Hassan: The Child of the Pyramid an Egyptian Tale

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Hassan: The Child of the Pyramid an Egyptian Tale by Charles Augustus Murray, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Charles Augustus Murray ISBN: 9781465607799
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Charles Augustus Murray
ISBN: 9781465607799
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
 More than thirty years have elapsed since, on a summer evening, the tents of an Arab encampment might have been seen dotting the plain which forms the western boundary of the Egyptian province of Bahyrah, a district bordering on the great Libyan desert, and extending northward as far as the shore of the Mediterranean. The western portion of this province has been for many years, and probably still is, the camping-ground of the powerful and warlike tribe of the “Sons of Ali”; a branch of which tribe, acknowledging as its chief Sheik Sâleh el-Ghazy, occupied the encampment above referred to. The evening was calm and still, and lovely as childhood’s sleep: no sound of rolling wheel, or distant anvil, or busy mill, or of the thousand other accessories of human labour, intruded harshly on the ear. Within the encampment there was indeed the “watch-dog’s honest bark,” the voices of women and children, mingled with the deeper tones of the evening prayer uttered by many a robed figure worshipping towards the east, but beyond it nought was to be heard save the tinkling of the bells of the home-coming flocks, and the soft western breeze whispering among the branches of the graceful palms its joy at having passed the regions of dreary sand. It seemed as if Nature herself were about to slumber, and were inviting man to share her rest. In front of his tent sat Sheik Sâleh, on a Turkish carpet, smoking his pipe in apparent forgetfulness that his left arm was bandaged and supported by a sling. At a little distance from him were his two favourite mares, each with a foal at her side, and farther off two or three score of goats, tethered in line to a kels, surrendering their milky stock to the expert fingers of two of the inmates of the Sheik’s harem; beyond these, several hundred sheep were taking their last nibble at the short herbs freshened by the evening dew; while in the distance might be seen a string of camels wending their slow and ungainly way homeward from the edge of the desert: the foremost ridden by an urchin not twelve years old, carolling at the utmost stretch of his lungs an ancient Arab ditty addressed by some despairing lover to the gazelle-eyes of his mistress.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
 More than thirty years have elapsed since, on a summer evening, the tents of an Arab encampment might have been seen dotting the plain which forms the western boundary of the Egyptian province of Bahyrah, a district bordering on the great Libyan desert, and extending northward as far as the shore of the Mediterranean. The western portion of this province has been for many years, and probably still is, the camping-ground of the powerful and warlike tribe of the “Sons of Ali”; a branch of which tribe, acknowledging as its chief Sheik Sâleh el-Ghazy, occupied the encampment above referred to. The evening was calm and still, and lovely as childhood’s sleep: no sound of rolling wheel, or distant anvil, or busy mill, or of the thousand other accessories of human labour, intruded harshly on the ear. Within the encampment there was indeed the “watch-dog’s honest bark,” the voices of women and children, mingled with the deeper tones of the evening prayer uttered by many a robed figure worshipping towards the east, but beyond it nought was to be heard save the tinkling of the bells of the home-coming flocks, and the soft western breeze whispering among the branches of the graceful palms its joy at having passed the regions of dreary sand. It seemed as if Nature herself were about to slumber, and were inviting man to share her rest. In front of his tent sat Sheik Sâleh, on a Turkish carpet, smoking his pipe in apparent forgetfulness that his left arm was bandaged and supported by a sling. At a little distance from him were his two favourite mares, each with a foal at her side, and farther off two or three score of goats, tethered in line to a kels, surrendering their milky stock to the expert fingers of two of the inmates of the Sheik’s harem; beyond these, several hundred sheep were taking their last nibble at the short herbs freshened by the evening dew; while in the distance might be seen a string of camels wending their slow and ungainly way homeward from the edge of the desert: the foremost ridden by an urchin not twelve years old, carolling at the utmost stretch of his lungs an ancient Arab ditty addressed by some despairing lover to the gazelle-eyes of his mistress.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book The Law by Charles Augustus Murray
Cover of the book Armenian Legends and Poems by Charles Augustus Murray
Cover of the book The Trial and Death of Jesus Christ: A Devotional History of Our Lord's Passion by Charles Augustus Murray
Cover of the book The Clandestine Marriage by Charles Augustus Murray
Cover of the book Dorothy on a House Boat by Charles Augustus Murray
Cover of the book Tales of Giants from Brazil by Charles Augustus Murray
Cover of the book The History of the Post Office by Charles Augustus Murray
Cover of the book Bonfield; Or, the Outlaw of the Bermudas. A Nautical Novel by Charles Augustus Murray
Cover of the book Frederick the Great and His Family by Charles Augustus Murray
Cover of the book John Marshall and The Constitution: A Chronicle of The Supreme Court by Charles Augustus Murray
Cover of the book The Mormon Battalion: Its History and Achievements by Charles Augustus Murray
Cover of the book I Rossi E I Neri (Complete) by Charles Augustus Murray
Cover of the book Stories by Foreign Authors: Scandinavian by Charles Augustus Murray
Cover of the book The Life and Times of George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham: From Original and Authentic Sources (Complete) by Charles Augustus Murray
Cover of the book The Russian Ballet by Charles Augustus Murray
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy