UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT LOS ANGELES IN MEMORIAM S. L. MILLARD ROSENBERG m L Ethiopian. G-. P. PUTNAM & S ONS JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA ; OR, LIFE AND LANDSCAPES FROM EGYPT TO THE NEGRO KINGDOMS OF THE WHITE NILE. BY BAYAED TAYLOK. WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY TBE AUTHOR BOUSE It OLD EDITION. NEW YORK: G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS 1835. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1854, by G. P. PUTNAM, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York. COPYRIGHT, MARIE TAYLOR, 1883. '* r V ''.. " ' * '. * *' .<<.* > . E/E3 v. / Btftitatel to A. B. OP SAXE-COBURG-GOTHA, = HIS FELLOW-TRAVELLER IN EOTP5 B. T. cc c DC ES CD ce CO PREFACE. THERE is an old Italian proverb, which says a man has lived to no purpose, unless he has either built a house, begotten a son, or written a book. As I have already complied more than once with the latter of these requisitions, 1 must seek to justify the present repetition thereof, on other grounds. My reasons for offering this volume to the public are, simply, that there is room for it. It is the record of a journey which led me, for the most part, over fresh fields, by patha which comparatively few had trodden before me. Al though I cannot hope to add much to the general stock of information concerning Central Africa, I may serve, at least, as an additional witness, to confirm or illustrate the evidence of others. Hence, the prepara tion of this work has appeared to me rather in the light 2 PREFACE. of a duty than a diversion, and I have endeavored to impart as much instruction as amusement to the reader. While seeking to give correct pictures of the rich, adventurous life into which I was thrown, I have resisted the temptation to yield myself up to its more subtle and poetic aspects. My aim has been to furnish a faithful narrative of my own experience, believing that none of those embellishments which the imagina tion so readily furnishes, can equal the charm of the unadorned truth. There are a few words of further explanation which I wish to say. The journey was undertaken solely for the purpose of restoring a frame exhausted by severe mental labor. A previous experience of a tropi cal climate convinced me that I should best accomplish my object by a visit to Egypt, and as I had a whole winter before me, I determined to penetrate as far into the interior of Africa as the time would allow, attracted less by the historical and geographical interest of those regions than by the desire to participate in their free, vigorous, semi-barbaric life. If it had been my inten tion, as some of my friends supposed, to search for the undiscovered sources of the White Nile, I should not have turned back, until the aim was accomplished or all means had failed. I am aware that, by including in this work my journey through Egypt, I have gone over much ground PREFACE. 3 wliieh is already familiar. Egypt, however, was the vestibule through which I passed to Ethiopia and the kingdoms beyond, and I have not been able to omit my impressions of that country without detracting from the completeness of the narrative. This book is the record of a single journey, which, both in its character and in the circumstances that suggested and accompa nied it, occupies a separate place in my memory. Its performance was one uninterrupted enjoyment, for, whatever the privations to which it exposed me, they were neutralized by the physical delight of restored health and by a happy confidence in the successful issue of the journey, which never forsook me. It is therefore but just to say, that the pictures I have drawn may seem over-bright to others who may here after follow me ; and I should warn all such that they must expect to encounter many troubles and annoy ances. Although I have described somewhat minutely the antiquities of Nubia and Ethiopia which I visited, and have not been insensible to the interest which every traveller in Egypt must feel in the remains of her ancient art, I have aimed at giving representations of the living races which inhabit those countries rather than the old ones which have passed away. JL have taken it for granted that the reader will feel more interested as I was in a live Arab, than a dead I PREFACE. Pharaoh. I am indebted wholly to the works of Cham- pollion, Wilkinson and Lepsius for whatever allusions 1 have made to the age and character of the Egyptian mine. B. T. NBW YORK, July, 1854. CONTENTS CHAPTER I lrm! at Alexatlria The Landing My First Oriental Bath The City Prepara tion* for Departure, ..... .... It CHAPTER IL Departure The Kangla The Egyptian Climate The Mahmoudieh Canal Entrance into the Nile Pleasures of the Journey Studying Arabic Sight of the Pyramids The Barrage Approach to Cairo, 81 CHAPTER IIL Entrance The Ezbekiyeh Saracenic Houses Donkeys The Bazaars The Street* Processions View from the Citadel Mosque of Mohammed All The Road to Suez The Island of Rhodo, 84 CHAPTER IV. Necessity of Leaving Immediately Engaging a Boat The Dragomen Achmet el Saldl Funds Information Procuring an Outfit Preparing for the Desert The Lucky Day Exertions to Leave Off, ........ 46 CHAPTER V. Howling Dervishes A Chicken Factory Eide to the Pyramids Quarrel with the Arabs The Ascent View from the Summit Backsheesh Eflfect of Pyramid- climbing The Sphinx Playing the Cadi We obtain Justice Visit to Sakkara and the Mummy Pits The Exhumation of Memphis Interview with M, Marietta -Aocount of his Discoveries Statue of Bemeses IL Return to the Nile, . 61 CONTENTS. CHAPTER VI. Leaving the Pyramids A Calm and a Breeze A Coptic Visit Minyeh The Grotton of Bonl -Hassan Donm Paltns and Crocodiles Djebel Aboufayda Entrance Int* Upper Egypt Diversions of the Boatmen Stout- Its Tombs A Landscape- -.4 Bath, 71 CHAPTER VIL Independence of Nile Life The Dahabiyeh Our Servants Our Residence Our Man ner of Living The Climate The Natives Costume Our Sunset Repose My Friend A Sensuous Life Defended, . 83 CHAPTER VIII. Calm Mountains and Tombs A Night Adventure in Ekhmin Character of die Boatmen Fair Wind Pilgrims Egyptian Agriculture Sugar and Cotton Graiu Sheep Arrival at Kenneh A Landscape The Temple of Dendera First Im pressions of Egyptian Art Portrait of Cleopatra A Happy Meeting Wo approach Thebea, 98 CHAPTER IX. Arrival at Thebes Ground-Plan of the Remains We Cross to the Western Bank- Guides The Temple of Goorneh Valley of the Kings' Tombs Belzoni's Tomb The Races of Men Vandalism of Antiquarians Bruce's Tomb Memnon The Grandfather of Sesostris The Head of Amunoph The Colossi of the Plain Memnonian Music The Statue of Remeses The Memnonium Beauty of Egyp tian Art More Scrambles among the Tombs The Bats of the issasseef Medee- net Aboa Sculptured Histories The Great Court of the Temple We return to Luxor, 113 CHAPTER X. rhe Dancing Girls of Egypt A Night Scene iu Luxor The Orange-Blossom and the Apple-Blossom The Beautiful Beinba The Dance Performance of the Apple- Blossom The Temple of Luxor A Mohammedan School Gallop to Karnak View of the Ruins The Great Hall of Pillars Bedouin Divers'' us A Nigh* Bide Karnak under the Full Moon Farewell to Thebes, . .131 CHAPTER XL The Temple of Hermontis Esneh and its Temple The Governor El Kab by Torcn light The Temple of Edfou The Quarries of Djebel Silsileh Ombos Approa 1. to Nubia Change in the Scenery and Inhabitants A Mirage Arrival at As ponan, 14J CHAPTER XIL A.n Official Visit Achmet's Dexterity The Island of Elephantine Nubian Children Trip to Philse Linant Bey- -The Island of Phll Sculptures- The Negro Race- CONTENTS. 7 Breakfast In a Ptolemab Temple The Island of Biggfth Backsheesh The Cataract The Granite Quarries of Assouan The Travellers separate, ... 15. CHAPTER XIII. flolitary Travel Scenery of tho Nubian Nile Agriculture The Inhabitants Arrival at Korosko The Governor The Tent Pitched Shekh Abou-Mohamined Bar gaining for Camels A Drove of Giraffes Visits Preparations for the Desert My Last Evening on the Nile, 162 CHAPTER XIV. The Curve of the Nile Eontes across the Desert Our Caravan starts Riding on a Dromedary The Guide and Camel-drivers Hair-dressing El Biban Scenery Dead Camels An Unexpected Visit Tho Guide makes my Grave The River without Water Characteristics of the Mirage Desert Life Tho Sun The Desert Air Infernal Scenery The Wells of Murr-hat Christmas Mountain Chains- Meeting Caravans Plains of Gravel The Story of Joseph Djebel Mokrut The Last Day in the Desert We see the Nile again, 171 CHAPTER XV. A Draught of Water Aboil-Hammed The Island of Mokrat Ethiopian Scenery The People An Ababdch Apollo Encampment on the Nile Tomb of an English man Eesa's Wedding A White Arab The Last Day of the Year Abou-Hashym Incidents Loss of my Thermometer The Valley of Wild Asses The Eleventh Cataract Approach to Berber Vultures Eyoub Outwitted We reach El Mek- heyref The Caravan Broken up, ... 198 CHAPTER XVL A Wedding My Reception by the Military Governor Achmet The Bridegroom A Guard I am an American Bey Kcff The Bey's Visit The Civil Governor About the Navy The Priest's Visit Riding in State The Dongolesc Stallion A Merchant's House The Town Dinner at the Governor's The Pains of Royalty A Salute to the American Flag Departure, 20fl CHAPTER XVII. Fortunate Travel The America Ethiopian Scenery The Atbara River Darner A Melon Patch Agriculture The Inhabitants Change of Scenery The First Hip popotamus Crocodiles Effect of My Map The Rais and Sailors Arabs in Ethio pia Ornamental Scars Leshir The Slave Bakhita We Approach MeroS, 211 CHAPTER XVHI. Arrival at Bedjerowiyeh The Ruins of Meroe Walk Across the Plain The Pyra mids Character of their Masonry The Tower and Vault Finding of tho Trea sure The Second Group More Ruins Site of the City Number of the Pyramldi The Antiquity of Meroe Ethiopian and Egyptian Civilization The Caucasian Uaoe -Reflections, 2itf CONTENTS. CHAPTER XIX. The Landscapes of Ethiopia My Evenings beside the Nile Experiences of the Ara bian Nights The Story of tho Snltana Zobeido and the "Wood-cutter Charactei of the Arabian Tales Religion. 23$ CHAPTER XX. arrival at Shendy Appearance of the Town Shendy In Former Days We Touch at El Metemma The Nile beyond Shendy Flesh Diet vs. Vegetables We Escape Shipwreck A Walk on Shore The Rapids of Derreira Djebel Gerri Tlie Twelfth Cataract Night In the Mountain Gorge Crocodiles A Drink of Mareesa My Birth-Day Fair Wind Approach to Khartoum The Junction of the Twa Niles Appearance of the City We Drop Anchor, 259 CHAPTER XXL The American Flag A Rencontre Search for a House The Austrian Consular Agent Description of his Residence The Garden The Menagerie Barbaric Pomp and State Picturesque Character of the Society of Khartoum Foundation and Growth of the City Its Appearance The Population Unhealthiness of the Cli mateAssembly of Ethiopian Chieftains Visit of Two Shekbs Dinner and Fire works, 270 CHAPTER XXIL Visit to the Catholic Mission Dr. Knoblecher, the Apostolic Vicar Moussa Bey Visit to Lattif Pasha Reception The Pasha's Palace Lions We Dine with the Pasha Ceremonies upon the Occasion Music The Guests The Franks in Khar toum Dr. Peney Visit to the Sultana Nasra An Ethiopian Dinner Charactei of tho Sultana, 230 CHAPTER XXIIL Recent Explorations of Soadan Limit of the Tropical Rains The Conquest of Ethio piaCountries Tributary to Egypt The District of Takka Expedition of Moussf Bey Tho Atbara P.lver The Abyssinian Frontier Christian Ruins of Abou- Ilaross The Kingdom of Sennaar Kordofan Dar-Fiir The Princess of Dar- Fur in Khartoum Her Visit to Dr. Reltz The Unknown Countries of Central Africa, . S7 CHAPTER XXIV. Kreurslons around Khartoum A Race into the Desert Euphorbia Forest Tho Banks of tho Bins Nile A Saint's Grave The Confluence of the Two Niles Mag nitude of the Nile Comparative Size of the Rivers Their Names Desire to pene trate further into Africa Attractions of the White Nile Engage the Boat John Ledt/ard Former Restrictions against exploring the River Visit to tho Pasha- Despotic Hospitality Achmet's Misgivings We set sail, ... 301 CONTENTS; CHAPTER XXV. Departure fram Khartoum We enter the White Nile Mirage and Landscape Th Consul returns Progress Loss of the Flag Scenery of the Shores Territory of the Hassaniyehs Curious Conjugal Custom Multitudes of Water Fowls Increas ed Richness of Vegetation Apes Sunset on the White Nile We reach the King dom of tho Shillcok Negroes, 820 CHAPTER XXVL Morning Magnificence of the Island Scenery Birds and Hippopotami Flight of the Natives The Island of Aba Signs of Population A Band of Warriors Tho Shekh and the Sultan A Treaty of Peace The Eobe of Honor Suspicions We walk to the Village Appearance of the Shillooks The Village The Sultan gives Audience Women and Children Ornaments of the Natives My Watch A Jar of Honey Suspicion and Alarm The Shillook and the Sultan's Black Wife Character of the Shillooks The Land of tho Lotus Population of the Sbillook Kingdom The Turn- Ing Point A View from the Mast-Head, 829 CHAPTER XXVIL Explorations of the White Nile Dr. Knoblecher's Voyage in 1849-50 The Lands of tho Shillooks and Dinkas Intercourse with the Natives Wild Elephants and Giraffes The Sobat Elver The Country of Marshes The Gazelle Lake The Nuehrs Interview with the Chief of the Kyks The Zbir Country Land of the Baris Tho Rapids Surmounted Arrival at Logwek, in Lat 4P W North Panora ma from Mt. Logwek Sources of the White Nile Character of the Bari Nation- Return of the Expedition Fascination of the Nile, ..... 845 CHAPTER XXVIIL We leave the Islands of the Shillooks Tropical Jungles A Whim and Its Conseqnen oes Lairs of Wild Beasts Arrival among the Hassaniyehs A Village The Wo man and the Sultan A Dance of Salutation My Arab Sailor A Swarthy Cleopa tra Salutation of the Saint Miraculous Fishing Night View of a Hassaniyeh Vil lage Wad Shellayeh A Shekh's Residence An Ebony Cherub The Cook At tempts Suicide Evening Landscape The Natives and their Cattle A Boyish Governor We reach Khartoum at Midnight, ...... 854 CHAPTER XXIX. rhe Departure of Abd-el Kader Bey An Illuminated Picture The Breakfast on tho Island Horsemanship The Pasha's Stories Departure of Lattif Effendi's Expedi tion A Night on the Sand Abou-Sin, and hia Shukoree Warriors Change in the Climate Intense Heat and its Effects Preparations for Returning A Money Transaction Farewell Visits A Dinner with Royal Guests Jolly King Dyaab A Shillook Dance Reconciliation Taking Leave of my Pets, ... 871 1* 10 CONTENTS. CHAPTER XXX. Ths Commerce of Soudai. Avenues of Trade The Merchants- ^Charactet of the Im parts- -Speculation The Guin Trade of Kordofan The Ivory Trade Abuses of th< Government The Traffic in Slaves Prices of Slaves Their Treatment, . 39-1 CHAPTER XXXI. F-iiewell Breakfast Departure from Khartoum Parting with Dr. Reitz A Predic tion and its Fulfilment Dreary Appearance of the Country Lions Burying- Grounds The Natives My Kababish Guide, Mohair.:ned Character of the Arabs Habits of Deception My Dromedary Mutton and Marecsa A Soudan Ditty The Eowyan Akaba Gerri Heat and Scenery An Altercation with the Guide A Mishap A Landscape Tedious Approach to El Metomma Appearance of tha Town Preparations for the Desert Meeting Old Acquaintances, . . 892 CHAPTER XXXII. Entering the Desert Character of the Scenery Wells Fear of the Arabs The La- loom Tree Effect of the Hot Wind Mohammed overtakes us Arab Endurance An unpleasant Bedfellow Comedy of the Crows Gazelles We encounter a Sand storm The Mountain of Thirst The Wells of Djeekdud A Mountain Pass- Desert Intoxication Scenery of the Table-land Bir Khannlk The Kababisb Arabs Gazelles again Ruins of an Ancient Coptic Monastery Distant View of the Nile Valley Djebel Berkel We come into Port, 406 CHAPTER XXXIIL l)ur whereabouts Shekh Mohammed Abd e'-Djebal My residence at Abd6m Cross- Ing the River A Superb Landscape Tho Town of Merawe Rido to Djebel Berkel The Temples of Napata Ascent of the Mountain Ethiopian Panorama Lost and Found The Pyramids The Governor of Merawe A Scene In the Divan The Shekh and I The Governor Dines with mo Ruins of the Cily of Napata A Talk about Religious Engaging Camels for Wadi-Ilalfa The Shekh's Parting Blessing, 421 CHAPTER XXXIV. Appearance of tho Country Koiti The Town of Ambukol The Caravan reorgan ized A Fiery Ride We reach Edabbe An Illuminated Landscape A Torment Nubian AgricultureOld Dongola The Palace-Mosque of the Nubian Kings A Panorama of Desolation The Old City Nubian Gratitude Another Sand-Stoi-ni A Dreary Journey The Approach to Handak A House of Doubtful Character The Inmates Journey to El Ordee (New Dongola) Khoorshid Bey Appearanc* of the Town, 43J CHAPTER XXXV. Ifc start for Wndi-Halfa The Plague of Black Gnats Mohammed's Coffln^-Th Island of Argo Market-Day Scenery of the Nile Entering Dar El-Mahass- CONTENTS. 11 Ruined Fortresses The Camel-Men A Rocky Chaos Fakir Bender The Akabi of Mahass Camp in the Wilderness The Charm of Desolation Tho Nile agaln^ Pilgrims from Dar-Fur The Straggle of the Nile An Arcadian Landscape Tlu Temple of Soleb Dar Sukkot The Land of Dates The Island of Sai A Sea o) Sand Camp by the River A Hyena Barbecue, ...... 451 CHAPTER XXXVI. tic Batn El-lTadjar, or Belly of Stone Ancient Granite Quarries The Village of Dil A Ruined Fortress A Wilderness of Stones The Hot Springs of Ukm6 A Windy Night A Dreary Day in the Desert The Shekh's Camel Fails Descent to Samneh The Temple and Cataract Meersheh Tho Sale of Abou-Sin We Emerge from the Belly of Stone A Kababish Caravan Tho Rock of Abou-Seer View of the Second Cataract We reach Wadi-IIalfa Selling my Dromedaries- Farewell to Abou-Sin Thanksgiving on the Ferry-boat Parting with the Camel- men, ............... 471 CHAPTER XXXVII. Wadi Haifa A Boat for Assouan We Embark on the Ni'.e Again An Egyptian Dream The Temples of Abou-Simbel Tho Smaller Temple Tho Colossi of Remesca II. Vulgarity of Travellers Entering the Great Temple My Impres sionsCharacter of Abou-Simbcl The Smaller Chambers The Eaces of Men Remeses and the Captive Kings Departure, ..... . . 480 CHAPTER XXXVIII. t Lose my Sunshine, and Regain it Nubian Scenery Derr The Temple of Ainada Mysterious Rappings Familiar Scenes Halt at Korosko Escape from Ship wreck The Temple of Sebooa Chasing other Boats Temple of Djerf Hossayn A Bscksheesh Experiment Kalabshee Temple of Dabod We reach the Egyp tian Frontier, ............. 496 CHAPTER XXXIX Assouan A Boat for Cairo English Tourists A Head-wind Ophthalmia Esneh A Mummied Princess AH Effendi's Stories A Donkey Afrite Arrival at Luxor The Egyptian Autumn A Day at Thebes Songs of the Sailors AH leave* mo Rido to Dendcra Head-winds again Visit to Tahtah The House of Rufai Bey, ............... 504 CHAPTER XL, liout in Harvest-time A kind Englishwoman A Slight Experience of Hasheesh- The Calm Rapid Progress down the Nilo The Last Day of the Voyage Arrl val at Cairo Tourists preparing for the Desert Parting with Achmot Conclo Blon, ............ , 51 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION TO AFRICA. Arrival at Alexandria The Landing My First Oriental Bath The City Prepara tions for Departure. I LEFT Smyrna in the Lloyd steamer, Conte Sturmer, on the first day of November, 1851. We passed the blue Sporadic Isles Cos, and Rhodes, and Karpathos and crossing the breadth of the Eastern Mediterranean, favored all the way by unruffled seas, and skies of perfect azure, made the pharos of Alexandria on the evening of the 3d. The entrance to the harbor is a narrow and difficult passage through reefs, and no vessel dares to attempt it at night, but with the first streak of dawn we were boarded by an Egyptian pilot, and the rising sun lighted up for us the white walls of the city, the windmills of the Ras el-Tin, or Cape of Figs, and the low yellow sand hills in which I recognized Africa for they were prophetic of the desert behind them. We entered the old harbor between the island of Pha- FOB and the main land (now connected by a peninsular strip, en which the Frank quarter is built), soou after sunrise, 14 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. The water swarmed with boats before the anchor dropped, and the Egyptian health officer had no sooner departed than we were boarded by a crowd of dragomen, hotel run ners, and boatmen. A squinting Arab, who wore a white dress and red sash, accosted me in Italian, offering to conduct me to the Oriental Hotel. A German and a Smyrniote whose acquaintance I had made during the voyage, joined me in accepting his services, and we were speedily boated ashore. We landed on a pile of stones, not far from a mean-looking edifice called the Custom-House. Many friends were there to welcome us, and I shall never forget the eagerness with which they dragged us ashore, and the zeal with which they pom melled one another in their generous efforts to take charge of our effects. True, we could have wished that their faces had been better washed, their baggy trousers less ragged and their red caps less greasy, and we were perhaps ungrateful in allow ing our Arab to rate them soundly and cuff the ears of the more obstreperous, before our trunks and carpet-bags could be portioned among them. At the Custom-House we were visit ed by two dark gentlemen, in turbans and black flowing robes, who passed our baggage without scrutiny, gently whispering in our ears, " backsheesh," a word which we then heard for the first time, but which was to be the key-note of much of our future experience. The procession of porters was then set in motion, and we passed through several streets of whitewashed two story houses, to the great square of the Frank quarter, which opened before us warm and brilliant in the morning sun shine. The principal hotels and consulates front on this square The architecture is Italian, with here and there a dash of Sar- ALEXANDRIA. IS, scenic, in the windows and doorways, especially in new build ings. A small obelisk of alabaster, a present from Mohammed Ali, stands in the centre, on a pedestal which was meant for a fountain, but has no water. All this I noted, as well as a crowd of donkeys and donkey-boys, and a string of laden camels, on our way to the hotel, which we found to be a long and not particularly clean edifice, on the northern side of the square. The English and French steamers had just arrived, and no rooms were to be had until after the departure of the afternoon boat for Cairo. Our dragoman, who called himself Ibrahim, suggested a bath as the most agreeable means of passing the intermediate time. The clear sky, the temperature (like that of a mild July day at home), and the novel interest of the groups in the atreets, were sufficient to compensate for any annoyance : but when we reached the square of the French Church, and saw a garden of palm-trees waving their coronals of glittering leaves every thing else was forgotten. My German friend, who had never seen palms, except as starveling exotics in Sorrento and Smyrna, lifted his hands in rapture, and even I, who had heard tens of thousands rustle in the hot winds of the Tropics, felt my heart leap as if their beauty were equally new to my eyes. For no amount of experience can deprive the traveller of that happy feeling of novelty which marks his first day on the soil of a new continent. I gave myself up wholly to its inebriation. Et ego in Africa, was the sum of my thoughts, and I neither saw nor cared to know the fact (which we dis* novcred in due time), that our friend Ibrahim was an arrani knave. The bath to which he conducted us was pronounced to be i6 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. the finest in Alexandria, the most superb in all the Orient, but it did not at all accord with our ideas of Eastern luxury. Moreover, the bath-keeper was his intimate friend, and would bathe us as no Christians were ever bathed before. One fact Ibrahim kept to himself, which was, that his intimate friend and he shared the spoils of our inexperience. We were con ducted to a one-story building, of very unprepossessing exte rior. As we entered the low, vaulted entrance, my ears were saluted with a dolorous, groaning sound, which I at first con jectured to proceed from the persons undergoing the opera tion, but which I afterward ascertained was made by a wheel turned by a buffalo, employed in raising water from the well. In a sort of basement hall, smelling of soap-suds, and with a large tank of dirty water in the centre, we were received by the bath-keeper, who showed us into a room containing three low divans with pillows. Here we disrobed, and Ibrahim, who had procured a quantity of napkins, enveloped our heads in turbans and swathed our loins in a simple Adamite gar ment. Heavy wooden clogs were attached to our feet, and an animated bronze statue led the way through gloomy passages, sometimes hot and steamy, sometimes cold and soapy, and redolent of any thing but the spicy odors of Araby the Blest, to a small vaulted chamber, lighted by a few apertures in the ceiling. The moist heat was almost suffocating ; hot water flowed over the stone floor, and the stone benches we sat upon were somewhat cooler than kitchen stoves. The bronze indi- ridual left us, and very soon, sweating at every pore, we began to think of the three Hebrews in the furnace. Our comfort was not increased by the groaning sound which we still heard, and by seeing, through a hole in the door, five or six naked MY FIRST ORIENTAL BATH. 1 figures lying motionless along the edge of a steaming vat, in the outer room. Presently our statue returned with a pair of coarse hair gloves on his hands. He snatched off our turbans, and then, seizing one of my friends by the shoulder as if he had been a sheep, began a sort of rasping operation upon his back. Thia process, varied occasionally by a dash of scalding water, was extended to each of our three bodies, and we were then suf fered to rest awhile. A course of soap-suds followed, which was softer and more pleasant in its effect, except when he took us by the hair, and holding back our heads, scrubbed our faces most lustily, as if there were no such things as eyes, noses and mouths. By this time we had reached such a salamandrine temperature that the final operation of a dozen pailfuls of hot water poured over the head, was really delightful After a plunge in a seething tank, we were led back to our chamber and enveloped hi loose muslin robes. Turbans were bound on our heads and we lay on the divans to recover from the lan guor of the bath. The change produced by our new costume was astonishing. T^he stout German became a Turkish mol- lah, the young Smyrniote a picturesque Persian, and I I scarcely know what, but, as my friends assured me, a much better Moslem than Frank. Cups of black coffee, and pipes of inferior tobacco completed the process, and in spite of the lack of cleanliness and superabundance of fleas, we went forth lighter in body, and filled with a calm content which nothing seemed able to disturb. After a late breakfast at the hotel, we sallied out for a sur vey of the city. The door was beleaguered by the donkeys *nd their attendant drivers, who hailed us in all languages at 18 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. once. " Venez, Monsieur ! " " Take a ride, sir ; here is a good donkey ! " " Schoener Esel ! " " Prendete il mio lur- rico ! " and you are made the vortex of a whirlpool of don- keys. The one-eyed donkey-boys fight, the donkeys kick, and there is no rest till you have bestridden one of the little beasts. The driver then gives his tail a twist and his rump a thwack, and you are carried off in triumph. The animal is so small that you seem the more silly of the two, when you have mounted, but after he has carried you for an hour in a rapid gallop, you recover your dignity in your respect for him. The spotless blue of the sky and the delicious elasticity of the air were truly intoxicating, as we galloped between gar dens of date-trees, laden with ripe fruit, to the city gate, and through it into a broad road, fringed with acacias, leading to the Mahmoudieh canal. But to the south, on a rise of dry, sandy soil, stood the Pillar of Diocletian not of Pompey, whose name it bears. It is a simple column, ninety-eight feet in height, but the shaft is a single block of red granite, and stands superbly against the back-ground of such a sky and such a sea. It is the only relic of the *ancient Alexandria worthy of its fame, but you could not wish for one more im posing and eloquent. The glowing white houses of the town, the minarets, the palms and the acacias fill the landscape, but it stands apart from them, in the sand, and looks only to the sea and the desert. tn the evening we took donkeys again and rode out of the town to a cafe on the banks of the canal. A sunset of burn ing rose and orange sank over the desert behind Pompey's Pillar, and the balmiest of breezes stole towards us from tho eea, through palm gardens. A Swiss gentleman, M. de Gon- THE DONKEY-BOY. IS eenbach, whose kindness I shall always gratefully remember accompanied us. As we sat under the acacias, sipping the black Turkish coffee, the steamer for Cairo passed, disturbing the serenity of the air with its foul smoke, and marring the delicious repose of the landscape in such wise, that we vowed we would have nothing to do with steam so long as we voyaged on the Nile. Our donkey-drivers patiently held the bridlea of our long-eared chargers til), we were ready to return. It was dark, and not seeing at first my attendant, a little one- eyed imp, I called at random : " Abdallah ! " This, it hap pened, was actually his name, and he came trotting up, hold ing the stirrup ready for me to mount. The quickness with which these young Arabs pick up languages, is truly astonish ing. " Gome vi chiamate ? " (what's your name ?) I asked of Abdallah, as we rode homeward. The words were new to him, but I finally made him understand their meaning, where upon he put his knowledge into practice by asking me : " Come vi chiamate?" "Abbas Pasha," I replied. "Oh, well," was his prompt rejoinder, " if you are Abbas Pasha, then I am Seyd Pasha." The next morning he was at the door with his donkey, which I fully intended to mount, but became entan gled in a wilderness of donkeys, out of which Ibrahim extri cated me by hoisting me on another animal. As I rode away, I caught a glimpse of the little fellow, crying lustily over his lisappointment. We three chance companions fraternized so agreeably that we determined to hire a boat for Cairo, in preference to waiting for the next steamer. We accordingly rode over to the Mali- moudieh Canal, accompanied by Ibrahim, to inspect the barks. Like all dragomen, Ibrahim had his private preferences, and 20 JOIHINEY IN CENTRAL AFRICA. conducted us on board a boat belonging to a friend of his, a grizzly rais, or captain. The craft was a small Icangia with a large lateen sail at the bow and a little one at the stern. It was not very new, but looked clean, and the rai's demanded three hundred piastres for the voyage. The piastre is the cur rent coin of the East. Its value is fluctuating, and always higher in Egypt than in Syria and Turkey, but may be assum ed at about five cents, or twenty to the American dollar. Be fore closing the bargain, we asked the advice of M. de Gon- zenbach, who immediately despatched his Egyptian servant and engaged a boat at two hundred and twenty-five piastres. Every thing was to be in readiness for our departure on the following evening. VOYAGE ON THE NIL* 21 CHAPTER II. FIRST VOYAGE ON THE HILB, Dt.perture The Kangia The Egyptian Cliuaato The Malimondieh Canal Entrance into the Nile Pleasure* of the Journey Studying Arabic Sight of the Pyramiqf Tbe Barrage Approach to Cairo. WE paid a most exorbitant bill at tlie Oriental Hotel, and started on donkeyback for our boat, at sunset. Our prepara tioiis for the voyage consisted of bread, rice, coffee, sugar, but ter and a few other comestibles ; an earthen furnace and char coal ; pots and stew-pans, plates, knives and forks, wooden spoons, coffee-cups and water-jars ; three large mats of cane- leaves, for bedding ; and for luxuries, a few bottles of claret, and a gazelle-skin stuffed with choice Latakieh tobacco. We were prudent enough to take a supper with us from the hotel, and not trust to our own cooking the first night on board. We waited till dark on the banks of the Canal before our baggage appeared. There is a Custom-House on all sides of Alexandria, and goods going out must pay as well as goods com ing in. The gate was closed, and nothing less than the silver oil of a dollar greased its hinges sufficiently for our cart to pass through. But what was our surprise on reaching the boat, to 5nd the same Itancjia and the same grizzly rais, who had pre viously demanded three hundred piastres. He seemed no lesa 2? JOURNEY IN CENTRAL AFRICA. astonished than we, for the bargain had been made by a third party, and I believe he bore us a grudge during the rest of the voyage. The contract placed the boat at our disposition ; so we went on board immediately, bade adieu to the kind friends who had accompanied us, and were rowed down the Canal in tho full glow of African moonlight. Some account of our vessel and crew will not be out of place here. The boat was about thirty-five feet in length, with a ehort upright mast in the bow, supporting a lateen sail fifty feet long. Against the mast stood a square wooden box, lined with clay, which served as a fireplace for cooking. The mid die boards of the deck were loose and allowed entrance to the hold, where our baggage was stowed. The sailors also lifted them and sat on the cross-beams, with their feet on the shat low keel, when they used the oars. The cabin, which occu pied the stern of the boat, was built above and below the deck, BO that after stepping down into it we could stand upright The first compartment contained two broad benches, with a smaller chamber in the rear, allowing just enough room, in all, for three persons to sleep. We spread oir mats on the boards, placed carpet-bags for pillows (first taking out the books), and our beds were made. Ibrahim slept on the deck, against the cabin-door. Our rai's, or captain, was an old Arab, with a black, wrink led face, a grizzly beard and a tattered blue robe. There were five sailors one with crooked eyes, one with a moustache, two copper-colored Fellahs, and one tall Nubian, black as the Egyptian darkness. The three latter were our favorites, and more cheerful and faithful creatures I never saw. One of the Fellahs sang nasal love-songs the whole day long, and was al- EVENING ON THE CANAL. 23 ways foremost in the everlasting refrain of " haylee-sah / " and u ya salaam!" with, which the Egyptian sailors row and tow and pole their boats against the current. Before we left the boat we had acquired a kind of affection for these three men, vhile the rai's, with his grim face and croaking voice, grew more repulsive every day. We spread a ;nat on the deck, lighted our lantern and sat down to supper, while a gentle north wind slowly carried our boat along through shadows of palms and clear spaces of moon light. Ibrahim filled the shebooks, and for four hours we sat in the open air, which seemed to grow sweeter and purer with every breath we inhaled. We were a triad the sacred num ber and it would have been difficult to find another triad so harmonious md yet differing so strongly in its parts. One was a Landwirtli from Saxe-Coburg, a man of forty-five, tall, yet portly in person, and accustomed to the most comfortable living and the best society in Germany. Another was a Srnyr- niote merchant, a young man of thirty, to whom all parts of Europe were familiar, who spoke eight languages, and who within four months had visited Ispahan and the Caucasus. Of the third it behooves me not to speak, save that he was from the New "World, and that he differed entirely from his friends in stature, features, station in life, and every thing else but mu tual goodfellowship. " Ah," said the German in the fulness of his heart, as we basked in the moonlight, " what a heavenly air ! what beautiful palms ! and this wonderful repose in all Nature, which I never felt before !" " It is better than tho gardens of Ispahan," added the Smyrniote. Nor did I deceive them when I said that for many months past I had known no taood of mind so peaceful and grateful. roURNEY IN CENTRAL AFRICA. We roso. somewhat stiff from our hard beds, but a cup of coffee and the fresh morning air restored the amenity of the voyage The banks of the Canal are flat and dull, and the country through which we passed, after leaving the marshy brink of Lake Mareotis, was in many places still too wet froin the recent inundation to be ploughed for the winter crops. It is a dead level of rich black loam, and produces rice, maize, sugar cane and millet. Here and there the sand has blown over it, and large spaces are given up to a sort of coarse, wiry grass, The villages are miserable collections of mud huts, but the date-palms which shadow them and the strings of camels that slowly pass to and fro, render even their unsightliness pictu resque. In two or three places we passed mud machines, driven by steam, for the purpose of cleaning the Canal. Ropes were stretched across the channel on both sides, and a large number of trading boats were obliged to halt, although the wind was very favorable. The barrier was withdrawn for us Franks, and the courteous engineer touched his tarboosh in reply to our salutations, as we shot through. Towards noon we stopped at a village, and the Asian went ashore with Ibrahim to buy provisions, while the European walked ahead with his fowling-piece, to shoot wild ducks for dinner. The American stayed on board and studied an Arabic vocabulary. Presently Ibrahim appeared with two fowls, two pigeons, a pot of milk and a dozen eggs. The Asian set about preparing breakfast, and showed himself so skilful that our bark soon exhaled the most savory odors. When we picked up our European he had only two hawks to offer us, but we gave him in return a breakfast which he declared perfect. We ate on deck, seated on a mat ; a pleasant wind filled our sails, ATFEK. 25 and myriads of swallows circled and twittered over our heads in the cloudless air. The calm, contemplative state produced by the coffee and pipes which Ibrahim brought us, lasted the whole afternoon, and the villages, the cane-fields, the Moslem oratories, the wide level of the Delta and the distant mounda of forgotten cities, passed before our eyes like the pictures of a dream. Only one of these pictures marred the serenity of our minds. It was an Arab burying-ground, on the banks of the Canal a collection of heaps of mud, baked in the sun. At the head and foot of one of the most recent, sat two wo men paid mourners who howled and sobbed, in long, piteous, despairing cries, which were most painful to hear. I should never have imagined that any thing but the keenest grief could teach such heart-breaking sounds. When I climbed the bank at sunset, for a walk, the minarets of Atfeh, on the Nile, were visible. Two rows of acacias, planted along the Canal, formed a pleasant arcade, through which we sailed, to the muddy excrescences of the town. The locks were closed for the night, and we were obliged to halt which gave us an opportunity of witnessing an Arabic marriage procession. The noise of two wooden drums and a sort of fife announced the approach of the bride, who, attended by her relatives, came down the bank from the mud-ovens above. She was closely veiled, but the Arabs crowded around to get a peep at her face. No sooner had the three Franks approached, than she was doubly guarded and hurried off to the house of her in tended husband. Some time afterwards I ascended the bank to have a nearer view of the miserable hovels, but was received with such outcries and menacing gestures, that I made a slow and dignified retreat. We visited, however, the house of the 2 JOURNEY IN CENTRAL AJRICA. bridegroom's father, where twenty or thirty Arabs, seated on the ground, were singing an epithalamium, to which they kept time by clapping their hands. Next morning, while our rais was getting his permit to pass ng sails and crowding into the narrow passage, amid shouts, cries and a bewildering profusion of Arabic gutturals. For half an hour, the scene was most exciting, but thanks to the windlass, we reached smoother vsater, and sailed off gayly for Cairo. The true Nile expanded before us, nearly two miles in VTE REACH BOULAK. 3 width. To the south, the three Pyramids of Gizeh loomed up like isolated mountain-peaks on the verge of the Desert On the right hand the Mokattam Hills lay red and bare in the sunshine,, and ere long, over the distant gardens of Shoo- bra, we caught sight of the Citadel of Cairo, and the minarets of the mosque of Sultan Hassan. The north wind was faith ful : at three o'clock we were anchored in Boulak, paid our rais, gave the crew a backsheesh, for which they kissed out hands with many ssclaniations of "taibf* (good!) anil set out for Cairo. JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. CHAPTER llf. yiCTURES OF CAIRO Entrance Tne E/bekiyeh Saracenic Houses Donkeys Tlio Bazaars The Streota Processions View from the Citadel Mosque of Mohammed All The lioad to Suez The Island of Rhoda, OUR approach to and entrance into Cairo was the illuminated frontispiece to the volume of my Eastern life. From the Nilo we had already seen the mosque of Sultan Hassan, the white domes, and long, pencil-like minarets of the new mosque of Mohammed Ali, and the massive masonry of the Citadel, crowning a projecting spur of the Mokattam Hills, which touches the city on the eastern side. But when, mounted on ambling donkeys, we followed the laden baggage-horses through the streets of Boulak, and entered the broad, shaded highway leading through gardens, grain-fields and groves of palm and banana, to the gate of the Ezbekiycli the great square of Cairo the scene, which, at a distance, had been dimmed and softened by the filmy screen of the Egyptian air, now became so gay, picturesque and animated, so full of life 1 motion and color, that niy dreams of the East were at je displaced by the vivid reality. The donkey-riding multi plies who passed continually to and fro, were wholly unlike THE GREAT SQUARE OK CAIRO. 35 the crowds of Smyrna and Alexandria, where the growing in- fluence of European dress and customs is already visible. Here, every thing still exhaled the rich aroina of the Orient, as it had been wafted to me from the Thousand and One Nights, the Persian poets and the Arab chroniclers. I forgot that I still wore a Frank dress, and found myself wondering at the temerity of the few Europeans we met. I looked without surpvise on the long processions of donkeys carrying water- skins, the heavily-laden camels, the women with white masks on their faces and black bags around their bodies, the stolid Nubian slaves, the grave Abyssinians, and all the other va rious characters that passed and repassed us. But because they were so familiar, they were none the less interesting, for all had been acquaintances, when, like Tennyson, u true Mus sulman was I, and sworn," under the reign of the good Haroun Al-Raschid. "We entered the Ezbekiyeh, which is wholly overgrown with majestic acacias and plane-trees, and thickets of aromatic flow ering shrubs. It is in the Frank quarter of the city, and was first laid out and planted by order of Mohammed Ali. All the principal hotels front upon it, and light, thatched cafes fill the space under the plane-trees, where the beau monde of Cairo promenade every Sunday evening. Nothing of the old City of the Caliphs, except a few tall minarets, can be seen from this quarter, but the bowery luxuriance of the foliage is all that the eye demands, and over the plain white walls, on every sidej the palms single, or in friendly groups lift their feathery crowns. After installing our household gods in the chambers sf the quiet and comfortable Hotel d'Europe, we went out to enjoy the sweet evening air in fr ant of one of the cafe?. T 88 JOl'RNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. tried for tlie first time the narghileh, or Persian water-pipe. The soft, velvety leaves of the tobacco of Shiraz are burned in a small cup, the tube of which enters a glass vase, half filled with rose-scented water. From the top of this vase issues a flexible tube, several feet in length, with a mouth-piece of wood or amber. At each inspiration, the smoke is drawn downward and rises through the water with a pleasant bubbling sound. It is deprived of all the essential oil of the weed, and is exceed ingly mild, cool and fragrant. But instead of being puffed out of the mouth in whiffs, it is breathed full into the lungs and out again, like the common air. This is not so difficult a mat ter as might be supposed ; the sensation is pleasant and slight ly exhilarating, and is not injurious to the lungs when moder ately indulged in. The Turkish quarter of Cairo still retains the picturesque Saracenic architecture of the times of the Caliphs. The houses are mostly three stories in height, each story projecting over the other, and the plain stone walls are either whitewash ed or striped with horizontal red bars, in a manner which would be absurd under a northern sky, but which is here singularly harmonious and agreeable. The only signs of sculpture are occasional door-ways with richly carved arches, or the light marble gallery surrounding a fountained court. I saw a few of these in retired parts of the city. The traveller, however, has an exhaustless source of delight in the wooden balconies inclosing the upper windows. The extraordinary lightness, grace and delicate fragility of their workmanship, rendered still more striking by contrast with the naked solidity of the walla to which they cling, gave me a new idea of the skill and fancy of the Saracenic architects. The wood seems rather woven in DONKEYS AND DONKEY-BOYS. 87 the loom, than cut with the saw and chisel. Through these lattices of fine network, with borders worked in lace-like pat terns, and sometimes topped with slender turrets and pinnacles, the wives of the Cairene merchants sit and watch the crowds passing softly to and fro in the twilight of the bazaars, them selves unseen. It needed no effort of the imagination to people the fairy watch-towers under which we rode daily, with forms as beautiful as those which live in the voluptuous melodies of Hafiz. To see Cairo thoroughly, one must first accustom himself to the ways of those long-eared cabs, without the use of which I would advise no one to trust himself in the bazaars. Don key-riding is universal, and no one thinks of going beyond the Frank quarter on foot. If he does, he must submit to be fol lowed by not less than six donkeys with their drivers. A friend of mine, who was attended by such a cavalcade for two hours, was obliged to yield at last, and made no second attempt. When we first appeared in the gateway of our hotel, equipped, for an excursion, the rush of men and animals was so great, that we were forced to retreat until our servant and the porter whipped us a path through the yelling and braying mob. Af ter one or two trials, I found an intelligent Arab boy, named Kish, who, for five piastres a day, furnished strong and ambi tious donkeys, which he kept ready at the door from morning till night. The other drivers respected Kish's privilege, and thenceforth I had no trouble. The donkeys are so small that my feet nearly touched the ground, but there is no end to their strength and endurance. Their gait, whether a pace or a gal lop, is so easy and light that fatigue is impossible. The dri vers take great pride in having high-cushioned red saddles, am* 270827 88 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. in hanging bits of jingling brass to the bridles. They kec\ their donkeys close shorn, and frequently beautify them by painting them various colors. The first animal I rode had legs barred like a zebra's, and my friend's rejoiced in purple flankf and a yellow belly. The drivers run behind them with a short stick, punching them from time to time, or giving them a sharp pinch on the rump. Very few of them own their donkeys, and I understood their pertinacity when I learned that they fre quently received a beating on returning home in the evening empty-handed. The passage of the bazaars seems at first quite as hazardous on donkey-back as on foot, but it is the difference between knock ing somebody down and being knocked down yourself, and one naturally prefers the former alternative. There is no use in attempting to guide the donkey, for he won't be guided. The driver shouts behind, and you are dashed at full speed into a confusion of other donkeys, camels, horses, carts, water-car riers and footmen. In vain you cry out : " Bess /" (enough !) "Piano/" and other desperate adjurations ; the driver's only reply is : " Let the bridle hang loose ! " You dodge your head under a camel-load of planks ; your leg brushes the wheel of a dust-cart ; you strike a fat Turk plump in the back ; you miraculously escape upsetting a fruit-stand ; you scatter a com pany of spectral, white-masked women, and at last reach some more quiet street, with the sensation of a man who has stormed a battery. At first this sort of riding made me very nervous, but finally I let the donkey go his ownivay, and took a curie us interest in seeing how near a chance I ran of striking or being struck. Sometimes there seemed no hope of avoiding a violent collision, but by a scries of the most remarkable dodges he gen THE POPULACE OF CAIRO. 39 erally carried me through in safety. The cries of the driver, running behind, gave me no little amusement : ' The Howadji comes ! Take care on the right hand ! take care on the left hand ! man, take care ! maiden, take care ! boy, get out of the way ! The Howadji comes ! " Kish had strong lunga and his donkey would let nothing pass him, and so, wherever we went, we contributed our full share to the universal noise and confusion. Cairo is the cleanest of all oriental cities. The regulations established by Mohammed Ali are strictly carried out. Each man is obliged to sweep before his own door, and the dirt is carried away in carts every morning. Besides this, the streets are watered several times a day, and are nearly always cool and free from dust. The constant evaporation of the water, however, is said to be injurious to the eyes of the inhabitants, though iu other respects the city is healthy. The quantity of sore-eyed, cross-eyed, one-eyed, and totally blind persons one meets every where, is surprising. There are some beggars, mostly old or deformed, but by no means so abundant or imper tinent as in the Italian cities. A number of shabby police men, in blue frock-coats and white pantaloons, parade the prin cipal thoroughfares, but I never saw their services called into requisition. The soldiers, who wear a European dress of white cotton, are by far the most awkward and unpicturesque class Even the Fellah, whose single brown garment hangs loose from his shoulders to his knees, has an air of dignity compared with these Frankish caricatures. The genuine Egyptian costume which bears considerable resemblance to the Greek, and espe cially the Hydriote, is simple and graceful. The colors are dark principally brown, blue, green and violet relieved by c 40 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. heavy silk sash of some gay pattern, and by the red slippers and tarboosh. But, as in Turkey, the Pashas and Beys, and many of the minor officers of the civil departments have adopt ed the Frank dress, retaining only the tarboosh, a change which is by no means becoming to them. I went into an Egyp tian barber-shop one day, to have my hair shorn, and in- joyed the preparatory pipe and coffee in company with two in dividuals, whom I supposed to be French or Italians of the vulgar order, until the barber combed out the long locks on the top of their head, by which Mussulmen expect to .be lifted up into Paradise. When they had gone, the man informed me *hat one was Khalim Pasha, one of the grandsons of Moham med Ali, and the other a Bey, of considerable notoriety. The Egyptians certainly do not gain any thing by adopting a costume which, in this climate, is neither so convenient nor so agreeable as their own. Besides the animated life of the bazaars, which I had an opportunity of seeing, in making my outfit for the winter's journey, I rarely went out without witnessing some incident or ceremony illustrative of Egyptian character and customs. One morning I encountered a stately procession, with music and banners, accompanying a venerable personage, with a green tur ban on his head and a long white beard flowing over his breast. This, as Kish assured me. was the Shereef of Mecca. He was attended by officers in the ricnest Turkish and Egyptian cos tumes, mounted on splendid Arabian steeds, who were almost hidden under their broad housings of green and crimson velvet, embroidered with gold. The people on all sides, as he passed, laid their hands on their breasts and bowed low, which he an swered by slowly lifting his hand. It was a simple motion, bu? nothing could have been more calm and majestic. FKSTIVK PROCESSIONS. 41 On another occasion, I met a bridal procession in the streets of Boulak. Three musicians, playing on piercing flutes, head ed the march, followed by the parents of the bride, who, sur rounded by her maids, walked under a crimson canopy. She was shrouded from head to foot in a red robe, over which a gilded diadem was fastened around her head. A large crowd of friends and relatives closed the procession, close behind which followed another, of very different character. The chief actors were four boys, of five w six years old, on their way to be circumcised. Each was mounted on a handsome horse, and wore the gala garments of a full-grown man, in which their little bodies were entirely lost. The proud parents marched by their sides, supporting them, and occasionally holding to their lips bottles of milk and sherbet. One was a jet black Nubian, who seemed particularly delighted with his situation, and grinned on all sides as he passed along. This procession was headed by a buffoon, who carried a laugh with him which opened a ready passage through the crowd. A man followed balancing on his chin a long pole crowned with a bunch of flowers. He came to me for backsheesh. His success brought me two swordsmen out of the procession, who cut at each other with scimitars and caught the blows on their shields. The coolness, swiftness and skill with which they parried the strokes was really admirable, and the concluding flourish was a masterpiece. One of them, striking with the full sweep of his arm, aimed directly at the face of the other, as if to divide his head into two parts ; but without making a pause, the glittering weapon turned, and sliced the air within half an inch of his eyes. The man neither winked nor moved a muscle of his face, but after the scimitai had passed, dashed it up with his shield, which he then reversed, 42 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. and dropping on one knee, held to me for backsheesh. After these came a camel, with a tuft of ostrich feathers on his head and a boy on his back, who pounded vigorously on two wooden drums with one hand, while he stretched the other down to me for backshcesh. Luckily the little candidates for circumci Bion were too busily engaged with their milk bottles and sugar> plums, to join in the universal cry. I had little time to devote to 1 he sights of Cairo, and was obliged to omit the excursions to the Petrified Forest, to Helio- polis and Old Cairo, until my return. Besides the city itself, which was always full of interest, I saw little else except the Citadel and the Island of Rhoda. We took the early morning for our ride to the former place, and were fortunate enough to find our view of the Nile-plain unobscured by the mists cus tomary at this season. The morning light is most favorable to the landscape, which lies wholly to the westward. The shad ows of the Citadel and the crests of the Mokattam Hills then lie broad and cool over the city, but do not touch its minarets, which glitter in the air like shafts of white and rosy flame. The populace is up and stirring, and you can hear the cries of the donkoymen and water-carriers from under the sycamores and acacias that shade the road to Boulak. Over the rich palm- gardens, the blue streak of the river and the plain beyond, you see the phantoms of two pyramids in the haze which still cur tains the Libyan Desert. Northward, beyond the parks and palaces of Shoobra, the Nile stretches his two great arms to ward the sea, dotted, far into the distance, with sails that flash in the sun. From no other point, and at no other time, ii Cairo so grand and beautiful. Within the walls of the Citadel is the Bir Youssef Jo THE CITADEL. 43 seph's "Well as it is called by the Arabs, not from tiie vir tuous Hebrew, but from Sultan Saladin, who dug it out and put it in operation. The well itself dates from the old Egyp tian time, but was filled with sand and entirely lost for manj centuries. It consists of an upper and lower shaft, cut through the solid rock, to the depth of two hundred and sixty feet. A winding gallery, lighted from the shaft, extends to the bottom of the first division, where, in a chamber cut in the rock, a mule turns the large wheel which brings up a continual string of buckets from the fountain below. The water is poured into a spacious basin, and carried thence to the top by another string of buckets set in motion at the surface. Attended by two Arabs with torches, we made the descent of the first shaft and took a drink of the fresh, cool fluid. This well, and the spot where the Mameluke Emin Bey jumped his horse over the wall and escaped the massacre of his comrades, are the only interesting historical points about the Citadel ; and the new mosque of Mohammed Ali, which overlooks the city from the most projecting platform of the fortifications, is the only part which has any claim to architectural beauty. Although it has been in process of erection for many years, this mosque is not nearly completed internally. The exterior is finished, and its large, white, depressed dome, flanked by minarets so tall and reed-like that they seem ready to bend with every breeze, is the first signal of Cairo to travellers coming up or down the Nile. The interior walls are lined throughout with oriental alabaster, stained with the orange flush of Egyptian sunsets, and the three domes blaze with elaborate arabesques of green, blue, crimson and gold. In a temporary chamber, fitted up in one corner, rests the coffin of Mohammed Ali, cov- 44 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. ered with a heavy velvet pall, and under the marble arches be fore it, a company of priests, squatted on the green carpet cov ering the floor, bow their heads continually and recite prayers or fragments of the Koran. Before descending into the city, I rode a little way into the Desert to the tombs of the Caliphs, on the road to Suez. They consist mostly of stone canopies raised on pillars, with mosques or oratories attached to them, exhibiting considerable variety in their design, but are more curious than impressive. The track in the sand made by the pilgrims to Mecca and the overland passengers to Suez, had far more real interest in my eyes. The pilgrims are fewer, and the passengers more nu merous, with each successive year. English-built omnibuses, whirled along by galloping post-horses, scatter the sand, and in the midst of the herbless Desert, the travellers regale them selves with beefsteak and ale, and growl if the accustomed Cheshire is found wanting. At this rate, how long will it be before there is a telegraph-station in Mecca, and the operator explodes with his wire a cannon on the Citadel of Cairo, to announce that the prayers on Mount Arafat have commenced ? The Island of Rhoda, which I visited on a soft, golden afternoon, is but a reminiscence of what it was a few years ago. Since Ibrahim Pasha's death it has been wholly neglect ed, and though we found a few gardeners at work, digging up the sodden flower-beds and clipping the rank myrtle hedges, they only served to make the neglect more palpable. During the recent inundation, the Nile had risen to within a few inches of covering the whole island, and the soil was still soft ind clammy. Nearly all the growths of the tropics are nur tured here; the coffee, the Indian fig, the mango, and othei KECORDS OF SILLINESS. 4fi trees alternate with the palm, orange, acacia, and the yellow mimosa, whose blossoms make the isle fragrant. I gathered a bunch of roses and jasmine-flowers from the unpruned vines. In the centre of the garden is an artificial grotto lined with shells, many of -which have been broken off and carried away by ridiculous tourists. There is no limit to human silliness, as I have wisely concluded, after seeing Pompey's Pillar dis figured by " Isaac Jones " (or some equally classic name), in capitals of black paint, a yard long, and finding " Jenny Lind ' equally prominent on the topmost stone of the great Pyramid (Of course, the enthusiastic artist chiselled his own name be side hers.) A mallet and chisel are often to be found in the outfits of English and American travellers, and to judge from the frequency of certain names, and the pains bestowed upon their inscription, the owners must have spent the most of theii time in Upper Egypt, in leaving records of their vulgar vanity much coffee. The expenfr of our outfit, including brea fowls, mutton, charcoal, and every othei requisite, was about two thousand piastres a little more than one hundred dollars. The calculation was made for one month's provisions for two persons. For my further journey after leaving the Nile, I was recommended to take a large supply, on account of the scarcity and expense of many articles in Upper Nubia and Sennaar. I therefore purchased sufficient tea, coffee, flour, rice, biscuits, sugar, macaroni and dried fruit to last me two months, beside A complete canteen, or supply of articles necessary for life in the desert. I took an extra quantity of gunpowder, tobacco 62 JOURXEV TO CENTRAL AFRICA. and coffee, for presents to the Arab shekhs. The entire cost of this outfit was about nine hundred piastres. In addition, ] procured a good Turkish tent for two hundred and fifty pias tres, to which I added a supply of tent-pins, lantern-poles, wa ter-skins, and leathern water-flasks, all these articles beiag pro cured to better advantage in Cairo. I did not propose adopt ing the Egyptian costume until I had made some progress in the language, and therefore contented myself with purchasing a bornous of camel's hair, a sabre, a broad shawl of Tripoli silk, for the waist, and shoes of white leather, which are very cool and comfortable. I also followed the custom of the Euro pean residents, in having my hair shorn close to the head, and wearing a white cotton skull-cap. Over this was drawn the red tarboosh, or fez, and as a protection against the sun, I bound a large white shawl around it, which was my first les- Bon in turban-making. Achmet, influenced by a superstition which is not peculiar to the East, begged me to hasten our preparations, in order that we might leave Boulak on Monday, which day, he averred, was the luckiest in the week, and would render our journey prosperous from beginning to end. Knowing from experience that half the success of the journey is in the start, and believ ing that it is better to have superstition with you than against you, I determined to gratify him. He was as zealous as I could wish, and we rested not from morning to night, until at last, from the spirit with which we labored, it seemed almost a matter of life and death, that the boat should leave on Mon day. I had a clause inserted in our written contract with the captain, that he should forfeit a day's rent, in case he was not ready at the appointed hour but, in spite of this precaution THE LUCKY DAY. Achmet, who well knew the indifference of the Arab nature- was constantly on his track. Two or three times a day he galloped to Boulak, to hasten the enlistment of the men, the baking of bread for the voyage, the furbishing of the cabin and the overhauling of the sails, oars and rigging. My Euro psan friends in Cairo smiled at our display of activity, saying that such a thing had never been known, as a boat sailing at the appointed time, and that I was fatiguing myself to no purpose. Monday (Nov. 17th) came, and the Egyptian cook, S lame, whom we had engaged for the Nile voyage, was de spatched to the markets to lay in a supply of fowls, eggs, but ter and vegetables. My letters home the last I expected to send, for months to come were committed to the Post Office, and after an early dinner, we saw our baggage and stores laden upon carts and started for Boulak, under Ach- met's guidance. "We took leave of the few friends we had made in Cairo, and followed. The Cleopatra was still lying in the midst of a crowd of dahdbiyelis, but the American flag, hoisted at tho peak of her little mizzenmast, was our " cornet,'' proclaiming departure. "We found Achmet unjacketed and unturbaned, stowing away the stores, with one eye on the rais, and another (as it seemed to me) on each of the tardy sailors. There was still charcoal to be bought, and bois gras for kindling fires, and clubs for the men, to prevent invasions from the shore, with many more of those wants which are never remembered until the last moment. The afternoon wore away ; the shadows of the feathery date-trees on the island of Rhoda stretched long and cool across the Nile ; but before the sun had touched the tops of the Pyramids, we had squeezed 54 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. out from the shipping of Boulak^and were slowly working up the Nile before a light wind, while our boatmen thumped the taraboolia, and sang their wild Arab songs of departure. Th. rai'a came up to know whether he had not fulfilled his contract and Achmet with a cheerful face, turned to me and said * Praised be Allah, master 1 we shall have a lucky journey." AchmeL CHAPTER V . THE PYRAMIDS AND MEMPHIS. Howling Dervishes A Chicken Factory Bide to the Pyramids Quarrel \vlth th Arabs The Ascent View from the Summit Backshecsh Effect of Pyramid climbing The Sphinx Playing the Cadi "We obtain Justice Visit to Sakkai.. and the Mummy Pits The Exhumation of Memphis Interview ivith M. Mar>,tU -Account of his Discoveries Statue of Barneses IL Return to the Nile. " And Morning opes in haste her lids, To gaze upon the Pyramids." EMEKSOX. WE went no further than the village of Gizeh, three or four miles above Cairo, on the first evening, having engaged out donkeys and their drivers to meet us there and convey MB tc the Pyramids on the following morning. Atout dusk, the rait moored our boat to the bank, beside a College of dervishes, whose unearthly chants, choruses and clapping of hands, were prolonged far into the night. Their wild cries, and deep, mo JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA aotonous bass bowlings BO filled our ears that we could no> choose but listen, and, in spite of our fatigue sleep was impos sible. After performing for several hours, they gradually ceased, through sheer exhaustion, though there was one tough old dervish, who continued to gasp out, "Allah! Allah!" with such a spasmodic energy, that I suspected it was pro duced by the involuntary action of his larynx, and that he could not have stopped, even had he been so minded. When we threw open the latticed blinds of our cabin, be fore sunrise, the next morning, the extraordinary purity of the air gave rise to an amusing optical delusion on the part of my friend. "See that wall!" said he, pointing to a space be tween two white houses " what a brilliant color it is painted, and how those palms and these white houses are relieved against it ! " He was obliged to look twice before he per ceived that what he had taken for a wall close at hand, was really the sky, and rested upon a far-off horizon. Our don keys were in readiness on the bank, and I bestrode the same faithful little gray who had for three days carried me through the bazaars of Cairo. We left orders for the rais to go on to Bedracheyu, a village near the supposed site of Memphis, and taking Achmet with us, rode off gayly among the mud hovels and under the date-trees of Gizeh, on our way to the Pyramids. Near the extremity of the village, we entered one of the larg chicken-hatching establishments for which the place is famed but found it empty. We disturbed a numerous family of Fel lahs, couched together on the clay floor, crept on our hands and knees through two small holes and inspected sundry ovena covered with a layer of chaff, and redolent of a mild, moist heat and a feathery smell The owner informed us that for HIDE TO THE PYRAMIDS. 57 the first four or five days the eggs were exposed to smoke a3 well as heat, and that when the birds began to pick the shell, which generally took place in fifteen days, they were placed in another oven and carefully accouched. The rising sun shone redly on the Pyramids, as we rod* out on the broad harvest land of the Nile. Tho black, unctuous loam was still too moist from the inundation to be ploughed, except in spots, here and there, but even where the water had scarce evaporated, millions of germs were pushing their slender blades up to the sunshine. In that prolific soil, the growth of grain is visible from day to day. The Fellahs were at work on all sides, preparing for planting, and the un gainly buffaloes drew their long ploughs slowly through the soil. Where freshly turned, the earth had a rich, soft lustre, like dark-brown velvet, beside which the fields of young wheat, beans and lentils, glittered with the most brilliant green. The larks sang in the air and flocks of white pigeons clustered like blossoms on the tops of the sycamores. There, in Novem ber, it was the freshest and most animating picture of Spring. The direct road to the Pyramids was impassable, on account of the water, and we rode along the top of a dyke, intersected by canals, to the edge of the Libyan Desert a distance of nearly ten miles. The ruptures in the dyke obliged us occa sionally to dismount, and at the last canal, which cuts off the advancing sands from the bounteous plain on the other side, our donkeys were made to swim, while we were carried across on the shoulders of two naked Arabs. They had run out in advance to meet us, hailing us with many English and French phrases, while half a dozen boys, with earthen bottles which they had just filled from the slimy canal, crowded after them, 3* f%8 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. insisting, in very good English, that we should drink at once, and take them -with us to the Pyramids. Our donkeys' hoofs now sank deep in the Libyan sands, and we looked up to the great stone-piles of Cheops, Ce- phrenes and Mycerinus, not more than half a mile distant. Our sunrise view of the Pyramids on leaving Gizeh, was suffi cient, had I gone no further, and I approached them, without the violent emotion which sentimental travellers experience, but with a quiet feeling of the most perfect satisfaction. The form of the pyramid is so simple and complete, that nothing is left to the imagination. Those vast, yellowish-gray masses, whose feet are wrapped in the silent sand, and whose tops lean against the serene blue heaven, enter the mind and remain in the memory with no shock of surprise, no stir of unexpected admiration. The impression they give and leave, is calm, grand and enduring as themselves. The sun glared hot on the sand as we toiled up the ascent to the base of Cheops, whose sharp corners were now broken into zigzags by the layers of stone. As we dismounted in his shadow, at the foot of the path which leads up to the entrance, on the northern side, a dozen Arabs beset us. They belonged to the regular herd who have the Pyramids in charge, and are so renowned for their impudence that it is customary to employ the janissary of some Consulate in Cairo, as a protection. Be fore leaving Gizeh I gave Achmet my sabre, which I thought would be a sufficient show to secure us from their importuni ties. However, when we had mounted to the entrance and were preparing to climb to the summit, they demanded a dollar from each for their company on the way. This was just four times the usual fee, and we flatly refused the demand. My A QUARREL ttf friend nad in the mean time become so giddy from the few *t**T- he had mounted, that he decided to return, and I ordered Acu met, who knew the way, to go on with me and leave the Arab* to their howlings. Their leader instantly sprang before him. and attempted to force him back. This was too much foi Achmet, who thrust the man aside, whereupon he was instantly beset by three ur four, and received several hard blows. The struggle took place just on the verge of the stones, and he win prudent enough to drag his assailants into the open space befor- the entrance of the Pyramid. My friend sprang towards tb- group with his cane, and I called to the donkey-driver to brin^ up my sabre, but by this time Achmet had released himself with the loss of his turban. The Arabs, who had threatened to treat us in the saiuti manner, then reduced their demand to the regular fee of five piastres for each. I took three of them and commenced the ascent, leaving Achmet and my friend below. Two boys fol lowed us, with bottles of water. At first, the way seemed hazardous, for the stones were covered with sand and fragments which had fallen from above, but after we had mounted twenty courses, the hard, smooth blocks of granite formed broader and more secure steps. Two Arabs went before, one holding each of my hands, while the third shoved me up from the rear. The assistance thus rendered was not slight, for few of the stones are less than four feet in height. The water-boys scampered up beside us with the agility of cats. We stopped a moment to take breath, at a sort of resting-place half-way up an opening in the Pyramid, communicating with the uppermost of the interior chambers. I had no sooner sat down on the nearest stone, than the Arabs stretched themselves 8C TOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. at my feet and entertained me with most absurd mixture t). flattery and menace. One, patting the calves of my legs jriwc out ; " Oh, what fine, strong legs ! how fast they came up . nobody ever went up the Pyramid so fast ! " while the others added : " Here you must give us backsheesh : every body gives us a dollar here." My only answer was, to get up and begin climbing, and they did not cease pulling and pushing till they left me breathless on the summit. The whole ascent did not occupy more than ten minutes. The view from Cheops has been often described. I cannot Bay that it increased my impression of the majesty and gran deur of the Pyramid, for that was already complete. My eyea wandered off from the courses of granite, broadening away below my feet, to contemplate the glorious green of the Nile- plain, barred with palm-trees and divided by the gleaming flood of the ancient river ; the minarets of Cairo ; the purple walla of the far Arabian mountains ; the Pyramid groups of Sakkara and Dashoor, overlooking disinterred Memphis in the South ; and the arid yellow waves of the Libyan Desert, which rolled unbroken to the western sky. The clear, open heaven above, which seemed to radiate light from its entire concave, clasped in its embrace and harmonized the different features of this wonderful landscape. There was too much warmth and bril liance for desolation. Every thing was alive and real ; the Pyramids were not ruins, and the dead Pharaohs, the worship pers of Athor and Apis, did not once enter my mind. My wild attendants did not long allow me to enjoy the view quietly. To escape from their importunities for kick- sheesh, I gave them two piastres in copper coin, which instantly turned their flatteries into the most bitter complaints. I* wag PHYSICAL EFFECT OF THE ASCENT 31 Insulting to give so little, and they preferred having none ; L I would not give a dollar, I might take the money back i took it without more ado, and put it into my pocket. This rather surprised them, and first one, and then another came to me and begged to have it again, on his own private account. I threw the coins high into the air, and as they clattered down on the stones, there ensued such a scramble as would have sent any but Arabs over the edge of the Pyramid. We then com menced the descent, two seizing my hands as before, and drag ging me headlong after them. We went straight down the side, sliding and leaping from stone to stone without stopping to take breath, and reached the base in five or six minutes. I was so excited from the previous aggression of the Arabs, that I neither felt fatigue nor giddiness on the way up and clown, and was not aware how violent had been my exertions. But when 1 touched the level sand, all my strength vanished in an instant. A black mist came over my eyes, and I sank down helpless and nearly insensible. I was scarcely able to speak, and it was an hour before I could sit upright on my donkey. I felt the Pyramid in all my bones, and for two or three days afterwards moved my joints with as much difficulty as a rheu matic patient. The Arabs, who at first had threatened to kill Achmet, now came forward and kissed his hands, humbly entreating pardon. But his pride had been too severely touched by the blows he had received, and he repulsed them, spitting upon the ground, as the strongest mark of contempt. We consider ed it due to him, to >urselvcs, and to other travellers after us, to represent the matter to the Shekh of the Pyramids, whc lives in a village calledKinnayseh, a mile distant, and ordered 02 lOURNET TO CKNTKAL AFRICA. Achrnct to conduct us thither. We first rode along the DJ of the Pyramid of Cephrenes, and down the sand drifts to th majestic head of the Sphinx. I shall not attempt to describe this enormous relic of Egyptian art. There is nothing like it in the world. Those travellers who pronounce its features to be negro in their character, are certainly very hasty in theit conclusions. That it is an Egyptian head is plainly evident, notwithstanding its mutilation. The type, however, is rather fuller and broader than is usual in Egyptian statues. On reaching the village we found that the shekh was ab sent in Cairo, but were received by his son, who, after spelling out a few words of my Arabic passport and hearing Achmet's relation of the affair, courteously invited us to his house. We rode between the mud huts to a small court-yard, where we dismounted. A carpet was spread on the ground, under a canopy of palm-leaves, and the place of honor was given 'to us the young shekh seating himself on the edge, while our don key-drivers, water-boys and a number of villagers, stood res pectfully around. A messenger was instantly despatched tc the Pyramids, and in the mean time we lighted the pipe of peace. The shekh promised to judge the guilty parties and punish them in our presence. Coffee was ordered, but as the unlucky youth returned and indiscreetly cried out, "J/a feesJi ! " (there is none !) the shekh took him by the neck, and run him out of the court-yard, threatening him with all manner of penalties unless he brought it. We found ourselves considered in the light of judges, and I thought involuntarily of the children playing Cadi, in the Arabian tale. But to play our Cadi with the necessary gravi ty of countenance was a difficult matter. It was rather em- PLAYING THE CADI. barrassing to sit cross-legged so long, and to look so My face was of the color of a boiled lobster, from the suu, and in order to protect my eyes, I had taken off my cravat and bound it around the red tarboosh. My friend had swathed his felt hat in like manner, and when the shekh looked at us from time to time, while Achmet spoke of our friendship with all the Consuls in Cairo, it was almost too much to enjoy quietly However, the shekh, who wore a red cap and a single cotton garment, treated us with much respect. His serene, impar tial demeanor, as he heard the testimony of the various wit nesses who were called up, was most admirable. After half an hour's delay, the messenger returned, and the guilty par ties were brought into court, looking somewhat alarmed and very submissive. We identified the two ringleaders, and after considering the matter thoroughly, the shekh ordered that they should be instantly bastinadoed. We decided between ourselves to let the punishment commence, lest the matter should not be considered sufficiently serious, and then to show our mercy by pardoning the culprits. One of the men was then thrown on the ground and held by the head and feet, while the shekh took a stout rod and began administering the blows. The victim had prepared himself by giving his bornous a double turn over his back, and as the end of the rod struck the ground each time, there was much sound with the veriest farce of punishment. After half a dozen strokes, he cried out, " ya salaam ! " whereupon the crowd laughed heartily, and my friend ordered the shekh to gtop. The latter cast the rod at our feet, and asked us to continue the infliction ourselves, until we were satisfied. We told him and the company in general, through Achmet, thai 34 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. we were convinced of his readiness to punish imposition ; that ve wished to show the Arabs that they must in future treal travellers with respect; that we should send word of the affan to Cairo, and they might rest assured that a second assault would be more severely dealt with. Since *his had beei demonstrated, we were willing that the punishment should now cease, and in conclusion returned our thanks to the shekh, for his readiness to do us justice. This decision was received with great favor ; the two culprits came forward and kissed our hands and those of Achmet, and the villagers pronounced a unanimous sentence of " ta'ib ! " (good !) The indiscreet youth again appeared, and this time with coffee, of which we partook with much relish, for this playing the Cadi was rather fatiguing. The shekh raised our hands to his forehead, and accompanied us to the end of the village, where we gave the coffee-bearer a backsheesh, dismissed our water-boys, and turned our donkeys' heads toward Abousir. Achmet's dark skin was pale from his wounded pride, and I was faint from pyramid-climbing, but a cold fowl, eaten as we sat in the sun, on the border of the glowing Desert, comforted us. The dominion of the sand has here as distinct a bound as that of the sea ; there is not thirty yards from the black., pregnant loam, to the fiery plain, where no spear of grass grows. Our path lay sometimes on one side of this border, sometimes on the other, for more than an hour and a half, till vre reached the ruined pyramids of Abousir, where it turned southward into the Desert. After seeing Cheops and Ce- phrenes, these pyramids are only interesting on account of their dilapidated state and the peculiarity of their forms, some of their sides taking a more obtuse angle at half their height 8AKKARA AND MEMPHIS. 65 They are buried deep in the sand, which has so drifted toward the plain, that from the broad hollow lying between them and the group of Sakkara, more than a mile distant, every sign ot vegetation is shut out. Vast, sloping causeways of masonry lead up to two of them, and a large mound, occupying the space between, suggests the idea that a temple formerly stood there The whole of the desert promontory, which seemed to have been gradually blown out on the plain, from the hills in the rear, exhibits traces here and there of ruins beneath the Burface. My friend and I, as we walked over the hot sand, before our panting donkeys, came instinctively to the same conclusion that a large city must have once occupied the space between, and to the southward of, the two groups of pyramids. It is not often that amateur antiquarians find such sudden and triumphant confirmation of their conjectures, aa we did. On the way, Achmet had told us of a Frenchman who had been all summer digging in the sand, near Sakkara. After we had crawled into the subterranean depot of mummied ibises, and nearly choked ourselves with dust in trying to find a pot not broken open; and after one of our donkeymen went into a human mummy pit and brought out the feet and legs of some withered old Egyptian, we saw before us the residence of this Frenchman ; a mud hut on a high sand-bank. It was an un fortunate building, for nearly all the front wall had tumbled down, revealing the contents of his kitchen. One or two Arabs loitered about, but a large number were employed at the end of a long trench which extended to the hills. Before reaching the house a number of deep pits barred Mir path, and the loose sand, stirred by our feet, slid back intc f the Arabs, he was obliged to cover up all his discov eries, after making his drawings and measurements. The Egyptian authorities are worse than apathetic, for they would not hesitate to burn the sphinxes for lime, and build barracks for filthy soldiers with the marble blocks. Besides this, the French influence at Cairo was then entirely overshadowed by M. MARIETTE AND HIS LABORS. that of England, and although M. Mariette was supported in his labors by the French Academy, and a subscription headed by Louis Napoleon's name, he was forced to be content with the simple permission to dig out these remarkable ruins and describe them. He could neither protect them nor remove the portable sculptures and inscriptions, and therefore prefer red giving them again into the safe keeping of the sand. Here they will be secure from injury, until some more fortu nate period, when, possibly, the lost Memphis may be entirely given to the world, as fresh as Pompeii, and far more grand and imposing. I asked M. Mariette what first induced him to dig: for Mem- o phis in that spot, since antiquarians had fixed upon the mounds near Mitrahenny (a village in the plain below, and about four miles distant), as the former site of the city. He said that the tenor of an inscription which he found on one of the blocks quarried out of these mounds, induced him to believe that the principal part of the city lay to the westward, and therefore he commenced excavating in the nearest sand-hill in that di rection. After sinking pits in various places he struck on an avenue of sphinxes, the clue to all his after discoveries. Fol lowing this, he came upon the remains of a temple (probably the Serapeum, or Temple of Serapis, mentioned by Strabo), and afterward upon streets, colonnades, public and private edi fices, and all other signs of a great city. The number of sphinxes alone, buried under these high sand-drifts, amounted to two thousand, and he had frequently uncovered twenty or thirty in a day. He estimated the entire number of statues, inscriptions and reliefs, at between four and five thousand. Tho most remarkable discovery was that of eight colossal 68 JOtJRNEr TO CENTRAL AFRICA. dtatues, which were evidently the product of Grecian art During thirteen months of assiduous labor, with but one a sistant, he had made drawings of all these objects and forward ed them to Paris. In order to be near at hand, he had built an Arab house of unburnt bricks, the walls of which had just tumbled down for the third time. His workmen were then engaged in clearing away the sand from the dwelling of some old Memphian, and he intended spreading his roof over the massive walls, and making his residence in the exhumed city. The man's appearance showed what he had undergone, and gave me an idea of the extraordinary zeal and patience requir ed to make a successful antiquarian. His face was as browc as an Arab's, his eyes severely inflamed, and his hands as rough as a bricklayer's. His manner with the native work men was admirable, and they labored with a hearty good-will which almost supplied the want of the needful implements. All they had were straw baskets, which they filled with a sort of rude shovel, and then handed up to be carried off on the heads of others. One of the principal workmen was deaf and dumb, but the funniest Arab I ever saw. He was constantly playing off his jokes on those who were too slow or too negli gent. An unlucky girl, stooping down at the wrong time to lift a basket of sand, received the contents of another on her head, and her indignant outcry was hailed by the rest with screams of laughter. I saw the same man pick out of the sand a glazed tile containing hieroglyphic characters. The gravity with which he held it before him, feigning to peruse it, occa sionally nodding his head, as if to say, "Well done for old Pharaoh i" could not have been excelled by Burton himself. Strabo states that Memphis had a circumference of seven- M. MARIETTE AXD HIS LABORS. 09 teen miles, and therefore both M. Mariette and the antiqua rians are right. The mounds of Mitrahenny probably mark the eastern portion of the city, while its western limit extend ed beyond the Pyramids of Sakkara, and included in its sub urbs those of Abousir and Dashoor. The space explored by M. Mariette is about a mile and a half in length, and some what more than half a mile in breadth. He was then continu ing his excavations westward, and had almost reached the first ridge of the Libyau Hills, without finding the termination of the ruins. The magnitude of his discovery will be best known when his drawings and descriptions are given to the world. A few months after my visit, his labors were further re warded by finding thirteen colossal sarcophagi of black marble, and he has recently added to his renown by discovering an en r trance to the Sphinx. Yet at that time, the exhumation of the lost Memphis second only in importance to that of Nine veh was unknown in Europe, except to a few savans in Paris, and the first intimation which some of my friends in Cairo and Alexandria had of it, was my own account of my visit, in the newspapers they received from America. But M. Mariette is a young man, and will yet see his name inscribed beside those of Burckhardt, Belzoni and Layard. "We had still a long ride before us, and I took leave of Memphis and its discoverer, promising to revisit him on my return from Khartoum. As we passed the brick Pyramid of Sakkara, which is built in four terraces of equal height, the dark, grateful green of the palms and harvest-fields of the Nilo appeared between two sand-hills a genuine balm to our heat- sd eyes. We rode through groves of the fragrant mimosa to broad dike, the windings of which we were obliged to follow 70 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. across the plain, as the soil was still wet and adhesive. It was too late to visit the beautiful Pyramids of Dashoor, the first of which is more than three hundred feet in height, and from a distance has almost as grand an effect as those of Gizeh. Our tired donkeys lagged slowly along to the palm-groves of Mitra- henny, where we saw mounds of earth, a few blocks of red granite and a colossal statue of Remeses II. (Sesostris) which until now were supposed to be the only remains of Memphis. The statue lies on its face in a hole filled with water. The countenance is said to be very beautiful, but I could only see the top of Sesostris's back, which bore a faint resemblance to a crocodile. Through fields of cotton in pod and beans in blossom, we vode to the Nile, dismissed our donkeys and their attendants, and lay down on some bundles of corn-stalks to wait the arri val of our boat. But there had been a south wind all day and we had ridden much faster than our men could tow. Wo sat till long after sunset before the stars and stripes, floating from the mizzen of the Cleopatra, turned the corner below Bedrasheyn. When, at last, we sat at our cabin-table, weary and hungry, we were ready to confess that the works of art produced by our cook, Salame, were more marvellous and in- foresting than Memphis and the Pyramids. LEA VI THE PYRAMIDS. 7) CHAPTER VI. PROM MEMPHIS TO S I O C T. having the Pyramids A Calm and a Breeze A Coptic Visit Minyeh Tho Grottoo. of Beni-Hassan Donm Palms and Crocodiles Djebel Aboufayda Entrance Into Upper Egypt Diversions of the Boatmen Siout-Ita Tombs A Landscape A Bath. " It flows through old hushed Egypt and its sands, Like some grave, mighty thought threading a dream." LEIGII HUNT'S SONNET TO TUB NILS. THE extent of my journey into Africa led me to reverse the usual plan pursued by travellers on the Nile, who sail to As souan or Wadi-Halfa without pause, and visit the antiquities on their return. I have never been able to discern the phi losophy of this plan. The voyage up is always longer, and more tedious (to those heathens who call the Nile tedious), than the return ; besides which, two visits, though brief, with an interval between, leave a more complete and enduring image, than a single one. The mind has time to analyze and contrast, and can afterwards confirm or correct the first im pressions. How any one can sail from Cairo to Siout, a voy age of two hundred and sixty miles, with but one or two points of mterest, without taking the Pyramids with him in memory > I cannot imagine Were it not for that recollection, I should have pronounced Modern Egypt more interesting than thw that he has tasted our pottage of Egyptian lentils. Coffee And pipes follow dinner, which is over with the first flush of sunset and the first premonition cf the coolness and quiet of evening. 94 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. We seat ourselves on deck, and drink to its fulness th balm of this indescribable repose. The sun goes down behind the Libyan Desert in a broad glory of purple and rosy lights ; the Nile is calm and unruffled, the palms stand as if sculptured in jasper and malachite, and the torn and ragged sides of the Arabian Mountains, pouring through a hundred fissures th* sand of the plains above, burn with a deep crimson lustre, as if smouldering from some inward fire. The splendor soon passes off and they stand for some minutes in dead, ashy pale ness. The sunset has now deepened into orange, in the midst of which a large planet shines whiter than the moon. A second glow falls upon the mountains, and this time of a pale, but intense yellow hue, which gives them the effect of a trans parent painting. The palm-groves are dark below and the sky (lark behind them ; they alone, the symbols of perpetual deso lation, are transfigured by the magical illumination. Scarcely a sound disturbs the solemn magnificence of the hour. Even our full-throated Arabs are silent, and if a wave gurgles against the prow, it slides softly back into the river, as if re buked for the venture. We speak but little, and then mostly in echoes of each other's thoughts. " This is more than mere enjoyment of Nature," said my friend, on such an evening : " it is worship." Speaking of my friend, it is no more than just that I should confess how much of the luck of this Nile voyage is owing to him, and therein may be the secret of my complete satisfaction and the secret of the disappointment of others. It \s inoro easy and yet more difficult for persons to harmonize ivhile travelling, than when at home. By this I mean, that men of kindred natures and aims find each other more readily MY COMRADE. 9fi and confide in each other more freely, while the least jarring element rapidly drives others further and further apart. No confossional so completely reveals the whole man as the com panionship of travel. It is not possible to wear the conven tional masks of Society, and one repulsive feature is often enough to neutralize many really good qualities. On the other tand, a congeniality of soul and temperament speedily ripens into the firmest friendship and doubles every pleasure which i& mutually enjoyed. My companion widely differs from me in age, in station, and in his experiences of life ; but to one of those open, honest and loving natures which are often found in his native Saxony, he unites a most warm and thorough appre ciation of Beauty in Nature or Art. We harmonize to a mir acle, and the parting with him at Assouan will be the sorest pang of my journey. My friend, the Howadji, in whose " Nile- Notes" the Egyptian atmosphere is so perfectly reproduced, says that " Conscience falls asleep on the Nile." If by this he means that artificial quality which bigots and sectarians call Con science, I quite agree with him, and do not blame the Nile for its soporific powers. But that simple faculty of the soul, na tive to all men, which acts best when it acts unconsciously, and leads our passions and desires into right paths without seeming to lead them, is vastly strengthened by this quiet and healthy life. There is a cathedral-like solemnity in the air of Egypt ; one feels the presence of the altar, and is a better man without his will. To those rendered misanthropic by disappointed ambition mistrustful by betrayed confidence despairing by unassuageable sorrow let me repeat the motta heads this chapter. 90 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. I hare endeavored to picture our mode of life as faithful]} and minutely as possible, because it bears no resemblance tc travel in any other part of the world. Into the neart of a Darbarous continent and a barbarous land, we carry with us every desirable comfort and luxury. In no part of Europe or America could we be so thoroughly independent, without un dergoing considerable privations, and wholly losing that sense of rest which is the greatest enjoyment of this journey. We are cut off from all communication with the great world of politics, merchandise and usury, and remember it only through the heart, not through the brain. We go ashore in the deli cious mornings, breathe the elastic air, and wander through the palm-groves, as happy and care-free as two Adams in a Paradise without Eves. It is an episode which will flow for ward in the under-currents of our natures through the rest of our lives, soothing and refreshing us whenever it rises to the surface. I do not reproach myself for this passive and sensu ous existence. I give myself up to it unreservedly, and if Borne angular-souled utilitarian should come along and recom mend me to shake off my laziness, and learn the conjugations of Coptic verbs or the hieroglyphs of Kneph and Thoth, I should not take the pipe from my mouth to answer him. My friend sometimes laughingly addresses me with two lines of Hebel s quaint Allemanic poetry : " Ei soldi a Lcben, junges Bluat, Desh ish wohl fur a Thierle gnat," (such a life, young blood, best befits an animal), but I tell him that the wisdom of the Black Forest won't answer for the If any one persists in forcing the application, I prefei OBSERVATION VS. DESCRIPTION. Deing called an animal to changing my present nabits. An entire life so spent would be wretchedly aimless, but a few months are in truth " sore labors bath " to every wrung heart and overworked brain. I could say much more, but it requires no little effort to write three hours in a cabin, when the palms are rustling their tops outside, the larks singing in the meadows, and the odor of mimosa flowers breathing through the windows. To travel and write, is like inhaling and exhaling one's breath at the same moment. You take in impressions at every pore of the mind, and the process is so pleasant, that you sweat them out again most reluctantly. Lest I should overtake the remedy with the disease, and make to-day Labor, which should be Rest, 1 shall throw down the pen. and mount yonder donkey which stands patiently on the bank, waiting to carry me to Siont once more, before starting for Thebes. TO CENTRAL AFRICA. CHAPTER VIII. UPPER EGYPT. Calin Mountains and Tombs A Night Adventure in Ekhmin Character of ihi Boatmen Fair Wind Pilgrims Egyptian Agriculture Sugar and Cotton Grain Sheep Arrival at Kennch A Landscape The Temple of Dendera First Im pressions of Egyptian Art Portrait of Cleopatra A Happy Meeting We approach Tliebes. Ocn men were ready at the appointed time, and precisely iwenty-four hours after reaching the port of Siout we spread our sails for Kenneh, and exchanged a parting salute with the boat of a New York physician, which arrived some hours after us. The north wind, which had been blowing freshly during the whole of our stay, failed us almost within sight of the port, and was followed by three days of breathless calm, during which time we made about twelve miles a day, by towing. My friend and I spent half the time on shore, wandering in land through the fields and making acquaintances in the vil lages. We found such tours highly interesting and refreshing, but nevertheless always returned to our floating Castle of In dolence, doubly delighted with its home-like cabin and lazy di vans. Many of the villages in this region are built among the mounds of ancient cities, the names whereof are faithfully enu merated in the guide-book, but as the cities themselves hava MOUNTAINS, TOMBS AND RUINS. 9* wholly disappeared, we were spared the necessity of seeking for their ruins. On the third night after leaving Siout, we passed the vil lage of Gow el-Kebir, the ancient Antaeopolis, whose beautiful temple has been entirely destroyed during the last twenty-five years, partly washed away by the Nile and partly pulled down to furnish materials for the Pasha's palace at Siout. Near this the famous battle between Hercules and Antaeus is re ported to have taken place. The fable of Antseus drawing strength from the earth appears quite natural, after one has seen the fatness of the soil of Upper Egypt. We ran the gauntlet of Djebel Shekh Hereedee, a mountain similar to Aboufayda in form, but much more lofty and imposing. It has also its legend : A miraculous serpent, say the Arabs, has lived for centuries in its caverns, and possesses the power of healing diseases. All these mountains, on the eastern bank of the Nile, are pierced with tombs, and the openings are sometimes so frequent and so near to each other as to resem ble a colonnade along the rocky crests. They rarely contain inscriptions, and many of them were inhabited by hermits and holy men, during the early ages of Christianity. At the most accessible points the Egyptians have commenced limestone quarries, and as they are more concerned in preserving piastres than tombs, their venerable ancestors are dislodged without scruple. Whoever is interested in Egyptian antiquities, should not postpone his visit longer. Not only 1'urks, but Europeans are engaged in the work of demolition, and the very antiquarians who profess the greatest enthusiasm for these monuments, are ruthless Vandals towards them when they Dave the power. 100 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. We dashed past the mountain of Shekh Hereedee in gal lant style, and the same night, after dusk, reached Ekhmin, the ancient Panopolis. This was one of the oldest cities in Egypt, and dedicated to the Phallic worship, whose first sym bol, the obelisk, has now a purely monumental significance. A few remnants of this singular ancient faith appear to be re tained among the modern inhabitants of Ekhmin, but only in the grossest superstitions, and without reference to the ab stract creative principle typified by the Phallic emblems. The early Egyptians surrounded with mystery and honored with all religious solemnity what they regarded as the highest human miracle wrought by the power of their gods, and in a philosophical point of view, there is no branch of their com plex faith more interesting than this. As we sat on the bank in the moonlight, quietly smoking our pipes, the howling of a company of dervishes sounded from the town, whose walls are a few hundred paces distant from the river. We inquired of the guard whether a Frank dare visit them. He could not tell, but offered to accompany me and try to procure an entrance. I took Achmet and two of our sailors, dosned a Bedouin capote, and set out in search of the dervishes. The principal gate of the town was closed, and my men battered it vainly with their clubs, to rouse the guard. We wandered for some time among the mounds of Panopolis, stumbling over blocks of marble and granite, under palms eighty feet high, standing clear and silvery in the moonlight. At last, the clamor of the wolfish dogs we waked up on the road, brought us one of the watchers outside of the walls, whom we requested to admit us into the city. He replied that this could not be done. " But," said Achmet, " here is A NIGHT ADVENTURE. 101 an Effendi who has just arrived, and must visit the mollahs to-night ; admit him and fear nothing." The men thereupon conducted us to another gate and threw a few pebbles against the window above it. A woman's voice replied, and presently the bolts were undrawn and we entered. By this time the dervishes had ceased their howlings, and every thing was aa still as death. We walked for half an hour through the de serted streets, visited the mosques and public buildings, and heard no sound but our own steps. It was a strangely inter esting promenade. The Arabs, armed with clubs, carried a paper lantern, which flickered redly on the arches and courts we passed through. My trusty Theban walked by my side, and took all possible trouble to find the retreat of the der vishes but in vain. We passed out through the gate, which was instantly locked behind us, and had barely reached our vessel, when the unearthly song of the Moslem priests, louder and wilder than ever, came to our ears. The prejudice of the Mohammedans against the Christians is wearing away with their familiarity with the Frank dresa and their adoption of Frankish vices. The Prophet's injunc tion against wine is heeded by few of his followers, or avoided by drinking araJcee, a liquor distilled from dates and often fla vored with hemp Their conscience is generally satisfied with a pilgrimage to Mecca and the daily performance of the pre scribed prayers, though the latter is often neglected. All of my sailors were very punctual in this respect, spreading their carpets on the forward deck, and occupying an hour or two every day with genuflexions, prostrations, and salutations to ward Mecca, the direction of which they never lost, notwith standing the windings of the Nile. In the cathedrals of Chris 102 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. tian Europe I have often seen pantomimes quite as unneces sary, performed with less apparent reverence. The people ol Egypt are fully as honest and well-disposed as the greatei part of the Italian peasantry. They sometimes deceive in small things, and are inclined to take trifling advantages, but that is the natural result of living under a government whose only rule is force, and which does not even hesitate to use fraud. Their good humor is inexhaustible. A single friendly word wins them, and even a little severity awakes no lasting feeling of revenge. I should much rather trust myself alone among the Egyptian Fellahs, than among the peasants of the Campagna, or the boors of Carinthia. Notwithstanding our men had daily opportunities of- plundering us, we never missed a single article. We frequently went ashore with our drago man, leaving every thing in the cabin exposed, and especially such articles as tobacco, shot, dates, &c., which would most tempt an Arab, yet our confidence was never betrayed. Wf often heard complaints from travellers in other boats, but I am satisfied that any one who will enforce obedience at the start, and thereafter give none but just and reasonable com mands, need have no difficulty with his crew. The next morning, the wind being light, we walked for ward to El Menschieh, a town about nine miles distant from Ekhmin. It was market-day, and the bazaar was crowded with the countrymen, who had brought their stock of grain, sugar-cane and vegetables. The men were taller and more muscular than in Lower Egypt, and were evidently descended from a more intelligent and energetic stock. They looked at us curiously, but with a sort of friendly interest, and cour teously made way for us as AVC passed through the narrow bar EGVI'TIAN AOUICULTURK. 10'c zaar. In the afternoon the wind increased to a small galo, and bore us rapidly past Gebel Tookh to the city of Girgeh. 84 named in Coptic times from the Christian saint, George. Like Manfalout, it has been half washed away by the Nile, and two lofty minarets were hanging on the brink of the slip pery bank, awaiting their turn to fall. About twelve miles from Girgeh, in the Lib} r an Desert, are the ruins of Abydus, now covered by the sand, except the top of the portico and roof of the temple-palace of Sesostris, and part of the temple of Osiris. We held a council whether we should waste the favorable wind or miss Abydus, and the testimony of Achmet, who had visited the ruins, iaving been taken, we chose the latter alternative. By this time Girgeh was nearly out of sight, and we comforted ourselves with the hope of soon see ing Dendera. The pilgrims to Mecca, by the Kenneh and Kosseir route, were on their return, and we met a number of boats, crowded with them, on their way to Cairo from the former place. Most of the boats carried the red flag, with the star and cres cent. On the morning after leaving Girgeh, we took a long stroll through the fields of Farshoot, which is, after Siout, the richest agricultural district of Upper Egypt. An excellent system of irrigation, by means of canals, is kept up, and the result shows what might be made of Egypt, were its great nat- ural resources rightly employed. The Nile offers a perpetual fountain of plenty and prosperity, and its long valley, from Nubia to the sea, would become, in other hands, the garden of the world. So rich and pregnant a soil I have never seea Here, side by side, flourish wheat, maize, cotton, sugar-can^ mdigo, hemp, rice, dourra, tobacco, olives, dates, oranges, and 104 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. ilie vegetables and fruits of nearly every climate. The wheatj whifih, in November, we found young and green, would in March be ripe for the sickle, and the people were cutting and threshing fields of dourra, which they had planted towards the end of summer. Except where the broad meadows are first re claimed from the rank, tufted grass which has taken posses sion of them, the wheat is sowed upon the ground, and then ploughed in by a sort of crooked wooden beam, shod with iron, and drawn by two camels or buffaloes. I saw no instance in which the soil was manured. The yearly deposit made by the bountiful river seems to be sufficient. The natives, it is true, possess immense numbers of pigeons, and every village is adorned with towers, rising above the mud huts like the py lons of temples, and inhabited by these birds. The manure collected from them is said to be used, but probably only in the culture of melons, cucumbers, and other like vegetables with which the gardens are stocked. The fields of sugar-cane about Farshoot were the richest I saw in Egypt. Near the village, which is three miles from the Nile, there is a steam sugar-refinery, established by Ibrahim Pasha, who seems to have devoted much attention to the cul ture of cane, with a view to his own profit. There are several of these manufactories along the Nile, and the most of them were in full operation, as we passed. At Radamoon, between Minyeh and Siout, there is a large manufactory, where the common coarse sugar made in the Fellah villages is refined and Bent to Cairo. We made use of this sugar in our household and found it to be of excellent quality, though coarser thau that of the American manufactories. The culture of cotton Vas not been so successful The large and handsome manufao VEGETABLES AND GRAIN. IOC tory built at Kenneh, is no longer in operation, and the field* which we saw Ihere, had a forlorn, neglected appearance. The plants grow luxuriantly, and the cotton is of fine quality but the pods are small and not very abundant. About Siout, and in Middle and Lower Egypt, we saw many fields of indigo, which is said to thrive well. Peas, beans and lentils are cul tivated to a great extent, and form an important item of the food of the inhabitants. The only vegetables we could procuro for our kitchen, were onions, radishes, lettuce and spinage. The Arabs are very fond of the tops of radishes, and eat them with as much relish as their donkeys. One of the principal staples of Egypt is the dourra (holcus sorghum), which resembles the zea (maize) in many respects. In appearance, it is very like broom-corn, but instead of the long, loose panicle of red seeds, is topped by a compact cone of grains, smaller than those of maize, but resembling them in form and taste. The stalks are from ten to fifteen feet high, and the heads frequently contain as much substance as two ears of maize. It is planted in close rows, and when ripe is cut by the hand with a short sickle, after which the heads are taken off and threshed separately. The grain is fed to horses, don* keys and fowls, and in Upper Egypt is used almost universally for bread. It is of course very imperfectly ground, and unbolt ed, and the bread is coarse and dark, though nourishing. Ip the Middle and Southern States of America this grain would thrive well and might be introduced with advantage. The plains of coarse, wiry grass (half eh), which in manj points on the Nile show plainly the neglect of the inhabitants, who by a year's labor might convert them into blooming fields, ore devoted to the pasturage of large herds of sheep, and goats, 106 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. and sometimes droves of buffaloes. The sheep arc allblazk 01 dark-brown, and their bushy heads remind one of terriers. The wool is rather coarse, and when roughly spun and woven by the Arabs, in its natural color, forms the mantle, something like a Spanish poncho, which is usually the Fellah's only gar ment. The mutton, almost the only meat to be found, is gen erally lean, and brings a high price, considering the abundance of sheep. The flesh of buffaloes is eaten by the Arabs, but ia too tough, and has too rank a flavor, for Christian stomachs. The goats are beautiful animals, with heads as slender and delicate as those of gazelles. They have short, black horns, curving downward long, silky ears, and a peculiarly mild and friendly expression of countenance. We had no difficulty in procuring milk in the villages, and sometimes fresh butter, which was more agreeable to the taste than the sight. The mode of churning is not calculated to excite one's appetite. The milk is tied up in a goat's skin, and suspended by a rope to the branch of a tree. One of the Arab housewives (who are all astonishingly ugly and filthy) then stations herself on one side, and propels it backward and forward till the process is completed. The cheese of the country resembles a mixture of 6and and slacked lime, and has an abominable flavor. Leaving Farshoot, we swept rapidly past Haou, the ancient Diospolis parva, or Little Thebes, of which nothing is left but some heaps of dirt, sculptured fragments, and the tomb of a certain Dionysius, sou of a certain Ptolemy. The course of the mountains, which follow the Nile, is here nearly east and west, as the river makes a long curve to the eastward on ap proaching Kenneh. The valley is inclosed within narrower bounds, and the Arabian Mountains on the north, shooting out KENNEH. 10V into bold promontories from the main chain, sometimes ris from the water's edge in bluffs many hundred feet in height The good wind, which had so befriended us for three days, fol lowed us all night, and when we awoke on the morning of De- comber 4th, our vessel lay at anchor in the port of Kenneh, having beaten by four hours the boat of our American friend, which was reputed to be one of the swiftest on the river. Kenneh, which lies about a mile east of the river, is cele brated for the manufacture of porous water-jars, and is an infe rior mart of trade with Persia and India, by means of Kosseir, on the Red Sea, one hundred and twenty miles distant. The town is large, but mean in aspect, and does not offer a single object of interest. It lies in the centre of a broad plain. We rode through the bazaars, which were tolerably well stocked and crowded with hadji, or pilgrims of Mecca. My friend, who wished to make a flag of the Saxe-Coburg colors, for hia return voyage, tried in vain to procure a piece of green cotton cloth. Every other color was to be had but green, which, as the sacred hue, worn only by the descendants of Mohammed, was nowhere to be found. He was finally obliged to buy a piece of white stuff and have it specially dyed. It came back the same evening, precisely the color of the Shereef of Mecca's turban. On the western bank of the Nile, opposite Kenneh, is the site of the city of Tentyra, famed for its temple of Athor. It is now called Dendera, from the modern Arab village. After breakfast, we shipped ourselves and our donkeys across the Nile, and rode off in high excitement, to make our first acquaintance with Egyptian temples. The path led through a palm grove, which in richness and beauty rivalled those of the 108 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. Mexican tierra caliente. The lofty shafts of the date and th< vaulted foliage of the doum-palm, blended in the most pictu resque groupage, contrasted with the lace-like texture of the [lowering mimosa, and the cloudy boughs of a kind of gray cy press. The turf under the trees was soft and green, and between the slim trunks we looked over the plain, to the Libyan Moun tains a long train of rosy lights and violet shadows. Out of this lovely wood we passed between magnificent fields of dourra and the castor-oil bean, fifteen feet in height, to a dyke which crossed the meadows to Dendera. The leagues of rank grass on our right rolled away to the Desert in shining billows, and the fresh west- wind wrapped us in a bath of intoxicating odors. ID the midst of this green and peaceful plain rose the earthy mounds of Ten tyra, and the portico of the temple, almost buried beneath them, stood like a beacon, marking the boundary of the Desert. "We galloped our little animals along the dyke, over heaps of dirt and broken bricks, among which a number of Arabs were burrowing for nitrous earth, and dismounted at a small pylon, which stands two or three hundred paces in front of the temple. The huge jambs of sandstone, covered with sharply cut hieroglyphics and figures of the Egyptian gods, and sur mounted by a single block, bearing the mysterious winged globe and serpent, detained us but a moment, and we hurried down what was once the dromos of the temple, now represented by a double wall of unburnt bricks. The portico, more than a hundred feet in length, and supported by six columns, united by screens of masonry, no stone of which, or of the columns themselves, ia unsculptured, is massive and imposing, but struck me as being too depressed to produce a very grand effect. What was my THK TEMPLE OF DENDERA. 101 astonishment, on arriving at the entrance, to find that I had approached the temple on a level with half its height, and that the pavement of the portico was as far below as the scrolls of its cornice were above me. The sis columns I had seen cover ed three other rows, of six each, all adorned with the most elaborate sculpture and exhibiting traces of the brilliant color ing which they once possessed. The entire temple, which is in an excellent state of preservation, except where the hand of the Coptic Christian has defaced its sculptures, was cleaned out by order of Mohammed Ali, and as all its chambers, as well as the roof of enormous sand-stone blocks, are entire, it is consid ered one of the most complete relics of Egyptian art. I find my pen at fault, when I attempt to describe the im pression produced by the splendid portico. The twenty-four columns, each of which is sixty feet in height, and eight feet in diameter, crowded upon a surface of one hundred feet by seventy, are oppressive in their grandeur. The dim light, admitted through the half closed front, which faces the north, spreads a mysterious gio^m around these mighty shafts, crown ed with the fourfold visage of Athor, still rebuking the im pious hands that have marred her solemn beauty. On the walls, between columns of hieroglyphics, and the cartouches of the Caesars and the Ptolemies, appear the principal Egyptian deities the rigid Osiris, the stately Isis and the hawk-headed Orus. Around the bases of the columns spring the leaves of the sacred lotus, and the dark-blue ceiling is spangled with stars, between the wings of the divine emblem. The sculptures are all in raised relief, and there is no stone in the temple without them. I cannot explain to myself the unusual emotion I felt while contemplating this wonderful combination of & 1 10 JOURNET TO CENTRAL AFRICA. simple and sublime architectural style with the utmost elabo ration of ornament. My blood pulsed fast and warm on my first view of the Roman Forum, but in Dendera I was so sad dened and oppressed, that I scarcely dared speak for fear of betraying an unmanly weakness. My friend walked silently between the columns, with a face as rigidly sad as if he had just looked on the coffin of his nearest relative. Though such a mood was more painful than agreeable, it required some effort to leave the place, and after a stay of two hours, we still lin gered in the portico and walked through the inner halls, under the spell of a fascination which we had hardly power to break. The portico opens into a hall, supported by six beautiful columns, of smaller proportions, and lighted by a square aper ture in the solid roof. On either side are chambers connected with dim and lofty passages, and beyond is the sanctuary and various other apartments, which receive no light from without. We examined their sculptures by the aid of torches, and our Arab attendants kindled large fires of dry corn stalks, which cast a strong red light on the walls. The temple is devoted to Athor, the Egyptian Venus, and her image is everywhere seen, receiving the homage of her worshippers. Even the dark stair case, leading to the roof up which we climbed over heaps of sand and rubbish is decorated throughout with processions of symbolical figures. The drawing has little of that grotesque stiffness which I expected to find in Egyptian sculptures, and the execution is so admirable in its gradations of light and shade, as to resemble, at a little distance, a monochromatic painting. The antiquarians view these remains with little interest, as they date from the comparatively recent era of the Ptolemies, at which time sculpture and architecture were or THE PORTRAIT OF CLEOPATRA. 11, tlie decline. We, who had seen nothing else of the kind, were charmed with the grace and elegance of this sumptuous mode of decoration. Part of the temple was built by Cleopatra, whose portrait, with that of her son Cassation, may still bo seen on the exterior wall. The face of the colossal figure has been nearly destroyed, but there is a smaller one, whose soft, voluptuous outline is still sufficient evidence of the justness of her renown. The profile is exquisitely beautiful. The fore head and nose approach the Greek standard, but the mouth ia more roundly and delicately curved, and the chin and cheek are fuller. Were such an outline made plastic, were the blank face colored with a pale olive hue, through which should blush a faint rosy tinge, lighted with bold black eyes and irradiated with the lightning of a passionate nature, it would even now 1 move the mighty hearts of captains and of kings." Around the temple and over the mounds of the ancient city are scattered the ruins of an Arab village which the in habitants suddenly deserted, without any apparent reason, two or three years previous to our visit. Behind it, stretches the yellow sand of the Desert. The silence and aspect of deser tion harmonize well with the spirit of the place, which would be much disturbed were one beset, as is usual in the Arab towns, by a gang of naked beggars and barking wolf-dogs Besides the temple, there are also the remains of a chapel ot Isis, with a pylon, erected by Augustus Caesar, and a small temple, nearly whelmed in the sand, supposed to be one of the mammeisi, or lying-in houses of the goddess Athor, who was honored in this form, on account of having given birth to the third member of the divine Triad. At sunset, we rode back from Dendera and set sail for J12 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. Thebes. In the evening, as we were sweeping along by moon light, with a full wind, a large dahabiyeh came floating down the stream. Achmet, who was on the look-out, saw the Amer ican flag, and we hailed her. My delight was unbounded, to hoar in reply the voice of my friend, Mr. Degen, of New York, who, with his lady and two American and English gentlemen, were returning from a voyage to Assouan. Both boats in stantly made for the shore, and for the first time since leaving Germany I had the pleasure of seeing familiar faces. For the space of three hours 1 forgot Thebes and the north wind, but towards midnight we exchanged a parting salute of four guns and shook out the broad sails of the Cleopatra, who leaned her cheek to the waves and shot off .ike a sea-gull. I am sure she must have looked beautiful tc my friends, as they stood on deck in the moonlight ARRIVAL AT THEBES. 113 CHAPTER IX. THEBES THE WESTERN BANK. Arrival a. Thebes Ground-Plan of the Remains We Cross to the Wcstein Bank- Guides The Temple of Goorneh Valley of the Kings' Tombs Belzonfs Tomb The Races of Men Vandalism of Antiquarians Brace's Tomb Memnon Th4 Grandfather of Sesostris The Head of Amunoph The Colossi of the Plain Memnonian Music The Statue of Remeses The Memnonium Beauty of Egyp tian Art More Scrambles among the Tombs The Bats of the Assassecf Medee- net Abou- -Sculptured Histories The Great Court of the Temple "We return t Luxor. ON the following evening, about nine o'clock, as my friend and I were taking our customary evening pipe in the cabin, our vessel suddenly stopped. The wind was still blowing, and I called to Achmet to know what was the matter. " We have reached Luxor," answered the Theban. We dropped the she- books, dashed out, up the bank, and saw, facing us in the brilliant moonlight, the grand colonnade of the temple, the solid wedges of the pylon, and the brother-obelisk of that which stands in the Place de la Concorde, in Paris. Thu wide plain of Thebes stretched away on either hand, and the beautiful outlines of the three mountain ranges which inclose it, rose in the distance against the stars. We looked on the landscape a few moments, in silence. " Come," said my friend, at length, "this is enough for to-night. Let us not be toe 1 I 4 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. hasty to exhaust what is in store for us." So we returned to our cabin, closed the blinds, and arranged our plans for best seeing, and best enjoying the wonders of the great Diospolis. Before commencing my recital, let me attempt to give an outline of the typography of Thebes. The course of the Kile is here nearly north, dividing the site of the ancient city into two almost equal parts. On approaching it from Kenneh, the mountain of Goorneh, which abuts on the river, marks the commencement of the western division. This mountain, a range of naked limestone crags, terminating in a pyramidal peak, gradually recedes to the distance of three miles from tho Nile, which it again approaches further south. Nearly the whole of the curve, which might be called the western wall of the city, is pierced with tombs, among which are those of the queens, and the grand priestly vaults of the Assasseef. The Valley of the Jvings' Tombs lies deep in the heart of the range seven or eight miles from the river. After passing the corner of the mountain, the first ruin on the western bank is that of the temple-palace of Goorneh. More than a mile fur ther, at the base of the mountain, is the Memnonium, or tem ple of Remeses the Great, between which and the Nile the two Memnonian colossi are seated on the plain. Nearly two iniies to the south of this is the great temple of Medeenet Abou, anc 1 . the fragments of other edifices are met with, still further be yond. On the eastern bank, nearly opposite Goorneh, stands the temple of Karnak, about half a mile from the river. Eight miles eastward, at the foot of the Arabian Mountains, is the small temple of Medamot, which, however, does not appear jo have been included in the limits of Thebes. Luxor is di rectly on the bank ot the Nile, a mile and a half south o THE WESTERN BANK. HE arnak, and the plain extends several miles beyond it, before reaching the isolated range, whose three conical peaks are the landmarks of Thebes to voyagers on the river. These distances convey an idea of the extent of the ancient city, but fail to represent the grand proportions of the land scape, so well fitted, in its simple and majestic outlines, to in close the most wonderful structures the world has ever seen. The green expanse of the plain ; the airy coloring of the moun tains ; the mild, solemn blue of the cloudless Egyptian sky ; these are a part of Thebes, and inseparable from the remem brance of its ruins. At sunrise we crossed to the western bank and moored our boat opposite Goorneh. It is advisable to commence with the Tombs, and close the inspection of that side with Medeenet Abou, reserving Karnak, the grandest of all, for the last. The most unimportant objects in Thebes are full of interest when seen first, whereas Karnak, once seen, fills one's thoughts to the exclusion of every thing else. There are Arab guides for each bank, who are quite familiar with all the principal points, and who have a quiet and unobtrusive way of directing the traveller, which I should be glad to see introduced into England and Italy. Our guide, old Achmet Gourgar, was a tall, lean gray-beard, who wore a white turban and long brown robe, and was most conscientious in his endeavors to satisfy us. We found several horses on the bank, ready saddled, and choosing two of the most promising, set off on a stirring gal lop for the temple of Goorneh and the Valley of the Kings' Tombs, leaving Achmet to follow with our breakfast, and the Arab boys with their water bottles. The temple of Goorneh was built for the worship of Amun, 116 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA the Theban Jupiter, by Osirei and his son, Kemeses the Great, the supposed Sesostris, nearly fourteen hundred years before the Christian era. It is small, compared with the other ruins, but interesting from its rude and massive style, a remnant of the early period of Egyptian architecture. The two pylons in front of it are shattered down, and the dromos of sphinxes has entirely disappeared. The portico is supported by a single row of ten columns, which neither resemble each other, nor are separated by equal spaces. What is most singular, is the fact that notwithstanding this disproportion, which is also ob servable in the doorways, the general effect is harmonious. We tried to fathom the secret of this, and found no other ex planation than in tho lowness of the buildiug, and the rough granite blocks of which it is built. One seeks no proportion in a natural temple of rock, or a cirque of Druid stones. All that the eye requires is rude strength, with a certain approach to order. The effect produced by this temple is of a similar character, barring its historical interest. Its dimensions are too small to be imposing, and I found, after passing it several times, that I valued it more as a feature in the landscape, than for its own sake. The sand and pebbles clattered under the hoofs of our horses, as we galloped up the gorge of Biban el Molook, the " Gates of the Kings." The sides are perpendicular cliffs of yellow rock, which increased in height, the further we advanc ed, and at last terminated in a sort of basin, shut in by preci pices several hundred feet in height and broken into fantastic turrets, gables and pinnacles. The bottom is filled with huge heaps of sand and broken stones, left from the excavation of the tombs in the solid rock. There are twenty-one tombs BELZONl's TOMB. 117 in this valley, more than half of which are of great extent and richly adorned with paintings and sculptures. Some have been filled with sand or otherwise injured by the occasional rains which visit this region, while a few are too small and plain to need visiting. Sir Gardner Wilkinson has numbered them all in red chalk at the entrances, which is very convenient to those who use his work on Egypt as a guide. I visited ten of the principal tombs, to the great delight of the old guide, who complained that travellers are frequently satisfied with four or five. The general arrangement is the same in all, but they dift'er greatly in extent and in the character of their deco ration. The first we entered was the celebrated tomb of Remeses 1., discovered by Belzoni. From the narrow entrance, a pre cipitous staircase, the walls of which arc covered with coluinng of hieroglyphics, descends to a depth of forty feet, where it strikes a horizontal passage leading to an oblong chamber, in which was formerly a deep pit, which Belzoni filled. This pit protected the entrance to the royal chamber, which was also carefully walled up. In the grace and freedom of the draw ings, and the richness of their coloring, this tomb surpasses all others. The subjects represented are the victories of the rnouarch, while in the sepulchral chamber he is received into the presence of the gods. The limestone rock is covered with a fine coating of plaster, on which the figures were first drawn \rith red chalk, and afterwards carefully finished in colors The reds, yellows, greens and blues are very brilliant, but eeem to have been employed at random, the gods having faces sometimes of one color, sometimes of another. In the furthest Chamber, which was left unfinished, the subjects are only 118 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. sketched in red chalk. Some of them have the loose and un certain lines of a pupil's hand, over which one sees the bold and rapid corrections of the master. Many of the figures are remarkable for their strength and freedom of outline. I was greatly interested in a procession of men, representing the dif ferent nations of the earth. The physical peculiarities of the Persian, the Jew and the Ethiopian are therein as distinctly marked as at the present day. The blacks are perfect coun terparts of those I saw daily upon the Nile, and the noses of the Jews seem newly painted from originals in New York. So little diversity in the distinguishing features of the race, after the lapse of more than three thousand years, is a strong argument in favor of the new ethnological theory of the sepa rate origin of different races. Whatever objections may be urged against this theory, the fact that the races have not ma terially changed since the earliest historic times, is established by these Egyptian records, and we must either place the first appearance of Man upon the earth many thousands of years in advance of Bishop Usher's chronology, or adopt the conclusion of Morton and Agassiz. The burial-vault, where Belzoni found the alabaster sarco phagus of the monarch, is a noble hall, thirty feet long by nearly twenty in breadth and height, with four massive pillars form ing a corridor on one side. In addition to the light of our torches, the Arabs kindled a large bonfire in the centre, which brought out in strong relief the sepulchral figures on the ueiling. painted in white on a ground of dark Indigo hue. The pillars and walls of the vault glowed with the vivid variety of their colors, and the general effect was unspeakably rich and gor geous. This tomb has already fallen a prey to worse plunderers BRUCE'S TOMB. 119 than the Medes and Persians. Belzoni carried off the sarco phagus, Champollion cut away the splendid jambs and architrave of the entrance to the lower chambers, and Lepsius has finished by splitting the pillars and appropriating their beautiful paint ings for the Museum at Berlin. At one spot, where the latter has totally ruined a fine doorway, some indignant Frenchman has written in red chalk : " Heurtre commispar Lepsius." In all the tombs of Thebes, wherever you see the most flagrant and shameless spoliations, the guide says, " Lepsius." Whc can blame the Arabs for wantonly defacing these precious monuments, when such an example is set them, by the vanity of European antiquarians ? Bruce's Tomb, which extends for four hundred and twenty feet into the rock, is larger than Belzoni's, but not so fresh and brilliant. The main entrance slopes with a very gradual de scent, and has on each side a number of small chambers and niches, apparently for mummies. The illustrations in these chambers are somewhat defaced, but very curious, on account of the light which they throw upon the domestic life of the Ancient Egyptians. They represent the slaughtering of oxen, the preparation of fowls for the table, the kneading and baking of bread and cakes, as well as the implements and utensils of the kitchen. In other places the field laborers are employed in leading the water of the Nile into canals, cutting dourra, threshing and carrying the grain into magazines. One room is filled with furniture, and the row of chairs around the base of the walls would not be out of place in the most elegant modern drawing-room. The Illustrated Catalogue of the Lon don Exhibition contains few richer and more graceful patterns. In a chamber nearer the royal vault, two old, blind minstrel: 120 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. arc seen, playing the harp in the presence of the King, whence this is sometimes called the Harper's Tomb. The pillars ot the grand hall, like those of all the other tombs we visited, represent the monarch, after death, received into the presence of the gods stately figures, with a calm and serious aspect, and lips, which, like those of the Sphinx, seemed closed upon some awful mystery. The absurdity of the coloring docs not destroy this effect, and a blue-faced Isis, whose hard, black eye ball stares from a brilliant white socket, is not less impressive than the same figure, cut in sandstone or granite. The delicacy and precision of the hieroglyphics, sculptured in intaglio, filled me with astonishment. In the tomb of Amuuoph III., which I visited the next day, they resembled the ciphers engraved upon seals in their exquisite sharpness and regxilarity. Only the principal tombs, however, are thus beautified. In others the figures are cither simply painted, or apparently sunken in the plaster, while it was yet fresh, by prepared pat terns. The latter method accounts for the exact resemblance of long processions of figures, which would otherwise require a most marvellous skill on the part of the artist. In some un finished chambers I detected plainly the traces of these pat terns, where the outlines of the figures were blunt and the grain of the plaster bent, and not cut. The family likeness in the faces of the monarchs is also too striking, unfortunately, for us to accept them all as faithful portraits. They are all apparent ly of the same age, and their attributes do not materially differ This was probably a flattery on the part of the artists, or the effect of a royal vanity, which required to be portrayed in the freshness of youth and .the full vigor of body and mind. The first faces I learned to recognize were those of Remeses II., the supposed Sesostris, and Amunoph III. AN ANCIENT TOMB. 121 The tomb of Memnon, as it was called by the Romans, is the most elegant of all, in its proportions, and is as symmetri cal as a Grecian temple. On the walls of the entrance art several inscriptions of Greek tourists, who visited it in the era of the Ptolemies, and spent their time in carving their names, like Americans nowadays. The huge granite sarcophagus in which the monarch's mummy was deposited, is broken, ad are those of the other tombs, with a single exception. This is the tomb of Osirei L, the grandfather of Sesostris, and the oldest in the valley. I visited it by crawling through a hole barely large enough to admit my body, after which I slid on my back down a passage nearly choked with sand, to another hole, opening into the burial chamber. Here no impious hand had defaced the walls, but the figures were as perfect and the color ing as brilliant as when first executed. In the centre stood an immense sarcophagus, of a single block of red granite, and the massive lid, which had been thrown off, lay beside it. The dust in the bottom gave out that peculiar mummy odor percep tible in all the tombs, and in fact long 1 after one has left them, for the clothes become saturated with it. The guide, delighted with having dragged me into that chamber, buried deep in the dumb heart of the mountain, said not a word, and from the awful stillness of the place and the phantasmagoric gleam of the wonderful figures, on the walls, I could have imagined my- elf a neophyte, on the threshold of the Osirian mysteries. We rode to the Western Valley, a still deeper and wider glen, containing tombs of the kings of the foreign dynasty of Atin-Re. We entered the two principal ones, but found the paintings rude and insignificant. There are many lateral pas sages and chambers and in some places deep pits, along the 6 122 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA- edge of which we were obliged to craw.. In the last toinb a very long and steep staircase descends into the rock. As w were groping after the guide, I called to my friend to *ake care, as there was but a single step, after making a slip. The words were scarcely out of my mouth before I felt a tremendous thump, followed by a number of smaller ones, and found myself sitting in a heap of sand, at the bottom, some twenty or thirty feet below. Fortunately, I came off with but a few slight bruises. Returning to the temple. of Goorneh, we took a path over the plain, through fields of wheat, lupins and lentils, to the two colossi, which we had already seen from a distance. These immense sitting figures, fifty-three feet above the plain, which has buried their pedestals, overlook the site of vanished Thebes and assert the grandeur of which they and Karnak are the most striking remains. They were erected by Amunoph III., and though the faces are totally disfigured, the full, round, beautiful proportions of the colossal arms, shoulders and thighs do not belie the marvellous sweetness of the features which we still see in his tomb. Except the head of Antinous, I know of no ancient portrait so beautiful as Amunoph. The long and luxuriant hair, flowing in a hundred ringlets, the soft grace of the forehead, the mild serenity of the eye, the fine thin lines of the nostrils and the feminine tenderness of the full lips, triumph over the cramped rigidity of Egyptian sculpture, and charm you with the lightness and harmony of Greek art. In looking on that head, I cannot help thinking that the subject overpowered the artist, and led him to the threshold of a truer art. Amunoph, or Memnon, was a poet in soul, and it was meet that his statue should salute the rising sun with a sound like that of a harp-string. THE MUSIC OF MEMNON. 123 Modern research has wholly annihilated this beautiful fable. Mcmnon now sounds at all hours of the day, and at the com mand of all travellers who pay an Arab five piastres to climb into his lap. We engaged a vender of modern scarabei, who threw ofl his garments, hooked his fingers and toes into the cracks of the polished granite, and soon hailed us with " Sa laam ! " from the knee of the statue. There is a certain stone on Memnon's lap, which, when sharply struck, gives out a clear metallic ring. Behind it is a small square aperture, invisible from below, where one of the priests no doubt stationed him self to perform the daily miracle. Our Arab rapped on the arms and body of the statue, which had the usual dead sound of stone, and rendered the musical ring of the sun-smitten block more striking. An avenue of sphinxes once led from the colossi to a grand temple, the foundations of which we found about a quarter of a mile distant. On the way are the frag ments of two other colossi, one of black granite. The enor mous substructions of the temple and the pedestals of its col umns have been sufficiently excavated to show what a superb edifice has been lost to the world. A crowd of troublesome Arabs, thrusting upon our attention newly baken cinerary urns, newly roasted antique wheat, and images of all kinds fresh from the maker's hand, disturbed our quiet examination of the ruins, and in order to escape their importunities, we rode to the Memnonium. This edifice, the temple-palace of Remeses the Great, la supposed to be the Memnonium, described by Strabo. It is built on a gentle rise of land at the foot of the mountain, and looks eastward to the Nile and Luxor. The grand stone py lon which stands at the entrance of its former avenue of 124 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. sphinxes has been half levelled by the fury of the Persian con querors, and the colossal granite statue of Remeses, in the first court of the temple, now lies in enormous fragments around ite pedestal. Mere dimensions give no idea of this immense mass, the weight of which, when entire, was nearly nine hun dred tons. How poor and trifling appear the modern statues which we call colossal, when measured with this, one of whose toes is a yard in length; and how futile the appliances of modern art, when directed to its transportation for a distance of one hundred and fifty miles ! The architrave at each end of the court was upheld by four caryatides, thirty feet in height. Though much defaced, they are still standing, but are dwarfed by the mighty limbs of Remeses. It is difficult to account for the means by which the colossus was broken. There are no marks of any instruments which could have forced such a mass asunder, and the only plausible conjecture I have heard is, that the stone must have been subjected to an intense heat and afterwards to the action of water. The statue, in its sitting position, must have been nearly sixty feet in height, and is the largest in the world, though not so high as the rock-hewn monoliths of Aboo-Simbel. The Turks and Arabs have cut several mill-stones out of its head, without any apparent dimi nution of its size. The Memnonium differs from the other temples of Egypt in being almost faultless in its symmetry, even when measured by the strictest rules of art. I know of nothing so exquisite as the central colonnade of its grand hall a double row of pillars forty-five feet in height and twenty-three in circum ference, crowned with capitals resembling the bell-shaped bios- eoms of the lotus. One must see them to comprehend ho^( THE MEMNONIUM. 125 this simple form, whose expression is all sweetness and tender ness in the flower, softens and beautifies the solid majesty of the shaft. In spite of their colossal proportions, there is nothing massive or heavy in their aspect. The cup of the capital curves gently outward from the abacus on which the architrave rests, and seems the natural blossom of the co lumnar stem. On either side of this perfect colonnade are four rows of Osiride pillars, of smaller size, yet the variety of their form and proportions only enhances the harmony of the whole. This is one of those enigmas in architecture which puzzle one on his first acquaintance with Egyptian temples, and which he is often forced blindly to accept as new laws of art, because his feeling tells him they are true, and his reason cannot satisfac torily demonstrate that they are false. We waited till the yellow rays of sunset fell on the capi tals of the Memnonium, and they seemed, like the lotus flowers to exhale a vapory light, before we rode home. All night we wandered in dreams through kingly vaults, with starry ceilings and illuminated walls ; but on looking out of our windows at dawn, we saw the red saddle-cloths of our horses against the dark background of the palm grove, as they came down to the boat. No second nap was possible, after such a sight, and many minutes had not elapsed before we were tasting the cool morning air in the delight of a race up and down the shore. Our old guide, however, was on his donkey betimes, and called us off to our duty. We passed Goorneh, and ascended the eastern face of the mountain to the tombs of the priests and private citizens of Thebes. For miles along the mountain side, one sees nothing but heaps of sand and rubbish, with nere and there an Arab hut, built against the face of a tomb, 126 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. whose chambers serve as pigeon houses, and stalls for asses The earth is filled with fragments of mummies, and the ban dages in which they were wrapped ; for even the sanctity of death itself, is here neither respected by the Arabs nor the Europeans whom they imitate. I cannot conceive the passion which some travellers have, of carrying away withered hands and fleshless legs, and disfiguring the abodes of the dead with their insignificant names. I should as soon think of carving my initials on the back of a live Arab, as on these venerable monuments. The first tomb we entered almost cured us of the desire to visit another. It was that called the Assasseef, built by a wealthy priest, and it is the largest in Thebes. Its outer court measures one hundred and three by seventy-six feet, and its passages extend between eight and nine hundred feet into the mountain. We groped our way between walls as black as ink, through long, labyrinthine suites of chambers, breathing a deathlike and oppressive odor. The stairways seemed to lead into the bowels of the earth, and on either hand yawned pits of uncertain depth. As we advanced, the ghostly vaults rumbled with a sound like thunder, and hundreds of noisome bats, scared by the light, dashed against the walls and dropped at our feet. We endured this for a little while, but on reach ing the entrance to some darker and deeper mystery, were so surrounded by the animals, who struck their filthy wings against our faces, that not for ten kings' tombs would we have gone a step further. My friend was on the point of vowing never to set his foot in another tomb, but I persuaded him tc wait until we had seen that of Amunoph. I followed the guide, who enticed me by flattering promises into a great many VrfiDEENET ABOU THE PYLON. 127 i, ard when he was tired with crawling in tht dust. ee*u rns ?1 oai water-carriers in advance, who dragged me in and wit by the aeel.\ The temple of Medeomt Abou is almost concealed by the ruins of a Coptic village, among which it stands, and by which it is partially buried. The oul^r court, pylon and main hall of the smaller temple rise &bcvo vhe mounds and overlook the plain of Thebes, but scarcely satisfy the expectation of the traveller, as he approaches. You fiist enter an inclosure sur rounded by a low stoue wall, and standing in advance of the pylon. The rear wall, facing the entrance, contains two sin gle pillars, with bell-shaped capitals, which rise above it and stand like guards before the doorway of the pylon. Here was another enigma for us. Who among modem architects would dare to plant two single pillars before a pyramidal gateway of solid masonry, and then inclose them in a plain wall, rising to half their height ? Yet here the symmetry of the shafts is not injured by the wall in which they stand, nor oppressed by the ponderous bulk of the pylon. On the contrary, the light col umns and spreading capitals, like a tuft of wild roses hanging from the crevice of a rock, brighten the rude strength of the masses of stone with a gleam of singular loveliness. What would otherwise only impress you by its size, now endears it self to you by its beauty Is this the effect of chance, or the result of a finer art than that which flourishes in our day ? I will not pretend to determine, but I must confess that Egypt, vn whose ruins I had expected to find only a sort of barbaric grandeur, has given me a new insight into that vital Beauty which is the soul of true Art. We devoted little time to the ruined court and sanctuaries 128 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. which follow the pylon, and to the lodges of the main temple standing beside them like watch-towers, three stories in height The majestic pylon of the great temple of Kemeses III. rose behind them, out of heaps of pottery and unburnt bricks^ and the colossal figure of the monarch in his car, borne by two horses into the midst of the routed enemy, attracted us from a distance. We followed the exterior wall of the temple, for its whole length of more than six hundred feet, reading the sculp tured history of his conquests. The entire outer wall of the temple presents a series of gigantic cartoons, cut in the blocks of sandstone, of which it is built. Remeses is always the cen tral figure, distinguished from subjects and foes no less by his superior stature than by the royal emblems which accompany him. Here we see heralds sounding the trumpet in advance of his car, while his troops pass in review before him ; there, with a lion walking by his side, he sets out on his work of conquest. His soldiers storm a town, and we see them climbing the vail with ladders, while a desperate hand-to-hand conflict is /.oing on below. In another place, he has alighted from his chariot and stands with his foot on the neck of a slaughtered king. Again, his vessels attack a hostile navy on the sea. One of the foreign craft becomes entangled and is capsized, jet while his spearmen hurl their weapons among the dismayed enemy, the sailors rescue those who are struggling in the flood. After we have passed through these stiange and stirring pictures, we find the monarch reposing on his throne, while hip soldiers de posit before him the hands of the slaughtered, and his scribes present to him lists of their numbers, and his generals lead tc him long processions of fettered captives. Again, he is repre sented as offering a group of subject kings to Amun, the The 1 THE INNER COURT. 12S ban Jupiter, who says to him : " Go, my cherished and chosen make war on foreign nations, besiege their forts and carry ofi their people to live as captives." On the front wall, he holds Lii his grasp the hands of a dozen monarchs, while with the oilier hand he raises his sword to destroy them. Their faces express the very extreme of grief and misery, but he is cold acd calm as Fate itself. We slid down the piles of sand and entered by a side-door into the grand hall of the temple. Here, as at Dendera, a sur prise awaited us. We stood on the pavement of a magnificent court, about one hundred and thirty feet square, around which ran a colonnade of pillars, eight feet square and forty feet high. On the western side is an inner row of circular columns, twen ty-four feet in circumference, with capitals representing the papyrus blossom. The entire court, with its walls, pillars and doorways, is covered with splendid sculptures and traces of paint, and the ceiling is blue as the noonday sky, and studded with stars. Against each of the square columns facing the court once stood a colossal caryatid, upholding the architrave of another colonnade of granite shafts, nearly all of which have been thrown from their bases and lie shivered on the pavement. This court opens towards the pylon into another of similar dimensions, but buried almost to the capitals of its columns in heaps of rubbish. The character of the temple is totally differ ent from that of every other in Egypt. Its height is small in proportion to its great extent, and it therefore loses the airy lightness of the Memnonium and the impressive grandeur of Dendera. Its expression is that of a massive magnificence, if [ may use such a doubtful compound : no single epithet sufF sea to describe it. 6* 80 JOUKNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. With Medeenet Abou finished our survey of the western division of Thebes two long days of such experience as the contemplation of a lifetime cannot exhaust. At sunset we took advantage of the wind, parted from our grooms and water carriers, who wished to accompany me to Khartoum, and cross ed the Nile to Luxor. THE DANCINO GIRLS OF EG7PK. 18\ CHAPTER X. THE ALMEHS, LUXOR AND KAKNAK. The Dancing Girb of Egypt A Night Scene In Luxor The Orange-Blossom and the Apple-Blossom The Beautiful Bemba The Dance Performance of the Apple Blossom- -The Temple of Luxor A Mohammedan School Gallop to Karnak View ol the Ruins The Great Hall of Pillars Bedouin Diversions A Night Elde Karnak under the Full Moon Farewell to Thebes. Two days in the tombs of the Kings and the temples of the Remesides and the Osirei exhausted us more thoroughly than a week of hard labor. In addition to the natural and exciting emotion, with which we contemplated those remains, and which we would not have repressed, if we could, we puzzled ourselves with the secrets of Egyptian architecture and the mysteries of Egyptian faith. Those pregnant days were followed by sleep less nights, and we reached Luxor at sunset with a certain dread of the morrow. Our mental nerves were too tensely strung, and we felt severely the want of some relaxation of an opposite character. The course which we adopted to freshen our minds for Karnak may strike a novice as singular, but it was most effectual, and can be explained on the truest philo sophical principles. In the afternoon Achmet had informed us that two of the celebrated Almehs. or dancing-women of the East, who had 132 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. been banished to Esneh, were in Luxor, and recommended UB to witness their performance. This was a welcome proposition, and the matter was soon arranged. Our rais procured a large room, had it cleared, engaged the performers and musicians, and took the cushions of our cabin to make us a stately scat If one should engage Castle Garden, and hire a company o( ballet dancers to perform for his special amusement, the fact would shake the pillars of New-York society, and as it was, I can think of some very good friends who will condemn our proceeding as indiscreet, and unworthy the serious aims of travel As I have no apology to make to myself, I need make none to them, except to suggest that the first end of travel is instruction, and that the traveller is fully justified in pursuing this end, so long as he neither injures himself nor others. About eight o'clock, accompanied by Achmet, our Theban guide, the rais of our vessel, and our favorite sailor, Ali, we set out for the rendezvous. Ali was the most gentleman-like Fellah I ever saw. His appearance was always neat and orderly, but on this particular evening his white turban was sprucer than ever, and his blue mantle hung as gracefully on his shoulders aa the cloak of a Spanish grandee. He followed behind us, re joicingly bearing the shebooks, as we walked under the moonlit columns of Luxor. We passed around the corner of the temple and ascended a flight of stone steps, to one of the upper cham bers, It was a room about thirty feet long by fifteen wide, with a roof of palm-logs, covered with thatch. The floor rest ed on the ceiling of the ancient sanctuary. Our boat-lanterns of oiled paper were already suspended from the roof, and a few candles, stuck in empty bottles, completed the illumination. We were politely received and conducted to the divan, A NIGHT-SCENE IN LUTCOR. 133 formed impromptu of a large cafass, or hen-coop, covered with a carpet and cushions. We seated ourselves upon it, with lega crossed Moslem-wise, while our attendants ranged themselves on the floor on the left, and All stood on the right, ready to replenish the pipes. Opposite to us sat the two Almehs, with four attendant dancers, and three female singers, and beside them the music, consisting of two drums, a tambourine, and a squeaking Arab violin. Our crew, shining in white turbans, were ranged near the door, with a number of invited guests, so that the whole company amounted to upwards of forty per sons. On our entrance the Almehs rose, came forward and greeted us, touching our hands to the lips and forehead. They then sat down, drank each a small glass of arakee, and while the drum thumped and the violin drawled a monotonous pre lude to the dance, we had leisure to scrutinize their dress and features. The two famed danseuses bore Arabic names, which were translated to us as the Orange-Blossom and the Apple-Blos som. The first was of medium size, with an olive complexion, and regular, though not handsome features. She wore a white dress, fitting like a vest from the shoulders to the hips, with short, flowing sleeves, under which a fine blue gauze, confined at the wrist with bracelets, hung like a mist about her arms. Her head-dress was a small red cap, with a coronet of gold coins, under which her black hair escaped in two shining braids. The Apple-Blossom, who could not have been more than fifteen years old, was small and slightly formed, dark-skinned, and might have been called beautiful, but for a defect in one of her iyes. Her dress was of dark crimson silk, with trowsers and armlets of white gauze, and a red cap, so covered with coin? 134 JOURNEV TO OKNTKAL AFRICA. that it nearly resembled a helmet of golden scales, with a fringe falling on each side of her face. Three of the other assistants were dressed in white, with shawls of brilliant pat terns bound around the waist. The fourth was a Nubian slave, named Zakhfara, whose shining black face looked wonderfully picturesque under the scarlet mantle which enveloped it like a turban, and fell in long folds almost to her feet. Among the singers was one named Bemba, who was almost the only really beautiful Egyptian woman I ever saw. Her features were large, but perfectly regular ; and her long, thick, silky hair hung loose nearly to her shoulders before its gleaming mass was gathered into braids. Her teeth were even, and white as pearls, and the lids of her large black eyes were stained with kohl, which gave them a languishing, melancholy expression. She was a most consummate actress ; for she no sooner saw that we noticed her face than she assumed the most indifferent air in the world and did not look at us again. But during the whole evening every movement was studied. The shawl was disposed in more graceful folds about her head ; the hair was tossed back from her shoulders ; the hand, tinged with henna, held the jasmine tube of her pipe in a hundred different atti tudes, and only on leaving did she lift her eyes as if first aware of our presence and wish us " buona sera " the only Italian words she knew with the most musical accent of which an Arab voice is capable. Meanwhile, the voices of the women mingled with the shrill, barbaric tones of the violin, and the prelude passed into a measured song of long, unvarying cadences, which the drums and tambourine accompanied with rapid beats. The range- Blossom and one of her companions took the floor, after drink- THE DANCE. 135 ing another glass of arakee and tigatcning the shawls around their hips The dance commenced with a slow movement, both hands being lifted above the head, while the jingling bits of metal on their shawls and two miniature cymbals of brass, fastened to the thumb and middle finger, kept time to the mu sic. As the dancers became animated, their motions were more rapid and violent, and the measure was marked, not in pirouettes and flying bounds, as on the boards of Frank thea tres, but by a most wonderful command over the muscles of the chest and limbs. Their frames vibrated with the musio like the strings of the violin, and as the song grew wild and stormy towards its close, the movements, had they not accord ed with it, would have resembled those of a person seized with some violent nervous spasm. After this had continued* for an incredible length of time, and I expected to see the Alinehs fall exhausted to the earth, the music ceased, and they stood before us calm and cold, with their breathing not perceptibly hurried. The dance had a second part, of very different char acter. Still with their lifted hands striking the little cym bals, they marked a circle of springing bounds, in which their figures occasionally reminded me of the dancing nymphs of Greek sculpture. The instant before touching the floor, as they hung in the air with the head bent forward, one foot thrown behind, and both arms extended above the head, they were drawn OP. the background of the dark hall, like forma taken from the frieze of a temple to Bacchus or Pan. Eastern politeness did not require us to cry " brava ! " or " encore ! " so we merely handed our pipes to Ali, to be filled a second time. Old Achmet Gourgar, our Theban guide, aowever, was so enraptured that he several times ejaculated ; 130 JOURNEY ro CENTR. T . AFRICA. " ta'ib keteer ! " (very good indeed !) and Rais Hassan's dark face beamed all over with delight. The circle of white tur- Daned heads in the rear looked on complacently, and our guard, who stood in the moonlight before the open door, almost forgot his duty in his enjoyment of the spectacle. I shall never for get the wild, fantastic picture we saw that night in the ruins of Luxor. The Apple-Blossom, who followed in a dance with one named Bakhita, pleased me far better. She added a thousand graceful embellishments to the monotonous soul of the music ; and her dance, if barbaric, was as poetic as her native palm- tree. She was lithe as a serpent, and agile as a young pan ther, and some of her movements were most extraordinary, in the nerVe and daring required to execute them, and to intro duce them without neglecting the rhythm of the dance. More than once she sank slowly back, bending her knees forward, till her head and shoulders touched the floor, and then, quick as a flash, shot flying into the air, her foot alighting in exact time with the thump of the drum. She had the power of moving her body from side to side, so that it curved like a snake from the hips to the shoulders, and once I thought that, like Lamia, she was about to resume her ancient shape, and slip out of sight through some hole in the ruined walls. One of the dances was a sort of pantomime, which she and Bakhita accom panied with their voices clear, shrill, ringing tones, which never faltered for a moment, or varied a hair's breadth from the melody, while every muscle was agitated with the exer tion of her movements. The song was pervaded with a Btrange, passionate tremolo, unlike any thing I ever heard be fore. The burden was : " I am alone ; my family and mj THE APPJ-E-3LOSSOM. 