seats in the House of Peers;
+while the professors of medicine are altogether without any one to stand
+up in their behalf. The consequence of this is, that if a medical
+question is started, or one having reference to sanitary measures—which,
+indeed, are interesting to every individual in the state, inasmuch as his
+own health and safety may be involved in them—it is either shelved on the
+first decent opportunity, or discussed languidly in a thin house. If the
+University of London, the Royal Colleges of Physicians and Surgeons, and
+some of the northern Universities, had the privilege granted them of
+sending representatives to the Legislature, the addition might be found
+to be as much for the benefit of the nation as for the honour and
+advantage of the profession itself. {157}
+
+About this time, finding that my friend the Mir Shahamet Ali intended to
+visit the north of England, I availed myself of the opportunity, and
+joined him in the excursion. This gentleman was the most remarkable
+stranger I have met with in England; he was a native of Delhi, where he
+received his education. The Mir was a most intelligent and learned man,
+and had travelled much in Bengal with Sir Claude Wade, whom he had
+accompanied to the Punjaub and Bahawalpur, when that gentleman went there
+for the purpose of negotiating with those States for throwing open the
+navigation of the Indus and the Sutledge. The Mir was afterwards sent
+with presents from the English Government to the Court of Lahore, and he
+subsequently published, in English, two books, the “Sikhs and Affghans,”
+and a “History of Bahawalpur,” besides one or two little pamphlets on
+Indian affairs; he also long held the situation of _Mir Moonshee_ in the
+Upper Provinces.
+
+Perhaps I may here be allowed to give an anecdote illustrative of London
+_haut ton_ and society, showing how scrupulous they are, and how a
+stranger may inadvertently fall into disrepute; and also, how easily a
+foreigner, by slight mistakes, may suffer severe consequences. I once,
+mistaking the designation of my friend, the Mir, introduced him at the
+houses of some religious fashionables as a prince, supposing the term
+Mir, in Hindustani, to be equivalent to the word Emir in Arabic. Some
+person chose to bestow this title on _myself_ instead of my friend, and I
+was supposed to be the prince. An intimate friend afterwards told me
+that I had been accused of introducing _myself_ as a prince. Thus a
+report, arising from a mistake of which I was wholly unconscious, was for
+some time circulated to my prejudice.
+
+But return to the Mir, he came to this country to obtain a better insight
+into European manners and society. Her Majesty the Queen of England was
+graciously pleased to receive him, and he was presented at court by the
+Earl of Shaftesbury. General Duncan Macleod, of the Indian army, whose
+engineering talents have been so justly admired, as exemplified in the
+splendid palace erected under his sole direction for the Nawab of
+Moorshedabad, also a friend of the Mir, was present. During this
+presentation, a very pleasing incident occurred, illustrative to the
+latter of the urbanity of Scottish aristocracy. Being very much struck
+with the splendid Highland costume of one of the gentlemen present, the
+Mir wished to be allowed to inspect it nearer, when General Macleod, with
+characteristic amiability, apologetically explained to the object of his
+admiration how much his _protégé_, the Oriental, was struck with his
+appearance. The chieftain very good-naturedly invited the Mir to
+approach, adding, “Perhaps you would like to see a chieftain’s wife
+also,” and forthwith introduced him to his lady, the Duchess of ---.
+
+As may readily be conceived, it was most agreeable for me to travel about
+with such a companion as the Mir. We visited all the manufacturing
+districts together. The Mir was indefatigable, active, inquiring, and
+desirous of obtaining knowledge in every acquirable shape. We proceeded
+to Birmingham, where we were received by our consul, Mr. Collis, and
+entertained at his house during our sojourn; he shewed us whatever sights
+in that wonderful town he deemed at all interesting to us. The various
+places we travelled through are so familiar to my English readers, that
+to relate them all, would prove tedious. Suffice it that we got on very
+well together, till we were one day leaving Sheffield for Edinburgh. At
+Sheffield we had nearly exhausted our funds in purchasing cutlery, etc.,
+so that when we came to the railway-station we had not enough ready money
+between us to pay our fare onward to Edinburgh. We were, however,
+bearers of letters of credit, and stating our circumstances to the head
+booking-clerk, he kindly consented to allow us to proceed by the train on
+condition that we paid on arriving in Edinburgh. Accordingly we took our
+seats in the carriage, and began to condole with each other on the
+awkwardness of our position. There was one other person beside ourselves
+in the carriage, and this gentleman, though a perfect stranger, kindly
+came forward and pressed upon us the use of his purse. After some little
+altercation and hesitation, Mir Shahamet Ali and myself agreed to borrow
+five pounds of this worthy stranger, on condition that we should be
+permitted to return it immediately after our arrival at Edinburgh. Our
+promise to pay was, as the reader may imagine, promptly met. This
+stranger proved to be Mr. Walker, the celebrated engineer, of Great
+George-street, and on returning from London to Scotland, I called to
+thank this estimable gentleman for his unsolicited kindness to myself and
+friend; and through this slight incident, I still enjoy his friendship
+and acquaintance.
+
+While in Edinburgh, we were much delighted at our visit to Holyrood in
+its quiet and decayed grandeur—majestic with age—replete with tragic and
+romantic reminiscences. This impressed us much, and the whole aspect of
+Edinburgh, especially as viewed by night, struck us as singularly
+Oriental; and we, in imagination, could with ease have conjured up some
+additions to the Arabian nights. The dim outline of the castle on the
+rock—the old town, dark and confused beneath, whilst on the opposite
+height, row upon row of twinkling or brilliant lights flashed across the
+sight; these might have made one easily suppose that the grovelling
+creatures of earth inhabited the lower portion, guarded by some
+portentously frowning power; whilst above danced the fairies in their
+exquisite mother’s light (called by the common people, “Bonnie Jumpers”);
+and in the new town dwelt the _Magi_, all illumination, life, light, and
+splendour. The hospitality and warmth of kindness of the Scotch to us
+strangers, was irresistibly gratifying, and we were most kindly
+entertained by many of them.
+
+In our walks, the boys frequently screamed after and cheered us, loudly
+vociferating, “_Ibrahim Pasha_!” I presume that they had heard of him,
+and imagined that every Oriental must be _the man_. The English almost
+invariably, even amongst the better classes, call everybody that wears a
+_fez_ or _tarboush_, _a Turk_, much upon the same principle as our people
+call every one with a _hat_ (_chapeau_), _Franji_ or a man from European
+countries, without distinction as to sect, creed, nationality, or the
+vast variety that exists amongst both people of government, laws,
+manners, and histories. The English also have an idea that every one
+wearing a turban must be a follower of Mahomed. Apropos of this subject,
+I may here recount an anecdote which will doubtless amuse my readers.
+
+One day when I was at the hospital, there was a woman waiting for a
+surgical operation to be performed. After explaining its nature, the
+surgeon, much to my delight, asked me to perform the needful operation.
+Up to this moment the woman was lying on a bed perfectly resigned, and
+with both hands clasped over her eyes. No sooner, however, did I take up
+the instruments, and draw near to perform the needful service, than she
+started up in bed, and glaring wildly at me with terror depicted in her
+countenance, and doubtless alarmed at my Oriental garb and beard, she
+screamed out with all her might, “The Turk! the Turk! the Turk is going
+to cut me!” Nor could any arguments of mine persuade her to submit to
+the operation at my hands.
+
+My friend, Shahamet Ali, had for some time rented a cottage at Ryde, in
+the Isle of Wight, where on our return he invited me to pass a few days.
+I cordially accepted this invitation, and whilst at Ryde had the
+happiness of meeting Lord and Lady Downes, together with Sir Claude Wade
+and his amiable lady, from all of whom I received much kindness, which
+has not ceased to this day. My visit to Ryde extended over a month, and
+my friend, Shahamet Ali, was during that time making his arrangements for
+a journey to Constantinople and thence to Mecca, which last place he
+visited for the express purpose of purifying himself, he having mixed so
+much with Christians that his religion required his pilgrimage thither.
+I accompanied him as far as Paris, where I left with him letters of
+introduction to my friends in the East. I have since heard from him; he
+had reached Mecca in safety, had performed his ablutions to satisfy the
+prejudice of his countrymen, thus washing away all impurities supposed to
+be contracted by mingling for so long a time in the customs and manners
+of the infidels. He is now settled as agent for the East India Company
+at Selana in Malwa.
+
+We both were much pleased with the Parisians. No introduction was
+needed—our position in society was a passport everywhere. The French are
+so amiable, _au dévant de vous_; perfect in grace, fascination and
+_toilette_; more cheerful, and perhaps warmer-hearted than the
+English—but far less stable. A Frenchman may form a violent attachment
+to a person to-day, and to-morrow be wholly indifferent as to his
+whereabouts or welfare. An Englishman may be some months before he
+evinces the least symptoms of even a partiality; but when a friendship
+really exists, you may count upon its sincerity and continuance.
+
+I returned to London and remained for some time, when my good friend,
+Mahomed Pasha, being recalled to Constantinople, it was arranged that I
+should return to Paris and reside there. Amongst others whose
+acquaintance I had the honour of renewing in France, was that of M.
+Lamartine, the great admirer of Lebanon, whom I had met in Syria. We
+were mutually pleased to renew our friendship. He wrote a very flowery
+letter to the Sultan Abdul Medjid, in which he said that having a map
+before him of all that mighty potentate’s dominions, he had fixed upon a
+little spot in Syria (Lebanon), whither he would wish to withdraw himself
+from the turmoil and strife of life to settle down; but the Turkish
+government, considering that the Maronites, who already possessed much
+influence through French protection might choose him as their Emir,
+consequently, in lieu of the small bit of ground begged for in Syria,
+presented him with an immense tract of fertile ground in Asia Minor,
+where the poet-statesman of France might sow every seed, save the seed of
+political discord, which in such a wilderness would never take root.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+VISIT TO PARIS.
+
+
+Orientals who visit Paris for the first time are at a loss to conceive
+anything more magnificent than its streets and its palaces and gardens.
+After having been in England, however, their opinion is materially
+altered, though I must still admit that there are some striking features
+in Paris; amongst these, the Boulevards, Champs Elysées, Tuileries, the
+Louvre and Luxembourg, are the most attractive. Of the greater part of
+the streets of Paris I can say but little; and there are some so filthy,
+narrow, and almost impassable, as to outstrip the meanest town in Turkey.
+Nothing but the uncouth wooden _sabots_ of the French could at any season
+traverse them. Though I must acknowledge that nothing can surpass the
+easy elegance and refinement of the higher classes of society, it would
+appear, from what a poor countryman of mine told me, that the second-rate
+lodging houses are miserable in the extreme. One would imagine, from his
+description, that they went to the opposite extreme to luxury.
+Complaining bitterly of his fate, for he had all his life before been
+accustomed to opulent independence in Lebanon, he wrote to me the other
+day as follows, viz.:—
+
+ “The disagreeable first-impression made upon my mind on first taking
+ possession of my lodgings here (Paris), was the melancholy
+ resemblance existing between my chimney-place and a Syrian
+ church-yard, for I can assure you that its shape resembles exactly
+ one of our ordinary tombstones. For the first few nights I hardly
+ dared look at it before going to bed, lest I should have my rest
+ broken by dreams of spectres and other horrid sprites of the
+ imagination. In addition to its disagreeable appearance, it smokes
+ so terribly that I dare not light a fire, though shivering with cold,
+ lest I should lose my eyesight from the effects of the smoke; but
+ this is not all; the door will not shut well, the floorings are of
+ damp bricks, and the rooms are built without respect to proportion,
+ elegance, or comfort. The house I am living in is eight stories
+ high, and heigho! poor me, I live on the fourth floor, so that I have
+ a hundred steps to mount up and down a dozen times a-day. The
+ greatest nuisance of all is, that the street door is continually
+ being left open, so that any one given to pilfering is at perfect
+ liberty to walk up and down stairs and help himself to whatever the
+ fates may throw in his way. There certainly is nominally a
+ _concierge_. This old worthy, however, is either so engrossed with
+ an old newspaper or so comfortably napping, that he is perfectly
+ unconscious of all passing around him.
+
+ “I have vainly complained to him of this negligence, and pointed out
+ the inconvenience and interruption I was perpetually being exposed to
+ by people rapping at my door, under the pretext of inquiring if M.
+ So-and-so lodged there, but evidently with the intention of finding
+ out if there was any one within to hinder their forcing an entrance.
+ His invariable reply used to be, ‘_Eh bien_! _que voulez vous que je
+ fasse_.’ There are no bells, so that I may die in a fit, or be burnt
+ to death before any assistance could be obtained.”
+
+Such is the deplorable picture drawn by my poor friend, who, on the other
+hand, lauds up to the skies lodgings of a similar class in London, and as
+he is a sharp, acute man, I have little doubt but that he is correct in
+his ideas.
+
+What surprised me very much in Paris was the apparent ignorance of the
+French with regard to the cities and towns of the Holy Land. I forgot at
+that period that they were restricted from reading their Bibles, and that
+consequently very few of them were likely to have the names of places,
+and people familiar to the English and ourselves, so firmly impressed
+upon their minds. My appearance and costume never excited curiosity.
+When they asked me whence I came from, and I answered _Syria_, the word
+made no impression on them.
+
+“Where is that?” said one man to another in my hearing.
+
+“_Ma foi_, _je ne saurais vous dire_—unless it be some obscure village in
+Algeria which our colonists have not yet explored.”
+
+Of course the higher classes are not guilty of such ignorance, for who
+could have thrown a better light on the beauties and localities of Syria
+than the learned and amiable Lamartine, whose accurate work, _Souvenirs
+de l’Orient_, is deservedly popular over Europe.
+
+I have many pleasant _souvenirs_ of the friends I met in Paris. The
+hospitable _reunions_ of their Excellencies the Turkish and the English
+ambassadors—the kindness of the American representative, Mr. Rives—the
+brilliant balls I was invited to by various families of fashion—and an
+adventure at the hotel V....—never to be forgotten, and which it is my
+intention at some future period to publish, which I have no doubt will
+interest many of my English readers—all these I recall with pleasure, and
+I avail myself of this opportunity with gladness to thank my many friends
+in Paris for the courtesy and kindness I have ever met with at their
+hands. But putting these aside as elegant exceptions, I prefer on the
+whole England, and the friendship of an Englishman to that of a
+Frenchman,—the private character of the former has a sounder foundation,
+and they know how to appreciate real moral, domestic comfort and
+happiness, such as our countrymen seek for and find amongst the citron
+groves and gardens of Syria.
+
+Now it can hardly be said that a Frenchman knows what domestic bliss
+signifies. With him the Café is a _sine quâ non_; he may have an amiable
+and charming wife, a young and attractive family, every charm of domestic
+happiness that should link his heart and thoughts with home, and draw him
+towards it as the only true and rational source of enjoyment; but he
+leaves all these, and looks upon them as insipid; his sole delight is to
+wander about from café to café, varying his amusements by an occasional
+game at billiards or a _petit verre_, else he strays from theatre to
+operas, from operas to balls, and some of the wealthier classes live for
+weeks, and sometimes months, in the country in the strictest seclusion,
+practising an economy amounting to penuriousness, in order that they may,
+on their return to town, be enabled to gratify this passion. The wives
+of these gentlemen, continually deserted, left to themselves, and
+naturally of a gay turn, which in many instances arises from a neglect of
+a proper moral education, form those _liaisons_ with others, which are
+publicly known and talked about with the utmost _nonchalance_, and which,
+in my humble opinion, are an outrage to the name of Christianity, and a
+disgrace to a nation acknowledged in every other respect to stand high in
+the scale of civilization. I cannot describe what a painful effect it
+has upon the mind of Syrian strangers to witness such things countenanced
+in France; they leave the country with very poor opinions of its
+civilization—poorer still of its Christianity; and they disseminate these
+opinions amongst our own people on their return to Syria; hence it arises
+that oftentimes the poorer and more ignorant inhabitants of Syria, who
+cannot distinguish one European nation from another, but who set all down
+under the head of Franks, and suppose all to be of one creed and manner
+of thinking, are apt to imagine that the English are only next-door to
+infidels, and consequently a people to be feared, if not entirely
+avoided; but this is an error which I will occupy myself in rectifying as
+soon as I can find time to distribute tracts in Syria descriptive of the
+laws, manners, customs, and religions, of the different nations of
+Europe.
+
+But to return to the French, or rather the middle classes of the French.
+I found it almost invariably the case that should a Frenchman invite you
+to a _café_, he does so in the full expectation that you in your turn
+will give him a treat. His character is inconsistency personified—he is
+fickle and capricious—he enters freely into conversation with you, and
+lets you into all his secrets during the first five minutes of his
+acquaintance, and he entertains you with a string of personal adventures.
+With him every one is _mon cher_! _mon brave_! _mon ami_! He could kiss
+and hug you on parting, and swears eternal fidelity. The next day his
+ardour has cooled—the third he restricts himself to a bow—the fourth, and
+he mingles with the crowd—and you never meet him again perhaps in a
+life-time.
+
+For a ball-room society give me Paris—for a quiet untiring friend, give
+me England. And of the two my heart prefers the latter.
+
+From France I travelled to Vienna. After delivering my letters to the
+minister in that city, I proceeded to Constantinople. On arriving there
+I took up my abode with my old friend the Emir Sayed, the grandson of the
+Emir Beschir.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+STAY AT CONSTANTINOPLE.
+
+
+Even at this distance of time, my spirit is filled with melancholy, when
+I think of that kind friend with whom I passed the greater portion of my
+time whilst at Constantinople: perhaps a description of one evening spent
+in his society may be of interest.
+
+The Emir Sayed—a wreck of greatness, whose fond dream of life’s realities
+can only find an echo in the past—the shattered fragment of one born to
+command—second only to a supreme sovereign—he is a helpless
+broken-hearted man, supported on the alms of those who could once barely
+claim the high honour of admission into his presence. So much does
+misfortune level the creatures of the Creator—so great the fall from a
+princely estate to a beggarly dependence; thank God, however, even the
+gloomiest hours of existence, a light, however feeble, of the brighter
+hopes of life, breaks in upon the soul like an April sunbeam, and chases
+from its darkened caverns all the moist drops of a tearful heart. It was
+thus with the Emir Sayed. His favorite resort in Stamboul was a _café_,
+where of an evening, furnished with a _chibūk_ and a cup of coffee, he
+would sit, surrounded by his most intimate friends, and listen from hour
+to hour to the marvellous or amusing tales told there nightly by
+professional tale-tellers. On such occasions it was a privilege to me to
+accompany the fallen prince, for, besides the instruction I derived in
+learning _au fond_ the technicalities of the Turkish language, I learnt a
+lesson in the experiences of life—how to bear up against misfortunes like
+a man—how to bow the head to the will of Providence, and submit to what
+might appear a calamity, and still doubtless might be intended as a
+safeguard or a blessing to him, whom the Great Benefactor has seen fit to
+surround with troubles, lest his soul should stray from the narrow path
+of righteousness.
+
+We will now, by the reader’s permission, fancy ourselves threading the
+narrow streets of the Turkish capital, following a servant, who carries a
+_fannar_, or lantern. At length we reach the _café_. A thousand lights,
+strung upon every conceivable hook, lend their enlivening brilliancy to
+light up the _salon_; the open space in front is filled with attentive
+auditors, all seated on diminutive stools, or carpets, all silent, all
+sedate, mostly wearing beards, and every one smoking or sipping his
+coffee. We pass through a kind of human alley. We enter the
+coffee-shop: the seat at the furthermost end—the seat of honour—is always
+reserved for the Emir. “He is a Bey still, and also a stranger.”
+
+At length we are all seated, all served, and the amusements of the
+evening commence; the violin and the guitar, both have been tuned, and
+the first piece commences: a short symphony of lively music, and then the
+bard of the company sings a song, of which the following is a specimen:—
+
+ Breeze of the West, I pray thee roam
+ Toward my moon-faced lady’s home;
+ To her my flight forlorn declare,
+ Tittle by tittle, hair by hair,
+
+ Parted from thee, thou form of grace,
+ My heart hath been grief’s dwelling-place;
+ And love has drawn my wandering feet,
+ From grove to grove, from street to street.
+
+ My heart, when bent on beauty’s chase,
+ Ne’er found so sweet a form and face;
+ Although with roving step it went,
+ From house to house, from tent to tent.
+
+ While others smile, and play, and flirt,
+ This bleeding heart bemoans its hurt,
+ Like a young rose, blood-stained with grief,
+ Petal by petal, leaf by leaf.
+
+ The garden where I loved to trace,
+ Sweet blooming flowers in thy face,
+ How _low_ and _dead_ all gardens seem,
+ Alley by alley, stream by stream.
+
+ Sweet jasmine-bosomed love,—I pray
+ Fondly to heaven by night and day,
+ Once more to see that form and face,
+ Lip pressed to lip, and face to face.
+
+ Of all the garden flowers that be,
+ Why is the rose most dear to me?
+ ’Tis that it’s like thy heart so true,
+ Odour to odour, hue to hue.
+
+ Though far from Allah’s loving sight,
+ The Fates have borne my soul’s delight;
+ Go, Western Breeze, this message bear,
+ Where’er thou art, my heart is there!
+
+The song is no sooner concluded, narghilies, pipes and coffee handed
+round, than the story-teller’s abilities are called into requisition, and
+he tells us the story of
+
+ “THE TAILOR AND THE SULTAN.
+
+ “Formerly when Baghdad was flourishing, when great men sometimes
+ condescended to sink themselves to a level with the common herd of
+ mankind, there lived and reigned the Sultan Houssein. He was a
+ famous man and a just judge, but rather eccentric withal. As his
+ Grand Vizier had, on more than one occasion, given him cause of
+ dissatisfaction, he was determined at any cost to get the cleverest
+ man in the kingdom to perform the duties of that office; but he
+ resorted to a curious trial of their talent. A proclamation was
+ issued, that the sultan offered the highest dignity in the empire to
+ him amongst his subjects, who should be able satisfactorily to
+ perform what he should require; on the other hand, the penalty in
+ case of failure being, that the man so failing should forfeit his
+ head. Under such circumstances, the aspirants were not over
+ numerous, but still there were not wanting ambitious men, who were
+ willing to place their heads in danger for the attainment of a
+ position, which perhaps they least of any of the people of the
+ country were fitted for. At last, a presumptuous tailor offered
+ himself as a candidate, and was in due course ushered into the
+ presence of royalty. The poor maker of garments found the sultan
+ reclining on a carpet; and, hanging on a nail in the wall of the
+ room, was a solitary counterpane; and in this counterpane the
+ solution of the whole of the difficulty lay—the task being to cover
+ the sultan entirely over with it. When the tailor first tried, to
+ his consternation he found it too short by two good spans. He then
+ suggested that another should be introduced; but the sultan laughed
+ and hooted at the idea. At last a bright notion flashed across the
+ tailor. He had long been accustomed to the nefarious art of
+ cabbaging, so he set his inventive faculties to work, to find out how
+ he could best cabbage a piece from the length of the sultan’s body,
+ or, in other words, reduce it into as small a compass as could
+ possibly be effected. Bethinking himself luckily of a little cane he
+ usually carried in his girdle, he first covered the sultan’s head,
+ his feet remaining uncovered; he removed the embroidered slippers,
+ and stealthily bringing out his cane, caught the sultan a severe blow
+ across the soles of his feet, that he involuntarily tucked them up,
+ thus drawing himself into a sufficiently small compass, and the
+ tailor, availing himself of this circumstance, instantly tucked the
+ counterpane round him, and thus effectually succeeded in entirely
+ covering him, at the same time telling him he must always take care
+ to stretch his legs according to his covering.”
+
+With songs and stories, such as I have given above, the time passes until
+nine o’clock, at which hour most of those assembled take their departure;
+and the Emir, attended as when he arrived, returns to his disconsolate
+dwelling to talk over the misfortunes of other days.
+
+Perhaps here it would not be out of place, to show the fallacy of the
+opinions usually entertained in Western Europe as to the state of things
+in Turkey. People talk of the fanaticism of the Turks; and in England
+more especially they seem to entertain an innate terror of the very name
+of Turk. Anything ferocious, anything ugly, and black, and dingy, is
+called “like a Turk.” Now what can undeceive this excessive ignorance
+better than the conduct of the present amiable and excellent Sultan, of
+whom many instances might be given, shewing the utmost liberality of
+conduct towards those of his subjects professing a different creed, and
+their admission to some of the most responsible public offices. It is a
+fact worthy of remark, as illustrating this toleration of spirit, that
+his representatives at the courts of London, Paris, Vienna, and Berlin,
+{175} have on several occasions been of the Greek faith. Also, on the
+event of the marriage of the daughter of the Prince Etienne Vogorides.
+(Prince Etienne was a native of Bulgaria. He was during ten years Prince
+of Samos. Latterly, however, he resided at Constantinople, and is high
+in favour with the Sultan, who for a long time has been accessible to the
+Prince at any hour; and he is a faithful devoted servant of the Sultan.
+One of his daughters is married to our present respected ambassador in
+London, and it is not necessary for me to inform the reader of the
+manifold virtues and amiable qualities of this lady; but her father’s
+excellence was such as has obtained for him a notoriety and honour
+unrivalled in the annals of Mahomedan history. When I was last at
+Constantinople, a daughter of the prince, a younger sister of our
+ambassadress, was married to a wealthy gentleman.) To the astonishment
+and intense gratification of every one present, His Majesty the Sultan
+attended with his mother at the ceremonial, a most unprecedented act of
+courtesy, and one least of all to be expected in Turkey, where the
+extreme fanaticism once existing between the two creeds would, we might
+have imagined, have raised an insurmountable barrier. What is more
+remarkable, the Padishah stood up; the prince seeing this, whispered the
+patriarch to curtail the ceremony. The sharp eyes of the Sultan noticed
+and understood this hint, and he immediately desired the patriarch to
+perform the rites as usual, as he was anxious to witness the ceremony
+fully performed. By departing on occasions such as these from the strict
+rules and regulations of the Mahomedan code, and by disregarding the
+reproachful remonstrances of the Ulemas, who are the most determined
+advocates of perfect uniformity to their doctrines, Sultan Abdul Medjid
+Khan, has evinced a strong desire to introduce a thorough social reform
+into his empire, and he has hereby conciliated the good will and gained
+the affection of his non-Mahomedan subjects. Indeed, among all the
+present rulers of the world, and especially those whom Providence has
+endowed with ample means of improving the condition of their subjects,
+the Sultan occupies a distinguished position; and to him more credit is
+due for the reforms he has introduced among his people, than to any other
+sovereign of the civilised globe, and for this evident reason, that in
+the path he had to follow the greatest difficulties have been met with
+and overcome; namely, those powerful ones which spring from religious
+bigotry and prejudice. These he has either overcome or obviated with the
+utmost wisdom and perseverance. And even her enemies are obliged to
+confess that Turkey, under the rule of Abdul Medjid, is in a far more
+vigorous and flourishing condition than they either believed or hoped.
+And during the whole of this critical period, in which the affairs of
+this empire have been agitated, what a noble example of calm and
+dignified moderation has both his public and private conduct exhibited.
+To the violent and uncourteous menaces of his enemy, and to the
+extravagant character of his pretensions, he has opposed a conciliating,
+yet firm line of policy, which has won for him the respect and support of
+the more intelligent portion of Europe; and when his character becomes
+better known to the English public, which it will probably in the course
+of events, I feel convinced it will claim and win all the admiration it
+deserves from a people whose public judgment is perhaps the most
+impartial in the world. My object is not to flatter; but I will avow,
+that I wish by facts and truth to remove some of that prejudice which is
+more or less associated in this country with the idea of a Turk. What I
+have said concerning my sovereign, is borne out by all intelligent
+travellers who have recently visited his dominions. For his love of
+literature—for his liberal patronage of men distinguished by literary or
+other merit—for his patriotism, evinced in his unceasing endeavours to
+bestow on his country all the advantages to be derived from modern
+scientific discovery, and for the amiability and gentleness of his
+personal character, I feel no hesitation, from what I have read of them,
+in ranking him with the most distinguished sovereigns of ancient
+times—with Frederick of Prussia, and I will add Peter the Great. But
+while he far excels the two last in the amiability of his character and
+disposition, he equals any of them in his efforts to advance the glory of
+his country and the welfare of his people.
+
+Owing to the ignorance which prevails in Europe on the subject of Turkey,
+a great outcry is frequently made by many persons about events which
+occur in that country, without for one moment taking into consideration
+the difference in the temperament of the people, arising from their
+Asiatic origin. Our great cause of surprise, is the sudden rise of
+individuals in comparatively indigent circumstances to places of great
+power. When, however, it is considered that the Orientals view the
+various grades of society in another light to the Western Europeans, the
+sudden aggrandisement of individuals from the lower classes will cease to
+be a matter of surprise. In Turkey, men of the noblest birth mix
+indiscriminately with all ranks, and he who is possessed of wealth,
+talent, or interest, may rise to offices of the greatest trust; and, as
+“knowledge is power,” I can see no reason why talent should not be
+brought into the notice which it merits. As a proof of the justice and
+benefit accruing from this system, I may adduce the case of a Kapudan
+Pasha, whose station in life was very humble, but, being gifted with more
+than ordinary abilities, he was promoted to the chief command of the
+Turkish fleet, which was never better managed than whilst under his
+control. Other instances of a similar character are of frequent
+occurrence, more particularly in the subordinate departments of the home
+service. A favourite eunuch, or the brother of a Georgian or Circassian
+concubine or wife, has had honours suddenly and most unexpectedly
+showered upon him in the civil and military service; and there are at
+this date many pashas of both services, who owe their rise to similar
+unforeseen but fortuitous circumstances. It is true, many of these can
+neither read nor write, but they are possessed of great power of
+discernment, and are accompanied by two or three individuals who possess
+sufficient education to carry out the views of their leader in a becoming
+manner. A good secretary, generally an Armenian, is an indispensable
+requisite.
+
+The evil arises here in the choice of the subordinates; who, if they be
+of a bigotted and selfish turn of mind, the benevolent intentions of the
+government are but imperfectly carried out, or frustrated in spite of the
+most strenuous efforts.
+
+Sultan Abdul Medjid, and his ministers, {178} deserve the highest credit
+for the various attempts which have at different times been made, to
+introduce a thorough reform into the financial system of the Porte. It
+is undoubtedly a herculean task, for I do not believe that there has ever
+existed in any country in the world, so perfect and general a system of
+corruption and extortion, on the part of the inferior officials. Though
+not oppressive in themselves, the taxes levied upon the people have, in
+consequence, become an intolerable yoke. Every village and individual
+taxed generally pays much more than the legitimate amount ordered to be
+levied by the government. The emirs and district governors, the sheikhs,
+kekhiahs, and heads of the tribes, live upon the villagers, and oblige
+the poor tenant-farmers to furnish their establishments with horses and
+servants, and practise other extortions. To meet these urgent exactions,
+the poor villagers are obliged annually to raise loans guaranteed on the
+ensuing season’s crops at a most usurious rate of interest, as high as
+from twenty-five to thirty-five and forty per cent. per annum, either
+from wealthy Jews, Armenians, or Greeks, and formerly even many of the
+protegés of the different European consulates took advantage of this
+state of things, and fattened upon the misfortunes and miseries of the
+poor peasants, over whom they rode roughshod. The existence of so
+terrible an evil could not long remain unknown to the inquiring mind of
+the Sultan, and though his sources of correct information have
+necessarily been meagre, he acquired an insight into it, sufficient to
+convince him of the necessity for a change. Accordingly, he ordered
+certain taxes to be abolished, others to be reduced; and he, above all,
+is endeavouring to organise an honest and simple system of collection.
+To this end all his ministers and employés have been obliged, before
+taking office, to promise, upon oath, to discharge their several duties
+impartially and justly; above all, not to receive bribes in any shape.
+He has been foiled to a great extent in these attempts; and hence may be
+derived the clearest and simplest explanation of the financial
+embarrassments of his government. _Apropos_ of this, I may quote from
+the letter of a friend, which has just come to hand.
+
+“Everybody seems to imagine that the speedy downfall of Turkey is
+inevitable, that its doom is all but sealed, and that she is passing as
+rapidly as she can into the hands of Russia. But it ought to be well
+known in Western Europe, that the so-much-talked-of balance of power in
+the East, cannot be thus so easily or so recklessly sacrificed by the two
+great powers, England and France. The jealousy of these powers is a
+sufficient safeguard for Turkey; and they will protect her from any
+aggression on the part of Russia or Austria on her rights and territory;
+and it is to me evident that Russia’s long course of policy with regard
+to the Ottoman empire in Turkey, will be frustrated from a quarter whence
+she may least expect it.”
+
+That which, in my opinion, establishes the resources and vitality of the
+Turkish empire is, that if one of the serious struggles to which it has
+been exposed for the last forty years, were to have happened to any other
+power, it would either have crippled it or caused its entire destruction.
+Turkey, on the contrary, has, during this space of time, experienced the
+severest trials, as, for instance, the Greek revolution, the destruction
+of the Janissaries in 1826 (who at that time constituted her army), the
+annihilation of her fleet at Navarino, the protracted war with Russia,
+the civil war with Egypt, and the many partial outbreaks caused by the
+machinations of European powers; in spite of all these, so far from
+sinking, Turkey, at this time possesses, besides irregular troops and
+auxiliaries, a regular and well-disciplined army and a splendid fleet,
+and is endeavouring still further to increase, and re-establish peace,
+and internal security; and also to find the best means of enriching her
+treasury without burdening her subjects; and I trust, that, under the
+beneficial government of the present benign Sultan, and his enlightened
+ministers (in spite of the fanatical party), Turkey will yet make great
+progress in civilisation and all its concomitant blessings. At least, if
+she does not, it will not be for want of exertion on the part of Abdul
+Medjid to introduce into his empire a thorough reform, himself setting an
+example to his subjects of forbearance and goodly feeling towards the
+many sects dwelling within the boundaries of his empire. The truth of
+these views has been amply proved by the gallant resistance offered by
+Turkey at the present crisis to the unjust aggressions of Russia.
+
+Just before leaving Constantinople, a circumstance occurred which created
+quite a sensation amongst all classes and creeds. An Armenian girl, the
+daughter of very respectable parents, formed a secret attachment to a
+young Moslem, in the service of the Sultan. The lovers managed to
+contrive interviews without exciting the suspicion of the girl’s friends;
+and eventually the girl fled to her lover, embraced the Mahommedan faith,
+and was regularly married to him. Sometime after they had been married,
+the young girl went to call upon her mother, most probably without her
+husband’s consent. The mother and all her relations bemoaning with many
+tears her apostasy, implored of the girl not to return to her husband,
+but to be received once again into her mother church. The girl, overcome
+by emotion for the moment, yielded a ready consent; and for her better
+security, it was agreed that she should be placed within the Armenian
+asylum. This was accordingly done, and the husband made vain search for
+his missing bride. Meanwhile the young lady got tired of her
+confinement, and very possibly of the treatment she received from the
+over-zealous attendants at the asylum, and accordingly contrived, through
+the window of the room where she was confined, to convey a message to her
+husband. The husband immediately complained to the authorities; who
+without delay demanded the girl of the bishop. The prelate at first
+denied any knowledge of the person in question. A military force was
+then sent to bring her away at any hazard; and a parley commenced between
+the commandant and the bishop, in which the latter gave his _parole
+d’honneur_, that if the troops were withdrawn he would conduct the girl
+himself next day before the divan, and she should there declare publicly,
+which of the two faiths she of her own free will would wish to embrace.
+Meanwhile the ambassadors of all European powers had exerted themselves
+on the woman’s behalf, but all to no purpose. Next day she was brought
+up trembling before the divan, to answer the important question about to
+be put her. Most of the European authorities were present, and so was
+the husband; and no sooner did her eye meet his again, than all her
+resolution failed her; and so powerful was the effect of her love, that
+she relinquished parents, family, friends, creed, and nation, all for his
+sake; and when asked the question, to which creed she gave the
+preference, her reply was—“_I am a Moslem_, _the wife of a Moslem_, _and
+I will live and die as such_.” This settled the affair at once. The
+Turk took his wife to his house back again, and the poor bishop
+sorrowfully withdrew, lamenting as he went along the unfavourable result
+of the affair.
+
+Before quitting the subject of my sojourn at Stamboul, I cannot forget
+the great kindness I received from Alfred Churchill, the proprietor of
+the Turkish newspaper, “Djeridei Havadis,” which he supplies with
+translations, by himself, of the leading topics of European news.
+
+The father of this gentleman was an English merchant established there.
+Being very fond of shooting, it happened one day that on sport intent, he
+crossed to seek his game on the Asiatic side of the Bosphorus—I would
+observe that a prejudice exists among the more bigoted natives against
+Europeans crossing the straits—our gallant sportsman was also
+unfortunately somewhat short-sighted, and as one does not commonly shoot
+in spectacles, nor employ that species of eye-glass which some of the
+young English ladies are so fond of bringing to bear upon any object of
+their curiosity, the natural consequence was that Mr. Churchill fell into
+a misadventure, and unluckily wounded a Turkish child. This of course,
+brought the relations and friends, and indeed the whole neighbourhood
+upon him, who attacked him with sticks, stones, and slippers, and
+anything at hand. After half killing him, they dragged him off to
+prison. This was a natural, perhaps a deserved, punishment for going
+about and taking bad aims in dangerous localities.
+
+His ambassador made a dreadful noise about this mishap. Colonel --- was
+sent from England to enquire into the circumstances, who very fairly
+reported that our friend was certainly wrong, considering the state of
+his vision, to be shooting near the place, and the Turks were also to
+blame for the manner of their attack.
+
+But the government of Turkey, after all the trouble and correspondence it
+caused them, nobly and generously allowed him a reparation, namely, the
+privilege of trading duty free in salt, which put several thousands into
+his pocket.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+EGYPT.
+
+
+Resuming my narrative, my readers will be interested by a slight sketch
+of Egypt. This country, now called by the natives “Messir,” was styled,
+in the Hebrew Scriptures, “The land of Mizraim”—a strange similarity in
+the two names, which places it beyond a doubt that, however much the face
+of the country may have been changed since the days of Moses and the
+children of Israel, and though consecutively under the sway of
+governments and people whose language and dialects varied in the extreme,
+the same original name has been faithfully preserved, though corrupted
+and abbreviated by various pronunciations given to it by various people.
+A land of troubles and misery it has been through many long centuries,
+from the fearful days when Aaron’s rod manifested the supreme power of
+the God of Abraham before the eyes of an unbelieving and stiff-necked
+people, down to within the last few years. The frightful devastations
+committed by the plague, and the extermination of the Mameluke power;
+these have been the last manifest outpourings of the wrath of God. Let
+us hope that the full cup of indignation has been poured out and emptied
+to the dregs; and that the prophetic words of Isaiah have been fulfilled
+as far as regards the curse, and that the predicted blessing is about to
+fall upon the land. “The Lord shall smite Egypt: he shall smite and heal
+it; and they shall return to the Lord, and he shall heal them,” etc.
+(Isaiah xix. 22–25).
+
+The striking allusion made to the fertility of the soil of Egypt in Gen.
+xli. 47—“The earth brought forth by handfuls”—is still exemplified by the
+produce. Corn is so plentiful, that cargoes are annually shipped for the
+maintenance of other lands, and when the famine was sorely felt in the
+neighbouring countries, whole fleets of vessels, laden with corn from
+Alexandria, brought to England timely succour to starving multitudes, and
+enriched the coffers of not a few speculative merchants, who made the
+miseries of their fellow-beings a means of advancing their own welfare in
+the world.
+
+There is little doubt but that Egypt has made great strides in
+civilisation under the sway of the present enlightened viceroy; for we
+have daily evidence of her continued improvement. Abbas Pasha is now
+only about forty-five years of age; he is the son of the eldest son of
+Mahomet Ali Pasha, and, therefore, according to the Egyptian rule, which
+gives precedence to the brother or his children, became entitled to the
+throne after the decease of Ibrahim, whose children, in some countries,
+would have been considered lawful successors. Abbas Pasha, unlike his
+predecessor, whose habits greatly contributed to curtail his life, is a
+man of very moderate and temperate style of living; he has but one wife,
+and, by this lady, an only son, now about twelve years of age. At the
+recommendation of the honorable Mr. Murray, the late British
+consul-general in Egypt, the viceroy sent to England to engage a tutor
+for the education of this son in English, and Mr. Artin, an English
+lawyer, was the lucky individual fixed upon.
+
+No sooner had Mr. Artin arrived in Egypt, than Abbas Pasha promoted him
+to the dignity of Bey, and he now ranks amongst the nobles of the land.
+The Pasha having set the example himself, strongly recommended all his
+ministers to have their children educated in like manner; and I have
+little doubt but that this good advice will, in the course of time, be
+adopted. He also sends annually a number of young men to England to be
+educated, who naturally take back with them a strong predilection for the
+people with whom they have for some time resided. This will tend greatly
+to introduce a love of English civilisation and improvements in the
+country.
+
+Amongst other improvements, Abbas Pasha has built himself a magnificent
+palace, Darr il Bedah, midway between Cairo and Suez. This good work
+excited the satire and spleen of the French people, who insisted that it
+was an act of insanity, throwing away money upon such a palace, situated
+in the desert; but, apart from its having given occupation and bread to
+thousands of starving inhabitants, the very fact of the Pasha making this
+place his favourite summer resort, has drawn the attention of the natives
+to the capabilities of the soil in the neighbourhood, and the place, from
+being a barren wilderness, is being rapidly brought into cultivation;
+villages are springing up; and, in addition to all this, the roads have
+been put into excellent order—not a trifling boon conferred upon the vast
+number of English travellers that are continually crossing this desert.
+
+The steamers on the Nile, and the railway now in course of construction,
+are still greater proofs of the Pasha’s enlightened and civilised mind.
+Abdallah Pasha, an Englishman who some time since embraced Mahomedanism,
+was appointed director of the transit, and the Pasha promoted him to that
+grade because he thought no one else competent to discharge the duties of
+the post. The truth of the matter is, that the English never commanded
+greater influence than they do at this present day in Egypt; they are
+looked up to and considered as everybody and everything; and for this
+they have much to thank the able and honourable Mr. Murray. To give an
+example of how far this influence with the Pasha extended, I may mention
+that, some time since, two hundred Copts were compelled to enlist as
+soldiers. Now these Copts are Christians, and their sufferings amongst
+the Moslem Fellahs can be more readily conceived than described; their
+friends and families succeeded in interesting Mr. Murray on their behalf,
+who interceded with the Pasha; and the result was, that they were
+immediately discharged from the army. But to shew how much and how
+sincerely Abbas Pasha appreciates the worth of such a man as the late
+British consul-general, the best proof I can give is, that when a sad
+calamity befell Mr. Murray, and his amiable lady died, the viceroy
+ordered all his ministers and head officials to go into mourning for her,
+and to follow her remains to the grave. Such a funeral was never
+witnessed in modern Egypt. All the nobles of the land, and the first
+gentry, without distinction of creed, with black crape round their left
+arms and round their red caps, following in mournful procession this
+highly respected English lady to her grave. If a potentate had died,
+greater honours could not have been rendered; this act is without
+precedent in the East.
+
+During my stay in Egypt, I resided with my kind friend Mr. Raphael Abet.
+Mr. Abet is one of three brothers; they were from Syria, and eventually
+settled in Egypt. These three brothers were all eminent for their piety
+and their charity. One unfortunately died prematurely; but he has left
+behind him an undying name, having bequeathed an immense fortune for the
+support of charity schools and other similar philanthropic institutions.
+The brother, of whose kind hospitalities I so abundantly partook during
+my sojourn in Egypt (and whom I cannot refrain from thanking through the
+medium of these pages), is equally well known for his benevolence and
+good deeds. On the occasion of the revolution in Greece, in 1823, when
+the Turks took several females and children prisoners, and carried them
+away to be sold as captives in other countries, several of these
+unfortunates found a friend and deliverer in Mr. Abet. Not a few of the
+captives were carried into Egypt, and there sold. Many of these were, at
+a great outlay, purchased by him, who treated them in every respect as
+though they had been his own children; he fed, clothed, and educated
+them, and eventually they married and settled comfortably in life. One
+of the Messrs. Abet is now established in London as a mercantile man; and
+I am sure all who know him will bear me out in pronouncing him to be a
+good man and a devout Christian.
+
+Whilst on the subject of Egyptian friends and acquaintances, I must not
+neglect to mention the name of that good man Mr. Larking, who has left
+behind him in Egypt many a souvenir of which any Englishman might well be
+proud; his name is gratefully remembered by all classes in Egypt, from
+the viceroy himself down to the meanest peasant. Mr. Larking, on first
+establishing himself in Egypt, so ingratiated himself with the Pasha,
+that in a very short time he was permitted to purchase whole villages,
+over which he ruled with as absolute sway as any Egyptian landowner. The
+country round these villages he soon brought into the richest state of
+cultivation: and so lenient a master, one under whom they reaped so many
+hitherto unheard-of benefits, made the peasants almost adore the name of
+Mr. Larking. Not only did he ameliorate the condition of his own land by
+the introduction of a superior method of cultivation, but he conferred a
+boon upon the whole of Egypt by procuring at some expense and trouble,
+the Sea-Island cotton seed, which has succeeded beyond the most sanguine
+expectations, and for the sample of it, which was shewn at the Great
+Exhibition, Mr. Larking obtained the prize. The viceroy was, of course,
+much gratified and pleased at this; and he has bestowed many costly gifts
+on Mr. Larking as expressive of his approbation; besides which, that
+gentleman has been appointed to act as the Viceroy’s confidential agent
+in England. This is only one of the many instances in which commoners
+have been raised to a high rank by Mehemet Ali Pasha, who being of
+obscure origin, took delight in raising to power those whose personal
+merits and talents brought them before his notice. Amongst the Viceroy’s
+favourites was one who particularly deserves our notice, viz., the late
+Boghas Bey. An Armenian by birth, and of no great opulence or particular
+parentage, Boghas Bey was possessed of all those good qualities which
+cannot fail to endear one even to the most savage breast: his charities
+were proverbial even to the detriment of his own personal interest. Step
+by step he rose in the Viceroy’s favour, till he had so far ingratiated
+himself with the Pasha, that Boghas was created a Bey, and had other high
+distinctions conferred upon him. He might have accumulated immense
+wealth, for the Viceroy’s heart and hand were ever open to confer great
+benefits upon him, but Boghas Bey preferred to serve his master
+gratuitously; and even the produce of the gifts of land forced upon his
+acceptance, went towards the maintenance of the poor, and many widows and
+orphans bless his name even to this day. But to shew how dangerous it is
+to be a favourite at Oriental courts, and how it subjects one to the vile
+jealousies of courtiers, even Boghas, favourite as he was, was well nigh
+falling a victim to the viceroy’s susceptibility and the villany of
+others. Some miscreants had misrepresented his character and actions to
+the Pasha, who, in a paroxysm of rage, ordered an officer in attendance
+to go instantly to the supposed delinquent’s house, and have him drowned
+in the Nile. As good fortune would have it, Boghas had on some previous
+occasion saved this very officer’s head, and the man gratefully
+remembering this, hid Boghas in his own house, intending to facilitate
+his escape to some other country. This was a bold stroke, and one worthy
+of great praise. Next morning the viceroy was sadly out of spirits; his
+wrath had not only calmed down, but circumstances had actually transpired
+which cleared his favourite of all suspicion. Great then was the
+viceroy’s consternation and grief on being informed that his orders had
+been executed to the letter: he tore his beard and gave way to
+exclamations of such sincere sorrow, that the officer took courage to
+prostrate himself at the viceroy’s feet, and explain how matters really
+stood. It is needless to say that he was readily pardoned, and Boghas
+received into higher favour than ever. At last, however, a sterner
+executioner than the one sent by the Pasha knocked at Boghas Bey’s door.
+Death came armed, and the good man died, to the universal sorrow of the
+Pasha and all Cairo. Such had been his munificence during his lifetime,
+that at his death he was almost a bankrupt. The viceroy, determined to
+carry his esteem to the last, ordered him a public funeral, at which all
+the Egyptian officials and European consuls and merchants were invited to
+attend. So that Boghas was buried with honours such as are rarely paid
+to a prince in that country.
+
+Of course during my stay in Egypt, I had often opportunities of visiting
+all the known antiquities, and amongst others the celebrated Pyramids,
+those noble testimonies of the bygone splendour of the land, and whose
+age and founders seem destined ever to remain a mystery. A friend of
+mine, a great antiquarian, and one deeply read in profane and sacred
+history, used to delight in holding forth to me his speculations as to
+their origin. His opinion was, that it must be erroneous to imagine that
+these pyramids were the handiwork of the Israelites. In support of this
+argument he quoted from many authorities, and amongst others from a
+well-known traveller who saw at one place the people making bricks with
+straw cut into small pieces, mingled with the clay to bind it. Hence it
+is, that when villages built of this brick fall into decay, the roads are
+full of small particles of straw, extremely offensive to the eyes in a
+high wind. These persons were engaged, exactly as the Israelites used to
+be, making bricks with straw, and for a similar purpose, viz„ to build
+extensive granaries for the Pasha—“_treasure cities for Pharaoh_.” Hence
+my friend argued that the Israelites laboured in making bricks, not in
+hewing stones such as the pyramids are constructed with; but I do not
+pretend to enter into any argument upon so learned and obscure a subject:
+I certainly was surprised at the magnificence of their structure, and
+often wondered within myself where the stones came from, by what means
+they were transported, and by what now unknown force or lever such huge
+blocks were raised up one above another, and so left a firm memento
+through centuries, despite convulsions of the earth, to stand forth as
+objects of surprise and admiration to the visitors of the present
+generation.
+
+With regard to the climate of Egypt, I believe it to be as good as many
+parts of Syria, though the heat is certainly more intense, and even I
+myself suffered from languor and oppression; but then the mornings and
+evenings fully recompense you for the sultrier heat of the day, and I
+never recollect to have enjoyed a summer’s moonlight night more than I
+did upon the Nile. The European residents in general enjoy excellent
+health; and few that have resided there long would wish to change their
+method of living, or the country they live in.
+
+In Cairo, the Consular Square contains many very handsome buildings,
+inhabited principally by the consuls of various nations, and some of the
+more wealthy European merchants. With my friend Mr. Walne, the British
+Consul at Cairo, I have spent many a pleasant hour, and for his great
+kindness and hospitality, I am glad to have an opportunity of thus
+publicly thanking him. Mr. W. is the head of the Egyptian Society, who
+have a very fine library, consisting chiefly of works relating to the
+antiquities and country of Egypt. The valuable books contained in this
+library are at all times, with perfect goodwill, placed at the disposal
+of strangers; and I gratefully acknowledge having derived useful
+information and amusement from the well-stocked shelves of this
+institution.
+
+A great source of comfort to English families residing in Egypt, is the
+punctual regularity with which the European mails arrive and depart; for,
+besides meeting almost weekly with swarms of their countrymen and fair
+countrywomen flocking to and from India, they have constantly fresh news
+from home, and can, upon any great emergency, transport themselves from
+the warm clime of Egypt to their own much-loved foggy island within the
+fortnight. Besides this, they are continually receiving newspapers from
+all parts of the world possessing the advantage over England of being
+cognisant of Indian and Australian news a fortnight before such
+intelligence could reach London; and this for merchants connected by
+trade with both places, must naturally be of paramount importance.
+
+During winter, the Europeans at Cairo are much given to festivities;
+dinner-parties and balls and soirées are then the order of the day, and
+great good feeling exists amongst the residents. Even private
+theatricals have been attempted; but it is during the Carnival that Cairo
+resounds with merriment, and masques and grotesque-looking figures, with
+torches and music, parade the streets from house to house till long after
+midnight, few enjoying the fun better than the native Cairines
+themselves. The gentlemen have shooting parties and coursing matches;
+the ladies ride out in the environs; they have healthy exercise, good
+houses, and the best of fare—all the productions of the East blended with
+the luxuries imported from European markets; and in this respect, as well
+as in conversing with and meeting more frequently ladies and gentlemen of
+their own nation, the English at Cairo possess advantages over the
+English in Syria. All the former have to complain of is the sultry heat
+of the weather, whilst the latter are isolated, and bemoan their solitude
+and the great lack of intelligent society.
+
+On leaving Egypt, I came back to England _viâ_ Marseilles. I had barely
+arrived at this latter port before I again had the misfortune of coming
+into contact with the gendarmes. On a former occasion, as the reader may
+recollect, I got into a scrape by inadvertently emptying a basin of water
+out of the hotel window over the head and shoulders of a fiery French
+officer. This time I had brought with me a little parcel of tobacco, to
+distribute amongst a few of my friends. They wanted to make out a case
+of smuggling against me; but no sooner did I produce my passport, to shew
+that I was attached to the Turkish embassy, than these officious
+officials changed their conduct, and quite overpowered me with their
+civilities. Truly Marseilles is an unlucky place for me. I here also
+had a sample of the bad management of travelling in France. I took a
+first-class ticket direct from Marseilles to Paris by diligence. On my
+arrival at Lyons, I was told that I must remain until next morning,
+unless I consented to travel in an inferior part of the carriage. This,
+notwithstanding my urgent remonstrances, I was compelled to do, owing to
+the necessity of my being in Paris by a certain date; and, though exposed
+to many inconveniences, I was so fortunate as to arrive there in time.
+My stay at Paris was limited to a few days, and I then came on to London
+and delivered my despatches to his excellency our respected ambassador,
+who immediately recognised me as one of his suite, and who has ever since
+continued to treat me with the greatest urbanity. So soon as my official
+duties permitted, I went the round of my kind friends in London, and
+amongst others, was delighted to see the Honourable George Massey, my old
+and well-tried friend, who insisted upon my taking up my abode at his
+house, where I remain surrounded by every comfort and luxury that
+kindness and forethought can provide, and happy in the enjoyment of the
+society of a genuine English family.
+
+The handsome present of horses lately sent by Abbas Pasha to the Queen of
+England, clearly testifies the good feeling existing between the two
+governments, and how much the viceroy wishes to keep up those friendly
+feelings so successfully cultivated and maintained. One of the horses
+above alluded to is of the largest and most valuable and rare breed; and
+there is little doubt but that the English nation will hereafter be
+indebted to Abbas Pasha for the possession of a breed of horses now
+unknown in England. The horses were sent to this country under the
+charge of Nubar Bey, an Armenian, a native of Smyrna, a relative of
+Boghas Bey, who is much esteemed by the Pasha and the Egyptians. He
+received a first-rate education in Europe, and speaks several of its
+languages with fluency; he accompanied Ibrahim Pasha on his visit to this
+country a few years back as interpreter-secretary, and since that time
+has visited several European courts on various diplomatic missions, and
+now holds a high appointment under the Egyptian government.
+
+The grooms who accompanied these horses were much astonished on seeing
+the Queen; they could not believe that so mild and gentle a lady could be
+possessed of such power and influence over the whole world; they were
+confident she must have a most clever magician in her employ, through
+whose arts she had attained so elevated a rank, and won such a share of
+their viceroy’s admiration. When they called to see me at
+Cambridge-square, amongst other articles of furniture, etc., which
+attracted their attention and admiration, was a little mantle-piece
+ornament, representing the three graces, of exquisite workmanship; they
+immediately set these down as household gods of the English, and it was
+with difficulty I could convince them to the contrary, and assure them
+that these, in common with many other nic-nacs, were simply used as
+ornaments to the room. These poor fellows were very grateful for the
+kindness shewn them by Mr. Massey and his family, who procured for them
+tickets of admission to many of the most interesting sights in London;
+and after partaking of his hospitality, they returned in a few days to
+Egypt, begging me to assure my friend and his family that, if ever he
+chanced to travel in Egypt, they hoped to have it in their power to shew
+him the antiquities of that country; and, though they could not boast of
+so magnificent a seraijah, or such furniture, or such sumptuous fare,
+still a good pillaf, a chibuk of tobacco, and a finjan of coffee, should
+be always at his disposal. Mr. Massey was much pleased at the simple
+good nature of these people. Before taking leave, I asked them their
+opinion of England and its people. They replied, both were wonderful;
+but they still preferred their own native country. That the English
+thought but of the present, and lived for this world alone; but that they
+looked forward to a hereafter, in which they hoped to be amply
+recompensed by all the sensual enjoyments a Mahomedan paradise promises
+for the numerous mortifications now endured in the flesh.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+VISITS TO LADY ROLLE AND TO BATH AND CHELTENHAM.
+
+
+Engaged in completing my manuscript preparatory to publication, I had
+devoted myself unweariedly to the task, and was about to correct the few
+last pages, when I was hindered by an invitation to pay a visit at Bicton
+in Devonshire, and there to recruit my health a little after my labour.
+Having accepted it, I purpose, for the present, to give a short account
+of my visit there; also to Bath and Cheltenham, which afforded me great
+pleasure, and which I hope will interest my readers.
+
+Lady Rolle had kindly invited me to visit her at Merton, which invitation
+I was very glad to accept; and I left London by an express train in full
+anticipation of much enjoyment. I had often heard the gardens at Bicton
+described as amongst the finest in this county; no pen, however, can do
+justice to their attractions, and the loveliness of the surrounding
+scenery, which burst forth in all the majesty of a warm spring day,
+agreeably contrasting with the dark and murky atmosphere of London.
+
+The rapidity of travelling by an express train really seems magical. If
+I were to write to my friends in the East and tell them I had travelled
+about two hundred miles within five hours, they would at once come to the
+conclusion that my head was turned like the unfortunate Druse Sheikh to
+whom I have alluded before. An Indian friend who was residing with me
+near a railway station, always compared the approach of the express train
+to that of Satan himself, rushing through the land direct from the
+infernal regions; a simile, according to my notions, not at all bad.
+
+As soon as I had arrived at Exeter, I found a fly waiting for me, when I
+took my seat by the driver, preferring it to the closeness of an inside
+seat. I observed a great number of boys who indulged in various remarks
+concerning my beard, dress, etc., and frequently called after me “Kossoo!
+Kossoo!” the meaning of which puzzled me not a little. I thought they
+meant the discoverer of the plant of that name so lately recommended for
+its medicinal properties, thinking they meant some allusion to my having
+studied medicine. In my perplexity I asked the driver for an
+explanation. “Why, maister, you sees they’ve never afore seed any
+foreign gentlemen like yourself, but that ’ere one they calls Kossoo, so
+they ’sposes you be he.” The subsequent conversation between the driver
+and myself turned upon Kossuth’s merits. On my asking him if he had ever
+seen the Hungarian governor, “No, maister, I wishes I could send such
+publican foreigners into the sea instead of having them in our country.”
+I told him that this is not the way in which we treat foreigners in our
+country, he replied, “You be come from the Holy Land which be’ant our
+country.”
+
+After a beautiful drive we arrived at the park-gates, where I was
+welcomed by the presence of a herd of beautiful deer, who seemingly were
+as inquisitive as human beings, they would not, however, permit me to
+approach them, but bounded gracefully away, thinking no doubt that so
+strange a looking being as myself should be first acknowledged and
+welcomed by their fair owner ere they would deign to become familiar with
+me. On arriving within sight of the mansion, I was struck with its fine
+appearance and noble proportions, and scarcely believed that any private
+individual could be the possessor of such a magnificent residence, which
+resembled more a royal palace than a country-seat of an English nobleman.
+I charged the driver with bringing me to a wrong place, but he resolutely
+persisted in affirming that this was the seat of Lady Rolle. On my
+arrival, a great many houris simultaneously appeared at the window, with
+what seemed to me to be wands; but soon the truth flashed upon me, and I
+discovered that the houris which my imagination had conjured up, were no
+other than Lady Rolle and her fair guests, who were amusing themselves
+with a game of billiards. The noble mistress of the mansion immediately
+introduced me to a large assemblage of wit, beauty, and fashion.
+
+It would be difficult to describe the various charms of this truly
+magnificent seat, placed in the midst of scenery of the most enchanting
+loveliness. The noble park in which it stands studded with giant trees,
+that appear to be the children of centuries, spreads over a wide extent,
+and presents the most pleasing variety. The grounds which more
+immediately surround it are beautifully laid out, and in their taste and
+arrangement reflect the character of its noble mistress. The mansion
+itself is placed on the crest of a gentle hill; the splendour, the
+comfort, the hospitality, which are to be met with within its walls,
+formed altogether a scene well calculated to strike and astonish the
+Eastern pilgrim, who for the first time beheld it. Day by day, as the
+place grew more familiar, new treasures would rise upon my bewildered and
+wondering eyes. In the grounds there is a beautiful arboretum, which I
+believe contains every specimen of tree likely to reward the trouble of
+cultivation, and arranged with regard to its botanical classification.
+The various green-houses and hot-houses filled with the choicest flowers
+and fruits of tropical climates, delight the eye and inform the mind;
+and, thanks to the presiding care that overlooks and regulates the whole,
+all in the highest state of cultivation. Here, in the compass of a few
+miles, and belonging to one possessor, the plants and shrubs of the most
+distant countries (among others I noticed the coffee and banana) are
+brought together, and under the fostering care of art and intelligence,
+made to live and flourish in the greatest luxuriance. Among the
+numberless things which won my admiration, I will add the mention of a
+lofty tower which is built in one part of the grounds, and which is
+reached by a pretty drive through a wood of pine, and from whose top a
+view of the most magnificent kind presents itself, of hill and dale, wood
+and meadow; and a little distance, bounding the prospect at one point,
+the blue sea may be seen, adding another beauty to the landscape.
+
+Never, in short, have I seen anything to rival this lovely human
+paradise, though I have had the pleasure of travelling through many
+English counties. I must leave my kind and indulgent reader to draw
+largely on his imaginative powers, and in thought translate himself to
+some fairy land, where nature’s beauties revel and disport in all their
+glory, and exhibit to the view of the entranced beholders all that is
+grand, beautiful, and ennobling. At Bicton time sped rapidly on, as time
+always will speed when spent in such charming and agreeable society. Our
+usual daily routine was prayers at half-past eight A.M., at which all the
+guests and servants attended, when her ladyship read the prayers herself.
+What an example thought I to thousands of the aristocracy of Europe!
+After prayers we repaired to the breakfast parlour, where a sumptuous
+repast was always provided. After the meal, the company separated into
+different parties—some for a drive, some for a walk, whilst others went
+shooting or fishing. At one, all usually re-assembled and partook of an
+excellent lunch; afterwards, there were billiards, bagatelle, and books;
+in short, each did as he thought fit. We dined, and after that there was
+abundance of amusement; in the evening, the ladies delighted us by
+playing and singing.
+
+Towards the close of my visit, I may inform the reader that my own stock
+of amusements were varied (I am happy to say that it was towards the end
+of my stay), by the discovery that two of her ladyship’s guests, Mr. P---
+and Mr. W---, were skilful with their pencils, and insisted upon handing
+me down to posterity in their sketch-books, so that I was suddenly
+assailed right and left (I think it must have been a concerted plan
+between them for their mutual convenience), which kept me pretty quiet in
+attendance to be sure—to their ease and my dis-ease. Mr. W---, not
+content with conferring on me the above advantage, insists on the further
+distinction of hanging me up at the exhibition—a sentence which I really
+believe he will carry into execution.
+
+The time thus passed pleasantly away, and the recollection of these
+delightful hours will always be vividly engraven on my mind. Amongst the
+performers on the piano was one who, _par excellence_, was divine: this
+was a Miss W---. We often had a round game invented by Mr. P---.
+Something similar to “My Lady’s Toilet,” only more refined.
+
+Lady Rolle kindly introduced me, during my residence at her abode, to a
+Mrs. P--- of Exeter, with whom I had a long conversation respecting the
+Greek church and the state of female education in Syria. I have heard
+that her daughters often visited the poor cottagers, with a view to
+improve and ameliorate their condition, a custom I am happy to find
+becoming very prevalent among the upper classes in England during the
+last few years. I wish some philanthropic young ladies would follow
+their good example, and make a step still further by setting out on a
+crusade against the ignorance of their sex in Syria.
+
+On the grounds attached to the mansion, my hostess has built a very
+beautiful tower filled with valuable and rare samples of china; it
+resembles an Indian pagoda. This amiable lady has also built a very fine
+church in memory of her husband, and also a mausoleum. But what
+surprised me still more was to find a cottage on her grounds which was
+paved entirely with sheep’s knucklebones—a novel spectacle to me, and
+very ingenious and curious.
+
+Whilst at Bicton, I heard a very amusing anecdote about an Eastern
+princess, who it appears had come there on a visit from London, and was
+much noticed by the nobility. This lady was very fond of vegetables and
+fruit, and in order the more freely to gratify her appetite, she used to
+rise early and go into the garden, and amongst other delicacies, she
+never spared the young onions, of which she was exceedingly fond. The
+gardener could not account for the depredations committed on his
+_potager_ till accident led him to discover the mystery. One day he
+locked the gate before the princess returned from her morning walk, and
+consequently she remained there some considerable time, and had to
+breakfast and dine off her favourite vegetables. At length, after a long
+search, the gardener heard her crying out, and accordingly released her.
+
+One day during this agreeable visit was devoted to a drive to Exeter to
+see the cathedral, gaol, and hospital, with which I was much interested.
+I must here bestow a passing note of admiration on her ladyship’s
+“turnout,” which conveyed us to the town: suffice it to say that it was
+appointed in the best English style, and with four fine horses of
+imposing stature, with their gay silver trappings and postillions, made
+an excellent _coup d’œil_. With the architecture of the cathedral I was
+particularly struck, on account of its resemblance to the old churches in
+Syria. I much admired the small paintings in fresco underneath the
+organ, which I was told had only recently been discovered, and these were
+very similar to those in our churches throughout my country, and which
+may be seen at the present day. After having inspected the cathedral, I
+visited the gaol, which pleased me from being kept so scrupulously clean;
+and I highly approved of the regulations and rules which were laid down
+and enforced. But one circumstance in particular pained me very much,
+that was to find a child only eight years of age imprisoned for arson. I
+was told that he was much happier in gaol than at home. Before leaving I
+visited the female department, which was equally clean and well arranged,
+and all the women were usefully occupied. Upon enquiring of the governor
+of the gaol whether the female prisoners gave him much trouble, his
+answer was, “I would rather have to do with a dozen men than one woman.”
+This speech rather startled me, and, as it was time to return to Bicton,
+I left Exeter, having been highly gratified and pleased with my visit.
+During my stay in the neighbourhood, as we proceeded though the village,
+many and very amusing conjectures were made concerning my country and
+station. By some I was considered no less a personage than a Persian
+prince; others deemed me a Turkish Pasha, whilst many even exalted me so
+high as to be somewhat of more importance—an Indian Rajah. Soon after, I
+bade adieu to Bicton, but not without deep regret and sorrow at leaving
+our amiable and hospitable friend and her assembled guests.
+
+From Bicton I proceeded to Bath. It was about mid-day when I started;
+the weather was lovely, and forcibly brought to my mind the contrast
+between the murky and ungenial atmosphere which pervaded London when I
+left it, and the bright clear air of this favoured portion of England.
+Could my readers, who spend so much of their time in the metropolis, have
+felt as I did on this morning, when the sweet breeze, wafting the odours
+of the fresh-turned earth, seemed to breathe health upon the cheek, and
+purity and peace into the heart, they could never again declare that the
+country possessed no charms. Contemplate but the rising of day’s bright
+luminary, which in the west of England is especially glorious, making its
+appearance as it does from behind lofty and undulating lines of hills,
+overlooking the loveliest of valleys, which must in spring present more
+the appearance of a Syrian glen than anything I have hitherto seen. The
+verdant moss, the delicate white violet, and the modest primrose, which
+hid their loveliness beneath a variety of trees, and amongst them the
+first that puts forth its blossoms is the sallow, whose yellow downy buds
+emit a honeyed odour, all combine to constitute this beautiful part of
+England a very Garden of Eden in which an humble mind might dwell for
+ever.
+
+The impression produced on my mind by these scenes, was very similar to
+that which so painfully affects the Swiss, when in a foreign country he
+is reminded of his wild and mountainous home. I felt all the sensations
+of the indescribable “mal de pays.”
+
+But I must proceed on my journey. I entered the railway carriage, and
+quick as lightning sped from all those who had shewn me so much kindness
+and attention, and to whom I shall often travel back in thought to dwell
+with grateful satisfaction and delight on this happy period of my life.
+Should any of my readers, who have not yet visited Bath, have occasion
+hereafter to do so, they will not fail, as I was, to be struck with the
+picturesque appearance which meets the eye just before arriving at this
+beautiful city; the numerous pretty meadows—the spires of churches rising
+here and there to remind the beholder that he is in a Christian
+country—richly cultivated pleasure grounds surrounding neat villas—the
+village inn and its busy scene—carriages, omnibuses, and vehicles of
+every description, travelling in all directions, giving to this fair city
+of the west a miniature resemblance to the mighty metropolis in a far
+more agreeable sense.
+
+But now the engine begins to slacken its pace; the shrill whistle sounds,
+and the heavy train, though seeming to grow tired yet reluctant to rest,
+arrives at the terminus. All now is hurry and bustle; friends, parents,
+assistants, are on the platform, eager to welcome or render their aid, as
+the case may be, yet provokingly kept back by the railings, which are
+pertinaciously kept for a while closed. At last all are free; and Bath,
+that elegant city, with its beautiful surrounding hills, and dazzling
+white houses, and decorated architectural public buildings, now bursts
+upon the view; the smoke curling upwards towards the clear atmosphere,
+dispersing ere it reaches the azure sky. The mildness of the climate
+surprised me, and particularly the warm mineral springs. There is an
+idea prevalent in Syria, that England being an island, there are no
+springs, that all the streams are brackish, and that the inhabitants are
+supplied with drinking-water from the clouds. On my first arrival in
+this country, seeing wine so plentiful and water so scarce at meals, I
+was inclined to believe that the supposition was a true one.
+
+Arriving at Bath, I immediately proceeded to the house of my valued and
+excellent friend, Sir Claude Wade, whose services in India will
+deservedly hand his name down to future generations as a distinguished
+character in the annals of European history. The following day after my
+arrival was devoted to making a tour of the city, in the course of which
+I saw the Royal Crescent, one of the finest piles of architecture I ever
+beheld, commanding quite a panoramic view of the surrounding country; I
+also walked through the Victoria Park, and examined the column erected in
+commemoration of the Queen’s visit to Bath in 1839. The inhabitants
+express their regret that their sovereign has not since favoured their
+fine city with her beloved presence. The rides and promenades in and
+about the city are very pleasant and delightful, reminding one so much of
+the _agréments_ of a foreign town, that I am surprised it should not be
+more generally visited by the English fashionables, instead of going
+abroad to spend their money.
+
+I found that the society here is on a very pleasant footing, and their
+genuine hospitality and kindness to me I shall remember with gratitude.
+Here, as well as elsewhere, there exists a great diversity of religious
+opinion. At one place I was asked whether I attended the High or Low
+Church, and imagining, at first, that they alluded to an upper or a lower
+part of the building, I replied that I preferred the body of the church,
+as I did not like mounting stairs. My answer afforded much amusement;
+but on discovering what was really intended by the question, I was too
+much occupied with thinking about the divisions amongst professing
+Christians to heed the smiles which I had caused.
+
+On Sunday I attended the Octagon Chapel, to hear a celebrated young
+preacher, and was handed by the pew-opener into a seat where there was a
+charming lady, who shewed me every attention, and even gave me her own
+book with the different parts of the service marked. I was most sensible
+of her civility, and thanked her for her kindness, which she politely but
+distantly acknowledged. The next day, I went with my friends to Mrs.
+F---’s soirée, in the Circus, where, to my surprise and pleasure, I again
+met this houri, when we soon got into conversation. She told me how
+astonished she was when she heard a “Turk” read and sing, etc.; she asked
+me many questions regarding my opinion of England and English customs,
+etc., and particularly what were my first impressions on hearing the
+vocal music of this country. I candidly said, that it seemed to me like
+the howlings of my own countrymen over the bodies of departed friends; I
+added, however, that in my case the old proverb “use is second nature,”
+had proved true, for now that I had become accustomed to it, the vocal as
+well as instrumental music of this country possessed great charms for me,
+especially since I have heard the enchanting voice of Miss S---, whom I
+met at Mrs. B---’s. This has effected a total change in my opinions; and
+if I were now asked the same question, remembering these sweet sounds I
+allude to, I should compare hers, at least, to the song of the Bulbul.
+My fair questioner was highly amused at my description of “first
+impressions” on this subject, from which we diverged into other matters
+of conversation; and I finally left my kind entertainer’s house with an
+impression of her hospitality, and of the fair community of Bath, more
+agreeable than were my first impressions of English music, and certainly
+not so likely to be changed. I desire also publicly to thank the
+inhabitants of Bath generally, as well as the municipal authorities of
+the city, for the practical kindness I experienced from them during my
+visit.
+
+As I am on the subject of Bath, I may as well mention my last visit to
+that gay and delightful city, in the course of which a grand ball was
+given by the bachelors to their friends. I was kindly invited to it by
+Mr. Nugent, whose zeal and activity in promoting the harmless gaieties of
+the place are the theme of praise with every one, and of whose polite
+attention to strangers I cannot speak too highly. Nothing that money and
+taste could effect was spared to make the ball one of the most brilliant
+and magnificent entertainments that I have witnessed in this country.
+The Rooms were celebrated, I hear, in former times as the scene where
+many a fair houri made her _début_ in the fashionable world, and were
+decorated in a style of elegance which reflected the greatest credit on
+the artists. I can only say, that whatever may have been their by-gone
+attractions, it is impossible that the display of bright eyes and
+graceful forms could ever have surpassed what I gazed upon that night.
+To attempt to describe this fairy scene would require the pen of a poet,
+that I might give adequate expression to my admiration of the beauty by
+which I was surrounded. I will quote, however, a passage from an Eastern
+author, which I think apropos to the occasion:—
+
+“Their beauty is perfection, they are loveliness itself; their elegant
+shapes glance like javelins by moonlight; their tresses float down their
+backs like the tendrils of the grape; they are slayers and piercers with
+their arrows and their darts; archers and strikers, the enchantresses of
+the _minds and hearts_ of men.”
+
+While at Bath I also had the pleasure of attending another splendid ball,
+given at the Guildhall by the Mayoress, Mrs. Allen, at which the _élite_
+of society there were present. The amiable hostess and her lord received
+their guests with great kindness and affability, evincing a desire to
+please, which completely succeeded, for every one seemed to enjoy the
+dancing exceedingly, as well as the sumptuous supper. The Mayoress’
+health was proposed in a suitable manner by the Marquis of Thomond, which
+was drunk with all the honours in sparkling champagne. During the
+evening, I was observing a Masonic symbol suspended over the insignia of
+the Mayor’s office, which led a gentleman, who was standing by, to
+recognise me as a brother mason. He at once introduced me to several of
+the brethren, and a few days afterwards I was invited by “the Lodge of
+Honour,” at Bath, to meet the Mayor at dinner, where we had “the feast of
+reason and the flow of soul?”
+
+I shall always retain a lively recollection of the pleasure which they
+afforded me, and the kindness I experienced. Whilst walking out one day
+I encountered my friend, Dr. Thompson, whom I had known in Syria, and who
+hailed me in Arabic, in the words of an old Eastern proverb, viz., _that
+though mountains never meet_, _the sons of Eve will_. Dr. Thompson, at
+my request, gave two lectures, one at Cheltenham and one at Bath, the
+notice of which I think worthy of being inserted, {210} and I now beg to
+thank him for the interest he takes in the affairs of my country.
+
+
+
+VISIT TO CHELTENHAM.
+
+
+From Bath I went to the above place, and during my stay I took up my
+quarters at the Plough Hotel, where I was most comfortable, and received
+every attention from the proprietor.
+
+I should be unmindful, and thankless indeed, were I to forget to express
+my grateful thanks to friends generally for the kind reception given me,
+and for the interest evinced on behalf of my beloved country, and I shall
+ever retain a lively remembrance of the Rev. J. Brown, Incumbent of
+Trinity Church. Wherever he is known, the deepest respect and regard are
+evinced towards him and his family. Oh, would that poor Syria were
+blessed with a few such philanthropic men with hearts and minds so
+capable of diffusing wisdom and knowledge wherever they go.
+
+I shall never forget the brief address delivered by this kind-hearted
+man, at a lecture given by Dr. Thompson, on behalf of female education in
+the East. In a few words he expressed all the wants of my country, which
+went home to my heart. I trust that the interest shewn by all on this
+exciting occasion may be the means of benefiting neglected Syria, and of
+promoting the interest of her benighted children, as regards educational
+institutions. I must also here record my sincere gratitude to the Rev.
+C. H. Bromby, M.A., the principal of the Normal Training College. How
+well, and how admirably this noble school is managed! How suitable it
+would be to the children of Syria!
+
+The few sentences I addressed to the meeting at Cheltenham, were
+expressive of my hope that they would enable me to send over for a few
+young Syrians of both sexes, to participate in the benefits of their
+college; and that it was my firm conviction the period was not far off
+when this institution would embrace a more extensive field of usefulness,
+and become the means of introducing Gospel truth and its accompanying
+blessings to my much loved Lebanon. Then shall the Cedar once again and
+for ever flourish in its native soil, spreading its luxuriant branches to
+shield the Thistle from all rude assaults—which may then grope even in
+its own humble way to thrive, and flourish, and raise its crowned head.
+
+Visitors to Cheltenham cannot but feel deeply indebted to Lord Northwick,
+for his liberality in admitting them to his interesting and unique
+collection of paintings. I was much gratified at the privilege thus
+afforded me; and it is due to his Lordship to say that the arrangement of
+the valuable paintings is exceedingly good. Both myself and a friend,
+who accompanied me, were much surprised on our entrance at the extent and
+magnificence of the apartments, especially the modern room called the
+_Pantheon_; we much admired the painting of the Earl of Surrey, by
+Titian, and were struck with its Oriental caste of features and
+complexion, which called to memory some one with whom we were mutually
+acquainted in Syria. Our attention was next directed to the portrait of
+Mahomet II., and if I may judge from the engravings of this Sultan, which
+I have seen in the houses of some of the nobility of Turkey (before the
+strict prohibition of the Koran on this head), this picture is an
+admirable likeness of him. We are told that it was expressly painted by
+the artist in deference to the wishes of the Venetians, who sent Bellini
+to Constantinople in the year 1458 for this purpose.
+
+The Flight into Egypt is another fine specimen of painting, and though of
+modern date delineates Oriental travelling; the face of the Virgin is
+exquisitely beautiful, and has a heavenly expression; this figure
+forcibly brought before me the Countess of K---, whom I had met on the
+day preceding my visit to this place. I would gladly have spent days
+instead of hours in this delightful residence, ornamented with such
+valuable and beautiful specimens of the fine arts; those only who come
+from distant lands, can fully appreciate the luxuries of all kinds which
+meet the eye of the spectator when in Western Europe, and especially in
+Great Britain. The magnificence which I encounter on all sides makes a
+sadness steal over me; and I cannot but lament for the barrenness of my
+native land, which once teemed with works, both of art and science. “How
+are the mighty fallen!” But hope shall shine in the Eastern skies, and
+the bright morning star arise again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+IMPRESSIONS OF ENGLAND.
+
+
+Many of my fair friends have been exceedingly anxious for me to give them
+my first impressions of England. After so long a residence in the
+country, I must confess my habits have become completely Anglicised; I
+have, however, the pleasure of offering them a translation of portions of
+some letters written to a friend at Constantinople during my first visit
+to England:—
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“You asked me, before leaving Stamboul, to convey to you as well as I
+could by letter my first impressions of England and the English. Your
+Excellency can hardly conceive the difficulty of the task which you have
+allotted me. However arduous the undertaking may be, I shall endeavour,
+to the best of my poor abilities, to satisfy your curiosity, and fulfil
+my rash promise. In our own dear village, and indeed in the most active
+and bustling towns of Syria, the silence and monotony of the houses are
+only occasionally broken in upon by the busy hum of human voices—the
+clattering hoofs of horses and mules—the braying of donkeys, and the
+merry tinkling bell of the caravan. The sweet song of the bulbul and
+other summer birds, with the buzzing of the honey-bee, are the familiar
+sounds to which we are from our infancy accustomed. Stately forest
+trees—mountains and hills—valleys and dales—citron groves and
+orchards—the bright plumage of birds and the painted wings of butterflies
+are the every-day pictures, furnished by the hand of nature, and on which
+alone our eyes have been content to dwell. The sound of chariot wheels
+has through centuries been hushed and sunk into oblivion, together with
+the fiery-spirited warriors that guided them. Such is the quiet state of
+affairs in our own loved country of Syria. Now, therefore, imagine
+yourself blindfolded and transported as though by magic into the very
+centre of the city of London.
+
+“Previously, however, a vast extent of ocean has to be traversed, which
+is accomplished in an incredibly short space of time, during which period
+much suffering from sea-sickness is to be expected, and many are
+compelled to keep to their cabins, creeping only upon deck occasionally
+to cheer the heart with a distant glimpse of land, as Malta and Gibraltar
+have appeared to view, and as speedily vanished from sight, leaving, like
+the false mirage, no trace behind. At last the shores of _Ingleterra_
+are discerned. The announcement is heard with indescribable delight, for
+the term of purgatory is about to expire. Well wrapped in a _burnoos_,
+for, although midsummer, the air is keen, you scramble upon deck, and
+being comfortably seated, take a first survey of the famed shores of
+Britain. As far as the eye can stretch, the whole land appears to be
+what is really the case, in a high state of cultivation. Houses and
+windmills innumerable meet the view, and a vast number of smoking
+minarets, which on inquiry prove to be the chimneys of countless
+factories. But you are not left long to consider these matters—what is
+occurring in the more immediate vicinity of the steamer rivets your
+attention. Thousands of vessels of all sizes, shapes, and nations, are
+moving up and down the channel. Gigantic men-of-war steamers—still
+larger mail-packets, ships-of-the-line, frigates, sloops, gun-brigs,
+Indiamen, schooners, barks, boats, all puffing and sailing, pitching and
+rolling, and getting entangled with one another in the most alarming
+manner. Frenchmen shouting and screaming to fishing-boats—Italians
+stamping at pilots—Greeks throwing their red caps overboard, pulling
+their hair in despair at not being able to make themselves understood.
+In short, the confusion of this Babel of tongues is so great that you
+stand and look on stupified and bewildered with amazement, and so
+overcome with alarm and the novelty of the thing, that you have ceased to
+watch the ship’s progress till the anchor is down, and you find yourself
+in the custom-house surrounded by boxes and inquisitive people, whilst
+thunder seems to be rolling along the streets outside.
+
+“A kind friend passes your luggage through the custom-house and hurries
+you into a cab, so imbecile and helpless have you become. If you had
+eyes all around your head, they would not suffice to look at the people
+and the sights in the streets. Thousands of people are pushing and
+running, and shouting and walking, in every direction; hundreds of
+carriages, three and four abreast, blocking up every thoroughfare. Now
+come waggons and carts of every description, omnibuses innumerable, and
+cabs; all these being the _arabaz_, or wheeled conveyances, varying in
+size, shape and colour, the number of wheels on which they move, and the
+number of horses by which they are drawn; some conveying mountains of
+bale goods, others laden with beer-barrels, whilst some are exclusively
+for the use of passengers. The noise created by these numerous vehicles
+jolting over the hard roads is greater than the roar of the Sultan’s
+artillery. What are all these people come out to see;—is your first
+natural inquiry. Is there a fire, or has there been an earthquake, or
+are all the suburban villages and towns pouring in their multitudes to
+witness some grand spectacle? You are inclined to doubt your friend when
+he tells you that this is an every-day occurrence in London; but
+experience proves him to be correct. _Wallah yar effendem_. If Stamboul
+were in flames, and all the Sultan’s harem burning, there could not be a
+greater concourse of people than may every day be encountered, between
+the hours of three and five, in one single street of London, and all the
+other hundred streets are almost equally well filled. Men, women, and
+children, all busy, all intent on some errand or occupation. Perhaps
+few, if any, of the vast crowd you encounter have come out simply for air
+and exercise. The reason for all this is, that London is a very dear
+city, talent plentiful, occupation scarce, so that every one is obliged
+to depend upon his own individual active exertions to enable him to
+procure even a crumb of bread. _Inshallah Būkera_ (to-morrow, please
+God) is a phrase wholly disregarded in England, and not to be found in an
+Englishman’s vocabulary. If you were to put off till to-morrow what
+might be done to-day, you would find yourself a beggar.
+
+“The English run a race with time; and though they cannot catch and
+overtake him, they keep close upon his heels. An old merchant dies at
+eighty, who, from the age of eleven or twelve, has been hard at work six
+days in every week from ten in the morning till four in the evening,
+amassing wealth, leaving riches, a good name, and a vast inheritance
+behind him. That man has made more use of his time than five hundred of
+the most active of our countrymen; and there are a thousand instances of
+such as these to be met with in the city.
+
+“But whilst we have been thinking about this, the cab stops opposite to a
+splendid _seraiyah_, a veritable palace. You image that this must be the
+Queen’s residence, and begin to expostulate with your friend for ushering
+you into the presence of royalty before you have had time to pay some
+attention to your toilet; he laughs at your ignorance. Two gentlemen,
+handsomely dressed and without hats, rush into the street and officiously
+carry in your luggage. You are quite shocked to see the nobility thus
+debased, and struggle with them to relieve them of their burden. The
+friend again interferes, and you find to your amazement, that the palace
+is nothing more than a large _khan_ for the accommodation of wealthy
+travellers, and that the two gentlemanly-looking men are _khudâmeen_, and
+that there are at least a dozen more, all in the same capacity, all as
+well dressed and as good-looking. You are then ushered into a room
+splendidly furnished; mirrors and chandeliers, tables and chairs,
+pictures and divans, all in profusion, and the commonest article in the
+room worth at least one thousand piastres. Your friend touches a spring,
+a bell rings in the distance, the door opens, and a _houri_ enters. This
+must be the lady of the palace; but she is young and tender as a dove,
+and blushes like the rose of Damascus in acknowledging your _salams_.
+Alas! even this beautiful creature is one of the _khudâmeen_, and you
+sigh to hear your friend order her to bring up the scuttle of coals,
+whose black dust cannot but soil her snowy and tapering fingers. It
+takes you a good week to settle down into anything like peace and
+comfort, or to get accustomed to the ways of the place and the hours for
+eating and sleeping. It takes you a month to reconcile yourself to the
+perpetual roaring and din in the streets, occasioned by the countless
+vehicles passing and repassing in the streets.
+
+“At last, however, you feel tired of being shut up alone, and ordering a
+carriage, step into it, and bid the driver take you to one of the
+fashionable drives. You go on at a rapid pace for a few hundred yards,
+and then there is a dead halt; vexed at this, you stand up in the
+carriage to endeavour to discover the cause, and then a sight meets the
+view quite sufficient to paralyse a stranger. In front, as far as the
+sight can reach, and behind, as far as the eye can see, as well as on
+either side of you, is one dense forest of human beings, horses, donkeys,
+carts, carriages, waggons, chimney-sweeps. Officers, lords and ladies,
+policemen and rabble. You move slowly along as though you were in a
+funeral procession, until a favourable opportunity presents itself for
+the coachman to display his skill, and then he dashes at full speed
+through carriages, and carts, so close together that none but his
+experienced eye could ever have imagined it possible to squeeze one’s way
+through uninjured. Expecting every instant to be crushed to death, you
+throw yourself back in the carriage, and shut your eyes on what was too
+fearful to look upon. By-and-by the easier motion of the carriage
+re-assures you—you look up, you have been disentangled from the dense
+crowd, and are driving along in comparative solitude through street after
+street of magnificent palaces. By-and-by, you pass through a square, and
+the verdure of a few trees comes like a refreshing shower to the seared
+up heart, and recalls to mind the lovely home of our ancestors in
+Lebanon. After awhile, we emerge from the turmoil and smoke, and dust of
+the city; and lo! before you, a magnificent garden—such a one as the
+Pacha of Damascus would be proud of. Real, fine, stately trees, and
+plenty of grass—plots of flowers—and imitation rivers and lakes, covered
+too with wild ducks, and geese, and numberless other water fowl, now
+become so domesticated, however, that you see them running out of the
+water at the approach of little children who carry baskets full of crumbs
+to feed them with.
+
+“Here, in roads railed off, the fashionable world drive and ride about
+for a few hours every evening in the season. A carriage passes with two
+_houris_ in it, whose faces leave an impression on your heart, which
+latter is as susceptible as wax. Another carriage, and two still more
+beautiful—a few minutes afterwards three pass at the same moment, with
+such eyes that the glances from them emit brilliant sparks of love; but
+there is no end to the _houris_ and no end to the heart-aches, so we bid
+the driver speed home again, and close our eyes, firmly determined not to
+be exposed to any fresh onslaught from these _houris_—these daughters of
+the finest people in the world. Arrived at home, dinner is served in
+magnificent style. The silver dishes, and the knives and forks—the
+spoons, etc., would alone suffice to purchase a property in Lebanon that
+would yield you or me a comfortable revenue for life; and as the thought
+strikes me, I sicken at the waste and splendour whilst millions are
+starving in the world; and though the dishes are excellent and rare, and
+well chosen, I would willingly resign them all for one good Syrian
+_pillaf_, and the pleasure of a _chibuk_, and a few minutes’ chat with
+your Excellency.
+
+“Nothing is more difficult than for a stranger to form acquaintances in
+London, unless he is furnished with good letters of introduction, or
+holds an official position. In the latter case, his rank at once
+entitles him to the _entrée_ of a certain circle of society. Being the
+guest of a nobleman or some notable man, is a passport into the society
+of his list of acquaintances; and once having been introduced, your
+number of friends is rapidly augmented. Thus, supposing I dine at Mr.
+P---’s to-day, there, amongst others, I meet Mr. W---. This gentleman
+invites me to his house, and there I find an entirely new set, who, in
+their turn, again introduce me to their friends and acquaintances.
+English ladies are the stars of English society. The married and elder
+ladies I may term the planets; their destinies are fixed, and they are
+placed in one particular position for life; but true to this theory, like
+planets, they emit a steady light; their language is refined, their
+manners fascinating, their bearing commanding respect, their conversation
+agreeable and instructive, and their wit brilliant and full of point.
+The young ladies are the satellites that revolve round these planets,
+more brilliant in the pride of youth and beauty, more active, and much
+gayer; their hearts would hardly counterbalance a feather. Poor doves!
+affliction and the trials of life have as yet no stamp on the soft
+waxwork texture of their sensitive affections; they talk and laugh, and
+ride and dance with young men without the least restraint, and the voice
+of calumny is never heard. How different from our poor, ignorant
+countrymen! What would all the old men and women of Lebanon say, if
+their daughters and granddaughters were seen taking long solitary rides
+and walks with the young men? With us, in the present uncivilized state
+of affairs, such liberties would be highly improper; but it is vastly
+different in England and Europe, where men and women are, from early
+childhood, educated with the strictest attention to morality as well as
+accomplishments. Girls of fifteen have sufficient confidence in their
+own strength of mind, and in the integrity and high honour of those with
+whom they associate, ever to feel embarrassed in the society of young
+men, though these young men be comparative strangers; they know
+themselves to be ladies, and that their associates are gentlemen; and in
+England these two words comprise everything that is virtuous and
+honourable.
+
+“The smallest deviation from the rigid path of religious virtue or
+worldly honour is visited with the severest penalty, and the delinquent
+is irrevocably lost, and for ever excluded from the pale of society.
+With such a punishment hanging over their heads, apart from the natural
+instinct to virtue, a _faux-pas_ is rare indeed amongst the highest
+classes of society.
+
+“Ladies are the leading features; many of them are renowned for great
+literary acquirements; most are accomplished; and the highest honours are
+inwardly awarded them by the opposite sex. If a lady enters a room, all
+the gentlemen rise from their seats, nor will they be seated again until
+she has chosen one for herself. If a lady drops a handkerchief, the men
+all rush to pick it up, so as to save her the trouble of stooping; when
+she speaks, all are attentive; and when she sings and plays, the whole
+company are hushed into such profound silence, that you might hear a pin
+drop.
+
+“When dinner, supper, or whatever the repast may be, is announced, the
+master of the house leads out the lady highest in rank present, the
+others being handed out by respective gentlemen; the lady of the house
+remaining till the last, when she is conducted to the refreshment-room by
+the gentleman of the highest rank present. In England men and women
+usually wear no covering on the head whilst in-doors, with the exception,
+however, of _matrons_, who wear caps made of some elegant lace material,
+and _widows_ who, according to custom, put on _weeds_ for a certain
+period after the husband’s decease. _Weeds_ means a peculiar cap,
+composed of white muslin, in shape both ugly and unbecoming.
+Notwithstanding this, my friend Mrs. ---, who is a widow ever looks
+charming and beautiful. But to return to the dinner; when it is
+finished, the ladies at a given sign from the mistress of the house, rise
+and leave the table. The gentlemen remain seated for about half-an-hour
+longer, during which interval they sip their wine, eat fruit, and
+converse. In England they offer wine and meat in abundance, but _water_
+and _bread_ is but scantily supplied. No smoking is allowed within
+doors, nor is it genteel to smoke in the streets—or even to smell of
+smoke when you enter the society of ladies; in fact they smell it as
+quickly as the gazelle does the hunter. Gentlemen who are fond of
+tobacco, have regular smoking rooms, or go to their clubs to indulge in a
+cigar; but the majority eschew smoking altogether. Our nation labours
+under a very false impression in supposing that the English are a people
+with very few ideas of religion; and in imagining that because they do
+not observe fasts and festivals, and cross themselves, they are almost
+worse than infidels. In no country is the Sabbath more strictly or
+rigorously regarded than in England. Not only are the shops and places
+of public entertainment closed on that holy day, but in some families in
+England even cooking is not allowed. The churches and chapels are
+literally crowded with well-dressed men and women twice a day. And there
+are many families that attend Divine service once or twice a week.
+Besides this, they support many splendid charitable institutions,
+hospitals for the sick and maimed, poor-houses for the paupers,
+foundlings for the unfortunate, and in fact, have institutions for the
+relief of every description of disease and infirmity to which human
+nature is subject. Nor must I omit to mention the public schools, and
+colleges for children of both sexes, where thousands are clothed, housed,
+fed and educated at the public expense, and where they will receive
+instruction that will fit them for any sphere; besides these, there are
+also innumerable private charities, and Her Majesty the Queen herself,
+takes the lead in distributing large bounties annually in the cold winter
+time—fuel, clothing, blankets, and many other requisites to the
+friendless and needy. Nor is it only for the temporal welfare of others
+that they exert themselves. Missionary establishments are supported by
+voluntary contributions, and the annual revenue or income of these
+institutions, consisting of millions of piastres, is expended in
+supporting missionaries and schools at home and abroad. Ladies and
+gentlemen who die worth immense fortunes, leaving no heirs to inherit,
+bequeath the bulk of their fortunes towards the furtherance of charitable
+objects.
+
+“There are merchants in London, and in some of the other principal towns
+in Great Britain, who are in possession of princely fortunes, and they
+always go on augmenting their wealth by any feasible scheme for the
+improvement of commerce—such as the laying on of a new line of steamers,
+or the construction of railroads. Schemes that require millions of money
+as a first outlay, and before any profits can be hoped to be realised,
+are discussed with the utmost _sang-froid_ by the merchants _on Change_,
+that is, at a large elegant building, set aside and built expressly for
+merchants to congregate and transact business. If the scheme is approved
+of to-day by a number of leading merchants, and the sum requisite be five
+millions sterling, by this day fortnight, at latest, the money is
+contributed and safely lodged in the banker’s hands. Such, _Mashallah_!
+is the expeditious method adopted by English merchants, the richest
+commoners of the richest kingdom in the world.
+
+“The fashionable world of London has fashionable hours for everything.
+Ladies sometimes do not get up before mid-day, and then usually breakfast
+in their private apartments, and not unfrequently in bed. The afternoon
+is the fashionable time for receiving visits; they dine when, in our
+country, people are thinking of going to bed; and this is not all, for,
+by the time that the son of Lebanon’s first refreshing siesta may be said
+to be over, these people are thinking about amusing themselves for the
+night. At about ten o’clock, fashionable evening parties commence. Some
+people are invited to four or five of these in the same evening, and they
+may perhaps go to all, remaining but a few minutes at each. Ladies and
+gentlemen dance till past midnight. Bands of delightful music are
+playing; the rooms are arranged like fairy land; the girls are so
+beautiful, and dressed so elegantly, that the whole scene is like a
+realisation of the fabulous tales of the Arabian Nights. Then there is
+also the opera, where professional singers and dancers are employed; and
+the magnificence with which the stage is decorated, the lights, the
+music, the dancing—so airy that the girls barely touch the ground with
+their toes. All is as a scene of magical enchantment, till the curtain
+drops amidst thunders of applause, and you are led out by your friends in
+a state of mental aberration. The next morning you awake, and look over
+your last night’s expenditure, and you find a few such items as the
+following:—
+
+
+
+ £ s. d. Piastres.
+Grapes (ten paras’ worth in 0 10 0 = 55
+Syria)
+Opera-ticket 1 1 0 = 110
+Supper, Cab-hire, etc. 1 11 6 = 165
+ ---
+ Total 330
+
+
+
+“Three hundred and thirty piastres for a few hours’ entertainment! Such
+is but a trifling instance of the daily expenditure accruing in London,
+this great mart which offers such numberless enticements to spend money;
+but, on the other hand, few, if any, places in the world present greater
+opportunities for amassing wealth. The very atmosphere of this great
+city seems to infect its inhabitants with an insatiable desire of
+becoming rich; such is, indeed, my own case, and it will be my constant
+endeavour to gain such a fortune as shall entitle me to be the enviable
+possessor of an English home, and become a domesticated man, and at the
+same time enable me to forward the interests of my own dear country, by
+contributing to the construction of hospitals, schools, etc., where my
+brethren and ‘the stranger that sojourneth in the land’ may receive
+relief.
+
+“Men in this country seldom think of marrying before they are thirty or
+forty years old; girls never before they are sixteen; but I must mention
+one thing which will rather surprise and amuse your Excellency.
+Children, especially daughters, are excluded from society until they are
+thoroughly educated, and considered by their parents fit to make their
+_début_. You may visit and dine continually at a house, without being
+aware that there are any children under the same roof. When young, they
+are kept almost exclusively in the nursery, under charge of a governess
+and nursery-maids. When old enough to go to school, they are sent off to
+these establishments, rarely coming home, except in cases of sickness or
+for the holidays, and even then they are seldom permitted to dine at the
+same table, or keep the same hours as their parents when there is
+company. Fancy a Syrian mother being separated from her children for
+months, and not seeing them, though easily within reach; knowing that her
+sons, if disobedient or naughty, have no mercy to expect from the
+schoolmaster, no sparing of the rod, or of heavy tasks either; and that
+their daughters may be going supperless to bed, for some trivial offence
+against the schoolmistress, whilst she, the mother, is supping
+sumptuously. If you tell them that this seems unnatural and cruel, their
+reply is, that they went through it themselves; but you will barely
+credit what I write, when I tell you, that there are many instances where
+mothers of young families, seldom see or inquire after their offspring
+more than once a day, sometimes not so often; and even sometimes they go
+out of town for a week or ten days, leaving these troublesome
+incumbrances to the tender mercies of a nursery-maid. What would our
+mothers have said, if any one had suggested to them, that it would be
+best to place us under the care of servant-maids? Would they ever have
+tasted food before they knew that we were served, or rested till they had
+wrenched the cane from the hand of the schoolmaster, torn his beard, and
+carried us away home?
+
+“However great the Western Europeans are, they cannot, in general, be
+said to possess that attachment and love which binds and links most
+oriental families together. I must here mention that beards are at a sad
+discount in England; moustaches hooted at, or only used by military men.
+Alas! for the reverence paid to the long beards of Syria. The possessors
+of such in this country would be set down as Jews; they are considered
+inconvenient, unsightly, and not reckoned as contributing to cleanliness.
+I knew a Frank in Syria, a hakeem, whose flowing beard was the admiration
+of all beholders; his patients used to seize it and make him swear by it,
+that he would do his best to cure them; and as for the damsels, happy was
+she that could make him vow fidelity to her, on the strength of his
+beard. Well, your Excellency, I met this hakeem in the streets of
+London. I knew him not; but he recognised me and spoke to me. The cruel
+razor had been at work, and his face was as smooth and beardless as the
+newborn babe. I asked him what had caused him to commit such an act of
+insanity, and he told me that, when he first landed, the children in the
+streets hooted, pelted him, and cried out ‘Halloo Moshes!’ and so, for
+quietness’ sake, he was obliged to submit his beautiful beard to the
+hands of a ruthless barber. In England no one wears beards. Bishops are
+beardless; Cadis are beardless; lawyers, hakeems, even the
+solicitors—wonderful indeed! but what is still more wonderful and absurd
+is, that these great men wear long curly wigs, which vastly resemble the
+sheepskins worn by our buffoons and tale-tellers.
+
+“Young ladies in this country are devotedly attached to handsome
+uniforms; and fine uniforms are devotedly attached to handsome fortunes
+as well as faces. Sometimes young officers elope with heiresses worth
+millions of money, whereas the officer, perhaps, has nothing but a gay
+uniform and a good-looking face and figure to shew: but in all cases,
+young ladies are very fond of red and blue coats; and an officer in the
+guards is irresistible. Even the beadle, that is, the _Indilaft_, is an
+object of admiration to the lower classes, as he struts about in his
+gold-laced cocked-hat and uniform.
+
+“It may of a truth be said of the English, that they strive with each
+other in their efforts to oblige a stranger, and heap civilities and
+attentions upon him. With them it is a matter of earnest regret that any
+foreign friend should find cause of complaint against any of their
+countrymen. One great advantage that we Syrians possess, is the very
+fact of coming from the Holy Land. Say to an Englishman, of whatever
+grade, ‘I am a Syrian,’ and he will immediately know how to appreciate
+your worth, and the excellence of your country; he will talk to you of
+Hebron and many other towns with unabating pleasure; and the reason is,
+that, from his infancy upwards, with him Syria has been a familiar
+household word; as a lisping infant, he has read at his mother’s knee of
+King Solomon and the cedars of Lebanon. At school, his prize-essays have
+been about Jerusalem; and if, mayhap, he is a poor man, unable to write
+or read, still, from the pulpit, he has long been accustomed to hear of
+the great patriarch, the prophets, and the kings, of Israel, the temple
+of Solomon, and other marvellous facts so intimately linked with his
+creed; the scene of all which was Syria and the Holy Land. Though most
+true that it is not an easy matter to cultivate the acquaintance of an
+Englishman, still, when you do once become acquainted with him, and are
+well known to him, then you are his friend in the true acceptance of that
+term, and you continue his friend for life, whether you remain in England
+or go abroad (I have found this by experience). Moreover he takes a
+pride in introducing you to his own circle of acquaintances, and
+endeavours, in concert with them, to promote your best interests and
+welfare; he abides by you as your friend during your absence, and if
+anything should reach his ears derogatory to your character, his best
+energies are brought into play; he sifts the matter thoroughly, hushes
+the voice of calumny, or exposes the infamy of the calumniator; and if
+perchance you are guilty in his opinion of any breach of etiquette or a
+misdemeanour, he weighs the matter maturely in his own mind, and is as
+ready to correct and reprimand, as he is to overlook the offence, and set
+it down to the score of your being a stranger, and necessarily
+uninitiated in the strict etiquette of the land.
+
+“The English do a good action solely from a wish to do good, and from no
+other earthly inducement. I am now speaking of Englishmen as
+individuals, for, when acting in numbers, I must confess I do not hold so
+high an opinion of them. This is proved by the many companies
+continually advertised and puffed up before the public, but which are
+nothing more or less than a hoax to catch the unwary, invented by
+unprincipled men, of which I myself have more than once been the dupe.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+LIFE, MANNERS, AND CUSTOMS OF SYRIA.
+
+
+An addition to the family of a Syrian man is always an event looked
+forward to with the greatest anxiety, more especially in cases of a first
+child. The mother secretly prays and hopes that it may be a son; so does
+the father, but he seldom alludes to the subject. When the propitious
+event takes place, no hakeem, except of late in extreme cases, since the
+introduction of European medical men, is ever called in. Such a thing
+would be considered highly indecorous and improper. Dyâhs (midwives)
+{233} are plentiful in Syria, and these females are ready at a moment’s
+notice. If the result be a son, then the whole household is overjoyed,
+and the husband is besieged by friends and acquaintances, all anxious to
+outvie with each other in wishing him joy, and in hoping that the
+newly-born son may live to prove his comfort and support in old age. If,
+however, a daughter be born to the family, it is looked upon rather in
+the light of a misfortune than otherwise. The husband looks as if he
+were quite ashamed of himself, the subject is seldom if ever broached,
+and if any of his intimate friends allude to the matter, they do it with
+the view of consoling the father. The usual form of expression in such
+cases is, “She that has brought a daughter will bear a son,” “Inshallah!
+if it be the will of God.” Soon after birth the child is wrapped in
+swaddling clothes, and is at once nourished by its own mother. Wet
+nurses are almost unknown, and are only employed in cases of death or
+great debility. The care of attending upon the mother devolves upon the
+female relatives; but the women in my country are usually so strong and
+robust that little attention is required. No muffling of knockers—no
+strewing of straw in the streets—no doctor anxiously expected—no dosing
+of both parent and child. Amongst the peasants and lower classes in
+particular, the women are so hardy that it is by no means an uncommon
+event for a mother, four or five hours after her accouchement, to be seen
+propped up with cushions, busily engaged in mending or making baby-linen.
+On the fourth day after her confinement, the _Kanum_ or lady is expected
+to receive the visits of her acquaintances and friends, both male and
+female; and for this occasion a brand new coverlet usually handsomely
+worked in silk, has been prepared. Propped up by pillows and covered
+with _farooa_, she receives lying-in state visits. Her visitors do not
+remain long, but during the whole of the time they are complimenting her
+on the fortunate event; and the new-born is paraded round, and gazed at,
+and admired; but no one dares to praise him without commencing with
+“Mashallah!” “God be praised for it!” This custom of visiting the mother
+proves clearly that the usages which existed in the time of our blessed
+Saviour, when the wise men from the East came to look upon the newborn
+babe, and brought with them offerings, continues up to the present day,
+each friend or acquaintance bringing or sending his or her offerings.
+
+The first thing to be done after the birth of the child is to fix upon a
+name. This name, if it be the firstborn son, is usually the name of the
+child’s paternal grandfather, or else, if the birth takes place on the
+anniversary of any great saint’s day, it is called after him; as for
+instance, Paul, or John, or Peter, and that saint becomes his patron
+through life; this necessary preliminary being arranged, the child is
+baptised within a week of its birth for fear it should sicken or die.
+The priests usually come to the house, sometimes the child is taken to
+the church. The godfathers and godmothers, two of each, and all the
+relatives assemble, a large basin of water (made tepid in cold weather),
+is placed upon a table and duly consecrated by the priests; the mother
+undresses the infant, and hands it naked, as it was born, to the hands of
+the officiating priest, and this minister, repeating prayers over it, in
+which he is assisted by others, immerses the whole body of the infant
+into the water three successive times in the name of the Father, and of
+the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Consecrated oil is then used, and the
+mark of the cross made with it on the forehead and chest of the infant.
+This also is done three times, the sponsors standing by and answering for
+the child. It is then wiped dry and carefully swaddled up again, and in
+a few minutes the ceremony terminates with the priest’s blessing.
+
+The rest of the day is usually devoted to pleasure, and the parents now
+feel more at their ease, as the child has been admitted within the pale
+of the Church, and in case of any untoward event, would be entitled to
+Christian burial. The father, if this be a first son, drops the name by
+which he was formerly known; thus, supposing the name to have been Yusuf
+or Michali, and his friends used to call him Sowajar Michali (the father
+of Joseph), now that his son has been christened by the name of Yacob,
+for instance, they call him Aboo Yacob, or the father of Yacob—a proud
+title for a Syrian; for not to have children is looked upon as the
+greatest misfortune and disgrace that can happen to a married couple;
+whereas, however poor the family, a multitude of children (especially if
+they be males) is considered a blessing. The greatest pride of an old
+man in Syria is to sit at the doorway of his house, or at the city gate,
+of an evening, pipe in hand, surrounded by his sons and grandsons. From
+the day of the Psalmist David down to the present day, it may truly be
+said in Syria, Blessed are they that have their quiver full of them. “Lo
+children and the fruit of the womb are an heritage and gift that cometh
+of the Lord. Like as the arrows in the hand of the giant: even so are
+the young children. Happy is the man that hath his quiver full of them;
+they shall not be ashamed when they speak with their enemies in the gate”
+(Psalm cxxvii. 4, 5, 6).
+
+Although from the first the infant is tenderly cared for, still, it must,
+however healthy, have occasionally some slight ailment, and then great
+consternation prevails in the household. The devices to heal it are
+many. In every Christian family a remnant of the holy palm-leaves,
+distributed on Palm Sunday, are very carefully preserved to serve on such
+occasions; these are now mixed with olive-leaves, salt, and aloes, and
+the whole is then thrown into a small brazier of charcoal, and the smoke
+thereof constitutes an incense supposed to expel the evil eye. {236}
+Sometimes, strange to say, the ashes of this composition bear strict
+resemblance to a human eye. This is taken and crushed on the floor with
+the child’s slipper, and the mother expresses a wish that the eyes of the
+envious which have brought the illness on the child, may be destroyed in
+like manner. After this, if the child is not better, the family priest
+is in this interval sent to, and offers up prayers for its welfare. Oil
+of almonds is usually applied externally, and rubbed in warm, generally
+with very beneficial results. There is also a peculiar kind of soft,
+fine earth in Syria, which is much sought after by mothers; this, when
+collected, is brought and warmed near the fire; it is then placed in the
+cradle, and, being covered with a fine counterpane, the infant, wrapped
+in its swaddling clothes, is laid on this, the warm earth retaining
+dryness and heat for many hours. Many of the poorer people lay their
+infants on the earth itself, and then cover them over warmly. In all
+cases it appears to have a beneficial effect on children, who seldom or
+ever catch cold. If you wish to incur the displeasure and dislike of a
+young mother in Syria, there are two certain methods of gaining this end;
+the first is to step across any baby-linen that may be lying about the
+ground; the second is to rock the cradle when the child is not in it;
+both these are considered very unfavourable to the child, and some
+mothers carry these ridiculous superstitions to such an extent, that they
+dislike any notice being taken of their children, even though the praise
+be accompanied with the indispensable “mashallahs”; but if there is one
+thing more than another that young mothers have a superstitious horror
+of, it is the visits or enquiries of a barren woman; she, it is supposed,
+must entertain a jealousy of those more fortunate than herself, and her
+praises be insincere and terrible.
+
+To such an extent do these ridiculous superstitions prevail, that if, by
+any misfortune, a child should happen to die, even though it be a year
+after any remarks may have been applied to it by a childless woman, these
+have been, nevertheless, treasured up, and the evil is laid at her door.
+Children are usually weaned in their fourteenth or fifteenth month, and
+then they are for a short time nourished principally on cow’s or goat’s
+milk; but by the time a child is eighteen months old, it has learned to
+eat all manner of dishes, and they are so pampered and indulged in this
+respect, that from the minute they awake, till they fall asleep again,
+their stomachs have hardly any respite. Fruit, bread, cheese, meat;
+anything and everything is set before them from the very false notion
+that, the more they eat, the faster and the stronger they will grow.
+
+This notion prevails throughout Syria, and it is imagined that strength
+cannot be gained except by hearty eating. So that when a man is very
+ill, and a doctor is sent for, his friends are all clamorous and anxious
+to tell him how many hours has elapsed since he last partook of food, and
+beg of him to insist on the patient’s eating something forthwith, or to
+give him some medicine that will give him an appetite. It is quite
+beyond their comprehension to understand that in some instances food
+would be very injurious in its effects. A man or a child has only to
+say, “_Ena-juaan_,” or “I am hungry,” and it would be considered a
+heinous sin not to gratify this craving instantly. All this, however, is
+pardonable when the real motives, those of sincere love and pity for the
+sufferer, are considered, mistaken though they may be; but time and
+education can alone remedy this evil. So soon as the boy is able,
+unaided, to run about and talk, he is then taken in hand by his father;
+his dress is always of the best obtainable materials, and if his father
+be a merchant or shopkeeper, he accompanies him to his office, and there,
+seated cross-legged, begins to ape the actions and conversation of his
+father. He is early instructed in lessons of sedateness and
+self-respect, and if not cheerfully willing to obey and listen, a few
+taps of the rod soon bring him to his senses. For the Syrian father acts
+upon the proverb, which says, “If you wish the tree to grow up straight
+and be fruitful you must prune its branches when young.” Slight
+castigations are generally inflicted by them in the absence of the
+mother, for otherwise they would be of no effect. Some mothers are very
+attached to their first-born so that they would willingly sacrifice their
+own lives rather than that their darling should suffer ever so slight an
+affront. Whipping a child in a mother’s presence would invariably lead
+to high words and ill feeling, and the result would be, that the child,
+whipped by one parent and petted by the other, would naturally imagine
+itself very ill used—hate the father and love the mother. The good
+effects of the punishment would be lost, and the child only grow more
+wary and naughty. To avoid these family broils, the father early
+accustoms his son to accompany him to his place of business; bearing the
+key in the same manner as it was done in the days of the prophets, upon
+his shoulder. Is. xxii. 22. There, unseen by the mother’s eye, the
+child soon learns implicit obedience to his father’s will, and as this
+obedience is at first always rewarded by some small present of fruit or
+so forth, the boy grows in love as well as in obedience. It is
+surprising what sage little fellows, of only five years old, one meets
+perched up cross-legged in the shops of their fathers; they are so well
+versed in the every-day business of the profession, that the father can
+repose every confidence in them, and leave them for hours together to
+deal with customers, weigh out, bargain, and effect sales. A child
+naturally takes a pride in thus early finding itself useful and
+important, and there are few children in the world that are more
+precocious than those of my native country. A child brought up in this
+way would think it highly indecorous to romp and play about during
+business hours. In the evening, however, he is permitted to repair to
+the fields with his companions; the onus of business has been laid aside,
+and the perfect child shows itself once more in the merry game or joyous
+laugh of the sportive crew.
+
+By the time a child is six years old, he seldom, if ever, requires
+chastisement; indeed, he thinks to be scolded is a perfect disgrace, and
+is consequently ever on the guard not to incur his father’s displeasure.
+The father who now thinks it is time that his son should be instructed to
+read and write, works upon the feelings of the boy so as to excite in him
+a great desire for learning. He usually commences by telling him that he
+is quite ashamed of having such an ignorant son whereas his neighbours’
+children are all well instructed, and know the whole of the Psalms by
+heart, for the acquirement of these invariably forms the commencement of
+Syrian education; the child protests that he only lacks opportunity, and
+the next day his schooling begins.
+
+The etiquette of Syrian manners is early instilled into the mind of the
+Syrian boy; he is taught, on first rising in the morning, after prayers
+and the necessary ablutions, to wish the “_Saboh il Kahir_” (“good
+morning,”) to every individual of the household, commencing with the
+father and finishing with the lowest menial in the establishment. After
+this, the son sees that his father is supplied with the necessary coffee,
+a slice of toast, and his _narghili_, and then next to his father he
+ranks himself, excepting when strangers are present. On the arrival of a
+guest, he is taught to go forth and welcome him as far as the threshold
+of the entrance-door, and this he does meekly, taking and kissing the
+hand of the visitor if a man of advanced age, at the same time
+overwhelming him with such flattering compliments, as, for instance, “The
+day at this moment has become bright.” “My thoughts have always been
+concentrated on you, O light of my eyes!” The boy then follows the guest
+to the _mistaba_, where his father is ready to receive him, and having
+busied himself ordering necessary refreshments, he returns to the divan,
+and seating himself at some distance from the others, listens in
+respectful silence to their conversation, or pulling out the brass
+inkhorn from his side (Ezek. ix.), which contains likewise his stock of
+pens (and is an inseparable companion, being always thrust into the
+girdle and carried about with him from morning till night), he possesses
+himself of some stray piece of paper, may be the back of a letter, and
+improves the moments as they fly by furthering his knowledge in
+arithmetic.
+
+When a priest calls at the house, then the son is all attention; none but
+himself is permitted to serve him; he replenishes the pipe-bowls, fetches
+the fire, hands him the coffee and other refreshments, and each time
+retires from the presence of the rev. father with fresh blessings heaped
+upon his head. The son is early taught to listen, but never to speak
+unless first spoken to, to be deferential to all old people, kind to the
+poor, and especially to the blind, sympathising with servants, whose
+faults he must correct with mildness and leniency, and above all, to
+abhor and hold in utter detestation all strong drinks and drunkards. You
+may travel from one end of Syria to the other, and mingle with every
+grade of every creed, and I may safely state, that drunkards are rarely
+met with. None but those who have travelled in Europe, or have mixed
+with European society, are addicted to this vice.
+
+The son is taught to adhere strictly to all laws of cleanliness. There
+are few people that are more rigid in the observance of them than the
+Syrian. On first rising, and on going to bed, before and after every
+meal, before and after every little promenade, hands and face are washed
+with soap and water and a few leaves of the lemon-tree; the mouth is also
+rinsed out, sometimes with simple water, sometimes with rose or
+orange-flower water, according to the opulence or poverty of the man.
+Tooth and hair-brushes are unknown among the Syrians. On entering a
+house, he is taught to leave his shoes before intruding into the
+visitors’ hall, and with light yellow slippers on, treads over the
+carpet; he advances to all the elders who happen to be present, kissing
+their hands and placing them on his head to intimate his respect and
+obedience. On entering a church in some parts of the country, he leaves
+his shoes outside. {242} This practice dates from the period of Moses
+and the burning bush, when the Lord addressed Moses, saying, “Draw not
+nigh hither: put off thy shoes from off thy feet, for the place whereon
+thou standest is holy ground” (Exod. iii. 5). Likewise he also lifts the
+turban off his head for a while, and then replaces it. During the
+reading of the Gospel and Belief all the males remain uncovered.
+
+So soon as a boy’s education is completed, and this simply consists in
+his being able to read and write Arabic, with a slight knowledge of
+arithmetic, then the father anxiously looks out for some opening which
+may enable his son thus early to acquire a knowledge of the world, and of
+the necessity of fighting one’s own battles, so as to be independent of
+the support of others; but though the son may earn a sufficiency to
+maintain himself without drawing on his father’s revenue, he still
+remains an inmate of the parental roof; indeed, in many instances he
+never quits it, and it is not uncommon to see the son a man of mature
+years himself, with his own children fast growing up to manhood, paying
+the most implicit obedience and respect to his father’s commands and
+wishes, just with the same deference that a child six years old would
+obey an austere father; indeed such is the universal reverence with which
+parents are treated, that (though these instances are rare) fathers have
+been known to chastise their sons when they had attained the mature age
+of thirty-five or forty; and the son, though father of a family himself,
+and though smarting from shame and indignation at such an exposure before
+the eyes of his own wife and children, has meekly borne the correction
+and kissed the hand that chastised him. “Honour thy father and thy
+mother that thy days may be long in the land,” is a commandment acted up
+to the letter in Syria, and any son transgressing this law, would meet
+with small sympathy from his countrymen, would be shunned by all, and be
+an object of indignation and scorn to all Orientals of whatever creed.
+Even that ferocious tyrant, Djessar Pasha, who never hesitated to
+sacrifice human life, whose wives and concubines were all massacred by
+his own hands to satiate his furious jealousy and rage against one
+unhappy girl, who had been discovered carrying on a flirtation with an
+officer of his court; even he, villain though he was, respected this law
+and enforced others to respect it. A story is told of a young Christian,
+who, being newly married, took possession of the whole of his father’s
+house, leaving the poor old man, who was a widower and a cripple, barely
+sufficient rags to cover his nakedness, or food to satisfy his hunger.
+The Pasha, hearing of this atrocious conduct, sent for the miscreant, and
+when he was brought trembling into his presence, exclaimed, “Hast thou no
+fear of God? In an hour’s time let me hear that your father, dog that
+you are, is in the possession of every comfort and luxury; or, by my
+beard, your head shall answer for this crime.”
+
+When the son is about twelve years of age, his parents begin to look
+about them to choose out from amongst the neighbours a suitable wife for
+their first-born. This is an arduous undertaking, and the son is often
+consulted as to whether he has any particular choice amongst his
+playmates and companions. Sometimes he has, sometimes he leaves all to
+the good judgment of his mother, always, however, stipulating, that the
+girl must be young, pretty, and good-tempered. Old women who go from
+house to house with trinkets and other articles to sell are sometimes
+commissioned by the mothers to look out for such eligible objects. If
+they know any party likely to suit, they acquaint the mother. They next
+find out when the maiden attends the bath, and inform their employer, who
+goes there at the same time, and if, upon seeing the girl, she thinks her
+likely to suit her son, she contrives to make her acquaintance. The old
+woman also, on her part, mentions the youth to the maiden and her family
+with the greatest possible praise, and the affair may be considered
+accomplished. The choice having thus fallen upon some one or other, and
+the preliminaries arranged, the dower to be paid for her settled,
+handkerchiefs bought, rings ordered, and a choice party of intimate
+friends invited, who, accompanied by the priest, repair to the house of
+the intended bride’s father. Sometimes the girl is brought into the room
+closely veiled, the young lad being present also—vows, and rings, and
+presents, are exchanged—the priest pronounces his blessing—the pair are
+betrothed, and from that day till the wedding takes place, become utter
+strangers to each other. They may have been bosom companions only the
+day before, romping with each other from early childhood, but the moment
+that the betrothal had taken place, there is an inseparable barrier to
+their meeting or conversing again till the church shall have pronounced
+them man and wife. This generally lasts six months, but sometimes mere
+children are engaged, and then they have to wait till both have arrived
+at years of maturity before they can get married. It seldom, if ever,
+happens, excepting, of course, in cases of death, that these betrothals
+are put aside or broken, the church considering the vows then pledged as
+binding on either side as the marriage vow itself.
+
+In order to give my readers some idea of an Oriental courtship, I will
+quote the account which my friend, the well known Assaad Kajah gives of
+his own:—“I went to my friend H. Khooja Hahib Giammal, a liberal and
+enlightened gentleman. He allowed his beautiful eldest daughter to hand
+me the sherbet, and the moment I saw her, as we say in our Eastern
+language, ‘a thousand of my vertebræ got broken,’ and she took my heart
+with her when she left the room. I knew I was a favourite with her
+father, and I returned home resolved not to delay making my proposals.
+
+“I told my father the state of my heart, and requested him to take a
+diamond ring and a fine white handkerchief, the emblem of betrothment, to
+the father of the damsel, and entreat him to allow me the joy of being
+betrothed to his daughter Martha. With a view to shew that I acted on
+the impulse of my own heart, and not merely by the guidance of my
+parents, I followed the example of our Patriarch ‘Isaac’ in the case of
+his beloved ‘Rebekah’ (Genesis xxiv. 22). I therefore sent to my own
+beloved ‘a golden ear-ring of half a shekel weight, and two bracelets for
+her hands of ten shekels weight of gold.’ Thus, the ancient custom of
+upwards of three thousand years old is retained by the people; and a
+Syrian does not inquire what a purse his bride is to have, but whether
+his Rebekah is such a one as was brought up like Nahor’s Milcah; their
+popular proverb is this: ‘_Khud alasseil walanah alhassir_,’ ‘Take the
+one of good root (i.e., of good parents), though she may be on a mat’
+(that is, though her parents may have no more furniture in their dwelling
+than a mat).
+
+“My beloved father, in his kind way, took my message, and with a beating
+heart I waited for the answer. In about an hour he returned, and said,
+smiling, ‘Assaad, all thy affairs seem to go smoothly.’”
+
+I am continually asked by my fair friends the number of wives I have left
+in Syria; my reply is, that I am not married, though I fervently hope
+some bright day to crown my earthly bliss with an English wife; the
+ladies seemed quite incredulous on my informing them, that only one is
+permitted by our law. The Mahommedan religion, it is true, admits of
+four lawful wives, besides concubines; but I can confidently assert, that
+the majority even of Mussulmans have but one wife. Possibly, in default
+of issue, another may be taken—this, however, is the _exception_, not the
+_rule_; and though polygamy has existed to a greater or less extent in
+the East since the days of the Psalmist David, and his son, the wise King
+Solomon, still where it is mostly practised now-a-days is amongst the
+wild Arab tribes, south of Gaza and the Nosairiyeh. Of these latter I
+have known an instance of a man marrying two wives on the same day, both
+young maidens, from different villages. But amongst the Turks the
+practice is anything but prevalent; in proof of which I may quote as
+instances, the late Grand Vizier Aali Pasha, the former one, Reschid
+Pasha, and Cabuli Effendi, the present talented Secretary for Foreign
+Affairs, and most of the leading Turkish gentlemen who have resided in
+Christian countries, have but one wife. As a proof of this I will relate
+an amusing story current in the East:—
+
+A certain Mahomedan had two wives, one of these occupied the lower, the
+other the upper, chamber of the house in which he lived. To prevent as
+much as possible all appearance of undue preference, he made it his rule
+to visit them alternately. The communication between the upper story and
+the ground floor was by a short ladder. One evening as he proceeded to
+mount this precarious staircase, in order to visit his beloved above, his
+down stairs wife immediately vociferated, that his memory had failed him,
+and that, in the due course of things, he had to remain with her. This
+the husband denied, and continued to mount the steps of the ladder. In
+despair, and still protesting loudly her right, the lady flew to the
+ladder, and the moment his head emerged into the floor of the upper
+chamber, seized her husband by the legs and arrested his further
+progress. The lady up-stairs, however, who had now got an inkling of the
+contest, and fearful on her part of being outwitted, rushed to the top of
+the ladder, and while the lady beneath was partly succeeding in pulling
+the unfortunate man down by the legs, suddenly seized him by that tuft of
+hair which is left on the head of every true believer, pulled as
+vigorously as her rival though in an opposite direction. While they
+tugged at their victim alternately, and doubt seemed to hang over
+victory, and it even appeared possible that the contested property might
+be rent in sunder between them, accompanied with all those noisy
+vociferations with which the fair sex are accustomed to conduct their
+combats, especially in the East, a thief introduced himself into the
+house, and was an unperceived spectator of the scene.
+
+Some time afterwards, the thief was apprehended and carried before the
+Cadi, to whom he related the circumstance of which he had been witness.
+“Well,” said the magistrate, “your punishment shall be either to lose
+your head, or like the man you have robbed, immediately possess yourself
+of two wives—you shall have the option.” “After what I have seen,”
+replied the criminal, “I have no hesitation; better to lose my head and
+go at once to Paradise than live to be torn in half between two jealous
+wives.”
+
+Although it is most true, that in Europe polygamy is disallowed, I need
+not say how often the marriage vow is broken, and how many are the
+delinquents. Often old men even have mistresses in addition to their own
+lawful wife. Much of this corruption evidently arises from the
+iniquitous practice of _mariage de convenance_, so often speculated in by
+most match-making mothers, in the two greatest capitals of Europe. Men
+and women, who have not a single idea in common, and no sympathy with
+each other, are inveigled into marriages because the one has wealth and
+the other titles, or what is worse, beauty is bartered for gold. I am
+quite at a loss to account for the utter want of feeling in those parents
+who can ruthlessly sacrifice the happiness and peace of mind of their own
+child, by marrying a girl, perhaps of sixteen, to a half-idiotic or
+toothless man, in infirmity or age, thus ill calculating either for the
+happiness or protection of inexperienced youth. (_I know of such
+instances_). It is not in nature that such a couple should be happy; for
+a young man cannot be fascinated by the charms of a haggish old woman,
+neither is it possible, where such disparities exist, for a young girl to
+nourish one spark of that warm affection which should ever exist between
+man and wife.
+
+Now, in Syria, such marriages never occur. A man takes a wife for a
+_helpmate_ not for a puppet—for a companion in health—a consolation in
+sickness, to help him in enjoying the bounteous gifts of nature, or to
+soothe when the cloud of affliction rests over his pathway. This was why
+marriage was constituted, and this is why people get married in the East.
+It is true that an Oriental wife cannot paint, or play the piano or harp,
+but she can sing in her own quiet way, and that sweetly, too—never
+sweeter than when she is hushing her first-born to slumber; and she can
+dance on any very festive occasion, not the giddy flaunting waltz or
+polka, but a quiet measured tread, graceful and becoming without being
+indecorous. It may be that a man does sometimes marry a girl possessed
+of a wealthy dower; but these instances are rare, and when they do occur,
+the dower is, for the most part, invested in jewels or in lands. If in
+the latter, the husband enjoys a life-interest in them—he is indeed lord
+and master of the property, and can make any improvements he sees fit:
+the former generally decorate the wife’s turban on festive occasions; but
+in case of misfortune, then these are pledged or sold off one by one to
+meet the emergency. I trust many of my fair readers will, after perusing
+this, feel convinced of the binding and solemn nature of the marriage tie
+amongst Christians in Syria. Far be it from me by these observations, to
+throw any slur upon the married life of the people of Western Europe; I
+merely wish to show to those who imagine that polygamy is universal in
+the East, that the same thing, but in a different form, is as prevalent
+in their own country. The English, indeed, are, upon the whole, freer
+from this vice than most other civilised nations, and their domestic
+felicity far exceeds that of any other people.
+
+But to return to the immediate subject. The son, as soon as he is
+married, is fairly embarked in life, and if his father be a widower, then
+the whole of the household arrangements devolve upon the young wife. The
+son is generally master of the house, and the old man retires from
+business and the bustle of life, passing the rest of his days as a guest
+or sort of pensioner in his own house, and seldom meddling with its
+domestic economy. Should the mother, however, still survive, she devotes
+her time to instructing her daughter-in-law in domestic matters, and also
+accompanies her when she goes out.
