Letters from Egypt eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 479 pages of information about Letters from Egypt.

Letters from Egypt eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 479 pages of information about Letters from Egypt.
by a rascally Copt who is a Consular agent at Keneh.  I believe the Belgian has left money for them, which of course they would never get without someone to look after it, and so I have Ramadan, the boy, with me, and shall take the girl when I go, and carry them both to Cairo, settle their little business, and let them present a sealed-up book which they have to their Consul there, according to their master’s desire, and then marry the girl to some decent man.  I have left her in Mustapha’s hareem till I go.

I enjoyed Nubia immensely, and long to go and live with the descendants of a great Ras (head, chief,) who entertained me at Ibreem, and who said, like Ravenswood, ’Thou art come to a fallen house, and there is none to serve thee left save me.’  It was a paradise of a place, and the Nubian had the grand manners of a very old, proud nobleman.  I had a letter to him from Sheykh Yussuf.

Since I wrote the above it has turned quite chilly again, so we agreed to stay till the heat really begins.  Maurice is so charmed with Luxor that he does not want to go, and we mean to let the boat and live here next winter.  I think another week will see us start down stream.  Janet talks of coming up the Nile with me next year, which would be pleasant.  I am a little better than I have been the last two months.  I was best in Nubia but I got a cold at Esneh, second hand from Maurice, which made me very seedy.  I cannot go about at all for want of breath.  Could you send me a chair such as people are carried in by two men?  A common chair is awkward for the men when the banks are steep, and I am nervous, so I never go out.  I wish you could see your son bare-legged and footed, in a shirt and a pair of white Arab drawers, rushing about with the fellaheen.  He is everybody’s ‘brother’ or ‘son.’

May, 1868:  Sir Alexander Duff Gordon

To Sir Alexander Duff Gordon.  MINIEH, May, 1868.

Dearest Alick,

We are just arriving at Minieh whence the railway will take letters quickly.  We dined at Keneh and at Siout with some friends, and had fantasia at Keneh.  Omar desires his dutiful salaams to you and hopes you will be satisfied with the care he has taken of ‘the child.’  How you would have been amused to hear the girl who came to dance for us at Esneh lecture Maurice about evil ways, but she was an old friend of mine, and gave good and sound advice.

Everyone is delighted about Abyssinia.  ’Thank God our Pasha will fear the English more than before, and the Sultan also,’ and when I lamented the expense, they all exclaimed, ’Never mind the expense, it is worth more than ten millions to you; your faces are whitened and your power enlarged before all the world; but why don’t you take us on your way back.’

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Letters from Egypt from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.