13< friends are all dead ; the plague has destroyed them. Come, then, to me, and be my beloved, for I have no other to lov me." Her gestures exhibited a singular mixture of the aban donment of grief, and the longing of love. While her body swayed to and fro with the wild, sad rhythm of 'the words, she raised both arms before her till the long sleeves fell back and covered her face : then opening them in wistful entreaty, sang the last line of the chorus, and bringing her hands to her fore head, relapsed into grief again. Apparently the prayer is an swered, for the concluding movement expressed a delirious joy. We listened to the music and looked on the dances for more than two hours, but at length the twanging of the violin and the never-ending drum-thumps began to set our teeth on edge, and we unfolded our cramped legs and got down from the divan. The lantern was unswung, the candle-ends taken from the empty bottles, the Almehs received their fees and went off rejoicing, and we left the chambers of Luxor to the night-wind and the moon. The guide of the Eastern bank, a wiry young Bedouin, was in attendance next morning, and a crowd of horses and asses awaited us on the shore. I chose a brown mare, with a small, slender head and keen eye, and soon accustomed myself to the Turkish saddle and broad shovel-stirrups. The temple of Luxor is imbedded in the modern village, and only the front of the pylon, facing towards Karnak, and part of the grand central colonnade, is free from its vile excrescences. For this reason its effect is less agreeable than that of the Memnonium, although of much grander proportions. Its plan is easily traced, nevertheless, and having been built by only two monarchs, Reme&es the Great and Amunoph III. or, to 38 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. use their more familiar titles, Sesostris and Memnon it is less bewildering, in a historical point of view, to the unstudied tourist, than most of the other temples of Egypt. The sanc tuary, which stands nearest the Nile, is still protected by the ancient stone quay, though the river has made rapid advances, and threatens finally to undermine Luxor as it has already un dermined the temples of Anteeopolis and Antinoe. I rode into what were once the sacred chambers, but the pillars and sculp tures were covered with filth, and the Arabs had built in, around and upon them, like the clay nests of the cliff-sparrow. The peristyle of majestic Osiride pillars, in front of the por tico, as well as the portico itself, are buried to half their depth, and so surrounded by hovels, that to get an idea of their ar rangement you must make the tour of a number of hen-houses and asses' stalls. The pillars are now employed as drying- posts for the buffalo dung which the Arabs use as fuel. Proceeding towards the entrance, the next court, which ia tolerably free from incumbrances, contains a colonnade of two rows of lotus-crowned columns, twenty-eight feet in circum ference. They still uphold their architraves of giant blocks of sandstone, and rising high above the miserable dwellings of the village, are visible from every part of the plain of Thebes. The English Vice-Consul, Mustapha Agha, occupies a house between two of these pillars. We returned the visit he had paid us on our arrival, and were regaled with the everlasting coffee and shebook, than which there is no more grateful re freshment. He gave us the agreeable news that Mr. Murray was endeavoring to persuade the Pasha to have Karnak cleared of its rubbish and preserved from further spoliation. If I pos sessed despotic power and I then wished it for the first time AN EGYPTIAN SCHOOL. 139 I should certainly make despotic use of it, in tearing dowu Borne dozens of villages and setting some thousands of Copts and Fellahs at work in exhuming what their ancestors havti mutilated and buried. The world cannot spare these remains. Tear down Roman ruins if you will ; level Cyclopean walls build bridges with the stones of Gothic abbeys and feudal for- tresses ; but lay no hand on the glory and grandeur of Egypt In order to ascend the great pylon of the temple, we were obliged to pass through a school, in which thirty or forty little Luxorians were conning their scraps of the Koran. They im mediately surrounded us, holding up their tin slates, scribbled with Arabic characters, for our inspection, and demanded back- sheesh for their proficiency The gray-bearded pedagogue tried to quiet them, but could not prevent several from following us. The victories of Remeses are sculptured on the face of the towers of the pylon, but his colossi, solid figures of granite, which sit on either side of the entrance, have been much de faced. The lonely obelisk, which stands a little in advance, on the left hand, is more perfect than its Parisian mate. From this stately entrance, an avenue of colossal sphinxes once ex tended to the Ptolemaic pylon of Karnak, a distance of a mile and a half. The sphinxes have disappeared, but the modern Arab road leads over its site, through fields of waste grass. And now we galloped forward, through a long procession of camels, donkeys, and Desert Arabs armed with spears towards Karnak, the greatest ruin in the world, the crowning triumph of Egyptian power and Egyptian art. Except a broken stone here and there protruding through the soil, the plain is as desolate as if it had never been conscious of a human dwelling, and only on reaching the vicinity of the mud 140 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. hamlet of Karnak, can the traveller realize that he is in Thebes. Here the camel-path drops into a broad excavated avenue, lined with fragments of sphinxes and shaded by starveling acacias. As you advance, the sphinxes are better preserved and remain seated on their pedestals, but they have all been decapitated. Though of colossal proportions, they are seated so close to each other, that it must have required nearly two thousand to form the double row to Luxor. The avenue final ly reaches a single pylon, of majestic proportions, built by one of the Ptolemies, and covered with profuse hieroglyphics. Passing through this, the sphinxes lead you to another pylon, followed by a pillared court and a temple built by the later Remesides. This, I thought, while my friend was measuring the girth of the pillars, is a good beginning for Karnak, but it is certainly much less than I expect. " Tdal minliennee! '" (come this way !) called the guide, as if reading my mind, and led me up the Ueaps of rubbish to the roof and pointed to the north. Ah, there was Karnak ! Had I been blind up to this time, ;>r had the earth suddenly heaved out of her breast the remains of the glorious temple ? From all parts of the plain of Thebes I had seen it in the distance a huge propylon, a shattered portico, and an obelisk, rising above the palms. Whence this wilderness of ruins, spreading so far as to seem a city rather than a temple pylon after pylon, tumbling into enormous cubes of stone, long colonnades, supporting fragments of Titan ic roofs, obelisks of red granite, and endless walls and avenues, branching out to isolated portals ? Yet they stood as silently bmid the accumulated rubbish of nearly four thousand years and the sunshine threw its yellow lustre as serenely over the KARNAK. 141 despoiled sanctuaries, as if it had never been otherwise, since the world began. Figures are of no use, in describing a place like this, but since I must use them, I may say that the length of the ruins before us, from west to east, was twelve hundred feet, and that the total circumference of Karnak, including its numerous pyla&, or gateways, is a mile and a half. We mounted and rode with fast-beating hearts to the west ern or main entrance, facing the Nile. The two towers of the propylon pyramidal masses of solid stone are three hundred and twenty-nine feet in length, and the one which is least ruined, is nearly one hundred feet in height. On each side of the sculp tured portal connecting them, is a tablet left by the French army, recording the geographical position of the principal Egyptian temples. We passed through and entered an open court, more than three hundred feet square, with a corridor of immense pillars on each side, connecting it with the towers of a second pylon, nearly as gigantic as the first. A colonnade of lofty shafts, leading through the centre of the court, once united the two entrances, but they have all been hurled down and lay as they fell, in long lines of disjointed blocks, except one, which holds its solitary lotus-bell against the sky. Two mutilated colossi of red granite still guard the doorway, whose lintel-stones are forty feet in length. Climbing over the huge fragments which have fallen from above and almost blocked up the passage, we looked down into the grand hall of the temple. I knew the dimensions of this hall, beforehand ; I knew the number and size of the pillars, but I was no more prepared for the reality than those will be, who may read this account of it and afterwards visit Karnak for themselves. It is the great good-luck of travel that many things must be seen to be knowa 142 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. Nothing could have compensated for the loss of that over whelming confusion of awe, astonishment, and delight, which came upon me like a flood. I looked down an avenue of twelve pillars six on each side each of which was thirty-six feet in circumference and nearly eighty feet in height. Crushing as were these ponderous masses of sculptured stone, the spreading bell of the lotus-blossoms which crowned them, clothed them with an atmosphere of lightness and grace. In front, over the top of another pile of colossal blocks, two obelisks rose sharp and clear, with every emblem legible on their polished sides, On each side of the main aisle are seven other rows of columns one hundred and twenty-two, in all each of which is about fifty feet high and twenty-seven in circumference. They have the Osiride form, without capitals, and do not range with the central shafts. In the efforts of the conquerors to overthrow them, two have been hurled from their places and thrown against the neighboring ones, where they still lean, as if weary with holding up the roof of massive sandstone. I walked alone through this hall, trying to bear the weight of its unutterable majesty and beauty. That I had been so oppressed by Den- dera, seemed a weakness which I was resolved to conquer, and I finally succeeded in looking on Karnak with a calmness more commensurate with its sublime repose but not by daylight. My ride back to Luxor, towards evening, was the nexl best thing after Karuak. The little animal I rode had become excited by jumping over stones and sliding down sand-heaps our guide began to show his Bedouin blood by dashing at ful. gallop toward the pylons and reining in his horse at a bound ; and, to conclude, I became infected with a lawless spirit that could not easily be laid. The guide's eyes sparkled when 1 BEDOUIN DIVERSIONS. 14?. proposed a race. We left my friend and the water-cairiers, bounded across the avenue of sphinxes, and took a smooth path leading toward the Desert. My mare needed but a word and a jog of the iron stirrup. Away we flew, our animals stretch ing themselves for a long heat, crasning the dry dourra-stalks, clearing the water-ditches, and scattering on all sides the Arab laborers we met. After a glorious gallop of two or three miles my antagonist was fairly distanced ; but one race would not content him, so we had a second, and finally a third, on the beach of Luxor. The horses belonged to him, and it was a matter of indifference which was the swiftest ; he raced mere ly for the delight of it, and so did I. The same gallant mare was ready for me at night. It was precisely full moon, and I had determined on visiting Karnak again before leaving. There was no one but the guide and I, he armed with his long spear, and I with my pistols in my belt. There was a wan haze in the air, and a pale halo around the moon, on each side of which appeared two faint mock- moons. It was a ghostly light, and the fresh north-wind, coming up the Nile, rustled solemnly in the palm-trees. We trotted silently to Karnak, and leaped our horses over the frag ments until we reached the foot of the first obelisk. Here we dismounted and entered the grand hall of pillars. There was no sound in all the temple, and the guide, who seemed to compre hend my wish, moved behind me as softly as a shadow, and spoke not a word. It needs this illumination to comprehend Karnak. The unsightly rubbish has disappeared : the rents in the roof are atoned for by the moonlight they admit ; the frag ments shivered from the lips of the mighty capitals are only the crumpled edges of the flower 5 a maze of shadows hides the 144 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. desolation of the courts, but every pillar and obelisk, pylon and propylon is glorified by the moonlight. The soul of Karnak is soothed and tranquillized. Its halls look upon you no longer with an aspect of pain and humiliation. Every stone seems to say : " I am not fallen, for I have defied the ages. I am a part of that grandeur which has never seen its peer, and I shall eiiuure for ever, for the world has need of me." [ climbed to the roof, and sat looking down into the hushed and awful colonnades, till I was thoroughly penetrated with their august and sublime expression. I should probably have remained all night, an amateur colossus, with my hands on my knees, had not the silence been disturbed by two arri vals of romantic tourists an Englishman and two Frenchmen. We exchanged salutations, and I mounted the restless mare again, touched her side with the stirrup, and sped back to Luxor. The guide galloped beside me, occasionally hurling his spear into the air and catching it as it fell, delighted with my readiness to indulge his desert whims. I found the cap tain and sailors all ready and my friend smoking his pipe on dock. In half an hour we had left Thebes. TUB TEMPLE OF HEKMONTI8. CHAPTEE XI. ft. ,m THEBES TO THE NUBIAN FRONTIER. Tte Temple of Hermontis Esneh and its Temple The Governor El Kab by Torch- right -The Temple of Edfou The Quarries of Djebel Silsileh Ombos Approach to Nubia Change In the Scenery and Inhabitants A Mirage Arrival at Assouan. Ouu journey from Thebes to Assouan occupied six days, in cluding a halt of twenty-four hours at Esneh. We left Luxor on the night of December 8th, but the westward curve of the Nile brought us in opposition with the wind, and the next day at noon we had only reached Erment, the ancient Hermontis, in sight of the three peaks of the Theban hills. We left our men to tug the boat along shore, and wandered off to the mounds of the old city, still graced with a small temple, or lying-in house of the goddess Reto, who is here represented aa giving birth to the god Hor-pire. The sculptures in the dark chambers, now used as stalls for asses, were evidently intend ed only for the priesthood of the temple, and are not repeated, as are those of other temples, in the halls open to the public Notwithstanding the great license which the Egyptian faith assumed, its symbols are, in general, scrupulously guarded from all low and unworthy forms of representation. The group of pillars iu the cuter court charmed us by the 7 146 JOURKKY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. richness and variety of their designs. No two capitals are of similar pattern, while in their combinations of the papyrus, the lotus and the palm-leaf, they harmonize one with another and as a whole. The abacus, between the capital and the archi trave, is so high as almost to resemble a second shaft. It Karnak and the Memnonium it is narrow, and lifts the pon derous beam just enough to prevent its oppressing the lightness of the capital I was so delighted with the pillars of Hermon- tis that I scarcely knew whether to call this peculiarity a grace or a defect. I have never seen it employed in modern archi tecture, and judge therefore that it has either been condemned by our rules or that our architects have not the skill and dar ing of the Egyptians. We reached Esneh the same night, but were obliged to re main all the next day in order to allow our sailors to bake their bread. We employed the time in visiting the temple, the only remnant of the ancient Latopolis, and the palace of Abbas Pasha, on the bank of the Nile. The portico of the temple, half buried in rubbish, like that of Dendera, which it resembles in design, is exceedingly beautiful. Each of its twenty-four columns is crowned with a different capital, so chaste and elegant in their execution that it is impossible to give any one the preference. The designs are mostly copied from the doum-pahn, the date-palm, and the lotus, but the cane, the vine, and various water-plants are also introduced. The building dates from the time of the Ptolemies, and its sculptures are uninteresting. We devoted all our time to the study of the capitals, a labyrinth of beauty, in which we were soon entangled. The Governor of Esneh, Ali Effendi, a most friendly and agreeable Arab, accompanied us through the tern- EL KAB BY TORCHLIGHT. 1 pie, and pointed out all the fishes, birds and crocodiles ho could find. To him they were evidently the most interesting things in it. He asked me how old the building was, and b> whom it had been erected. On leaving, we accepted his invi tation to partake of coffee and pipes. The visit took place in due form, with many grave salutations, which we conscien tiously imitated. Achmet had returned to our boat, and my small stock of Arabic was soon exhausted, but we managed to exchange all the necessary common-places. The day of leaving Esneh, we reached El Kab, the ancient Eleuthyas, whose rock-tombs are among the most curious in Egypt. We landed at twilight, provided with candles, and made our way through fields of wiry Tialfeh grass, and through a breach in the brick wall of the ancient town, to the Arabian Desert. It was already dark, but our guide, armed with hia long spear, stalked vigorously forward, and brought us safely up the mountain path to the entrances of the sepulchres. There are a large number of these, but only two are worth visiting, on account of the light which they throw on the social life of the Egyptians. The owner of the tomb and his wife a red man and a yellow woman are here seen, receiving the delighted guests. Seats are given them, and each is presented with an aromatic flower, while the servants in the kitchen hasten to prepare savory dishes. In other compartments, all the most minute processes of agriculture are represented with wonderful fidelity. So little change has taken place in three thousand years, that they would answer, with scarcely a cor rection, as illustrations of the Fellah agriculture of Modem Egypt. The next morning we walked ahead to the temple of Edfou, 145 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. abootmg a few brace of fat partridges by the way, and scaring two large jackals from their lairs in the thick grass. The superb pylon of the temple rose above the earthy mounds of Apollinopolis like a double-truncated pyramid. It is in an entire state of preservation, with all its internal chambers, pas sages and stairways. The exterior is sculptured with colossal figures of the gods, thirty feet in height, and from the base of the portal to the scroll-like cornice of the pylon, is more than a hundred feet. Through the door we entered a large open court, surrounded by a colonnade. The grand portico of the temple, buried nearly to the tops of its pillars, faced us, and we could only judge, from the designs of the capitals and the girth of the shaft, the imposing effect which it must have pro duced on those who entered the court. The interior is totally filled with rubbish, and a whole village of Arab huts stands on the roof. A strong wind carried us, before sunset, to the quarries of Djebel Silsileh, the " Mountain of the Chain," where the Nile is compressed between two rugged sandstone hills. The river is not more than three hundred yards broad, and the approach to this rocky gateway, after so many weeks of level alluvial plain, is very striking. Here are the sandstone quarries whence the huge blocks were cut, to build the temples and shape the colossi of Thebes. They lie on the eastern bank, close to the river, and the ways down which the stones were slid to the vessels that received them, are still to be seen. The stone is of a pale reddish-brown color, and a very fine and clear grain. It appears to have been divided into squares of the proper size, and cut from above downward. The shape of many of the cuormous blocks may be easily traced. In one place the rod THE RUINS OF OMBOS. 149 has been roughly hewn into a sort of temple, supported by pil lars thirty feet square, and with an entrance as grand and rude as a work of the Titans. In the morning we awoke in the shadow of Ombos, which stands on a hill overlooking the Nile, into which its temple to Isis has fallen. Little now remains of the great temple to Savak, the crocodile-headed god, the deity of Ombos, but its double portico, supported by thirteen pillars, buried nearly waist-deep in the sands. The aspect of these remains, seated on the lonely promontory commanding the course of the river and the harvest-land of the opposite shore, while the stealthy Desert approaches it from behind, and year by year heaps the sand higher against the shattered sanctuary, is sadly touching. We lingered and lingered around its columns, loth to leave the ruined grace which a very few years will obliterate. Two such foes as the Nile and the Desert make rapid progress, where no human hand is interposed to stay them. As we sailed away, a large crocodile, perhaps Savak himself, lay motionless on a sand-bank with his long snout raised in the air. We were two days in sailing from Ombos to Assouan, owing to a dead calm, the first in two weeks. The nights were very cool, and the mid-day temperature not too warm for com fort. One morning my thermometer stood at 40 ; the Arabs complained bitterly of the cold, and, wrapped in their woolen mantles, crawled about the deck as languidly as benumbed flies. At noon the mercury did not often rise above 75 in the shade As we approach Nubia, the scenery of the river undergoes a complete change. The rugged hills of black sand stone and granite usurp the place of the fields, and leave but a narrow strip of cultivable land on either side. The Arabs are 150 JOURNEY TC CENTRAL AFRICA. darker and show the blood of the desert tribes in their features They are, however, exceedingly friendly. The day before reaching Assouan, we walked ahead of our boat and were obliged to wait two or three hours. We had a retinue of boys whc pummelled one another as to which should pick up the pigeons we shot. The successful one came bounding back with a face sparkling with delight, and kissed the bird and touched it to his forehead as he gave it to us. As we were resting under the palm-trees, my friend regretted that we had not brought our shebooks along with us. One of the Arabs, guess ing his wish from the word " shebook," instantly ran off and scoured the dourra-fields until he found a laborer who owned a pipe. He brought the man back, with the sickle in his hand and a corn-stalk pipe of very indifferent tobacco, which he gravely presented to my friend. Before returning on board we saw a wonderful mirage. Two small lakes of blue water, glit tering in the sun, lay spread in the yellow sands, apparently not more than a mile distant. There was not the least sign of vapor in the air, and as we were quite unacquainted with the appearance of the mirage, we decided that the lakes were Nile- water, left from the inundation. I pointed to them and asked the Arabs : " Is that water ? " " No, no ! " they all exclaimed : " that is no water that is a bahr Shaytan ! " (a river of the Devil). The white tomb of a Moslem saint, sparkling in the noon day sun, on the summit of a hill overlooking the Nile, finally announced our arrival at the Nubian frontier. We now beheld the palms of Assouan and the granite cliffs beyond which we had been so impatient to reach, a few hours before with regret, almost with dread. This was our point of separation. THK NUBIAN FRONTIER. 151 My pathway was through those desolate hills, into the heart of Nubia, into the Desert, and the strange countries beyond, where so few had been before me. The vestibule was passed : Egypt lay behind me. The long landscape of the Nile was but the dromos to that temple of African life, whose adytum was still far in advance, deep in the fiery tropical silence of Ethiopia. While my blood thrilled at the prospect, and the thirst of adventure and discovery inspired me as the wind of the Desert inspires the Arab charger, I could not part with in difference from the man who had shared with me the first au gust impression, the sublime fascination of Egypt. Nor was the prospect of a solitary voyage back to Cairo at all cheering to him. Achmet would of course accompany me, and the cook, Salame, who knew barely twenty words of French and Italian, must perforce act as dragoman. My friend was therefore com pletely at the mercy of the captain and crew, and saw nothing but annoyance and embarrassment before him. I had much trust in Rais Hassan's honesty and good faith, and was glad to learn, several months afterwards, that his conduct bad con firmed it. JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFIUCA. CHAPTER XII PHIL2E AND THE CATARACT. An Official Visit Acbmet's Dexterity The Island of Elephantine Nubian Ct JIdren Trip to Philse Linant Bey The Island of Philse Sculptures The Negro Bace Breakfast in a Ptolemaic Temple The Island of Biggeh Backsheesh The Cataract The Granite Quarries of Assouan The Travellers separate. " Where Nile reflects the endless length Of dark-red colonnades." MACAULAT. WE had scarcely moored our vessel to the beach at Assou an, before a messenger of the Governor arrived to ask if there was an American on board. He received the information, and we were occupied in preparing ourselves for an excursion to the island of Elephantine, when Achmet called to us : " The Governor is coming." We had no time to arrange our cabin for his reception ; he was already at the door, with two attend ants, and the most I could do was to clear sufficient space for a seat on my divan. His Excellency was a short, stout, broad- faced man, with large eyes, a gray beard and a flat nose. He wore a semi-European dress of brown cloth, and was blunt though cordial in his manners. His attendants, one of whom was the Captain of the Cataract, wore the Egyptian dress, with black turbans. They saluted us by touching their hands THE GOVERNOR'S VISIT. 153 to the lips and forehead, and we responded iu similar manner, after which the Governor inquired after our health and we in quired after his. I delivered my letter, and while he was occu pied in reading it, Achmet prepared the coffee and pipes. Luckily, we had three shebooks, the best of which, having an amber mouth-piece, was presented to the Governor. I waited for the coffee with some trepidation, for I knew we had but two Turkish Jinjans, and a Frank cup was out of the question. However, Achmet was a skilful servant. He presented the cups at such intervals that one was sure to be empty while the other was full, and artfully drew away the attention of our guests by his ceremonious presentations ; so that not only they but both of us partook twice of coffee, without the least embarrassment, and I believe, had there been ten persons instead of five, he would have given the two cups the effect of ten. After the Governor had expressed his pleasure in flowing Oriental phrases, and promised to engage me a boat for Koros- ko, he took his leave and we crossed in a ferry barge to Ele phantine. This is a small but fertile island, whose granite foundations are fast anchored in the Nile. It once was cover ed with extensive ruins, but they have all been destroyed ex cept a single gateway and an altar to Amun, both of red gran ite, and a sitting statue of marble. The southern part is en tirely covered with the ruins of a village of unburnt brick, from the topmost piles of which we enjoyed a fine view of the pic turesque environs of Assouan. The bed of the Nile, to the south, was broken with isles of dark-red granite rock, the same formation which appears in the jagged crests of the mountains beyond the city. Scattered over them were the tombs of holy i5 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. men, dating from the times of the Saracens. A thin palm- grove somewhat concealed the barren aspect of the city, bu* our glances passed it, to rest on the distant hills, kindling in the setting sun. The island is inhabited by Nubians, and some twenty 01 thirty children, of from six to ten years of age the boys entire ly naked, the girls wearing the rdhad, a narrow leathern girdle, around the loins surrounded us, crying " backsheesh ! " and offering for sale bits of agate, coins, and fragments of pottery. Some of them had cunning but none of them intelligent faces , and their large black eyes had an astonishingly precocious ex pression of sensuality. We bought a few trifles and tried to dismiss them, but their numbers increased, so that by the time we had made the tour of the island we had a retinue of fifty followers. I took the branches of henna they offered me and switched the most impudent of them, but they seemed then to consider that they had a rightful claim to the backsheesh, and were more importunate than ever. As we left, they gathered on the shore and sang us a farewell chorus, but a few five para pieces, thrown among them, changed the harmony into a scramble and a fight, in which occupation these lovely children of Nature were engaged until we lost sight of them. The next day we visited Philae. We took donkeys and a guide and threaded the dismal valley of Saracenic tombs south of the town, into a pass leading through the granite hills. The landscape was wintry in its bleakness and ruggedness The path over which we rode was hard sand and gravel, and on both sides the dark rocks were piled in a thousand wonder ful combinations On the surface there is no appearance of regular strata, but rather of some terrible convulsion, which LIJvANT BEY. 165 hag broken the immense masses and thrown them confusedly together. Russegger noticed that the structure of the primi tive strata of Assouan was exactly similar to that of Northern Lapland. The varieties of landscape, in different climates, depend therefore upon the difference of vegetation and of atmos pheric effect, rather than that of geological forms, which al ways preserve their identity. Dr. Kane also found in the bleak hills of Greenland the same structure which he had observed in the Ghauts of tropical India. After three or four miles of this travel the pass opened upon the Nile, just above the Cataract. At the termination of the portage is a Nubian village, whose plantations of doum and date-palms and acacias are dazzling in their greenness, from contrast with the bleak pyramids of rock and the tawny drifts of the Lybian sands on the western bank. We rode down to the port, where a dozen trading vessels lay at anchor, and took a large boat for Philae. The Governor of Assouan was there, and His Excellency showed me the vessel he had engaged for me a small and rather old datiabiyeh, but the best to be had. The price was one hundred and fifty piastres for the trip about one hundred and twenty miles besides something for the men. Achmet attributed this moderate de mand to the effect of a timely present, which had been deli cately conveyed into the Governor's hands the night before. There was a tall gentleman, in the official Egyptian costume, in company with the Governor. Achmet said he was a French engineer in the service of Abbas Pasha, and I afterwards learned that he was none other than M. Linant, or Linant Bey whose name is so well known through his connection with the exploration of Petra, and of the antiquities in Ethio- 156 JOUUNET TO CENTRAL AFRICA. pia. He was accompanied by his wife, a French lady, who greeted us courteously, and two daughters of semi-Abyssiniau origin. The latter were dressed in Oriental costume, but un veiled. M. Linant is a tall, grave person, about fifty years o age. He wore a crescent of diamonds on his breast, and hie features expressed all the dignity and repose of one who had become thoroughly naturalized in the East. As the wind carried us out into the stream, we saw the towers of the temple of Isis, on Philae, through a savage gorge of the river. The enormous masses of dark granite were piled on either side to a height of several hundred feet, taking in some places the forms of monoliths and sitting colossi, one of which appeared so lightly balanced on the loose summit that a strong gale might topple it down the steep. The current in the narrow channel was so violent that we could make no head way, but a Nubian boy, swimming on a palm-log, carried a rope to the shore, and we were at length towed with much labor into the more tranquil basin girdling Philse. The four lofty towers of the two pylons, the side corridors of pillars and the exterior walls of the temple seem perfectly preserved, on ap proaching the island, the green turf of whose banks and the grouping of its palms quite conceal the ruins of a miserable mnd village which surrounds the structures. Philae is the jewel of the Nile, but these ruins are an unsightly blotch, which takes away half its lustre. The setting is nevertheless perfect. The basin of black, jagged mountains, folding on all sides, yet half-disclosing the avenues to Egypt and Nubia ; the hem of emerald turf at their feet, sprinkled with clusters f palm, and here and there the pillar or wall of a temple; ibo ling of the bright river, no longer turbid as in Lower THE TEMPLES OF PHIL^E. In Egypt : of these it is the centre, as it was once the radiant focus of their beauty. The temple, which belongs to the era of the Ptolemies, and is little more than two thousand years old, was built by various monarchs, and is very irregular in its plan. Instead of pre serving a fixed direction, it follows the curve of the island, ana its various corridors and pylons have been added to each other with so little regard to proportion, that the building is much more agreeable when viewed as a collection of detached parts, than as a whole. From its locality, it has suffered compara tively little from the ravages of man, and might be restored to almost its original condition. The mud which Coptic Chris tians plastered over the walls of its sanctuaries has concealed, but not defaced, their richly-colored sculptures, and the palm- leaf and lotus capitals of its portico retain the first brilliancy of their green and blue tints. The double corridor of thirty. six columns, in front of the temple, reaching to the southern end of the island,, has never been finished, some of the capitals last erected being unsculptured, and others exhibiting various stages of completion. In Egypt one so accustoms himself to looking back four thousand years, that Philae seems but of yes terday. The Gothic Cathedrals of the Middle Ages are like antediluvian remains, compared with its apparent newness and freshness. We examined the interior chambers with the aid of a torch, and I also explored several secret passages, inclosed in the thickness of the walls. The sculptures are raised on the face of the stone, and painted in light and brilliant colors. They represent Isis and Osiris, with their offspring, the god Horus, which three cons 4 ituted the Trinity worshipped in Philae. In 158 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. one place Isis is seen giving suck to the infant god a group which bore a singular resemblance to some painting 1 have seen of the Virgin and Child. The gods are here painted of fair, Greek complexion, and not, as in the oldest tombs and temples, of a light red. Their profiles are symmetrical and even beautiful, and the emblems by which they are surround ed are drawn and colored in admirable taste. Those friends of the African Race, who point to Egypt as a proof of what that race has accomplished, are wholly mistaken. The only negro features represented in Egyptian sculpture are those of slaves and captives taken in the Ethiopian wars of the Pha raohs. The temples and pyramids throughout Nubia, as far as the frontiers of Dar-Fur and Abyssinia, all bear the hiero glyphs of these monarchs, and there is no evidence in all the valley of the Nile that the Negro Race ever attained a higher degree of civilization than is at present exhibited in Congo and Ashantee. East of the great temple is a square, open building, whose four sides are rows of columns, supporting an architrave, and united, at about half their height, by screens of stone. The capitals are all of different design, yet exhibit the same ex quisite harmony which charmed us in Hermontis and Esneh. The screens and pillars were evidently intended to have been covered with sculpture, and a roof of sandstone blocks was to have been added, which would have made the structure as per fect as it is unique. The square block, or abacus, interposed between the capital and architrave, is even higher than in the pillars of Hermontis, and I was equally puzzled whether to call it a grace or a defect. There was one thing, however, which certainly did give a grace to the building, and that was u BACKSHEESH ! " 159 our breakfast, which we ate on a block large enough to have made an altar for the Theban Jupiter, surrounded by a crowd of silent Arabs. They contemplated the ruins of our cold fowls with no less interest than did we those of the temples of Philje. Before returning, we crossed to the island of Biggeh, where two pillars of a temple to Athor stand sentry before the door of a mud hut, and a red granite colossus is lucky in having no head, since it is spared the sight of such desecra tion. The children of Biggeh fairly drove us away with the cries of " backsheesh ! " The hideous word had been rung in our ears since leaving Assouan, and when we were again salut ed with it, on landing at the head of the Cataract, patience ceased to be a virtue. My friend took his cane and I the stick of my donkey-driver, and since the naked pests dared not approach near enough to get the backsheesh, they finally ceased to demand it. The word is in every Nubian mouth, and the very boatmen and camel-drivers as they passed us said " backsheesh " instead of " good morning." As it was impos sible to avoid hearing it, I used the word in the same way, and cordially returned the greeting. A few days previous, aa we were walking on shore near Esneh, a company of laborers in a dourra-field began the cry. I responded, holding out my hand, whereupon one of the men pulled off his white cotton cap (his only garment), and offered it to me, saying : " If you are poor, take it." We walked down to the edge of the Cataract and climbed * rock, which commanded a view of the principal rapid. 1'liere is nothing like a fall, and the passage up and down is attended with little peril. The bed of the Nile is filled with 160 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. granite masses, around which the swift current roars and foams, and I can imagine that the descent must be very ex citing, though perhaps less so than that of the Rapids of the St. Lawrence. Boats are towed up, under the superintendence of one of the rais, or captains of the Cataract There are four of these officers, with a body of about two hundred men. The foe varies from two to four hundred piastres, according to the size of the boat. One third of the money is divided among the captains, and the remainder falls to the portion of the men. This also includes the descent, and travellers going to the Second Cataract and back, pay half the fee on returning. On the following morning we visited the ancient granite quarries of Assouan. They lie in the hills, south of the town, and more than a mile from the river. I never saw a more magnificent bed of rock. Its color is a light red, flecked with green, and its grain is very fine and nearly as solid as por phyry. An obelisk, one hundred feet long and twelve feet square at the base, still lies in the quarry, having been aban doned on account of a slight fissure near its summit. Grooves were afterward cut, for the purpose of separating it into blocks, but for some reason or other the design was not carried out. In many parts of the quarry the method employed by the Egyptians to detach the enormous masses, is plainly to be Been. A shallow groove was first sunk along the line of frac ture, after which mortices about three inches wide and four deep, were cut at short intervals, for the purpose of receiving wooden wedges. These having been driven firmly into their eockets, were saturated with water, and by their expansion forced the solid grain asunder. We rode back to the Cleopatra with heavy hearts. Every THE TRAVELLERS SEPARATE. 161 thing had been prepared for our departure, my friend for Cairo and Germany, and I for the Nubian Desert and White Nile The Governor of Assouan had despatched a letter to the Gov ernor of Korosko, asking him to have camels ready for the Desert, on my arrival, my own letters to my friends were fin ished, my equipage had been transferred to the shore, and camels had arrived to transport it around the Cataract to the Nubian village, where my boat was in readiness. Our hand some sailor, Ali, begged so hard to be allowed to accompany me, that I finally agreed to take him as a servant, and he was already on duty. Achmet was nearly as cheerful as he, not withstanding he had just written to his family to say that he was going to Soudan, and had given up, as he afterwards in formed me, all hopes of ever seeing Egypt again. The Amer ican flag was run down, and the Saxe-Coburg colors green and white hoisted in its stead. We had a parting visit from the Governor, who gave me another letter to Korosko, and wo then sat down to a breakfast for which we had no appetite. The camels were loaded and sent off in advance, under Ali's charge, but I waited until every man was on board the good old vessel and ready to push off for Cairo. The large mair. sail was unshipped and laid over the cabin, and the stern-sail only to be used when the south-wind blows, hoisted in its place. The tow-rope was wound up and stowed away, and the large oars hung in the rowlocks. Finally, every sailor was at his post ; the moment came, and we parted, as two men seldom part, who were strangers six weeks before. I goaded my don key desperately over the sands, hastened the loading of mj effects, and was speedily afloat and alone on the Nubian Nilo Ali. CHAPTER XIII. THE K0BIAN NILB. Bolitary Travel Scenery of tlie Nubian Nile Agriculture The Inhabits* at Eorosko The Governor The Tent Pitched Shekh Abou-Moha>u~; pervious to the fiercest sun that ever blazed. After dinner, I seated myself at the tent door, wrapped \ my capote, and gave myself up to the pipe of meditation. 1 1 was a splendid starlit evening. Not a blade of the palin- Icaves was stirring, and the only sounds I heard were the mel ancholy drone of sakias along the river, and the cry of tho jackal among the hills. The Nile had already become my home, endeared to me not more by the grand associations of its eldest human history than by the rest and the patience which I had breathed in its calm atmosphere. Now I was to leave it for the untried Desert, and the strange regions beyond, where I should find its aspect changed. Would it still give me the same health of body, the same peace and contentment of soul ? " Achmet," said I to the Theban, who was sitting not far off, silently smoking, " we are going into strange coun tries have you no fear?" " You remember, master/' he an swered, " that we left Cairo on a lucky day, and why should 1 fear, since all things are in the hands of Allah ? " Eyoub, the Ababdah Guide. CHAPTER XIV. THE GREAT NUBIAN DESERT. Il.e Curve of the Nile Routes across the Desert Our Caravan starts Elding on I Dromedary The Guide and Camel-drivers Hair-dressing El Biban Scenery- Dead Camels An Unexpected Visit The Guide makes my Grave The Rivet without Water Characteristics of the Mirage Desert Life The Sun The Desert Air Infernal Scenery The Wells of Murr-hat Christmas Mountain Chains- Meeting Caravans Plains of Gravel The Story of Joseph Djebel Mokrat Th Last Day tn the Desert We see the Nile again. " lie sees the snake-like caravan crawl O'er the edge of the Desert, black and small, And nearer and nearer, till, one by one. Ho can count Its camels in the sun." LOWELL. A GLANCE at the map will explain the necessity of my Desert journey. The Nile, at Korosko (which is in lat. 22 oS/), makes a sharp bend to the west, and in ascending his current, 172 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. one travels in a south-westerly direction nearly to Dongola, thence south to Edabbe, in lat. 18, after which his course ia north-east as far as lat. 19 30', where he again resumes the general southern direction. The termini 'of this immense curve, called by the ancients the " elbows" of the Nile, are Korosko and Abou-Hammed, in southern Nubia. About ninety miles above the former place, at Wadi Haifa, is the second cataract of the Nile, the Southern Thule of Egyptian tourists. The river, between that point and Dongola, is so broken by rapids, that vessels can only pass during the inun dation, and then with great difficulty and danger. The exi gencies of trade have established, no doubt since the earliest times, the shorter route through the Desert. The distance be tween Korosko and Abou-Hammed, by the river, is more than gix hundred miles, while by the Desert, it is, according to my reckoning, only two hundred and forty-seven miles. The former caravan route led directly from Assouan to Berber and Shendy, and lay some distance to the eastward of that from Korosko. It is the same travelled by Bruce and Burckhardt, but is now almost entirely abandoned, since the countries of Soudan have been made tributary to Egypt. It lies through a chain of valleys, inhabited by the Ababdeh Arabs, and ac cording to Burckhardt, there are trees and water, at short in tervals, for the greater part of the way. The same traveller thus describes the route from Korosko : " On that road the traveller finds only a single well, which is situated midway, four long days distant from Berber and as many from Seboca ["near Korosko]. A great inconvenience on that road is that neither trees nor shrubs are anywhere found, whence th camels are much distressed for food, and passengers are oblig ed to carry wood with them to dress their meals." THE CARAVAN STARTS. 173 On the morning of the 21st of December j the water-skins were filled from the Nile, the baggage carefully divided into separate loads, the unwilling camels received their burdens, and I mounted a dromedary for the first time. My little cara van consisted of six camels, including that of the guide. Aa it was put in motion, the Governor and Shekh Abou-Moham- med wished me a safe journey and the protection of Allah. We passed the miserable hamlet of Korosko, turned a corner of the mountain-chain into a narrow stony valley, and in a few minutes lost sight of the Nile and his belt of palms. Thence forth, for many days, the only green thing to be seen in all the wilderness was myself. After two or three hours' travel, we passed an encampment of Arabs, where my Bisharees added another camel for their own supplies, and two Nubians, mount ed on donkeys, joined us for the march to Berber. The first day's journey lay among rugged hills, thrown together confus edly, with no apparent system or direction. They were of jet black sandstone, and resembled immense piles of coke and an thracite. The small glens and basins inclosed in this chaos were filled with glowing yellow sand, which in many places streamed down the crevices of the black rocks, like rivulets of fire. The path was strewn with hollow globes of hard, black stones, precisely resembling cannon-balls. The guide gave me one of the size of a rifle-bullet, with a seam around the centre, as if cast in a mould. The thermometer showed a temperature of eighty degrees at two P. M., but the heat was tempered by a pure, fresh breeze. After eight hours' travel, 1 made my first camp at sunset, in a little hollow inclosed by mountains, where a gray jackal, after being twice shot at, cam* and looked into the door of the tent. 174 JOURNKY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. I found dromedary-riding not at all difficult. One sits OB a very lofty seat, with liis feet crossed over the animal's shoul ders or resting on his neck. The body is obliged to rock back ward and forward, on account of the long, swinging gait, and as there is no stay or fulcrum except a blunt pommel, around which the legs are crossed, some little power of equilibrium is necessary. My dromedary was a strong, stately beast, of a light cream color, and so even a gait, that it would bear the Arab test : that is, one might drink a cup of coffee, while go ing on a full trot, without spilling a drop. I found a great advantage in the use of the Oriental costume. My trowsers allowed the legs perfect freedom of motion, and I soon learned so many different modes of crossing those members, that no day was sufficient to exhaust them. The rising and kneeling of the animal is hazardous at first, as his long legs double to gether like a carpenter's rule, and you are thrown backwards and then forwards, and then backwards again, but the trick of it is soon learned. The soreness and fatigue of which many travellers complain, I never felt, and I attribute much of it tc the Frank dress. I rode from eight to ten hours a day, read and even dreamed in the saddle, and was at night as fresh and unwearied as when I mounted in the morning. My caravan was accompanied by four Arabs. The guide, Eyoub, was an old Ababdeh, who knew all the Desert between the Ked Sea and the Nile, as far south as Abyssinia. The camel-drivers were of the great Bisharee tribe, which extends from Shendy, in Ethiopia, through the eastern portion of the Nubian Desert, to the frontiers of Egypt. They owned the burden camels, which they urged along with the cry of " Yo- to ! Shekh Abd-el Kader ! " and a shrill barbaric song, the THK CAMEL-DRIVERS AND THEIR HAIR. 1& refrain of which was : " Prophet of God, help the camels and bring us safely to our journey's end ! " They were very sus ceptible to cold, and a temperature of 50, which we frequent ly had in the morning, made them tremble like aspen leaves, and they were sometimes so benumbed that they could scarcely load the camels. They were proud of their enormous heads of hair, which they wore parted on both temples, the middle portion being drawn into an upright mass, six inches in height, while the side divisions hung over the ears in a multitude of little twists. These love-locks they anointed every morning with suet, and looked as if they had slept in a hard frost, until the heat had melted the fat. I thought to flatter one of them as he performed the operation, by exclaiming "Beautiful !" but he answered coolly : " You speak truth : it is very beauti ful." Through the central mass of hair a wooden skewer was stuck, in order to scratch the head without disturbing the arrangement. They wore long swords, carried in a leathern scabbard over the left shoulder, and sometimes favored us with a war-dance, which consisted merely in springing into the air with a brandished sword and turning around once before com ing down. Their names were El Emeem, Hossayn and Ali. We called the latter Shekh Ali, on account of his hair. He wore nothing but a ragged cotton clout, yet owned two camels, had a tent in the Desert, and gave Achinet a bag of dollars to carry for him. I gave to El Emeem, on account of his shrill voice, the nickname of Wiz (wild goose), by which he was thenceforth called. They were all very devout, retiring a short distance from the road to say their prayers, at the usual hours and performing the prescribed ablutions with sand, instead of ivater. 176 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. On the second morning we passed through a gorge in the black hills, and entered a region called El Biban, or " The Gates." Here the mountains, though still grouped in the sam<* disorder, were more open and gave room to plains of sand ser. eral miles in length. The narrow openings, through which the road passes from one plain to another, gave rise to the name The mountains are higher than on the Nile, and present the most wonderful configurations towers, fortresses, walls, pyra mids, temples in ruin, of an inky blackness near at hand, but tinged of a deep, glowing violet hue in the distance. Towards noon I saw a mirage a lake in which the broken peaks were reflected with great distinctness. One of the Nubians who was with us, pointed out a spot where he was obliged to climb the rocks, the previous summer, to avoid being drowned. During the heavy tropical rains which sometimes fall here, the hun dreds of pyramidal hills pour down such floods that the sand cannot immediately drink them up, and the valleys arc turned into lakes. The man described the roaring of the waters, down the clefts of the rocks, as something terrible. In sum mer the passage of the Desert is much more arduous than in winter, and many men and camels perish. The road waa strewn with bones and carcasses, and I frequently counted twen ty dead camels within a stone's throw. The stone-heaps which are seen on all the spurs of the hills, as landmarks for cara vans, have become useless, since one could find his way by the bones in the sand. My guide, who was a great believer in afrites and devils, said that formerly many persons lost the way and perished from thirst, all of which was the work of svil spirits. My next camp was in the midst of a high circular plain. AN UNEXPECTED VISIT. 