+
+There is one thing very praiseworthy amongst the Syrians, and a trait in
+our character which many civilised nations would do well to take for an
+example. I allude to untiring love and charity between not only members
+of one household, but all relations or connexions, however distantly
+connected. One seldom or ever hears of a father and his children being
+on bad terms, or of quarrels and broils between sisters and brothers. Of
+course they are not exempt from angry passions; high words may rise
+between them, and even ill feeling rancour in their hearts, but they
+never allow “the sun to set on their wrath;” and if only for appearance’
+sake, they make it up again speedily, and converse and chat as freely as
+ever. In this respect they act up to a wise, if not elegant, French
+proverb—“_Le linge sale doit être lavé en famille_.” No strangers are
+permitted to rejoice at their discords, or mock at their infirmities.
+
+Then, again, so long as one member of a family is well off, he will never
+suffer his poor relations to feel want. If he can find them employment,
+well and good; if not, they have the shelter of his own house, and food
+from his own table; and in return, all he expects is, that they will lend
+a hand at being useful. Every want is supplied them: and if even clothes
+be necessary, these are provided. When two or more relations of a poor
+man are well to do, they join together to assist him; and this in a great
+measure accounts for the scarcity of street-beggars in most parts of
+Syria. A Syrian would consider it a disgrace to his name, that any
+member of his family should be suffered to want whilst he had a crumb to
+spare, and it would be looked upon as a heinous sin in a religious point
+of view. In England, perhaps, it would not be fashionable to have a poor
+relation out at elbows, tarnishing the splendidly furnished drawing-room
+of a wealthy relative; or it would not be convenient to curtail the
+luxury and voluptuous display of every-day wealth, to contribute a
+pittance for the maintenance of a starving nephew or a crippled brother.
+This may not be fashionable, but it would be Christian-like; and rest
+assured, O slave of the world, so full of all “the pomps and vanities of
+this wicked world,” that when He comes, who gave even His life for your
+salvation, then the poor uneducated Syrian—the man who has received
+little—will have a far lighter account to balance with the Great Author
+of eternal life, than you who have possessed and have withheld.
+
+Public prostitution was a thing entirely unknown in Syria until
+intercourse with Europeans introduced it first into the sea-ports; from
+thence it gradually spread inland. Formerly the most severe punishments
+were inflicted for this crime, and where the authorities failed to
+interfere, the relatives took the law into their own hands, and very
+summarily disposed of an offender against their honour. Even now-a-days,
+such poor creatures are rare; and if by chance one meets with one, she is
+invariably under the protection of some European—of itself a sufficient
+guarantee from punishment. I remember a most shocking instance of the
+punishment inflicted upon a woman of this class some eighteen years ago,
+at Beyrout. Her family were neighbours of mine. She was several times
+warned to be on her guard, but totally disregarded these warnings, till
+at length, some of the men connected with her family, entered (with the
+father’s knowledge and consent) the house of her paramour at night, and
+after hewing her to pieces, threw her remains into a well attached to a
+house belonging to my uncle, the Rev. Kouri Georgius Risk Allah.
+
+The girls in Syria are principally educated in housewifery, such as
+baking, washing, cooking, etc. Starching and ironing are as yet unknown,
+except to a few aspiring geniuses at Beyrout, who, from this knowledge,
+derive no small emolument. The girls are also instructed in the
+management of all household affairs, the care of poultry, and even of
+making cream-cheese, bread, pastry and _leban_, and also in household
+superstitions. Amongst these last, they are taught—
+
+Never to rock a cradle when it is empty, because evil spirits are very
+fond, so say old crones in Syria, of being rocked.
+
+Never to sweep the house after sunset, as this is only practised when
+there has been a death in the family and after the body has been carried
+out.
+
+Never to look into a mirror after sunset, for an _afreet_ is sure to be
+peeping over their shoulder, and he may shew himself to them in such a
+very unpleasant manner as might frighten them to death instanter. Only
+think of this, ye opera-going and ball-frequenting young ladies! What a
+hard case it would be if you were forbidden to look into a mirror after
+candles have been rung for.
+
+Never to cut their finger or toe-nails near a basin of water; for if the
+nail should chance to fall into the water, they have nothing left to them
+but to make their will and go to bed, for, according to the logic of all
+old women, die they must.
+
+And last and not least—Never to interrupt or harm the black snake of the
+house—_Hye il sauda_. In almost every house in Syria there is a peculiar
+black serpent, large but very harmless, which takes up its abode in the
+cellar of the house, and will never afterwards quit its nook or corner
+till killed, or till the house falls, or the snake dies. No Syrian would
+ever intentionally kill these snakes, for, besides keeping mice and rats
+away, they are held in such deep veneration, that endless are the absurd
+superstitions and tales told about them, all of which I myself once
+firmly believed in. Amongst other things, it is said, that if you
+destroy one of these snakes, the mate will be sure to seek for and obtain
+vengeance. They pretend, further, that these snakes are doatingly fond
+of milk, and that the smell of it will immediately attract them. It is
+commonly believed, that a young mother may be sure, if she is not on the
+watch, that the black snake will come in the night and feed off her
+breasts, till it has drained them so dry that there is nothing left for
+the infant; and again, with regard to the child, should the snake be
+disappointed in getting its supply of milk from the fountain-head, that
+it will then resort to the artifice of inserting its tail into the
+infant’s mouth, and so tickling its throat as to cause it to be sick, and
+thus supply itself with food. But the most ludicrous story told is about
+the conscientiousness of one of these snakes, a story which is firmly
+believed by most Orientals. It runs thus: “In Syria, it is the custom of
+every family to lay up a year’s provisions of all the necessaries of
+life, in store-rooms attached to the house; these provisions consist of
+melted butter in jars for cooking rice, wheat, burghal, etc. Now, as the
+story goes, one of these black snakes once deposited her eggs in one of
+these store-rooms, a hole in the corner of which led to a serpent’s nest.
+The young ones had been hatched, and were all assembled together
+gambolling about, when some of the children, happening to surprise these
+young snakes at their frolics, seeing that they were very small, whipped
+them up in their handkerchiefs, and ran off with them to the other end of
+the house. Now think what might have been the serious results of this
+frolic. Mother snake coming home could not find her young ones, and made
+a pretty to do about it. At last she discovered that the children had
+stolen them, and in her rage and vexation determined to be revenged on
+the whole family. Accordingly, with the assistance of her tail, she
+removed the cover of the butter-jar, and inserting her fangs into the
+butter, succeeded in poisoning the whole mass. Bye and bye, home came
+the lady of the house from the bath, and no sooner did she see what the
+children had been about, than, with many screams and exclamations, she
+insisted on the young snakes being carried back again. No sooner said
+than done; and now mother snake began to regret deeply what she had done.
+How to remedy the evil was the question—speak she could not, nor had she
+any other method of warning the family not to use the butter. Well, now
+what do you think she did? She called the male snake to her assistance,
+and these two, coiling themselves round the thin jar, squeezed with all
+their might and main, till the jar broke into a hundred pieces, the
+melted butter ran out on the ground, and was lost, and the family were
+saved from being poisoned.”
+
+This is one amongst the many fabulous tales about the black household
+snake of Syria; but such like superstitions need not startle educated
+people in England, when they remember the endless fables that pass
+current in their own land about many animals, plants, and things—even to
+coffins darting out of fires, winding-sheets in candles, and lover-like
+apparitions in tea-cups.
+
+It must not be supposed that the higher classes of Syrians are not
+scrupulous with regard to the laws of etiquette; on the contrary, they
+strictly enforce them. If Kowagar Bustros and his family called to see
+Kowagar Saba and his family on this Tuesday, Kowagar Saba will return the
+visit next Tuesday. If Kowagar Domian invite Kowagar Michali and family
+to dinner, Kowagar Michali and family give a return party to Kowagar
+Domian. But the grand day for receiving visits in every house is the
+_Eed_, or festival of the master of the house, which is annually
+celebrated on that saint’s day whose name he has taken, and whose
+patronage he acknowledges. Thus all those of the name of Michali remain
+at home on St. Michael’s day, and all their acquaintances call to see
+them, and to wish them health, luck, and prosperity; some bring fruits,
+some sweetmeats, and few come empty-handed. If this usage is productive
+of no very beneficial effects, it at least serves to promote a kindly
+feeling betwixt neighbours and friends; and this, after all, is a grand
+point to observe if one wishes to be comfortable and happy in this world.
+
+When a Syrian dies, after a few hours the hired mourners are sent for,
+according to a custom which has apparently prevailed from the most remote
+antiquity, as we find it referred to in Amos v. 16. The cries raised by
+these women are peculiarly mournful and affecting when they are first
+heard announcing to the immediate neighbourhood that one of their number
+has departed, or reaching the ear of the passing stranger with their
+intelligence of death and sorrow. Wax-tapers are then sent round to his
+friends as a notice that they are invited to the funeral, which always
+takes place within twenty-four hours after death. When they are
+assembled in the church, the tapers are lit, the corpse is placed in the
+centre, and the service is read; then the candles are extinguished, the
+body is carried to the grave by his friends, is buried, and “his place
+knows him no more” (Job vii. 9–10).
+
+I am tempted to close this chapter with the following lament of a lover
+over the grave of his mistress, literally translated from the Arabic.
+
+
+
+I.
+
+
+Alas! and ah well a-day, that my rose-faced love, my intimate, my soul’s
+companion, should be enveloped in her shroud! That tongue, once
+familiar, with so many languages, gives utterance now to none. I listen
+vainly and am astonished not to hear thy once-loved voice.
+
+
+
+II.
+
+
+Tell me, O Grave, tell me, is her incomparable beauty gone? Has she,
+too, faded, as the petals fall from the sweetest flower, and her lovely
+face changed—changed and gone! Thou art not a garden, O Grave; nor yet
+heaven; still all the fairest flowers and the brightest plants are culled
+by thee.
+
+
+
+III.
+
+
+O black, mysterious Ground, tell me how or wherefore have we sinned, that
+thou art prone to hug the beautiful, the chaste, the rare—and yet so cold
+thy love. Stones alone hast thou for pillows for the tender, the loved,
+the fair.
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+
+O Ground—confusion to thy face!—think not the treasure that is withering
+in thy grasp is thine. O no! Thank God, her soul, her immortality, is
+far beyond thy reach.
+
+
+
+V.
+
+
+Earth, unfeeling Earth, thy heart is adamant; nor hope nor pity find a
+place in thee. Yet seeds sown in thy bosom spring up as flowers
+beautiful and rare. Without thee, a solitary soul—a blank is the world
+to me—nor merry laugh nor cheerful glance has now a charm.
+
+
+
+VI.
+
+
+Sometimes I weep alone to think that I have lost thy love for ever—and
+then, oh! bitterly weep to see thy mother’s furrowed brow—full well she
+feels the treasure lost—the young child and the beautiful. I marvel not,
+angel, that thou art gone—for heaven were better fitted for thy home than
+earth; but I marvel that we can live yet awhile on earth—live without thy
+smile.
+
+
+
+VII.
+
+
+And thou who couldst barely resist the cold—thy fate is hard—nor friend
+to whisper comfort, nor careful eye to watch—in thy cold, solitary,
+mysterious grave—none can give comfort. But how foolish! I speak to
+dust. Thy soul, thank God! is far beyond the hurt of man or evil spirit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+SYRIA AND HER INHABITANTS.
+
+
+In this chapter I shall endeavour to take a brief review of the country
+and people—the drawback to the advancement and welfare of the latter—and
+the inducements held out by the former for colonisation by emigrants—with
+the mutual benefits accruing therefrom.
+
+That portion of the Turkish dominions which lies to the southward of
+Tyre, and includes all the country comprised within the boundary limits
+of Gaza and Hebron to the south, and Tyre to the north, is with very few
+exceptions, an uncultivated waste, owing, not to the want of fertility of
+soil, but to the indolence of its inhabitants. The sea-ports, or
+roadsteads, are at all seasons of the year open and exposed, and in the
+winter months dangerous in the extreme for shipping; in proof of this, I
+have only to cite the many shipwrecks which have occurred within the last
+few years at Jaffa and Caipha. Gaza has only, during the present year,
+risen into notice, few English schooners having arrived at Belfast direct
+from that port, deeply laden with grain. But the roadstead of Gaza is
+perilous for vessels at all seasons of the year, as the wind blows in
+shore; the holding ground is bad; the inducements held out to commerce
+very small; the inhabitants lazy and impoverished; little or no
+consumption for seaport goods and British manufactures (the natives of
+the villages in the interior restricting themselves to clothing which is
+made of coarse stuffs manufactured by themselves or imported from Egypt);
+the desert no field for speculations; and such little European produce as
+finds its way into the interior being carried thither by petty retail
+merchants, natives, who supply themselves with an annual stock from the
+ofttimes glutted market of Beyrout. With respect to the export trade,
+the south of Palestine supplies abundance of wheat, sessame, and other
+grain; but the quality of much of this grain is superior to that produced
+in Asia Minor.
+
+The people inhabiting these southern parts of Palestine are almost a
+distinct race from their brethren farther north; in manners and customs,
+and even in complexion and stature, differing materially from the
+northern Syrian: the great heat of the climate and the general scarcity
+of water rendering them an indolent and careless people, sadly lacking in
+cleanliness, and without spirit or energy to make any exertions for the
+amelioration of their wretched condition. After leaving Tyre, and as we
+proceeded south, mulberry-plantations quickly disappear; thus the one
+grand staple commodity is wanting, and the occupation of rearing the
+silkworm, at once a healthy and amusing pastime and a lucrative labour,
+is denied the inhabitants of Southern Palestine. With hard manual
+labour, privation, and exposure to intense heat, and all the evils of
+comparative serfdom, they have no pleasurable recreations to lighten the
+arduous pursuits of their every-day avocations: the plough and the
+spade—the spade and the plough—incessant toil and small
+recompense—unwillingess to work, yet goaded to it by dire necessity, the
+pangs of starvation, or the chastisements inflicted by unrelenting
+landlords and landowners. Such is their unhappy lot.
+
+Their huts are miserable, their children squalid and unhealthy; they toil
+through a life of troubles and sorrows, and have the poor satisfaction of
+knowing that they are possessed of no benefits which might, in
+after-years, accrue to their children’s advantage. From generation to
+generation they live and die, are born and given in marriage, but the
+tenure of their serfdom is still the same. They are nominally free
+subjects of an enlightened government, but virtually the slaves of
+circumstances, groaning under the petty chiefs and subordinate
+understrappers of government, who have yet to learn submission to the
+will and mandates of the present excellent Sultan, Abdul Medjid Khan,
+whose reign has already been distinguished by many great improvements in
+the condition of the Christian population. Many of the firmans issued of
+late years have not as yet come into force in the interior of Turkey, and
+in those possessions of the Ottoman empire situated farthest from the
+sea-ports. In the course of some years it is, however, to be hoped, that
+the most remote villages will be benefited by the improvements made in
+Western Europe.
+
+The disposition of the natives of Southern Palestine has a tinge of
+sullen moroseness in it, which has doubtless been ingrafted in it from
+generation to generation; there is nothing _couleur-de-rose_ in their
+sphere of life and action; and the superstition they inherit from their
+ancestors is not that pure and lovely religion of Christ which can cast a
+halo around, whilst it strengthens, encourages, and supports in the
+darkest hours of affliction and woe. It may be, that, under better
+auspices—could the people be brought to have a common interest in their
+own and each other’s welfare, were there less animosity and party feeling
+existing between the various creeds, could they be brought to nurture
+less of deadly malice and hatred towards each other, all combining in one
+common cause with a mutual good understanding—the fate of Southern
+Palestine and its prevailing feature of sterile barrenness might be
+changed. The country, people, and climate, might yield to the
+introduction of agriculture and other improvements, and be materially
+bettered—if land were meted out in portions with a sure guarantee to the
+cultivator that his toil and labour would eventually be recompensed by
+his reaping some fruits for himself from the sweat of his brow to benefit
+his children—were the lower classes of the Moslems less avaricious, the
+Jews less despised, the Christians less exposed to the grinding system of
+the land-owners and admitted to reap fair profits from the fields they
+plough and the gardens they cultivate for their wealthier and more
+powerful masters; then, peradventure, the sea-coast and the cities near
+and round about Jerusalem would gradually re-assume a right to that
+blessed title which ascribed to its countries the appellation of a land
+rich indeed, and flowing with milk and honey. But alas for the land of
+Canaan! the portion of the tribe of Judah is become an unsightly
+wilderness; and of Zion it may be truly said, “Thy house is left unto
+thee desolate.”
+
+From Gaza to Tyre the whole line of sea-coast is inhabited by people who,
+with the exception of Jaffa, Caipha, and Acre, are professionally
+goatherds and farmers—a simple people that subsist chiefly upon milk and
+cheese, with fruit and vegetables, and who are merely the hirelings of
+the owners of the large flocks committed to their charge. These goats
+furnish the surrounding country with the only palatable meat to be
+procured in these hot regions. Mutton is scarce, and beef seldom heard
+of; hence poultry and goats are the staple commodity of the meat-market.
+A young kid of a year’s growth is up to this very day often chosen as a
+choice delicacy. Who does not call to mind the crafty art of Rebecca in
+seasoning the well-flavoured dish so as to make it vie with the tenderest
+venison? A kid, seasoned with spice and stuffed with sweet herbs, rice,
+and the kernel of the fine fruit (at the very recollection of which I
+hunger), is the festive dish of every house in Palestine on seasons of
+mirth and great rejoicings. The father of the newly-married bridegroom,
+tottering from extreme old age, will issue forth from the festive board
+after having partaken of this delicacy, with a face radiant with smiles
+and contentment, pouring forth blessings on him that prepared the savoury
+meat.
+
+It is seldom now-a-days that men die of extreme old age and debility in
+the countries round about Jerusalem; but where such instances occur, and
+where the faculties are retained to the last, and the human functions are
+in full operation, then rest assured, that the tent scene in Isaac’s last
+closing moments—so beautifully portrayed in the Holy Scriptures—is still
+vividly re-acted up to this very day, with the sole exception perhaps of
+the deceit practised by Jacob and his mother, which omission may solely
+arise from the fact that the children of this world have now become wiser
+in their generation, and are no longer to be imposed upon by such simple
+and rude artifices.
+
+But in their poverty and misery, the children of Southern Syria must bow
+the neck meekly to the yoke till a brighter day dawns from above upon
+their affliction, and till the curse is removed and the blessing of the
+Almighty shall descend, like the rich dew of Hermon, upon their country
+and themselves, and more than amply recompense them for centuries of
+suffering and woe. They must remember the words spoken by the prophet
+Isaiah—“O Assyrian, the rod of mine anger, and the staff in their hand is
+mine indignation.”
+
+With Sidon the whole face of the country changes, and here commences that
+luxuriant and verdant pasturage and foliage, which continue increasing as
+we progress to the northward and may be said to reach a climax of beauty
+and profuse richness in the districts of Lebanon, Tripoli, Lattakia, and
+Antioch. Vast mulberry plantations, orchards of delicious fruits, and
+vineyards covered with an endless variety of grapes, everywhere delight
+the eye. At those spots where the soil is untilled, and up the lofty
+sides of the mountains, grow the cypress, the majestic oak, the stately
+fir, and the lofty pine; every inch of ground being thickly covered with
+wild flowers, blackberry bushes, the white rose, and the training
+honey-suckle, all which, with the fresh odours of the country, recall
+forcibly to the mind the words of the prophet Hosea, “his smell is as
+Lebanon.”
+
+ “—Through the grass
+ The quick-eyed lizard rustles, and the trills
+ Of summer birds sing welcome as ye pass;
+ Flowers fresh in hue, and many in their dyes,
+ Dance in the soft breeze in a fairy mass;
+ The sweetness of the violet’s deep-blue eyes,
+ Kissed by the breath of heaven, seems colour’d by its skies.”
+
+In the neighbourhood of Sidon, even the rare exotic banana has now been
+reared with success, its large and handsome leaves and clustering golden
+fruit being a source of wonder and admiration to the Syrian who is a
+stranger to that neighbourhood. Here also commences that plentiful
+supply of clear, crystal water which so materially adds to the beauty of
+the scenery, makes cleanliness and comfort a cheap luxury to the
+inhabitants, and as a natural consequence, proportionably benefits the
+health of the natives. Children grow up surrounded by the choicest gifts
+of a bountiful Providence, and their young and tender hearts are moulded
+in a meeker and more gentle frame; their labour is more congenial to
+their constitution and habits, and the smallest exertion is quickly
+recompensed by a grateful and fruitful return. The shade of many trees
+affords them a welcome shelter; the waters of many cool streams are at
+hand to quench their slightest thirst; and the choice fruits of a hundred
+orchards, maturing to ripeness, afford them a luxurious repast. Besides
+these, the cattle and poultry are more plentiful, and of a better sort,
+and the pasturages are thickly dotted with flocks of fine healthy sheep,
+and milch cows in abundance. The result of all these blessings is, that
+the inhabitants are a healthier, wealthier, and a more cheerful race than
+the people of Southern Palestine; and the vast supply of honey gathered
+from the wild honey-combs in the neighbouring mountains, and the
+excessive cheapness and excellence of milk renders this portion of Syria
+the land “flowing with milk and honey” of the present day.
+
+Oh that I were possessed of sufficient eloquence to prove to that great
+mass of people who are emigrating from the British isles to the far
+distant shores of Australia and North America, the fallacy of the
+opinion, so universally entertained by some English, with regard to the
+risk and danger incurred by those possessed of lands within the limits of
+the Turkish dominions! Would that I could divest them of the idea
+usually run away with by Englishmen, that they would be exposing their
+lives and property to the will and pleasure of ferocious three-tailed
+pashas, such as they have read of in books of travels, dated nearly half
+a century back, and whose detestable names and memory are now handed down
+to posterity in tales and Eastern ballads.
+
+The real state of the Turkish empire is quite the reverse to what these
+good people imagine, and of late years any European, particularly since
+the siege of Acre, and an Englishman especially, commands universal
+respect from all the inhabitants of Syria, rich or poor, Christian or
+Jew. There may be, perhaps, a few of the more bigoted beys and nobles,
+who, wishing to remain in undisturbed possession of their wealth, and the
+monopoly of land and labour, would regard the advent of enlightened
+strangers as likely to be an infringement on their position, dignity, and
+independence; but their rage and jealousy would prove as impotent as it
+would be contemptible.
+
+It is, moreover, difficult to satisfy Europeans, especially Englishmen,
+that they can make safe investments in the Turkish dominions; but it is
+only requisite to enquire into the tenure of all sorts of property as
+held by Europeans in every part of Turkey for many years, to shew that
+their vested rights have never been questioned, and that when any injury
+or loss was proved to have been sustained to any such property, the
+official representative of the owner had only to submit his claim, and in
+every instance full and satisfactory redress was instantly afforded; and
+I may refer, in proof of this, to an instance which occurred some years
+ago of losses sustained by the French Factory, on Mount Lebanon, owing to
+irregularities and outrages on the part of the petty local authorities,
+and others, for which ample indemnification was given.
+
+I may state, as an additional confirmation, the case of the Rev. Goodall,
+the American Missionary, who was plundered by the soldiers during the
+Greek piratical invasion of Beyrout, to which I have before alluded. As
+soon as quiet was re-established, the Consul applied to the Pasha for a
+restitution of the stolen property, or a tantamount value. A list was
+made out, and so punctilious was the Pasha, that even a fowl, that had
+been ready trussed for roasting, was included amongst the missing
+articles, and every farthing was paid down out of the Government
+treasury. And this is the case in most instances where a European is the
+aggrieved party; the Governor of the district will be sure to see justice
+done him and the Treasury is entitled to collect the sum disbursed from
+the heads of the villages in the immediate neighbourhood where the theft
+was committed. This answers a double end; it satisfies the injured
+party, and ensures almost to a certainty the capture of the felon, for
+all the villagers are on the watch to discover the rogue that has brought
+on them such a taxation.
+
+Europeans hold property after this manner, viz., they authorise a friend
+who is a subject of the Sultan, in whom they can place implicit
+confidence, to buy or purchase such and such a house or landed property
+in his own name; then he makes a transfer of the titles to such property
+to the European in lieu of some imaginary debt, usually a sum far
+exceeding the value of the property itself. This transfer is made in the
+Cadi’s, or Chief Judge’s Court; and being registered, becomes valid in
+Turkish law, and is legally recognised as such. It is thus that the
+oldest vested European interests in Turkey are secured and possessed, and
+handed down to the lawful heirs of the European proprietors.
+
+In respect both to the character of the Turks, and their kindly
+disposition towards strangers, I cannot do better than give a quotation
+from an interesting work by J. C. Monk, Esq., who has very recently
+visited the country, in order to illustrate their friendliness and
+amiability. He says—
+
+“For my own part I look back with unmixed pleasure and gratification to
+the brief period of my sojourn among the Turks. Their hospitality to
+strangers, as well as their charity to the poor, and to each other in
+distress, has never been questioned. From the Pasha in his palace, and
+from the peasant in his hut, I have received kindness and hospitality.
+They are not inquisitive in demanding the business or occasion which
+brings a stranger to their doors, as such he is welcome; as he came, so
+may he depart; no present is required, and rarely is it expected; no
+questions are asked; attentive to the wants and comforts of his guests,
+the Turk seems to forget his natural _insouciance_ until the departure of
+the stranger, when in return for his salutation he wishes him “God
+speed.”
+
+Of one thing I am certain, and that is, that the middling and poorer
+classes would hail the arrival of English emigrants with rapturous
+delight; and in stating this, I am not without antecedents to prove what
+I assert. I might instance the case of the late lamented and excellent
+Mr. John Barker, who, for many years, lived amongst the wildest and most
+bigoted portion of the natives of Northern Syria (at least, they were so
+when he first went amongst them); go now and ask whomsoever you will—the
+richest or the poorest—their opinion of the English, and, as if with one
+voice, they will reply—that, taking Mr. Barker as a standard, they
+consider them the best, most charitable, and most enlightened people that
+inhabit the earth—the best friends and staunchest supporters of the
+Sultan—and a people that they would gladly see settled around them.
+
+Let us quietly argue both sides of the question; and perhaps as an
+objection to start with, the reader may urge, that, in the instance above
+quoted, the gentleman who thus settled in Syria was a wealthy retired
+Consul-General, possessing, _for that country_, an income equal to, if
+not exceeding, that of the most important Pasha in Syria, and that,
+therefore, apart from his wealth, the high official position he had
+occupied in Egypt and Aleppo, was a sufficient reason to command esteem
+and respect among the natives; also in the cases of Col. Churchill, who
+possesses large estates in the mountains, and is most active in his
+exertions for the spiritual enlightenment and temporal improvement of the
+people, that of Lady Hester Stanhope, and other Europeans. This may be
+correct to a certain extent, but is false in the main. Of that
+unfortunate lady, who once ruled with almost absolute power, the wild
+Arabs of the desert, the only traces that remain, are the few crumbling
+ruins of her humble abode at Djouni; her very name is almost forgotten,
+and her sun of life sunk behind the cloud of obscurity. But why was
+this? Simply because she lavished her money, when she had any, in vain
+paraphernalia, and gave large sums, as _backshish_, to unprincipled men,
+who had no sooner spent the money, than they forgot the patroness. Had
+she employed her time and means in buying land and cultivating it,
+introducing useful arts, etc., then her memento would have been lasting,
+and the boon conferred handed down from generation to generation. Mr.
+Barker’s and Col. Churchill’s estates flourish, and will continue to
+flourish through many years to come.
+
+The better sorts of peaches and grapes, besides a variety of rare Indian
+and American fruits, which have been introduced by English
+philanthropists, all serve to remind the Syrians of the kind friends who
+brought them to the country; and many who have risen from obscurity into
+comparative independence, hourly bless the good men whose hands showered
+these benefits upon them. It would be in the power, more or less, of
+every Englishman emigrating to Syria, to confer a lasting benefit upon
+the natives through the introduction of a better method than they possess
+of cultivating the ground, etc.; while a blacksmith, a skilful carpenter,
+and a good mason, would prove invaluable acquisitions; and an industrious
+farmer might initiate them into the art of making wholesome cheese, in
+lieu of the hard, unpalatable stuff that now bears that name. These
+would be the greatest of boons to the Syrians; and though naturally a
+slow people, unwilling to deviate from old customs and habits which have
+been handed down to them from generation to generation, still the
+successful working of any newly introduced system, affording them
+incontrovertible proofs of its yielding a better profit, would very soon
+induce the natives to follow the example of their more civilised
+neighbours.
+
+The advantages to be derived from emigrating to Syria are manifold; but
+first amongst these let me class, what to a patriotic Englishman must be
+a pleasant thought, the comparative vicinity of this country to his
+native land. Thousands of people are content to be cooped up for months
+in a close confined vessel, exposed to all the hardships and sufferings
+of a long sea-voyage, and subjected to the expenses of passage-money and
+outfit, with the almost certainty before them, even if they succeed
+beyond their most sanguine wishes, of being exiled from their country for
+ten or a dozen years. I do not now allude to those shoals that are
+flocking over to Australia, tempted from home by the immense wealth of
+the Gold-diggings; nor to the possibility of these Gold-diggings being
+very speedily inundated with people who may, when too late, bitterly
+lament the rashness of their proceedings; neither will I advert to the
+possibility of mines being discovered even in so neglected a country as
+Syria. Some are already known; and even copper and iron also exist. In
+Arabia, mountains of turquoise exist, specimens of which were exhibited
+at the Exhibition, and gained a prize, by Major C. R. Macdonald, who had
+also the honour of presenting the Queen with a pair of magnificent
+bracelets. I am arguing with that class of men who emigrate simply
+because they can find no occupation for their professional labours at
+home. Yet not one out of these thousands has moral courage to emigrate
+to Syria, where, if they proceed by a steamer, their outfit and
+passage-money would amount to about one-half the expense incurred in
+going to Australia,—the passage barely exceeding a fortnight, and that
+passage, if the season is well chosen, performed in the height of summer,
+with hardly a squall to ruffle the placid waters of the Mediterranean.
+Here, then, at the very outset, is a saving of at least one-half of the
+expense which must be incurred in going to Australia.
+
+We will now suppose our emigrant arrived in Syria, with some surplus cash
+in his pocket; he here converts each golden sovereign into more than one
+hundred piastres, and he must be a spendthrift indeed if he cannot live
+well and comfortably for ten piastres per day, or at the rate of four
+sovereigns a month. In this interval he has had enough time to look
+about him, and determine upon the town or position in which he intends
+fixing his abode; and he has had also, during this short period, the
+satisfaction of writing to his friends at home, and of receiving their
+answers and congratulations on his safe arrival. Listen to this, O ye
+that would still persist in emigrating to Australia, and remember how
+many months must elapse ere the happy tidings of your safe arrival and
+its reply can reach you.
+
+If the emigrant be a farmer he is not long in fixing upon a fit site for
+the establishment of his farm-house. The immediate neighbourhood of
+Tripoli, Beyrout, Tyre, Sidon, and Jaffa are best adapted for his
+purpose, the shipping there and the towns themselves affording an ample
+market for the consumption of live stock. He will have cheapness to
+contend against in the sale of cattle and poultry, but the superior
+quality of what would be produced by a careful farmer, his stall-fed oxen
+and sheep, and well-fattened poultry, would, amongst Europeans and the
+wealthiest natives, command eventually a ready and profitable sale.
+Cyprus would supply him with young turkeys at an average value of about a
+shilling a head, and with every other species of poultry. If he wished
+to experimentalise in improving the breed of cattle, he might do so
+advantageously, not to mention the profits from wool and hides. The one
+article of cheese alone, in exchange, would be to him a source of certain
+gain. One half of the inhabitants subsist for a great portion of the
+year almost entirely upon this food, wretchedly as it is made by my
+countrymen.
+
+Should the emigrant be a lover of a cold climate, he can easily fix his
+abode on the snow-capped pinnacles of Lebanon, where he may enjoy
+perpetual frost. If another should prefer a milder climate, he can
+calculate his temperature almost to a nicety, and by carrying a pocket
+thermometer about with him, go higher or descend lower, as fancy or
+inclination might prompt. Should he love to luxuriate in heat, he has
+only to descend to the sea-side, and there he will revel in all the glory
+of sunshine, glare, and warm land-breezes. Mechanics, etc., would find
+ready occupation in the very heart of the busiest towns in Syria, and
+what is more, such is the high repute of English mechanics and artizans
+amongst the natives of Syria, that even old grey-bearded Mahomedans would
+gladly apprentice themselves, giving in return their manual labour.
+
+It may be urged, with regard to climate, that the heat of all parts of
+Syria is too intense to admit of English labourers being employed in the
+cultivation of the immense tracts of waste land that so abound in various
+districts. My reply to this is, that both food and labour being
+extremely cheap in that country, and the produce, whether grain or silk,
+disposable at an enormous profit in the English markets, the proceeds of
+such sales would enable the small capitalist to employ sufficient
+labourers under him; so that, in short, he would be simply a teacher and
+overseer, managing his own property, and could, in a very few years,
+afford to have an official in his pay, whilst he himself perhaps might
+be, with his family, enjoying a cheap jaunt to his own country.
+
+But there is also another large class of emigrants, to whose means and
+occupations Syria is even better suited than to all the foregoing. I
+mean persons of a certain fixed moderate income; those in receipt of an
+annual rent or interest, varying in amount from £50 to £300. A man in
+London, especially if he have a wife and family to support, is
+comparatively a pauper if he can earn no more than £50 per annum. Take
+that man to Syria; plant him in any part of Lebanon, or in any other
+district of that country, and he has no longer pounds and shillings to
+mete out carefully, so as to cover the annual outlay for household
+expenses; but he has now to deal with piastres and paras. For one
+piastre he can get four ordinary penny loaves; for half a piastre he can
+get five eggs; for another half, as much fresh butter and milk as will
+serve his purpose for the day, and unless he be an extraordinary eater,
+leave an abundant surplus. Thus for two piastres we have seen him
+provided with milk, butter, and bread—three staple commodities—and the
+additional luxury of fresh-laid eggs. An _oak_, or 2¾ lbs. of mutton,
+would cost him about two and a half piastres, and he spends a piastre in
+vegetables and fruit; thus the raw articles of consumption cost him daily
+five and a half piastres, or just one shilling sterling. With sixpence
+additional, he can have fish and wine and coffee, an ample supply of
+each, enough indeed to satisfy the cravings of three moderate men; so
+that his annual item for food, wine, and coffee, would amount to 547
+shillings and sixpence, or £27 17s. 6d. Of his original income of £50
+per annum, he would thus still have a surplus of £22 2s. 6d. His rent
+and the hire of three servants, their keep included, may consume £10 of
+this balance, and with the remaining £12 2s. 6d. he could buy and keep
+for the whole first year a very serviceable steed, whose cost would be
+more than recompensed by the benefit and pleasure of horse-exercise every
+day in the week.
+
+Having now mounted my comparatively English “beggar on horseback”—even if
+he be the most indolent of indolent men—he must go on thriving better and
+better. Most Englishmen, however, have too much good sense now-a-days to
+suffer precious hours to flit lazily by. It is evident also, that our
+emigrant will he put to less expense the second year of his sojourn, at
+least to the amount of the value of cost of his horse, which will then
+only become an item of keep, as grass is plentiful and barley (on which
+our horses are fed) cheap. His exchequer would thus be increased by £10
+at the end of the second year. Now, even in England, a sharp-witted
+fellow might, by unremitting perseverance and indefatigable zeal, turn
+ten pounds into twenty; but in Syria, this sum is 1100 piastres, and for
+1100 piastres there is many a bit of ground to be purchased equal in size
+to the largest square in London. This he could lay out, if he fancied,
+part in a kitchen-garden, part in a farm-yard, and part in a nursery for
+young mulberry shoots, to be transplanted the ensuing year, by which time
+also the extent of ground could be doubled by the purchase of a fresh lot
+for £10 more—both planted with mulberries, the proprietor supplying his
+own table with poultry and vegetables, making his own wine, and pressing
+his own oil. In five years after his first settlement, he would have a
+mulberry plantation five times as extensive as Eaton Square, with that
+portion of the property first planted already yielding a return; for the
+mulberry-tree, after three years, is ready to rear the worm upon, and the
+quantity reared goes on increasing as the trees become larger and yield a
+more abundant supply of leaves. At the end of these five years our
+landed proprietor, whose greatest horror in London was quarter-day, and
+rent and taxes, now finds himself in receipt of about £80 per annum
+instead of £50, with every prospect of a rapid augmentation, for he may
+have been adding ground to ground each successive year, and every
+successive piece of land purchased may have been larger than the
+preceding, till about the seventh year of his residence, when he may have
+made an outlay of about £200, and have a promising plantation, yielding
+him, conjointly with his income, somewhere about £120 per annum, with
+every prospect of this income rapidly increasing. The best part of the
+pleasant tableau, too, would consist in the fact that there had been no
+pinching and screwing up of one’s means, no direful privations to meet
+the emergency, no sleepless nights, and worrying busy days, racking one’s
+brains and detracting from health and happiness; but on the contrary, the
+emigrant’s life will have been one perpetual scene of pleasurable and
+healthful occupation and diversion.
+
+He will be an early riser, because he has had his little flower-garden to
+weed, or the planting out of his fruit-trees and vegetables to
+superintend: his farm-yard will then claim his attention; the cows
+milking and sending forth to grass; the sheep, the turkeys, the geese,
+ducks, fowls, guinea-hens, etc., all to be attended to; terminating by a
+pleasant ride round his own plantation (how his heart throbs at the
+thought, _his own plantation_!), and in seeing that his people are at
+their various labours for the day. This ride gives him a keen relish for
+his breakfast; and the forenoon is agreeably occupied in making notes of
+when such and such a hen first sat on her eggs, and when such a batch of
+chickens were hatched, etc. At noon he has lunch, and takes his
+_siesta_; whilst the afternoon is devoted to study, or to correspondence;
+or, if the fancy take him, and the season be propitious, to a shooting
+party. There is no game-law to check his ambition, or to limit his range
+of ground: no preserves, no man-traps, no “All dogs found trespassing
+will be shot.” He may climb up one hill and go down another; spring a
+covey of partridges, knock over a couple or more, and then quietly
+re-load his gun for another shot. The only thing that seem inquisitive
+about, or will take any interest in, such proceedings are, not
+game-_keepers_, but game-_destroyers_—jackals and sparrowhawks; the one
+will track the blood of the wounded partridge more surely even than the
+dogs, the other soars high over head, and equally robs the sportsman of
+his game unless numbered amongst his victims.
+
+In the cool of the evening, the emigrant will enjoy his wholesome,
+abundant, and luxurious dinner, and perhaps, entering into the spirit of
+Oriental life, take a _fingan_ of coffee, and, may be, smoke a pipe of
+delicious _Lattakia_; and at ten, at the latest, he takes himself to bed,
+glad, after the many occupations of the day, to seek that healthful and
+refreshing sleep, which is sure to be the natural result of so regular a
+course of life.
+
+Such is the picture of life I have drawn out for a man possessed at the
+outset of only £50 per annum. Many in the receipt of even more than this
+sum annually, are now on the threshold of the poorhouse. Surely, if such
+should peruse these pages, they cannot longer hesitate as to what to do
+or how to proceed.
+
+Men with families who wish to luxuriate in the enjoyments of life, but
+whose limited means of from £200 to £300 per annum restrict them, should
+emigrate to Lebanon and to Syria. There they might build themselves
+palaces, have parks stocked with gazelles and deer, the choicest orchard
+of fruit, a stable not to be surpassed by potentates of Europe,
+summer-houses, and dogs, and guns, and other requisites for shooting and
+coursing parties; a summer residence near the seaside, and a yacht to
+pleasure in whithersoever they might choose, or whither the whim of the
+moment might lead them.
+
+Finally, if Englishmen would only emigrate to Syria, and establish a
+small colony there, then the uninitiated natives would be enabled to form
+some estimate of their character as a nation; and, above all, would
+discover, that they, like themselves, are Church-goers, strictly
+observant of the sabbath, possessing ordained bishops, priests, and
+deacons,—acknowledging the efficacy of the Sacraments, and a people
+really good, and believers in the Gospel, in lieu of being what they now
+suppose them to be, a people that mount upon house-tops to pray, because
+the higher the elevation the nearer they think themselves to God.
+
+If consumptive patients, in the early stage of that most direful malady,
+were to resort to the milder climate of Syria, there is every hope that,
+under God’s blessing, they would eventually recover, for, apart from the
+excellency of the climate, they are there exposed to no sudden changes of
+heat and cold, no coming out of stifling opera-houses into the chilling
+night air, no pernicious excitements, nor exhausting late hours.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+SYRIA, HER INHABITANTS, AND THEIR RELIGIONS, CONTINUED.
+
+
+The desire to benefit my countrymen by an influx of European emigrants
+has tempted me to wander from the subject of the preceding chapter; to
+forget the actual inhabitants for a moment, while painting the delights
+of a residence in Syria to those who can only become so in future. I
+must now proceed with my survey of the different races of people who
+inhabit the country, and I shall endeavour to make this sketch of their
+peculiarly national and religious characteristics as clear as possible.
+
+There are few countries on the face of the earth so small in extent,
+which comprise so many different races and religious persuasions, as
+Syria. In point of fact, its present condition in this respect offers a
+remarkable illustration of the numerous schisms, which took place in the
+Greek Church during the earlier period of its existence, and which, it is
+well-known, were carried on with greater perseverance and bitterness than
+any similar disturbances, which have at various times afflicted other
+churches.
+
+So complete has been the separation of the sectarian bodies from the
+present church—so great was the influence of the leading ecclesiastics
+among them, that a religious difference has produced a variation in their
+habits and manners, and has even given to people, descendants from the
+same stock, and living in the same country, the appearance of a totally
+different origin.
+
+We also number among our inhabitants a large and influential population,
+inhabiting a mountainous district, who believe, and their belief is not
+without foundation, that they are of Chinese origin. In reviewing our
+population, we find that it may be classed into four chief sections:
+Christians, Jews, Mahommedans, and Infidels. The Christians we find
+sub-divided into more than that number of sects; almost every sect
+constituting a different people.
+
+The Mahommedans are also sub-divided into two branches, the orthodox and
+the heterodox, or as they are otherwise called Sûnnees and Sheeas, the
+former who are the more numerous, acknowledge the Sultan as the head and
+protector of their religion, and are noted for their love of tradition
+and their many interpretations of the Koran. The Sheeas are nearly the
+same in creed as the Methoûali, of whom I shall speak further in a future
+chapter. The Jews stand alone and isolated, as they do all over the
+world, though there is one of the infidel tribes which is now declared to
+be of Jewish origin. Of each and all I shall speak in the proper place,
+believing that I shall best succeed in rousing the interests of my
+readers by presenting this picture of the inhabitants of Syria from a
+religious point of view.
+
+Of late years, as most of my readers must be aware, the attention of the
+benevolent Christian public of Great Britain has been frequently and
+anxiously directed to the want of proper religious teaching in Syria.
+Englishmen, both poor and wealthy, have contributed from their purses to
+supply the deficiency through the aid of English and native missionaries:
+the latter having been educated in England expressly for this sacred
+purpose.
+
+The United States have not been behindhand in this general cause;
+American missionaries have co-operated with some of their brethren from
+this country zealously, and with good results. How far those results
+have extended—how rapidly the elementary principles of the purest
+Christianity have been spread abroad in the East, through the agency of
+these godly men, to whose fervent zeal and untiring energy, I can, at
+least bear the most satisfactory, though humble testimony, has been
+better and more efficiently told in the annual reports, which the several
+missionary societies issue to the public, than any description which I
+could give.
+
+I am truly grateful for the deep interest which these societies and their
+supporters have taken in the religious welfare of my nation; but it would
+not be becoming in me to attempt to add anything to their reports.
+
+It will be sufficient for me to assure my readers, that the pious
+gentlemen employed by the parent societies, have traversed Syria in all
+directions, piercing even into the very heart of its most mountainous
+districts, sowing broadcast the seeds of a pure and immaculate faith;
+that they have found patient listeners in all, and zealous converts in
+many of our towns and villages. The number of their converts continues
+to increase; they are re-planting the true faith “The Cedar of Lebanon,”
+which has flourished in the land from time immemorial, and they have
+prepared the ground, nay, they have already laid the foundation on which
+to raise an imperishable temple in honour of the only true Mediator, our
+Saviour Christ, in defiance of the machinations and intrigues of the
+“wild beast of Rome.”
+
+They have my most fervent wishes for their complete success, and,
+trusting to the aid of the Most High, I confidently look forward to that
+day, when the offshoots of the stately Cedar of Lebanon shall have
+covered the entire land, casting a holy shade over its inhabitants, when
+the noxious weeds that now impede its growth and baffle its influence,
+shall have disappeared from the land, and when the “wild beast” shall
+have been banished to his den.
+
+I desire, above all things, to remove an erroneous impression which I
+find prevailing very generally in this country as to the character of the
+Greek, or Orthodox Eastern Church, to which, by far the greater portion
+of the Christian inhabitants belong. I have myself styled this Church
+the “Thistle of Lebanon,” when comparing it with the healthier and purer
+doctrines of the Reformed Church, which I have ventured to call the Cedar
+of my beloved Lebanon; but, nevertheless, it would be most ungenerous,
+nay unfair, to permit my readers to retain the impression that the Greek,
+or the Orthodox Eastern Church, is an offshoot of the Church of Rome, or
+in any way connected with it.
+
+Nearly three hundred thousand of my countrymen worship God according to
+its doctrines, and all of them, excepting, perhaps the most ignorant,
+would feel indignant at the supposition that they were followers of the
+Church of Rome.
+
+I will not fatigue my readers with a learned disquisition on the forms of
+worship, or on points of doctrine, for I shall effect my purpose much
+easier by a simple statement of the cardinal differences between the two
+churches, and I have no doubt they will at once be convinced, that there
+is a greater degree of relationship between the English or any other
+Reformed Church, and the Orthodox Eastern Church than there exists
+between it and the Church of Rome.
+
+Learned historians, and some of the most intelligent and enquiring of
+Eastern travellers, have dwelt with much force on the early history of
+the Orthodox Eastern Church, and there is no doubt in my own mind that
+they have clearly established, not merely the fact of its not being an
+offshoot of the Church of Rome, nor in any way intimately connected with
+it; but, on the contrary, that since its establishment it has always been
+a Protestant Church, and that it is therefore more ancient in its
+Protestant character than either of the Reformed Churches.
+
+Unfortunately for the character of the Orthodox Eastern Church, the
+knowledge and experience of these intelligent men has been confined to a
+very small circle of readers, and the greater part of the British public
+has attached infinitely more credit to the imperfect and superficial
+sketches of travellers, who resorting to our country for a short time,
+and after “doing” Syria in a month, beguile the tedium of their journey
+home by writing an account of their seeings and doings, concocting it in
+as rapid and careless a manner as their examination into the condition of
+the country was hasty and thoughtless.
+
+It is upon the authority of such trustworthy writers, that I find the
+impression prevailing, that the creed, the doctrines, and forms of
+worship of the Orthodox Eastern Church are precisely similar to those of
+the Church of Rome. When resident in Syria, I have, on more than one
+occasion, attended church with English travellers, who, struck by the
+presence of pictures, which decorate the walls of all our churches, and
+by the similarity of the robes of the officiating priests to those worn
+by the priests of the Romish Church, conceived that they were in a Roman
+Catholic Church. It needed some explanation to remove this impression.
+Most of the writers to whom I allude—I will not mention their
+names—having received the same impression, they have at once jumped to
+the conclusion in which they invite their readers to concur, that the
+Orthodox Eastern Church is only a branch of the abhorred Church of Rome.
+
+There is, as I have shewn, some excuse for the first impression, but
+nothing could be more erroneous or unjust than the conclusion to which
+they have arrived. I acknowledge that the robes of the Greek priests
+differ in no material point from those worn by the priests of Rome; and I
+admit that there are pictures in their churches; but I do most
+unhesitatingly deny—what has been stated by more than one writer—that
+there are images to be found in these churches, or that they are
+worshipped by the adherents of the Orthodox Eastern Church. {284} The
+offending pictures are not prescribed by the Church.
+
+The Orthodox Eastern Church does not include among its doctrines the
+worship of saints; in fact, the pictures are merely portraits of holy
+men, who have led blameless lives, and whose virtues the spectator is
+invited to imitate by witnessing the honour done to them after death.
+The only Mediator acknowledged by the Orthodox Eastern Church, is our
+Lord Jesus Christ; in proof of which I may be permitted to quote the
+following passage from its doctrines: “The sufferings and death of Christ
+are an abundant satisfaction for the sins of the whole world.”
+
+The Virgin is, however, highly reverenced, as being according to the
+angel’s declaration “highly favoured and blessed among women.” Some
+also, but those chiefly among the most uneducated, address prayers
+through her to the Saviour. I may, perhaps, be permitted to establish my
+case still more clearly, by pointing out other and more important points
+on which the two Churches are at variance.
+
+In the first place the Orthodox Eastern Church denies the power of any
+council to alter or to add to the articles of faith. It protested at the
+time against the famous council of Trent, since which period the
+authority of councils has formed an important article in the laws of the
+Romish Church. The Orthodox Eastern Church acknowledges no other guide
+and source of doctrine or faith than the Holy Scriptures, as contained in
+the Old and New Testaments, which are _open to all_—not proscribed, as is
+the case in the Romish Church—and are printed in all the languages of the
+various countries in which the Greek Church has adherents. I have even
+seen Bibles printed by the zealous Church Missionary Society used in the
+Greek Church, and many of the Greek priests requested Mr. Schlincz, while
+he was in Syria in 1840, on a mission of enquiry into the persecution of
+the Jews of Damascus, to supply them with copies of these. He left with
+me several boxes of these books, which I distributed amongst the people
+whom I thought likely to profit by them.
+
+It expressly protests against the Romish doctrine of the infallibility of
+the Pope, and it recognises our Lord, the Saviour, as the head of the
+Church. Surely, these are points of the greatest moment, such indeed as
+ought not to have been overlooked by impartial writers, when dwelling on
+the character and doctrines of a vast religious body; but there are
+others of an equally important nature.
+
+According to its doctrines, the Holy Spirit proceedeth from the Father
+alone, and not from the Father and Son as is asserted by the Romists, and
+by the dissenters from the Orthodox Eastern Church, whose origin and
+history will be stated in another part of this book. The latter Church
+accepts the death of the Saviour as an abundant satisfaction for the sins
+of the world; it holds the doctrine of justification by faith; it
+denounces the belief in transubstantiation, and in purgatory; and it
+departs in another most important point from the practice of that of
+Rome, by authorising the marriage of its ministers.
+
+It is not my purpose to fatigue my readers by establishing a relationship
+between the Orthodox Eastern Church and that of the United Kingdom, or of
+any other country, I am satisfied with having shewn the little value to
+be attached to the statements of hasty travellers, and with having, I
+hope, fully established a thorough dissimilarity on the most important
+points of religious belief between the doctrines and practice of the
+Orthodox Eastern Church and that of Rome.
+
+I should have had much more difficulty in doing justice to the claims of
+the Orthodox Eastern Church in the eyes of the Protestant public, had the
+writers who have sought to establish its affinity to Rome, availed
+themselves of other points of weakness, which my pen can neither defend
+nor conceal.
+
+First and foremost, to my mind, stands that foolish proceeding, which the
+priesthood of the Eastern Church annually practise on the ignorant and
+credulous of their disciples; when, on Easter Sunday, following the
+example of the Romish Church in manufacturing miracles, they pretend to
+draw fire down from heaven; the agency employed on the occasion being
+either a lucifer match or a phosphorus bottle. Also the practice of
+burning incense during divine service, and of requiring a particular, not
+a general, confession before taking the Lord’s Supper.
+
+When I returned to Constantinople, after my first visit to England, I had
+several interviews with the head patriarch, and with some of the bishops
+of the Orthodox Eastern Church, of which I am an humble though not a
+blind adherent. Finding them willing to listen to the remarks of one so
+much younger and more ignorant than themselves, whose only advantage
+arose from the experience gained by travelling in foreign countries, I
+strenuously endeavoured to shew them how erroneous and ill-judged was
+their practising miracles, the burning of incense, and other proceedings
+by which the senses are deceived, how well calculated they were to
+disgust the better educated and more intelligent of their followers, and
+eventually to drive them from the bosom of the Church.
+
+The patriarch and the bishops did not seek to discomfit me by learned
+arguments or flimsy excuses. Like intelligent men, they acknowledged the
+practices complained of to be unnecessary if not improper; but they
+assured me, that however sincere their desire to establish a thorough
+reform, their efforts for the present were necessarily restricted; a
+choice between two evils being the only course which was open to them.
+
+I was compelled to agree with them that the practice of drawing down fire
+from heaven on Easter Sunday, as well as that of burning incense in the
+churches during divine service, had both been established for so many
+years, and that the former especially had taken so deep a hold over the
+imagination of my unlettered brethren, that any sudden attempt to abolish
+either would at once be regarded as irreligious and revolutionary.
+Rather than incur so great a risk, they were content to continue what
+they considered the lesser evil; and in the meantime to promote as far as
+in them lay, the work of education, by means of which alone change in
+this direction is possible. To such an answer, of course, I had no
+reply; and I have endeavoured to aid the good cause of education wherever
+and whenever it has been in my power.
+
+Such as it is, with all its errors, its imperfections, and its
+weaknesses, the Orthodox Eastern Church, the “Thistle of Lebanon,” most
+certainly claims precedence in point of antiquity over every other
+Christian church, and to my mind it as clearly deserves the sympathy of
+all Christians, especially of all who maintain the Protestant faith. For
+without other support than the rock of faith in our Lord Jesus Christ,
+without assistance from abroad, and in slavery at home, this church has
+withstood the shock of Mahommedan invasion, and has maintained its
+position in Syria during a bondage of more than twelve hundred years.
+Nearly all those who now profess its faith must be the lineal descendants
+of families who acknowledged its authority and professed its doctrines
+before the time of the Hegira; for one of the first laws of our
+Mahommedan conquerors reimposed the punishment of death on all Christians
+who should seek to gain, and on all who should become, converts to their
+faith. It is only of late years that this law has been allowed to fall
+into disuse; but it is still most powerful, as the following interesting
+anecdote will prove.
+
+Not many days ago, I received a letter from a friend in Syria, in which
+amongst other things he informs me of the wonderful fact that the son of
+a Mufti had just been converted from Mahommedanism to the doctrines of
+the Orthodox Church, notwithstanding this law, and that he had been
+received into the bosom of the Church at Syra, in Greece, in order to
+prevent the fact from becoming known to the fanatic.
+
+The gentleman, who has just given so striking an illustration of the
+power of truth, is a scholar of some repute, a man of more than average
+intellectual powers, and naturally of an inquiring turn of mind.
+Dissatisfied with the faith of his fathers, he quietly made himself
+acquainted with the doctrines of the leading Christian churches in the
+East; and after a searching investigation into their relative merits,
+after lengthened arguments with several priests of both churches, and
+after a close study of the holy Scriptures, he finally resolved upon
+renouncing his allegiance to the Prophet, and upon joining a church which
+accepts the mediation of the Saviour.
+
+His mind once made up, he immediately announced his desire to be received
+into the bosom of the Orthodox Eastern Church to the priest in his own
+neighbourhood, who, however, declined to receive so distinguished a
+convert, from fear of incurring persecution, and perhaps of bringing the
+obnoxious law into fresh operation. Nothing daunted by this refusal, the
+conviction of the necessity of his reception into a Christian church
+having taken so deep a root in his mind, he at once endeavoured to
+succeed in other places.
+
+With this object in view, he wandered from town to town, traversing
+nearly all Syria in search of a priest, who would dare to hear his
+recantation of Mahommedanism, and to receive his profession of faith in
+our Lord; but all was in vain. Wherever he went he was met by a refusal,
+on the same grounds as had been assigned by the priest to whom he had at
+first applied. Eventually he was under the necessity of leaving his
+wife, his family, and his property, to the care of Providence, while he
+proceeded to Syra, in Greece, where he happily encountered no further
+obstacle to the attainment of his heart’s desire. Many centuries, I
+believe, have elapsed since any instance occurred of this severe law
+being enforced. He is now settled in Constantinople, without suffering
+any molestation on this account.
+
+How great, therefore, the claims of the Orthodox Eastern Church upon, and
+how close its affinity to, the Protestant Churches of Western Europe!
+Oppressed by its rulers, neglected by its brethren in the faith,
+suffering under the general impoverishment of the country, maligned by
+many who upon a closer investigation would have declared themselves its
+warmest friends, the Orthodox Eastern Church, the “Thistle of Lebanon,”
+still stands forth a monument of the enduring force of truth and faith.
+It is not easy to make an accurate computation of the numbers of its
+adherents, since, like those of every other church in the East, they are
+not concentrated in any one district, but are scattered over the whole of
+Syria, living chiefly, however, in the plains. Next to the Mahommedans,
+they are the most numerous, and I should say, including the Holy Land,
+that in round numbers they may safely be estimated at more than three
+hundred thousand.
+
+At the head of the Orthodox Eastern Church are four patriarchs; one at
+Constantinople, one at Jerusalem, one at Cairo, and one at Damascus. The
+latter are in some degree subordinate to the first; but their relations
+are ill defined, the power of the chief patriarch being in a great
+measure nominal. Whenever a bishop is appointed by one of the patriarchs
+in Syria or Egypt, the intervention of the patriarch in Constantinople is
+appealed to, to procure the sanction of the Turkish government. This
+sanction, I may mention, has never been withheld by the successive
+sultans—a degree of toleration hardly to have been expected from the
+fanatical followers of Mahommed.
+
+The patriarch in Damascus is called Patriarch of Antioch, the patriarchal
+see having remained in Antioch until that city was destroyed by
+earthquakes and revolutions. Each patriarch can, within his own
+province, suspend members of the priesthood, though they should have
+attained the dignity of bishop; but cases of this kind occur very rarely
+indeed. Considering the number of its adherents, this church cannot be
+said to be wealthy. It is true that it has great landed possessions; but
+they are most inefficiently managed, so that its chief sources of revenue
+are collections made in the church during the service; the fees paid for
+marriages and burials, and for reading prayers with the sick, and for
+visits which the priests make every month to the several houses,
+sprinkling the apartments with holy water, in order to drive out any evil
+spirit that may have taken up his abode there. No one thinks of
+inhabiting a new house, or one whose last occupier was a heretic, without
+this ceremony being performed. These, however, are all voluntary
+payments.
+
+In common with all other ministers of religion within the Turkish
+dominions, the priests of the Orthodox Eastern Church are highly favoured
+by the law. They pay no taxes whatever; they cannot suffer imprisonment
+or any other punishment at the option of the officials, who are hardly
+less ignorant than they are extortionate, and whose power over the other
+inhabitants is enormous. The only remedy against an offending priest is
+to report him to the patriarch of the province, who, either by himself or
+with the advice of the patriarch in Constantinople, ordains such a
+punishment as the case may deserve.
+
+As a rule, the priests are extremely ignorant and very poor. The
+salaries of the patriarchs rarely exceed £500, and many of the ministers
+are not in the receipt of more than £40 or £50 a year. The greater
+number of these have received but little education; their sole
+qualification for their office being, in most cases, the good opinion of
+their neighbours and some knowledge of reading or writing.
+
+As the eloquent author of “The Crescent and the Cross” truly says, they
+are frequently chosen by the laity of their district from among the
+lowest mechanics; and the election is invariably confirmed by the
+patriarch if there be nothing against the character of the elect.
+
+Colleges or educational establishments for the priesthood can hardly be
+said to exist. It would be ridiculous to give that name to the convent
+in Jerusalem, in which the young student is initiated into the manner of
+practising those pretended miracles which I have already spoken of as
+being annually performed at Easter, and in which he acquires a fair
+portion of that spirit of hatred and envy with which the various
+religious denominations within the walls of the Holy City regard each
+other.
+
+Much has been already accomplished by the enlightened men who have taken
+up the cause of the apostles, and who are labouring hard to dispel the
+dark cloud of ignorance which hangs over the minds of my countrymen like
+a heavy cloud. With the knowledge and the elements of the true faith
+which they are zealously disseminating, I do not despair not merely of a
+thorough reform of the Orthodox Eastern Church, but of an entire change
+in the mutual relations of the several religious bodies. Where there was
+hatred, there shall be love; and the spirit of envy shall be transformed
+into that of emulation.
+
+The service of the Orthodox Eastern Church is always performed in the
+native language, and consists of prayers, scripture-readings, a sermon,
+which is, however, generally only a simple explanation or commentary on
+chapters from the Holy Bible, and in chaunting hymns. The priests, as I
+have previously mentioned, wear robes differing but very little from
+those worn by the priesthood of the Church of Rome. It is customary to
+separate the sexes during the service; the galleries being devoted
+exclusively to the reception of the females, and the body of the Church
+to the males. Only the aged are allowed seats, of which there are very
+few, and the young men are forced to stand.
+
+At the commencement of the service, the officiating priest traverses the
+church, scattering incense from a censer. During Lent, strict observers
+of the law abstain from all animal food, even from eggs, milk, butter,
+and cheese, and they further fast from night till noon. At this period
+they also abstain from the use of all spirituous or vinous fluids. At
+all seasons of the year it is customary to practise abstinence on
+Wednesdays and Fridays. The sacrament is usually administered twice a
+month. It consists of leavened bread and wine mixed together, and is
+administered by the officiating clergyman with a spoon, the formula used
+on this solemn occasion being nearly the same as that employed in the
+English Church.
+
+I have mentioned the existence of dissenters from the Orthodox Eastern
+Church in Syria. They are called Greek Roman Catholics, and have existed
+rather more than one hundred and fifty years. The founder of this sect
+was a priest named Karolus, who had been elected patriarch of Antioch,
+or, as the functionary is called, patriarch of Damascus.
+
+The election was, however, not ratified by the head patriarch of
+Constantinople on account of the doctrines held by the new patriarch on
+the subject of the Holy Spirit. Karolus maintained, in contradiction to
+the established doctrine of the Orthodox Eastern Church, that the Holy
+Spirit proceeded from the Father and the Son, as is asserted by the Roman
+Catholic Church. On a closer inquiry into the religious tenets of the
+elect of Damascus, it was discovered that his opinions were heretical
+also on other points, for he was found to entertain a very favourable
+bias towards the doctrine of purgatory, and also of works of
+supererogation. In consequence, the patriarch of Constantinople
+dispatched to Damascus a more trustworthy follower to fill the vacant
+post.
+
+While the dispute was still pending, Karolus had been indefatigably
+working to increase the numbers of his own adherents; and the see of
+Rome, but too glad to have so eligible an opportunity of adding to its
+influence in a quarter where all its former efforts had been in vain,
+immediately despatched some of its cleverest emissaries to Karolus for
+the purpose of inducing him not to give way in the dispute, and promising
+him the support of the Pope.
+
+These emissaries were but too successful. What their arguments could not
+effect, they obtained by money and promises. Amongst other things, they
+held out hopes to Karolus of preferment in the Romish Church, and finally
+their influence prevailed over the advice, the entreaties, and the solemn
+admonition of the chief patriarch of Constantinople. Karolus entered the
+Church of Rome, humbly and submissively acknowledging the authority of
+the Pope, by whom he was created bishop of Antioch. Since then all the
+well-known energies of the Romish propaganda, all the wealth, the
+influence, the tactics of that unscrupulous power have been used with
+great effect to increase the number of dissenters from the Orthodox
+Eastern Church.
+
+In this case, there may be found additional evidence of the
+unscrupulousness of the chief agents of the authorities at Rome. Though
+it is the law of that Church, and one that is most strictly enforced,
+that Roman Catholic priests shall live in perpetual celibacy, the Greek
+Roman Catholic priests, as the dissenters from the Orthodox Eastern
+Church are called, are permitted to marry, and they are further allowed
+to retain the rites of the Church from which they have deserted. Perhaps
+these anomalies have been purposely continued in order to facilitate the
+perversion of the faithful adherents of the Orthodox Eastern Church by
+inducing the belief, that the two Churches are identical.
+
+Like the parent Church, that of the Greek Roman Catholics is scattered
+throughout Syria, but its adherents reside chiefly in the plains; their
+numbers may be computed at about sixty thousand. It was most successful
+in making proselytes while Syria was under the Egyptian rule; at which
+period the government seemed to make it a point to place in positions of
+trust and emolument chiefly such persons as acknowledged the authority of
+the Pope of Rome.
+
+It must not be supposed, that this preference was the result of a
+peculiar partiality on the part of the pachas for the Roman Catholic
+religion; for it has been tolerably well ascertained, that this
+favourable bias was the result of the direct mediation of the Sacred
+College at Rome, whose members, it may be imagined, rendered some
+equivalent service to the Egyptian government.
+
+It is not many years since Baachery Bey, a member of the divan in
+Damascus, of the same faith, procured from Maximius, the patriarch of the
+Greek Roman Catholics, permission to erect a Church in that city; and
+with it the still higher authority of Mehemet Ali, who ordered the church
+to be built without giving the petitioners the trouble of first obtaining
+a firman. This church is now one of the finest in Damascus, and is yet
+another of the records existing in Syria of the unscrupulousness
+exhibited by the Church of Rome in the selection of its agents.
+
+In 1840, there arose a great dispute between the heterodox patriarch
+Maximius and the orthodox patriarch of Antioch, on the dress worn by the
+priests in the Greek Roman Catholic Church. The latter complained that
+the priests under the tutelage of his Romish opponent did not, in this
+respect, conform to the exact rules prescribed by the head of their own
+Church, but continued to wear one similar to that worn by his own
+priests. This the orthodox patriarch considered to be highly offensive,
+and even dangerous, since the ignorant and credulous public were but too
+likely to be enticed by this similarity into the belief, that the
+doctrines of the two Churches were identical.
+
+The matter was referred to Constantinople; was discussed by the
+contending parties before the head patriarch of the Orthodox Eastern
+Church, and finally submitted to the decision of the Turkish authorities.
+After both parties had wasted much time, great patience, and no
+inconsiderable sums of money, the authorities either found the gold of
+the Orthodox Eastern Church to be both brighter and heavier, or else the
+influence of the Czar was too powerful for them, for they at last decided
+that Maximius and his priests should wear a peculiar hat (_kalloosee_)
+with many corners to distinguish them from those of the Orthodox Church.
+
+It is not only in trifles, however, that the Turkish authorities are
+called upon to decide between these two Churches—the Mahommedan laymen to
+arbitrate between Christian ministers! Unhappily their interference is
+sometimes demanded in matters of far higher importance.
+
+The mutual jealousies of the Christian sects, their envy and hatred, have
+reached such a pitch, that, on the most sacred festival in the Christian
+year, when devout pilgrims from all parts of the earth, who have wandered
+to Jerusalem for the purpose, are in the holiest of all localities within
+the Holy City, Turkish soldiers are required to keep the peace between
+them. At the very tomb of our Saviour, Christianity is disgraced by the
+quarrels of its believers, and Mahommedans are called in to prevent them
+from shedding the blood or taking the lives of each other.
+
+Political animosity has perhaps more to do with this melancholy
+exhibition than simple religious discord. Hasty and ill-judged have been
+the measures of protection which the great powers of Europe, at different
+times, and from motives dwelt upon elsewhere, have accorded to one or the
+other of the religious bodies in the East. Great Britain, France,
+Russia, and Austria, have all, without due cause, interfered to
+_protect_, as they say, their _protégés_ from undue oppression; but the
+result of their protection has not only brought them into unpleasant and
+dangerous contact with each other, excited and nourished envy and hatred
+among the protected, but has still further shaken the foundations of “our
+ancient ally,” as the Porte is called in England, whose existence is said
+to be so intimately bound up with the maintenance of that unintelligible
+paradox, “the balance of power in Europe.”
+
+At the moment of writing these lines, the diplomatic representatives of
+the great powers resident in Constantinople, the ministers of the great
+powers themselves, are in the agonies of negotiation, as their peculiar
+proceedings are diplomatically termed; and the noble representative of
+Great Britain has been hastily ordered to return to the seat of his
+mission, in order that the British influence may not suffer from a
+partial or one-sided decision of the case. It is to be hoped that the
+result of all these diplomatic efforts, or even that of the still more
+terrible instrumentality of war, may ultimately tend to the benefit and
+improvement of the unhappy people whose country is to become the field of
+contention.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+CHRISTIAN INHABITANTS.
+
+
+Among the Christian inhabitants of Syria, the Maronites, in point of
+numbers, if not in the simplicity of their faith, certainly take rank
+next to the devout followers of the Orthodox Eastern Church, and the
+brief review I propose to take of their history and position will, I
+think, sufficiently establish for them a claim to be placed among the
+most interesting Christian races or nations which can be found in any
+part of the globe.
+
+To the present hour they continue to inhabit the mountains of Lebanon and
+Anti-Lebanon, in which twelve centuries since they sought and found
+refuge from the decided measures to which the general Council of
+Constantinople had recourse, in order to punish them for their adherence
+to the Monothelite heresy. Driven from their homes in the plains and
+cities of the land, they established themselves in perfect security in
+the mountain fastnesses, which have enabled them on more than one
+occasion to set the power of the Egyptian and Turkish Governments at
+defiance, and to afford to others, no matter what their faith or origin,
+an impenetrable asylum against the persecutions of their enemies.
+Europeans or Easterns, Christians or infidels, flying before the
+persecutions of political or religious bigots, are still received with
+open arms and untiring hospitality by the Maronites, whose forefathers
+always practised the virtues learned in adversity—virtues which they have
+most successfully inculcated on the minds of their descendants. No
+greater proof than this can be brought forward of the excellence of their
+principles, their courage and integrity of heart, since even from that
+early period they made Lebanon what Hebron and other ancient cities were
+among the children of Israel. The extraordinary liberality and
+hospitality displayed by the original inhabitants can alone account for
+the striking amalgamation of Christian and unbelieving races, and for
+their having inhabited the mountains, for so long a period, in perfect
+amity and good-will towards each other, except when bad feelings have
+been excited by the intrigues or intermeddling of the foreign powers,
+whose interference has at all times been ruinous to the country.
+
+So complete has been the political union of the inhabitants of the
+Lebanon, notwithstanding all the differences between them, that for
+centuries they submitted to be governed by one head. So great is the
+reliance to be placed upon those brave mountaineers, and so high is the
+general estimation of their character, that when, in the year 1821, the
+genius of British diplomacy and a royal administration of the navy, had
+cleverly contrived the famous battle of Navarino, and the European
+consuls and residents in Syria were obliged to fly from the wrath of the
+Mahommedans, who set no bounds to their hatred to the Franks, they
+unanimously selected the home of the Maronites as their best and safest
+asylum. There they remained for nearly a year and a half, protected and
+respected by their hospitable hosts, and safe from the vindictive
+longings of the Turks, who dared not venture beyond the lowlands in
+pursuit of their prey.
+
+This was perhaps the first occasion in which educated Europeans obtained
+a closer inspection into the customs, manners and religion of the
+Maronites; and it is to be regretted that none of them have given their
+experience to the world in a popular shape. Many still dwell with
+pleasure upon this remarkable era in their lives; and interesting are the
+tales which they tell at their own firesides, of the dangers they
+encountered on their road, and the life they led in the mountains.
+Indeed, I have heard several of the gentlemen who were among those who
+sought an asylum in Lebanon, declare, that with the exception of the
+unpleasantness of being in a measure cut off from all communication with
+Europe, they seldom remember to have passed a pleasanter eighteen months,
+invigorated by a delightful and pleasantly cool climate, in a country
+abounding with shooting of all kinds; while, for those who loved the
+study of botany, there was an inexhaustible fund of amusement and
+occupation. Even here, and at a time too when they were apparently
+menaced by surrounding dangers, the _youngsters_ amongst the Europeans
+could not forget their predominant attachment to fun and mischief; and an
+anecdote has been frequently told of a poor old Maronite priest who
+prided himself extremely on the excellency of the fruits produced by the
+garden attached to the monastery which he inhabited, and which I believe
+were really of a very superior quality, and who had for many months
+reckoned on the autumn of 1821, as likely to prove the most prolific
+season he had yet known; when lo! he was surrounded by a hoard of gnats
+and bees in the shape of wild young Europeans, who, despite the height of
+his walls, and the depth of his ditches, and the distance they had to
+come every night, succeeded night after night in rifling the orchard and
+carrying off just those fruits that were upon the very turn, and which
+promised to be the _first fruit_ of the season. It is needless to say
+that the old priest was sadly perplexed and annoyed; the last persons in
+the world to be suspected were these very identical young men; first,
+because they lived so far off—secondly, because, in the presence of the
+old priest, they deported themselves with so much decorum, and attended
+so regularly to the Sunday service, that the old priest would as fain
+believe himself guilty of a felony as harbour any suspicions against the
+real offenders. He began to fear sadly that he must needs have some
+black sheep amongst his own flock; and as the depredations continued
+nightly, despite watching and all other precautions, he lost all
+patience, and after service one Sunday pronounced an anathema against
+those parties who had persisted in stealing his fruit if they did not
+immediately desist from their wicked practices. All was vain! Weeks
+rolled on, still the fruits were missing, and still anathemas were
+thundered on a Sunday from the pulpit, till the old priest in a fit of
+despair caused all the unripe fruit to be plucked at once, determined, as
+he expressed himself, at least to benefit by a few preserves and jellies,
+since he was not permitted to taste any of his ripe fruit, and so the
+affair ended for the time being. Some years after, however, when many
+successive rich harvests of delicious fruits had completely obliterated
+the misfortunes of that particular year from the old priest’s memory, he
+chanced to be riding through the very identical village to which his
+fruit had been regularly conveyed of a night, and was astonished to find
+growing in the wildest profusion specimens of the apricot, peach, and
+nectarine, of which he had heretofore prided himself that he himself was
+the sole possessor. Enquiry was set on foot, and the Druse at whose
+house the young men had been lodging stated, that some years since, when
+some young Franks were occupying his house, they used to receive large
+baskets of fruit, which they had told him were sent to them as presents
+from a convent, and that the kernels and seeds of these fruits had been
+preserved and planted, and, with very little attention or care, had
+succeeded to admiration. Thus, out of evil resulted good; for if it had
+not been for these young thieves, the mountaineers might have been
+debarred from obtaining many excellent fruits, which are now growing wild
+upon the mountains.
+
+The Maronites derive their name from Maroun, a holy recluse, whose good
+actions and moral teachings were like so many dew-drops upon the
+wilderness of sin and wickedness in which some of the inhabitants of the
+East were wandering, about the beginning of the fifth century. They were
+subsequently associated with the Romish Church by one John, the Maronite,
+who joined the Latin insurgents against the authority of the Greek
+Emperor. They remained subordinate to the Church of Rome during the next
+six hundred years, though they continued to maintain their own
+patriarchs. This attachment and subjection to Rome was, however,
+considerably diminished by the events which followed the crusades; and
+they for a short time maintained an independent position. Rome, however,
+never lost sight of its former subjects, and perpetually strove to win
+them back to the fold of which the Pope is the shepherd; and after forty
+years of negotiation and intrigue, Pope Eugenius succeeded in procuring
+from the Maronites a solemn renewal of their recognition of the Papal
+authority. From that date they have adhered to the Romish Church,
+enjoying privileges which the temporising unscrupulous conclave in Rome
+conferred and maintained, though contrary to the laws of their Church, in
+order not to lose so large a body of supporters. What these privileges
+are, will be seen in the following account of the people and their
+religious practices.
+
+The connection which exists between the Maronites and the Church of Rome
+is, in point of fact, maintained almost entirely by the priests, who, of
+course, have very good motives for their conduct. Were it not for the
+almost slavish subjection of the people to the priestly authority, this
+connection with the Church of Rome would long since have been violently
+shaken, if not entirely severed, for the second time.
+
+I have said that they inhabit the mountains of Lebanon; but I ought to be
+more precise, and to state, that they are chiefly to be found in those
+parts of the mountains which are in a north-easterly direction from
+Beyrout. They are a most industrious, contented, happy people, whose
+chief occupations are confined to weaving silk, and to tilling their
+ground—which, in some parts, the rocks and the soil render exceedingly
+difficult—for cultivating their mulberry trees for silk worms, which they
+do with great zeal and good effect.
+
+So thoroughly has nature fortified the district they inhabit, and so
+manly and courageous are they, that until the year 1843 they had never
+been conquered by the Mahommedans; and though they had politically agreed
+to the payment of an annual tribute to the Porte, they were at that
+period without a garrison. They have experienced great vicissitudes at
+different periods, but throughout their whole history, I find that each
+crisis only served to add to the power and influence of the priesthood,
+who, in all things, social as well as political, have an incredible hold
+over the people. They are the legislators and the administrators. As
+they cunningly work together with the Sheikhs, nothing but a thorough
+change in the system of education will enable the people to shake off
+their fetters.
+
+Their creed and ritual partake both of the Greek and Latin churches; but,
+though they reverently adore the Virgin, they allow no images of any kind
+in their churches. What is still more remarkable, is the fact, their
+priests before ordination are allowed to marry, but the patriarchs and
+bishops must live in the strictest celibacy. So great is the deference
+paid by the laity to the priesthood, that whenever one of them meets a
+priest, he is sure at least to kiss his hand and ask his blessing; while
+some of the more pious, or perhaps more servile, of the women kneel
+before the priestly robe as if it were as holy and as sacred as the altar
+at which its wearer officiates. As a rule, however, the people dislike
+being called Roman Catholics; indeed many of them openly profess to hate
+the See of Rome, and, were it not for the very Romish tendencies of the
+protection and education they obtain at their schools, which in other
+respects are really excellent, the Maronites would certainly, in a very
+short period, disconnect themselves from all association with the See of
+Rome.
+
+An attempt was made not very long ago by an American missionary, to
+introduce a purer Christianity among them; but the unfavourable results
+of his brief residence at Deyr-al-Kamar may be solely attributed to a
+want of caution, in too abruptly opposing the doctrines of the
+established faith before educating the people.
+
+A legate from the Pope is perpetually resident on the Lebanon, where the
+chief monastery of the Maronite priesthood is situated. At various
+periods, too, there have been missions sent out from Rome in order to
+prevent any slackening or lessening of the papal influence. At this
+moment there is a Lazarite mission in Syria, the members of which have
+succeeded in persuading several fathers of families to part with their
+children for the purpose of having them educated in Rome. They have also
+constructed a hospital, and established schools for male and female
+children at Beyrout. The convents are among the few religious
+institutions within the dominions of his Imperial Majesty the Sultan,
+which are allowed to use the pleasant-sounding church-bells; and the
+Lebanon {306} is among the few localities in the East where the European
+traveller can experience the pleasant feelings and genial associations of
+his country, which are excited by the solemn sound of the Sabbath-bell,
+feelings that were unintelligible to me until I had spent more than one
+Sabbath in Europe. This privilege is a terrible ear-sore to the
+Mahommedans, who detest the Maronites more than any other Christian sect;
+partly because they know the Maronites entertain the belief that they are
+destined to put a period to Islamism, by enticing French interests into
+the East.
+
+I may observe, here, that in point of fact the Maronite faith has no firm
+foundation; for heretofore they seem to have been a people such as is
+described by St. James, chap. i. ver. 6—“He that wavereth is like a wave
+of the sea driven of the wind and tossed.” And they continue to be
+lukewarm; neither one thing nor the other; Roman Catholic in their
+adherence to the Pope and in the observance of certain outward forms of
+religion—Greeks as regards the privileges accorded to their priests—and
+Protestants in not admitting images in their churches. If we take a
+review of their _waverings_, we may be led to some conclusion on this
+head. First, we are told that their sect originated with a hermit of the
+fifth century: nearly 600 years they appear to have adhered to their
+original faith, but in 1182 they submitted to the Pope’s authority.
+Barely a century elapses when they are found wavering again, owing to
+circumstances then taking place in the East. Nearly 300 years afterwards
+they again return to the Church of Rome; this was in 1445. And now, 400
+years after that, we find their creed to consist of an amalgamation of
+all the Christian sects. This cannot last long; they must eventually
+become one thing or the other; either _de facto_ Roman Catholics, or else
+_de facto_ Greeks or Protestants.
+
+Notwithstanding the Maronites live under a theocracy, from the peculiar
+situation of the Lebanon with regard to the lords of the surrounding
+land, the admission to many privileges was rendered not only
+advantageous, but absolutely requisite; and from these facts the notions
+of liberty entertained by the Maronite are far more exalted than those
+meagre ideas that possess the brain of the inhabitant of the plains.
+Their patriarch, subject to the Pope’s approval, is elected by the
+bishops of the nation: to him they pay extraordinary deference. The
+bishops are also possessed of immense influence, and their word is
+tantamount to law. The local authorities are careful to avoid anything
+that might cause offence to these prelates, well knowing the influence
+they exercise over the minds of the people. Owing to this, crime is in a
+great measure unknown amongst the Maronites; for offences, however
+trivial, are immediately judged by the clergy, and satisfaction and
+retribution at once exacted. Marriages without the bishop’s consent
+cannot be solemnized; and any _faux pas_ on the part of young people
+usually terminates in their marriage.
+
+The word of excommunication or anathema, amongst the Maronites, is
+“_fra-massoon_”; and he or she on whom it is pronounced, is as much
+avoided and abhorred as the plague-stricken. All houses are closed
+against a “_fra-massoon_,” and he may starve of cold and hunger amongst
+his own family and friends, with none to compassionate him. I remember
+being told by a person not overburdened with common sense, that upon one
+occasion, some years ago, a friend of his had given shelter and food to a
+“_fra-massoon_”; and that, happening unfortunately, soon after, to quit
+this world, his body was put aside in a cave, in accordance with the
+usual custom. Ten years afterwards, the coffin was accidentally opened,
+and the spectators saw with horror that the corpse was quite fresh, and
+presented no signs of decomposition. So unusual an occurrence excited
+great curiosity, and enquiries being made, it soon became known that the
+departed had transgressed the laws of the Church, by giving hospitality
+to one whom its ministers had cursed. The relatives of the deceased
+instantly went to the priest, and, after feeing him pretty freely,
+obtained his services to read a certain number of prayers over the
+corpse, and to pronounce upon it the forgiveness of the Church. Hereupon
+nature resumed her usual course, and nothing further was heard of the
+subject.
+
+The Maronites, under the influence of their priesthood, are noted as
+being most inhospitable to all excepting those professing their own
+creed; and even European travellers have been refused a shelter for the
+night, supposing that they were missionaries. They are a very
+superstitious and credulous people, and delight in absurd legends. They
+perform pilgrimages to Jerusalem and also to the tomb of Noah, supposed
+to be situated in the village of Kerak, between Beyrout and Baalbec; and
+about this they have endless ridiculous stories. They also pretend to
+have discovered the tomb of Moses, at a place a short distance from where
+the late Lady Hester Stanhope used to live.
+
+One great advantage which the Maronites possess, and which must
+eventually prove very beneficial to them, is the fact, that education is
+spreading universally amongst them. There is a native printing-press at
+work in one of the monasteries; but though the generality of the men are
+well-bred, the women are grossly ignorant and rude. Lady Francis Egerton
+found cause to complain of this sadly: “If I fastened my door,” says her
+ladyship, “they called and knocked and battered at it, until I feared it
+would yield to their efforts; and this at five o’clock in the morning,
+whilst I was in bed.”—A pardonable curiosity, however, amongst a
+semi-barbarous people; for so the women must be termed, until they are
+admitted to the privileges conferred by education, and social intercourse
+with civilised English women.
+
+The Maronites, in common with the Greeks and the Armenians, pay an annual
+visit to the Cedars of Lebanon, for the celebration of the feast of the
+Transfiguration. Here they celebrate mass on a rough stone altar, at the
+foot of the Cedars: in the open air—in “a temple not made with
+hands”—some of them offer up prayers and thanksgivings, quoting those
+very Psalms of David which were composed and written expressly to
+commemorate God’s mercy and loving-kindness, as in connection with the
+immediate spots which surround these cedars.
+
+A wedding amongst the Maronites differs in some material points from the
+ordinary marriages in Syria; in the first place, the priest is considered
+the principal negotiator, and on his report as to the suitableness of the
+match, much of the future happiness of the young people may be said to
+depend. After preliminaries have been arranged, gifts of dresses, and
+the like, are exchanged, but the bashful _fiancée_ is supposed to be in
+utter ignorance of all that transpires, to spurn these gifts, and to
+dislike even the mention of her future husband’s name. The priest
+blesses the bridal clothes of the bridegroom before he adopts them. When
+the friends go to fetch the bride, a mock combat ensues, in which,
+however, without bloodshed or bruises, the bridegroom’s party is
+invariably victorious, and the women carry off the veiled bride in
+triumph, attended by her female relation. The bride’s house mourns her
+departure, and she herself makes no secret of her sorrow to leave; but
+the _arus_ (bride) no sooner makes her appearance than the shouts and
+acclamations, and firing of muskets by the assembled multitude, seem
+effectually to drown any discordant sounds of lamentation; the
+procession, however, moves at a funeral pace, for it is thought highly
+indecorous that the bride should appear as though anxious to arrive at
+her new abode. On crossing the threshold, she is saluted by the women
+with the cry of welcome, and clapping the hands; and after her veil has
+been removed, she is covered with one of red gauze, and then made to sit
+in state on the divan at the upper end of the room. Here she neither
+smiles nor speaks, but rises on the entry of each venerable female
+friend, to embrace her, and kiss her hand. Both men and women, though in
+separate apartments, pass the night in noisy hilarity. Before sunset,
+the bishop, or in his absence the senior priest, attends at the
+bridegroom’s house to perform the ceremony; all symptoms of mirth are
+immediately abandoned, silence is proclaimed, and then the service
+proceeds very much after the fashion of the Greek Church, only that both
+the groomsman and bridesmaid are crowned by the priest as well as the
+couple being married, and the _bridegroom_ places the ring given him by
+the priest on the bride’s finger. Towards the end of the marriage
+ceremony, the priest puts a piece of blue ribband, with the picture of a
+saint attached to it, round the bridegroom’s neck. The newly married
+bride is confined to her house for the space of a month after her
+marriage.
+
+I have already mentioned the extreme facility with which the Maronites
+believe many fables and superstitions that have any connection with
+religious matters; and perhaps I shall be pardoned for introducing in
+evidence of this, a fact which occurred about eighty years ago, which
+attracted the attention of the traveller Volney, and which is still
+spoken of very frequently among the inhabitants. There are several
+nunneries belonging to the Maronites in the Lebanon, and it was in one of
+them, about the period mentioned, that Hindyeh, a young nun, forced
+herself into great notoriety by the severity of her penances, and the
+extraordinary piety she displayed. Having found many friends, her
+reputation increased to such an extent, that she was at last declared
+capable of working miracles; and the simple-minded Maronites, having
+provided the funds, she was duly installed in a religious establishment
+of her own. Her nunnery, and the other establishments in connection with
+it, had flourished for more than twenty years, when a suspicion was
+suddenly excited, that several of the nuns, of whom many had died, had
+met their death by unfair means, and that most improper practices
+prevailed within the cells. An unhappy merchant of Sidon, who had placed
+two of his daughters in the establishment, disturbed by these reports,
+determined to visit the place and make inquiries. On his arrival, he was
+told he could not see his daughters because they were ill, and finding
+that all entreaties were in vain, he proceeded to Deyr al Kamar, and
+obtained an armed force from Emir Yusuf, the chief of the mountain, and
+the attendance of the bishop to enquire into the matter. The result
+shewed the existence of a system of wickedness and profligacy, exceeding
+in iniquity anything ever known, to which one of the daughters of the
+merchant in question had already fallen a victim, the other being at the
+time almost dead. The holy, or rather unholy, Hindyeh, was seized and
+imprisoned, with her accomplices, and the examinations which were made
+fully criminated them all. The arch-priestess of all this wickedness
+managed to escape from the convent in which she was imprisoned, and to
+reach a locality in which she possessed a large body of adherents and
+believers. Notwithstanding the disclosures which were made, the
+hypocritical career pursued by this nefarious woman, so completely
+imposed upon the weak and credulous Maronites, that she died respected
+and revered, and to this day is acknowledged as a saint. Need I say
+anything more to prove the extent to which this weakness is carried among
+the _fellahen_.
+
+The number of Roman Catholics in Syria, including both the Armenians, and
+the Greek Roman Catholics, as one portion of them is called, may be
+stated at about 200,000, and, as they differ in no important points from
+the Roman Catholics of the West, they may be passed over without further
+mention. I may observe, however, that the Armenians are not so generally
+respected as their Christian brethren of other denominations; and, in
+illustration, I would remark, that at the grand ceremony on Easter-day of
+bringing down fire from heaven, the Armenians are driven to obtain a
+portion of it as best they may; their priests and pilgrims being
+generally forced into the most remote corner of the sacred edifice.
+
+The Copts, or, as we are accustomed to call them in the East, “the
+Oobbeet,” are the followers of one “Mar Yackoob.” Their chief doctrine
+is that Christ possessed but one nature; and they agree with the Church
+of Rome in saying that the Holy Spirit proceeded from the Father to the
+Son. They are governed by a patriarch who resides at Cairo, and is
+called patriarch of Alexandria, whose authority is very great over the
+whole sect; indeed, their most prominent characteristic may be said to be
+an almost slavish obedience to their priests. Like the Maronites, they
+invariably kiss the hand of any priest they may encounter in the open
+street, or country; and many of them prostrate themselves before the holy
+man. Though they conform to the Hebrew practice of circumcision, they
+also baptize their infants. It is customary with them to pray seven
+times during the twenty-four hours, according to the rules prescribed by
+the patriarchs; and it is, moreover, a common practice with many of them
+to learn by heart the whole of the Psalms, some of which they invariably
+repeat before proceeding to transact any business, in the belief that
+this devout recurrence to the Psalmist will insure prosperity to the
+affair they have in hand.
+
+Generally they are very clever, especially at figures. A few of them
+have recently joined the Orthodox Eastern Church, with which they have
+many practices and doctrines in common; and a small section has been very
+powerfully worked upon by a Lazarite mission, the members of which
+succeeded in persuading several parents to part with their children for
+the purpose of having them educated in Paris.
+
+It is presumed, from the remarkably Jewish cast of their features, and
+from their adherence to the Hebrew law, that they are of Jewish origin;
+but other evidence on this point is wanting. Though I have said that
+they were called after one Mar Yackoob, their existence as a Christian
+sect at an earlier period is clearly established; and indeed it has been
+said by many of the learned visitors to Syria, that they are as old as
+the Nestorians. At all events they were only organised by Mar Yackoob,
+who founded a perfect theocratic form of association or government.
+Indeed, wherever we turn, whether it be to the several Christian sects or
+denominations in the East, or to any one of the pagan forms of religion,
+we find the same fact in all. They have all been founded and organised
+by a priest, and, whether for good or evil, priestly influence has, in
+most instances, prevailed until the present day. It is also believed
+that the Armenians were in some way connected with, or absolutely
+descended from, the Copts; and there is very good evidence of great
+intimacy between the latter and the Nestorians, the last of the Christian
+bodies in Syria, and now to be described. In point of numbers the Copts
+are very unimportant. They do not exceed 300 in Syria; but there are a
+great many of them to be found in Egypt.
+
+The Nestorians now claim my attention; but as very little is known
+concerning them in my own neighbourhood, and as I have never had an
+opportunity of visiting them in their own mountain-homes, I can only
+relate what has been told me by travellers.
+
+It is believed that they are of Jewish origin; but there is no positive
+evidence on the point, beyond their features, their observance of certain
+Jewish customs, and their respect for portions of the Hebrew code of
+laws. It cannot be doubted, however, that they have maintained
+Christianity in the East for more than sixteen hundred years; and that,
+as primitive Christians, who have not degenerated from the simple form of
+worship enjoined by the Apostles of our Lord, they are entitled to our
+deepest respect and veneration.
+
+They are divided into two sects, the Simple and the Papal Nestorians; but
+the former do not acknowledge the latter as a part of their body, and
+declare that they are in no way connected with the Nestorian Church.
+They have two patriarchs, who reside in the mountains near Julamerk, and
+whose influence, together with that of all the priesthood, is very great
+indeed. Here again we find existing a purely theocratic form of
+government. The priesthood legislate politically and socially, and they
+administer the laws judicially, as well as attend to the religious wants
+of the community over which they preside.
+
+The habits and manners of life of the Nestorians are so primitive, that
+their simplicity has become proverbial in the East. Their belief differs
+from the Orthodox Eastern Church, by declaring the existence of two
+persons in the Saviour, as was propounded by their founder, Nestorius, in
+the beginning of the fifth century. The sacrament of bread and wine is
+administered to all by the officiating priest, in almost the same way as
+this ceremony is performed in the Greek Eastern churches. They are most
+hostile to the Roman Catholics, whom they hate.
+
+Including the Nestorians inhabiting Persia, I believe there may be
+altogether about 100,000. On the confines of Persia, they are engaged in
+perpetual warfare with the Koords.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+THE POPULATION OF SYRIA, CONTINUED.—THE PAGAN INHABITANTS.
+
+
+Having dwelt at some length upon the several bodies of Christian
+inhabitants of Syria, I must entreat my readers’ pardon if I endeavour to
+make my description of the unbelieving portion as brief and condensed as
+possible. Of course, I need not advert to the Mahommedans, the faithful
+followers of the Prophet. As I have stated before, they comprise by far
+the largest proportion of the inhabitants of the towns and lowlands of
+Syria, and are lords and masters over the rest of the population.
+
+But, besides the orthodox Mahommedans, we have in Syria a very large
+number of heterodox followers of the Mahommedan faith, who are called
+Metáwali; and who, though they are certainly less numerous than their
+orthodox brethren, are an infinitely more interesting people. They are
+followers of Ali, the other sect adhering to Omar. They may amount, in
+round numbers, to about 35,000; but as they have selected for their homes
+some of the most inaccessible parts of the mountainous districts of the
+country, their numbers cannot be very accurately ascertained. They are
+said, by many persons, to belong to the same section of the Mahommedan
+faith as the Persians, who also believe in Ali; but they exhibit some
+peculiar doctrines and customs, which establish an essential distinction
+between the two.
+
+Like the former, they expect the advent of the Messiah in the person of
+the twelfth Imam of his line, whom the Turks allege to have been slain in
+the battle of Karbela in which he engaged with the Caliph of Bagdad; but
+whom the Metáwali believe to have been transported to Arabia, by the
+miraculous interposition of the Divinity, and from whence he is to return
+in triumph to re-establish the race of the Imams on the throne, and to
+punish all who opposed him or his followers. When the expected Messiah
+does appear, they believe that he will assume the government of the whole
+world—that he will visit with the most dreadful punishments all who shall
+have denied him—and that he will render unto all true believers eternal
+happiness.
+
+In expectation of the advent of this Messiah, the Metáwali keep horses,
+money, and clothing constantly in readiness for his arrival; and whatever
+is once set apart for this purpose, is held sacred for ever after, and
+cannot be used by an ordinary mortal. {318}
+
+They believe in the transmigration and gradual purification of the soul,
+which, according to their belief, eventually becomes a bright star in the
+heavenly firmament. The first apostle of Ali, in Syria, was
+Abou-Abdallah-Mohammed, who was most successful in making converts, but,
+having excited the envy and hatred of some of the chief people in
+Damascus, he was imprisoned and burned to death as an infidel and
+blasphemer. From this circumstance he has been styled the first martyr.
+
+Though the first apostle of the new faith was thus summarily
+extinguished, the light of his doctrines was not smothered with him, and
+it may be considered certain that the manner of his death was mainly the
+cause of the rapidity with which they spread over the country immediately
+afterwards. As is generally the case, persecution lent strength and
+vitality to the cause, and many sought the honour of a martyrdom similar
+to that which had befallen Abou-Abdallah-Mohammed. However, the faster
+the new religion spread, the greater activity did the Orthodox
+authorities develop in putting it down. Priest after priest was being
+drawn and quartered, hundreds of men, women, and children were butchered
+or buried alive, to gratify the atrocious passions of an ignorant people,
+and still more barbarous government. Nevertheless, the new faith
+prospered, and the Metáwali began to assume a position of influence and
+power in the country; but after numerous vicissitudes, the butcher
+Djezzar, who had been made governor of Syria, succeeded by cunning and
+treachery in prostrating their power, and destroying their strongholds.
+Thousands of them were executed by his orders, and even under his eye,
+and, like Mehemet Ali, who watched the destruction of the Mamelukes, so
+did Ahmed Djezzar amuse himself by watching the death struggles of
+hundreds of the Metáwali who had been hurled from the battlements of
+Nabatieh into the Kasmich.
+
+Under persecutions like these, the strong arm of the authorities, aided
+by the passions of a fanatical body combining together against them, the
+Metáwali gradually lessened in numbers, and consequently lost the
+influential and powerful position they were beginning to acquire.
+Politically this sect may now be said to be prostrate, but they cherish
+the memories of those of their forefathers who fell in the defence of
+their religious independence, and many an evening’s hour is passed by the
+people listening in rapt attention to the numerous anecdotes of the
+firmness, the courage, and the devotedness of the martyrs for their
+faith.
+
+The localities they live in entails habits and customs which naturally
+tend to rear a hardy and courageous race. Their method of living is
+simple in the extreme; but, though the stranger who may visit their
+mountain-villages is sure of the greatest hospitality, it is
+nevertheless, of a peculiar character. They never admit within their
+dwellings any person who does not belong to their own persuasion, nor do
+they allow any one but a Metáwali to use their furniture or domestic
+utensils. Should a Frank or a Jew by accident touch a mat or a pot
+belonging to them, it is instantly cast away as defiled and unclean. To
+receive the wandering stranger there is erected in every village, a house
+for the purpose, in which the visitor is ever most bountifully provided
+for. Strange to say, however, their dislike to contact with others,
+extends no further than their own dwellings. In the open air, or in a
+house belonging to a person of a different persuasion, they are alike
+indifferent to the presence of Christian or Jew, conversing and
+associating with them as freely as they zealously avoid permitting them
+to enter their own dwellings. They are an exceedingly clean people,
+never sitting down to a meal without having performed their ablutions.
+
+It is owing, perhaps to the paucity of their numbers, but still more, I
+think, to the gradual decline of the power of the Maronite, that the
+Metáwali exist untroubled in their mountain fastnesses. But should any
+attempt be made by any government, or by any other religious body in the
+East, to wrong or subjugate them, I am convinced that they would not
+submit without a very severe struggle, in which their native ferocity
+would once more appear on the surface, to their own disadvantage,
+perhaps, but still more to that of their enemy.
+
+A good deal has been written respecting the Druses, who are the most
+curious, and least known section of the population of Syria. The cause
+of the ignorance which prevails concerning them, and which I am unable to
+dispel will be seen in the following account of this interesting and
+courageous people.
+
+I have been told that several learned men have, at different times,
+diligently endeavoured to acquire a thorough insight into the religious
+theories possessed by the Druses, but I have never yet met with any
+author who has given an explanation or description of them,
+satisfactorily to his readers. Where others, whom I have been taught to
+respect and revere, have failed, I hesitate to make the attempt, knowing
+that I shall be unsuccessful. In point of fact, the great mystery which
+surrounds the religion of the Druses is, I fear, a mystery even to
+themselves, a shadowy outline, which the initiated are told they
+understand, and which the uninitiated worship in the depth of their
+ignorance.
+
+The Druses inhabit the Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon, or rather the southern
+portions of the mountain, in which they possess a great deal of land and
+villages; but they are also mixed up with the Maronite and other
+Christian populations of more than two hundred other villages. They are
+divided into two classes; the initiated into the mysteries of their
+religion are called Akkals, and the uninitiated are called Djahils. Both
+sexes are alike eligible for initiation among the Akkals; in this respect
+there is that perfect equality for the female sex, which I so often hear
+some of my fair friends in England sighing for. But the woman who is a
+Akkaliah may not marry a Djahil. There is an easy remedy for this,
+however, since I am told that initiation may be effected on very short
+notice and without expense or examinations. Every Thursday the Akkals
+meet in Khalueh, a temple, or building, erected expressly for the
+purpose, and in which their religious books, their war trophies, and
+standards are kept. Here they sit talking of politics, or reading
+religious books, and when the general discussions are concluded, the
+majority go away, leaving only the highest in social rank to discuss the
+interests of the tribe with the priests. The chief priest, or as I take
+the liberty of calling him, their great mystery-man, lives at Bakleen,
+whence he rules over the whole body. As I have said previously, the
+nature of their religious belief is a mystery. It is neither Christian
+nor Jewish, nor Mahommedan nor Pagan. They believe in the unity of God,
+and in the transmigration of souls, but while they themselves profess to
+be Mahommedans, they exhibit in their social customs as well as in their
+features, many points of resemblance with the Jews, and they have no
+hesitation whatever in denouncing Mahommed as a false prophet, and in
+disregarding the most sacred festivals of the Moslem faith.
+
+Though so little is known of their present religion, it has been
+tolerably well ascertained that it was founded by one Darazi, who about
+the middle of the eleventh century traversed Syria, preaching the
+doctrine that the real Caliph Hakeem was the incarnation of God, and the
+most perfect manifestation of the Deity. Name and strength was, however,
+first given to the new creed by one Hamza, who denounced Adam, Abraham,
+Moses, Jesus, and Mahommed as impostors, and declared himself to be the
+incarnation of the spirit of universal intelligence. In his creed, he
+either forgot or wilfully omitted all notice of a future state of
+existence. Since that period, this peculiar faith has gained many
+proselytes; and the Druses are now, next to the Maronites, the most
+numerous religious body in Lebanon who are not Mahommedans.
+
+Leaving their mysterious creed, to deal with the people themselves, I may
+state, that they are easily distinguished by their features, being,
+generally speaking, muscular, well-made men, active and middle-sized, and
+enabled to undergo great fatigue. Their courage is not to be daunted.
+The women are generally very handsome, with tall, slim figures, black
+hair, and beautiful blue eyes. The disposition of the men is a strange
+mixture of open-hearted hospitality and morose vindictiveness; but they
+are strictly honourable, and have never been known to break a promise.
+In all their transactions they deal uprightly with one another; but this
+cannot be said to be the case when they transact business with others:
+their creed admits of their practising imposition upon infidels to their
+own faith.
+
+I have already observed, that there exists a great resemblance between
+the ancient Scottish clans and the mountaineers of the Lebanon. In
+support of this, I cannot do better than to quote what Volney says, when
+speaking of the Druses:—“As soon as the emir and sheikhs had determined
+on war at Deyr al Kamar, criers went up at night to the summit of the
+cliffs, and cried aloud, ‘To war, to war! Take your guns, take your
+pistols! Noble sheikhs, mount your horses; arm yourselves with the lance
+and the sabre: meet to-morrow at Deyr al Kamar. Zeal of God! zeal of
+combat!’ This summons, heard in the neighbouring villages,” continues
+the same author, “was repeated there; and as the whole country is nothing
+but a chain of lofty mountains and deep valleys, the proclamation passed
+through its length and breadth in a few hours. These cries, from the
+stillness of the night, the long-resounding echoes, and the nature of the
+subject, had something awful and terrible in their effect. Three days
+after, fifteen thousand men were assembled at Deyr al Kamar, and
+operations might have been immediately commenced.”
+
+To strengthen their respective clans, is the Druses’ main object through
+life; and to effect this, they almost invariably marry amongst
+themselves—preferring their own relations with poverty, to the richest
+dowry with a foreigner. Their creed admits of but one wife; but they
+allow of divorces. If a Druse says to his wife, “Go to your father’s
+house,” and does not say to her, “Come back,” it is considered a divorce.
+Their jealousy far outstrips the Mussulman’s: any conjugal infidelity is
+certain of being requited by death: no intercession, however powerful,
+can avail aught in these cases; even where fathers have made
+intercession, brothers have become the executioners of their own sisters.
+Any man can divorce his wife upon paying a certain sum; but divorces are
+of very rare occurrence.
+
+The every-day life of the Druse is monotonous in the extreme; even their
+children at an early age inherit their insipid manner of life, and leave
+the healthful recreation of a good game at _damah_, to sit down in a
+circle, and ape their parents in discussing politics. The Druse, like
+most of the natives of Syria, is an early riser; and the first thing he
+does after he has gone through his morning ablutions, is to command his
+wife to set before him a large bowl of freshly-drawn goat’s milk, or
+_dibs_. In this he sops his bread; and making a hearty and wholesome
+breakfast, shoulders his gun, sticks his kanjur in his girdle, lights his
+pipe, and then goes forth to attend to his daily occupations till
+mid-day. If it be the season to plough, he harnesses his oxen, and
+treads heavily after the furrows till nigh upon mid-day, at which time
+his wife or one of the family brings him out his substantial mid-day
+repast. In this interval he has perhaps rested himself half a dozen
+times, to sit and smoke a pipe: or, if a fellow-creedsman passed, he has
+stopped to exchange a few words—complain of the heat, ask the news, the
+lowest price quoted for wheat, and so on; but you seldom hear them
+laughing or joking with one another, and never by any chance singing or
+whistling; they have no idea of a tune, no taste for music, unless it be
+the music of money rattling in their pockets; and this has greater charms
+for them than the pipe of Tityrus had over the sylvan woods. At this
+mid-day meal there is another fresh bowl of _laban_ milk in addition to a
+goodly supply of _borghol_, and, in summer, cucumber and some chillies,
+or the batingan stuffed with hashed mutton and rice.
+
+As the sun sinks behind the conical tops of the western hills, the Druse
+unyokes his cattle and drives them homeward, himself shouldering the
+plough. Now it is that, if ever he enjoys himself, the Druse indulges in
+a little relaxation. If he be fortunate enough to be possessed of a
+supply of powder and shot, he deviates from his right path, leaving the
+oxen to find their way home untended, and shouts and throws stones into
+every bush and down every glade he passes. Sometimes a hare starts up,
+sometimes a covey of partridges, or, may be, a jackal; but, whatever the
+game chance to be, he fires, and that with so steady and correct an aim,
+as to be almost certain of securing the victim. Even jackals’ skins are
+valuable, and will fetch their price.
+
+Of an evening they assemble at one anothers’ houses, and there, with pipe
+in hand, seated in such an attitude that their knees are on a level with
+their nose, they talk politics by the hour. They are generally a
+dissatisfied, gloomy, and grumbling people; and their usual topic of
+conversation is exactly what John Bull is so much laughed at for, viz.,
+the hardness of the times. They pull to pieces the pasha, the emir, the
+effendis—lament over the prospects of a bad silk crop, or a worse wheat
+harvest, speaking feelingly of the general lack of money—foretell that
+things will be certain to go on from bad to worse—predict a
+famine—prophesy a murrain amongst the cattle—see in the yellow tinge of
+the western atmosphere the cholera—smell out of the heavy night-dew an
+interminable catalogue of maladies, as absurd and unknown as any of the
+foregoing calamities; and having worked themselves up to an extreme pitch
+of wretchedness, they disperse for the night, and retrace their steps to
+their respective homes, croaking the while, or hooting gloomily to one
+another just as a parcel of ravens would croak or owls hoot as they wing
+their way to roost, when the distant growl of thunder foretells the
+coming storm.
+
+The Druses are great hypocrites in religious matters. One of their
+religious books gives them this liberty, for it says:—“_Embrace the
+religion of those who have power over you_; _for such is the pleasure of
+our_ MAOULA, _till he_, _to whom the best times are known_, _shall
+unsheathe the sword_, _and display the power of his unity_.” Hence with
+the Turks, they pretend to be devout Moslems—fast when they fast, and
+feast when they feast. With the Christians they are equally devoted to
+the Adrah Mariam—the Virgin Mary; and in private they despise and detest
+both: but I believe that the Druses have really great faith and
+confidence in the English, whom they suppose to be all Protestants; and
+their idea of a Protestant is that their religion is a species of
+freemasonry, which very much resembles their own. Of late years
+political struggles on the mountains have served rather to strengthen
+this belief; for the Druses were invariably supported by the English, and
+the native attachés, agents, and other people, not only of the Consulates
+in the neighbouring towns, but also English travellers, lost no
+opportunity of impressing this fact upon the minds of the Druses’ who
+were already predisposed to such a belief from the fact of a tradition
+long existent amongst them, that many of their noblest families were
+descended from some of the princes amongst the Crusaders.
+
+The Druses never introduce the subject of their religion before others;
+that is to say, never in such a form as to hold it forth as an argument,
+or an inducement for others to become proselytes, or to inform strangers
+of their doctrines, but they confidently affirm that a great number of
+their co-religionists inhabit the vast continent of India, and declare
+that they are to be met with even in China, from which they believe they
+themselves came.
+
+They suppose, that in England there are to this day many of the Akkals,
+or initiated, but of later years their confidence has been much shaken;
+and _apropos_ of this, I quote an extract of a letter from one of the
+Akkals of the Druses, sent to me from Lebanon in 1845:—
+
+ “There are many English travellers, and some men apparently of much
+ wisdom, who have visited us and conversed on subjects of religion;
+ and they endeavour to persuade us that in their country there are
+ many people who profess a creed similar to our own: this was
+ particularly mentioned by a tall English emir. I wish you would
+ enquire into this matter, and write us your opinion clearly; and
+ should the report be verified, the existence of such co-religionists
+ would at once entitle us to proclaim the protection of the English
+ upon the same grounds as the Maronites are protected by France.”
+
+It is said that, in the official report of M. Desméloises, then a French
+Consul in Syria, this belief of the Druses that they were allied to, and
+descended from, noble European families, was found serviceable to the
+French agents, when the allied forces appeared off the coast of Syria,
+for the purpose of expelling Ibrahim Pasha and the Egyptian troops; and
+they acted upon the imagination of the Druses so powerfully, that little
+or no inducement was requisite to cause them to side with the Europeans.
+
+There is one thing to which the Druses are much addicted, and which sadly
+deteriorates from their general character for civilization—this is, their
+fondness for raw meat. Whenever a gazelle is shot, or a kid killed, the
+raw kidneys and heart are luxuries for which the Druse epicure will
+contend with angry words; and such is the force of example, that even
+Christians in the neighbourhood have adopted this system of cannibalism,
+washing down every mouthful with a glass of strong _arakey_. European
+authors accuse the Christians of the plains, and especially the women, of
+being guilty of a like atrocity, saying that they eat meat in their
+_kubbas_, but the fact is what meat they use in these is first so finely
+sliced up, and then so unmercifully thumped, that it becomes a perfect
+paste, and the very friction and heat more than half cook it; besides
+which, this meat is mixed with chillies, onions, and borghol, and the
+proportion of meat to wheat is one to ten.
+
+Outwardly the Druses keep up the appearance of friendship with their
+neighbours, but the intrigues of political agents, and the wary cunning
+of Roman priests, have of late years tended sadly to interrupt the
+harmony that existed between the Druses and the Maronites.
+
+The Yezidees, of whom there are some thousands in the country next claim
+attention. They are most numerous in Koordistan, where they are all
+comprised in one general body. In Syria, however, we are accustomed to
+divide them into three tribes—the worshippers of the sun, the Shemisees;
+the worshippers of the devil, the Sheytanees; and the cut-throats. I do
+not mean to say that the latter portion are greater cut-throats than
+their co-religionists of the other two sections, for like the
+Mahommedans, with whom they come chiefly into collision, the whole of the
+three divisions are equally distinguished by the same murderous
+inclinations. Like the religion of the Druses, that of the Yezidees is
+an indescribable mixture of nearly all the religious creeds of the East
+and West. They respect Christ and the Christian saints; but they do not
+disavow Mahommed and Moses. They baptize their children, but they
+conform also to the Hebrew practice of circumcision. They commemorate
+the birth of the Saviour, but they also celebrate the feast of the
+Passover with all the forms and solemnities customary among the Jews; and
+they also abstain from all the food which is considered unclean by the
+Israelite. While worshipping but one God, they profess profound
+veneration for Ahriman, the prince of darkness, and they also adore the
+fiery element, bowing before the rising sun. In praying, they are
+careful to kneel with their faces towards the East. Indeed, it would
+seem as if, doubtful of salvation under a simple faith of their own, the
+presiding minds of the Yezidees had collected the principal points from
+all religions in the world, in order to make sure of the right one. Some
+of them even do not hesitate to make an avowal of this kind. The most
+peculiar feature of their religion, is the extreme respect which they pay
+to the devil, who is never mentioned by his right name, but is always
+mysteriously spoken of _as the great incognito_, _the bird of Paradise_,
+and whose worship is always carried on after sunset. I am assured too,
+that his Satanic eminence is always present on these sacred occasions,
+and is accustomed to acknowledge the honours paid to him by his credulous
+worshippers by a yell or scream of a most unearthly kind, its effect
+being to prostrate on their faces the whole of the parties present.
+Their head-priest possesses an extraordinary amount of influence over the
+whole body.
+
+The Yezidees are a brave, open, confiding, honest, industrious, civil
+race, combining with these good qualities, however, an inordinate passion
+for warfare, civil and national, and a great proneness to robbery and
+pillage on a large scale. They are actuated by their intense contempt
+and hatred towards the Mahommedans to the committal of many excesses
+against the followers of the Prophet. Indeed, they are firmly convinced
+that they cannot perform a more meritorious action—an action more
+advantageous to themselves, both in this and the next life, and they
+absolutely take pleasure in ridding the world of a Mahommedan. This
+spirit of hatred is fully returned by its objects, who detest the
+Yezidees, and who consider the very name to be synonymous with all that
+is evil and treacherous.
+
+It has been stated of late years, that the traditions which exist among
+this people, and which tend to establish their descent from the ancient
+Hebrews, are founded on fact, that they are in reality a remnant of the
+lost tribes of Israel. I am not sufficiently learned on this subject to
+trace the links of the connection, but I may unhesitatingly state, that
+the conviction of its truth is rapidly spreading among the people
+themselves.
+
+I shall close this account of these sects in Syria with a brief mention
+of the Ansyreeh or Nosairiyeh and I am more inclined to say a few words
+about them, from the fact that a systematic effort is likely to be made
+for their conversion. These tribes also inhabit the mountain districts;
+but they live in much greater isolation than the other religious bodies,
+and in consequence, their numbers are not to be ascertained with anything
+approaching to precision. They do not inhabit any particular province,
+but I am perfectly well aware, as has been stated by one writer on this
+subject, that there are several hundred Nosairiyeh resident in the small
+village of Salahiyeh, about one mile from Damascus. They are most
+numerous in the range of mountains north of Mount Lebanon; where I can
+assure my readers that it is a task of no slight difficulty, and even
+great danger to penetrate, and it has very rarely indeed been
+successfully accomplished. In illustration of this fact, I may narrate
+here the experience of a friend of mine, who desired personally to obtain
+all the information concerning this people, which a trip into the most
+northern parts of the Lebanon could procure. Having made all his
+arrangements for the purpose, he departed, provided with a passport, or
+firman from the Turkish authorities, addressed to all the sheikhs of the
+mountain tribes, ordering them to show the bearer every civility, and to
+afford him every protection during his journey. Armed with this
+document, he proceeded on his journey without much apprehension. During
+the first day’s travel among the hills, he found the firman most
+effective, the sheikhs lending him every aid to get on. But he had no
+sooner left the immediate limits within which the people came into direct
+and frequent contact with the authorities, than he found the case was
+very different; argument and entreaty became necessary, where the mere
+sight of the firman had been formerly sufficient to procure the
+gratification of his wishes. Having succeeded in obtaining quarters for
+the night in the abode of a small sheikh, who condescended to be
+hospitable to the stranger, my friend soon got into conversation with his
+entertainer, and ultimately explained the whole object of his journey.
+The Sheikh listened in silence, twisting his moustachios with Eastern
+solemnity, and displaying some astonishment in his features at what he
+evidently considered the very hazardous course which my friend seemed
+bent on pursuing. After supper, the sheikh returned to the subject, and
+laboured seriously to impress upon his guest’s mind the nature of the
+numerous dangers which he must encounter if he continued his journey. To
+the sheikh’s argument respecting the want of all roads, the ruggedness of
+the mountain paths, sudden precipices, and dangerous fords, the former
+laughingly rejoined, that he relied on a stout pair of legs, a firm hand,
+and a steady eye, and that he would not shrink from his object deterred
+by such difficulties, which a strong and bold man might readily vanquish;
+and in reply to the sheikh’s still more serious sketch of the dangerous
+character of the tribes through whose territories he must pass, my
+friend, still laughing, flourished what he considered his all-powerful
+firman. The sheikh asked permission to read it; it was granted, and
+having perused it, returned it to the owner. After some moments’ silence
+he rose from his mat, and approaching my friend, said to him, in an under
+tone: “Friend, your firman certainly may procure you protection and
+assistance on your outward journey, but it says nothing concerning your
+return; be advised, retrace your steps and get your firman amended, if
+you must inquire into our condition and habits, but you would do much
+better to remain among your friends. We Nosairiyeh do not like
+strangers.” My friend stared at this address, which many of my readers
+may consider most lawyer-like, and worthy the nice distinctions between
+words which I am told the English lawyers delight to make; but it had its
+effect, for we are yet without the full account of these people which my
+friend would have furnished us with. On the following morning he
+retraced his steps; and on his arrival he appears to have forgotten to
+apply for any alteration or addition to his firman, and to have preferred
+the inglorious ease of home to the dangerous search after knowledge among
+unexplored mountains, inhabited by barbarous infidels.
+
+In connection with this subject I may mention, that several travellers
+have been induced to state, that there exists a peculiar religious sect
+in Syria who are called Womb-worshippers, but I am sure that the only
+persons who deserve that name are the Nosairiyeh. The occasions on which
+this peculiar part of their religion is developed are extremely limited;
+indeed, I believe that it takes place but once a year, when the majority
+of the whole people assemble together in a cave, which is set apart for
+the purpose, and which is known only to themselves. I can add, moreover,
+that no one is admitted to these rites, who is not acquainted with the
+distinguishing sign or token by which they recognise each other. When
+they are assembled, a variety of prayers adapted expressly to the
+occasion are recited; and after what I may term the religious portion of
+the service is concluded, the men and women present have recourse to the
+most indelicate proceedings, which are the peculiar forms of the worship
+of the womb. By some, however, the Nosairiyeh are considered to be an
+aboriginal tribe, which has survived the many changes that have swept
+over the country, and have preserved such peculiar traits as distinguish
+them from all its other inhabitants. From what I have heard, I am
+inclined to believe that this is the case; and I also feel disposed to
+regard them as probably a sect of heretical Christians, who having
+originally retired among the mountains to secure the free exercise of
+their opinions, thus became isolated; and that their early faith became
+more and more corrupted by the influence of time, and the circumstances
+and changes going on around them, since like some other similar sects
+they still preserve a vague idea of some of the leading facts of
+Christianity, though mixed with notions not only false but absurd.
+
+They speak of the incarnation and crucifixion of our Lord as of one among
+many others. They have, I understand, also a custom of celebrating the
+sacrament by giving to the communicants a portion of meat and wine; added
+to this, they have mystical ceremonies and prayers. They believe in the
+transmigration of souls, and also in astrology and magic, also observing,
+it is said, many of the religious seasons and festivals peculiar to the
+Jews; nor are they at all reluctant, when any object is to be attained,
+to profess the doctrines and carry out the practice of Mahommedanism.
+But whatever may be the essential doctrines of their religion, there is
+no doubt that their morality is of the very lowest character; passionate
+and violent, their hatred of their rulers is only equalled by that which
+the different factions among them bear to each other, the most sanguinary
+feuds breaking out every now and then among them, carried on with the
+deadliest animosity, and accompanied by fearful acts of murder and
+revenge.
+
+About a year since, I happened to be at a convent about two days’ journey
+from Tripoli; and while there, I had an opportunity of seeing a number of
+these curious people. Some days previous to my arrival, a young woman
+belonging to them had been brought to the convent in a state of mental
+aberration. I ought to say that the convent is consecrated to Saint
+George, who is believed to possess especial power for the cure of
+madness, and for whom the Nosairiyeh, as well as most of the mountain
+tribes, profess great respect and veneration—carrying out their
+professions practically, by the payment of an annual donation of oil,
+corn, and fruits, for the use of the convent. The young woman in
+question, having been confined in chains during her whole stay in one of
+the cells behind the altar, and kept on very low diet indeed, was
+restored to reason. I will not say what part of the treatment had been
+most efficacious in curing her, but the devout believers in the power of
+the saint, declared that he had visited her during the night, and by his
+presence driven out the evil spirit. Her friends, being made acquainted
+with her miraculous recovery, came to reclaim her just after my arrival.
+Contrary to the general Eastern custom, there was a large number of women
+mixed up with the men, moving apparently on a footing of perfect equality
+with the ruder sex. While they remained within sight of the convent,
+before and after reclaiming their recovered companion, they appeared to
+care for nothing besides dancing and singing. One of their dances was
+very much like an English country dance, with a great deal of shaking
+hands. I found them to be a powerfully-built, muscular race, with open
+honest countenances; they were all thoroughly equipped and armed. In
+their dress, the women differed from the general costume of the country,
+inasmuch as they wore very long and very flowing garments, of a kind
+usually only worn by men.
+
+Nothing, however, can exceed the degradation in which the female sex are
+held among the Nosairiyeh. They are regarded in the same light as their
+horses and other domestic animals; and to the practice of polygamy among
+them, and the drudgery and ill-usage to which their wives are condemned,
+may be traced the origin of the darkest and most repulsive portions of
+the picture they present. The untiring perseverance and praiseworthy
+zeal of missionary labourers may yet succeed in leading them to a
+knowledge of better things. I could repeat here what I have always
+stated in respect to such endeavours, that schools must be the first step
+towards such an end; and that even before the subject of religion is
+touched upon, they must be taught such a course of secular studies as
+will, by expanding their mind and strengthening their reasoning
+faculties, prepare them to receive that priceless seed, which it would be
+unwise to cast beforehand in such a weedy soil, among the thorns and the
+thistles that would choke its growth and cause it to perish.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+APPEARANCE AND COSTUMES OF THE PEOPLE.
+
+
+I fear my readers will consider that I have been rather tedious in the
+last few chapters, but what I have said I consider indispensable to put
+them in possession of the real state of my beloved country; and to make
+them generally acquainted with the character, the religion, and the
+manners of its inhabitants. I shall now devote a few pages to a
+description of the appearance and costumes of the different races.
+
+The large tract of territory extending from Aleppo, in the north, as far
+as the desert upon the outskirts of Gaza and Hebron, in the south, is
+inhabited by the variety of sects and people, whose peculiar religious
+ceremonies and occupations have been described in the preceding chapter.
+Commencing with the district of Aleppo, we shall find inhabiting that
+city,—first, the Aleppine-Greeks, most of whom are, by creed Roman
+Catholics, and by profession merchants, silk-weavers, and manufacturers
+of fine silken robes, such as are worn by the majority of the
+inhabitants, male and female. The peculiar costume of the natives of
+Aleppo is the most striking feature of that truly oriental and
+magnificent city. On a feast-day, between the hours of prayer, the
+gardens in the environs of the city are thronged with crowds of well
+dressed men and women; some walking, some riding, and others seated on
+their _seggadeh_, or rugs, under the pleasant shades of the fragrant
+walnut-trees, with the _chibuk_ or _narghili_ in their hands, or else
+cowering upon the bank of the river, angling for fish. We will, with the
+reader’s permission, place ourselves beside a merry group who are
+musically inclined, and hope to attract the attention of another group of
+laughing girls, who, though well muffled up in their white _izars_, still
+shew sufficient of well-proportioned features to convince the beholder
+that beauty lurks beneath the muffling veil. However, we take our
+station here, not to watch them, but those that pass to and fro, and to
+guess with the utmost precision, by their costumes, what their belief is,
+and in what peculiar calling of life they are engaged; first, then, comes
+an old gentleman riding on a white Egyptian ass—the very fact of his
+being the possessor of one of these valuable animals at once stamps him
+with respectability; but apart from this, the tall _kulpak_, or Persian
+cap, on his head, and the long, loose flowing robes proclaim him to be a
+descendant from one of the most ancient, wealthy and respectable families
+of Aleppo. The privilege of wearing this peculiar kind of head-gear,
+exempts the wearer, by virtue of a firman obtained from the sublime Porte
+many centuries ago, from the capitation tax, and many other minor
+disagreeables to which the less fortunate rayahs are sometimes exposed.
+This firman was obtained either by interest, or for some service rendered
+by their ancestors to the Turkish government, at a period when all the
+rich trade of the Indies passed through Aleppo, and when, as even up to
+the latest period, that unfortunate city has been exposed to the
+incursion of the wild desert tribes, who frequently molested the Baghdad
+caravans, and even broke into the khans and strongholds, carrying off
+warehoused merchandise to a considerable amount. The resistance offered
+to these marauders by the wealthier merchants of Aleppo, led to their
+obtaining special favors from the Porte; and these favors, be it said to
+the honor of the Turkish Sultans, have descended as an heirloom from
+father to son even down to the present day, and the insignia, as already
+mentioned, is the _kulpak_ which yonder citizen carries on his head. By
+creed he is a Roman Catholic, and devout in the observance of fasts and
+festivals; by profession a _serraff_, or money changer, and any of the
+European merchants who may require a few thousand piastres on an
+emergency, will go to this man, and he will advance the requisite sum
+instanter; his business-office is not much longer than an ordinary
+sentinel’s box, but then his house, which is in the suburbs of the city,
+is replete with comfort and elegance, and amongst other furniture and
+requisites, you will find massive porcelain jars, and other equally
+costly relics of the former Indian traffic, which have been handed down
+from father to son, and which are never brought into active service, save
+and except upon festive occasions when a marriage or a christening is
+celebrated in the family.
+
+Next to this wealthy aristocrat, our eyes encounter a couple of natives
+on foot, both well clad, with rich silk scarfs girt round them but on
+whose hands and arms the indelible dark blue tinge at once indicates
+their occupation, viz., that of dyers; generally speaking, they profess,
+in most parts of Syria, the tenets of the Greek church, and they are
+almost a peculiar people of themselves, inhabiting the suburbs of a town
+for the sake of convenience, and in order to be in the immediate vicinity
+of level verdant plains, on which, during the summer months, they stretch
+the dyed cloths to dry. It is seldom, however, that these people make
+use of any other dyes than the commonest blue and black—such as is well
+adapted, from its inferior materials, to meet the meagerly supplied
+purses of the greater mass of the population of Syria, blue _shintians_
+being invariably the every-day costume of masons, mechanics,
+day-labourers, and peasants occupied in agricultural pursuits; hence it
+is that the profits on labour are small and insignificant, the occupation
+is incessant, and the demand never fluctuating. From this circumstance
+also, the indigo imported from England and other parts of Europe
+invariably meets with a ready and profitable sale amongst this class of
+people, who are the merchant’s best and surest customers, and whose
+annual consumption, reckoning one year with another, so little varies,
+that a careful trader might calculate to within a few pounds’ weight, the
+exact annual demand for indigo of any given village in Syria, and
+accordingly carry on a safe and profitable trade in this one article
+alone. These dyers usually marry, and are given in marriage amongst
+themselves, and the children are brought up to the trade of their
+fathers; but in all other respects, they are the same as the rest of the
+Greek community, attending regularly at their churches, strict observers
+of fasts and festivals, and mingling freely with all their fellow
+citizens of whatever creed or calling.
+
+Next to these comes the sedate Armenian, clad in a sombre grey cloak,
+trimmed with ermine, and a slovenly black handkerchief bound round his
+almost threadbare _gibbeh_; he is walking with a countryman, and a fellow
+creedsman of his own; and though the latter is the better clad and
+cleanlier looking, he is far from being the wealthier; they are both,
+however, on the same intimate footing as though equals in birth, riches,
+and station; both out more for exercise and to talk about business, than
+from any wish to join in the recreations that are passing around them.
+The first man—the meaner looking of the two—is very possibly possessor of
+about 20,000 piastres; he is a banker of the Pachalik, and right-hand man
+of all the Pashas who come into power; from them he derives no small
+profit, but it is not from this source alone that his revenues flow; even
+the poor man who is now his companion, is one among the many of his
+countrymen, who pay into his coffers an annual tax on certain stipulated
+conditions. In Aleppo, and all over Turkey and Syria, almost every cook
+in European and wealthy Oriental families, is an Armenian; these
+Armenians come from their own country in search of employment, and on
+arriving at Aleppo, being friendless, and without any recommendation as
+to character, etc., they seek out those who profess the same creed as
+themselves, and by them are introduced to the protection of a banker, who
+will guarantee their honesty, provided the man pays him an annual
+per-centage upon his wages. This is agreed to, and a compact being made,
+the _serraff_ himself exerts his best influence amongst the circles of
+his acquaintance to obtain for his protegée a situation in an opulent
+family. As the English are generally the best pay-masters, he first
+tries them; if he succeeds, the young man is placed under the tuition of
+a professed cook of his own creed, and his career in life commences. The
+banker adds the man’s name to the thick folio volume, in which he has
+already registered those of the numerous tax-payers that help to enrich
+his coffers; and though on an average one with another, they only pay
+about twenty piastres per annum, still, considering the vast numbers who
+are under this obligation, the total amount derived from this source
+makes a considerable sum. On the other hand the banker, who possesses a
+certain extent of influence with the Pashas, stands by his countrymen in
+any case of emergency, and if needs must, is ready to advance any money
+to procure the release of a delinquent, or to help in his flight, as the
+Armenians are extremely jealous of their character for honesty and
+integrity, and it may with truth be observed, that with very few
+exceptions, they make excellent servants—faithful, steady, and
+industrious, and are seldom, if ever, addicted to liquor; if they do
+cheat their own masters, they take care that no one else in the household
+shall. And this is a notorious fact, particularly in Aleppo, that the
+prices of meat and vegetables, etc., are fixed by a tariff every year
+amongst the Armenian servants, and as their name is legion, and every
+second family has an Armenian cook, the greater mass of the people
+usually pay at the same rate or proportion for their provisions, though
+it is well-known that the poorer classes obtain the same supplies from
+the very same tradesmen with whom the wealthier families deal, at a lower
+price; still, for convenience’ sake, these peccadilloes are winked at,
+and the Armenians justify their petty thefts, and accommodate their
+consciences to their perpetration, by the reflection, that if they did
+not cheat, _others_ would, and thus further encourage dishonesty amongst
+the rest of the servants.
+
+The Armenians have passed by, and another couple of individuals attract
+our attention; their faces are long and sallow, their features marked,
+eyes sunken, beard profuse, and in the contracted brow there is much that
+indicates selfish thoughts; the meanness of their scant attire, is only
+to be surpassed by the filthiness of their general appearance. Did you
+notice yonder young Mahommedan spit on the ground, or in the faces of
+these two as they passed him, while he petulantly muttered, that this day
+would prove to him an unlucky one, from the moment he had encountered
+these two men? You will ask the reason of this; it is because they are
+of that once mighty people, Yahoodee, or Israel, whom Mahommedans regard
+as the cursed of God, the refuse of the earth, who are treated with less
+consideration than the meagre curs that slink along the streets; for a
+Jew does not dare to pass by on the right hand of the Moslem. Yet these
+Hebrews are now so well inured to hardship and insult, that they wisely
+pursue their way, regardless of all around, their whole soul wrapt up in
+the one absorbing thought—gain. If words and blows are sometimes
+inflicted upon them by the lords of the land, they at least have the
+gratification of knowing that there is not one amongst their brethren,
+but who avails himself of every opportunity to swindle and defraud every
+customer with whom they may chance to have transactions; and even the
+coins which pass through their hands never escape without being
+diminished in weight. As an instance of their innate propensity for
+defrauding, I will record an anecdote which occurred at Damascus some
+years ago. A Jew having been convicted of coining gold _saadeeyeh_ (nine
+piastres), was punished by the government by having half his beard shaved
+off, and mounted on an ass, with his face turned towards the tail, and a
+European hat on his head; in this way he was conducted through the city,
+preceded by a crier, proclaiming his crime. Through bribery and interest
+he was set at liberty, and shortly afterwards recommenced his nefarious
+practices; the second time, however, he resorted to the filing of coin,
+and being again discovered, the Cadi ordered his hands to be cut off, as
+the most effectual means of preventing a recurrence of such tricks. Even
+this did not put a atop to his cheating, for having initiated his son
+into his arts, they together devised the mode of dissolving a part of the
+money in strong acid. Being for the third time discovered, both father
+and son were hanged.
+
+The very name _Yahoodee_, or _Jew_, is tantamount in the East to
+swindler. Yet it is a most remarkable fact, that fallen and degraded
+though the race be—their position only equivalent to a state of perpetual
+serfdom—you never meet with a Jew who gains his livelihood by manual
+labour, or by begging for his bread. They neither till the ground, nor
+follow the plough, nor yet exercise themselves in any agricultural
+pursuits; neither are there amongst them day-labourers, or mechanics; and
+all this arises from the species of Freemasonry which links these fallen
+people together, and induces them to assist and support one another in
+times of the greatest need and difficulty. Hence it arises that every
+Jew, from an early age is, as it were, launched into the world by the
+assistance of his co-religionists. They usually begin life in the
+pastry-cook line; for to sell fruits, would be like carrying coals to
+Newcastle, in such a country as Syria, where every man has his own
+garden, or, if he be not possessed of this, the markets are stocked to
+overflowing. After this, they become petty tradesmen, and with a
+stock-in-trade of some half-dozen loaves of sugar, a few pounds of
+coffee, spices, etc., the whole perhaps not exceeding three or four
+hundred piastres, he migrates to the surrounding villages, barters or
+sells, comes back again and replenishes his stock, and so goes on adding
+mite to mite till he is enabled to set up a _Dekkan_ in the bazaar. The
+wheel of fortune having commenced turning, he climbs up warily, and it
+may be slowly, yet securely, to an ample independence for his old age;
+and there are many very wealthy Hebrew families in Syria, whose origin
+might be traced to such as just I have described. When a Jew has once
+amassed wealth, it seldom if ever happens that he falls low in the scale
+again.
+
+In later years, the condition of this persecuted people has been much
+improved in the Ottoman dominions, and they may be now said to enjoy all
+those advantages and privileges which are afforded to other foreigners
+residing within the limits of the Turkish dominions; hence, it is to be
+hoped, if we may be permitted to judge by the signs of the times, that
+the day is not far off when they will be again restored to their land,
+and when in the words of the prophet, it may be said, “_They shall be my
+people_, _and I will be their God_.” In fact a society has been formed
+in England for the purchasing of land in Palestine to enable Jews to
+settle there. But these privileges have not always been enjoyed by this
+unhappy people; not more than twenty years ago the barbarities practised
+upon them seem almost incredible. A friend told me of an incident that
+occurred in Servia when a famine, or a pestilence, had ceased to ravage
+the country, there was a grand procession and thanksgiving, and in the
+edict of the Governor, it was not only proclaimed, but carried into
+execution, that at every quarter of a mile a donkey and a Jew should be
+sacrificed; thus classing them together, and ruthlessly shedding the
+blood of two of the most unoffending creatures of the Creator. But the
+Jews and their sorrows and persecutions are, I trust, passing by, as a
+firman has lately been obtained from the Turkish government, through the
+influence of Sir M. Montefiore, which secures the Jews like privileges
+with the Christians; this boon was presented to them by Col. Churchill,
+who, in 1841, during his official residence in Damascus, exerted himself
+strenuously and successfully to relieve them from the consequences of the
+persecution they had undergone in the well known affair of Padre Thomaso.
+
+And now comes a stately horseman, whose very steed seems to paw the
+ground more proudly than others, as though conscious of the fact that he
+carries on his back one of the lords of the land. This is a Turkish
+Effendi, his long loose cloth cloak is thickly trimmed with ermine; his
+horse-trappings are magnificent—his countenance full of importance and
+gravity—his beard black and wagging to and fro in a haughty commanding
+style; he looks neither to the right nor to the left—acknowledges no
+salutations, though the people rise as he passes, and bow their heads
+subserviently to the earth; behind him rides a gaily dressed youth,
+carrying in his hand the ready lit _chibuk_; look at the amber
+mouthpiece, richly set with brilliants and emeralds, and then you may
+form some conception of the importance and wealth of this great
+functionary. The occupations of the Turks are various, for being lords
+of the land they and they alone, in most parts of the country, occupy the
+posts of Government. Amongst them, we may first rank the independent
+beys and effendis—nobles of the land, wealthy from inheritance, and most
+generally possessed of extensive gardens and plantations, these are the
+aristocracy—they have no cares as to how they shall live—no thought as to
+their sustenance—their mansions are capacious—their studs splendid—their
+repasts sumptuous—their harems filled with the choicest flowers of
+Georgia and Circassia. They regularly attend the mosques, and keep their
+fasts and festivals, and if they have anything to trouble their minds, it
+most assuredly arises from a similar inconvenience to that which the
+_fool_ in the Scriptures was exposed—viz., the want of extensive
+granaries wherein to warehouse their fast increasing riches. Next to
+these we may reckon Government employés, who, though virtually invested
+with greater authority than these beys (who hold no official position),
+in reality are subjected to their whims and caprices. Of this class are
+the Pashas, Cadis, etc., etc.,—men who are generally well off so long as
+they remain in office, but whose position would be very dubious indeed
+were they once deprived of their main staff in life—their salaries.
+
+The rest of the Moslem population may be divided into three classes,
+viz., merchants, tradesmen, and household domestics; the latter if they
+be Mahommedans, will seldom serve the native Christians, though they will
+sometimes place themselves under European masters in order to be
+protected from taxation, or being enlisted into the army. Of the former,
+from the time of the Caliphs, Turkey has been celebrated for the wealth
+of her merchants, and for their upright, honest method of transacting
+business. However, though the uprightness of the old Mahommedan merchant
+remains his wealth is on the decline, and is passing into other hands.
+Most of the opulent merchants of Baghdad are Moslems who, regularly once
+a year subject themselves to a long and inconvenient journey to Aleppo
+and return so as to superintend and watch over their own interests; and
+like the old tales of the Arabian Nights, rich scented spices spread
+their odour over the desert far and wide. Besides these other merchants
+from Mecca turn a devout pilgrimage into a mercantile transaction, and
+carry back with them many rare articles—otto of roses, and other scents,
+which usually attract a multitude of eager purchasers. The trades
+followed by most Mahommedans, are those of carpenters, locksmiths,
+tanners, shoemakers, sawyers, saddlers, and saddle embroiderers. Of
+these, the saddlers and the shoemakers rank first. The carpenters are
+expert tradesmen, and Damascus abounds with turners, known to bring work
+to a highly finished state.
+
+And now these two have passed before us, and a fresh sight attracts
+attention. Fierce-looking fellows, three in number, now appear, their
+heads girt with long flowing silk handkerchiefs, of a bright yellow
+colour; their beards are thick, black and curly; their features
+sun-burnt; their eyebrows knit, and there is a lurking savage look in
+their eyes which speaks volumes of treachery and bloodshed. Long loose
+striped dresses with horse-hair girths, loose shintians, and the ordinary
+Syrian red boots, complete their costume. They are mounted on Arab
+steeds of the purest breed; slung by their left side is a scimitar of
+fine Damascene steel; each carries on his shoulder a long polished
+_Roomah_, or lance, from which hangs tassels of various gay colors.
+These horseman are Bedouins of the Desert, who perhaps, have come hither
+to spy out the land under the pretence of a friendly visit on mercantile
+business; but what is more likely to be the reason, to find out when next
+a caravan, or travellers, will pass through the desert. No one fears
+them now, since their number is too small, when compared to the crowds
+which are on the alert and passing to and fro. Still, these Bedouins may
+even at this very moment be plotting a similar carnage and attack to that
+which was made at Aleppo, so recently as 1850. Notwithstanding the
+ferocity of their nature, “their hand still being against every man,” yet
+they never are guilty of a breach of faith or friendship. As an instance
+of this, an Arab was once at Damascus, and received civilities from a
+Damascene, who gave him some bread and tobacco. About two years passed,
+when it so happened that this man was going to Aleppo with a caravan,
+which was attacked, and, happily for all, the traveller was recognised by
+one of the Bedouins, who proved to be the very man who had received
+hospitality at Damascus.
+
+Next on our panoramic sketch we find two hardy labourers, fine robust
+looking men; these are the _fellahen_, and their vocation in life is
+restricted to tilling the ground; but there are some amongst them who
+follow the occupation of farriers, and some few in the larger towns are
+blacksmiths, tinkers, and shopkeepers; but those that occupy our
+attention at present wear too healthy an aspect to be taken for citizens.
+They are peasants from a neighbouring village, and to them Sunday is a
+day of rest; during the weekdays they are early risers (up with the lark,
+and even before this “_bird hath shaken the dew-drop from her wing_”); to
+them sleep has been a boon indeed—a luxury that few who are not
+accustomed to hard manual labour can be supposed to enjoy. The careful
+thrifty wife, although her husband is an early riser, was up before him,
+lighting the fire, and preparing his early meal. He gets up, and goes
+through his ablutions; and I may here remark, that Europeans in general,
+and especially the English, form a very incorrect notion as to the habits
+of the poorer class of natives in Syria, since few people are more
+careful in their rigid adherence to cleanliness, though their brown
+sun-burnt skin gives strangers an idea to the contrary. His breakfast
+consists of a few loaves, resembling Scotch cakes, on which cheese, and
+on fast days olives, mashed together, are carefully rolled up; sometimes,
+as an extra dainty, a little cold stew from yesterday’s dinner, or a
+small dish of _leban_, gives a relish to his keen appetite; and having
+finished this he shoulders his plough, loosens his cattle, and followed
+close at the heels by his house-dog, goes forth to his labour till
+evening. He has generally arrived at the field of action before the sun
+gets up to look at him, and he never leaves it till the fiery sun, red
+with heat, has sunk below the horizon. Truly, a labourer in Syria is a
+living specimen of the curse brought upon mankind by the disobedience of
+Adam—“_He earns his daily bread by the sweat of his brow_.” Every day,
+save on fasts and festivals, his toil never ceases. At the commencement
+of the year, his first and most laborious occupation is that of rearing
+silk-worms, of which I shall now proceed to give a description.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+THE OCCUPATIONS OF THE PEOPLE.
+
+
+It is early in spring. The snow that last week lay ancle deep in the
+plains and valleys of Mount Lebanon, has rapidly dissolved under the
+genial heat of the April sun. Storms that wildly raged along the
+sea-girt coast, outriders of Æolus, as he swept by in his hurricane-car,
+drawn by equinoctial gales; these have been lulled into repose, and the
+turbulent billows of the deep have forgotten their rough playmate, and
+are hushed into tranquility. The winter garb of the forest is fast being
+set aside; the waters of the river flow pleasantly in the warm glow of
+sunshine; feathered songsters are tuning up against the great spring
+jubilee; the linnet and the bulbul now call to mind snatches of sweet
+carols many months forgotten; nature awakes to the bright morning of the
+year; with light heart the bee sucks from early opening flowers; with the
+passing song, the peasant trudges forward to his daily labour; oxen are
+yoked to the plough; the earth—softened with excessive moisture—yields
+readily to the deep furrows made by the friendly implement; long hidden
+seeds are turned up to the light of day, and brought forth from nature’s
+storehouse to supply the wants of the hungry feathered multitude; grass
+springs up almost perceptibly beneath our feet; the swallow has returned
+from his distant journeyings, and brought with him a retinue of gaily
+dressed butterflies. The sun grows warmer from day to day; the sky
+remains clear and cloudless; the first week of April has fled on the
+rapid wings of time, and we are fairly launched into all the delights of
+an incomparable Syrian spring—hie we forth early on the morrow to breathe
+the pure untainted air—to revel in the sweet odours wafted around us from
+countless flowers—to watch the master-touch of that great and beneficent
+Creator, who has left no work unfinished. Manifold indeed are His works,
+and in wisdom has He made them all.
+
+The morrow has come, we are up and abroad before the sun has cast his
+first mantle of light over the pleasant waters of the deep blue sea. We
+saunter into one of the many white mulberry plantations that surround us
+on every side, and observe that the leafless boughs are only just putting
+forth their tender spring buds: yet there is an unusual commotion amongst
+the rearers of the silkworm—whole families, men, women, and children, are
+variously employed; the earth round the roots of the mulberry trees is
+being hoed up; some are planting young shoots, others busy in the kitchen
+gardens; whilst, to the European eye, a few appear as though engaged in a
+mysterious occupation. They seem as if their arms were an inconvenience
+to them, or, as though they were all afflicted with boils or eruptions
+under their arms, which preclude the possibility of using them without
+intense pain and difficulty. The singular attitude of these people, as
+they move about like so many brood-hens with anxiously expanded wings,
+once attracted the attention of an English medical officer, who assured
+me, with great alarm depicted in his countenance, that tumours under the
+arm-pits are certain indications of the plague, and he immediately
+recommended our instant departure from the neighbourhood; whilst
+uncertain what course to pursue, one of the men thrust his hand into his
+bosom, and extracted the immediate cause of my friend’s alarm; this
+proved to be a small bag of silk-worm eggs, and as this remainder of his
+stock has been late in hatching, the peasant resorted to artificial
+means, and the heat of his body is usually productive of beneficial
+effects. However, in some parts of Syria the eggs are deposited in
+moderately warm rooms, which speedily bring forth the embryo worm.
+Wonderful to say, these eggs, which have been suspended in linen bags
+throughout the whole year; during the heat of summer, the mild autumn,
+and the cold of winter—on which temperature has produced no effect—now
+that the right season has arrived, issue forth from the diminutive eggs,
+just as the mulberry first puts forth its delicate foliage, so well
+adapted to the weak state of the _microscopic worm_. Insects now creep
+round the bag that had confined them as eggs, and the peasant, who has
+been anxiously watching them for the last week, welcomes their appearance
+with infinite satisfaction, as sure harbingers of spring; and, as on the
+produce of the silk season the fellah and his family depend, in a great
+measure, for their maintenance, the different processes are watched by
+them with great anxiety. Now let us attend from day to day, and watch
+the progress of these tiny millions as they advance in growth, and
+finally spin round themselves that marvellous small store-house of silk,
+commonly designated as the cocoon.
+
+The first steps taken by the peasants after the eggs are hatched, is to
+place some of the minute worms in the centre of small circular baskets,
+which have been carefully cemented over with cow-dung, and left in a
+sunny spot till completely dry; this precaution is indispensable, because
+the worms are so diminutive that, however closely wrought may be the
+workmanship of the basket, they would inevitably fall through, and be
+destroyed or lost. The reason also for having the cow-dung is, that the
+cow is held in great esteem amongst most Oriental silk-worm breeders; and
+a superstitious idea prevails, that this animal has a sacred charm, and
+they therefore imagine that by covering the baskets with cow-dung, it
+will have some power over the worms. In this primitive condition, a
+handful of the tender leaves of the mulberry is plucked, and cut up
+similarly to tobacco, and then sprinkled over the young brood. This
+process is repeated twice daily, and suffices for the food of numerous
+caterpillars during the first days of their existence. Their growth is
+very rapid, and their appetite ravenous; and though tended each day with
+the utmost solicitude, it is by no means certain that one-half of the
+immense numbers contained in these baskets will arrive at perfection.
+Hundreds are trodden to death by their companions; scores of brave young
+worms perish beneath the weight of some slender mulberry twig, the size
+of which, though small indeed, is, in comparison to them, like a huge
+tree; besides these calamities, the worms are entirely at the mercy of
+the weather. In some parts of Syria, nature takes a freak into her head,
+and in the midst of sunshine and warmth, down comes a tremendous
+hail-stone shower or snow storm—then farewell to the worms and the poor
+peasant’s prospects; his only chance is, to send immediately to the
+mountain plantations, whose colder climate has retarded the hatching of
+the egg, and here, at great expense, purchase a second supply of
+“silk-worm seed” (as it is technically called by us), and then the crop
+is entirely artificial, for the leaves have attained too coarse a
+texture, and the peasant is compelled to chop them up into minute
+particles, before he durst administer them to the feeble and delicate
+insects. There are two other enemies from which the insect has to be
+guarded: during its first week’s growth, it is extremely liable to be
+beset by red ants; and during the spinning, or last week of its existence
+as a worm, the swallow and the sparrow think it a delicacy wherewith to
+feed their newly-hatched progeny; and great havoc is sometimes committed
+by these swift-winged depredators. Yet, notwithstanding all these
+drawbacks, so careful are the peasants, that every precaution has been
+taken long before the season arrives, to guard against any and all of
+these foes; and it may be accurately observed, that bad crops and unlucky
+seasons are the exceptions to a general rule. One year with another, he
+generally obtains, within a few drachmas, the quantity of silk he has
+reckoned upon, and he is usually pretty sure as to the amount of money he
+hopes to gain, as this has most commonly been agreed upon many months
+past, and the peasant has already received some portion of the fixed
+valuation in advance.
+
+The first week of our watching has expired; the worms have increased.
+These little creatures, which occupied but a very small spot in the
+centre of the baskets, have now become so bulky, that they can no longer
+find space sufficient to crawl about without destruction to each other;
+consequently they have now to be removed to the _hoosse_, or cottages,
+erected purposely for their rearing, and they are no sooner placed here
+than the laborious part of the peasant’s business commences. Heretofore
+his wife and children have chiefly occupied themselves in supplying the
+frugal wants of the colony of young insects, and they had nothing else to
+do but to strip the smaller branches and twigs of the tender leaves; now,
+however, the worms, which are growing and thriving, require five times as
+much attention and food as before, consequently, the good man of the
+house and his son (if he has one), take the responsibility upon their
+shoulders the moment the worms become inmates of the _hoosse_, where they
+are generally installed with much ceremony; the priest repeats a
+benediction, and sprinkles holy water where the worms are to be placed.
+
+We will follow the silk cultivator and his family, as they carry the
+small baskets containing the worms into the _hoosse_, which is a large
+hut with a peat roof; the walls are composed of reeds, platted liked
+mats, with small partitions on every side. The building, which has been
+newly done up, is daily inspected, to prevent birds from taking up their
+abode amongst the straw and rushes of which it is composed; the interior
+of the _hoosse_ is fitted up with shelves, formed with canes, on which
+are laid closely-worked long and narrow mats, woven of reeds. These
+extend round three sides of the nurseries, and are placed one above
+another, with an intervening space between each shelf of about twenty
+inches. On these mats a thick layer of mulberry leaves is laid among the
+insects; the baskets containing the worms are moved carefully on the
+mats, instinct leading them to the freshest leaves; meanwhile, the
+peasant and his family are busily repeating prayers for a blessing on
+their undertakings, at the same time mixing the grossest and most absurd
+superstitions with their simple prayers. Pieces of red cloth rags, or
+other dazzling colours, together with a shell of a hen’s egg, ornamented
+with a red silk tassel and blue beads, are attached to the poles that
+support the hoosse, and every other imaginable part of the building where
+they are likely to meet the eye and attract attention. This is to divert
+the stranger from allowing his thoughts to be wholly occupied with the
+worms, or from gazing on them uninterruptedly: such an offence would be
+sure to be productive of the “_evil eye_.” Indeed so great is the
+superstition of these poor ignorant peasants, and their dread of the
+baneful influence of this imaginary being, that they seldom have a child,
+cattle, or possess cocks and hens, or even trees upon which they place
+any value, without affixing to them a bunch of coloured rags, with a blue
+ring made of common glass, for say they, “those that have such things
+will be influenced by the venom of envy; and the venom of envy shooting
+out of the eyes will blight the object of our desire, as lightning blasts
+the tree.” So much for this absurd and ridiculous notion. Another
+formula gone through, is the tying small skeins of last year’s silk in
+various positions over the silkworms; this is to excite them to industry,
+and to shame such as are slothful, by shewing them the remnants of the
+riches and skill of their ancestors.
+
+We have seen the silkworms duly installed in the hoosse, and retire to
+the music of their active mastication of the leaves, to return again on
+the morrow and see how things thrive.
+
+To the surprise of my European friend, on entering the hoosse on the
+morrow, he found all solemn silence; on examining the shelves, he thought
+that the worms were all dead and gone. While he was regretting the heavy
+loss which would fall upon the cultivators, I smiled at his ignorance,
+and assured him that the worms were never more healthy than at the
+present moment, (the peasant adding in a whisper), “_they are all good_
+_Christians of the Greek faith_, _and are keeping a three days’ rigid
+fast_.” And this is firmly believed by him and his family, and is the
+prevalent notion in Syria. At such periods as the present, when the
+worms are in a state of torpor, owing to their rapid growth, they are
+compelled at certain intervals to disembarrass themselves of the tight
+old skin, which being too small gradually bursts, and a fresh skin is
+formed, suitable to the increased size of the insect. At such periods
+the natives, from the highest to the lowest, priests and laymen,
+acknowledge the worms to be keeping a _Soame_, the Arabic term for fasts.
+
+The third morning after our last visit we call again, and find the newly
+clad worms rapidly awaking to the sense of a keen appetite, glistening
+and shining like bridesmaids in their beautiful new white satin costumes.
+This process of shedding the skin, is evidently attended with danger to
+the silk-worm, if we may be permitted to judge from the number that have
+died under the process, whilst others, though surviving, have been so
+disfigured as to be rendered entirely useless. The peasant and his
+family are occupied collecting the dead and the maimed before feeding the
+hungry survivors; this finished, he arms himself with a sharp sickle;
+henceforth the leaves are no more gathered by the hands—trees are marked
+out in regular rotation—the smaller branches are cut off, which are then
+carried by the woman and children to a clean swept place in front of the
+hoosse; the leaves and even smaller twigs, are speedily separated from
+the branches, and sprinkled plentifully over the worms; the branches are
+collected up on one side, and left to dry for future use as fuel; thus,
+whilst the foliage of the mulberry nourishes and maintains life in the
+silk-worm, the branches are used to light the fire which suffocates the
+poor creatures when they have formed the cocoon, and assumed the
+chrysalis state. After this first _soame_, or fast, the worms grow very
+rapidly; in about a fortnight afterwards, they undergo the second
+fast—they are now, however, much stronger, and better able to resist the
+casting of their skins; so much so, that scarcely one dies under the
+operation. On recovering from this second _soame_, they eat
+prodigiously, and grow very rapidly. The peasant is compelled to cut the
+branches off the mulberry three times a day in lieu of once, as
+heretofore, and the worms feast without intermission, morning, noon and
+night; at length in about eight weeks from the time they were hatched,
+their existence as worms is rapidly drawing to a close. What was at
+first barely the size of a grain of fine gunpowder, is now become three
+and four inches long, sleek and fat, and for all the world looking like a
+young roasting lamb of Lilliputian breed, ready trussed up for cooking.
+
+All the mulberry trees in the plantation, with the exception of some six
+or a dozen, present the lamentable spectacle of so many boughless stems;
+whilst nature around is profuse in luxuriance, and the wild convolvolus,
+as though compassionating the sad condition of the mulberry, twists its
+friendly leaves around, and decks it with gaudy blossoms of the early May
+morning. The peasant has been busy cutting down boughs of trees, etc.,
+the bark of which he makes into string and ropes; these have been exposed
+to the sun, till all the leaves have withered and fallen to the ground.
+The worm which, by a wonderful instinct, has heretofore never strayed
+seven inches from where it was originally placed, now begins to evince
+symptoms of impatience, and roves about the edges of the shelves, or
+tries to mount up the smooth and slippery canes that support the shelves.
+The peasant, marking these indications, immediately places the dry twigs
+of thorn and bushes over the worms, and in a short time the whole colony
+rapidly mounts amongst these twigs, each choosing out for itself some
+favourable position, where it may with greater facility weave its costly
+and wonderful web. And now we stand quietly, and watch the indefatigable
+little creature silently persevering in completing its own little
+storehouse, and what will prove to be its own little tomb. No machinery
+could be more exact than the movements of this small insect, as it
+carefully draws out of its mouth thread after thread, now moving with its
+head to the right, and carrying the almost invisible web down to its
+tail, then turning its head in the opposite direction, apparently for the
+purpose of drawing the silk from where it had been fastened on one side,
+till it has carefully drawn it over its own head, and secured it with
+gummy saliva. We quit the worms at mid-day, when hardly a thread of this
+wonderful substance is as yet visible; we return early the next day, and
+the cocoon is formed, but it is yet too tender to be touched. The
+peasant merely contents himself with observing the shape and color of
+these cocoons—setting much store on such as are of a yellow brown tinge,
+small, with a belt in the centre. Some of the cocoons are as white as
+snow, some yellow, some brown. The peasant now reports the condition of
+the silk-worms to his masters who immediately places his seal on the door
+of the hoosse.
+
+When they are considered fit to reel off the silk, he has the old oven to
+put in repair, to inspect the basin on the top of this altar-shaped
+furnace, to erect the old wheel, which has lain on the dust-heap ever
+since last year—drive a nail in here—put a new spoke in there; and when
+all is completed, and ready for immediate use, the peasant’s wife goes
+early on the morning of the auspicious day, and carries in her hand a
+morsel of damp clay; this she flings against the door-post of the
+master’s house, if it adheres, then luck will attend the season, if, on
+the contrary, it drops off, the silk will be unsaleable. This is not the
+last superstitious ceremony observed; early that morning, about an hour
+after sunrise, the master of the plantation, followed by the peasants,
+and all his family, march in regular procession to the hoosse, the great
+man carrying under his arm a bundle of handkerchiefs, or other trifles,
+as presents for his followers; these are duly distributed on reaching the
+sheds; every one says a blessing on that day’s undertaking, the door is
+unsealed, the people rush in, and rapidly empty the hoosse of the twigs
+and branches on which the cocoons have settled; these are piled up
+outside of the door, the women and children spread mats on the ground;
+here seated, they pick the cocoons from the twigs, and the peasants, as
+the mats get overloaded, gather them into a goodly-sized basket: by
+nightfall this operation has been concluded; they then separate from the
+mass some two or three hundred of the very best cocoons, which are set
+aside to breed from. Next day, the first streak of dawn has barely lit
+up the east, before the busy peasants are up and doing. “The cocoon
+cleaners” are occupied picking them; that is, detaching from the hard
+shell the soft downy substance, which afterwards constitutes what is
+termed the rough silk. The peasant, meanwhile, has lit the furnace; the
+water in the boiler is wrought to a proper temperature for reeling the
+silk. An old man busies himself in bringing bundles of faggots from the
+large pile of mulberry branches, with which to keep the fire alive.
+Baskets of picked cocoons are placed beside the peasant who, seated on a
+stool, chooses from these a dozen or fourteen at a time, while a man or a
+boy turns the large wheel with his foot; this wheel is about fifteen feet
+in diameter; the cocoons are thrown into the warm water, and well whipped
+with switches, till the whole surface becomes frothy, and the threads of
+the cocoons begin to detach themselves. Seizing these, the peasant
+skilfully draws them up, gradually using more strength, till he has
+sufficient length of thread to fasten to a peg in the wheel. The party
+at the wheel commences turning with all his force: the wheel goes round
+rapidly; the peasant is ever on the watch, knotting broken threads,
+supplying the place of empty shells by fresh cocoons, or screaming to his
+attendant for more fire or more water. So passes the day. Evening
+arrives, and there is a large heap of empty cocoons, in which, however,
+the dead worms still remain; and on the wheel, which was bare in the
+morning, there is a fine thick golden-looking skein of silk, weighing
+some four or five pounds. This primitive style of reeling is of course
+detrimental to the quality of the silk, and is a frightfully slow method
+compared to European factories, which I have visited. When the peasant
+discovers that he has more cocoons than he can possibly reel off within a
+given time, he stifles them by exposing them to great heat, a process by
+which the quantity of silk they yield is greatly diminished; but as the
+cocoon fly, _i.e._, the moth, comes out within three weeks, this stifling
+is indispensable, as the cocoon (except for rough silk) is wholly unfit
+for use when once it has been perforated by the moth.
+
+About two weeks have passed since first the cocoon commenced to be
+reeled; the silk is now ready for the market, and is hanging out in
+golden festoons to dry thoroughly before it is packed. The old baskets
+are once again brought into play, but they are this time all alive with
+fluttering white velvet-like moths; they never fly. Their enjoyment of
+life is very brief indeed; the male moth dies within twenty hours of its
+birth; the female is then placed on fine linen rags, where, in the course
+of the day it will deposit from 100 to 500 eggs, which are left in the
+air for a short time, and then put into linen bags and hung from the beam
+in the centre of the house, or sent to the mountain to await another
+year. The silk season ends just as the heat of June sets in.
+
+Having watched the whole process of the fellah throughout the silk
+season, we will continue to follow him to the close of the year. The
+silk being weighed and given to the women to make into hanks, and
+provision made for the future brood of worms, I will call my reader’s
+attention to the wheat harvest. The labours of the peasantry will now be
+of a severer nature than hitherto; he has to toil under the scorching
+rays of the sun, whose beams, at least in some parts of Syria and
+Palestine, are far more powerful than those ever endured by English
+reapers; consequently the fellah is compelled to desist from his
+occupation from mid-day till about two o’clock in the afternoon. During
+this portion of the day, scarcely a breath of air stirs, not a leaf is
+ruffled; even the many-coloured and beautiful butterflies lazily flutter
+from flower to flower seeking shade beneath the petals of the Damascene
+rose; all is perfectly still, and the peasants take their wonted siesta.
+However great may be the inconvenience of the intense heat, yet it is
+wholly balanced by the benefits which accrue from the excellent climate
+with which this country is blest. The farmer in Syria has little cause
+of apprehension from sudden storms or showers, so that the harvest is
+gathered in, receiving no injury from those changes of weather, to which
+it is subject in less genial latitudes. The corn being reaped by the
+fellahs, the damsels, even as in the time of Ruth, follow, gathering the
+ears and binding them in sheaves; after leaving them for a short time to
+dry, they are carried to a part of the field called _baiedar_, which has
+been levelled and swept clear to receive them. A rude machine,
+constructed of oaken planks with stones fixed in holes drilled on the
+under side, is placed on the now scattered sheaves; on this a youth sits
+or stands to drive the oxen round and round, which have been harnessed to
+it. This process separates the grain from the husk; it has next to be
+winnowed, and for this purpose is collected in heaps; the corn, by means
+of a wooden shovel, is thrown up in the air, when the delightful and cool
+breezes of evening waft the chaff to the winds. The reaping, threshing,
+and winnowing, being now completed, the wheat intended for domestic
+consumption, is stored in wells, constructed expressly for this purpose,
+whilst that which is for agricultural uses, is placed in enormous jars,
+of from five to fifteen feet in height, and of proportionate diameter.
+
+The peasant now receives from his master the portion due to him from the
+harvest; he then commences making one half of what he obtains into
+_borghol_. The weather is most favourable for this process, as it
+requires fine sunny days, and during the night the wheat is covered with
+sheets to protect it from the dew, which is very heavy in the East. The
+grain is first washed and boiled, when it is exposed for several days to
+dry on mats, before carrying it to the mill, where it is ground and thus
+converted into _borghol_. Of this there are two kinds, viz., coarse and
+fine; this latter serves simply as a substitute for rice, and is called
+_ruzz-mufalfal_, whilst the other is used in _kubbas_, that favourite
+dish to which I have before alluded. The harvest is now over, and the
+vineyards in the surrounding mountains present a rich and beautiful
+sight; the bright and luscious clusters of black and white grapes lie in
+profusion along the ground, for in Syria the vines are suffered to trail
+on the earth; and I am persuaded that were they trained as in the Rhenish
+vineyards, they would yield a more abundant crop.
+
+At this season of the year, the scene which is now presented is both
+picturesque, lovely, and interesting. Beneath a sky pure and bright,
+amidst the luxuriant and straggling vines, the damsels of Lebanon are
+busily occupied collecting the grapes. With what ease and elegance they
+move! Their graceful forms are shewn to full advantage in their loose
+and flowing vesture the brilliant and well-selected shades of which
+contrast beautifully with surrounding nature. Some are bringing baskets
+to be filled, whilst others are cutting the grapes and placing them in
+these panniers. The sun now begins to shed a deep red on the face of the
+western horizon, this is the signal to return home; each one takes her
+basket, puts it on her head, or loads her donkey, and the gay cavalcade
+moves homewards, singing some plaintive ditty; and thus ends a day which
+I know many of my fair Western readers would be not a little interested
+to witness. On the following day, those which are not required by the
+villagers for their own wines, arakey, or raisins, are carried to the
+market where they are sold. Even in the vineyards there remain enough to
+satisfy the weary traveller as he passes by, and to supply the feathered
+tribes, and the bees, that therefrom gather an abundant store of rich
+honey, either for hives, or, flying to far distant woods and meadows,
+make for themselves a secret nest amidst the fragrant herbs; however,
+these hidden stores are soon tracked out and added to the simple repasts
+of our peasantry. Scarcely is the vintage over, when the olive
+plantations require attention. This is one of the most celebrated as
+well as useful of all trees. The fruit is beaten from the tree in the
+same way as walnuts in England are threshed in a green or unripe state,
+it is steeped in an alkaline ley, and then pickled in salt and water, and
+that it is much esteemed when thus preserved is well known. To procure
+the oil, the nearly ripe fruit is bruised by moderate pressure in a mill,
+when the oil flows out. This valuable article is used in almost every
+Syrian culinary preparation, and it is also applied for many medicinal
+purposes. Thus with the olive, meet emblem of peace, end the bright
+beams of this year’s sun. Winter comes on with rapid strides: the boughs
+so lately loaded with leaves, flowers, and lastly, with fruits, are daily
+losing their beautiful foliage; and chilling autumnal breezes coldly
+whisper through the leafless branches, and Lebanon grows dark till the
+pale snow covers its top, and reflects the last dying rays of the sun.
+The peasantry now gather their supplies of fuel, which the relentless
+winds tear from the trees, scattering the earth with fragments of boughs,
+which, however, prove most acceptable to those who are in search of wood.
+And now the fellah and his cheerful family being furnished with fruits of
+all kinds, wine, honey, poultry and firing, and the numerous other et
+ceteras necessary to a Syrian household, fear nought for winds or storms;
+nor are his cattle forgotten, his cow and treasured mare are both
+furnished with provender, much of which has been made from the refuse
+left by the silkworm of the mulberry leaves, the centre part of which
+they could not devour; these having been collected were made into stacks
+ready for winter. During the autumn, the cattle derive much nourishment
+from the second crop which sprouts from the despoiled mulberry trees.
+The fellah’s wants being thus well supplied, he fails not to acknowledge
+the blessing which he possesses, and exclaims, “_El-Hham’dvo li-llah_!”
+God be praised!
+
+The resources of Syria are inexhaustible if only properly developed. The
+trade in wine may rival that of Spain, Portugal, or France; the grapes
+are beautiful, and if they were only properly selected, and proper means
+taken to secure a good wine in this country, neither in Europe nor Asia
+is there greater facility for establishing an extensive and lucrative
+trade in this one department than in Syria and Palestine? The fruits are
+delicious; and those grown in the open air and without any trouble, rival
+in flavour, quality, and quantity, those of any other country, where the
+greatest pains are taken and great expense incurred to accomplish this.
+Then, again, the articles of tobacco, wheat, wool, etc., and innumerable
+other articles; madder root, the beautiful dyes of Syria (the Tyrian dye
+is not known now); one and all may, if properly cultivated and brought
+into the English market, rival its imports from all other parts of the
+world. The immense plains could, with very little outlay or labour, give
+us wheat and wool, indeed supply all the world; and Syria will, I hope,
+yet, at no remote period, become the granary of the west.
+
+The white wool of Scripture was up to a late period partially grown in
+the country around the Euphrates; and, as is suggested by Dr. Thompson in
+the articles already adverted to in the Colonial and Asiatic Magazine,
+when an improved breed of sheep from English colonies, Spain, etc., shall
+be introduced into Syria, we may expect to supply with its resources the
+markets now chiefly furnished with wool from America, Australia, Germany,
+etc.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+THE COMPARATIVE INFLUENCES OF THE ROMAN CATHOLIC AND PROTESTANT FAITHS IN
+SYRIA.
+
+
+There is perhaps no country in the world which so much engages the
+attention of the Propaganda of Rome as Syria and the Holy Land. To
+possess a leading influence on its destinies, has ever been the ambition
+of the Pope. What could have been more iniquitous than the absurd
+pretensions of the Roman Catholics in the Jerusalem question? It may be
+necessary to go back a little, and to acquaint the reader, that France
+has for many years claimed a sort of protection over the Romish Churches
+in Syria, and in periods of commotion in Mount Lebanon has exhibited the
+French colours from the convents, whilst all the appearance of state
+protection from the Propaganda has been kept up of late years, as must be
+well known in Europe. Thus a perpetual excitement is created in Mount
+Lebanon, the Roman Catholics looking to France, the Greeks to Russia, and
+the Druses to England. All this must be naturally displeasing to the
+Turkish government, and destructive to the country itself, whilst the
+agents of each of these parties are exciting them to perpetual outbreaks;
+and most disgraceful scenes are continually occurring at Jerusalem, even
+around the sepulchre of our blessed Lord; so that there is presented to
+Christendom, the melancholy spectacle of Turkish soldiers called in to
+prevent Christians massacring one another. To increase the confusion,
+the last French ambassador at the Porte, M. Lavalette, demanded a renewal
+and ratification of some privileges, stated to be the substance of an old
+treaty with France, and so far succeeded as to obtain a promise from the
+ex-minister, Reschid Pasha, to comply with his wishes. Pending the
+negotiation, however, the French minister being absent for a time, Russia
+went to work and had this promise set aside. His Excellency M.
+Lavalette, returning and finding this, prepared to stand to his colours,
+and brought the _Charlemagne_ man-of-war to sustain his demand. The
+grand vizier was called upon for an explanation, and as he could not
+defend his conduct, was dismissed from office, and the question thus
+remained in abeyance for months, but has now again been mooted. France
+has got a renewal of the original privilege, whilst Russia continues
+obstinately to oppose these concessions. The question is thus still at
+issue, and it is difficult to say how, when, or where it will end, unless
+England, as the only power best suited to do so, mediate between such
+conflicting parties. At least such is my humble opinion. {371} The Holy
+Sepulchre once exclusively in the possession of the Roman Catholics would
+indeed be a bright gem in the diadem of the Romish Church, the acme of
+their ambition, and a keystone to the hearts and affections of every
+Christian inhabitant in Syria; but though they have as yet failed in
+this, they have many other strongholds and fastnesses in the land. Look
+at their convents at Carmel, Jaffa, Ramlah, Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Sidon,
+Beyrout, Acre, Damascus, and Aleppo, and which are daily increasing. In
+these, and many other towns, they are the chief point of attraction to
+the weary wayfarers; to these they flock for rest and for sustenance—to
+these the sick betake themselves for medical advice and medicine—and all
+is afforded them gratuitously. They have also schools for the
+instruction of children in Arabic, Italian and French; and though many
+poor members of the Greek Church would gladly abstain from sending their
+children to be under the tuition of the priests, did any other
+opportunity offer itself for their education, still, in many instances,
+they have now no alternative if at least they desire that their children
+should be instructed in the European languages. At the present day, the
+sea-coast towns of Syria are rising into such great importance from the
+rapidly-increasing commerce with Great Britain and America, that to be
+possessed of a smattering of foreign languages is a source of gain to the
+rising generation of Syria; hence, all are desirous of obtaining this
+knowledge; and for the accomplishment of their desire, there is no choice
+left but to attend the Roman Catholic schools.
+
+There is, as I have already stated, an innate enmity between the Greeks
+and Latins in Syria—a deadly strife in a doctrinal point of view; still
+the young Syrians of the Greek persuasion, and even Moslems who, from
+self-interest, are prompted to attend daily these Romish schools, are
+also compelled to submit to their rules; and the course of instruction
+there consists almost exclusively of books and lessons well adapted to
+impress upon the young imagination the doctrines and observances of that
+Church. What follows from this intercourse? The teacher begins to plot
+against the pupil; he softens down difficulties; he wins confidence by
+kind words, and occasionally by small gifts, whilst a strict endeavour is
+made to mix up with these studies as much pleasure and amusement as is
+admissible with the drier pursuits of knowledge. These and a hundred
+other methods are adopted by the Roman Catholic priests to gain over the
+esteem and regard of the pupils; and as a natural result, the child,
+perhaps innately of an affectionate disposition, feels an impulse to be
+grateful—gratitude warms into friendship—friendship ripens into
+attachment; and then the battle is won; the child is only nominally a
+Greek—in principle and at heart a Romanist. The parents and friends may
+be long in discovering the painful truths of the case (if ever they
+arrive at the knowledge), for in exact proportion as the child becomes
+imbued with his teacher’s notions, so does he imbibe that unchristian
+spirit of concealment and deception, which it is the great aim of his
+preceptors that he should be possessed of; and having reached this point,
+as he grows in years so he grows deeper in cunning, and becomes a
+powerful instrument in the hands of his instructors, “a wolf in sheep’s
+clothing,” turned loose among the flock of his unsuspecting brethren, and
+whilst a strict adherent to the outward observances of the Greek Church,
+is a very Jesuit at heart, working out with secret but almost certain
+success, the utter slavery of all those that fall into his meshes. This
+is the existing evil in Syria—a growing danger—a picture of truth not at
+all overdrawn. This is the “wild beast” of the present day in Lebanon,
+which is “passing by and treading down the humble and unsupported
+Thistle.”
+
+Hospitality is the prevailing feature of the East; it is a precept and
+practice handed down from generation to generation since the time of the
+patriarchs. Abraham, when he unconsciously received and waited upon the
+three heavenly messengers, was doing exactly what is practised by the
+wild Arabs of the desert to this very day. “_Baëtic baetuc_” (my house
+is your house) is, with a very few exceptions, the maxim in the heart of
+every inhabitant of Syria, the more refined citizens of Damascus and
+Aleppo placing the best rooms in their houses at the disposal of the
+stranger, as well as their horses, their servants, the best fruits of
+their gardens, and even themselves. All is cheerfully given up to their
+guests; and that man is a black sheep of the flock who is wanting in
+courtesy to the stranger, be he Christian, Moslem or idolater, rich or
+poor.
+
+The poor peasant, in his lowly hut in the village, and the Arab in his
+tent, will gladly share his frugal repast with the friendless stranger,
+and allot him a corner of his own cushion and portion of his own
+bed-covering, if he have nothing better to offer. In fact, the latter
+will not allow a stranger to pass without entering his tent-door and
+tasting the bread and salt of hospitality. A man without hospitality is
+looked upon as worthless and unnatural; but a people without
+hospitality—the idea is too monstrous for an Oriental to conceive. {375}
+
+The Latin convent on Mount Cannel has a widespread fame in the East. The
+Hadgi from the far-distant shores of India, whom chance or speculation
+has brought from Mecca into Syria, has ofttimes been refreshed, and
+rested under the shadow of these its hospitable walls; and he naturally
+returns to his friends and his country full of the good deeds and the
+kindness of the monks of the great _deher_ (convent) of _Mar Elias_.
+Another, perhaps, has been sick nigh unto death, and in his sickness was
+nursed, kindly waited upon, restored to health, and then sent forth with
+a blessing, by the _Hakeems_ of this convent. What follows? The virtues
+and charities of these Catholic brethren are ever afterwards the theme of
+his daily conversation. Again—a pilgrim, penniless and starving, has
+received food and raiment, with a small sum of money to carry him on his
+way home, from the Carmelite friars. The pilgrim, through after-life,
+cherishes a thankful gratitude towards his timely benefactors; and this,
+to a greater or less extent, is the case with all the minor convents and
+monasteries in Syria.
+
+Now, while the Roman Catholics have their convents, the Greeks and
+Armenians their monasteries; while the Druses, Maronites, and Arabs have
+a corner in their humble dwellings, and a crust and a sup for the
+penniless pilgrim and the weary wayfarer; yet, alas! not even in Beyrout
+can the English boast of ever so mean an establishment for the exercises
+of charity—charity, that golden rule, laid down by Him whom they profess
+to look to as their only Saviour and Redeemer, as the great Pattern and
+Example of their lives. When I reflect upon the enormous sums spent in
+sending fleets to fill Syria with bloodshed and misery, to the ruin of
+many of my unfortunate countrymen, I must confess my surprise is turned
+into indignation.
+
+Amongst the fraternity constituting the monks of the various convents,
+there is always one or more somewhat skilled in the art of healing; and
+generally attached to these establishments, as in the instance of the
+convent on Mount Carmel, is a dispensary well stocked with drugs, and
+with the newest and best medicines recognised and used by physicians. In
+some few of the principal towns in Syria there are resident European
+doctors, principally Italians and Frenchmen, with a sprinkling of Germans
+and Poles, and one or two Americans. With the exception of the
+last-mentioned, they are mostly in the pay of the Turkish government, and
+are either connected with the quarantine establishments, belong to the
+troops, or are attached to the court of the Pasha. Relative to these,
+however, I may quote what Dr. Thompson, who was for some time at Damascus
+on a medical mission, and who was extremely beloved and esteemed by the
+natives there, states, viz.,—
+
+ “That on one occasion he was requested by the seraskier, or commander
+ of the forces for Arabia, to perform an important operation on a
+ soldier, as the ordinary medical staff were not able or willing to do
+ it. In the course of the operation, the medical staff one and all
+ failed in their aid, and some of them even fainted; and the writer
+ had to rely on his own presence of mind, and unaided, to terminate
+ the operation. Imagine an epidemic in a hospital under such
+ surveillance; the mortality is frightful even under ordinary
+ circumstances. In acute cases, and in serious surgical cases, there
+ is little or no chance for a successful result; and the soldiers and
+ sailors seldom resort to the doctor if they can avoid it. The
+ European renegades in the service are very little better, with a few
+ exceptions. The monks that practise medicine as a profession have a
+ very fair knowledge of simples, and compound their own medicines, and
+ employ a good many recent chemicals and modern ingredients in the
+ European _Materia Medica_; but their knowledge of acute disease is
+ necessarily limited.”
+
+The natives, in the hour of sickness, have first of all recourse to
+simple herbal remedies, which have been handed down through many
+generations, and are chiefly held in estimation by the old people of the
+villages. When these remedies are found to fail, then, and oftentimes
+only at the eleventh hour, they bethink them of the Franks inhabiting
+some convent in the neighbourhood; and as all Franks are supposed to be
+physicians by birth, recourse is had to their healing art in preference
+to Italian or other quack medical professors, who are harsh in their
+treatment of the sick, unconscionable as to charges, and in any real case
+of difficulty seldom, if ever, successful. The monks are always ready
+and willing to avail themselves of any such opportunity of displaying
+their skill and charity, and it requires no second invitation before one
+or more of them are at the threshold of the sick man’s house, and a few
+minutes find them busily employed about the cure, if it be practicable.
+In many instances, the patient is only suffering from severe
+constipation, or it may be a severe attack of ague; and in these cases a
+quick and almost miraculous cure is soon effected. That it should be
+considered a miracle, or an interposition of Divine Providence, brought
+about by the prayers and benedictions of the holy friars, is the main
+object they have in view, hence no opportunity is lost, on the first
+arrival of the priestly doctors, to impress upon the minds of the
+relatives and friends in secret the almost certainty of the patient’s
+demise, unless a special interposition be made by them on his behalf. If
+this does not ultimately lead to the conversion of the household, it
+shakes them in their own creed, engenders confidence towards their
+benefactors, and leaves a grateful impression behind for many gratuitous
+charities rendered. The least return they can then make, is to comply
+with the oft-urged request of the monks to send their children to be
+educated at the convent school.
+
+Luckily for the credit of Great Britain, she sends few charlatans from
+her colleges; and an English or American quack is a thing heretofore
+unheard of in Syria, whereas charlatans of all other nations have been
+superabundant. An English doctor possesses an unsullied reputation in
+Syria. He is looked upon in the same light as an English gun, or an
+English watch—a thing that can only be manufactured or brought to
+perfection in England. Hence, if the report be spread that an English
+Hakeem, or even an Englishman of any denomination, be travelling in the
+neighbourhood, the halt and lame, and blind, and otherwise ailing of all
+the surrounding villages will congregate near to where his tent may be
+pitched, and pester him incessantly for remedies, if it be only a little
+white sugar weighed out by his skilful hands, to be used in cases of
+ophthalmia. Every sect, and even Mahommedan ladies, came and consulted
+Dr. Thompson, and received him at their own houses unveiled. The
+judicious physician is treated in the light of a gifted individual; he is
+looked upon as having the power of life and death in his hands: in the
+sick-room he is courted and treated with the greatest deference and
+respect; and even whilst passing in the streets, the occupants rise to
+salute him. It is not uncommon for him to find himself impeded in his
+progress by the prostration of the female members of the family to kiss
+his garments, even his shoes. This has occurred repeatedly, to my
+knowledge, in Damascus; and the doctor was also appealed to in private
+matters as the umpire, and for his advice in domestic and personal
+affairs.
+
+I may also here relate an incident in my own life in support of the
+influence which a Hakeem can obtain over the prejudices of Eastern
+people. During my last visit to Constantinople, whilst visiting at the
+house of Husseen Pasha, His Excellency, in the course of conversation,
+hinted to me, that the rumour of my medical studies in Europe had reached
+him; and after a little introductory preamble, he begged of me to see his
+wife, who had been confined to her bed for some days. I can hardly
+describe my astonishment at such a request coming from such a quarter;
+however, I expressed my readiness to do all in my humble power to
+alleviate the sufferings of the invalid. I was accordingly conducted by
+a eunuch through a perfect maze of dark and mysterious passages (coughing
+all the way, as is the fashion, to give notice of the approach of a male,
+for the females to veil themselves) to the bed-chamber of the sick lady,
+whom I found reclining upon a mattress, laid upon a carpet on the floor.
+It being announced to her, that the Hakeem Bashi was at hand, an
+attendant, old Dudu, came forward, and our interview commenced.
+
+After a short conversation, in which she made many anxious inquiries
+relative to the Frank country and the English ladies, about whom I found
+she had very absurd notions, we came to the real object of my visit. I
+asked where the pain lay, and it will cause my readers to smile when I
+state her reply. She told me that I must cast her nativity according to
+Eastern customs, and thus discover the seat of pain myself. I told her
+that the system of medicine which I had learnt in England did not admit
+of such practices, and went on to shew her the utter fallacy of such
+doings. She answered me, that her own doctor in Circassia formally
+adopted this plan, and that, after ascertaining the star under which she
+was born, appropriate verses from the Koran were written upon three slips
+of paper: one was put in water, which she afterwards drunk; one was burnt
+with perfumes to drive evil spirits from the room; and the third was
+placed upon the affected part. After some little difficulty I discovered
+the seat of her malady, and that she was suffering under a tumour. I
+then felt her pulse, and requested her to shew me her tongue. Here
+another difficulty arose, as she could not shew me her tongue without
+unveiling; but the old lady who stood by told her that the Prophet
+allowed it before the Hakeem and Priest, at the same time quoting verses
+from the Koran in assertion of what she stated. This had the desired
+effect; and on her removing her veil, I was perfectly dazzled with the
+intense sweetness and beauty of her face. She was a Circassian, one of
+the fairest of her race, and had just arrived at Constantinople. After
+some trouble she permitted me to inspect the part affected; on beholding
+it, some lectures delivered by my revered Mentor, Mr. Phillips, and also
+by Mr. Ferguson, immediately recurred to my mind. In the lectures they
+said, that incision with the knife was the only remedy in such cases.
+After two days I ventured to break this to my trembling patient, much to
+her terror; but on my assuring her that I would remove it without her
+being sensible to pain, she at last consented, and I successfully
+performed the operation, putting her under the effects of chloroform,
+which appeared to the bystanders pure magic. They had heard tell of such
+things from the Arabian Nights, but could hardly believe their senses
+when actually beheld by themselves in the present day.
+
+I have already endeavoured to show in how many various ways the Latins
+possess superior opportunities, and are in a better position than the
+Greeks, in having greater facilities daily afforded them as far as
+regards the work of conversion; but there is yet another great source of
+advantage to them, and one which holds out many tempting inducements to
+the heavily-taxed peasantry to embrace at once, and without any further
+hesitation, the Roman Catholic faith. This is the privilege exercised by
+the consular authorities, and even by the very priests themselves, of
+protecting from outrage or insult every one who has embraced their
+religion, and who gives evidence of the sincerity of their intentions by
+regular attendance at mass, and by the rigid observance of high-days and
+holy-days, feasts and fasts. They also give them employment; and they
+become, _de facto_, protected by the French government; their taxes are
+light in comparison with those levied on their fellow-countrymen, and
+they are entirely exempted from that grinding system so commonly
+practised and played off upon the peasantry by the soldiery and
+underlings of government—a class of individuals that are a perfect bane
+to the Ottoman empire.
+
+Before concluding these remarks, I must point out another glaring
+instance in which the Latins have gained a decided ascendancy over the
+Greeks in the East. I allude to the establishment by the Sisters of
+Charity of a hospital at Beyrout, in which the first medical advice there
+procurable has been secured. Here the poor fever-stricken natives have
+every attention paid to their wants in the hour of sorrow and sickness;
+while, side by side, on neat iron-bedsteads covered with snowy linen, we
+stumble across the last sad remains of the French Roman Catholic sailor,
+and, in the next bed to his, the Protestant British tar. Both have been
+equally cared for, as far as bodily concerns go, but there has been a
+fearful distinction between the spiritual consolation of the two. The
+Frenchman has received daily—hourly visits from the nuns, who have spoken
+to him smilingly of heaven, and lighted death’s dark pathway with the
+rays of cheerfulness. The Englishman, on the contrary, has felt himself
+friendless and solitary—no gentle lips have stooped down to whisper
+comfort and holy counsellings to the quickly departing soul. The reason
+is, that there is not at present an English clergyman or an English
+doctor in Beyrout.
+
+The Sisters of Charity, and their other kindred agencies in the East, are
+beneficial in their way. During seasons of sickness they are all in full
+requisition, and deserve their meed of praise. As to these religious
+ladies, whatever may be their proselytising propensities—we know, that
+where they chiefly confine themselves to their meek and humble calling,
+their indefatigable zeal and never-ceasing exertions at all seasons and
+at all hours, are greatly to be commended. The patients visited at their
+own houses retain a grateful sense of the patient attention shewn them in
+the hours of need and in seasons of epidemic, when in the East friends
+desert each other. The institutions under their control are remarkably
+well kept, and far more neatly and economically conducted than any
+hospitals or schools in England. The manner in which their internal
+economy and household arrangements are conducted and _efficiently_
+superintended is highly creditable to them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+THE REMEDY.
+
+
+From the earliest days of Christianity, the blessed truths of the Gospel
+were almost invariably accompanied by acts of mercy and love. At first,
+these truths were impressed upon the memories of reckless and darkly
+ignorant multitudes by signs and wonders, well suited to the times and
+people; and miracles, resulting in immediate temporary benefit to the
+afflicted, were apt, though but faint, illustrations of the incalculable
+boon about to be conferred on the immortal souls of the believers and
+followers of our blessed Redeemer—the blind received their sight—the lame
+recovered the use of their limbs—the sick were healed—and even the dead
+were brought to life again. The early apostles were physicians both to
+the soul and body; and those that had faith but as a grain of
+mustard-seed went about doing good to the sick and dying. These miracles
+were palpable and beyond the power of refutation; and as long as the
+necessity for something beyond the comprehension of man existed, such
+things were requisite to draw and fix the attention of ignorant and
+superstitious idolators; but as soon as the true faith had taken root,
+and the young sapling no longer required outward and visible props to
+secure it from those tempestuous hurricanes of persecution which, through
+so long a period, raged with hardly any intermission, then palpable
+miracles ceased to be exercised on earth—the visible sign was removed—the
+word of command or the touch no longer possessed the healing virtue—but
+miracles of grace and mercy still continued to be performed, and they
+continue to this day the same, as palpably visible to the
+spiritually-minded man (who can distinguish the hand of God in every
+temporal blessing enjoyed by the true followers of Christ), as was the
+resurrection of Lazarus to those unbelieving Jews who were eyewitnesses
+to that marvellous demonstration of infinite power tempered with infinite
+mercy. In lieu of this power of performing miracles, or of witnessing
+them, men were endowed with a spirit of wisdom, which gradually developed
+itself in successive generations; and the sick and the dying—the maimed,
+the halt, and the blind, who had now no further hope of instantaneous or
+certain relief through miraculous gifts, resorted to the skill of
+physicians, men of more enlightened education than themselves, but in
+other respects their equals, co-partners of the joys and sorrows
+inherited in this world, and destined like themselves to terminate their
+earthly career in the grave. And these physicians, or at least some
+amongst them, laboured for the benefit of humanity.
+
+At first, we may readily conceive that their resources were limited, and
+their primitive knowledge of medicines extremely scant; but the healing
+art never retrograded a single step. Of this we have abundant proof in
+the history of nations, as regards the advancement of this peculiar
+branch of science, though it is most true, that in countries such as, for
+instance, Arabia, which, in times past, was pre-eminent for its knowledge
+of medicinal drugs, and which may be said to have been the nursery of
+chemistry; this art has almost entirely disappeared whilst in the present
+day the medical profession may in Europe be said to have arrived nearly
+at its zenith; other sciences may have kept pace with it in their
+marvellous and beneficial discoveries, but none can so much claim the
+thankful gratitude of mankind in general. Health is universally
+acknowledged to be the most precious of all temporal blessings, and,
+consequently, the pillars that maintain and prop up health have a prior
+claim to all others; and that man must be blind indeed, both spiritually
+and bodily, who does not see and acknowledge in this boon to suffering
+humanity the invisible hand of the Almighty Benefactor, as clearly
+intelligent to the man of God now, as were then the words, “_Arise_,
+_take up thy bed and walk_,” to the hopeless palsied patient. In short,
+every cure and every relief afforded to the sick and dying, are so many
+miracles of mercy. A man meets with an accident—he is mortally wounded
+in battle—crushed by a railway accident—burnt in a fire—all but drowned
+in water—sick of a fatal malady lingering with vain hopes and vainer love
+of life—the marked victim of consumption—these all have their immediate
+and most excruciating tortures benumbed or alleviated by the skill of the
+physician; or, if there is hope of life, the whispering of that hope
+falls from their lips like precious balm of Gilead imbuing them with
+courage and patience to undergo suffering, for great beyond measure is
+the tenaciousness to life. If, on the other hand, the skilful
+practitioner believes his patient doomed, and pronounces the last
+verdict, still he can proclaim to him the sweet hope of mercy—mercy
+eternal and boundless—for the penitent sinner, and help him to collect
+his scattered thoughts from wandering to that world which he must now
+speedily leave; he may whisper to him that there is still time for hope,
+and to hope for mercy, and he may assist him to spend these last precious
+moments in penitence and prayer.
+
+What has long ceased to be a marvel amongst nations advanced in
+civilisation, is still regarded in the light of a miracle by the
+untutored portion of the world. Those who have penetrated into the
+remotest and least-known regions, have adduced evidence in support of
+this; and it is natural that a savage should regard with superstitious
+awe and reverence, a man endowed by education with even such every-day
+attainments as would barely pass muster in England, France, or America;
+and it is as natural, that this awe and reverence should gradually give
+place to affection and gratitude when, by the interposition of medical
+skill, the sick and suffering man experiences a speedy transition from
+pain and disease to the rapturous bliss of a state of convalescence,—and
+this transition brought about, too, by what, to him in his ignorance
+appears a magical influence. His faith in that man’s power is so great,
+that, if he only drop a word in proper season, the untutored mind of the
+comparative savage has sufficient natural energy to grow inquisitive
+about what so materially regards himself; and he soon feels persuaded
+that one from whom he has already received such convincing proofs of
+disinterested kindness can never be capable of doing him an injury; and
+this leads him to reflect; and reflection is the first grand
+foundation-stone, which, when once firmly set, can readily be built upon,
+and become, with God’s blessing, a house upon a rock. Throughout all
+ages since the foundation of the Christian faith, those missionaries who
+have penetrated into barbarous countries, have invariably found the great
+utility of being acquainted, however slightly, with a knowledge of
+medicines and their proper application. The very word _hakeem_ is a
+passport to the Oriental heart and good-will. How else could Europeans,
+in the garb of monks, and furnished only with staff and wallet, have
+traversed those vast and unknown regions of China, Tartary, Thibet, etc.,
+and have escaped scatheless to make known to the world their travels and
+adventures in lands and amongst people whose very name was a mystery to
+civilised Europe? That physicians are honoured by these people, and even
+in some instances gratefully remembered, is certain. This truth is
+placed beyond a doubt by the fact of a Chinese poet having celebrated the
+name, fame, and good deeds of a skilful European oculist in a lengthy
+poem, part of which was translated into English and published some few
+years since in London, taken, I believe, from the notes of the late Rev.
+Mr. Abed, a distinguished American settled at Singapore. And it is owing
+to the fact of monks, professionally physicians, having been with
+impunity permitted to travel through unknown lands, that Europeans are
+indebted for the introduction of the silkworm from China into their own
+country, an indefatigable monk having ingeniously contrived to convey the
+eggs carefully packed in the hollow of his staff over thousands of miles,
+and through apparently insuperable dangers and difficulties from China to
+Turkey.
+
+I have now, I hope, succeeded in proving to the reader the necessity that
+exists of incorporating the medical with the clerical profession in the
+persons of those good Christians, valiant soldiers of Christ, who are
+cheerfully willing to devote their lives and talents to the furtherance
+of the Gospel as missionaries in foreign parts; and I shall now endeavour
+to explain my views, hopes, and wishes, as connected more immediately
+with the spread of the Truth in Syria and throughout the East. Many
+thousands of pounds have been already lavished upon futile attempts to
+convert the heathen, and many excellent Christians are now to be found in
+England ready with open hands to further a good cause; but as I never
+intend to participate in any worldly gain to be drawn directly or
+indirectly from what I am about to recommend to their serious attention
+and consideration, they must at least acquit me of any selfish motives,
+for my career in life is not in my own power; and though I have learned
+to prize England and the many treasured friends and privileges I here
+possess most highly, yet, I cannot forget my mother country altogether,
+and trust and hope I may be able, at intervals, to revisit its sunny
+shores for a while, and during my absence from it my every thought shall
+be how best to promote the spiritual welfare of my beloved brethren
+there.
+
+The plan I propose as best calculated to insure, within a few years, the
+happiest results to Syria, is as follows, viz:—
+
+Firstly.—That a society be formed in England, composed of benevolent
+ladies and gentlemen, who shall have for their aim the establishment of a
+charitable hospital and schools at Beyrout, and that, for the furtherance
+of this object, subscription-lists be opened at some of the principal
+banking establishments all over Great Britain.
+
+Secondly.—That the donations thus collected shall be paid into the Bank
+of England.
+
+Thirdly.—That when the sum subscribed shall have amounted to about two
+thousand pounds, a pious, experienced middle-aged medical man, be sent to
+Beyrout, accompanied by a chemist; there in co-operation with some
+intelligent native (such as Asaad Kayat, the present English consul at
+Jaffa, who has so materially benefited his country), to purchase a
+promising piece of land in a healthy and elevated position an hour’s ride
+from the town of Beyrout.
+
+Fourthly.—To build there a hospital, and in the town a dispensary for
+out-door patients. The cost of this ground and buildings would not
+exceed one thousand pounds. Separate private rooms, attached to the
+hospital, would be very desirable for travellers, who needing medical aid
+or nursing, and being able to pay for the same, would prefer being thus
+lodged to going to an hotel. This would be a great boon, especially to
+the English, who might thus feel greater confidence and security in their
+visits to this interesting country; knowing that, in case of illness or
+accident, they could there receive proper medical treatment, and every
+care necessary to ensure their recovery. The physician attached to the
+institution might, when called in to attend opulent European or native
+families, be permitted to charge a small fee, which could be regulated by
+the committee, and which fee, or half of it, might go towards the
+hospital expenses.
+
+Fifthly.—If funds continued to permit, to build, in connection with this
+hospital (but in the town), schoolrooms for boys and girls, where they
+might be thoroughly taught their own language, and in it go through a
+course of Christian instruction, learn needlework and household duties.
+
+Sixthly.—I propose that the requisite medicines, surgical instruments,
+furniture, bedding, and materials for school use, be supplied by
+voluntary contributions, such Christian or charitable tradespeople as
+feel disposed to support such institutions contributing their mites
+thereto in lieu of paying money.
+
+Seventhly.—It would be very desirable, when the hospital was constructed,
+if the physician there would take in as many Syrian pupils to educate as
+the funds permitted; to be sent, when deemed by him fit, to England to
+improve themselves at the hospitals here, and to increase their Christian
+knowledge; afterwards to be employed in the hospitals or dispensaries,
+which, it is to be hoped, will soon, from so excellent a commencement,
+increase all over Syria; for it would be desirable that eventually all
+posts connected with these institutions should be occupied by intelligent
+natives, who could afford to be employed at much lower rates of salary,
+and who would exercise a greater influence over their fellow-townsmen if
+only from their superior knowledge of their mother tongue.
+
+I have now endeavoured to shew that, with an outlay of two thousand
+pounds, very commodious institutions might be established, and a large
+piece of ground be purchased at Beyrout, if a Society were formed for
+their establishment in Syria. Meanwhile, I have reckoned upon the
+charitable disposition of the class of annual subscribers; and in this
+Christian land, where money is so cheerfully granted for the promotion of
+good and alleviation of suffering, I may safely reckon on this bounty
+attaining about five hundred pounds per annum, not one fraction of which
+but may, with judicious arrangement, safely treble the amount in the
+course of a very few years.
+
+I have as yet made no allusion as to the uses to which the land purchased
+in Beyrout might be applied besides the erection of a hospital upon it.
+Any surplus land could, at a very trifling original outlay, be planted
+out with mulberry-shoots; and these, if properly managed, would, in the
+course of three years, be fit to rear the silk-worm. After the final
+erection of the proposed establishment at Beyrout, and when it had been
+working a year, I should recommend that the society, in lieu of
+permitting the surplus funds on hand to remain idle, should vote the same
+to the purchase of some tract of land in the immediate neighbourhood of
+Damascus or Beyrout, and to have plantations in the fertile district of
+Antioch, where land and labour are excessively cheap. Thus, an outlay of
+one thousand pounds in landed property would, if it were all planted with
+mulberries, yield, in the course of a few years, an annual revenue (if
+the silk were sold in the Syrian market), of about two hundred pounds per
+annum; if reeled for European purposes, nearly double that amount. And
+this revenue would go on steadily increasing as the trees became older
+and yielded more leaves for the nourishment of a greater number of worms,
+and as, with the profits of the silk, additional grounds might be
+purchased and cultivated, I could safely guarantee that, were the
+society’s efforts judiciously supported by efficient agents, in from
+fifteen to twenty years this and similar institutions would not only be
+enabled entirely to support themselves from the revenue of their estates,
+independent of any succour from the society, but they would even have
+surplus funds for the establishment of like minor institutions in the
+interior.
+
+At the first outset, the cultivation of the lands acquired in Beyrout
+might devolve upon the parents or destitute relatives of such of the
+poorer boys as were receiving a gratuitous education at the schools
+attached to the institutions, and the poorer class of girls educated at
+the schools, if permitted, might, during one month in the year, be
+occupied in reeling off the silk produced by the cocoons on the
+Institution’s estates.
+
+It is my idea, that the system of education should consist of two
+distinct schools or classes for both boys and girls; the upper or high
+school to be appropriated solely for the superior education of the sons
+and daughters of such wealthy and respectable natives as have the means
+and inclination of advancing their children in after life, and on whom
+languages, drawing, music, various species of needlework, and other like
+accomplishments, would not be uselessly lavished; while, on the other
+hand, the lower school should strictly confine itself to orphans and
+children of the labouring and poorer classes, who might be instructed to
+read and write their own tongue with ease and facility, at the same time
+that they were initiated into useful trades and professions, and the
+girls of this class taught plain needlework, and no useless
+accomplishments. As regards the diet and care of this latter class,
+strict attention should he paid to _cleanliness_, regularity, order,
+_truthfulness_, and other good habits; at the same time that their food
+and raiment should, though sufficient, be neither superabundant, nor
+consist of such articles as might induce them in after-years, when left
+to battle their way through the world, to have a hankering after dainties
+and luxuries wholly beyond the compass of their slender means.
+
+But to ensure success to the proper working of such a philanthropic
+medical mission as is here contemplated, intemperate zeal or harsh
+bigotry must be carefully abstained from. I quite agree with Dr.
+Thompson, who, in a letter addressed to Dr. Hodgkin from Damascus, says,
+“I believe all who know the East, and particularly Syria, will freely
+admit that it is only through medical agency that a change in the
+religious views of the people can be effected; but even a medical man
+must work for years among them, and first acquire their confidence; and I
+believe I am not too sanguine that then, by cautious and judicious steps,
+he may and will do more than pure missionaries can expect to accomplish
+for a quarter of a century to come.” “It is at the bedside of a sick
+person, where are always assembled all the friends of the patient, that a
+medical man can do the good work, and where he may do so with impunity,
+especially if there be a slight prospect of recovery. The most fanatical
+I have found raised no objection under these circumstances, even, strange
+to say, among the Moslems.”
+
+I may now quote the following lines from Mr. Cuthbert Young, in his
+“Notes of a Wayfarer,” he says:—“No means are more likely to smooth down
+prejudices and recommend true Christianity than the spirit of benevolence
+that emanates from it, and that breathes in this institution. Compulsory
+means for proselytising never have been, and never will be, effectual in
+the case of Mahommedans; but what can withstand self-denying kindness?
+And what may not happen when we know that free access is obtained by
+Christian physicians, even to the harems of Moslems! The same vices that
+are so destructive in China—infanticide and abortion—prevail here; and, I
+believe, the use of exciting stimulants, such as opium, is also general;
+but the wretched patients, when placed under the superintendence of a
+faithful Christian physician, though they may not be prepared to embrace
+Christianity, may yet drink in to some extent of the Christian spirit.”
+
+The amount of good, and the favourable impression made on the people by
+medical missionaries, cannot be overrated. We need only refer to China.
+There is no more efficient way of rendering a people, or a country,
+lasting advantages, than through the agency of Christian and judicious
+medical men.
+
+In bringing these pages to a close, I may be allowed to express a hope
+that they will not prove wholly without interest to those who peruse
+them. My chief incentive for appearing before the public, has been from
+an humble desire to advocate the cause of Syria; and the patriotic will
+doubtless join in my prayer, that my efforts may not prove abortive. If,
+therefore, either directly or otherwise, I shall be the means of rousing
+the sympathetic energies of right thinking people, on behalf of my native
+land, I shall feel fully recompensed for all the time I have bestowed on
+this little volume. However great have been the exertions which, (as not
+professing authorship), it may have given me, yet the recalling past
+scenes and circumstances for the work has left a relish and a fragrance
+on my mind, and a remembrance which is sweet. I have, however, by its
+publication, caused a strong feeling of enmity and malice to spring up
+against me among my Roman Catholic brethren; and to their hostility I am
+reluctantly compelled to attribute a considerable change which, since the
+appearance of my work, has taken place in my circumstances. By
+fabricating reports disadvantageous to my welfare, and by using indirect
+influence in certain quarters, I have been made to suffer a considerable
+pecuniary loss; but I hope in exchange that I have gained better things.
+Amongst the latter I would place the satisfaction of having candidly
+expressed my opinions on important subjects without regard to my worldly
+interests, and that by so doing, I have more effectually paved the way
+and pointed out the true path of improvement for my countrymen, by
+directing attention to the evils which exist among them, and suggesting a
+method by which they may be rooted out. May then those seeds of charity
+which have so often sprung up, blossomed, and yielded fruit for me, now
+do so likewise (and more also) for my countrymen. I cannot take leave of
+my readers without once more expressing my heartfelt gratitude towards
+the people of this country. From all whom I have ever met, I have
+received that welcome and reception for which the English are justly
+proverbial. Even the nobles of these mighty realms have deigned to
+honour me, by evincing an interest in the subject next to my heart. May
+that Omnipotent Power, to whose authority they also bend, long preserve
+these great and true-hearted men; and may this kingdom never cease to be
+the ark, the earthly resting-place of all true believers, whence, as from
+a vast store-house of provisions, mental or bodily, all nations under the
+sun may seek and find assistance.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+NOTES ON THE GEOLOGY OF SYRIA,
+
+
+(_Kindly communicated to me by my friend_, _Professor Edward Forbes_.)
+
+MY DEAR SIR,—It is much to be desired that a careful geological
+exploration of your interesting country should be undertaken by an able
+investigator. All that we know of the structure of Syria is fragmentary,
+and in great part unsatisfactory. Sufficient, however, is known to
+indicate the scientific importance of the region, and to hold out a
+promise of a rich harvest for the practical geologist who may undertake
+its description. The collection of fossils which I have myself seen from
+the district around Lebanon, suggested many enquiries that have not yet
+been answered, especially respecting the relations of the jurassic and
+cretaceous rocks of that famous region. The following scanty notices of
+what is known about Syrian formations and their fossils, may serve to
+excite curiosity and to direct the traveller to fresh observations.
+
+In the year 1833, a valuable memoir by M. Botta, Jun., was published by
+the Geological Society of France. It is entitled “Observations sur le
+Liban et l’Antiliban.” He represents Mount Lebanon as composed of rocks
+belonging to the lower cretaceous series, resting upon green sands, and
+these in their turn reposing upon jurassic strata. He states, that in
+the chain of the Lebanon there are three distinct formations. The
+uppermost is a limestone, very variable in character, both of appearance
+and hardness, and alternating with calcareous marls. The lower division
+of this formation is distinguished by the presence of beds and nodules of
+flint. Fossil sea-urchins occur in its middle, and fishes in its lower
+part. A second formation of variable thickness is sandy, very
+ferruginous, abounding in iron ores and lignites, and passing above into
+a calcareous rock. The lowest formation is constituted of numerous beds
+of cavernous limestone. Besides these older rocks, M. Botta remarks upon
+the presence, all along the coast from Beyrout to Tripoli, of
+conglomerates or sandstones, quite unconformable to the calcareous rocks
+of the coast.
+
+M. Botta takes particular notice of those localities in which remarkable
+fossils occur. The first is at the bottom of the basin in which Antoura
+is built. The stratum is confused marl, abounding in specimens of
+sea-urchins. These species are remarkable for their size and shape. He
+considers this bed as belonging to the jurassic series. Corals are also
+found in it.
+
+The second locality is near the convent of Bikeurby, where a stratum
+occurs containing numerous univalve shells of the genus _Nerinœa_, which
+being harder than the rock containing them, stand up on its weathered
+surface.
+
+The third locality is at Sach el Aalma, where at about 300 feet above the
+level of the sea occurs an impure limestone, often soft. In it fossil
+fishes are found in plenty. They are irregularly disposed in the rock.
+
+The fossil fishes of Mount Lebanon have been the subject of frequent
+investigations, although the true geological position of the beds whence
+they are derived, has not yet been made out with certainty. Two memoirs
+have especially been devoted to descriptions of them, the one by M.
+Heckel (1843), and the other by Professor Pictet, of Geneva (1853).
+Professor Agassiz also has written upon some of the Lebanon fishes, and
+Sir Philip Grey Egerton has described a very remarkable fossil, viz., the
+Cyclobatis Oligodactylus, brought from Syria by Captain Graves, R.N., who
+kindly committed it to my care in 1845. Altogether no fewer than
+thirty-four fossil fishes from Mount Lebanon are now known and described.
+As the works in which the accounts are contained are not likely to pass
+into the hands of travellers, it may be useful to give a list of some of
+the principal of these very interesting and beautiful fossils.
+
+Of the family of perched fishes there occurs a species of _Beryx_, a
+genus of which certain fossil forms are found in the chalk, and a few
+living species in the Indian seas. The _Beryx Vexillifer_ is found in
+the hard limestones of Hakel.
+
+Of the family of sparoid fishes, one or two species occur in the soft
+limestones of Sach el Aalma. The _Pagellus Libanicus_ is an example.
+
+Of the family of Chromidæ, three species of _Pycnosterinx_ occur in the
+soft limestones of Sach el Aalma, viz., _P. discoides_, _P. Heckelii_,
+and _P. Russegerii_.
+
+Of the Squamipennes, a _Platax_ occurs in the hard limestones of Hakel.
+
+Of the Cataphracti, a new genus called _Petalopteryx_ has been
+established by Pictet for a fish from Sach el Aalma. Of the Sphyrenoid
+fishes, a _Mesogaster_ occurs at the same locality. To the Halecoid
+fishes a great number of those of Lebanon belong; among them are the
+following:—
+
+_Osmeroides Megapterus_, Sach el Aalma.
+
+_Eurypholis_ (new genus of Pictet) _sulcidens_, from Hakel.
+
+_Eurypholis Boisseri_, from the same locality.
+
+_Eurypholis longiden_, from Sach el Aalma.
+
+_Spaniodon_ (new genus of Pictet) _Blondelii_, from Sach el Aalma.
+
+_Spaniodon elongatus_, Sach el Aalma.
+
+_Clupea lata_, Sach el Aalma.
+
+_Clupea macropthalma_, Hakel.
+
+_Clupea sardiniodes_, Hakel.
+
+_Clupea laticauda_, Hakel.
+
+_Clupea minima_, Sach el Aalma.
+
+_Clupea brevissima_, Hakel. This fish, originally described by M. de
+Blainville, appears to be very common in its locality.
+
+Of the Esocidæ, there is the fish called _Rhinellus furcatus_, which
+occurs at Sach el Aalma.
+
+Of the Sclerodermi, several species of _Dircetis_ occur at Sach el Aalma.
+A curious and anomalous fish, called _Coccodus armatus_, is found at
+Hakel.
+
+Of Cartilaginous fishes, a _Spinax_ is found at Sach el Aalma.
+
+The curious _Cyclobatis oligodactylus_ of Egerton belongs to the same
+division.
+
+In the north of Syria, M. C. Gaillardot has observed several distinct
+stages of rocks belonging to the great Nummulitic formation, and
+therefore, according to the received geological classification, members
+of the Eocene group of Tertiaries. The newest of these beds are stated
+to consist of compact white or grey limestones containing fossil corals,
+sea-urchins, and oysters. Under these is a white chalky limestone,
+alternating with green and grey soft marls and other limestones, almost
+entirely made up, according to Vicomte D’Archiac, of the _Nummulina
+intermedia_. In the white limestones of Ainzarka are found _Nummulina
+Raymondi_, _N. lœvigata_, and _Alveolina subpyrenacia_. M. Gaillardot
+would distinguish the entire group of strata constituting the highest
+mountains of Syria by the name of the Libanian System. He appears,
+however, to have confounded strata of very different ages, tertiary rocks
+with cretaceous and jurassic. In the true Lebanon region the mummulitic
+beds seem to be altogether wanting. It is possible that they may be
+present in the Antioch district, but this has not been clearly made out
+as yet. M. Russegger has shewn, contrary to the views of M. Gaillardot,
+that the region around Jerusalem is mainly of oolitic age, with
+occasional remains of cretaceous strata outlying here and there.
+
+During the Armenian expedition to the shores of the Dead Sea,
+considerable collections of Syrian fossils appear to have been amassed.
+These have been described by Mr. Conrad, and are figured in the report
+very recently published by Mr. Lynch. The cretaceous beds of Syria are
+therein referred in part, at least, to the age of the white chalk of
+Europe. The Jurassic fossils are, for the most part, in the condition of
+casts. Species of _Nerinœa_ were noticed, and among European forms, the
+_Ostrea scapha_ of Roemer, and the _Ostrea virgata_ of Goldfuss. A very
+remarkable fossil is the _Ammonites Syriacus_, from the Lebanon region;
+it is a species apparently of the genus _Ceratites_, a group of
+cephalopods usually regarded as characteristic of strata of Triassic age,
+but in this instance possibly represented among cretaceous beds.
+
+
+
+
+NOTES.
+
+
+{3} Canticles iv. 13–15.
+
+{8} The supposed tomb of the prophet Jonah is distinctly visible from
+this spot.
+
+{10} This favourite dish is something similar to forced-meat balls,
+being made of dried boiled wheat, finely-chopped suet and meat, pepper,
+salt, and red chillies. The whole is mashed into a paste, then squeezed
+by the hand into a globular shape, and afterwards either boiled or baked.
+
+{21a} In the houses of Mahomedans the texts are from the Koran.
+
+{21b} Afterwards Pasha of Damascus, where he introduced many useful
+European inventions; he is now the Commander-in-Chief at Adrianople,
+beloved and esteemed by the people he governs.
+
+{22} It is the fashion of Damascus, and generally in the East, for the
+lady of the house to first sip the coffee, and then hand it to the
+visitor as a mark of favour; and on my first arrival in London, I used to
+do the same, much to the astonishment of my English lady-friends.
+
+{28} (Aliahey Ushruf fûl salām.)
+
+{48} In the East generally, however it is not regarded in the light of a
+theft to eat as much fruit from the fertile gardens as may satisfy the
+moderate wants of the passer by.
+
+{76} Spirit, made of raisins and aniseed distilled.
+
+{78} Every marriage-guest brings a wax-taper, which he is to light.
+
+{79} Sometimes the marriage ceremony is performed at home, sometimes in
+the church.
+
+{92} This is made either of raisins, or a kind of sweet pod. These are
+crushed in a mill worked by a camel and afterwards mixed with a small
+portion of alkali and a kind of soft earth, placed in a vessel with a
+vent. Over this a certain quantity of water is poured again till all the
+juice is extracted, then evaporated by heat till a mass resembling
+molasses, is left, which has a delicious flavour.
+
+{97} This tobacco, when gathered, is hung up while it is green in a
+chamber, and exposed to the fumes of a particular kind of wood, which
+grows only in this neighbourhood, and which imparts to it a mild and much
+admired flavour.
+
+{107} I have this fact on the authority of an English traveller.
+
+{119} Another story prevalent was, that the Sultan had written to the
+Queen of England, commanding her to send her fleet to subdue the
+Egyptians and threatening, if she refused to do so, to dethrone her, as
+he is the Padischah of all kings.
+
+{157} Since the above remarks were placed in the hands of the printer,
+Mr. Brady has, I am happy to see, obtained permission of the minister to
+introduce a bill into the House of Commons, for the registration of all
+duly qualified medical practitioners. This is, at least, one step in the
+right direction. Short though it be, nevertheless we must look upon it
+as an earnest of greater regard on the part of the Government than they
+have hitherto evinced; and we may receive it as a first instalment of
+more valuable boons yet to come.
+
+{175} M. Musurus, Prince Callimaki, and Prince Caradja.
+
+{178} Reschid Pasha, Aali Pasha, and Fuah Effendi, the ablest men in the
+empire, were many years in this country, and are eminently distinguished
+by their advocacy of reform, and by carrying on improvements in all
+branches of the public service.
+
+{210} EUPHRATES AND THE EAST.—On Saturday last, a lecture announced
+under the above title, was delivered at the Assembly Rooms in this city,
+by Dr. J. B. Thompson, a gentleman who has just returned from a medical
+mission in Turkey. Capt. Saumarez, R.N., presided, and a very numerous
+audience of ladies and gentlemen attended on the occasion. The lecture
+was so desultory in its course, that it will not admit of analysis;
+nevertheless, it was exceedingly interesting, and formed an important
+addition to our information respecting a country which is the cradle of
+the world. Dr. Thompson, it appears, was sent to Asiatic Turkey on a
+medical mission by an association of English gentlemen, amongst whom was
+the Earl of Ellesmere; and having opened a free hospital at Damascus, and
+acquired the Arabic language, he enjoyed rare facilities for obtaining a
+knowledge of the manners, feelings, and circumstances of the population.
+There is not only more toleration for Christians in Turkey, but less
+corruption and injustice than under the powers which seek to dismember
+it. He described the Turkish rulers as sensible men, ever ready to carry
+on any improvements suggested to them. The missionaries would effect far
+more if, instead of teaching doctrines to adults, they educated the
+females prior to their seclusion in the harems. There was no impediment
+to the establishment of female schools; and, therefore, if these
+secondary means were adopted, the condition of the young might be raised,
+the prejudices of the parents might be abated, and a foundation might be
+laid for the civilization of the East. The principal feature of the
+lecture, however, was the description of a new route to India. Instead
+of passengers proceeding by Alexandria, Cairo, across the sandy Egyptian
+Desert, and through the Red Sea, it was suggested that they should land
+at the mouth of the river Orontes, near Antioch, in Syria, and pass
+through a rich and beautiful country to Belis. There, embarking on the
+river Euphrates, they would descend through the land of Paradise to
+Bussora on the Persian Gulf and from thence proceed straight to Bombay or
+Calcutta. The advantages of this new route were healthiness and
+rapidity. The journey to India by Suez occupied twenty-eight days, and
+entailed much suffering in crossing the Desert, and in traversing the
+unhealthy Red Sea. The transit from Antioch to Belis would occupy two
+days by railway through a country so rich and fertile that it would
+become peopled if communication were opened up. The entire journey to
+India would be shortened seven days, the route being not only better but
+shorter by at least 300 miles. The saving of time would be still greater
+if a railway were formed along the bank of the Euphrates from Belis to
+Bussora. Dr. Thompson addressed himself to the objections which had been
+made to the route by the Euphrates. It had been said, that Col.
+Chesney’s exploring expedition failed; but this was incorrect. Col.
+Chesney’s difficulties arose partly from his having fixed upon Barick,
+higher up than Belis, as his terminus, and partly from the want of native
+pilots. The river is subject to squalls, the signs of which are familiar
+to those who live on its banks; but Col. Chesney employed none of the
+navigators, and one of his steamers having been upset, the river in
+consequence got a bad name. It had been said, too, that the Bedouin
+Arabs are ill-disposed towards the navigation of the Euphrates. This Dr.
+Thompson denied on his own knowledge, having visited all the chiefs along
+the banks, and he declared, contrary to the general opinion, that the
+Bedouins are a benevolent, generous, noble-hearted race. It might be
+true, he observed, that during the progress of Col. Chesney’s expedition,
+the Bedouins were prejudiced against the navigation of the river; but the
+fact was, there were powers which thought they had an interest in
+misrepresenting the intentions of the English in the East. This feeling
+had, however, been dissipated by more correct knowledge. Dr. Thompson
+added, that he had submitted the plan of the Euphrates route to the
+Turkish Sultan, who immediately perceived its advantages over the old
+route through Egypt, and would strongly support it. One feature of the
+plan, he also stated, would be the establishment of a school for children
+at Antioch, the climate of which is delightful; and while officers in
+India might come there on furlough, without losing certain advantages, as
+they would still be within the confines of Asia, their friends in Europe
+would find it an easy and delightful trip to visit them at that place.
+Dr. Thompson pointed out other and more general advantages, which would
+arise from the adoption of the new route, as regards trade and
+civilisation.
+
+On the conclusion of the lecture, Habeeb Risk Allah Effendi, a Syrian,
+who is at the present sojourning in this city, presented himself to the
+meeting, and addressed it in a few sentences expressive of his desire
+that the Euphrates route might be adopted, as it would be the means of
+civilising his native country. The Syrian women, he said, are entirely
+uneducated, and this is one of the principal causes of the ignorance
+which pervades the great mass of the people. He gracefully thanked the
+audience for their attendance, regarding it as a manifestation of warm
+interest felt in the progress of the East. A vote of thanks having been
+given to Dr. Thompson, on the motion of Sir Claude Wade, the audience
+separated, and, we may fairly add, that, though the manner of the
+lecturer was clearly unpremeditated, his matter gave considerable
+satisfaction to a large, intelligent, and influential audience.—_Extract
+from the Bath Chronicle_.
+
+{233} This method of practice is in all respects the same as that of the
+Egyptian midwives alluded to in Exodus i.16.
+
+{236} The Hebrews appear to have had a similar tradition, as we read in
+the _History of Tobit_, vii. 4, 6, 7, 16, 17. viii. 2, 3,
+
+{242} During a recent visit to Walton-on-Thames with Azimullah Khan, who
+is here on a mission from the Peishwa to the Right Honourable East India
+Directors, and who, I may remark, is highly talented, and possesses an
+extensive knowledge of the English language, we attended the service at
+the church there. Azimullah left his golden slippers at the door, not
+presuming to enter a temple with them on. Afterwards they were brought
+to our pew by the beadle, who said that, if he did not take them, they
+would be stolen. By my friend’s zealous adherence to Eastern custom, he
+caught a severe cold.
+
+{284} A false conclusion of the same nature arose in my own mind on
+entering an English Church; when I observed a picture of the Saviour over
+the altar, and various monumental effigies round the walls, I rashly
+concluded that the English worshipped pictures, etc., and laid their dead
+in the Church to pray for them.
+
+{306} Latterly, the Jesuits at Beyrout, as, indeed, at all the principal
+towns in Turkey, and even in Cyprus, have succeeded in introducing the
+use of bells, even in some instances, for schools, factories, and private
+families.
+
+{318} It may be as well here to relate an anecdote in connection with
+the late Lady H. Stanhope, whose eccentric life has already excited so
+much interest all over Europe. It came to the knowledge of some Metáwali
+chiefs that her ladyship, like themselves, kept apart two beautiful mares
+ready caparisoned, on which no one had ever yet ridden; attributing this
+to a religious prejudice similar to their own, they came to the
+conclusion that she ought to be considered as one of themselves. A
+council was accordingly held, but after many pros and cons the vote was
+unfavourable to her ladyship’s election, because, as one of the chiefs
+asserted, she was so excessively eccentric, as to ride on one side of her
+horse, and not to wear trousers. I believe that this occurred before her
+ladyship had adopted the Oriental style of dress.
+
+{371} Since writing the above, the small cloud has gathered to a storm,
+which threatens to involve the world in the dispute. I am grieved to
+say, that the true state of the facts reflects the usual disgrace on
+human nature, incident to all religious quarrels. For what, after all,
+is the present question? Not any point of faith, morality or
+benevolence, but a contention between two parties for the exclusive
+possession of the fees obtained from pious pilgrims visiting spots, whose
+situation if precisely ascertained, would be doubly calculated to make an
+impression never to be effaced from the minds of those who tread them;
+but that the places actually shown are probably not the real ones, modern
+research has greatly tended to prove, both from measurement as well as
+historical evidence. The matter is thus left doubtful; and it is painful
+to think that no record, to be relied on, should have been preserved of
+spots hallowed by the more remarkable incidents in the earthly career of
+that Holy Presence, so all-important to mankind. The real point in
+dispute was between the priests of the Greek and Latin Churches, for the
+possession and care of those places which are shown as the scene of the
+birth, crucifixion and burial of our Lord, from the exhibition of which a
+large revenue accrues. Majority of numbers and better management, had
+for some time secured the greater share of the advantages to the Greek
+priests. Hence arose, on their respective sides, the opportunity for
+French and Russian interference; the Czar claiming the exclusive
+protectorate of the Greek Christians throughout Turkey. In the question
+of the keys, the Turks had no interest; but the pretence of international
+protection on the part of the Russians, was a wedge of destruction, and
+hence the war.
+
+{375} While I was going from Trieste to Constantinople, we had very bad
+weather, and the sea very rough. We put into a port, to remain at
+anchor. I was so tired of the sea that I went on shore, and proceeded to
+a _café_, where I saw two Albanians of ferocious aspect, each carrying
+two pistols, a dagger, and carbine. When I made my appearance, they
+enquired, “What countryman are you?” I replied, “I come from the Holy
+Land.” Both arose and rushed towards me. I was at first alarmed, but
+the words, “Welcome, stranger!” reassured me. They hugged me with
+enthusiasm. They then desired the host to provide the best dishes he
+had, and requested me to join their repast. Finally, they offered me a
+home in their house, and the best apartment they had.
+
+
+
+
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+<title>The Thistle and the Cedar of Lebanon, by Habeeb Risk Allah</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Thistle and the Cedar of Lebanon, by
+Habeeb Risk Allah
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Thistle and the Cedar of Lebanon
+
+
+Author: Habeeb Risk Allah
+
+
+
+Release Date: February 18, 2011 [eBook #35322]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE THISTLE AND THE CEDAR OF
+LEBANON***
+</pre>
+<p>This ebook was transcribed by Les Bowler.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/front.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Portrait of the Author"
+title=
+"Portrait of the Author"
+src="images/front.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<h1>THE THISTLE<br />
+<span class="smcap">and</span><br />
+THE CEDAR OF LEBANON,</h1>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">by</span><br />
+HABEEB RISK ALLAH EFFENDI,<br />
+<span class="smcap">m.r.c.s.</span>,<br />
+<span class="smcap">and associate of king&rsquo;s
+college</span>.</p>
+<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;And Jehoash the king of Israel sent to
+Amaziah king of Judah, saying, The thistle that was in Lebanon,
+sent to the cedar that was in Lebanon, saying, Give thy daughter
+to my son to wife; and there passed by a wild beast that was in
+Lebanon, and trode down the thistle.&rdquo;&mdash;2 Kings xiv.
+9.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">second
+edition</span>.</p>
+<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center">LONDON:<br />
+JAMES MADDEN, 8 LEADENHALL STREET.</p>
+<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center">1854</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span
+class="smcap">london</span>:<br />
+<span class="smcap">printed by wertheimer and co.</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">finsbury circus</span>.</p>
+<h2><!-- page iii--><a name="pageiii"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. iii</span>PREFACE<br />
+<span class="smcap">to the first edition</span>.</h2>
+<p>The following pages were written in compliance with the
+solicitations of many esteemed friends, who were desirous that I
+should lay before the public an outline of my life and travels,
+and give to the English nation a description of the domestic
+habits and religious opinions of my countrymen in Syria.&nbsp;
+However incompetent I may have proved for the task, I trust that
+what I have written may not be wholly uninteresting; and above
+all, it is my earnest hope, that my feeble efforts to arouse the
+generous interest of the English for the welfare and improvement
+of my native land, may not prove without use.</p>
+<p>In choosing the title which is prefixed to my humble work, I
+have acted upon the long-established usage of my countrymen of
+speaking parabolically, a practice which has existed from the
+days of Job down to the present time.</p>
+<p><!-- page iv--><a name="pageiv"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+iv</span>I cannot conclude without offering my heartfelt thanks
+to my friend, the Rev. Wm. Frederick Witts, Fellow of
+King&rsquo;s College, Cambridge, for the valuable assistance he
+has rendered me in revising these pages for the press.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">R. A.</p>
+<p>18, <i>Cambridge-square</i>, <i>Hyde Park</i>,<br />
+
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+<i>May</i>, 1853.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><!-- page v--><a
+name="pagev"></a><span class="pagenum">p. v</span>PREFACE<br />
+<span class="smcap">to the second edition</span>.</p>
+<p>One thousand copies, which constituted the First Edition of
+this work, having been disposed of within six months, I cannot
+allow another to go forth without expressing the satisfaction I
+feel at the liberal encouragement it has met with, and the
+gratitude I entertain towards my English readers for their
+indulgence towards it.&nbsp; My acknowledgments are also due to
+the Press, for the very favourable notices with which it has been
+invariably honoured by them.</p>
+<p>The same hope which animated my labours, and induced me to
+present them to the public, still cheers me on, namely, that of
+engaging the attention and exciting the interest of the English
+nation in the fate and prospects of Syria, my beloved country: a
+land dear to every thinking mind from its sacred associations,
+and richly meriting the attention of the man of business and the
+traveller, from its undeveloped material resources, and from its
+picturesque beauty and healthy climate.</p>
+<p>I can only allude to, in order to deplore, the state of war
+which now agitates and exhausts it; but in whatever manner the
+dispute may be settled, I have confidence that England and France
+will see justice done to an outraged country; and also, that the
+patriotic cause of our government will finally triumph over its
+enemies; <!-- page vi--><a name="pagevi"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. vi</span>for, under the generous and tolerant
+sway of Abdul Medjid Khan, and his enlightened ministers, far
+more is to be effected for the welfare of every class of his
+subjects, than are likely to arise from the interference of any
+foreign power; and I am sure that the more intelligent portion of
+the Orthodox Greek population are fully aware of this, and that
+they are, as they ought to be, loyally disposed towards the
+Sultan, their sovereign.</p>
+<p>As I am now on the eve of quitting England for the East, I
+take this opportunity of publicly giving expression to my
+heartfelt sense of the uniform kindness and courtesy I have met
+with from all ranks in this mighty empire; also, of once more
+expressing the earnest hope, that when this present contest shall
+have ceased, British energy, philanthropy, and capital, may be
+induced to promote the commercial and educational development of
+the population and resources of my native land.&nbsp; She
+possesses many natural treasures&mdash;she is eager for
+improvement&mdash;she is not far distant.</p>
+<p>If to this end the following pages shall have, even in the
+smallest degree contributed, I shall enjoy the high gratification
+of believing that neither my life nor my labour has been in
+vain.</p>
+<p>Many inaccuracies, I regret to say, occurred in the First
+Edition; these I have done my best to correct.&nbsp; Should any
+(I trust no material ones) have still escaped me, I must crave my
+reader&rsquo;s indulgence for them.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>London</i>, <i>Feb.</i> 11, 1854.</p>
+<h2><!-- page vii--><a name="pagevii"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. vii</span>CONTENTS.</h2>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td><p>&nbsp;</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="smcap">Page</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center"><span
+class="smcap">Introductory Chapter</span>.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: center">&nbsp;</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page1">1</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER I.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Reminiscences of early Childhood&mdash;My
+Birth-place&mdash;Sheikh Faris Biridi&mdash;Early
+Tuition&mdash;Family Customs&mdash;Position of Shuay-f&acirc;t,
+and Pastures&mdash;Inhabitants&mdash;Author quits for Beyrout</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page5">5</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER II.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Beyrout&mdash;Piratical Attack&mdash;Flight to
+Mountains&mdash;Effects of the Assault upon the Inhabitants</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page14">14</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER III.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Damascus&mdash;Author&rsquo;s First visit
+to&mdash;Description of the Town&mdash;The Inhabitants&mdash;The
+Customs and Manners&mdash;The Ladies&mdash;Their Beauty and
+Freedom&mdash;Court-yards and
+Houses&mdash;Bazaars&mdash;Environs&mdash;Soir&eacute;es&mdash;Games&mdash;Specimens
+of Poetry and Songs&mdash;Wonderful
+Legend&mdash;Refreshments&mdash;Entertainment given by the
+British Consul&mdash;Privileges of Christians&mdash;Padre
+Tomaso&mdash;American and British
+Missions&mdash;Population&mdash;Antiquity&mdash;Ravages by
+Cholera</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page18">18</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER IV.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Return to Beyrout&mdash;American Mission&mdash;Original
+Difficulties they encountered&mdash;How overcome&mdash;The
+Estimation of Physicians&mdash;Anecdote of Mr.
+Zohrab&mdash;American Doctors&mdash;Introduction to
+School&mdash;Reminiscences of School-days&mdash;Anecdote of
+Sheikh Ahmed&mdash;Lists of Missionaries&mdash;Adventure of Mr.
+Bird&mdash;The Pacha&rsquo;s Revenge&mdash;Description of the
+Rise of the Settlement and trade at Beyrout&mdash;Climate, Hints
+with regard to</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page41">41</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center"><!-- page viii--><a
+name="pageviii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. viii</span>CHAPTER
+V.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Visit to Cyprus&mdash;Description of Voyage&mdash;Arrival
+at Larnaca&mdash;Visit to Nicosia and other towns&mdash;Cyprus
+Wines&mdash;Languages&mdash;Departure for Tersous&mdash;Arrival
+at Mersine&mdash;Scenery in Cilicia&mdash;Gardens&mdash;Buildings
+of
+Tersous&mdash;Streets&mdash;Climate&mdash;Inhabitants&mdash;Signor
+Michael Saba&mdash;Adana&mdash;Its Shops and
+Streets&mdash;Inhabitants&mdash;Fanaticism&mdash;Revolts&mdash;Pacha&rsquo;s
+Service&mdash;The Pass of Kulek
+Bughas&mdash;Scenery&mdash;Departure for Ayas</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page57">57</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER VI.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Ayas to Scanderoon&mdash;Scanderoon to
+Aleppo&mdash;Description of Journey&mdash;The
+Aleppines&mdash;Their Style and Polish&mdash;A Wedding
+described&mdash;Syrian Step-mothers&mdash;Jewish and Christian
+quarters&mdash;Earthquake of 1822&mdash;Pastimes and Garden
+Parties&mdash;Population&mdash;Commerce&mdash;Departure for
+Antioch&mdash;Gessir il Haded&mdash;Orontes&mdash;Antioch</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page71">71</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER VII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Antioch&mdash;Its Beauty and Fruitfulness&mdash;Visit to
+Suedia and Lattakia&mdash;Signor Mosi Elias&mdash;Hardships
+endured by Consular Agents&mdash;Anecdote of English
+Travellers&mdash;Uses and Abuses of the Protection
+System&mdash;Fanaticism of Moslem
+Populace&mdash;Produce&mdash;Lattakia to
+Tripoli&mdash;Oranges&mdash;Abu Rish&mdash;Signor
+Catsoflis&mdash;A fair Intercessor for Justice to the
+Injured&mdash;Results of the Appeal&mdash;Cedars of
+Lebanon&mdash;Baalbec&mdash;Anecdote of English
+Forces&mdash;Turjaman Bashi&mdash;Strange Character of Sayid
+Ali&mdash;Damascus&mdash;Djouni and Sidon&mdash;Lady
+Hesther&mdash;General Loustannau&mdash;Description of
+Sidon&mdash;Bombardment of St. Jean d&rsquo;Acre&mdash;Kaipha and
+Mount Carmel&mdash;Mistaken Ideas of Love</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page85">85</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER VIII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>First visit to England&mdash;Sail for Malta&mdash;Miseries
+of Seasickness&mdash;Arrival at Malta&mdash;The Emir
+Beschir&mdash;Late Bishop of Jerusalem&mdash;Steam Frigate
+Gorgon&mdash;Arrival at Portsmouth&mdash;Rev. Baptist
+Noel&mdash;London&mdash;Souvenir of Wimbledon&mdash;A Duel
+prevented&mdash;Anecdote of Druse Sheikh&mdash;Return to
+Syria&mdash;Sir George Otway&mdash;Arrival at Beyrout&mdash;War
+between Druses and Maronites&mdash;Stamboul&mdash;Emir Kasim, his
+History&mdash;Lord Cowley&mdash;<!-- page ix--><a
+name="pageix"></a><span class="pagenum">p. ix</span>Dr.
+Bennett&mdash;Mr. Goodall&mdash;Return to
+England&mdash;Malta&mdash;Marseilles&mdash;Adventure with French
+Officer&mdash;M. Guizot&mdash;Suliman Pacha&mdash;M.
+Thiers&mdash;Delicate Mission&mdash;Arrival in
+England&mdash;Prince Callimaki&mdash;Mr. Zohrab&mdash;Mr. B.
+Phillips&mdash;King&rsquo;s College, London&mdash;Medical
+Profession&mdash;Lectures&mdash;Frightful Accident&mdash;Long
+Illness&mdash;Admission as Member of King&rsquo;s
+College&mdash;The Mir Shahamet Ali and Sir C. Wade&mdash;Visit to
+Manufacturing Districts&mdash;Lamartine</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page122">122</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER IX.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Visit to Paris&mdash;First
+Impressions&mdash;Boulevards&mdash;Champs
+Elys&eacute;es&mdash;Description of a
+Lodging-house&mdash;Domestic Habits of the French&mdash;English
+and French Friendship&mdash;Departure for Constantinople
+<i>vi&acirc;</i> Vienna</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page164">164</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER X.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Reminiscences of
+Stamboul&mdash;Entertainments&mdash;Songs&mdash;The Tailor and
+the Sultan&mdash;The Sultan&rsquo;s Condescension&mdash;Marriage
+of the Daughter of Prince Vogiredis&mdash;Turkish
+Navy&mdash;Present Crisis&mdash;A Renegade Girl</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page170">170</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XI.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Egypt&mdash;Abbas Pasha and his Improvements&mdash;The
+British Consul-General&mdash;Mr. Abet&mdash;Mr.
+Larking&mdash;Boghas
+Bey&mdash;Antiquities&mdash;Climate&mdash;Library&mdash;Advantages
+enjoyed by European Residents&mdash;Festivities&mdash;Fulfilment
+of Prophecy&mdash;Late Gift of Horses presented by Nubar Bey to
+her Majesty&mdash;The Hon. G. Massey&mdash;Impressions made on
+the Grooms</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page184">184</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Visit to Devonshire, Bath, and Cheltenham&mdash;Visit to
+Lady Rolle&mdash;Description of Bicton&mdash;Travelling by an
+Express Train&mdash;A Coachman&rsquo;s Remarks&mdash;The
+Park&mdash;Arrival and Reception&mdash;Description of my
+Life&mdash;My Portrait taken&mdash;Amusements&mdash;Conversation
+with Mrs. P--- of Exeter about the Greek Church&mdash;English
+Young Ladies&mdash;Cottage Visiting&mdash;Buildings erected by
+Lady Rolle at Bicton&mdash;Amusing Anecdote of an Eastern
+Princess&mdash;Drive to
+Exeter&mdash;Equipage&mdash;Cathedral&mdash;Frescoes&mdash;Gaol&mdash;Child
+in Prison there&mdash;Female Department&mdash;<!-- page x--><a
+name="pagex"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+x</span>Villagers&rsquo; Opinions of me&mdash;Bath&mdash;Beauties
+of Country reminded me of
+Syria&mdash;Springs&mdash;Arrival&mdash;Sir Claude
+Wade&mdash;Tour of the City&mdash;Society&mdash;Diversity of
+Religious
+Opinions&mdash;Service&mdash;Soir&eacute;e&mdash;Agreeable
+Rencontre&mdash;Second Visit to Bath&mdash;Bachelor&rsquo;s
+Ball&mdash;Lady Mayoress&rsquo;s Ball at the
+Guildhall&mdash;Recognition as a Free-mason&mdash;Invitation to
+&ldquo;The Lodge of Honour&rdquo; to meet the Mayor&mdash;Meeting
+with Dr. Thompson&mdash;Lecture&mdash;Quoted from the
+Paper&mdash;Visit to Cheltenham&mdash;Rev. J. Brown&mdash;Rev. C.