177 Burrounded by hundreds of black peaks. Here I bad an unex pected visit. I was sitting in my tent, about eight o clock, when I heard the tramp of dromedaries outside, and a strange voice saying : ana wahed Ingleez (I am an Englishman). It proved to be Capt. Peel, of the British Navy, (son of the late Sir Robert Peel), who was returning from a journey to Khar toum and Kordofan. He was attended by a single guide, and carried only a water-skin and a basket of bread. He had travelled nearly day and night since leaving Berber, and would finish the journey from that place to Korosko a distance of four hundred miles in seven days. He spent an hour with me, and then pushed onward through " The Gates " towards the Nile. It had been his intention to penetrate into Dar- Fiir, a country yet unvisited by any European, but on reach ing Obeid, the Capital of Kordofan, his companion, a Syrian Arab, fell sick, and he was himself attacked with the ague. This decided him to return, and he had left his baggage and servants to follow, and was making for England with all speed. He was provided with all the necessary instruments to make his travel useful in a scientific point of view, and the failure of his plans is much to be regretted. I was afterwards inform ed by M. Linant that he met Capt. Peel on the following day, and supplied him with water enough to reach the Nile. Towards noon, on the third day, we passed the last of the " Gates," and entered the Bohr Ida Ma (River without Water), a broad plain of burning yellow sand. The gateway is very imposing, especially on the eastern side, where it is Droken by a valley or gorge of Tartarean blackness. As we passed the last peak, my guide, who had ridden in advance dismounted beside what seemed *-o be a collection of graves 8* 178 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. iittle ridges of sand, -with rough head and foot stones. He sal by one which he had just made. As I came up he informed ine that all travellers who crossed the Nubian Desert, for the first time, are here expected to pay a toll, or fee to the guide and camel -men. " But what if I do not choose to pay ? " I asked " Then you will immediately perish, and be buried here. The graves are those of persons who refused to pay.' As I had no wish to occupy the beautiful mound he had heap ed for me, with the thigh-bones of a camel at the head and foot, I gave the men a few piastres, and passed the place. He then plucked up the bones and threw them away, and restored the sand to its original level.* The Balir Ida Ma spread out before us, glittering in the hot sun. About a mile to the eastward lay (apparently) a lake of blue water. Heeds and water-plants grew on its margin, and its smooth surface reflected the rugged outline of the hills beyond. The Waterless River is about two miles in breadth, and appears to have been at one time the bed of a large stream. * Burckhardt gives the following account of the same custom, in his travels in Nubia : " In two hours and a half we came to a plain on the top of the mountain called Akabet el Benat, the Rocks of the Girls. Hero the Arabs who serve as guides through these mountains have devised a singular mode of extorting presents from the traveller ; they alight at certain spots in the Akabet el Benat, and beg a present ; if it is refused, they collect a heap of sand, and mould it into the form of a diminutive tomb, and then placing a stone at each of the extremities, they ap prise the traveller that his tomb is made; meaning, that henceforward, there will be no security for him, in this rocky wilderness. Host per sons pay a trifling contribution, rather than have their graves made be fore their eyes; there were, however, several tombs of this description dispersed over the plain." THE RIVER WITHOUT WATER. 179 It crosses all the caravan routes in the desert, and is supposed to extend from the Nile to the Red Sea. It may have been the outlet for the river, before its waters forced a passage through the primitive chains which cross its bed at Assouan and Kalabshee. A geological exploration of this part of Afri ca could not fail to produce very interesting results. Beyond the Balir Ida Ma extends the broad central plateau of the Desert, fifteen hundred feet above the sea. It is a vast reacll of yellow sand, dotted with low, isolated hills, which in somo places are based on large beds of light-gray sandstone of an unusually fine and even grain. Small towers of stone have been erected on the hills nearest the road, in order to guide the couriers who travel by night. Near one of them the guide pointed out the grave of a merchant, who had been murdered there two years previous, by his three slaves. The latter es caped into the Desert, but probably perished, as they were never heard of afterwards. In the smooth, loose sand, I had an opportunity of reviving my forgotten knowledge of track- ography, and soon learned to distinguish the feet of hyenas, foxes, ostriches, lame camels and other animals. The guide assured me that there were devils in the Desert, but one only sees them when he travels alone. On this plain the mirage, which first appeared in the Biban, presented itself under a variety of wonderful aspects. Thence forth, I saw it every day, for hours together, and tried to de duce some rules from the character of its phenomena. It appears on all sides, except that directly opposite to the sun, but rarely before nine A. M. or after three p. M. The color of the apparent water is always precisely that of the sky, and this is a good test to distinguish it from real water, which is invari 180 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. ably of a deeper hue. It is seen on a gravelly as well as a sandy surface, and often fills with shining pools the slight de pressions in the soil at the bases of the hills. Where it extends to the horizon there is no apparent line, and it then becomes an inlet of the sky, as if the walls of heaven were melting down and flowing in upon the earth. Sometimes a whole mountain chain is lifted from the horizon and hung in the air, with ita reflected image joined to it, base to base. I frequently saw, during the forenoon, lakes of sparkling blue water, apparently not a quarter of a mile distant. The waves ripple 'in the wind; tall reeds and water-plants grow on the margin, and the Desert rocks behind cast their shadows on the surface. It is impossi ble to believe it a delusion. You advance nearer, and sudden ly, you know not how, the lake vanishes. There is a grayish film over the spot, but before you have decided whether the film is in the air or in your eyes, that too disappears, and you see only the naked sand. What you took to be reeds and water-plants probably shows itself as a streak of dark gravel. The most probable explanation of the mirage which I could think of, was, that it was actually a reflection of the sky upon a stratum of heated air, next the sand. I found the Desert life not only endurable but very agree able. No matter how warm it might be at mid-day, the nighta wero always fresh and cool, and the wind blew strong from the north-west, during the greater part of the time. The tempera ture varied from 50 55 at 6 A. M. to 80 85 at 2 P. M. The extremes were 47 and 100. So great a change of tem perature every day was not so unpleasant as might be suppos ed. In my case, Nature seemed to make a special provisiou 'n order to keep the balance right. During the hot hours of IIFE IN THE DESSRT. 18 the day I never suffered inconvenience from the heat, but up to 85 felt sufficiently cool. I seemed to absorb the rays of the sun, and as night came ou and the temperature of the ail fell, that of my skin rose, till at last I glowed through and through, like a live coaL It was a peculiar sensation, which I never experienced before, but was rather pleasant than other wise. My face, however, which was alternately exposed to the heat radiated from the sand, and the keen morning wind, coul< not accommodate itself to so much contraction and expansion, The skin cracked and peeled off more than once, and I was obliged to rub it daily with butter. I mounted my dromedary with a " shining morning face," until, from alternate buttering and burning, it attained the hue and crispness of a well-basted partridge. I soon fell into a regular daily routine of travel, which, during all my later experiences of the Desert, never became monotonous. I rose at dawn every morning, bathed my eyes with a handful of the precious water, and drank a cup of coffee. After the tent had been struck and the camels laden, I walked aheat for two hours, often so far in advance that I lost sight ana nearing of the caravan. I found an unspeak able fascination in the sublime solitude of the Desert. I often beheld the sun rise, when, within the wide ring of the horizon, there was no other living creature to be seen. He came up like a god, in awful glory, and it would have been a natural act, had I cast myself upon the sand and worshipped him. The suddeu change in the coloring of the landscape, on his ap pearance the lighting up of the dull sand into a warm golden hue, and the tintings of purple and violet on the distant por phyry hills was a morning miracle, which I never beheld 182 JOUUNEV TO CENTRAL AFRICA. without awe. The richness of this coloring made the Desert beautiful ; it was too brilliant for desolation. The scenery, st far from depressing, inspired and exhilarated me. I never felt the sensation of physical health and strength in such per fection, and was ready to shout from morning till night, from the overflow of happy spirits. The air is an elixir of life as sweet and pure and refreshing as that which the first Man breathed, on the morning of Creation. You inhale the una dulterated elements of the atmosphere, for there are no exha lations from moist earth, vegetable matter, or the smokes and Bteams which arise from the abodes of men, to stain its purity. This air, even more than its silence and solitude, is the secret of one's attachment to the Desert. It is a beautiful illustra- tior> of the compensating care of that Providence, which leaves none of the waste places of the earth without some atoning glory. Where all the pleasant aspects of Nature are wanting where there is no green thing, no fount for the thirsty lip, scarcely the shadow of a rock to shield the wanderer in the blazing noon God has breathed upon the wilderness his sweetest and tenderest breath, giving clearness to the eye, strength to the frame, and the most joyous exhilaration to the spirits. Achmet always insisted on my taking a sabre as a protec tion against the hyenas, but I was never so fortunate as to see more than their tracks, which crossed the path at every step. I saw occasionally the footprints of ostriches, but they, as well as the giraffe, are scarce in this Desert. Towards noon, Ach met and I made a halt in the shadow of a rock, or if no rock was at hand, on the bare sand, and took our breakfast. One's daily bread is never sweeter than in the Desert The rest of liESKBT SCENERY. 183 the day I jogged along patiently beside the baggage camels, and at sunset halted for the night. A divan on the sand, and a well-filled pipe, gave me patience \vhile dinner was prepar ing, and afterwards I made the necessary entries in my jour nal. I had no need to court sleep, after being rocked all day on the dromedary. At the close of the third day, we encamped opposite a mountain which Eyonb called Djebel Khattdb (the Mountain of "Wood). The Bohr Ehattdb, a river of sand, similar to the Bahr bela Ma, and probably a branch of it, crossed our path. I here discovered that the water-skins I had hired from Shekh Abou-Mohamrned were leaky, and that our eight skins were already reduced to four, while the Arabs had en tirely exhausted their supply. This rendered strict economy necessary, as there was but a single well on the road. Until noon the next day we journeyed over a vast plain of sand, in terrupted by low reefs of black rock. To the south-east it stretched unbroken to the sky, and looking in that direction, I saw two hemispheres of yellow and blue, sparkling all over with light and heat, so that the eye winked to behold them The colocynth (called by the Arabs murrar}, grew in many places in the dry, hot sand. The fruit resembles a melon, and is TO intensely bitter that no animal will eat it. I made breakfast under the lee of an isolated rock, crowned with a beacon of camel-bones. We here met three Ababdehs, armed with long spears, on their way to Korosko. Soon after mid day the plain was broken by low ranges of hills, and we saw in front and to the east of us many blue mountain-chains. Our oad approached one of them a range; several miles in length, the highest peak of which reached an altitude of a thousand 184 JOURNEr TO CENTRAL AFRICA. feet. The sides were precipitous and formed of vertical strata but the crests were agglomerations of loose stones, as if shaken out of some enormous coal-scuttle. The glens and gorges were black as ink ; no speck of any other color relieved the terrible gloom of this singular group of hills. Their aspect was much more than sterile : it was infernal. The name given to them by the guide was Djilet e 1 Djindee, the meaning of which I could not learn. At their foot I found a few thorny shrubs, the first sign of vegetation since leaving Korosko. We encamped half an hour before sunset on a gravelly plain, between two spurs of the savage hills, in order that our camels might browse on the shrubs, and they were only too ready to take advantage of the permission. They snapped off the hard, dry twigs, studded with cruel thorns, and devoured them as if their tongues were made of cast-iron. We were now in the haunts of the gazelle and the ostrich, but saw nothing of them. Shekh Ali taught me a few words of the Bisharee language, asking for the English words in return, and was greatly delighted when I translated olcam (camel), into "0 camel!" "Wallah!" said he, "your language is the same as ours." The Bisharee tongue abounds with vowels, and is not unmusical. Many of the substantives com mence with o as omek, a donkey ; osha, a cow ; ogana, a ga zelle. The plural changes o into a, as akam, camels ; amck, donkeys, &c. The language of the Ababdehs is different from that of the Bisharees, but probably sprang from the same original stock. Lepsius considers that the Kenoos dialect of Nubia is an original African tongue, having no affinity with any of the Shemitic languages. On the fifth day we left the plain, and entered a country THE WELLS OF MURR-HAT. 18* of broken mountain-ranges. In one place the road passed through a long, low hill of slate rock, by a gap which had beer purposely broken. The strata were vertical, the laminae vary ing from one to four inches in thickness, and of as fine a quali ty and smooth a surface as I ever saw. A long wady, or val ley, which appeared to be the outlet of some mountain-basin, was crossed by a double row of stunted doum-palins, marking a water-course made by the summer rains. Eyoub pointed it out to me, as the half-way station between Korosko and Abou- Hammed. For two hours longer we threaded the dry wadys_ shut in by black, chaotic hills. It was now noonday, I was very hungry, and the time allotted by Eyoub for reaching Sir Miirr-lidt had passed. He saw my impatience and urged his dromedary into a trot, calling out to me to follow him. We bent to the west, turned the flank of a high range, and after half an hour's steady trotting, reached a side-valley or cul-de- sac, branching off from the main wady. A herd of loose camels, a few goats, two black camel's-hair tents, and half a dozen half-naked Ababdehs, showed that we had reached the wells. A few shallow pits, dug in the centre of the valley, fur nished an abundance of bitter, greenish water, which the jamels drank, but which I could not drink. The wells are called by the Arabs el morra, " the bitter." Fortunately, I had two skins of Nile-water left, which, with care, would last to Abou-Hammed. The water was always cool and fresh, though in color and taste it resembled a decoction of old shoes. We found at the wells Capt. Peel's Syrian friend, Churi who was on his way to Korosko with five camels, carrying the Captain's baggage. He left immediately after my arrival, or I might have sent by him a Christmas greeting to friends at 186 JOURNEY TO OENTEAL AFIUOA. home. .During the afternoon three slave-merchants arrived, in four days from Abou-Hammed. Their caravan of a hundred and fifty slaves was on the way. They were tall, strong, hand- sotae men, dark-hrown in complexion, but with regular fea- The Wells of Murr-Hat. tures. They were greatly pleased with my sketch-book, but retreated hastily when I proposed making a drawing of them. I then called Eyoub into my tent, who willingly enough sat for the rough sketch which heads this chapter. Achmet did his best to give me a good Christmas dinner, but the pigeon? were all gone, and the few fowls which remained were so spirit less from the heat and jolting of the camel, that their slaugh- *cr anticipated their natural death by a very short time. Nevertheless, I produced a cheery illumination by the tent- lanterns, and made Eyoub and the Bisharees happy with a bottle of arakde and some handfulls of tobacco The wind MEETING CAUAVAN8. whistled drearily around my tent, but I glowed like fire from the oozing out of the heat I had absorbed, and the Arabs witk out, squatted around their fire of camel's dung, sang the wild monotonous songs of the Desert. We left Murr-hat at sunrise, on the morning of the sixth day. I walked ahead, through the foldings of the black moun tains, singing as I went, from the inspiration of the brilliant sky and the pure air. In an hour and a half the pass opened on a broad plain of sand, and I waited for my caravan, as the day was growing hot. On either side, as we continued our journey, the blue lakes of the mirage glittered in the sun. Several isolated pyramids rose above the horizon, far to the East, and a purple mountain-range in front, apparently two or three hours distant, stretched from east to west. " We will breakfast in the shade of those mountains," I said to Achinet, but breakfast-time came and they seemed no nearer, so I sat down in the sand and made my meal. Towards noon we met large caravans of camels, coming from Berber. Some were laden with gum, but the greater part were without burdens, as they were to be sold in Egypt. In the course of the day up wards of a thousand passed us. Among the persons we met was Capt. Peel's cawass, or janissary (whom he had left in Khartoum), on his return, with five camels and three slaves, which he had purchased on speculation. He gave such a dis mal account of Soudan, that Achmet was quite gloomy for the r?st of the day The afternoon was intensely hot, the thermometer standing at 1 00, but I felt little annoyance from the heat, and used no protection against it The sand was deep and the road a wea ry one for the camels, but the mountains which seemed so near 188 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. at hand in the morning were not yet reached. We pushed for ward ; the sun went down, and the twilight was over before we encamped at their base. The tent was pitched by the light of the crescent moon, which hung over a pitchy-black peak. I had dinner at the fashionable hour of seven. Achmet was obliged to make soup of the water of Miirr-hat, which had an abominable taste. I was so drowsy that before my pipe was finished, I tumbled upon my mattress, and was unconscious until midnight, when I awoke with the sensation of swimming in a river of lava. Eyoub called the mountain Kab cl Kafass an absurd name, without meaning but I suspect it is the same ridge which crosses the caravan route from Shendy to Assouan, and which is called Djebel Shigre by Bruce and Burckhardt. The tent was struck in the morning starlight, at which time the thermometer stood at 55. I walked alone through the mountains, which rose in conical peaks to the height of near a thousand feet. The path was rough and stony until I reached the outlet of the pass. When the caravan came up, 1 found that the post-courier who left Korosko two days after us, had joined it. He was a jet-black, bare-headed and bare legged Bisharee, mounted on a dromedary. He remained with us all day, and liked our company so well that he encamped with us, in preference to continuing his journey. On leaving the mountain, we entered a plain of coarse grarel, abounding with pebbles of agate and jasper. * Another range, which Eyoub called Djebel Dighlee, appeared in front, and we reach ed it about noon. The day was again hot, the mercury rising to 95. It took us nearly an hour to pass Djebel Dighlee, beyond which the plain stretched away to the Nile, interrupt- THE MOUNTAIN OF MOKRAT. 189 ed here and there by a distant peak. Far in advance of us lay Djebel Mokrat, the limit of the next day's journey. From its top, said Eyoub, one may see the palm-groves along the Nile, We encamped on the open plain, not far from two black pyra midal hills, in the flush of a superb sunset. The ground was traversed by broad strata of gray granite, which lay on the surface in huge boulders. Our camels here found a few bunch es of dry, yellow grass, which had pierced the gravelly soil. To the south-east was a mountain called by the Arabs Djebel Nogdra (the Mountain of the Drum), because, as Eyoub de clared, a devil who had his residence among its rocks, frequent ly beat a drum at night, to scare the passing caravans. The stars were sparkling freshly and clearly when I rose, on the morning of the eighth day, and Djebel Mokrat lay like a faint shadow on the southern horizon. The sun revealed a few isolated peaks to the right and left, but merely distant isles on the vast, smooth ocean of the Desert. It was a rap ture to breathe air of such transcendent purity and sweetness. I breakfasted on the immense floor, sitting in the sun, and then jogged on all day, in a heat of 90, towards Djebel Mokrat, which seemed as far off as ever. The sun went down, and it was still ahead of us. " That is a Djebel Shaytan" I said to Eyoub ; " or rather, it is no mountain ; it is an afrite." " Effendi ! " said the old man, " don't speak of afrites here. There are many in this part of the Desert, and if a man travels alone here at night, one of them walks behind him and forces him to go forward and forward, until he has lost his path." We rode on by the light of the moon and stars silently at first, but presently Shekh Ali began to sing his favorite song of " Yalldh salaameh, el-hamdu lillahfok belameh," and one 190 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. of the Kenoos, to beguile the way, recited in a chanting copious passages from the Koran. Among other things, he related the history of Joseph, which Achmet translated to me. The whole story would be too long to repeat, but portions of it are interesting. " After Joseph had been thrown into the well," continued the Kenoos, " a caravan of Arabs came along, and began to draw water for the camels, when one of the men said : ' Shekh, there is something in the well.' ' Well,' said the Shekh, ' if it be a man, he belongs to me, but if it be goods, you may have them.' So they drew it up, and it was Joseph, and the Shekh took him to Cairo and sold him to Azeez (Potiphar). [I omit his account of Potiphar's wife, which could not well be repeated.] When Joseph was in prison, he told what was the meaning of the dreams of Sultan Faraoon's baker and butler, who were imprisoned with him. The Sultan himself soon afterwards had a dream about seven fat cows eating seven lean ones, which nobody could explain. Then the jailer went to Faraoon, and said : ' Here is Joseph, in jail he can tell you all about it.' Faraoon said : 'Bring him here, then.' So they put Joseph in a bath, washed him, shaved his head, gave him a new white turban, and took him to the Sultan, who said to him : ' Can you explain my dream ? ' ' To be sure I can,' said Joseph, 'but if I tell you, you must make me keeper of your magazines.' ' Very well : ' said Faraoon. Then Joseph told how the seven fat cows meant seven years when the Nile would have two inundations a year, and the seven lean cows, seven years afterwards when it would have no inundation at all ; and he said to Faraoon that since he was now magazine-keeper, he should take from all the country as far as Assouan, during the THE LAS! DA IN THE DESEKT. 191 Beven fat years, enough wheat and dourra and beans, to la?; during the seven lean ones.'' The narrator might have added that the breed of fat kine has never been restored, all the cattle of Egypt being undoubted descendants of the lean stock. Two hours after sunset, we killed Djebel Mokrat, as the Arabs say : that is, turned its corner. The weary camels were let loose among some clumps of dry, rustling reeds, and I stretched myself out on the sand, after twelve hours in the saddle. Our water was nearly exhausted by this time, and the provisions were reduced to hermits' fare bread, rice and dates. I had, however, the spice of a savage appetite, which was no sooner appeased, than I fell into a profound sleep. I could not but admire the indomitable pluck of the little don keys owned by the Kenoos. These animals not only carried provisions and water for themselves and their masters, the whole distance, but the latter rode them the greater part of the way ; yet they kept up with the camels, plying their little lega as ambitiously the last day as the first. I doubt whether a horse would have accomplished as much under similar circum stances. The next morning we started joyfully, in hope of seeing the Nile, and even Eyoub, for the first time since leaving Ko- rosko, helped to load the camels. In an hour we passed the mountain of Mokrat, but the same endless plain of yellow gravel extended before us to the horizon. Eyoub had promised that we should reach Abou-Hammed in half a day, and even pointed out some distant blue mountains in the south, as being beyond the Nile. Nevertheless, we travelled nearly till noon without any change of scenery, and no more appearance of river 1 J2 JOURNEY TO CKNTRAL AFRICA. than the abundant streams of the mirage, on all sides. I drank my last cup of water for breakfast, and then continued my march in the burning sun, with rather dismal spirits. Finally, the Desert, which had been rising since we left the mountain, be gan to clescer.d, and I saw something like round granite bould ers Vypig on the edge of the horizon. " Eflendi, see the doum- ti-ees ! " cried Kyoub. I looked again : they ivere doum-palms, and so broad and green that they must certainly stand near water. Soon we descended into a hollow in the plain, looking down which I saw to the south a thick grove of trees, and over their tops the shining surface of the Nile. " All," I called to my sailor-servant, " look at that great bahr shaytan ! " The son of the Nile, who had never before, in all his life, been more than a day out of sight of its current, was almost beside him self with joy. "Wallah, master," he cried, "that is no river of the Devil : it is the real Nile the water of Paradise." It did my heart good to see his extravagant delight. "If you were to give me five piastres, master," said he, " I would not drink the bitter water of Mdrr-hat." The guide made me a salutation, in his dry way, and the two Nubians greeted me with " a great welcome to you, 0, Efiendi ! " With every step the valley unfolded before me such rich deeps of fanLko foli age, such a glory in the green of the beans and lupins, such radiance beyond description in the dance of the sunbeams on the water ! The landscape was balm to my burning eyes, and the mere sight of the glorious green herbage was a sensuous delight, in which I rioted for the rest of the day The Tent-Door, at Abou-Hammed. CHAPTER XV. THE ETHIOPIAN FRONTIER. A Draught of Water-Abou-Hammed The Island of Mokrtt-Ethiopian Scenery- The People An Ababdeh Apollo Encampment on the Nile Tomb of an English man-Eesa's Wedding-A White Arab-The Last Day of the Year-Abou-IIashym Incidents-Loss of my Thennometer-The Valley of Wild Asses-The Eleventh Cataract-Approach to Berber Vultures-Eyoub Outwitted-We reach El Melt- heyref The Caravan Broken up. ACHMET and I began to feel thirst, so we hurried on in ad vance, to the mud hamlet of Abou-Hammed. We dismounted on the bank of the river, where we were received by a dark Ababdeh, who was officiating in place of the Governor, and in- vited me to take possession of the latter's house. Achmet gave him a large wooden bowl and told him to fill it from the Nile, and we would tnlk to him afterwards. I sha'l never for- 9 194 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. get the luxury of that long, deep draught. My body absorbed the water as rapidly as the hot sand of the Desert, and I drank at least a quart without feeling satisfied. I preferred my tent to the Governor's house, and had it pitched where I could look out on the river and the palms. Abou-Hammed is a miserable village, inhabited by a few hundred Ababdehs and Bisharees ; the Desert here extended to the water's edge, while the oppo site banks were as green as emerald. There was a large mud fortress, with round bastions at the cornel's, to the west of the village. It formerly belonged to an Ababdeh Shekh, but was then deserted. In the afternoon I crossed to the island of Mokrat, which lies opposite. The vessel was a sort of a canoe, made of pieces of the doum-palm, tied together with ropes and plastered with mud. My oarsmen were two boys of fifteen, half-naked fellows with long, wild hair, yet very strong and symmetrical limbs and handsome features. I landed in the shade of the palms, and walked for half an hour along the shore, through patches of dourra and cotton, watered by the creaking mills. The whole island, which is upwards of twenty miles long, is level and might be made productive, but the natives only cul tivate a narrow strip along the water. The trees were dourn and date palm and acacia, and I saw in the distance others of a rich, dark green, which appeared to be sycamore. The hip popotamus is found here, and the boatmen showed me the enormous tracks of three, which had made havoc among their bean-patches the day before. As I was returning to the boat I met three natives, tall, strong, stately men. I greeted them with " Peace be with you ! " and they answered " Peace be with you," at the same time offering their hands. We talked for some time in broken Arabic, and I have rarely seen such ABOU-HAMMED. 195 good-will expressed in savage features. In fact, all the faces 1 now saw were of a superior stamp to that of the Egyptians. They expressed not only more strength and independence, but more kindness and gentleness. I procured a lean sheep for eight piastres, and after Ach- niet had chosen the best parts for my dinner, I gave the re mainder to Eyoub and the Bisharees. The camels were driven down to th a river, but only three drank out of the six. I took my seal in the shade of the tent, and looked at the broad blue current of the Nile for hours, without being wearied of the scene. Groups of tall Bisharees stood at a respectable dis tance, gazing upon me, for a Frank traveller was no common sight. In the evening I attempted to reduce my desert tem perature by a bath in the river, but I had become so sensitive to cold that the water made me shudder in every nerve, and it required a double portion of pipes and coffee to restore my natural warmth. I left Abou- Hammed at noon the next day, having been detained by some government tax on camels, which my Bisha rees were called upon to pay. Our road followed the river, occa sionally taking to the Desert for a short distance, to cut off a bend, but never losing sight of the dark clumps of palms and the vivid coloring of the grain on the western bank. The scenery bore a very different stamp from that of Egypt. The colors were darker, richer and stronger, the light more intense and glowing, and all forms of vegetable and animal life pene- traled with a more full and impassioned expression of life. The green of the fields actually seemed to throb under the fiery gusli of sunshine, and the palm-leaves to thrill and trem ble in the hot blue air. The people were glorious barbarians 196 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFKICA. large, tall, full-limbed, with open, warm, intelligent faces and lustrous black eyes. They dress with more neatness than the Egyptian Fellahs, and their long hair, though profusely smeared with suet, is arranged with some taste and clothes their heads better than the dirty cotton skull-cap. Among those 1 saw at Abou-Hammed were two youths of about seventeen, who were wonderfully beautiful. One of them played a sort of coarse reed flute, and the other a rude stringed instrument, which he called a tambour. He was a superb fellow, with the purest straight Egyptian features, and large, brilliant, melting black eyes. Every posture of his body expressed a grace the most striking because it was wholly unstudied. I have never seen human forms superior to these two. The first, whom I named the Apollo Ababdese, joined my caravan, for the jour* ney to Berber. He carried with him all his wealth a flute, a sword, and a heavy shield of hippopotamus hide. His features were as perfectly regular as the Greek, but softer and rounder in outline. His limbs were without a fault, and the light poise of his head on the slender neck, the fine play of his shoulder- blades and the muscles of his back, as he walked before me, wearing only a narrow cloth around his loins, would have charmed a sculptor's eye. He walked among my camel-driv ers as Apollo might have walked among the other shepherds of King Admetus. Like the god, his implement was the flute ; he was a wandering minstrel, and earned his livelihood by play ing at the festivals of the Ababdehs. His name was Eesa, the Arabic for Jesus. I should have been willing to take several shades of his complexion if I could have had with them his perfect ripeness, roundness and symmetry :>f body and limb, He told me that he smoked no tobacco and drank no ara ENCAMPMENT ON THE NILE. 19? kee, but only water and milk a true offshoot of the goldeu age! Abebdeh Flute and Tambour Players. We encamped for the night in a cluster of doum-palms, near the Nile. The soil, even to the edge of the millet-patches which covered the bank, was a loose white sand, and shone like snow under the moon, while the doum-leaves rustled with as dry and sharp a sound as bare boughs under a northern sky. The wind blew fresh, but we were sheltered by a little rise of land, and the tent stood firm. The temperature (72) wag delicious ; the stars sparkled radiantly, and the song of crickets among the millet reminded me of home. No sooner had we encamped than Eesa ran off to some huts which he spied in the distance, and told the natives that they must immediately bring all their sheep and fowls to the Effendi. The poor peo ple came to inquire whether they must part with their stock, and were very glad when they found that we wanted nothing. I took only two cucumbers which an old man brought and humbly placed at my feet. 198 JOURXKY TO CENTRAI AFRICA. The next morning I walked ahead, 'ollowing the river bank but the camels took a shorter road through the Desert, and passed me unobserved. After walking two hours, I sought for them in every direction, and finally came upon Ali, who wa? doing his best to hold my dromedary down. No sooner had ] straddled the beast than he rose and set off on a swinging gal lop to rejoin the caravan. During the day our road led along the edge of the Desert, sometimes in the sand and sometimes over gravelly soil, covered with patches of thorny shrubs. Until 1 reached the village of Abou-Hashym, in the evening, there was no mark of cultivation on the eastern bank, though I saw in places the signs of fields which had long since been desert ed. I passed several burying-grounds, in one of which the guide showed me the grave of Mr. Melly, an English gentle man who died there about a year previous, on his return to Egypt with his family, after a journey to Khartoum. His tomb was merely an oblong mound of unburnt brick, with a rough stone at the head and foot. It had beeu strictly re spected by the natives, who informed me that large sums were given to them to keep it in order and watch it at night. They also told me that after his death there was great difficulty in procuring a shroud. The only muslin in the neighborhood was a piece belonging to an old Shekh, who had kept it many years, in anticipation of his own death. It was sacred, having been sent to MeecJa and dipped in the holy well of Zemzem. In this the body was wrapped and laid in the earth. The grave was in a dreary spot, out of sight of the river, and surrounded by desert thorns. We had a strong north-wind all day. The sky was cloud* less, but a fine white film filled the air, and the distant moun- A WHITE ARAB. 19$ tains had the pale, blue-gray tint of an English landscape. The Jii?harees wrapped themselves closely in their mantles as they walked, but Eesa only tightened the cloth around his loins, and allowed free play to his glorious limbs. He informed me that he was on his way to Berber to make preparations for his marriage, which was to take place in another moon. He and llossayn explained to me how the Ababdehs would then come together, feast on camel's flesh, and dance their sword-dances. " 1 shall go to your wedding, too," i said to Eesa. " Will you indeed, O Effendi ! " he cried, with delight : " then I shall kill my she-camel, and give you the best piece." I asked whether I should be kindly received among the Ababdehs, and Eyoub declared that the men would be glad to see me, but that the women were afraid of Franks. " But," said Achmet, " the Effendi is no Frank." " How is this ? " said Eyoub, turning to me. "Achmet is right," I answered : " I am a white Arab, from India." " But do you not speak the Frank language, when you talk with each other ? " " No," said Achmet, " we talk Hindustanee." " 0, praised be Allah ! " cried Hossayn, clapping his hands with joy : " praised be Allah, that you are an Arab, like ourselves ! " and there was such pleasure in the faces of all, that I immediately repented of having deceived them. They assured me, however, that the Ababdehs would not only admit me into their tribe, but that I might have the handsomest Ababdiyeh that could be found, for a wife. Hos sayn had already asked Achmet to marry the eldest of his two daughters, who was then eleven years old. I passed the last evening of the year 1851 on the bank of the Nile, near Abou-Hashym. There was a wild, green island an the stream, and reefs of black rock, which broke the currenl 200 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. into rapids. The opposite shore was green and lovely crowned with groups of palms, between whose stems I had glimpses of blue mountains far to the south and west. The tempera ture was mild, and the air full of the aroma of miino.-a blos soms. When night came on I enjoyed the splendid moon and starlight of the tropics, and watched the Southern Cross rise above the horizon. The inhabitants of the village beat their wooden drums lustily all night, to scare the hippopotami away from their bean-fields. My dream before waking was of an immense lion, which I had tamed, and which walked beside me a propitious omen, said the Arabs. The morning was so cold that the Bisharees were very lan guid in their movements, and even I was obliged to don my capote. Eesa helped the men in all the freedom of his naked limbs, and showed no signs of numbness. The village of Abou-Hashym extends for three or four miles along the river, and looked charming in the morning sunshine, with its bright fields of wheat, cotton and dourra spread out in front of the tidy clay houses. The men were at work among the grain, directing the course of the water, and shy children tended the herds of black goats that browsed on the thorns skirting the Desert. - The people greeted me very cordially, and when I stopped to wait for the camels an old man came running up to inquire if I had lost the way. The western bank of the river is still richer and more thickly populated, and the large town of Bedjem, capital of the Beyooda country, lies just opposite Abou-Hashym. After leaving the latter place our road swerved Btill more from the Nile, and took a straight course over a rolling desert tract of stones and thorns, to avoid a very long curve of the stream. The air was still strong from the north, LOSS OF MY THERMOMETER. JCJ and the same gray vapor tempered the sunshine and toned down the brilliant tints of the landscape. We passed several small burying-grounds in which many of the graves were decked with small white flags stuck on poles, and others had bowls of water placed at the head n custom for which I could get no explanation. Near El Bagh eyr, where we struck the river again, we met two Bedouins, who had turned merchants and were taking a drove of camels to Egypt. One of them had the body of a gazelle which he had shot two days before, hanging at his saddle, and offered to sell to me, but the flesh had become too dry and hard for my teeth. AH succeeded in buying a pair of fowls for three pias tres, and brought me, besides, some doum-nuts, of the last year's growth. I could make no impression on them until the rind had been pounded with stones. The taste was like that of dry gingerbread, and when fresh, must be very agreeable. In the fields I noticed a new kind of grain, the heads of which resembled rice. The natives called it dookhn, and said that it was even more nutritious than wheat or dourra, though not so palatable. I signalized New-Year's Day, 1852, by breaking my ther mometer, which fell out of my pocket as I was mounting my dromedary. It was impossible to replace it, and one point wherein my journey might have been useful was thus lost. The variations of temperature at different hours of the day were very remarkable, and on leaving Korosko I had com menced a r scord which I intended to keep during the whole of iny stay in Central Africa.* In the evening I found in the * The following record of the temperature, from the time of leaving Korosko to the date of the accident which deprived me of the 9* t02 JOURNEY TO CKNTKAL AFRICA. Nile a fish about four feet long, which had just been killed bj a crocodile. It was lying near the water's edge, and as I de scended the bank to examine it, two slender black serpents slid away from before my feet. We struck the tent early the next morning, and entered on the akaba, or pass of the Wady el-homar (Valley of Asses). It was a barren, stony tract, intersected with long hollows, which produced a growth of thorns and a hard, dry grass, the blades of which cut the fingers that attempted to pluck it. We passed two short ranges of low hills, which showed the same strata of coal-black shale, as in the Nubian Desert. The akaba takes its name from the numbers of wild asses which are found in it. These beasts are remarkably shy and fleet, but are sometimes killed and eaten by the Arabs. We kept a sharp look-out, but saw nothing more than their tracks in the sand. We met several companies of the village eter, is interesting, as it shows a variation fully equal to that of our OB climate : 2 P. M 80 80 75 (BahrbelaMa) 85 78 86 100 95 90 90 85 84 Jan. 1st, 1852 47 70 68 7A.M. 12 M. Korosko, Dec. 21st 59 75 Desert, 22 50 74 a 44 23 55 75 M 44 24 61 70 u 44 25 54 78 a 44 26 60 91 it 44 27 55 M 44 28 59=> Abon-Hammed 44 29 61 The Nile 44 30 59 M 44 31 52 78 ETHIOPIAN SCENEKY. 203 Arabs, travelling on foot or on donkeys. The women were unveiled, and wore the same cotton mantle as the men, reach ing from the waist to the knees. They were all tolerably ol UP. 204 Berber, and Achmet told them they could not deceive me, for I had the truth written in a book, they said not a word. We entered the town, which was larger, cleaner and hand somer than any place I had seen since leaving Siout. Ar- naout soldiers were mixed with the Arabs in the streets, and we met a harem of Caireue ladies taking * wind was fair, and bore me southward, deeper into FORTUNATE TRAVEL. 219 CHAPTER XVII. THE ETHIOPIAN NILE. Fortunate Travel The America Ethiopian Scenery The Atbaia River Darner j Melon Patch Agriculture The Inhabitants Change of Scenery The First Hip popotamus Crocodiles Effect of My Map The Eais and Sailors Arabs in EtMo pla Ornamental Scars Beshir The Slave Bakhita We Approach Meioi " Fair is that land as evening skies, And cool though in the depth it iies Of burning Africa." WOBDSWOKTH. THE voyage from Berber to Khartoum was another link in my chain of fortunate travel. The Ethiopian Nile seemed to me more beautiful than the Egyptian ; at least, the vegetation waa richer, the air milder and sweeter, the water purer, and to crown all, the north-wind unfailing. Day and night there was a fresh, steady breeze, carrying us smoothly against the cur rent, at the precise rate of speed which is most pleasant in a wailing craft three to four miles an hour. The temperature was that of an American June, the nights deliciously mild and Hweet, and the full moon shone with a splendor unknown in northern latitudes. I was in perfect health of body, and suf- fored no apprehension or anxiety for the future to disturb my happy frame of mind. El Mekheyref looked very picturesque in the soft cleai 220 JOORNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. light of the last afternoon hour, as I sailed away from it The Bey's mansion and the mosque rose conspicuously above tha long lines of clay walls, and groups of luxuriant date-trees in the gardens supplied the place of minarets and spires. Both shores, above the city, were in a high state of cultivation, and I passed many thriving villages before dusk. Even under the moon, the corn-fields on either hand were green and bright. I was installed in a temporary cabin, formed of my tent-canvas, stretched over a frame of palm-sticks, erected on the narro\v poop-deck. Achmet and Ali took possession of the hold, which they occupied as kitchen and store-room. The rais, sailors and the two beautiful sheep which the Bey gave me, were group ed on the forecastle. On this first evening, the men, fatigued by their extra labors on my account, were silent, and I was left to the full enjoyment of the scene. The waves rippled pleasantly against the prow of the America ; the frogs and crickets kept up a concert along the shore, and the zikzdk, or crocodile-bird, uttered his sharp, twittering note at intervals. Hours passed thus, before I was willing to close my eyes. The landscapes next morning were still more beautiful. The Nile was as broad as in Lower Egypt, flowing between banks of the most brilliant green. Long groves of palms be hind the shore, shut out from view the desert tracts beyond, and my voyage all day was a panorama of the richest summer scenery. Early in the forenoon I passed the mouth of the At- bara, the ancient Astaboras, and the first tributary stream which the traveller meets on his journey from the Mediterra nean. Its breadth is about one-third that of the main river, but the volume of water must be in a much smaller proportion. The water is a clear, bright green, and its junction with the THK ATBARA RIVER. 221 darker Nile is distinctly marked. I could look up the Atbare for about a mile, to "where it curved out of sight between high green banks covered with flowering mimosas. It was a charm ing piece of river scenery, and I longed to follow the stream upward through the wild domains of the Hallengas and Ha- dendoas, through the forests and jungles of Takka and Schan- galla, to where, an impetuous torrent, it foams through the Alpine highlands of Samen, under the eternal snows of Abba- Jaret and Amba-Hai. In Abyssinia it bears the name of Ta- cazze, but afterwards through the greater part cf its course, is called the Atbara (and the country it waters, Dar Atbara), ex cept at its junction with the Nile, where the natives name it El-bahr Mogran. Two or three hours later we reached the large town of Da rner, which gives its name to the point of land between the two rivers. It is a quarter of a mile from the shore, and is a collection of mud buildings, scattered through a grove of sont trees. My sailors stopped to get some mats, and I climbed the bank to look at the place, but there was nothing in the view to tempt me to enter. During the day we stopped at an island in the river, to buy some vegetables. Two men were guarding a large patch of ripe melons and cucumbers, behind which extended fields of dourra, divided by hedges of a kind of shrub cypress, all overgrown with a purple convolvulus in flower, and a wild gourd-vine, with bright yellow blossoms. In wandering through the luxuriant mazes of vegetation, I came upon a dwelling of the natives a nest or arbor, scooped out of a thick clump of shrubs, and covered with dry branchea It resembled the milpas, or brush-huts of the Mexican ranche- ros. The only furniture was a frame of palm-sticks, serving 222 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA as a divan, and four stones, arranged so as to form a fire-place On returning to the shore, I found Achmet in dispute with the two men. He had taken some melons, for which he offer ed them two and a half piastres. They demanded more, but as he had purchased melons for less in El Mekheyref, he re fused, and giving them the money, took the melons perforce " Well," said they, " you are our masters, and we must sub mit;" but they would sell no more to my sailors. The latter, however, procured a bowl of treacle, made of dates, and some sour milk, at another hut, and were contented therewith. The bean-fields along the shore had just been trampled down by a hippopotamus, whose huge foot-prints we saw in the soft mud near the water. All day, we sailed between shores of vegetation, of the ripest green. Both banks of the river, through this region, are studded with water-wheels, whose creaking ceases not by day nor by night. It was pleasant to see the strings of jars ascending and descending, and to hear the cool plashing cf the precious blood of the Nile, as it poured into the branching veins which are the life of that teeming soil. The wheels were turned by oxen, driven by Dinka slaves, who sang vo ciferous melodies the while, and the water was conveyed to fields distant from the river in the hollow trunks of the doum- tree. There, where I expected to sail through a wilderness, 1 found a garden. Ethiopia might become, in other hands, the richest and most productive part of Africa. The people are industrious and peaceable, and deserve better masters. Theii dread of the Turks is extreme, and so is their hatred. I stop ped one evening at a little village on the western bank The SCENERY AND INHABITANTS. 223 sailors were sent to the houses to procure fowls and eggs, and after a long time two men appeared, bringing, as they said, the only chicken in the place. They came up slowly, stooped and touched the ground, and then laid their hands on their heads, signifying that they were as dust before my feet. Achmet paid them the thirty paras they demanded, and when they saw that the supposed Turks had no disposition to cheat them, they went back and brought more fowls. Travellers who go by the land routes give the people an excellent character for hospital ity. I was informed that it is almost impossible to buy any thing, even when double the value of the article is tendered, but by asking for it as a favor, they will cheerfully give what ever they have. When I crept out of my tent on the third mornicg, the fea tures of the scenery were somewhat changed. A blue chain of hills, which we had passed in the night, lay behind us, and a long, graceful mountain range rose on the right, broken by a pass which was cut through it at right angles to its course. The mountains retreated out of my horizon during the fore noon, but in the afternoon again approached nearly to the water's edge, on the eastern bank. They were of a dark-red color, exhibiting a broken, mound-like formation. We passed several islands during the day beds of glorious vegetation. The sakias were turning at intervals of a hundred yards or less, and the rustling Celds of wheat and dourra seemed burst ing with the fulness of their juices. I now began to notice that warm vermilion tinge of the clouds, which is frequently exhibited near the Equator, but is nowhere so striking as in Central Africa. Lying heavily along the horizon, in the warm hours of the day, they appeared to glow with a dead, smould- 224 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. ering fire, like brands which are soft white ashes on the cut side, but living coals within. On the same day I saw the nrbt hippopotamus. The mec discerned him about a quarter of a mile off, as he came up to breathe, and called my attention to him. Our vessel was run towards him, and the sailors shouted, to draw his attention : " How is your wife, old boy ?" " Is your son married yet?" and other like exclamations. They insisted upon it that hia curiosity would be excited by this means, and he would allow us to approach. I saw him at last within a hundred yards, but only the enormous head, which was more than three feet in breadth across the ears. He raised it with a tremendous snort, opening his huge mouth at the same time, and I thought I had never seen a more frightful-looking monster. He came up in our wake, after we had passed, and followed us for some time. Directly afterwards we spied five crocodiles on a sand-bank. One of them was of a grayish-yellow color, and upward of twenty feet in length. We approached quietly to within a few yards of them, when my men raised their poles and shouted. The beasts started from their sleep and dashed quickly into the water, the big yellow one striking so violently against our hull, that I am sure he went off with a head-ache. The natives have many superstitions concerning the hippopotamus, and re lated to me some astonishing examples of his cunning and Bagacity. Among others, they asserted that an Arab woman, at Abou-Hammed, went down to the river to wash some clothes, once upon a time. She laid the garments upon some smooth stones, and was engaged in trampling them with her feet, when a huge hippopotamus thrust his head out of the river, and after watching her for some time, made for the shore. The woman MY MAP. 22,1 fled in terror leaving the clothes behind her ; whereupon the beast immediately took her place, and pounded away so vig orously with his feet, that in a short time there was not left A fragment as big as your hand. On making inquiries for the ruins of Meroe, which we were then approaching, the rai's only knew that there were some " beioot Jcadeem " (ancient houses) near the village of Bedjer- owiyeh, which we would probably reach that night. As I found on my map a name which nearly corresponded to that of the village, I had no doubt that this was Meroe, and gave orders that the boat should halt until the next day. The rai's was greatly surprised at my knowing the names of all the towns along the river, seeing that I had never been there before. I showed him my map, and told him that I knew from it, the name of every mountain, every village, and every river, from Cairo to Abyssinia. The men crowded around and inspected it with the utmost astonishment, and when I pointed out to them the location of Mecca, and read them the names of all the villages as far as Khartoum, they regarded it with an ex pression of reverential awe. " Wallah ! " exclaimed the rai's : " this is truly a wonderful Frank ! " My rai's, whose name was Bakhid, belonged, with his men, to the Nubian tribe of Mahass, below Dongola. They were tall, well-formed men, with straight features and high cheek bones, but the lips were thicker than those of the Arab tribes of Ethiopia. The latter are of almost pure Shemitic blood, and are descended from families which emigrated into Africa from the Hedjaz. seven or eight centuries ago. This accounts for the prevalence and purity of the Arab language in these regions. The descendants of the Djaaleyn, or tribe of Benj 10* E26 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. Koreish, of Yemen, are still to be found in the coxantry of the Atbara, and there are those in Ethiopia, who claim to be de scendants from the line of the Abbasides and the Ornmiades There has been very little intermixture with the negro races beyond Sennaar, who are looked upon as little better than wild beasts. The Arabic language is spoken from the Red Sea to the borders of Dar-Fur and Bornou, and according to Burck- hardt, the prevalent idioms are those of Hedjaz, in Arabia, The distinction between the descendants of the old Arab stock, and those who, like the Ababdehs and Bisharees, belong to the native African races, is obvious to the most careless observer. The latter, however, must not be confounded with the Negro race, from which they differ still more widely. Rais Bakhid had with him a son named Ibrahim a boy of twelve. His head was shaven so as to leave a circular tuf* of hair on the crown ; large silver rings hung from his ears, and each cheek was adorned with four broad scars three hori zontal, and one vertical, which were produced by gashing the skin with a knife, and then raising the flesh so as to prevent the edges from uniting. All the Nubian tribes are scarred in the same way, frequently upon the breast and back as well aa the face, and the number and position of the marks is generally a token of the particular tribe to which the person belongs. The slaves brought from the mountains of Fazogl, oil the Abyssinian frontier, have a still greater profusion of these bar baric ornaments. I had another Mahassee on board- a fellow of five and twenty, named Beshir, who kept all the others in a continual laugh with his droll sayings. He spoke the dialect of his tribe, not a word of which I could understand, but his Jaee and voice were so comical, that I laughed involuntarily, THE SLAVE BAKIIITA. 