+H. Bromley&mdash;Meeting&mdash;My Address&mdash;Appeal to send
+over for, and educate young Syrians at the Normal College at
+Cheltenham&mdash;Case of a young Syrian Lad&mdash;Lord
+Northwick&mdash;His Collection of
+Paintings&mdash;Conclusion&mdash;Reasons for appearing before the
+Public as an Author</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page197">197</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XIII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Impressions of England&mdash;Letters to a Friend in the
+East&mdash;Voyage to
+England&mdash;Landing&mdash;Custom-house&mdash;Crowded
+Thoroughfares&mdash;English
+Activity&mdash;Hotel&mdash;Servants&mdash;Drive&mdash;Motley
+Groups&mdash;Squares&mdash;Park&mdash;Houris&mdash;Heart-aches&mdash;Dinner&mdash;English
+Splendour, but Syrian Ease and a Chibuk preferred&mdash;English
+Acquaintances&mdash;Society&mdash;Young Ladies&mdash;Their
+Freedom&mdash;Matrons&mdash;Their
+Acquirements&mdash;Etiquette&mdash;Dress&mdash;Widows&mdash;Gentlemen&mdash;English
+Sabbath&mdash;Public Schools and Colleges&mdash;The
+Queen&mdash;Missionary and Charitable Institutions&mdash;Great
+Wealth of the English&mdash;The Merchants&mdash;The Fashionable
+World&mdash;The Opera&mdash;Expensive Pleasure&mdash;Insatiable
+Craving for Riches&mdash;Desire for an English
+Home&mdash;Marriages&mdash;Children&mdash;Schooling&mdash;Absence
+of Reverence for Beards&mdash;Devotion of the Young Fair Sex to
+Uniforms&mdash;Kindness to Strangers&mdash;Interest in the Holy
+Land&mdash;Hospitality&mdash;Private Worth and Public
+Scheming</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page216">216</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XIV.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Life, Manners, and Customs of Syria&mdash;Ceremonies at
+Births&mdash;Christian Names&mdash;Remedies for Infantile
+Diseases&mdash;Early Instruction and Training&mdash;Syrian
+Manners&mdash;Reverential Treatment of Priests&mdash;Personal
+Cleanliness&mdash;Education&mdash;Betrothal&mdash;Marriage&mdash;Polygamy
+of Mahommedans&mdash;Education of Girls&mdash;Household
+Maxims&mdash;Domestic Snakes&mdash;Mourning for the Dead&mdash;A
+Lover&rsquo;s Lament</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page233">233</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center"><!-- page xi--><a
+name="pagexi"></a><span class="pagenum">p. xi</span>CHAPTER
+XV.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Syria and her Inhabitants&mdash;Description of the
+Southern parts of Palestine&mdash;The Misery of its
+Inhabitants&mdash;Their Disposition and Labours&mdash;Sea-coast
+Population&mdash;Their Habits&mdash;Scriptural
+Analogy&mdash;Sidon, Lebanon, Tripoli, Lattakia and
+Antioch&mdash;The Children of those Parts&mdash;Appeal to the
+British on behalf of Syria&mdash;Real State of the Turkish
+Empire&mdash;Safety of English Investments&mdash;The Turkish
+Dominions&mdash;How to purchase Property&mdash;English Emigrants
+would be welcomed in Syria&mdash;Mr. John Barker&mdash;Colonel
+Churchill&mdash;Lady Hester
+Stanhope&mdash;Fruits&mdash;Cultivation of the
+Soil&mdash;Advantages for the English Emigrant and Amelioration
+for Syria&mdash;Major Macdonald&mdash;His Discovery of Turquoises
+and Presentation of some to the Queen&mdash;Advice to
+Emigrants&mdash;All Particulars and Expenses of Voyage explained,
+Outlay, Working, Expenditure and Profits derivable&mdash;Climate
+recommended for Health</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page259">259</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XVI.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Syria, her Inhabitants and their Religion&mdash;Religious
+Teaching in Syria&mdash;American Missionaries&mdash;Their
+Zeal&mdash;Greek or Orthodox Eastern Church&mdash;Interview and
+Conversation with the Patriarch and Bishops at
+Constantinople&mdash;Letter from Syria&mdash;The Conversion of
+the Son of a Mufti to Christianity&mdash;Lord Shaftesbury and the
+Protestant College at Malta&mdash;Mahommedan Power and the
+Christian Churches in Syria&mdash;Claims of the Orthodox Eastern
+Church and its Affinity to the Protestant Churches of
+England&mdash;The Four Patriarchs&mdash;Education of the Syrian
+Priesthood&mdash;The Service of the Orthodox Eastern
+Church&mdash;Dissenters from it&mdash;Account of Karolus their
+Patriarch&mdash;Dispute about the Head-dress and reference to
+Constantinople&mdash;Decision&mdash;Jealousies of the Christian
+Sects&mdash;Political Animosities</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page279">279</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XVII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>The Maronites&mdash;Their Political
+Position&mdash;Anecdote connected with the Year 1821&mdash;Their
+Customs, Manners, and Religion&mdash;The Number of Roman
+Catholics in Syria&mdash;The Copts&mdash;The Nestorians</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page299">299</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center"><!-- page xii--><a
+name="pagexii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. xii</span>CHAPTER
+XVIII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>The Population of Syria continued&mdash;The Metoulis or
+Heterodox Followers of Mahommed&mdash;The Druses&mdash;The
+Nosairiyeh&mdash;The Yezidees</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page317">317</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XIX.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Appearance and Costume of the People&mdash;The Aleppine
+Greeks&mdash;The Dyers&mdash;The Armenians&mdash;The Yahoodee or
+Israelites&mdash;The Turkish Effendi&mdash;The Bedouins&mdash;The
+Fellaheen</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page338">338</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XX.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>The Occupations of the People&mdash;Lebanon in
+April&mdash;The Mulberry Plantations&mdash;Anecdote&mdash;The
+Silkworms&mdash;The Wheat Harvest&mdash;Borghol&mdash;The
+Vintage&mdash;The Olive Winter&mdash;The Resources of
+Syria&mdash;The Small Capitalists in Syria</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page352">352</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XXI.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>The Comparative Influences of the Roman Catholic and
+Protestant Faiths in Syria&mdash;The Roman Catholics&mdash;Their
+Convents&mdash;Greek and Armenian Monasteries&mdash;The Knowledge
+and Practice of Medicine&mdash;The Influence of the
+Hakeem&mdash;Anecdote&mdash;Conversions&mdash;The Sisters of
+Charity</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page370">370</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XXII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>The Remedy&mdash;The Early
+Apostles&mdash;Physicians&mdash;Missionaries&mdash;Introduction
+of the Silkworm from China&mdash;Incorporation of the Medical
+with the Clerical Profession&mdash;Proposed Society to be formed
+in
+England&mdash;Hospital&mdash;School-rooms&mdash;Dispensary&mdash;Purchase
+of Land&mdash;Its Cultivation&mdash;System of
+Education&mdash;Letter of Dr. Thomson&mdash;Mr. Cuthbert
+Young&rsquo;s &ldquo;Notes of a Wayfarer&rdquo;</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page384">384</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">APPENDIX.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Notes on the Geology of Syria, by Professor Forbes</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page397">397</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<h2><!-- page 1--><a name="page1"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+1</span>INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER.</h2>
+<p>In presenting the British public with the following pages,
+containing a brief sketch of my life and travels, together with a
+description of the customs and present condition of my native
+land, I am actuated solely by motives which, I trust, a careful
+perusal of this work will prove to be disinterested.</p>
+<p>All nations are more or less patriotic; none more so than the
+inhabitants of the British isles.&nbsp; With them the inducements
+to this love of home are all-sufficient, for their religion is
+the purest, their government and laws the best in the world, and
+they are second to no people in the enjoyment of privileges and
+blessings, such as could be only enjoyed by a &ldquo;peculiar
+people,&rdquo; under the immediate protection of the Almighty
+Benefactor.&nbsp; Next to them we may rank, as promoters of
+freedom and enlightenment, the citizens of the United States,
+those other scions of a noble stock.</p>
+<p>Yet so peculiar is that innate love of man for the particular
+country and people with which are associated the early years of
+his childhood, that even the son of <!-- page 2--><a
+name="page2"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 2</span>utter darkness,
+born and bred a savage, inured to every hardship and privation,
+who boasts of no city, scarcely professes a religion, whose home
+is the desert waste, his bed the warm sands of Arabia, even he,
+the wild Bedouin, in his untutored heart, sets boundless store by
+the place and people to which early attachment has rivetted his
+affections.&nbsp; Separate him from these and from his beloved
+mare, and no riches or pleasures could compensate him for the
+loss.&nbsp; This is also applicable to the humble and oftentimes
+oppressed natives who dwell in the towns and villages of Syria,
+Lebanon, and Palestine.&nbsp; Though for centuries they have been
+subjected to the heavy yoke of bondage, and of late years, like
+the Israelites of old, were bondsmen to Egypt; however much they
+may have deplored their hard fate, none have ever dreamt of
+quitting the dear land of their forefathers&mdash;those ancestors
+who were coeval with the patriarchs.&nbsp; Some till the ground
+where Abraham once tended his flocks; others cut timber where the
+men of Hiram and Solomon once hewed cedars for the temple at
+Jerusalem; but the boast and glory of all these is, that they
+dwell in the land where the Promise was fulfilled.&nbsp; One may
+be by birth a Nazarene, another a townsman of Cana.&nbsp; A day
+or two&rsquo;s journey enables him to reach that very Bethlehem
+where the blessed Redeemer was born, to track His holy footsteps
+in His pilgrimage of mercy from place to place, to weep and
+bemoan Him on the site of the last closing scenes of His holy
+life, and to raise up their hearts with grateful thanksgivings
+for the great salvation wrought out for their souls by His
+glorious resurrection.</p>
+<p>Apart from these cherished associations of the spiritual with
+the temporal world, the native of the Holy <!-- page 3--><a
+name="page3"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 3</span>Land is fondly
+attached to his country, because its climate is congenial to his
+manners, its soil productive, its inhabitants hospitable, its
+waters the purest, air the freshest, sun the brightest, fruits
+the most delicious, and flowers the sweetest and most wildly
+profuse.&nbsp; All these gifts in the greatest luxuriance are to
+be found within the Lebanon range&mdash;that Lebanon of which the
+inspired bard, the wisest of men and the best of kings, sings in
+his beautiful metaphor on Christian love. <a
+name="citation3"></a><a href="#footnote3"
+class="citation">[3]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;Thy plants are an orchard
+of pomegranates with pleasant fruits. . .&nbsp; A fountain of
+gardens, a well of living waters, and streams from
+Lebanon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With such a past to dwell on, it is not surprising that the
+poor, neglected peasant of Syria may still proudly vaunt himself
+of his birthright and country.&nbsp; I, too, hope, kind reader,
+for your sympathy in my sharing this national characteristic, and
+for endeavouring, as far as in me lies, to promote the welfare,
+both temporal and eternal, of my fellow countrymen and native
+land.&nbsp; The former, alas! are gradually sinking deeper and
+deeper into the meshes of superstition and idolatry; the latter
+groans under a heavy yoke, rendered still less supportable by the
+grossest ignorance.&nbsp; The indefatigable propagators of the
+Romish faith are arousing the people from their pristine
+ignorance, only, I fear, to plunge them into a more fearful
+vortex of errors.</p>
+<p>I rush to the rescue; for God has blessed me far above my
+countrymen, by shedding the true light of the Gospel around my
+pathway, through the instrumentality of good and holy men, whom
+He has chosen for His especial service, and who have bestowed on
+me the priceless boon of a Christian education.&nbsp; I am <!--
+page 4--><a name="page4"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+4</span>willing and anxious to devote every hour of my life, and
+all my poor means, to the furtherance of His cause.&nbsp; Yet,
+though much may combine in my favour, I am inadequate to the
+accomplishment of the good I desire for my country, without the
+aid, wise counsel, and support of the Christian inhabitants of
+Great Britain.</p>
+<p>Reader! in the following pages I have endeavoured to depict as
+clearly as I can the evil and the remedy.&nbsp; I have glanced
+over the leading features of my life, to show how circumstances,
+trivial in themselves, appear to have combined in my favour, that
+I should be an humble instrument in the hands of my Maker, to
+work out a brighter and better hope for dear Syria.</p>
+<p>That &ldquo;pearl of great price,&rdquo; pure Christianity,
+has been cherished and nurtured within these isles till the true
+faith has reared itself up like a mighty mirror, reflecting the
+glorious light of the blessed truths of the Gospel far and
+wide.&nbsp; May one beam of charity, reflected from thence,
+alight upon the mother church of Syria&mdash;that church now sunk
+in misery and degradation, but from which (remember, O Christian
+of Great Britain) was derived the glorious knowledge of an
+eternal salvation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Thistle that <i>is</i> in Lebanon&rdquo; is the
+harassed, weak, yet simple disciple of the Eastern Church; and
+&ldquo;the Cedar that was in Lebanon&rdquo; is the true Church of
+Christ, whose seeds were first derived from those Holy shores,
+and are now firmly rooted in England.&nbsp; The Thistle has sent
+to ask thy daughter, Enlightenment, in marriage to her son,
+Simplicity.&nbsp; O refuse her not lest the <i>wild beast</i> in
+Lebanon should tread down the Thistle and obtain the
+ascendancy.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 5--><a name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+5</span>CHAPTER I.<br />
+SCENES OF EARLY CHILDHOOD.</h2>
+<p>My earliest recollections are associated with the lovely and
+rural village of Shuay-f&acirc;t, my birth-place, on the Lebanon;
+and where, if not the happiest, certainly the most innocent years
+of my childhood were passed.&nbsp; My late father had no fixed
+residence at that place, but he, with the rest of his family,
+usually resorted there to spend the summer months and part of the
+autumn and spring.&nbsp; In winter the cold became intense, owing
+to the elevated position of the village; consequently most of its
+inhabitants and summer visitors, including amongst these latter
+my own family, invariably wintered at Beyrout.&nbsp; My uncle,
+Sheikh Faris Biridi, filled the important and respected post of
+<i>katib</i>, or secretary to the Emir Beshir Shahab, the late
+prince of Lebanon, who resided at the village of Deyr-al Kamar,
+situated a few hours&rsquo; journey from Shuay-f&acirc;t.&nbsp;
+At least three times a week my uncle&rsquo;s duties compelled him
+to visit the Emir.&nbsp; Sheikh Faris was universally respected
+amongst the villagers; his house was the best&mdash;his grounds
+the most extensive, and he himself in reality, an intelligent and
+well-informed man.&nbsp; For a Syrian, he was deeply read and
+well skilled in the use of his pen; but above <!-- page 6--><a
+name="page6"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 6</span>all, he was an
+earnest and devout Christian, a kind father, and a good
+friend&mdash;virtues which gained for him the esteem and love of
+all the neighbouring villagers, as well Moslems and Druses as the
+Christians.</p>
+<p>Under the favourable auspices of this kind man&rsquo;s
+tuition, I first learned to read and write my native tongue; and,
+as I was afterwards informed, even at that early age, gave
+cheering proofs of an active mind, and evinced an aptitude and
+love for the acquirement of knowledge.&nbsp; I could not possibly
+have had a better guide, both as regards precept and
+example.&nbsp; So long as I remained under his hospitable roof,
+his great and chief care was to richly stock my young mind with
+doctrines well adapted to promote the welfare of the soul in
+after years on all important business.&nbsp; His household
+arrangements were an example for others.&nbsp; He was an early
+riser himself, and insisted on all his household following this
+healthful practice: his maxim was that sleep was for the dark
+hours of the night&mdash;work and recreation for the
+light&mdash;prayers and thanksgivings for all seasons.</p>
+<p>My uncle was accustomed when at home to repair every morning,
+during the spring and summer seasons, to the top of a
+neighbouring hill, which commanded a view over an extensive range
+of country.&nbsp; On these occasions it was my wont to accompany
+him.&nbsp; A servant preceded us carrying a small carpet and a
+cushion or two; I carried my uncle&rsquo;s pipe and tobacco-pouch
+with flint, steel, and tinder, in one hand; in the other, the
+Kitab Mukaddas, or Arabic Bible, printed in England, by the
+Church Missionary Society.&nbsp; As soon as my uncle had seated
+himself, and assumed his pipe, he would make me sit at his feet
+and read out to him from the good Book, illustrating and
+commenting as opportunity occurred.&nbsp; The hundred and fourth
+Psalm, than which <!-- page 7--><a name="page7"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 7</span>none could be better suited to the
+time and place, was usually his favourite.</p>
+<p>From our elevated position, we could command a view, not only
+of our own dearly cherished and beautiful hamlet, but also of
+many of the surrounding villages.&nbsp; At our feet lay
+Shuay-f&acirc;t, with its neat little cottages and cleanly swept
+court-yards, surrounded by a dense little forest of mulberries,
+oranges, lemons, apricots, olives, countless vines, and many
+other fruits; the dark leaves of an occasional poplar lending
+variety to the beauty and shading of the foliage.&nbsp; Not a
+man, woman, or child, moved to and fro in the narrow little
+streets, but their names and occupations were well known to
+us.&nbsp; The dogs wagged their tails in happy recognition of my
+shrill sharp whistle, and a thousand echoes caught up the
+signal.&nbsp; The verdant hills and valleys that surrounded us
+were thickly dotted with cattle and sheep contentedly browsing
+upon the rich pasturage.&nbsp; Peeping over the densely wooded
+plantations, the tops of the little whitewashed houses pointed
+out the locality of some well-known village.&nbsp; Clear streams
+of water sparkling in the glowing sunlight, often intersected the
+plains and valleys, or rushed headlong down the steep sides of
+some deep dell, abounding with wild flowers and myrtle
+bushes.&nbsp; Far below, where the distant fields in square
+patches of variegated hues, green bespangled with blue and
+crimson flowers; sometimes covered, like a sheet of pure gold,
+with countless buttercups, and sometimes in uncultivated patches
+of sombre brown; but what I most dearly loved to gaze at was the
+broad blue sea in the distance, looking so pleasantly cool and
+calm, with here and there a patch of deeper blue, where the
+breeze sportively ruffled the waves.&nbsp; I always thought of
+Nabiy <!-- page 8--><a name="page8"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+8</span>Yunas <a name="citation8"></a><a href="#footnote8"
+class="citation">[8]</a> and the great fish, and wondered if many
+such fish were yet taking their pastime in the deep.&nbsp; How
+little I imagined at that time that I was destined to traverse
+those mighty waters, and to suffer myself to be borne away on
+their waves hundreds of miles from shore, exposed to raging
+tempests in a fragile bark!&nbsp; Such a notion would then have
+been scouted by all my friends; and I myself should have been
+foremost in deriding the idea, and in opposing, that which has
+since proved conducive to my best interests, temporal, and I
+trust eternal; but I was then a child, and understood and acted
+as a child.</p>
+<p>From this pleasant spot, my uncle gazed with rapture upon the
+surrounding scenery, as the first rays of the sun peered above
+the snow-capped peaks of lofty Lebanon, and spread a golden
+mantle over the vast panorama; from my childhood, I have known
+how to appreciate the beauties of nature in all their poetry; and
+I admire them still, but with a milder and more subdued
+admiration.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He sendeth the springs into the valleys, which run
+among the hills.&rdquo;&nbsp; This was a portion of a
+morning&rsquo;s reading lesson; the force and beauty of the verse
+were illustrated by everything around me.&nbsp; My worthy
+preceptor would impress this fact upon my mind.&nbsp; The men,
+the cattle, the trees, shrubs, flowers, birds, butterflies, even
+the most insignificant insect that crawls upon the
+earth&mdash;all these are preserved, he argued, by the bounty and
+beneficence of the Creator&mdash;without this water how would
+nature subsist?&nbsp; In short the whole of that delightful Psalm
+seemed as though expressly composed to illustrate the country
+around us, especially <!-- page 9--><a name="page9"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 9</span>that passage which says, &ldquo;The
+cedars of Lebanon, which he hath planted; where the birds make
+their nests.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thus profitably and pleasantly the early hours of the day
+would be consumed.&nbsp; I was then dismissed with sage advice,
+to remember throughout the day what I had read and heard; and my
+uncle being called away by his avocations, I was left to amuse
+myself with my play-mates in the village, until the hour of noon
+summoned us to our substantial mid-day meal.&nbsp; Like most
+boys, we were prone to mischief.&nbsp; I remember a favourite
+game amongst the village lads, which occasionally terminated in a
+squabble, and was known by the name of Al Cadi, or The
+Judge.&nbsp; The Cadi was chosen by lot, as were the officers of
+his court, and the imaginary plaintiffs and defendants.&nbsp;
+Squatted on the ground, under the pleasant shade of some
+mulberry-tree, we then held a court.&nbsp; Sentence was recorded
+and executed; and sometimes the boy who personated the imaginary
+criminal was sentenced to be bastinadoed.&nbsp; On these
+occasions, the executioners laid about them so smartly with the
+light switches of the mulberry and olive, that though the
+boy&rsquo;s shoes were never removed, the lash penetrated to the
+sole of the foot, and then the pretended culprit, smarting from
+pain, would lose all command over his temper; a
+<i>mel&eacute;e</i> would ensue, which outraged the dignity of
+the court, and usually terminated by all the members, the Cadi
+included, being summarily whipped for their naughtiness.</p>
+<p>When the hour of mid-day was announced by the striking of
+gongs, which in Syria are usually substituted for bells at some
+churches, all our family assembled for <i>futar</i>, and my uncle
+would enter, followed by the peasants employed about his
+plantations, together with his other <!-- page 10--><a
+name="page10"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+10</span>servants.&nbsp; This was the signal for the cook and her
+assistant to carry into the centre of the yard a large iron
+cauldron, containing the <i>ruzz-mufalfal</i>, or whatever was
+prepared for the day for the supply of the whole household.&nbsp;
+Clean shining platters were ranged in piles round this cauldron,
+and a blessing having been first asked, the food was ladled
+out&mdash;a goodly portion for each&mdash;enough and no
+waste.&nbsp; The only distinguishing mark at this family meal
+was, that the members of my uncle&rsquo;s family were all seated
+round a low circular table, and reclined upon carpets and against
+cushions.&nbsp; The others sat where their fancy dictated; but
+they chiefly crowded under that side of the court-yard wall which
+afforded a shade from the heat of the sun.&nbsp; In addition to
+the contents of the cauldron, there was generally a dish of
+stewed meat and vegetables; or (if the season was Lent), of the
+egg-vegetable, or <i>batinjan</i>, and the vegetable-marrow,
+sliced and fried in oil&mdash;with as many cucumbers, pickles,
+lettuces, radishes, and young onions, as any one wished and asked
+for.&nbsp; During the repast, one of the servants usually stood
+at the door to watch for any poor wayfarers who might pass, to
+ask them to partake of our hospitality.&nbsp; When all had
+finished, the fragments were divided into equal portions amongst
+the cats and dogs of the establishment; and what was left by them
+was given to the fowls and sparrows.&nbsp; Our evening meal
+differed but little from that of the morning, except on days when
+the national dish of <i>Kubbee</i> <a name="citation10"></a><a
+href="#footnote10" class="citation">[10]</a> superseded
+everything else.&nbsp; Then we had <!-- page 11--><a
+name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 11</span>Kubbees in
+soup made of <i>laban</i>, or curdled milk, and Kubbees fried,
+and Kubbees baked; for the Syrian can never tire of eating of
+this delicious dish.&nbsp; The interval between mid-day and the
+evening was occupied variously&mdash;but first came the
+indispensable siesta, indulged in by men, women, and
+children.&nbsp; The men would then return to their respective
+labours, while the women occupied themselves in household
+matters, and most of the children were sent to the village
+school; but for myself, my afternoons were occupied with our
+family spiritual adviser, an excellent old man, who came daily
+and instructed me, from the hours of two to four <span
+class="smcap">p.m.</span>&nbsp; After supper, my uncle would sit
+in state and receive the visits of the neighbours, who usually
+dropped in for an hour or two every evening.&nbsp; They sat and
+smoked, and talked about agricultural matters or village affairs;
+and sometimes one of the party would tell an amusing story, and
+another would sing a song&mdash;sweetmeats, coffee, and other
+refreshments being from time to time handed round&mdash;and thus
+the evenings would be spent in pleasant harmless enjoyment.&nbsp;
+This, with very little variety, is a faithful picture of what was
+our every-day life at Shuay-f&acirc;t: and so passed the years of
+my infancy.</p>
+<p>I have omitted to make any personal allusion to the various
+members of my family.&nbsp; I hope, however, that I shall be
+pardoned in making a slight reference to my uncle&rsquo;s lovely
+daughters, nine in number; these fair cousins of mine outrivalled
+each other in beauty and amiable qualities, and each had a trait
+of beauty peculiar to herself.&nbsp; In Syria, it is the custom
+to distinguish the various members of a family by a soubriquet,
+which has reference to some perfection or failing.&nbsp; Thus our
+groom, Yusuf, who limped a little, was called
+&ldquo;<i>Topal</i>,&rdquo; or the lame; and one of my cousins,
+&ldquo;<i>Al Shams</i>,&rdquo; or the sun, <!-- page 12--><a
+name="page12"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 12</span>owing to her
+very bright eyes; whilst another, who had mild blue eyes, was
+designated, &ldquo;<i>Al Kamar</i>,&rdquo; or the moon.&nbsp;
+<i>Al Kamar</i> was so noted for her beauty and sweet
+disposition, that two of the chiefs of Lebanon sought her hand in
+marriage&mdash;and this, though they had never seen her; but
+<i>Al Kamar</i> was not ambitious of honors and riches.&nbsp; The
+creed of the sheikhs also differed widely from her own; so she
+refused them both.&nbsp; All these nine daughters are now married
+and settled in life; so I take leave of them with a fervent
+prayer, that the Almighty may graciously watch over them, and
+crown their end with eternal happiness.</p>
+<p>Shuay-f&acirc;t, like most of the surrounding villages,
+produces a large quantity of silk; but it is in particular
+celebrated for the excellence of its wine, its olives, and
+olive-oil.&nbsp; Of the first, I can affirm, that I have, in
+after-years, heard good judges of wine, when quoting its
+excellence, refer to it as verifying the words of Hosea (xiv. 7),
+&ldquo;The scent thereof shall be as the wine of
+Lebanon.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is certainly very odoriferous.&nbsp; The
+olives and olive-oil are not to be surpassed in all Syria.</p>
+<p>The inhabitants, both men and women, are a fine, healthy
+people, and the males are particularly athletic.&nbsp; To
+describe them well, I cannot use better or more appropriate
+language than that of the prophet Ezekiel (xxxi. 3),
+&ldquo;Behold, the Assyrian was a cedar in Lebanon with fair
+branches, and with a shadowing shroud, and of a high
+stature.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yet with all these combined advantages, of health, a delicious
+climate, and a fertile soil, many of the poor peasants are
+oppressed and miserable.&nbsp; This arises from the iniquitous
+system of extortion practised on them by land-owners and
+subordinate officers.&nbsp; It must, however, <!-- page 13--><a
+name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 13</span>be confessed,
+that the mountaineers are, to a certain extent, more independent
+than the inhabitants of the plains, who are ridden over roughshod
+by the petty and tyrannical under-strappers in office.</p>
+<p>I had barely attained my tenth year, when, much to my grief, I
+was removed from the family of my kind uncle, and taken to
+Beyrout, there permanently to reside; but, alas for short-sighted
+mortals, an event was even then brewing, which burst like a
+tempest, over the Beyroutines, and which materially affected my
+father&rsquo;s plans and wishes with regard to my future career
+in life.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 14--><a name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+14</span>CHAPTER II.<br />
+PIRATICAL ATTACK ON BEYROUT.</h2>
+<p>Months rolled on.&nbsp; Merchants were at that period carrying
+on a comparatively thriving trade at Beyrout.&nbsp; The novelty
+of the scene that presented itself on my first arrival there had
+gradually worn off.&nbsp; In my leisure hours I rambled along the
+sandy beach, gathering shells, and wading ankle deep into the
+surf, at first with ill-suppressed fear and trembling; but the
+example of other boys emboldening me to venture into the water, I
+finished by becoming quite an adept in the art of swimming.&nbsp;
+Then the ships were a source of wonder and surprise, as they
+sailed in and out of the harbour, like gigantic swans floating
+over the waves.&nbsp; These also had ceased to excite interest,
+for I had been on board, handled the tarry ropes, walked the
+deck, and suffered inconvenience from the disagreeable motion, so
+that these also had ceased to be a marvel.&nbsp; Thus time rolled
+on, and I had well nigh forgotten all my regrets at leaving
+Lebanon and the hospitable abode of my uncle, when the unexpected
+event alluded to in the foregoing chapter, transpired.</p>
+<p>It was on Palm Sunday, in, I think, the year 1828.&nbsp; The
+harbour had been deserted for some few days; there was not even
+an Arab boat at the anchorage: and on <!-- page 15--><a
+name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 15</span>the eventful
+evening I am now describing, the eye might have vainly swept the
+horizon seeking for indications of an approaching sail.&nbsp;
+This, however, was no uncommon event in those days, when the
+commerce of Beyrout was yet in its infancy.&nbsp; None imagined,
+on retiring to rest that night, that impending danger was so
+close at hand.&nbsp; Midnight had, however, scarcely chimed, and
+the last occupant of the latest open coffee-house crept home to
+his hovel, when a tumult arose, and the night air was filled with
+shrieks and lamentations, mingled with the startling reports of
+fire-arms.&nbsp; There was a rush in the streets of many people
+running for their lives; and all the inmates of my father&rsquo;s
+household being now thoroughly awakened, ran out also, and joined
+the flying multitude.&nbsp; The Bab Yacoob, leading to Damascus
+and Lebanon, was open and unguarded.&nbsp; We fled with the
+concourse towards the mountains, favored in our retreat by the
+obscurity of the night; nor did any one think of stopping to
+breathe or repose till they had gained the summit of one of the
+neighbouring hills.&nbsp; Here, finding no signs of pursuit, and
+the clamour and report of fire-arms having died away in the
+distance, the frightened populace halted anxiously to await the
+first dawn of day, which was to enable them to secure their
+retreat to the neighbouring villages.&nbsp; All were totally
+ignorant as to the cause of the sudden panic, but many laboured
+under the absurd notion that the place had been attacked by
+Russian troops.&nbsp; None, however, stopped to be better
+informed on the subject; but, renewing their flight with the
+first light of morning, each betook himself and family to that
+village with which he was best acquainted; and for the next few
+weeks the Lebanon district was inundated with the scared refugees
+from Beyrout.</p>
+<p><!-- page 16--><a name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+16</span>As for ourselves, we directed our steps to
+Shuay-f&acirc;t, and accomplished the journey as best we could;
+arriving there weary and half-famished, to the utter astonishment
+and dismay of my uncle&rsquo;s household, who were at first quite
+at a loss to account for our sudden appearance in so pitiable a
+condition.&nbsp; Soon after our arrival, official intelligence
+reached the mountains of what had transpired.&nbsp; A ruffianly
+horde of piratical Greeks, allured by the hopes of meeting with
+rich booty, had made this sudden descent upon the peaceful and
+unsuspecting inhabitants.&nbsp; They had entered the town without
+resistance, and once in possession of the Quai, had
+unhesitatingly commenced the work of despoliation.&nbsp; Whole
+warehouses were stripped&mdash;money and rich jewellery carried
+off&mdash;murder and every atrocious crime, the offspring of
+villany, had been perpetrated.&nbsp; To secure the gold coins and
+jewellery worn by the women on their heads, wrists, and ankles,
+the wretches never hesitated to make use of the knife; and
+ear-rings were wrenched forcibly from the ears of the hapless
+victims.&nbsp; When the pirates were satiated with plunder, they
+broke and destroyed what was left; and then, setting fire to
+different parts of the town, they betook themselves with their
+booty to their boats, and thus disappeared.&nbsp; Luckily for
+house-owners, most of the buildings were constructed of solid
+masonry, with domes and vaulted roofs, so that the fire, even
+where it had ignited, speedily exhausted its impotent rage.&nbsp;
+The Moslem rabble, disguised as Greeks, also joined in the
+general foray.</p>
+<p>By this calamity all the residents at Beyrout suffered more or
+less.&nbsp; Many were utterly ruined; and my poor father&rsquo;s
+losses were so severe, that he at first wholly relinquished the
+idea of ever returning to that place.&nbsp; <!-- page 17--><a
+name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 17</span>For many
+months afterwards we resided at Shuay-f&acirc;t; but here also an
+outbreak amongst the mountaineers disturbed us again, and we were
+compelled to retrace our steps to Beyrout, which place, from that
+day forward, became my home.</p>
+<p>With regard to the marauders, they escaped scot-free and were
+neither detected nor punished, as this took place at the time of
+the Greek revolution and the battle of Navarino, when the
+government were doubtless too much occupied to notice it.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 18--><a name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+18</span>CHAPTER III.<br />
+DESCRIPTION OF DAMASCUS.</h2>
+<p>It now became necessary that I should seek out and steadfastly
+follow up some fixed profession or calling in life.&nbsp; There
+was more than one motive that urged this measure upon me as a
+necessity: in the first place, my father&rsquo;s resources had
+been sadly crippled by the piratical affair; besides, I was of an
+age when youths in Syria earn their own livelihood, and my
+education was sufficiently advanced to enable me to enter upon
+the duties of life.&nbsp; I could read and write my own language;
+and this was all that was expected, and much more than many
+youths of my age could boast.&nbsp; I had no thought then of
+acquiring a knowledge of foreign languages.&nbsp; To escape from
+the thraldom of school is always a source of great delight to
+schoolboys.</p>
+<p>As far as my own views went, I was bent upon going to
+Damascus; and though my dear parents opposed this wish at first,
+I gradually coaxed them into a consenting mood; and perhaps the
+greatest inducement for them to yield to my wishes, was the fact
+of our having a wealthy and influential friend, then residing at
+Damascus, who had been a fellow-<i>katib</i> of my uncle&rsquo;s,
+and who occupied a high post in the service of the Pasha.</p>
+<p>To this worthy man&rsquo;s care I was confided; and, taking
+leave of my dear parents, and accompanied by their <!-- page
+19--><a name="page19"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+19</span>blessing, I left Beyrout, and proceeded to Damascus; a
+city which existed before the patriarch Abraham&rsquo;s time,
+being referred to as a well-known place, in Gen. xiv.&nbsp; It
+was the chief city of Syria, founded by Rezin, and was sacked by
+Jeroboam II., king of Israel.&nbsp; It is still a comparatively
+thriving and populous city, and has those natural resources of
+climate, soil, and abundance of water, which cannot fail to
+perpetuate its fame as the garden of the East.&nbsp; Here,
+shortly after my arrival, I was fortunate enough, through the
+influence of our friend, to procure a lucrative and rising
+situation.&nbsp; At this place I remained a considerable time,
+delighted with its climate and beauty, as also well pleased with
+my office and with my associates.</p>
+<p>No pen can give an adequate idea of the delights of
+Damascus.&nbsp; The nearest approach I can hope to make to a
+truthful description, will be simply to depict what I saw and
+experienced; and this perhaps will give the stranger a better
+conception of the place than the flowery rhapsodies of many of
+those writers, whose experience, resulting from a visit of a few
+days, has been skilfully converted into some dozen chapters of
+post octavo.</p>
+<p>Damascus, like most Eastern towns, has nothing to boast of in
+the outside appearance of its rough unwhitewashed houses.&nbsp;
+Its streets are narrow, dark and intricate&mdash;crowds of
+people&mdash;caravans of camels&mdash;mules&mdash;and troops of
+donkeys&mdash;are all perpetually on the move, though not with
+that rapidity of locomotion so striking to a foreigner on his
+first visit to London.</p>
+<p>The stranger is struck dumb with amazement and
+disappointment.&nbsp; He has heard so much and he sees so little,
+that his first exclamation is sure to be, &ldquo;Can this really
+be Sham-al Sharif?&mdash;the much praised Damascus;<!-- page
+20--><a name="page20"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+20</span>&mdash;the so-styled paradise of the East!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Yes, stranger, this is the justly celebrated Damascus; but the
+secret cause of your amazement lies hid as the kernel in the
+shell of a nut, the outer surface of which is the walls of the
+houses, while within lies concealed the sweet kernel.&nbsp; Open
+the street-door of rough and unpolished wood; and after carefully
+closing the same, as if by magic, the whole train of your
+thoughts and your discontentment will be diverted into another
+channel, and you will be struck with surprise and admiration, as
+the hidden beauties of the city will then burst upon your
+view.&nbsp; The same may be said with regard to the ladies of
+Damascus, notoriously the handsomest women in the
+East&mdash;Houris, whose bright eyes have afforded an endless
+theme for the poet&rsquo;s song!&nbsp; Forms carefully enveloped
+in white and coloured <i>izars</i>&mdash;features muffled up and
+completely disguised by white veils!&nbsp; That man must needs be
+a magician who could identify even his own wife or sister from
+amidst the herd of ghostly figures continually flitting to and
+fro in the streets; though now and then some Eastern
+<i>akruti</i> (coquette), may even here be found slily contriving
+to allow the light of her sparkling eyes to beam through this
+dark screen.&nbsp; Here also is the same mystery, and the beauty
+lies concealed within the outer shell.</p>
+<p>Now standing in a spacious quadrangle, exquisitely paved with
+marble, we take a hasty survey of all around us.&nbsp; In the
+centre is a square basin of clear crystal-like water, in which
+gold and silver fish are playfully swimming about; and in the
+middle of this <i>birkat</i> a fountain continually throws its
+sportive jets to return in showers of pearls upon the many pretty
+little flowers that are planted round the borders.&nbsp; An
+arcade, supported by elegant columns, runs round three sides; and
+the fourth <!-- page 21--><a name="page21"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 21</span>side of the quadrangle is occupied by
+the lower apartments of the house.&nbsp; The <i>corna</i> (or
+cornices), are all ornamented with Arabic inscriptions, both in
+poetry and prose, being invariably Scripture texts. <a
+name="citation21a"></a><a href="#footnote21a"
+class="citation">[21a]</a>&nbsp; In little <i>fistakiares</i>, or
+parterres, walled in with marble slabs, a few choice orange and
+lemon trees are carefully cultivated; and it is difficult to say
+whether the sweet odour of their blossoms is not rivalled, or
+even surpassed, by the delicious fragrance of the roses and rich
+<i>Baghdad ful</i> (or dwarf jessamine), which so thickly cluster
+about their roots.&nbsp; Of the interior of such a mansion no one
+could have given a better idea than did His Excellency Mahomed
+Pasha, <a name="citation21b"></a><a href="#footnote21b"
+class="citation">[21b]</a> the late ambassador to the court of
+St. James&rsquo;s, who, during his residence in London, gave
+several balls, having some of the apartments at the Embassy, so
+fitted up, as exactly to resemble the interior of a house at
+Damascus.&nbsp; These rooms were the leading topic of chit chat
+among the fashionables of London for many weeks afterwards.</p>
+<p>I must crave the reader&rsquo;s permission to conduct him into
+one of these houses; and in so doing to introduce him to the
+<i>mistaba</i>, or alcove, in the centre, from the back of which
+two trellised windows overlook a spacious fruit garden.&nbsp; A
+low divan runs round its three sides, while a soft carpet covers
+the marble floor.&nbsp; The cushions, and even the divan itself,
+are of the richest velvet stuffs: and the numerous
+<i>&eacute;tag&egrave;res</i> in the <i>mistaba</i> are filled
+with costly glass-ware, crystal cups, and elegant porcelain
+vases.&nbsp; On each side is a tray, covered with a snowy napkin,
+the edges <!-- page 22--><a name="page22"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 22</span>worked with gold and silver flowers,
+upon one are handsome <i>finjans</i> in filigree, silver
+coffee-cups and sugar-basins; on the other, cut-glass saucers
+full of delicious candied sweetmeats, of which the orange-flower,
+violet and rose are the most fragrant.&nbsp; Both trays rest on
+low stools, the feet of which are elegantly carved.&nbsp; One of
+the adjoining rooms is fitted up with handsome <i>narghilies</i>,
+and long pipes with amber mouth-pieces of great value.&nbsp; In
+this room there is also a small <i>mangal</i>, or brazier, in
+which a charcoal fire is perpetually burning for the double
+purpose of boiling the often-required coffee, and of supplying
+the smokers with fire for their pipes, or
+<i>narghilies</i>.&nbsp; Servants are constantly in attendance in
+this room, and the arrival of a visitor is the signal for
+activity amongst them.&nbsp; Lemonade is first offered, and then
+smoking materials are put in requisition; after this, the
+sweetmeats are handed round; and lastly, coffee is served. <a
+name="citation22"></a><a href="#footnote22"
+class="citation">[22]</a></p>
+<p>In a Pasha&rsquo;s house, when people call on official
+business, the appearance of coffee is a quiet hint to be off, or
+in other words, denotes a termination of that morning&rsquo;s
+visit.&nbsp; The visitor sips his coffee, returns the
+<i>finjan</i> to the attendant slave, touches heart, mouth and
+head to the Pasha, and then bows himself out.&nbsp; The room
+opposite to this smoking apartment, is usually the dormitory of
+the servants; its outside appearance is handsome, and the closed
+door is tastefully carved and painted, but the interior is by no
+means inviting&mdash;heaps <!-- page 23--><a
+name="page23"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 23</span>of mattrasses
+are piled up on all sides, and perchance even a small store of
+provisions for domestic consumption.&nbsp; In this respect this
+lumber-room is quite different to the usual appearance of things
+in Damascus, for the outside is the best-looking part of
+it.&nbsp; So much for the interior of the houses; now let us see
+how the ladies look when they are within doors, and have laid
+aside the <i>izar</i> and odious black handkerchief.&nbsp; We
+will first describe the daughter of the host; a very fair
+specimen of her sex in Damascus.&nbsp; Her eyes are beautifully
+dark, her eyelashes, eyebrows, and hair, of a glossy jet black,
+the latter tinged with <i>henna</i>, hangs down her back and
+reaches nearly to the ground in a succession of plaits, each
+terminating with black silk braid, knotted and interwoven with
+various sized golden coins, her features (excepting the eyes) are
+all small but compact.&nbsp; The nose is Grecian, the lips
+cherry, and slightly pouting, the chin dimpled, the form of the
+face oval, and the complexion clear with a rosy tint.&nbsp; The
+bust and figure are unexceptionable, the arms comely, the wrists
+and ankles well turned, and the feet and hands perfect models for
+a sculptor; yet this is one out of the many nondescript beings
+that we encountered out of doors covered with <i>izar</i> and
+veil.&nbsp; Her face and figure are well set off by the
+head-dress and Oriental costume.&nbsp; On the top of her head she
+wears a small red cap, which is encircled by a handsomely
+flowered handkerchief, and over the latter strings of pearls and
+pieces of small gold money are tastefully arranged in
+festoons.&nbsp; In the centre of her red cap is a diamond
+crescent, from which hangs a long golden cord, with a blue silk
+tassel, usually ornamented with pearls: her vest fits tight, and
+admirably displays the unlaced figure.&nbsp; In summer, this vest
+is of blue or pink satin, bordered and fringed with gold <!--
+page 24--><a name="page24"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+24</span>lace; in winter, cloth, edged with fur, is substituted
+for the satin; and over the vest is worn a short grey jacket,
+chastely embroidered with black silk braid.&nbsp; The vest is
+confined to the waist by a <i>zunnar</i>, in summer, of a silk
+Tripoli scarf, in winter by a costly Cashmere shawl; and from
+under this a long robe reaches to her ankles, and is divided into
+two long lappels, lined with satin, and fringed with costly
+trimmings.&nbsp; This latter robe partially conceals the
+<i>shirwal</i>, or full trowsers, which hang loosely over, and
+are fastened round the ankles; the tastey mixture of colors, and
+the graceful arrangement renders the costume a perfect
+study.&nbsp; Latterly, European shoes have been much used by the
+Damascene ladies, especially those gaily-flowered kid shoes,
+imported into Syria from Marseilles.&nbsp; This completes the
+young lady&rsquo;s toilet, and her walk and action are as
+graceful as her figure and face are prepossessing; but beyond the
+<i>naam</i> (yes) and <i>la</i> (no) of conversation, you can
+seldom get a word from her unless you are a very intimate friend
+of the family, and then these young ladies are as fond of a
+little romping or quizzing as their more accomplished and more
+elegant sisters of the North.&nbsp; It is a mistake to imagine
+that the men of the Turkish empire are wholly excluded from any
+friendly intercourse with the women of those countries, a tale
+which has gained credence, and been perseveringly maintained by
+travellers, few of whom have ever had an opportunity of testing
+the truth of the report by personal experience.&nbsp; In fact, in
+my opinion, the Eastern ladies have really far more liberty than
+their Northern sisters, inasmuch as they are able when veiled
+with the <i>izar</i>, to go where they please.&nbsp; These
+<i>izars</i> being of the same form and colour, it is almost
+impossible to identify an individual; and a man may pass even his
+own wife, without recognising <!-- page 25--><a
+name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 25</span>her.&nbsp; In
+illustration of this, I am tempted to give the following story,
+for the authenticity of which I can vouch.&nbsp; The wife of a
+Mahomedan merchant, of Cairo, suspecting her husband, paid him a
+visit in his shop, accompanied, as is usual, by a duenna, both
+enveloped in the folds of their <i>izars</i>.&nbsp; During the
+visit, while inspecting some muslin, the lady contrived to
+indulge the amatory merchant with a glimpse of her large dark
+eyes, which completely enchanted her unconscious lord.&nbsp; An
+interview was brought about, through the agency of the old woman;
+and the astonished husband discovered to his dismay, in the
+charmer, the features of his piqued and angry helpmate.</p>
+<p>Amongst the higher classes of Christians in particular, every
+freedom exists in doors; young ladies not only shew themselves,
+but, after serving the guest with coffee and sweetmeats, they
+will seat themselves on the edge of the divan, and soon manage to
+join in the conversation.&nbsp; This state of freedom exists to a
+greater or less degree till the young girl is betrothed; then it
+is not considered decorous that she should be present whenever
+her intended bridegroom visits the house, neither should she hear
+his name mentioned.&nbsp; Even amongst Turks, and more especially
+in the villages and smaller towns of Syria, the young Mahomedan
+sees and converses with the future object of his love, until she
+attains her eleventh or twelfth year, she is then excluded from
+the society of men; but womanhood has already begun to develop
+itself in the person of the girl of ten or eleven years old in
+these climates where they are oftentimes wives and mothers at
+thirteen.&nbsp; Hence love exists between the young couple before
+the destined bridegroom urges his mother to make the requisite
+proposals of marriage.&nbsp; He loses <!-- page 26--><a
+name="page26"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 26</span>sight of his
+lady-love as soon as she enters upon womanhood, though he may, by
+means of a third party, catch an occasional glimpse of her
+features as she passes to and fro, strictly guarded by matrons
+and old duennas; but not a single word or one bewitching kiss can
+the despairing lover hope for until she is brought home to his
+house, his lawful consort and partner for life; then, and not
+till then, commences the great seclusion of the ladies of the
+Turkish hareem.&nbsp; Even in country places and villages, though
+the newly-married bride may be strictly guarded for a year or
+two, this feeling eventually wears off, and the women mix in the
+every-day occupations of the field or in the garden, unveiled and
+undistinguishable from their Christian neighbours.&nbsp; Of late
+years especially much progress has been made in this branch of
+civilisation, arising from the example set by the sultan&rsquo;s
+ladies themselves at Stamboul, and by the increase of European
+ladies at Beyrout and other towns in Syria, often travelling
+about the country, and who, though unveiled, enjoy a high
+reputation for virtue and honesty, convincing proof to the Turks,
+that the face, which is the mirror of the heart, was meant to be
+studied as an example, not as a concealed vessel of craft and
+guile.</p>
+<p>But to return to Damascus.&nbsp; We have now taken a brief
+survey of the court-yards and lower portion of the houses; and
+having been served with sweetmeats by the pretty young lady, we
+follow the matron of the house up stairs, to reach which we have
+to cross the yard, for there is no communication between the
+lower and upper story, and we must pass into the arcade for the
+steps.&nbsp; Now that we have reached the upper story, there is a
+room on either side of the <i>mistaba</i> communicating with a
+gallery: and these rooms are the sleeping <!-- page 27--><a
+name="page27"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 27</span>apartments of
+the family in winter.&nbsp; In summer they serve as
+dressing-rooms and as a receptacle for the mattresses, etc., that
+are nightly spread on the top of the house for the family to
+sleep upon; for in summer almost every one sleeps on the terrace,
+from the lord and master of the house and the lowest menial down
+to the very cats and dogs, whose instinct causes them to seek for
+coolness in the more elevated parts of the house.&nbsp; These
+rooms are gaily painted, but contain little or no furniture; a
+divan or so, a mirror, some flower-vases, and ladies&rsquo;
+nic-nacs; these constitute the furniture.&nbsp; Mounting up to
+the terrace, we come upon a belvidere, surrounded on three sides
+by a wall lofty enough to prevent the possibility of the tallest
+man accidentally over-looking his neighbour&rsquo;s court-yard;
+on the fourth side there is a wooden railing, from which we
+command a view of our own court-yard, catching a glimpse of some
+of the famed gardens of Damascus in the distance.</p>
+<p>The bazars of the city, crowded with busy purchasers, present
+a bustling scene to the stranger.&nbsp; After Constantinople,
+Damascus claims precedence for the quantity and richness of the
+stuffs displayed for sale in its bazars from all countries in the
+world.&nbsp; Indian manufactures, spices of Arabia, coffee from
+Mocha, and endless European wares, are hourly bartered and
+sold.&nbsp; The scent of sandal-wood and myrrh, the <i>attar</i>
+of Mecca, the Indian&rsquo;s curry ingredients, the rich drugs of
+the apothecary, the smoky perfumes of the scented <i>narghili</i>
+and pipe of <i>Jabaliy</i> tobacco; all these tend to confuse and
+stupify the bewildered European, who, pushing his way through the
+dense multitude, follows us into a native restaurant, where iced
+lemonade and sweetmeats are tantalisingly exposed for sale.&nbsp;
+The pleasant cold water, playing in artificial jets, turns a
+small tin watermill, hung with <!-- page 28--><a
+name="page28"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 28</span>little silver
+bells, whose pleasant music first attracts the attention of the
+busy stranger.&nbsp; Here, seated for a moment, we enjoy the
+passing scene, and are vastly refreshed by the good things around
+us.&nbsp; Among these we may notice a pleasant beverage, and one
+very much in request: it is made by bruising a certain quantity
+of raisins, on which water is poured; the liquid is afterwards
+strained, and ice is added to render it cool.&nbsp; The place is
+crowded with a thirsty multitude, all eager to partake of this;
+but the swarms of flies that alight on one&rsquo;s face and
+hands, make quiet and repose completely out of the question; so
+we are up again, and hurrying through the bazars towards the
+environs of the city.&nbsp; The day is too hot and the distance
+too great for a walk, so we hire horses and a native
+cicerone.</p>
+<p>The beauty of the environs of Damascus I can only compare to
+some lovely landscape of fancy&rsquo;s brightest imagining, in
+which is combined every rich and bountiful gift of
+Providence&mdash;flowers, fruits, waters, hills, plains, rivers;
+a cloudless, blue sky; a rich, brilliant sunlight; and the
+delicious zephyr breathing soft freshness over the scene.&nbsp;
+It may well be believed by the zealous Mussulmans of Damascus,
+that Mahomed, <a name="citation28"></a><a href="#footnote28"
+class="citation">[28]</a> as he beheld it from the western hills,
+declined to enter into the city, lest the luxurious richness of
+this earthly Paradise might induce him to forget the existence of
+another and an eternal one.&nbsp; Skilfully did the prophet make
+a virtue of necessity in this instance.&nbsp; He well knew his
+incapability of besieging the city.&nbsp; I am inclined to think
+that, had it been otherwise, Mahomed was far too eager after
+earthly enjoyments to have relinquished so fair a spot.</p>
+<p>Our guide fails not to point out to us two branches <!-- page
+29--><a name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 29</span>of
+the Barrada, reckoned to be Abana and Pharpar, rivers which
+Naaman, the leper, thought better than the waters of
+Jordan.&nbsp; The lions to be seen at Damascus are
+numerous.&nbsp; Amongst these, we visit the <i>Bab il Gharbi</i>,
+where Tamerlane heaped up a pyramid of heads after taking the
+city by storm; then the monument called <i>Nabiy Abel</i>,
+marking, it is said, the identical spot where Cain slew his
+innocent brother.&nbsp; The name of the city is presumed by some
+to be derived from this event, the word <i>damm</i> signifying
+&ldquo;blood&rdquo;; but I must confess, I cannot see much ground
+for this presumption.&nbsp; If any truth be attached to this
+tradition, our first parents cannot well have wandered far from
+the lovely Garden of Eden when this first tragedy occurred; and
+Eden must have been situated to the west of Damascus, as it is
+said, that the angel of the Lord guarded the east end of the
+garden&mdash;a proof that our first parents were sent out
+eastward, and could only endeavour to return from that
+side.&nbsp; Some natives imagine that the Hammah and Hums of the
+present day are on the site of the beautiful garden of
+gardens.&nbsp; The eastern gate of the city, now walled up, is
+where St. Paul is supposed to have been let down in a basket;
+they shew us the very house from which he is said to have
+escaped.&nbsp; The Christian cemetery, containing the tomb of St.
+George, and the arch where St. Paul hid himself on escaping from
+Damascus; the wide road beyond the cemetery, still highly
+reverenced as the spot of the miraculous conversion; all these
+were familiar to me during my long stay in this fair city; and I
+mention them here for the benefit of strangers visiting the
+spot.</p>
+<p>During the summer evenings, the friends, at whose house I was
+staying, gave frequent entertainments to their numerous
+acquaintances amongst the inhabitants <!-- page 30--><a
+name="page30"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 30</span>of
+Damascus.&nbsp; On these occasions, the ladies of the different
+families honoured us with their presence, and occasionally some
+of the European consuls and merchants were invited.&nbsp; A
+description of one evening party will describe the whole.&nbsp;
+First, then, we will introduce the stranger into the house where
+the <i>farah</i> (feast) is to be held.&nbsp; Women are busily
+occupied washing out and sweeping the court-yard; the flowers and
+other plants are fresh watered; the marble fountain is decorated
+with coloured lanterns and festoons of flowers; carpets are
+spread, and divan cushions ranged against the wall; the
+<i>mistaba</i> is tastefully lighted, and a highly inflammable
+torch, composed of the fat wood of fir, resin, and other
+ingredients, is planted in each of the four corners.&nbsp; In the
+smoking apartment of the <i>mistaba</i>, preparations are making
+on a grand scale.&nbsp; Large bags of ready-washed and prepared
+<i>timbac</i> are hung upon nails in the wall, to filter and to
+be fit for immediate use when the <i>narghilies</i> are called
+into requisition.&nbsp; Tobacco pouches are filled.&nbsp; Two
+additional <i>mangals</i> of charcoal fire, and some additional
+coffee-pots are prepared.&nbsp; Decanters are filled with
+<i>arraki</i>, wine, liqueurs, orange-flower, and rose-water; and
+the cut-glass saucers replenished with candied preserves; whilst
+two maid-servants and a boy, assisted and superintended by the
+mistress of the house, are busy grinding coffee and decocting
+huge bowls of deliciously-iced lemonade.&nbsp; In addition to all
+this, a side-table is groaning under the weight of plates of
+sliced oranges and picked pomegranates, with numerous other
+fruits, and a great variety of pastry.&nbsp; By the time all
+these arrangements are completed the night sets in; the whole
+yard is illuminated; the members of the household and the
+servants are busily engaged donning their best attire, and the
+company of hired musicians <!-- page 31--><a
+name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 31</span>arrive.&nbsp;
+The music striking up, is the signal for the nearest invited
+neighbours to make their appearance.&nbsp; They arrive, the men
+clad in long, loose silken robes; the women enveloped in their
+white <i>izars</i>; but these latter are speedily thrown aside at
+the invitation of the lady of the house, who assists in helping
+the guests to disrobe, and then confides their <i>izars</i> to
+the trusty care of the handmaiden.</p>
+<p>Now these veils are all of the same make, and they have no
+initials or other distinguishing mark.&nbsp; Notwithstanding
+this, no confusion ensues on the breaking up of a party as to
+identification, every lady is quick to recognise her own peculiar
+<i>izar</i> from the mass of white sheets that are folded and
+piled one above another upon the divan in the upstairs
+dressing-room.&nbsp; Soon the whole party have arrived, and the
+amusements of the evening commence with vocal and instrumental
+music.&nbsp; After this, some of the gentlemen stand up and go
+through the graceful attitudes of the Syrian dance, then some
+others volunteer the sword dance, or the Bedouin dance, some of
+the married ladies then take courage; but it requires coaxing and
+threats to induce the timid damsel to display her skill.&nbsp;
+Persuasion being out of the question, some old gentleman gets up
+and pretends that he is going to dance instead of her, and he
+goes through a few steps till he comes close up to some girl that
+he has singled out from the circle.&nbsp; Seizing her arm with no
+very gentle force, he whirls into the centre of the yard, and
+meanwhile, some one who has watched the man&oelig;uvre, acts the
+same part by some other blushing maiden.&nbsp; These are
+confronted face to face, and there is now no escape, so they
+commence at first timidly and bashfully, but getting gradually
+excited by the music, they lose all this pretended bashfulness,
+and <!-- page 32--><a name="page32"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+32</span>do their best to outshine each other; and truly there is
+rarely a more graceful sight than two beautiful Damascene girls,
+elegantly dressed and bespangled with jewels, displaying their
+graceful figures to the best advantage, to the slow but becoming
+measures of the dance.&nbsp; All the other young ladies now
+follow their example, and as each couple retires at the
+termination of their efforts to please, they are hailed with
+shouts of applause, and liberally besprinkled with rose and
+orange-flower water.&nbsp; The old ladies evince their
+approbation by a peculiar vibrating scream, produced by the voice
+passing through the nearly closed lips, whilst the under lip is
+kept in a continual tremulous state by the rapid application of
+the back of the forefinger to that feature.&nbsp; When dancing is
+over for the evening, sometimes games of forfeit are introduced,
+and promote much mirth, especially one game called
+&ldquo;<i>Tuthun Tuthun</i>, <i>min Tuthun</i>&rdquo;&mdash;a
+game of Turkish origin, as its name denotes, and which is played
+thus:&mdash;Every one in the circle takes the name of a bird, a
+tree, or a flower, whilst the king of the game goes round and
+collects in a handkerchief some small article from each one
+present.&nbsp; These he afterwards shuffles together, and then
+drawing one out, which he carefully conceals in his hand, he
+fixes upon some one in the circle, to whom he puts the question
+&ldquo;<i>Tuthun Tuthun</i>, <i>min Tuthun</i>?&rdquo; or,
+&ldquo;Tobacco tobacco, whose is it?&rdquo;&nbsp; The party fixed
+upon is obliged to guess, and he names some bird or flower which
+he heard some one call himself; if the guess is wrong, he has to
+hold out his hand and receive three stripes from a closely
+knotted handkerchief, and then the party referred to is next
+obliged to guess to whom the &ldquo;<i>Tuthun</i>&rdquo; belongs,
+and so on all round the circle till the right name has been
+discovered.&nbsp; Then the king resigns his post and <!-- page
+33--><a name="page33"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+33</span>handkerchief, and is relieved in office by him or her
+that made the right guess.</p>
+<p>After these games some one tells a story or recites a poem, a
+specimen of which I am enabled to introduce, literally
+translated.</p>
+<blockquote><p>I&rsquo;ve gazed on many eyes, that shine<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As bright; none ever yet so well<br />
+Have answered to my heart as thine,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; My lovely, little, dear gazelle.</p>
+<p>Oh give me but one smile, to tell<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of pity from those gentle eyes:<br />
+The thought shall ever with me dwell,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; My love you did not all despise.</p>
+<p>You move in beauty, while each charm<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Subdues the more my amorous soul,<br />
+Until my fainting spirits warm<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To strength beneath thy sweet control.</p>
+<p>Hear then my prayer, to you alone<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I bow&mdash;Let those who know me not,<br />
+Mock, if they will, at pangs unknown:<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Your smile, though false, is ne&rsquo;er forgot.</p>
+<p>Mine eyes have often wearied long<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To catch thine image passing by;<br />
+My saddened spirit grew more strong,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With thee one moment in mine eye.</p>
+<p>But oh, if love should ever seek<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Its seat within that beauteous breast,<br />
+Drive it afar; you see it wreak<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; On me its power to poison rest.</p>
+<p>For bound beneath thy beauty&rsquo;s sway,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; My days in wasting sadness roll;<br />
+Though deaf to all, this dust can say,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; You&rsquo;ll meet in heaven, my parted soul.</p>
+<p><!-- page 34--><a name="page34"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+34</span>Deign but my fevered heart to cool,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With but one passing word of hope,<br />
+Then shall my tortured spirit school<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Itself, with all beside to cope.</p>
+<p>But thought is useless, words are vain;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And my bewildered mind can fling<br />
+No effort from this maddening brain,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That can to thee its image bring.</p>
+<p>For disappointed and beguiled,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I will not spend another sigh;<br />
+If you had never on me smiled,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; No tear had ever dimmed mine eye.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I will now endeavour to give my readers a specimen of an
+original Arabic tale in the familiar and colloquial style of
+these Oriental storytellers so famed for their amusing delivery
+and gesticulation.</p>
+<h3>THE STORY OF THE JINN AND THE SCOLDING WIFE.</h3>
+<p>Once upon a time, many years ago, when good people were rather
+scarce upon the earth, and such men as Noah had ceased to exist,
+there dwelt a certain poor man at the city of Aleppo, whose name
+was&mdash;I forgot now exactly what; but as his heirs might not
+take it in good part, we had best leave the name-part of the
+business alone altogether.&nbsp; However, he was fortunate enough
+to pick up with a pretty little wife, whose smiles, so thought
+the lover, were like the dew of Hermon; instead of which, they
+proved to be very mildew in every sense of the word.&nbsp;
+Yusuf&mdash;so was the man called, but, I forgot, we must not
+mention it&mdash;married the fair Ankafir.&nbsp; First week,
+honey and kaymak, and everything nice and sweet; second week,
+necklaces and other jewellery required; third week, funds low,
+dinners scant, temper sour; fourth week, squalls matrimonial from
+morning to night, from night to morning.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tell you what it is, my dear,&rdquo; quoth Yusuf,
+&ldquo;either you must leave off blowing up, or I must take to
+bastinadoing: so just you choose the least evil.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To hear her talk of his inhumanity&mdash;to hear her talk of
+her <!-- page 35--><a name="page35"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+35</span>rich relations and their influence with the
+Pasha&mdash;to hear her storm about broken hearts, and, what is a
+great deal more serious and matter-of-fact, broken heads&mdash;I
+say, to hear her jabber about all this, was enough to turn a
+quiet, sober-minded man into a misanthrope for life; but, to feel
+the argument in the shape of sundry manipulations, cuffs on the
+ear, scratches, etc., this was beyond the endurance of a martyr;
+so thought Yusuf, so did his friends, and so did the evil
+counsellors that recommended him to resort to the use of water as
+an only alternative.</p>
+<p>Now, I don&rsquo;t mean to say, mind you, that they suggested,
+that water, as an every-day kind of a beverage, was likely to be
+productive of very beneficial effects; neither did they hint that
+arraki and water, though this latter has often done the job,
+would facilitate in ridding Yusuf of his incubus.&nbsp; The river
+Euphrates was thought deep enough&mdash;a casualty in the upset
+of a boat, plausible.&nbsp; The desperate husband took the
+hint.&nbsp; One day he had a headache.&nbsp; Next day, change of
+air was thought requisite, and the water-side recommended.&nbsp;
+He went to Berijek thence to the river-side.&nbsp; A friendly old
+boatman hired him a boat and his own personal services, and</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Upon the stream they got &rsquo;em.<br />
+The wind blew high; he blew his nose,<br />
+And&mdash;sent her to the bottom.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>She sunk, never again to rise, and the light-hearted husband
+leaped out of the boat and strolled along the river-side.</p>
+<p>By and bye, a damp-looking old customer, half Neptune, half I
+don&rsquo;t know what you may call it, comes walking up the
+river, just as coolly as a ship of war might float on the ocean,
+and as fresh as though he had only just got in for a dip, instead
+of having floated ever so many hundred miles.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sal&#257;m alaykum,&rdquo; says Yusuf, &ldquo;I hope
+you&rsquo;re well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Peace, thou son of a swine,&rdquo; says the stranger;
+&ldquo;What do you mean by sending her there to bother
+us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who is it you mean, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who,&rdquo; said the fierce little man, who was nothing
+more or less than the Jinn, or Spirit of the Water, &ldquo;why
+her, to be sure, that vixen of a wife of yours, who has
+completely defiled the water.&nbsp; Why there is no peace any
+more in those regions, and I <!-- page 36--><a
+name="page36"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 36</span>have come
+forth to take a signal vengeance on you: now choose what death
+you like&mdash;hanging, tearing to pieces, or
+impaling.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said Yusuf, very humbly, &ldquo;if you, who
+are possessed of so much power, cannot control her temper, how
+could I, a miserable mortal, hope to manage her?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was so much truth in this assertion, that the Jinn
+calmed down amazingly.&nbsp; &ldquo;My friend,&rdquo; quoth he,
+&ldquo;I see you&rsquo;re a sensible man; you and I will
+henceforth unite our fortunes; so just have the kindness to step
+upon my shoulders, and we will be off like a lightning-flash for
+Baghdad.&rdquo;&nbsp; Yusuf did as he was desired; and in the
+course of the next hour they were safely housed in Baghdad.&nbsp;
+Now the Caliph had an only daughter, who was reported beautiful
+as the morning star.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would you like to have her,&rdquo; quoth the Jinn,
+&ldquo;for a wife?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who, me, sir; I am very much obliged to you,&rdquo;
+quoth Yusuf; &ldquo;but I don&rsquo;t exactly see how that is to
+be accomplished.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I will manage that part of the matter.&nbsp; You
+pass yourself off for a great <i>hakeem</i>.&nbsp; I will coil
+myself round the girl&rsquo;s neck in the shape of a most
+venomous snake with two heads.&nbsp; No one shall be able to
+approach but you.&nbsp; You burn that bit of paper that I have
+written upon, and throw the ashes into water, and as it is
+demolished, so will I gradually disappear.&nbsp; The results will
+be the Caliph&rsquo;s gratitude and his daughter&rsquo;s hand and
+heart.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yusuf was very willing to do as he was bid.&nbsp; The feat was
+accomplished.&nbsp; He married the girl and settled down for life
+in easy circumstances.&nbsp; Some time after, the Jinn fell
+desperately in love with the Vizier&rsquo;s daughter, and
+displayed his attachment in the rather uncongenial form of a
+viper.&nbsp; Now the Caliph had borne in mind the notoriety of
+his son-in-law in this peculiar species of malady; so when the
+Vizier came moaning and complaining that Yusuf would not go and
+cure his daughter, he sent his compliments to Yusuf, with a
+silken cord and the alternative carefully tied up in an
+embroidered pocket-handkerchief&mdash;of immediate compliance
+with his will&mdash;an arsenic pill or strangulation.&nbsp; Yusuf
+had no remedy, though he had faithfully promised the Jinn never
+to intrude upon his felicity.&nbsp; He hit, however, upon a
+plausible excuse, and being introduced into <!-- page 37--><a
+name="page37"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 37</span>the presence
+of the Vizier&rsquo;s daughter, he bent over her neck and
+whispered to the Jinn&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I say, I&rsquo;ve just dropped in to warn you that she
+is here in Baghdad, and looking for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, you don&rsquo;t mean her?&rdquo; said the alarmed
+Jinn.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I do though, sure as you are a ghost.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I say, you wont say where I am off to, will you,&rdquo;
+says the Jinn; &ldquo;but if you will just pack up your
+sal&#257;ms and any other light articles you may wish to send to
+your friends, I&rsquo;ll be happy to be the bearer.&nbsp;
+I&rsquo;m off.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you, though?&rdquo; says Yusuf</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes I am,&rdquo; said the Jinn.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d rather stem an angry wave<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Than meet a storming woman.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And so saying, he departed, and the Vizier&rsquo;s daughter
+was healed.</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p>Refreshments have been served at intervals; and the smoking
+has been incessant, the married ladies, especially mothers of
+families, indulging in whiffs at the <i>narghili</i>.&nbsp; It is
+considered unbecoming in a young lady to smoke, and they never do
+so in public: but as they often serve the <i>narghili</i> to
+distinguished guests, they are compelled to take some whiffs, as
+it is customary to present it lighted; and as this process does
+not appear to make them feel unwell, we naturally imagine that on
+the sly these young ladies frequently indulge themselves with a
+pipe.&nbsp; This, kind reader, is a fair sample of the manner in
+which the Damascus Christians amuse themselves during the
+evening.</p>
+<p>Once Mr. Farren, the then British Consul-General at Damascus,
+gave a grand entertainment to celebrate the king&rsquo;s
+birth-day.&nbsp; To this, my relative and myself were invited, in
+common with several of the Mahomedan chiefs and Christian
+inhabitants of Damascus, who were utterly astounded at the
+magnificent display of European luxury.&nbsp; The rooms were
+decorated <!-- page 38--><a name="page38"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 38</span>with flags of all nations, and
+splendidly furnished <i>&agrave; l&rsquo;Anglaise</i>; and it was
+probably the first <i>f&ecirc;te</i> of the kind that many of
+these people had ever witnessed.&nbsp; Every one was much charmed
+with the affable manners of the Consul, and impressed with the
+wealth and dignity of the nation he represented.&nbsp; And this
+kind of display was doubtless very beneficial in curbing the
+fanatical hatred of the Damascus Mahomedans towards <i>Kuffar</i>
+in general, which, at that time, raged to such a pitch, that no
+Christian could, without insult, traverse the streets of Damascus
+on horseback, especially with a white turban, till the
+interpreter of Mr. Farren ventured to break through the
+law.&nbsp; Amongst the Moslems in Syria, those only who are
+direct descendants of the prophet, or who have accompanied the
+Hajj or pilgrimage to Mecca, are permitted to wear a green
+turban, the other Mahomedans a white one.&nbsp; In the mountains,
+it is worn indiscriminately by all creeds.&nbsp; In Turkey, those
+born on Friday are entitled to wear green.&nbsp; This fact
+surprised an English friend at Constantinople, who seeing so many
+green turbans, and not being aware of this latter circumstance,
+observed, that the prophet must have a large family.</p>
+<p>During Ibrahim Pasha&rsquo;s occupation of the country, he did
+much towards bringing the haughty Mahomedans to a due
+appreciation of their own nothingness; and the Damascus of to-day
+is very different to that of some twenty years back.&nbsp; Now
+Christians, and even Jews, in garbs and costumes, ride to and fro
+unmolested; and since the departure of the Egyptians, no small
+share of praise is due to the energy and exertions of Mr. Richard
+Wood, the present Consul, who is so much respected by the
+natives, as to be distinguished amongst them by the Turkish title
+of Bey, and who has successfully <!-- page 39--><a
+name="page39"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 39</span>persevered in
+maintaining the privileges afforded to residents and strangers of
+all creeds, under the iron sway of Ibrahim Pasha.</p>
+<p>Whilst at Damascus, we heard the following story,
+characteristic of the manner in which Ibrahim Pasha sometimes
+administered retributive justice.&nbsp; A rich Mahomedan, who was
+an invalid, desired to make the pilgrimage to Mecca; but being
+prevented by his health, he offered to defray all the expenses of
+a poor and pious neighbour, provided he would undertake this
+journey for him.&nbsp; The poor man agreed to do so; and previous
+to his departure, he deposited his money, and the few valuables
+of which he was possessed, in a box, which he entrusted to the
+care of a friend, who was a banker.&nbsp; On his return from
+Mecca, the box was restored to him, but upon opening it, he
+discovered that the contents had been taken out.&nbsp; The man
+immediately went and laid his complaint before the Cadi, who
+ordered the banker to be brought before him.&nbsp; The accused,
+placing his hand on the Koran, swore that he had taken neither
+the money nor the rest of the property from the box; such a
+solemn declaration was considered unquestionable, and the poor
+man lost his cause.&nbsp; Being utterly ruined, he wandered about
+the city in despair; when one day, whilst seated outside the gate
+of Damascus, he observed Ibrahim Pasha on horseback.&nbsp; He
+immediately ran to him, and seizing his bridle-rein, stated his
+case to the Pasha, and fully described his sorrows and the
+ill-usage which he had received.&nbsp; Ibrahim Pasha listened to
+his story, and bestowing on him a few piastres, said,
+&ldquo;After seven days come to me.&rdquo;&nbsp; In the
+meanwhile, inquiries were made regarding the banker, and hearing
+that he had a son at a certain school, the Pasha went in
+disguise, accompanied by his <!-- page 40--><a
+name="page40"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 40</span>secretary,
+and contrived to win the friendship and confidence of the
+master.&nbsp; One day, whilst the professor and his scholars were
+taking their customary siesta, the merchant&rsquo;s son was
+carried off, and a young bear deposited in the place which the
+boy had occupied.&nbsp; When the rest awoke, great was their
+surprise at seeing such an animal amongst them; but their
+consternation was even greater, when after the lapse of a short
+time, the merchant&rsquo;s son was nowhere to be found.&nbsp; The
+terror of the professor, and the affliction of the father, may
+easily be imagined.&nbsp; In his anger, the bereaved parent
+applied to Ibrahim Pasha, and demanded that the heaviest and most
+severe penalty should be inflicted on the master for his seeming
+negligence.&nbsp; &ldquo;I know where your son is,&rdquo; said
+the Pasha, &ldquo;he is safe, and when you return the money and
+property which you have taken from the box of your friend, your
+child shall be restored to you.&rdquo;&nbsp; The contents of the
+box were given up, and the banker was beheaded.</p>
+<p>The Roman Catholics have made comparatively few converts in
+Damascus, and the mysterious disappearance, a few years since, of
+Padre Tomaso and his servant, acts as a check upon the Jesuits,
+who mostly avoid those places where every security is not
+afforded, and where great temporal advantages do not accompany
+the success of their efforts at conversion.</p>
+<p>By the last published report of the British and Foreign Bible
+Society, the heart is cheered with the intelligence, that there
+are now established at Damascus three American and two Irish
+Missionaries.&nbsp; May their efforts be crowned with success;
+for Damascus is said to contain about 140,000 inhabitants, all,
+more or less, superstitiously ignorant and blind to the blessed
+light of the gospel!</p>
+<h2><!-- page 41--><a name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+41</span>CHAPTER IV.<br />
+THE AMERICAN MISSIONARIES AT BEYROUT.</h2>
+<p>After a residence of upwards of two years at Damascus, I was
+suddenly, in the spring of the year, recalled to Beyrout, this
+latter town having, in my absence, grown into considerable
+importance as a commercial sea-port.&nbsp; The traffic with
+European countries daily augmenting, had given an impetus to
+several enterprising young Syrians, who wished to acquire a
+knowledge of European languages; and as precedents were not
+wanting of this knowledge having led to preferment and subsequent
+opulence, my friends conceived the idea of placing me under the
+care of some of the excellent American Missionaries, for tuition
+in English and other European languages.&nbsp; It was not without
+reluctance that I obeyed the mandate of my friends, but as
+implicit obedience to their will was a primary consideration,
+bidding adieu to my many kind acquaintances, I retraced my steps,
+and in the course of a few days was once again in the bosom of my
+own dear family.&nbsp; The Americans have always numbered amongst
+their fraternity a medical officer; and it was mainly
+attributable to this fact, that myself, as well as many other
+Syrian lads, were happily blessed with the opportunity of
+receiving a good moral education.&nbsp; I was just entering on my
+sixteenth year when I first joined the American school; still too
+young to have any deeply rooted <!-- page 42--><a
+name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 42</span>prejudices or
+ideas, though luckily old enough to appreciate the value of the
+opportunity thus afforded me, and consequently to endeavour to
+profit by it as much as lay in my power; but I must here explain
+how it happened that a physician was, through the blessing of
+Providence, the means of gaining for us so priceless a
+boon.&nbsp; When the American Missionaries first arrived in
+Syria, their advent gave rise to conjecture and suspicion among
+the natives.&nbsp; Bishops and priests warned their congregations
+to be on the alert, and guard against any efforts made by the
+Missionaries to convert the people; these admonitions and
+warnings were strengthened by reports spread by the crafty
+emissaries of the Pope, which were as false as they were
+calumnious.&nbsp; It was no part of Roman Catholic policy to
+countenance the good endeavours of these Missionaries to
+enlighten the natives of the country, by the establishment of
+schools and circulation of the holy word of God, as contained in
+Arabic Bibles, printed by the Church Missionary Society in
+London.&nbsp; Heretofore, the Papists had to grapple only with
+the superstitious but simple-minded followers of the Eastern
+Church.&nbsp; In Aleppo and Beyrout, they had already Syrian
+Roman Catholics, whose talents were employed to hinder the work
+of the Missionaries; but now they had formidable opponents to
+combat with&mdash;men as infinitely their superiors in wisdom and
+acquirements, as they were religiously steadfast, and persevering
+with all humility and patience to carry out their ends, for the
+accomplishment of which, they had left their distant country, and
+sacrificed home and every comfort.&nbsp; What the Roman Catholics
+had most to dread, was the establishment of Protestant schools, a
+measure which they clearly foresaw would tend to their ultimate
+confusion and defeat, and to overthrow which they left <!-- page
+43--><a name="page43"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 43</span>no
+means untried.&nbsp; Had not the Americans been possessed of
+great Christian patience, and matured sound judgment, they could
+not possibly have succeeded; but time proved their deeds and
+actions to be the purest; their morals, precepts, and examples,
+above praise; the blessing of God was with them, and they watched
+and prayed continually.&nbsp; At length an opportunity presented
+itself; and they, like careful sentries, availed themselves of
+it, and from that time up to the present date their schools have
+gone on progressing, and though they have not succeeded in making
+many converts, they have prevented much evil by their watchful
+care over the natives.&nbsp; Sickness is a leveller of many
+prejudices; and this is more particularly the case in Syria,
+where physicians are scarce and must be selected without regard
+to creed.&nbsp; From time immemorial the natives have placed
+implicit faith in the skill of Frank <i>hakeems</i>.&nbsp; Of
+late years I am sorry to say the Turkish empire has been
+inundated with numbers of soi-disant physicians, many of whom are
+political refugees and renegades, uneducated, and totally
+ignorant of the profession they have assumed, and have, by virtue
+of a piece of parchment (forged or purchased) and a few drugs,
+foisted themselves upon the notice of Syrians, as eminent
+practitioners; but their exorbitant charges and unsuccessful
+practice soon opened the eyes of the people as to their real
+position, yet not before these charlatans had worked out for
+their medical brethren so foul a reputation, that the natives
+have become suspicious of all new-comers, and would rather have
+recourse to the simple remedies prescribed by the village herb
+doctor, than entrust their lives to be experimentalised upon by
+foreign quacks.</p>
+<p>Apropos of this I may mention an anecdote that <!-- page
+44--><a name="page44"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 44</span>was
+related to me by Mr. Edward Zohrab, the respected Turkish
+Consul-General in London.&nbsp; This gentleman, once travelling
+in the interior of Turkey, had the misfortune to fall ill at a
+remote village where all hopes of succour were despaired of;
+whilst debating with the Sheikh of the village on the feasibility
+of despatching an express messenger to the nearest large town in
+search of medical aid, there arrived, most opportunely, a
+European traveller who had taken up his lodgings for the night at
+the public khan of the village; this grandee&rsquo;s servant soon
+spread the fame of his master in the place.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;the only learned Frank
+physician in Turkey.&nbsp; He has been <i>hakeem</i> to all the
+great <i>pad-shahs</i> of Europe, and is only travelling here to
+find some rare drugs and medicinal stones for the great emperor
+of Moscof.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is he?&rdquo; said the delighted Sheikh, who had rushed
+to seek aid from the stranger.&nbsp; &ldquo;Then for
+Allah&rsquo;s sake bring him with all speed to my residence; for
+there is a <i>miri liwa</i> dying there of fever; and if anything
+happens in my house what&rsquo;s to become of me and my
+family?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The learned physician accompanied the Sheikh to his house, and
+in him Mr. Zohrab discovered, to his utter amazement and
+discomfort, the person of a once respectable Italian
+ship-chandler who had carried on business some years back at
+Constantinople, but who, subsequently failing, had donned the cap
+and cloak of a mountebank, and went about quacking the
+natives.&nbsp; It is needless to say that the discomfited doctor
+made a precipitate retreat from the village.&nbsp; But to return
+to the subject after this digression, the good done by the
+American physician was peculiarly instanced in my own family.</p>
+<p><!-- page 45--><a name="page45"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+45</span>A very near relative lay grievously ill at
+Beyrout&mdash;every effort of the native <i>hakeem</i> to give
+him sleep proved abortive.&nbsp; Native astrologers came, and
+writing down the names and number of letters in each name of the
+patient and of his mother, multiplied and divided the sum total,
+and then tearing up the paper into fine shreds, swallowed the
+whole; but even this magic failed.&nbsp; After much discussion,
+it was finally determined, much to the disgust of my clerical
+uncle, to summon the American doctor, with whom or with whose
+brethren my family had heretofore carefully avoided
+intercourse.</p>
+<p>The doctor came&mdash;his mild gentle demeanour&mdash;his soft
+sweet words of consolation&mdash;his consummate skill&mdash;and
+his great talents as a man of learning&mdash;all these gained for
+him the deepest respect and regard, whilst his indefatigable
+attention to the invalid claimed our gratitude.&nbsp; We, in
+common with our neighbours, had entertained a vulgar prejudice
+against this good man, because it was generally asserted that
+wherever he could introduce himself under the cloak of his
+profession, to the sick and dying, he invariably profited by the
+opportunity to sow discord amongst the members of the family, by
+propagating doctrines strangely at variance with their
+creed.&nbsp; How false these accusations&mdash;how gross the
+calumnies heaped upon him, and through whose agency they had
+originated, now became clear to my family and their friends, and
+we now esteemed these kind Americans the better from a sense of
+having unjustly injured them, though it were only in
+thought.&nbsp; During my relative&rsquo;s long and dangerous
+illness the doctor&rsquo;s kindness was above praise&mdash;he
+never intruded a single question or made any reference to
+difference of creeds; but when the patient was convalescent, and
+when he saw that his visits were no <!-- page 46--><a
+name="page46"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 46</span>longer
+necessary, on taking leave of us the doctor distributed a few
+tracts on religious subjects, for perusal amongst ourselves and
+neighbours, begging us at our leisure to do so.&nbsp; Had he done
+this before we had become acquainted with his intrinsic worth and
+merits, the chances are that these tracts would have been flung
+into the fire so soon as his back was turned.&nbsp; Now, however,
+we all felt persuaded that so excellent a man could never be
+guilty of propagating anything that was not good and moral.&nbsp;
+The result was that his gifts were treasured up and perused with
+attention, and whenever the doctor paid us a friendly visit he
+brought with him more delightful little stories; the print was so
+clear, the pictures and binding so pretty, that these tracts were
+much prized, and very soon much sought after.&nbsp; The children
+of the native Christians and those of the American missionaries
+became playmates; and the prejudices that had barred the doors of
+the American school-room against the former were gradually
+removed.&nbsp; It was at this period that I was sent for to
+Beyrout; and a few weeks after my arrival I was duly installed as
+one amongst other native students under the kind tuition of
+Messrs. Goodall and Whiting of the mission.</p>
+<p>I can never sufficiently express my deep sense of gratitude to
+these two excellent gentlemen.&nbsp; Under them I acquired the
+rudiments of a good general education; and as my knowledge of
+their language grew apace, I was afforded free access to such
+books, both amusing and instructive, as were well calculated to
+engraft a thirst after knowledge and develop the
+understanding.&nbsp; Generally speaking, all the native scholars,
+sooner or later, comprehended the wide difference existing
+between the Gospel truths as expounded in the Roman churches, and
+the true sense <!-- page 47--><a name="page47"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 47</span>and comprehensive meaning of the Word
+of God as contained in the holy Bible, such as it was our custom
+to peruse, morning, noon, and night.&nbsp; We discovered that the
+Bible was a pleasant book, full of entertaining history and
+adventure, and abounding with illustrations of the marvelous
+mercy and love of the Creator for the creature; and that this
+book should be forbidden by the Romish priests at first appeared
+to us singular; then very wrong: and ultimately we felt convinced
+that in so doing they were guilty of a heinous offence.</p>
+<p>My education consisted in simple lessons, reading, writing,
+and arithmetic.&nbsp; However I made no great progress in worldly
+knowledge; but the precepts and examples of my kind instructors
+were, I trust, a good seed sown in season; they took root in the
+tender soil of childish simplicity; grew up with our growth and
+ripened with the years of maturity; and I humbly hope that, with
+the blessing of the Almighty, they may never hereafter be choked
+by those <i>tares</i> sown by Satan&mdash;the sinful vanities and
+pleasures of this world.</p>
+<p>I remember, amongst the many anecdotes and incidents of those
+happy days, one which made a deep impression upon myself and my
+fellow-students.&nbsp; During the fruit season, as our
+school-house at Beyrout was situated amongst the gardens, we boys
+made frequent excursions in the night to pillage the neighbouring
+orchards of their superabundant loads of fruit; this was a common
+practice amongst all the lads of the town of Beyrout; and though
+doubtless very wrong, still fruit is so cheap and so plentiful
+that, even when detected by the proprietors, our punishment
+rarely exceeded a box or two on the ears, and many direful
+threats as to any future offence.&nbsp; Notwithstanding these
+threats, however, the fruit was too tempting to be so easily <!--
+page 48--><a name="page48"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+48</span>relinquished. <a name="citation48"></a><a
+href="#footnote48" class="citation">[48]</a>&nbsp; One night I
+sallied out with several other of my schoolfellows, and amongst
+these a young chief of the Druses, named Sheikh Ahmed,&mdash;a
+boy of undaunted courage, and who, in after-years, as I will
+explain further on, was the means of saving the life of one
+connected with the mission school.&nbsp; On this eventful night,
+sentries had been set to watch our movements, and we were all
+taken in the very act.&nbsp; The angry proprietor made us bear
+the brunt of all his losses; and so, after being very roughly
+treated and deprived of all our plunder, we were set free and
+permitted to run home again as best we could, with rueful faces
+and aching limbs.</p>
+<p>By some means a report of this transaction had reached the
+school-master&rsquo;s ears by times next morning, though we were
+ignorant of this fact till breakfast-time arrived; then, with
+keen appetites, we resorted to our usual place at the
+breakfast-table, when lo! there were nothing but plates turned
+bottom upwards laid for such amongst us as had been engaged in
+the orchard-rifling affair.&nbsp; The rest of the boys, who were
+well supplied with dainties, were quite at a loss to account for
+this deficiency; but our guilty consciences plainly whispered to
+us the motives for this punishment; we therefore, sneaked out of
+the room, inwardly determined never to expose ourselves to such
+well-merited treatment again; and we firmly adhered to our
+resolution.&nbsp; This silent and mild method of punishing an
+offence had far more effect with us than rougher treatment; and
+the chances are that if we had been publicly upbraided, whipped,
+and tasked, we should not so quickly have mended.</p>
+<p><!-- page 49--><a name="page49"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+49</span>The Sheikh Ahmed, after having left school, whilst
+heading his own people, the Druses, during the war in Lebanon,
+one day suddenly came upon a group of angry villagers, who were
+about to wreak their vengeance upon an unhappy traveller who had
+fallen into their hands.&nbsp; The young Sheikh authoritatively
+interfered and swore by his beard no harm should be done to
+him.&nbsp; In the traveller, to his astonishment and joy, Sheikh
+Ahmed identified the Arabic professor of the mission
+school,&mdash;a simple, good man, to whose care and tuition we
+were all much indebted, and who, having been mistaken for a
+Maronite, was about falling a victim to mistaken identity.&nbsp;
+The name of this intelligent and excellent man was Tannoos
+Haddad, who had been converted to Christianity by the American
+missionaries, and has since been ordained, and is now assisting
+in the spread of the Gospel among his benighted countrymen.&nbsp;
+The head of the school at that time was Mr. Hubbard, who a few
+years after died at Malta, and many a young man now in Syria
+gratefully recalls his memory as having been the means of their
+education and advancement both in temporal and spiritual
+knowledge.</p>
+<p>At present, the following is a list of the missionaries at
+Beyrout:&mdash;Rev. Eli Smith, D.D.; Rev. B. Whiting; H. A. D.
+Forest, M.D.; Mr. Hurtes, superintendent of the printing
+department; Buttros Bistani, and Elias Fowas, native
+helpers.&nbsp; No one has ever replaced the late Mr. Winbolt, the
+much esteemed and regretted chaplain of Beyrout; and the
+Americans are about to remove to the mountains.&nbsp; Lord help
+the souls of the forty thousand inhabitants now living there, and
+put it in the hearts of the English people to establish schools
+and hospitals in this most promising field for missionary
+labour.</p>
+<p><!-- page 50--><a name="page50"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+50</span>Beyrout was, at the period of which I am now writing,
+under the Egyptian government, and the whole place was overrun by
+fierce Albanian soldiers and recruits, who were the terror of
+society.&nbsp; Many are the instances on record of the outrages
+committed by these men; but their treatment of the esteemed Mr.
+Bird, an American missionary, was perhaps the most glaring
+instance of unprovoked atrocity.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bird had a country-house in the environs of Beyrout, not
+far from where some of the troops were encamped.&nbsp; This house
+was surrounded by a large fruit-garden, and the produce was
+continually stolen and recklessly wasted; for which, however,
+there appears to have been no remedy.&nbsp; On one occasion, Mr.
+Bird&rsquo;s native servant, seeing some soldiers pilfering from
+a fig-tree, threw a stone, which unfortunately took effect and
+slightly wounded one of them in the head.&nbsp; Hearing the
+uproar that ensued, and learning the cause from his servant, Mr.
+B--- immediately ran out with a few necessaries in his hands to
+examine and dress the wound.&nbsp; He was thus charitably
+occupied when a number of the man&rsquo;s comrades who had been
+attracted by the noise, arrived upon the spot, and presuming it
+to be Mr. Bird who had wounded the man, made a ruffianly assault
+on that unoffending person, buffeted and bound him; and finally
+carried their cruel vengeance to such an extent, that they
+actually crucified him on a sycamore-tree, using cords in lieu of
+nails, but in every other respect blasphemously imitating the
+position of the figure upon the cross, as seen by them often in
+pictures and on crucifixes.&nbsp; Here, spit upon, slapped, and
+derided, Mr. Bird was left for some time suffering intense agony,
+both of mind and body, for the hot afternoon sun shone fiercely
+upon him, and the sharp stings of the <!-- page 51--><a
+name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 51</span>sand-flies
+drove him almost to distraction; happily the servant had made his
+escape into the town, and flown to the residence of the
+consul.&nbsp; So flagrant an offence naturally excited the anger
+of all the Europeans in Beyrout; and consuls of every nation,
+accompanied by their retinue, all armed to the teeth, rode forth
+to the rescue.&nbsp; On seeing so large a cavalcade advance, the
+troops beat to arms; and affairs now assumed a most menacing
+attitude on both sides.&nbsp; A council was held among the
+Europeans; and it was speedily determined that a deputation
+should dismount and proceed on foot to the tent of the officer
+commanding the troops.&nbsp; This was according done; and the
+Pasha, having listened to the complaint, summoned the offenders
+into his presence, meanwhile issuing orders that Mr. Bird should
+be instantly released and brought before him, that he might speak
+for himself.&nbsp; The soldiers endeavoured to vindicate
+themselves, by asserting that the Franks had murdered a true
+believer of the prophet; and in proof of what they asserted, they
+had actually the audacity and folly to cause the wounded man to
+be carried on a few planks, hastily knocked together, and set
+down on the ground a few paces distant from the Pasha&rsquo;s
+tent, where the impudent fellow so well maintained the rigidity
+of limb and face, that he really had much the appearance of a
+cold stiff corpse.&nbsp; The Pasha&rsquo;s doctor (a European),
+however, was close at hand; and this officer was ordered to see
+whether the man was really dead or in a dying condition.&nbsp;
+The doctor, who was an acute man, soon saw how matters stood; and
+producing from his coat pocket a bottle of sal volatile, he
+dexterously applied it to the nose of the prostrate soldier, and
+with such good effect, that the man started up as though he had
+received an electric shock, and was seized with <!-- page 52--><a
+name="page52"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 52</span>such a
+violent fit of sneezing, that, notwithstanding the serious
+position of both parties, it was found impossible to resist a
+simultaneous burst of laughter.&nbsp; The Pasha was too much
+enraged to join in this hilarity, which he speedily checked, by
+thundering out to his attendants to seize upon the ringleaders in
+this disgraceful riot, and have them hung on the same tree upon
+which Mr. Bird had been exposed&mdash;a threat that would
+doubtless have been put into immediate execution, but for the
+strenuous interference of good Mr. Bird, who, though still
+smarting from the severity of his treatment, was far too good a
+Christian to allow his enemies to be punished.&nbsp; He tried
+hard to beg them off altogether; but this the Pasha would not
+listen to, so the Europeans returned home to be out of hearing of
+the cries of the wretches as they underwent the severest
+bastinadoing ever inflicted, where flogging stops short of
+life.</p>
+<p>This account will appear a perfect fable to those who only
+know Beyrout in its present civilised state; and vast indeed must
+have been the change for the better, when ladies and children can
+wander about the place, singly and unprotected, at all hours of
+the day, and even, I may venture to assert, throughout the
+night.</p>
+<p>Since the expulsion of the Egyptians, in 1840&ndash;1, Beyrout
+has rapidly risen into considerable importance; and it may now be
+considered the chief entrep&ocirc;t of Syrian commerce.&nbsp; At
+that period there were barely three or four European families
+established; and an English vessel only occasionally touched at
+the port; now, merchants, artizans, and shopkeepers, from all
+parts of Europe have flocked into the town; and scarcely a week
+passes by without three or more vessels arriving in the roads
+from different ports of Europe.&nbsp; The roadstead presents a
+gay appearance on Sunday, when <!-- page 53--><a
+name="page53"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 53</span>all the
+different vessels display the ensigns of their respective
+nations, and corresponding flags are hoisted from the tops of the
+consulates on shore.&nbsp; English, French, Sardinian, Austrian,
+American, Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch, Danish, Norwegian, and
+Swedish ships are daily arriving at, or sailing out of the port,
+bringing manufactures from Manchester, colonial produce from
+London, sugar from Hamburg, assorted cargoes from France and
+Italy, and numberless requisites and necessaries from other parts
+of the world; whilst they export from Beyrout, silk reeled in the
+many factories situated in the immediate neighbourhood and on
+Lebanon, grain from the interior, raw silk, of which some portion
+is contributed from my native village, and lately an enterprising
+American has carried off ship-loads of our Beyrout and Syrian
+olive oil, timber, nuts, and specimens of dried and preserved
+fruits.&nbsp; The population is rapidly increasing, the wealth
+augmenting, new firms are being established, fresh channels of
+commerce discovered, houses being built, gardens enclosed,
+grounds purchased and planted, till the once quiet, secluded, and
+almost desolate-looking Beyrout, many of whose decayed and
+dilapidated ruins crumbled into dust under the severe shocks of
+the great earthquake of 1821, has been rapidly metamorphosed into
+a pleasant and flourishing town, replete with handsome buildings
+and luxuriant gardens, presenting, as viewed from the sea, one of
+the handsomest marine pictures possible for the pencil of the
+painter to depict, or the lay of the poet to celebrate.</p>
+<p>Please God, I hope yet to see the day when much loved Beyrout
+shall rival and surpass in every sense Smyrna, and even
+Stamboul.&nbsp; I often hear people in England talking about the
+beautiful azure skies of sunny Italy, and sighing for her shores;
+but I doubt <!-- page 54--><a name="page54"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 54</span>very much if any part of the world
+can surpass some portions of Syria for climate or for beauty of
+scenery of every description.&nbsp; Those who are fond of
+romantic and wild scenery, have only to travel over the Lattakia
+mountains to gratify their tastes and inclinations.&nbsp; The
+quiet woodbine, the pleasant myrtle-shade, the jessamine and the
+rose, the murmuring stream and the lovely cot; these are to be
+met with all over Lebanon and North Syria&mdash;nature, in all
+her variety, collected, together&mdash;hills, valleys, rivers,
+fountains&mdash;gardens, ocean&mdash;snow and sunshine; all these
+may be included in one prospect surveyed from any of the many
+eminences in the immediate neighbourhood of Beyrout.&nbsp; As for
+cloudless skies, all Syria possesses this charm, and it has none
+of the drawbacks that Italy must lament&mdash;no Popish
+thraldom&mdash;no revolutionary crisis always on the eve of
+exploding, and always stained with innocent blood.&nbsp; The
+land, it is true, is the land of the Moslem; but the present
+enlightened Sultan has made it a land of perfect liberty to the
+stranger; and more than this, a land in which he enjoys
+privileges that he cannot hope for in his own native country.</p>
+<p>Beyrout is the spot for many reasons best adapted for
+missionary purposes; and I have long wished for the day when I
+may be enabled to lay before intelligent men a certain means of
+promoting the interests, both spiritual and temporal, of their
+Eastern brethren with little pains-taking or trouble to
+themselves, but with incalculable advantages to those whom they
+would benefit.&nbsp; Of this, however, more anon, in a chapter
+devoted expressly to the subject.</p>
+<p>A great advantage derivable to Europeans settling at Beyrout
+is the immediate proximity of the Lebanon range of mountains;
+for, though reputed an excellent <!-- page 55--><a
+name="page55"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 55</span>climate,
+Beyrout is subject to great heats during the summer season, and
+it not unfrequently occurs that reckless strangers unnecessarily
+expose themselves to the fierce rays of the sun with nothing but
+a flimsy hat to protect their heads.&nbsp; The result is
+brain-fever and sometimes death.&nbsp; The latter is very
+unfairly attributed to the climate.&nbsp; One might as well say
+the same of London, where several instances of <i>coup de
+soleil</i> have occurred during a late year; but as some
+constitutions cannot stand heat, however well sheltered indoors,
+these have only to pitch their tents, or to repair to a
+neighbouring village during the summer, a pleasant half-hour or
+hour&rsquo;s ride from Beyrout.&nbsp; Here they may choose their
+own temperature, and not only this, but also gratify their own
+peculiar fancy with regard to scenery; and those who love
+field-sports will find endless amusement and occupation amongst
+the hares and partridges with which the neighbourhood is
+literally overrun.</p>
+<p>But the real fact of the case is, that the climate of Beyrout
+is extremely healthy; in proof of which I quote the general
+health of the natives and of those Europeans who have resided
+there long enough to adapt themselves to the customs of the
+country, who eat but little meat during the hot months, eschew
+spirits and inebriating liquors, avoid violent exercise or
+exposure to draughts and the intense heat of the mid-day sun;
+rise early, use frequent ablutions, take gentle horse exercise,
+and only use fresh and ripe fruit, and vegetables which are
+generally of the best.&nbsp; Even fish is considered by the
+natives as tantamount to poison during the months of July and
+August; and surely nature is bountiful enough in the supply of an
+endless variety of delicious fruits and vegetables to enable one
+to subsist without much heavy <!-- page 56--><a
+name="page56"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 56</span>and
+unwholesome meat.&nbsp; Of the benefits arising from this diet
+and regimen, the robust natives of the villages give ample proof;
+their every-day meals consist principally of bread, fruit,
+vegetables, rice or burghal, and cold water; with a little cup of
+coffee and a pipe of mild tobacco after meals to promote
+digestion.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 57--><a name="page57"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+57</span>CHAPTER V.<br />
+EXCURSION TO CYPRUS.</h2>
+<p>Quitting my kind friends the Americans in 1839, I was
+appointed by the Government to accompany a distinguished
+European, travelling on a diplomatic mission through the
+East.&nbsp; He was an affable, kind man; and though I have often
+since made the tour of the places we then visited, I never so
+much enjoyed a journey as in his pleasant and instructive
+company.&nbsp; Our plan of route was to first visit Cyprus and
+Asia Minor, then the northern towns and villages of Syria, and so
+travel southwards as far as the limits of Syria and
+Palestine.&nbsp; All things being prepared, we set sail from
+Beyrout late one evening in a small felucca, which, nevertheless,
+in fine weather, sailed remarkably well; and, upon the whole, we
+were pretty comfortable on board, the entire use of the boat, to
+the exclusion of other passengers, having been contracted
+for.</p>
+<p>The land breeze blew freshly all night, and at daylight next
+morning, when I staggered up, holding fast by the cords of the
+mast, there was not a vestige of Beyrout to be seen; indeed, my
+inexperienced eyes could discern nothing but sea and clouds,
+though the Arab <i>ra&#299;s</i> (captain) positively affirmed,
+that what I mistook for clouds was the high land of Cyprus,
+looming right a-head.&nbsp; This was the first time in my life
+that I had ever found myself so far out at sea.&nbsp; At first
+the <!-- page 58--><a name="page58"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+58</span>novelty of the sight, the lovely, cool, blue colour of
+the waves&mdash;the azure sky, tinged with a hundred brilliant
+hues, all harbingers of the rising sun&mdash;the fish sportively
+bounding into the air&mdash;the sea-gulls&mdash;the white sails
+of vessels in the distance; all these were a source of amusement
+and speculation for the mind; but when the sun rose, and its heat
+soon drove me to take shelter under the lee of the large
+mainsail&mdash;when I had nothing to do but to watch the little
+boat dipping and plunging into the water&mdash;when the smell of
+tar, pitch, tobacco-smoke, and fried onions, assailed my
+nostrils; then I was fairly and dreadfully sea-sick.</p>
+<p>I wrapped myself up in my <i>kaboot</i>, and only groaned out
+answers to the many kind enquiries made by my new friend and the
+assiduous boat&rsquo;s company.&nbsp; These latter became an
+intolerable nuisance.&nbsp; First would come the fat,
+greasy-looking old <i>ra&#299;s</i>, with an abominable skewer of
+fried meat and onions in one hand, and a nasty, well-mauled piece
+of bread in the other.&nbsp; &ldquo;Eat, my son,&rdquo; he would
+say; &ldquo;eat these delicious morsels, rivalling in flavour and
+richness the <i>Kab&#257;bs</i> of Paradise; it will strengthen
+your heart.&rdquo;&nbsp; A lizard or a toad could not have been
+more nauseous to me than was that man at that moment.&nbsp;
+Throughout the morning it was nothing but &ldquo;<i>yar
+Ibn-i</i>, <i>koul</i>, <i>yar Ibn-i Risk Allah</i>&rdquo; (O
+son, eat, O son Risk Allah).&nbsp; The heat grew intense towards
+midday.&nbsp; My European friend was almost as great a sufferer
+as myself.&nbsp; Happily the sea-breeze held on, and at eleven,
+<span class="smcap">p.m.</span>, that night our felucca was
+safely moored at Larnaca, the sea-port town of Cyprus.</p>
+<p>During our stay at Larnaca we were lodged with the English
+vice-consular agent at that time, a native of the island.&nbsp;
+He was an obliging old man, who did all in his power to make our
+stay agreeable.&nbsp; I was very <!-- page 59--><a
+name="page59"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 59</span>much pleased
+with this place and its hospitable inhabitants; though only so
+short a distance from Beyrout, the change was very great.&nbsp;
+Here there were numerous carriages and other vehicles, drawn by
+horses and oxen; and a drive in an open carriage was both a treat
+and a novelty to me, who had never been accustomed to any other
+mode of locomotion than walking or riding on horseback.&nbsp; The
+Greeks and the Roman Catholics had neat churches here, and the
+loud chiming of the church bells on a Sunday was a clear proof
+that the Christians of this island enjoyed more privileges, and
+mixed more freely with the Turks than their brethren on the
+mainland.&nbsp; To such an extraordinary pitch is this
+neighbourly intercourse carried, that they intermarry with each
+other without any distinction of creed; the only part of the
+Turkish dominions where such a license exists.&nbsp; At Larnaca
+the houses were neatly built, and the streets cleanly swept;
+there were many pleasant rides and drives about the
+neighbourhood, but the climate is insalubrious and peculiarly ill
+adapted to European constitutions.&nbsp; The heat in the summer
+months is beyond endurance; and there are many salt-pits and
+marshes in the neighbourhood, which contribute greatly towards
+the sufferings of the inhabitants.&nbsp; I am sorry to say that
+what I saw of the natives, only helped to confirm me in those
+prejudices which exist against them in the East.&nbsp; The men
+are, for the most part, notorious gamblers and drunkards, and
+when drunk or excited, capable of any act of ferocity.&nbsp;
+Besides this, they are possessed of all the cunning of the fox,
+and are such lovers of mammon, that for the acquirement of wealth
+they would be guilty of any dishonesty or treachery, and
+sacrifice even the honor and virtue of their families, at the
+shrine of their household deity&mdash;gold.&nbsp; How painful to
+reflect <!-- page 60--><a name="page60"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 60</span>that so many precious souls are
+thrown away for the want of better teaching and example; how sad
+to know that they have no opportunity offered them of throwing
+off the heavy yoke of sin, and of bursting the bonds of
+Satan.&nbsp; But their bishops and priests are a wicked set, full
+of conceit and sinful lusts, selling their own souls, as well as
+those confided to their care, for the acquirement of filthy
+lucre; and so long as they encourage the vices and dissipations
+of their flocks as a sure source of revenue to themselves (for
+however great the crime, absolution may be purchased, and slight
+penances imposed to expiate the most heinous sins); so long as
+such a sad state of affairs is permitted, there can be no hope of
+any amelioration in their degraded condition.&nbsp; I know not
+what the motives for it may be; but poor Cyprus has, so long as I
+can remember, been more neglected than other parts of the East by
+the Missionary Societies in England and America.&nbsp; This is
+much to be lamented, and may, I hope, soon be remedied.&nbsp;
+Doubtless for the first few years, missionaries would have almost
+insuperable difficulties to contend against; but, with
+God&rsquo;s blessing, these would gradually disappear.&nbsp; The
+climate, though perhaps unfavourable to their constitution, would
+be favourable to their cause, and a skilful physician a boon to
+an island, where heretofore only quacks and charlatans have been
+within the call of suffering humanity.&nbsp; The late Doctor
+Lilburn has left a name behind him in Cyprus still reverenced by
+the poorer and sicklier inhabitants; his kind urbanity, his
+charity, and attention to the sufferings of the sick, and his
+skill as a physician, displayed in many extraordinary cures, all
+these contributed to work out for him a fame which would have
+gradually enlarged itself, and penetrated to the remotest corners
+of the island, <!-- page 61--><a name="page61"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 61</span>had it pleased the Almighty to spare
+him yet awhile on earth; but he died, and we have every hope that
+his good Christian spirit is now reaping an eternal harvest of
+bliss.</p>
+<p>With all the crimes and vices attached to the character of the
+Cypriote Greeks, they are all staunch observers of the outward
+forms prescribed by the elders of their church.&nbsp; They are
+rigid observers of fast days, and the same man that would hardly
+hesitate to rob you of your life, would rather endure any
+torments of hunger, or any temptation, than break through the
+prescribed rules of abstinence.&nbsp; This, in conjunction with
+their frequent attendance at the confessional, clearly shews the
+implicit faith they place in the powers and virtues of their
+priests; and it appears to me that this strict command over
+certain lusts of the flesh might, if diverted into a proper
+channel, redound much to their credit, and these very ruffians
+become devoted Christians, when they have once learnt the
+instability of all human hopes, the impotency of man&rsquo;s
+agency to avert a pending destruction, and to give all the glory
+to God, and no portion of it to princes or men.</p>
+<p>We visited severally Nicosia, the inland capital of the
+kingdom, Fuma Gosta, and a few other unimportant sea-side
+villages.&nbsp; Nicosia is a very handsomely built town, with
+beautiful gardens, and surrounded with strongly built
+fortifications.&nbsp; The streets are sufficiently wide, and for
+the most part kept in admirable repair; good roads are a rare
+thing to meet in the East.&nbsp; The <i>majlis</i>, or government
+council, of which the Pasha himself is president, is composed of
+Turks and Greeks; but the greater portion are Greeks.&nbsp; These
+are the wealthiest part of the community, and carry everything
+<!-- page 62--><a name="page62"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+62</span>before them.&nbsp; In some caves attached to the houses
+of the most ancient Greek families, there are large supplies of
+old Cyprus <i>camandarea</i>, upwards of half a century in
+earthen jars.&nbsp; This wine is very expensive, and is only used
+as a luxury or for convalescent invalids.&nbsp; The supposed
+sites of Salamis and Paphos were pointed out to us; in the former
+place we are told, in the Acts of the Apostles, that Paul and
+Barnabas, who landed in Cyprus <span class="smcap">a.d.</span>
+44, preached Christ crucified; here also, Barnabas, who is
+reverenced as the principal Apostle and first Bishop of Cyprus,
+was stoned, being martyred by the Jews of Salamis: at Paphos St.
+Paul struck Bar-jesus with blindness, and the pro-consul embraced
+Christianity.&nbsp; The spiritual blindness of the people of the
+whole island is, alas! more appalling than that miraculous
+visitation on the blaspheming impostor.&nbsp; During our stay in
+the island, my friend was much occupied surveying and sketching,
+and from seeing him apparently so much attached to the elegant
+accomplishments, I first acquired a passion for drawing, but he
+had no time to instruct me; I had no means of improving myself;
+and so I was obliged to let the matter rest till a favourable
+opportunity should present itself.</p>
+<p>The prevailing language of the island is Greek&mdash;Turkish
+is also spoken, but Arabic is almost unknown in the interior; a
+strange circumstance, considering the proximity of Cyprus to the
+Syrian coast.</p>
+<p>After a month&rsquo;s ramble in the island, we hired a native
+boat at Cyprus, and sailed over to Cilicia, a voyage which we
+were three days in accomplishing, owing to the then prevalent
+light winds and calms.&nbsp; Mersine, the seaport of Tarshish, or
+Tersous, the birthplace of St. Paul, and once a city of no mean
+repute, is a miserable little village consisting of some half a
+<!-- page 63--><a name="page63"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+63</span>hundred huts, inhabited by fever-stricken, flea-bitten
+fellahs.&nbsp; There are many pleasant orange groves and citron
+walks in the village; and the water and shade, and verdure, form
+a picture of ease, and health, and comfort, that but ill accords
+with the really pestilential atmosphere of the
+neighbourhood.&nbsp; Small and unimportant as Mersine is in
+itself, it is of considerable importance to the commerce of Asia
+Minor, as being the nearest seaport to Tersous and Adana, whose
+merchants ship annually large quantities of linseed, wool,
+sessame, and cotton, the produce of the vast plains and valleys
+on either side of the Taurus range of mountains.&nbsp; From
+Mersine to Tersous is a distance of about four hours&rsquo; easy
+riding.&nbsp; We left Mersine the morning after our arrival an
+hour before sunrise, so that we reached our destination before
+the sun had waxed overpoweringly hot, or the horse-flies had
+become annoying.&nbsp; The beauty of the plains we rode over,
+their fertility and variegated aspect, and the whole scenery
+around us, is scarcely surpassed in any part of the world that I
+have visited, before or since.&nbsp; Troops of swift gazelles,
+and hares innumerable passed our track as we crossed the plains
+of Adana; whilst the surrounding bushes abounded with partridges,
+quails, and such like game; the marshes and lakes were literally
+teeming with water-fowl, from the majestic swan to the
+insignificant sandpiper and water-rail; foxes were plentiful, and
+so were jackals and hyenas; and the high range of mountains that
+encompasses the plain on all sides, save that which faces the
+sea, was plentifully stocked with chetahs, leopards, and other
+equally undesirable neighbours.&nbsp; The further we rode the
+higher the elevation of the ground became, and the land was well
+laid out in cultivation.&nbsp; Finally, we reached the really
+picturesque <!-- page 64--><a name="page64"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 64</span>and vast gardens on the outskirts of
+the town, where we met occasional donkey-loads of the choicest
+fruits and vegetables.&nbsp; Heaps of cucumbers and lettuces were
+piled up near the garden-gates ready for transportation to the
+market, and the passers-by coolly helped themselves to some
+without any interference on the part of the owners or gardeners,
+so super-abundantly does nature there produce her choicest
+gifts.</p>
+<p>Tersous is in some parts handsomely built, in others it was
+disfigured by wretched hovels, whilst masses of putrifying
+vegetable and animal matter were all that met the eye or assailed
+the nostril.&nbsp; The inhabitants seemed equally distinct from
+each other.&nbsp; The occupants of the better sort of houses were
+stout, robust, and healthy-looking fellows, who lived upon the
+fat of the land, and inhabited Tersous only during winter, and a
+portion of autumn and spring, decamping with their families to
+the lofty and salubrious climates of Kulek Bughaz, and other
+pleasantly situated villages of the Taurus, as soon as the
+much-dreaded summer drew nigh.&nbsp; The inmates of the miserable
+hovels were, on the contrary, perfect personifications of misery
+and despair&mdash;sickly-looking, unfortunate <i>Fellahin</i>
+Christians and Jews, who must work, and work hard too, to enable
+them to inhabit any home, however humble, and are, consequently,
+tied down to the place hot weather or cold, martyrs to fevers,
+dropsy, and a few other like horrible complaints common to
+Tersous at all times of the year, but raging to a fearful extent
+during the months of June, July and August.&nbsp; The fevers are
+occasioned partly from the miasma arising from the marshes in the
+neighbourhood and the many stagnant pools and gutters in the town
+itself, but chiefly from <!-- page 65--><a
+name="page65"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 65</span>the frightful
+exhalations occasioned by the mounds of putrifying camels, cows,
+oxen, goats, horses, and mules, which annually die off from a
+murrain raging amongst them, and whose carcases are dragged to
+the outside of the city&rsquo;s old walls, and there
+indiscriminately piled up in the dry ditches around&mdash;a
+carnival for jackals and glutted vultures who are so amply
+provided for, that even they and the packs of savage curs that
+infest the streets of the town, grow dainty in their pickings and
+become worthless scavengers from excess of feasting.</p>
+<p>This is a frightful but faithful picture of the suburbs of
+modern Tersous.&nbsp; The very streets are equally neglected;
+bestrewed with the disgusting remains of dogs, cats, and similar
+nuisances.&nbsp; Indeed, Tersous might be aptly termed a mass of
+corruption; and yet it has not been neglected by bountiful
+nature.&nbsp; The pleasant waters of the famed Cydnus, which
+murmur through the very heart of the town, render its banks on
+either side prolific with orange and lemon trees; the sweet odour
+from whose blossoms, the fever-wasted form, reclining in a
+pleasant shade on its banks, inhales with gusto, but alas! each
+breath is impregnated with the noxious poisons that float heavily
+on the atmosphere.</p>
+<p>The inhabitants are negligent and careless about what most
+vitally concerns their immediate welfare, vainly sweeping out and
+cleansing their own particular court-yards and houses, whilst the
+streets and the suburbs are teeming with the seeds of pestilence,
+and the dark night vapour is bestridden by direful disease and
+death.&nbsp; In Tersous there was only one resident Englishman,
+and that was the Vice-Consul, who had come there to die like his
+predecessors.&nbsp; There were no missionaries, not even a
+Catholic priest, though <!-- page 66--><a name="page66"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 66</span>plenty of Italian and French Roman
+Catholics were attached to the various consulates, or employed as
+merchants and fishers of leeches.&nbsp; The native inhabitants,
+including a great many from Cyprus, were of all creeds, the
+greater part being Mahomedans.</p>
+<p>During our stay, we were the guests of a hospitable native
+Christian, Signor Michael Saba, a notable merchant of Tersous;
+but almost all of those whose acquaintance I made, are since
+dead, our worthy host among the rest.&nbsp; He, poor man, fell a
+victim to a virulent fever, that swept away hundreds besides
+himself, within the space of a fortnight.&nbsp; Sad indeed is the
+change for the worse in the Tersous of the present day, to what
+that town must have been in the primitive days of the Christian
+church, when it boasted of its wealth and commerce, and sent
+forth to the world such accomplished men as the great Apostle St.
+Paul; who, speaking of his native home, could call it <i>A city
+of no mean repute in Cilicia</i>.&nbsp; Our stay in Tersous did
+not exceed the time absolutely necessary for the completion of my
+friend&rsquo;s drawings and surveys; and then, nothing loth, we
+turned our backs upon the place, crossing the large handsome
+bridge built over the river, and so speeded on towards
+Adana.&nbsp; The country lying between Tersous and Adana, was
+very similar to that which we had traversed between Mersine and
+the former place, a flat country imperceptibly rising as we
+advanced.&nbsp; Most of this country was more or less cultivated;
+and we passed countless Turcoman encampments forming large
+villages, the whole of whose population was almost exclusively
+occupied in making those carpets, for which they are so much
+renowned.&nbsp; The great brilliancy of colour and duration of
+these carpets have acquired for them a very just celebrity.&nbsp;
+The Turcoman dyes, brilliant yellow, <!-- page 67--><a
+name="page67"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 67</span>green, and
+purple (the latter possibly the celebrated Tyrian dye, now lost
+to the world), are a secret, for the possession of a knowledge of
+which, the princely Manchester manufacturers would, I imagine,
+willingly loosen their purse-strings; but no one in the East has
+hitherto been possessed of sufficient energy and patient
+inquisitiveness to coax this secret from the breasts of these
+wild sons of the wilderness.&nbsp; <i>En route</i> we passed many
+old wells which supplied these people and their flocks with water
+during the summer months.&nbsp; At some of these wells we stopped
+and begged water for ourselves and horses, which was cheerfully
+supplied by pretty maidens, who, like Rebecca of old, had come to
+the well to supply their father&rsquo;s flocks with water.</p>
+<p>The town of Adana is of very unprepossessing aspect; its
+houses being very inferior, both in appearance and dimensions, to
+those of Tersous.&nbsp; They have, however, the advantage of
+being in a much healthier situation, though, owing to the
+inconvenient system of excluding windows, which might overlook
+the neighbours&rsquo; court-yards, the houses are insufferably
+close during the hot months; and have more the resemblance of
+miserable prisons, with well-secured doors, than of
+dwelling-houses.&nbsp; The Turks, who are seldom at home during
+the day, suffer very little inconvenience from the fact above
+alluded to.&nbsp; They, for the most part, have their little
+shops on either side of the prodigiously long street that
+constitutes Adana; and as these are covered in with thatch-work,
+and are moreover carefully watered by public water-carriers
+several times a day, the <i>Dukkans</i> afford a desirable
+retreat from the mid-day heat.&nbsp; If their wives and families
+suffer inconvenience from the sultry closeness of the weather,
+they are at liberty to lock their doors and resort to any among
+the number <!-- page 68--><a name="page68"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 68</span>of pleasant gardens that embellish
+the suburbs of the town, there to make <i>farah</i>, and enjoy
+themselves till the hour arrives when the <i>Dukkans</i> are
+closed for the night, and the master of the house is expected
+home; then all scamper back to receive their hungry husbands, and
+if their dinner be not cooked, or be displeasing to their taste,
+to receive in addition a few lashes of the <i>corbash</i>, in the
+use of which they are pretty well skilled in Adana.</p>
+<p>The inhabitants are all Moslems&mdash;the most intolerably
+bigoted and ignorantly proud people to be met with in the whole
+of the Sultan&rsquo;s dominions.&nbsp; No professor of another
+creed dares to settle in any quarter of the town, but have their
+houses scattered around its suburbs, and these are in general
+miserable, mean-looking hovels, tenanted by a wretchedly
+poverty-stricken people.&nbsp; Though Adana is the head-quarters
+of the Pasha of that Pashalik, no Europeans, consuls or
+merchants, reside in the place, from which fact alone arises the
+unbearable hauteur of the Turks of Adana, who are unaccustomed to
+mingle with more civilised people, or to bend to the yoke which
+the rules of official etiquette demand and obtain.</p>
+<p>Adana has often been the theatre of frightful convulsions and
+rebellions.&nbsp; The supreme power of the Sublime Porte has been
+on more than one occasion set at defiance, and though the results
+have been terrible, and the honour of the Sultan been vindicated
+in blood, time has worn off the impression, and rising
+generations have continued to grow up in insolence and
+insubordination, till the natives are so void of civility to the
+stranger, that, as a recent author truthfully observes, &ldquo;it
+was difficult for any European to traverse the bazars, especially
+that part allotted to shoe-makers, <!-- page 69--><a
+name="page69"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 69</span>without being
+disgustingly abused, and even spit at.&rdquo;&nbsp; In all other
+parts, the residence of the Pasha is usually fixed upon as the
+residence of the consuls and consular agents; as, for instance,
+Damascus, Jerusalem, and Aleppo, the presence of European
+authorities being always a wholesome check upon the governors,
+who have an innate fear of them, which, notwithstanding their
+deadly hate and bigotry, they are compelled to acknowledge by
+civil words and acts; and if there is one thing that they fear
+more than another, it is the facility with which Europeans use
+their pens.&nbsp; &ldquo;I will write to Stamboul,&rdquo; is a
+terrible sentence to the conscience-smitten official.&nbsp; In it
+he pictures to his imagination an endless array of evils; first,
+the certainty of answers; then his being involved in a difficult
+correspondence, which is almost sure to terminate, if he does not
+speedily amend, in his recall, and possibly still more severe
+punishment.</p>
+<p>Adana had few inducements to hold out to us for
+remaining.&nbsp; The Pasha&rsquo;s beautiful <i>serrai</i> was
+the only object worthy of attention.&nbsp; This had been
+handsomely constructed, and was picturesquely situated on the
+banks of that rapid stream which flows through Tersous.&nbsp;
+Here also was a bridge of very fine structure, and apparently of
+very ancient date.&nbsp; The river itself was enlivened by a
+number of floating flour-mills, the rapid motion of whose wheels
+threw showers of clear water high up into the air, and gave a
+busy and stirring appearance to the, in all other respects, dull
+and monotonous town.</p>
+<p>We ventured as far north as Kulek Bughaz&mdash;that
+impregnable mountain-pass which Ibrahim Pasha so strongly
+fortified, and which modern travellers state, is now in a ruinous
+condition.&nbsp; Having, from this great <!-- page 70--><a
+name="page70"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 70</span>elevation,
+taken a survey of the immense extent of plains both on the Konia
+and Adana side, we hastened to descend again, since the mountains
+were infested with lawless banditti, and the whole country around
+was in a very unsettled state, owing to recent warlike
+demonstrations between Mehemet Ali Pasha and the Sublime
+Porte.</p>
+<p>Reaching the plains, we once more skirted the river, till we
+arrived at a pathway, that led us, after two days&rsquo; weary
+journeyings, to the village of Ayas, on the northern side of the
+Gulf of Scanderoon; thus avoiding a passage through the
+territories of the descendants of that late notorious
+robber-chief, Kuchuk Ali Oglu, whose infamous name had spread
+terror far and wide throughout the Ottoman dominions.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 71--><a name="page71"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+71</span>CHAPTER VI.<br />
+ALEPPO.</h2>
+<p>Hiring an Arab boat at Ayas, we crossed over the Gulf of
+Scanderoon, passing close to the lagoons near that place, which
+are very dangerous for navigation; in fact, so much so, that in
+speaking of it we say in Arabic, &ldquo;As dangerous as the Black
+Sea.&rdquo;&nbsp; They, however, abound in fine turtle, such as
+would meet with a ready and profitable market in London.&nbsp; We
+landed at Scanderoon, a wretched and deserted village, surrounded
+with pestiferous marshes on all sides.&nbsp; The fever was at
+that period prevalent, so that our stay was limited to a few
+hours, during which brief interval horses were engaged to carry
+us to Antioch, and we partook of some slight refreshment at the
+residence of my friend, Suleiman Bey.</p>
+<p>Leaving Scanderoon, or Alesandretta, as it is also called, we
+rode for upwards of an hour through marshes, and hot, humid,
+unhealthy ground, till arriving at the foot of the Beilan
+mountains, we commenced their rather abrupt ascent, and after
+half an hour&rsquo;s scrambling and hard work, reached an
+elevation from which we caught an uninterrupted view of the sea
+for many miles on either side, and so pushing forward, in three
+hours we reached the picturesque village of Beilan, which is
+situated on either side of a high mountain gorge, and is one of
+those natural barriers which, like <!-- page 72--><a
+name="page72"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 72</span>Kulek Bughaz,
+afforded a stronghold in times of disturbance and war to several
+rebel chiefs, who from these fortresses set at defiance the
+invading armies from the neighbouring plains: but since the death
+of Kuchuk Ali Oglu, who so long reigned <i>in terrorem</i> over
+the peaceful inhabitants of the plains, this class of people have
+been entirely exterminated; and Beilan, being on the highway from
+Constantinople to Aleppo, is now inhabited by a civilised though
+very poor class of Turks and Armenians, whose constant
+intercourse with Europeans and other merchants has tamed them
+into honesty, and taught them to respect and fear the prowess of
+all European nations, more especially the English, of whose
+fleets they have sometimes caught sight when cruizing about the
+Gulf, and the roar of whose cannon, echoing from mountain to
+dell, whispered to them not mildly of the power and valour of
+that surprising nation.</p>
+<p>From Beilan to Aleppo our journey occupied two days and a
+half; and as we travelled with our own tents, etc., we were
+entirely independant of such wretched accommodation as is usually
+afforded to travellers in the villages.&nbsp; Aleppo had much the
+appearance of Damascus when viewed from the distance.&nbsp; The
+bright foliage of the trees dotted with occasional domes and
+terraces&mdash;the lofty minarets, and the picturesque hill and
+castle in the centre, all contributed to render the tableau
+complete; besides which, around as far as the eye could stretch,
+the barren and desolate appearance of the mountains made Aleppo
+stand forth a perfect Oasis in a wilderness.&nbsp; On our arrival
+we were lodged at the Latin convent, but shortly afterwards
+removed to hired apartments in Jedida, the Christian quarter of
+the town, where I had the pleasure of forming the acquaintance of
+several wealthy native families.</p>
+<p><!-- page 73--><a name="page73"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+73</span>The Aleppines are with truth styled polished; they are
+innately gentlemen and ladies, from the highest to the lowest;
+the graceful walk&mdash;the well-bred salutation&mdash;in short,
+the whole deportment is such as would well become, and even
+grace, an English aristocratic <i>re-union</i>.&nbsp; During our
+stay, Signor Fatallah, a wealthy neighbour, who was likewise
+proprietor of a silk manufactory, married his son to the daughter
+of an opulent fellow-townsman; preparations on a grand scale had
+long been going forward, and amongst a vast concourse of friends
+and acquaintances invited to celebrate the nuptials, we also were
+included.&nbsp; The auspicious moment arrived, and we proceeded
+to Fatallah&rsquo;s house escorted by a band of native musicians
+whom we met going there.&nbsp; On arriving at the residence of
+the bridegroom, we were ushered into a long room in which guests
+were seated from the door to the upper part according to their
+rank in life; the chief guests being seated at the head of the
+divan on either side of the master of the house, others were
+ranged lower and lower, the poorest guests were close to the
+doorway, and one or two so poor that they did not even aspire to
+a place on the divan, but squatted themselves cross-legged on the
+ground.&nbsp; On the arrival of a fresh guest the master of the
+house would rise and come forward to receive him; and if, as
+happened on some occasions, the guest from mock humility would
+seat himself in a position lower than what his actual rank of
+precedence entitled him to, an absurd scuffle would ensue, in
+which the master of the house would endeavour to drag the other
+higher up into the room, and the guest with many
+&ldquo;St&#257;fer Allahs&rdquo; (God forbid) and many false
+protestations, would pretend reluctantly to yield to the
+distinction proferred him, and so gain honour in the sight of the
+<!-- page 74--><a name="page74"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+74</span>assembled multitude.&nbsp; Such scenes brought vividly
+to my mind our Lord&rsquo;s parable about the meek being exalted;
+and rendered it clearly evident that this etiquette, so strictly
+adhered to by the natives of all Syria to this present hour,
+existed in the time of the Redeemer, and has been practised from
+the Patriarchs downwards.&nbsp; The very costume&mdash;the method
+of salutation&mdash;the seats arranged methodically for the
+guests, all helped to contribute not a little in forcibly
+recalling to mind several portions of Scripture often read with
+pleasure in my childhood.</p>
+<p>After we had arrived and taken our seats, the musicians struck
+up some popular and lively Arabic air familiar to the ears of us
+Syrians, as connected with many pleasant recollections of like
+spectacles and occasions.&nbsp; Numberless servants were busily
+occupied in handing to the guests sherbet, pipes, narghilies, and
+a large assortment of candied and other sweetmeats.&nbsp; As the
+visitors continued rapidly arriving they were sprinkled by the
+bridesman with essences, and the scene in the court-yard outside
+the reception-room assumed a more animated appearance.&nbsp;
+Groups of young men in gaily-coloured and picturesque coats, were
+seated in separate circles each possessing a
+<i>k&#257;n&#363;n</i> or other instrument players of its own,
+emulous to surpass the notes of his neighbour.&nbsp; Occasionally
+one or two men from each circle would stand up and go through the
+wild but elegant figures of the Bedouin dances, whilst groups of
+pretty and timid girls, collected in knots round the walls of the
+house, watched with the deepest interest the wrestling matches of
+their lovers or brothers, and joined loudly in the plaudits which
+crowned a successful competitor with the full-blown honours of
+championship.&nbsp; As the evening advanced, their hilarity
+increased; <!-- page 75--><a name="page75"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 75</span>strings of servants with
+heavily-laden trays were seen occasionally crossing the
+court-yard, bringing quantities of confectionery and other gifts
+of the friends and relations of the bridegroom, for it is always
+expected that everyone invited will contribute in some small way
+to set up the young couple in life.&nbsp; To this intent the
+presents comprise all sorts of articles, such as handkerchiefs,
+caps, scarfs, wax-tapers, coffee, sugar, sweet-meats, live fowls,
+wheat, tobacco, etc.&nbsp; Every one gives his mite; it costs the
+donor only a trifle, but in the mass very materially assists the
+newly married pair.&nbsp; This custom of friends sending presents
+is also adopted upon the accouchment of a lady; her friends, the
+ensuing week, send her various small presents on trays, such as a
+couple of roasted chickens, or some delicate tit-bit, well suited
+to the palate of an invalid.&nbsp; These small civilities are
+productive of much good will, and really cost nothing, but I
+wonder what any fashionable lady in London would say, if a
+friend, under similar circumstances, volunteered to send her a
+dish of roast fowl.&nbsp; I understand that among the middle and
+lower classes in England such presents are not unfrequent, though
+generally in cases not entirely above the reach of want; whereas,
+with us in Syria, when we have any dish that is particularly
+nice, or any early fruit that is very choice the custom of
+sending a portion to our neighbours is observed by all classes
+alike, as a mark of regard and delicate attention.</p>
+<p>But to return to the gay nuptials of our friend,
+Fatallah&rsquo;s son, the bridegroom was nowhere visible, neither
+were there any signs of the fair bride or her attendant
+nymphs.&nbsp; Towards evening, however, the Greek bishop,
+marshalled in by three or four priests, made his appearance, and
+as soon as his reverence had <!-- page 76--><a
+name="page76"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 76</span>been saluted
+and seated himself, servants appeared with low round tables,
+which they set before the guests, and covering them with
+heavily-laden trays, removed the napkins, and displayed to the
+hungry multitude the very choice collection of viands that had
+been cooked for the nuptial dinner.</p>
+<p>Richly flavoured soups, aromatic dishes of minced meat,
+gravies, and numerous other delicacies, both sweet and sour, were
+all plentifully supplied; the first course consisting chiefly of
+light dishes, in which vegetables and curdled cream figured in
+abundance; the second, comprising various kinds of meat; the
+whole repast terminating with one vast pillaf, kids and lambs
+roasted whole, and stuffed with pistachio nuts, currants and
+spices.&nbsp; Before commencing dinner, a small glass of arraki
+<a name="citation76"></a><a href="#footnote76"
+class="citation">[76]</a> was handed round to the guests;
+afterwards, an abundant supply of wine of Lebanon was at hand for
+those who wished to partake of it.</p>
+<p>Whilst this festivity was going forward indoors, those outside
+were not one whit behind in enjoyment.&nbsp; Sheep cooked whole,
+were set before the musicians and singers; also huge platters of
+pillaf, which made two men stagger under their weight.&nbsp; At
+the conclusion of dinner, all the guests were served with basins
+and ewers of water, and very liberally besprinkled with rose and
+orange-flower water.</p>
+<p>During the repast, the bridegroom, who had entered the room
+very meanly clad, was conducted by young men, his companions,
+into an adjoining apartment, and there having been shaved and
+washed, then stripped of his beggarly rags, he was clothed in
+splendid bridal attire and led back into the presence of the
+guests.&nbsp; Here he passed round from one to the other, humbly
+<!-- page 77--><a name="page77"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+77</span>taking their hands and kissing them, commencing with the
+bishops and priests, until he had completed the circle; he then
+received the blessing; after which he was permitted to seat
+himself upon a low chair placed in the centre of the room, and
+there, with his head hanging down from feelings of bashfulness,
+the young man awaited the arrival of the propitious hour.&nbsp;
+After some little delay, the distant sound of darbekirs and
+firing off of muskets warned the assembly that the bride had
+quitted her home for the last time, and was now being escorted
+with all the pride of Eastern pomp through the streets to the
+residence of her destined husband.&nbsp; The road chosen on this,
+as on all similar occasions, is the longest and most circuitous,
+in order to show that the bride is in no hurry to arrive at the
+house of her beloved.&nbsp; No sooner did the shouts and
+acclamations reach the ears of the young men congregated in the
+court-yards, than these as though inspired by martial music,
+leapt up from the ground and seizing upon their fire-arms, rushed
+out into the streets accompanied by drums and other instruments,
+to be in readiness to receive the bride&rsquo;s escort, and
+exchange with them <i>feux de joie</i> of musketry.</p>
+<p>Some servants of the house now carried into the reception-room
+a common low table which was speedily covered with snow-white
+drapery, and on which were placed the bishop&rsquo;s mitre,
+prayer-books, chalices, censers, etc., all to be in readiness for
+the consecration of the nuptials.&nbsp; The bishop and attendant
+priests were speedily arrayed in clerical costumes; two small
+crowns of olive branches richly gilt and decorated with flowers
+were placed upon the table; and these arrangements had scarcely
+been completed, when the bride was ushered in by her attendant
+nymphs, followed by a <!-- page 78--><a name="page78"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 78</span>concourse of friends and relations,
+having previously thrown some yeast upon the outer door of the
+house, and broken a pomegranate over it.&nbsp; The former
+signifying that she is to be attached as closely to her husband
+as the yeast adheres to the door; while the latter figures that
+she is to be as fruitful a mother as this fruit is full of
+seed.</p>
+<p>The bride was covered from head to foot in a long, loose veil,
+white as snow; but of sufficiently thin texture to admit of her
+features being partly distinguishable, and to show that over her
+under garments, which were composed of richly embroidered silks
+and satins, she was literally bespangled with costly gems; large
+festoons of gold coins encircling her head, and falling over her
+shoulders, reached to the ground.</p>
+<p>The priest now lighted the candles placed on the temporary
+altar: <a name="citation78"></a><a href="#footnote78"
+class="citation">[78]</a> deacons with censers in their hands
+went the round of the room, sprinkling benedictions on all
+around; the bride and bridegroom were duly arranged before the
+bishops and priests&mdash;a bridesman and a bridesmaid stood
+behind, their right hands resting on the crowns which had now
+been placed on the heads of the young couple about to be married;
+the chaunt commenced, and the serious part of the ceremony
+began.&nbsp; As the nuptials progressed, the bridegroom and bride
+three times exchanged crowns; then the rings were placed upon the
+fingers of both, and the bishop made them drink out of the same
+cup of wine; once did they make the circuit of the altar-table;
+and then amidst a shower of small silver coins, confectionary,
+and flowers, which fell like heavy rain all around, the bishop
+gave his blessing; and the young couple were <!-- page 79--><a
+name="page79"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 79</span>bound by
+indissoluble ties from that moment forward, throughout life, as
+man and wife.&nbsp; The bride was shortly after led away into an
+antechamber, where she was partly relieved of her many cumbrous
+veils, and where such of the friends of the family as desired,
+had a fair opportunity of admiring her pretty face.&nbsp; She
+then stepped forth and kissed the hands of male intruders, in
+token of her humble submission to one of their sex from that day
+forward. <a name="citation79"></a><a href="#footnote79"
+class="citation">[79]</a></p>
+<p>The latter part of the evening was passed much in the same way
+as the earlier part of the day had been; with music, songs, and
+dancing.&nbsp; What added much to the general effect, was the
+numerous variegated lamps and brilliant torches, that cast a
+light upon and added greatly to the picturesque effect of the
+various costumes; for by this time many of the European residents
+were present, in some instances accompanied by their ladies, and
+some of the military and other officers in the government
+service, dressed in their respective uniforms.&nbsp; It was near
+upon midnight when we withdrew, but the festivities were kept up
+till daybreak; and then the wedding-feast terminated, the
+gaieties of which had been sustained with hardly any intermission
+throughout the three preceding days.</p>
+<p>Such is the general custom amongst our people; and even the
+poorest man on such joyful occasions, as they occur only once in
+a lifetime, will spend his last piastre in endeavours to make the
+ceremony as brilliant an affair as he can.&nbsp; When a widower
+or widow is married, all these rejoicings are abandoned&mdash;the
+simple nuptial ceremony, in the presence of a few relatives, is
+all that is expected or in fact deemed decorous; and <!-- page
+80--><a name="page80"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 80</span>this
+arises from a very honourable notion, that the memory of a
+deceased partner should be held in religious esteem; so as to
+prevent the outraging the feelings of their relatives upon the
+occasion of entering a second time into that estate, by any
+display or great rejoicing: indeed a man or a woman is supposed
+to marry a second time purely from motives of mutual advantage;
+to be a helpmate to each other, especially in the case of a man
+having had a family by his first wife, in which case, the
+children are often unavoidably neglected, as the husband&rsquo;s
+occupations preclude the possibility of his devoting much time or
+thought to their welfare.&nbsp; A stepmother in Syria is not a
+proverb of harshness; stepmothers in that country, in direct
+contrariety to what is believed to be the case in Europe, are
+affectionate and kind to their step-children; and even in such
+rare instances as that of a man marrying again, when his first
+wife&rsquo;s children are already nearly grown up, even then
+perfect harmony reigns between the different members of the
+family, for filial respect is so powerfully inculcated in a young
+Syrian&rsquo;s breast, that however young the stepmother may be,
+she is always looked up to and respected as the wife of a father;
+and with regard to the wife herself, the rule acts the same, only
+vice versa, the children are regarded as the children of her
+husband; and however many children a second wife may have, the
+first one&rsquo;s always claim the precedence.&nbsp; It is
+indispensable amongst all Syrian families, that every member
+should know and keep his or her respective place, and quarrels on
+this score are seldom if ever known.</p>
+<p>We remained long enough in Aleppo to become familiar with all
+its quarters, Christian, Jewish, and European; the latter reside
+principally at Kittab, a <!-- page 81--><a
+name="page81"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 81</span>pleasant
+little hamlet of neatly constructed houses, which dates after the
+period of the shocking earthquake in 1822&mdash;an event which so
+alarmed the populace that for many weeks afterwards they thought
+themselves insecure within the walls of the city, many of the
+massive houses, though built upon arches, having given way,
+carrying everything before them, and crushing alike inmates and
+passers-by in the streets.&nbsp; Aleppo is perhaps the most
+fashionable town in the East, not even excepting Damascus.&nbsp;
+The fashions change there as often almost as they do in Paris,
+and all the young ladies are as particular about their dress as
+the more aristocratic belles in the North; the result of all this
+is, that an Aleppine lady proves usually an expensive wife; but I
+must acknowledge, that their extreme neatness, the snowy-white
+veils, and gaily-coloured tunics, add much to the picturesque
+appearance of the gardens on festive days, when the whole
+population throngs these favourite places of resort as much for
+air and exercise as from a wish to shew themselves, as it is only
+on this day many of them have an opportunity of escaping from the
+narrow and confined streets of the city.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shamm al Hawa,&rdquo; is a favourite expression of
+Aleppines, for they dearly love the open country, and delight to
+rove amongst trees and flowers; Aleppo is a country I should have
+great hopes for with regard to the success of missionary
+labour.&nbsp; The Aleppines are too courteous to mock at or hold
+in derision the tenets of any man, or to interrupt a man when he
+speaks, nor indeed to listen inattentively.&nbsp; Many amongst
+them are naturally intelligent: and did any schools or
+institutions exist from which their families might derive any
+clear and indisputable benefit&mdash;education for their <!--
+page 82--><a name="page82"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+82</span>children&mdash;instruction in any arts or
+sciences&mdash;physic and medical attendance for the sick and
+poverty-stricken (they are by no means an ungrateful people),
+their attention would most assuredly be arrested by such
+attentions to their own and their townsmen&rsquo;s wants, and
+they would be brought to reflect that such kind benefactors must
+be trustworthy people, and people that love truth.</p>
+<p>The last Report of the British and Foreign Bible Society gives
+the population of Aleppo to be 90,000 souls, of which number
+19,000 are said to be Christians of various denominations, and
+yet there was only one Protestant missionary on the spot; the
+Rev. Mr. Benton having been obliged to revisit America for the
+benefit of his health.&nbsp; When it is considered that at
+Aintab, a considerable town, only a day distant from Aleppo, the
+efforts of a single missionary, the Rev. Dr. Smith, of the
+American mission, have been crowned with unprecedented success,
+and that chiefly amongst the Armenians, of whom there are also
+numbers established in Aleppo, it cannot but be regretted that so
+favourable a field should be neglected.&nbsp; The fact of this
+missionary being also a physician is another proof in support of
+what I shall endeavour to prove in a subsequent chapter, namely,
+the advantages derivable from the wide establishment of Medical
+Missions, a subject which I trust, under the Almighty blessing,
+will attract the attention of the Christian inhabitants of Great
+Britain.</p>
+<p>Few towns in the East can rival Aleppo in a commercial
+sense.&nbsp; Every resident is more or less of a speculator; and
+thousands have lost and gained a fortune in the failures or
+successes of mercantile speculations.&nbsp; Even the women are
+imbued with this spirit of <!-- page 83--><a
+name="page83"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 83</span>enterprise;
+and the female broker is no inconsiderable person in a
+merchant&rsquo;s appreciation.&nbsp; She penetrates into the
+restricted precincts of the harem, and displays, to the admiring
+gaze of its fair secluded inmates, jewels and tinselled fineries,
+such as would barely merit a moment&rsquo;s pause or attention in
+the over-crowded bazaars, but when presented by themselves, prove
+an inducement to purchase; and this is a means of no small
+profit, above all to the poorer class of speculators who are
+obliged to restrict their purchases to their very limited
+means.&nbsp; Even children hawk about minor commodities, and
+little urchins who have scarcely a rag to cover their nudity,
+will offer to the stranger carefully hoarded up bits of glass and
+old coins picked up in some of the most deserted and ruinous
+portions of the city, hoping that amongst them a valuable antique
+may invite his attention.</p>
+<p>We left Aleppo after a prolonged stay, and mounting our horses
+joined a caravan loaded with produce for the supply of the
+Antioch market.&nbsp; The first few hours, after leaving Aleppo,
+our road lay over a rocky pathway difficult to ride over, bleak
+and monotonous in the extreme; but soon the glorious plains of
+the Amuk spreading before us as far as the eye could reach, burst
+like a splendid panorama on our gaze.&nbsp; We rapidly descended
+to their level, and the remainder of our first day&rsquo;s
+journeying was over a flat country, whose natural prolific soil,
+interspersed as it was at short distances with small tributary
+streams, would have been a sight to gladden the heart of any
+emigrant who should seek for rich pasturages for his
+cattle&mdash;abundant harvest of wheat and barley&mdash;rich
+orchards and valuable plantations.</p>
+<p>All these doubtless once existed at a time when <!-- page
+84--><a name="page84"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 84</span>the
+ruined cities, portions of whose past grandeur still remain to
+gratify the curious antiquarian, were in their zenith; indeed
+tradition reports the whole of this extensive plain (which it
+took us two days&rsquo; hard riding to traverse), at its
+narrowest breadth, to have been once an extensive forest, in some
+parts almost impenetrable.&nbsp; Now there is hardly a tree to be
+seen; immense pasturages and fields stretch on every side, and
+numbers of horses, cattle, and sheep, browse on the luxuriant
+herbage.&nbsp; We arrived on the third day at the Gessir il
+Haded, or iron bridge, where we first crossed the Orontes, and
+after skirting the river for a few minutes, struck off on a wide
+pathway leading over a mountainous country, richly dotted with
+trees, and verdant with wild thyme and lavender.&nbsp; Small
+herds of gazelles, startled from their resting-places by the echo
+of our horses&rsquo; tramp, darted across our pathway, and sought
+refuge on the further side of the many lofty hills that now
+surrounded us.&nbsp; The Orontes, in its meandering course,
+occasionally took a sweep and glided close under our elevated
+pathway; by and bye we closed in with the river; myriads of
+water-fowl and other game flew over our heads.&nbsp; There was a
+stately old ruined castle, on a bleak isolated hill; we passed
+under its deserted battlements, and in ten minutes afterwards
+were riding through the streets of the once famed city of
+Antioch.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 85--><a name="page85"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+85</span>CHAPTER VII.<br />
+ANTIOCH AND LATTAKIA.</h2>
+<p>In Antioch our stay was, much to our regret, comparatively
+short; for who would willingly quit so fair a spot&mdash;a
+perfect Paradise, and rich in the fairest gifts of nature?&nbsp;
+A healthy climate, a cloudless sky, luxuriant fruits and flowers,
+meadows and pasturages, high hills and valleys; the mountain and
+the plain bespangled with trees, the wild myrtle and other
+fragrant shrubs, intersected by a glorious river; the earth
+producing nourishment for droves upon droves of cattle, and
+domestic as well as wild fowl; the river abounding in eels, and
+the distant sea furnishing delicious fish of fifty
+varieties.&nbsp; What more could mortal man on earth
+desire?&nbsp; All these can Antioch boast of, besides the many
+pleasant reminiscences connected with the spot.&nbsp; Its
+primitive Christian Church, the great success that crowned the
+early efforts of those two devout and indefatigable apostles,
+Paul and Barnabas;&mdash;the city, the birthplace of St. Luke,
+the beloved physician, where originated the name of that faith,
+which is our pride, our boast, and the source of all our hope;
+these are ties which render Antioch, in the devout
+Christian&rsquo;s estimation, second only to Jerusalem.&nbsp;
+When we were at this place many parts of the once famous walls of
+the city were still in perfect condition, a wonderful proof of
+the skill and persevering labours of those brave but <!-- page
+86--><a name="page86"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 86</span>alas
+unsuccessful men who strove permanently to plant the cross in the
+countries where it had first been raised, and had once
+triumphantly flourished.&nbsp; Though through so many succeeding
+generations the city has been subjected to every imaginable
+disaster, fire, invasion, revolt, and the terrible effects of
+violent earthquakes, yet nature still smiles upon the surrounding
+country as brightly as ever she shone in the zenith of her
+city&rsquo;s glory.&nbsp; Its palaces and other magnificent
+buildings, the handiwork of mortal man, had, with man, all
+crumbled away to dust.&nbsp; Its millions of inhabitants have
+dwindled down to some few thousands, and in this respect the
+wreck is complete; but the fairness of the morning, and the
+freshness of the breeze, the beauty of the prospect, the flowers,
+and fruits, and trees, these continue the same as in the
+wealthiest era of the Seleucid&aelig;.&nbsp; Man and man&rsquo;s
+triumphant domes are nowhere to be seen; a few crazily built
+houses, and a few straggling inhabitants, are all that now
+constitute the modern town of Antakia.</p>
+<p>Yet, notwithstanding all this, the vast extent of land in the
+neighbourhood of Antioch which is devoted solely to the
+cultivation of mulberry-trees, and the great space of still
+uncultivated ground which might be devoted to a like purpose,
+gives ample assurance that, in the one article of silk alone, an
+immense revenue might be derived, and a very large population be
+maintained in easy, if not affluent, circumstances.&nbsp; As
+matters stand at the present day, the silk produced yields no
+inconsiderable revenue; but the plantations are the exclusive
+property of a few independent proprietors, who, themselves
+reaping more than a lion&rsquo;s share, leave to the great herd
+of the inhabitants a paltry, miserable pittance, which can
+scarcely find them <!-- page 87--><a name="page87"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 87</span>the very barest necessaries of life,
+although Antioch is acknowledged to be perhaps the cheapest place
+in the known world.</p>
+<p>Whilst at Antioch, we visited the water-mills now occupying
+the site of the once celebrated groves of Daphne, and thence
+returning, took horses and proceeded to Suedia over the selfsame
+ground once familiar to Paul and Barnabas, when those two
+apostles, like ourselves, went down to Seleucia to take shipping
+from thence.&nbsp; The whole space intervening between Antioch
+and Suedia, a distance of nearly twenty miles, is occupied by
+luxuriant mulberry plantations and orchards of delicious
+fruit-trees; fruits that are peculiar to this neighbourhood
+having been introduced and cultivated with great care, through a
+series of many years, by a philanthropic English gentleman, who
+distributed cuttings and grafts throughout the district.</p>
+<p>At Suedia we remained two days, the guests of this hospitable
+gentleman, visiting in that interval&mdash;the site where stood
+the pillar of Simeon Stylites&mdash;the delightful country seats
+of Mr. Barker at Bitias and Huderbey, and lastly, the splendid
+ruined tunnel and aqueduct, besides other remains of the once
+wealthy Seleucia.&nbsp; This done, we hired an Arab felucca,
+which, sailing out of the Orontes, and crossing the Gulf of
+Antioch in the short space of seven hours, carried us over to
+Lattakia, the ancient Laodicea.</p>
+<p>Arrived at Lattakia, we became the guests of the hospitable
+brothers Elias.&nbsp; Signor Mosi Elias is the British
+vice-consul at that port; and seldom have I had the happiness of
+meeting with a more worthy man; but, in fact, the whole of his
+family are distinguished for their great courtesy and hospitality
+to all strangers.&nbsp; This eulogy may fairly be extended to all
+the native <!-- page 88--><a name="page88"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 88</span>agents established along the
+sea-coast of Syria; although, unfortunately, their humble efforts
+are not always duly appreciated.&nbsp; English gentlemen,
+accustomed to every comfort and luxury that wealth can command,
+little imagine the expense and trouble incurred by many of the
+humble Syrian agents in their efforts to afford hospitality to
+British travellers.&nbsp; Receiving no salary, and yet compelled
+to maintain a certain position to support the dignity of office,
+the means in their power must necessarily be limited; but as far
+as house-room goes&mdash;a bed, a dinner, breakfast, and supper,
+according to their limited means; these are always cheerfully
+offered to the traveller; and the poor consular agent, who has
+almost insuperable difficulties to contend with, so as to enable
+him to impress the local authorities with a due sense of the
+importance and respectability of his office, is glad to avail
+himself of the opportunity of having an Englishman as guest under
+his roof, to convince the neighbours and his fellow-townsmen of
+his influence with the British.&nbsp; I have known instances
+where a poor consular agent has even parted with some valuable
+family relic, so as to enable him to afford a hearty welcome to
+some Englishman of distinction; while, perhaps, the only return
+he has met with, was to be treated with supreme contempt and
+derision, even to his face; or to have his name bandied about to
+the world in some gaudily bound book of travels, in which authors
+have seen fit to make sport of men, who, in all probability,
+sacrificed a night&rsquo;s rest and comfort to contribute both
+towards them in a strange land.</p>
+<p>While on this subject, I may record one instance which came to
+my knowledge, and which was really too scandalous not to be made
+known.</p>
+<p>A party of travellers, for I cannot style them <!-- page
+89--><a name="page89"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+89</span>gentlemen, five or six in number, were travelling
+through Syria and Palestine, accompanied by a retinue of servants
+with tents, baggage, and every luxury and comfort that money
+could command.&nbsp; Arriving at one of the seaport towns, where
+dwelt an English agent (a good old man, who was a Syrian by
+birth), they pitched their tents outside of the town, and sending
+their insolent dragoman to the agent, informed him that it was
+their intention to remain a couple of days in that neighbourhood,
+and commanded him to procure them guides to shew them over the
+town and its vicinity, so that they might see all that was worth
+being seen.&nbsp; To this, the agent really assented; and
+&ldquo;on hospitable thoughts intent,&rdquo; dressed himself for
+the occasion, and, preceded by his <i>cawass</i>, went to the
+travellers&rsquo; tents to pay his respects, and to offer them
+any little services in his power.&nbsp; Finding that they
+required no further aid, he then told them, that although they
+had placed the possibility of being useful to them beyond his
+reach, he trusted that they would not wholly deprive him of the
+pleasure of their company; and invited them to dine at his house
+at an early hour the next day.&nbsp; This invitation the
+travellers, who had barely treated the old man with civility,
+thought proper to accept, and the next day they duly made their
+appearance.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, the poor consul, whose stock of crockery was rather
+scant, and whose knives and forks mustered but a meagre show,
+endeavoured, by buying or borrowing, to make things as tidy and
+complete as he possibly could; but it often happens, that in such
+small villages as that in which the agent resided, and where
+European vessels seldom resort, European merchandise is very
+rare; and such a thing as a plated spoon or a knife and fork, is
+not to be met with for love or money.&nbsp; <!-- page 90--><a
+name="page90"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 90</span>This was
+precisely the case in the instance before us; and the poor agent
+was put to his wit&rsquo;s end in discovering that, after every
+effort, his stock of knives still fell short of the necessary
+complement by a knife.&nbsp; In this dilemma, he was quite at a
+nonplus what to do; till, finally, he resolved to throw himself
+upon the known courtesy of an Englishman, and explain exactly how
+matters stood; begging of the guests on their arrival to let
+their servants fetch from their own tents such implements for
+table use, as were indispensably requisite for the accommodation
+of all.</p>
+<p>No sooner, however, had the poor agent explained the state of
+affairs by means of the interpreter, than the guests, one and
+all, fell into a violent passion, and asked the consul how he had
+dared to insult them by asking them to dinner, when he was not in
+a position to treat them as became persons of their rank and
+distinction.&nbsp; Saying this, they swept from the room in a
+towering passion, leaving the poor agent lost in amazement how to
+account for such conduct from persons who styled themselves
+English gentlemen, and overcome with shame and vexation that his
+neighbours should have been witness to such an outrage.</p>
+<p>This anecdote requires no comment.&nbsp; Happily such
+instances of gross misconduct are of rare occurrence, but it
+plainly exemplifies the absurd system followed by government in
+placing native agents all over Syria and Turkey, to whom they do
+not afford means of maintaining a position which ought to command
+respect.</p>
+<p>The present system of native agencies is altogether a mistake;
+they should be entrusted only to those who have previously had a
+European education.&nbsp; Most of those now employed have been
+reared in dread of the <!-- page 91--><a name="page91"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 91</span>very name of the <i>local powers</i>,
+and are inefficient in cases of controversy between subjects of
+two nations.</p>
+<p>I may here be permitted to deviate a little from the subject
+of Lattakia and my travels, to make a few remarks on the uses and
+abuses of the protection-system, so largely practised all over
+Syria and Turkey.</p>
+<p>The abuses of the system are very great; this is much to be
+regretted, because in the main the arrangements existing between
+the Ottoman government and European powers with regard to this
+particular subject, viz., that of the privileges enjoyed by
+Europeans to protect a limited number of persons actually in the
+service of consuls, merchants, and others, is a very great boon
+to Europeans.&nbsp; Were it not for this privilege, Europeans
+residing in Syria would find it a very difficult matter to
+procure good and efficient servants at moderate wages.</p>
+<p>In some parts of Syria, where every creature-comfort or
+necessary is extremely cheap, the lower orders, who are generally
+of an indolent disposition, would much prefer remaining idle for
+one-half of the year to engaging in any occupation which might
+make it incumbent on them to go through a certain portion of
+daily labour; and this they can afford to do, as their habits are
+frugal, and the amount gained in one day by a labourer, will
+suffice to support himself and family for three days.&nbsp; This
+applies equally to the fellah or peasant employed in
+cultivation.&nbsp; His portion of the silk harvest is sufficient
+to maintain him till the wheat crop is gathered in, when he earns
+with his scythe a sufficiency to maintain him in idleness till
+the olive and grape harvests arrive, and then he is either paid
+in cash or allowed a certain quantity of wheat, oil, wine, <!--
+page 92--><a name="page92"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+92</span>aqua vit&aelig;, <i>dibis</i>, <a
+name="citation92"></a><a href="#footnote92"
+class="citation">[92]</a> raisins, etc., as recompense for his
+labour.&nbsp; Of this store he lays by a sufficiency for the
+winter; the silk and the surplus of the wheat, etc., he either
+sells or barters for other household requisites, such as
+clothing, butter and charcoal.&nbsp; He brings his own fuel from
+the mountains, and, if he be at all a careful manager, can keep
+an ass or a mule of his own to carry goods and passengers to and
+from the nearest towns and villages.&nbsp; Thus, with a very
+small amount of labour, the peasant of Syria can afford to have
+an idle time of it, were he not in terror of government taxes;
+for although the system of taxation is fairly and justly
+arranged, and in reality the sums levied are small in proportion
+to the income, still there are understrappers, besides their own
+Christian Nazir and Sheikhs, who peculate to a large extent under
+the plea of some false necessity.&nbsp; This induces the peasant
+gladly to embrace any opportunity that may offer of entering into
+the service of a Frank; for from the hour of his employment he
+is, to all intents and purposes, the subject of another power; he
+is exempt from taxation, and the officials durst not intrude
+themselves upon the privacy of his household, under penalty of
+being at loggerheads with the consuls and pashas, and possibly of
+being exposed to the ignominy of the bastinado.</p>
+<p>Now the very possession of this power to protect is sufficient
+to raise an Englishman much in the estimation of the Turks, and
+other natives of Syria; and were <!-- page 93--><a
+name="page93"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 93</span>this
+privilege used with moderation, and not abused, it would become,
+as I have already stated, a boon to Europeans.</p>
+<p>The great misfortune is that there is no existing line of
+distinction which might separate the herd of Syro-European
+inhabitants, from those really and virtually Europeans by birth
+and education.&nbsp; These two distinct classes are as separated
+from each other as light is from darkness, yet unfortunately
+possessing like powers and like privileges, the latter class, who
+fill the posts of consuls, merchants, clerks, missionaries,
+<i>doctors</i>, and a few tradesmen being strictly gentlemen in
+their principles.</p>
+<p>The former class consists of men, whose paternal ancestors
+were European, and who scrupulously claim their rights as
+such.&nbsp; Most of them have intermarried amongst their own
+peculiar class, so as to form a distinct and new race of
+inhabitants in Syria.&nbsp; They have inherited from their
+fathers in a lineal descent, their names, nationality, and
+wealth, and in many instances their consular dignity.&nbsp; Some
+few have inherited the consulates without proportionate means to
+support the dignity, and the mass of this class being linked
+together by marriage ties, almost every man is grandfather,
+uncle, cousin, nephew, father, brother, or son, or brother-in-law
+to his next-door neighbour.&nbsp; It is with this latter class in
+particular that the abuse of the protection system prevails to an
+alarming extent.</p>
+<p>There are in Syria few or none of that troublesome class of
+Europeans that so infest Constantinople, Smyrna, and
+Alexandria.&nbsp; I allude to political and other refugees: these
+find no occupation or encouragement in Syria, where there are no
+established gambling-houses, or other dens to which they can
+resort.</p>
+<p><!-- page 94--><a name="page94"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+94</span>To be classed as a European merchant in Syria, requires
+no very great outlay of capital; take, for example, the following
+instance:&mdash;</p>
+<p>Messrs. A--- and Co., a wealthy English firm, established at
+Beyrout or elsewhere, receive annually from three to four
+thousand bales of British manufactured goods, and they ship goods
+to an equally large amount.&nbsp; They necessarily require the
+services of not only household servants, but cashiers, native
+writers, and warehousemen.&nbsp; These men are very properly
+admitted to the privilege of temporarily enjoying the protection
+of a British subject.</p>
+<p>Perhaps the next-door neighbour to these gentlemen is a Mr.