227 whenever he spoke. He was a graceless fellow, given to all sorts of debauchery, and was never so happy as when he could drink his fill of om bilbil, (the " mother of nightingales,") as the beer of the country is called, because he who drinks it, sings. Another curious character was an old woman named Bak- hita, a slave of the owner of the vessel, who acted as cook for the sailors. She sat squatted on the forward deck all day, hideously and nakedly ugly, but performed her duties so regu larly and with such a contented face, laughing heartily at all the jokes which the men made at her expense, that I soon learn ed to tolerate her presence, which was at first disgusting. She was a native of the mountains of Dar-Far, but had been captur ed by the slave-hunters when a child. She was in Shendy on the night when Ismail Pasha and his soldiers w^re burned to death by Mek Nemr, in the year 1822. But with all my ques tioning, she could give no account of the scene, and it was a marvel that she remembered it at all. Life was to her a blank page, and what one day might write upon it, the next day erased. She sat from morning till night, grinding the dourra between two flat stones, precisely as the Mexican women grind their maize, occasionally rubbing her hands upon her woolly head to rid them of the paste. Her only trouble waa my white sheep, which, in its search after food, would deliber ately seize her mealy top-knots and begin to chew them. Her yells, at such times, were the signal for a fresh attack of Be- ehir's drollery. Yet old, and ugly, andimbruted as she was, no Prankish belle, whose bloom is beginning to wane, could have been more sensitive about her age. I was delighted to find this touch of vanity in her; it was the only trace of feminin* 228 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. nature she ever betrayed. Besbir's declaration tbat she was a hundred and fifty years old, roused her to fury. She rose up, turned to me with a face so hideously distorted that I could not laugh at it, and yelled out : " Look at me, my lord ! and tell me if this son of a dog speaks the truth ! " " He lies, Bakhita," I answered ; " I should say that you were not more than thirty years old." The fury of her face was instantly re placed by a simper of vanity which made it even more hideous; but from that time Bakhita considered me as her friend. Be- ehir, who never missed an opportunity of hailing the people on shore, called out one day to a damsel who came down to the river for water : " Here is your sister on board." The ami able maiden, not at all pleased with the comparison, rejoined " Am I sister to a hyena ? "a compliment, over which the old woman chuckled for a long time. The wind fell at sunset, when we were about seven miles from Meroe, and while the sailors moored the boat to the shore and built a fire to cook the head and ribs of my sheep, I climb ed the bank, to get a sight of the country. As far as I could see, the soil was cultivated, principally with cotton and dourra. The cotton was both in flower and pod, and was of excellent quality. Achmet and I visited a water-mill, under the charge of a Dinka slave, who came up humbly and kissed our hands. We commanded him to go on with his work, when he took his Beat on the beam of the wheel and drove his cows around, to the accompaniment of a loud, shrill song, which, at a distance harmonized strangely with the cry of the jackal, in the deserts uway beyond the river. MERGE. 220 CHAPTER XVIII. THE RUINS OP MERGE. Inival at Bo.ljeiowiyeh The Rains of Merot Walk Across the Plain The Pyr* raids Character of their Masonry The lower and Vault Finding of the Trea sureThe Second Group More Ruins Site of the City Number of the Pyramldi The Antiquity of MeroO Ethiopian and Egyptian Civilization The Caucasian Race Reflections. A LIGHT breeze sprang up soon after midnight, and when I arose, at sunrise, we were approaching the village of Bedjer- owiyeh. By the time cofiee was ready, the America was moor ed at the landing-place, and Rais Bakhid, who was familiar with all the localities, stood in waiting. Achmet, with Beshir and another sailor, also accompanied me. We crossed some fields of cotton and dookhn to the village, which was a cluster of toliuls, or circular huts of mud and sticks, in a grove of sont trees. The rais tried to procure a donkey for me, but the people, who took me for an Egyptian, and appeared very timo rous and humble, denied having any, although I saw two half- starved beasts among the trees. We therefore set out on foot, toward a range of mountains, about five miles distant. The discovery of the ruins of Meroe is of comparatively recent date, and it is only within a very short time that theii 2' A JOUrtNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. true character and place in Ethiopian history have been sati* factorilj established. Hoskins, Cailliaud and Ferlini were the first to direct the attention of antiquarians to this quarter, and the later and more complete researches of Lepsius leave room for little more to be discovered concerning them. It is re markable that both Bruce and Burckhardt, who travelled by /and from Berber to Shendy, failed to see the ruins, which must have been visible from the road they followed. The for mer, in fact, speaks of the broken pedestals, carved stones and pottery which are scattered over the plain, and sagely says . " It is impossible to avoid risking a guess that this is the an cient city of Meroe" but he does not mention the groups of pyramids which are so conspicuous a feature in the landscape. Our path led over a plain covered with thorny shrubs at first, but afterwards hard black gravel, and we had not gone more than a mile before the rais pointed out the pyramids of the ancient Ethiopian city. I knew it only from its mention in history, and had never read any description of its remains; consequently I was surprised to see before me, in the vapory morning air, what appeared to be the ruins of pylae and porti cos, as grand and lofty as those of Karnak. Rising between us and the mountains, they had an imposing effect, and I ap proached them with excited anticipations. As we advanced, however, and the morning vapors melted away, I found that they derived much of their apparent height from the hill upon which they are built, and that, instead of being the shattered parts of one immense temple, they were a group of separate pyramids, standing amid the ruins of others which have been Completely destroyed. We reached them after a walk of about four miles. They THE PYRAMIDS. 231 stand upjn a narrow, crescent-shaped hill, which rises forty or fifty feet from the plain, presenting its convex front to the Nile, while toward the east its hollow curve embraces a small valley lying between it and the mountain range. Its ridge is crowned with a long line of pyramids, standing so close to each other that their bases almost meet, but presenting no regular plan or association, except in the direction of their faces. None of them retains its apex, and they are all more or less ruined, though two are perfect to within a few courses of the top. I climbed one of the highest, from which I could overlook the whole group, as well as another cluster, which crowned the summit of a low ridge at the foot of the mountains opposite. Of those among which I stood, there were sixteen, in different degrees of ruin, besides the shapeless stone-heaps of many more. They are all built of fine red sandstone, in regular courses of masonry, the spaces of which are not filled, or cased, as in the Egyptian pyramids, except at the corners, which are covered with a narrow hem or moulding, in order to give a smooth outline. The stones are about eighteen inches high, and the recession of each course varies from two to four inches, FO that the height of the structure is always much greater than the breadth of the base. A peculiarity of these pyramids is. that the sides are not straight but curved lines, of different degrees of convexity, and the breadth of the courses of stone is adjusted with the utmost nicety, so as to produce this form. They are small, compared with the enormous piles of Gizeh and Dashoor, but singularly graceful and elegant in appearance Not one of the group is more than seventy feet in height, noi when complete could have exceeded one hundred. All or nearly all have a small chamber attached to the er- 232 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. terior, exactly against the centre of their eastern sides, but no passage leading into the interior ; and from the traces of Dr. Lepsius's labors, by which I plainly saw that he had attempt ed in vain to find an entrance, it is evident that they are mere ly solid piles of masonry, and that, if they were intended as tombs, the bodies were deposited in the outer chambers. Some of these chambers are entire, except the roof, and their walls are profusely sculptured with hieroglyphics, somewhat blurred and worn down, from the effect of the summer rains. Their entrances resembled the doorways of temples, on a miniature scale, and the central stones of two of them were sculptured with the sacred winged globe. I saw on the jamb of another a figure of the god Horus. The chambers were quite small, and not high enough to allow me to stand upright. The sculp tures have a very different character from those in the tombs of Thebes, and their resemblance to those of the Ptolemaic period was evident at the first glance. The only cartouches of monarchs which I found were so obliterated that I could not identify them, but the figure of one of the kings, grasping in one hand the hair of a group of captives, while with the other he lifts a sword to slay them, bears a striking resemblance to that of Ptolemy Euergetes, on the pylon of the temple at Edfou. Many of the stones in the vast heaps which lie scat tered over the hills, are covered with sculptures. I found on some the winged globe and scarabeus, while others retained the scroll or fillet which usually covers the sloping corners of a pylon. On the northern part of the hill I found several blocks of limestone, which exhibited a procession of sculptured figures brilliantly colored. The last structure on the southern extremity of the hill i? THE FINDING OF THE TREASURE. 233 rather a tower than a pyramid, consisting of a high base ol foundation, upon which is raised a square building, the corners presenting a very slight slope towards the top, which is cover ed with ruins, indicating that there was criginally another and narrower story upon it. When complete, it must have borne considerable resemblance to the Assyrian towers, the remains of which are found at Nineveh. On this part of the hill there are many small detached chambers, all facing the east, and the remains of a large building. Here Lcpsius appears to have expended most of his labors, and the heaps of stone and rub bish he has left behind him prevent one from getting a very clear idea of the original disposition of the buildings. He has quarried one of the pyramids down to its base, without finding any chamber within or pit beneath it. My rais, who was at a loss to comprehend the object of my visit, spoke of Lepsius as a great Frank astrologer, who had kept hundreds of the people at work for many days, and at last found in the earth a multitude of chickens and pigeons, all of solid gold. He then gave the people a great deal of backsheesh and went away, taking the golden fowls with him. The most interesting object he lias revealed is a vaulted room, about twenty feet long, which the rais pointed out as the place where the treasures were found. It is possible that he here referred to the discoveries made about twenty years ago by Ferliui, who excavated a great quantity of rings and other ornaments Greek and Roman, as well as Ethiopian which are now in the Museum at Berlin. The ceiling of this vault is on the true principle of the arch, with a keystone in the centre, which circumstance, as well as Jie character of the sculptures, would seem to fix the age ol the pyramids at a little more than two thousand years. 234 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. I took a sketch of this remarkable cluster of ruins from their northern end, and afterwards another from the valley be low, whence each pyramid appears distinct and separate, nc one covering the other. The rai's and sailors were puzzled what to make of my inspection of the place, but finally con eluded that I hoped to find a few golden pigeons, which the Frank astrologer had not carried away. I next visited the eastern group, which consists of ten pyramids, more or less di lapidated, and the ruined foundations of six or eight more. The largest, which I ascended, consists of thirty-five courses of stone, and is about fifty-three feet in height, eight or ten feet of the apex having been hurled down. Each side of the apex is seventeen paces, or about forty-two feet long, and the angle of ascent is consequently much greater than in the pyra mids of Egypt. On the slope of the hill are the substructions of two or three large buildings, of which sufficient remains to show the disposition of the chambers and the location of the doorways. Towards the south, near where the valley inclosed between the two groups opens upon the plain, are the remains of other pyramids and buildings, and some large, fortress-like ruins are seen on the summits of the mountains to the East. I would willingly have visited them, but the wind was blowing fresh, and the rais was impatient to get back to his vessel. Many of the stones of the pyramids are covered with rude at tempts at sculpturing camels and horses ; no doubt by the Arabs, for they resemble a school-boy's first drawings on a elate straight sticks for legs, squares for bodies, and triangles for humps. Leaving the ruins to the company of the black goats that were browsing on the dry grass, growing in bunches at their SITE OF THE ANCIENT CITY. 23S eastern base, 1 walked to another group of pyramids, which lay a mile and a half to the south-west, towards the Nile. As wt approached them, a herd of beautiful gray gazelles started frum among the stones and bounded away into the Desert. ' These were the tents of the poor people," said the rais, pointing to the pyramids : " the Frank found no golden pi geons here." They were, in fact, smaller and more dilapidated than the others. Some had plain burial chambers attached to their eastern sides, but the sculptures were few and insignifi cant. There were sixteen in all, more or less ruined. Scat tering mounds, abounding with fragments of bricks and build ing-stones, extended from these ruins nearly to the river's bank, a distance of more than two miles ; and the foundations of many other pyramids might be seen among them. The total number of pyramids in a partial state of preservation some being nearly perfect, while a few retained only two or three of the lower courses which I counted on the site of Meroe, was forty-two. Besides these, I noticed the traces of forty 01 fifty others, which had been wholly demolished. The entire number, however, of which Meroe could boast, in its prime, was one hundred and ninety-six. The- mounds near the river, which cover an extent of between one and two miles, point out the site of the city, the capital of the old Hierarchy of Meroe, and the pyramids are no doubt the tombs of its kings and priests. It is rather singular that the city has been so completely destroyed, as the principal spoilers of Egypt, the Persians, never penetrated into Ethiopia, and there is nc evidence of the stones having been used to any extent by the Arabs, as building materials. The examination of Meroe has solved the doubtful 236 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. * tlon of an Ethiopian civilization anterior to that of Egypt Hoskins and Cailliaud, who attributed a great antiquity to the ruins, were misled by the fact, discovered by Lepsius, that the Ethiopian monarchs adopted as their own, and placed upon their tombs the nomens of the earlier Pharaohs. It is now established beyond a doubt, that, so far from being the oldest, these are the latest remains of Egyptian art ; their inferiority displays its decadence, and not the rude, original type, whence it sprang. Starting from Memphis, where not only the oldest Egyptian, but the oldest human records yet discovered, are found, the era of civilization becomes later, as you ascend the Nile. In Nubia, there are traces of Thothmes and Amunoph III., or about fifteen centuries before the Christian era; at Napata, the ancient capital of Ethiopia, we cannot get beyond King Tirhaka, eight centuries later ; while at Meroe, there is no evidence which can fix the date of the pyramids earlier than the first, or at furthest, the second century before Christ. Egypt, therefore, was not civilized from Ethiopia, but Ethio pia from Egypt. The sculptures at Meroo also establish the important fact that the ancient Ethiopians, though of a darker complexion than the Egyptians (as they are in fact represented, in Egyp tian sculpture), were, like them, an offshoot of the great Cau casian race.* Whether they were originally emigrants from * In the Letters of Lepsius, which were not published until oftei my return from Africa, I find the foMowing passage, the truth of which is supported by all the evidence we possess: 'The Ethiopian nam comprehended much that was dissimilar, among the ancients. The an cient population of the whole Nile Valley as far as Khartoum, and per haps, also, along the Blue River, as well as the tribes of the Desert to THE CAUCASIAN HACK IN ETHIOPIA. 237 Northern India and the regions about Cashmere, as the Egyp tians are supposed to have been, or, like the Beni Koreish at a later period, crossed over from the Arabian Peninsula, is not BO easily determined. The theory of Pococke and other scholars, based on the presumed antiquity of Meroe, that here was the first dawning on African soil of that earliest Indian Civilization, which afterwards culminated at Memphis and Thebes, is overthrown ; but we have what is of still greater significance the knowledge that the highest Civilization, in every age of the world, has been developed by the race to which we belong. I walked slowly back to the boat, over the desolate plain, striving to create from those shapeless piles of ruin the splen dor of which they were once a part. The sun, and the wind and the mountains, and the Nile, were what they had ever been ; but where the kings and priests of Meroe walked in the pomp of their triumphal processions, a poor, submissive peasant knelt before me with a gourd full of goat's milk ; and if I had asked him when that plain had been inhabited, he would have answered me, like Chidhar, the Prophet : ' As thou seest it now, so has it been for ever ! " (he east of the Nile, and the Abyssinian nations, were in former times probably even more distinctly separated fromtha negroes than new, ODd tlonged to the Caucasian Race" 258 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. Moonlight on the Ethiopian Nile. CHAPTEK XIX. ETHIOPIAN NIGHTS' ENTERTAINMENTS. TTio Landscapes of Ethiopia My Evenings beside the Nile Experiences of the Ara bian Nights The Story of the Sultana Zobeide and the Wood-cutter Character of the Arabian Tales Keligion. " For it was in the golden prime Of good Harouu Al-Raschid." TENNYSON. WITH my voyage on the Ethiopian Nile a thread of romance was woven, which, in the Oriental mood that had now become native to me, greatly added to the charm of the journey. My nights' entertainments were better than the Arabian. The moon was at the full and although, during the day, a light north-wind filled my sails, it invariably fell calm at sunset, KVENING ON THE NILB. 239 and remained so for two or three hours. During the after noon, I lay stretched on my carpet on the deck, looking through half-closed eyes on the glittering river and his banks. The western shore was one long bower of Paradise so green, so bright, so heaped with the deep, cool foliage of majestio sjoa mores and endless clusters of palms. I had seen no such beautiful palms since leaving Minyeh, in Lower Egypt. There they were taller, but had not the exceeding richness and glory of these. The sun shone hot in a cloudless blue heaven, and the air was of a glassy, burning clearness, like that which dwells in the inmost heart of fire. The colors of the landscape were as if enamelled on gold, so intense, so glowing in their in toxicating depth and splendor. When, at last, the wind fell except a breeze just strong enough to shake the creamy odor out of the purple bean-blossoms and the sun went down in a bed of pale orange light, the moon came tip the other side of heaven, a broad disc of yellow fire, and bridged the glassy Nile with her beams. At such times, I selected a pleasant spot on the western bank of the river, where the palms were loftiest and most thickly clustered, and had the boat moored to the shore. Achmet then spread my carpet and piled my cushions on the shelving bank of white sand, at the foot of the trees, where, as I lay, I could see the long, feathery leaves high above my head, and at the same time look upon the broad wake of the moon, as she rose beyond the Nile. The sand was as fine and eoft as a bed of down, and retained an agreeable warmth from tho snnshinc which had lain upon it all day. As we rarely Halted near a village, there was no sound to disturb the balmy repose of the scene, except, now and then, the whine of a jackal 240 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. prowling along the edge of the Desert. Achmet crossed his legs beside me on the sand, and Ali, who at such times had special charge of my pipe, sat at my feet, ready to replenish il as often as occasion required. My boatmen, after gathering dry palm-leaves and the resinous branches of the mimosa, kindled a fire beside some neighboring patch of dooklin, and squatted around it, smoking and chatting in subdued tones, that their gossip might not disturb my meditations. Their white tur bans and lean dark faces were brought out in strong relief by the red fire-light, and completed the reality of a picture which was more beautiful than dreams. On the first of these evenings, after my pipe had been filled for the third time, Achmet, finding that 1 showed no disposi tion to break the silence, and rightly judging that I would rather listen than talk, addressed me. " Master," said he, " I know many stories, such as the story-tellers relate in the cof fee houses of Cairo. If you will give me permission, I will tell you some which I think you will find diverting.'' " Ex cellent ! " said I ; " nothing will please me better, provided you tell them in Arabic. This will be more agreeable to both of us, and whenever I cannot understand your words, I will interrupt you, and you shall explain them as well as you can, in English." He immediately commenced, and while those evening calms lasted, I had such a living experience of the Arabian Nights, as would have seemed to me a greater marvel than any they describe, had it been foreshown to my boyish vision, when I first hung over the charmed pages. There, in my African mood, the most marvellous particulars seemed quite real and natural, and I enjoyed those flowers of Eastern romance with a zest unknown before. After my recent reoep EXPERIENCES OF THE ARABIAN NIGHTS. 241 tion, as a king of the Franks, in the capital of Berber, it was not difficult to imagine myself Shahriar, the Sultan of the In- dies, especially as the moon showed me my turbaned shadow on the sand. If the amber mouth-piece of my pipe was not studded with jewels, and if the zerf which held my coffee-cup was brass instead of gold, it was all the same by moonlight. Achmet, seated on the sand, a little below my throne, was Sheherazade, and Ali, kneeling at my feet, her sister, Dinar- zade ; though, to speak candidly, my imagination could not stretch quite so far. In this respect, Shahriar had greatly the advantage of me. I bitterly felt the difference between my dusky vizier, and his vizier's daughter. Nor did Ali, who lis tened to the stories with great interest, expressing his satisfac tion occasionally by a deep guttural chuckle, ever surprise me by saying : " If you are not asleep, my sister, I beg of you to recount to me one of those delightful stories you know." Nevertheless, those nights possessed a charm which sepa rates them from all other nights I have known. The stories resembled those of the Arabian tale in being sometimes pro longed from one day to another. One of them, in fact, was " Ganem, the Slave of Love," but, as told by Achmet, differ ing slightly from the English version. The principal story, however, was new to me, and as I am not aware that it has evei been translated, I may be pardoned for telling it as it was told to me, taking the liberty to substitute my own words for Ach- met's mixture of Arabic and English. I was too thoroughly given up to the pleasant illusion, to note down the story at the time, and I regret that many peculiarities of expression have escaped me, which then led me to consider it a genuine product of the age which produced the Thousand and One Nights. 11 242 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. *' You already know, my Master," Achmet began, " that many hundred years ago all the people of Islam were governed by a caliph, whose capital was Baghdad, and I doubt not that you have heard of the great Caliph, Haroun Al-Raschid, who certainly was not only the wisest man of his day, but the wisest that has been known since the days of our Prophet, Mohammed, whose name be exalted ! It rarely happens that a wise and great man ever finds a wife, whose wisdom is any match for his own ; for as the wise men whom Allah sends upon the earth are few, so are the wise women still fewer. But herein was the Caliph favored of Heaven. Since the days of Balkis, the Queen of Sheba, whom even the prophet Solo mon could not help but honor, there was no woman equal in virtue or in wisdom to the Sultana Zubeydeh (Zobeide). The Caliph never failed to consult her on all important matters, and her prudence and intelligence were united with his, in the government of his great empire, even as the sun and moon are sometimes seen shining in the heavens at the same time. ' But do not imagine that Haroun Al-Raschid and the Sultana Zubeydeh were destitute of faults. None except the Prophets of God may their names be extolled for ever ! were ever entirely just, or wise, or prudent The Caliph was sub ject to fits of jealousy and mistrust, which frequently led him to commit acts that obliged him, afterwards, to eat of the bit ter fruit of repentance ; and as for Zubeydeh, with all her wisdom she had a sharp tongue in her head, and was often so little discreet as to say things which brought upon her the dis pleasure of the Commander of the Faithful. " It chanced that, once upon a time, they were both seated in a window of the hareem, which overlooked one of the streets THE SULTANA AXD THE WOOD-CUTTER. 248 of Baghdad. The Caliph was in an ill-humor, for a beautiful Georgian slave whom his vizier had recently brought him, haa disappeared from the harem, and he saw in this the work of Zubeydeh, who was always jealous of any rival to her beauty. Now as they were sitting there, looking down into the street, a poor wood-cutter came along, with a bundle of sticks upon his head. His body was lean with poverty, and his only clothing was a tattered cloth, bound around his waist. But the most wonderful thing was, that in passing through the wood where he had collected his load, a serpent had seized him by the heel, but his feet were so hardened by toil that they resembled the 'hoofs of a camel, and he neither felt the teeth of the serpent, nor knew, that he was still dragging it after him as he walked. The Caliph marvelled when he be held this, but Zubeydeh exclaimed : ' See, Commander of the Faithful ! there is the man's wife ! ' ' What ! ' exclaim ed Haroun, with sudden wrath : ' Is the wife then a serpent to the man, which stings him none the less because he does not feel it ? Thou serpent, because thou hast stung me, and be cause thou hast made sport of the honest poverty of that poor creature, thou shalt take the serpent's place ! ' Zubeydeh an swered not a word, for she knew that to speak would but in crease the Caliph's anger. Haroun clapped his hands thrice, and presently Mesrour, his chief eunuch, appeared. ' Here Mesrour ! ' said he, ' take this woman with thee, follow yonder wood-cutter, and present her to him as his wife, whom the Ca liph hath ordered him to accept.' " Mesrour laid his hands upon his breast and bowed his head, vn token of obedience. He then beckoned to Zubeydeh, who rose, covered herself with a veil and a feridjee, such as is worn 244 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL ATTICA. by the wives of the poor, and followed him. When they hao overtaken the wood-cutter, Mesrour delivered to him the mes saga of the Caliph, and presented to him the veiled Zubeydeh. ' There is no God but God ! ' said the poor man ; ' hut how can I support a wife I, who can scarcely live by my own la bors?' 'Dost thou dare to disobey the Commander of the Faithful ? ' cried Mesrour, in such a savage tone, that the man trembled from head to foot ; but Zubeydeh, speaking for the first time, said : ' Take me with thee, Man ! since it is the Caliph's wilL I will serve thee faithfully, and perhaps the burden of thy poverty may be lightened through me.' The man thereupon obeyed, and they proceeded together to his house, which was in a remote part of the city. There were but two miserable rooms, with a roof which was beginning to fall in, from decay. The wood-cutter, having thrown down his bundle, went out to the bazaar, purchased some rice and a little salt, und brought a jar of water from the fountain. This was all he could afford, and Zubeydeh, who had kindled a fire in the mean time, cooked it and placed it before him. But when he would have had her raise her veil and sit down to eat with him, she refused, saying : ' I have promised that I shall not increase the burden of thy poverty. Promise me, in return, that thou wilt never seek to look upon my face, nor to enter that room, which I have chosen for my apartment. I am not without learning, Man ! and if thou wilt respect my wishes, it shall be well for thee.' " The wood-cutter, who was not naturally deficient in intel ligence, perceived from the words of Zubeydeh that she was a superior person, and, judging that he could not do better than k> follow her counsel, promised at once all that she desired. THE SULTANA AND THE WOOD-CUTTER. 245 She then declared, that as she intended to take charge of his household, he must give to her, every evening, all the money he had received for his wood during the day. The man con sented to this likewise, produced a handful of copper coins, which altogether amounted to only one piastre but you musl know, my master, that a piastre, in the days of Haroun Al- Raschid, was four or five times as much as it is now-a-days. Thus they lived together for several weeks, the wood-cuttej going to the forest every day, and paying his gains every night into the hands of Zubeydeh, who kept his miserable house clean and comfortable and prepared his food. She managed things with so much economy that she was enabled to save two paras every day, out of the piastre which he gave her. When she had amassed twenty piastres in this way, she gave them to the wood-cutter, saying : ' Go now to the market and buy thee an ass with this money. Thou canst thus bring home thrice as much wood as before, and the ass can subsist upon the grass which he finds in the forest, and which costs thee nothing.' ' By Allah ! ' exclaimed the wood-cutter ; * thou art a won derful woman, and I will obey thee in every thing.' " He forthwith did as Zubeydeh ordered, and was now en abled to give her three or four piastres every evening. She presented him with a more decent garment, and added butter to his pillau of rice, but still preserved such a strict economy, that in a short time he was master of three asses instead of one, and was obliged to hire a man to assist him in cutting wood. One evening, as the asses came home with their loads, Zubeydeh remarked that the wood gave out a grateful fra grance, like that of musk or ambergris, and upon examining il more closely, she found that it was a most precious article 246 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. in fact, that it had been cut from one of those spicy treea which sprang up where the tears of Adam fell upon the Earth, as he bewailed his expulsion from Paradise. For at that time the juices of the fruits of Paradise still remained in his body, and his tears were flavored by them which was the cause of all the spices that grow in the lands of Serendib and India. Zu- beydeh asked of the wood-cutter : ' To whom dost thou sell this wood ?' and from his answer she found that it was all purchased by some Jewish merchants, who gave him no more for it than for the common wood with which she cooked his rice. ' The accursed Jews ! ' she exclaimed : { Go thou to them immedi ately, and threaten to accuse them before the Cadi of defraud ing a son of the Faith, unless they agree to pay thce for this wood henceforth, twelve times as much as they have paid before ! ' " The man lost no time in visiting the Jewish merchants, who, when they saw that their fraud had been discovered, were greatly alarmed, and immediately agreed to pay him all that he demanded. The wood-cutter now brought home every night three donkey-loads of the precious wood, and paid to Zubeydeh from one to two hundred piastres. She was soon able to purchase a better house, where she not only gave the man more nourishing food, but sent for a teacher to instruct nim how to read and write. He had so improved in appear ance by this time, and had profited so well by the wise conver sation of Zubeydeh, that he was quite like another person, and those who had known him in his poverty no longer recognized him. For this reason, the Caliph, who soon repented of hip anger towards Zubeydeh and made every effort to recover her, was unable to find any trace of him. Mesrour sought day and THE SOT/TANA AND THE WOOD-CUTTER. 24 night tnrough the streets of Baghdad, but as Zubeydeh nevei left the wood-cutter's house, all his search was in vain, and the Caliph was like one distracted. " One day, as the wood-cutter was on his way to the forest, he was met by three persons, who desired to hire his asses for the day. ' But,' said he. ' I make my living from the wood which the asses carry to the city.' ' What profit do you make upon each load ? ' asked one of the men. ' If it is a good load, I often make fifty piastres,' answered the wood-cutter ' Well,' said the men, ' we will give you two hundred pias tres as the hire of each ass, for one day.' The wood-cutter, who had not expected such an extraordinary offer, was about to accept it at once, when he reflected that he had obeyed in all things the advice of Zubeydeh, and ought not to take such a step without her consent. He thereupon requested the men to wait while he returned home and consulted his wife. ' You have done right, my lord ! ' said Zubeydeh : ' I commend your prudence, and am quite willing that you should accept the offer of the men, as the money will purchase other asses and repay you for the loss of the day's profit, if the persons should not return.' " Now the three men were three celebrated robbers, who had amassed a vast treasure, which they kept concealed in a cave in one of the neighboring mountains. They hired the donkeys in order to transport this treasure to a barque in which they had taken passage to Bassora, where they intended to estab lish themselves as rich foreign merchants. But Allah, who governs all things, allows the plans of the wicked to prosper for a time, only that he may throw them into more utter ruin at the last The robbers went to their secret cave with the 248 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. donkeys and loaded them with all their spoils great sacks of gold, of rubies, diamonds and emeralds, which the beasts were scarcely strong enough to carry. On their way to the river helow Baghdad, where the boat was waiting for them, two of them stopped to drink at a well, while the other went on with the asses. Said one of the twain to the other : " Let us kill our comrade, that we may have the greater treasure." He at once agreed, and they had no sooner overtaken the third rob ber, than the first, with one stroke of his sabre, made his head fly from his body. The two then proceeded together for a short distance, when the murderer said : ' I must have more than half of the treasure, because I killed our comrade.' ' If you begin by claiming more than half, you will in the end claim the whole,' said the other robber, who refused to agree. They presently set upon each other with their swords, and after fighting for some time, both of them received so many wounds that they fell dead in the road. " The asses, finding that no one was driving them any longer, took, from habit, the road to the wood-cutter's house, where they arrived safely, with the treasure upon their backs Great was the amazement of their master, who, at Zubeydeh'a command, carried the heavy sacks into the house. But when he had opened one of them, and the splendor of the jewels fill ed the whole room, Zubeydeh exclaimed : ' God is great 1 Now, indeed, I see that my conduct is acceptable to Him, and that His hand hurries my design more swiftly to its comple tion.' But, as she knew not what had happened to the rob bers, and supposed that the owner of the treasure woidd have big loss proclaimed in the bazaars, she determined to keep the sacks closed for the space of a moon, after which, according to THE 8ULTAKA AND THE ^VOOD-CUTTER. 249 the law, they would become her property, if they had not been claimed in the mean time. Of course, no proclamation of th loss was made, and at the end of the moon, she considered that she had a just right to the treasure, which, upon computation proved to be even greater than that of the Caliph Haroun Al- Raschid. " She commanded the wood-cutter to send her at once the most renowned architect of Baghdad, whom she directed to build, exactly opposite to the Caliph's Palace, another palace which should surpass in splendor any thing that had ever been beheld. For the purchase of the materials and the hire of the workmen, she gave him a hundred thousand pieces of gold. ' If men ask,' said she, ' for whom you are building the palace, tell them it is for the son of a foreign king.' The architect employed all the workmen in Baghdad, and followed her in structions so well, that in two months the palace was finished. The like of it had never been seen, and the Caliph's palace faded before its magnificence as the face of the moon fades when the sun has risen above the horizon. The walls were of marble, white as snow ; the gates of ivory, inlaid with pearl ; the domes were gilded, so that when the sun shone, the eye could not look upon them ; and from a great fountain of silver, in the court-yard, a jet of rose-colored water, which diffused an agreeable odor, leaped into air. Of this palace it might be said, in the words of the poet : ' Truly it resembles Para dise ; or is it the lost House of Irem, built from the treasures of King Sheddad ? May kindness dwell upon the lips of the lord of this palace, and charity find refuge in his heart, that he be adjudged worthy to enjoy such splendor ! ' " During the building of the palace, Zubeydeh employed 11* 250 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. the best masters in teaching the wood-cutter all the accomplish ments which his present condition required that he should pos sess. In a short time he was a very pattern of elegance in his manner : his words were choice and spoken with dignity and propriety, and his demeanor was that of one horn to command rather than to obey. When she had succeeded to the full ex tent of her wishes, she commenced teaching him to play chess, and spent several hours a day in this manner, until he finally played with a skill equal to her own. By this time, the palace was completed, and after having purchased horses and slaves, and every thing necessary to the maintenance of a princely household, Zubeydeh and the wood-cutter took possession of it during the night, in order that they might not be observed by the Caliph. Zubeydeh bade the wood-cutter remember the promise he had made her. She still retained her own apart ments, with a number of female slaves to attend her, and she now presented to him, as a harem becoming a prince, twenty Circassian girls, each one fairer than the morning-star. " The next morning she called the wood-cutter, and ad dressed him thus : ' You see, my lord ! what I have done for you. You remember in what misery I found you, and how, by your following my advice, every thing was changed. I in tend to exalt you still higher, and hi order that my plans may not be frustrated, I now ask you to promise that you will obey me in all things, for a month from this time.' Zubeydeh made this demand, for she knew how quickly a change of fortune may change a man's character, and how he will soon come to look upon that as a right which Allah granted him as a boon. But the wood-cutter threw himself at her feet, and said : ' Queen 1 it is for you to command, and it is for me to obey THS SULTANA AND THE WOOD-CUTTER. 251 ou have taught me understanding and wisdom ; you have given me the wealth of kings. May Allah forget me, if I for get to give you, in return, gratitude and obedience.' ' Go, then,' continued Zubeydeh, ' mount this horse, and attended by twenty slaves on horseback, visit the coffee-house in the great bazaar. Take with thee a purse of three thousand pieces of gold, and as thou goest on thy way, scatter a handful occa sionally among the beggars. Take thy seat in the coffee-house, where thou wilt see the Vizier's son, who is a skilful player of chess. He will challenge the multitude to play with him, and when no one accepts, do thou engage him for a thousand pieces of gold. Thou wilt win ; but pay him the thousand pieces as if thou hadst lost, give two hundred pieces to the master of the coffee-house, divide two hundred pieces among the attendants, and scatter the remainder among the beggars.' " The wood-cutter performed all that Zubeydeh commanded. He accepted the challenge of the Vizier's son, won the game, yet paid him a thousand pieces of gold as if he had lost, and then rode back to the palace, followed by the acclamations of the multitude, who were loud in their praises of his beauty, the elegance of his speech, his unbounded munificence, and the splendor of his attendance. Every day he visited the coffee house, gave two hundred pieces of gold to the master, two hundred to the servants, and distributed six hundred among the beggars. But the Vizier's son, overcome with chagrin at his defeat, remained at home, where, in a few days, he sick ened and died. These things coming to the Vizier's ear, he felt a great desire to see the foreign prince, whose wealth and generosity were the talk of all Baghdad ; and as he believed himself to be the greatest chess-player in the world, he deter- 252 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. mined to challenge him to a game. He thereupon visited th* coffee-house, where he had not remained long when the wood cutter made his appearance, in even greater splendor than be fore. This was in accordance with the instructions of Zuby- deh, who was informed of all that had taken place. He at once accepted the Vizier's challenge to play, for a stake of two thousand pieces of gold. After a hard-fought battle, the Vizier was fairly beaten, but the wood-cutter paid him the two thousand pieces of gold, as if he had lost the game, gave away another thousand as usual, and retired to his palace. " The Vizier took his defeat so much to heart, that his cha grin, combined with grief for the loss of his son, carried him off in a few days. This circumstance brought the whole his tory to the ears of Haroun Al-Raschid himself, who was im mediately seized with a strong desire to play chess with the foreign prince, not doubting but that, as he had always beaten his Vizier, he would be more than a match for the new antago nist. Accordingly he sent an officer to the palace of the wood cutter, with a message that the Commander of the Faithful de sired to offer his hospitality to the son of the foreign king. By Zubeydeh's advice, the invitation was accepted, and the officer speedily returned to Haroun Al-Raschid, to whom he gave such a description of the magnificence of the new palace, that the Caliph's mouth began to water, and he exclaimed : ' By Allah ! I must look to this. No man, who has not the ring of Solomon on his finger, shall surpass me in my own cap ital!" In a short time the wood-cutter arrived, attired in such splendor that the day seemed brighter for his appearance, and attended by forty black slaves, in dresses of crimson silk, with turbans of white and gold, and golden swords by their THE SULTANA AND THK WOOD-CUTTER. 253 Bides. They formed a double row from the court-yard to thf throne-hall where the Caliph sat, and up the avenue thus form ed the wood-cutter advanced, preceded by two slaves in dressel of cloth-of- silver, who placed at the Caliph's feet two crystal goblets filled with rubies and emeralds of immense size. The Caliph, delighted with this, superb present, rose, embraced the supposed prince, and seated him by his side. From the great wealth displayed by the wood-cutter, and the perfect grace and propriety of his manners, the Caliph suspected that he was no less a personage than the son of the King of Cathay. " After a handsome repast had been served, the Caliph proposed a game of chess, stating that he had heard much of the prince's skill in playing. ' After I shall have played with you, Commander of the Faithful ! ' said the wood-cutter, ' you will hear no more of my skill.' The Caliph was charm ed with the modesty of this speech, and the compliment to himself, and they immediately began to play. The wood-cut ter, although he might easily have beaten the Caliph, suffered the latter to win the first game, which put him into the best humor possible. But when the second game had been played, and the wood-cutter was the victor, he perceived that the Ca liph's face became dark, and his good-humor was gone. ' You are too generous to your servant, Caliph ! ' said he ; ' had you not given me this success as an encouragement, I should have lost a second time.' At these words Haroun smiled, and they played a third game, which the wood-cutter purposely a! lowed him to win. Such was the counsel given to him by Zu- beydeh, who said : ' If thou permittest him to win the first game, he will be so well pleased, that thou mayest venture to defeat him on the second game. Then, when he has won the 254 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. third game, thy having been once victorious will magnify hw opinion of his own skill ; for where we never suffer defeat, we at last regard our conquests with indifference ' " The result was precisely as Zubeydeh had predicted The Caliph was charmed with the foreign prince, and in a few days made him his Vizier. The wood-cutter filled his exalted station with dignity and judgment, and became at once a great favorite with the people of Baghdad. The month of obedience which he promised to Zubeydeh was now drawing to a close, when she said to him : ' Cease to visit the Caliph, and do not leave thy palace for two or three days. When the Caliph sends for thee, return for answer that thou art ill.' She fore saw that the Caliph would then come to see his Vizier, arid gave the wood-cutter complete instructions, concerning what he should say and do. " Haroun Al-Raschid no sooner heard of the illness of his Vizier, than he went personally to his palace, to see him. He was amazed at the size and splendor of the edifice. ' Truly,' said he, striking his hands together, ' this man hath found the ring of Solomon, which compels the assistance of the ge nii. In all my life I have never seen such a palace as this.' He found the Vizier reclining on a couch of cloth-of-gold, in a chamber, the walls whereof were of mother-of-pearl, and the floor of ivory. There was a fountain of perfumed water in the centre, and beside it stood a jasmine-tree, growing in a vase of crystal. ' How is this?' said the Caliph, seating himself on one end of the couch ; ' a man whom the genii serve, should have the secrets of health in his hands.' ' It is no fever,' said the Vizier ; ' but the other day as I was washing myself in the fountain, before the evening prayer, I stooped too near the ja& THE STTLTANA AND THK WOOD-CUTTER. 256 mine tree, and one of its thorns scratched my left arm. ' What ! ' cried the Caliph, in amazement ; ' the scratch of a blunt jasmine- thorn has made you ill ! ' c You wonder at it, no doubt, Commander of the Faithful ! ' said the Vizier ' because, only a few months ago, you saw that I was insensi ble to the fangs of a serpent, which had fastened upon mj heel.' 'There is no God but God!' exclaimed Haroun Al- Raschid, as by these words he recognized the poor wood-cut ter, who had passed under the window of his palace ' hast thou indeed found the ring of Solomon ? and where is the wo man whom Mesrour, at my command, brought to thee ? ' " ' She is here ! ' said Zubeydeh, entering the door. She turned towards the Caliph, and slightly lifting her veil, show ed him her face, more beautiful than ever. Haroun, with a cry of joy, was on the point of clasping her in his arms, when he stopped suddenly, and said : ' But thou art now the wife of that man.' ' Not so, great Caliph ! ' exclaimed the Vizier who rose to his feet, now that there was no longer any need to affect illness ; ' from the day that she entered my house, I have never seen her face. By the beard of the Prophet, she is not less pure than she is wise. It is she who has made me all that I am. Obedience to her was the seed from which the tree of my fortune has grown.' Zubeydeh then knelt at the Caliph's feet, and said : ' Commander of the Faithful, re store me to the light of your favor. I swear to you that I am not less your wife than when the cloud of your anger over shadowed me. This honorable man has never ceased to re spect me. My thoughtless words led you to send me forth to take the place of the serpent, but I have now shown you that a wife may also be to her husband as the staff, whereon he 256 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. leans for support ; as the camel, which bringeth him riches ; as the tent, which shelters and protects him; as the bath, which maketh him comely, and as the lamp, whereby his stepa are enlightened.' " Haroun Al-Raschid had long since bitterly repented of his rashness and cruelty. He now saw in what had happened, the hand of Allah, who had turned that which he had intended as a punishment, into a triumph. He restored Zubeydeh at once to his favor, and to the wood-cutter, whom he still retain ed as Vizier, he gave his eldest daughter hi marriage. All the citizens of Baghdad took part in the festivities, which lasted two weeks, and the Caliph, to commemorate his gratitude, built a superb mosque, which is called the Mosque of the Res toration to this very day. The Vizier nobly requited all the pains which the Sultana Zubeydeh had taken with his educa tion, and showed so much wisdom and justice in his adminis tration of the laws, that the Caliph never had occasion to be dissatisfied with him. Thus they all lived together in the ut most happiness and concord, until they were each, in turn, vis ited by the Terminator of Delights and the Separator of Com panions." So ended Achmet's story ; but without the moonlight, the tall Ethiopian palms and the soothing pipe, as accessories, I fear that this reproduction of it retains little of the charm which I found in the original. It was followed by other and wilder tales, stamped in every part with the unmistakable sig net of the Orient. They were all characterized by the belief in an inevitable Destiny, which seems to be the informing soul of all Oriental literature. This belief affords every liberty to the poet and romancer, and the Arabic authors have not scru ORIENTAL LITERATURE. 257 pled to make liberal use of it. There is no hazard in sur rounding your hero with all sorts of real and imaginary dan gers, or in heaping up obstacles in the path of his designs, when you know that his destiny obliges him to overcome them. He becomes, for the time, the impersonation of Fate, and cir cumstances yield before him. You see, plainly, that he was chosen, in the beginning, to do the very thing which he accom plishes, in the end. If a miracle is needed for his success, it is not withheld. Difficulties crowd upon him to the last, only that the final triumph may be more complete and striking. Yet with all these violations of probability, the Oriental tales exhibit a great fertility of invention and sparkle with touches of genuine human nature. The deep and absorbing interest with which the unlettered Arabs listen to their recital the hold which they have upon the popular heart of the East at tests their value, as illustrations of Eastern life. From Poetry we frequently passed to Religion, and Ach- met was astonished to find me familiar not only with Mo hammed, but with Ali and Abdullah and Abu-talib, and with many incidents of the Prophet's life, which were new to him. The Persian chronicles were fresh in my memory, and all the wonders related of Mohammed by that solemn old biographer, Mohammed Bekr, came up again as vividly as when I first read them. We compared notes, he repeated passages of the Koran, and so the Giaour and the True Believer discussed the nature of their faith, but always ended by passing beyond Pro phet and Apostle, to the one great and good God, who is equally merciful to all men. I could sincerely adopt the first article of his faith: "La illak iV Allah!" "There is no God but God," while he was equally ready to accept the first commandment of mine. 268 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. CHAPTER XX. FROM SHENDY TO K H A R T O M. Arriva at Shendy Appearance of the Town -Shendy in Former Days "We Touch at El Metemma The Nile beyond Shendy Flesh Diet vs. Vegetables We Escape Bhipwreck A Walk on Shore The Rapids of Derreira Djebel Gerri The Twelfth Cataract Night in the Mountain Gorge Crocodiles A Drink of MareeM My Birth-Day Fair Wind Approach to Khartoum The Junction of the Two Niles Appearance of the City We Drop Anchor. THE morning after visiting the rains of Meroe I reached the old Ethiopian town of Shendy. It lies about half a mile from the river, but the massive fort and palace of the Governor are built on the water's edge. Several spreading sycamore trees gave a grace to the shore, which would otherwise have been dull and tame. Naked Ethiopians were fishing or washing their clothes in the water, and some of them, as they held their long, scarlet-edged mantles above their heads, to dry in the wind and sun, showed fine, muscular figures. The women had hideous faces, but symmetrical and well developed forms. A group of Egyptian soldiers watched us from the bank before the palace, and several personages on horseback, one of whom appeared to be the Governor himself, were hailing the ferry SHENDY. 259 best, which was just about putting off with a heavy load of na tives. We ran the boat to the shore, at a landing-place just above the palace. The banks of the river were covered with fields of cucumbers and beans, the latter brilliant with white and purple blossoms and filled with the murmuring sound of bees. Achmet, the rais and I walked up to the capital the famous Shendy, once the great mart of trade for the regions between the Red Sea and Dar-Fur. On the way we met numbers of women with water-jars. They wore no veils, but certainly needed them, for their faces were of a broad, semi-negro char acter, and repulsively plain. The town is built in a straggling manner, along a low, sandy ridge, and is upwards of a mile in length, though it probably does not contain more than ten thousand inhabitants. The houses are mud, of course, but rough and filthy, and many of them are the same circular to- kuls of mats and palm-sticks as I had already noticed in the smaller villages. The only decent dwelling which I saw had been just erected by a Dongolese merchant. There was a mosque, with a low mud minaret, but neither iu this nor in any other respect did the place compare with El Mekheyref. The bazaar resembled a stable, having a passage through the centre, shaded with mats, and stalls on either side, some of which contained donkeys and others merchants. The goods displayed were principally blue and white cotton stuffs of 3oarse quality, beads, trinkets and the like. It was market-day, but the people had not yet assembled. A few screens of matting, erected on sticks, were the only preparations which had been made. The whole appearance of the place was that of poverty and desertion Beyond the clusters of huts, and a mud wall, 260 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. Which ran along the eastern side of the town, the Desert ex tended to the harizon a hot, white plain, dotted with clumps of thorns. On our return to the boat, the rais pointed out the spot where, in 1822, Ismail Pasha and his soldiers were burn ed to death by Mek Nemr (King Leopard), the last monarch of Shendy. The bloody revenge taken by Mohammed Bey Defterdar (son-in-law of Mohammed Ali), for that act, sealed the fate of the kingdom. The seat of the Egyptian govern ment in Soudan was fixed at Khartoum, which in a few years became also the centre of trade, and now flourishes at the ex pense of Shendy and El Meterama. Burckhardt, who visited Shendy during the reign of King Leopard, devotes much space to a description of the trade of the town at that time. It was then in the height of its pros perity, and the resort of merchants from Arabia, Abyssinia, Egypt, and even Syria and Asia Minor. It was also one of the chief slave-marts of Central Africa, in which respect it has since been superseded by Obeid, in Kordofan. The only com merce which has been left to Shendy is that with Bjidda and the other Arabian ports, by way of Sowakin, on the Red Sea a caravan journey of fourteen days, through the country of Takka, infested by the wild tribes of the Hallengas and Haden- doas. Mek Nemr. according to Burckhardt, was of the Djaaleyn tribe, who are descendants of the Beni Koreish, ot Yemen, and still retain the pure Arabian features. I was afterwards, during my stay in Khartoum, enabled to verify the declaration of the same traveller, that all the tribes of Ethiopia between the Nile and the Red Sea are of unmixed Arab stock. The .palace of the Governor, which was a building of con at, METEMMA. 261 siderable extent, had heavy circular bastions, which were de fended by cannon. Its position, on the bank of the Nile, was much more agreeable than that of the city, and the garrison had settled around it, forming a small village on its eastern side. The white walls and latticed windows of the palace reminded me of Cairo, and I anticipated a pleasant residence within its walls, on my return to Shendy. As I wished to ?each Khartoum as soon as possible I did not call upon the Governor, but sent him the letter of recommendation from Yagheshir Bey. From Shendy, one sees the group of palms which serves as a landmark to El Metemma, the capital of a former Ethiopian Kingdom, further up the Nile, on its oppo site bank. This is the starting point for caravans to Merawe and Dongola through the Beyooda Desert. "We passed its port about noon, and stopped a few minutes to let the rais pay his compliments to the owner of our vessel, who was on shore. He was a little old man, with a long staff, and dressed like the meanest Arab, although he was shekh of half a dozen villages, and had a servant leading a fine Congolese horse behind him. The boat of Khalim Bey, agent of the Governor of Berber and Shendy, was at the landing place, and we saw the Bey, a tall, handsome Turk in a rich" blue and crimson dress, who sent a servant to ask my name and character. The scenery of the Nile, southward from Shendy, is again changed. The tropical rains which fall occasionally at Abou Hammed and scantily at Berber, "are here periodical, and there is no longer the same striking contrast between desert and garden laud. The plains extending inward from the river are covered with a growth of bushes and coarse grass, which also appears in patches on the sides of the mountains. The inhabi 262 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. tanfcs cultivate but a narrow strip of beans and dourra along the river, but own immense flocks of sheep and goats, which afford their principal sustenance. I noticed many fields of tho grain called doolihn, of which they plant a larger quantity than of dourra. Mutton, however, is the Ethiopian's greatest deli cacy. Notwithstanding this is one of the warmest climates in the world, tho people eat meat whenever they can get it, and greatly prefer it to vegetable food. The sailors and camel- drivers, whose principal food is dourra, are, notwithstanding a certain quality of endurance, as weak as children, when com pared with an able-bodied European, and they universally attribute this weakness to their diet. This is a fact for the lank vegetarians to explain. My experience coincided with that of the Ethiopians, and I ascribed no small share of my personal health and strength, which the violent alternations of heat and cold during the journey had not shaken in the least, to the fact of my having fared sumptuously every day. After leaving Shendy, the Nile makes a bend to the west, and we went along slowly all the afternoon, with a side-wind. The shores were not so highly cultivated as those we had passed, and low hills of yellow sand began to show themselves on either hand. The villages were groups of mud tohuls, with high, conical roofs, and the negro type of face appeared much more frequently among the inhabitants the result of amalga mation with slaves. We saw numbers of young crocodiles which my sailors delighted to frighten by shouting and throw ing sticks at them, as they sunned themselves on the sand. Wild geese and ducks were abundant, and the quiet little coves along the shore were filled with their young brood. During the day a large hawk or vulture dashed down to within a yard ESCAPE FROM SHIPWRECK. 265 of tho deck in the attempt to snatch a piece of my black ram, which Beshir had just killed. The next morning we had a narrow escape from shipwreck The wind blew strong from the north, as we reached a twist in the river, where our course for several miles lay to the north west, obliging the men to take in sail and tow the vessel. They had reached the turning-point and the sail was blowing loop'-, while two sailors lay out on the long, limber yard, trying tc reef, when a violent gust pulled the rope out of the hands of the man on shore, and we were carried into the stream. The steersman put the helm hard up, and made for the point of an island which lay opposite, but the current was so strong that we could not reach it. It blew a gale, and the Nile was rough with waves. Between the island and the southern shore lay a clus ter of sharp, black rocks, and for a few minutes we appeared to be driving directly upon them. The ra'is and sailors, with many cries of " Prophet ! O Apostle ! " gave themselves up to their fate ; but the strength of the current saved us. Our bow just grazed the edge of the last rock, and we were blown across to the opposite shore, where we struck hard upon the sand and were obliged to remain two hours, until the wind abated. I was vexed and impatient at first, but remembering the effect of a pipe upon a similar occasion, I took one, and soon became calm enough to exclaim : " it is the will of Allah ! " While the boat was making such slow headway, I went ashore and walked an hour or two among the fields of beans and dourra. The plains for several miles inland were covered with dry grass and thorn- trees, and only needed irrigation to bloom as a garden. The sun was warm, the bean-fields alive mth bees, and the wind took a rich summer fragrance from th 264 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. white and purple blossoms. Near one of the huts, I accosted a woman who was weeding among the dourra. She told me that her husband had deserted her and taken a-nother wife, leaving her the charge of their two children. He had also taken her three cows and given them to his new wife, so that her only means of support was to gather the dry grass and sell it in the villages. I gave her a few piastres, which she receiv ed gratefully. In the afternoon we passed the main bend of the river, and were able to make use of the wind, which by this time was light. The sailor who had been left ashore during the gale overtook us, by walking a distance of eight or ten miles and swimming one of the smaller arms of the river. The western bank of the river now became broken and billy, occa sionally overhung by bluffs of gravelly soil, of a dark red color. On the top of one of the hills there was a wall, which the rais pointed out to me as kadeem (ancieiit), but it appeared too dilapidated to repay the trouble of a visit. On the following day, the scenery became remarkably wild and picturesque. After passing the village of Derreira, on the right bank, the Nile was studded with islands of various sizes rising like hillocks from the water, and all covered with the most luxuriant vegetation. The mimosa, the acacia, the palm, the sycamore and the nebbuk flourished together in rank growth, with a profusion of smaller shrubs, and all were mat ted together with wild green creepers, which dropped their long streamers of pink and purple blossoms into the water. Reefs of black rock, over which the waves foamed impetuous ly, made the navigation intricate and dangerous. The banks of the river were high and steep, and covered with bushes and rank grass, above which the rustling blades of the dourra glifr THE TWELFTH CATARACT. 265 tered in (he sun. The country was thickly populated, and the inhabitants were mostly of the Shygheean tribe from Dar Shygheea, the region between Dongola and Berber. The sakias were tended by Dinka slaves, as black as ebony, and with coarse, brutish faces. At one point on the eastern shore, oppo site the island of Bendi, the natives had collected all their live stock, but for what purpose I could not learn. The shore waa covered with hundreds of camels, donkeys, sheep, cows and goats, carefully kept in separate herds. After threading ten miles of those island bowers, we ap proached Djebel Gerri, which we had seen all day, ahead of us. The IS'ile, instead of turning westward around the flank of the mountain, as I had anticipated from the features of the land scape, made a sudden bend to the south, between a thick clus ter of islands, and entered the hills. At this point there was a rapid, extending half-way across the river. The natives call it a shellal (cataract), although it deserves the name no more than the cataracts of Assouan and Wadi-Halfa. Adopting the term, however, which lias been sanctioned by long usage, this is the Twelfth Cataract of the Nile, and the last one which the traveller meets before reaching the mountains of Abyssinia. The stream is very narrow, compressed between high hills of naked red sandstone rock. At sunset we were completely shut in the savage solitude, and there we seemed likely to remain, for the wind came from all quarters by turns, and jammed the vessel against the rocks more than once. The narrow terraces of soil on the sides of the mountains were covered with dense beds of long, dry grass, and as we lay moored to the rocks, I climbed up to one of these, in spite of the rais's warnings that I should fall in witli lions and ser- 266 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. pents. I lay down in the warm grass, and watched the shad ows deepen in the black gorge, as the twilight died away. The zikzak or crocodile-bird twittered along the shore, and, after it became quite dark, the stillness was occasionally broken by the snort of a hippopotamus, as he thrust his huge head above water, or by the yell of a hyena prowling among the hills. Talk of the pleasure of reading a traveller's adventures in strange lands ! There is no pleasure equal to that of living them : neither the anticipation nor the memory of such a scene as I witnessed that evening, can approach the fascination of the reality. I was awakened after midnight by the motion -of the vessel, and looking out of my shelter as I lay, could see that we were slowly gliding through the foldings of the stony moun tains. The moon rode high and bright, over the top of a peak in front, and the sound of my prow, as it occasionally grated against the rocks, alone disturbed the stillness of the wild pass. Once the wind fell, and the men were obliged to make fast to a rock, but before morning we had emerged from the mountains and were moored to the bank, to await daylight for the passage of the last rapid. In the mouth of the pass lies an island, which rises into a remarkable conical peak, about seven hundred feet in height. It is called the Rowyan (thirst assuaged), while a lofty summit of the range of Gerri bears the name of Djebel Attshan (the Mountain of Thirst). The latter stands on a basis of arid sand, whence its name, but the Rowyan is encircled by the arms of the Nile. In the Wady Beit-Naga, some three or four hours' journey eastward from the river, are the ruined temples of Naga and Mesowurat, described by Hoskins. The date of their erection has been ascertained by Lepsius to be coeval DRINKING MAREESA. 261 with that of Meroe. We here saw many crocodiles, basking ofl the warm sand-banks. One group of five were enormous mon sters, three of them being at least fifteen, and the other two twenty feet in length. They lazily dragged their long bodies into the water as we approached, but returned after we had passed. The zikzaks were hopping familiarly about them, on the sand, and I have no doubt that they ilo service to the croco diles in the manner related by the Arabs. The river was still studded with islands some mere frag ments of rock covered with bushes, and some large level tracts, flourishing with rich fields of cotton and dourra. About noon, we passed a village on the eastern bank, and I sent Ali and Beshir ashore to procure supplies, for my ram was finished. Ali found only one fowl, which the people did not wish to sell, but, Turk-like, he took it forcibly and gave them the usual price. Beshir found some mareesa, a fermented drink made of dourra, and for two piastres procured two jars of it, holding two gallons each, which were brought down to the boat by a pair of sturdy Dinka women, whose beauty was almost a match for Bakhita. The mareesa bad an agreeable flavor and very little intoxicating property. I noticed, however, that after Beshir had drunk nearly a gallon, he sang and danced rather more than usual, and had much to say of a sweetheart of his, who lived in El-Metemma, and who bore the charming name of Gammero-Betahadjero. Bakhita, after drinking an equal portion, complained to me bitterly of my white sheep, which had nibbed off" the ends of the woolly twists adorning her head, but I comforted her by the present of half a piastre, for the purpose of buying mutton-fat. As the wind fell, at sunset, we reached a long slope of 268 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. snowy sand, on the island of Aussee. Achraet went to the huts of the inhabitants, where he was kindly received and fur nished with milk. I walked for an hour up and down (he beautiful beach, breathing the mild, cool evening air, heavy with delicious odors. The glassy Nile beside me reflected the last orange-red hues of sunset, and the evening star, burning with a white, sparry lustre, made a long track of light across his breast. I remembered that it was my birthday the fourth time I had spent my natal anniversary in a foieign land. The first had been in Germany, the second in Italy, the third in Mexico, and now the last, in the wild heart of Africa. They were all pleasant, but this was the best of all. When I returned to the vessel, I found my carpet and cushions spread on the sand, and All waiting with my pipe. The evening entertainment commenced : I was listening to an .Arabian tale, and watching the figures .of the boatmen, grouped around a fire they had kindled in a field of duokhn, when the wind came up with a sudden gust and blew out the folds of my idle flag. Instantly the sand was kicked over the brands, the carpet taken up, all hands called on board, and we dashed away on the dark river with light hearts. I rose before sunrise the next morning, and found the wind unchanged. We were sail ing between low shores covered with grain-fields, and a sandy island lay in front. The ra'is no sooner saw me than he called my attention to the tops of some palm-trees that appeared on the horizon, probably six or eight miles distant. They grew in the gardens of Khartoum ! We reached the point of the broad, level island that divides the waters of the two Niles, and could soon distinguish the single minaret and buildings of the city. . A boat, coming down from the White Nile, passed ARRIVAL AT KHAHTOUM. 265 Us on the right, and another, bound for Khartoum, led us up the Blue Nile. The 'proper division between the two rivers is the point of land upon which Khartoum is built, but the chan nel separating it from the island opposite is very narrow, and the streams do not fully meet and mingle their waters till the island is passed. The city presented a picturesque and to my eyes, accus tomed to the mud huts of the Ethiopian villages a really stately appearance, as we drew near. The line of buildings extended for more than a mile along the' river, and many of the houses were embowered in gardens of palm, acacia, orange and tamarind trees. The Palace of the Pasha had a certain appearance of dignity, though its walls were only unburnt brick, and his hareem, a white, two-story building, looked cool and elegant amid the palms that shaded it. Egyptian soldiers, in their awkward, half-Frank costume, were lounging on the bank before the Palace, and slaves of inky blackness, resplen dent in white and red livery, were departing on donkeys on their various errands. The slope of the bank was broken at short intervals by water-mills, and files of men with skins, and women with huge earthen jars on their heads, passed up and down between the water's edge and the openings of the narrow lanes leading between the gardens into the city. The boat of the Governor of Berber, rowed by twelve black slaves, put off from shore, and moved slowly down stream, against the north wind, as we drew up and moored the America below the gar den of the Catholic Mission. It was the twelfth of January ; I had made the journey from Assouan to Khartoum in twenty- six days, and from Cairo in fifty-seven. f7fi JOUBNEY TO CENTRAL AF11ICA CHAPTER XXI. LIFE IN KHARTOUM. She American Flag A Rencontre Search for a House The Austrian Consular Agent Description of hit Residence The Garden The Menagerie Barbaric I'omp and State Picturesque Character of the Society of Khartoum Foundation and Growth of the City Its Appearance The Population Unhealthiness of the Climate Assembly of Ethiopian Chieftains Visit of Two Shkhs Dinner and Fireworks. AT the time .of my arrival in Khartoum, there were not more than a dozen vessels in port, and the only one which would pass for respectable in Egypt was the Pasha's dahabiyeh. I had but an open merchant-boat, yet my green tent and flag gave it quite a showy air, and I saw that it treated some little sensa tion among the spectators. The people looked at the flag with astonishment, for the stars and stripes had never before been seen in Khartoum. At the earnest prayer of the rais, who was afraid the boat would be forcibly impressed into the ser vice of the Government, and was anxious to get back to his sick family in El Metemma, 1 left the flag flying until he was ready to leave. Old Bakhita, in her dumb, ignorant way, ex pressed great surprise and grief when she learned that Achrnel and I were going to desert the vessel. She had an indefinite SEARCH FOR A HOUSE. 271 idea that we had become part and parcel of it, and would re main on board for the rest of our lives. I took Achmet and started immediately in search of a house, as in those lands a traveller who wishes to be respect able, must take a residence on arriving at a city, even if he only intends to stay two or three days. Over the mud walls on either side of the lane leading up from the water, I could look into wildernesses of orange, date, fig, and pomegranate trees, oleanders in bloom and trailing vines. We entered a tolerable street, cleanly swept, and soon came to a coffee-house. Two or three persons were standing at the door, one of whom a fat, contented-looking Turk eyed Achmet sharply. The two looked at each other a moment in mutual doubt and aston ishment, and then fell into each other's arms. It was a Syrian merchant, whom Achmet had known in Cairo and Beyrout. " master ! " said he, his dark face radiant with delight, as he clasped the hand of the Syrian : " there never was such a lucky journey as this ! " The merchant, who had been two years in Khartoum, ac companied us in our search. We went first to the residence of the shekh of the quarter, who was not at home. Two small boys, the sons of one of a detachment of Egyptian physicians, who had recei.lly arrived, received me. They complained bit terly of Soudan, and longed to get back again to Cairo. We then went to the Governor of the city, but he was absent in Kordofan. Finally, in wandering about the streets, we met a certain Ali Effendi, who took us to a house which would be vacant the next day. It was a large mud palace, containing an outer and inner divan, two sleeping-rooms, a kitchen, store rooms, apartments for servants, and an inclosed court-yard and 272 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. Btahles, all of which were to be had at one hundred piastres a munth an exorbitant price, as I afterwards learned. Before engaging it, I decided to ask the advice of the Austrian Con sular Agent, Dr. Reitz, for whom I had letters from the Eng lish and Austrian Consuls in Cairo. He received me with true German cordiality, and would hear of nothing else but that I should immediately take possession of an unoccupied room in his house. Accordingly the same day of my arrival beheld me installed in luxurious quarters, with one of the most brave, generous and independent of men as my associate. As the Consul's residence was the type of a house of the best class in Khartoum, a description of it may give some idea of life in the place, under the most agreeable circumstances. The ground-plot was one hundred and thirty paces square, and surrounded by a high mud wall. Inside of this stood the dwell ing, which was about half that length, and separated from it by a narrow garden and court-yard. Entering the court by the gate, a flight of steps conducted to the divan, or recep tion-room, in the second story. From the open antechamber one might look to the south over the gray wastes of Sennaar, or, if the sun was near his setting, see a reach in the White Nile, flashing like the point of an Arab spear. The divan had a cushioned seat around three sides, and matting on the floor, and was really a handsome room, although its walls were mud, covered with a thin coating of lime, and its roof palm-logs overlaid with coarse matting, on which rested a layer of mud a foot thick. In the second story were also the Consular Of fice and a sleeping-room. The basement contained the kitchen, store-rooms, and servants' rooms. The remainder of the house was only one story in height, and had a balcony looking on the THE MENAGERIE. 271 garden, and completely emboweri-d in flowering vines. The only rooms were the dining-hall, with cushioned divans on each side and a drapery of the Austrian colors at the end, and my apartment, which overlooked a small garden-court, wherein two large ostriches paced up and down, and a company of wild geese and wild swine made continual discord. The court at the entrance communicated with the stables, which contained the Consul's horses a white steed, of the pure Arabian blood of Nedjid, and the red stallion appropriated to my use, which was sent by the King of Dar-FQr to Lattif Pasha, and present ed by him to the Consul. A hejin, or trained dromedary, of unusual size, stood in the court, and a tame lioness was tied to a stake in the corner. She was a beautiful and powerful beast, and I never passed her without taking her head between my knees, or stroking her tawny hide until she leaned against me like a cat and licked my hand. Passing through a side-door into the garden, we came upon a whole menagerie of animals. Under the long arbors, covered with luxuriant grape-vines, stood two surly hyenas, a wild ass from the mountains of the Atbara, and an Abyssinian mule. A tall marabout (a bird of the crane species, with a pouch-bill) stalked about the garden, occasionally bending a hinge in the middle of his long legs, and doubling them backwards, so that he used half of them for a seat. Adjoining the stable was a large sheep-yard, in which were gathered together gazelles, strange varieties of sheep and goats from the countries of the White Nile, a virgin-crane, and a large antilopus leucoi~yx, from Koidofan, with curved horns four feet in length. My favorite, however, was the leopard, which was a most playful Mid affeciionate creature except at meal-time. He was nol 274 JOUHXKY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. more than half grown, and had all the wiles of an intelligent kitten, climbing his post and springing upon me, or creeping up slyly and seizing my ankle in his mouth. The garden, which was watered by a well and string of buckets turned by an ox, had a rich variety of fruit-trees. The grape season was just over, though I had a few of the last bunches ; figs were ripening from day to day, oranges and lemons were in fruit and flower, bananas blooming for another crop, and the pome granate and kishteh, or custard-apple, hung heavy on the branches. There was also a plantation of date-trees and sugar-cane, and a great number of ornamental shrubs. In all these picturesque features of my residence in Khar toum, I fully realized that I had at last reached Central Afri ca. In our mode of life, also, there was a rich flavor of that barbaric pomp and state which one involuntarily associates with the name of Soudan. We arose at dawn, and at sunrise were in the saddle. Sometimes I mounted (he red stallion, of the wild breed of Dar-Fur, and sometimes one of the Con-ul's tall and fleet dromedaries. Six dark attendant, in white and scarlet dresses, followed us on dromedaries and two grooms on foot ran before us, to clear a way through the streets. Af ter passing through Khartoum, we frequently made long excur sions up the banks of the two Niles, or out upon the boundless plain between them. In this way, I speedily became familiar with the city and its vicinity, and as, on our return, I always accompanied the Consul oil all his visits to the various digni taries, I had every opportunity of studying the peculiar life of the place, and gaining some idea of its governing principles. As the only city of Central Africa which has a regular com munication with the Mediterranean (by which ii occasionally SOCIETY IN KHARTOUM. 275 receives a ray of light from the civilized world beyond), it haa become a capital on a small scale, and its society is a curious compound of Christian, Turk and Barbarian. On the same day, I have had a whole sheep set before me, in the house of an Ethiopian Princess, who wore a ring in her nose ; taken coffee and sherbet with the Pasha ; and drank tea, prepared in the true English style, in the parlor of a European. When to these remarkable contrasts is added (he motley character of its native population, embracing representatives from almost every tribe between Dar-Fur and the Red Sea, between Egypt and the Negro kingdoms of the White Nile, it will readily be seen how rich a field of observation Khartoum offers to the traveller. Nevertheless, those who reside there, almost with out exception, bestow upon the city and country all possible maledictions. Considered as a place of residence, other ques tions come into play, and they are perhaps not far wrong. Khartoum is the most remarkable I had almost said the only example of physical progress in Africa, in this century. Where, thirty years ago, there was not even a dwelling, unless it might be the miserable tokul, or straw hut of the Ethiopian Fellah, now stands a city of some thirty or forty thousand in habitants, daily increasing in size and importance, and gradually drawing into its mart the commerce of the immense regions of Central Africa. Its foundation, I believe, is due to Ismail Pasha (son of Mohammed Ali), who, during his conquests of the kingdoms of Shendy and Sennaar, in the years 1821 and 1822, recognized the importance, in a military and commercial pense, of establishing a post at the confluence of the two Niles. Mohammed Bey Defterdar, who succeeded him, seconded the plan, and ere long it was determined to make Khartoum, or 276 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. account of its central position, the capital of the Egyptian pashalik of Soudan. Standing at the mouth of the Blue Nile, which flows down from the gold and iron mountains of Abys sinia, and of the White Nile, the only avenue to a dozen Negro kingdoms, rich in ivory and gum, and being nearly equidistant from the conquered provinces of Sennaar, Kordofan, Sliemiy and Berber, it speedily outgrew the old Eth'opian cities, and drew to itself the greater part of their wealth and commercial activity. Now it is the metropolis of all the eastern part of Soudan, and the people speak of it in much the same style as the Egyptians speak of their beloved Cairo. The town is larger, cleaner and better built than any of the cities of Upper Egypt, except perhaps Siout. It extends for about a mile along the bank of the Blue Nile, facing the north, and is three-quarters of a mile in its greatest breadth. The part next the river is mostly taken up with the gardens and dwellings of Beys and other government officers, and wealthy merchants. The gardens of ihe Pasha, of Moussa Bey, Musakar Bey and the Catholic Mission are all large and beau tiful, and towards evening, when the north wind rises, shower the fragrance of their orange and mimosa blossoms over the whole town. The dwellings, which stand in them, cover a large space of ground, but are, for the most part, only one story in height, as the heavy summer rains would speedily beat down mud walls of greater height. The Pasha's palace, which was built during the year previous to my visit, is of burnt brick, much of which was taken from the ancient Christian ruins of Abou-Harass, on the Blue Nile. It is a quadrangu lar building, three hundred feet square, with a large open court in the centre. Its front formed one side of a square, which THE CITY AND POPULATION. 273 when complete, will be surrounded by other offices of govern ment. For Soudan, it is a building of some pretension, and the Pasha took great pride in exhibiting it. He told me that the Arab shekhs who visited him would not believe that it wag the work of man alone. Allah must have helped him to raise such a wonderful structure. It has an inclosed arched corri dor in front, in the Italian style, and a square tower over the entrance. At the time of my visit Abdallah Effendi was building a very handsome two-story house of burnt brick, and the Catholic priests intended erecting another, as soon as they should have established themselves permanently. Within a few months, large additions had been made to the bazaar, while the houses of the slaves, on the outskirts of the city, were constantly springing up like ant-hills. There is no plan whatever in the disposition of the build ings. Each man surrounds his property with a mud wall, re gardless of its location with respect to others, and in going from one point to another, one is obliged to make the most perplexing zigzags. I rarely ventured far on foot, as I soon became bewildered in the labyrinth of blank walls. When mounted on the Consul's tallest dromedary, I looked down on the roofs of the native houses, and could take my bearings without difficulty. All the mysteries of the lower life of Khartoum were revealed to me, from such a lofty post. On each side I looked into pent yards where the miserable Arab and Negro families lazily basked in the sun during the day, or into the filthy nests where they crawled at night. The swarms of children which they bred in those dens sat naked in the dust, playing with vile yellow dogs, and sometimes a lean bur- ien camel stood in the corner. The only furniture to be seen 278 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. was a water-skin, a few pots and jars, a basket or two, and sometimes an angareb, or coarse wooden frame covered with a netting of ropes, and serving as seat and bed. Nearly half thr< population of the place are slaves, brought from the mountains above Fazogl, or from the land of the Dinkas, on the White Nile. One's commiseration of these degraded races is almost overcome by his disgust with their appearance and habits, and I found even the waste plain that stretches towards Sennaar a relief after threading the lanes of the quarters where they live. Notwithstanding the nature of its population, Khartoum is kept commendably neat and clean. It will be a lucky day for Rome and Florence when their streets exhibit no more filth than those of this African city. The bazaars only are swept every morning, but the wind performs this office for the remainder of the streets. The soog, or market, is held in a free space, opening upon the inland plain, where the country people bring their sheep, fowls, camels, dourra, vegetables and other common products. The slaughtering of animals takes place every morning on the banks of the Blue Nile, east of the city, which is thus entirely free from the effluvia arising there from. Here the sheep, cows, goats and camels are killed, skinned and quartered in the open air, and it is no unusual thing to see thirty or forty butchers at work on as many dif ferent animals, each surrounded by an attendant group of vul tures, hawks, cranes, crows and other carnivorous birds. They are never molested by the people, and we sometimes rode through thousands of them, which had so gorged themselves that they scarcely took the trouble to move out of our way. The place labors under the disadvantage of being the most Unhealthy part of one of the most unhealthy regions in th THE CLIMATE. 279 world. From the southern frontier of Nubia, where the tropi cal rains begin to fall, to the table-land of Abyssinia on the south, and as far up the White Nile as has yet been explored, Soud&n is devastated by fevers of the most malignant charac ter. The summers are fatal to at least one-half of the Turks, Egyptians and Europeans who make their residence there, and the natives themselves, though the mortality is not so great among them, rarely pass through the year without an attack of fever. I arrived during the most healthy part of the year, and yet of all the persons I saw, three-fourths were complain ing of some derangement of the system. The military hospi tal, which I visited, was filled with cases of fever, dysentery and small-pox. I was in such good bodily condition from my journey through the Desert that I could scarcely conceive the sensation of sickness, and the generous diet and invigorating exercise I enjoyed secured me from all fear of an attack. Travellers are not agreed as to the cause of this mortality in Soudan. Some attribute it to the presence of infusoriae in the water; yet we drank the pure, mountain-born flood of the Blue Nile, and filtered it beforehand. I am disposed to side with Russegger, who accounts for it entirely by the miasma arising from decayed vegetation, during the intense heats. The coun try around Khartoum is a dead level ; the only mountain to be seen is the long ridge of Djebel Gerrari, twelve miles to the north. Behind the town, the White Nile curves to the east, and during the inundation his waters extend even to the sub urbs, almost insulating the place. The unusual sickness of the winter of 1852 might be accounted for by the inundation of the previous summer, which was so much higher than ordinary that the people were obliged to erect dykes to keep the water 280 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. out of the streets. The opposite bank of the river is consid ered more healthy ; and in the town of Halfay, only ten miles distant, the average mortality is much less. I was fortunate in reaching Khartoum at a very interesting period. All the principal shekhs of the different tribes be tween the Nile and the Red Sea were then collected there ; and as Dr. Reitz was on friendly terms with all of them, I had the opportunity of making their acquaintance, and could have readily procured a safe-conduct through their territories, if I had been disposed to make explorations in that direction. During the summer there had been trouble in the neigh borhood of Sennaar, and a general movement against the Egyptian rule was feared. In October and November, how ever, Moussa Bey made a campaign in the regions about and beyond the Atbara, and returned with the chief malcontents in chains. They were afterwards liberated, but had been re tained in Khartoum until some disputed questions should be settled. On the night of my arrival, the Co7iul received a visit of ceremony from the two principal ones : Hamed, the chief shekh of the Bisharees, and Owd-el-Kerim, son of the great shekh of the Shukorees, which inhabit the wide territory between the Atbara and the Blue Nile. They were accom panied by several attendants, and by Mohammed Kheyr, the commander of the Shygheean cavalry employed in the late ex pedition. The latter was a fierce-looking black in rich Turk ish costume. Hamed was a man of middle size, black, but with straight features and a mild, serious expression efface. He was dress ed in white, as well as his attendant whose bushy hair was twisted into countless strings and pierced with a new wooden VISIT OF ARAB 8HEK HS. 281 ikewer. The Shukoree shekh arrived last. We were seated on the divan, and all rose when he entered. He was a tall, powerful man, with large, jet-black eyes and a bold, fierce face. He wore a white turban and flowing robes of the same color, with a fringe and stripe of crimson around the border. The Consul advanced to the edge of the carpet to meet him, when the shekh opened his arms and the two fell upon each other's necks. Coffee and pipes were then served, and water was brought for the washing preparatory to dinner. Hamed and the Shygheean captain washed only their hands, but the great Owd-el-Kerim washed his hands, face and feet, and occupied nearly a quarter of an hour at his devotions, bowing his head many times to the earth and repeating the name of Allah with deep emphasis. We passed through the garden to the dining- room, where the shekhs were greatly amazed at seeing a table set in European style. They all failed in managing the knives and forks, except O \vd-el-Kerim, who watched the Consul and myself, and did his part with dignity. Achraet had made a vermicelli soup, which they eyed very suspiciously, and did not venture to take more than a few mouthfuls. They no doubt went away with the full belief that the Franks devour worms. They were at a loss how to attack the roast mutton, until I carved it for them, but did such execution with their fingers among the stews and salads that the dishes were soon emptied. After they had again partaken of coffee and pipes in the divan, the Consul ordered two or three rockets, which had been left from his Christmas celebration, to be sent up in order to satisfy the curiosity of his guests, who had heard much of those wonderful fires, which had amazed all Khartoum, three weeks before. The shekh sand attendants were grouped on 282 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. the balcony, when the first rocket shot hissing into the air, drew its fiery curve through the darkness, and burst into a rain of yellow stars. " Wallah ! " and " Mashallah ! " were echoed from mouth to mouth, and the desert chiefs could scarcely contain themselves, from astonishment and delight, The second rocket went up quite near to us, and sooner than was expected. Hamed, the Bisharee shekh, was so startled that he threw both his arms around the Consul and held fast for dear life, and even the great Owd-el-Kerim drew a long breath and ejaculated, " God is great!" They then took their leave, deeply impressed with the knowledge and wisdom of the Franks. VISIT TO THE CATHOLIC MISSION 28* CHAPTER XXII. VISITS IN KHAKTOTTM. flalt to the Catholic Mission Dr. Knoblecher, the Apostolic Vicar Moussa Bey- Visit to Lattif Pasha Reception The Pasha's Palace Lions We Dine with th Pasha Ceremonies upon the Occasion Music The Guests The Franks in Khar toum Dr. Peney Visit to the Sultana N&sra An Ethiopian Dinner Character of the Sultana. ON the day of my arrival, Dr. Reitz proposed a visit to Dr. Knoblecher, the Apostolic Vicar of the Catholic Missions in Central Africa, who had returned to Khartoum about twenty days previous. The Vicar's name was already familiar to me, from the account of his voyage up the White Nile in 1850, which was published in the German journals during his visit to Europe, and it bad been my design to propose joining his party, in case he had carried out his plan of making a second voyage in the winter of 1852. He ascended as far as lat. 4 north, or about sixty miles beyond the point reached by D'Ar- naud and Werne, and therefore stands at the head of Nilotic explorers. Preceded by two attendants, we walked through the town to the Catholic Mission, a spacious one-story building in a large garden near the river. Enlering a court, in the centre of 2S4 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. which grew a tall tamarind tree, we were received by an Italian monk, in flowing robes, who conducted us into a second court, inclosed by the residence of the Vicar. Here we met two other priests, a German and a Hungarian, dressed in flowing Orien tal garments. They ushered us into a large room, carpeted with matting, and with a comfortable divan around the sides. The windows looked into a garden, which was filled with orange, fig and banana trees, and fragrant with jasmine and mimosa blossoms. We had scarcely seated ourselves, when the monks rose and remained standing, while Dr. Knoblecher entered. He was a small man, slightly and rather delicately built, and not more than thirty-five years of age. His com plexion was fair, his eyes a grayish blue, and his beard, which he wore flowing upon his breast, a very decided auburn. His face was one of those which wins not only kindness but confi dence from all the world. His dress consisted of a white tur ban, and a flowing robe of dark purple cloth. He is a man of thorough cultivation, conversant with several language.*, and possesses an amount of scientific knowledge which will make his future explorations valuable to the world. During my stay in Khartoum I visited him frequently, and derived from him much information concerning the countries of Soudan and their inhabitants. On our return we called upon Moussa Bey, the commander of the expedition sent into the lands of the Shukorees and the Hallengas, the foregoing summer. He was then ill of a fever and confined to his bed, but we entered the room without cere mony, and found with him the new Governor of Berber and Abd-el-Kader Bey, the Governor of Kordofan, besides several secretaries and attendants. Moussa Bey was a Turk, perhaps VISIT TO LATTIF PASHA. 285 fifty years of age, and had a strong, sturdy, energetic lace. Several Arab shekhs, some of whom had been taken prisoners in the late expedition, were lounging about the court-yards. The day after my arrival, Dr. Reitz presented me to Lattif Pasha, the Governor of -Soudan. The Egyptian officials in Khartoum generally consider themselves as exiles, and a sta tion in Soudan carries with it a certain impression of disgrace. For the Pasha, however, it is an office of great importance and responsibility, and its duties are fully as arduous as those of the Viceroy of Egypt himself. The provinces under his rule constitute a territory of greater extent than France, and there are as many factions among the native tribes as parties among the French politicians. It is moreover, in many respects, an independent sovereignty. Its great distance from the seat of authority, and the absence of any regular means of communica tion except the government post, gives the Pasha of Soudan opportunities of which he never fails to avail himself. Achmet Pasha at one time so strengthened himself here that he defied even Mohammed Ali, and it is still whispered that foul means were used to get rid of him. Since then, rotation in office ia found to be good policy, and the Egyptian Government is care ful to remove a Pasha before he has made himself dangerous. From the Turks and Europeans in Khartoum, I heard little good of Lattif Pasha. His character was said to be violent and arbitrary, and several most savage acts were attributed to him. One thing, however, was said in favor of him, and it was a great redeeming trait in those lands : he did not enrich himself by cheating the government. At the time of my visit it was understood that he had been recalled, and was to be superseded by Rustum Pasha. 286 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. We found the Pasha seated on his divan, with a secretary before him, reading a file of documents. The guards at the door presented arms as we entered, and the Pasha no sooner saw us than he rose, and remained standing till we came up. The Consul presented me, and we seated ourselves on the di van, separated from him by a pair of cushions. Pipes were brought to us by black slaves, and after a few commonplaces, he turned again to his business. The Secretary was reading despatches to the different provinces of Soudan. As fast as each was approved and laid aside, a Memlook slave of fifteen, who appeared to fill the office of page, stamped them with the Pasha's seal, in lieu of signature. When the affairs were con cluded, the Pasha turned to us and entered into conversation. He was a man of forty-five years of age, of medium height, but stoutly built, and with regular and handsome features. His complexion was a pale olive, his eyes large and dark, and he wore a black beard and moustaches, very neatly trimmed. Hia mouth was full, and when he smiled, showed a perfect set of strong white teeth, which gave a certain grimness to his ex pression. His manner was refined, but had that feline smooth ness which invariably covers sharp claws. If I had met him in London or Paris, in Frank costume, I should have set him down as the primo basso of the Italian Opera. He was plain ly dressed in a suit of dark-blue cloth, and wore a small tar boosh on his head. Our conversation first turned upon America, and finally upon steam navigation and maritime affairs in general. He took an interest in such subjects, as he was formerly Admiral in the navy of Mohammed Ali. An engraving of the Turkish frigate Sultan Mahmoud, which was built by the American THE PASHA'S PALACE. 28" Eckford, hung on the wall opposite me. Over the divan wa? a portrait of Sultan Abdul-Medjid, and on each side two Arabic sentences, emblazoned on a ground of blue fjnd crimson. The apartment was spacious and lofty ; the ceiling was of smooth palm-logs, and the floor of cement, beaten hard and polished with the trowel. I expressed my surprise to the Pasha that he had erected such a stately building in the short space of nine months, and he thereupon proposed to show it to me more in detail. He conducted us to a reception-room, covered with fine carpets, and furnished with mirrors and luxurious divans ; then the dining-room, more plainly furnished, the bath with Moorish arches glimmering in steamy twilight, and his private armory, the walls of which were hung with a small but rich assortment of Turkish and European weapons. The doors of the apartments were made of a dark-red wood, of very fine grain, closely resembling mahogany. It is found in the moun tains of Fazogl, on the south-western border of Abyssinia. It is susceptible of a fine polish, and the Pasha showed me a large and handsome table made from it. . The Pasha then led us into the court-yard, where the work men were still busy, plastering the interior of the corridors surrounding it. A large leopard and a lion-whelp of six months old, were chained to two of the pillars. A younger whelp ran loose about the court, and gave great diversion to the Pasha, by lying in wait behind the pillars, whence he pounced out upon any young boy-slave, who might pass that way. The little fellow would take to his heels in great terror, and scamper across the court, followed by the whelp, who no sooner overtook him than he sprang with his fore-paws against the boy's back, threw him down, and then ran off, apparently 288 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. very much delighted with the sport. He had the free range of the palace, but spent the most of his time in the kitchen where he would leap upon a table, deliberately lie down, and watch (he movements of the cooks with great interest. The Pasha told us that this whelp had on one occasion found his way to the harem, where his presence was first proclaimed by the screams of the terrified women. The leopard was a large and fierce animal, but the other lion was a rough, good-humored fellow, turning over on his back to be played with, and roar ing frequently, with a voice that resembled the low notes of a melancholy trombone. From this court we passed into tho outer corridor fronting the square, when the jewelled ^hebooka were again brought, and the Pasha discoursed for some time on the nece.-sity of controlling one's passions and preserving a quiet temperament under all circumstances. "When we rose to depart, he invited us to return and dine with him next day. Towards sunset the horses were got ready ; Dr. Reitz don ned his uniform, and I dressed myself in Frank costume, with the exception of the tarboosh, shawl and red slippers. We called at the Catholic Mission on our way to the Palace, and while conversing with the monks in the garden, a message came from the Pasha requesting Aboona Suleyman (Padre Solomon, as Dr. Knoblecher was called by the Copts and Mussulmans in Khartoum) to accompany us. We therefore set out on foot with the Vicar, with the grooms leading the horses behind us. The Pa^ha received us at the entrance of his reception-room, and then retired to pray, before further conversation. The di van at the further end of the room was divided in the centre by a pile of cushions, the space on the right hand being reserved for the Pasha alone. The Consul, being the second inde* CEREMONIES BEFORE DINNER. 