+B--- who is also styled a merchant, because once, or perhaps
+twice in a twelvemonth, he goes through the form of receiving a
+solitary bale of goods; this bale, in all probability, being sent
+through his hands as a blind, by some wealthier relative, to
+impress the local authorities with an idea of his wealth, and to
+enable him to establish his claim to rank as a merchant.&nbsp;
+This man pretends to find occupation for as many people as the
+solid English house does, and every man in his employment, and
+under his protection (perhaps the cook only excepted) is a man of
+substance.&nbsp; It would be a problem hard to solve by any
+uninitiated traveller or stranger how to account for this; how
+this man who is notoriously poor, and whose miserable single bale
+of manufactures would barely counter-balance the expenditure of
+his household for a single week, can manage to support so vast a
+retinue, find occupation for so many people, and keep up such an
+appearance of state; but the secret lies in a nut-shell.&nbsp; In
+his case <i>the master is the hireling of the servant</i>.&nbsp;
+His warehouseman alone (who drives a thriving trade in the
+wealthiest bazaar) <!-- page 95--><a name="page95"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 95</span>pays him perhaps, sixty pounds
+sterling per annum, to enjoy the privilege of European
+protection; so that at this rate, and as the list of protected is
+a long one, the Syro-European merchant is in the receipt of an
+excellent income; he keeps his horses and gives grand
+entertainments; but as far as conscience or honesty goes, these
+are two hard words not to be met with in his vocabulary.</p>
+<p>This is <i>infamous</i>!&nbsp; But even this is a trifle in
+comparison to what is done by such as are invested with authority
+as consuls.&nbsp; These have a long list of protected, and the
+consular secretary, and consular interpreter has each his own
+peculiar prot&eacute;g&eacute;es; and so the number goes on
+gradually downwards, until we arrive at the consular
+<i>cawass</i>; and even he can boast of one or more on his
+list!&nbsp; Thus, in lieu of a consul only protecting a <i>dozen
+or fourteen</i> individuals (which is about treble the number he
+is, strictly speaking, allowed), he in fact is the indirect means
+of affording protection to many <i>scores</i> of individuals;
+each of whom is a dead loss to the treasury of the local
+government, and a burthen to his poorer and less fortunate
+brethren; and this because the exact amount of any given tax to
+be collected being beforehand fixed by the government, the Nazirs
+and Sheikhs allot to each man of the village his own portion; and
+what should have fallen on the shoulders of the exempted or
+protected man, is obliged to be made good by those persons who
+are subjected to the tax.</p>
+<p>But this is not all: the subordinate officers in some of the
+European Consulates are guilty of equally gross offences.&nbsp;
+The consuls are apt to be wheedled over by the cunning dragoman
+or chancellor, so completely, that at last they place a blind and
+implicit faith in their <!-- page 96--><a name="page96"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 96</span>every word or suggestion, and will on
+no consideration listen to complaints often too justly founded
+against these upstart Jacks in office.</p>
+<p>An instance of this occurred to myself; but I will, from
+delicacy to the high official functionary mixed up with it, omit
+names of places and persons.&nbsp; A native Prince was anxious to
+call upon one of the authorities, but being unacquainted with the
+English language, he desired me to accompany him; not but that
+the authority in question was furnished with an interpreter, but
+simply, because the Prince wished, for privacy&rsquo;s sake, that
+the matter of conversation should be confined to ourselves,
+without any prying ears being witness to the interview.&nbsp;
+Arriving at the office, we were shown in; but the interpreter
+ushering the Prince into one apartment, showed me into
+another.&nbsp; I was quite amazed at this strange proceeding; but
+as the dragoman immediately left the room, I could only
+conjecture that it was some sly trick of his own, or a wish to be
+possessed of information regarding the Prince.&nbsp; Whichever
+motive it might have been, the visit terminated without my seeing
+the official.&nbsp; On a subsequent occasion, however, I alluded
+to the matter; the dragoman was taxed with it but stoutly denied
+having done anything of the kind, declaring that I of my own
+accord had gone into another room.&nbsp; I brought the
+Prince&rsquo;s testimony to prove how the man had slighted me;
+but notwithstanding all this, that lying interpreter had gained
+such influence with this high official, that our testimony was
+discarded, and he was believed.</p>
+<p>After this long digression from the subject, for which I beg
+the reader&rsquo;s kind forgiveness, I now resume the thread of
+my narrative.</p>
+<p>The staple produce of Lattakia is wheat, silk, and <!-- page
+97--><a name="page97"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+97</span>tobacco; <a name="citation97"></a><a href="#footnote97"
+class="citation">[97]</a> of these, the latter is considered to
+be the finest and most odoriferous in the world; and the <i>aboo
+reah</i>, though many attempts have been made to introduce it
+into other parts of Syria, will grow nowhere else save at
+Jabaliy, a small seaport town about three hours to the southward
+of Lattakia, and where one of the Sultans who had abdicated his
+throne and withdrawn himself from the world, built a magnificent
+mosque, and some other public edifices, the ruins of many of
+which are still to be seen, and which render &ldquo;Sultan
+Ibrahim,&rdquo; as Jabaliy is from these circumstances styled, an
+object of interest to travellers.</p>
+<p>Whilst at Lattakia a messenger arrived with dispatches,
+summoning us to Beyrout.&nbsp; On our arrival there, we found the
+combined Austrian, Turkish, and English fleets anchored before
+the town, to compel the Egyptians to evacuate Syria, and at the
+invitation of my friend, Ahmed Bey, I paid him a visit on board
+of the Turkish Admiral&rsquo;s vessel, who despatched me on a
+secret mission to the mountains; whilst there I was filled with
+consternation by hearing a report that Ibrahim Pasha, having
+obtained intelligence of my movements, had set a price upon my
+head.&nbsp; I immediately burnt all my papers, changed my dress,
+and travelled in disguise of a beggar, expecting every moment to
+be recognised and beheaded.&nbsp; At last I reached a village
+called Arrayah, near the road to Damascus; here I had some
+relations, and I immediately went to them for shelter.</p>
+<p>After I had been there a few days, the news of it <!-- page
+98--><a name="page98"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+98</span>reached the governor, and he immediately sent two
+<i>cawass</i> to arrest me; but the servant of my friend, having
+received information that I was being pursued, hid me in the
+harem apartments, which are accessible to none but the head of
+the family, a priest, or a physician; here I was secreted, and on
+their arrival, they even sent in a priest to the harem to
+ascertain if I was there; but the vigilance of my protectors
+evaded them even in this, and I was let down from the window in a
+basket into the garden, from whence I escaped to a cave close by
+till midnight; I then made my way back to my relations, who told
+me of the close search the <i>cawass</i> had made, and the
+disappointment they experienced at not finding me.</p>
+<p>A few days after this an English traveller passed through the
+place, and understanding a little of his language, I offered my
+services to accompany him to Beyrout, under the title of
+<i>turjaman</i>; and according to the laws of Turkey, I no sooner
+joined him than I was under British protection.&nbsp; By this
+means I reached Beyrout in safety; and finding that the Capitan
+Pasha had gone to Acre, I joined the English forces, and then,
+for the first time in my life, witnessed the consummate skill and
+accuracy with which the troops carried on the warfare.</p>
+<p>Nothing could have been more ingenious than the plan of
+attack.&nbsp; The Turkish troops, arriving in steamers and
+vessels of war, were during the night, with the utmost
+precaution, transhipped to the British vessel; and next morning,
+those vessels, supposed by the forces on shore to carry troops,
+were towed down by the &ldquo;Geyser&rdquo; and other steamers
+towards Ras-Beyrout, which occasioned the whole of the Egyptian
+forces to evacuate the town, and take up a strong position in
+that <!-- page 99--><a name="page99"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+99</span>neighbourhood.&nbsp; When the steamers perceived this,
+they altered their course and proceeded to Dog River.&nbsp; Here
+a few Albanians had been stationed to oppose them.&nbsp; These
+were mown down by the heavy batteries of the frigates, who landed
+their troops and took unmolested possession of the place.&nbsp;
+Soon after they were joined by Beschir Kasir, with a body of men
+from the mountains, whom the English commandant supplied with
+arms, etc.&nbsp; And thus the victory was won.</p>
+<p>I remained with the army several weeks, and assisted in the
+operations against the Egyptians; and after the conclusion of
+peace, accompanied an English officer and a numerous body of
+attendants to Tripoli, or as we call it, Trablous, the beautiful
+orange garden of the world.&nbsp; People talk so much about St.
+Michael oranges; for my part, I have never seen any orange in the
+world whose flavour and scent could equal that of Trablous;
+besides which, they are so plentiful and cheap, that although all
+the sea-coasts, and the interior of Syria and Palestine, and even
+parts of Asia Minor, are supplied with boat-loads and camel-loads
+of oranges from Tripoli, there is still abundance left to cause
+them to be a cheap as well as a delicious luxury.&nbsp; Our duty
+here, as elsewhere, was to see that the people of the place and
+the neighbourhood were well governed&mdash;to hear complaints and
+bring them in a proper form before the local authorities, to the
+end that injured parties might obtain redress&mdash;and to
+enquire into and make notes of everything that occurred.</p>
+<p>The natives had christened my friend &ldquo;Abu Rish,&rdquo;
+which being literally translated, means &ldquo;the father of a
+feather&rdquo;; they gave him this name because he always sported
+a large feather in his cocked hat, which was seldom set aside in
+his journeyings.&nbsp; I have no doubt <!-- page 100--><a
+name="page100"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 100</span>but that
+many of the ignorant and half wild natives of some of the
+villages that we passed through looked upon this hat and feathers
+in something the same light as the native of the savage island
+regarded that of Captain Cook, considering it to be a very
+strangely formed head, an abnormal amalgamation of the cock with
+the man.</p>
+<p>We were lodged at Tripoli, with the Signor Catsoflis, the
+British vice-consul, at whose house we experienced much
+hospitality.&nbsp; Signor Catsoflis and his brother, the Austrian
+vice-consul, are twins; and so strong is the resemblance between
+them, that it is barely possible for a stranger to distinguish
+the one from the other when apart.&nbsp; The wife of Signor
+Catsoflis, the Austrian vice-consul, is the sister of Signor
+Elias, the vice consul at Lattakia.&nbsp; I never before, or
+since, have set eyes on any woman that could rival her in beauty,
+and her disposition was as sweet as her face was lovely.&nbsp;
+This lady made a complaint to me on behalf of a fellow Christian,
+a poor peasant from the mountains, who accustomed to rove about
+free, and in such dress as his fancy dictated, amongst his own
+villagers, unwittingly made his appearance in the streets of
+Tripoli, dressed in a light robe of a greenish colour, which
+excited the wrath and indignation of some fanatics, who, saying
+that none but descendants from the prophet could be permitted to
+wear any colour approaching to green, tore the garment from the
+poor fellow&rsquo;s back, beat and otherwise shamefully
+ill-treated him; this was the instance of the complaint.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;And now,&rdquo; said the fair advocate, addressing herself
+to me, &ldquo;let me see if you and your friend are really
+possessed of such influence and authority as you vaunt yourselves
+of, by causing the wrongs of this poor unoffending man to be
+redressed.&rdquo;&nbsp; If anything could <!-- page 101--><a
+name="page101"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 101</span>have
+spurred me to the deed, it was certainly being thus taunted by
+one of the handsomest women in the world.&nbsp; I immediately
+agreed to comply with her wishes, and, girding on my sword, took
+the Cawass, and proceeded direct to Yusuf Pasha.&nbsp; Before
+going, however, I had donned a pair of Wellington boots that a
+European friend had lent me; and the brilliant emerald green of
+whose tops must have inspired the gaping Moslems in the streets
+with the utmost envy and rage.</p>
+<p>I entered into the presence of the governor without even
+announcing myself, an abrupt proceeding which not a little
+disconcerted His Excellency, who began anxiously to question me,
+hoping that I was the bearer of good, not of unfavourable,
+news.&nbsp; I stated the case to the governor, and he replied
+very civilly, that he regretted that it did not come within his
+jurisdiction, being purely a question of creed.&nbsp; The Cadi,
+however, being summoned to the divan, tried to shuffle out of the
+matter as best he could; he said it was decidedly against the law
+of the prophet, and that the aggressor merited the
+punishment.&nbsp; I asked him whether this law was intended to
+bear only upon certain individuals, or upon all.&nbsp; The Cadi
+replied, upon all; then, said I, if such be the case, you had
+better take me and give me a bastinadoing, for as you see,
+pointing to my boots, nothing can be a brighter green than those
+are; this completely confounded the Cadi.&nbsp; I insisted on
+having the men bastinadoed on the very spot where the outrage had
+been committed; the consequence was, that after some little
+demur, I carried the day, and they were punished as I had
+directed.&nbsp; This event occasioned immense sensation amongst
+the inhabitants, and impressed them with a due notion of the
+influence and power of the British nation, tending to keep the
+more <!-- page 102--><a name="page102"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 102</span>fanatical within bounds, since no
+rank, or grade, or riches could protect them from punishment if
+they once gave offence to Europeans.</p>
+<p>After remaining some time at Tripoli, we proceeded to visit
+the famous cedars of Lebanon.&nbsp; There are at present eleven
+of these celebrated trees, seven of which are supposed to have
+existed from the time of the building of Solomon&rsquo;s
+temple.&nbsp; I need scarcely inform my readers how conspicuously
+these trees have figured in Scriptural metaphors.&nbsp; The
+prophet Ezekiel speaks in glowing terms of their beauty.&nbsp;
+Again, Isaiah seems in a remarkable manner to predict their
+extinction, &ldquo;The rest of the trees of this forest shall be
+few that a child may write them.&rdquo;&nbsp; How literally has
+this prophecy been fulfilled!</p>
+<p>On my last visit to Syria I found the priest, to whom the
+charge of these trees is committed, had planted a number of
+seedlings, though with what success I have not yet heard.&nbsp; A
+church has also been built on the spot.&nbsp; The Arabs believe
+they were planted by the hands of the Almighty himself, and there
+are innumerable traditions connected with these trees, which I
+hope to give an account of in a future work.&nbsp; One of these
+cedars is of so great a diameter, that a monk actually hollowed
+it out and formed a sort of room in which he took up his
+abode.&nbsp; The trunks are covered with names of travellers,
+many of a very old date cut out with the knife.</p>
+<p>From the cedars we proceeded to the wonderful ruins of
+Baalbec; but these have been often described by various
+travellers.&nbsp; After a beautiful journey of two days over
+verdant hills and down deep ravines, we reached Damascus, where I
+was pleased beyond measure to meet my connexions and
+acquaintances.&nbsp; At <!-- page 103--><a
+name="page103"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 103</span>this time
+several European officers were travelling over Syria in all
+directions on diplomatic missions.&nbsp; These endeavoured to
+ascertain the exact capabilities of every town and village, as
+regards the number of men that could bear arms; the number of
+cattle, horses, etc.; the arms and quantity of ammunition, and
+the proportion that the Moslem population bore to the
+Christians.&nbsp; Of these gallant officers, one was sent to
+Damascus, and whilst residing there, he was very much captivated
+by the beauty of the Moslem ladies.&nbsp; On first arriving, this
+gentleman was well received by the grey-bearded authorities; but
+he soon lost caste; reports and complaints were of every-day
+occurrence; this white stranger would persist in making love to
+the Moslem ladies, and the Moslem girls would persist in making
+love to him.&nbsp; This was a dreadful state of affairs; but this
+was not all, for even the old Armenian patriarch was roused into
+wrath by discovering that a timid little Armenian girl was
+actually head over ears in love with the feather-crowned
+stranger, or rather with his money.&nbsp; There was no standing
+this.&nbsp; The people said it was a crying shame, and reported
+it to the Cadi, who complained to Nedjid Pasha; and the Pasha,
+who was one of the old school, and a right down Frank hater,
+complained to the Commander-in-Chief of the forces at
+Beyrout.&nbsp; The Commander-in-Chief sent several officers up to
+Damascus to investigate the case, which was tried in open divan
+before the Pasha, who summoned such as had charges against the
+gallant officer to appear before him.&nbsp; The charges brought
+against him were twofold.&nbsp; First, that he had endeavoured to
+subvert the minds of the people from rendering due homage to
+Ottoman authority, by asking them such significant questions as,
+for instance, If the English or the French were to lay <!-- page
+104--><a name="page104"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+104</span>siege to the country, with which of the powers would
+you side?&nbsp; The second charge was, the heinous offence of
+making love to some score of Turkish damsels, besides the
+Armenian lady in question.&nbsp; The first charge was thrown out
+as frivolous, absurd, and annoying; the second was fully
+proved.</p>
+<p>I acted as turjaman Bashi to the Court of enquiry, and from
+the circumstance of the gentleman being in a foreign land, I was
+naturally disposed to lean rather to the side of the
+European.&nbsp; The Mahommedans observed this, and were very
+spiteful against me.&nbsp; The result of all this was, that the
+military gentleman was advised to leave Damascus; but he,
+availing himself of a moonless night, put a termination to the
+whole affair, by starting off for the sea-coast, carrying away
+with him a fair, young widow, who had captured his heart by her
+dancing, and to whom he was ultimately married; and, for aught I
+know to the contrary, they are to this day a very loving and
+happy couple.&nbsp; Strange to say, neither understood a word of
+each other&rsquo;s language, and it would appear, from this
+example, that words are not necessary where such expressive
+things as eyes and flowers are brought into play.</p>
+<p>This romantic lady, after a lapse of time, settled at Beyrout,
+together with her affectionate husband; the story had preceded
+them to this place, but they soon mixed in society as though
+nothing had happened.&nbsp; The Syrians, though strictly moral,
+mingle humanity with their laws of etiquette; they do not, as in
+England, for ever exclude from society such as have been guilty
+of so trivial a peccadillo as this lady was guilty of.&nbsp; They
+remember that all are but frail mortals and apt to err.</p>
+<p>To me the English appear to be over severe.&nbsp; It is true,
+that in Turkey the Moslems are entitled to four <!-- page
+105--><a name="page105"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+105</span>wives, and that in England a man can only marry one;
+but I should like to know who is the greater delinquent, he that
+avowedly and opening admits of polygamy, or that man, who, as is
+often the case amongst society in England, and indeed all Europe,
+vowing solemnly at the altar that &ldquo;<i>forsaking all others
+he will keep only with her</i>,&rdquo; marries one wife, and at
+the same time continues to associate with half a dozen other
+women?&nbsp; For my part, whenever I hear of an English lady
+eloping, I cannot help fearing that she has been driven to it by
+the inconstancy or neglect of a wicked husband.</p>
+<p>In Damascus, at the period I am writing of, there dwelt an
+extraordinary man, well known to the English who visited the
+place as the proprietor of a large hotel, by the name of Sayed
+Ali; he also filled the office of chancellor to the English
+consulate.&nbsp; This extraordinary character could speak and
+write several languages with the utmost fluency, and no one could
+fathom out what countryman he was, or what creed he
+professed.&nbsp; With the English he was an Englishman, and none
+could doubt his pronunciation.&nbsp; This was the case with the
+French; whilst the Turks, listening in admiration to his high
+flow of Stamboline Turkish, and his profound knowledge of the
+Koran, ranked him amongst the most devout and most learned of
+their citizens.&nbsp; One thing only was positive with regard to
+Sayed Ali, and that was, that his wife was a Moslem, the daughter
+of some fanatical Sheikh.&nbsp; Sayed&rsquo;s wife had an
+extremely handsome sister; who having been seen but once, had
+captivated the heart of an old English official, who at that time
+resided at Damascus; and this gentleman, notwithstanding the
+great disparity between them in every respect, in age, rank and
+creed, determined, cost what it might, to marry the girl.&nbsp;
+Female friends were <!-- page 106--><a name="page106"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 106</span>employed as go-betweens, and these
+so effectually wrought upon the imagination of the fair lady,
+that she actually resolved to embrace Christianity, and fly for
+succour to the arms of her lover.&nbsp; Things had arrived at
+this pitch, when Sayed Ali accidentally got scent of what was
+going on; he subsequently declared to me, that had it not been
+for the high official position of the gentleman in question, he
+certainly would have shot him; as it was, he contented himself
+with calling at his sister-in-law&rsquo;s house, and knocking at
+the door drew his sword; the girl responding to the knock, opened
+the door, when the infuriated Sayed Ali made a murderous attack
+upon her, and inflicted a wound on her shoulder, a repetition of
+which must have proved fatal.&nbsp; As this happened during the
+day, the noise attracted a crowd around the house, and the girl
+was rescued.&nbsp; Rendered desperate by this, Sayed Ali made a
+plunge at himself, and inflicted a wound in his abdomen of nearly
+an inch deep; not, however, relishing the sensation, the monster
+drew out his sword, and calling lustily for aid was forthwith
+carried away to his own house.&nbsp; Here he was attended by the
+English medical officers then at Damascus.&nbsp; I shortly after
+called to see him, and to inquire into the cause of this
+murderous onslaught.&nbsp; In reply, he told me that his motives
+were what I have already stated; he was determined that his name
+should not be defamed, or his wife&rsquo;s family put to shame by
+the act of a thoughtless, capricious child, winding up, however,
+with&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad I have not killed her, and for my part
+I&rsquo;ll never be such a fool again as to stab myself to please
+any one in Damascus.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The doctor dressed the wounds, and both shortly afterwards
+recovered, whilst the greatest delinquent in <!-- page 107--><a
+name="page107"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 107</span>the affair
+suffered neither pain or inconvenience from his gross
+misconduct.&nbsp; He is now in high office under the government
+at Constantinople.&nbsp; This is a fair sample of the abuses
+practised by many of those in authority, who in lieu of holding
+out a pattern for imitation, both by example and precept, are
+unfortunately too prone to indulge their own vicious
+propensities, setting all propriety, honour, and justice at
+defiance.&nbsp; I do not mean to say that all incline in the same
+way&mdash;that all are addicted to falling desperately in love
+with every girl they meet; but this I assert, with very few
+exceptions, they have their peculiar fancies, for the
+gratification of which they stoop to many acts of meanness.&nbsp;
+In illustration of what I say, I may be permitted to quote one
+more instance,&mdash;a case widely different from the foregoing,
+and yet equally offensive to honourable minds.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One man, a sycophant, partly to curry favour with a
+great man whom he wished to oblige, partly to satisfy his
+avaricious propensities, delayed a steam packet twenty-four hours
+beyond its fixed time of departure, because the vessel chanced to
+sail upon a Saturday, and the great man in question was a Jew; he
+detained the steamer till Sunday morning to accommodate the
+fastidious Hebrew, and to profit by his commission on the lordly
+passage money.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now this man is professedly a Christian, but he prefers
+breaking the Christian&rsquo;s sabbath to inconveniencing his
+friend or his pocket; but apart from all this, we have still to
+calculate the losses arising from the expenses incurred by such a
+vessel lying unnecessarily idle&mdash;the risk of insurance, and
+the loss of time to money, cargo, and letters.&rdquo; <a
+name="citation107"></a><a href="#footnote107"
+class="citation">[107]</a></p>
+<p><!-- page 108--><a name="page108"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+108</span>But let us turn to a more pleasing subject.&nbsp; In
+these latter days of progression and civilisation, Damascus
+happily has kept pace with the other towns in Syria; there has
+been a large influx of European merchants.&nbsp; The Greek
+patriarch has, in the true spirit of civilization, and after
+great exertions, established a school which will be productive of
+much good.</p>
+<p>From Damascus we went down to Sidon, visiting, <i>en
+route</i>, the residence of the late Lady Hester Stanhope, at
+Djouni, which was even then fast falling to decay.&nbsp; Lady
+Hester I had known personally, and although clever and eccentric,
+with a head full of strange fancies, yet she had a heart not
+devoid of good feeling and kind intentions.&nbsp; For my part, I
+can always recollect, with grateful pleasure, the kind reception
+I met with at her house, and if there is any thing which I
+consider base, it is the conduct of her biographer (who was also
+her physician), and who has abused a sacred trust to pander to
+the inquisitiveness of the European world; or else to contribute
+to the depth and weight of his own purse, has raked up the ashes
+of one, who at least towards himself, was the best of friends and
+patronesses; and whether the book contains much of truth or much
+of imagination, it is either a breach of confidence of the very
+worst order, or a libel on the dead which there is none to
+controvert or dispute.</p>
+<p>At Sidon there, at that time, resided General Loustannau,
+whose life abounded more in romantic incidents than all the
+novels of our most celebrated writers.&nbsp; In India he had
+served under a native Prince with such courage and distinction,
+and through so long a period of years that he had amassed an
+immense fortune.&nbsp; He was at the time of my visit a
+half-witted mendicant, <!-- page 109--><a
+name="page109"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 109</span>one of the
+many objects of the late Lady Hester Stanhope&rsquo;s
+benevolence, and one who, like herself, was subject to many
+extravagant eccentricities.&nbsp; The story of Loustannau is so
+remarkable that I cannot refrain from quoting part of it from Mr.
+Kelly&rsquo;s work on Syria:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;General Loustannau was a native of Aidens, in the
+department of Basses Pyr&eacute;n&eacute;es; his family was not
+wealthy, and his youthful ardour impelled him to seek his fortune
+in foreign lands.&nbsp; Arriving at Bordeaux for the purpose of
+embarking for America, he found a vessel about to sail for India
+with M. de Saint Lubin, who was commissioned by Louis XVI. to
+propose to the Mahrattas a treaty of alliance, offensive and
+defensive, against the English.&nbsp; Loustannau took advantage
+of the opportunity, gave up his American project, and in due time
+found himself amongst the Mahrattas.&nbsp; This was in the year
+1778, when he was twenty years of age.&nbsp; War had for some
+time existed between the Mahrattas and the English, and
+Loustannau, who wished to take service with the former, obtained
+a letter of recommendation to M. Norogue, a Portuguese officer,
+who commanded their forces.&nbsp; That General received him very
+courteously, but thought him too young to be entrusted with any
+command.&nbsp; Loustannau, however, accompanied the army in its
+movements, and was witness to the continual advantages afforded
+the English by the unskilfulness of General Norogue.&nbsp; The
+Mahrattas, though thrice outnumbering their enemies, were
+constantly forced to yield their ground; at last the prince
+succeeded in bringing the English to an engagement in a position
+unfavourable to the latter, inasmuch as it allowed of their being
+out-flanked by the superior number of their <!-- page 110--><a
+name="page110"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+110</span>adversaries.&nbsp; But this did not avail them; the
+English entrenched themselves on an eminence from which their
+batteries committed great havoc among the Mahrattas.&nbsp;
+Loustannau observing a height which commanded the English
+position, immediately mentioned the fact to Norogue, who received
+this communication with supercilious indifference.&nbsp; Stung to
+the quick by this contemptuous treatment, Loustannau addressed
+himself to a Mahratta chief through an interpreter, and with the
+reckless enthusiasm of youth, pledged his head that he would be
+successful if he were given the command of a few pieces of
+cannon.&nbsp; Three thousand horse and ten guns were placed under
+his orders; the result surpassed his hopes, and the English were
+driven from their position with great loss.&nbsp; In spite of
+Norogue&rsquo;s jealousy, a choncadar with a gold stick was soon
+sent in quest of the young Frenchman, who had rendered such
+essential service to the national cause.&nbsp; Loustannau was
+presented to the chiefs who exercised the regency, and received a
+magnificent present.&nbsp; He remained in the service of the
+Mahrattas, and soon had a corps of 2000 men under his exclusive
+command.&nbsp; He took part in all the subsequent operations
+against the English, and was mainly instrumental in inflicting
+upon them those losses which for a while seemed to place our
+Indian empire in such imminent jeopardy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At the battle of Chassepachrer, he routed our seapoys
+with great slaughter; the battle was ended, the English artillery
+alone continued to fire a few volleys in its retreat, in order to
+protect the fugitives, when a grape-shot struck Loustannau in the
+left hand and carried off the four fingers and half the
+thumb.&nbsp; It was long before he recovered from the effects of
+this wound.&nbsp; <!-- page 111--><a name="page111"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 111</span>When the stump was healed, he had a
+silver hand of very ingenious workmanship fitted to it.&nbsp; The
+first day he appeared at the head of his troops with this new
+kind of hand, a priest threw himself prostrate before his
+horse&rsquo;s feet, crying out, that the &lsquo;prophecy was
+fulfilled, since it was written in the temple of the God Siva,
+that the Mahrattas were to reach the summit of their glory under
+a man from the far west, who should have a silver hand, and prove
+invincible.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Loustannau was thenceforth looked upon as something
+almost superhuman.&nbsp; Diamonds, precious stones, the richest
+presents of every kind, were lavished on him from all
+sides.&nbsp; He was assigned a magnificent palace, with all the
+appurtenances of royal luxury.&nbsp; His stables contained thirty
+elephants sumptuously caparisoned, and a hundred and fifty
+horses, the best that India could produce.&nbsp; His body-guard
+consisted of 2000 men, with four pieces of cannon; and the
+principal chief had two colossal silver hands planted before the
+entrance of the palace that all men might know, by that token,
+that the man of destiny was the leader of the national
+forces.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Another campaign took place, in which Loustannau was
+again successful, and which terminated greatly to the
+satisfaction of the Mahrattas.&nbsp; On his return to Azra, he
+was received with honours such as were used to be conferred only
+on princes and sultans; and the ruling prince solemnly declared
+him &lsquo;The Lion of the State and the Tiger in War.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Loustannau married the daughter of a French officer in
+India; he had now been eighteen years among the Mahrattas; he had
+several children, and his wife urged him to return to Europe to
+enjoy the fruits of his toils.</p>
+<p><!-- page 112--><a name="page112"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+112</span>&ldquo;Notwithstanding his excessive generosity, the
+wealth he had accumulated was enormous; but, from the moment he
+quitted the territory of the Mahrattas, fortune, which till then
+had been so lavish to him of her favours, forsook him all at
+once, and the rest of his life was but one series of disasters
+and sorrows.&nbsp; He converted his whole fortune into paper, for
+he had not yet made up his mind where he would settle, and he did
+not wish to purchase any estates before his arrival.&nbsp; His
+homeward voyage was long and difficult; and he was several times
+in danger of shipwreck.&nbsp; When, at last, after a
+seven-month&rsquo;s passage, he reached France, the assignats had
+fallen into such utter depreciation, that he found the 8,000,000
+of francs he had remitted home dwindled down to 220,000.&nbsp;
+This first blow made a terrible impression on a temper so violent
+as his, and so spoiled by prosperity; but he still possessed a
+considerable amount in diamonds, some of which he sold, and with
+the proceeds he settled in Tarbes with his family, consisting of
+two sons and three daughters.&nbsp; Shortly afterwards, he lost
+his favourite son, and his grief was such as to occasion him an
+attack of insanity, from which he did not completely recover for
+two years.&nbsp; When he was restored to his senses, he set about
+constructing extensive iron works on the frontiers of Spain, in
+order to afford his restless energies an object on which to
+employ themselves.&nbsp; For three years, his sole pleasure
+consisted in superintending his engineers and workmen, and
+watching the progress of the great constructions he planned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Things were in this state when fresh misfortunes befell
+him.&nbsp; He was on the point of realising the profits of his
+enterprise, when war broke out between France and Spain.&nbsp;
+Immediately upon the first disasters of <!-- page 113--><a
+name="page113"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 113</span>the French
+arms, his buildings were burned, his furnaces destroyed, and his
+hopes annihilated.&nbsp; The ruin of his fortune was almost
+complete, and he only supported himself by selling, one by one,
+the costly jewels he had brought from India.&nbsp; All these
+misfortunes impaired his reason; he had continued fits of
+overwrought devotion, amounting at times to insanity.&nbsp; His
+family lived on in this way until 1815, in a state of mediocrity
+very hard to endure after their brilliant condition and their
+opulence in past years.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In 1815, Loustannau&rsquo;s only surviving son, who was
+a captain in the imperial guards, was dangerously wounded at
+Waterloo.&nbsp; His father saw himself on the point of losing
+him, and this shock seemed to restore to him the possession of
+his faculties.&nbsp; When he recovered, all the revived energies
+of his character were concentrated on the thought, how destitute
+would be the state of his family after his death; he determined,
+therefore to return to India, though many years had elapsed since
+he left it.&nbsp; His son wished to go in his stead, but he would
+not hear of this; and in 1816 he embarked for Egypt, having
+raised the necessary funds for his journey by pledging a ruby of
+rare value, the last gift of his Mahratta patron.&nbsp; Not
+finding in Egypt an opportunity of pursuing his way by the Red
+Sea, he crossed over to Syria, with the intention of joining the
+caravan from Damascus to Bassorah; but he fell dangerously ill at
+Acre, his brain being again affected; he squandered away all his
+money in his delirium, and destroyed bills of exchange and other
+valuable papers.&nbsp; After this, he suffered for awhile all the
+horrors of penury, and the renowned Loustannau&mdash;&rsquo;The
+Lion of the State and the Tiger in War&rsquo;&mdash;was reduced
+to earn his bread as a day-labourer.&nbsp; In this <!-- page
+114--><a name="page114"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+114</span>deplorable condition he was found by M. Catafago, a
+wealthy Levantine merchant, who relieved his wants and took him
+into his house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Loustannau had occasionally lucid intervals, in which
+he talked of his past greatness, and related the history of his
+life and his afflictions; but he had the mortification of seeing
+that everything he uttered seemed to his hearers but an
+additional proof of his insanity.&nbsp; To make all sure,
+however, letters were written to France, requesting information
+respecting this extraordinary man; and at last his son, who had
+heard nothing of him for two years, made all haste to Syria, and
+found his unfortunate father almost wholly deprived of
+reason.&nbsp; His journey to India was henceforth clearly
+impossible.&nbsp; The Captain had gathered together the last
+remnants of his fortune; and he remained for some time in Syria,
+doing everything that affection could suggest, in the hope of
+restoring his father to himself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was at this period that the old man&rsquo;s
+melancholy story reached the ears of Lady Hester Stanhope.&nbsp;
+She was then in the hey-day of her fame, and she offered
+Loustannau and his son an asylum in her house.&nbsp; At the first
+sight of the latter, she was struck with the resemblance that he
+bore to the gallant lover she had lost.&nbsp; From the lines of
+his hand, the form of his foot, and the aspect of the stars, she
+gathered that the life of Captain Loustannau was destined to be
+inseparably connected with her own.&nbsp; The Captain, however,
+had not lost sight of his Indian project, for he still hoped to
+recover some remains of the vast property his father must have
+left in that country.&nbsp; Lady Hester dissuaded him from going
+to India, and undertook to employ every possible means of
+recovering what remained of <!-- page 115--><a
+name="page115"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 115</span>the old
+General&rsquo;s property or fortune; but great changes had
+occurred since the old man had left the country.&nbsp;
+Wellesley&rsquo;s (Wellington) victories had put the English in
+possession of a great portion of the Mahratta territory;
+Loustannau&rsquo;s princely protectors were no more, and his
+property had passed into other hands.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was a singular chance that brought together in a
+corner of Syria two beings so remarkable as General Loustannau
+and Lady Hester Stanhope; they had long, mystical conversations
+together, and Lady Hester looked on Loustannau as a prophet who
+was come to prepare the way for her, and to be the forerunner of
+her triumph.&nbsp; The Captain sought to beguile the tedium of
+his existence by managing the household and the pecuniary affairs
+of Lady Hester.&nbsp; She treated him with the most assiduous
+kindness until his death, which happened, I believe, in
+1825.&nbsp; Her feelings towards him were those of pure
+friendship, tinged by the memory of her youthful affections and
+stimulated by the fantastic notion that a secret bond irrevocably
+united his destiny with her own.&nbsp; After his death, she had
+him buried in her garden, and twice every day she visited his
+grave, decorated it with flowers, and remained by it absorbed in
+long reveries.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;General Loustannau&rsquo;s insanity became more intense
+after his son&rsquo;s death, his delusions being greatly
+augmented by his intercourse with Lady Hester Stanhope.&nbsp;
+Celestial music floated round him; for a while he believed
+himself called to give battle to Bonaparte, who, he said, had
+returned to the earth under the form of Antichrist; and in 1831
+he declared it his destiny to become king of Jerusalem when the
+fulness of time <!-- page 116--><a name="page116"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 116</span>should have been accomplished.&nbsp;
+He had now warm altercations with Lady Hester; for he asserted
+his right to the bay mare with the natural saddle, whilst her
+ladyship was to have the white mare, and to ride with him into
+the Holy City as his wife, her place being at his left-hand and a
+little behind him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Her ladyship very soon saw it written in the stars that
+Loustannau and herself were to part.&nbsp; Accordingly she had a
+house fitted up for his reception at Abra, a village within five
+miles of her own residence, on the road to Sidon.&nbsp; But she
+continued her benevolent protection towards him, and did not let
+him want for anything requisite for his comfort.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lady Hester died in June, 1839, a few days before the
+battle of Neizeb, which she had foretold with rather surprising
+accuracy.&nbsp; Her wealth was all gone.&nbsp; She even left
+considerable debts, and her property was instantly seized by her
+creditors.&nbsp; Loustannau being thus once more reduced to
+entire destitution, the French consul of Sidon took charge of
+him, and gave him a humble lodging in the French khan.&nbsp; Thus
+this venerable old man, who had once possessed immense wealth,
+commanded great armies, and enriched multitudes of Europeans, now
+subsisted on charity.&nbsp; It has long been generally supposed
+that he was dead, as asserted by M. Jouay.&nbsp; He is dead, it
+is true, to all purposes of active life, but he has still a few
+lucid intervals in the midst of his harmless religious
+insanity.&nbsp; Happily for him, he has almost wholly lost his
+memory, and of all his past greatness he recollects nothing
+distinctly except the title he bore in India.&nbsp; Often does he
+proudly repeat that they called him formerly &lsquo;The Lion of
+the State and the Tiger in War;&rsquo; <!-- page 117--><a
+name="page117"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 117</span>and then,
+sadly reverting to his present condition, he subjoins, &lsquo;And
+now I am nothing but an unfortunate beggar.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Such is the admirable account given by Mr. Kelly of this
+singular individual, who passed through all the stages from
+happiness and affluence to misery and destitution.&nbsp;
+Loustannau is now dead, not only to purposes of active life, but
+dead in the literal sense of the word, and his bones repose in
+the European cemetery at Sidon; the life of this man and the site
+of his troubles affording a fresh incentive for strangers to
+visit Sidon, in addition to its ancient fame as a city of the
+days of Solomon.</p>
+<p>Sidon is perhaps the most delightfully situated town in all
+Palestine.&nbsp; Abounding with pleasant gardens, and rides and
+walks; the climate is healthy, and the commerce of the place is
+rising into importance, and the harbour capable of great
+improvement.&nbsp; In May, 1851, the families of two American
+missionaries established themselves in this neighbourhood, and
+already the schools and the works of the mission are
+prospering.</p>
+<p>From Sidon we visited Tyre!&mdash;poor, solitary, desolate
+Tyre&mdash;in whose meagre forsaken town and bare rugged rocks,
+we had manifest proof of the never-failing veracity of Scripture
+prophecy.&nbsp; How else would the once greatest city of the
+earth, whose ships visited all parts, whose merchants had a
+world-wide reputation, be now an utter desolation, inhabited only
+by a few traders and wretched fishermen and their families, whose
+daily occupation of spreading out the nets to dry are so many
+consecutive proofs of the fulfilment of the words of the
+prophet.&nbsp; But so many modern travellers have described these
+parts, that it would be useless for me to dwell <!-- page
+118--><a name="page118"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+118</span>upon the subject in this work: so we quitted Sur, the
+modern Tyre; and a night&rsquo;s pleasant sail in a small
+shaktoor brought us to Acre.&nbsp; St. Jean d&rsquo;Acre was at
+this period still suffering much from the explosion of the powder
+magazine, which so much assisted Admiral Napier in his siege; the
+houses were all tottering ruins, the mosques minus their
+minarets, and the stench from the accumulated mass of decomposed
+matter, the carcases of camels, sheep and oxen, and in some
+places the sun-bleached bones of unhappy beings, in the twinkling
+of an eye as it were hurried into eternity; these were a
+loathsome and melancholy spectacle.</p>
+<p>I may here state, that I was present at the bombardment of
+Acre, and from a favourable situation witnessed the terrific
+result of the &ldquo;Geyser&rdquo; bombshells, which were thrown
+with such unerring certainty, that, knowing the position of the
+powder-magazine, they fired upon it with so nice an aim, that
+each succeeding shell struck upon the last in such a manner that
+the first thrown was thus forced through the wall, and occasioned
+the explosion; but I may further state what is yet a hidden
+mystery to the British public, and which in a great measure
+accounts for the facility with which this almost impregnable
+fortress was captured, and that is, that the Imams and the Cadi
+of Acre secretly warned the soldiery not to resist the arms of
+the British force there assembled, <i>because</i> they were
+fighting for the Sultan, whom it was their duty, as Mahomedans,
+to obey; and, moreover, that in the sight of God and the prophet,
+there was no other lawful Moslem king; none to be acknowledged,
+save the Sultan of the Sublime Porte, Abdul Medjid; and that if
+they acted against his interests, then the Prophet would utterly
+forsake <!-- page 119--><a name="page119"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 119</span>them, and such as fell in battle
+might fully make up their minds to be hurled into eternal
+perdition, and that such as fought in his favour would assuredly
+go to heaven.&nbsp; Such an exhortation and threat, at such a
+peculiar time, was sure to have the desired effect. <a
+name="citation119"></a><a href="#footnote119"
+class="citation">[119]</a></p>
+<p>Not only did the soldiers fight without spirit, but many of
+the artillery actually spiked their guns.&nbsp; Of this latter
+fact I myself had ocular demonstration when the engagement was
+over, and the allied forces landed at Acre.&nbsp; After this
+fact, it becomes not the English admiral to boast too much and
+compare his success with the failure of Napoleon.</p>
+<p>From Acre, still journeying southward, we passed the famous
+brook Kedron, so often alluded to in Holy Writ, and passing
+through the miserable village of Kaipha, ascended Mount Carmel,
+and sojourned a couple of days in the hospitable convent of the
+Carmelite monks.&nbsp; Leaving Carmel, we passed through
+C&aelig;sarea, now an utter desolation, and visited Jaffa and
+Gaza, and from the latter place, striking inland, took in
+succession Hebron, Jerusalem, Bethlehem, the Dead Sea and the
+Jordan, besides visiting all the other towns of any note or
+importance, all of which have been often described by European
+travellers, so that the best thing I can do is to avoid
+repetition, and content myself with observing, that the reality
+far exceeded my expectations as regards the beauty of the scenery
+and the wild picturesque position of almost every <!-- page
+120--><a name="page120"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+120</span>town of note in Palestine.&nbsp; At the same time I
+deem it most essential to warn the English travellers to be very
+careful in the choice of a guide-book, as many, even up to a very
+late date, have been published with apparently no other aim than
+to puff up the author&rsquo;s vanity, containing mostly a tissue
+of unaccountable misrepresentations from first to last.&nbsp; If
+the traveller, in a spirit of knight-errantry, goes forth to
+visit the holy shores of Palestine and Syria, hoping there to
+bask under the bright light of large sunny-loving eyes&mdash;if
+he thinks to lead the Arab maid captive by the heart&mdash;to win
+over the smiles of the Grecian, or scampering over desolate
+mountains&mdash;to fall in with untutored Syrian maids, who sally
+forth and carry him from his horse, fatigued and fever-smitten,
+to be watched over and cared for by female
+philanthropists,&mdash;if, I say, the traveller quits England
+with any such notions, he will return to these shores grievously
+disappointed.</p>
+<p>Although myself a native of the country, dressed in the
+costume, and speaking the language, still, with all these
+advantages, the maidens always fled at our approach, not even if
+they mastered their coyness, would they ever exchange a syllable
+with us strangers.&nbsp; Possibly, my friend and myself were not
+possessed of that charm which a recent gallant author, according
+to his own account, seems to have carried about with him wherever
+he went; for he says, that in many parts fathers of families
+rushed out and endeavoured to force him into a marriage with
+their daughters, or else the maidens themselves, in <i>villages
+he had never before visited</i>, came forth, having heard of his
+notoriety (this in parts where there is no post, and where news
+<!-- page 121--><a name="page121"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+121</span>travels at the rate of a mile a week), to meet him with
+timbrel and dance, and other welcomings.&nbsp; The only note that
+ever welcomed us to such villages, was the angry tongue of a
+scolding harridan, or else the hooting of the owls, or the cry of
+the jackal.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 122--><a name="page122"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 122</span>CHAPTER VIII.<br />
+FIRST VISIT TO ENGLAND.</h2>
+<p>It sometimes happened that the naval officers belonging to the
+ship-of-war stationed at Beyrout, took up their temporary
+residence with some friend on shore, being always welcome guests
+at the houses of the inhabitants.&nbsp; It was in this way that I
+first came to cultivate an acquaintance with the captain of Her
+Majesty&rsquo;s steamer, &ldquo;Hecate,&rdquo; so that we were
+much thrown together.&nbsp; On one occasion, whilst he was a
+guest at our house, he proposed that I should accompany him on a
+pleasure cruise as far as Malta; a proposition I gladly acceded
+to, more particularly as the Emir Beschir, with his family and a
+relation of my own, were at that time residing on the
+island.&nbsp; I had long had a desire to see Malta, for many had
+described it to me as a species of little world, where one might
+sit down in a <i>caf&eacute;</i> and study the characters of
+every European nation.</p>
+<p>The alarm and grief of my relations on learning my
+determination was only to be equalled by the envious jeerings of
+my companions, who, whilst they pretended to pity my infatuation,
+would, I feel persuaded, have parted with every para in their
+possession for a portion of my good luck.</p>
+<p><!-- page 123--><a name="page123"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+123</span>The steamer was to sail at the end of the week; and I
+was so busy making preparations, packing and taking leave, that I
+really had not a moment&rsquo;s leisure for calm
+meditation,&mdash;and I am very glad I had not, for the chances
+are, that this, in conjunction with some of the melancholy
+forebodings of my friends, would have unnerved me for the
+trip.&nbsp; Seeing, however, that I was determined on starting,
+my neighbours changed their annoying prognostications into good
+acts, which acts consisted in inundating me with as many presents
+of sweetmeats, biscuits, etc., as would have kept me during a
+twelvemonths&rsquo; passage round the world.&nbsp; I selected
+some of the best of them for the officers&rsquo; mess, and at
+last the word ready being given, got my luggage together and
+embarked; the dispatches being received on board, and the
+&ldquo;Hecate&rdquo; soon after getting up her steam, we
+proceeded on our voyage to Malta accompanied by the prayers and
+blessings of a multitude of friends and relations assembled at
+Ras-Beyrout to witness our departure.</p>
+<p>The day after we had sailed, I awoke at early dawn and crept
+up upon deck as best I could.&nbsp; The motion of the vessel was
+so strange and violent, that I reeled and staggered like a tipsy
+man, and felt confused, miserable, weak and sick.&nbsp; The
+horrible sensations I experienced on first awaking that morning
+cannot be easily erased from my mind.&nbsp; I was awoke by a
+singular and deafening noise, which seemed to proceed from
+directly overhead, which, as I afterwards discovered, was
+occasioned by the daily process of holy-stoning the decks.&nbsp;
+I managed to reach the main-deck just in time to be handed to the
+larboard gangway by the officer of the watch, who there left me
+alone in my <!-- page 124--><a name="page124"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 124</span>misery with my head hanging over the
+bulwarks&mdash;a wretched victim to sea-sickness.</p>
+<p>Bitterly, during that moment, did I lament having ever quitted
+Beyrout.&nbsp; My sufferings were so intense that I thought I
+must have died during the day.&nbsp; This was the first time I
+had ever found myself so far out at sea.&nbsp; There was no land
+in sight.&nbsp; The morning was gloomy and boisterous; and
+altogether my spirits felt so depressed that I resigned myself to
+Allah, and wrapping the loose folds of my large Cyprus cloak
+carefully around me, I sat down cross-legged in a corner behind
+the man at the helm, and vainly endeavoured to fall off to
+sleep.&nbsp; A nice cup of coffee which the captain&rsquo;s
+steward kindly brought, in a great measure revived me; this
+relief, however, was only temporary, the dreadful odour of the
+victuals cooking for breakfast, fried fish, ham and eggs, etc.,
+these made me feel so ill that I was compelled to retire to my
+berth, and there I lay more dead than alive during the whole
+passage, utterly callous as to what became of me, and as to
+whether the vessel was steadily pursuing her voyage in safety or
+was in imminent danger of going to the bottom.</p>
+<p>Some Capuchin friars were on board, returning from Jerusalem
+to Malta, accompanied by two young Syrian females who were going
+to Rome to be educated in the principles of the Roman Catholic
+religion, and they not only enjoyed the passage amazingly, being
+possessed of capital appetites, but they very uncharitably,
+though not very unlike human nature, mocked at my calamities and
+tried to heighten my alarm and sufferings by frightening me with
+false reports as to the vessel&rsquo;s danger, and as to my own
+weak state of health.</p>
+<p><!-- page 125--><a name="page125"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+125</span>After intense sufferings and encountering much really
+rough weather, we had at length the satisfaction of finding
+ourselves safe at anchor in the harbour of Valetta.&nbsp; I doubt
+whether any of the passengers that accompanied St. Paul on his
+disastrous voyage and shipwreck, suffered greater fear or pain
+than I had undergone; certainly they could not have rejoiced more
+than I did at its happy termination.&nbsp; Blessed be God, who is
+not forgetful of His children, even in the vast unruly deep!</p>
+<p>On arriving at Malta, we had eleven days&rsquo; quarantine to
+perform; but the tediousness of this imprisonment was much
+alleviated by the kindness and attention of the good Mr.
+Schlicnz, whom I had known in Syria, and who now daily visited me
+at the Lazaretto, supplying me with books to fill up the tedium
+of dull hours.&nbsp; On the eleventh day, being admitted to
+pratique, I accepted the hospitable invitation of that gentleman
+to take up my quarters at his house.&nbsp; I was, through his
+politeness, introduced into the society of several of the leading
+families at Malta.&nbsp; On leaving Beyrout, I had been furnished
+with letters of introduction to Sir Frederick Bouverie, the then
+governor.&nbsp; His excellency received me with the utmost
+urbanity and kindness, and, indeed, I shall ever have cause
+gratefully to remember Sir Frederick&rsquo;s polite attention, as
+it was mainly through his instrumentality that I first visited
+the shores of Great Britain.</p>
+<p>One of my first visits was, of course, to the Emir Beschir of
+Lebanon, who, with his family, were then residing there as
+political exiles.&nbsp; I had several long conversations with
+this once-powerful prince; and the Emir suggested that his wife
+and son should accompany me to London, there to exert their
+influence in <!-- page 126--><a name="page126"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 126</span>endeavouring to prevail upon Her
+Majesty the Queen to interpose her influence on their
+behalf.&nbsp; They communicated with the British Government, both
+at home and in the island on this subject; but no encouragement
+was held out by the authorities there or in England for the
+furtherance of this scheme; and the subject, after a long
+correspondence, was, therefore, reluctantly dropped.&nbsp; The
+Emir, being hurt and displeased at this apparent neglect, sent
+his son to Constantinople, who, being well received by the
+Ottoman Government, wrote, at its suggestion, to invite his
+father to the Porte, an invitation he readily accepted; upon
+which the governor of Malta placed at his disposal a British
+war-steamer, and the Emir and his family immediately quitted the
+island.</p>
+<p>I may here be permitted to deviate a little from my journal to
+give a brief description of these Emirs, their origin and
+end.&nbsp; The family of the Emirs were originally Moslems,
+natives of Shaahbah, a village on the southern plain of Lebanon;
+and they are said to be descended in a direct line from the
+renowned Moslem Prophet, and to have ruled over the Lebanon for
+many years.&nbsp; The founder of the family, Yusuf al Husn, or
+the handsome or beautiful Yusuf, so called from his great
+personal attractions, was, on account of his bravery and
+influence, chosen by the mountaineers of Lebanon to be their
+prince.</p>
+<p>Before consenting to the choice, however, he himself
+stipulated that the power of life and death should be invested in
+his hands; and this having been agreed to, he was duly elected
+Emir, came to the mountains, and settled amongst his people, over
+whom he was to rule with a despotic sway.&nbsp; During the time
+this prince held the supreme power, he preserved the greatest
+order amongst the unruly tribes over whom he was placed, <!--
+page 127--><a name="page127"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+127</span>and travellers passed and repassed with the greatest
+safety.&nbsp; Some time after he had settled amongst the Druses
+and Maronites, after mature consideration, he came to the
+resolution of embracing the Christian religion, although such a
+measure was sure to prove disadvantageous to him, by estranging
+the Druses and occasioning the Sultan&rsquo;s displeasure; he,
+however, retained undisputed the right of his position and
+authority, and on dying, was succeeded by his son, the Emir whom
+I then met at Malta.</p>
+<p>The cause of this second Emir&rsquo;s disgrace was his having
+fallen into disrepute with the government, by not immediately
+joining the Seraskier Pasha on the occasion of the expulsion of
+the Egyptians from Syria.&nbsp; But the cause of the poor
+man&rsquo;s conduct was one that few can help sympathising
+with.&nbsp; His son was at that time with Ibrahim Pasha; and had
+it been known to that warrior that the Emir had joined the forces
+against him, there is little doubt but that he would have caused
+the son to be cut to pieces.&nbsp; Under these circumstances, the
+Emir was constrained to remain on the mountains till the
+expulsion of the Egyptian troops had been effected.&nbsp; He then
+went down to Sidon and surrendered himself to the English, and
+was by them conveyed in a frigate to Beyrout.</p>
+<p>The Seraskier having given out that he was in possession of a
+Firman, by the authority of which, could he lay hold of the Emir,
+he would undoubtedly behead him, and send his head as a trophy to
+Constantinople, the English authorities strongly recommended his
+departure for Malta, where once on English ground his safety
+would be ensured.&nbsp; The Emir accordingly came to that island,
+and was very well received by the governor, who placed a palace
+at his disposal.&nbsp; I must <!-- page 128--><a
+name="page128"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 128</span>acknowledge
+that all that the Emir said about Sir Frederic Bouverie redounded
+much to his Excellency&rsquo;s credit.&nbsp; He spoke of him as a
+humane and kind governor, and one who knew how to respect fallen
+dignity.</p>
+<p>I have already said the Emir ultimately left Malta for
+Constantinople.&nbsp; On arriving at Stamboul he was exiled to
+Zafron Boli, a place notorious for the animosity of its
+inhabitants towards Christians, and where his eldest son, pining
+on account of the miseries endured by his father, soon succumbed
+to misfortune.&nbsp; Here he remained some time subjected to much
+mental suffering.&nbsp; Often in after years he told me, in
+familiar conversation, that what afforded him some small
+consolation was the similitude between his own fate and that of
+the late King Louis Philippe.</p>
+<p>After some time, through the kind intervention of one of the
+European ambassadors, the Emir was brought to Broussa, and
+ultimately removed to Constantinople, where, within a short time,
+himself and his remaining son sunk into the grave.&nbsp; Every
+respect was paid to his memory; by the Sultan&rsquo;s order a
+public funeral was awarded him, and masses said for the repose of
+his soul at the government expense, a striking proof of the
+liberality and toleration of the government of the Sublime
+Porte.</p>
+<p>During my stay at Malta, the late Dr. Alexander, the first
+Protestant bishop in Jerusalem, arrived at that island,
+accompanied by his family and suite, <i>en route</i> for his new
+see.&nbsp; I shall never forget my amazement on being introduced
+to that prelate, to find that he wore no beard.&nbsp; A bishop
+without a beard was a perfect marvel to me, and a thing unheard
+of in the East; in short, perfectly fabulous.&nbsp; This
+excellent man condescended <!-- page 129--><a
+name="page129"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 129</span>to ask my
+opinion on many points connected with the East, and I made so
+bold as to tell him, that if he wished to pass for a bishop
+amongst the natives of Syria, he must let his beard grow without
+further delay.</p>
+<p>Malta was a great novelty to me&mdash;the beauty of the
+scenery&mdash;the bustle of the place&mdash;the frigates,
+steamers, schooners, boats, carriages, soldiers, bands of music,
+friars, nuns, and a vast concourse of people in every imaginable
+costume, and speaking every known tongue.&nbsp; All these
+perplexed, astonished, and delighted me at one and the same time;
+and a drive in the environs of Valetta was a perfect treat.&nbsp;
+At Malta I first got an idea of European manners; and I must own,
+my astonishment was very great to see the females, with faces
+perfectly uncovered, chatting in the greatest familiarity with
+the opposite sex, and it was to me quite incomprehensible.&nbsp;
+But my greatest astonishment was excited at a ball to which I was
+invited.&nbsp; The waltzing, polkaing, etc., appeared to me a
+most ridiculous and indecent exhibition; and it was a long time
+before this feeling wore off.&nbsp; I have to this day been
+unable to find out how any pleasure can be derived from a
+constant spinning round like the sails of a mill.</p>
+<p>It was not without much regret that I quitted the
+island&mdash;a perfect scene of enchantment&mdash;and the kind,
+hospitable acquaintances I had formed during my brief stay.&nbsp;
+His excellency the governor had been good enough to exert his
+influence in procuring me a passage on board of a war-steamer on
+the point of leaving for England.&nbsp; Such an opportunity was
+not to be thrown away, so hurrying down to the water-side, I
+embarked, on board H. M.&rsquo;s steam-frigate Gorgon, Captain W.
+H. Henderson, C.B., 28th February, 1842.&nbsp; I had leisure to
+survey the busy scene around us before the vessel <!-- page
+130--><a name="page130"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+130</span>finally started.&nbsp; Shore-boats were plying around,
+offering for sale fruits, cigars, and canary birds.&nbsp; On
+board all was order and silence; around, all confusion, shouting,
+and quarrelling, and whilst mentally occupied in drawing this
+comparison, the anchor was weighed and we steamed rapidly away
+from the pleasant shores of the island of Malta.</p>
+<p>After an agreeable voyage, marked by no particular incident,
+we duly arrived at Portsmouth.&nbsp; On my arrival, I was made
+happy by meeting the Rev. Mr. Marshall, chaplain of
+Nelson&rsquo;s ship, the Victory, and whose acquaintance I had
+the pleasure of forming when that gentleman was travelling in
+Syria.&nbsp; Mr. Marshall and all the officers of the ship were
+extremely kind to me, and shewed me over the old ship of the
+renowned admiral.&nbsp; At this place I landed, and having got a
+permit, was kindly shewn over the splendid dockyards.&nbsp; Here
+also I tasted some water twenty years in cask.&nbsp; I afterwards
+went round in the same steamer to Woolwich, and having shewn my
+letters of introduction to the captain, he kindly undertook to
+advise me.&nbsp; He recommended me to proceed at once to the
+house of the Honourable and Rev. Baptist Noel; and acting upon
+his advice, I came to London, and thence proceeded to Hornsey, at
+that time the residence of my reverend friend.</p>
+<p>Confused and amazed as I was with the noise and bustle around
+me in so vast a place as London, I was sufficiently alive to my
+own interests to have my eyes open, so that I should not be
+cheated.&nbsp; This led to a ludicrous altercation between myself
+and a toll-collector at a turnpike.&nbsp; The man insisted on his
+money being paid; I, on the other hand, as obstinately refused,
+assuring him that, though a foreigner, I was well <!-- page
+131--><a name="page131"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+131</span>acquainted with the tricks practised upon travellers;
+in short, I thought the man was asking for what, in my own
+country, is termed a <i>bakhsheesh</i>, which means nothing more
+or less than a present.&nbsp; Some gentlemen, however, came up
+and explained how matters stood, and then I paid the trifle and
+bade the driver proceed.</p>
+<p>Nothing could exceed the Christian brotherly reception I met
+with at the excellent Mr. Noel&rsquo;s house.&nbsp; He actually
+busied himself with helping to carry in my baggage; and I was
+lost in admiration to observe how, in the bosom of his own
+family, he would play and sport with his own children, doing
+anything for their amusement and to make them happy.&nbsp; His
+early rising and great taste for gardening quite astonished
+me.&nbsp; Pleasant indeed were the days that I spent under his
+hospitable roof; and if any in this world have a claim upon my
+esteem and gratitude, it surely must be Mr. Noel and his amiable
+lady.</p>
+<p>Leaving my kind host&rsquo;s house, which I did with unfeigned
+regret, I lived some time in London with Mr. W. Brown, in order
+to make myself familiar with the many sights so well worthy of
+visiting; and I then proceeded to Wimbledon, in order that, under
+the care and tuition of the Rev. William Edelman, the clergyman
+of the place, I might improve myself in English, and be prepared
+for a college education.&nbsp; I was placed there by the kindness
+of the Rev. W. Neven and the Hon. Capt. Maude, belonging to the
+committee of the society raised to promote education in Syria, by
+Assaod Y. Kayet&rsquo;s exertions, and also noted for their
+civility to all my countrymen that have ever visited
+England.&nbsp; In Mr. Edelman&rsquo;s house, I found a happy
+home, for I was considered and treated in every respect as one of
+the family.&nbsp; Mrs. Edelman was a very accomplished lady; <!--
+page 132--><a name="page132"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+132</span>she kindly undertook to teach me drawing, and she was
+well versed in Latin and classics.&nbsp; Of the many kind friends
+I met with during my stay at Wimbledon, I may particularise and
+thank the kind-hearted Mrs. Marryatt, mother of the celebrated
+novelist, who, at the advanced age of eighty, looks as blooming
+as though she were in the prime of life.&nbsp; The venerable lady
+is a great botanist and very fond of gardening.&nbsp; Mrs.
+Russell and her two daughters shewed me great civility, as did
+the gifted Mrs. Hudson, who is unfortunately blind.&nbsp; I am
+also much indebted to the attention and civility of Major
+Oliphant, one of the East India directors and to Mr. Mallison,
+Mr. Jones, and Mr. Peach, and their kind families; in short,
+without enumerating their names, I thank all my good friends at
+Wimbledon, and in the neighbourhood.</p>
+<p>One day at church I was surprised and gratified at recognising
+in the person of a very tall gentleman sitting in a pew some
+distance from me, the late Captain Murray of the Rifles, an old
+friend who had been a visitor at our house in Syria; he was as
+pleased as myself at the recognition, and having introduced me to
+his mother and sisters, insisted on my going home with him to
+lunch.&nbsp; Such acts of attention and kind civility were of
+daily occurrence during my stay at Wimbledon; but I must not
+forget to thank Miss C---, who was so good as to be at the
+trouble of taking my portrait.</p>
+<p>I witnessed a cavalry review before His Royal Highness Prince
+Albert; the dazzling splendour of the accoutrements surprised me
+very much.&nbsp; Here also I was once nearly being made
+eye-witness to a detestable duel.&nbsp; The circumstances of this
+adventure were as follows, viz.:&mdash;I was one day walking with
+Mr. Walmsley, now of the Foreign-office, and Captain John <!--
+page 133--><a name="page133"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+133</span>Nunn, a military officer from Ireland, when passing
+near Wimbledon-common, we saw some people busily occupied in
+measuring the ground.&nbsp; Imagining them to be engineers
+occupied in a survey, I was glad of the opportunity likely to be
+afforded me of improving myself in this science by closely
+watching their proceedings.&nbsp; With this intention I asked my
+friends to approach nearer to them; judge then of my horror when
+informed by them, that these preliminaries were evidently being
+arranged for a duel about to take place between two gentlemen,
+who had probably quarrelled about some trifle, or possibly <i>un
+affaire de c&oelig;ur</i>, and who were going to settle their
+difference in this disgraceful manner.&nbsp; One of my friends
+ran and fetched a constable, who speedily terminated the
+proceeding by virtue of his staff of office.</p>
+<p>I cannot say how detestable and absurd this crime appeared in
+my eyes&mdash;such bloodshed to occur in civilised England
+appeared to me marvellous&mdash;in a country professedly
+Christian.&nbsp; I really began to wish myself back in Syria
+again; for if this was to be the result of civilization and
+education, ignorance were bliss indeed.</p>
+<p>On my first arrival in England, and for many months
+afterwards, I was greatly at a loss to comprehend the many idioms
+of the language; and the result was that I was perpetually the
+victim of some ludicrous error in either speaking or
+misunderstanding the English.&nbsp; Previous to my departure from
+Syria, I had become acquainted with Captain Charles Shadwell, in
+Her Majesty&rsquo;s navy, the son of the late respected
+vice-Chancellor, Sir Launcelot Shadwell.&nbsp; On our parting he
+had desired me, should I ever visit England, to call upon his
+father, from whom I could readily obtain his <!-- page 134--><a
+name="page134"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+134</span>address.&nbsp; Soon after my arrival I bethought myself
+of this invitation, and called at the court-house at
+Westminster.&nbsp; On enquiring of an attendant if Sir Launcelot
+was within, the man replied in the affirmative, but at the same
+time gave me to understand that Sir Launcelot was <i>sitting</i>,
+and that therefore I could not hope to see him.</p>
+<p>This reply naturally very much amazed me, and I therefore
+persisted in my request.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tell you, Sir, that Sir Launcelot is
+<i>sitting</i>,&rdquo; was again the answer of the servant.</p>
+<p>This rather annoyed me.&nbsp; &ldquo;Well, Sir,&rdquo;
+rejoined I, &ldquo;I know that Sir Launcelot is <i>sitting</i>; I
+never supposed for an instant that he was lying down or asleep at
+this hour of the day, and that is just the very reason why I have
+called to see him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I need not say that my reply as much astonished the official
+as I was confounded at his obstinacy.&nbsp; After some little
+altercation, however, I was made to understand that the term
+<i>sitting</i>, as used in this instance, referred to Sir
+Launcelot&rsquo;s official occupations, and not a little abashed,
+I apologised for the error, at the same time explaining to the
+man the motives of my visit.&nbsp; I begged him to take in my
+card, and in the mean time walked into the court, not however,
+without a fresh difficulty occurring, for the official requested
+me to take off my cap, for I then wore what I have been
+accustomed to all my life, the <i>fez</i> or
+<i>tarboush</i>.&nbsp; On this request being repeated, I told the
+man that I would much sooner take off my boots, as it was
+disrespectful in my country to go bareheaded into the presence of
+one&rsquo;s superiors.&nbsp; I suppose the man had never seen
+such a curious customer as I seemed to him to be; he however
+implored me not to remove my boots, and without further demur,
+allowed me to remain.</p>
+<p><!-- page 135--><a name="page135"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+135</span>I afterwards saw Sir Launcelot in the private office of
+the Chancellor.&nbsp; He received me with stiff <i>hauteur</i>
+and distant politeness, and on making known my errand, regretted
+that he could not give me his son&rsquo;s address, but said that
+if I left my own, he would forward it to his son.&nbsp; This I
+did, and rather hurt at the frigidity of his manner, speedily
+withdrew.</p>
+<p>A few days after this, I received a very kind letter from Sir
+Launcelot, enclosing me one from his son, and in which Sir
+Launcelot, after apologising for the apparent want of courtesy
+displayed in his reception, which he justly attributed to the
+impostures often practised by persons of foreign appearance on
+the credulity of English gentlemen, concluded by hospitably
+inviting me to dinner, when I should have the happiness of once
+again meeting my friend, his son.</p>
+<p>About the same time that I had come to England, there also
+arrived a young Druse Sheikh from the mountains of Lebanon, who,
+attended by his two servants, had left his home to be educated;
+and government had placed him under the tuition of the Rev. Mr.
+---.&nbsp; Some time afterwards, one of the servants from some
+misunderstanding, attempted to stab that gentleman, but was
+fortunately prevented.&nbsp; A great disturbance, however,
+occurred, and the police were obliged to interfere and disarm
+them.&nbsp; In 1843 the Prince went raving mad, and was sent back
+to his friends.&nbsp; One day, paying a visit to Aali Effendi, at
+that time Turkish ambassador here, he suddenly flung a beautiful
+and expensive watch which he wore into the fire, exclaiming that
+he would no longer carry the devil in his pocket.&nbsp; I
+afterwards met him on one occasion on the Lebanon, and he told me
+that he was very ill, as the English had put a charm into his
+stomach; <!-- page 136--><a name="page136"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 136</span>and he begged of me to give him an
+English lancet to perform an operation and cut the charm.&nbsp;
+Luckily there are instances directly opposite to this case, or
+else one might be discouraged in carrying out the good cause of
+Syrian education.&nbsp; The fate of Assaad Shidiac (whose brother
+is considered one of the first Arabic and English scholars, and
+has been for many years employed by the Church Missionary Society
+in translating the Bible from English into Arabic), who fell a
+martyr to the cause, shews triumphantly that few people can be
+more sincere converts than the Syrian Christians.</p>
+<p>This admirable young man was originally a Maronite, but having
+been educated by the missionaries, was led to see the errors of
+the Romish faith.&nbsp; While travelling amongst his own native
+villagers he was seized, and the people tried to force him to
+renounce the faith he had adopted.&nbsp; On his refusal, they
+imprisoned and otherwise ill-treated him.&nbsp; A merchant
+residing at Beyrout very soon flew to his rescue; but alas! he
+arrived too late, the noble soul of Shidiac had fled for ever,
+and the immediate cause of his death remains to this day
+enveloped in mystery.</p>
+<p>I remember well that on first arriving in England I had a
+habit of sitting cross-legged on a chair or an ottoman.&nbsp;
+This position used to amuse my English friends very much, and on
+one occasion when I detected a number of young ladies laughing
+among themselves and pointing at me, I anxiously enquired the
+cause of their merriment, and one of them volunteered to tell me
+that it was only tailors in this country that resorted to the use
+of such a droll position.&nbsp; I assured them that in Syria the
+nobles of the land sat cross-legged; but thanking them for this
+gentle correction, I ever <!-- page 137--><a
+name="page137"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 137</span>after
+endeavoured to sit as much like an Englishman as I could, a task
+which I at first found both difficult and disagreeable.</p>
+<p>At this time I received intelligence of the death of a very
+dear friend and relative, and this melancholy news urged on me
+the necessity of returning to Syria.&nbsp; I accordingly began to
+make preparations, and was so fortunate as to meet Sir George
+Otway, who was going up the Mediterranean in command of the
+&ldquo;Virago&rdquo; steamer, and who very kindly gave me a
+passage as far as Malta.</p>
+<p>On board the &ldquo;Virago&rdquo; I had the happiness of
+meeting those amiable noblemen, the Marquis of Worcester and Lord
+Clarence Paget.&nbsp; We touched at Gibraltar, and were there
+joined by the bishop of that diocese who was about to pay a visit
+to Malta.&nbsp; We had a remarkably pleasant voyage out, and on
+arriving once more at Malta, I immediately occupied myself in
+preparations for landing, not displeased at the idea of once
+again visiting that pleasant little island for a few days.&nbsp;
+In the midst of all this, my attention was suddenly attracted to
+the constant succession of flags that were being rapidly hauled
+up and down and changed.&nbsp; I was of course ignorant as to the
+motives of these signals.&nbsp; In a short time, however, Sir
+George Otway enlightened me on this subject by informing me with
+a smile on his countenance, that the &ldquo;Medea&rdquo; steam
+frigate, Captain Warden, with the Lycian expedition, was about to
+leave for Rhodes, and that he was glad to say he had been
+successful in procuring me a passage by her.&nbsp; Accordingly,
+taking a hearty leave of the excellent commander and gallant
+officers of the &ldquo;Virago,&rdquo; and bidding adieu to my
+noble <!-- page 138--><a name="page138"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 138</span>fellow-passengers, I was quickly
+transferred from one vessel to the other.</p>
+<p>On the deck of the new steamer I was delighted to recognise
+the features of my old acquaintance Mr., now Sir Charles
+Fellowes, who was then proceeding to conduct the expedition to
+Lycia in Asia Minor.&nbsp; In a few days the steamer landed me at
+Rhodes.&nbsp; I joined the Austrian boat at that island, and was
+soon, to my great joy and satisfaction, safely landed at
+Beyrout.</p>
+<p>On joining my old acquaintances, I was much amused at the
+ridiculous reports in circulation as to the results of my visit
+to England.&nbsp; Some imagined I had been made a bishop, whilst
+others stated that I had given myself out as the Prince of Syria,
+and had persuaded the English government to grant me a fleet to
+conquer the country.&nbsp; I was frequently asked by the chiefs
+when I expected the ships to arrive.&nbsp; All concluded that I
+was thoroughly versed in medicine, as the people of Syria imagine
+all Europeans, and those who visit that country, to be well
+acquainted with this science.</p>
+<p>After I had been a short time at Beyrout, I went on a visit to
+the mountains, when a desperate war broke out between the
+Maronites and the Druses, through the machinations of the
+priests.&nbsp; The Druses immediately made a desperate attack
+upon the village of Deyr Al Kamar, where at that time the Emir
+Kasim was residing at the palace.&nbsp; The village was nearly
+destroyed, and much blood was shed.&nbsp; The palace was
+sufficiently strong to resist their attack.&nbsp; The government
+was so amazed at this outbreak, that the Emir was ordered to go
+to Beyrout, whence he was sent to Constantinople.&nbsp; I myself
+remained a short time at Beyrout to arrange some private
+affairs.&nbsp; This being settled to the <!-- page 139--><a
+name="page139"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+139</span>satisfaction of all concerned, I took my passage to
+Constantinople on board of one of the Austrian steamers, and
+after a prosperous voyage was duly landed at Stamboul.&nbsp; This
+was the first time I had ever visited the great Moslem capital;
+but I came here after having seen and been resident at London,
+and it consequently had few charms for me, though I must admit,
+that as seen from the sea in approaching it, I thought Stamboul
+one of the most lovely spots I had ever set eyes on.</p>
+<p>Here I soon joined my old acquaintance the Emir Kasim.&nbsp;
+The story of this prince is as follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p>His childhood was passed on Lebanon, and ultimately he became
+possessed of large landed estates, to the cultivation of which he
+devoted much of his time.&nbsp; Living in a fine mansion in the
+village of Hadded, about four hours&rsquo; journey from Beyrout,
+the greater portion of which belonged to him, his house was at
+all times open to the traveller, whether poor or rich; and,
+indeed, no person ever passed his door without experiencing the
+hospitality of the owner.&nbsp; The chief objects of the
+Emir&rsquo;s attention were silkworms, of which he kept immense
+numbers.&nbsp; He was also celebrated for his fine breed of
+Arabian horses.&nbsp; Devoted to the pleasures of hunting wild
+boars in the neighbourhood of Damascus, and shooting, his great
+delight was a <i>battue</i> of partridges; for the perfect
+enjoyment of which an excellent system had been
+established.&nbsp; The unfortunate birds (of the red-legged
+species), having been gradually accustomed to be fed in a small
+open spot, whenever the Emir felt inclined for the sport, he
+ensconced himself snugly behind a bush especially prepared for
+the purpose, and blazed away at his victims at his ease.&nbsp; It
+is quite certain that the Emir had not had the advantage of a
+sporting education in England, <!-- page 140--><a
+name="page140"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 140</span>but it
+cannot be denied that the natural cunning of the man had led him
+to imitate closely a European practice.&nbsp; In other respects
+he was an ignorant and unlettered man; his only accomplishments
+being a little reading and writing.</p>
+<p>When the Emir Beschir had been called upon to join the allies
+with his forces against Ibrahim Pacha, but was unable to comply
+with the call, Kasim collected all his followers and went down to
+the sea-coast to join Sir Charles Napier, who, in return,
+promised to make him Prince of Lebanon, and to add Beyrout and
+Sidon to his principality; his losses in money and property were
+immense for Syria, but he listened to the promises of the
+English, which were to the effect that he should be amply
+recompensed.&nbsp; These promises were, however, never
+fulfilled.&nbsp; The title of Prince of Lebanon was certainly
+granted him; but the disturbance before narrated broke out, and
+his removal was the result.&nbsp; It was imagined at the time
+that the political influence of another power outweighed that of
+England, and caused this measure to be brought about.&nbsp; On
+his arrival at Constantinople from Beyrout, the Prince was
+brought before the divan and called upon to answer certain
+charges brought against him.&nbsp; This he succeeded in doing to
+the satisfaction of the authorities, and he was accordingly
+acquitted; but it was thought that his presence amongst the
+mountaineers might again cause a revolt, and the government,
+therefore, ordered him to remain in Turkey.</p>
+<p>While in Stamboul I had laid his case before Lord Cowley, the
+British ambassador, who, upon ascertaining the real state of
+affairs, promised to exert himself in his favour, which promise
+his lordship fulfilled to the utmost.&nbsp; The prince, not
+understanding the integrity of <!-- page 141--><a
+name="page141"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 141</span>his
+lordship&rsquo;s character, and being a total stranger to the
+system of European diplomacy, wished to force on his lordship the
+acceptance of some very valuable Arab horses, which present, of
+course, was instantly refused.&nbsp; This very much astonished
+the Emir, who had all his life been accustomed to Oriental
+tactics in policy, in which such an argument was the only one
+ever likely to be productive of beneficial results.&nbsp; This,
+in fact has been the system practised from the earliest ages up
+to the present date.&nbsp; We read in the Bible of the wife of
+Nabal riding forth from Carmel, accompanied with donkey-loads of
+presents, to meet David, in order that by soft words and rich
+presents she might propitiate the king in her favour, and turn
+his wrath away from her husband.&nbsp; The meeting between Jacob
+and Esau gives another instance of this method of conciliating
+favour being resorted to.</p>
+<p>The Emir remained for some time under surveillance at
+Constantinople, when, through the strenuous exertions of Lord
+Cowley, a small pension was obtained from the Government.&nbsp;
+Some time after this, when I was in England, I received some
+letters and enclosures from him.</p>
+<p>After perusing the whole of the letters, I came to the
+resolution of delivering one intended for Sir Charles Napier
+personally.&nbsp; Sir Charles received me with the rough
+cordiality of an English sailor, and after a long conversation
+about the affairs of Syria, told me, that now he much regretted
+the part he had taken in Eastern politics, and promised to exert
+himself in favour of the Emir Beshir Kasim, and of Syria, at the
+same time exhibiting great interest for the welfare of its
+inhabitants.&nbsp; He applied to Lord Palmerston in behalf of the
+prince, and through his influence, after a long <!-- page
+142--><a name="page142"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+142</span>correspondence, instructions were forwarded to Sir
+Stratford Canning to exert himself in his favour; but, during
+this interval, a severe illness had deprived my unfortunate
+friend of his sight.&nbsp; At length, through the kindness of
+Aali Pasha, the then minister for foreign affairs, permission was
+obtained for his return to Syria, upon the Emir undertaking to
+live there strictly as a private individual, and to interfere in
+no way with the politics of the country.&nbsp; He is now living
+on Mount Lebanon, where, at the advanced age of about eighty
+years, he exerts himself as far as age will permit, in promoting
+the happiness of those around him.&nbsp; But to return to my
+narrative.</p>
+<p>During my stay at Constantinople, I was fortunate enough to
+make the acquaintance of many warm friends, and among others, of
+the late lamented Lord William Clinton, who, at that time, was
+fulfilling the duties of secretary to the embassy, also of Mr.
+Wood and Mr. Allison, a gentleman distinguished by his profound
+acquaintance with the languages, customs, and manners of the
+East, also attached to the embassy, Mr. Cumberbatch, the
+consul-general, and his brother.&nbsp; I further had the pleasure
+of making the acquaintance of the late Doctor Bennet, chaplain to
+the embassy, a truly good man, and one who did credit to his
+creed.</p>
+<p>Dr. Bennett had a large family of sons and daughters, all
+scattered about over the world.&nbsp; One is, I believe, now high
+in the East India Company&rsquo;s service in Bengal, another
+attached to the consulate at Varna; and there is one, I believe,
+in England, who has embraced his father&rsquo;s profession and
+entered the ministry.&nbsp; Mrs. Bennett was a most exemplary
+wife.&nbsp; From her I received my first impression in favour of
+English wives; her never-tiring and affectionate attendance upon
+the <!-- page 143--><a name="page143"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 143</span>good doctor when seized with his
+last fatal illness, seemed to me, who was then unaccustomed to
+the devotion displayed by English women in time of sickness,
+truly angelic, and quite disheartened me when drawing a
+comparison between them and my own countrywomen, ignorant of
+reading and writing, though doubtless, if educated, susceptible
+of all the more refined feelings of civilisation.</p>
+<p>Though on the point of falling desperately in love with one of
+the fair daughters of the land, this consideration effectually
+checked my enthusiasm.&nbsp; A lady-friend had given me an
+eloquent description of a young Greek damsel, to which I was more
+than half inclined to listen, when the example I have already
+quoted made me suddenly remember that such things were not to be
+hoped for save in an English wife.</p>
+<p>During my stay at Stamboul, I renewed my acquaintance with the
+Rev. Mr. Goodall, my former kind instructor, who had left Syria
+and come to reside in that city, where, in conjunction with the
+other American missionaries, he carried on his arduous duties
+with unremitting zeal.&nbsp; Though not long resident at
+Constantinople, I was witness, on more than one occasion, to the
+havoc committed by the fires that are incessantly
+occurring.&nbsp; From one of these I myself was a severe
+sufferer.&nbsp; Once, while spending the evening with Lord W.
+Clinton, a fire broke out in the house next to his.&nbsp; As mine
+was only a few doors further off, I hastened away to rescue my
+property, and with the assistance of the <i>hammahls</i>, or
+porters, succeeded in removing it into the centre of a
+neighbouring field, where it would be out of harm&rsquo;s
+way.&nbsp; Having done this, I returned immediately to Lord
+William&rsquo;s to give him what assistance I could in helping to
+remove his property to a <!-- page 144--><a
+name="page144"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 144</span>place of
+safety.&nbsp; The fire committed fearful ravages.&nbsp; A whole
+quarter of Pera was destroyed.&nbsp; When it was at last
+extinguished, I hastened to look after my own property, but such
+had been the devastation committed by the flames, that the whole
+face of the district was changed; and I found it utterly
+impossible to recognise any spot or mark which might afford the
+slightest clue as to the whereabouts of my late quarters, and
+thus lead to the recognition of the field.&nbsp; After a long and
+unsuccessful search, I was obliged to give the matter up; and I
+was thus deprived of the whole of my personal effects.&nbsp; This
+was in the winter of 1846.</p>
+<p>After some months&rsquo; residence at Constantinople, through
+Lord Cowley&rsquo;s kind exertions with the Turkish government, I
+was sent to England, and was furnished with letters to Prince
+Callimaki, then ambassador at the court of St.
+James&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Lord Cowley gave me a passage to Malta in an
+English war-steamer.&nbsp; We touched at Corfu, where I was so
+fortunate as to make the acquaintance of Lord Seaton, who at that
+time held the office of Lord High Commissioner of the Ionian
+Isles.&nbsp; Both himself and family treated me with the greatest
+hospitality.&nbsp; During my short stay, I had time to discover
+that his lordship&rsquo;s popularity amongst the residents was
+very great.</p>
+<p>From Corfu we came to Malta, where I had the pleasure of
+meeting several dear friends again.&nbsp; I stayed here for a
+fortnight; and on one occasion, I regret to say, I witnessed
+conduct most unusual in British officers, who, with few
+exceptions, I have found ever mindful of their position as
+gentlemen.&nbsp; One evening, at the theatre, a number of the
+junior officers were present, and, in spite of the quiet
+remonstrances of the audience, persisted in placing their feet on
+the <!-- page 145--><a name="page145"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 145</span>ledge in the front of the
+boxes.&nbsp; The Maltese at length became so exasperated that a
+number of them left the house and awaited the departure of the
+officers, when they assailed them in a most furious manner, and
+would certainly have inflicted serious injury upon them had not a
+guard arrived opportunely to separate the combatants.&nbsp; At
+the height of the riot my curiosity was much excited on observing
+a peasant, who had struck down an officer, and seemed apparently
+about to follow up his attack, suddenly desist and render the
+utmost assistance to his late foe.&nbsp; Being acquainted with
+the gentleman, I next day enquired what could have caused this
+change, and was much surprised to find that this strange
+occurrence arose from the peasant having, by a secret sign,
+discovered that the officer was a brother mason.&nbsp; I could
+not but admire a system productive of such benevolent results,
+and a few evenings after, happening to be dining with my friend,
+Captain Ford of the artillery, and understanding from him that he
+was engaged to attend a lodge on the island, I begged he would
+procure me admission.&nbsp; This he kindly consented to do, and I
+was, therefore, duly initiated.&nbsp; The kind feeling and
+brotherly love I have met with among masons, has rendered this
+event one of the happiest of my life.</p>
+<p>From Malta I came to England through France, <i>vi&aacute;</i>
+Marseilles.&nbsp; At Marseilles I put up at the Hotel de
+l&rsquo;Europe.&nbsp; Being at that time ignorant of the
+language, I found myself awkwardly situated, for shortly after my
+arrival, having washed my hands, I could find no place wherein to
+empty the basin, and being amongst strangers, I felt great
+diffidence in making known my wants.&nbsp; In this dilemma, I
+resorted to the expedient of throwing the water out of the
+window.&nbsp; I did so, and was <!-- page 146--><a
+name="page146"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 146</span>chuckling
+at the success of my plan, when my attention was attracted by a
+great noise in the street, and, to my surprise, I heard
+foot-steps and angry voices approaching my bed-room door.</p>
+<p>On their entering, I found that the water had unfortunately
+alighted on a French officer, who at that moment chanced to be
+passing in full-dress uniform.&nbsp; His indignation was such
+that I expected to be annihilated on the spot.&nbsp; I presume,
+however, that the people of the hotel would not permit him to
+wreak his vengeance on me, and so he contented himself by giving
+me into the charge of the police, who desired me the next day to
+appear before the magistrate (the complainant appearing in
+person).&nbsp; I of course made ample apologies through an
+interpreter, and the matter was at length satisfactorily
+settled.&nbsp; This officer and myself afterwards became very
+good friends; he explained to me that he had imagined I was an
+Arab from Africa, who had thus sought to revenge myself for
+injuries I might have received from their hands whilst in
+Algeria, and that this had determined him to have me punished,
+adding that had he known that I was a Syrian, and above all from
+Mount Lebanon, he would certainly have been disposed to be more
+lenient.&nbsp; This <i>contretemps</i> shewed me the necessity of
+being acquainted with the customs and languages of the places
+through which I might be necessitated to travel.</p>
+<p>I left Marseilles by the diligence, and was very surprised at
+the slow method of travelling adopted by the French.&nbsp; As
+compared to the railroad transit in England, they seemed a
+century behind.&nbsp; The idea seems quite absurd that a country
+like France, which aspires to rivalry in arts and sciences no
+less than in accomplishments, should compel unhappy travellers to
+<!-- page 147--><a name="page147"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+147</span>lose three days in performing a distance that could
+almost be done in a few hours in England.</p>
+<p>I made a short stay at Paris, where I met with great kindness
+from the Ottoman ambassador, Suliman Pasha, and was fortunate
+enough while there also to make the acquaintance of that
+celebrated statesman and profound scholar, M. Guizot.&nbsp; M.
+Thiers, also honoured with his friendship.&nbsp; With this last
+eminent statesman I had a long and interesting conversation
+respecting the Syrian campaign of 1840&ndash;41, and he evinced a
+most lively interest in the fortunes of the grand Emir
+Beschir.&nbsp; Under the pretence of collecting money for the
+sufferers of Mount Lebanon, an association was formed at that
+time in Paris, with the secret intention of making a tool of one
+of the Emir&rsquo;s family, and through his instrumentality
+exciting a rebellion amongst the inhabitants, and then taking
+advantage of their civil discord.</p>
+<p>Being a native of those parts, the ambassador thought that I
+could without exciting suspicion gain some information as to the
+real projects of these people.&nbsp; I obtained possession of a
+pamphlet, in which their benevolent views were set forth as a
+blind to their proceedings, from the treasurer of the society,
+with whom I was formerly acquainted, but who, ignorant of my
+intentions, declared its real purposes.&nbsp; Their object was to
+excite commotions, and through the medium of these civil discords
+to increase the influence of France in those parts.</p>
+<p>On my arrival in England in October, 1847, I presented my
+letters of introduction to Prince Callimaki, who introduced me to
+the members of his suite.&nbsp; After some deliberation, the
+Prince and my English friends thought it would be better for my
+interests to study a <!-- page 148--><a name="page148"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 148</span>profession than to remain simply
+attached to the Embassy: but they left it to me to choose what
+that profession should be.&nbsp; After mature reflection, I fixed
+upon surgery, which I thought would more than any other render my
+services of use to my fellow-countrymen.&nbsp; On making my
+choice known, the Prince and Mr. Zohrab kindly undertook to
+consult with Mr. Benjamin Phillips, the eminent surgeon of
+Wimpole-street, now retired from practice, and living at Hendon,
+to whom I was furnished with a letter of introduction.&nbsp; The
+parental conduct of this gentleman towards me I shall ever call
+to mind with the deepest veneration, and in the phraseology of my
+countrymen, <i>the ashes of my bones will not cease to retain
+this feeling</i>.&nbsp; It was at last determined that I should
+reside with Mr. Drewitt, of Curzon-street, May-fair; this
+gentleman and his kind-hearted lady exerted themselves to the
+utmost to procure my comfort and further my views, and whilst
+under their hospitable roof, I enjoyed every domestic
+happiness.</p>
+<p>In order still further to advance my interests, the Prince
+Callimaki, Mr. Phillips, and other friends, most kindly addressed
+letters to the Directors of King&rsquo;s College, introducing me
+to them, and stating my earnest wish to attend the valuable
+lectures of this institution.&nbsp; In reply, the much respected
+principal, Dr. Jelf, immediately sent me an admission to the
+College, and he himself received me in the most generous and
+noble manner, and exhorted me to use my endeavours to persuade my
+countrymen to follow my example.</p>
+<p>I now regularly attended these lectures, and from both
+professors and students received every civility and
+attention.&nbsp; At first my repugnance to the dissecting-room
+was so great and overpowering, that I went to <!-- page 149--><a
+name="page149"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 149</span>the prince
+and earnestly besought of him to let me relinquish the
+profession, telling him that I thought it quite an act of
+barbarity thus to mutilate the dead.&nbsp; The prince, however,
+after many arguments, induced me to persevere a little
+longer.&nbsp; I took his advice, and soon found that this feeling
+of repugnance gradually subsided; nay, more than this, I began to
+take peculiar pleasure in the study, when the whole magnitude of
+its wonderful philosophy burst upon my understanding.&nbsp; One
+day a trifling accident occurred to me&mdash;trifling in
+appearance, but which very nearly terminated fatally.&nbsp; The
+event, however, was productive of one good result, it shewed me
+the sincere and unaffected esteem of English friends, and made me
+happy in the knowledge that I was fortunate enough to have
+hundreds, even in England, deeply interested in my welfare.</p>
+<p>Whilst assisting in the dissecting-room in November 1849, I
+accidentally pricked my finger with a poisoned knife, but being
+engaged on that day to dine with the excellent and good Lord
+Cranworth, the present Lord Chancellor, the hospitalities of that
+nobleman, and the cheering music of his lady and her sister, Lady
+Eardley, entirely drove the circumstance from my memory.&nbsp;
+This was the ninth of November, and I was engaged to join the
+festivities at the Guildhall in the evening.&nbsp; At midnight,
+whilst in the midst of my enjoyment, I was seized with sudden
+illness, and my good friend, the late Sir Felix Booth,
+immediately sent me home in his carriage.&nbsp; After a night of
+extreme wretchedness and misery, I next morning summoned around
+me a host of my medical acquaintances; but these, alas! were but
+Job&rsquo;s comforters, for they one and all assured me, that
+should erysipelas supervene, <!-- page 150--><a
+name="page150"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 150</span>death would
+be the certain result.&nbsp; I need not here relate the
+depressing effect this news had upon my already exhausted
+spirits.</p>
+<p>My English friends may smile at what I am now about to relate,
+but the impression made at that period on my mind was so great,
+that I cannot refrain from mentioning the matter.</p>
+<p>While in my own country (according to the universal custom of
+the inhabitants), I had sought to dive into the secrets of
+futurity through the aid of a <i>munajjim</i>, or magician, who
+predicted that on a Friday I should be seized with a dangerous
+illness or be shot, either purposely or by accident, and that in
+all probability either misfortune would prove fatal to me.&nbsp;
+In my almost helpless state, this circumstance coming vividly to
+my mind, was all-sufficient to have brought about the foretold
+result, for it certainly for some time hindered my
+recovery.&nbsp; I sent for a Syrian friend and made my will, and
+he committed to paper all my good wishes towards my kindred at
+home.</p>
+<p>During this sad time, my first English friend, the Hon. and
+Rev. Baptist Noel, was most indefatigable in his attentions; and
+this good man comforted me with prayers, and taught me to lean on
+the word of God for comfort and succour, not only in this
+affliction, but in every tribulation.&nbsp; I likewise received a
+visit from Cardinal Wiseman, who, meeting my friend and medical
+adviser, Mr. Phillips, at the door, asked permission to see
+me.&nbsp; This was reluctantly granted, and only upon condition
+that the cardinal should attend to my spiritual concerns, and
+leave my corporeal cure to Mr. P.&nbsp; My illness continued for
+three months; but at last, through the untiring labours of Mr.
+Phillips, and under the Divine blessing, I was once more restored
+to health.</p>
+<p><!-- page 151--><a name="page151"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+151</span>My apartments were every day besieged by numbers of
+kind friends, who called to ascertain the state of my health, and
+to leave me fruits, and such tokens of esteem as they thought
+most acceptable to an invalid.</p>
+<p>I well remember that, at a period during the most dangerous
+part of my illness, I called to mind, that in my country a
+superstition was prevalent, that the broth made from a young
+black cock, whose head must be severed by a knife with one stroke
+from the body, was very efficacious in curing such cases as mine;
+and my strict injunctions and earnest entreaties to those around
+me to prepare me this broth, must have made them imagine me
+imbecile.</p>
+<p>Before quitting this subject, I must here record my grateful
+thanks to Mr. Zohrab, the Turkish consul-general, and his lady,
+whose friendship and kindness to me upon all occasions I can
+never sufficiently acknowledge.&nbsp; On my partial recovery,
+they insisted on my taking up my abode at their mansion at
+Hampstead; and owing to their kind attentions and
+<i>recherch&eacute;</i> fare, I soon recovered my strength.</p>
+<p>The 12th of April, 1850, was one of the proudest days of my
+life.&nbsp; On that day I had the great honour of being admitted
+a member of the Royal College of Surgeons of London; and whilst
+yet blushing beneath my new honours, more came pouring upon my
+head.&nbsp; I went to King&rsquo;s College on the 27th of the
+same month to witness the distribution of prizes, and there I had
+the pleasure of meeting the amiable and learned professor, Doctor
+Jelf; from him I was surprised and delighted to learn, that,
+listening to his kind recommendation of my attention to studies
+and lectures, His Grace the Archbishop of Canterbury had been
+graciously pleased <!-- page 152--><a name="page152"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 152</span>to confer upon me the honour of
+being an associate of the college.</p>
+<p>Having thus been admitted among the surgical staff of England,
+I am naturally jealous, as well for the honour and privileges, as
+for the efficiency of the profession, in this great country; and
+I think it will not be out of place if I briefly record the
+opinions entertained by a foreigner on the anomalous and
+unsatisfactory position which it at present occupies.</p>
+<p>Although, then, the medical profession, as a body, is held by
+the people in very considerable estimation and respect, and
+although the individual practitioners are received in the
+families, whose confidence or friendship they have obtained, with
+the utmost cordiality and unreserve, giving place only to
+ministers of religion, nevertheless, they have good reason to
+complain of the manner in which they are treated by the
+Government, and the little care that is taken of their
+interests.&nbsp; Being all of them men of somewhat extended
+education,&mdash;with very few exceptions, gentlemen by
+birth&mdash;and very many of them deeply versed in various
+scientific subjects, it would not be too much to expect that the
+Government would at least throw around them the shield of its
+protection, even if it did not stimulate them to increased
+activity and exertion, by holding out honours and rewards, as
+prizes for the most distinguished.&nbsp; Yet how stands the
+fact?&nbsp; The law permits any man to call himself surgeon, and
+to perform the most capital operations; moreover, the Executive
+will not take the trouble to publish a list of the authorised
+practitioners in the three kingdoms.&nbsp; No authentic document
+exists, enrolling in one compendium the names of all who are
+entitled to practise in their respective departments, and,
+consequently, the public are kept in ignorance of those <!-- page
+153--><a name="page153"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+153</span>whom in medical matters they may with safety
+trust.&nbsp; Nor is this all.&nbsp; It absolutely encourages
+unlicensed and ignorant pretenders, by permitting the sale of
+quack medicines for a paltry duty on each parcel vended.&nbsp; It
+derives, indeed, no small revenue from this disgraceful source,
+not only to the injury of the regular members of the profession,
+but to the imminent danger of the community also.&nbsp; In legal
+matters, no man can give you advice without being duly licensed
+to do so; but in medicine and surgery any man may prescribe the
+most deadly poison, or amputate a leg without the least
+authority, and, unless death result from his temerity, without
+being amenable to any penalty.</p>
+<p>As a proof of the contemptuous treatment to which the
+profession is exposed at the hands of the authorities of the
+nation, great and small, reference need merely be made to the
+surgeons attached to the Poor-law unions, and to the
+assistant-surgeons of the navy.&nbsp; The latter&mdash;gentlemen
+who have passed through their education, and must of necessity be
+in their twenty-third year&mdash;are not allowed a separate
+cabin, in which to prosecute their studies, until after three
+years of service, but are doomed to the noise and inconvenience
+of the midshipmen&rsquo;s berth.&nbsp; They are thus put on an
+equality with youths, six or seven years younger than themselves,
+and who are still in a state of pupilage.&nbsp; Whilst from the
+former, for the most part, is exacted a quantity of physical
+labour, sufficient to exhaust the stoutest frame, for a stipend
+considerably less than would be accepted by a skilled artisan;
+the threat having been in many instances put forth against the
+established practitioner of the neighbourhood, that if he will
+not undertake the duty on the terms proposed, the
+&ldquo;Board&rdquo; will invite some fresh man into the <!-- page
+154--><a name="page154"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+154</span>district, to whom, of course, an opportunity would be
+given of shouldering his elder rival off his stool, and acquiring
+for himself a part, at least, of the professional emolument of
+the place.</p>
+<p>Again; who would have presumed, that in this intelligent
+country the General Board of Health would only contain in its
+composition one medical man?&nbsp; Who would have believed that
+the important sanitary affairs, which come under its
+jurisdiction, should be investigated and adjudicated upon by a
+committee of gentlemen, with that one solitary exception, totally
+unconnected with medicine?</p>
+<p>One great drawback against entering upon the duties of medical
+life, as a profession, will be acknowledged in the fact, that
+there are no high places of honour or emolument set apart for the
+members of that profession as there are for divines and
+lawyers.&nbsp; The utmost a medical man can hope for, because it
+is the highest point he can possibly attain to, is to have the
+honour of knighthood or a baronetcy conferred upon
+him&mdash;distinctions which are bestowed upon Lord Mayors and
+Sheriffs with a much more profuse hand than on the scientific
+portion of the community.&nbsp; The Archbishop of Canterbury
+ranks next to the members of the Royal Family, and the Bishops
+take precedence of all temporal Barons.&nbsp; The Lord
+Chancellor&rsquo;s rank is next in order to the Archbishop; and
+thus the two highest offices in the realm are open to the
+ambition of the most obscure student in divinity and law, while
+to the professors of medicine not even a commissionership is ever
+offered.</p>
+<p>With an equally niggardly hand are pecuniary grants and
+pensions distributed.&nbsp; There must indeed be something very
+extraordinary in the case that would induce a minister to
+recommend to the Sovereign a grant of <!-- page 155--><a
+name="page155"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 155</span>money, as a
+pension or otherwise, to any member of the medical profession,
+however benefited mankind might have been by his discoveries, and
+however old and indigent he might himself have become.&nbsp; Nor
+do widows and children fare much better.&nbsp; Should a pension
+be vouchsafed to the family of a distinguished professional man,
+left in straitened circumstances, it is, for the most part,
+comparatively inconsiderable in amount.</p>
+<p>Successful soldiers are titled and pensioned, and any man who
+has invented a destructive weapon of war is held in high
+veneration; while those who have devoted their lives to the
+mitigation of human suffering, and have even discovered a certain
+means of abrogating pain under the most severe surgical
+operations, are passed by as unworthy of regard.</p>
+<p>Unfortunately, the remarks I have penned above are applicable,
+for the most part, to all literary men, equally with the
+professors of medicine.&nbsp; In no country is literature more
+highly prized by the people, or less patronised by the
+Government.</p>
+<p>Such is surely a suicidal as well as narrow-minded policy,
+because it tends to drive young men of high talent and promise,
+who might otherwise be disposed to seek medicine as a profession,
+into some other walk of life.&nbsp; Every encouragement, on the
+contrary, ought to be held out to the flower of the rising
+generation to enter into the medical profession as a study, since
+the health, and, consequently, the happiness of the community are
+entrusted, under Providence, to their keeping.&nbsp; One would
+suppose, indeed, that if no higher motive was the actuating
+principle, a selfish regard for their own well-being would induce
+those in power to render <!-- page 156--><a
+name="page156"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 156</span>it worth
+the while of youths of genius and extensive acquirements to
+devote themselves to this noble pursuit.&nbsp; For this purpose
+some posts of distinction should be put aside, or new ones
+created, and appropriated to the professors of medicine; and in
+that case it would soon be discovered, that a preliminary
+scientific education, and the knowledge acquired in the intimate
+intercourse with society, enjoyed by the medical practitioner, by
+no means disqualified him to undertake places of trust, and to
+execute delicate and important services.</p>
+<p>Another complaint, that the profession might justly make, is,
+the want of any representatives of their interest in the lower
+House of Parliament.&nbsp; Both in the Lords and Commons assembly
+the law possesses a large and even overwhelming force; and
+although the constitution of the country precludes the ministers
+of religion from holding seats in the Commons, yet that want is
+well supplied by the talent and eloquence of the members sent by
+the universities of Oxford and Cambridge into that chamber; and
+the omission is, moreover, fully and excellently made up by the
+number, learning, and energy of the bishops having seats in the
+House of Peers; while the professors of medicine are altogether
+without any one to stand up in their behalf.&nbsp; The
+consequence of this is, that if a medical question is started, or
+one having reference to sanitary measures&mdash;which, indeed,
+are interesting to every individual in the state, inasmuch as his
+own health and safety may be involved in them&mdash;it is either
+shelved on the first decent opportunity, or discussed languidly
+in a thin house.&nbsp; If the University of London, the Royal
+Colleges of Physicians and Surgeons, and some of the northern
+Universities, had the privilege granted them of sending <!-- page
+157--><a name="page157"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+157</span>representatives to the Legislature, the addition might
+be found to be as much for the benefit of the nation as for the
+honour and advantage of the profession itself. <a
+name="citation157"></a><a href="#footnote157"
+class="citation">[157]</a></p>
+<p>About this time, finding that my friend the Mir Shahamet Ali
+intended to visit the north of England, I availed myself of the
+opportunity, and joined him in the excursion.&nbsp; This
+gentleman was the most remarkable stranger I have met with in
+England; he was a native of Delhi, where he received his
+education.&nbsp; The Mir was a most intelligent and learned man,
+and had travelled much in Bengal with Sir Claude Wade, whom he
+had accompanied to the Punjaub and Bahawalpur, when that
+gentleman went there for the purpose of negotiating with those
+States for throwing open the navigation of the Indus and the
+Sutledge.&nbsp; The Mir was afterwards sent with presents from
+the English Government to the Court of Lahore, and he
+subsequently published, in English, two books, the &ldquo;Sikhs
+and Affghans,&rdquo; and a &ldquo;History of Bahawalpur,&rdquo;
+besides one or two little pamphlets on Indian affairs; he also
+long held the situation of <i>Mir Moonshee</i> in the Upper
+Provinces.</p>
+<p>Perhaps I may here be allowed to give an anecdote illustrative
+of London <i>haut ton</i> and society, showing how scrupulous
+they are, and how a stranger may inadvertently fall into
+disrepute; and also, how easily a <!-- page 158--><a
+name="page158"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 158</span>foreigner,
+by slight mistakes, may suffer severe consequences.&nbsp; I once,
+mistaking the designation of my friend, the Mir, introduced him
+at the houses of some religious fashionables as a prince,
+supposing the term Mir, in Hindustani, to be equivalent to the
+word Emir in Arabic.&nbsp; Some person chose to bestow this title
+on <i>myself</i> instead of my friend, and I was supposed to be
+the prince.&nbsp; An intimate friend afterwards told me that I
+had been accused of introducing <i>myself</i> as a prince.&nbsp;
+Thus a report, arising from a mistake of which I was wholly
+unconscious, was for some time circulated to my prejudice.</p>
+<p>But return to the Mir, he came to this country to obtain a
+better insight into European manners and society.&nbsp; Her
+Majesty the Queen of England was graciously pleased to receive
+him, and he was presented at court by the Earl of
+Shaftesbury.&nbsp; General Duncan Macleod, of the Indian army,
+whose engineering talents have been so justly admired, as
+exemplified in the splendid palace erected under his sole
+direction for the Nawab of Moorshedabad, also a friend of the
+Mir, was present.&nbsp; During this presentation, a very pleasing
+incident occurred, illustrative to the latter of the urbanity of
+Scottish aristocracy.&nbsp; Being very much struck with the
+splendid Highland costume of one of the gentlemen present, the
+Mir wished to be allowed to inspect it nearer, when General
+Macleod, with characteristic amiability, apologetically explained
+to the object of his admiration how much his
+<i>prot&eacute;g&eacute;</i>, the Oriental, was struck with his
+appearance.&nbsp; The chieftain very good-naturedly invited the
+Mir to approach, adding, &ldquo;Perhaps you would like to see a
+chieftain&rsquo;s wife also,&rdquo; and forthwith introduced him
+to his lady, the Duchess of ---.</p>
+<p><!-- page 159--><a name="page159"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+159</span>As may readily be conceived, it was most agreeable for
+me to travel about with such a companion as the Mir.&nbsp; We
+visited all the manufacturing districts together.&nbsp; The Mir
+was indefatigable, active, inquiring, and desirous of obtaining
+knowledge in every acquirable shape.&nbsp; We proceeded to
+Birmingham, where we were received by our consul, Mr. Collis, and
+entertained at his house during our sojourn; he shewed us
+whatever sights in that wonderful town he deemed at all
+interesting to us.&nbsp; The various places we travelled through
+are so familiar to my English readers, that to relate them all,
+would prove tedious.&nbsp; Suffice it that we got on very well
+together, till we were one day leaving Sheffield for
+Edinburgh.&nbsp; At Sheffield we had nearly exhausted our funds
+in purchasing cutlery, etc., so that when we came to the
+railway-station we had not enough ready money between us to pay
+our fare onward to Edinburgh.&nbsp; We were, however, bearers of
+letters of credit, and stating our circumstances to the head
+booking-clerk, he kindly consented to allow us to proceed by the
+train on condition that we paid on arriving in Edinburgh.&nbsp;
+Accordingly we took our seats in the carriage, and began to
+condole with each other on the awkwardness of our position.&nbsp;
+There was one other person beside ourselves in the carriage, and
+this gentleman, though a perfect stranger, kindly came forward
+and pressed upon us the use of his purse.&nbsp; After some little
+altercation and hesitation, Mir Shahamet Ali and myself agreed to
+borrow five pounds of this worthy stranger, on condition that we
+should be permitted to return it immediately after our arrival at
+Edinburgh.&nbsp; Our promise to pay was, as the reader may
+imagine, promptly met.&nbsp; This stranger proved to be Mr.
+Walker, the celebrated engineer, of Great George-street, and on
+<!-- page 160--><a name="page160"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+160</span>returning from London to Scotland, I called to thank
+this estimable gentleman for his unsolicited kindness to myself
+and friend; and through this slight incident, I still enjoy his
+friendship and acquaintance.</p>
+<p>While in Edinburgh, we were much delighted at our visit to
+Holyrood in its quiet and decayed grandeur&mdash;majestic with
+age&mdash;replete with tragic and romantic reminiscences.&nbsp;
+This impressed us much, and the whole aspect of Edinburgh,
+especially as viewed by night, struck us as singularly Oriental;
+and we, in imagination, could with ease have conjured up some
+additions to the Arabian nights.&nbsp; The dim outline of the
+castle on the rock&mdash;the old town, dark and confused beneath,
+whilst on the opposite height, row upon row of twinkling or
+brilliant lights flashed across the sight; these might have made
+one easily suppose that the grovelling creatures of earth
+inhabited the lower portion, guarded by some portentously
+frowning power; whilst above danced the fairies in their
+exquisite mother&rsquo;s light (called by the common people,
+&ldquo;Bonnie Jumpers&rdquo;); and in the new town dwelt the
+<i>Magi</i>, all illumination, life, light, and splendour.&nbsp;
+The hospitality and warmth of kindness of the Scotch to us
+strangers, was irresistibly gratifying, and we were most kindly
+entertained by many of them.</p>
+<p>In our walks, the boys frequently screamed after and cheered
+us, loudly vociferating, &ldquo;<i>Ibrahim
+Pasha</i>!&rdquo;&nbsp; I presume that they had heard of him, and
+imagined that every Oriental must be <i>the man</i>.&nbsp; The
+English almost invariably, even amongst the better classes, call
+everybody that wears a <i>fez</i> or <i>tarboush</i>, <i>a
+Turk</i>, much upon the same principle as our people call every
+one with a <i>hat</i> (<i>chapeau</i>), <i>Franji</i> or a man
+from European countries, without distinction as to sect, creed,
+nationality, or the <!-- page 161--><a name="page161"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 161</span>vast variety that exists amongst
+both people of government, laws, manners, and histories.&nbsp;
+The English also have an idea that every one wearing a turban
+must be a follower of Mahomed.&nbsp; Apropos of this subject, I
+may here recount an anecdote which will doubtless amuse my
+readers.</p>
+<p>One day when I was at the hospital, there was a woman waiting
+for a surgical operation to be performed.&nbsp; After explaining
+its nature, the surgeon, much to my delight, asked me to perform
+the needful operation.&nbsp; Up to this moment the woman was
+lying on a bed perfectly resigned, and with both hands clasped
+over her eyes.&nbsp; No sooner, however, did I take up the
+instruments, and draw near to perform the needful service, than
+she started up in bed, and glaring wildly at me with terror
+depicted in her countenance, and doubtless alarmed at my Oriental
+garb and beard, she screamed out with all her might, &ldquo;The
+Turk! the Turk! the Turk is going to cut me!&rdquo;&nbsp; Nor
+could any arguments of mine persuade her to submit to the
+operation at my hands.</p>
+<p>My friend, Shahamet Ali, had for some time rented a cottage at
+Ryde, in the Isle of Wight, where on our return he invited me to
+pass a few days.&nbsp; I cordially accepted this invitation, and
+whilst at Ryde had the happiness of meeting Lord and Lady Downes,
+together with Sir Claude Wade and his amiable lady, from all of
+whom I received much kindness, which has not ceased to this
+day.&nbsp; My visit to Ryde extended over a month, and my friend,
+Shahamet Ali, was during that time making his arrangements for a
+journey to Constantinople and thence to Mecca, which last place
+he visited for the express purpose of purifying himself, he
+having mixed so much with Christians that his religion <!-- page
+162--><a name="page162"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+162</span>required his pilgrimage thither.&nbsp; I accompanied
+him as far as Paris, where I left with him letters of
+introduction to my friends in the East.&nbsp; I have since heard
+from him; he had reached Mecca in safety, had performed his
+ablutions to satisfy the prejudice of his countrymen, thus
+washing away all impurities supposed to be contracted by mingling
+for so long a time in the customs and manners of the
+infidels.&nbsp; He is now settled as agent for the East India
+Company at Selana in Malwa.</p>
+<p>We both were much pleased with the Parisians.&nbsp; No
+introduction was needed&mdash;our position in society was a
+passport everywhere.&nbsp; The French are so amiable, <i>au
+d&eacute;vant de vous</i>; perfect in grace, fascination and
+<i>toilette</i>; more cheerful, and perhaps warmer-hearted than
+the English&mdash;but far less stable.&nbsp; A Frenchman may form
+a violent attachment to a person to-day, and to-morrow be wholly
+indifferent as to his whereabouts or welfare.&nbsp; An Englishman
+may be some months before he evinces the least symptoms of even a
+partiality; but when a friendship really exists, you may count
+upon its sincerity and continuance.</p>
+<p>I returned to London and remained for some time, when my good
+friend, Mahomed Pasha, being recalled to Constantinople, it was
+arranged that I should return to Paris and reside there.&nbsp;
+Amongst others whose acquaintance I had the honour of renewing in
+France, was that of M. Lamartine, the great admirer of Lebanon,
+whom I had met in Syria.&nbsp; We were mutually pleased to renew
+our friendship.&nbsp; He wrote a very flowery letter to the
+Sultan Abdul Medjid, in which he said that having a map before
+him of all that mighty potentate&rsquo;s dominions, he had fixed
+upon a little spot in Syria (Lebanon), whither he would wish to
+<!-- page 163--><a name="page163"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+163</span>withdraw himself from the turmoil and strife of life to
+settle down; but the Turkish government, considering that the
+Maronites, who already possessed much influence through French
+protection might choose him as their Emir, consequently, in lieu
+of the small bit of ground begged for in Syria, presented him
+with an immense tract of fertile ground in Asia Minor, where the
+poet-statesman of France might sow every seed, save the seed of
+political discord, which in such a wilderness would never take
+root.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 164--><a name="page164"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 164</span>CHAPTER IX.<br />
+VISIT TO PARIS.</h2>
+<p>Orientals who visit Paris for the first time are at a loss to
+conceive anything more magnificent than its streets and its
+palaces and gardens.&nbsp; After having been in England, however,
+their opinion is materially altered, though I must still admit
+that there are some striking features in Paris; amongst these,
+the Boulevards, Champs Elys&eacute;es, Tuileries, the Louvre and
+Luxembourg, are the most attractive.&nbsp; Of the greater part of
+the streets of Paris I can say but little; and there are some so
+filthy, narrow, and almost impassable, as to outstrip the meanest
+town in Turkey.&nbsp; Nothing but the uncouth wooden
+<i>sabots</i> of the French could at any season traverse
+them.&nbsp; Though I must acknowledge that nothing can surpass
+the easy elegance and refinement of the higher classes of
+society, it would appear, from what a poor countryman of mine
+told me, that the second-rate lodging houses are miserable in the
+extreme.&nbsp; One would imagine, from his description, that they
+went to the opposite extreme to luxury.&nbsp; Complaining
+bitterly of his fate, for he had all his life before been
+accustomed to opulent independence in Lebanon, he wrote to me the
+other day as follows, viz.:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;The disagreeable first-impression made upon
+my mind on first taking possession of my lodgings here (Paris),
+was the <!-- page 165--><a name="page165"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 165</span>melancholy resemblance existing
+between my chimney-place and a Syrian church-yard, for I can
+assure you that its shape resembles exactly one of our ordinary
+tombstones.&nbsp; For the first few nights I hardly dared look at
+it before going to bed, lest I should have my rest broken by
+dreams of spectres and other horrid sprites of the
+imagination.&nbsp; In addition to its disagreeable appearance, it
+smokes so terribly that I dare not light a fire, though shivering
+with cold, lest I should lose my eyesight from the effects of the
+smoke; but this is not all; the door will not shut well, the
+floorings are of damp bricks, and the rooms are built without
+respect to proportion, elegance, or comfort.&nbsp; The house I am
+living in is eight stories high, and heigho! poor me, I live on
+the fourth floor, so that I have a hundred steps to mount up and
+down a dozen times a-day.&nbsp; The greatest nuisance of all is,
+that the street door is continually being left open, so that any
+one given to pilfering is at perfect liberty to walk up and down
+stairs and help himself to whatever the fates may throw in his
+way.&nbsp; There certainly is nominally a <i>concierge</i>.&nbsp;
+This old worthy, however, is either so engrossed with an old
+newspaper or so comfortably napping, that he is perfectly
+unconscious of all passing around him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have vainly complained to him of this negligence, and
+pointed out the inconvenience and interruption I was perpetually
+being exposed to by people rapping at my door, under the pretext
+of inquiring if M. So-and-so lodged there, but evidently with the
+intention of finding out if there was any one within to hinder
+their forcing an entrance.&nbsp; His invariable reply used to be,
+&lsquo;<i>Eh bien</i>! <i>que voulez vous que je
+fasse</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; There are no bells, so that I may die in
+a fit, or be burnt to death before any assistance could be
+obtained.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Such is the deplorable picture drawn by my poor friend, who,
+on the other hand, lauds up to the skies lodgings of a similar
+class in London, and as he is a sharp, acute man, I have little
+doubt but that he is correct in his ideas.</p>
+<p>What surprised me very much in Paris was the apparent
+ignorance of the French with regard to the <!-- page 166--><a
+name="page166"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 166</span>cities and
+towns of the Holy Land.&nbsp; I forgot at that period that they
+were restricted from reading their Bibles, and that consequently
+very few of them were likely to have the names of places, and
+people familiar to the English and ourselves, so firmly impressed
+upon their minds.&nbsp; My appearance and costume never excited
+curiosity.&nbsp; When they asked me whence I came from, and I
+answered <i>Syria</i>, the word made no impression on them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where is that?&rdquo; said one man to another in my
+hearing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Ma foi</i>, <i>je ne saurais vous
+dire</i>&mdash;unless it be some obscure village in Algeria which
+our colonists have not yet explored.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Of course the higher classes are not guilty of such ignorance,
+for who could have thrown a better light on the beauties and
+localities of Syria than the learned and amiable Lamartine, whose
+accurate work, <i>Souvenirs de l&rsquo;Orient</i>, is deservedly
+popular over Europe.</p>
+<p>I have many pleasant <i>souvenirs</i> of the friends I met in
+Paris.&nbsp; The hospitable <i>reunions</i> of their Excellencies
+the Turkish and the English ambassadors&mdash;the kindness of the
+American representative, Mr. Rives&mdash;the brilliant balls I
+was invited to by various families of fashion&mdash;and an
+adventure at the hotel V....&mdash;never to be forgotten, and
+which it is my intention at some future period to publish, which
+I have no doubt will interest many of my English
+readers&mdash;all these I recall with pleasure, and I avail
+myself of this opportunity with gladness to thank my many friends
+in Paris for the courtesy and kindness I have ever met with at
+their hands.&nbsp; But putting these aside as elegant exceptions,
+I prefer on the whole England, and the friendship of <!-- page
+167--><a name="page167"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 167</span>an
+Englishman to that of a Frenchman,&mdash;the private character of
+the former has a sounder foundation, and they know how to
+appreciate real moral, domestic comfort and happiness, such as
+our countrymen seek for and find amongst the citron groves and
+gardens of Syria.</p>
+<p>Now it can hardly be said that a Frenchman knows what domestic
+bliss signifies.&nbsp; With him the Caf&eacute; is a <i>sine
+qu&acirc; non</i>; he may have an amiable and charming wife, a
+young and attractive family, every charm of domestic happiness
+that should link his heart and thoughts with home, and draw him
+towards it as the only true and rational source of enjoyment; but
+he leaves all these, and looks upon them as insipid; his sole
+delight is to wander about from caf&eacute; to caf&eacute;,
+varying his amusements by an occasional game at billiards or a
+<i>petit verre</i>, else he strays from theatre to operas, from
+operas to balls, and some of the wealthier classes live for
+weeks, and sometimes months, in the country in the strictest
+seclusion, practising an economy amounting to penuriousness, in
+order that they may, on their return to town, be enabled to
+gratify this passion.&nbsp; The wives of these gentlemen,
+continually deserted, left to themselves, and naturally of a gay
+turn, which in many instances arises from a neglect of a proper
+moral education, form those <i>liaisons</i> with others, which
+are publicly known and talked about with the utmost
+<i>nonchalance</i>, and which, in my humble opinion, are an
+outrage to the name of Christianity, and a disgrace to a nation
+acknowledged in every other respect to stand high in the scale of
+civilization.&nbsp; I cannot describe what a painful effect it
+has upon the mind of Syrian strangers to witness such things
+countenanced in France; they leave the country <!-- page 168--><a
+name="page168"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 168</span>with very
+poor opinions of its civilization&mdash;poorer still of its
+Christianity; and they disseminate these opinions amongst our own
+people on their return to Syria; hence it arises that oftentimes
+the poorer and more ignorant inhabitants of Syria, who cannot
+distinguish one European nation from another, but who set all
+down under the head of Franks, and suppose all to be of one creed
+and manner of thinking, are apt to imagine that the English are
+only next-door to infidels, and consequently a people to be
+feared, if not entirely avoided; but this is an error which I
+will occupy myself in rectifying as soon as I can find time to
+distribute tracts in Syria descriptive of the laws, manners,
+customs, and religions, of the different nations of Europe.</p>
+<p>But to return to the French, or rather the middle classes of
+the French.&nbsp; I found it almost invariably the case that
+should a Frenchman invite you to a <i>caf&eacute;</i>, he does so
+in the full expectation that you in your turn will give him a
+treat.&nbsp; His character is inconsistency personified&mdash;he
+is fickle and capricious&mdash;he enters freely into conversation
+with you, and lets you into all his secrets during the first five
+minutes of his acquaintance, and he entertains you with a string
+of personal adventures.&nbsp; With him every one is <i>mon
+cher</i>! <i>mon brave</i>! <i>mon ami</i>!&nbsp; He could kiss
+and hug you on parting, and swears eternal fidelity.&nbsp; The
+next day his ardour has cooled&mdash;the third he restricts
+himself to a bow&mdash;the fourth, and he mingles with the
+crowd&mdash;and you never meet him again perhaps in a
+life-time.</p>
+<p>For a ball-room society give me Paris&mdash;for a quiet
+untiring friend, give me England.&nbsp; And of the two my heart
+prefers the latter.</p>
+<p><!-- page 169--><a name="page169"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+169</span>From France I travelled to Vienna.&nbsp; After
+delivering my letters to the minister in that city, I proceeded
+to Constantinople.&nbsp; On arriving there I took up my abode
+with my old friend the Emir Sayed, the grandson of the Emir
+Beschir.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 170--><a name="page170"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 170</span>CHAPTER X.<br />
+STAY AT CONSTANTINOPLE.</h2>
+<p>Even at this distance of time, my spirit is filled with
+melancholy, when I think of that kind friend with whom I passed
+the greater portion of my time whilst at Constantinople: perhaps
+a description of one evening spent in his society may be of
+interest.</p>
+<p>The Emir Sayed&mdash;a wreck of greatness, whose fond dream of
+life&rsquo;s realities can only find an echo in the
+past&mdash;the shattered fragment of one born to
+command&mdash;second only to a supreme sovereign&mdash;he is a
+helpless broken-hearted man, supported on the alms of those who
+could once barely claim the high honour of admission into his
+presence.&nbsp; So much does misfortune level the creatures of
+the Creator&mdash;so great the fall from a princely estate to a
+beggarly dependence; thank God, however, even the gloomiest hours
+of existence, a light, however feeble, of the brighter hopes of
+life, breaks in upon the soul like an April sunbeam, and chases
+from its darkened caverns all the moist drops of a tearful
+heart.&nbsp; It was thus with the Emir Sayed.&nbsp; His favorite
+resort in Stamboul was a <i>caf&eacute;</i>, where of an evening,
+furnished with a <i>chib&#363;k</i> and a cup of coffee, he would
+sit, surrounded by his most intimate friends, and listen from
+hour to hour to the marvellous or amusing tales told there
+nightly by professional tale-tellers.&nbsp; On such occasions it
+was a privilege to me to accompany the fallen <!-- page 171--><a
+name="page171"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 171</span>prince,
+for, besides the instruction I derived in learning <i>au fond</i>
+the technicalities of the Turkish language, I learnt a lesson in
+the experiences of life&mdash;how to bear up against misfortunes
+like a man&mdash;how to bow the head to the will of Providence,
+and submit to what might appear a calamity, and still doubtless
+might be intended as a safeguard or a blessing to him, whom the
+Great Benefactor has seen fit to surround with troubles, lest his
+soul should stray from the narrow path of righteousness.</p>
+<p>We will now, by the reader&rsquo;s permission, fancy ourselves
+threading the narrow streets of the Turkish capital, following a
+servant, who carries a <i>fannar</i>, or lantern.&nbsp; At length
+we reach the <i>caf&eacute;</i>.&nbsp; A thousand lights, strung
+upon every conceivable hook, lend their enlivening brilliancy to
+light up the <i>salon</i>; the open space in front is filled with
+attentive auditors, all seated on diminutive stools, or carpets,
+all silent, all sedate, mostly wearing beards, and every one
+smoking or sipping his coffee.&nbsp; We pass through a kind of
+human alley.&nbsp; We enter the coffee-shop: the seat at the
+furthermost end&mdash;the seat of honour&mdash;is always reserved
+for the Emir.&nbsp; &ldquo;He is a Bey still, and also a
+stranger.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At length we are all seated, all served, and the amusements of
+the evening commence; the violin and the guitar, both have been
+tuned, and the first piece commences: a short symphony of lively
+music, and then the bard of the company sings a song, of which
+the following is a specimen:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>Breeze of the West, I pray thee roam<br />
+Toward my moon-faced lady&rsquo;s home;<br />
+To her my flight forlorn declare,<br />
+Tittle by tittle, hair by hair,</p>
+<p><!-- page 172--><a name="page172"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+172</span>Parted from thee, thou form of grace,<br />
+My heart hath been grief&rsquo;s dwelling-place;<br />
+And love has drawn my wandering feet,<br />
+From grove to grove, from street to street.</p>
+<p>My heart, when bent on beauty&rsquo;s chase,<br />
+Ne&rsquo;er found so sweet a form and face;<br />
+Although with roving step it went,<br />
+From house to house, from tent to tent.<br />
+<br />
+While others smile, and play, and flirt,<br />
+This bleeding heart bemoans its hurt,<br />
+Like a young rose, blood-stained with grief,<br />
+Petal by petal, leaf by leaf.</p>
+<p>The garden where I loved to trace,<br />
+Sweet blooming flowers in thy face,<br />
+How <i>low</i> and <i>dead</i> all gardens seem,<br />
+Alley by alley, stream by stream.</p>
+<p>Sweet jasmine-bosomed love,&mdash;I pray<br />
+Fondly to heaven by night and day,<br />
+Once more to see that form and face,<br />
+Lip pressed to lip, and face to face.</p>
+<p>Of all the garden flowers that be,<br />
+Why is the rose most dear to me?<br />
+&rsquo;Tis that it&rsquo;s like thy heart so true,<br />
+Odour to odour, hue to hue.</p>
+<p>Though far from Allah&rsquo;s loving sight,<br />
+The Fates have borne my soul&rsquo;s delight;<br />
+Go, Western Breeze, this message bear,<br />
+Where&rsquo;er thou art, my heart is there!</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The song is no sooner concluded, narghilies, pipes and coffee
+handed round, than the story-teller&rsquo;s abilities are called
+into requisition, and he tells us the story of</p>
+<blockquote><p style="text-align: center">&ldquo;<span
+class="smcap">The Tailor and the Sultan</span>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Formerly when Baghdad was flourishing, when great men
+sometimes condescended to sink themselves to a <!-- page 173--><a
+name="page173"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 173</span>level with
+the common herd of mankind, there lived and reigned the Sultan
+Houssein.&nbsp; He was a famous man and a just judge, but rather
+eccentric withal.&nbsp; As his Grand Vizier had, on more than one
+occasion, given him cause of dissatisfaction, he was determined
+at any cost to get the cleverest man in the kingdom to perform
+the duties of that office; but he resorted to a curious trial of
+their talent.&nbsp; A proclamation was issued, that the sultan
+offered the highest dignity in the empire to him amongst his
+subjects, who should be able satisfactorily to perform what he
+should require; on the other hand, the penalty in case of failure
+being, that the man so failing should forfeit his head.&nbsp;
+Under such circumstances, the aspirants were not over numerous,
+but still there were not wanting ambitious men, who were willing
+to place their heads in danger for the attainment of a position,
+which perhaps they least of any of the people of the country were
+fitted for.&nbsp; At last, a presumptuous tailor offered himself
+as a candidate, and was in due course ushered into the presence
+of royalty.&nbsp; The poor maker of garments found the sultan
+reclining on a carpet; and, hanging on a nail in the wall of the
+room, was a solitary counterpane; and in this counterpane the
+solution of the whole of the difficulty lay&mdash;the task being
+to cover the sultan entirely over with it.&nbsp; When the tailor
+first tried, to his consternation he found it too short by two
+good spans.&nbsp; He then suggested that another should be
+introduced; but the sultan laughed and hooted at the idea.&nbsp;
+At last a bright notion flashed across the tailor.&nbsp; He had
+long been accustomed to the nefarious art of cabbaging, so he set
+his inventive faculties to work, to find out how he could best
+cabbage a piece from the length of the sultan&rsquo;s body, or,
+in other words, reduce it into as small a <!-- page 174--><a
+name="page174"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 174</span>compass as
+could possibly be effected.&nbsp; Bethinking himself luckily of a
+little cane he usually carried in his girdle, he first covered
+the sultan&rsquo;s head, his feet remaining uncovered; he removed
+the embroidered slippers, and stealthily bringing out his cane,
+caught the sultan a severe blow across the soles of his feet,
+that he involuntarily tucked them up, thus drawing himself into a
+sufficiently small compass, and the tailor, availing himself of
+this circumstance, instantly tucked the counterpane round him,
+and thus effectually succeeded in entirely covering him, at the
+same time telling him he must always take care to stretch his
+legs according to his covering.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>With songs and stories, such as I have given above, the time
+passes until nine o&rsquo;clock, at which hour most of those
+assembled take their departure; and the Emir, attended as when he
+arrived, returns to his disconsolate dwelling to talk over the
+misfortunes of other days.</p>
+<p>Perhaps here it would not be out of place, to show the fallacy
+of the opinions usually entertained in Western Europe as to the
+state of things in Turkey.&nbsp; People talk of the fanaticism of
+the Turks; and in England more especially they seem to entertain
+an innate terror of the very name of Turk.&nbsp; Anything
+ferocious, anything ugly, and black, and dingy, is called
+&ldquo;like a Turk.&rdquo;&nbsp; Now what can undeceive this
+excessive ignorance better than the conduct of the present
+amiable and excellent Sultan, of whom many instances might be
+given, shewing the utmost liberality of conduct towards those of
+his subjects professing a different creed, and their admission to
+some of the most responsible public offices.&nbsp; It is a fact
+worthy of remark, as illustrating this toleration of <!-- page
+175--><a name="page175"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+175</span>spirit, that his representatives at the courts of
+London, Paris, Vienna, and Berlin, <a name="citation175"></a><a
+href="#footnote175" class="citation">[175]</a> have on several
+occasions been of the Greek faith.&nbsp; Also, on the event of
+the marriage of the daughter of the Prince Etienne
+Vogorides.&nbsp; (Prince Etienne was a native of Bulgaria.&nbsp;
+He was during ten years Prince of Samos.&nbsp; Latterly, however,
+he resided at Constantinople, and is high in favour with the
+Sultan, who for a long time has been accessible to the Prince at
+any hour; and he is a faithful devoted servant of the
+Sultan.&nbsp; One of his daughters is married to our present
+respected ambassador in London, and it is not necessary for me to
+inform the reader of the manifold virtues and amiable qualities
+of this lady; but her father&rsquo;s excellence was such as has
+obtained for him a notoriety and honour unrivalled in the annals
+of Mahomedan history.&nbsp; When I was last at Constantinople, a
+daughter of the prince, a younger sister of our ambassadress, was
+married to a wealthy gentleman.)&nbsp; To the astonishment and
+intense gratification of every one present, His Majesty the
+Sultan attended with his mother at the ceremonial, a most
+unprecedented act of courtesy, and one least of all to be
+expected in Turkey, where the extreme fanaticism once existing
+between the two creeds would, we might have imagined, have raised
+an insurmountable barrier.&nbsp; What is more remarkable, the
+Padishah stood up; the prince seeing this, whispered the
+patriarch to curtail the ceremony.&nbsp; The sharp eyes of the
+Sultan noticed and understood this hint, and he immediately
+desired the patriarch to perform the rites as usual, as he was
+anxious to witness the ceremony fully performed.&nbsp; By
+departing on occasions such as these from the strict rules and
+regulations of the Mahomedan code, and by <!-- page 176--><a
+name="page176"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+176</span>disregarding the reproachful remonstrances of the
+Ulemas, who are the most determined advocates of perfect
+uniformity to their doctrines, Sultan Abdul Medjid Khan, has
+evinced a strong desire to introduce a thorough social reform
+into his empire, and he has hereby conciliated the good will and
+gained the affection of his non-Mahomedan subjects.&nbsp; Indeed,
+among all the present rulers of the world, and especially those
+whom Providence has endowed with ample means of improving the
+condition of their subjects, the Sultan occupies a distinguished
+position; and to him more credit is due for the reforms he has
+introduced among his people, than to any other sovereign of the
+civilised globe, and for this evident reason, that in the path he
+had to follow the greatest difficulties have been met with and
+overcome; namely, those powerful ones which spring from religious
+bigotry and prejudice.&nbsp; These he has either overcome or
+obviated with the utmost wisdom and perseverance.&nbsp; And even
+her enemies are obliged to confess that Turkey, under the rule of
+Abdul Medjid, is in a far more vigorous and flourishing condition
+than they either believed or hoped.&nbsp; And during the whole of
+this critical period, in which the affairs of this empire have
+been agitated, what a noble example of calm and dignified
+moderation has both his public and private conduct
+exhibited.&nbsp; To the violent and uncourteous menaces of his
+enemy, and to the extravagant character of his pretensions, he
+has opposed a conciliating, yet firm line of policy, which has
+won for him the respect and support of the more intelligent
+portion of Europe; and when his character becomes better known to
+the English public, which it will probably in the course of
+events, I feel convinced it will claim and win all the admiration
+it deserves from a people whose public judgment is <!-- page
+177--><a name="page177"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+177</span>perhaps the most impartial in the world.&nbsp; My
+object is not to flatter; but I will avow, that I wish by facts
+and truth to remove some of that prejudice which is more or less
+associated in this country with the idea of a Turk.&nbsp; What I
+have said concerning my sovereign, is borne out by all
+intelligent travellers who have recently visited his
+dominions.&nbsp; For his love of literature&mdash;for his liberal
+patronage of men distinguished by literary or other
+merit&mdash;for his patriotism, evinced in his unceasing
+endeavours to bestow on his country all the advantages to be
+derived from modern scientific discovery, and for the amiability
+and gentleness of his personal character, I feel no hesitation,
+from what I have read of them, in ranking him with the most
+distinguished sovereigns of ancient times&mdash;with Frederick of
+Prussia, and I will add Peter the Great.&nbsp; But while he far
+excels the two last in the amiability of his character and
+disposition, he equals any of them in his efforts to advance the
+glory of his country and the welfare of his people.</p>
+<p>Owing to the ignorance which prevails in Europe on the subject
+of Turkey, a great outcry is frequently made by many persons
+about events which occur in that country, without for one moment
+taking into consideration the difference in the temperament of
+the people, arising from their Asiatic origin.&nbsp; Our great
+cause of surprise, is the sudden rise of individuals in
+comparatively indigent circumstances to places of great
+power.&nbsp; When, however, it is considered that the Orientals
+view the various grades of society in another light to the
+Western Europeans, the sudden aggrandisement of individuals from
+the lower classes will cease to be a matter of surprise.&nbsp; In
+Turkey, men of the noblest birth mix indiscriminately with all
+ranks, and he who is possessed of wealth, talent, or interest,
+may rise to offices of the <!-- page 178--><a
+name="page178"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 178</span>greatest
+trust; and, as &ldquo;knowledge is power,&rdquo; I can see no
+reason why talent should not be brought into the notice which it
+merits.&nbsp; As a proof of the justice and benefit accruing from
+this system, I may adduce the case of a Kapudan Pasha, whose
+station in life was very humble, but, being gifted with more than
+ordinary abilities, he was promoted to the chief command of the
+Turkish fleet, which was never better managed than whilst under
+his control.&nbsp; Other instances of a similar character are of
+frequent occurrence, more particularly in the subordinate
+departments of the home service.&nbsp; A favourite eunuch, or the
+brother of a Georgian or Circassian concubine or wife, has had
+honours suddenly and most unexpectedly showered upon him in the
+civil and military service; and there are at this date many
+pashas of both services, who owe their rise to similar unforeseen
+but fortuitous circumstances.&nbsp; It is true, many of these can
+neither read nor write, but they are possessed of great power of
+discernment, and are accompanied by two or three individuals who
+possess sufficient education to carry out the views of their
+leader in a becoming manner.&nbsp; A good secretary, generally an
+Armenian, is an indispensable requisite.</p>
+<p>The evil arises here in the choice of the subordinates; who,
+if they be of a bigotted and selfish turn of mind, the benevolent
+intentions of the government are but imperfectly carried out, or
+frustrated in spite of the most strenuous efforts.</p>
+<p>Sultan Abdul Medjid, and his ministers, <a
+name="citation178"></a><a href="#footnote178"
+class="citation">[178]</a> deserve the highest credit for the
+various attempts which have at <!-- page 179--><a
+name="page179"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 179</span>different
+times been made, to introduce a thorough reform into the
+financial system of the Porte.&nbsp; It is undoubtedly a
+herculean task, for I do not believe that there has ever existed
+in any country in the world, so perfect and general a system of
+corruption and extortion, on the part of the inferior
+officials.&nbsp; Though not oppressive in themselves, the taxes
+levied upon the people have, in consequence, become an
+intolerable yoke.&nbsp; Every village and individual taxed
+generally pays much more than the legitimate amount ordered to be
+levied by the government.&nbsp; The emirs and district governors,
+the sheikhs, kekhiahs, and heads of the tribes, live upon the
+villagers, and oblige the poor tenant-farmers to furnish their
+establishments with horses and servants, and practise other
+extortions.&nbsp; To meet these urgent exactions, the poor
+villagers are obliged annually to raise loans guaranteed on the
+ensuing season&rsquo;s crops at a most usurious rate of interest,
+as high as from twenty-five to thirty-five and forty per cent.
+per annum, either from wealthy Jews, Armenians, or Greeks, and
+formerly even many of the proteg&eacute;s of the different
+European consulates took advantage of this state of things, and
+fattened upon the misfortunes and miseries of the poor peasants,
+over whom they rode roughshod.&nbsp; The existence of so terrible
+an evil could not long remain unknown to the inquiring mind of
+the Sultan, and though his sources of correct information have
+necessarily been meagre, he acquired an insight into it,
+sufficient to convince him of the necessity for a change.&nbsp;
+Accordingly, he ordered certain taxes to be abolished, others to
+be reduced; and he, above all, is endeavouring to organise an
+honest and simple system of collection.&nbsp; To this end all his
+ministers and employ&eacute;s have been obliged, before taking
+office, to promise, upon oath, to discharge their several duties
+impartially and <!-- page 180--><a name="page180"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 180</span>justly; above all, not to receive
+bribes in any shape.&nbsp; He has been foiled to a great extent
+in these attempts; and hence may be derived the clearest and
+simplest explanation of the financial embarrassments of his
+government.&nbsp; <i>Apropos</i> of this, I may quote from the
+letter of a friend, which has just come to hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Everybody seems to imagine that the speedy downfall of
+Turkey is inevitable, that its doom is all but sealed, and that
+she is passing as rapidly as she can into the hands of
+Russia.&nbsp; But it ought to be well known in Western Europe,
+that the so-much-talked-of balance of power in the East, cannot
+be thus so easily or so recklessly sacrificed by the two great
+powers, England and France.&nbsp; The jealousy of these powers is
+a sufficient safeguard for Turkey; and they will protect her from
+any aggression on the part of Russia or Austria on her rights and
+territory; and it is to me evident that Russia&rsquo;s long
+course of policy with regard to the Ottoman empire in Turkey,
+will be frustrated from a quarter whence she may least expect
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That which, in my opinion, establishes the resources and
+vitality of the Turkish empire is, that if one of the serious
+struggles to which it has been exposed for the last forty years,
+were to have happened to any other power, it would either have
+crippled it or caused its entire destruction.&nbsp; Turkey, on
+the contrary, has, during this space of time, experienced the
+severest trials, as, for instance, the Greek revolution, the
+destruction of the Janissaries in 1826 (who at that time
+constituted her army), the annihilation of her fleet at Navarino,
+the protracted war with Russia, the civil war with Egypt, and the
+many partial outbreaks caused by the machinations of European
+powers; in spite of all these, so far from sinking, Turkey, at
+this time possesses, besides irregular troops and auxiliaries, a
+regular and well-disciplined army and a splendid fleet, and is
+endeavouring still further to increase, and re-establish peace,
+and internal security; and also to find the best <!-- page
+181--><a name="page181"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+181</span>means of enriching her treasury without burdening her
+subjects; and I trust, that, under the beneficial government of
+the present benign Sultan, and his enlightened ministers (in
+spite of the fanatical party), Turkey will yet make great
+progress in civilisation and all its concomitant blessings.&nbsp;
+At least, if she does not, it will not be for want of exertion on
+the part of Abdul Medjid to introduce into his empire a thorough
+reform, himself setting an example to his subjects of forbearance
+and goodly feeling towards the many sects dwelling within the
+boundaries of his empire.&nbsp; The truth of these views has been
+amply proved by the gallant resistance offered by Turkey at the
+present crisis to the unjust aggressions of Russia.</p>
+<p>Just before leaving Constantinople, a circumstance occurred
+which created quite a sensation amongst all classes and
+creeds.&nbsp; An Armenian girl, the daughter of very respectable
+parents, formed a secret attachment to a young Moslem, in the
+service of the Sultan.&nbsp; The lovers managed to contrive
+interviews without exciting the suspicion of the girl&rsquo;s
+friends; and eventually the girl fled to her lover, embraced the
+Mahommedan faith, and was regularly married to him.&nbsp;
+Sometime after they had been married, the young girl went to call
+upon her mother, most probably without her husband&rsquo;s
+consent.&nbsp; The mother and all her relations bemoaning with
+many tears her apostasy, implored of the girl not to return to
+her husband, but to be received once again into her mother
+church.&nbsp; The girl, overcome by emotion for the moment,
+yielded a ready consent; and for her better security, it was
+agreed that she should be placed within the Armenian
+asylum.&nbsp; This was accordingly done, and the husband made
+vain search for his missing bride.&nbsp; Meanwhile the young lady
+got tired of her confinement, <!-- page 182--><a
+name="page182"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 182</span>and very
+possibly of the treatment she received from the over-zealous
+attendants at the asylum, and accordingly contrived, through the
+window of the room where she was confined, to convey a message to
+her husband.&nbsp; The husband immediately complained to the
+authorities; who without delay demanded the girl of the
+bishop.&nbsp; The prelate at first denied any knowledge of the
+person in question.&nbsp; A military force was then sent to bring
+her away at any hazard; and a parley commenced between the
+commandant and the bishop, in which the latter gave his <i>parole
+d&rsquo;honneur</i>, that if the troops were withdrawn he would
+conduct the girl himself next day before the divan, and she
+should there declare publicly, which of the two faiths she of her
+own free will would wish to embrace.&nbsp; Meanwhile the
+ambassadors of all European powers had exerted themselves on the
+woman&rsquo;s behalf, but all to no purpose.&nbsp; Next day she
+was brought up trembling before the divan, to answer the
+important question about to be put her.&nbsp; Most of the
+European authorities were present, and so was the husband; and no
+sooner did her eye meet his again, than all her resolution failed
+her; and so powerful was the effect of her love, that she
+relinquished parents, family, friends, creed, and nation, all for
+his sake; and when asked the question, to which creed she gave
+the preference, her reply was&mdash;&ldquo;<i>I am a Moslem</i>,
+<i>the wife of a Moslem</i>, <i>and I will live and die as
+such</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; This settled the affair at once.&nbsp; The
+Turk took his wife to his house back again, and the poor bishop
+sorrowfully withdrew, lamenting as he went along the unfavourable
+result of the affair.</p>
+<p>Before quitting the subject of my sojourn at Stamboul, I
+cannot forget the great kindness I received from Alfred
+Churchill, the proprietor of the Turkish <!-- page 183--><a
+name="page183"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 183</span>newspaper,
+&ldquo;Djeridei Havadis,&rdquo; which he supplies with
+translations, by himself, of the leading topics of European
+news.</p>
+<p>The father of this gentleman was an English merchant
+established there.&nbsp; Being very fond of shooting, it happened
+one day that on sport intent, he crossed to seek his game on the
+Asiatic side of the Bosphorus&mdash;I would observe that a
+prejudice exists among the more bigoted natives against Europeans
+crossing the straits&mdash;our gallant sportsman was also
+unfortunately somewhat short-sighted, and as one does not
+commonly shoot in spectacles, nor employ that species of
+eye-glass which some of the young English ladies are so fond of
+bringing to bear upon any object of their curiosity, the natural
+consequence was that Mr. Churchill fell into a misadventure, and
+unluckily wounded a Turkish child.&nbsp; This of course, brought
+the relations and friends, and indeed the whole neighbourhood
+upon him, who attacked him with sticks, stones, and slippers, and
+anything at hand.&nbsp; After half killing him, they dragged him
+off to prison.&nbsp; This was a natural, perhaps a deserved,
+punishment for going about and taking bad aims in dangerous
+localities.</p>
+<p>His ambassador made a dreadful noise about this mishap.&nbsp;
+Colonel --- was sent from England to enquire into the
+circumstances, who very fairly reported that our friend was
+certainly wrong, considering the state of his vision, to be
+shooting near the place, and the Turks were also to blame for the
+manner of their attack.</p>
+<p>But the government of Turkey, after all the trouble and
+correspondence it caused them, nobly and generously allowed him a
+reparation, namely, the privilege of trading duty free in salt,
+which put several thousands into his pocket.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 184--><a name="page184"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 184</span>CHAPTER XI.<br />
+EGYPT.</h2>
+<p>Resuming my narrative, my readers will be interested by a
+slight sketch of Egypt.&nbsp; This country, now called by the
+natives &ldquo;Messir,&rdquo; was styled, in the Hebrew
+Scriptures, &ldquo;The land of Mizraim&rdquo;&mdash;a strange
+similarity in the two names, which places it beyond a doubt that,
+however much the face of the country may have been changed since
+the days of Moses and the children of Israel, and though
+consecutively under the sway of governments and people whose
+language and dialects varied in the extreme, the same original
+name has been faithfully preserved, though corrupted and
+abbreviated by various pronunciations given to it by various
+people.&nbsp; A land of troubles and misery it has been through
+many long centuries, from the fearful days when Aaron&rsquo;s rod
+manifested the supreme power of the God of Abraham before the
+eyes of an unbelieving and stiff-necked people, down to within
+the last few years.&nbsp; The frightful devastations committed by
+the plague, and the extermination of the Mameluke power; these
+have been the last manifest outpourings of the wrath of
+God.&nbsp; Let us hope that the full cup of indignation has been
+poured out and emptied to the dregs; and that the prophetic words
+of Isaiah have been fulfilled as far as regards the curse, and
+that the predicted blessing is about to fall upon the <!-- page
+185--><a name="page185"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+185</span>land.&nbsp; &ldquo;The Lord shall smite Egypt: he shall
+smite and heal it; and they shall return to the Lord, and he
+shall heal them,&rdquo; etc.&nbsp; (Isaiah xix. 22&ndash;25).</p>
+<p>The striking allusion made to the fertility of the soil of
+Egypt in Gen. xli. 47&mdash;&ldquo;The earth brought forth by
+handfuls&rdquo;&mdash;is still exemplified by the produce.&nbsp;
+Corn is so plentiful, that cargoes are annually shipped for the
+maintenance of other lands, and when the famine was sorely felt
+in the neighbouring countries, whole fleets of vessels, laden
+with corn from Alexandria, brought to England timely succour to
+starving multitudes, and enriched the coffers of not a few
+speculative merchants, who made the miseries of their
+fellow-beings a means of advancing their own welfare in the
+world.</p>
+<p>There is little doubt but that Egypt has made great strides in
+civilisation under the sway of the present enlightened viceroy;
+for we have daily evidence of her continued improvement.&nbsp;
+Abbas Pasha is now only about forty-five years of age; he is the
+son of the eldest son of Mahomet Ali Pasha, and, therefore,
+according to the Egyptian rule, which gives precedence to the
+brother or his children, became entitled to the throne after the
+decease of Ibrahim, whose children, in some countries, would have
+been considered lawful successors.&nbsp; Abbas Pasha, unlike his
+predecessor, whose habits greatly contributed to curtail his
+life, is a man of very moderate and temperate style of living; he
+has but one wife, and, by this lady, an only son, now about
+twelve years of age.&nbsp; At the recommendation of the honorable
+Mr. Murray, the late British consul-general in Egypt, the viceroy
+sent to England to engage a tutor for the education of this son
+in English, and Mr. Artin, an English lawyer, was the lucky
+individual fixed upon.</p>
+<p>No sooner had Mr. Artin arrived in Egypt, than <!-- page
+186--><a name="page186"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+186</span>Abbas Pasha promoted him to the dignity of Bey, and he
+now ranks amongst the nobles of the land.&nbsp; The Pasha having
+set the example himself, strongly recommended all his ministers
+to have their children educated in like manner; and I have little
+doubt but that this good advice will, in the course of time, be
+adopted.&nbsp; He also sends annually a number of young men to
+England to be educated, who naturally take back with them a
+strong predilection for the people with whom they have for some
+time resided.&nbsp; This will tend greatly to introduce a love of
+English civilisation and improvements in the country.</p>
+<p>Amongst other improvements, Abbas Pasha has built himself a
+magnificent palace, Darr il Bedah, midway between Cairo and
+Suez.&nbsp; This good work excited the satire and spleen of the
+French people, who insisted that it was an act of insanity,
+throwing away money upon such a palace, situated in the desert;
+but, apart from its having given occupation and bread to
+thousands of starving inhabitants, the very fact of the Pasha
+making this place his favourite summer resort, has drawn the
+attention of the natives to the capabilities of the soil in the
+neighbourhood, and the place, from being a barren wilderness, is
+being rapidly brought into cultivation; villages are springing
+up; and, in addition to all this, the roads have been put into
+excellent order&mdash;not a trifling boon conferred upon the vast
+number of English travellers that are continually crossing this
+desert.</p>
+<p>The steamers on the Nile, and the railway now in course of
+construction, are still greater proofs of the Pasha&rsquo;s
+enlightened and civilised mind.&nbsp; Abdallah Pasha, an
+Englishman who some time since embraced Mahomedanism, was
+appointed director of the transit, <!-- page 187--><a
+name="page187"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 187</span>and the
+Pasha promoted him to that grade because he thought no one else
+competent to discharge the duties of the post.&nbsp; The truth of
+the matter is, that the English never commanded greater influence
+than they do at this present day in Egypt; they are looked up to
+and considered as everybody and everything; and for this they
+have much to thank the able and honourable Mr. Murray.&nbsp; To
+give an example of how far this influence with the Pasha
+extended, I may mention that, some time since, two hundred Copts
+were compelled to enlist as soldiers.&nbsp; Now these Copts are
+Christians, and their sufferings amongst the Moslem Fellahs can
+be more readily conceived than described; their friends and
+families succeeded in interesting Mr. Murray on their behalf, who
+interceded with the Pasha; and the result was, that they were
+immediately discharged from the army.&nbsp; But to shew how much
+and how sincerely Abbas Pasha appreciates the worth of such a man
+as the late British consul-general, the best proof I can give is,
+that when a sad calamity befell Mr. Murray, and his amiable lady
+died, the viceroy ordered all his ministers and head officials to
+go into mourning for her, and to follow her remains to the
+grave.&nbsp; Such a funeral was never witnessed in modern
+Egypt.&nbsp; All the nobles of the land, and the first gentry,
+without distinction of creed, with black crape round their left
+arms and round their red caps, following in mournful procession
+this highly respected English lady to her grave.&nbsp; If a
+potentate had died, greater honours could not have been rendered;
+this act is without precedent in the East.</p>
+<p>During my stay in Egypt, I resided with my kind friend Mr.
+Raphael Abet.&nbsp; Mr. Abet is one of three brothers; they were
+from Syria, and eventually settled <!-- page 188--><a
+name="page188"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 188</span>in
+Egypt.&nbsp; These three brothers were all eminent for their
+piety and their charity.&nbsp; One unfortunately died
+prematurely; but he has left behind him an undying name, having
+bequeathed an immense fortune for the support of charity schools
+and other similar philanthropic institutions.&nbsp; The brother,
+of whose kind hospitalities I so abundantly partook during my
+sojourn in Egypt (and whom I cannot refrain from thanking through
+the medium of these pages), is equally well known for his
+benevolence and good deeds.&nbsp; On the occasion of the
+revolution in Greece, in 1823, when the Turks took several
+females and children prisoners, and carried them away to be sold
+as captives in other countries, several of these unfortunates
+found a friend and deliverer in Mr. Abet.&nbsp; Not a few of the
+captives were carried into Egypt, and there sold.&nbsp; Many of
+these were, at a great outlay, purchased by him, who treated them
+in every respect as though they had been his own children; he
+fed, clothed, and educated them, and eventually they married and
+settled comfortably in life.&nbsp; One of the Messrs. Abet is now
+established in London as a mercantile man; and I am sure all who
+know him will bear me out in pronouncing him to be a good man and
+a devout Christian.</p>
+<p>Whilst on the subject of Egyptian friends and acquaintances, I
+must not neglect to mention the name of that good man Mr.
+Larking, who has left behind him in Egypt many a souvenir of
+which any Englishman might well be proud; his name is gratefully
+remembered by all classes in Egypt, from the viceroy himself down
+to the meanest peasant.&nbsp; Mr. Larking, on first establishing
+himself in Egypt, so ingratiated himself with the Pasha, that in
+a very short time he was permitted to purchase whole villages,
+over which <!-- page 189--><a name="page189"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 189</span>he ruled with as absolute sway as
+any Egyptian landowner.&nbsp; The country round these villages he
+soon brought into the richest state of cultivation: and so
+lenient a master, one under whom they reaped so many hitherto
+unheard-of benefits, made the peasants almost adore the name of
+Mr. Larking.&nbsp; Not only did he ameliorate the condition of
+his own land by the introduction of a superior method of
+cultivation, but he conferred a boon upon the whole of Egypt by
+procuring at some expense and trouble, the Sea-Island cotton
+seed, which has succeeded beyond the most sanguine expectations,
+and for the sample of it, which was shewn at the Great
+Exhibition, Mr. Larking obtained the prize.&nbsp; The viceroy
+was, of course, much gratified and pleased at this; and he has
+bestowed many costly gifts on Mr. Larking as expressive of his
+approbation; besides which, that gentleman has been appointed to
+act as the Viceroy&rsquo;s confidential agent in England.&nbsp;
+This is only one of the many instances in which commoners have
+been raised to a high rank by Mehemet Ali Pasha, who being of
+obscure origin, took delight in raising to power those whose
+personal merits and talents brought them before his notice.&nbsp;
+Amongst the Viceroy&rsquo;s favourites was one who particularly
+deserves our notice, viz., the late Boghas Bey.&nbsp; An Armenian
+by birth, and of no great opulence or particular parentage,
+Boghas Bey was possessed of all those good qualities which cannot
+fail to endear one even to the most savage breast: his charities
+were proverbial even to the detriment of his own personal
+interest.&nbsp; Step by step he rose in the Viceroy&rsquo;s
+favour, till he had so far ingratiated himself with the Pasha,
+that Boghas was created a Bey, and had other high distinctions
+conferred upon him.&nbsp; He might have <!-- page 190--><a
+name="page190"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 190</span>accumulated
+immense wealth, for the Viceroy&rsquo;s heart and hand were ever
+open to confer great benefits upon him, but Boghas Bey preferred
+to serve his master gratuitously; and even the produce of the
+gifts of land forced upon his acceptance, went towards the
+maintenance of the poor, and many widows and orphans bless his
+name even to this day.&nbsp; But to shew how dangerous it is to
+be a favourite at Oriental courts, and how it subjects one to the
+vile jealousies of courtiers, even Boghas, favourite as he was,
+was well nigh falling a victim to the viceroy&rsquo;s
+susceptibility and the villany of others.&nbsp; Some miscreants
+had misrepresented his character and actions to the Pasha, who,
+in a paroxysm of rage, ordered an officer in attendance to go
+instantly to the supposed delinquent&rsquo;s house, and have him
+drowned in the Nile.&nbsp; As good fortune would have it, Boghas
+had on some previous occasion saved this very officer&rsquo;s
+head, and the man gratefully remembering this, hid Boghas in his
+own house, intending to facilitate his escape to some other
+country.&nbsp; This was a bold stroke, and one worthy of great
+praise.&nbsp; Next morning the viceroy was sadly out of spirits;
+his wrath had not only calmed down, but circumstances had
+actually transpired which cleared his favourite of all
+suspicion.&nbsp; Great then was the viceroy&rsquo;s consternation
+and grief on being informed that his orders had been executed to
+the letter: he tore his beard and gave way to exclamations of
+such sincere sorrow, that the officer took courage to prostrate
+himself at the viceroy&rsquo;s feet, and explain how matters
+really stood.&nbsp; It is needless to say that he was readily
+pardoned, and Boghas received into higher favour than ever.&nbsp;
+At last, however, a sterner executioner than the one sent by the
+Pasha knocked at Boghas Bey&rsquo;s door.&nbsp; Death came armed,
+and the good man died, to the <!-- page 191--><a
+name="page191"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 191</span>universal
+sorrow of the Pasha and all Cairo.&nbsp; Such had been his
+munificence during his lifetime, that at his death he was almost
+a bankrupt.&nbsp; The viceroy, determined to carry his esteem to
+the last, ordered him a public funeral, at which all the Egyptian
+officials and European consuls and merchants were invited to
+attend.&nbsp; So that Boghas was buried with honours such as are
+rarely paid to a prince in that country.</p>
+<p>Of course during my stay in Egypt, I had often opportunities
+of visiting all the known antiquities, and amongst others the
+celebrated Pyramids, those noble testimonies of the bygone
+splendour of the land, and whose age and founders seem destined
+ever to remain a mystery.&nbsp; A friend of mine, a great
+antiquarian, and one deeply read in profane and sacred history,
+used to delight in holding forth to me his speculations as to
+their origin.&nbsp; His opinion was, that it must be erroneous to
+imagine that these pyramids were the handiwork of the
+Israelites.&nbsp; In support of this argument he quoted from many
+authorities, and amongst others from a well-known traveller who
+saw at one place the people making bricks with straw cut into
+small pieces, mingled with the clay to bind it.&nbsp; Hence it
+is, that when villages built of this brick fall into decay, the
+roads are full of small particles of straw, extremely offensive
+to the eyes in a high wind.&nbsp; These persons were engaged,
+exactly as the Israelites used to be, making bricks with straw,
+and for a similar purpose, viz&bdquo; to build extensive
+granaries for the Pasha&mdash;&ldquo;<i>treasure cities for
+Pharaoh</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Hence my friend argued that the
+Israelites laboured in making bricks, not in hewing stones such
+as the pyramids are constructed with; but I do not pretend to
+enter into any argument upon so learned and obscure a subject: I
+certainly was surprised at the magnificence <!-- page 192--><a
+name="page192"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 192</span>of their
+structure, and often wondered within myself where the stones came
+from, by what means they were transported, and by what now
+unknown force or lever such huge blocks were raised up one above
+another, and so left a firm memento through centuries, despite
+convulsions of the earth, to stand forth as objects of surprise
+and admiration to the visitors of the present generation.</p>
+<p>With regard to the climate of Egypt, I believe it to be as
+good as many parts of Syria, though the heat is certainly more
+intense, and even I myself suffered from languor and oppression;
+but then the mornings and evenings fully recompense you for the
+sultrier heat of the day, and I never recollect to have enjoyed a
+summer&rsquo;s moonlight night more than I did upon the
+Nile.&nbsp; The European residents in general enjoy excellent
+health; and few that have resided there long would wish to change
+their method of living, or the country they live in.</p>
+<p>In Cairo, the Consular Square contains many very handsome
+buildings, inhabited principally by the consuls of various
+nations, and some of the more wealthy European merchants.&nbsp;
+With my friend Mr. Walne, the British Consul at Cairo, I have
+spent many a pleasant hour, and for his great kindness and
+hospitality, I am glad to have an opportunity of thus publicly
+thanking him.&nbsp; Mr. W. is the head of the Egyptian Society,
+who have a very fine library, consisting chiefly of works
+relating to the antiquities and country of Egypt.&nbsp; The
+valuable books contained in this library are at all times, with
+perfect goodwill, placed at the disposal of strangers; and I
+gratefully acknowledge having derived useful information and
+amusement from the well-stocked shelves of this institution.</p>
+<p><!-- page 193--><a name="page193"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+193</span>A great source of comfort to English families residing
+in Egypt, is the punctual regularity with which the European
+mails arrive and depart; for, besides meeting almost weekly with
+swarms of their countrymen and fair countrywomen flocking to and
+from India, they have constantly fresh news from home, and can,
+upon any great emergency, transport themselves from the warm
+clime of Egypt to their own much-loved foggy island within the
+fortnight.&nbsp; Besides this, they are continually receiving
+newspapers from all parts of the world possessing the advantage
+over England of being cognisant of Indian and Australian news a
+fortnight before such intelligence could reach London; and this
+for merchants connected by trade with both places, must naturally
+be of paramount importance.</p>
+<p>During winter, the Europeans at Cairo are much given to
+festivities; dinner-parties and balls and soir&eacute;es are then
+the order of the day, and great good feeling exists amongst the
+residents.&nbsp; Even private theatricals have been attempted;
+but it is during the Carnival that Cairo resounds with merriment,
+and masques and grotesque-looking figures, with torches and
+music, parade the streets from house to house till long after
+midnight, few enjoying the fun better than the native Cairines
+themselves.&nbsp; The gentlemen have shooting parties and
+coursing matches; the ladies ride out in the environs; they have
+healthy exercise, good houses, and the best of fare&mdash;all the
+productions of the East blended with the luxuries imported from
+European markets; and in this respect, as well as in conversing
+with and meeting more frequently ladies and gentlemen of their
+own nation, the English at Cairo possess advantages over the
+English in Syria.&nbsp; All the former have to complain of is the
+sultry heat of the weather, whilst <!-- page 194--><a
+name="page194"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 194</span>the latter
+are isolated, and bemoan their solitude and the great lack of
+intelligent society.</p>
+<p>On leaving Egypt, I came back to England <i>vi&acirc;</i>
+Marseilles.&nbsp; I had barely arrived at this latter port before
+I again had the misfortune of coming into contact with the
+gendarmes.&nbsp; On a former occasion, as the reader may
+recollect, I got into a scrape by inadvertently emptying a basin
+of water out of the hotel window over the head and shoulders of a
+fiery French officer.&nbsp; This time I had brought with me a
+little parcel of tobacco, to distribute amongst a few of my
+friends.&nbsp; They wanted to make out a case of smuggling
+against me; but no sooner did I produce my passport, to shew that
+I was attached to the Turkish embassy, than these officious
+officials changed their conduct, and quite overpowered me with
+their civilities.&nbsp; Truly Marseilles is an unlucky place for
+me.&nbsp; I here also had a sample of the bad management of
+travelling in France.&nbsp; I took a first-class ticket direct
+from Marseilles to Paris by diligence.&nbsp; On my arrival at
+Lyons, I was told that I must remain until next morning, unless I
+consented to travel in an inferior part of the carriage.&nbsp;
+This, notwithstanding my urgent remonstrances, I was compelled to
+do, owing to the necessity of my being in Paris by a certain
+date; and, though exposed to many inconveniences, I was so
+fortunate as to arrive there in time.&nbsp; My stay at Paris was
+limited to a few days, and I then came on to London and delivered
+my despatches to his excellency our respected ambassador, who
+immediately recognised me as one of his suite, and who has ever
+since continued to treat me with the greatest urbanity.&nbsp; So
+soon as my official duties permitted, I went the round of my kind
+friends in London, and amongst others, was delighted to see the
+Honourable George <!-- page 195--><a name="page195"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 195</span>Massey, my old and well-tried
+friend, who insisted upon my taking up my abode at his house,
+where I remain surrounded by every comfort and luxury that
+kindness and forethought can provide, and happy in the enjoyment
+of the society of a genuine English family.</p>
+<p>The handsome present of horses lately sent by Abbas Pasha to
+the Queen of England, clearly testifies the good feeling existing
+between the two governments, and how much the viceroy wishes to
+keep up those friendly feelings so successfully cultivated and
+maintained.&nbsp; One of the horses above alluded to is of the
+largest and most valuable and rare breed; and there is little
+doubt but that the English nation will hereafter be indebted to
+Abbas Pasha for the possession of a breed of horses now unknown
+in England.&nbsp; The horses were sent to this country under the
+charge of Nubar Bey, an Armenian, a native of Smyrna, a relative
+of Boghas Bey, who is much esteemed by the Pasha and the
+Egyptians.&nbsp; He received a first-rate education in Europe,
+and speaks several of its languages with fluency; he accompanied
+Ibrahim Pasha on his visit to this country a few years back as
+interpreter-secretary, and since that time has visited several
+European courts on various diplomatic missions, and now holds a
+high appointment under the Egyptian government.</p>
+<p>The grooms who accompanied these horses were much astonished
+on seeing the Queen; they could not believe that so mild and
+gentle a lady could be possessed of such power and influence over
+the whole world; they were confident she must have a most clever
+magician in her employ, through whose arts she had attained so
+elevated a rank, and won such a share of their viceroy&rsquo;s
+admiration.&nbsp; When they called to see me at Cambridge-square,
+amongst other articles of furniture, <!-- page 196--><a
+name="page196"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 196</span>etc., which
+attracted their attention and admiration, was a little
+mantle-piece ornament, representing the three graces, of
+exquisite workmanship; they immediately set these down as
+household gods of the English, and it was with difficulty I could
+convince them to the contrary, and assure them that these, in
+common with many other nic-nacs, were simply used as ornaments to
+the room.&nbsp; These poor fellows were very grateful for the
+kindness shewn them by Mr. Massey and his family, who procured
+for them tickets of admission to many of the most interesting
+sights in London; and after partaking of his hospitality, they
+returned in a few days to Egypt, begging me to assure my friend
+and his family that, if ever he chanced to travel in Egypt, they
+hoped to have it in their power to shew him the antiquities of
+that country; and, though they could not boast of so magnificent
+a seraijah, or such furniture, or such sumptuous fare, still a
+good pillaf, a chibuk of tobacco, and a finjan of coffee, should
+be always at his disposal.&nbsp; Mr. Massey was much pleased at
+the simple good nature of these people.&nbsp; Before taking
+leave, I asked them their opinion of England and its
+people.&nbsp; They replied, both were wonderful; but they still
+preferred their own native country.&nbsp; That the English
+thought but of the present, and lived for this world alone; but
+that they looked forward to a hereafter, in which they hoped to
+be amply recompensed by all the sensual enjoyments a Mahomedan
+paradise promises for the numerous mortifications now endured in
+the flesh.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 197--><a name="page197"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 197</span>CHAPTER XII.<br />
+VISITS TO LADY ROLLE AND TO BATH AND CHELTENHAM.</h2>
+<p>Engaged in completing my manuscript preparatory to
+publication, I had devoted myself unweariedly to the task, and
+was about to correct the few last pages, when I was hindered by
+an invitation to pay a visit at Bicton in Devonshire, and there
+to recruit my health a little after my labour.&nbsp; Having
+accepted it, I purpose, for the present, to give a short account
+of my visit there; also to Bath and Cheltenham, which afforded me
+great pleasure, and which I hope will interest my readers.</p>
+<p>Lady Rolle had kindly invited me to visit her at Merton, which
+invitation I was very glad to accept; and I left London by an
+express train in full anticipation of much enjoyment.&nbsp; I had
+often heard the gardens at Bicton described as amongst the finest
+in this county; no pen, however, can do justice to their
+attractions, and the loveliness of the surrounding scenery, which
+burst forth in all the majesty of a warm spring day, agreeably
+contrasting with the dark and murky atmosphere of London.</p>
+<p>The rapidity of travelling by an express train really seems
+magical.&nbsp; If I were to write to my friends in the East and
+tell them I had travelled about two hundred <!-- page 198--><a
+name="page198"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 198</span>miles
+within five hours, they would at once come to the conclusion that
+my head was turned like the unfortunate Druse Sheikh to whom I
+have alluded before.&nbsp; An Indian friend who was residing with
+me near a railway station, always compared the approach of the
+express train to that of Satan himself, rushing through the land
+direct from the infernal regions; a simile, according to my
+notions, not at all bad.</p>
+<p>As soon as I had arrived at Exeter, I found a fly waiting for
+me, when I took my seat by the driver, preferring it to the
+closeness of an inside seat.&nbsp; I observed a great number of
+boys who indulged in various remarks concerning my beard, dress,
+etc., and frequently called after me &ldquo;Kossoo!&nbsp;
+Kossoo!&rdquo; the meaning of which puzzled me not a
+little.&nbsp; I thought they meant the discoverer of the plant of
+that name so lately recommended for its medicinal properties,
+thinking they meant some allusion to my having studied
+medicine.&nbsp; In my perplexity I asked the driver for an
+explanation.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why, maister, you sees they&rsquo;ve
+never afore seed any foreign gentlemen like yourself, but that
+&rsquo;ere one they calls Kossoo, so they &rsquo;sposes you be
+he.&rdquo;&nbsp; The subsequent conversation between the driver
+and myself turned upon Kossuth&rsquo;s merits.&nbsp; On my asking
+him if he had ever seen the Hungarian governor, &ldquo;No,
+maister, I wishes I could send such publican foreigners into the
+sea instead of having them in our country.&rdquo;&nbsp; I told
+him that this is not the way in which we treat foreigners in our
+country, he replied, &ldquo;You be come from the Holy Land which
+be&rsquo;ant our country.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After a beautiful drive we arrived at the park-gates, where I
+was welcomed by the presence of a herd of beautiful deer, who
+seemingly were as inquisitive as <!-- page 199--><a
+name="page199"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 199</span>human
+beings, they would not, however, permit me to approach them, but
+bounded gracefully away, thinking no doubt that so strange a
+looking being as myself should be first acknowledged and welcomed
+by their fair owner ere they would deign to become familiar with
+me.&nbsp; On arriving within sight of the mansion, I was struck
+with its fine appearance and noble proportions, and scarcely
+believed that any private individual could be the possessor of
+such a magnificent residence, which resembled more a royal palace
+than a country-seat of an English nobleman.&nbsp; I charged the
+driver with bringing me to a wrong place, but he resolutely
+persisted in affirming that this was the seat of Lady
+Rolle.&nbsp; On my arrival, a great many houris simultaneously
+appeared at the window, with what seemed to me to be wands; but
+soon the truth flashed upon me, and I discovered that the houris
+which my imagination had conjured up, were no other than Lady
+Rolle and her fair guests, who were amusing themselves with a
+game of billiards.&nbsp; The noble mistress of the mansion
+immediately introduced me to a large assemblage of wit, beauty,
+and fashion.</p>
+<p>It would be difficult to describe the various charms of this
+truly magnificent seat, placed in the midst of scenery of the
+most enchanting loveliness.&nbsp; The noble park in which it
+stands studded with giant trees, that appear to be the children
+of centuries, spreads over a wide extent, and presents the most
+pleasing variety.&nbsp; The grounds which more immediately
+surround it are beautifully laid out, and in their taste and
+arrangement reflect the character of its noble mistress.&nbsp;
+The mansion itself is placed on the crest of a gentle hill; the
+splendour, the comfort, the hospitality, which are to be met <!--
+page 200--><a name="page200"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+200</span>with within its walls, formed altogether a scene well
+calculated to strike and astonish the Eastern pilgrim, who for
+the first time beheld it.&nbsp; Day by day, as the place grew
+more familiar, new treasures would rise upon my bewildered and
+wondering eyes.&nbsp; In the grounds there is a beautiful
+arboretum, which I believe contains every specimen of tree likely
+to reward the trouble of cultivation, and arranged with regard to
+its botanical classification.&nbsp; The various green-houses and
+hot-houses filled with the choicest flowers and fruits of
+tropical climates, delight the eye and inform the mind; and,
+thanks to the presiding care that overlooks and regulates the
+whole, all in the highest state of cultivation.&nbsp; Here, in
+the compass of a few miles, and belonging to one possessor, the
+plants and shrubs of the most distant countries (among others I
+noticed the coffee and banana) are brought together, and under
+the fostering care of art and intelligence, made to live and
+flourish in the greatest luxuriance.&nbsp; Among the numberless
+things which won my admiration, I will add the mention of a lofty
+tower which is built in one part of the grounds, and which is
+reached by a pretty drive through a wood of pine, and from whose
+top a view of the most magnificent kind presents itself, of hill
+and dale, wood and meadow; and a little distance, bounding the
+prospect at one point, the blue sea may be seen, adding another
+beauty to the landscape.</p>
+<p>Never, in short, have I seen anything to rival this lovely
+human paradise, though I have had the pleasure of travelling
+through many English counties.&nbsp; I must leave my kind and
+indulgent reader to draw largely on his imaginative powers, and
+in thought translate himself to some fairy land, where
+nature&rsquo;s beauties revel and disport in all their glory, and
+exhibit to the view of the <!-- page 201--><a
+name="page201"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 201</span>entranced
+beholders all that is grand, beautiful, and ennobling.&nbsp; At
+Bicton time sped rapidly on, as time always will speed when spent
+in such charming and agreeable society.&nbsp; Our usual daily
+routine was prayers at half-past eight <span
+class="smcap">a.m.</span>, at which all the guests and servants
+attended, when her ladyship read the prayers herself.&nbsp; What
+an example thought I to thousands of the aristocracy of
+Europe!&nbsp; After prayers we repaired to the breakfast parlour,
+where a sumptuous repast was always provided.&nbsp; After the
+meal, the company separated into different parties&mdash;some for
+a drive, some for a walk, whilst others went shooting or
+fishing.&nbsp; At one, all usually re-assembled and partook of an
+excellent lunch; afterwards, there were billiards, bagatelle, and
+books; in short, each did as he thought fit.&nbsp; We dined, and
+after that there was abundance of amusement; in the evening, the
+ladies delighted us by playing and singing.</p>
+<p>Towards the close of my visit, I may inform the reader that my
+own stock of amusements were varied (I am happy to say that it
+was towards the end of my stay), by the discovery that two of her
+ladyship&rsquo;s guests, Mr. P--- and Mr. W---, were skilful with
+their pencils, and insisted upon handing me down to posterity in
+their sketch-books, so that I was suddenly assailed right and
+left (I think it must have been a concerted plan between them for
+their mutual convenience), which kept me pretty quiet in
+attendance to be sure&mdash;to their ease and my dis-ease.&nbsp;
+Mr. W---, not content with conferring on me the above advantage,
+insists on the further distinction of hanging me up at the
+exhibition&mdash;a sentence which I really believe he will carry
+into execution.</p>
+<p>The time thus passed pleasantly away, and the <!-- page
+202--><a name="page202"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+202</span>recollection of these delightful hours will always be
+vividly engraven on my mind.&nbsp; Amongst the performers on the
+piano was one who, <i>par excellence</i>, was divine: this was a
+Miss W---.&nbsp; We often had a round game invented by Mr.
+P---.&nbsp; Something similar to &ldquo;My Lady&rsquo;s
+Toilet,&rdquo; only more refined.</p>
+<p>Lady Rolle kindly introduced me, during my residence at her
+abode, to a Mrs. P--- of Exeter, with whom I had a long
+conversation respecting the Greek church and the state of female
+education in Syria.&nbsp; I have heard that her daughters often
+visited the poor cottagers, with a view to improve and ameliorate
+their condition, a custom I am happy to find becoming very
+prevalent among the upper classes in England during the last few
+years.&nbsp; I wish some philanthropic young ladies would follow
+their good example, and make a step still further by setting out
+on a crusade against the ignorance of their sex in Syria.</p>
+<p>On the grounds attached to the mansion, my hostess has built a
+very beautiful tower filled with valuable and rare samples of
+china; it resembles an Indian pagoda.&nbsp; This amiable lady has
+also built a very fine church in memory of her husband, and also
+a mausoleum.&nbsp; But what surprised me still more was to find a
+cottage on her grounds which was paved entirely with
+sheep&rsquo;s knucklebones&mdash;a novel spectacle to me, and
+very ingenious and curious.</p>
+<p>Whilst at Bicton, I heard a very amusing anecdote about an
+Eastern princess, who it appears had come there on a visit from
+London, and was much noticed by the nobility.&nbsp; This lady was
+very fond of vegetables and fruit, and in order the more freely
+to gratify her appetite, she used to rise early and go into the
+garden, and amongst other delicacies, she never spared the <!--
+page 203--><a name="page203"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+203</span>young onions, of which she was exceedingly fond.&nbsp;
+The gardener could not account for the depredations committed on
+his <i>potager</i> till accident led him to discover the
+mystery.&nbsp; One day he locked the gate before the princess
+returned from her morning walk, and consequently she remained
+there some considerable time, and had to breakfast and dine off
+her favourite vegetables.&nbsp; At length, after a long search,
+the gardener heard her crying out, and accordingly released
+her.</p>
+<p>One day during this agreeable visit was devoted to a drive to
+Exeter to see the cathedral, gaol, and hospital, with which I was
+much interested.&nbsp; I must here bestow a passing note of
+admiration on her ladyship&rsquo;s &ldquo;turnout,&rdquo; which
+conveyed us to the town: suffice it to say that it was appointed
+in the best English style, and with four fine horses of imposing
+stature, with their gay silver trappings and postillions, made an
+excellent <i>coup d&rsquo;&oelig;il</i>.&nbsp; With the
+architecture of the cathedral I was particularly struck, on
+account of its resemblance to the old churches in Syria.&nbsp; I
+much admired the small paintings in fresco underneath the organ,
+which I was told had only recently been discovered, and these
+were very similar to those in our churches throughout my country,
+and which may be seen at the present day.&nbsp; After having
+inspected the cathedral, I visited the gaol, which pleased me
+from being kept so scrupulously clean; and I highly approved of
+the regulations and rules which were laid down and
+enforced.&nbsp; But one circumstance in particular pained me very
+much, that was to find a child only eight years of age imprisoned
+for arson.&nbsp; I was told that he was much happier in gaol than
+at home.&nbsp; Before leaving I visited the female department,
+which was equally clean and well arranged, and all the women were
+usefully occupied.&nbsp; Upon enquiring of the <!-- page 204--><a
+name="page204"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 204</span>governor of
+the gaol whether the female prisoners gave him much trouble, his
+answer was, &ldquo;I would rather have to do with a dozen men
+than one woman.&rdquo;&nbsp; This speech rather startled me, and,
+as it was time to return to Bicton, I left Exeter, having been
+highly gratified and pleased with my visit.&nbsp; During my stay
+in the neighbourhood, as we proceeded though the village, many
+and very amusing conjectures were made concerning my country and
+station.&nbsp; By some I was considered no less a personage than
+a Persian prince; others deemed me a Turkish Pasha, whilst many
+even exalted me so high as to be somewhat of more
+importance&mdash;an Indian Rajah.&nbsp; Soon after, I bade adieu
+to Bicton, but not without deep regret and sorrow at leaving our
+amiable and hospitable friend and her assembled guests.</p>
+<p>From Bicton I proceeded to Bath.&nbsp; It was about mid-day
+when I started; the weather was lovely, and forcibly brought to
+my mind the contrast between the murky and ungenial atmosphere
+which pervaded London when I left it, and the bright clear air of
+this favoured portion of England.&nbsp; Could my readers, who
+spend so much of their time in the metropolis, have felt as I did
+on this morning, when the sweet breeze, wafting the odours of the
+fresh-turned earth, seemed to breathe health upon the cheek, and
+purity and peace into the heart, they could never again declare
+that the country possessed no charms.&nbsp; Contemplate but the
+rising of day&rsquo;s bright luminary, which in the west of
+England is especially glorious, making its appearance as it does
+from behind lofty and undulating lines of hills, overlooking the
+loveliest of valleys, which must in spring present more the
+appearance of a Syrian glen than anything I have hitherto
+seen.&nbsp; The verdant moss, <!-- page 205--><a
+name="page205"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 205</span>the
+delicate white violet, and the modest primrose, which hid their
+loveliness beneath a variety of trees, and amongst them the first
+that puts forth its blossoms is the sallow, whose yellow downy
+buds emit a honeyed odour, all combine to constitute this
+beautiful part of England a very Garden of Eden in which an
+humble mind might dwell for ever.</p>
+<p>The impression produced on my mind by these scenes, was very
+similar to that which so painfully affects the Swiss, when in a
+foreign country he is reminded of his wild and mountainous
+home.&nbsp; I felt all the sensations of the indescribable
+&ldquo;mal de pays.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But I must proceed on my journey.&nbsp; I entered the railway
+carriage, and quick as lightning sped from all those who had
+shewn me so much kindness and attention, and to whom I shall
+often travel back in thought to dwell with grateful satisfaction
+and delight on this happy period of my life.&nbsp; Should any of
+my readers, who have not yet visited Bath, have occasion
+hereafter to do so, they will not fail, as I was, to be struck
+with the picturesque appearance which meets the eye just before
+arriving at this beautiful city; the numerous pretty
+meadows&mdash;the spires of churches rising here and there to
+remind the beholder that he is in a Christian
+country&mdash;richly cultivated pleasure grounds surrounding neat
+villas&mdash;the village inn and its busy scene&mdash;carriages,
+omnibuses, and vehicles of every description, travelling in all
+directions, giving to this fair city of the west a miniature
+resemblance to the mighty metropolis in a far more agreeable
+sense.</p>
+<p>But now the engine begins to slacken its pace; the shrill
+whistle sounds, and the heavy train, though seeming to grow tired
+yet reluctant to rest, arrives at the terminus.&nbsp; All now is
+hurry and bustle; friends, parents, <!-- page 206--><a
+name="page206"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 206</span>assistants,
+are on the platform, eager to welcome or render their aid, as the
+case may be, yet provokingly kept back by the railings, which are
+pertinaciously kept for a while closed.&nbsp; At last all are
+free; and Bath, that elegant city, with its beautiful surrounding
+hills, and dazzling white houses, and decorated architectural
+public buildings, now bursts upon the view; the smoke curling
+upwards towards the clear atmosphere, dispersing ere it reaches
+the azure sky.&nbsp; The mildness of the climate surprised me,
+and particularly the warm mineral springs.&nbsp; There is an idea
+prevalent in Syria, that England being an island, there are no
+springs, that all the streams are brackish, and that the
+inhabitants are supplied with drinking-water from the
+clouds.&nbsp; On my first arrival in this country, seeing wine so
+plentiful and water so scarce at meals, I was inclined to believe
+that the supposition was a true one.</p>
+<p>Arriving at Bath, I immediately proceeded to the house of my
+valued and excellent friend, Sir Claude Wade, whose services in
+India will deservedly hand his name down to future generations as
+a distinguished character in the annals of European
+history.&nbsp; The following day after my arrival was devoted to
+making a tour of the city, in the course of which I saw the Royal
+Crescent, one of the finest piles of architecture I ever beheld,
+commanding quite a panoramic view of the surrounding country; I
+also walked through the Victoria Park, and examined the column
+erected in commemoration of the Queen&rsquo;s visit to Bath in
+1839.&nbsp; The inhabitants express their regret that their
+sovereign has not since favoured their fine city with her beloved
+presence.&nbsp; The rides and promenades in and about the city
+are very pleasant and delightful, reminding one so much of the
+<i>agr&eacute;ments</i> of a foreign town, that I am <!-- page
+207--><a name="page207"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+207</span>surprised it should not be more generally visited by
+the English fashionables, instead of going abroad to spend their
+money.</p>
+<p>I found that the society here is on a very pleasant footing,
+and their genuine hospitality and kindness to me I shall remember
+with gratitude.&nbsp; Here, as well as elsewhere, there exists a
+great diversity of religious opinion.&nbsp; At one place I was
+asked whether I attended the High or Low Church, and imagining,
+at first, that they alluded to an upper or a lower part of the
+building, I replied that I preferred the body of the church, as I
+did not like mounting stairs.&nbsp; My answer afforded much
+amusement; but on discovering what was really intended by the
+question, I was too much occupied with thinking about the
+divisions amongst professing Christians to heed the smiles which
+I had caused.</p>
+<p>On Sunday I attended the Octagon Chapel, to hear a celebrated
+young preacher, and was handed by the pew-opener into a seat
+where there was a charming lady, who shewed me every attention,
+and even gave me her own book with the different parts of the
+service marked.&nbsp; I was most sensible of her civility, and
+thanked her for her kindness, which she politely but distantly
+acknowledged.&nbsp; The next day, I went with my friends to Mrs.
+F---&rsquo;s soir&eacute;e, in the Circus, where, to my surprise
+and pleasure, I again met this houri, when we soon got into
+conversation.&nbsp; She told me how astonished she was when she
+heard a &ldquo;Turk&rdquo; read and sing, etc.; she asked me many
+questions regarding my opinion of England and English customs,
+etc., and particularly what were my first impressions on hearing
+the vocal music of this country.&nbsp; I candidly said, that it
+seemed to me like the howlings of my own countrymen over the
+bodies of departed friends; I added, however, that <!-- page
+208--><a name="page208"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 208</span>in
+my case the old proverb &ldquo;use is second nature,&rdquo; had
+proved true, for now that I had become accustomed to it, the
+vocal as well as instrumental music of this country possessed
+great charms for me, especially since I have heard the enchanting
+voice of Miss S---, whom I met at Mrs. B---&rsquo;s.&nbsp; This
+has effected a total change in my opinions; and if I were now
+asked the same question, remembering these sweet sounds I allude
+to, I should compare hers, at least, to the song of the
+Bulbul.&nbsp; My fair questioner was highly amused at my
+description of &ldquo;first impressions&rdquo; on this subject,
+from which we diverged into other matters of conversation; and I
+finally left my kind entertainer&rsquo;s house with an impression
+of her hospitality, and of the fair community of Bath, more
+agreeable than were my first impressions of English music, and
+certainly not so likely to be changed.&nbsp; I desire also
+publicly to thank the inhabitants of Bath generally, as well as
+the municipal authorities of the city, for the practical kindness
+I experienced from them during my visit.</p>
+<p>As I am on the subject of Bath, I may as well mention my last
+visit to that gay and delightful city, in the course of which a
+grand ball was given by the bachelors to their friends.&nbsp; I
+was kindly invited to it by Mr. Nugent, whose zeal and activity
+in promoting the harmless gaieties of the place are the theme of
+praise with every one, and of whose polite attention to strangers
+I cannot speak too highly.&nbsp; Nothing that money and taste
+could effect was spared to make the ball one of the most
+brilliant and magnificent entertainments that I have witnessed in
+this country.&nbsp; The Rooms were celebrated, I hear, in former
+times as the scene where many a fair houri made her
+<i>d&eacute;but</i> in the fashionable world, and were decorated
+in a style of elegance which <!-- page 209--><a
+name="page209"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 209</span>reflected
+the greatest credit on the artists.&nbsp; I can only say, that
+whatever may have been their by-gone attractions, it is
+impossible that the display of bright eyes and graceful forms
+could ever have surpassed what I gazed upon that night.&nbsp; To
+attempt to describe this fairy scene would require the pen of a
+poet, that I might give adequate expression to my admiration of
+the beauty by which I was surrounded.&nbsp; I will quote,
+however, a passage from an Eastern author, which I think apropos
+to the occasion:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Their beauty is perfection, they are loveliness itself;
+their elegant shapes glance like javelins by moonlight; their
+tresses float down their backs like the tendrils of the grape;
+they are slayers and piercers with their arrows and their darts;
+archers and strikers, the enchantresses of the <i>minds and
+hearts</i> of men.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While at Bath I also had the pleasure of attending another
+splendid ball, given at the Guildhall by the Mayoress, Mrs.
+Allen, at which the <i>&eacute;lite</i> of society there were
+present.&nbsp; The amiable hostess and her lord received their
+guests with great kindness and affability, evincing a desire to
+please, which completely succeeded, for every one seemed to enjoy
+the dancing exceedingly, as well as the sumptuous supper.&nbsp;
+The Mayoress&rsquo; health was proposed in a suitable manner by
+the Marquis of Thomond, which was drunk with all the honours in
+sparkling champagne.&nbsp; During the evening, I was observing a
+Masonic symbol suspended over the insignia of the Mayor&rsquo;s
+office, which led a gentleman, who was standing by, to recognise
+me as a brother mason.&nbsp; He at once introduced me to several
+of the brethren, and a few days afterwards I was invited by
+&ldquo;the Lodge of Honour,&rdquo; at Bath, to meet the Mayor at
+dinner, where we had &ldquo;the feast of reason and the flow of
+soul?&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 210--><a name="page210"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+210</span>I shall always retain a lively recollection of the
+pleasure which they afforded me, and the kindness I
+experienced.&nbsp; Whilst walking out one day I encountered my
+friend, Dr. Thompson, whom I had known in Syria, and who hailed
+me in Arabic, in the words of an old Eastern proverb, viz.,
+<i>that though mountains never meet</i>, <i>the sons of Eve
+will</i>.&nbsp; Dr. Thompson, at my request, gave two lectures,
+one at Cheltenham and one at Bath, the notice of which I think
+worthy of being inserted, <a name="citation210"></a><a
+href="#footnote210" class="citation">[210]</a> and I now beg to
+thank him for the interest he takes in the affairs of my
+country.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 211--><a name="page211"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 211</span>VISIT TO CHELTENHAM.</h3>
+<p>From Bath I went to the above place, and during my stay I took
+up my quarters at the Plough Hotel, where I was most comfortable,
+and received every attention from the proprietor.</p>
+<p>I should be unmindful, and thankless indeed, were I to forget
+to express my grateful thanks to friends generally for the kind
+reception given me, and for the interest evinced on behalf of my
+beloved country, and <!-- page 212--><a name="page212"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 212</span>I shall ever retain a lively
+remembrance of the Rev. J. Brown, Incumbent of Trinity
+Church.&nbsp; Wherever he is known, the deepest respect and
+regard are evinced towards him and his family.&nbsp; Oh, would
+that poor Syria were blessed with a few such philanthropic men
+<!-- page 213--><a name="page213"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+213</span>with hearts and minds so capable of diffusing wisdom
+and knowledge wherever they go.</p>
+<p>I shall never forget the brief address delivered by this
+kind-hearted man, at a lecture given by Dr. Thompson, on behalf
+of female education in the East.&nbsp; In a few words he
+expressed all the wants of my country, which went home to my
+heart.&nbsp; I trust that the interest shewn by all on this
+exciting occasion may be the means of benefiting neglected Syria,
+and of promoting the interest of her benighted children, as
+regards educational institutions.&nbsp; I must also here record
+my sincere gratitude to the Rev. C. H. Bromby, M.A., the
+principal of the Normal Training College.&nbsp; How well, and how
+admirably this noble school is managed!&nbsp; How suitable it
+would be to the children of Syria!</p>
+<p>The few sentences I addressed to the meeting at Cheltenham,
+were expressive of my hope that they would enable me to send over
+for a few young Syrians of both sexes, to participate in the
+benefits of their college; and that it was my firm conviction the
+period was not far off when this institution would embrace a more
+extensive field of usefulness, and become the <!-- page 214--><a
+name="page214"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 214</span>means of
+introducing Gospel truth and its accompanying blessings to my
+much loved Lebanon.&nbsp; Then shall the Cedar once again and for
+ever flourish in its native soil, spreading its luxuriant
+branches to shield the Thistle from all rude assaults&mdash;which
+may then grope even in its own humble way to thrive, and
+flourish, and raise its crowned head.</p>
+<p>Visitors to Cheltenham cannot but feel deeply indebted to Lord
+Northwick, for his liberality in admitting them to his
+interesting and unique collection of paintings.&nbsp; I was much
+gratified at the privilege thus afforded me; and it is due to his
+Lordship to say that the arrangement of the valuable paintings is
+exceedingly good.&nbsp; Both myself and a friend, who accompanied
+me, were much surprised on our entrance at the extent and
+magnificence of the apartments, especially the modern room called
+the <i>Pantheon</i>; we much admired the painting of the Earl of
+Surrey, by Titian, and were struck with its Oriental caste of
+features and complexion, which called to memory some one with
+whom we were mutually acquainted in Syria.&nbsp; Our attention
+was next directed to the portrait of Mahomet II., and if I may
+judge from the engravings of this Sultan, which I have seen in
+the houses of some of the nobility of Turkey (before the strict
+prohibition of the Koran on this head), this picture is an
+admirable likeness of him.&nbsp; We are told that it was
+expressly painted by the artist in deference to the wishes of the
+Venetians, who sent Bellini to Constantinople in the year 1458
+for this purpose.</p>
+<p>The Flight into Egypt is another fine specimen of painting,
+and though of modern date delineates Oriental travelling; the
+face of the Virgin is exquisitely beautiful, and has a heavenly
+expression; this figure forcibly <!-- page 215--><a
+name="page215"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 215</span>brought
+before me the Countess of K---, whom I had met on the day
+preceding my visit to this place.&nbsp; I would gladly have spent
+days instead of hours in this delightful residence, ornamented
+with such valuable and beautiful specimens of the fine arts;
+those only who come from distant lands, can fully appreciate the
+luxuries of all kinds which meet the eye of the spectator when in
+Western Europe, and especially in Great Britain.&nbsp; The
+magnificence which I encounter on all sides makes a sadness steal
+over me; and I cannot but lament for the barrenness of my native
+land, which once teemed with works, both of art and
+science.&nbsp; &ldquo;How are the mighty fallen!&rdquo;&nbsp; But
+hope shall shine in the Eastern skies, and the bright morning
+star arise again.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 216--><a name="page216"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 216</span>CHAPTER XIII.<br />
+IMPRESSIONS OF ENGLAND.</h2>
+<p>Many of my fair friends have been exceedingly anxious for me
+to give them my first impressions of England.&nbsp; After so long
+a residence in the country, I must confess my habits have become
+completely Anglicised; I have, however, the pleasure of offering
+them a translation of portions of some letters written to a
+friend at Constantinople during my first visit to
+England:&mdash;</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p>&ldquo;You asked me, before leaving Stamboul, to convey to you
+as well as I could by letter my first impressions of England and
+the English.&nbsp; Your Excellency can hardly conceive the
+difficulty of the task which you have allotted me.&nbsp; However
+arduous the undertaking may be, I shall endeavour, to the best of
+my poor abilities, to satisfy your curiosity, and fulfil my rash
+promise.&nbsp; In our own dear village, and indeed in the most
+active and bustling towns of Syria, the silence and monotony of
+the houses are only occasionally broken in upon by the busy hum
+of human voices&mdash;the clattering hoofs of horses and
+mules&mdash;the braying of donkeys, and the merry tinkling bell
+of the caravan.&nbsp; The sweet song of the bulbul and other
+summer birds, with the buzzing of the honey-bee, are the familiar
+sounds to which we are <!-- page 217--><a
+name="page217"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 217</span>from our
+infancy accustomed.&nbsp; Stately forest trees&mdash;mountains
+and hills&mdash;valleys and dales&mdash;citron groves and
+orchards&mdash;the bright plumage of birds and the painted wings
+of butterflies are the every-day pictures, furnished by the hand
+of nature, and on which alone our eyes have been content to
+dwell.&nbsp; The sound of chariot wheels has through centuries
+been hushed and sunk into oblivion, together with the
+fiery-spirited warriors that guided them.&nbsp; Such is the quiet
+state of affairs in our own loved country of Syria.&nbsp; Now,
+therefore, imagine yourself blindfolded and transported as though
+by magic into the very centre of the city of London.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Previously, however, a vast extent of ocean has to be
+traversed, which is accomplished in an incredibly short space of
+time, during which period much suffering from sea-sickness is to
+be expected, and many are compelled to keep to their cabins,
+creeping only upon deck occasionally to cheer the heart with a
+distant glimpse of land, as Malta and Gibraltar have appeared to
+view, and as speedily vanished from sight, leaving, like the
+false mirage, no trace behind.&nbsp; At last the shores of
+<i>Ingleterra</i> are discerned.&nbsp; The announcement is heard
+with indescribable delight, for the term of purgatory is about to
+expire.&nbsp; Well wrapped in a <i>burnoos</i>, for, although
+midsummer, the air is keen, you scramble upon deck, and being
+comfortably seated, take a first survey of the famed shores of
+Britain.&nbsp; As far as the eye can stretch, the whole land
+appears to be what is really the case, in a high state of
+cultivation.&nbsp; Houses and windmills innumerable meet the
+view, and a vast number of smoking minarets, which on inquiry
+prove to be the chimneys of countless factories.&nbsp; But you
+are not left long to consider these matters&mdash;what <!-- page
+218--><a name="page218"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 218</span>is
+occurring in the more immediate vicinity of the steamer rivets
+your attention.&nbsp; Thousands of vessels of all sizes, shapes,
+and nations, are moving up and down the channel.&nbsp; Gigantic
+men-of-war steamers&mdash;still larger mail-packets,
+ships-of-the-line, frigates, sloops, gun-brigs, Indiamen,
+schooners, barks, boats, all puffing and sailing, pitching and
+rolling, and getting entangled with one another in the most
+alarming manner.&nbsp; Frenchmen shouting and screaming to
+fishing-boats&mdash;Italians stamping at pilots&mdash;Greeks
+throwing their red caps overboard, pulling their hair in despair
+at not being able to make themselves understood.&nbsp; In short,
+the confusion of this Babel of tongues is so great that you stand
+and look on stupified and bewildered with amazement, and so
+overcome with alarm and the novelty of the thing, that you have
+ceased to watch the ship&rsquo;s progress till the anchor is
+down, and you find yourself in the custom-house surrounded by
+boxes and inquisitive people, whilst thunder seems to be rolling
+along the streets outside.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A kind friend passes your luggage through the
+custom-house and hurries you into a cab, so imbecile and helpless
+have you become.&nbsp; If you had eyes all around your head, they
+would not suffice to look at the people and the sights in the
+streets.&nbsp; Thousands of people are pushing and running, and
+shouting and walking, in every direction; hundreds of carriages,
+three and four abreast, blocking up every thoroughfare.&nbsp; Now
+come waggons and carts of every description, omnibuses
+innumerable, and cabs; all these being the <i>arabaz</i>, or
+wheeled conveyances, varying in size, shape and colour, the
+number of wheels on which they move, and the number of horses by
+which they are drawn; some conveying mountains of bale goods,
+others laden with <!-- page 219--><a name="page219"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 219</span>beer-barrels, whilst some are
+exclusively for the use of passengers.&nbsp; The noise created by
+these numerous vehicles jolting over the hard roads is greater
+than the roar of the Sultan&rsquo;s artillery.&nbsp; What are all
+these people come out to see;&mdash;is your first natural
+inquiry.&nbsp; Is there a fire, or has there been an earthquake,
+or are all the suburban villages and towns pouring in their
+multitudes to witness some grand spectacle?&nbsp; You are
+inclined to doubt your friend when he tells you that this is an
+every-day occurrence in London; but experience proves him to be
+correct.&nbsp; <i>Wallah yar effendem</i>.&nbsp; If Stamboul were
+in flames, and all the Sultan&rsquo;s harem burning, there could
+not be a greater concourse of people than may every day be
+encountered, between the hours of three and five, in one single
+street of London, and all the other hundred streets are almost
+equally well filled.&nbsp; Men, women, and children, all busy,
+all intent on some errand or occupation.&nbsp; Perhaps few, if
+any, of the vast crowd you encounter have come out simply for air
+and exercise.&nbsp; The reason for all this is, that London is a
+very dear city, talent plentiful, occupation scarce, so that
+every one is obliged to depend upon his own individual active
+exertions to enable him to procure even a crumb of bread.&nbsp;
+<i>Inshallah B&#363;kera</i> (to-morrow, please God) is a phrase
+wholly disregarded in England, and not to be found in an
+Englishman&rsquo;s vocabulary.&nbsp; If you were to put off till
+to-morrow what might be done to-day, you would find yourself a
+beggar.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The English run a race with time; and though they
+cannot catch and overtake him, they keep close upon his
+heels.&nbsp; An old merchant dies at eighty, who, from the age of
+eleven or twelve, has been hard at work six days in every week
+from ten in the morning till four in <!-- page 220--><a
+name="page220"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 220</span>the
+evening, amassing wealth, leaving riches, a good name, and a vast
+inheritance behind him.&nbsp; That man has made more use of his
+time than five hundred of the most active of our countrymen; and
+there are a thousand instances of such as these to be met with in
+the city.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But whilst we have been thinking about this, the cab
+stops opposite to a splendid <i>seraiyah</i>, a veritable
+palace.&nbsp; You image that this must be the Queen&rsquo;s
+residence, and begin to expostulate with your friend for ushering
+you into the presence of royalty before you have had time to pay
+some attention to your toilet; he laughs at your ignorance.&nbsp;
+Two gentlemen, handsomely dressed and without hats, rush into the
+street and officiously carry in your luggage.&nbsp; You are quite
+shocked to see the nobility thus debased, and struggle with them
+to relieve them of their burden.&nbsp; The friend again
+interferes, and you find to your amazement, that the palace is
+nothing more than a large <i>khan</i> for the accommodation of
+wealthy travellers, and that the two gentlemanly-looking men are
+<i>khud&acirc;meen</i>, and that there are at least a dozen more,
+all in the same capacity, all as well dressed and as
+good-looking.&nbsp; You are then ushered into a room splendidly
+furnished; mirrors and chandeliers, tables and chairs, pictures
+and divans, all in profusion, and the commonest article in the
+room worth at least one thousand piastres.&nbsp; Your friend
+touches a spring, a bell rings in the distance, the door opens,
+and a <i>houri</i> enters.&nbsp; This must be the lady of the
+palace; but she is young and tender as a dove, and blushes like
+the rose of Damascus in acknowledging your <i>salams</i>.&nbsp;
+Alas! even this beautiful creature is one of the
+<i>khud&acirc;meen</i>, and you sigh to hear your friend order
+her to bring up the scuttle of coals, whose black dust cannot but
+soil her snowy <!-- page 221--><a name="page221"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 221</span>and tapering fingers.&nbsp; It takes
+you a good week to settle down into anything like peace and
+comfort, or to get accustomed to the ways of the place and the
+hours for eating and sleeping.&nbsp; It takes you a month to
+reconcile yourself to the perpetual roaring and din in the
+streets, occasioned by the countless vehicles passing and
+repassing in the streets.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At last, however, you feel tired of being shut up
+alone, and ordering a carriage, step into it, and bid the driver
+take you to one of the fashionable drives.&nbsp; You go on at a
+rapid pace for a few hundred yards, and then there is a dead
+halt; vexed at this, you stand up in the carriage to endeavour to
+discover the cause, and then a sight meets the view quite
+sufficient to paralyse a stranger.&nbsp; In front, as far as the
+sight can reach, and behind, as far as the eye can see, as well
+as on either side of you, is one dense forest of human beings,
+horses, donkeys, carts, carriages, waggons, chimney-sweeps.&nbsp;
+Officers, lords and ladies, policemen and rabble.&nbsp; You move
+slowly along as though you were in a funeral procession, until a
+favourable opportunity presents itself for the coachman to
+display his skill, and then he dashes at full speed through
+carriages, and carts, so close together that none but his
+experienced eye could ever have imagined it possible to squeeze
+one&rsquo;s way through uninjured.&nbsp; Expecting every instant
+to be crushed to death, you throw yourself back in the carriage,
+and shut your eyes on what was too fearful to look upon.&nbsp;
+By-and-by the easier motion of the carriage re-assures
+you&mdash;you look up, you have been disentangled from the dense
+crowd, and are driving along in comparative solitude through
+street after street of magnificent palaces.&nbsp; By-and-by, you
+pass through <!-- page 222--><a name="page222"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 222</span>a square, and the verdure of a few
+trees comes like a refreshing shower to the seared up heart, and
+recalls to mind the lovely home of our ancestors in
+Lebanon.&nbsp; After awhile, we emerge from the turmoil and
+smoke, and dust of the city; and lo! before you, a magnificent
+garden&mdash;such a one as the Pacha of Damascus would be proud
+of.&nbsp; Real, fine, stately trees, and plenty of
+grass&mdash;plots of flowers&mdash;and imitation rivers and
+lakes, covered too with wild ducks, and geese, and numberless
+other water fowl, now become so domesticated, however, that you
+see them running out of the water at the approach of little
+children who carry baskets full of crumbs to feed them with.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here, in roads railed off, the fashionable world drive
+and ride about for a few hours every evening in the season.&nbsp;
+A carriage passes with two <i>houris</i> in it, whose faces leave
+an impression on your heart, which latter is as susceptible as
+wax.&nbsp; Another carriage, and two still more beautiful&mdash;a
+few minutes afterwards three pass at the same moment, with such
+eyes that the glances from them emit brilliant sparks of love;
+but there is no end to the <i>houris</i> and no end to the
+heart-aches, so we bid the driver speed home again, and close our
+eyes, firmly determined not to be exposed to any fresh onslaught
+from these <i>houris</i>&mdash;these daughters of the finest
+people in the world.&nbsp; Arrived at home, dinner is served in
+magnificent style.&nbsp; The silver dishes, and the knives and
+forks&mdash;the spoons, etc., would alone suffice to purchase a
+property in Lebanon that would yield you or me a comfortable
+revenue for life; and as the thought strikes me, I sicken at the
+waste and splendour whilst millions are starving in the world;
+and though the dishes are excellent and rare, and well <!-- page
+223--><a name="page223"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+223</span>chosen, I would willingly resign them all for one good
+Syrian <i>pillaf</i>, and the pleasure of a <i>chibuk</i>, and a
+few minutes&rsquo; chat with your Excellency.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing is more difficult than for a stranger to form
+acquaintances in London, unless he is furnished with good letters
+of introduction, or holds an official position.&nbsp; In the
+latter case, his rank at once entitles him to the
+<i>entr&eacute;e</i> of a certain circle of society.&nbsp; Being
+the guest of a nobleman or some notable man, is a passport into
+the society of his list of acquaintances; and once having been
+introduced, your number of friends is rapidly augmented.&nbsp;
+Thus, supposing I dine at Mr. P---&rsquo;s to-day, there, amongst
+others, I meet Mr. W---.&nbsp; This gentleman invites me to his
+house, and there I find an entirely new set, who, in their turn,
+again introduce me to their friends and acquaintances.&nbsp;
+English ladies are the stars of English society.&nbsp; The
+married and elder ladies I may term the planets; their destinies
+are fixed, and they are placed in one particular position for
+life; but true to this theory, like planets, they emit a steady
+light; their language is refined, their manners fascinating,
+their bearing commanding respect, their conversation agreeable
+and instructive, and their wit brilliant and full of point.&nbsp;
+The young ladies are the satellites that revolve round these
+planets, more brilliant in the pride of youth and beauty, more
+active, and much gayer; their hearts would hardly counterbalance
+a feather.&nbsp; Poor doves! affliction and the trials of life
+have as yet no stamp on the soft waxwork texture of their
+sensitive affections; they talk and laugh, and ride and dance
+with young men without the least restraint, and the voice of
+calumny is never heard.&nbsp; How different from our poor,
+ignorant countrymen!&nbsp; What would all the old men and women
+of Lebanon <!-- page 224--><a name="page224"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 224</span>say, if their daughters and
+granddaughters were seen taking long solitary rides and walks
+with the young men?&nbsp; With us, in the present uncivilized
+state of affairs, such liberties would be highly improper; but it
+is vastly different in England and Europe, where men and women
+are, from early childhood, educated with the strictest attention
+to morality as well as accomplishments.&nbsp; Girls of fifteen
+have sufficient confidence in their own strength of mind, and in
+the integrity and high honour of those with whom they associate,
+ever to feel embarrassed in the society of young men, though
+these young men be comparative strangers; they know themselves to
+be ladies, and that their associates are gentlemen; and in
+England these two words comprise everything that is virtuous and
+honourable.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The smallest deviation from the rigid path of religious
+virtue or worldly honour is visited with the severest penalty,
+and the delinquent is irrevocably lost, and for ever excluded
+from the pale of society.&nbsp; With such a punishment hanging
+over their heads, apart from the natural instinct to virtue, a
+<i>faux-pas</i> is rare indeed amongst the highest classes of
+society.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ladies are the leading features; many of them are
+renowned for great literary acquirements; most are accomplished;
+and the highest honours are inwardly awarded them by the opposite
+sex.&nbsp; If a lady enters a room, all the gentlemen rise from
+their seats, nor will they be seated again until she has chosen
+one for herself.&nbsp; If a lady drops a handkerchief, the men
+all rush to pick it up, so as to save her the trouble of
+stooping; when she speaks, all are attentive; and when she sings
+and plays, the whole company are hushed into such profound
+silence, that you might hear a pin drop.</p>
+<p><!-- page 225--><a name="page225"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+225</span>&ldquo;When dinner, supper, or whatever the repast may
+be, is announced, the master of the house leads out the lady
+highest in rank present, the others being handed out by
+respective gentlemen; the lady of the house remaining till the
+last, when she is conducted to the refreshment-room by the
+gentleman of the highest rank present.&nbsp; In England men and
+women usually wear no covering on the head whilst in-doors, with
+the exception, however, of <i>matrons</i>, who wear caps made of
+some elegant lace material, and <i>widows</i> who, according to
+custom, put on <i>weeds</i> for a certain period after the
+husband&rsquo;s decease.&nbsp; <i>Weeds</i> means a peculiar cap,
+composed of white muslin, in shape both ugly and
+unbecoming.&nbsp; Notwithstanding this, my friend Mrs. ---, who
+is a widow ever looks charming and beautiful.&nbsp; But to return
+to the dinner; when it is finished, the ladies at a given sign
+from the mistress of the house, rise and leave the table.&nbsp;
+The gentlemen remain seated for about half-an-hour longer, during
+which interval they sip their wine, eat fruit, and
+converse.&nbsp; In England they offer wine and meat in abundance,
+but <i>water</i> and <i>bread</i> is but scantily supplied.&nbsp;
+No smoking is allowed within doors, nor is it genteel to smoke in
+the streets&mdash;or even to smell of smoke when you enter the
+society of ladies; in fact they smell it as quickly as the
+gazelle does the hunter.&nbsp; Gentlemen who are fond of tobacco,
+have regular smoking rooms, or go to their clubs to indulge in a
+cigar; but the majority eschew smoking altogether.&nbsp; Our
+nation labours under a very false impression in supposing that
+the English are a people with very few ideas of religion; and in
+imagining that because they do not observe fasts and festivals,
+and cross themselves, they are almost worse than infidels.&nbsp;
+In no country is the Sabbath more strictly or rigorously regarded
+than <!-- page 226--><a name="page226"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 226</span>in England.&nbsp; Not only are the
+shops and places of public entertainment closed on that holy day,
+but in some families in England even cooking is not
+allowed.&nbsp; The churches and chapels are literally crowded
+with well-dressed men and women twice a day.&nbsp; And there are
+many families that attend Divine service once or twice a
+week.&nbsp; Besides this, they support many splendid charitable
+institutions, hospitals for the sick and maimed, poor-houses for
+the paupers, foundlings for the unfortunate, and in fact, have
+institutions for the relief of every description of disease and
+infirmity to which human nature is subject.&nbsp; Nor must I omit
+to mention the public schools, and colleges for children of both
+sexes, where thousands are clothed, housed, fed and educated at
+the public expense, and where they will receive instruction that
+will fit them for any sphere; besides these, there are also
+innumerable private charities, and Her Majesty the Queen herself,
+takes the lead in distributing large bounties annually in the
+cold winter time&mdash;fuel, clothing, blankets, and many other
+requisites to the friendless and needy.&nbsp; Nor is it only for
+the temporal welfare of others that they exert themselves.&nbsp;
+Missionary establishments are supported by voluntary
+contributions, and the annual revenue or income of these
+institutions, consisting of millions of piastres, is expended in
+supporting missionaries and schools at home and abroad.&nbsp;
+Ladies and gentlemen who die worth immense fortunes, leaving no
+heirs to inherit, bequeath the bulk of their fortunes towards the
+furtherance of charitable objects.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are merchants in London, and in some of the other
+principal towns in Great Britain, who are in possession of
+princely fortunes, and they always go on augmenting their wealth
+by any feasible scheme for the <!-- page 227--><a
+name="page227"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 227</span>improvement
+of commerce&mdash;such as the laying on of a new line of
+steamers, or the construction of railroads.&nbsp; Schemes that
+require millions of money as a first outlay, and before any
+profits can be hoped to be realised, are discussed with the
+utmost <i>sang-froid</i> by the merchants <i>on Change</i>, that
+is, at a large elegant building, set aside and built expressly
+for merchants to congregate and transact business.&nbsp; If the
+scheme is approved of to-day by a number of leading merchants,
+and the sum requisite be five millions sterling, by this day
+fortnight, at latest, the money is contributed and safely lodged
+in the banker&rsquo;s hands.&nbsp; Such, <i>Mashallah</i>! is the
+expeditious method adopted by English merchants, the richest
+commoners of the richest kingdom in the world.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The fashionable world of London has fashionable hours
+for everything.&nbsp; Ladies sometimes do not get up before
+mid-day, and then usually breakfast in their private apartments,
+and not unfrequently in bed.&nbsp; The afternoon is the
+fashionable time for receiving visits; they dine when, in our
+country, people are thinking of going to bed; and this is not
+all, for, by the time that the son of Lebanon&rsquo;s first
+refreshing siesta may be said to be over, these people are
+thinking about amusing themselves for the night.&nbsp; At about
+ten o&rsquo;clock, fashionable evening parties commence.&nbsp;
+Some people are invited to four or five of these in the same
+evening, and they may perhaps go to all, remaining but a few
+minutes at each.&nbsp; Ladies and gentlemen dance till past
+midnight.&nbsp; Bands of delightful music are playing; the rooms
+are arranged like fairy land; the girls are so beautiful, and
+dressed so elegantly, that the whole scene is like a realisation
+of the fabulous tales of the Arabian Nights.&nbsp; Then there is
+also the opera, where professional singers and dancers are
+employed; and the magnificence with <!-- page 228--><a
+name="page228"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 228</span>which the
+stage is decorated, the lights, the music, the dancing&mdash;so
+airy that the girls barely touch the ground with their
+toes.&nbsp; All is as a scene of magical enchantment, till the
+curtain drops amidst thunders of applause, and you are led out by
+your friends in a state of mental aberration.&nbsp; The next
+morning you awake, and look over your last night&rsquo;s
+expenditure, and you find a few such items as the
+following:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td><p>&nbsp;</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: center">&pound;</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: center">s.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: center">d.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>&nbsp;</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: center">Piastres.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Grapes (ten paras&rsquo; worth in Syria)</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">0</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">10</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">0</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: center">=</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">55</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Opera-ticket</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">1</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">1</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">0</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: center">=</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">110</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Supper, Cab-hire, etc.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">1</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">11</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">6</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: center">=</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">165</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>&nbsp;</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>&nbsp;</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>&nbsp;</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>&nbsp;</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>&nbsp;</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">---</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>&nbsp;</p>
+</td>
+<td colspan="4"><p>Total</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">330</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Three hundred and thirty piastres for a few
+hours&rsquo; entertainment!&nbsp; Such is but a trifling instance
+of the daily expenditure accruing in London, this great mart
+which offers such numberless enticements to spend money; but, on
+the other hand, few, if any, places in the world present greater
+opportunities for amassing wealth.&nbsp; The very atmosphere of
+this great city seems to infect its inhabitants with an
+insatiable desire of becoming rich; such is, indeed, my own case,
+and it will be my constant endeavour to gain such a fortune as
+shall entitle me to be the enviable possessor of an English home,
+and become a domesticated man, and at the same time enable me to
+forward the interests of my own dear country, by contributing to
+the construction of hospitals, schools, etc., where my brethren
+and &lsquo;the stranger that sojourneth in the land&rsquo; may
+receive relief.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Men in this country seldom think of marrying before
+they are thirty or forty years old; girls never before they are
+sixteen; but I must mention one thing which <!-- page 229--><a
+name="page229"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 229</span>will rather
+surprise and amuse your Excellency.&nbsp; Children, especially
+daughters, are excluded from society until they are thoroughly
+educated, and considered by their parents fit to make their
+<i>d&eacute;but</i>.&nbsp; You may visit and dine continually at
+a house, without being aware that there are any children under
+the same roof.&nbsp; When young, they are kept almost exclusively
+in the nursery, under charge of a governess and
+nursery-maids.&nbsp; When old enough to go to school, they are
+sent off to these establishments, rarely coming home, except in
+cases of sickness or for the holidays, and even then they are
+seldom permitted to dine at the same table, or keep the same
+hours as their parents when there is company.&nbsp; Fancy a
+Syrian mother being separated from her children for months, and
+not seeing them, though easily within reach; knowing that her
+sons, if disobedient or naughty, have no mercy to expect from the
+schoolmaster, no sparing of the rod, or of heavy tasks either;
+and that their daughters may be going supperless to bed, for some
+trivial offence against the schoolmistress, whilst she, the
+mother, is supping sumptuously.&nbsp; If you tell them that this
+seems unnatural and cruel, their reply is, that they went through
+it themselves; but you will barely credit what I write, when I
+tell you, that there are many instances where mothers of young
+families, seldom see or inquire after their offspring more than
+once a day, sometimes not so often; and even sometimes they go
+out of town for a week or ten days, leaving these troublesome
+incumbrances to the tender mercies of a nursery-maid.&nbsp; What
+would our mothers have said, if any one had suggested to them,
+that it would be best to place us under the care of
+servant-maids?&nbsp; Would they ever have tasted food before they
+knew that we were served, or rested till <!-- page 230--><a
+name="page230"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 230</span>they had
+wrenched the cane from the hand of the schoolmaster, torn his
+beard, and carried us away home?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;However great the Western Europeans are, they cannot,
+in general, be said to possess that attachment and love which
+binds and links most oriental families together.&nbsp; I must
+here mention that beards are at a sad discount in England;
+moustaches hooted at, or only used by military men.&nbsp; Alas!
+for the reverence paid to the long beards of Syria.&nbsp; The
+possessors of such in this country would be set down as Jews;
+they are considered inconvenient, unsightly, and not reckoned as
+contributing to cleanliness.&nbsp; I knew a Frank in Syria, a
+hakeem, whose flowing beard was the admiration of all beholders;
+his patients used to seize it and make him swear by it, that he
+would do his best to cure them; and as for the damsels, happy was
+she that could make him vow fidelity to her, on the strength of
+his beard.&nbsp; Well, your Excellency, I met this hakeem in the
+streets of London.&nbsp; I knew him not; but he recognised me and
+spoke to me.&nbsp; The cruel razor had been at work, and his face
+was as smooth and beardless as the newborn babe.&nbsp; I asked
+him what had caused him to commit such an act of insanity, and he
+told me that, when he first landed, the children in the streets
+hooted, pelted him, and cried out &lsquo;Halloo Moshes!&rsquo;
+and so, for quietness&rsquo; sake, he was obliged to submit his
+beautiful beard to the hands of a ruthless barber.&nbsp; In
+England no one wears beards.&nbsp; Bishops are beardless; Cadis
+are beardless; lawyers, hakeems, even the
+solicitors&mdash;wonderful indeed! but what is still more
+wonderful and absurd is, that these great men wear long curly
+wigs, which vastly resemble the sheepskins worn by our buffoons
+and tale-tellers.</p>
+<p><!-- page 231--><a name="page231"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+231</span>&ldquo;Young ladies in this country are devotedly
+attached to handsome uniforms; and fine uniforms are devotedly
+attached to handsome fortunes as well as faces.&nbsp; Sometimes
+young officers elope with heiresses worth millions of money,
+whereas the officer, perhaps, has nothing but a gay uniform and a
+good-looking face and figure to shew: but in all cases, young
+ladies are very fond of red and blue coats; and an officer in the
+guards is irresistible.&nbsp; Even the beadle, that is, the
+<i>Indilaft</i>, is an object of admiration to the lower classes,
+as he struts about in his gold-laced cocked-hat and uniform.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It may of a truth be said of the English, that they
+strive with each other in their efforts to oblige a stranger, and
+heap civilities and attentions upon him.&nbsp; With them it is a
+matter of earnest regret that any foreign friend should find
+cause of complaint against any of their countrymen.&nbsp; One
+great advantage that we Syrians possess, is the very fact of
+coming from the Holy Land.&nbsp; Say to an Englishman, of
+whatever grade, &lsquo;I am a Syrian,&rsquo; and he will
+immediately know how to appreciate your worth, and the excellence
+of your country; he will talk to you of Hebron and many other
+towns with unabating pleasure; and the reason is, that, from his
+infancy upwards, with him Syria has been a familiar household
+word; as a lisping infant, he has read at his mother&rsquo;s knee
+of King Solomon and the cedars of Lebanon.&nbsp; At school, his
+prize-essays have been about Jerusalem; and if, mayhap, he is a
+poor man, unable to write or read, still, from the pulpit, he has
+long been accustomed to hear of the great patriarch, the
+prophets, and the kings, of Israel, the temple of Solomon, and
+other marvellous facts so intimately linked with his creed; the
+scene of all which was Syria and the Holy Land.&nbsp; Though most
+true that it <!-- page 232--><a name="page232"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 232</span>is not an easy matter to cultivate
+the acquaintance of an Englishman, still, when you do once become
+acquainted with him, and are well known to him, then you are his
+friend in the true acceptance of that term, and you continue his
+friend for life, whether you remain in England or go abroad (I
+have found this by experience).&nbsp; Moreover he takes a pride
+in introducing you to his own circle of acquaintances, and
+endeavours, in concert with them, to promote your best interests
+and welfare; he abides by you as your friend during your absence,
+and if anything should reach his ears derogatory to your
+character, his best energies are brought into play; he sifts the
+matter thoroughly, hushes the voice of calumny, or exposes the
+infamy of the calumniator; and if perchance you are guilty in his
+opinion of any breach of etiquette or a misdemeanour, he weighs
+the matter maturely in his own mind, and is as ready to correct
+and reprimand, as he is to overlook the offence, and set it down
+to the score of your being a stranger, and necessarily
+uninitiated in the strict etiquette of the land.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The English do a good action solely from a wish to do
+good, and from no other earthly inducement.&nbsp; I am now
+speaking of Englishmen as individuals, for, when acting in
+numbers, I must confess I do not hold so high an opinion of
+them.&nbsp; This is proved by the many companies continually
+advertised and puffed up before the public, but which are nothing
+more or less than a hoax to catch the unwary, invented by
+unprincipled men, of which I myself have more than once been the
+dupe.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 233--><a name="page233"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 233</span>CHAPTER XIV.<br />
+LIFE, MANNERS, AND CUSTOMS OF SYRIA.</h2>
+<p>An addition to the family of a Syrian man is always an event
+looked forward to with the greatest anxiety, more especially in
+cases of a first child.&nbsp; The mother secretly prays and hopes
+that it may be a son; so does the father, but he seldom alludes
+to the subject.&nbsp; When the propitious event takes place, no
+hakeem, except of late in extreme cases, since the introduction
+of European medical men, is ever called in.&nbsp; Such a thing
+would be considered highly indecorous and improper.&nbsp;
+Dy&acirc;hs (midwives) <a name="citation233"></a><a
+href="#footnote233" class="citation">[233]</a> are plentiful in
+Syria, and these females are ready at a moment&rsquo;s
+notice.&nbsp; If the result be a son, then the whole household is
+overjoyed, and the husband is besieged by friends and
+acquaintances, all anxious to outvie with each other in wishing
+him joy, and in hoping that the newly-born son may live to prove
+his comfort and support in old age.&nbsp; If, however, a daughter
+be born to the family, it is looked upon rather in the light of a
+misfortune than otherwise.&nbsp; The husband looks as if he were
+quite ashamed of himself, the subject is seldom if ever broached,
+and if any of his intimate friends allude to the matter, they do
+it with the view of consoling the father.&nbsp; The usual form of
+expression in such cases is, <!-- page 234--><a
+name="page234"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 234</span>&ldquo;She
+that has brought a daughter will bear a son,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Inshallah! if it be the will of God.&rdquo;&nbsp; Soon
+after birth the child is wrapped in swaddling clothes, and is at
+once nourished by its own mother.&nbsp; Wet nurses are almost
+unknown, and are only employed in cases of death or great
+debility.&nbsp; The care of attending upon the mother devolves
+upon the female relatives; but the women in my country are
+usually so strong and robust that little attention is
+required.&nbsp; No muffling of knockers&mdash;no strewing of
+straw in the streets&mdash;no doctor anxiously expected&mdash;no
+dosing of both parent and child.&nbsp; Amongst the peasants and
+lower classes in particular, the women are so hardy that it is by
+no means an uncommon event for a mother, four or five hours after
+her accouchement, to be seen propped up with cushions, busily
+engaged in mending or making baby-linen.&nbsp; On the fourth day
+after her confinement, the <i>Kanum</i> or lady is expected to
+receive the visits of her acquaintances and friends, both male
+and female; and for this occasion a brand new coverlet usually
+handsomely worked in silk, has been prepared.&nbsp; Propped up by
+pillows and covered with <i>farooa</i>, she receives lying-in
+state visits.&nbsp; Her visitors do not remain long, but during
+the whole of the time they are complimenting her on the fortunate
+event; and the new-born is paraded round, and gazed at, and
+admired; but no one dares to praise him without commencing with
+&ldquo;Mashallah!&rdquo; &ldquo;God be praised for
+it!&rdquo;&nbsp; This custom of visiting the mother proves
+clearly that the usages which existed in the time of our blessed
+Saviour, when the wise men from the East came to look upon the
+newborn babe, and brought with them offerings, continues up to
+the present day, each friend or acquaintance bringing or sending
+his or her offerings.</p>
+<p>The first thing to be done after the birth of the child <!--
+page 235--><a name="page235"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+235</span>is to fix upon a name.&nbsp; This name, if it be the
+firstborn son, is usually the name of the child&rsquo;s paternal
+grandfather, or else, if the birth takes place on the anniversary
+of any great saint&rsquo;s day, it is called after him; as for
+instance, Paul, or John, or Peter, and that saint becomes his
+patron through life; this necessary preliminary being arranged,
+the child is baptised within a week of its birth for fear it
+should sicken or die.&nbsp; The priests usually come to the
+house, sometimes the child is taken to the church.&nbsp; The
+godfathers and godmothers, two of each, and all the relatives
+assemble, a large basin of water (made tepid in cold weather), is
+placed upon a table and duly consecrated by the priests; the
+mother undresses the infant, and hands it naked, as it was born,
+to the hands of the officiating priest, and this minister,
+repeating prayers over it, in which he is assisted by others,
+immerses the whole body of the infant into the water three
+successive times in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and
+of the Holy Ghost.&nbsp; Consecrated oil is then used, and the
+mark of the cross made with it on the forehead and chest of the
+infant.&nbsp; This also is done three times, the sponsors
+standing by and answering for the child.&nbsp; It is then wiped
+dry and carefully swaddled up again, and in a few minutes the
+ceremony terminates with the priest&rsquo;s blessing.</p>
+<p>The rest of the day is usually devoted to pleasure, and the
+parents now feel more at their ease, as the child has been
+admitted within the pale of the Church, and in case of any
+untoward event, would be entitled to Christian burial.&nbsp; The
+father, if this be a first son, drops the name by which he was
+formerly known; thus, supposing the name to have been Yusuf or
+Michali, and his friends used to call him Sowajar Michali (the
+father of Joseph), now that his son has <!-- page 236--><a
+name="page236"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 236</span>been
+christened by the name of Yacob, for instance, they call him Aboo
+Yacob, or the father of Yacob&mdash;a proud title for a Syrian;
+for not to have children is looked upon as the greatest
+misfortune and disgrace that can happen to a married couple;
+whereas, however poor the family, a multitude of children
+(especially if they be males) is considered a blessing.&nbsp; The
+greatest pride of an old man in Syria is to sit at the doorway of
+his house, or at the city gate, of an evening, pipe in hand,
+surrounded by his sons and grandsons.&nbsp; From the day of the
+Psalmist David down to the present day, it may truly be said in
+Syria, Blessed are they that have their quiver full of
+them.&nbsp; &ldquo;Lo children and the fruit of the womb are an
+heritage and gift that cometh of the Lord.&nbsp; Like as the
+arrows in the hand of the giant: even so are the young
+children.&nbsp; Happy is the man that hath his quiver full of
+them; they shall not be ashamed when they speak with their
+enemies in the gate&rdquo; (Psalm cxxvii. 4, 5, 6).</p>
+<p>Although from the first the infant is tenderly cared for,
+still, it must, however healthy, have occasionally some slight
+ailment, and then great consternation prevails in the
+household.&nbsp; The devices to heal it are many.&nbsp; In every
+Christian family a remnant of the holy palm-leaves, distributed
+on Palm Sunday, are very carefully preserved to serve on such
+occasions; these are now mixed with olive-leaves, salt, and
+aloes, and the whole is then thrown into a small brazier of
+charcoal, and the smoke thereof constitutes an incense supposed
+to expel the evil eye. <a name="citation236"></a><a
+href="#footnote236" class="citation">[236]</a>&nbsp; Sometimes,
+strange to say, the ashes of this composition bear strict
+resemblance to a human eye.&nbsp; This is taken and crushed on
+the floor with the <!-- page 237--><a name="page237"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 237</span>child&rsquo;s slipper, and the
+mother expresses a wish that the eyes of the envious which have
+brought the illness on the child, may be destroyed in like
+manner.&nbsp; After this, if the child is not better, the family
+priest is in this interval sent to, and offers up prayers for its
+welfare.&nbsp; Oil of almonds is usually applied externally, and
+rubbed in warm, generally with very beneficial results.&nbsp;
+There is also a peculiar kind of soft, fine earth in Syria, which
+is much sought after by mothers; this, when collected, is brought
+and warmed near the fire; it is then placed in the cradle, and,
+being covered with a fine counterpane, the infant, wrapped in its
+swaddling clothes, is laid on this, the warm earth retaining
+dryness and heat for many hours.&nbsp; Many of the poorer people
+lay their infants on the earth itself, and then cover them over
+warmly.&nbsp; In all cases it appears to have a beneficial effect
+on children, who seldom or ever catch cold.&nbsp; If you wish to
+incur the displeasure and dislike of a young mother in Syria,
+there are two certain methods of gaining this end; the first is
+to step across any baby-linen that may be lying about the ground;
+the second is to rock the cradle when the child is not in it;
+both these are considered very unfavourable to the child, and
+some mothers carry these ridiculous superstitions to such an
+extent, that they dislike any notice being taken of their
+children, even though the praise be accompanied with the
+indispensable &ldquo;mashallahs&rdquo;; but if there is one thing
+more than another that young mothers have a superstitious horror
+of, it is the visits or enquiries of a barren woman; she, it is
+supposed, must entertain a jealousy of those more fortunate than
+herself, and her praises be insincere and terrible.</p>
+<p>To such an extent do these ridiculous superstitions prevail,
+that if, by any misfortune, a child should <!-- page 238--><a
+name="page238"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 238</span>happen to
+die, even though it be a year after any remarks may have been
+applied to it by a childless woman, these have been,
+nevertheless, treasured up, and the evil is laid at her
+door.&nbsp; Children are usually weaned in their fourteenth or
+fifteenth month, and then they are for a short time nourished
+principally on cow&rsquo;s or goat&rsquo;s milk; but by the time
+a child is eighteen months old, it has learned to eat all manner
+of dishes, and they are so pampered and indulged in this respect,
+that from the minute they awake, till they fall asleep again,
+their stomachs have hardly any respite.&nbsp; Fruit, bread,
+cheese, meat; anything and everything is set before them from the
+very false notion that, the more they eat, the faster and the
+stronger they will grow.</p>
+<p>This notion prevails throughout Syria, and it is imagined that
+strength cannot be gained except by hearty eating.&nbsp; So that
+when a man is very ill, and a doctor is sent for, his friends are
+all clamorous and anxious to tell him how many hours has elapsed
+since he last partook of food, and beg of him to insist on the
+patient&rsquo;s eating something forthwith, or to give him some
+medicine that will give him an appetite.&nbsp; It is quite beyond
+their comprehension to understand that in some instances food
+would be very injurious in its effects.&nbsp; A man or a child
+has only to say, &ldquo;<i>Ena-juaan</i>,&rdquo; or &ldquo;I am
+hungry,&rdquo; and it would be considered a heinous sin not to
+gratify this craving instantly.&nbsp; All this, however, is
+pardonable when the real motives, those of sincere love and pity
+for the sufferer, are considered, mistaken though they may be;
+but time and education can alone remedy this evil.&nbsp; So soon
+as the boy is able, unaided, to run about and talk, he is then
+taken in hand by his father; his dress is always of the best
+obtainable materials, and if his father be a merchant or
+shopkeeper, he accompanies <!-- page 239--><a
+name="page239"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 239</span>him to his
+office, and there, seated cross-legged, begins to ape the actions
+and conversation of his father.&nbsp; He is early instructed in
+lessons of sedateness and self-respect, and if not cheerfully
+willing to obey and listen, a few taps of the rod soon bring him
+to his senses.&nbsp; For the Syrian father acts upon the proverb,
+which says, &ldquo;If you wish the tree to grow up straight and
+be fruitful you must prune its branches when young.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Slight castigations are generally inflicted by them in the
+absence of the mother, for otherwise they would be of no
+effect.&nbsp; Some mothers are very attached to their first-born
+so that they would willingly sacrifice their own lives rather
+than that their darling should suffer ever so slight an
+affront.&nbsp; Whipping a child in a mother&rsquo;s presence
+would invariably lead to high words and ill feeling, and the
+result would be, that the child, whipped by one parent and petted
+by the other, would naturally imagine itself very ill
+used&mdash;hate the father and love the mother.&nbsp; The good
+effects of the punishment would be lost, and the child only grow
+more wary and naughty.&nbsp; To avoid these family broils, the
+father early accustoms his son to accompany him to his place of
+business; bearing the key in the same manner as it was done in
+the days of the prophets, upon his shoulder.&nbsp; Is. xxii.
+22.&nbsp; There, unseen by the mother&rsquo;s eye, the child soon
+learns implicit obedience to his father&rsquo;s will, and as this
+obedience is at first always rewarded by some small present of
+fruit or so forth, the boy grows in love as well as in
+obedience.&nbsp; It is surprising what sage little fellows, of
+only five years old, one meets perched up cross-legged in the
+shops of their fathers; they are so well versed in the every-day
+business of the profession, that the father can repose every
+confidence in them, and leave them for hours together to deal
+with customers, <!-- page 240--><a name="page240"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 240</span>weigh out, bargain, and effect
+sales.&nbsp; A child naturally takes a pride in thus early
+finding itself useful and important, and there are few children
+in the world that are more precocious than those of my native
+country.&nbsp; A child brought up in this way would think it
+highly indecorous to romp and play about during business
+hours.&nbsp; In the evening, however, he is permitted to repair
+to the fields with his companions; the onus of business has been
+laid aside, and the perfect child shows itself once more in the
+merry game or joyous laugh of the sportive crew.</p>
+<p>By the time a child is six years old, he seldom, if ever,
+requires chastisement; indeed, he thinks to be scolded is a
+perfect disgrace, and is consequently ever on the guard not to
+incur his father&rsquo;s displeasure.&nbsp; The father who now
+thinks it is time that his son should be instructed to read and
+write, works upon the feelings of the boy so as to excite in him
+a great desire for learning.&nbsp; He usually commences by
+telling him that he is quite ashamed of having such an ignorant
+son whereas his neighbours&rsquo; children are all well
+instructed, and know the whole of the Psalms by heart, for the
+acquirement of these invariably forms the commencement of Syrian
+education; the child protests that he only lacks opportunity, and
+the next day his schooling begins.</p>
+<p>The etiquette of Syrian manners is early instilled into the
+mind of the Syrian boy; he is taught, on first rising in the
+morning, after prayers and the necessary ablutions, to wish the
+&ldquo;<i>Saboh il Kahir</i>&rdquo; (&ldquo;good morning,&rdquo;)
+to every individual of the household, commencing with the father
+and finishing with the lowest menial in the establishment.&nbsp;
+After this, the son sees that his father is supplied with the
+necessary coffee, a slice of <!-- page 241--><a
+name="page241"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 241</span>toast, and
+his <i>narghili</i>, and then next to his father he ranks
+himself, excepting when strangers are present.&nbsp; On the
+arrival of a guest, he is taught to go forth and welcome him as
+far as the threshold of the entrance-door, and this he does
+meekly, taking and kissing the hand of the visitor if a man of
+advanced age, at the same time overwhelming him with such
+flattering compliments, as, for instance, &ldquo;The day at this
+moment has become bright.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;My thoughts have
+always been concentrated on you, O light of my eyes!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The boy then follows the guest to the <i>mistaba</i>, where his
+father is ready to receive him, and having busied himself
+ordering necessary refreshments, he returns to the divan, and
+seating himself at some distance from the others, listens in
+respectful silence to their conversation, or pulling out the
+brass inkhorn from his side (Ezek. ix.), which contains likewise
+his stock of pens (and is an inseparable companion, being always
+thrust into the girdle and carried about with him from morning
+till night), he possesses himself of some stray piece of paper,
+may be the back of a letter, and improves the moments as they fly
+by furthering his knowledge in arithmetic.</p>
+<p>When a priest calls at the house, then the son is all
+attention; none but himself is permitted to serve him; he
+replenishes the pipe-bowls, fetches the fire, hands him the
+coffee and other refreshments, and each time retires from the
+presence of the rev. father with fresh blessings heaped upon his
+head.&nbsp; The son is early taught to listen, but never to speak
+unless first spoken to, to be deferential to all old people, kind
+to the poor, and especially to the blind, sympathising with
+servants, whose faults he must correct with mildness and
+leniency, and above all, to abhor and hold in utter detestation
+all strong drinks and drunkards.&nbsp; You may travel from <!--
+page 242--><a name="page242"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+242</span>one end of Syria to the other, and mingle with every
+grade of every creed, and I may safely state, that drunkards are
+rarely met with.&nbsp; None but those who have travelled in
+Europe, or have mixed with European society, are addicted to this
+vice.</p>
+<p>The son is taught to adhere strictly to all laws of
+cleanliness.&nbsp; There are few people that are more rigid in
+the observance of them than the Syrian.&nbsp; On first rising,
+and on going to bed, before and after every meal, before and
+after every little promenade, hands and face are washed with soap
+and water and a few leaves of the lemon-tree; the mouth is also
+rinsed out, sometimes with simple water, sometimes with rose or
+orange-flower water, according to the opulence or poverty of the
+man.&nbsp; Tooth and hair-brushes are unknown among the
+Syrians.&nbsp; On entering a house, he is taught to leave his
+shoes before intruding into the visitors&rsquo; hall, and with
+light yellow slippers on, treads over the carpet; he advances to
+all the elders who happen to be present, kissing their hands and
+placing them on his head to intimate his respect and
+obedience.&nbsp; On entering a church in some parts of the
+country, he leaves his shoes outside. <a
+name="citation242"></a><a href="#footnote242"
+class="citation">[242]</a>&nbsp; This practice dates from the
+period of Moses and the burning bush, when the Lord addressed
+Moses, saying, &ldquo;Draw not nigh <!-- page 243--><a
+name="page243"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 243</span>hither: put
+off thy shoes from off thy feet, for the place whereon thou
+standest is holy ground&rdquo; (Exod. iii. 5).&nbsp; Likewise he
+also lifts the turban off his head for a while, and then replaces
+it.&nbsp; During the reading of the Gospel and Belief all the
+males remain uncovered.</p>
+<p>So soon as a boy&rsquo;s education is completed, and this
+simply consists in his being able to read and write Arabic, with
+a slight knowledge of arithmetic, then the father anxiously looks
+out for some opening which may enable his son thus early to
+acquire a knowledge of the world, and of the necessity of
+fighting one&rsquo;s own battles, so as to be independent of the
+support of others; but though the son may earn a sufficiency to
+maintain himself without drawing on his father&rsquo;s revenue,
+he still remains an inmate of the parental roof; indeed, in many
+instances he never quits it, and it is not uncommon to see the
+son a man of mature years himself, with his own children fast
+growing up to manhood, paying the most implicit obedience and
+respect to his father&rsquo;s commands and wishes, just with the
+same deference that a child six years old would obey an austere
+father; indeed such is the universal reverence with which parents
+are treated, that (though these instances are rare) fathers have
+been known to chastise their sons when they had attained the
+mature age of thirty-five or forty; and the son, though father of
+a family himself, and though smarting from shame and indignation
+at such an exposure before the eyes of his own wife and children,
+has meekly borne the correction and kissed the hand that
+chastised him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Honour thy father and thy mother that
+thy days may be long in the land,&rdquo; is a commandment acted
+up to the letter in Syria, and any son transgressing this law,
+would meet with small sympathy from his countrymen, would <!--
+page 244--><a name="page244"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+244</span>be shunned by all, and be an object of indignation and
+scorn to all Orientals of whatever creed.&nbsp; Even that
+ferocious tyrant, Djessar Pasha, who never hesitated to sacrifice
+human life, whose wives and concubines were all massacred by his
+own hands to satiate his furious jealousy and rage against one
+unhappy girl, who had been discovered carrying on a flirtation
+with an officer of his court; even he, villain though he was,
+respected this law and enforced others to respect it.&nbsp; A
+story is told of a young Christian, who, being newly married,
+took possession of the whole of his father&rsquo;s house, leaving
+the poor old man, who was a widower and a cripple, barely
+sufficient rags to cover his nakedness, or food to satisfy his
+hunger.&nbsp; The Pasha, hearing of this atrocious conduct, sent
+for the miscreant, and when he was brought trembling into his
+presence, exclaimed, &ldquo;Hast thou no fear of God?&nbsp; In an
+hour&rsquo;s time let me hear that your father, dog that you are,
+is in the possession of every comfort and luxury; or, by my
+beard, your head shall answer for this crime.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When the son is about twelve years of age, his parents begin
+to look about them to choose out from amongst the neighbours a
+suitable wife for their first-born.&nbsp; This is an arduous
+undertaking, and the son is often consulted as to whether he has
+any particular choice amongst his playmates and companions.&nbsp;
+Sometimes he has, sometimes he leaves all to the good judgment of
+his mother, always, however, stipulating, that the girl must be
+young, pretty, and good-tempered.&nbsp; Old women who go from
+house to house with trinkets and other articles to sell are
+sometimes commissioned by the mothers to look out for such
+eligible objects.&nbsp; If they know any party likely to suit,
+they acquaint the mother.&nbsp; They next find out when the
+maiden attends <!-- page 245--><a name="page245"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 245</span>the bath, and inform their employer,
+who goes there at the same time, and if, upon seeing the girl,
+she thinks her likely to suit her son, she contrives to make her
+acquaintance.&nbsp; The old woman also, on her part, mentions the
+youth to the maiden and her family with the greatest possible
+praise, and the affair may be considered accomplished.&nbsp; The
+choice having thus fallen upon some one or other, and the
+preliminaries arranged, the dower to be paid for her settled,
+handkerchiefs bought, rings ordered, and a choice party of
+intimate friends invited, who, accompanied by the priest, repair
+to the house of the intended bride&rsquo;s father.&nbsp;
+Sometimes the girl is brought into the room closely veiled, the
+young lad being present also&mdash;vows, and rings, and presents,
+are exchanged&mdash;the priest pronounces his blessing&mdash;the
+pair are betrothed, and from that day till the wedding takes
+place, become utter strangers to each other.&nbsp; They may have
+been bosom companions only the day before, romping with each
+other from early childhood, but the moment that the betrothal had
+taken place, there is an inseparable barrier to their meeting or
+conversing again till the church shall have pronounced them man
+and wife.&nbsp; This generally lasts six months, but sometimes
+mere children are engaged, and then they have to wait till both
+have arrived at years of maturity before they can get
+married.&nbsp; It seldom, if ever, happens, excepting, of course,
+in cases of death, that these betrothals are put aside or broken,
+the church considering the vows then pledged as binding on either
+side as the marriage vow itself.</p>
+<p>In order to give my readers some idea of an Oriental
+courtship, I will quote the account which my friend, the well
+known Assaad Kajah gives of his own:&mdash;&ldquo;I went to my
+friend H. Khooja Hahib Giammal, a liberal and <!-- page 246--><a
+name="page246"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 246</span>enlightened
+gentleman.&nbsp; He allowed his beautiful eldest daughter to hand
+me the sherbet, and the moment I saw her, as we say in our
+Eastern language, &lsquo;a thousand of my vertebr&aelig; got
+broken,&rsquo; and she took my heart with her when she left the
+room.&nbsp; I knew I was a favourite with her father, and I
+returned home resolved not to delay making my proposals.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told my father the state of my heart, and requested
+him to take a diamond ring and a fine white handkerchief, the
+emblem of betrothment, to the father of the damsel, and entreat
+him to allow me the joy of being betrothed to his daughter
+Martha.&nbsp; With a view to shew that I acted on the impulse of
+my own heart, and not merely by the guidance of my parents, I
+followed the example of our Patriarch &lsquo;Isaac&rsquo; in the
+case of his beloved &lsquo;Rebekah&rsquo; (Genesis xxiv.
+22).&nbsp; I therefore sent to my own beloved &lsquo;a golden
+ear-ring of half a shekel weight, and two bracelets for her hands
+of ten shekels weight of gold.&rsquo;&nbsp; Thus, the ancient
+custom of upwards of three thousand years old is retained by the
+people; and a Syrian does not inquire what a purse his bride is
+to have, but whether his Rebekah is such a one as was brought up
+like Nahor&rsquo;s Milcah; their popular proverb is this:
+&lsquo;<i>Khud alasseil walanah alhassir</i>,&rsquo; &lsquo;Take
+the one of good root (i.e., of good parents), though she may be
+on a mat&rsquo; (that is, though her parents may have no more
+furniture in their dwelling than a mat).</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My beloved father, in his kind way, took my message,
+and with a beating heart I waited for the answer.&nbsp; In about
+an hour he returned, and said, smiling, &lsquo;Assaad, all thy
+affairs seem to go smoothly.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I am continually asked by my fair friends the number of wives
+I have left in Syria; my reply is, that I am <!-- page 247--><a
+name="page247"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 247</span>not
+married, though I fervently hope some bright day to crown my
+earthly bliss with an English wife; the ladies seemed quite
+incredulous on my informing them, that only one is permitted by
+our law.&nbsp; The Mahommedan religion, it is true, admits of
+four lawful wives, besides concubines; but I can confidently
+assert, that the majority even of Mussulmans have but one
+wife.&nbsp; Possibly, in default of issue, another may be
+taken&mdash;this, however, is the <i>exception</i>, not the
+<i>rule</i>; and though polygamy has existed to a greater or less
+extent in the East since the days of the Psalmist David, and his
+son, the wise King Solomon, still where it is mostly practised
+now-a-days is amongst the wild Arab tribes, south of Gaza and the
+Nosairiyeh.&nbsp; Of these latter I have known an instance of a
+man marrying two wives on the same day, both young maidens, from
+different villages.&nbsp; But amongst the Turks the practice is
+anything but prevalent; in proof of which I may quote as
+instances, the late Grand Vizier Aali Pasha, the former one,
+Reschid Pasha, and Cabuli Effendi, the present talented Secretary
+for Foreign Affairs, and most of the leading Turkish gentlemen
+who have resided in Christian countries, have but one wife.&nbsp;
+As a proof of this I will relate an amusing story current in the
+East:&mdash;</p>
+<p>A certain Mahomedan had two wives, one of these occupied the
+lower, the other the upper, chamber of the house in which he
+lived.&nbsp; To prevent as much as possible all appearance of
+undue preference, he made it his rule to visit them
+alternately.&nbsp; The communication between the upper story and
+the ground floor was by a short ladder.&nbsp; One evening as he
+proceeded to mount this precarious staircase, in order to visit
+his beloved above, his down stairs wife immediately vociferated,
+that his memory had failed him, and that, in the due course <!--
+page 248--><a name="page248"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+248</span>of things, he had to remain with her.&nbsp; This the
+husband denied, and continued to mount the steps of the
+ladder.&nbsp; In despair, and still protesting loudly her right,
+the lady flew to the ladder, and the moment his head emerged into
+the floor of the upper chamber, seized her husband by the legs
+and arrested his further progress.&nbsp; The lady up-stairs,
+however, who had now got an inkling of the contest, and fearful
+on her part of being outwitted, rushed to the top of the ladder,
+and while the lady beneath was partly succeeding in pulling the
+unfortunate man down by the legs, suddenly seized him by that
+tuft of hair which is left on the head of every true believer,
+pulled as vigorously as her rival though in an opposite
+direction.&nbsp; While they tugged at their victim alternately,
+and doubt seemed to hang over victory, and it even appeared
+possible that the contested property might be rent in sunder
+between them, accompanied with all those noisy vociferations with
+which the fair sex are accustomed to conduct their combats,
+especially in the East, a thief introduced himself into the
+house, and was an unperceived spectator of the scene.</p>
+<p>Some time afterwards, the thief was apprehended and carried
+before the Cadi, to whom he related the circumstance of which he
+had been witness.&nbsp; &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the magistrate,
+&ldquo;your punishment shall be either to lose your head, or like
+the man you have robbed, immediately possess yourself of two
+wives&mdash;you shall have the option.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;After
+what I have seen,&rdquo; replied the criminal, &ldquo;I have no
+hesitation; better to lose my head and go at once to Paradise
+than live to be torn in half between two jealous
+wives.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Although it is most true, that in Europe polygamy is
+disallowed, I need not say how often the marriage vow is broken,
+and how many are the delinquents.&nbsp; <!-- page 249--><a
+name="page249"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 249</span>Often old
+men even have mistresses in addition to their own lawful
+wife.&nbsp; Much of this corruption evidently arises from the
+iniquitous practice of <i>mariage de convenance</i>, so often
+speculated in by most match-making mothers, in the two greatest
+capitals of Europe.&nbsp; Men and women, who have not a single
+idea in common, and no sympathy with each other, are inveigled
+into marriages because the one has wealth and the other titles,
+or what is worse, beauty is bartered for gold.&nbsp; I am quite
+at a loss to account for the utter want of feeling in those
+parents who can ruthlessly sacrifice the happiness and peace of
+mind of their own child, by marrying a girl, perhaps of sixteen,
+to a half-idiotic or toothless man, in infirmity or age, thus ill
+calculating either for the happiness or protection of
+inexperienced youth.&nbsp; (<i>I know of such
+instances</i>).&nbsp; It is not in nature that such a couple
+should be happy; for a young man cannot be fascinated by the
+charms of a haggish old woman, neither is it possible, where such
+disparities exist, for a young girl to nourish one spark of that
+warm affection which should ever exist between man and wife.</p>
+<p>Now, in Syria, such marriages never occur.&nbsp; A man takes a
+wife for a <i>helpmate</i> not for a puppet&mdash;for a companion
+in health&mdash;a consolation in sickness, to help him in
+enjoying the bounteous gifts of nature, or to soothe when the
+cloud of affliction rests over his pathway.&nbsp; This was why
+marriage was constituted, and this is why people get married in
+the East.&nbsp; It is true that an Oriental wife cannot paint, or
+play the piano or harp, but she can sing in her own quiet way,
+and that sweetly, too&mdash;never sweeter than when she is
+hushing her first-born to slumber; and she can dance on any very
+festive occasion, not the giddy flaunting waltz or polka, but a
+quiet measured tread, graceful and <!-- page 250--><a
+name="page250"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 250</span>becoming
+without being indecorous.&nbsp; It may be that a man does
+sometimes marry a girl possessed of a wealthy dower; but these
+instances are rare, and when they do occur, the dower is, for the
+most part, invested in jewels or in lands.&nbsp; If in the
+latter, the husband enjoys a life-interest in them&mdash;he is
+indeed lord and master of the property, and can make any
+improvements he sees fit: the former generally decorate the
+wife&rsquo;s turban on festive occasions; but in case of
+misfortune, then these are pledged or sold off one by one to meet
+the emergency.&nbsp; I trust many of my fair readers will, after
+perusing this, feel convinced of the binding and solemn nature of
+the marriage tie amongst Christians in Syria.&nbsp; Far be it
+from me by these observations, to throw any slur upon the married
+life of the people of Western Europe; I merely wish to show to
+those who imagine that polygamy is universal in the East, that
+the same thing, but in a different form, is as prevalent in their
+own country.&nbsp; The English, indeed, are, upon the whole,
+freer from this vice than most other civilised nations, and their
+domestic felicity far exceeds that of any other people.</p>
+<p>But to return to the immediate subject.&nbsp; The son, as soon
+as he is married, is fairly embarked in life, and if his father
+be a widower, then the whole of the household arrangements
+devolve upon the young wife.&nbsp; The son is generally master of
+the house, and the old man retires from business and the bustle
+of life, passing the rest of his days as a guest or sort of
+pensioner in his own house, and seldom meddling with its domestic
+economy.&nbsp; Should the mother, however, still survive, she
+devotes her time to instructing her daughter-in-law in domestic
+matters, and also accompanies her when she goes out.</p>
+<p><!-- page 251--><a name="page251"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+251</span>There is one thing very praiseworthy amongst the
+Syrians, and a trait in our character which many civilised
+nations would do well to take for an example.&nbsp; I allude to
+untiring love and charity between not only members of one
+household, but all relations or connexions, however distantly
+connected.&nbsp; One seldom or ever hears of a father and his
+children being on bad terms, or of quarrels and broils between
+sisters and brothers.&nbsp; Of course they are not exempt from
+angry passions; high words may rise between them, and even ill
+feeling rancour in their hearts, but they never allow &ldquo;the
+sun to set on their wrath;&rdquo; and if only for
+appearance&rsquo; sake, they make it up again speedily, and
+converse and chat as freely as ever.&nbsp; In this respect they
+act up to a wise, if not elegant, French
+proverb&mdash;&ldquo;<i>Le linge sale doit &ecirc;tre lav&eacute;
+en famille</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; No strangers are permitted to
+rejoice at their discords, or mock at their infirmities.</p>
+<p>Then, again, so long as one member of a family is well off, he
+will never suffer his poor relations to feel want.&nbsp; If he
+can find them employment, well and good; if not, they have the
+shelter of his own house, and food from his own table; and in
+return, all he expects is, that they will lend a hand at being
+useful.&nbsp; Every want is supplied them: and if even clothes be
+necessary, these are provided.&nbsp; When two or more relations
+of a poor man are well to do, they join together to assist him;
+and this in a great measure accounts for the scarcity of
+street-beggars in most parts of Syria.&nbsp; A Syrian would
+consider it a disgrace to his name, that any member of his family
+should be suffered to want whilst he had a crumb to spare, and it
+would be looked upon as a heinous sin in a religious point of
+view.&nbsp; In England, <!-- page 252--><a
+name="page252"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 252</span>perhaps, it
+would not be fashionable to have a poor relation out at elbows,
+tarnishing the splendidly furnished drawing-room of a wealthy
+relative; or it would not be convenient to curtail the luxury and
+voluptuous display of every-day wealth, to contribute a pittance
+for the maintenance of a starving nephew or a crippled
+brother.&nbsp; This may not be fashionable, but it would be
+Christian-like; and rest assured, O slave of the world, so full
+of all &ldquo;the pomps and vanities of this wicked world,&rdquo;
+that when He comes, who gave even His life for your salvation,
+then the poor uneducated Syrian&mdash;the man who has received
+little&mdash;will have a far lighter account to balance with the
+Great Author of eternal life, than you who have possessed and
+have withheld.</p>
+<p>Public prostitution was a thing entirely unknown in Syria
+until intercourse with Europeans introduced it first into the
+sea-ports; from thence it gradually spread inland.&nbsp; Formerly
+the most severe punishments were inflicted for this crime, and
+where the authorities failed to interfere, the relatives took the
+law into their own hands, and very summarily disposed of an
+offender against their honour.&nbsp; Even now-a-days, such poor
+creatures are rare; and if by chance one meets with one, she is
+invariably under the protection of some European&mdash;of itself
+a sufficient guarantee from punishment.&nbsp; I remember a most
+shocking instance of the punishment inflicted upon a woman of
+this class some eighteen years ago, at Beyrout.&nbsp; Her family
+were neighbours of mine.&nbsp; She was several times warned to be
+on her guard, but totally disregarded these warnings, till at
+length, some of the men connected with her family, entered (with
+the father&rsquo;s knowledge and consent) the house of her
+paramour at night, and <!-- page 253--><a
+name="page253"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 253</span>after
+hewing her to pieces, threw her remains into a well attached to a
+house belonging to my uncle, the Rev. Kouri Georgius Risk
+Allah.</p>
+<p>The girls in Syria are principally educated in housewifery,
+such as baking, washing, cooking, etc.&nbsp; Starching and
+ironing are as yet unknown, except to a few aspiring geniuses at
+Beyrout, who, from this knowledge, derive no small
+emolument.&nbsp; The girls are also instructed in the management
+of all household affairs, the care of poultry, and even of making
+cream-cheese, bread, pastry and <i>leban</i>, and also in
+household superstitions.&nbsp; Amongst these last, they are
+taught&mdash;</p>
+<p>Never to rock a cradle when it is empty, because evil spirits
+are very fond, so say old crones in Syria, of being rocked.</p>
+<p>Never to sweep the house after sunset, as this is only
+practised when there has been a death in the family and after the
+body has been carried out.</p>
+<p>Never to look into a mirror after sunset, for an <i>afreet</i>
+is sure to be peeping over their shoulder, and he may shew
+himself to them in such a very unpleasant manner as might
+frighten them to death instanter.&nbsp; Only think of this, ye
+opera-going and ball-frequenting young ladies!&nbsp; What a hard
+case it would be if you were forbidden to look into a mirror
+after candles have been rung for.</p>
+<p>Never to cut their finger or toe-nails near a basin of water;
+for if the nail should chance to fall into the water, they have
+nothing left to them but to make their will and go to bed, for,
+according to the logic of all old women, die they must.</p>
+<p>And last and not least&mdash;Never to interrupt or harm the
+black snake of the house&mdash;<i>Hye il sauda</i>.&nbsp; In
+almost every house in Syria there is a peculiar black serpent,
+<!-- page 254--><a name="page254"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+254</span>large but very harmless, which takes up its abode in
+the cellar of the house, and will never afterwards quit its nook
+or corner till killed, or till the house falls, or the snake
+dies.&nbsp; No Syrian would ever intentionally kill these snakes,
+for, besides keeping mice and rats away, they are held in such
+deep veneration, that endless are the absurd superstitions and
+tales told about them, all of which I myself once firmly believed
+in.&nbsp; Amongst other things, it is said, that if you destroy
+one of these snakes, the mate will be sure to seek for and obtain
+vengeance.&nbsp; They pretend, further, that these snakes are
+doatingly fond of milk, and that the smell of it will immediately
+attract them.&nbsp; It is commonly believed, that a young mother
+may be sure, if she is not on the watch, that the black snake
+will come in the night and feed off her breasts, till it has
+drained them so dry that there is nothing left for the infant;
+and again, with regard to the child, should the snake be
+disappointed in getting its supply of milk from the
+fountain-head, that it will then resort to the artifice of
+inserting its tail into the infant&rsquo;s mouth, and so tickling
+its throat as to cause it to be sick, and thus supply itself with
+food.&nbsp; But the most ludicrous story told is about the
+conscientiousness of one of these snakes, a story which is firmly
+believed by most Orientals.&nbsp; It runs thus: &ldquo;In Syria,
+it is the custom of every family to lay up a year&rsquo;s
+provisions of all the necessaries of life, in store-rooms
+attached to the house; these provisions consist of melted butter
+in jars for cooking rice, wheat, burghal, etc.&nbsp; Now, as the
+story goes, one of these black snakes once deposited her eggs in
+one of these store-rooms, a hole in the corner of which led to a
+serpent&rsquo;s nest.&nbsp; The young ones had been hatched, and
+were all assembled together gambolling about, when some of the
+<!-- page 255--><a name="page255"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+255</span>children, happening to surprise these young snakes at
+their frolics, seeing that they were very small, whipped them up
+in their handkerchiefs, and ran off with them to the other end of
+the house.&nbsp; Now think what might have been the serious
+results of this frolic.&nbsp; Mother snake coming home could not
+find her young ones, and made a pretty to do about it.&nbsp; At
+last she discovered that the children had stolen them, and in her
+rage and vexation determined to be revenged on the whole
+family.&nbsp; Accordingly, with the assistance of her tail, she
+removed the cover of the butter-jar, and inserting her fangs into
+the butter, succeeded in poisoning the whole mass.&nbsp; Bye and
+bye, home came the lady of the house from the bath, and no sooner
+did she see what the children had been about, than, with many
+screams and exclamations, she insisted on the young snakes being
+carried back again.&nbsp; No sooner said than done; and now
+mother snake began to regret deeply what she had done.&nbsp; How
+to remedy the evil was the question&mdash;speak she could not,
+nor had she any other method of warning the family not to use the
+butter.&nbsp; Well, now what do you think she did?&nbsp; She
+called the male snake to her assistance, and these two, coiling
+themselves round the thin jar, squeezed with all their might and
+main, till the jar broke into a hundred pieces, the melted butter
+ran out on the ground, and was lost, and the family were saved
+from being poisoned.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This is one amongst the many fabulous tales about the black
+household snake of Syria; but such like superstitions need not
+startle educated people in England, when they remember the
+endless fables that pass current in their own land about many
+animals, plants, and things&mdash;even to coffins darting out of
+fires, winding-sheets in candles, and lover-like apparitions in
+tea-cups.</p>
+<p><!-- page 256--><a name="page256"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+256</span>It must not be supposed that the higher classes of
+Syrians are not scrupulous with regard to the laws of etiquette;
+on the contrary, they strictly enforce them.&nbsp; If Kowagar
+Bustros and his family called to see Kowagar Saba and his family
+on this Tuesday, Kowagar Saba will return the visit next
+Tuesday.&nbsp; If Kowagar Domian invite Kowagar Michali and
+family to dinner, Kowagar Michali and family give a return party
+to Kowagar Domian.&nbsp; But the grand day for receiving visits
+in every house is the <i>Eed</i>, or festival of the master of
+the house, which is annually celebrated on that saint&rsquo;s day
+whose name he has taken, and whose patronage he
+acknowledges.&nbsp; Thus all those of the name of Michali remain
+at home on St. Michael&rsquo;s day, and all their acquaintances
+call to see them, and to wish them health, luck, and prosperity;
+some bring fruits, some sweetmeats, and few come
+empty-handed.&nbsp; If this usage is productive of no very
+beneficial effects, it at least serves to promote a kindly
+feeling betwixt neighbours and friends; and this, after all, is a
+grand point to observe if one wishes to be comfortable and happy
+in this world.</p>
+<p>When a Syrian dies, after a few hours the hired mourners are
+sent for, according to a custom which has apparently prevailed
+from the most remote antiquity, as we find it referred to in Amos
+v. 16.&nbsp; The cries raised by these women are peculiarly
+mournful and affecting when they are first heard announcing to
+the immediate neighbourhood that one of their number has
+departed, or reaching the ear of the passing stranger with their
+intelligence of death and sorrow.&nbsp; Wax-tapers are then sent
+round to his friends as a notice that they are invited to the
+funeral, which always takes place within twenty-four hours after
+death.&nbsp; When they <!-- page 257--><a
+name="page257"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 257</span>are
+assembled in the church, the tapers are lit, the corpse is placed
+in the centre, and the service is read; then the candles are
+extinguished, the body is carried to the grave by his friends, is
+buried, and &ldquo;his place knows him no more&rdquo; (Job vii.
+9&ndash;10).</p>
+<p>I am tempted to close this chapter with the following lament
+of a lover over the grave of his mistress, literally translated
+from the Arabic.</p>
+<h3>I.</h3>
+<p>Alas! and ah well a-day, that my rose-faced love, my intimate,
+my soul&rsquo;s companion, should be enveloped in her
+shroud!&nbsp; That tongue, once familiar, with so many languages,
+gives utterance now to none.&nbsp; I listen vainly and am
+astonished not to hear thy once-loved voice.</p>
+<h3>II.</h3>
+<p>Tell me, O Grave, tell me, is her incomparable beauty
+gone?&nbsp; Has she, too, faded, as the petals fall from the
+sweetest flower, and her lovely face changed&mdash;changed and
+gone! Thou art not a garden, O Grave; nor yet heaven; still all
+the fairest flowers and the brightest plants are culled by
+thee.</p>
+<h3>III.</h3>
+<p>O black, mysterious Ground, tell me how or wherefore have we
+sinned, that thou art prone to hug the beautiful, the chaste, the
+rare&mdash;and yet so cold thy love.&nbsp; Stones alone hast thou
+for pillows for the tender, the loved, the fair.</p>
+<h3>IV.</h3>
+<p>O Ground&mdash;confusion to thy face!&mdash;think not the
+treasure that is withering in thy grasp is thine.&nbsp; O
+no!&nbsp; Thank God, her soul, her immortality, is far beyond thy
+reach.</p>
+<h3>V.</h3>
+<p>Earth, unfeeling Earth, thy heart is adamant; nor hope nor
+pity find a place in thee.&nbsp; Yet seeds sown in <!-- page
+258--><a name="page258"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+258</span>thy bosom spring up as flowers beautiful and
+rare.&nbsp; Without thee, a solitary soul&mdash;a blank is the
+world to me&mdash;nor merry laugh nor cheerful glance has now a
+charm.</p>
+<h3>VI.</h3>
+<p>Sometimes I weep alone to think that I have lost thy love for
+ever&mdash;and then, oh! bitterly weep to see thy mother&rsquo;s
+furrowed brow&mdash;full well she feels the treasure
+lost&mdash;the young child and the beautiful.&nbsp; I marvel not,
+angel, that thou art gone&mdash;for heaven were better fitted for
+thy home than earth; but I marvel that we can live yet awhile on
+earth&mdash;live without thy smile.</p>
+<h3>VII.</h3>
+<p>And thou who couldst barely resist the cold&mdash;thy fate is
+hard&mdash;nor friend to whisper comfort, nor careful eye to
+watch&mdash;in thy cold, solitary, mysterious grave&mdash;none
+can give comfort.&nbsp; But how foolish!&nbsp; I speak to
+dust.&nbsp; Thy soul, thank God! is far beyond the hurt of man or
+evil spirit.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 259--><a name="page259"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 259</span>CHAPTER XV.<br />
+SYRIA AND HER INHABITANTS.</h2>
+<p>In this chapter I shall endeavour to take a brief review of
+the country and people&mdash;the drawback to the advancement and
+welfare of the latter&mdash;and the inducements held out by the
+former for colonisation by emigrants&mdash;with the mutual
+benefits accruing therefrom.</p>
+<p>That portion of the Turkish dominions which lies to the
+southward of Tyre, and includes all the country comprised within
+the boundary limits of Gaza and Hebron to the south, and Tyre to
+the north, is with very few exceptions, an uncultivated waste,
+owing, not to the want of fertility of soil, but to the indolence
+of its inhabitants.&nbsp; The sea-ports, or roadsteads, are at
+all seasons of the year open and exposed, and in the winter
+months dangerous in the extreme for shipping; in proof of this, I
+have only to cite the many shipwrecks which have occurred within
+the last few years at Jaffa and Caipha.&nbsp; Gaza has only,
+during the present year, risen into notice, few English schooners
+having arrived at Belfast direct from that port, deeply laden
+with grain.&nbsp; But the roadstead of Gaza is perilous for
+vessels at all seasons of the year, as the wind blows in shore;
+the holding ground is bad; the inducements held out to <!-- page
+260--><a name="page260"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+260</span>commerce very small; the inhabitants lazy and
+impoverished; little or no consumption for seaport goods and
+British manufactures (the natives of the villages in the interior
+restricting themselves to clothing which is made of coarse stuffs
+manufactured by themselves or imported from Egypt); the desert no
+field for speculations; and such little European produce as finds
+its way into the interior being carried thither by petty retail
+merchants, natives, who supply themselves with an annual stock
+from the ofttimes glutted market of Beyrout.&nbsp; With respect
+to the export trade, the south of Palestine supplies abundance of
+wheat, sessame, and other grain; but the quality of much of this
+grain is superior to that produced in Asia Minor.</p>
+<p>The people inhabiting these southern parts of Palestine are
+almost a distinct race from their brethren farther north; in
+manners and customs, and even in complexion and stature,
+differing materially from the northern Syrian: the great heat of
+the climate and the general scarcity of water rendering them an
+indolent and careless people, sadly lacking in cleanliness, and
+without spirit or energy to make any exertions for the
+amelioration of their wretched condition.&nbsp; After leaving
+Tyre, and as we proceeded south, mulberry-plantations quickly
+disappear; thus the one grand staple commodity is wanting, and
+the occupation of rearing the silkworm, at once a healthy and
+amusing pastime and a lucrative labour, is denied the inhabitants
+of Southern Palestine.&nbsp; With hard manual labour, privation,
+and exposure to intense heat, and all the evils of comparative
+serfdom, they have no pleasurable recreations to lighten the
+arduous pursuits of their every-day avocations: the plough and
+the spade&mdash;the spade and the plough&mdash;incessant toil and
+small recompense&mdash;unwillingess <!-- page 261--><a
+name="page261"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 261</span>to work,
+yet goaded to it by dire necessity, the pangs of starvation, or
+the chastisements inflicted by unrelenting landlords and
+landowners.&nbsp; Such is their unhappy lot.</p>
+<p>Their huts are miserable, their children squalid and
+unhealthy; they toil through a life of troubles and sorrows, and
+have the poor satisfaction of knowing that they are possessed of
+no benefits which might, in after-years, accrue to their
+children&rsquo;s advantage.&nbsp; From generation to generation
+they live and die, are born and given in marriage, but the tenure
+of their serfdom is still the same.&nbsp; They are nominally free
+subjects of an enlightened government, but virtually the slaves
+of circumstances, groaning under the petty chiefs and subordinate
+understrappers of government, who have yet to learn submission to
+the will and mandates of the present excellent Sultan, Abdul
+Medjid Khan, whose reign has already been distinguished by many
+great improvements in the condition of the Christian
+population.&nbsp; Many of the firmans issued of late years have
+not as yet come into force in the interior of Turkey, and in
+those possessions of the Ottoman empire situated farthest from
+the sea-ports.&nbsp; In the course of some years it is, however,
+to be hoped, that the most remote villages will be benefited by
+the improvements made in Western Europe.</p>
+<p>The disposition of the natives of Southern Palestine has a
+tinge of sullen moroseness in it, which has doubtless been
+ingrafted in it from generation to generation; there is nothing
+<i>couleur-de-rose</i> in their sphere of life and action; and
+the superstition they inherit from their ancestors is not that
+pure and lovely religion of Christ which can cast a halo around,
+whilst it strengthens, encourages, and supports in the darkest
+hours of affliction <!-- page 262--><a name="page262"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 262</span>and woe.&nbsp; It may be, that,
+under better auspices&mdash;could the people be brought to have a
+common interest in their own and each other&rsquo;s welfare, were
+there less animosity and party feeling existing between the
+various creeds, could they be brought to nurture less of deadly
+malice and hatred towards each other, all combining in one common
+cause with a mutual good understanding&mdash;the fate of Southern
+Palestine and its prevailing feature of sterile barrenness might
+be changed.&nbsp; The country, people, and climate, might yield
+to the introduction of agriculture and other improvements, and be
+materially bettered&mdash;if land were meted out in portions with
+a sure guarantee to the cultivator that his toil and labour would
+eventually be recompensed by his reaping some fruits for himself
+from the sweat of his brow to benefit his children&mdash;were the
+lower classes of the Moslems less avaricious, the Jews less
+despised, the Christians less exposed to the grinding system of
+the land-owners and admitted to reap fair profits from the fields
+they plough and the gardens they cultivate for their wealthier
+and more powerful masters; then, peradventure, the sea-coast and
+the cities near and round about Jerusalem would gradually
+re-assume a right to that blessed title which ascribed to its
+countries the appellation of a land rich indeed, and flowing with
+milk and honey.&nbsp; But alas for the land of Canaan! the
+portion of the tribe of Judah is become an unsightly wilderness;
+and of Zion it may be truly said, &ldquo;Thy house is left unto
+thee desolate.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>From Gaza to Tyre the whole line of sea-coast is inhabited by
+people who, with the exception of Jaffa, Caipha, and Acre, are
+professionally goatherds and farmers&mdash;a simple people that
+subsist chiefly upon milk and cheese, with fruit and vegetables,
+and who are <!-- page 263--><a name="page263"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 263</span>merely the hirelings of the owners
+of the large flocks committed to their charge.&nbsp; These goats
+furnish the surrounding country with the only palatable meat to
+be procured in these hot regions.&nbsp; Mutton is scarce, and
+beef seldom heard of; hence poultry and goats are the staple
+commodity of the meat-market.&nbsp; A young kid of a year&rsquo;s
+growth is up to this very day often chosen as a choice
+delicacy.&nbsp; Who does not call to mind the crafty art of
+Rebecca in seasoning the well-flavoured dish so as to make it vie
+with the tenderest venison?&nbsp; A kid, seasoned with spice and
+stuffed with sweet herbs, rice, and the kernel of the fine fruit
+(at the very recollection of which I hunger), is the festive dish
+of every house in Palestine on seasons of mirth and great
+rejoicings.&nbsp; The father of the newly-married bridegroom,
+tottering from extreme old age, will issue forth from the festive
+board after having partaken of this delicacy, with a face radiant
+with smiles and contentment, pouring forth blessings on him that
+prepared the savoury meat.</p>
+<p>It is seldom now-a-days that men die of extreme old age and
+debility in the countries round about Jerusalem; but where such
+instances occur, and where the faculties are retained to the
+last, and the human functions are in full operation, then rest
+assured, that the tent scene in Isaac&rsquo;s last closing
+moments&mdash;so beautifully portrayed in the Holy
+Scriptures&mdash;is still vividly re-acted up to this very day,
+with the sole exception perhaps of the deceit practised by Jacob
+and his mother, which omission may solely arise from the fact
+that the children of this world have now become wiser in their
+generation, and are no longer to be imposed upon by such simple
+and rude artifices.</p>
+<p>But in their poverty and misery, the children of Southern
+Syria must bow the neck meekly to the yoke <!-- page 264--><a
+name="page264"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 264</span>till a
+brighter day dawns from above upon their affliction, and till the
+curse is removed and the blessing of the Almighty shall descend,
+like the rich dew of Hermon, upon their country and themselves,
+and more than amply recompense them for centuries of suffering
+and woe.&nbsp; They must remember the words spoken by the prophet
+Isaiah&mdash;&ldquo;O Assyrian, the rod of mine anger, and the
+staff in their hand is mine indignation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With Sidon the whole face of the country changes, and here
+commences that luxuriant and verdant pasturage and foliage, which
+continue increasing as we progress to the northward and may be
+said to reach a climax of beauty and profuse richness in the
+districts of Lebanon, Tripoli, Lattakia, and Antioch.&nbsp; Vast
+mulberry plantations, orchards of delicious fruits, and vineyards
+covered with an endless variety of grapes, everywhere delight the
+eye.&nbsp; At those spots where the soil is untilled, and up the
+lofty sides of the mountains, grow the cypress, the majestic oak,
+the stately fir, and the lofty pine; every inch of ground being
+thickly covered with wild flowers, blackberry bushes, the white
+rose, and the training honey-suckle, all which, with the fresh
+odours of the country, recall forcibly to the mind the words of
+the prophet Hosea, &ldquo;his smell is as Lebanon.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;&mdash;Through
+the grass<br />
+The quick-eyed lizard rustles, and the trills<br />
+Of summer birds sing welcome as ye pass;<br />
+Flowers fresh in hue, and many in their dyes,<br />
+Dance in the soft breeze in a fairy mass;<br />
+The sweetness of the violet&rsquo;s deep-blue eyes,<br />
+Kissed by the breath of heaven, seems colour&rsquo;d by its
+skies.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In the neighbourhood of Sidon, even the rare exotic <!-- page
+265--><a name="page265"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+265</span>banana has now been reared with success, its large and
+handsome leaves and clustering golden fruit being a source of
+wonder and admiration to the Syrian who is a stranger to that
+neighbourhood.&nbsp; Here also commences that plentiful supply of
+clear, crystal water which so materially adds to the beauty of
+the scenery, makes cleanliness and comfort a cheap luxury to the
+inhabitants, and as a natural consequence, proportionably
+benefits the health of the natives.&nbsp; Children grow up
+surrounded by the choicest gifts of a bountiful Providence, and
+their young and tender hearts are moulded in a meeker and more
+gentle frame; their labour is more congenial to their
+constitution and habits, and the smallest exertion is quickly
+recompensed by a grateful and fruitful return.&nbsp; The shade of
+many trees affords them a welcome shelter; the waters of many
+cool streams are at hand to quench their slightest thirst; and
+the choice fruits of a hundred orchards, maturing to ripeness,
+afford them a luxurious repast.&nbsp; Besides these, the cattle
+and poultry are more plentiful, and of a better sort, and the
+pasturages are thickly dotted with flocks of fine healthy sheep,
+and milch cows in abundance.&nbsp; The result of all these
+blessings is, that the inhabitants are a healthier, wealthier,
+and a more cheerful race than the people of Southern Palestine;
+and the vast supply of honey gathered from the wild honey-combs
+in the neighbouring mountains, and the excessive cheapness and
+excellence of milk renders this portion of Syria the land
+&ldquo;flowing with milk and honey&rdquo; of the present day.</p>
+<p>Oh that I were possessed of sufficient eloquence to prove to
+that great mass of people who are emigrating from the British
+isles to the far distant shores of Australia and North America,
+the fallacy of the opinion, <!-- page 266--><a
+name="page266"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 266</span>so
+universally entertained by some English, with regard to the risk
+and danger incurred by those possessed of lands within the limits
+of the Turkish dominions!&nbsp; Would that I could divest them of
+the idea usually run away with by Englishmen, that they would be
+exposing their lives and property to the will and pleasure of
+ferocious three-tailed pashas, such as they have read of in books
+of travels, dated nearly half a century back, and whose
+detestable names and memory are now handed down to posterity in
+tales and Eastern ballads.</p>
+<p>The real state of the Turkish empire is quite the reverse to
+what these good people imagine, and of late years any European,
+particularly since the siege of Acre, and an Englishman
+especially, commands universal respect from all the inhabitants
+of Syria, rich or poor, Christian or Jew.&nbsp; There may be,
+perhaps, a few of the more bigoted beys and nobles, who, wishing
+to remain in undisturbed possession of their wealth, and the
+monopoly of land and labour, would regard the advent of
+enlightened strangers as likely to be an infringement on their
+position, dignity, and independence; but their rage and jealousy
+would prove as impotent as it would be contemptible.</p>
+<p>It is, moreover, difficult to satisfy Europeans, especially
+Englishmen, that they can make safe investments in the Turkish
+dominions; but it is only requisite to enquire into the tenure of
+all sorts of property as held by Europeans in every part of
+Turkey for many years, to shew that their vested rights have
+never been questioned, and that when any injury or loss was
+proved to have been sustained to any such property, the official
+representative of the owner had only to submit his claim, and in
+every instance full and satisfactory redress <!-- page 267--><a
+name="page267"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 267</span>was
+instantly afforded; and I may refer, in proof of this, to an
+instance which occurred some years ago of losses sustained by the
+French Factory, on Mount Lebanon, owing to irregularities and
+outrages on the part of the petty local authorities, and others,
+for which ample indemnification was given.</p>
+<p>I may state, as an additional confirmation, the case of the
+Rev. Goodall, the American Missionary, who was plundered by the
+soldiers during the Greek piratical invasion of Beyrout, to which
+I have before alluded.&nbsp; As soon as quiet was re-established,
+the Consul applied to the Pasha for a restitution of the stolen
+property, or a tantamount value.&nbsp; A list was made out, and
+so punctilious was the Pasha, that even a fowl, that had been
+ready trussed for roasting, was included amongst the missing
+articles, and every farthing was paid down out of the Government
+treasury.&nbsp; And this is the case in most instances where a
+European is the aggrieved party; the Governor of the district
+will be sure to see justice done him and the Treasury is entitled
+to collect the sum disbursed from the heads of the villages in
+the immediate neighbourhood where the theft was committed.&nbsp;
+This answers a double end; it satisfies the injured party, and
+ensures almost to a certainty the capture of the felon, for all
+the villagers are on the watch to discover the rogue that has
+brought on them such a taxation.</p>
+<p>Europeans hold property after this manner, viz., they
+authorise a friend who is a subject of the Sultan, in whom they
+can place implicit confidence, to buy or purchase such and such a
+house or landed property in his own name; then he makes a
+transfer of the titles to such property to the European in lieu
+of some imaginary debt, usually a sum far exceeding the value of
+the property itself.&nbsp; This transfer is made in the
+Cadi&rsquo;s, or <!-- page 268--><a name="page268"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 268</span>Chief Judge&rsquo;s Court; and being
+registered, becomes valid in Turkish law, and is legally
+recognised as such.&nbsp; It is thus that the oldest vested
+European interests in Turkey are secured and possessed, and
+handed down to the lawful heirs of the European proprietors.</p>
+<p>In respect both to the character of the Turks, and their
+kindly disposition towards strangers, I cannot do better than
+give a quotation from an interesting work by J. C. Monk, Esq.,
+who has very recently visited the country, in order to illustrate
+their friendliness and amiability.&nbsp; He says&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For my own part I look back with unmixed pleasure and
+gratification to the brief period of my sojourn among the
+Turks.&nbsp; Their hospitality to strangers, as well as their
+charity to the poor, and to each other in distress, has never
+been questioned.&nbsp; From the Pasha in his palace, and from the
+peasant in his hut, I have received kindness and
+hospitality.&nbsp; They are not inquisitive in demanding the
+business or occasion which brings a stranger to their doors, as
+such he is welcome; as he came, so may he depart; no present is
+required, and rarely is it expected; no questions are asked;
+attentive to the wants and comforts of his guests, the Turk seems
+to forget his natural <i>insouciance</i> until the departure of
+the stranger, when in return for his salutation he wishes him
+&ldquo;God speed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Of one thing I am certain, and that is, that the middling and
+poorer classes would hail the arrival of English emigrants with
+rapturous delight; and in stating this, I am not without
+antecedents to prove what I assert.&nbsp; I might instance the
+case of the late lamented and excellent Mr. John Barker, who, for
+many years, lived amongst the wildest and most bigoted portion of
+the natives of Northern Syria (at <!-- page 269--><a
+name="page269"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 269</span>least, they
+were so when he first went amongst them); go now and ask
+whomsoever you will&mdash;the richest or the poorest&mdash;their
+opinion of the English, and, as if with one voice, they will
+reply&mdash;that, taking Mr. Barker as a standard, they consider
+them the best, most charitable, and most enlightened people that
+inhabit the earth&mdash;the best friends and staunchest
+supporters of the Sultan&mdash;and a people that they would
+gladly see settled around them.</p>
+<p>Let us quietly argue both sides of the question; and perhaps
+as an objection to start with, the reader may urge, that, in the
+instance above quoted, the gentleman who thus settled in Syria
+was a wealthy retired Consul-General, possessing, <i>for that
+country</i>, an income equal to, if not exceeding, that of the
+most important Pasha in Syria, and that, therefore, apart from
+his wealth, the high official position he had occupied in Egypt
+and Aleppo, was a sufficient reason to command esteem and respect
+among the natives; also in the cases of Col. Churchill, who
+possesses large estates in the mountains, and is most active in
+his exertions for the spiritual enlightenment and temporal
+improvement of the people, that of Lady Hester Stanhope, and
+other Europeans.&nbsp; This may be correct to a certain extent,
+but is false in the main.&nbsp; Of that unfortunate lady, who
+once ruled with almost absolute power, the wild Arabs of the
+desert, the only traces that remain, are the few crumbling ruins
+of her humble abode at Djouni; her very name is almost forgotten,
+and her sun of life sunk behind the cloud of obscurity.&nbsp; But
+why was this?&nbsp; Simply because she lavished her money, when
+she had any, in vain paraphernalia, and gave large sums, as
+<i>backshish</i>, to unprincipled men, who had no sooner spent
+the money, than they forgot the patroness.&nbsp; Had she <!--
+page 270--><a name="page270"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+270</span>employed her time and means in buying land and
+cultivating it, introducing useful arts, etc., then her memento
+would have been lasting, and the boon conferred handed down from
+generation to generation.&nbsp; Mr. Barker&rsquo;s and Col.
+Churchill&rsquo;s estates flourish, and will continue to flourish
+through many years to come.</p>
+<p>The better sorts of peaches and grapes, besides a variety of
+rare Indian and American fruits, which have been introduced by
+English philanthropists, all serve to remind the Syrians of the
+kind friends who brought them to the country; and many who have
+risen from obscurity into comparative independence, hourly bless
+the good men whose hands showered these benefits upon them.&nbsp;
+It would be in the power, more or less, of every Englishman
+emigrating to Syria, to confer a lasting benefit upon the natives
+through the introduction of a better method than they possess of
+cultivating the ground, etc.; while a blacksmith, a skilful
+carpenter, and a good mason, would prove invaluable acquisitions;
+and an industrious farmer might initiate them into the art of
+making wholesome cheese, in lieu of the hard, unpalatable stuff
+that now bears that name.&nbsp; These would be the greatest of
+boons to the Syrians; and though naturally a slow people,
+unwilling to deviate from old customs and habits which have been
+handed down to them from generation to generation, still the
+successful working of any newly introduced system, affording them
+incontrovertible proofs of its yielding a better profit, would
+very soon induce the natives to follow the example of their more
+civilised neighbours.</p>
+<p>The advantages to be derived from emigrating to Syria are
+manifold; but first amongst these let me class, what to a
+patriotic Englishman must be a pleasant thought, the comparative
+vicinity of this country to his <!-- page 271--><a
+name="page271"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 271</span>native
+land.&nbsp; Thousands of people are content to be cooped up for
+months in a close confined vessel, exposed to all the hardships
+and sufferings of a long sea-voyage, and subjected to the
+expenses of passage-money and outfit, with the almost certainty
+before them, even if they succeed beyond their most sanguine
+wishes, of being exiled from their country for ten or a dozen
+years.&nbsp; I do not now allude to those shoals that are
+flocking over to Australia, tempted from home by the immense
+wealth of the Gold-diggings; nor to the possibility of these
+Gold-diggings being very speedily inundated with people who may,
+when too late, bitterly lament the rashness of their proceedings;
+neither will I advert to the possibility of mines being
+discovered even in so neglected a country as Syria.&nbsp; Some
+are already known; and even copper and iron also exist.&nbsp; In
+Arabia, mountains of turquoise exist, specimens of which were
+exhibited at the Exhibition, and gained a prize, by Major C. R.
+Macdonald, who had also the honour of presenting the Queen with a
+pair of magnificent bracelets.&nbsp; I am arguing with that class
+of men who emigrate simply because they can find no occupation
+for their professional labours at home.&nbsp; Yet not one out of
+these thousands has moral courage to emigrate to Syria, where, if
+they proceed by a steamer, their outfit and passage-money would
+amount to about one-half the expense incurred in going to
+Australia,&mdash;the passage barely exceeding a fortnight, and
+that passage, if the season is well chosen, performed in the
+height of summer, with hardly a squall to ruffle the placid
+waters of the Mediterranean.&nbsp; Here, then, at the very
+outset, is a saving of at least one-half of the expense which
+must be incurred in going to Australia.</p>
+<p>We will now suppose our emigrant arrived in Syria, <!-- page
+272--><a name="page272"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+272</span>with some surplus cash in his pocket; he here converts
+each golden sovereign into more than one hundred piastres, and he
+must be a spendthrift indeed if he cannot live well and
+comfortably for ten piastres per day, or at the rate of four
+sovereigns a month.&nbsp; In this interval he has had enough time
+to look about him, and determine upon the town or position in
+which he intends fixing his abode; and he has had also, during
+this short period, the satisfaction of writing to his friends at
+home, and of receiving their answers and congratulations on his
+safe arrival.&nbsp; Listen to this, O ye that would still persist
+in emigrating to Australia, and remember how many months must
+elapse ere the happy tidings of your safe arrival and its reply
+can reach you.</p>
+<p>If the emigrant be a farmer he is not long in fixing upon a
+fit site for the establishment of his farm-house.&nbsp; The
+immediate neighbourhood of Tripoli, Beyrout, Tyre, Sidon, and
+Jaffa are best adapted for his purpose, the shipping there and
+the towns themselves affording an ample market for the
+consumption of live stock.&nbsp; He will have cheapness to
+contend against in the sale of cattle and poultry, but the
+superior quality of what would be produced by a careful farmer,
+his stall-fed oxen and sheep, and well-fattened poultry, would,
+amongst Europeans and the wealthiest natives, command eventually
+a ready and profitable sale.&nbsp; Cyprus would supply him with
+young turkeys at an average value of about a shilling a head, and
+with every other species of poultry.&nbsp; If he wished to
+experimentalise in improving the breed of cattle, he might do so
+advantageously, not to mention the profits from wool and
+hides.&nbsp; The one article of cheese alone, in exchange, would
+be to him a source of certain gain.&nbsp; One half of the
+inhabitants <!-- page 273--><a name="page273"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 273</span>subsist for a great portion of the
+year almost entirely upon this food, wretchedly as it is made by
+my countrymen.</p>
+<p>Should the emigrant be a lover of a cold climate, he can
+easily fix his abode on the snow-capped pinnacles of Lebanon,
+where he may enjoy perpetual frost.&nbsp; If another should
+prefer a milder climate, he can calculate his temperature almost
+to a nicety, and by carrying a pocket thermometer about with him,
+go higher or descend lower, as fancy or inclination might
+prompt.&nbsp; Should he love to luxuriate in heat, he has only to
+descend to the sea-side, and there he will revel in all the glory
+of sunshine, glare, and warm land-breezes.&nbsp; Mechanics, etc.,
+would find ready occupation in the very heart of the busiest
+towns in Syria, and what is more, such is the high repute of
+English mechanics and artizans amongst the natives of Syria, that
+even old grey-bearded Mahomedans would gladly apprentice
+themselves, giving in return their manual labour.</p>
+<p>It may be urged, with regard to climate, that the heat of all
+parts of Syria is too intense to admit of English labourers being
+employed in the cultivation of the immense tracts of waste land
+that so abound in various districts.&nbsp; My reply to this is,
+that both food and labour being extremely cheap in that country,
+and the produce, whether grain or silk, disposable at an enormous
+profit in the English markets, the proceeds of such sales would
+enable the small capitalist to employ sufficient labourers under
+him; so that, in short, he would be simply a teacher and
+overseer, managing his own property, and could, in a very few
+years, afford to have an official in his pay, whilst he himself
+perhaps might be, with his family, enjoying a cheap jaunt to his
+own country.</p>
+<p>But there is also another large class of emigrants, to <!--
+page 274--><a name="page274"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+274</span>whose means and occupations Syria is even better suited
+than to all the foregoing.&nbsp; I mean persons of a certain
+fixed moderate income; those in receipt of an annual rent or
+interest, varying in amount from &pound;50 to &pound;300.&nbsp; A
+man in London, especially if he have a wife and family to
+support, is comparatively a pauper if he can earn no more than
+&pound;50 per annum.&nbsp; Take that man to Syria; plant him in
+any part of Lebanon, or in any other district of that country,
+and he has no longer pounds and shillings to mete out carefully,
+so as to cover the annual outlay for household expenses; but he
+has now to deal with piastres and paras.&nbsp; For one piastre he
+can get four ordinary penny loaves; for half a piastre he can get
+five eggs; for another half, as much fresh butter and milk as
+will serve his purpose for the day, and unless he be an
+extraordinary eater, leave an abundant surplus.&nbsp; Thus for
+two piastres we have seen him provided with milk, butter, and
+bread&mdash;three staple commodities&mdash;and the additional
+luxury of fresh-laid eggs.&nbsp; An <i>oak</i>, or 2&frac34; lbs.
+of mutton, would cost him about two and a half piastres, and he
+spends a piastre in vegetables and fruit; thus the raw articles
+of consumption cost him daily five and a half piastres, or just
+one shilling sterling.&nbsp; With sixpence additional, he can
+have fish and wine and coffee, an ample supply of each, enough
+indeed to satisfy the cravings of three moderate men; so that his
+annual item for food, wine, and coffee, would amount to 547
+shillings and sixpence, or &pound;27 17s. 6d.&nbsp; Of his
+original income of &pound;50 per annum, he would thus still have
+a surplus of &pound;22 2s. 6d.&nbsp; His rent and the hire of
+three servants, their keep included, may consume &pound;10 of
+this balance, and with the remaining &pound;12 2s. 6d. he could
+buy and keep for the whole first year a very serviceable steed,
+whose <!-- page 275--><a name="page275"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 275</span>cost would be more than recompensed
+by the benefit and pleasure of horse-exercise every day in the
+week.</p>
+<p>Having now mounted my comparatively English &ldquo;beggar on
+horseback&rdquo;&mdash;even if he be the most indolent of
+indolent men&mdash;he must go on thriving better and
+better.&nbsp; Most Englishmen, however, have too much good sense
+now-a-days to suffer precious hours to flit lazily by.&nbsp; It
+is evident also, that our emigrant will he put to less expense
+the second year of his sojourn, at least to the amount of the
+value of cost of his horse, which will then only become an item
+of keep, as grass is plentiful and barley (on which our horses
+are fed) cheap.&nbsp; His exchequer would thus be increased by
+&pound;10 at the end of the second year.&nbsp; Now, even in
+England, a sharp-witted fellow might, by unremitting perseverance
+and indefatigable zeal, turn ten pounds into twenty; but in
+Syria, this sum is 1100 piastres, and for 1100 piastres there is
+many a bit of ground to be purchased equal in size to the largest
+square in London.&nbsp; This he could lay out, if he fancied,
+part in a kitchen-garden, part in a farm-yard, and part in a
+nursery for young mulberry shoots, to be transplanted the ensuing
+year, by which time also the extent of ground could be doubled by
+the purchase of a fresh lot for &pound;10 more&mdash;both planted
+with mulberries, the proprietor supplying his own table with
+poultry and vegetables, making his own wine, and pressing his own
+oil.&nbsp; In five years after his first settlement, he would
+have a mulberry plantation five times as extensive as Eaton
+Square, with that portion of the property first planted already
+yielding a return; for the mulberry-tree, after three years, is
+ready to rear the worm upon, and the quantity reared goes on
+increasing as the trees become larger and yield a more abundant
+supply of <!-- page 276--><a name="page276"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 276</span>leaves.&nbsp; At the end of these
+five years our landed proprietor, whose greatest horror in London
+was quarter-day, and rent and taxes, now finds himself in receipt
+of about &pound;80 per annum instead of &pound;50, with every
+prospect of a rapid augmentation, for he may have been adding
+ground to ground each successive year, and every successive piece
+of land purchased may have been larger than the preceding, till
+about the seventh year of his residence, when he may have made an
+outlay of about &pound;200, and have a promising plantation,
+yielding him, conjointly with his income, somewhere about
+&pound;120 per annum, with every prospect of this income rapidly
+increasing.&nbsp; The best part of the pleasant tableau, too,
+would consist in the fact that there had been no pinching and
+screwing up of one&rsquo;s means, no direful privations to meet
+the emergency, no sleepless nights, and worrying busy days,
+racking one&rsquo;s brains and detracting from health and
+happiness; but on the contrary, the emigrant&rsquo;s life will
+have been one perpetual scene of pleasurable and healthful
+occupation and diversion.</p>
+<p>He will be an early riser, because he has had his little
+flower-garden to weed, or the planting out of his fruit-trees and
+vegetables to superintend: his farm-yard will then claim his
+attention; the cows milking and sending forth to grass; the
+sheep, the turkeys, the geese, ducks, fowls, guinea-hens, etc.,
+all to be attended to; terminating by a pleasant ride round his
+own plantation (how his heart throbs at the thought, <i>his own
+plantation</i>!), and in seeing that his people are at their
+various labours for the day.&nbsp; This ride gives him a keen
+relish for his breakfast; and the forenoon is agreeably occupied
+in making notes of when such and such a hen first sat on her
+eggs, and when such a batch of chickens <!-- page 277--><a
+name="page277"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 277</span>were
+hatched, etc.&nbsp; At noon he has lunch, and takes his
+<i>siesta</i>; whilst the afternoon is devoted to study, or to
+correspondence; or, if the fancy take him, and the season be
+propitious, to a shooting party.&nbsp; There is no game-law to
+check his ambition, or to limit his range of ground: no
+preserves, no man-traps, no &ldquo;All dogs found trespassing
+will be shot.&rdquo;&nbsp; He may climb up one hill and go down
+another; spring a covey of partridges, knock over a couple or
+more, and then quietly re-load his gun for another shot.&nbsp;
+The only thing that seem inquisitive about, or will take any
+interest in, such proceedings are, not game-<i>keepers</i>, but
+game-<i>destroyers</i>&mdash;jackals and sparrowhawks; the one
+will track the blood of the wounded partridge more surely even
+than the dogs, the other soars high over head, and equally robs
+the sportsman of his game unless numbered amongst his
+victims.</p>
+<p>In the cool of the evening, the emigrant will enjoy his
+wholesome, abundant, and luxurious dinner, and perhaps, entering
+into the spirit of Oriental life, take a <i>fingan</i> of coffee,
+and, may be, smoke a pipe of delicious <i>Lattakia</i>; and at
+ten, at the latest, he takes himself to bed, glad, after the many
+occupations of the day, to seek that healthful and refreshing
+sleep, which is sure to be the natural result of so regular a
+course of life.</p>
+<p>Such is the picture of life I have drawn out for a man
+possessed at the outset of only &pound;50 per annum.&nbsp; Many
+in the receipt of even more than this sum annually, are now on
+the threshold of the poorhouse.&nbsp; Surely, if such should
+peruse these pages, they cannot longer hesitate as to what to do
+or how to proceed.</p>
+<p>Men with families who wish to luxuriate in the <!-- page
+278--><a name="page278"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+278</span>enjoyments of life, but whose limited means of from
+&pound;200 to &pound;300 per annum restrict them, should emigrate
+to Lebanon and to Syria.&nbsp; There they might build themselves
+palaces, have parks stocked with gazelles and deer, the choicest
+orchard of fruit, a stable not to be surpassed by potentates of
+Europe, summer-houses, and dogs, and guns, and other requisites
+for shooting and coursing parties; a summer residence near the
+seaside, and a yacht to pleasure in whithersoever they might
+choose, or whither the whim of the moment might lead them.</p>
+<p>Finally, if Englishmen would only emigrate to Syria, and
+establish a small colony there, then the uninitiated natives
+would be enabled to form some estimate of their character as a
+nation; and, above all, would discover, that they, like
+themselves, are Church-goers, strictly observant of the sabbath,
+possessing ordained bishops, priests, and
+deacons,&mdash;acknowledging the efficacy of the Sacraments, and
+a people really good, and believers in the Gospel, in lieu of
+being what they now suppose them to be, a people that mount upon
+house-tops to pray, because the higher the elevation the nearer
+they think themselves to God.</p>
+<p>If consumptive patients, in the early stage of that most
+direful malady, were to resort to the milder climate of Syria,
+there is every hope that, under God&rsquo;s blessing, they would
+eventually recover, for, apart from the excellency of the
+climate, they are there exposed to no sudden changes of heat and
+cold, no coming out of stifling opera-houses into the chilling
+night air, no pernicious excitements, nor exhausting late
+hours.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 279--><a name="page279"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 279</span>CHAPTER XVI.<br />
+SYRIA, HER INHABITANTS, AND THEIR RELIGIONS, CONTINUED.</h2>
+<p>The desire to benefit my countrymen by an influx of European
+emigrants has tempted me to wander from the subject of the
+preceding chapter; to forget the actual inhabitants for a moment,
+while painting the delights of a residence in Syria to those who
+can only become so in future.&nbsp; I must now proceed with my
+survey of the different races of people who inhabit the country,
+and I shall endeavour to make this sketch of their peculiarly
+national and religious characteristics as clear as possible.</p>
+<p>There are few countries on the face of the earth so small in
+extent, which comprise so many different races and religious
+persuasions, as Syria.&nbsp; In point of fact, its present
+condition in this respect offers a remarkable illustration of the
+numerous schisms, which took place in the Greek Church during the
+earlier period of its existence, and which, it is well-known,
+were carried on with greater perseverance and bitterness than any
+similar disturbances, which have at various times afflicted other
+churches.</p>
+<p>So complete has been the separation of the sectarian bodies
+from the present church&mdash;so great was the influence of the
+leading ecclesiastics among them, that <!-- page 280--><a
+name="page280"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 280</span>a religious
+difference has produced a variation in their habits and manners,
+and has even given to people, descendants from the same stock,
+and living in the same country, the appearance of a totally
+different origin.</p>
+<p>We also number among our inhabitants a large and influential
+population, inhabiting a mountainous district, who believe, and
+their belief is not without foundation, that they are of Chinese
+origin.&nbsp; In reviewing our population, we find that it may be
+classed into four chief sections: Christians, Jews, Mahommedans,
+and Infidels.&nbsp; The Christians we find sub-divided into more
+than that number of sects; almost every sect constituting a
+different people.</p>
+<p>The Mahommedans are also sub-divided into two branches, the
+orthodox and the heterodox, or as they are otherwise called
+S&ucirc;nnees and Sheeas, the former who are the more numerous,
+acknowledge the Sultan as the head and protector of their
+religion, and are noted for their love of tradition and their
+many interpretations of the Koran.&nbsp; The Sheeas are nearly
+the same in creed as the Metho&ucirc;ali, of whom I shall speak
+further in a future chapter.&nbsp; The Jews stand alone and
+isolated, as they do all over the world, though there is one of
+the infidel tribes which is now declared to be of Jewish
+origin.&nbsp; Of each and all I shall speak in the proper place,
+believing that I shall best succeed in rousing the interests of
+my readers by presenting this picture of the inhabitants of Syria
+from a religious point of view.</p>
+<p>Of late years, as most of my readers must be aware, the
+attention of the benevolent Christian public of Great Britain has
+been frequently and anxiously directed to the want of proper
+religious teaching in Syria.&nbsp; Englishmen, both poor and
+wealthy, have contributed from their purses to supply the
+deficiency through the <!-- page 281--><a
+name="page281"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 281</span>aid of
+English and native missionaries: the latter having been educated
+in England expressly for this sacred purpose.</p>
+<p>The United States have not been behindhand in this general
+cause; American missionaries have co-operated with some of their
+brethren from this country zealously, and with good
+results.&nbsp; How far those results have extended&mdash;how
+rapidly the elementary principles of the purest Christianity have
+been spread abroad in the East, through the agency of these godly
+men, to whose fervent zeal and untiring energy, I can, at least
+bear the most satisfactory, though humble testimony, has been
+better and more efficiently told in the annual reports, which the
+several missionary societies issue to the public, than any
+description which I could give.</p>
+<p>I am truly grateful for the deep interest which these
+societies and their supporters have taken in the religious
+welfare of my nation; but it would not be becoming in me to
+attempt to add anything to their reports.</p>
+<p>It will be sufficient for me to assure my readers, that the
+pious gentlemen employed by the parent societies, have traversed
+Syria in all directions, piercing even into the very heart of its
+most mountainous districts, sowing broadcast the seeds of a pure
+and immaculate faith; that they have found patient listeners in
+all, and zealous converts in many of our towns and
+villages.&nbsp; The number of their converts continues to
+increase; they are re-planting the true faith &ldquo;The Cedar of
+Lebanon,&rdquo; which has flourished in the land from time
+immemorial, and they have prepared the ground, nay, they have
+already laid the foundation on which to raise an imperishable
+temple in honour of the only true Mediator, our Saviour Christ,
+in defiance of the machinations and intrigues of the &ldquo;wild
+beast of Rome.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 282--><a name="page282"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+282</span>They have my most fervent wishes for their complete
+success, and, trusting to the aid of the Most High, I confidently
+look forward to that day, when the offshoots of the stately Cedar
+of Lebanon shall have covered the entire land, casting a holy
+shade over its inhabitants, when the noxious weeds that now
+impede its growth and baffle its influence, shall have
+disappeared from the land, and when the &ldquo;wild beast&rdquo;
+shall have been banished to his den.</p>
+<p>I desire, above all things, to remove an erroneous impression
+which I find prevailing very generally in this country as to the
+character of the Greek, or Orthodox Eastern Church, to which, by
+far the greater portion of the Christian inhabitants
+belong.&nbsp; I have myself styled this Church the &ldquo;Thistle
+of Lebanon,&rdquo; when comparing it with the healthier and purer
+doctrines of the Reformed Church, which I have ventured to call
+the Cedar of my beloved Lebanon; but, nevertheless, it would be
+most ungenerous, nay unfair, to permit my readers to retain the
+impression that the Greek, or the Orthodox Eastern Church, is an
+offshoot of the Church of Rome, or in any way connected with
+it.</p>
+<p>Nearly three hundred thousand of my countrymen worship God
+according to its doctrines, and all of them, excepting, perhaps
+the most ignorant, would feel indignant at the supposition that
+they were followers of the Church of Rome.</p>
+<p>I will not fatigue my readers with a learned disquisition on
+the forms of worship, or on points of doctrine, for I shall
+effect my purpose much easier by a simple statement of the
+cardinal differences between the two churches, and I have no
+doubt they will at once be convinced, that there is a greater
+degree of relationship between the English or any other <!-- page
+283--><a name="page283"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+283</span>Reformed Church, and the Orthodox Eastern Church than
+there exists between it and the Church of Rome.</p>
+<p>Learned historians, and some of the most intelligent and
+enquiring of Eastern travellers, have dwelt with much force on
+the early history of the Orthodox Eastern Church, and there is no
+doubt in my own mind that they have clearly established, not
+merely the fact of its not being an offshoot of the Church of
+Rome, nor in any way intimately connected with it; but, on the
+contrary, that since its establishment it has always been a
+Protestant Church, and that it is therefore more ancient in its
+Protestant character than either of the Reformed Churches.</p>
+<p>Unfortunately for the character of the Orthodox Eastern
+Church, the knowledge and experience of these intelligent men has
+been confined to a very small circle of readers, and the greater
+part of the British public has attached infinitely more credit to
+the imperfect and superficial sketches of travellers, who
+resorting to our country for a short time, and after
+&ldquo;doing&rdquo; Syria in a month, beguile the tedium of their
+journey home by writing an account of their seeings and doings,
+concocting it in as rapid and careless a manner as their
+examination into the condition of the country was hasty and
+thoughtless.</p>
+<p>It is upon the authority of such trustworthy writers, that I
+find the impression prevailing, that the creed, the doctrines,
+and forms of worship of the Orthodox Eastern Church are precisely
+similar to those of the Church of Rome.&nbsp; When resident in
+Syria, I have, on more than one occasion, attended church with
+English travellers, who, struck by the presence of pictures,
+which decorate the walls of all our churches, and by the
+similarity of the robes of the officiating priests to those <!--
+page 284--><a name="page284"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+284</span>worn by the priests of the Romish Church, conceived
+that they were in a Roman Catholic Church.&nbsp; It needed some
+explanation to remove this impression.&nbsp; Most of the writers
+to whom I allude&mdash;I will not mention their
+names&mdash;having received the same impression, they have at
+once jumped to the conclusion in which they invite their readers
+to concur, that the Orthodox Eastern Church is only a branch of
+the abhorred Church of Rome.</p>
+<p>There is, as I have shewn, some excuse for the first
+impression, but nothing could be more erroneous or unjust than
+the conclusion to which they have arrived.&nbsp; I acknowledge
+that the robes of the Greek priests differ in no material point
+from those worn by the priests of Rome; and I admit that there
+are pictures in their churches; but I do most unhesitatingly
+deny&mdash;what has been stated by more than one
+writer&mdash;that there are images to be found in these churches,
+or that they are worshipped by the adherents of the Orthodox
+Eastern Church. <a name="citation284"></a><a href="#footnote284"
+class="citation">[284]</a>&nbsp; The offending pictures are not
+prescribed by the Church.</p>
+<p>The Orthodox Eastern Church does not include among its
+doctrines the worship of saints; in fact, the pictures are merely
+portraits of holy men, who have led blameless lives, and whose
+virtues the spectator is invited to imitate by witnessing the
+honour done to them after death.&nbsp; The only Mediator
+acknowledged by the Orthodox Eastern Church, is our Lord Jesus
+<!-- page 285--><a name="page285"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+285</span>Christ; in proof of which I may be permitted to quote
+the following passage from its doctrines: &ldquo;The sufferings
+and death of Christ are an abundant satisfaction for the sins of
+the whole world.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Virgin is, however, highly reverenced, as being according
+to the angel&rsquo;s declaration &ldquo;highly favoured and
+blessed among women.&rdquo;&nbsp; Some also, but those chiefly
+among the most uneducated, address prayers through her to the
+Saviour.&nbsp; I may, perhaps, be permitted to establish my case
+still more clearly, by pointing out other and more important
+points on which the two Churches are at variance.</p>
+<p>In the first place the Orthodox Eastern Church denies the
+power of any council to alter or to add to the articles of
+faith.&nbsp; It protested at the time against the famous council
+of Trent, since which period the authority of councils has formed
+an important article in the laws of the Romish Church.&nbsp; The
+Orthodox Eastern Church acknowledges no other guide and source of
+doctrine or faith than the Holy Scriptures, as contained in the
+Old and New Testaments, which are <i>open to all</i>&mdash;not
+proscribed, as is the case in the Romish Church&mdash;and are
+printed in all the languages of the various countries in which
+the Greek Church has adherents.&nbsp; I have even seen Bibles
+printed by the zealous Church Missionary Society used in the
+Greek Church, and many of the Greek priests requested Mr.
+Schlincz, while he was in Syria in 1840, on a mission of enquiry
+into the persecution of the Jews of Damascus, to supply them with
+copies of these.&nbsp; He left with me several boxes of these
+books, which I distributed amongst the people whom I thought
+likely to profit by them.</p>
+<p>It expressly protests against the Romish doctrine <!-- page
+286--><a name="page286"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 286</span>of
+the infallibility of the Pope, and it recognises our Lord, the
+Saviour, as the head of the Church.&nbsp; Surely, these are
+points of the greatest moment, such indeed as ought not to have
+been overlooked by impartial writers, when dwelling on the
+character and doctrines of a vast religious body; but there are
+others of an equally important nature.</p>
+<p>According to its doctrines, the Holy Spirit proceedeth from
+the Father alone, and not from the Father and Son as is asserted
+by the Romists, and by the dissenters from the Orthodox Eastern
+Church, whose origin and history will be stated in another part
+of this book.&nbsp; The latter Church accepts the death of the
+Saviour as an abundant satisfaction for the sins of the world; it
+holds the doctrine of justification by faith; it denounces the
+belief in transubstantiation, and in purgatory; and it departs in
+another most important point from the practice of that of Rome,
+by authorising the marriage of its ministers.</p>
+<p>It is not my purpose to fatigue my readers by establishing a
+relationship between the Orthodox Eastern Church and that of the
+United Kingdom, or of any other country, I am satisfied with
+having shewn the little value to be attached to the statements of
+hasty travellers, and with having, I hope, fully established a
+thorough dissimilarity on the most important points of religious
+belief between the doctrines and practice of the Orthodox Eastern
+Church and that of Rome.</p>
+<p>I should have had much more difficulty in doing justice to the
+claims of the Orthodox Eastern Church in the eyes of the
+Protestant public, had the writers who have sought to establish
+its affinity to Rome, availed themselves of other points of
+weakness, which my pen can neither defend nor conceal.</p>
+<p><!-- page 287--><a name="page287"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+287</span>First and foremost, to my mind, stands that foolish
+proceeding, which the priesthood of the Eastern Church annually
+practise on the ignorant and credulous of their disciples; when,
+on Easter Sunday, following the example of the Romish Church in
+manufacturing miracles, they pretend to draw fire down from
+heaven; the agency employed on the occasion being either a
+lucifer match or a phosphorus bottle.&nbsp; Also the practice of
+burning incense during divine service, and of requiring a
+particular, not a general, confession before taking the
+Lord&rsquo;s Supper.</p>
+<p>When I returned to Constantinople, after my first visit to
+England, I had several interviews with the head patriarch, and
+with some of the bishops of the Orthodox Eastern Church, of which
+I am an humble though not a blind adherent.&nbsp; Finding them
+willing to listen to the remarks of one so much younger and more
+ignorant than themselves, whose only advantage arose from the
+experience gained by travelling in foreign countries, I
+strenuously endeavoured to shew them how erroneous and ill-judged
+was their practising miracles, the burning of incense, and other
+proceedings by which the senses are deceived, how well calculated
+they were to disgust the better educated and more intelligent of
+their followers, and eventually to drive them from the bosom of
+the Church.</p>
+<p>The patriarch and the bishops did not seek to discomfit me by
+learned arguments or flimsy excuses.&nbsp; Like intelligent men,
+they acknowledged the practices complained of to be unnecessary
+if not improper; but they assured me, that however sincere their
+desire to establish a thorough reform, their efforts for the
+present were necessarily restricted; a choice between two evils
+being the only course which was open to them.</p>
+<p><!-- page 288--><a name="page288"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+288</span>I was compelled to agree with them that the practice of
+drawing down fire from heaven on Easter Sunday, as well as that
+of burning incense in the churches during divine service, had
+both been established for so many years, and that the former
+especially had taken so deep a hold over the imagination of my
+unlettered brethren, that any sudden attempt to abolish either
+would at once be regarded as irreligious and revolutionary.&nbsp;
+Rather than incur so great a risk, they were content to continue
+what they considered the lesser evil; and in the meantime to
+promote as far as in them lay, the work of education, by means of
+which alone change in this direction is possible.&nbsp; To such
+an answer, of course, I had no reply; and I have endeavoured to
+aid the good cause of education wherever and whenever it has been
+in my power.</p>
+<p>Such as it is, with all its errors, its imperfections, and its
+weaknesses, the Orthodox Eastern Church, the &ldquo;Thistle of
+Lebanon,&rdquo; most certainly claims precedence in point of
+antiquity over every other Christian church, and to my mind it as
+clearly deserves the sympathy of all Christians, especially of
+all who maintain the Protestant faith.&nbsp; For without other
+support than the rock of faith in our Lord Jesus Christ, without
+assistance from abroad, and in slavery at home, this church has
+withstood the shock of Mahommedan invasion, and has maintained
+its position in Syria during a bondage of more than twelve
+hundred years.&nbsp; Nearly all those who now profess its faith
+must be the lineal descendants of families who acknowledged its
+authority and professed its doctrines before the time of the
+Hegira; for one of the first laws of our Mahommedan conquerors
+reimposed the punishment of death on all Christians who should
+seek to gain, and on all who should become, <!-- page 289--><a
+name="page289"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 289</span>converts to
+their faith.&nbsp; It is only of late years that this law has
+been allowed to fall into disuse; but it is still most powerful,
+as the following interesting anecdote will prove.</p>
+<p>Not many days ago, I received a letter from a friend in Syria,
+in which amongst other things he informs me of the wonderful fact
+that the son of a Mufti had just been converted from
+Mahommedanism to the doctrines of the Orthodox Church,
+notwithstanding this law, and that he had been received into the
+bosom of the Church at Syra, in Greece, in order to prevent the
+fact from becoming known to the fanatic.</p>
+<p>The gentleman, who has just given so striking an illustration
+of the power of truth, is a scholar of some repute, a man of more
+than average intellectual powers, and naturally of an inquiring
+turn of mind.&nbsp; Dissatisfied with the faith of his fathers,
+he quietly made himself acquainted with the doctrines of the
+leading Christian churches in the East; and after a searching
+investigation into their relative merits, after lengthened
+arguments with several priests of both churches, and after a
+close study of the holy Scriptures, he finally resolved upon
+renouncing his allegiance to the Prophet, and upon joining a
+church which accepts the mediation of the Saviour.</p>
+<p>His mind once made up, he immediately announced his desire to
+be received into the bosom of the Orthodox Eastern Church to the
+priest in his own neighbourhood, who, however, declined to
+receive so distinguished a convert, from fear of incurring
+persecution, and perhaps of bringing the obnoxious law into fresh
+operation.&nbsp; Nothing daunted by this refusal, the conviction
+of the necessity of his reception into a Christian church having
+taken so deep a root in <!-- page 290--><a
+name="page290"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 290</span>his mind,
+he at once endeavoured to succeed in other places.</p>
+<p>With this object in view, he wandered from town to town,
+traversing nearly all Syria in search of a priest, who would dare
+to hear his recantation of Mahommedanism, and to receive his
+profession of faith in our Lord; but all was in vain.&nbsp;
+Wherever he went he was met by a refusal, on the same grounds as
+had been assigned by the priest to whom he had at first
+applied.&nbsp; Eventually he was under the necessity of leaving
+his wife, his family, and his property, to the care of
+Providence, while he proceeded to Syra, in Greece, where he
+happily encountered no further obstacle to the attainment of his
+heart&rsquo;s desire.&nbsp; Many centuries, I believe, have
+elapsed since any instance occurred of this severe law being
+enforced.&nbsp; He is now settled in Constantinople, without
+suffering any molestation on this account.</p>
+<p>How great, therefore, the claims of the Orthodox Eastern
+Church upon, and how close its affinity to, the Protestant
+Churches of Western Europe!&nbsp; Oppressed by its rulers,
+neglected by its brethren in the faith, suffering under the
+general impoverishment of the country, maligned by many who upon
+a closer investigation would have declared themselves its warmest
+friends, the Orthodox Eastern Church, the &ldquo;Thistle of
+Lebanon,&rdquo; still stands forth a monument of the enduring
+force of truth and faith.&nbsp; It is not easy to make an
+accurate computation of the numbers of its adherents, since, like
+those of every other church in the East, they are not
+concentrated in any one district, but are scattered over the
+whole of Syria, living chiefly, however, in the plains.&nbsp;
+Next to the Mahommedans, they are the most numerous, and I should
+say, including the <!-- page 291--><a name="page291"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 291</span>Holy Land, that in round numbers
+they may safely be estimated at more than three hundred
+thousand.</p>
+<p>At the head of the Orthodox Eastern Church are four
+patriarchs; one at Constantinople, one at Jerusalem, one at
+Cairo, and one at Damascus.&nbsp; The latter are in some degree
+subordinate to the first; but their relations are ill defined,
+the power of the chief patriarch being in a great measure
+nominal.&nbsp; Whenever a bishop is appointed by one of the
+patriarchs in Syria or Egypt, the intervention of the patriarch
+in Constantinople is appealed to, to procure the sanction of the
+Turkish government.&nbsp; This sanction, I may mention, has never
+been withheld by the successive sultans&mdash;a degree of
+toleration hardly to have been expected from the fanatical
+followers of Mahommed.</p>
+<p>The patriarch in Damascus is called Patriarch of Antioch, the
+patriarchal see having remained in Antioch until that city was
+destroyed by earthquakes and revolutions.&nbsp; Each patriarch
+can, within his own province, suspend members of the priesthood,
+though they should have attained the dignity of bishop; but cases
+of this kind occur very rarely indeed.&nbsp; Considering the
+number of its adherents, this church cannot be said to be
+wealthy.&nbsp; It is true that it has great landed possessions;
+but they are most inefficiently managed, so that its chief
+sources of revenue are collections made in the church during the
+service; the fees paid for marriages and burials, and for reading
+prayers with the sick, and for visits which the priests make
+every month to the several houses, sprinkling the apartments with
+holy water, in order to drive out any evil spirit that may have
+taken up his abode there.&nbsp; No one thinks of inhabiting a new
+house, or one whose last occupier <!-- page 292--><a
+name="page292"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 292</span>was a
+heretic, without this ceremony being performed.&nbsp; These,
+however, are all voluntary payments.</p>
+<p>In common with all other ministers of religion within the
+Turkish dominions, the priests of the Orthodox Eastern Church are
+highly favoured by the law.&nbsp; They pay no taxes whatever;
+they cannot suffer imprisonment or any other punishment at the
+option of the officials, who are hardly less ignorant than they
+are extortionate, and whose power over the other inhabitants is
+enormous.&nbsp; The only remedy against an offending priest is to
+report him to the patriarch of the province, who, either by
+himself or with the advice of the patriarch in Constantinople,
+ordains such a punishment as the case may deserve.</p>
+<p>As a rule, the priests are extremely ignorant and very
+poor.&nbsp; The salaries of the patriarchs rarely exceed
+&pound;500, and many of the ministers are not in the receipt of
+more than &pound;40 or &pound;50 a year.&nbsp; The greater number
+of these have received but little education; their sole
+qualification for their office being, in most cases, the good
+opinion of their neighbours and some knowledge of reading or
+writing.</p>
+<p>As the eloquent author of &ldquo;The Crescent and the
+Cross&rdquo; truly says, they are frequently chosen by the laity
+of their district from among the lowest mechanics; and the
+election is invariably confirmed by the patriarch if there be
+nothing against the character of the elect.</p>
+<p>Colleges or educational establishments for the priesthood can
+hardly be said to exist.&nbsp; It would be ridiculous to give
+that name to the convent in Jerusalem, in which the young student
+is initiated into the manner of practising those pretended
+miracles which I have already spoken of as being annually
+performed at Easter, and <!-- page 293--><a
+name="page293"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 293</span>in which he
+acquires a fair portion of that spirit of hatred and envy with
+which the various religious denominations within the walls of the
+Holy City regard each other.</p>
+<p>Much has been already accomplished by the enlightened men who
+have taken up the cause of the apostles, and who are labouring
+hard to dispel the dark cloud of ignorance which hangs over the
+minds of my countrymen like a heavy cloud.&nbsp; With the
+knowledge and the elements of the true faith which they are
+zealously disseminating, I do not despair not merely of a
+thorough reform of the Orthodox Eastern Church, but of an entire
+change in the mutual relations of the several religious
+bodies.&nbsp; Where there was hatred, there shall be love; and
+the spirit of envy shall be transformed into that of
+emulation.</p>
+<p>The service of the Orthodox Eastern Church is always performed
+in the native language, and consists of prayers,
+scripture-readings, a sermon, which is, however, generally only a
+simple explanation or commentary on chapters from the Holy Bible,
+and in chaunting hymns.&nbsp; The priests, as I have previously
+mentioned, wear robes differing but very little from those worn
+by the priesthood of the Church of Rome.&nbsp; It is customary to
+separate the sexes during the service; the galleries being
+devoted exclusively to the reception of the females, and the body
+of the Church to the males.&nbsp; Only the aged are allowed
+seats, of which there are very few, and the young men are forced
+to stand.</p>
+<p>At the commencement of the service, the officiating priest
+traverses the church, scattering incense from a censer.&nbsp;
+During Lent, strict observers of the law abstain from all animal
+food, even from eggs, milk, butter, and cheese, and they further
+fast from night till noon.&nbsp; At <!-- page 294--><a
+name="page294"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 294</span>this period
+they also abstain from the use of all spirituous or vinous
+fluids.&nbsp; At all seasons of the year it is customary to
+practise abstinence on Wednesdays and Fridays.&nbsp; The
+sacrament is usually administered twice a month.&nbsp; It
+consists of leavened bread and wine mixed together, and is
+administered by the officiating clergyman with a spoon, the
+formula used on this solemn occasion being nearly the same as
+that employed in the English Church.</p>
+<p>I have mentioned the existence of dissenters from the Orthodox
+Eastern Church in Syria.&nbsp; They are called Greek Roman
+Catholics, and have existed rather more than one hundred and
+fifty years.&nbsp; The founder of this sect was a priest named
+Karolus, who had been elected patriarch of Antioch, or, as the
+functionary is called, patriarch of Damascus.</p>
+<p>The election was, however, not ratified by the head patriarch
+of Constantinople on account of the doctrines held by the new
+patriarch on the subject of the Holy Spirit.&nbsp; Karolus
+maintained, in contradiction to the established doctrine of the
+Orthodox Eastern Church, that the Holy Spirit proceeded from the
+Father and the Son, as is asserted by the Roman Catholic
+Church.&nbsp; On a closer inquiry into the religious tenets of
+the elect of Damascus, it was discovered that his opinions were
+heretical also on other points, for he was found to entertain a
+very favourable bias towards the doctrine of purgatory, and also
+of works of supererogation.&nbsp; In consequence, the patriarch
+of Constantinople dispatched to Damascus a more trustworthy
+follower to fill the vacant post.</p>
+<p>While the dispute was still pending, Karolus had been
+indefatigably working to increase the numbers of his own
+adherents; and the see of Rome, but too glad <!-- page 295--><a
+name="page295"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 295</span>to have so
+eligible an opportunity of adding to its influence in a quarter
+where all its former efforts had been in vain, immediately
+despatched some of its cleverest emissaries to Karolus for the
+purpose of inducing him not to give way in the dispute, and
+promising him the support of the Pope.</p>
+<p>These emissaries were but too successful.&nbsp; What their
+arguments could not effect, they obtained by money and
+promises.&nbsp; Amongst other things, they held out hopes to
+Karolus of preferment in the Romish Church, and finally their
+influence prevailed over the advice, the entreaties, and the
+solemn admonition of the chief patriarch of Constantinople.&nbsp;
+Karolus entered the Church of Rome, humbly and submissively
+acknowledging the authority of the Pope, by whom he was created
+bishop of Antioch.&nbsp; Since then all the well-known energies
+of the Romish propaganda, all the wealth, the influence, the
+tactics of that unscrupulous power have been used with great
+effect to increase the number of dissenters from the Orthodox
+Eastern Church.</p>
+<p>In this case, there may be found additional evidence of the
+unscrupulousness of the chief agents of the authorities at
+Rome.&nbsp; Though it is the law of that Church, and one that is
+most strictly enforced, that Roman Catholic priests shall live in
+perpetual celibacy, the Greek Roman Catholic priests, as the
+dissenters from the Orthodox Eastern Church are called, are
+permitted to marry, and they are further allowed to retain the
+rites of the Church from which they have deserted.&nbsp; Perhaps
+these anomalies have been purposely continued in order to
+facilitate the perversion of the faithful adherents of the
+Orthodox Eastern Church by inducing the belief, that the two
+Churches are identical.</p>
+<p>Like the parent Church, that of the Greek Roman <!-- page
+296--><a name="page296"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+296</span>Catholics is scattered throughout Syria, but its
+adherents reside chiefly in the plains; their numbers may be
+computed at about sixty thousand.&nbsp; It was most successful in
+making proselytes while Syria was under the Egyptian rule; at
+which period the government seemed to make it a point to place in
+positions of trust and emolument chiefly such persons as
+acknowledged the authority of the Pope of Rome.</p>
+<p>It must not be supposed, that this preference was the result
+of a peculiar partiality on the part of the pachas for the Roman
+Catholic religion; for it has been tolerably well ascertained,
+that this favourable bias was the result of the direct mediation
+of the Sacred College at Rome, whose members, it may be imagined,
+rendered some equivalent service to the Egyptian government.</p>
+<p>It is not many years since Baachery Bey, a member of the divan
+in Damascus, of the same faith, procured from Maximius, the
+patriarch of the Greek Roman Catholics, permission to erect a
+Church in that city; and with it the still higher authority of
+Mehemet Ali, who ordered the church to be built without giving
+the petitioners the trouble of first obtaining a firman.&nbsp;
+This church is now one of the finest in Damascus, and is yet
+another of the records existing in Syria of the unscrupulousness
+exhibited by the Church of Rome in the selection of its
+agents.</p>
+<p>In 1840, there arose a great dispute between the heterodox
+patriarch Maximius and the orthodox patriarch of Antioch, on the
+dress worn by the priests in the Greek Roman Catholic
+Church.&nbsp; The latter complained that the priests under the
+tutelage of his Romish opponent did not, in this respect, conform
+to the exact rules prescribed by the head of their own Church,
+but continued to wear one similar to that worn <!-- page 297--><a
+name="page297"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 297</span>by his own
+priests.&nbsp; This the orthodox patriarch considered to be
+highly offensive, and even dangerous, since the ignorant and
+credulous public were but too likely to be enticed by this
+similarity into the belief, that the doctrines of the two
+Churches were identical.</p>
+<p>The matter was referred to Constantinople; was discussed by
+the contending parties before the head patriarch of the Orthodox
+Eastern Church, and finally submitted to the decision of the
+Turkish authorities.&nbsp; After both parties had wasted much
+time, great patience, and no inconsiderable sums of money, the
+authorities either found the gold of the Orthodox Eastern Church
+to be both brighter and heavier, or else the influence of the
+Czar was too powerful for them, for they at last decided that
+Maximius and his priests should wear a peculiar hat
+(<i>kalloosee</i>) with many corners to distinguish them from
+those of the Orthodox Church.</p>
+<p>It is not only in trifles, however, that the Turkish
+authorities are called upon to decide between these two
+Churches&mdash;the Mahommedan laymen to arbitrate between
+Christian ministers!&nbsp; Unhappily their interference is
+sometimes demanded in matters of far higher importance.</p>
+<p>The mutual jealousies of the Christian sects, their envy and
+hatred, have reached such a pitch, that, on the most sacred
+festival in the Christian year, when devout pilgrims from all
+parts of the earth, who have wandered to Jerusalem for the
+purpose, are in the holiest of all localities within the Holy
+City, Turkish soldiers are required to keep the peace between
+them.&nbsp; At the very tomb of our Saviour, Christianity is
+disgraced by the quarrels of its believers, and Mahommedans are
+called in to prevent them from shedding the blood or taking the
+lives of each other.</p>
+<p><!-- page 298--><a name="page298"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+298</span>Political animosity has perhaps more to do with this
+melancholy exhibition than simple religious discord.&nbsp; Hasty
+and ill-judged have been the measures of protection which the
+great powers of Europe, at different times, and from motives
+dwelt upon elsewhere, have accorded to one or the other of the
+religious bodies in the East.&nbsp; Great Britain, France,
+Russia, and Austria, have all, without due cause, interfered to
+<i>protect</i>, as they say, their <i>prot&eacute;g&eacute;s</i>
+from undue oppression; but the result of their protection has not
+only brought them into unpleasant and dangerous contact with each
+other, excited and nourished envy and hatred among the protected,
+but has still further shaken the foundations of &ldquo;our
+ancient ally,&rdquo; as the Porte is called in England, whose
+existence is said to be so intimately bound up with the
+maintenance of that unintelligible paradox, &ldquo;the balance of
+power in Europe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At the moment of writing these lines, the diplomatic
+representatives of the great powers resident in Constantinople,
+the ministers of the great powers themselves, are in the agonies
+of negotiation, as their peculiar proceedings are diplomatically
+termed; and the noble representative of Great Britain has been
+hastily ordered to return to the seat of his mission, in order
+that the British influence may not suffer from a partial or
+one-sided decision of the case.&nbsp; It is to be hoped that the
+result of all these diplomatic efforts, or even that of the still
+more terrible instrumentality of war, may ultimately tend to the
+benefit and improvement of the unhappy people whose country is to
+become the field of contention.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 299--><a name="page299"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 299</span>CHAPTER XVII.<br />
+CHRISTIAN INHABITANTS.</h2>
+<p>Among the Christian inhabitants of Syria, the Maronites, in
+point of numbers, if not in the simplicity of their faith,
+certainly take rank next to the devout followers of the Orthodox
+Eastern Church, and the brief review I propose to take of their
+history and position will, I think, sufficiently establish for
+them a claim to be placed among the most interesting Christian
+races or nations which can be found in any part of the globe.</p>
+<p>To the present hour they continue to inhabit the mountains of
+Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon, in which twelve centuries since they
+sought and found refuge from the decided measures to which the
+general Council of Constantinople had recourse, in order to
+punish them for their adherence to the Monothelite heresy.&nbsp;
+Driven from their homes in the plains and cities of the land,
+they established themselves in perfect security in the mountain
+fastnesses, which have enabled them on more than one occasion to
+set the power of the Egyptian and Turkish Governments at
+defiance, and to afford to others, no matter what their faith or
+origin, an impenetrable asylum against the persecutions of their
+enemies.&nbsp; Europeans or Easterns, Christians or infidels,
+flying <!-- page 300--><a name="page300"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 300</span>before the persecutions of political
+or religious bigots, are still received with open arms and
+untiring hospitality by the Maronites, whose forefathers always
+practised the virtues learned in adversity&mdash;virtues which
+they have most successfully inculcated on the minds of their
+descendants.&nbsp; No greater proof than this can be brought
+forward of the excellence of their principles, their courage and
+integrity of heart, since even from that early period they made
+Lebanon what Hebron and other ancient cities were among the
+children of Israel.&nbsp; The extraordinary liberality and
+hospitality displayed by the original inhabitants can alone
+account for the striking amalgamation of Christian and
+unbelieving races, and for their having inhabited the mountains,
+for so long a period, in perfect amity and good-will towards each
+other, except when bad feelings have been excited by the
+intrigues or intermeddling of the foreign powers, whose
+interference has at all times been ruinous to the country.</p>
+<p>So complete has been the political union of the inhabitants of
+the Lebanon, notwithstanding all the differences between them,
+that for centuries they submitted to be governed by one
+head.&nbsp; So great is the reliance to be placed upon those
+brave mountaineers, and so high is the general estimation of
+their character, that when, in the year 1821, the genius of
+British diplomacy and a royal administration of the navy, had
+cleverly contrived the famous battle of Navarino, and the
+European consuls and residents in Syria were obliged to fly from
+the wrath of the Mahommedans, who set no bounds to their hatred
+to the Franks, they unanimously selected the home of the
+Maronites as their best and safest asylum.&nbsp; There they
+remained for nearly a year and a half, protected and respected by
+their hospitable hosts, <!-- page 301--><a
+name="page301"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 301</span>and safe
+from the vindictive longings of the Turks, who dared not venture
+beyond the lowlands in pursuit of their prey.</p>
+<p>This was perhaps the first occasion in which educated
+Europeans obtained a closer inspection into the customs, manners
+and religion of the Maronites; and it is to be regretted that
+none of them have given their experience to the world in a
+popular shape.&nbsp; Many still dwell with pleasure upon this
+remarkable era in their lives; and interesting are the tales
+which they tell at their own firesides, of the dangers they
+encountered on their road, and the life they led in the
+mountains.&nbsp; Indeed, I have heard several of the gentlemen
+who were among those who sought an asylum in Lebanon, declare,
+that with the exception of the unpleasantness of being in a
+measure cut off from all communication with Europe, they seldom
+remember to have passed a pleasanter eighteen months, invigorated
+by a delightful and pleasantly cool climate, in a country
+abounding with shooting of all kinds; while, for those who loved
+the study of botany, there was an inexhaustible fund of amusement
+and occupation.&nbsp; Even here, and at a time too when they were
+apparently menaced by surrounding dangers, the <i>youngsters</i>
+amongst the Europeans could not forget their predominant
+attachment to fun and mischief; and an anecdote has been
+frequently told of a poor old Maronite priest who prided himself
+extremely on the excellency of the fruits produced by the garden
+attached to the monastery which he inhabited, and which I believe
+were really of a very superior quality, and who had for many
+months reckoned on the autumn of 1821, as likely to prove the
+most prolific season he had yet known; when lo! he was surrounded
+by a hoard of gnats and bees in the shape of wild young
+Europeans, who, <!-- page 302--><a name="page302"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 302</span>despite the height of his walls, and
+the depth of his ditches, and the distance they had to come every
+night, succeeded night after night in rifling the orchard and
+carrying off just those fruits that were upon the very turn, and
+which promised to be the <i>first fruit</i> of the season.&nbsp;
+It is needless to say that the old priest was sadly perplexed and
+annoyed; the last persons in the world to be suspected were these
+very identical young men; first, because they lived so far
+off&mdash;secondly, because, in the presence of the old priest,
+they deported themselves with so much decorum, and attended so
+regularly to the Sunday service, that the old priest would as
+fain believe himself guilty of a felony as harbour any suspicions
+against the real offenders.&nbsp; He began to fear sadly that he
+must needs have some black sheep amongst his own flock; and as
+the depredations continued nightly, despite watching and all
+other precautions, he lost all patience, and after service one
+Sunday pronounced an anathema against those parties who had
+persisted in stealing his fruit if they did not immediately
+desist from their wicked practices.&nbsp; All was vain!&nbsp;
+Weeks rolled on, still the fruits were missing, and still
+anathemas were thundered on a Sunday from the pulpit, till the
+old priest in a fit of despair caused all the unripe fruit to be
+plucked at once, determined, as he expressed himself, at least to
+benefit by a few preserves and jellies, since he was not
+permitted to taste any of his ripe fruit, and so the affair ended
+for the time being.&nbsp; Some years after, however, when many
+successive rich harvests of delicious fruits had completely
+obliterated the misfortunes of that particular year from the old
+priest&rsquo;s memory, he chanced to be riding through the very
+identical village to which his fruit had been regularly conveyed
+of a night, and was astonished to find growing in the wildest
+profusion <!-- page 303--><a name="page303"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 303</span>specimens of the apricot, peach, and
+nectarine, of which he had heretofore prided himself that he
+himself was the sole possessor.&nbsp; Enquiry was set on foot,
+and the Druse at whose house the young men had been lodging
+stated, that some years since, when some young Franks were
+occupying his house, they used to receive large baskets of fruit,
+which they had told him were sent to them as presents from a
+convent, and that the kernels and seeds of these fruits had been
+preserved and planted, and, with very little attention or care,
+had succeeded to admiration.&nbsp; Thus, out of evil resulted
+good; for if it had not been for these young thieves, the
+mountaineers might have been debarred from obtaining many
+excellent fruits, which are now growing wild upon the
+mountains.</p>
+<p>The Maronites derive their name from Maroun, a holy recluse,
+whose good actions and moral teachings were like so many
+dew-drops upon the wilderness of sin and wickedness in which some
+of the inhabitants of the East were wandering, about the
+beginning of the fifth century.&nbsp; They were subsequently
+associated with the Romish Church by one John, the Maronite, who
+joined the Latin insurgents against the authority of the Greek
+Emperor.&nbsp; They remained subordinate to the Church of Rome
+during the next six hundred years, though they continued to
+maintain their own patriarchs.&nbsp; This attachment and
+subjection to Rome was, however, considerably diminished by the
+events which followed the crusades; and they for a short time
+maintained an independent position.&nbsp; Rome, however, never
+lost sight of its former subjects, and perpetually strove to win
+them back to the fold of which the Pope is the shepherd; and
+after forty years of negotiation and intrigue, Pope Eugenius
+succeeded in procuring from the Maronites a solemn renewal of
+their recognition of the <!-- page 304--><a
+name="page304"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 304</span>Papal
+authority.&nbsp; From that date they have adhered to the Romish
+Church, enjoying privileges which the temporising unscrupulous
+conclave in Rome conferred and maintained, though contrary to the
+laws of their Church, in order not to lose so large a body of
+supporters.&nbsp; What these privileges are, will be seen in the
+following account of the people and their religious
+practices.</p>
+<p>The connection which exists between the Maronites and the
+Church of Rome is, in point of fact, maintained almost entirely
+by the priests, who, of course, have very good motives for their
+conduct.&nbsp; Were it not for the almost slavish subjection of
+the people to the priestly authority, this connection with the
+Church of Rome would long since have been violently shaken, if
+not entirely severed, for the second time.</p>
+<p>I have said that they inhabit the mountains of Lebanon; but I
+ought to be more precise, and to state, that they are chiefly to
+be found in those parts of the mountains which are in a
+north-easterly direction from Beyrout.&nbsp; They are a most
+industrious, contented, happy people, whose chief occupations are
+confined to weaving silk, and to tilling their
+ground&mdash;which, in some parts, the rocks and the soil render
+exceedingly difficult&mdash;for cultivating their mulberry trees
+for silk worms, which they do with great zeal and good
+effect.</p>
+<p>So thoroughly has nature fortified the district they inhabit,
+and so manly and courageous are they, that until the year 1843
+they had never been conquered by the Mahommedans; and though they
+had politically agreed to the payment of an annual tribute to the
+Porte, they were at that period without a garrison.&nbsp; They
+have experienced great vicissitudes at different periods, but
+throughout their whole history, I find that each crisis <!-- page
+305--><a name="page305"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+305</span>only served to add to the power and influence of the
+priesthood, who, in all things, social as well as political, have
+an incredible hold over the people.&nbsp; They are the
+legislators and the administrators.&nbsp; As they cunningly work
+together with the Sheikhs, nothing but a thorough change in the
+system of education will enable the people to shake off their
+fetters.</p>
+<p>Their creed and ritual partake both of the Greek and Latin
+churches; but, though they reverently adore the Virgin, they
+allow no images of any kind in their churches.&nbsp; What is
+still more remarkable, is the fact, their priests before
+ordination are allowed to marry, but the patriarchs and bishops
+must live in the strictest celibacy.&nbsp; So great is the
+deference paid by the laity to the priesthood, that whenever one
+of them meets a priest, he is sure at least to kiss his hand and
+ask his blessing; while some of the more pious, or perhaps more
+servile, of the women kneel before the priestly robe as if it
+were as holy and as sacred as the altar at which its wearer
+officiates.&nbsp; As a rule, however, the people dislike being
+called Roman Catholics; indeed many of them openly profess to
+hate the See of Rome, and, were it not for the very Romish
+tendencies of the protection and education they obtain at their
+schools, which in other respects are really excellent, the
+Maronites would certainly, in a very short period, disconnect
+themselves from all association with the See of Rome.</p>
+<p>An attempt was made not very long ago by an American
+missionary, to introduce a purer Christianity among them; but the
+unfavourable results of his brief residence at Deyr-al-Kamar may
+be solely attributed to a want of caution, in too abruptly
+opposing the doctrines of the established faith before educating
+the people.</p>
+<p><!-- page 306--><a name="page306"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+306</span>A legate from the Pope is perpetually resident on the
+Lebanon, where the chief monastery of the Maronite priesthood is
+situated.&nbsp; At various periods, too, there have been missions
+sent out from Rome in order to prevent any slackening or
+lessening of the papal influence.&nbsp; At this moment there is a
+Lazarite mission in Syria, the members of which have succeeded in
+persuading several fathers of families to part with their
+children for the purpose of having them educated in Rome.&nbsp;
+They have also constructed a hospital, and established schools
+for male and female children at Beyrout.&nbsp; The convents are
+among the few religious institutions within the dominions of his
+Imperial Majesty the Sultan, which are allowed to use the
+pleasant-sounding church-bells; and the Lebanon <a
+name="citation306"></a><a href="#footnote306"
+class="citation">[306]</a> is among the few localities in the
+East where the European traveller can experience the pleasant
+feelings and genial associations of his country, which are
+excited by the solemn sound of the Sabbath-bell, feelings that
+were unintelligible to me until I had spent more than one Sabbath
+in Europe.&nbsp; This privilege is a terrible ear-sore to the
+Mahommedans, who detest the Maronites more than any other
+Christian sect; partly because they know the Maronites entertain
+the belief that they are destined to put a period to Islamism, by
+enticing French interests into the East.</p>
+<p>I may observe, here, that in point of fact the Maronite faith
+has no firm foundation; for heretofore they seem to have been a
+people such as is described by St. James, chap. i. ver.
+6&mdash;&ldquo;He that wavereth is like a <!-- page 307--><a
+name="page307"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 307</span>wave of the
+sea driven of the wind and tossed.&rdquo;&nbsp; And they continue
+to be lukewarm; neither one thing nor the other; Roman Catholic
+in their adherence to the Pope and in the observance of certain
+outward forms of religion&mdash;Greeks as regards the privileges
+accorded to their priests&mdash;and Protestants in not admitting
+images in their churches.&nbsp; If we take a review of their
+<i>waverings</i>, we may be led to some conclusion on this
+head.&nbsp; First, we are told that their sect originated with a
+hermit of the fifth century: nearly 600 years they appear to have
+adhered to their original faith, but in 1182 they submitted to
+the Pope&rsquo;s authority.&nbsp; Barely a century elapses when
+they are found wavering again, owing to circumstances then taking
+place in the East.&nbsp; Nearly 300 years afterwards they again
+return to the Church of Rome; this was in 1445.&nbsp; And now,
+400 years after that, we find their creed to consist of an
+amalgamation of all the Christian sects.&nbsp; This cannot last
+long; they must eventually become one thing or the other; either
+<i>de facto</i> Roman Catholics, or else <i>de facto</i> Greeks
+or Protestants.</p>
+<p>Notwithstanding the Maronites live under a theocracy, from the
+peculiar situation of the Lebanon with regard to the lords of the
+surrounding land, the admission to many privileges was rendered
+not only advantageous, but absolutely requisite; and from these
+facts the notions of liberty entertained by the Maronite are far
+more exalted than those meagre ideas that possess the brain of
+the inhabitant of the plains.&nbsp; Their patriarch, subject to
+the Pope&rsquo;s approval, is elected by the bishops of the
+nation: to him they pay extraordinary deference.&nbsp; The
+bishops are also possessed of immense influence, and their word
+is tantamount to law.&nbsp; The local authorities are careful to
+avoid anything that <!-- page 308--><a name="page308"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 308</span>might cause offence to these
+prelates, well knowing the influence they exercise over the minds
+of the people.&nbsp; Owing to this, crime is in a great measure
+unknown amongst the Maronites; for offences, however trivial, are
+immediately judged by the clergy, and satisfaction and
+retribution at once exacted.&nbsp; Marriages without the
+bishop&rsquo;s consent cannot be solemnized; and any <i>faux
+pas</i> on the part of young people usually terminates in their
+marriage.</p>
+<p>The word of excommunication or anathema, amongst the
+Maronites, is &ldquo;<i>fra-massoon</i>&rdquo;; and he or she on
+whom it is pronounced, is as much avoided and abhorred as the
+plague-stricken.&nbsp; All houses are closed against a
+&ldquo;<i>fra-massoon</i>,&rdquo; and he may starve of cold and
+hunger amongst his own family and friends, with none to
+compassionate him.&nbsp; I remember being told by a person not
+overburdened with common sense, that upon one occasion, some
+years ago, a friend of his had given shelter and food to a
+&ldquo;<i>fra-massoon</i>&rdquo;; and that, happening
+unfortunately, soon after, to quit this world, his body was put
+aside in a cave, in accordance with the usual custom.&nbsp; Ten
+years afterwards, the coffin was accidentally opened, and the
+spectators saw with horror that the corpse was quite fresh, and
+presented no signs of decomposition.&nbsp; So unusual an
+occurrence excited great curiosity, and enquiries being made, it
+soon became known that the departed had transgressed the laws of
+the Church, by giving hospitality to one whom its ministers had
+cursed.&nbsp; The relatives of the deceased instantly went to the
+priest, and, after feeing him pretty freely, obtained his
+services to read a certain number of prayers over the corpse, and
+to pronounce upon it the forgiveness of the Church.&nbsp;
+Hereupon nature resumed her usual course, and nothing further was
+heard of the subject.</p>
+<p><!-- page 309--><a name="page309"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+309</span>The Maronites, under the influence of their priesthood,
+are noted as being most inhospitable to all excepting those
+professing their own creed; and even European travellers have
+been refused a shelter for the night, supposing that they were
+missionaries.&nbsp; They are a very superstitious and credulous
+people, and delight in absurd legends.&nbsp; They perform
+pilgrimages to Jerusalem and also to the tomb of Noah, supposed
+to be situated in the village of Kerak, between Beyrout and
+Baalbec; and about this they have endless ridiculous
+stories.&nbsp; They also pretend to have discovered the tomb of
+Moses, at a place a short distance from where the late Lady
+Hester Stanhope used to live.</p>
+<p>One great advantage which the Maronites possess, and which
+must eventually prove very beneficial to them, is the fact, that
+education is spreading universally amongst them.&nbsp; There is a
+native printing-press at work in one of the monasteries; but
+though the generality of the men are well-bred, the women are
+grossly ignorant and rude.&nbsp; Lady Francis Egerton found cause
+to complain of this sadly: &ldquo;If I fastened my door,&rdquo;
+says her ladyship, &ldquo;they called and knocked and battered at
+it, until I feared it would yield to their efforts; and this at
+five o&rsquo;clock in the morning, whilst I was in
+bed.&rdquo;&mdash;A pardonable curiosity, however, amongst a
+semi-barbarous people; for so the women must be termed, until
+they are admitted to the privileges conferred by education, and
+social intercourse with civilised English women.</p>
+<p>The Maronites, in common with the Greeks and the Armenians,
+pay an annual visit to the Cedars of Lebanon, for the celebration
+of the feast of the Transfiguration.&nbsp; Here they celebrate
+mass on a rough stone altar, at the foot of the Cedars: in the
+open air&mdash;in &ldquo;a <!-- page 310--><a
+name="page310"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 310</span>temple not
+made with hands&rdquo;&mdash;some of them offer up prayers and
+thanksgivings, quoting those very Psalms of David which were
+composed and written expressly to commemorate God&rsquo;s mercy
+and loving-kindness, as in connection with the immediate spots
+which surround these cedars.</p>
+<p>A wedding amongst the Maronites differs in some material
+points from the ordinary marriages in Syria; in the first place,
+the priest is considered the principal negotiator, and on his
+report as to the suitableness of the match, much of the future
+happiness of the young people may be said to depend.&nbsp; After
+preliminaries have been arranged, gifts of dresses, and the like,
+are exchanged, but the bashful <i>fianc&eacute;e</i> is supposed
+to be in utter ignorance of all that transpires, to spurn these
+gifts, and to dislike even the mention of her future
+husband&rsquo;s name.&nbsp; The priest blesses the bridal clothes
+of the bridegroom before he adopts them.&nbsp; When the friends
+go to fetch the bride, a mock combat ensues, in which, however,
+without bloodshed or bruises, the bridegroom&rsquo;s party is
+invariably victorious, and the women carry off the veiled bride
+in triumph, attended by her female relation.&nbsp; The
+bride&rsquo;s house mourns her departure, and she herself makes
+no secret of her sorrow to leave; but the <i>arus</i> (bride) no
+sooner makes her appearance than the shouts and acclamations, and
+firing of muskets by the assembled multitude, seem effectually to
+drown any discordant sounds of lamentation; the procession,
+however, moves at a funeral pace, for it is thought highly
+indecorous that the bride should appear as though anxious to
+arrive at her new abode.&nbsp; On crossing the threshold, she is
+saluted by the women with the cry of welcome, and clapping the
+hands; and after her veil has been removed, she is covered with
+one <!-- page 311--><a name="page311"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 311</span>of red gauze, and then made to sit
+in state on the divan at the upper end of the room.&nbsp; Here
+she neither smiles nor speaks, but rises on the entry of each
+venerable female friend, to embrace her, and kiss her hand.&nbsp;
+Both men and women, though in separate apartments, pass the night
+in noisy hilarity.&nbsp; Before sunset, the bishop, or in his
+absence the senior priest, attends at the bridegroom&rsquo;s
+house to perform the ceremony; all symptoms of mirth are
+immediately abandoned, silence is proclaimed, and then the
+service proceeds very much after the fashion of the Greek Church,
+only that both the groomsman and bridesmaid are crowned by the
+priest as well as the couple being married, and the
+<i>bridegroom</i> places the ring given him by the priest on the
+bride&rsquo;s finger.&nbsp; Towards the end of the marriage
+ceremony, the priest puts a piece of blue ribband, with the
+picture of a saint attached to it, round the bridegroom&rsquo;s
+neck.&nbsp; The newly married bride is confined to her house for
+the space of a month after her marriage.</p>
+<p>I have already mentioned the extreme facility with which the
+Maronites believe many fables and superstitions that have any
+connection with religious matters; and perhaps I shall be
+pardoned for introducing in evidence of this, a fact which
+occurred about eighty years ago, which attracted the attention of
+the traveller Volney, and which is still spoken of very
+frequently among the inhabitants.&nbsp; There are several
+nunneries belonging to the Maronites in the Lebanon, and it was
+in one of them, about the period mentioned, that Hindyeh, a young
+nun, forced herself into great notoriety by the severity of her
+penances, and the extraordinary piety she displayed.&nbsp; Having
+found many friends, her reputation increased to such an extent,
+that she was at last declared capable of working miracles; and
+the <!-- page 312--><a name="page312"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 312</span>simple-minded Maronites, having
+provided the funds, she was duly installed in a religious
+establishment of her own.&nbsp; Her nunnery, and the other
+establishments in connection with it, had flourished for more
+than twenty years, when a suspicion was suddenly excited, that
+several of the nuns, of whom many had died, had met their death
+by unfair means, and that most improper practices prevailed
+within the cells.&nbsp; An unhappy merchant of Sidon, who had
+placed two of his daughters in the establishment, disturbed by
+these reports, determined to visit the place and make
+inquiries.&nbsp; On his arrival, he was told he could not see his
+daughters because they were ill, and finding that all entreaties
+were in vain, he proceeded to Deyr al Kamar, and obtained an
+armed force from Emir Yusuf, the chief of the mountain, and the
+attendance of the bishop to enquire into the matter.&nbsp; The
+result shewed the existence of a system of wickedness and
+profligacy, exceeding in iniquity anything ever known, to which
+one of the daughters of the merchant in question had already
+fallen a victim, the other being at the time almost dead.&nbsp;
+The holy, or rather unholy, Hindyeh, was seized and imprisoned,
+with her accomplices, and the examinations which were made fully
+criminated them all.&nbsp; The arch-priestess of all this
+wickedness managed to escape from the convent in which she was
+imprisoned, and to reach a locality in which she possessed a
+large body of adherents and believers.&nbsp; Notwithstanding the
+disclosures which were made, the hypocritical career pursued by
+this nefarious woman, so completely imposed upon the weak and
+credulous Maronites, that she died respected and revered, and to
+this day is acknowledged as a saint.&nbsp; Need I say anything
+more to prove the extent to which this weakness is carried among
+the <i>fellahen</i>.</p>
+<p><!-- page 313--><a name="page313"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+313</span>The number of Roman Catholics in Syria, including both
+the Armenians, and the Greek Roman Catholics, as one portion of
+them is called, may be stated at about 200,000, and, as they
+differ in no important points from the Roman Catholics of the
+West, they may be passed over without further mention.&nbsp; I
+may observe, however, that the Armenians are not so generally
+respected as their Christian brethren of other denominations;
+and, in illustration, I would remark, that at the grand ceremony
+on Easter-day of bringing down fire from heaven, the Armenians
+are driven to obtain a portion of it as best they may; their
+priests and pilgrims being generally forced into the most remote
+corner of the sacred edifice.</p>
+<p>The Copts, or, as we are accustomed to call them in the East,
+&ldquo;the Oobbeet,&rdquo; are the followers of one &ldquo;Mar
+Yackoob.&rdquo;&nbsp; Their chief doctrine is that Christ
+possessed but one nature; and they agree with the Church of Rome
+in saying that the Holy Spirit proceeded from the Father to the
+Son.&nbsp; They are governed by a patriarch who resides at Cairo,
+and is called patriarch of Alexandria, whose authority is very
+great over the whole sect; indeed, their most prominent
+characteristic may be said to be an almost slavish obedience to
+their priests.&nbsp; Like the Maronites, they invariably kiss the
+hand of any priest they may encounter in the open street, or
+country; and many of them prostrate themselves before the holy
+man.&nbsp; Though they conform to the Hebrew practice of
+circumcision, they also baptize their infants.&nbsp; It is
+customary with them to pray seven times during the twenty-four
+hours, according to the rules prescribed by the patriarchs; and
+it is, moreover, a common practice with many of them to learn by
+heart the whole of the Psalms, some <!-- page 314--><a
+name="page314"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 314</span>of which
+they invariably repeat before proceeding to transact any
+business, in the belief that this devout recurrence to the
+Psalmist will insure prosperity to the affair they have in
+hand.</p>
+<p>Generally they are very clever, especially at figures.&nbsp; A
+few of them have recently joined the Orthodox Eastern Church,
+with which they have many practices and doctrines in common; and
+a small section has been very powerfully worked upon by a
+Lazarite mission, the members of which succeeded in persuading
+several parents to part with their children for the purpose of
+having them educated in Paris.</p>
+<p>It is presumed, from the remarkably Jewish cast of their
+features, and from their adherence to the Hebrew law, that they
+are of Jewish origin; but other evidence on this point is
+wanting.&nbsp; Though I have said that they were called after one
+Mar Yackoob, their existence as a Christian sect at an earlier
+period is clearly established; and indeed it has been said by
+many of the learned visitors to Syria, that they are as old as
+the Nestorians.&nbsp; At all events they were only organised by
+Mar Yackoob, who founded a perfect theocratic form of association
+or government.&nbsp; Indeed, wherever we turn, whether it be to
+the several Christian sects or denominations in the East, or to
+any one of the pagan forms of religion, we find the same fact in
+all.&nbsp; They have all been founded and organised by a priest,
+and, whether for good or evil, priestly influence has, in most
+instances, prevailed until the present day.&nbsp; It is also
+believed that the Armenians were in some way connected with, or
+absolutely descended from, the Copts; and there is very good
+evidence of great intimacy between the latter and the Nestorians,
+the last of the Christian bodies in Syria, and now to be
+described.&nbsp; In point of numbers <!-- page 315--><a
+name="page315"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 315</span>the Copts
+are very unimportant.&nbsp; They do not exceed 300 in Syria; but
+there are a great many of them to be found in Egypt.</p>
+<p>The Nestorians now claim my attention; but as very little is
+known concerning them in my own neighbourhood, and as I have
+never had an opportunity of visiting them in their own
+mountain-homes, I can only relate what has been told me by
+travellers.</p>
+<p>It is believed that they are of Jewish origin; but there is no
+positive evidence on the point, beyond their features, their
+observance of certain Jewish customs, and their respect for
+portions of the Hebrew code of laws.&nbsp; It cannot be doubted,
+however, that they have maintained Christianity in the East for
+more than sixteen hundred years; and that, as primitive
+Christians, who have not degenerated from the simple form of
+worship enjoined by the Apostles of our Lord, they are entitled
+to our deepest respect and veneration.</p>
+<p>They are divided into two sects, the Simple and the Papal
+Nestorians; but the former do not acknowledge the latter as a
+part of their body, and declare that they are in no way connected
+with the Nestorian Church.&nbsp; They have two patriarchs, who
+reside in the mountains near Julamerk, and whose influence,
+together with that of all the priesthood, is very great
+indeed.&nbsp; Here again we find existing a purely theocratic
+form of government.&nbsp; The priesthood legislate politically
+and socially, and they administer the laws judicially, as well as
+attend to the religious wants of the community over which they
+preside.</p>
+<p>The habits and manners of life of the Nestorians are so
+primitive, that their simplicity has become proverbial in the
+East.&nbsp; Their belief differs from the Orthodox Eastern
+Church, by declaring the existence of two <!-- page 316--><a
+name="page316"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 316</span>persons in
+the Saviour, as was propounded by their founder, Nestorius, in
+the beginning of the fifth century.&nbsp; The sacrament of bread
+and wine is administered to all by the officiating priest, in
+almost the same way as this ceremony is performed in the Greek
+Eastern churches.&nbsp; They are most hostile to the Roman
+Catholics, whom they hate.</p>
+<p>Including the Nestorians inhabiting Persia, I believe there
+may be altogether about 100,000.&nbsp; On the confines of Persia,
+they are engaged in perpetual warfare with the Koords.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 317--><a name="page317"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 317</span>CHAPTER XVIII.<br />
+THE POPULATION OF SYRIA, CONTINUED.&mdash;THE PAGAN
+INHABITANTS.</h2>
+<p>Having dwelt at some length upon the several bodies of
+Christian inhabitants of Syria, I must entreat my readers&rsquo;
+pardon if I endeavour to make my description of the unbelieving
+portion as brief and condensed as possible.&nbsp; Of course, I
+need not advert to the Mahommedans, the faithful followers of the
+Prophet.&nbsp; As I have stated before, they comprise by far the
+largest proportion of the inhabitants of the towns and lowlands
+of Syria, and are lords and masters over the rest of the
+population.</p>
+<p>But, besides the orthodox Mahommedans, we have in Syria a very
+large number of heterodox followers of the Mahommedan faith, who
+are called Met&aacute;wali; and who, though they are certainly
+less numerous than their orthodox brethren, are an infinitely
+more interesting people.&nbsp; They are followers of Ali, the
+other sect adhering to Omar.&nbsp; They may amount, in round
+numbers, to about 35,000; but as they have selected for their
+homes some of the most inaccessible parts of the mountainous
+districts of the country, their numbers cannot be very accurately
+ascertained.&nbsp; They are said, by many persons, to belong to
+the same section of the Mahommedan faith as the Persians, who
+also believe in Ali; but they exhibit some peculiar doctrines and
+customs, which establish an essential distinction between the
+two.</p>
+<p><!-- page 318--><a name="page318"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+318</span>Like the former, they expect the advent of the Messiah
+in the person of the twelfth Imam of his line, whom the Turks
+allege to have been slain in the battle of Karbela in which he
+engaged with the Caliph of Bagdad; but whom the Met&aacute;wali
+believe to have been transported to Arabia, by the miraculous
+interposition of the Divinity, and from whence he is to return in
+triumph to re-establish the race of the Imams on the throne, and
+to punish all who opposed him or his followers.&nbsp; When the
+expected Messiah does appear, they believe that he will assume
+the government of the whole world&mdash;that he will visit with
+the most dreadful punishments all who shall have denied
+him&mdash;and that he will render unto all true believers eternal
+happiness.</p>
+<p>In expectation of the advent of this Messiah, the
+Met&aacute;wali keep horses, money, and clothing constantly in
+readiness for his arrival; and whatever is once set apart for
+this purpose, is held sacred for ever after, and cannot be used
+by an ordinary mortal. <a name="citation318"></a><a
+href="#footnote318" class="citation">[318]</a></p>
+<p>They believe in the transmigration and gradual purification of
+the soul, which, according to their belief, eventually becomes a
+bright star in the heavenly firmament.&nbsp; <!-- page 319--><a
+name="page319"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 319</span>The first
+apostle of Ali, in Syria, was Abou-Abdallah-Mohammed, who was
+most successful in making converts, but, having excited the envy
+and hatred of some of the chief people in Damascus, he was
+imprisoned and burned to death as an infidel and
+blasphemer.&nbsp; From this circumstance he has been styled the
+first martyr.</p>
+<p>Though the first apostle of the new faith was thus summarily
+extinguished, the light of his doctrines was not smothered with
+him, and it may be considered certain that the manner of his
+death was mainly the cause of the rapidity with which they spread
+over the country immediately afterwards.&nbsp; As is generally
+the case, persecution lent strength and vitality to the cause,
+and many sought the honour of a martyrdom similar to that which
+had befallen Abou-Abdallah-Mohammed.&nbsp; However, the faster
+the new religion spread, the greater activity did the Orthodox
+authorities develop in putting it down.&nbsp; Priest after priest
+was being drawn and quartered, hundreds of men, women, and
+children were butchered or buried alive, to gratify the atrocious
+passions of an ignorant people, and still more barbarous
+government.&nbsp; Nevertheless, the new faith prospered, and the
+Met&aacute;wali began to assume a position of influence and power
+in the country; but after numerous vicissitudes, the butcher
+Djezzar, who had been made governor of Syria, succeeded by
+cunning and treachery in prostrating their power, and destroying
+their strongholds.&nbsp; Thousands of them were executed by his
+orders, and even under his eye, and, like Mehemet Ali, who
+watched the destruction of the Mamelukes, so did Ahmed Djezzar
+amuse himself by watching the death struggles of hundreds of the
+Met&aacute;wali who had been hurled from the battlements of
+Nabatieh into the Kasmich.</p>
+<p><!-- page 320--><a name="page320"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+320</span>Under persecutions like these, the strong arm of the
+authorities, aided by the passions of a fanatical body combining
+together against them, the Met&aacute;wali gradually lessened in
+numbers, and consequently lost the influential and powerful
+position they were beginning to acquire.&nbsp; Politically this
+sect may now be said to be prostrate, but they cherish the
+memories of those of their forefathers who fell in the defence of
+their religious independence, and many an evening&rsquo;s hour is
+passed by the people listening in rapt attention to the numerous
+anecdotes of the firmness, the courage, and the devotedness of
+the martyrs for their faith.</p>
+<p>The localities they live in entails habits and customs which
+naturally tend to rear a hardy and courageous race.&nbsp; Their
+method of living is simple in the extreme; but, though the
+stranger who may visit their mountain-villages is sure of the
+greatest hospitality, it is nevertheless, of a peculiar
+character.&nbsp; They never admit within their dwellings any
+person who does not belong to their own persuasion, nor do they
+allow any one but a Met&aacute;wali to use their furniture or
+domestic utensils.&nbsp; Should a Frank or a Jew by accident
+touch a mat or a pot belonging to them, it is instantly cast away
+as defiled and unclean.&nbsp; To receive the wandering stranger
+there is erected in every village, a house for the purpose, in
+which the visitor is ever most bountifully provided for.&nbsp;
+Strange to say, however, their dislike to contact with others,
+extends no further than their own dwellings.&nbsp; In the open
+air, or in a house belonging to a person of a different
+persuasion, they are alike indifferent to the presence of
+Christian or Jew, conversing and associating with them as freely
+as they zealously avoid permitting them to enter their own
+dwellings.&nbsp; They are an exceedingly clean people, never
+sitting down to a meal without having performed their
+ablutions.</p>
+<p><!-- page 321--><a name="page321"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+321</span>It is owing, perhaps to the paucity of their numbers,
+but still more, I think, to the gradual decline of the power of
+the Maronite, that the Met&aacute;wali exist untroubled in their
+mountain fastnesses.&nbsp; But should any attempt be made by any
+government, or by any other religious body in the East, to wrong
+or subjugate them, I am convinced that they would not submit
+without a very severe struggle, in which their native ferocity
+would once more appear on the surface, to their own disadvantage,
+perhaps, but still more to that of their enemy.</p>
+<p>A good deal has been written respecting the Druses, who are
+the most curious, and least known section of the population of
+Syria.&nbsp; The cause of the ignorance which prevails concerning
+them, and which I am unable to dispel will be seen in the
+following account of this interesting and courageous people.</p>
+<p>I have been told that several learned men have, at different
+times, diligently endeavoured to acquire a thorough insight into
+the religious theories possessed by the Druses, but I have never
+yet met with any author who has given an explanation or
+description of them, satisfactorily to his readers.&nbsp; Where
+others, whom I have been taught to respect and revere, have
+failed, I hesitate to make the attempt, knowing that I shall be
+unsuccessful.&nbsp; In point of fact, the great mystery which
+surrounds the religion of the Druses is, I fear, a mystery even
+to themselves, a shadowy outline, which the initiated are told
+they understand, and which the uninitiated worship in the depth
+of their ignorance.</p>
+<p>The Druses inhabit the Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon, or rather the
+southern portions of the mountain, in which they possess a great
+deal of land and villages; <!-- page 322--><a
+name="page322"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 322</span>but they
+are also mixed up with the Maronite and other Christian
+populations of more than two hundred other villages.&nbsp; They
+are divided into two classes; the initiated into the mysteries of
+their religion are called Akkals, and the uninitiated are called
+Djahils.&nbsp; Both sexes are alike eligible for initiation among
+the Akkals; in this respect there is that perfect equality for
+the female sex, which I so often hear some of my fair friends in
+England sighing for.&nbsp; But the woman who is a Akkaliah may
+not marry a Djahil.&nbsp; There is an easy remedy for this,
+however, since I am told that initiation may be effected on very
+short notice and without expense or examinations.&nbsp; Every
+Thursday the Akkals meet in Khalueh, a temple, or building,
+erected expressly for the purpose, and in which their religious
+books, their war trophies, and standards are kept.&nbsp; Here
+they sit talking of politics, or reading religious books, and
+when the general discussions are concluded, the majority go away,
+leaving only the highest in social rank to discuss the interests
+of the tribe with the priests.&nbsp; The chief priest, or as I
+take the liberty of calling him, their great mystery-man, lives
+at Bakleen, whence he rules over the whole body.&nbsp; As I have
+said previously, the nature of their religious belief is a
+mystery.&nbsp; It is neither Christian nor Jewish, nor Mahommedan
+nor Pagan.&nbsp; They believe in the unity of God, and in the
+transmigration of souls, but while they themselves profess to be
+Mahommedans, they exhibit in their social customs as well as in
+their features, many points of resemblance with the Jews, and
+they have no hesitation whatever in denouncing Mahommed as a
+false prophet, and in disregarding the most sacred festivals of
+the Moslem faith.</p>
+<p>Though so little is known of their present religion, <!-- page
+323--><a name="page323"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 323</span>it
+has been tolerably well ascertained that it was founded by one
+Darazi, who about the middle of the eleventh century traversed
+Syria, preaching the doctrine that the real Caliph Hakeem was the
+incarnation of God, and the most perfect manifestation of the
+Deity.&nbsp; Name and strength was, however, first given to the
+new creed by one Hamza, who denounced Adam, Abraham, Moses,
+Jesus, and Mahommed as impostors, and declared himself to be the
+incarnation of the spirit of universal intelligence.&nbsp; In his
+creed, he either forgot or wilfully omitted all notice of a
+future state of existence.&nbsp; Since that period, this peculiar
+faith has gained many proselytes; and the Druses are now, next to
+the Maronites, the most numerous religious body in Lebanon who
+are not Mahommedans.</p>
+<p>Leaving their mysterious creed, to deal with the people
+themselves, I may state, that they are easily distinguished by
+their features, being, generally speaking, muscular, well-made
+men, active and middle-sized, and enabled to undergo great
+fatigue.&nbsp; Their courage is not to be daunted.&nbsp; The
+women are generally very handsome, with tall, slim figures, black
+hair, and beautiful blue eyes.&nbsp; The disposition of the men
+is a strange mixture of open-hearted hospitality and morose
+vindictiveness; but they are strictly honourable, and have never
+been known to break a promise.&nbsp; In all their transactions
+they deal uprightly with one another; but this cannot be said to
+be the case when they transact business with others: their creed
+admits of their practising imposition upon infidels to their own
+faith.</p>
+<p>I have already observed, that there exists a great resemblance
+between the ancient Scottish clans and the mountaineers of the
+Lebanon.&nbsp; In support of this, I cannot do better than to
+quote what Volney says, <!-- page 324--><a
+name="page324"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 324</span>when
+speaking of the Druses:&mdash;&ldquo;As soon as the emir and
+sheikhs had determined on war at Deyr al Kamar, criers went up at
+night to the summit of the cliffs, and cried aloud, &lsquo;To
+war, to war!&nbsp; Take your guns, take your pistols!&nbsp; Noble
+sheikhs, mount your horses; arm yourselves with the lance and the
+sabre: meet to-morrow at Deyr al Kamar.&nbsp; Zeal of God! zeal
+of combat!&rsquo;&nbsp; This summons, heard in the neighbouring
+villages,&rdquo; continues the same author, &ldquo;was repeated
+there; and as the whole country is nothing but a chain of lofty
+mountains and deep valleys, the proclamation passed through its
+length and breadth in a few hours.&nbsp; These cries, from the
+stillness of the night, the long-resounding echoes, and the
+nature of the subject, had something awful and terrible in their
+effect.&nbsp; Three days after, fifteen thousand men were
+assembled at Deyr al Kamar, and operations might have been
+immediately commenced.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To strengthen their respective clans, is the Druses&rsquo;
+main object through life; and to effect this, they almost
+invariably marry amongst themselves&mdash;preferring their own
+relations with poverty, to the richest dowry with a
+foreigner.&nbsp; Their creed admits of but one wife; but they
+allow of divorces.&nbsp; If a Druse says to his wife, &ldquo;Go
+to your father&rsquo;s house,&rdquo; and does not say to her,
+&ldquo;Come back,&rdquo; it is considered a divorce.&nbsp; Their
+jealousy far outstrips the Mussulman&rsquo;s: any conjugal
+infidelity is certain of being requited by death: no
+intercession, however powerful, can avail aught in these cases;
+even where fathers have made intercession, brothers have become
+the executioners of their own sisters.&nbsp; Any man can divorce
+his wife upon paying a certain sum; but divorces are of very rare
+occurrence.</p>
+<p>The every-day life of the Druse is monotonous in the extreme;
+even their children at an early age inherit <!-- page 325--><a
+name="page325"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 325</span>their
+insipid manner of life, and leave the healthful recreation of a
+good game at <i>damah</i>, to sit down in a circle, and ape their
+parents in discussing politics.&nbsp; The Druse, like most of the
+natives of Syria, is an early riser; and the first thing he does
+after he has gone through his morning ablutions, is to command
+his wife to set before him a large bowl of freshly-drawn
+goat&rsquo;s milk, or <i>dibs</i>.&nbsp; In this he sops his
+bread; and making a hearty and wholesome breakfast, shoulders his
+gun, sticks his kanjur in his girdle, lights his pipe, and then
+goes forth to attend to his daily occupations till mid-day.&nbsp;
+If it be the season to plough, he harnesses his oxen, and treads
+heavily after the furrows till nigh upon mid-day, at which time
+his wife or one of the family brings him out his substantial
+mid-day repast.&nbsp; In this interval he has perhaps rested
+himself half a dozen times, to sit and smoke a pipe: or, if a
+fellow-creedsman passed, he has stopped to exchange a few
+words&mdash;complain of the heat, ask the news, the lowest price
+quoted for wheat, and so on; but you seldom hear them laughing or
+joking with one another, and never by any chance singing or
+whistling; they have no idea of a tune, no taste for music,
+unless it be the music of money rattling in their pockets; and
+this has greater charms for them than the pipe of Tityrus had
+over the sylvan woods.&nbsp; At this mid-day meal there is
+another fresh bowl of <i>laban</i> milk in addition to a goodly
+supply of <i>borghol</i>, and, in summer, cucumber and some
+chillies, or the batingan stuffed with hashed mutton and
+rice.</p>
+<p>As the sun sinks behind the conical tops of the western hills,
+the Druse unyokes his cattle and drives them homeward, himself
+shouldering the plough.&nbsp; Now it is that, if ever he enjoys
+himself, the Druse indulges <!-- page 326--><a
+name="page326"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 326</span>in a little
+relaxation.&nbsp; If he be fortunate enough to be possessed of a
+supply of powder and shot, he deviates from his right path,
+leaving the oxen to find their way home untended, and shouts and
+throws stones into every bush and down every glade he
+passes.&nbsp; Sometimes a hare starts up, sometimes a covey of
+partridges, or, may be, a jackal; but, whatever the game chance
+to be, he fires, and that with so steady and correct an aim, as
+to be almost certain of securing the victim.&nbsp; Even
+jackals&rsquo; skins are valuable, and will fetch their
+price.</p>
+<p>Of an evening they assemble at one anothers&rsquo; houses, and
+there, with pipe in hand, seated in such an attitude that their
+knees are on a level with their nose, they talk politics by the
+hour.&nbsp; They are generally a dissatisfied, gloomy, and
+grumbling people; and their usual topic of conversation is
+exactly what John Bull is so much laughed at for, viz., the
+hardness of the times.&nbsp; They pull to pieces the pasha, the
+emir, the effendis&mdash;lament over the prospects of a bad silk
+crop, or a worse wheat harvest, speaking feelingly of the general
+lack of money&mdash;foretell that things will be certain to go on
+from bad to worse&mdash;predict a famine&mdash;prophesy a murrain
+amongst the cattle&mdash;see in the yellow tinge of the western
+atmosphere the cholera&mdash;smell out of the heavy night-dew an
+interminable catalogue of maladies, as absurd and unknown as any
+of the foregoing calamities; and having worked themselves up to
+an extreme pitch of wretchedness, they disperse for the night,
+and retrace their steps to their respective homes, croaking the
+while, or hooting gloomily to one another just as a parcel of
+ravens would croak or owls hoot as they wing their way to roost,
+when the distant growl of thunder foretells the coming storm.</p>
+<p><!-- page 327--><a name="page327"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+327</span>The Druses are great hypocrites in religious
+matters.&nbsp; One of their religious books gives them this
+liberty, for it says:&mdash;&ldquo;<i>Embrace the religion of
+those who have power over you</i>; <i>for such is the pleasure of
+our</i> <span class="smcap">Maoula</span>, <i>till he</i>, <i>to
+whom the best times are known</i>, <i>shall unsheathe the
+sword</i>, <i>and display the power of his
+unity</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Hence with the Turks, they pretend to be
+devout Moslems&mdash;fast when they fast, and feast when they
+feast.&nbsp; With the Christians they are equally devoted to the
+Adrah Mariam&mdash;the Virgin Mary; and in private they despise
+and detest both: but I believe that the Druses have really great
+faith and confidence in the English, whom they suppose to be all
+Protestants; and their idea of a Protestant is that their
+religion is a species of freemasonry, which very much resembles
+their own.&nbsp; Of late years political struggles on the
+mountains have served rather to strengthen this belief; for the
+Druses were invariably supported by the English, and the native
+attach&eacute;s, agents, and other people, not only of the
+Consulates in the neighbouring towns, but also English
+travellers, lost no opportunity of impressing this fact upon the
+minds of the Druses&rsquo; who were already predisposed to such a
+belief from the fact of a tradition long existent amongst them,
+that many of their noblest families were descended from some of
+the princes amongst the Crusaders.</p>
+<p>The Druses never introduce the subject of their religion
+before others; that is to say, never in such a form as to hold it
+forth as an argument, or an inducement for others to become
+proselytes, or to inform strangers of their doctrines, but they
+confidently affirm that a great number of their co-religionists
+inhabit the vast continent of India, and declare that they are to
+be <!-- page 328--><a name="page328"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+328</span>met with even in China, from which they believe they
+themselves came.</p>
+<p>They suppose, that in England there are to this day many of
+the Akkals, or initiated, but of later years their confidence has
+been much shaken; and <i>apropos</i> of this, I quote an extract
+of a letter from one of the Akkals of the Druses, sent to me from
+Lebanon in 1845:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;There are many English travellers, and some
+men apparently of much wisdom, who have visited us and conversed
+on subjects of religion; and they endeavour to persuade us that
+in their country there are many people who profess a creed
+similar to our own: this was particularly mentioned by a tall
+English emir.&nbsp; I wish you would enquire into this matter,
+and write us your opinion clearly; and should the report be
+verified, the existence of such co-religionists would at once
+entitle us to proclaim the protection of the English upon the
+same grounds as the Maronites are protected by France.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It is said that, in the official report of M.
+Desm&eacute;loises, then a French Consul in Syria, this belief of
+the Druses that they were allied to, and descended from, noble
+European families, was found serviceable to the French agents,
+when the allied forces appeared off the coast of Syria, for the
+purpose of expelling Ibrahim Pasha and the Egyptian troops; and
+they acted upon the imagination of the Druses so powerfully, that
+little or no inducement was requisite to cause them to side with
+the Europeans.</p>
+<p>There is one thing to which the Druses are much addicted, and
+which sadly deteriorates from their general character for
+civilization&mdash;this is, their fondness for raw meat.&nbsp;
+Whenever a gazelle is shot, or a kid killed, the raw kidneys and
+heart are luxuries for which the Druse epicure will contend with
+angry words; and such is the <!-- page 329--><a
+name="page329"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 329</span>force of
+example, that even Christians in the neighbourhood have adopted
+this system of cannibalism, washing down every mouthful with a
+glass of strong <i>arakey</i>.&nbsp; European authors accuse the
+Christians of the plains, and especially the women, of being
+guilty of a like atrocity, saying that they eat meat in their
+<i>kubbas</i>, but the fact is what meat they use in these is
+first so finely sliced up, and then so unmercifully thumped, that
+it becomes a perfect paste, and the very friction and heat more
+than half cook it; besides which, this meat is mixed with
+chillies, onions, and borghol, and the proportion of meat to
+wheat is one to ten.</p>
+<p>Outwardly the Druses keep up the appearance of friendship with
+their neighbours, but the intrigues of political agents, and the
+wary cunning of Roman priests, have of late years tended sadly to
+interrupt the harmony that existed between the Druses and the
+Maronites.</p>
+<p>The Yezidees, of whom there are some thousands in the country
+next claim attention.&nbsp; They are most numerous in Koordistan,
+where they are all comprised in one general body.&nbsp; In Syria,
+however, we are accustomed to divide them into three
+tribes&mdash;the worshippers of the sun, the Shemisees; the
+worshippers of the devil, the Sheytanees; and the
+cut-throats.&nbsp; I do not mean to say that the latter portion
+are greater cut-throats than their co-religionists of the other
+two sections, for like the Mahommedans, with whom they come
+chiefly into collision, the whole of the three divisions are
+equally distinguished by the same murderous inclinations.&nbsp;
+Like the religion of the Druses, that of the Yezidees is an
+indescribable mixture of nearly all the religious creeds of the
+East and West.&nbsp; They respect Christ and the Christian
+saints; but they do not disavow <!-- page 330--><a
+name="page330"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 330</span>Mahommed
+and Moses.&nbsp; They baptize their children, but they conform
+also to the Hebrew practice of circumcision.&nbsp; They
+commemorate the birth of the Saviour, but they also celebrate the
+feast of the Passover with all the forms and solemnities
+customary among the Jews; and they also abstain from all the food
+which is considered unclean by the Israelite.&nbsp; While
+worshipping but one God, they profess profound veneration for
+Ahriman, the prince of darkness, and they also adore the fiery
+element, bowing before the rising sun.&nbsp; In praying, they are
+careful to kneel with their faces towards the East.&nbsp; Indeed,
+it would seem as if, doubtful of salvation under a simple faith
+of their own, the presiding minds of the Yezidees had collected
+the principal points from all religions in the world, in order to
+make sure of the right one.&nbsp; Some of them even do not
+hesitate to make an avowal of this kind.&nbsp; The most peculiar
+feature of their religion, is the extreme respect which they pay
+to the devil, who is never mentioned by his right name, but is
+always mysteriously spoken of <i>as the great incognito</i>,
+<i>the bird of Paradise</i>, and whose worship is always carried
+on after sunset.&nbsp; I am assured too, that his Satanic
+eminence is always present on these sacred occasions, and is
+accustomed to acknowledge the honours paid to him by his
+credulous worshippers by a yell or scream of a most unearthly
+kind, its effect being to prostrate on their faces the whole of
+the parties present.&nbsp; Their head-priest possesses an
+extraordinary amount of influence over the whole body.</p>
+<p>The Yezidees are a brave, open, confiding, honest,
+industrious, civil race, combining with these good qualities,
+however, an inordinate passion for warfare, civil and national,
+and a great proneness to robbery and <!-- page 331--><a
+name="page331"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 331</span>pillage on
+a large scale.&nbsp; They are actuated by their intense contempt
+and hatred towards the Mahommedans to the committal of many
+excesses against the followers of the Prophet.&nbsp; Indeed, they
+are firmly convinced that they cannot perform a more meritorious
+action&mdash;an action more advantageous to themselves, both in
+this and the next life, and they absolutely take pleasure in
+ridding the world of a Mahommedan.&nbsp; This spirit of hatred is
+fully returned by its objects, who detest the Yezidees, and who
+consider the very name to be synonymous with all that is evil and
+treacherous.</p>
+<p>It has been stated of late years, that the traditions which
+exist among this people, and which tend to establish their
+descent from the ancient Hebrews, are founded on fact, that they
+are in reality a remnant of the lost tribes of Israel.&nbsp; I am
+not sufficiently learned on this subject to trace the links of
+the connection, but I may unhesitatingly state, that the
+conviction of its truth is rapidly spreading among the people
+themselves.</p>
+<p>I shall close this account of these sects in Syria with a
+brief mention of the Ansyreeh or Nosairiyeh and I am more
+inclined to say a few words about them, from the fact that a
+systematic effort is likely to be made for their
+conversion.&nbsp; These tribes also inhabit the mountain
+districts; but they live in much greater isolation than the other
+religious bodies, and in consequence, their numbers are not to be
+ascertained with anything approaching to precision.&nbsp; They do
+not inhabit any particular province, but I am perfectly well
+aware, as has been stated by one writer on this subject, that
+there are several hundred Nosairiyeh resident in the small
+village of Salahiyeh, about one mile from Damascus.&nbsp; They
+are most numerous in the range of mountains north of <!-- page
+332--><a name="page332"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+332</span>Mount Lebanon; where I can assure my readers that it is
+a task of no slight difficulty, and even great danger to
+penetrate, and it has very rarely indeed been successfully
+accomplished.&nbsp; In illustration of this fact, I may narrate
+here the experience of a friend of mine, who desired personally
+to obtain all the information concerning this people, which a
+trip into the most northern parts of the Lebanon could
+procure.&nbsp; Having made all his arrangements for the purpose,
+he departed, provided with a passport, or firman from the Turkish
+authorities, addressed to all the sheikhs of the mountain tribes,
+ordering them to show the bearer every civility, and to afford
+him every protection during his journey.&nbsp; Armed with this
+document, he proceeded on his journey without much
+apprehension.&nbsp; During the first day&rsquo;s travel among the
+hills, he found the firman most effective, the sheikhs lending
+him every aid to get on.&nbsp; But he had no sooner left the
+immediate limits within which the people came into direct and
+frequent contact with the authorities, than he found the case was
+very different; argument and entreaty became necessary, where the
+mere sight of the firman had been formerly sufficient to procure
+the gratification of his wishes.&nbsp; Having succeeded in
+obtaining quarters for the night in the abode of a small sheikh,
+who condescended to be hospitable to the stranger, my friend soon
+got into conversation with his entertainer, and ultimately
+explained the whole object of his journey.&nbsp; The Sheikh
+listened in silence, twisting his moustachios with Eastern
+solemnity, and displaying some astonishment in his features at
+what he evidently considered the very hazardous course which my
+friend seemed bent on pursuing.&nbsp; After supper, the sheikh
+returned to the subject, and laboured seriously to impress upon
+his guest&rsquo;s mind the nature of the numerous <!-- page
+333--><a name="page333"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+333</span>dangers which he must encounter if he continued his
+journey.&nbsp; To the sheikh&rsquo;s argument respecting the want
+of all roads, the ruggedness of the mountain paths, sudden
+precipices, and dangerous fords, the former laughingly rejoined,
+that he relied on a stout pair of legs, a firm hand, and a steady
+eye, and that he would not shrink from his object deterred by
+such difficulties, which a strong and bold man might readily
+vanquish; and in reply to the sheikh&rsquo;s still more serious
+sketch of the dangerous character of the tribes through whose
+territories he must pass, my friend, still laughing, flourished
+what he considered his all-powerful firman.&nbsp; The sheikh
+asked permission to read it; it was granted, and having perused
+it, returned it to the owner.&nbsp; After some moments&rsquo;
+silence he rose from his mat, and approaching my friend, said to
+him, in an under tone: &ldquo;Friend, your firman certainly may
+procure you protection and assistance on your outward journey,
+but it says nothing concerning your return; be advised, retrace
+your steps and get your firman amended, if you must inquire into
+our condition and habits, but you would do much better to remain
+among your friends.&nbsp; We Nosairiyeh do not like
+strangers.&rdquo;&nbsp; My friend stared at this address, which
+many of my readers may consider most lawyer-like, and worthy the
+nice distinctions between words which I am told the English
+lawyers delight to make; but it had its effect, for we are yet
+without the full account of these people which my friend would
+have furnished us with.&nbsp; On the following morning he
+retraced his steps; and on his arrival he appears to have
+forgotten to apply for any alteration or addition to his firman,
+and to have preferred the inglorious ease of home to the
+dangerous search after knowledge among unexplored mountains,
+inhabited by barbarous infidels.</p>
+<p><!-- page 334--><a name="page334"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+334</span>In connection with this subject I may mention, that
+several travellers have been induced to state, that there exists
+a peculiar religious sect in Syria who are called
+Womb-worshippers, but I am sure that the only persons who deserve
+that name are the Nosairiyeh.&nbsp; The occasions on which this
+peculiar part of their religion is developed are extremely
+limited; indeed, I believe that it takes place but once a year,
+when the majority of the whole people assemble together in a
+cave, which is set apart for the purpose, and which is known only
+to themselves.&nbsp; I can add, moreover, that no one is admitted
+to these rites, who is not acquainted with the distinguishing
+sign or token by which they recognise each other.&nbsp; When they
+are assembled, a variety of prayers adapted expressly to the
+occasion are recited; and after what I may term the religious
+portion of the service is concluded, the men and women present
+have recourse to the most indelicate proceedings, which are the
+peculiar forms of the worship of the womb.&nbsp; By some,
+however, the Nosairiyeh are considered to be an aboriginal tribe,
+which has survived the many changes that have swept over the
+country, and have preserved such peculiar traits as distinguish
+them from all its other inhabitants.&nbsp; From what I have
+heard, I am inclined to believe that this is the case; and I also
+feel disposed to regard them as probably a sect of heretical
+Christians, who having originally retired among the mountains to
+secure the free exercise of their opinions, thus became isolated;
+and that their early faith became more and more corrupted by the
+influence of time, and the circumstances and changes going on
+around them, since like some other similar sects they still
+preserve a vague idea of some of the leading facts of
+Christianity, though mixed with notions not only false but
+absurd.</p>
+<p><!-- page 335--><a name="page335"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+335</span>They speak of the incarnation and crucifixion of our
+Lord as of one among many others.&nbsp; They have, I understand,
+also a custom of celebrating the sacrament by giving to the
+communicants a portion of meat and wine; added to this, they have
+mystical ceremonies and prayers.&nbsp; They believe in the
+transmigration of souls, and also in astrology and magic, also
+observing, it is said, many of the religious seasons and
+festivals peculiar to the Jews; nor are they at all reluctant,
+when any object is to be attained, to profess the doctrines and
+carry out the practice of Mahommedanism.&nbsp; But whatever may
+be the essential doctrines of their religion, there is no doubt
+that their morality is of the very lowest character; passionate
+and violent, their hatred of their rulers is only equalled by
+that which the different factions among them bear to each other,
+the most sanguinary feuds breaking out every now and then among
+them, carried on with the deadliest animosity, and accompanied by
+fearful acts of murder and revenge.</p>
+<p>About a year since, I happened to be at a convent about two
+days&rsquo; journey from Tripoli; and while there, I had an
+opportunity of seeing a number of these curious people.&nbsp;
+Some days previous to my arrival, a young woman belonging to them
+had been brought to the convent in a state of mental
+aberration.&nbsp; I ought to say that the convent is consecrated
+to Saint George, who is believed to possess especial power for
+the cure of madness, and for whom the Nosairiyeh, as well as most
+of the mountain tribes, profess great respect and
+veneration&mdash;carrying out their professions practically, by
+the payment of an annual donation of oil, corn, and fruits, for
+the use of the convent.&nbsp; The young woman in question, having
+been confined in chains during her <!-- page 336--><a
+name="page336"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 336</span>whole stay
+in one of the cells behind the altar, and kept on very low diet
+indeed, was restored to reason.&nbsp; I will not say what part of
+the treatment had been most efficacious in curing her, but the
+devout believers in the power of the saint, declared that he had
+visited her during the night, and by his presence driven out the
+evil spirit.&nbsp; Her friends, being made acquainted with her
+miraculous recovery, came to reclaim her just after my
+arrival.&nbsp; Contrary to the general Eastern custom, there was
+a large number of women mixed up with the men, moving apparently
+on a footing of perfect equality with the ruder sex.&nbsp; While
+they remained within sight of the convent, before and after
+reclaiming their recovered companion, they appeared to care for
+nothing besides dancing and singing.&nbsp; One of their dances
+was very much like an English country dance, with a great deal of
+shaking hands.&nbsp; I found them to be a powerfully-built,
+muscular race, with open honest countenances; they were all
+thoroughly equipped and armed.&nbsp; In their dress, the women
+differed from the general costume of the country, inasmuch as
+they wore very long and very flowing garments, of a kind usually
+only worn by men.</p>
+<p>Nothing, however, can exceed the degradation in which the
+female sex are held among the Nosairiyeh.&nbsp; They are regarded
+in the same light as their horses and other domestic animals; and
+to the practice of polygamy among them, and the drudgery and
+ill-usage to which their wives are condemned, may be traced the
+origin of the darkest and most repulsive portions of the picture
+they present.&nbsp; The untiring perseverance and praiseworthy
+zeal of missionary labourers may yet succeed in leading them to a
+knowledge of better things.&nbsp; I could repeat here what I have
+always stated in respect to <!-- page 337--><a
+name="page337"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 337</span>such
+endeavours, that schools must be the first step towards such an
+end; and that even before the subject of religion is touched
+upon, they must be taught such a course of secular studies as
+will, by expanding their mind and strengthening their reasoning
+faculties, prepare them to receive that priceless seed, which it
+would be unwise to cast beforehand in such a weedy soil, among
+the thorns and the thistles that would choke its growth and cause
+it to perish.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 338--><a name="page338"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 338</span>CHAPTER XIX.<br />
+APPEARANCE AND COSTUMES OF THE PEOPLE.</h2>
+<p>I fear my readers will consider that I have been rather
+tedious in the last few chapters, but what I have said I consider
+indispensable to put them in possession of the real state of my
+beloved country; and to make them generally acquainted with the
+character, the religion, and the manners of its
+inhabitants.&nbsp; I shall now devote a few pages to a
+description of the appearance and costumes of the different
+races.</p>
+<p>The large tract of territory extending from Aleppo, in the
+north, as far as the desert upon the outskirts of Gaza and
+Hebron, in the south, is inhabited by the variety of sects and
+people, whose peculiar religious ceremonies and occupations have
+been described in the preceding chapter.&nbsp; Commencing with
+the district of Aleppo, we shall find inhabiting that
+city,&mdash;first, the Aleppine-Greeks, most of whom are, by
+creed Roman Catholics, and by profession merchants, silk-weavers,
+and manufacturers of fine silken robes, such as are worn by the
+majority of the inhabitants, male and female.&nbsp; The peculiar
+costume of the natives of Aleppo is the most striking feature of
+that truly oriental and magnificent city.&nbsp; On a feast-day,
+between the hours of prayer, the gardens in the environs of the
+city are thronged with crowds of well dressed men and <!-- page
+339--><a name="page339"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+339</span>women; some walking, some riding, and others seated on
+their <i>seggadeh</i>, or rugs, under the pleasant shades of the
+fragrant walnut-trees, with the <i>chibuk</i> or <i>narghili</i>
+in their hands, or else cowering upon the bank of the river,
+angling for fish.&nbsp; We will, with the reader&rsquo;s
+permission, place ourselves beside a merry group who are
+musically inclined, and hope to attract the attention of another
+group of laughing girls, who, though well muffled up in their
+white <i>izars</i>, still shew sufficient of well-proportioned
+features to convince the beholder that beauty lurks beneath the
+muffling veil.&nbsp; However, we take our station here, not to
+watch them, but those that pass to and fro, and to guess with the
+utmost precision, by their costumes, what their belief is, and in
+what peculiar calling of life they are engaged; first, then,
+comes an old gentleman riding on a white Egyptian ass&mdash;the
+very fact of his being the possessor of one of these valuable
+animals at once stamps him with respectability; but apart from
+this, the tall <i>kulpak</i>, or Persian cap, on his head, and
+the long, loose flowing robes proclaim him to be a descendant
+from one of the most ancient, wealthy and respectable families of
+Aleppo.&nbsp; The privilege of wearing this peculiar kind of
+head-gear, exempts the wearer, by virtue of a firman obtained
+from the sublime Porte many centuries ago, from the capitation
+tax, and many other minor disagreeables to which the less
+fortunate rayahs are sometimes exposed.&nbsp; This firman was
+obtained either by interest, or for some service rendered by
+their ancestors to the Turkish government, at a period when all
+the rich trade of the Indies passed through Aleppo, and when, as
+even up to the latest period, that unfortunate city has been
+exposed to the incursion of the wild desert tribes, who
+frequently <!-- page 340--><a name="page340"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 340</span>molested the Baghdad caravans, and
+even broke into the khans and strongholds, carrying off
+warehoused merchandise to a considerable amount.&nbsp; The
+resistance offered to these marauders by the wealthier merchants
+of Aleppo, led to their obtaining special favors from the Porte;
+and these favors, be it said to the honor of the Turkish Sultans,
+have descended as an heirloom from father to son even down to the
+present day, and the insignia, as already mentioned, is the
+<i>kulpak</i> which yonder citizen carries on his head.&nbsp; By
+creed he is a Roman Catholic, and devout in the observance of
+fasts and festivals; by profession a <i>serraff</i>, or money
+changer, and any of the European merchants who may require a few
+thousand piastres on an emergency, will go to this man, and he
+will advance the requisite sum instanter; his business-office is
+not much longer than an ordinary sentinel&rsquo;s box, but then
+his house, which is in the suburbs of the city, is replete with
+comfort and elegance, and amongst other furniture and requisites,
+you will find massive porcelain jars, and other equally costly
+relics of the former Indian traffic, which have been handed down
+from father to son, and which are never brought into active
+service, save and except upon festive occasions when a marriage
+or a christening is celebrated in the family.</p>
+<p>Next to this wealthy aristocrat, our eyes encounter a couple
+of natives on foot, both well clad, with rich silk scarfs girt
+round them but on whose hands and arms the indelible dark blue
+tinge at once indicates their occupation, viz., that of dyers;
+generally speaking, they profess, in most parts of Syria, the
+tenets of the Greek church, and they are almost a peculiar people
+of themselves, inhabiting the suburbs of a town for the sake of
+convenience, and in order to be in the immediate <!-- page
+341--><a name="page341"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+341</span>vicinity of level verdant plains, on which, during the
+summer months, they stretch the dyed cloths to dry.&nbsp; It is
+seldom, however, that these people make use of any other dyes
+than the commonest blue and black&mdash;such as is well adapted,
+from its inferior materials, to meet the meagerly supplied purses
+of the greater mass of the population of Syria, blue
+<i>shintians</i> being invariably the every-day costume of
+masons, mechanics, day-labourers, and peasants occupied in
+agricultural pursuits; hence it is that the profits on labour are
+small and insignificant, the occupation is incessant, and the
+demand never fluctuating.&nbsp; From this circumstance also, the
+indigo imported from England and other parts of Europe invariably
+meets with a ready and profitable sale amongst this class of
+people, who are the merchant&rsquo;s best and surest customers,
+and whose annual consumption, reckoning one year with another, so
+little varies, that a careful trader might calculate to within a
+few pounds&rsquo; weight, the exact annual demand for indigo of
+any given village in Syria, and accordingly carry on a safe and
+profitable trade in this one article alone.&nbsp; These dyers
+usually marry, and are given in marriage amongst themselves, and
+the children are brought up to the trade of their fathers; but in
+all other respects, they are the same as the rest of the Greek
+community, attending regularly at their churches, strict
+observers of fasts and festivals, and mingling freely with all
+their fellow citizens of whatever creed or calling.</p>
+<p>Next to these comes the sedate Armenian, clad in a sombre grey
+cloak, trimmed with ermine, and a slovenly black handkerchief
+bound round his almost threadbare <i>gibbeh</i>; he is walking
+with a countryman, and a fellow creedsman of his own; and though
+the latter is the better clad and cleanlier looking, he is far
+from being <!-- page 342--><a name="page342"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 342</span>the wealthier; they are both,
+however, on the same intimate footing as though equals in birth,
+riches, and station; both out more for exercise and to talk about
+business, than from any wish to join in the recreations that are
+passing around them.&nbsp; The first man&mdash;the meaner looking
+of the two&mdash;is very possibly possessor of about 20,000
+piastres; he is a banker of the Pachalik, and right-hand man of
+all the Pashas who come into power; from them he derives no small
+profit, but it is not from this source alone that his revenues
+flow; even the poor man who is now his companion, is one among
+the many of his countrymen, who pay into his coffers an annual
+tax on certain stipulated conditions.&nbsp; In Aleppo, and all
+over Turkey and Syria, almost every cook in European and wealthy
+Oriental families, is an Armenian; these Armenians come from
+their own country in search of employment, and on arriving at
+Aleppo, being friendless, and without any recommendation as to
+character, etc., they seek out those who profess the same creed
+as themselves, and by them are introduced to the protection of a
+banker, who will guarantee their honesty, provided the man pays
+him an annual per-centage upon his wages.&nbsp; This is agreed
+to, and a compact being made, the <i>serraff</i> himself exerts
+his best influence amongst the circles of his acquaintance to
+obtain for his proteg&eacute;e a situation in an opulent
+family.&nbsp; As the English are generally the best pay-masters,
+he first tries them; if he succeeds, the young man is placed
+under the tuition of a professed cook of his own creed, and his
+career in life commences.&nbsp; The banker adds the man&rsquo;s
+name to the thick folio volume, in which he has already
+registered those of the numerous tax-payers that help to enrich
+his coffers; and though on an average one with another, they only
+pay about twenty <!-- page 343--><a name="page343"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 343</span>piastres per annum, still,
+considering the vast numbers who are under this obligation, the
+total amount derived from this source makes a considerable
+sum.&nbsp; On the other hand the banker, who possesses a certain
+extent of influence with the Pashas, stands by his countrymen in
+any case of emergency, and if needs must, is ready to advance any
+money to procure the release of a delinquent, or to help in his
+flight, as the Armenians are extremely jealous of their character
+for honesty and integrity, and it may with truth be observed,
+that with very few exceptions, they make excellent
+servants&mdash;faithful, steady, and industrious, and are seldom,
+if ever, addicted to liquor; if they do cheat their own masters,
+they take care that no one else in the household shall.&nbsp; And
+this is a notorious fact, particularly in Aleppo, that the prices
+of meat and vegetables, etc., are fixed by a tariff every year
+amongst the Armenian servants, and as their name is legion, and
+every second family has an Armenian cook, the greater mass of the
+people usually pay at the same rate or proportion for their
+provisions, though it is well-known that the poorer classes
+obtain the same supplies from the very same tradesmen with whom
+the wealthier families deal, at a lower price; still, for
+convenience&rsquo; sake, these peccadilloes are winked at, and
+the Armenians justify their petty thefts, and accommodate their
+consciences to their perpetration, by the reflection, that if
+they did not cheat, <i>others</i> would, and thus further
+encourage dishonesty amongst the rest of the servants.</p>
+<p>The Armenians have passed by, and another couple of
+individuals attract our attention; their faces are long and
+sallow, their features marked, eyes sunken, beard profuse, and in
+the contracted brow there is much that indicates selfish
+thoughts; the meanness of their scant <!-- page 344--><a
+name="page344"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 344</span>attire, is
+only to be surpassed by the filthiness of their general
+appearance.&nbsp; Did you notice yonder young Mahommedan spit on
+the ground, or in the faces of these two as they passed him,
+while he petulantly muttered, that this day would prove to him an
+unlucky one, from the moment he had encountered these two
+men?&nbsp; You will ask the reason of this; it is because they
+are of that once mighty people, Yahoodee, or Israel, whom
+Mahommedans regard as the cursed of God, the refuse of the earth,
+who are treated with less consideration than the meagre curs that
+slink along the streets; for a Jew does not dare to pass by on
+the right hand of the Moslem.&nbsp; Yet these Hebrews are now so
+well inured to hardship and insult, that they wisely pursue their
+way, regardless of all around, their whole soul wrapt up in the
+one absorbing thought&mdash;gain.&nbsp; If words and blows are
+sometimes inflicted upon them by the lords of the land, they at
+least have the gratification of knowing that there is not one
+amongst their brethren, but who avails himself of every
+opportunity to swindle and defraud every customer with whom they
+may chance to have transactions; and even the coins which pass
+through their hands never escape without being diminished in
+weight.&nbsp; As an instance of their innate propensity for
+defrauding, I will record an anecdote which occurred at Damascus
+some years ago.&nbsp; A Jew having been convicted of coining gold
+<i>saadeeyeh</i> (nine piastres), was punished by the government
+by having half his beard shaved off, and mounted on an ass, with
+his face turned towards the tail, and a European hat on his head;
+in this way he was conducted through the city, preceded by a
+crier, proclaiming his crime.&nbsp; Through bribery and interest
+he was set at liberty, and shortly afterwards recommenced his
+nefarious practices; the <!-- page 345--><a
+name="page345"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 345</span>second
+time, however, he resorted to the filing of coin, and being again
+discovered, the Cadi ordered his hands to be cut off, as the most
+effectual means of preventing a recurrence of such tricks.&nbsp;
+Even this did not put a atop to his cheating, for having
+initiated his son into his arts, they together devised the mode
+of dissolving a part of the money in strong acid.&nbsp; Being for
+the third time discovered, both father and son were hanged.</p>
+<p>The very name <i>Yahoodee</i>, or <i>Jew</i>, is tantamount in
+the East to swindler.&nbsp; Yet it is a most remarkable fact,
+that fallen and degraded though the race be&mdash;their position
+only equivalent to a state of perpetual serfdom&mdash;you never
+meet with a Jew who gains his livelihood by manual labour, or by
+begging for his bread.&nbsp; They neither till the ground, nor
+follow the plough, nor yet exercise themselves in any
+agricultural pursuits; neither are there amongst them
+day-labourers, or mechanics; and all this arises from the species
+of Freemasonry which links these fallen people together, and
+induces them to assist and support one another in times of the
+greatest need and difficulty.&nbsp; Hence it arises that every
+Jew, from an early age is, as it were, launched into the world by
+the assistance of his co-religionists.&nbsp; They usually begin
+life in the pastry-cook line; for to sell fruits, would be like
+carrying coals to Newcastle, in such a country as Syria, where
+every man has his own garden, or, if he be not possessed of this,
+the markets are stocked to overflowing.&nbsp; After this, they
+become petty tradesmen, and with a stock-in-trade of some
+half-dozen loaves of sugar, a few pounds of coffee, spices, etc.,
+the whole perhaps not exceeding three or four hundred piastres,
+he migrates to the surrounding villages, barters or sells, comes
+back again and replenishes his stock, and so goes on adding mite
+to <!-- page 346--><a name="page346"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+346</span>mite till he is enabled to set up a <i>Dekkan</i> in
+the bazaar.&nbsp; The wheel of fortune having commenced turning,
+he climbs up warily, and it may be slowly, yet securely, to an
+ample independence for his old age; and there are many very
+wealthy Hebrew families in Syria, whose origin might be traced to
+such as just I have described.&nbsp; When a Jew has once amassed
+wealth, it seldom if ever happens that he falls low in the scale
+again.</p>
+<p>In later years, the condition of this persecuted people has
+been much improved in the Ottoman dominions, and they may be now
+said to enjoy all those advantages and privileges which are
+afforded to other foreigners residing within the limits of the
+Turkish dominions; hence, it is to be hoped, if we may be
+permitted to judge by the signs of the times, that the day is not
+far off when they will be again restored to their land, and when
+in the words of the prophet, it may be said, &ldquo;<i>They shall
+be my people</i>, <i>and I will be their God</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; In
+fact a society has been formed in England for the purchasing of
+land in Palestine to enable Jews to settle there.&nbsp; But these
+privileges have not always been enjoyed by this unhappy people;
+not more than twenty years ago the barbarities practised upon
+them seem almost incredible.&nbsp; A friend told me of an
+incident that occurred in Servia when a famine, or a pestilence,
+had ceased to ravage the country, there was a grand procession
+and thanksgiving, and in the edict of the Governor, it was not
+only proclaimed, but carried into execution, that at every
+quarter of a mile a donkey and a Jew should be sacrificed; thus
+classing them together, and ruthlessly shedding the blood of two
+of the most unoffending creatures of the Creator.&nbsp; But the
+Jews and their sorrows and persecutions are, I trust, passing by,
+as a firman has lately been obtained from the Turkish government,
+through the <!-- page 347--><a name="page347"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 347</span>influence of Sir M. Montefiore,
+which secures the Jews like privileges with the Christians; this
+boon was presented to them by Col. Churchill, who, in 1841,
+during his official residence in Damascus, exerted himself
+strenuously and successfully to relieve them from the
+consequences of the persecution they had undergone in the well
+known affair of Padre Thomaso.</p>
+<p>And now comes a stately horseman, whose very steed seems to
+paw the ground more proudly than others, as though conscious of
+the fact that he carries on his back one of the lords of the
+land.&nbsp; This is a Turkish Effendi, his long loose cloth cloak
+is thickly trimmed with ermine; his horse-trappings are
+magnificent&mdash;his countenance full of importance and
+gravity&mdash;his beard black and wagging to and fro in a haughty
+commanding style; he looks neither to the right nor to the
+left&mdash;acknowledges no salutations, though the people rise as
+he passes, and bow their heads subserviently to the earth; behind
+him rides a gaily dressed youth, carrying in his hand the ready
+lit <i>chibuk</i>; look at the amber mouthpiece, richly set with
+brilliants and emeralds, and then you may form some conception of
+the importance and wealth of this great functionary.&nbsp; The
+occupations of the Turks are various, for being lords of the land
+they and they alone, in most parts of the country, occupy the
+posts of Government.&nbsp; Amongst them, we may first rank the
+independent beys and effendis&mdash;nobles of the land, wealthy
+from inheritance, and most generally possessed of extensive
+gardens and plantations, these are the aristocracy&mdash;they
+have no cares as to how they shall live&mdash;no thought as to
+their sustenance&mdash;their mansions are capacious&mdash;their
+studs splendid&mdash;their repasts sumptuous&mdash;their harems
+filled with the choicest flowers of Georgia and Circassia.&nbsp;
+They regularly attend the <!-- page 348--><a
+name="page348"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 348</span>mosques,
+and keep their fasts and festivals, and if they have anything to
+trouble their minds, it most assuredly arises from a similar
+inconvenience to that which the <i>fool</i> in the Scriptures was
+exposed&mdash;viz., the want of extensive granaries wherein to
+warehouse their fast increasing riches.&nbsp; Next to these we
+may reckon Government employ&eacute;s, who, though virtually
+invested with greater authority than these beys (who hold no
+official position), in reality are subjected to their whims and
+caprices.&nbsp; Of this class are the Pashas, Cadis, etc.,
+etc.,&mdash;men who are generally well off so long as they remain
+in office, but whose position would be very dubious indeed were
+they once deprived of their main staff in life&mdash;their
+salaries.</p>
+<p>The rest of the Moslem population may be divided into three
+classes, viz., merchants, tradesmen, and household domestics; the
+latter if they be Mahommedans, will seldom serve the native
+Christians, though they will sometimes place themselves under
+European masters in order to be protected from taxation, or being
+enlisted into the army.&nbsp; Of the former, from the time of the
+Caliphs, Turkey has been celebrated for the wealth of her
+merchants, and for their upright, honest method of transacting
+business.&nbsp; However, though the uprightness of the old
+Mahommedan merchant remains his wealth is on the decline, and is
+passing into other hands.&nbsp; Most of the opulent merchants of
+Baghdad are Moslems who, regularly once a year subject themselves
+to a long and inconvenient journey to Aleppo and return so as to
+superintend and watch over their own interests; and like the old
+tales of the Arabian Nights, rich scented spices spread their
+odour over the desert far and wide.&nbsp; Besides these other
+merchants from Mecca turn a devout pilgrimage into a mercantile
+<!-- page 349--><a name="page349"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+349</span>transaction, and carry back with them many rare
+articles&mdash;otto of roses, and other scents, which usually
+attract a multitude of eager purchasers.&nbsp; The trades
+followed by most Mahommedans, are those of carpenters,
+locksmiths, tanners, shoemakers, sawyers, saddlers, and saddle
+embroiderers.&nbsp; Of these, the saddlers and the shoemakers
+rank first.&nbsp; The carpenters are expert tradesmen, and
+Damascus abounds with turners, known to bring work to a highly
+finished state.</p>
+<p>And now these two have passed before us, and a fresh sight
+attracts attention.&nbsp; Fierce-looking fellows, three in
+number, now appear, their heads girt with long flowing silk
+handkerchiefs, of a bright yellow colour; their beards are thick,
+black and curly; their features sun-burnt; their eyebrows knit,
+and there is a lurking savage look in their eyes which speaks
+volumes of treachery and bloodshed.&nbsp; Long loose striped
+dresses with horse-hair girths, loose shintians, and the ordinary
+Syrian red boots, complete their costume.&nbsp; They are mounted
+on Arab steeds of the purest breed; slung by their left side is a
+scimitar of fine Damascene steel; each carries on his shoulder a
+long polished <i>Roomah</i>, or lance, from which hangs tassels
+of various gay colors.&nbsp; These horseman are Bedouins of the
+Desert, who perhaps, have come hither to spy out the land under
+the pretence of a friendly visit on mercantile business; but what
+is more likely to be the reason, to find out when next a caravan,
+or travellers, will pass through the desert.&nbsp; No one fears
+them now, since their number is too small, when compared to the
+crowds which are on the alert and passing to and fro.&nbsp;
+Still, these Bedouins may even at this very moment be plotting a
+similar carnage and attack to that which was made at Aleppo, so
+recently as 1850.&nbsp; Notwithstanding the ferocity of <!-- page
+350--><a name="page350"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+350</span>their nature, &ldquo;their hand still being against
+every man,&rdquo; yet they never are guilty of a breach of faith
+or friendship.&nbsp; As an instance of this, an Arab was once at
+Damascus, and received civilities from a Damascene, who gave him
+some bread and tobacco.&nbsp; About two years passed, when it so
+happened that this man was going to Aleppo with a caravan, which
+was attacked, and, happily for all, the traveller was recognised
+by one of the Bedouins, who proved to be the very man who had
+received hospitality at Damascus.</p>
+<p>Next on our panoramic sketch we find two hardy labourers, fine
+robust looking men; these are the <i>fellahen</i>, and their
+vocation in life is restricted to tilling the ground; but there
+are some amongst them who follow the occupation of farriers, and
+some few in the larger towns are blacksmiths, tinkers, and
+shopkeepers; but those that occupy our attention at present wear
+too healthy an aspect to be taken for citizens.&nbsp; They are
+peasants from a neighbouring village, and to them Sunday is a day
+of rest; during the weekdays they are early risers (up with the
+lark, and even before this &ldquo;<i>bird hath shaken the
+dew-drop from her wing</i>&rdquo;); to them sleep has been a boon
+indeed&mdash;a luxury that few who are not accustomed to hard
+manual labour can be supposed to enjoy.&nbsp; The careful thrifty
+wife, although her husband is an early riser, was up before him,
+lighting the fire, and preparing his early meal.&nbsp; He gets
+up, and goes through his ablutions; and I may here remark, that
+Europeans in general, and especially the English, form a very
+incorrect notion as to the habits of the poorer class of natives
+in Syria, since few people are more careful in their rigid
+adherence to cleanliness, though their brown sun-burnt skin gives
+strangers an idea to the contrary.&nbsp; His breakfast consists
+of a few <!-- page 351--><a name="page351"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 351</span>loaves, resembling Scotch cakes, on
+which cheese, and on fast days olives, mashed together, are
+carefully rolled up; sometimes, as an extra dainty, a little cold
+stew from yesterday&rsquo;s dinner, or a small dish of
+<i>leban</i>, gives a relish to his keen appetite; and having
+finished this he shoulders his plough, loosens his cattle, and
+followed close at the heels by his house-dog, goes forth to his
+labour till evening.&nbsp; He has generally arrived at the field
+of action before the sun gets up to look at him, and he never
+leaves it till the fiery sun, red with heat, has sunk below the
+horizon.&nbsp; Truly, a labourer in Syria is a living specimen of
+the curse brought upon mankind by the disobedience of
+Adam&mdash;&ldquo;<i>He earns his daily bread by the sweat of his
+brow</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Every day, save on fasts and festivals,
+his toil never ceases.&nbsp; At the commencement of the year, his
+first and most laborious occupation is that of rearing
+silk-worms, of which I shall now proceed to give a
+description.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 352--><a name="page352"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 352</span>CHAPTER XX.<br />
+THE OCCUPATIONS OF THE PEOPLE.</h2>
+<p>It is early in spring.&nbsp; The snow that last week lay ancle
+deep in the plains and valleys of Mount Lebanon, has rapidly
+dissolved under the genial heat of the April sun.&nbsp; Storms
+that wildly raged along the sea-girt coast, outriders of
+&AElig;olus, as he swept by in his hurricane-car, drawn by
+equinoctial gales; these have been lulled into repose, and the
+turbulent billows of the deep have forgotten their rough
+playmate, and are hushed into tranquility.&nbsp; The winter garb
+of the forest is fast being set aside; the waters of the river
+flow pleasantly in the warm glow of sunshine; feathered songsters
+are tuning up against the great spring jubilee; the linnet and
+the bulbul now call to mind snatches of sweet carols many months
+forgotten; nature awakes to the bright morning of the year; with
+light heart the bee sucks from early opening flowers; with the
+passing song, the peasant trudges forward to his daily labour;
+oxen are yoked to the plough; the earth&mdash;softened with
+excessive moisture&mdash;yields readily to the deep furrows made
+by the friendly implement; long hidden seeds are turned up to the
+light of day, and brought forth from nature&rsquo;s storehouse to
+supply the wants of the hungry feathered multitude; grass springs
+up almost perceptibly beneath our feet; the swallow has returned
+from his distant <!-- page 353--><a name="page353"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 353</span>journeyings, and brought with him a
+retinue of gaily dressed butterflies.&nbsp; The sun grows warmer
+from day to day; the sky remains clear and cloudless; the first
+week of April has fled on the rapid wings of time, and we are
+fairly launched into all the delights of an incomparable Syrian
+spring&mdash;hie we forth early on the morrow to breathe the pure
+untainted air&mdash;to revel in the sweet odours wafted around us
+from countless flowers&mdash;to watch the master-touch of that
+great and beneficent Creator, who has left no work
+unfinished.&nbsp; Manifold indeed are His works, and in wisdom
+has He made them all.</p>
+<p>The morrow has come, we are up and abroad before the sun has
+cast his first mantle of light over the pleasant waters of the
+deep blue sea.&nbsp; We saunter into one of the many white
+mulberry plantations that surround us on every side, and observe
+that the leafless boughs are only just putting forth their tender
+spring buds: yet there is an unusual commotion amongst the
+rearers of the silkworm&mdash;whole families, men, women, and
+children, are variously employed; the earth round the roots of
+the mulberry trees is being hoed up; some are planting young
+shoots, others busy in the kitchen gardens; whilst, to the
+European eye, a few appear as though engaged in a mysterious
+occupation.&nbsp; They seem as if their arms were an
+inconvenience to them, or, as though they were all afflicted with
+boils or eruptions under their arms, which preclude the
+possibility of using them without intense pain and
+difficulty.&nbsp; The singular attitude of these people, as they
+move about like so many brood-hens with anxiously expanded wings,
+once attracted the attention of an English medical officer, who
+assured me, with great alarm depicted in his countenance, that
+tumours under the arm-pits are certain indications of <!-- page
+354--><a name="page354"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+354</span>the plague, and he immediately recommended our instant
+departure from the neighbourhood; whilst uncertain what course to
+pursue, one of the men thrust his hand into his bosom, and
+extracted the immediate cause of my friend&rsquo;s alarm; this
+proved to be a small bag of silk-worm eggs, and as this remainder
+of his stock has been late in hatching, the peasant resorted to
+artificial means, and the heat of his body is usually productive
+of beneficial effects.&nbsp; However, in some parts of Syria the
+eggs are deposited in moderately warm rooms, which speedily bring
+forth the embryo worm.&nbsp; Wonderful to say, these eggs, which
+have been suspended in linen bags throughout the whole year;
+during the heat of summer, the mild autumn, and the cold of
+winter&mdash;on which temperature has produced no
+effect&mdash;now that the right season has arrived, issue forth
+from the diminutive eggs, just as the mulberry first puts forth
+its delicate foliage, so well adapted to the weak state of the
+<i>microscopic worm</i>.&nbsp; Insects now creep round the bag
+that had confined them as eggs, and the peasant, who has been
+anxiously watching them for the last week, welcomes their
+appearance with infinite satisfaction, as sure harbingers of
+spring; and, as on the produce of the silk season the fellah and
+his family depend, in a great measure, for their maintenance, the
+different processes are watched by them with great anxiety.&nbsp;
+Now let us attend from day to day, and watch the progress of
+these tiny millions as they advance in growth, and finally spin
+round themselves that marvellous small store-house of silk,
+commonly designated as the cocoon.</p>
+<p>The first steps taken by the peasants after the eggs are
+hatched, is to place some of the minute worms in the centre of
+small circular baskets, which have been carefully cemented over
+with cow-dung, and left in a <!-- page 355--><a
+name="page355"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 355</span>sunny spot
+till completely dry; this precaution is indispensable, because
+the worms are so diminutive that, however closely wrought may be
+the workmanship of the basket, they would inevitably fall
+through, and be destroyed or lost.&nbsp; The reason also for
+having the cow-dung is, that the cow is held in great esteem
+amongst most Oriental silk-worm breeders; and a superstitious
+idea prevails, that this animal has a sacred charm, and they
+therefore imagine that by covering the baskets with cow-dung, it
+will have some power over the worms.&nbsp; In this primitive
+condition, a handful of the tender leaves of the mulberry is
+plucked, and cut up similarly to tobacco, and then sprinkled over
+the young brood.&nbsp; This process is repeated twice daily, and
+suffices for the food of numerous caterpillars during the first
+days of their existence.&nbsp; Their growth is very rapid, and
+their appetite ravenous; and though tended each day with the
+utmost solicitude, it is by no means certain that one-half of the
+immense numbers contained in these baskets will arrive at
+perfection.&nbsp; Hundreds are trodden to death by their
+companions; scores of brave young worms perish beneath the weight
+of some slender mulberry twig, the size of which, though small
+indeed, is, in comparison to them, like a huge tree; besides
+these calamities, the worms are entirely at the mercy of the
+weather.&nbsp; In some parts of Syria, nature takes a freak into
+her head, and in the midst of sunshine and warmth, down comes a
+tremendous hail-stone shower or snow storm&mdash;then farewell to
+the worms and the poor peasant&rsquo;s prospects; his only chance
+is, to send immediately to the mountain plantations, whose colder
+climate has retarded the hatching of the egg, and here, at great
+expense, purchase a second supply of &ldquo;silk-worm seed&rdquo;
+(as it is technically called by us), and then the crop is <!--
+page 356--><a name="page356"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+356</span>entirely artificial, for the leaves have attained too
+coarse a texture, and the peasant is compelled to chop them up
+into minute particles, before he durst administer them to the
+feeble and delicate insects.&nbsp; There are two other enemies
+from which the insect has to be guarded: during its first
+week&rsquo;s growth, it is extremely liable to be beset by red
+ants; and during the spinning, or last week of its existence as a
+worm, the swallow and the sparrow think it a delicacy wherewith
+to feed their newly-hatched progeny; and great havoc is sometimes
+committed by these swift-winged depredators.&nbsp; Yet,
+notwithstanding all these drawbacks, so careful are the peasants,
+that every precaution has been taken long before the season
+arrives, to guard against any and all of these foes; and it may
+be accurately observed, that bad crops and unlucky seasons are
+the exceptions to a general rule.&nbsp; One year with another, he
+generally obtains, within a few drachmas, the quantity of silk he
+has reckoned upon, and he is usually pretty sure as to the amount
+of money he hopes to gain, as this has most commonly been agreed
+upon many months past, and the peasant has already received some
+portion of the fixed valuation in advance.</p>
+<p>The first week of our watching has expired; the worms have
+increased.&nbsp; These little creatures, which occupied but a
+very small spot in the centre of the baskets, have now become so
+bulky, that they can no longer find space sufficient to crawl
+about without destruction to each other; consequently they have
+now to be removed to the <i>hoosse</i>, or cottages, erected
+purposely for their rearing, and they are no sooner placed here
+than the laborious part of the peasant&rsquo;s business
+commences.&nbsp; Heretofore his wife and children have chiefly
+occupied themselves in supplying the frugal <!-- page 357--><a
+name="page357"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 357</span>wants of
+the colony of young insects, and they had nothing else to do but
+to strip the smaller branches and twigs of the tender leaves;
+now, however, the worms, which are growing and thriving, require
+five times as much attention and food as before, consequently,
+the good man of the house and his son (if he has one), take the
+responsibility upon their shoulders the moment the worms become
+inmates of the <i>hoosse</i>, where they are generally installed
+with much ceremony; the priest repeats a benediction, and
+sprinkles holy water where the worms are to be placed.</p>
+<p>We will follow the silk cultivator and his family, as they
+carry the small baskets containing the worms into the
+<i>hoosse</i>, which is a large hut with a peat roof; the walls
+are composed of reeds, platted liked mats, with small partitions
+on every side.&nbsp; The building, which has been newly done up,
+is daily inspected, to prevent birds from taking up their abode
+amongst the straw and rushes of which it is composed; the
+interior of the <i>hoosse</i> is fitted up with shelves, formed
+with canes, on which are laid closely-worked long and narrow
+mats, woven of reeds.&nbsp; These extend round three sides of the
+nurseries, and are placed one above another, with an intervening
+space between each shelf of about twenty inches.&nbsp; On these
+mats a thick layer of mulberry leaves is laid among the insects;
+the baskets containing the worms are moved carefully on the mats,
+instinct leading them to the freshest leaves; meanwhile, the
+peasant and his family are busily repeating prayers for a
+blessing on their undertakings, at the same time mixing the
+grossest and most absurd superstitions with their simple
+prayers.&nbsp; Pieces of red cloth rags, or other dazzling
+colours, together with a shell of a hen&rsquo;s egg, ornamented
+with a red silk tassel and blue beads, are attached to the <!--
+page 358--><a name="page358"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+358</span>poles that support the hoosse, and every other
+imaginable part of the building where they are likely to meet the
+eye and attract attention.&nbsp; This is to divert the stranger
+from allowing his thoughts to be wholly occupied with the worms,
+or from gazing on them uninterruptedly: such an offence would be
+sure to be productive of the &ldquo;<i>evil eye</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Indeed so great is the superstition of these poor ignorant
+peasants, and their dread of the baneful influence of this
+imaginary being, that they seldom have a child, cattle, or
+possess cocks and hens, or even trees upon which they place any
+value, without affixing to them a bunch of coloured rags, with a
+blue ring made of common glass, for say they, &ldquo;those that
+have such things will be influenced by the venom of envy; and the
+venom of envy shooting out of the eyes will blight the object of
+our desire, as lightning blasts the tree.&rdquo;&nbsp; So much
+for this absurd and ridiculous notion.&nbsp; Another formula gone
+through, is the tying small skeins of last year&rsquo;s silk in
+various positions over the silkworms; this is to excite them to
+industry, and to shame such as are slothful, by shewing them the
+remnants of the riches and skill of their ancestors.</p>
+<p>We have seen the silkworms duly installed in the hoosse, and
+retire to the music of their active mastication of the leaves, to
+return again on the morrow and see how things thrive.</p>
+<p>To the surprise of my European friend, on entering the hoosse
+on the morrow, he found all solemn silence; on examining the
+shelves, he thought that the worms were all dead and gone.&nbsp;
+While he was regretting the heavy loss which would fall upon the
+cultivators, I smiled at his ignorance, and assured him that the
+worms were never more healthy than at the present moment, (the
+peasant adding in a whisper), &ldquo;<i>they are all good</i>
+<!-- page 359--><a name="page359"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+359</span><i>Christians of the Greek faith</i>, <i>and are
+keeping a three days&rsquo; rigid fast</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; And this
+is firmly believed by him and his family, and is the prevalent
+notion in Syria.&nbsp; At such periods as the present, when the
+worms are in a state of torpor, owing to their rapid growth, they
+are compelled at certain intervals to disembarrass themselves of
+the tight old skin, which being too small gradually bursts, and a
+fresh skin is formed, suitable to the increased size of the
+insect.&nbsp; At such periods the natives, from the highest to
+the lowest, priests and laymen, acknowledge the worms to be
+keeping a <i>Soame</i>, the Arabic term for fasts.</p>
+<p>The third morning after our last visit we call again, and find
+the newly clad worms rapidly awaking to the sense of a keen
+appetite, glistening and shining like bridesmaids in their
+beautiful new white satin costumes.&nbsp; This process of
+shedding the skin, is evidently attended with danger to the
+silk-worm, if we may be permitted to judge from the number that
+have died under the process, whilst others, though surviving,
+have been so disfigured as to be rendered entirely useless.&nbsp;
+The peasant and his family are occupied collecting the dead and
+the maimed before feeding the hungry survivors; this finished, he
+arms himself with a sharp sickle; henceforth the leaves are no
+more gathered by the hands&mdash;trees are marked out in regular
+rotation&mdash;the smaller branches are cut off, which are then
+carried by the woman and children to a clean swept place in front
+of the hoosse; the leaves and even smaller twigs, are speedily
+separated from the branches, and sprinkled plentifully over the
+worms; the branches are collected up on one side, and left to dry
+for future use as fuel; thus, whilst the foliage of the mulberry
+nourishes and maintains life in the silk-worm, the branches are
+used <!-- page 360--><a name="page360"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 360</span>to light the fire which suffocates
+the poor creatures when they have formed the cocoon, and assumed
+the chrysalis state.&nbsp; After this first <i>soame</i>, or
+fast, the worms grow very rapidly; in about a fortnight
+afterwards, they undergo the second fast&mdash;they are now,
+however, much stronger, and better able to resist the casting of
+their skins; so much so, that scarcely one dies under the
+operation.&nbsp; On recovering from this second <i>soame</i>,
+they eat prodigiously, and grow very rapidly.&nbsp; The peasant
+is compelled to cut the branches off the mulberry three times a
+day in lieu of once, as heretofore, and the worms feast without
+intermission, morning, noon and night; at length in about eight
+weeks from the time they were hatched, their existence as worms
+is rapidly drawing to a close.&nbsp; What was at first barely the
+size of a grain of fine gunpowder, is now become three and four
+inches long, sleek and fat, and for all the world looking like a
+young roasting lamb of Lilliputian breed, ready trussed up for
+cooking.</p>
+<p>All the mulberry trees in the plantation, with the exception
+of some six or a dozen, present the lamentable spectacle of so
+many boughless stems; whilst nature around is profuse in
+luxuriance, and the wild convolvolus, as though compassionating
+the sad condition of the mulberry, twists its friendly leaves
+around, and decks it with gaudy blossoms of the early May
+morning.&nbsp; The peasant has been busy cutting down boughs of
+trees, etc., the bark of which he makes into string and ropes;
+these have been exposed to the sun, till all the leaves have
+withered and fallen to the ground.&nbsp; The worm which, by a
+wonderful instinct, has heretofore never strayed seven inches
+from where it was originally placed, now begins to evince
+symptoms of impatience, and roves about the edges of the shelves,
+or tries to mount up the <!-- page 361--><a
+name="page361"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 361</span>smooth and
+slippery canes that support the shelves.&nbsp; The peasant,
+marking these indications, immediately places the dry twigs of
+thorn and bushes over the worms, and in a short time the whole
+colony rapidly mounts amongst these twigs, each choosing out for
+itself some favourable position, where it may with greater
+facility weave its costly and wonderful web.&nbsp; And now we
+stand quietly, and watch the indefatigable little creature
+silently persevering in completing its own little storehouse, and
+what will prove to be its own little tomb.&nbsp; No machinery
+could be more exact than the movements of this small insect, as
+it carefully draws out of its mouth thread after thread, now
+moving with its head to the right, and carrying the almost
+invisible web down to its tail, then turning its head in the
+opposite direction, apparently for the purpose of drawing the
+silk from where it had been fastened on one side, till it has
+carefully drawn it over its own head, and secured it with gummy
+saliva.&nbsp; We quit the worms at mid-day, when hardly a thread
+of this wonderful substance is as yet visible; we return early
+the next day, and the cocoon is formed, but it is yet too tender
+to be touched.&nbsp; The peasant merely contents himself with
+observing the shape and color of these cocoons&mdash;setting much
+store on such as are of a yellow brown tinge, small, with a belt
+in the centre.&nbsp; Some of the cocoons are as white as snow,
+some yellow, some brown.&nbsp; The peasant now reports the
+condition of the silk-worms to his masters who immediately places
+his seal on the door of the hoosse.</p>
+<p>When they are considered fit to reel off the silk, he has the
+old oven to put in repair, to inspect the basin on the top of
+this altar-shaped furnace, to erect the old wheel, which has lain
+on the dust-heap ever since last <!-- page 362--><a
+name="page362"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+362</span>year&mdash;drive a nail in here&mdash;put a new spoke
+in there; and when all is completed, and ready for immediate use,
+the peasant&rsquo;s wife goes early on the morning of the
+auspicious day, and carries in her hand a morsel of damp clay;
+this she flings against the door-post of the master&rsquo;s
+house, if it adheres, then luck will attend the season, if, on
+the contrary, it drops off, the silk will be unsaleable.&nbsp;
+This is not the last superstitious ceremony observed; early that
+morning, about an hour after sunrise, the master of the
+plantation, followed by the peasants, and all his family, march
+in regular procession to the hoosse, the great man carrying under
+his arm a bundle of handkerchiefs, or other trifles, as presents
+for his followers; these are duly distributed on reaching the
+sheds; every one says a blessing on that day&rsquo;s undertaking,
+the door is unsealed, the people rush in, and rapidly empty the
+hoosse of the twigs and branches on which the cocoons have
+settled; these are piled up outside of the door, the women and
+children spread mats on the ground; here seated, they pick the
+cocoons from the twigs, and the peasants, as the mats get
+overloaded, gather them into a goodly-sized basket: by nightfall
+this operation has been concluded; they then separate from the
+mass some two or three hundred of the very best cocoons, which
+are set aside to breed from.&nbsp; Next day, the first streak of
+dawn has barely lit up the east, before the busy peasants are up
+and doing.&nbsp; &ldquo;The cocoon cleaners&rdquo; are occupied
+picking them; that is, detaching from the hard shell the soft
+downy substance, which afterwards constitutes what is termed the
+rough silk.&nbsp; The peasant, meanwhile, has lit the furnace;
+the water in the boiler is wrought to a proper temperature for
+reeling the silk.&nbsp; An old man busies himself in bringing
+bundles of faggots from the large pile of <!-- page 363--><a
+name="page363"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 363</span>mulberry
+branches, with which to keep the fire alive.&nbsp; Baskets of
+picked cocoons are placed beside the peasant who, seated on a
+stool, chooses from these a dozen or fourteen at a time, while a
+man or a boy turns the large wheel with his foot; this wheel is
+about fifteen feet in diameter; the cocoons are thrown into the
+warm water, and well whipped with switches, till the whole
+surface becomes frothy, and the threads of the cocoons begin to
+detach themselves.&nbsp; Seizing these, the peasant skilfully
+draws them up, gradually using more strength, till he has
+sufficient length of thread to fasten to a peg in the
+wheel.&nbsp; The party at the wheel commences turning with all
+his force: the wheel goes round rapidly; the peasant is ever on
+the watch, knotting broken threads, supplying the place of empty
+shells by fresh cocoons, or screaming to his attendant for more
+fire or more water.&nbsp; So passes the day.&nbsp; Evening
+arrives, and there is a large heap of empty cocoons, in which,
+however, the dead worms still remain; and on the wheel, which was
+bare in the morning, there is a fine thick golden-looking skein
+of silk, weighing some four or five pounds.&nbsp; This primitive
+style of reeling is of course detrimental to the quality of the
+silk, and is a frightfully slow method compared to European
+factories, which I have visited.&nbsp; When the peasant discovers
+that he has more cocoons than he can possibly reel off within a
+given time, he stifles them by exposing them to great heat, a
+process by which the quantity of silk they yield is greatly
+diminished; but as the cocoon fly, <i>i.e.</i>, the moth, comes
+out within three weeks, this stifling is indispensable, as the
+cocoon (except for rough silk) is wholly unfit for use when once
+it has been perforated by the moth.</p>
+<p>About two weeks have passed since first the cocoon <!-- page
+364--><a name="page364"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+364</span>commenced to be reeled; the silk is now ready for the
+market, and is hanging out in golden festoons to dry thoroughly
+before it is packed.&nbsp; The old baskets are once again brought
+into play, but they are this time all alive with fluttering white
+velvet-like moths; they never fly.&nbsp; Their enjoyment of life
+is very brief indeed; the male moth dies within twenty hours of
+its birth; the female is then placed on fine linen rags, where,
+in the course of the day it will deposit from 100 to 500 eggs,
+which are left in the air for a short time, and then put into
+linen bags and hung from the beam in the centre of the house, or
+sent to the mountain to await another year.&nbsp; The silk season
+ends just as the heat of June sets in.</p>
+<p>Having watched the whole process of the fellah throughout the
+silk season, we will continue to follow him to the close of the
+year.&nbsp; The silk being weighed and given to the women to make
+into hanks, and provision made for the future brood of worms, I
+will call my reader&rsquo;s attention to the wheat harvest.&nbsp;
+The labours of the peasantry will now be of a severer nature than
+hitherto; he has to toil under the scorching rays of the sun,
+whose beams, at least in some parts of Syria and Palestine, are
+far more powerful than those ever endured by English reapers;
+consequently the fellah is compelled to desist from his
+occupation from mid-day till about two o&rsquo;clock in the
+afternoon.&nbsp; During this portion of the day, scarcely a
+breath of air stirs, not a leaf is ruffled; even the
+many-coloured and beautiful butterflies lazily flutter from
+flower to flower seeking shade beneath the petals of the
+Damascene rose; all is perfectly still, and the peasants take
+their wonted siesta.&nbsp; However great may be the inconvenience
+of the intense heat, yet it is wholly balanced by the benefits
+which <!-- page 365--><a name="page365"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 365</span>accrue from the excellent climate
+with which this country is blest.&nbsp; The farmer in Syria has
+little cause of apprehension from sudden storms or showers, so
+that the harvest is gathered in, receiving no injury from those
+changes of weather, to which it is subject in less genial
+latitudes.&nbsp; The corn being reaped by the fellahs, the
+damsels, even as in the time of Ruth, follow, gathering the ears
+and binding them in sheaves; after leaving them for a short time
+to dry, they are carried to a part of the field called
+<i>baiedar</i>, which has been levelled and swept clear to
+receive them.&nbsp; A rude machine, constructed of oaken planks
+with stones fixed in holes drilled on the under side, is placed
+on the now scattered sheaves; on this a youth sits or stands to
+drive the oxen round and round, which have been harnessed to
+it.&nbsp; This process separates the grain from the husk; it has
+next to be winnowed, and for this purpose is collected in heaps;
+the corn, by means of a wooden shovel, is thrown up in the air,
+when the delightful and cool breezes of evening waft the chaff to
+the winds.&nbsp; The reaping, threshing, and winnowing, being now
+completed, the wheat intended for domestic consumption, is stored
+in wells, constructed expressly for this purpose, whilst that
+which is for agricultural uses, is placed in enormous jars, of
+from five to fifteen feet in height, and of proportionate
+diameter.</p>
+<p>The peasant now receives from his master the portion due to
+him from the harvest; he then commences making one half of what
+he obtains into <i>borghol</i>.&nbsp; The weather is most
+favourable for this process, as it requires fine sunny days, and
+during the night the wheat is covered with sheets to protect it
+from the dew, which is very heavy in the East.&nbsp; The grain is
+first washed and boiled, when it is exposed for several days to
+dry on <!-- page 366--><a name="page366"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 366</span>mats, before carrying it to the
+mill, where it is ground and thus converted into
+<i>borghol</i>.&nbsp; Of this there are two kinds, viz., coarse
+and fine; this latter serves simply as a substitute for rice, and
+is called <i>ruzz-mufalfal</i>, whilst the other is used in
+<i>kubbas</i>, that favourite dish to which I have before
+alluded.&nbsp; The harvest is now over, and the vineyards in the
+surrounding mountains present a rich and beautiful sight; the
+bright and luscious clusters of black and white grapes lie in
+profusion along the ground, for in Syria the vines are suffered
+to trail on the earth; and I am persuaded that were they trained
+as in the Rhenish vineyards, they would yield a more abundant
+crop.</p>
+<p>At this season of the year, the scene which is now presented
+is both picturesque, lovely, and interesting.&nbsp; Beneath a sky
+pure and bright, amidst the luxuriant and straggling vines, the
+damsels of Lebanon are busily occupied collecting the
+grapes.&nbsp; With what ease and elegance they move!&nbsp; Their
+graceful forms are shewn to full advantage in their loose and
+flowing vesture the brilliant and well-selected shades of which
+contrast beautifully with surrounding nature.&nbsp; Some are
+bringing baskets to be filled, whilst others are cutting the
+grapes and placing them in these panniers.&nbsp; The sun now
+begins to shed a deep red on the face of the western horizon,
+this is the signal to return home; each one takes her basket,
+puts it on her head, or loads her donkey, and the gay cavalcade
+moves homewards, singing some plaintive ditty; and thus ends a
+day which I know many of my fair Western readers would be not a
+little interested to witness.&nbsp; On the following day, those
+which are not required by the villagers for their own wines,
+arakey, or raisins, are carried to the market where they are
+sold.&nbsp; Even in the vineyards there <!-- page 367--><a
+name="page367"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 367</span>remain
+enough to satisfy the weary traveller as he passes by, and to
+supply the feathered tribes, and the bees, that therefrom gather
+an abundant store of rich honey, either for hives, or, flying to
+far distant woods and meadows, make for themselves a secret nest
+amidst the fragrant herbs; however, these hidden stores are soon
+tracked out and added to the simple repasts of our
+peasantry.&nbsp; Scarcely is the vintage over, when the olive
+plantations require attention.&nbsp; This is one of the most
+celebrated as well as useful of all trees.&nbsp; The fruit is
+beaten from the tree in the same way as walnuts in England are
+threshed in a green or unripe state, it is steeped in an alkaline
+ley, and then pickled in salt and water, and that it is much
+esteemed when thus preserved is well known.&nbsp; To procure the
+oil, the nearly ripe fruit is bruised by moderate pressure in a
+mill, when the oil flows out.&nbsp; This valuable article is used
+in almost every Syrian culinary preparation, and it is also
+applied for many medicinal purposes.&nbsp; Thus with the olive,
+meet emblem of peace, end the bright beams of this year&rsquo;s
+sun.&nbsp; Winter comes on with rapid strides: the boughs so
+lately loaded with leaves, flowers, and lastly, with fruits, are
+daily losing their beautiful foliage; and chilling autumnal
+breezes coldly whisper through the leafless branches, and Lebanon
+grows dark till the pale snow covers its top, and reflects the
+last dying rays of the sun.&nbsp; The peasantry now gather their
+supplies of fuel, which the relentless winds tear from the trees,
+scattering the earth with fragments of boughs, which, however,
+prove most acceptable to those who are in search of wood.&nbsp;
+And now the fellah and his cheerful family being furnished with
+fruits of all kinds, wine, honey, poultry and firing, and the
+numerous other et ceteras necessary to a Syrian household, fear
+nought for winds or storms; <!-- page 368--><a
+name="page368"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 368</span>nor are his
+cattle forgotten, his cow and treasured mare are both furnished
+with provender, much of which has been made from the refuse left
+by the silkworm of the mulberry leaves, the centre part of which
+they could not devour; these having been collected were made into
+stacks ready for winter.&nbsp; During the autumn, the cattle
+derive much nourishment from the second crop which sprouts from
+the despoiled mulberry trees.&nbsp; The fellah&rsquo;s wants
+being thus well supplied, he fails not to acknowledge the
+blessing which he possesses, and exclaims,
+&ldquo;<i>El-Hham&rsquo;dvo li-llah</i>!&rdquo;&nbsp; God be
+praised!</p>
+<p>The resources of Syria are inexhaustible if only properly
+developed.&nbsp; The trade in wine may rival that of Spain,
+Portugal, or France; the grapes are beautiful, and if they were
+only properly selected, and proper means taken to secure a good
+wine in this country, neither in Europe nor Asia is there greater
+facility for establishing an extensive and lucrative trade in
+this one department than in Syria and Palestine?&nbsp; The fruits
+are delicious; and those grown in the open air and without any
+trouble, rival in flavour, quality, and quantity, those of any
+other country, where the greatest pains are taken and great
+expense incurred to accomplish this.&nbsp; Then, again, the
+articles of tobacco, wheat, wool, etc., and innumerable other
+articles; madder root, the beautiful dyes of Syria (the Tyrian
+dye is not known now); one and all may, if properly cultivated
+and brought into the English market, rival its imports from all
+other parts of the world.&nbsp; The immense plains could, with
+very little outlay or labour, give us wheat and wool, indeed
+supply all the world; and Syria will, I hope, yet, at no remote
+period, become the granary of the west.</p>
+<p>The white wool of Scripture was up to a late period partially
+grown in the country around the Euphrates; <!-- page 369--><a
+name="page369"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 369</span>and, as is
+suggested by Dr. Thompson in the articles already adverted to in
+the Colonial and Asiatic Magazine, when an improved breed of
+sheep from English colonies, Spain, etc., shall be introduced
+into Syria, we may expect to supply with its resources the
+markets now chiefly furnished with wool from America, Australia,
+Germany, etc.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 370--><a name="page370"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 370</span>CHAPTER XXI.<br />
+THE COMPARATIVE INFLUENCES OF THE ROMAN CATHOLIC AND PROTESTANT
+FAITHS IN SYRIA.</h2>
+<p>There is perhaps no country in the world which so much engages
+the attention of the Propaganda of Rome as Syria and the Holy
+Land.&nbsp; To possess a leading influence on its destinies, has
+ever been the ambition of the Pope.&nbsp; What could have been
+more iniquitous than the absurd pretensions of the Roman
+Catholics in the Jerusalem question?&nbsp; It may be necessary to
+go back a little, and to acquaint the reader, that France has for
+many years claimed a sort of protection over the Romish Churches
+in Syria, and in periods of commotion in Mount Lebanon has
+exhibited the French colours from the convents, whilst all the
+appearance of state protection from the Propaganda has been kept
+up of late years, as must be well known in Europe.&nbsp; Thus a
+perpetual excitement is created in Mount Lebanon, the Roman
+Catholics looking to France, the Greeks to Russia, and the Druses
+to England.&nbsp; All this must be naturally displeasing to the
+Turkish government, and destructive to the country itself, whilst
+the agents of each of these parties are exciting them to
+perpetual outbreaks; and most disgraceful scenes are continually
+occurring at Jerusalem, <!-- page 371--><a
+name="page371"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 371</span>even around
+the sepulchre of our blessed Lord; so that there is presented to
+Christendom, the melancholy spectacle of Turkish soldiers called
+in to prevent Christians massacring one another.&nbsp; To
+increase the confusion, the last French ambassador at the Porte,
+M. Lavalette, demanded a renewal and ratification of some
+privileges, stated to be the substance of an old treaty with
+France, and so far succeeded as to obtain a promise from the
+ex-minister, Reschid Pasha, to comply with his wishes.&nbsp;
+Pending the negotiation, however, the French minister being
+absent for a time, Russia went to work and had this promise set
+aside.&nbsp; His Excellency M. Lavalette, returning and finding
+this, prepared to stand to his colours, and brought the
+<i>Charlemagne</i> man-of-war to sustain his demand.&nbsp; The
+grand vizier was called upon for an explanation, and as he could
+not defend his conduct, was dismissed from office, and the
+question thus remained in abeyance for months, but has now again
+been mooted.&nbsp; France has got a renewal of the original
+privilege, whilst Russia continues obstinately to oppose these
+concessions.&nbsp; The question is thus still at issue, and it is
+difficult to say how, when, or where it will end, unless England,
+as the only power best suited to do so, mediate between such
+conflicting parties.&nbsp; At least such is my humble opinion. <a
+name="citation371"></a><a href="#footnote371"
+class="citation">[371]</a>&nbsp; The Holy Sepulchre once
+exclusively in the <!-- page 372--><a name="page372"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 372</span>possession of the Roman Catholics
+would indeed be a bright gem in the diadem of the Romish Church,
+the acme of their ambition, and a keystone to the hearts and
+affections of every Christian inhabitant in Syria; but though
+they have as yet failed in this, they have many other strongholds
+and fastnesses in the land.&nbsp; Look at their convents at
+Carmel, Jaffa, Ramlah, Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Sidon, Beyrout,
+Acre, Damascus, and Aleppo, and which are daily increasing.&nbsp;
+In these, and many other towns, they are the chief point of
+attraction to the weary wayfarers; to these they flock for rest
+and for sustenance&mdash;to these the sick betake themselves for
+medical advice and medicine&mdash;and all is afforded them
+gratuitously.&nbsp; They have also schools for the instruction of
+children in Arabic, Italian and French; and though many poor
+members of the Greek <!-- page 373--><a name="page373"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 373</span>Church would gladly abstain from
+sending their children to be under the tuition of the priests,
+did any other opportunity offer itself for their education,
+still, in many instances, they have now no alternative if at
+least they desire that their children should be instructed in the
+European languages.&nbsp; At the present day, the sea-coast towns
+of Syria are rising into such great importance from the
+rapidly-increasing commerce with Great Britain and America, that
+to be possessed of a smattering of foreign languages is a source
+of gain to the rising generation of Syria; hence, all are
+desirous of obtaining this knowledge; and for the accomplishment
+of their desire, there is no choice left but to attend the Roman
+Catholic schools.</p>
+<p>There is, as I have already stated, an innate enmity between
+the Greeks and Latins in Syria&mdash;a deadly strife in a
+doctrinal point of view; still the young Syrians of the Greek
+persuasion, and even Moslems who, from self-interest, are
+prompted to attend daily these Romish schools, are also compelled
+to submit to their rules; and the course of instruction there
+consists almost exclusively of books and lessons well adapted to
+impress upon the young imagination the doctrines and observances
+of that Church.&nbsp; What follows from this intercourse?&nbsp;
+The teacher begins to plot against the pupil; he softens down
+difficulties; he wins confidence by kind words, and occasionally
+by small gifts, whilst a strict endeavour is made to mix up with
+these studies as much pleasure and amusement as is admissible
+with the drier pursuits of knowledge.&nbsp; These and a hundred
+other methods are adopted by the Roman Catholic priests to gain
+over the esteem and regard of the pupils; and as a natural
+result, the child, perhaps innately of an affectionate
+disposition, feels an impulse to be <!-- page 374--><a
+name="page374"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+374</span>grateful&mdash;gratitude warms into
+friendship&mdash;friendship ripens into attachment; and then the
+battle is won; the child is only nominally a Greek&mdash;in
+principle and at heart a Romanist.&nbsp; The parents and friends
+may be long in discovering the painful truths of the case (if
+ever they arrive at the knowledge), for in exact proportion as
+the child becomes imbued with his teacher&rsquo;s notions, so
+does he imbibe that unchristian spirit of concealment and
+deception, which it is the great aim of his preceptors that he
+should be possessed of; and having reached this point, as he
+grows in years so he grows deeper in cunning, and becomes a
+powerful instrument in the hands of his instructors, &ldquo;a
+wolf in sheep&rsquo;s clothing,&rdquo; turned loose among the
+flock of his unsuspecting brethren, and whilst a strict adherent
+to the outward observances of the Greek Church, is a very Jesuit
+at heart, working out with secret but almost certain success, the
+utter slavery of all those that fall into his meshes.&nbsp; This
+is the existing evil in Syria&mdash;a growing danger&mdash;a
+picture of truth not at all overdrawn.&nbsp; This is the
+&ldquo;wild beast&rdquo; of the present day in Lebanon, which is
+&ldquo;passing by and treading down the humble and unsupported
+Thistle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hospitality is the prevailing feature of the East; it is a
+precept and practice handed down from generation to generation
+since the time of the patriarchs.&nbsp; Abraham, when he
+unconsciously received and waited upon the three heavenly
+messengers, was doing exactly what is practised by the wild Arabs
+of the desert to this very day.&nbsp; &ldquo;<i>Ba&euml;tic
+baetuc</i>&rdquo; (my house is your house) is, with a very few
+exceptions, the maxim in the heart of every inhabitant of Syria,
+the more refined citizens of Damascus and Aleppo placing the best
+rooms in their houses at the disposal of the stranger, as well as
+their <!-- page 375--><a name="page375"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 375</span>horses, their servants, the best
+fruits of their gardens, and even themselves.&nbsp; All is
+cheerfully given up to their guests; and that man is a black
+sheep of the flock who is wanting in courtesy to the stranger, be
+he Christian, Moslem or idolater, rich or poor.</p>
+<p>The poor peasant, in his lowly hut in the village, and the
+Arab in his tent, will gladly share his frugal repast with the
+friendless stranger, and allot him a corner of his own cushion
+and portion of his own bed-covering, if he have nothing better to
+offer.&nbsp; In fact, the latter will not allow a stranger to
+pass without entering his tent-door and tasting the bread and
+salt of hospitality.&nbsp; A man without hospitality is looked
+upon as worthless and unnatural; but a people without
+hospitality&mdash;the idea is too monstrous for an Oriental to
+conceive. <a name="citation375"></a><a href="#footnote375"
+class="citation">[375]</a></p>
+<p>The Latin convent on Mount Cannel has a widespread fame in the
+East.&nbsp; The Hadgi from the far-distant shores of India, whom
+chance or speculation has brought from Mecca into Syria, has
+ofttimes been refreshed, and rested under the shadow of these its
+hospitable walls; and he naturally returns to his friends and his
+country full of the good deeds and the kindness <!-- page
+376--><a name="page376"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 376</span>of
+the monks of the great <i>deher</i> (convent) of <i>Mar
+Elias</i>.&nbsp; Another, perhaps, has been sick nigh unto death,
+and in his sickness was nursed, kindly waited upon, restored to
+health, and then sent forth with a blessing, by the
+<i>Hakeems</i> of this convent.&nbsp; What follows?&nbsp; The
+virtues and charities of these Catholic brethren are ever
+afterwards the theme of his daily conversation.&nbsp;
+Again&mdash;a pilgrim, penniless and starving, has received food
+and raiment, with a small sum of money to carry him on his way
+home, from the Carmelite friars.&nbsp; The pilgrim, through
+after-life, cherishes a thankful gratitude towards his timely
+benefactors; and this, to a greater or less extent, is the case
+with all the minor convents and monasteries in Syria.</p>
+<p>Now, while the Roman Catholics have their convents, the Greeks
+and Armenians their monasteries; while the Druses, Maronites, and
+Arabs have a corner in their humble dwellings, and a crust and a
+sup for the penniless pilgrim and the weary wayfarer; yet, alas!
+not even in Beyrout can the English boast of ever so mean an
+establishment for the exercises of charity&mdash;charity, that
+golden rule, laid down by Him whom they profess to look to as
+their only Saviour and Redeemer, as the great Pattern and Example
+of their lives.&nbsp; When I reflect upon the enormous sums spent
+in sending fleets to fill Syria with bloodshed and misery, to the
+ruin of many of my unfortunate countrymen, I must confess my
+surprise is turned into indignation.</p>
+<p>Amongst the fraternity constituting the monks of the various
+convents, there is always one or more somewhat skilled in the art
+of healing; and generally attached to these establishments, as in
+the instance of the convent on Mount Carmel, is a dispensary well
+stocked with drugs, and with the newest and best medicines <!--
+page 377--><a name="page377"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+377</span>recognised and used by physicians.&nbsp; In some few of
+the principal towns in Syria there are resident European doctors,
+principally Italians and Frenchmen, with a sprinkling of Germans
+and Poles, and one or two Americans.&nbsp; With the exception of
+the last-mentioned, they are mostly in the pay of the Turkish
+government, and are either connected with the quarantine
+establishments, belong to the troops, or are attached to the
+court of the Pasha.&nbsp; Relative to these, however, I may quote
+what Dr. Thompson, who was for some time at Damascus on a medical
+mission, and who was extremely beloved and esteemed by the
+natives there, states, viz.,&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;That on one occasion he was requested by
+the seraskier, or commander of the forces for Arabia, to perform
+an important operation on a soldier, as the ordinary medical
+staff were not able or willing to do it.&nbsp; In the course of
+the operation, the medical staff one and all failed in their aid,
+and some of them even fainted; and the writer had to rely on his
+own presence of mind, and unaided, to terminate the
+operation.&nbsp; Imagine an epidemic in a hospital under such
+surveillance; the mortality is frightful even under ordinary
+circumstances.&nbsp; In acute cases, and in serious surgical
+cases, there is little or no chance for a successful result; and
+the soldiers and sailors seldom resort to the doctor if they can
+avoid it.&nbsp; The European renegades in the service are very
+little better, with a few exceptions.&nbsp; The monks that
+practise medicine as a profession have a very fair knowledge of
+simples, and compound their own medicines, and employ a good many
+recent chemicals and modern ingredients in the European
+<i>Materia Medica</i>; but their knowledge of acute disease is
+necessarily limited.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The natives, in the hour of sickness, have first of all
+recourse to simple herbal remedies, which have been handed down
+through many generations, and are chiefly held in estimation by
+the old people of the villages.&nbsp; When these remedies are
+found to fail, then, and oftentimes only at the eleventh hour,
+they bethink them of <!-- page 378--><a name="page378"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 378</span>the Franks inhabiting some convent
+in the neighbourhood; and as all Franks are supposed to be
+physicians by birth, recourse is had to their healing art in
+preference to Italian or other quack medical professors, who are
+harsh in their treatment of the sick, unconscionable as to
+charges, and in any real case of difficulty seldom, if ever,
+successful.&nbsp; The monks are always ready and willing to avail
+themselves of any such opportunity of displaying their skill and
+charity, and it requires no second invitation before one or more
+of them are at the threshold of the sick man&rsquo;s house, and a
+few minutes find them busily employed about the cure, if it be
+practicable.&nbsp; In many instances, the patient is only
+suffering from severe constipation, or it may be a severe attack
+of ague; and in these cases a quick and almost miraculous cure is
+soon effected.&nbsp; That it should be considered a miracle, or
+an interposition of Divine Providence, brought about by the
+prayers and benedictions of the holy friars, is the main object
+they have in view, hence no opportunity is lost, on the first
+arrival of the priestly doctors, to impress upon the minds of the
+relatives and friends in secret the almost certainty of the
+patient&rsquo;s demise, unless a special interposition be made by
+them on his behalf.&nbsp; If this does not ultimately lead to the
+conversion of the household, it shakes them in their own creed,
+engenders confidence towards their benefactors, and leaves a
+grateful impression behind for many gratuitous charities
+rendered.&nbsp; The least return they can then make, is to comply
+with the oft-urged request of the monks to send their children to
+be educated at the convent school.</p>
+<p>Luckily for the credit of Great Britain, she sends few
+charlatans from her colleges; and an English or American quack is
+a thing heretofore unheard of in Syria, whereas <!-- page
+379--><a name="page379"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+379</span>charlatans of all other nations have been
+superabundant.&nbsp; An English doctor possesses an unsullied
+reputation in Syria.&nbsp; He is looked upon in the same light as
+an English gun, or an English watch&mdash;a thing that can only
+be manufactured or brought to perfection in England.&nbsp; Hence,
+if the report be spread that an English Hakeem, or even an
+Englishman of any denomination, be travelling in the
+neighbourhood, the halt and lame, and blind, and otherwise ailing
+of all the surrounding villages will congregate near to where his
+tent may be pitched, and pester him incessantly for remedies, if
+it be only a little white sugar weighed out by his skilful hands,
+to be used in cases of ophthalmia.&nbsp; Every sect, and even
+Mahommedan ladies, came and consulted Dr. Thompson, and received
+him at their own houses unveiled.&nbsp; The judicious physician
+is treated in the light of a gifted individual; he is looked upon
+as having the power of life and death in his hands: in the
+sick-room he is courted and treated with the greatest deference
+and respect; and even whilst passing in the streets, the
+occupants rise to salute him.&nbsp; It is not uncommon for him to
+find himself impeded in his progress by the prostration of the
+female members of the family to kiss his garments, even his
+shoes.&nbsp; This has occurred repeatedly, to my knowledge, in
+Damascus; and the doctor was also appealed to in private matters
+as the umpire, and for his advice in domestic and personal
+affairs.</p>
+<p>I may also here relate an incident in my own life in support
+of the influence which a Hakeem can obtain over the prejudices of
+Eastern people.&nbsp; During my last visit to Constantinople,
+whilst visiting at the house of Husseen Pasha, His Excellency, in
+the course of conversation, hinted to me, that the rumour of my
+medical <!-- page 380--><a name="page380"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 380</span>studies in Europe had reached him;
+and after a little introductory preamble, he begged of me to see
+his wife, who had been confined to her bed for some days.&nbsp; I
+can hardly describe my astonishment at such a request coming from
+such a quarter; however, I expressed my readiness to do all in my
+humble power to alleviate the sufferings of the invalid.&nbsp; I
+was accordingly conducted by a eunuch through a perfect maze of
+dark and mysterious passages (coughing all the way, as is the
+fashion, to give notice of the approach of a male, for the
+females to veil themselves) to the bed-chamber of the sick lady,
+whom I found reclining upon a mattress, laid upon a carpet on the
+floor.&nbsp; It being announced to her, that the Hakeem Bashi was
+at hand, an attendant, old Dudu, came forward, and our interview
+commenced.</p>
+<p>After a short conversation, in which she made many anxious
+inquiries relative to the Frank country and the English ladies,
+about whom I found she had very absurd notions, we came to the
+real object of my visit.&nbsp; I asked where the pain lay, and it
+will cause my readers to smile when I state her reply.&nbsp; She
+told me that I must cast her nativity according to Eastern
+customs, and thus discover the seat of pain myself.&nbsp; I told
+her that the system of medicine which I had learnt in England did
+not admit of such practices, and went on to shew her the utter
+fallacy of such doings.&nbsp; She answered me, that her own
+doctor in Circassia formally adopted this plan, and that, after
+ascertaining the star under which she was born, appropriate
+verses from the Koran were written upon three slips of paper: one
+was put in water, which she afterwards drunk; one was burnt with
+perfumes to drive evil spirits from the room; and the third was
+placed upon the affected part.&nbsp; <!-- page 381--><a
+name="page381"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 381</span>After some
+little difficulty I discovered the seat of her malady, and that
+she was suffering under a tumour.&nbsp; I then felt her pulse,
+and requested her to shew me her tongue.&nbsp; Here another
+difficulty arose, as she could not shew me her tongue without
+unveiling; but the old lady who stood by told her that the
+Prophet allowed it before the Hakeem and Priest, at the same time
+quoting verses from the Koran in assertion of what she
+stated.&nbsp; This had the desired effect; and on her removing
+her veil, I was perfectly dazzled with the intense sweetness and
+beauty of her face.&nbsp; She was a Circassian, one of the
+fairest of her race, and had just arrived at
+Constantinople.&nbsp; After some trouble she permitted me to
+inspect the part affected; on beholding it, some lectures
+delivered by my revered Mentor, Mr. Phillips, and also by Mr.
+Ferguson, immediately recurred to my mind.&nbsp; In the lectures
+they said, that incision with the knife was the only remedy in
+such cases.&nbsp; After two days I ventured to break this to my
+trembling patient, much to her terror; but on my assuring her
+that I would remove it without her being sensible to pain, she at
+last consented, and I successfully performed the operation,
+putting her under the effects of chloroform, which appeared to
+the bystanders pure magic.&nbsp; They had heard tell of such
+things from the Arabian Nights, but could hardly believe their
+senses when actually beheld by themselves in the present day.</p>
+<p>I have already endeavoured to show in how many various ways
+the Latins possess superior opportunities, and are in a better
+position than the Greeks, in having greater facilities daily
+afforded them as far as regards the work of conversion; but there
+is yet another great source of advantage to them, and one which
+holds out <!-- page 382--><a name="page382"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 382</span>many tempting inducements to the
+heavily-taxed peasantry to embrace at once, and without any
+further hesitation, the Roman Catholic faith.&nbsp; This is the
+privilege exercised by the consular authorities, and even by the
+very priests themselves, of protecting from outrage or insult
+every one who has embraced their religion, and who gives evidence
+of the sincerity of their intentions by regular attendance at
+mass, and by the rigid observance of high-days and holy-days,
+feasts and fasts.&nbsp; They also give them employment; and they
+become, <i>de facto</i>, protected by the French government;
+their taxes are light in comparison with those levied on their
+fellow-countrymen, and they are entirely exempted from that
+grinding system so commonly practised and played off upon the
+peasantry by the soldiery and underlings of government&mdash;a
+class of individuals that are a perfect bane to the Ottoman
+empire.</p>
+<p>Before concluding these remarks, I must point out another
+glaring instance in which the Latins have gained a decided
+ascendancy over the Greeks in the East.&nbsp; I allude to the
+establishment by the Sisters of Charity of a hospital at Beyrout,
+in which the first medical advice there procurable has been
+secured.&nbsp; Here the poor fever-stricken natives have every
+attention paid to their wants in the hour of sorrow and sickness;
+while, side by side, on neat iron-bedsteads covered with snowy
+linen, we stumble across the last sad remains of the French Roman
+Catholic sailor, and, in the next bed to his, the Protestant
+British tar.&nbsp; Both have been equally cared for, as far as
+bodily concerns go, but there has been a fearful distinction
+between the spiritual consolation of the two.&nbsp; The Frenchman
+has received daily&mdash;hourly visits from the nuns, who have
+spoken to him smilingly of heaven, and <!-- page 383--><a
+name="page383"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 383</span>lighted
+death&rsquo;s dark pathway with the rays of cheerfulness.&nbsp;
+The Englishman, on the contrary, has felt himself friendless and
+solitary&mdash;no gentle lips have stooped down to whisper
+comfort and holy counsellings to the quickly departing
+soul.&nbsp; The reason is, that there is not at present an
+English clergyman or an English doctor in Beyrout.</p>
+<p>The Sisters of Charity, and their other kindred agencies in
+the East, are beneficial in their way.&nbsp; During seasons of
+sickness they are all in full requisition, and deserve their meed
+of praise.&nbsp; As to these religious ladies, whatever may be
+their proselytising propensities&mdash;we know, that where they
+chiefly confine themselves to their meek and humble calling,
+their indefatigable zeal and never-ceasing exertions at all
+seasons and at all hours, are greatly to be commended.&nbsp; The
+patients visited at their own houses retain a grateful sense of
+the patient attention shewn them in the hours of need and in
+seasons of epidemic, when in the East friends desert each
+other.&nbsp; The institutions under their control are remarkably
+well kept, and far more neatly and economically conducted than
+any hospitals or schools in England.&nbsp; The manner in which
+their internal economy and household arrangements are conducted
+and <i>efficiently</i> superintended is highly creditable to
+them.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 384--><a name="page384"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 384</span>CHAPTER XXII.<br />
+THE REMEDY.</h2>
+<p>From the earliest days of Christianity, the blessed truths of
+the Gospel were almost invariably accompanied by acts of mercy
+and love.&nbsp; At first, these truths were impressed upon the
+memories of reckless and darkly ignorant multitudes by signs and
+wonders, well suited to the times and people; and miracles,
+resulting in immediate temporary benefit to the afflicted, were
+apt, though but faint, illustrations of the incalculable boon
+about to be conferred on the immortal souls of the believers and
+followers of our blessed Redeemer&mdash;the blind received their
+sight&mdash;the lame recovered the use of their limbs&mdash;the
+sick were healed&mdash;and even the dead were brought to life
+again.&nbsp; The early apostles were physicians both to the soul
+and body; and those that had faith but as a grain of mustard-seed
+went about doing good to the sick and dying.&nbsp; These miracles
+were palpable and beyond the power of refutation; and as long as
+the necessity for something beyond the comprehension of man
+existed, such things were requisite to draw and fix the attention
+of ignorant and superstitious idolators; but as soon as the true
+faith had taken root, and the young sapling no longer required
+outward and visible props to secure it from those tempestuous
+hurricanes of persecution which, through so long a period, raged
+with hardly any intermission, then palpable <!-- page 385--><a
+name="page385"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 385</span>miracles
+ceased to be exercised on earth&mdash;the visible sign was
+removed&mdash;the word of command or the touch no longer
+possessed the healing virtue&mdash;but miracles of grace and
+mercy still continued to be performed, and they continue to this
+day the same, as palpably visible to the spiritually-minded man
+(who can distinguish the hand of God in every temporal blessing
+enjoyed by the true followers of Christ), as was the resurrection
+of Lazarus to those unbelieving Jews who were eyewitnesses to
+that marvellous demonstration of infinite power tempered with
+infinite mercy.&nbsp; In lieu of this power of performing
+miracles, or of witnessing them, men were endowed with a spirit
+of wisdom, which gradually developed itself in successive
+generations; and the sick and the dying&mdash;the maimed, the
+halt, and the blind, who had now no further hope of instantaneous
+or certain relief through miraculous gifts, resorted to the skill
+of physicians, men of more enlightened education than themselves,
+but in other respects their equals, co-partners of the joys and
+sorrows inherited in this world, and destined like themselves to
+terminate their earthly career in the grave.&nbsp; And these
+physicians, or at least some amongst them, laboured for the
+benefit of humanity.</p>
+<p>At first, we may readily conceive that their resources were
+limited, and their primitive knowledge of medicines extremely
+scant; but the healing art never retrograded a single step.&nbsp;
+Of this we have abundant proof in the history of nations, as
+regards the advancement of this peculiar branch of science,
+though it is most true, that in countries such as, for instance,
+Arabia, which, in times past, was pre-eminent for its knowledge
+of medicinal drugs, and which may be said to have been the
+nursery of chemistry; this art has almost entirely disappeared
+<!-- page 386--><a name="page386"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+386</span>whilst in the present day the medical profession may in
+Europe be said to have arrived nearly at its zenith; other
+sciences may have kept pace with it in their marvellous and
+beneficial discoveries, but none can so much claim the thankful
+gratitude of mankind in general.&nbsp; Health is universally
+acknowledged to be the most precious of all temporal blessings,
+and, consequently, the pillars that maintain and prop up health
+have a prior claim to all others; and that man must be blind
+indeed, both spiritually and bodily, who does not see and
+acknowledge in this boon to suffering humanity the invisible hand
+of the Almighty Benefactor, as clearly intelligent to the man of
+God now, as were then the words, &ldquo;<i>Arise</i>, <i>take up
+thy bed and walk</i>,&rdquo; to the hopeless palsied
+patient.&nbsp; In short, every cure and every relief afforded to
+the sick and dying, are so many miracles of mercy.&nbsp; A man
+meets with an accident&mdash;he is mortally wounded in
+battle&mdash;crushed by a railway accident&mdash;burnt in a
+fire&mdash;all but drowned in water&mdash;sick of a fatal malady
+lingering with vain hopes and vainer love of life&mdash;the
+marked victim of consumption&mdash;these all have their immediate
+and most excruciating tortures benumbed or alleviated by the
+skill of the physician; or, if there is hope of life, the
+whispering of that hope falls from their lips like precious balm
+of Gilead imbuing them with courage and patience to undergo
+suffering, for great beyond measure is the tenaciousness to
+life.&nbsp; If, on the other hand, the skilful practitioner
+believes his patient doomed, and pronounces the last verdict,
+still he can proclaim to him the sweet hope of mercy&mdash;mercy
+eternal and boundless&mdash;for the penitent sinner, and help him
+to collect his scattered thoughts from wandering to that world
+which he must now speedily leave; he may whisper to him that
+there is still time for hope, <!-- page 387--><a
+name="page387"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 387</span>and to hope
+for mercy, and he may assist him to spend these last precious
+moments in penitence and prayer.</p>
+<p>What has long ceased to be a marvel amongst nations advanced
+in civilisation, is still regarded in the light of a miracle by
+the untutored portion of the world.&nbsp; Those who have
+penetrated into the remotest and least-known regions, have
+adduced evidence in support of this; and it is natural that a
+savage should regard with superstitious awe and reverence, a man
+endowed by education with even such every-day attainments as
+would barely pass muster in England, France, or America; and it
+is as natural, that this awe and reverence should gradually give
+place to affection and gratitude when, by the interposition of
+medical skill, the sick and suffering man experiences a speedy
+transition from pain and disease to the rapturous bliss of a
+state of convalescence,&mdash;and this transition brought about,
+too, by what, to him in his ignorance appears a magical
+influence.&nbsp; His faith in that man&rsquo;s power is so great,
+that, if he only drop a word in proper season, the untutored mind
+of the comparative savage has sufficient natural energy to grow
+inquisitive about what so materially regards himself; and he soon
+feels persuaded that one from whom he has already received such
+convincing proofs of disinterested kindness can never be capable
+of doing him an injury; and this leads him to reflect; and
+reflection is the first grand foundation-stone, which, when once
+firmly set, can readily be built upon, and become, with
+God&rsquo;s blessing, a house upon a rock.&nbsp; Throughout all
+ages since the foundation of the Christian faith, those
+missionaries who have penetrated into barbarous countries, have
+invariably found the great utility of being acquainted, however
+slightly, with a knowledge of medicines and their proper
+application.&nbsp; The very word <i>hakeem</i> is a <!-- page
+388--><a name="page388"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+388</span>passport to the Oriental heart and good-will.&nbsp; How
+else could Europeans, in the garb of monks, and furnished only
+with staff and wallet, have traversed those vast and unknown
+regions of China, Tartary, Thibet, etc., and have escaped
+scatheless to make known to the world their travels and
+adventures in lands and amongst people whose very name was a
+mystery to civilised Europe?&nbsp; That physicians are honoured
+by these people, and even in some instances gratefully
+remembered, is certain.&nbsp; This truth is placed beyond a doubt
+by the fact of a Chinese poet having celebrated the name, fame,
+and good deeds of a skilful European oculist in a lengthy poem,
+part of which was translated into English and published some few
+years since in London, taken, I believe, from the notes of the
+late Rev. Mr. Abed, a distinguished American settled at
+Singapore.&nbsp; And it is owing to the fact of monks,
+professionally physicians, having been with impunity permitted to
+travel through unknown lands, that Europeans are indebted for the
+introduction of the silkworm from China into their own country,
+an indefatigable monk having ingeniously contrived to convey the
+eggs carefully packed in the hollow of his staff over thousands
+of miles, and through apparently insuperable dangers and
+difficulties from China to Turkey.</p>
+<p>I have now, I hope, succeeded in proving to the reader the
+necessity that exists of incorporating the medical with the
+clerical profession in the persons of those good Christians,
+valiant soldiers of Christ, who are cheerfully willing to devote
+their lives and talents to the furtherance of the Gospel as
+missionaries in foreign parts; and I shall now endeavour to
+explain my views, hopes, and wishes, as connected more
+immediately with the spread of the Truth in Syria and <!-- page
+389--><a name="page389"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+389</span>throughout the East.&nbsp; Many thousands of pounds
+have been already lavished upon futile attempts to convert the
+heathen, and many excellent Christians are now to be found in
+England ready with open hands to further a good cause; but as I
+never intend to participate in any worldly gain to be drawn
+directly or indirectly from what I am about to recommend to their
+serious attention and consideration, they must at least acquit me
+of any selfish motives, for my career in life is not in my own
+power; and though I have learned to prize England and the many
+treasured friends and privileges I here possess most highly, yet,
+I cannot forget my mother country altogether, and trust and hope
+I may be able, at intervals, to revisit its sunny shores for a
+while, and during my absence from it my every thought shall be
+how best to promote the spiritual welfare of my beloved brethren
+there.</p>
+<p>The plan I propose as best calculated to insure, within a few
+years, the happiest results to Syria, is as follows,
+viz:&mdash;</p>
+<p>Firstly.&mdash;That a society be formed in England, composed
+of benevolent ladies and gentlemen, who shall have for their aim
+the establishment of a charitable hospital and schools at
+Beyrout, and that, for the furtherance of this object,
+subscription-lists be opened at some of the principal banking
+establishments all over Great Britain.</p>
+<p>Secondly.&mdash;That the donations thus collected shall be
+paid into the Bank of England.</p>
+<p>Thirdly.&mdash;That when the sum subscribed shall have
+amounted to about two thousand pounds, a pious, experienced
+middle-aged medical man, be sent to Beyrout, accompanied by a
+chemist; there in co-operation with some intelligent native (such
+as Asaad Kayat, the <!-- page 390--><a name="page390"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 390</span>present English consul at Jaffa, who
+has so materially benefited his country), to purchase a promising
+piece of land in a healthy and elevated position an hour&rsquo;s
+ride from the town of Beyrout.</p>
+<p>Fourthly.&mdash;To build there a hospital, and in the town a
+dispensary for out-door patients.&nbsp; The cost of this ground
+and buildings would not exceed one thousand pounds.&nbsp;
+Separate private rooms, attached to the hospital, would be very
+desirable for travellers, who needing medical aid or nursing, and
+being able to pay for the same, would prefer being thus lodged to
+going to an hotel.&nbsp; This would be a great boon, especially
+to the English, who might thus feel greater confidence and
+security in their visits to this interesting country; knowing
+that, in case of illness or accident, they could there receive
+proper medical treatment, and every care necessary to ensure
+their recovery.&nbsp; The physician attached to the institution
+might, when called in to attend opulent European or native
+families, be permitted to charge a small fee, which could be
+regulated by the committee, and which fee, or half of it, might
+go towards the hospital expenses.</p>
+<p>Fifthly.&mdash;If funds continued to permit, to build, in
+connection with this hospital (but in the town), schoolrooms for
+boys and girls, where they might be thoroughly taught their own
+language, and in it go through a course of Christian instruction,
+learn needlework and household duties.</p>
+<p>Sixthly.&mdash;I propose that the requisite medicines,
+surgical instruments, furniture, bedding, and materials for
+school use, be supplied by voluntary contributions, such
+Christian or charitable tradespeople as feel disposed to support
+such institutions contributing their mites thereto in lieu of
+paying money.</p>
+<p><!-- page 391--><a name="page391"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+391</span>Seventhly.&mdash;It would be very desirable, when the
+hospital was constructed, if the physician there would take in as
+many Syrian pupils to educate as the funds permitted; to be sent,
+when deemed by him fit, to England to improve themselves at the
+hospitals here, and to increase their Christian knowledge;
+afterwards to be employed in the hospitals or dispensaries,
+which, it is to be hoped, will soon, from so excellent a
+commencement, increase all over Syria; for it would be desirable
+that eventually all posts connected with these institutions
+should be occupied by intelligent natives, who could afford to be
+employed at much lower rates of salary, and who would exercise a
+greater influence over their fellow-townsmen if only from their
+superior knowledge of their mother tongue.</p>
+<p>I have now endeavoured to shew that, with an outlay of two
+thousand pounds, very commodious institutions might be
+established, and a large piece of ground be purchased at Beyrout,
+if a Society were formed for their establishment in Syria.&nbsp;
+Meanwhile, I have reckoned upon the charitable disposition of the
+class of annual subscribers; and in this Christian land, where
+money is so cheerfully granted for the promotion of good and
+alleviation of suffering, I may safely reckon on this bounty
+attaining about five hundred pounds per annum, not one fraction
+of which but may, with judicious arrangement, safely treble the
+amount in the course of a very few years.</p>
+<p>I have as yet made no allusion as to the uses to which the
+land purchased in Beyrout might be applied besides the erection
+of a hospital upon it.&nbsp; Any surplus land could, at a very
+trifling original outlay, be planted out with mulberry-shoots;
+and these, if properly managed, would, in the course of three
+years, be fit to <!-- page 392--><a name="page392"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 392</span>rear the silk-worm.&nbsp; After the
+final erection of the proposed establishment at Beyrout, and when
+it had been working a year, I should recommend that the society,
+in lieu of permitting the surplus funds on hand to remain idle,
+should vote the same to the purchase of some tract of land in the
+immediate neighbourhood of Damascus or Beyrout, and to have
+plantations in the fertile district of Antioch, where land and
+labour are excessively cheap.&nbsp; Thus, an outlay of one
+thousand pounds in landed property would, if it were all planted
+with mulberries, yield, in the course of a few years, an annual
+revenue (if the silk were sold in the Syrian market), of about
+two hundred pounds per annum; if reeled for European purposes,
+nearly double that amount.&nbsp; And this revenue would go on
+steadily increasing as the trees became older and yielded more
+leaves for the nourishment of a greater number of worms, and as,
+with the profits of the silk, additional grounds might be
+purchased and cultivated, I could safely guarantee that, were the
+society&rsquo;s efforts judiciously supported by efficient
+agents, in from fifteen to twenty years this and similar
+institutions would not only be enabled entirely to support
+themselves from the revenue of their estates, independent of any
+succour from the society, but they would even have surplus funds
+for the establishment of like minor institutions in the
+interior.</p>
+<p>At the first outset, the cultivation of the lands acquired in
+Beyrout might devolve upon the parents or destitute relatives of
+such of the poorer boys as were receiving a gratuitous education
+at the schools attached to the institutions, and the poorer class
+of girls educated at the schools, if permitted, might, during one
+month in the year, be occupied in reeling off the silk produced
+by the cocoons on the Institution&rsquo;s estates.</p>
+<p><!-- page 393--><a name="page393"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+393</span>It is my idea, that the system of education should
+consist of two distinct schools or classes for both boys and
+girls; the upper or high school to be appropriated solely for the
+superior education of the sons and daughters of such wealthy and
+respectable natives as have the means and inclination of
+advancing their children in after life, and on whom languages,
+drawing, music, various species of needlework, and other like
+accomplishments, would not be uselessly lavished; while, on the
+other hand, the lower school should strictly confine itself to
+orphans and children of the labouring and poorer classes, who
+might be instructed to read and write their own tongue with ease
+and facility, at the same time that they were initiated into
+useful trades and professions, and the girls of this class taught
+plain needlework, and no useless accomplishments.&nbsp; As
+regards the diet and care of this latter class, strict attention
+should he paid to <i>cleanliness</i>, regularity, order,
+<i>truthfulness</i>, and other good habits; at the same time that
+their food and raiment should, though sufficient, be neither
+superabundant, nor consist of such articles as might induce them
+in after-years, when left to battle their way through the world,
+to have a hankering after dainties and luxuries wholly beyond the
+compass of their slender means.</p>
+<p>But to ensure success to the proper working of such a
+philanthropic medical mission as is here contemplated,
+intemperate zeal or harsh bigotry must be carefully abstained
+from.&nbsp; I quite agree with Dr. Thompson, who, in a letter
+addressed to Dr. Hodgkin from Damascus, says, &ldquo;I believe
+all who know the East, and particularly Syria, will freely admit
+that it is only through medical agency that a change in the
+religious views of the people can be effected; but even a medical
+man <!-- page 394--><a name="page394"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 394</span>must work for years among them, and
+first acquire their confidence; and I believe I am not too
+sanguine that then, by cautious and judicious steps, he may and
+will do more than pure missionaries can expect to accomplish for
+a quarter of a century to come.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;It is at the
+bedside of a sick person, where are always assembled all the
+friends of the patient, that a medical man can do the good work,
+and where he may do so with impunity, especially if there be a
+slight prospect of recovery.&nbsp; The most fanatical I have
+found raised no objection under these circumstances, even,
+strange to say, among the Moslems.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I may now quote the following lines from Mr. Cuthbert Young,
+in his &ldquo;Notes of a Wayfarer,&rdquo; he
+says:&mdash;&ldquo;No means are more likely to smooth down
+prejudices and recommend true Christianity than the spirit of
+benevolence that emanates from it, and that breathes in this
+institution.&nbsp; Compulsory means for proselytising never have
+been, and never will be, effectual in the case of Mahommedans;
+but what can withstand self-denying kindness?&nbsp; And what may
+not happen when we know that free access is obtained by Christian
+physicians, even to the harems of Moslems!&nbsp; The same vices
+that are so destructive in China&mdash;infanticide and
+abortion&mdash;prevail here; and, I believe, the use of exciting
+stimulants, such as opium, is also general; but the wretched
+patients, when placed under the superintendence of a faithful
+Christian physician, though they may not be prepared to embrace
+Christianity, may yet drink in to some extent of the Christian
+spirit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The amount of good, and the favourable impression made on the
+people by medical missionaries, cannot be overrated.&nbsp; We
+need only refer to China.&nbsp; There is no more efficient way of
+rendering a people, or a country, <!-- page 395--><a
+name="page395"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 395</span>lasting
+advantages, than through the agency of Christian and judicious
+medical men.</p>
+<p>In bringing these pages to a close, I may be allowed to
+express a hope that they will not prove wholly without interest
+to those who peruse them.&nbsp; My chief incentive for appearing
+before the public, has been from an humble desire to advocate the
+cause of Syria; and the patriotic will doubtless join in my
+prayer, that my efforts may not prove abortive.&nbsp; If,
+therefore, either directly or otherwise, I shall be the means of
+rousing the sympathetic energies of right thinking people, on
+behalf of my native land, I shall feel fully recompensed for all
+the time I have bestowed on this little volume.&nbsp; However
+great have been the exertions which, (as not professing
+authorship), it may have given me, yet the recalling past scenes
+and circumstances for the work has left a relish and a fragrance
+on my mind, and a remembrance which is sweet.&nbsp; I have,
+however, by its publication, caused a strong feeling of enmity
+and malice to spring up against me among my Roman Catholic
+brethren; and to their hostility I am reluctantly compelled to
+attribute a considerable change which, since the appearance of my
+work, has taken place in my circumstances.&nbsp; By fabricating
+reports disadvantageous to my welfare, and by using indirect
+influence in certain quarters, I have been made to suffer a
+considerable pecuniary loss; but I hope in exchange that I have
+gained better things.&nbsp; Amongst the latter I would place the
+satisfaction of having candidly expressed my opinions on
+important subjects without regard to my worldly interests, and
+that by so doing, I have more effectually paved the way and
+pointed out the true path of improvement for my countrymen, by
+directing attention to the evils which exist among them, and
+suggesting <!-- page 396--><a name="page396"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 396</span>a method by which they may be rooted
+out.&nbsp; May then those seeds of charity which have so often
+sprung up, blossomed, and yielded fruit for me, now do so
+likewise (and more also) for my countrymen.&nbsp; I cannot take
+leave of my readers without once more expressing my heartfelt
+gratitude towards the people of this country.&nbsp; From all whom
+I have ever met, I have received that welcome and reception for
+which the English are justly proverbial.&nbsp; Even the nobles of
+these mighty realms have deigned to honour me, by evincing an
+interest in the subject next to my heart.&nbsp; May that
+Omnipotent Power, to whose authority they also bend, long
+preserve these great and true-hearted men; and may this kingdom
+never cease to be the ark, the earthly resting-place of all true
+believers, whence, as from a vast store-house of provisions,
+mental or bodily, all nations under the sun may seek and find
+assistance.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 397--><a name="page397"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 397</span>APPENDIX.<br />
+NOTES ON THE GEOLOGY OF SYRIA,</h2>
+<p>(<i>Kindly communicated to me by my friend</i>, <i>Professor
+Edward Forbes</i>.)</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">My Dear Sir</span>,&mdash;It is much to be
+desired that a careful geological exploration of your interesting
+country should be undertaken by an able investigator.&nbsp; All
+that we know of the structure of Syria is fragmentary, and in
+great part unsatisfactory.&nbsp; Sufficient, however, is known to
+indicate the scientific importance of the region, and to hold out
+a promise of a rich harvest for the practical geologist who may
+undertake its description.&nbsp; The collection of fossils which
+I have myself seen from the district around Lebanon, suggested
+many enquiries that have not yet been answered, especially
+respecting the relations of the jurassic and cretaceous rocks of
+that famous region.&nbsp; The following scanty notices of what is
+known about Syrian formations and their fossils, may serve to
+excite curiosity and to direct the traveller to fresh
+observations.</p>
+<p>In the year 1833, a valuable memoir by M. Botta, Jun., was
+published by the Geological Society of France.&nbsp; It is
+entitled &ldquo;Observations sur le Liban et
+l&rsquo;Antiliban.&rdquo;&nbsp; He represents Mount Lebanon as
+composed of rocks belonging to the lower cretaceous series,
+resting upon green sands, and these in their turn reposing upon
+jurassic strata.&nbsp; He states, that in the chain of the
+Lebanon there are three distinct formations.&nbsp; The uppermost
+is a limestone, very variable in character, both of appearance
+and hardness, and alternating with calcareous marls.&nbsp; The
+lower division of this formation is distinguished by the presence
+of beds and nodules of flint.&nbsp; Fossil sea-urchins occur in
+its <!-- page 398--><a name="page398"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 398</span>middle, and fishes in its lower
+part.&nbsp; A second formation of variable thickness is sandy,
+very ferruginous, abounding in iron ores and lignites, and
+passing above into a calcareous rock.&nbsp; The lowest formation
+is constituted of numerous beds of cavernous limestone.&nbsp;
+Besides these older rocks, M. Botta remarks upon the presence,
+all along the coast from Beyrout to Tripoli, of conglomerates or
+sandstones, quite unconformable to the calcareous rocks of the
+coast.</p>
+<p>M. Botta takes particular notice of those localities in which
+remarkable fossils occur.&nbsp; The first is at the bottom of the
+basin in which Antoura is built.&nbsp; The stratum is confused
+marl, abounding in specimens of sea-urchins.&nbsp; These species
+are remarkable for their size and shape.&nbsp; He considers this
+bed as belonging to the jurassic series.&nbsp; Corals are also
+found in it.</p>
+<p>The second locality is near the convent of Bikeurby, where a
+stratum occurs containing numerous univalve shells of the genus
+<i>Nerin&oelig;a</i>, which being harder than the rock containing
+them, stand up on its weathered surface.</p>
+<p>The third locality is at Sach el Aalma, where at about 300
+feet above the level of the sea occurs an impure limestone, often
+soft.&nbsp; In it fossil fishes are found in plenty.&nbsp; They
+are irregularly disposed in the rock.</p>
+<p>The fossil fishes of Mount Lebanon have been the subject of
+frequent investigations, although the true geological position of
+the beds whence they are derived, has not yet been made out with
+certainty.&nbsp; Two memoirs have especially been devoted to
+descriptions of them, the one by M. Heckel (1843), and the other
+by Professor Pictet, of Geneva (1853).&nbsp; Professor Agassiz
+also has written upon some of the Lebanon fishes, and Sir Philip
+Grey Egerton has described a very remarkable fossil, viz., the
+Cyclobatis Oligodactylus, brought from Syria by Captain Graves,
+R.N., who kindly committed it to my care in 1845.&nbsp;
+Altogether no fewer than thirty-four fossil fishes from Mount
+Lebanon are now known and described.&nbsp; As the works in which
+the accounts are contained are not likely to pass into the hands
+of travellers, it may be useful to give a list of some of the
+principal of these very interesting and beautiful fossils.</p>
+<p>Of the family of perched fishes there occurs a species of
+<i>Beryx</i>, a genus of which certain fossil forms are found in
+the chalk, and a few living species in the Indian seas.&nbsp; The
+<i>Beryx Vexillifer</i> is found in the hard limestones of
+Hakel.</p>
+<p><!-- page 399--><a name="page399"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+399</span>Of the family of sparoid fishes, one or two species
+occur in the soft limestones of Sach el Aalma.&nbsp; The
+<i>Pagellus Libanicus</i> is an example.</p>
+<p>Of the family of Chromid&aelig;, three species of
+<i>Pycnosterinx</i> occur in the soft limestones of Sach el
+Aalma, viz., <i>P. discoides</i>, <i>P. Heckelii</i>, and <i>P.
+Russegerii</i>.</p>
+<p>Of the Squamipennes, a <i>Platax</i> occurs in the hard
+limestones of Hakel.</p>
+<p>Of the Cataphracti, a new genus called <i>Petalopteryx</i> has
+been established by Pictet for a fish from Sach el Aalma.&nbsp;
+Of the Sphyrenoid fishes, a <i>Mesogaster</i> occurs at the same
+locality.&nbsp; To the Halecoid fishes a great number of those of
+Lebanon belong; among them are the following:&mdash;</p>
+<p><i>Osmeroides Megapterus</i>, Sach el Aalma.</p>
+<p><i>Eurypholis</i> (new genus of Pictet) <i>sulcidens</i>, from
+Hakel.</p>
+<p><i>Eurypholis Boisseri</i>, from the same locality.</p>
+<p><i>Eurypholis longiden</i>, from Sach el Aalma.</p>
+<p><i>Spaniodon</i> (new genus of Pictet) <i>Blondelii</i>, from
+Sach el Aalma.</p>
+<p><i>Spaniodon elongatus</i>, Sach el Aalma.</p>
+<p><i>Clupea lata</i>, Sach el Aalma.</p>
+<p><i>Clupea macropthalma</i>, Hakel.</p>
+<p><i>Clupea sardiniodes</i>, Hakel.</p>
+<p><i>Clupea laticauda</i>, Hakel.</p>
+<p><i>Clupea minima</i>, Sach el Aalma.</p>
+<p><i>Clupea brevissima</i>, Hakel.&nbsp; This fish, originally
+described by M. de Blainville, appears to be very common in its
+locality.</p>
+<p>Of the Esocid&aelig;, there is the fish called <i>Rhinellus
+furcatus</i>, which occurs at Sach el Aalma.</p>
+<p>Of the Sclerodermi, several species of <i>Dircetis</i> occur
+at Sach el Aalma.&nbsp; A curious and anomalous fish, called
+<i>Coccodus armatus</i>, is found at Hakel.</p>
+<p>Of Cartilaginous fishes, a <i>Spinax</i> is found at Sach el
+Aalma.</p>
+<p>The curious <i>Cyclobatis oligodactylus</i> of Egerton belongs
+to the same division.</p>
+<p>In the north of Syria, M. C. Gaillardot has observed several
+distinct stages of rocks belonging to the great Nummulitic
+formation, and therefore, according to the received geological
+classification, members of the Eocene group of Tertiaries.&nbsp;
+The newest of these beds are stated to consist of compact white
+or grey limestones containing fossil corals, sea-urchins, and
+oysters.&nbsp; <!-- page 400--><a name="page400"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 400</span>Under these is a white chalky
+limestone, alternating with green and grey soft marls and other
+limestones, almost entirely made up, according to Vicomte
+D&rsquo;Archiac, of the <i>Nummulina intermedia</i>.&nbsp; In the
+white limestones of Ainzarka are found <i>Nummulina Raymondi</i>,
+<i>N. l&oelig;vigata</i>, and <i>Alveolina
+subpyrenacia</i>.&nbsp; M. Gaillardot would distinguish the
+entire group of strata constituting the highest mountains of
+Syria by the name of the Libanian System.&nbsp; He appears,
+however, to have confounded strata of very different ages,
+tertiary rocks with cretaceous and jurassic.&nbsp; In the true
+Lebanon region the mummulitic beds seem to be altogether
+wanting.&nbsp; It is possible that they may be present in the
+Antioch district, but this has not been clearly made out as
+yet.&nbsp; M. Russegger has shewn, contrary to the views of M.
+Gaillardot, that the region around Jerusalem is mainly of oolitic
+age, with occasional remains of cretaceous strata outlying here
+and there.</p>
+<p>During the Armenian expedition to the shores of the Dead Sea,
+considerable collections of Syrian fossils appear to have been
+amassed.&nbsp; These have been described by Mr. Conrad, and are
+figured in the report very recently published by Mr. Lynch.&nbsp;
+The cretaceous beds of Syria are therein referred in part, at
+least, to the age of the white chalk of Europe.&nbsp; The
+Jurassic fossils are, for the most part, in the condition of
+casts.&nbsp; Species of <i>Nerin&oelig;a</i> were noticed, and
+among European forms, the <i>Ostrea scapha</i> of Roemer, and the
+<i>Ostrea virgata</i> of Goldfuss.&nbsp; A very remarkable fossil
+is the <i>Ammonites Syriacus</i>, from the Lebanon region; it is
+a species apparently of the genus <i>Ceratites</i>, a group of
+cephalopods usually regarded as characteristic of strata of
+Triassic age, but in this instance possibly represented among
+cretaceous beds.</p>
+<h2>NOTES.</h2>
+<p><a name="footnote3"></a><a href="#citation3"
+class="footnote">[3]</a>&nbsp; Canticles iv. 13&ndash;15.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote8"></a><a href="#citation8"
+class="footnote">[8]</a>&nbsp; The supposed tomb of the prophet
+Jonah is distinctly visible from this spot.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote10"></a><a href="#citation10"
+class="footnote">[10]</a>&nbsp; This favourite dish is something
+similar to forced-meat balls, being made of dried boiled wheat,
+finely-chopped suet and meat, pepper, salt, and red
+chillies.&nbsp; The whole is mashed into a paste, then squeezed
+by the hand into a globular shape, and afterwards either boiled
+or baked.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote21a"></a><a href="#citation21a"
+class="footnote">[21a]</a>&nbsp; In the houses of Mahomedans the
+texts are from the Koran.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote21b"></a><a href="#citation21b"
+class="footnote">[21b]</a>&nbsp; Afterwards Pasha of Damascus,
+where he introduced many useful European inventions; he is now
+the Commander-in-Chief at Adrianople, beloved and esteemed by the
+people he governs.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote22"></a><a href="#citation22"
+class="footnote">[22]</a>&nbsp; It is the fashion of Damascus,
+and generally in the East, for the lady of the house to first sip
+the coffee, and then hand it to the visitor as a mark of favour;
+and on my first arrival in London, I used to do the same, much to
+the astonishment of my English lady-friends.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote28"></a><a href="#citation28"
+class="footnote">[28]</a>&nbsp; (Aliahey Ushruf f&ucirc;l
+sal&#257;m.)</p>
+<p><a name="footnote48"></a><a href="#citation48"
+class="footnote">[48]</a>&nbsp; In the East generally, however it
+is not regarded in the light of a theft to eat as much fruit from
+the fertile gardens as may satisfy the moderate wants of the
+passer by.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote76"></a><a href="#citation76"
+class="footnote">[76]</a>&nbsp; Spirit, made of raisins and
+aniseed distilled.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote78"></a><a href="#citation78"
+class="footnote">[78]</a>&nbsp; Every marriage-guest brings a
+wax-taper, which he is to light.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote79"></a><a href="#citation79"
+class="footnote">[79]</a>&nbsp; Sometimes the marriage ceremony
+is performed at home, sometimes in the church.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote92"></a><a href="#citation92"
+class="footnote">[92]</a>&nbsp; This is made either of raisins,
+or a kind of sweet pod.&nbsp; These are crushed in a mill worked
+by a camel and afterwards mixed with a small portion of alkali
+and a kind of soft earth, placed in a vessel with a vent.&nbsp;
+Over this a certain quantity of water is poured again till all
+the juice is extracted, then evaporated by heat till a mass
+resembling molasses, is left, which has a delicious flavour.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote97"></a><a href="#citation97"
+class="footnote">[97]</a>&nbsp; This tobacco, when gathered, is
+hung up while it is green in a chamber, and exposed to the fumes
+of a particular kind of wood, which grows only in this
+neighbourhood, and which imparts to it a mild and much admired
+flavour.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote107"></a><a href="#citation107"
+class="footnote">[107]</a>&nbsp; I have this fact on the
+authority of an English traveller.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote119"></a><a href="#citation119"
+class="footnote">[119]</a>&nbsp; Another story prevalent was,
+that the Sultan had written to the Queen of England, commanding
+her to send her fleet to subdue the Egyptians and threatening, if
+she refused to do so, to dethrone her, as he is the Padischah of
+all kings.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote157"></a><a href="#citation157"
+class="footnote">[157]</a>&nbsp; Since the above remarks were
+placed in the hands of the printer, Mr. Brady has, I am happy to
+see, obtained permission of the minister to introduce a bill into
+the House of Commons, for the registration of all duly qualified
+medical practitioners.&nbsp; This is, at least, one step in the
+right direction.&nbsp; Short though it be, nevertheless we must
+look upon it as an earnest of greater regard on the part of the
+Government than they have hitherto evinced; and we may receive it
+as a first instalment of more valuable boons yet to come.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote175"></a><a href="#citation175"
+class="footnote">[175]</a>&nbsp; M. Musurus, Prince Callimaki,
+and Prince Caradja.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote178"></a><a href="#citation178"
+class="footnote">[178]</a>&nbsp; Reschid Pasha, Aali Pasha, and
+Fuah Effendi, the ablest men in the empire, were many years in
+this country, and are eminently distinguished by their advocacy
+of reform, and by carrying on improvements in all branches of the
+public service.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote210"></a><a href="#citation210"
+class="footnote">[210]</a>&nbsp; <span class="smcap">Euphrates
+and the East</span>.&mdash;On Saturday last, a lecture announced
+under the above title, was delivered at the Assembly Rooms in
+this city, by Dr. J. B. Thompson, a gentleman who has just
+returned from a medical mission in Turkey.&nbsp; Capt. Saumarez,
+R.N., presided, and a very numerous audience of ladies and
+gentlemen attended on the occasion.&nbsp; The lecture was so
+desultory in its course, that it will not admit of analysis;
+nevertheless, it was exceedingly interesting, and formed an
+important addition to our information respecting a country which
+is the cradle of the world.&nbsp; Dr. Thompson, it appears, was
+sent to Asiatic Turkey on a medical mission by an association of
+English gentlemen, amongst whom was the Earl of Ellesmere; and
+having opened a free hospital at Damascus, and acquired the
+Arabic language, he enjoyed rare facilities for obtaining a
+knowledge of the manners, feelings, and circumstances of the
+population.&nbsp; There is not only more toleration for
+Christians in Turkey, but less corruption and injustice than
+under the powers which seek to dismember it.&nbsp; He described
+the Turkish rulers as sensible men, ever ready to carry on any
+improvements suggested to them.&nbsp; The missionaries would
+effect far more if, instead of teaching doctrines to adults, they
+educated the females prior to their seclusion in the
+harems.&nbsp; There was no impediment to the establishment of
+female schools; and, therefore, if these secondary means were
+adopted, the condition of the young might be raised, the
+prejudices of the parents might be abated, and a foundation might
+be laid for the civilization of the East.&nbsp; The principal
+feature of the lecture, however, was the description of a new
+route to India.&nbsp; Instead of passengers proceeding by
+Alexandria, Cairo, across the sandy Egyptian Desert, and through
+the Red Sea, it was suggested that they should land at the mouth
+of the river Orontes, near Antioch, in Syria, and pass through a
+rich and beautiful country to Belis.&nbsp; There, embarking on
+the river Euphrates, they would descend through the land of
+Paradise to Bussora on the Persian Gulf and from thence proceed
+straight to Bombay or Calcutta.&nbsp; The advantages of this new
+route were healthiness and rapidity.&nbsp; The journey to India
+by Suez occupied twenty-eight days, and entailed much suffering
+in crossing the Desert, and in traversing the unhealthy Red
+Sea.&nbsp; The transit from Antioch to Belis would occupy two
+days by railway through a country so rich and fertile that it
+would become peopled if communication were opened up.&nbsp; The
+entire journey to India would be shortened seven days, the route
+being not only better but shorter by at least 300 miles.&nbsp;
+The saving of time would be still greater if a railway were
+formed along the bank of the Euphrates from Belis to
+Bussora.&nbsp; Dr. Thompson addressed himself to the objections
+which had been made to the route by the Euphrates.&nbsp; It had
+been said, that Col. Chesney&rsquo;s exploring expedition failed;
+but this was incorrect.&nbsp; Col. Chesney&rsquo;s difficulties
+arose partly from his having fixed upon Barick, higher up than
+Belis, as his terminus, and partly from the want of native
+pilots.&nbsp; The river is subject to squalls, the signs of which
+are familiar to those who live on its banks; but Col. Chesney
+employed none of the navigators, and one of his steamers having
+been upset, the river in consequence got a bad name.&nbsp; It had
+been said, too, that the Bedouin Arabs are ill-disposed towards
+the navigation of the Euphrates.&nbsp; This Dr. Thompson denied
+on his own knowledge, having visited all the chiefs along the
+banks, and he declared, contrary to the general opinion, that the
+Bedouins are a benevolent, generous, noble-hearted race.&nbsp; It
+might be true, he observed, that during the progress of Col.
+Chesney&rsquo;s expedition, the Bedouins were prejudiced against
+the navigation of the river; but the fact was, there were powers
+which thought they had an interest in misrepresenting the
+intentions of the English in the East.&nbsp; This feeling had,
+however, been dissipated by more correct knowledge.&nbsp; Dr.
+Thompson added, that he had submitted the plan of the Euphrates
+route to the Turkish Sultan, who immediately perceived its
+advantages over the old route through Egypt, and would strongly
+support it.&nbsp; One feature of the plan, he also stated, would
+be the establishment of a school for children at Antioch, the
+climate of which is delightful; and while officers in India might
+come there on furlough, without losing certain advantages, as
+they would still be within the confines of Asia, their friends in
+Europe would find it an easy and delightful trip to visit them at
+that place.&nbsp; Dr. Thompson pointed out other and more general
+advantages, which would arise from the adoption of the new route,
+as regards trade and civilisation.</p>
+<p>On the conclusion of the lecture, Habeeb Risk Allah Effendi, a
+Syrian, who is at the present sojourning in this city, presented
+himself to the meeting, and addressed it in a few sentences
+expressive of his desire that the Euphrates route might be
+adopted, as it would be the means of civilising his native
+country.&nbsp; The Syrian women, he said, are entirely
+uneducated, and this is one of the principal causes of the
+ignorance which pervades the great mass of the people.&nbsp; He
+gracefully thanked the audience for their attendance, regarding
+it as a manifestation of warm interest felt in the progress of
+the East.&nbsp; A vote of thanks having been given to Dr.
+Thompson, on the motion of Sir Claude Wade, the audience
+separated, and, we may fairly add, that, though the manner of the
+lecturer was clearly unpremeditated, his matter gave considerable
+satisfaction to a large, intelligent, and influential
+audience.&mdash;<i>Extract from the Bath Chronicle</i>.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote233"></a><a href="#citation233"
+class="footnote">[233]</a>&nbsp; This method of practice is in
+all respects the same as that of the Egyptian midwives alluded to
+in Exodus i.16.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote236"></a><a href="#citation236"
+class="footnote">[236]</a>&nbsp; The Hebrews appear to have had a
+similar tradition, as we read in the <i>History of Tobit</i>,
+vii. 4, 6, 7, 16, 17. viii. 2, 3,</p>
+<p><a name="footnote242"></a><a href="#citation242"
+class="footnote">[242]</a>&nbsp; During a recent visit to
+Walton-on-Thames with Azimullah Khan, who is here on a mission
+from the Peishwa to the Right Honourable East India Directors,
+and who, I may remark, is highly talented, and possesses an
+extensive knowledge of the English language, we attended the
+service at the church there.&nbsp; Azimullah left his golden
+slippers at the door, not presuming to enter a temple with them
+on.&nbsp; Afterwards they were brought to our pew by the beadle,
+who said that, if he did not take them, they would be
+stolen.&nbsp; By my friend&rsquo;s zealous adherence to Eastern
+custom, he caught a severe cold.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote284"></a><a href="#citation284"
+class="footnote">[284]</a>&nbsp; A false conclusion of the same
+nature arose in my own mind on entering an English Church; when I
+observed a picture of the Saviour over the altar, and various
+monumental effigies round the walls, I rashly concluded that the
+English worshipped pictures, etc., and laid their dead in the
+Church to pray for them.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote306"></a><a href="#citation306"
+class="footnote">[306]</a>&nbsp; Latterly, the Jesuits at
+Beyrout, as, indeed, at all the principal towns in Turkey, and
+even in Cyprus, have succeeded in introducing the use of bells,
+even in some instances, for schools, factories, and private
+families.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote318"></a><a href="#citation318"
+class="footnote">[318]</a>&nbsp; It may be as well here to relate
+an anecdote in connection with the late Lady H. Stanhope, whose
+eccentric life has already excited so much interest all over
+Europe.&nbsp; It came to the knowledge of some Met&aacute;wali
+chiefs that her ladyship, like themselves, kept apart two
+beautiful mares ready caparisoned, on which no one had ever yet
+ridden; attributing this to a religious prejudice similar to
+their own, they came to the conclusion that she ought to be
+considered as one of themselves.&nbsp; A council was accordingly
+held, but after many pros and cons the vote was unfavourable to
+her ladyship&rsquo;s election, because, as one of the chiefs
+asserted, she was so excessively eccentric, as to ride on one
+side of her horse, and not to wear trousers.&nbsp; I believe that
+this occurred before her ladyship had adopted the Oriental style
+of dress.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote371"></a><a href="#citation371"
+class="footnote">[371]</a>&nbsp; Since writing the above, the
+small cloud has gathered to a storm, which threatens to involve
+the world in the dispute.&nbsp; I am grieved to say, that the
+true state of the facts reflects the usual disgrace on human
+nature, incident to all religious quarrels.&nbsp; For what, after
+all, is the present question?&nbsp; Not any point of faith,
+morality or benevolence, but a contention between two parties for
+the exclusive possession of the fees obtained from pious pilgrims
+visiting spots, whose situation if precisely ascertained, would
+be doubly calculated to make an impression never to be effaced
+from the minds of those who tread them; but that the places
+actually shown are probably not the real ones, modern research
+has greatly tended to prove, both from measurement as well as
+historical evidence.&nbsp; The matter is thus left doubtful; and
+it is painful to think that no record, to be relied on, should
+have been preserved of spots hallowed by the more remarkable
+incidents in the earthly career of that Holy Presence, so
+all-important to mankind.&nbsp; The real point in dispute was
+between the priests of the Greek and Latin Churches, for the
+possession and care of those places which are shown as the scene
+of the birth, crucifixion and burial of our Lord, from the
+exhibition of which a large revenue accrues.&nbsp; Majority of
+numbers and better management, had for some time secured the
+greater share of the advantages to the Greek priests.&nbsp; Hence
+arose, on their respective sides, the opportunity for French and
+Russian interference; the Czar claiming the exclusive
+protectorate of the Greek Christians throughout Turkey.&nbsp; In
+the question of the keys, the Turks had no interest; but the
+pretence of international protection on the part of the Russians,
+was a wedge of destruction, and hence the war.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote375"></a><a href="#citation375"
+class="footnote">[375]</a>&nbsp; While I was going from Trieste
+to Constantinople, we had very bad weather, and the sea very
+rough.&nbsp; We put into a port, to remain at anchor.&nbsp; I was
+so tired of the sea that I went on shore, and proceeded to a
+<i>caf&eacute;</i>, where I saw two Albanians of ferocious
+aspect, each carrying two pistols, a dagger, and carbine.&nbsp;
+When I made my appearance, they enquired, &ldquo;What countryman
+are you?&rdquo;&nbsp; I replied, &ldquo;I come from the Holy
+Land.&rdquo;&nbsp; Both arose and rushed towards me.&nbsp; I was
+at first alarmed, but the words, &ldquo;Welcome, stranger!&rdquo;
+reassured me.&nbsp; They hugged me with enthusiasm.&nbsp; They
+then desired the host to provide the best dishes he had, and
+requested me to join their repast.&nbsp; Finally, they offered me
+a home in their house, and the best apartment they had.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE THISTLE AND THE CEDAR OF
+LEBANON***</p>
+<pre>
+
+
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