289 pendent power, seated himself on the left hand, Dr. Knob- lecher modestly took the corner, and I drew up my legs beside him, on the side divan. After a short absence during which, we also were supposed to have said our prayers the Pasha returned, saluted us a second time, and seated himself. Four slaves appeared at the same moment, with four pipes, which they presented to us in the order of our rank, commencing with the Pasha. When the aroma of the delicate Djebeli tobacco had diffus ed a certain amount of harmony among us, the conversation became more animated. The principal subject we discussed was the coup d'etat of Louis Napoleon, the news of which had just arrived by dromedary post, in twenty-four days from Cairo. The Pasha said it was 'precisely the thing which he had long ago predicted would come to pass. Louis Napoleon, he said, would behead Thiers, Cavaignac, Lamoriciere and the others whom he had imprisoned, and make, if necessary, twenty coups d'etat, after which, France would begin to prosper. The French, he said, must be well beaten, or it is impossible to govern them. The conversation had hardly commenced, when a slave appeared, bearing a silver tray, upon which were four tiny glasses of mastic cordial, a single glass of water, and saucers which contained bits of orange and pomegranate. The Pasna was always served first. He drank the cordial, took a sip of water, and then each of us in turn, drinking from the bame glass. At intervals of about five minutes the same re freshment appeared, and was served at least ten times before dinner was announced. . Presently there came a band of musicians five Egyptian boys whom the Pasha had brought with him from Cairo. We 13 290 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. had also two additions to the company of guests : Rufaa an intelligent Egyptian, who was educated in France, and had been principal of a native college in Cairo, under Mohammed Ali, and All Bey Khasib, the late Governor of Berber, who had been deposed on account of alleged mal-practices. The latter was the son of a water carrier in Cairo, but was adopted by the widow of Ismail Pasha, who gave him a superior educa tion. Other accounts represented him to be the illegitimate son of either Ismail or Ibrahim Pasha, and this surmise was probably correct. He was a bold, handsome man of thirty, and was said to be the most intelligent of all the officials in Soudan. After some little prelude, the musicians commenced. The instruments were a xumarra, or reed flute, a dulcimer, the wires of which were struck with a wooden plectrum, held be tween the first and middle fingers, and a tamborine, two of the boys officiating only as singers. The airs were Arabic and Persian, and had the character of improvisations, compared with the classic music of Europe. The rhythm was perfect, and the parts sustained by the different instruments arranged with considerable skill. The Egyptian officers were greatly moved by the melodies, which, in their wild, passionate, bar baric cadences, had a singular charm for my ear. The songs were principally of love, but of a higher character than the common songs of the people. The Pasha translated a brace for us. One related to the loves of a boy and maiden, the for mer of whom was humble, the latter the daughter of a Bey. They saw and loved each other, but the difference in their sta tions prevented the fulfilment of their hopes. One day, as the girl was seated at her window, a funeral passed through the MUSIC AND DINNER. 291 street below. She asked the name of the dead person, and they answered " Leyl," the name of her beloved, whom the violence of his passion had deprived of life. Her lamentations formed the theme of a separate song, in which the name of Leyl was repeated in one long, continued outcry of grief and love. The second song was of a widow who had many wooers, by whom she was so beset, that she finally appointed a day to give them her decision. The same day her son died, yet, be cause she had given her word, she mastered her grief by a he roic resolution, arrayed herself in her finest garments, received her suitors, and sang to her lute the song which would best entertain them. At the close of the festival she announced her loss in a song, and concluded by refusing all their offers At last, dinner was announced. The Pasha led the way into the dining-room, stopping in an ante-chamber, where a group of slaves were ready with pitchers, ewers and napkins, and we performed the customary washing of hands. The Pasha then took his seat at the round table, and pointed out his place to each guest. Dr. Knoblecher and myself sat on his right, Dr. Reitz and Rufaa Bey on his left, and Ali Bey Khasib opposite. There were no plates, but each of us had a silver knife, spoon and fork, and the arrangement was so far in Frank style that we sat upon chairs instead of the floor. The only ceremony observed was, that the Pasha first tasted each dish as it was brought upon the table, after which the rest of us followed. We all ate soup from the same tureen, and buried our several right hands to the knuckles in the fat flesh of the sheep which was afterwards set before us. Claret was poured out for the Franks and Rufaa Bey (whose Moslem principles had been damaged by ten years residence in Paris), the Pasha and 292 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. All Bey alone abstaining. There were twenty courses in all, and the cookery was excellent Besides the delicate Turkish compounds of meat and vegetables, delicious fish from the White Nile and fruits from the Pasha's garden, we had blano mange and several varieties of French patisserie. At the close of the repast, a glass bowl containing a cool drink made from dried figs, quinces and apricots, was placed upon the table. The best possible humor prevailed, and I enjoyed the dinner exceedingly, the more so because I had not expected to find such a high degree of civilization in Soudan. We had afterwards coffee and pipes in the reception-room, and about ten in the evening took leave of the Pasha and walk ed home, preceded by attendants carrying large glass lanterns. After accompanying Dr. Knoblecher to the gate of the Mission, Ali Bey Khasib took my hand, Rufaa Bey that of the Con sul, and we walked to the residence of the Bey, who detained us an hour by the narration of the injuries and indignities which had been inflicted upon him by order of Abbas Pasha, The latter, on coming into power, took especial care to remove all those officers who had been favorites of Mohammed AIL Many of them were men of high attainments and pure charac ter, who had taken an active part in carrying out the old Pasha's measures of reform. Among them was Rufaa Bey, who, with several of his associates, was sent to Khartoum, os tensibly for the purpose of founding a College there, but in reality as a banishment from Egypt. He had been there a jear and a half at the time of my visit, yet no order had been received from Cairo relative to the College. This state of in- nction and uncertainty, combined with the effect of the climate, Lad already terminated the lives of two of his fellow -profea FKANKS AND COPTS. 294 SOTS, and it was no doubt the design of Abbas Pasha to relievt himself of all of them by the same means. When I heard this story, the truth of which Dr. Reitz confirmed, I could readilj account for the bitterness of the curses which the venerable old Bey heaped upon the head of his tyrannical ruler. The Frank population of Khartoum was not large, consist ing, besides Dr. Reitz and the priests of the Catholic Mission of Dr. Peney, a French physician, Dr. Vierthaler, a German, and an Italian apothecary, the two former of whom were in the Egyptian service. Dr. Peney had been ten years in Soudan, and knew the whole country, from the mountains of Fazogl to the plains of Takka, on the Atbara River, and the Shangalla forests on the Abyssinian frontier. He was an exceedingly intelligent and courteous person, and gave me much interesting information, concerning the regions he had visited and the habits of the different tribes of Soudan. I had afterwards personal opportunity of verifying the correctness of many of his statements. There were a few Coptic merchants in the place, and on the second day after my arrival I had an opportunity of witnessing the New- Year ceremonies of their Church, which, like the Greek, still retains the old style. The service, which was very similar to a Catholic mass, was chant ed in musical Arabic, and at its close we were presented with small cakes of unleavened flour, stamped with a cross. At the conclusion of the ceremonies coffee was given to us in an outer court, with the cordial " Haneean ! " (a wish equivalent to the Latin prosit, or " may it benefit you ! ") to which we re plied : " Allah Haneek /" (may God give you benefit !) Dr. Reitz took me one day to visit the celebrated Sitteh lLady) Nasra, the daughter of the last King of Sennaar and 294 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. brother of the present Shekh of that province. She is a woman of almost masculine talent and energy, and may be said to gov ern Sennaar at present. All the Arab shekhs, as well as the population at large, have the greatest respect for her, and in variably ask her advice, in any crisis of affairs. Her brother, Ids-is "Wed Adlan, notwithstanding his nominal subjection to Egypt, still possesses absolute sway over several hundred vil lages, and is called King of Kulle. The Lady Nasra retains the title of Sultana, on account of her descent from the ancient royal house of Sennaar. She has a palace at Soriba, on the Blue Nile, which, according to Lepsius, exhibits a degree of wealth and state very rare in Soudan. She was then in Khartoum on a visit, with her husband, Mohammed Defalleh, the son of a former Vizier of her father, King Adlan. We found the Lady Nasra at home, seated on a carpet in her audience-hall, her husband and Shekh Abd-el-Kader the Shekh of Khartoum, who married her daughter by a former husband occupying an adjacent carpet. She gave the Consul her hand, saluted me, as a stranger, with an inclination of her head, and we seated ourselves on the floor opposite to her. She was about forty-five years old, but appeared younger, and still retained the traces of her former beauty. Her skin was a pale bronze color, her eyes large and expressive, and her face remarkable for its intelligence and energy. All her motions were graceful and dignified, and under more favorable circum stances she might have become a sort of Ethiopian Zenobia. She wore a single robe of very fine white muslin, which she bometimcs folded so as nearly to conceal her features, and sometimes allowed to fall to her waist, revealing the somewhat over-ripe charms of her bosom. A heavy ring of the natiy* VISIT TO THE PRINCESS OF SENNAAR. 295 gold of Kasan hung from her nose, and others adorned her fin gers. Dr. Reitz explained to her that I was not a Frank, but came from a great country on the other side of the world. She spoke of the visit of Dr. Lepsius, at Soriba, and said that he was the only far- travelled stranger she had seen, except myself. I took occasion to say that I had frequently heard of her in my native land ; that her name was well-known all over the world ; and that the principal reason of my visit to Sou dan, was the hope of seeing her. She was not in the least flat tered by these exaggerated compliments, but received them as quietly as if they were her right. She was a born queen, and I doubt whether any thing upon the earth would have been able to shake her royal indifference. Her slaves were all girls of twelve to fourteen years of age, naked except the rdhad, or girdle of leathern fringe about the loins. They had evidently been choseu for their beauty, and two of them, although as black as cast-iron statues, were in comparable for the symmetry of their forms and the grace of their movements. They brought us pipes and coffee, and when not employed, stood in a row at the bottom of the room, with their hands folded upon their breasts. Dinner was just ready, and we were invited to partake of it. The Sultana had al ready dined in solitary state, so her husband, Shekh Abd-el- Kader, the Consul and I, seated ourselves cross-legged on the floor, around the huge bowl containing an entire sheep stuffed with rice. We buried our fingers in the hot and smoking flesh and picked the choicest pieces from the ribs ard flank, occa sionally taking a handful of rice from the interioi The only additional dish was a basket of raw onions and radishes. Be fore each of us stood a slave with a napkin and a large glass 290 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. of om bilbil the " mother of nightingales." After drinking we returned the glass to the slave's hand, she standing all the while immovable as a statue. After we had eaten our fill of roast mutton and raw onions, they brought a dish of prepared dourra, called abri, which strongly resembles the pinole of Mexico. The grain is pounded very fine, sifted, mixed with a little sugar and water, and made into thin, dry leaves, as white and delicate as cambric. It is considered very nourishing, es pecially on a journey, for which purpose it is used by the rich shekhs of Soudan. As we took our leave, the Sultana, observing that our cane batons, which we had just purchased in the bazaar, were of very indifferent quality, ordered two others to be brought, of a fine yellow wood, resembling box, which is found in the moun> tains on the Abyssinian frontier, and gave them to us. RKCBNT EXPLORATION OF SOUDAN. 287 CHAPTER XXIII. THE COUNTRIES OF SOUDAN. R/.'ent Explorations of Soudun Limit of the Tropical Rains The Conquest of Ethio piaCountries Tributary to Egypt Tho District of Takka Expedition of Mouss Bey The Atliara Eiver The Abyssinian Frontier Christian Ruins of Abon-IIa- rass The Kingdom of Sennaar Kordofan Dar-Fur The Princess of Dar-Fur in Khartoum Her Visit to Dr. Reitz ThJ Unknown Countries of Central Africa. UNTIL within a recent period, but little has been known of the geography and topography of the eastern portion of Central Africa. Few English travellers have made these regions the subject of their investigation, their attention having been prin cipally directed towards the countries on the western coast The Niger, in fact, has been for them a more interesting prob lein than the Nile. The German travellers Riippell and Rus segger, however, by their explorations within the last twenty- five years, have made important contributions to our knowledge of Eastern Soudan, while D'Arnaud, Werne, and more than all, Dr. Knoblechcr, have carried our vision far into the heart of the mysterious regions beyond. Still, the results of these explorations are far from being generally known, or even rep resented upon our maps. Geographical charts are still issued j in which the conjectured Mountains of the Moon continue to 13* 298 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. Btretch their ridges across the middle of Africa, in latitudes where the latest travellers find a plain as level as the sea. A few words, therefore, concerning the character and relative po sition of the different countries of which I have occasion to epeak, may make these sketches of African life and landscapes' more intelligible to many readers. As far as southern Nubia, with the exception of the Oases in the Libyan Desert, the Nile is the only agent of productive ness. Beyond the narrow limits of his bounteous valley, there is little except red sand and naked rock, from the Red Sea to the Atlantic. On reaching lat. 19, however, a change takes place in the desert landscapes. Here the tropical rains, which are unknown in Egypt and Northern Nubia, fall every sum mer, though in diminished quantity. The dry, gravelly plains, nevertheless, exhibit a scattering growth of grass and thorny Bhrubs, and springs are frequently found among the mountain ranges. As we proceed southward, the vegetation increases in quantity ; the grass no longer keeps the level of the plain, but climbs the mountain-sides, and before reaching Khartoum, in lat. 15 40' north, we have passed the limit of the Desert. The wide plains stretching thence eastward to the Atbara, and westward beyond Kordofan, are savannas of rank grass, cross ed here and there by belts of the thorny mimosa, and differing little in aspect frpm the plains of California during the dry sea son. The Arabs who inhabit them are herdsmen, and own vast flocks of camels and sheep. The Nile here is no longer the sole river, and loses his title of " The Sea," which he owns in Egypt. The Atbara, which flows down to him from the Abyssinian Alps, has many tributaries of its own ; the Bluo Nile, between Khartoum and Sennaar receives the large THE CONQUEST OF ETHIOPIA. 299 streams of the Rahad and the Dender ; and the White Nile^ though flowing for the greater part of his known course through an immense plain, boasts two important affluents the Sobat and the Bahr el-Ghazal. The soil, climate, produc tions and character of the scenery of this region are therefore very different from Egypt. Before the conquest of Soudan by Mohammed Ali, little was known of the country between the Ethiopian Nile and the Red Sea, or of Central Africa south of the latitude of Kordo- fan and Sennaar. The White Nile, it is true, was known to exist, but was considered as a tributary stream. It was ex tremely difficult and dangerous to proceed beyond Nubia, and then only in company with the yearly caravans which passed between Assouan and Sennaar. Ibrahim Pasha, Ismail Pasha, and Mohammed Bey Defterdar, between the years 1820 and 1825, gradually subjugated and attached to the rule of Egypt the countries of Berber, Sbendy and Sennaar, as far as the mountains of Fazogl, in lat. 11, on the south-western frontier of Abyssinia, the wild domains of the Shukorees, the Bisha- rees, the Hallengas and Hadendoas, extending to the Red Sea, and embracing the seaport of Sowakin, and the kingdom of Kordofan, west of the Nile, and bounded by the large and powerful negro kingdom of Dar-Fur. The Egyptian posses sions in Soudan are nearly as extensive as all Egypt, Nubia not included, and might become even richer and more flourish ing under a just and liberal policy of government. The plains on both sides of the Nile might be irrigated to a much greater extent than in Egypt, and many vast tracts of territory given up to the nomadic tribes, could readily be reclaimed from the wilderness. The native inhabitants are infinitely more stupid 800 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. and degraded than the Fellahs of Egypt, but that they are c pable of great improvement is shown by the success attending the efforts of the Catholic priests in Khartoum, in educating children. The terrible climate of Soudan will always be a drawback to its physical prosperity, yet even this would be mitigated, in some measure, were the soil under cultivation. As I followed the course of the Nile, from the northern limit of the tropical rains to Khartoum, my narrative will have given some idea of the country along his banks. The terri tory to the east, towards and beyond the Atbara, is still in a great measure unexplored. Burckhardt was the first Euro pean who visited it, but his route lay among the mountain- ranges near and parallel to the coast of the Red Sea. The long chain of Djebel Langay, which he crossed, is three to five thousand feet in height, and, like the mountain-spine of the island of Ceylon, never has the same season on both sides at once. When it rains on the eastern slopes, the western are dry, and the contrary. There is another and still higher chain near the coast, but the greater part of this region consists of vast plains, tenanted by the Arab herdsmen, and rising gradu ally towards the south into the first terraces of the table-land of Abyssinia. The land of the Shukorees and the Hallengas, lying on both sides of the Atbara, is called Belad el Takka. Dr. Reitz visited it during the summer of 1851, in company with the military expedition under Moussa Bey, and travelled for three or four weeks through regions where no European had been before him. Leaving the town of Shendy, he travelled eastward for nine days over unbroken plains of grass, abounding with ga- relies and hyenas, to a village called Goz Radjeb, on the At- DR. REITZ'S JOURNEY TO TAKKA. 801 bara River. This belongs to the Shukorees, against whom th expedition was in part directed. He then crossed the river and travelled for two or three weeks through a broken moun tain country, inhabited by the wandering races of the Hallen ges and Hadendoas. The mountains, which -were from two tc three thousand feet in height, were crested with walls of naked porphyry rock, but their lower slopes were covered with grass and bushes, and peopled by myriads of apes. Between the ranges were many broad and beautiful valleys, some of which were inhabited. Here the vegetable and animal world was far richer than on the Nile. The Consul was obliged to follow the movements of the expedition, and therefore could not trace out any regular plan of exploration. After seeing just enough to whet his curiosity to penetrate further, Moussa Bey return ed to Goz Radjeb. His route then followed the course of the Atbara, for a distance of one hundred and twenty miles, to the town of Sofie, on the Abyssinian frontier. The river, which is a clear and beautiful stream, has a narrow border of trees and underwood, and flows in a winding course through a region of low, grassy hills. By using the water for irrigation, the coun try, which is now entirely uncultivated, might be made evry productive. The Shukorees possess immense herds of camels, and a hegin, or trained dromedary, which the Consul purchas ed from them, was one of the strongest and fleetest which I saw in Africa. Near Sofie the savannas of grass give place to dense tropi cal forests, with a rank undergrowth which is often impenetra ble. Here, in addition to the lion and leopard, which are common to all Soudan, the expedition saw large herds of the elephant and rhinoceros. The wo >ds were filled with birds of 302 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. brilliant plumage, and the vegetable world was rich and gor geous beyond description. The Consul remained but a short time here, and then travelled westward to the town of Abou Harass on the Blue Nile, visiting on the way a curious isolated mountain, called Djebel Attesh. Near Abou-Harass are the ruins of an ancient Christian town, probably dating from the fourth or fifth century, about which time Christianity, pre viously planted in Abyssinia, began to advance northward to wards Nubia. The Consul obtained from the Governor of Abou-Harass three iron crosses of a peculiar form, a number of beads which had belonged to a rosary, and a piece of in cense all of which were found in removing the bricks used to build the Pasha's palace and other edifices in Khartoum. The room which I occupied during my stay in Khartoum was paved with the same bricks. These remains are in curious contrast with the pyramids of Meroe and the temples of Mesowurat, The Christian and Egyptian Faiths, advancing towards each other, almost met on these far fields. The former kingdom of Sennaar included the country be tween the two Niles except the territory of the Shillooks as far south as lat. 12. It is bounded by Abyssinia on the east, and by the mountains of the savage Galla tribes, on the south. The Djezeereli (Island) el ffoye, as the country be tween the rivers is called, is for the most part a plain of grass. Towards the south, there are some low ranges of hills, followed by other plains, which extend to the unknown mountain region, and abound with elephants and lions. The town of Sennaar, once the capital of this region and the residence of its Meks or Kings, is now of little importance. It was described to me a a collection of mud huts, resembling Shendy. The Egyptiaa KORDOFAN. 303 rule extends ten days' journey further, to Fazogl, -where the fine timber in the mountains and the gold-bearing sands of Kasan have given rise to the establishment of a military post Sennaar, as well as Kordofan, Berber and Dongola, is govern ed by a Bey, appointed by the Pasha of Soudan. It is only two weeks' journey thence to Gondar, the capital of Amhara, the principal Abyssinian kingdom. I was told that it is no* difficult for merchants to visit the latter place, but that any one suspected of being a person of consequence is detained there and not allowed to leave again. I had a strong curiosity to see something of Abyssinia, and had I been quite sure that I should not be taken for a person of consequence, might have made the attempt to reach Gondar. Kordofan lies west of the White Nile, and consists entire ly of great plains of grass and thorns, except in the southern part, where there is a mountain range called Djebel Dyer, in habited by emigrants from Dongola. It is not more than two hundred miles in breadth, from east to west. Its capital, Obeid, lies in lat. 13 12' north, and is a mere collection of mud huts. Mr. Peterick, the English Vice-Consul for Sou dan, to whom I had letters from Mr. Murray, the English Consul-General in Cairo, had taken up his residence in Obeid. The soil of Kordofan is sterile, and the water is considered very unhealthy for foreigners. Capt. Peel gave me such a de scription of its endless thickets of thorns, its miserable popula tion and its devastating fevers, that I lost all desire to visit it The Governor, Abd-el-Kader Bey, was in Khartoum, and Dr. Reitz intended making a journey through the country in com pany with him. There is a caravan route of twenty days between Obeid and Dongola, through a wild region called the Beyooda 804 JOURNET TO CENTRAL AFRICA. or Bedjuda. A few degrees further north, it would be a bar* ren desert, but here it is an alternation of wadys, or valleys, with ranges of porphyry mountains, affording water, trees, and sufficient grass for the herds of the wandering Arabs. It ia inhabited by two tribes the Kababish and the Howoweet, who differ strongly from the Arabs east of the Nile, in their appearance and habits. The latter, by their superior intelli- gence and their remarkable personal beauty, still attest their descent from the tribes of Hedjaz and Yemen. The tribes in the western desert are more allied to the Tibboos, and other tenants of the Great Zahara. The caravans on this road aro exposed to the danger of attacks from the negroes of Dar-Fur, who frequently waylay small parties, murder the individuals and carry off the camels and goods. The great kingdom of Dar-Fur offers a rich field for some future explorer. The extensive regions it incloses are suppos ed to furnish the key to the system of rivers and mountain- chains of Central Africa. Through the fear and jealousy of its rulers, no stranger has been allowed to pass its borders, since the visit of Mr. Browne, half a century ago. Of late, however, the relations between the Egyptian rulers in Souddn and the Sultan of Dar-Fur have been quite amicable, and if nothing occurs to disturb this harmony there is some hope that the ban will be removed. Lattif Pasha informed me that he had written to the Sultan on behalf of Capt. Peel, who wished to pass through Dar-Fur and reach Bornou. He had at that time received no answer, but it had been intimated, unofficial" ly, that the Sultan would reply, giving Capt. Peel permission to enter the country and travel in it, but not to pass beyond it There is an almost continual war between the Sultans of 13or- THE PRINCESS OF DAR-FUR. 301 nou and Dar-Fur, and the Pasha was of the opinion that it would be impossible to traverse Africa from east to west, in the line of those states. A circumstance occurred lately, which may help to open Dar-Fur to Europeans. The Sitteh (Lady) Sowakin, the aunt of Sultan Adah, the present monarch of that kingdom, is a zealous Moslem, and lately determined to make a pilgrimage to the grave of the Prophet. She arrived in Khartoum in Au gust, 1851, attended by a large retinue of officers, attendants and slaves, and after remaining a few days descended the Nile to El Mekheyref, crossed the Desert to Sowakin, on the Red Sea, and sailed thence for Djidda, the port of Mecca. During her stay Lattif Pasha was exceedingly courteous to her, intro ducing her to his wives, bestowing upon her handsome presents, and furnishing her with boats and camels for her journey. Dr. Reitz availed himself of the occasion to make the people of Dar-Fur better acquainted with Europeans. All the Frank residents assembled at his house, in Christian costume, and proceeded to the residence of the Lady Sowakin. They found her sitting in state, with two black slaves before her on their hands and knees, motionless as sphinxes. On each side stood her officers and interpreters. She was veiled, as well as her female attendants, and all exhibited the greatest surprise and curiosity at the appearance of the Franks. The gifts they laid before her silks, fine soaps, cosmetics, bon-bons, &c. she ex amined with childish delight, and when the Consul informed her that the only object of the Europeans in wishing to enter Dar-Fur was to exchange such objects as these for gum and elephants' teeth, she promised to persuade Sultan Adah to open hie kingdom to them. 806 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. The next day her principal officers visited the Consul's house, and spent a long time examining its various wonders. The pictures, books and furniture filled them with astonish ment, and they went from one object to another, like children, uttering exclamations of surprise and delight. What most startled them was a box of lucifer matches, which was entirely beyond their comprehension. They regarded the match with superstitious awe, and seemed to consider that the fire was pro duced by some kind of magic. Their relation of what they saw so excited the curiosity of the Lady Sowakin, that she came on the following day, with her women. She was no less astonished than her attendants had been, but was most attract ed by the Consul's large mirror. She and her women spent half an hour before it, making gestures, and unable to compre hend how they were mimicked by the reflected figures. As she was unacquainted with its properties, she threw back her veil to see whether the image would show her face. The Con sul was standing behind her, and thus caught sight of her fea tures ; she was black, with a strongly marked but not unpleas ant countenance, and about forty-five years of age. He had a breakfast prepared for the ladies, but on reaching the room the attendants all retired, and he was informed that the women of rank in Dar-Fur never eat in the presence of the men. After they had finished the repast, he observed that they had not only partaken heartily of the various European dishes, but had taken with them what they could not eat, so that the table ex hibited nothing but empty dishes. When they left, the Lady reiterated her promise, and added that if the Consul would visit Dar-Fur, the Sultan would certainly present him wit! many camel-loads of elephants' teeth, in consideration of his courtesy to her. UNKNOWN COUNTRIES. 307 To the westward of Dar-Fur, and between that country and Bornou, lies the large kingdom of Waday, which has never been visited by a European. I learned from some Kordofan mer chants, who had visited the frontiers of Dar-Fur on their trad ing expeditions, that Sultan Adah had conquered a great part of Waday, and would probably soon become involved in war vrith the Sultan of Bornou. It is said that there is in the country of Waday a lake called Fittre, which is a hundred and fifty miles in length, and receives several rivers. At the south-western extremity of Dar-Fur, in lat. 6 N. there is a small country, called Fertit. I often heard it mentioned by the Ethiopian traders, one of whom showed me a snuff-box, which he had bought of a native of the country. It was made from the hard shell of a fruit about the size of an orungc, with a stopper roughly wrought of silver. Almost the entire region south of lat. 10 N. and lying between the White Nile and the Gulf of Guinea is unknown ground, and presents a rich field for future explorers. The difiiculties and dangers which have hitherto attended the path of African discovery, are rapidly diminishing, and the time is not far distant when every mystery, hidden in the heart of that wonderful Continent, will be made clear. Where a traveller has once pem-trated, he smoothes the way for those who follow, and that superior intelligence which renders the brute creation unable to bear the gaze of a human eye, is the defence of the civilized man against the barbarian. Bruce, journeying from Abyssinia to Egypt, in the year 177'2, was beset by continual dangers, and even Burckhardt, in 1814, though successfully disguised as a Mussulman shekh, or saint, was oblig ed to keep his journal by stealth. At present, however, a 308 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. Frank may travel in comparative safety, from Cairo to the borders of Dar-Fur and Abyssinia, while the "White Nile and its tributaries afford avenues to the very heart of the unexplor ed regions beyond. The climate is the greatest obstacle in the way of discovery, and the traveller whose temperament is best adapted for the heats of the inter-tropical zone, possesses the best chance of success. BJIOURfilONS AROUND KHARTOUM. CHAPTER XXIV. EXCURSIONS AND P R E P A R A T I O N 8 . Excursions around Khartoum A Eace into the Desert Euphorbia Forest The Banks of the Blue Nile A Saint's Grave The Confluence of the Two Niles Mag nitude of the Nile Comparative Size of the Rivers Their Names Desire to pene trate further into Africa Attractions of the White Nile Engage the Boat John Ledyard Former Restrictions against exploring the River Visit to the Pasha Despotic Hospitality Achmet's Misgivings We set sail MY morning rides with Dr. Reitz, around Khartoum, grad ually extended themselves into the neighboring country, with in the limits which a fast dromedary could reach in two hours' travel In this way I became familiar with the scenery along the banks of both Niles, and the broad arid plains between them. As I rarely appeared in public except in the Consul's company, and attended with all the state which his household tould command, I was looked upon by the inhabitants as a foreign prince of distinguished rank. The Pasha's soldiers duly presented arms, and the people whom I met in the streets stopped and saluted me profoundly, as I passed. The Consul had succeeded in making a strong impression of his own power nd importance, and this was reflected upon his guest. One jotrio'Er TO CENTRAL AFRICA. morning, as we were riding towards the palace, a man cried out : " May God prolong your days, Consul ! and the daya of the strange lord, for you make a grand show with your horses, every day ! " There was one of our rides which I never call to mind with out a leap of the heart. The noble red stallion which I usual ly mounted had not forgotten the plains of Dar-Fur, where ho was bred, and whenever we came upon the boundless level ex tending southward from the town, his wild blood was aroused. He pricked up his ears, neighed as grandly as the war-horse of Job, champed furiously against the restraining bit, and ever and anon cast a glance of his large, brilliant eye backward at me, half in wonder, half in scorn, that I did not feel the same desire. The truth is, I was tingling from head to foot with equal excitement, but Dr. Reitz was a thorough Englishman in his passion for trotting, and was vexed whenever I rode at any other pace. Once, however, the sky was so blue, the morning air so cool and fresh, and the blood so lively in my veins, that I answered the fierce questioning of Sultan's eye with an in voluntary shout, pressed my knees against his sides and gave him the rein. Mercury, what a rush followed ! We cut the air like the whizzing shaft from a Saracen crossbow ; Sul tan stretched out until his powerful neck was almost on a level with his back, and the glorious rhythm of his hoofs was accom panied by so little sense of effort, that it seemed but the throb bing of his heart, keeping time with my own. His course waa as straight as a sunbeam, swerving not a hair's-breadth to the right or left, but forward, forward into the freedom of the Desert. Neck and neck with him careered the Consul's milk- white stallion, and I was so lost in the divine excitement of 1 UACE INTO THE DESERT. 31 our speed, that an hour had passed before I was cool enough to notice where we were going. The Consul finally called out to me to stop, and I complied, sharing the savage resistance of Sultan, who neighed and plunged with greater ardor than at the start. The minarets of Khartoum had long since disap peared ; we were in the centre of a desolate, sandy plain, bro ken here and there by clumps of stunted mimosas a dreary landscape, but glorified by the sunshine and the delicious air. We rode several miles on the return track, before we met the pursuing attendants, who had urged their dromedaries into a gallop, and were sailing after us like a flock of ostriches. A few days after my arrival, we had the dromedaries sad dled and rode to Kereff, a village on the Blue Nile, about two leagues distant. The path was over a wide plain, covered with dry grass, and resembling an Illinois prairie after a long drought. In the rainy season it is green and luxuriant with grass and a multitude of flowers. The only trees were the savage white thorn of the Desert, until we approached the river, where we found forests of the large euphorbia, which I had first noticed as a shrub in Upper Egypt. It here became a tree, upwards of twenty feet in height. The branches bent over my head, as I rode through on the Consul's tallest drom edary. The trees were all in blossom, and gave out a subtle, sickening odor. The flowers appear in whorls around the stem, at the base of the leaves ; the corolla is entire, but divided into five points, white in the centre, with a purple stain at the extremity. The juice of this plant is viscid and milky, and the Arabs informed me that if a single drop of it gets into the eye it will produce instant blindness. Beyond these thickets extended patches of wheat and cot 312 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. ton to the banks of the Blue Nile, where the hump-backed oxen of Sennaar were lazily turning the creaking wheels of the sakies. The river had here a breadth of more than half a mile, and shone blue and brilliant in the morning sun. Before 1 poaching Kereff, we visited five villages, all built of mats and clay. The inhabitants were warming themselves on the sunny side of the huts, where they still shivered in the cold north- wind. At Kereff, two men brought a large gourd, filled with sour milk, which was very cool and refreshing. The principal wealth of the people consists in their large flocks of sheep and goats. They cultivate barely sufficient wheat and dourra to supply them with a few cakes of coarse bread, and their favor ite beverage of om bilbil. On our return we passed the grave of a native saint, which was decorated with rows of pebbles and a multitude of white pennons, fluttering from the tops of poles stuck in the ground. Several women were seated at the head, apparently paying their devotions to the ghost of the holy man. The older ones were unveiled and ugly, but there was a damsel of about eighteen, who threw part of her cotton mantle over her face, yet allow ed us to see that she was quite handsome. She had a pale yellow complexion, showing her Abyssinian descent, large, al mond-shaped eyes, and straight black hair which diffused an odor of rancid butter. I found it most agreeable to admire her beauty from the windward side. An old beggar-woman, whose gray hair, skinny face and bleared eyes, flashing from the bottom of deep sockets, made her a fitting picture of a Lapland witch, came up and touched our hands, which she could barely reach as we sat on the dromedaries, which saved us the horror of having her kiss them. We gave her a back THE JUNCTION OB' THE TWO NILBS. 313 aneosh, which she took as if it had been her right. After in voking the name of Allah many times, she went to the grave and brought each of us a handful of dirt, which we carefully put into our pockets, but as carefully emptied out again after we had reached home. The next morning I rode with the Consul to the junction of the two Niles, about a mile and a half to the west of Khar toum. The land all around is low, and the two rivers meet at right angles, but do not mingle their waters till they have roll ed eight or ten miles in their common bed. The White Nile is a light-brown, muddy color, the Blue Nile a dark bluish green. Both rivers are nearly of equal breadth at the point of confluence, but the current of the latter is much the stronger. There is a low green island, called Omdurman, in the White Nile, at its junction. The ferry-boat had just brought over a party of merchants from Kordofan, with their packages of gum A number of large vessels, belonging to the government, were hauled up on the bank, and several Arabs, under the direction of a Turkish ship-builder, were making repairs. We rode a short distance up the White Nile, over a beach which was deeply printed with the enormous foot-prints of a whole herd of hippopotami, and then home through the fields of blossom ing beans. The Nile was to me a source of greater interest than all the negro kingdoms between Khartoum and Timbuctoo, There, two thousand miles from his mouth, I found his current as broad, as strong, and as deep as at Cairo, and was no nearer the mystery of his origin, If I should ascend the western of his two branches, I might follow his windings twelve hundred miles further and still find a broad and powerful stream, of 14 314 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. whose source even the tribes that dwell in those far regions are ignorant. I am confident that when the hidden fountains shall at last be reached, and the problem of twenty centuries solved, the entire length of the Nile will be found to be not less than four thousand miles, and he will then take his rank with thft Mississippi and the Amazon a sublime trinity of streams There is, in some respects, a striking resemblance between the Nile and the former river. The Missouri is the true Missis sippi, rolling the largest flood and giving his color to the min gled streams. So of the White Nile, which is broad and tur bid, and pollutes the clear blue flood that has usurped his name and dignity. In spite of what geographers may say and they are still far from being united on the subject the Blue Nile is not the true Nile. There, at the point of junction, his volume of water is greater,* but he is fresh from the moun tains and constantly fed by large, unfailing affluents, while the White Nile has rolled for more than a thousand miles on near ly a dead level, through a porous, alluvial soil, in which he loses more water than he brings with him. * Capt Peel, who measured the volume of water in the two rivers, gives the following result: Breadth of the Blue Nile at Khartoum, 768 yards; average depth, 16.11 feet; average current, 1.564 knots; volume of water, 5,820,600 cubic feet per minute. Breadth of the White Nile, immediately above the junction, 483 yards ; average depth, 13.92 feet; average current, 1.47 knots; volume of water, 2,985,400 feet per minute. Breadth of the Nile below the junction, 1107 yards; average depth, 14.38 feet ; average current. 2 knots ; volume of water, 9,526,700 cubio feet per minute. This measurement was made in the latter part of Oeto- be , 1851. It can hardly be considered conclusive, as during the pre ceding summer the rains had been unusually heavy in the mountains of Abyssinia, which may have occasioned a greater disproportion than usual, in the volume of Ae two rivers. THE BLUE NILE. 315 The Blue Nile, whose source the honest, long-slandered Bruce did actually discover, rises near lat. 1 1 N. in the moun tains of Godjam, on the south-western frontier of Abyssinia. Thence it flows northward into the great lake of Demhea, or Tzana, near its southern extremity. The lake is shallow and muddy, and the river carries his clear flood through it without mixing. He then flows to the south and south-east, under the name of Tzana, along the borders of the kingdom of Shoa, to between lat. 9 and 10, whence he curves again to the north and finds his way through the mountains of Fazogl to the plains of Sennaar. His entire length cannot be less than eight hun dred miles. The stream is navigable as far as the mountains, about three hundred miles from Khartoum, where it is inter rupted by rapids. The Arabic name El-bahr el-Azrek, means rather "black" than "blue," the term azrek being used with reference to objects of a dark, blue-black color ; and besides, it is called iZacfc, in contradistinction to the ahr el- Abiad, the white Nile. The boatmen here also frequently speak of the black river as he, and the white as she. When I asked the reason of this, they replied that it was because the former had a stronger current. It is remarkable that the name " Nile," which is never heard in Egypt, (where the river is simply called el-lahr, " the sea,") should be retained in Ethiopia. There the boatmen speak of " el-bdhr el-Nil" which name they also sometimes apply to the Blue Nile. It is therefore easy to understand why the latter river should have been looked upon as the main current of the Nile. After I had been eight or ten days in Khartoum, I began to think of penetrating further into the interior. My inten tion, on leaving Cairo, was to push on as far as my time and 316 JOURNE* TO CENTRAL AFRICA. means would allow, and the White Nile was the great point of attraction. The long journey I had already made in order to reach Soudan only whetted my desire of seeing more of the wild, barbaric life of Central Africa, and, owing to the good luck which had saved me from any delay on the road, I could spare three or four weeks for further journeys, before setting out on my return to Egypt. Some of my friends in Khar toum counselled one plan and some another, but after distract ing myself in a maze of uncertainties, I returned to my first love, and determined to make a voyage up the White Nile. There was little to be gained by visiting Kordofan, as I had already seen Central African life to better advantage in Khar toum. Sennaar is now only interesting as a station on the way to Abyssinia or the mountains of Fazogl, and in the wild regions along the Atbara it is impossible to travel without an armed escort. As it is exceedingly dangerous for a single boat to pass through the extensive negro kingdoms of the Shillooks and the Dinkas, I had hoped to accompany Dr. Knoblecher's expedition some distance up the river and then take my chance of returning. The boat belonging to the Catholic Mission, however, had not arrived from Cairo, and the season was so far advanced that the expedition had been postponed until the following November. At the time of my visit, nevertheless, a Maltese trader named Lattif Effendi, was fitting up two large vessels which were shortly to leave on a trading voyage which he intended pu&hing as far as the Bari country. I could have made arrangements to accompany him, but as he could not re turn before some time in June, I should have been obliged, ic,- that case, to pass the sickly season in Soudan a risk scarcely worth the profit, as, with the best possible good luck, I miglit ENGAGING A VESSEL. 3t7 barely have reached the point attained by Dr. Knoblecher. The Consul proposed my going with Lattif Eflendi until I should meet the yearly expedition on its return, and then como down the river with it. This would have enabled me to pene trate to lat. 9, or perhaps 8, but after passing the islands of the Shillooks, one sees little except water, grass and mosqui toes, until he reaches the land of the Kyks, in lat. 7. After weighing carefully all the arguments on both sides, I decided to take a small boat and ascend as far as the islands. Here the new and rich animal and vegetable world of the magnifi cent river begins to unfold, and in many respects it is the most impressive portion of his stream. I was fortunate in finding a small vessel, of the kind called sandal the only craft in port, except the Pasha's dahabiyeh, which would have answered my purpose. It belonged to a fat old Turk, named Abou-Balta, from whom I engaged it for three hundred and twenty-five piastres. The crew consisted of a rais, five strong Congolese sailors, and a black female slave, as cook. The rais knew the river, but positively refus ed to take me further than the island of Aba, somewhere be tween lat. 12 and 13, on account of the danger of venturing among the Shillooks, without an armed force. I named the boat the John Ledyard, in memory of the first American traveller in Africa. The name was none the less appropriate, since Ledyard was buried beside the Nile, at the outset of a journey undertaken for the purpose of discovering its sources. Dr. Reitz gave me two sheep as provision for the voyage, and the remainder of my outfit cost me about a hundred and twen ty piastres in the bazaars of Khartoum. T reached Khartoum at a favorable season for making the 318 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. voyage. Formerly, it had been very difficult for any Euro pean to obtain permission to sail on the White Nile, owing to the trade of the river having been completely monopolized bj the Pasha of Soudan, in defiance of the Treaty of 1838, which made the river free to merchants of all nations. No later than the previous winter, Count Dandolo, an Italian traveller who visited Khartoum, encountered much opposition before ha succeeded in obtaining a boat for the Islands of the Shillooks. Owing to the vigorous efforts of Dr. Reitz, the monopoly had at last been broken down, and the military guard formerly stationed at the confluence of the two rivers, no longer existed. I did not even inform the Pasha of my intention to make the voyage until after I had taken the boat and completed my preparations. I then paid him a visit of ceremony, in com pany with the Consul. He was very affable, and insisted on our remaining for dinner, although we had invited two friends to help us eat a roasted ram. We urged this in excuse, but he cut us off by exclaiming : "I am ruler here, and my com mands dare not be disobeyed," and immediately sent a servant to order our guests, in his name, to eat the ram themselves. He then despatched messengers for Abd-el-Kader Bey, Gover nor of Kordofan, and Kuffaa. Bey, who were brought to the palace in the same arbitrary manner. Having thus secured his company, he retired for the usual prayers before dinner, leaving us to enjoy the preparatory pipe. Among the mani fold dishes served at dinner, were three or four kinds of fish from the White Nile, all of them of excellent flavor. The Pasha continued his discussion of Louis Napoleon's coup d'etat, taking delight in recommending a sanguinary policy as the only course, and could not enough praise Sultas 7TB BET SAIL. 319 Mahmoud I. for his execution of forty thousand Janissaries in one day. Finally, on the morning of the 22d of January, my effect? were all on board, and my rais and sailors in readiness. Ach met and Ali preceded me to the boat with many misgivings, for we were now going into regions where the Pasha's name was scarcely known where the Egyptian sway had never reached a land of kaffirs, or infidels, who were supposed to be nearly related to the terrible " Nyam-Nyams," the anthro pophagi of Central Africa. Achmet could not comprehend my exhilaration of spirits, and in reply to my repeated ex clamations of satisfaction and delight, observed, with a shake of the head : <: If it were not that we left Cairo on a lucky day, my master ! I should never expect to see Khartoum again." Fat Abou-Balta, who had promised to accompany me as far as the first village on the White Nile, did not make his appearance, and so we pushed off without him. Never was name more wrongly applied than that of Abou-Balta (the " fa ther of hatchets "), for he weighed three hundred pounds, had a face like the full moon, and was the j oiliest Turk I ever saw. Dr. Reitz, whose hospitality knew no bounds, sent his drome daries up the river the day previous, and accompanied me with his favorite servants two ebony boys, with shining counte nances and white and scarlet dresses. The White Nile. CHAPTER XXV. VOYAGE UP THE WHITE NILE. Departure from Khartoum We enter the White Nile Mirage and Landscape The Consul returns Progress Loss of the Flag -Scenery of the Shores Territory of the Hassaniyehs Curious Conjugal Custom Multitudes of Water Fowls Increas- e ' Richness of Vegetation A pts Sunset on the White Nile We reach the King lorn of the Shillook Negroes. "At night he heard the lion roar And the hyena scream, And the river-horse as he crushed the reeds Beside some hidden stream ; And It passed like a glorious roll of drums Through the triumph of his dream." LONGFELLOW. THE men pushed away from shore with some difficulty, as a violent north-wind drove the boat back, but the sail once un furled, we shot like an arrow between the gardens of Khar toum and the apreen shores of the island of TutL Before ENTERING THE WHITE NILE. 321 reaching the confluence of the rivers, a jut of land obliged th sailors again to take to their poles and oars, but a short time sufficed to bring us to the turning-point. Here the colors of the different streams are strongly marked. They are actually blue and white, and meet in an even line, which can be seen extending far down the common tide. We tossed on the agi tated line of their junction, but the wind carried us in a few minutes past the island of Omdurman, which lies opposite. The first American flag that ever floated over the White Nile, fluttered gayly at the mast-head, pointing to the south to those vast, mysterious regions out of which the mighty stream finds its way. A flock of the sacred ibis alighted on the sandy shore of the island, where the tall king-heron, with his crest of stately feathers, watched us as he walked up and down. In front, over the island of Moussa Bey, a broad mirage united its delusive waters with those of the true river and lifted the distant shores so high above the horizon that they seemed floating in the air. The stream, which is narrow at its junc tion with the Blue Nile, expanded to a breadth of two miles, and the shores ahead of us were so low that we appeared to be at the entrance of a great inland sea. Our course swerved to the eastward, so that we were in the rear of Khartoum, whose minaret was still visible when we were ten miles distant. The low mud dwellings of the town were raised to twice their real height, by the effect of the mirage. The shores on either side were sandy tracts, almost uncultivated, and covered with an abundant growth of thorns, mimosas and a small tree with thick green foliage. By twelve o'clock we reached the point where Dr. Keitz had sent his dromedaries, which were in readiness, kneeling on the beach. We could not approach the 14* 822 JOVRXEY TO CENTRAL AFUICA. shore, on account of the mud, but the sailors carried us out or their shoulders. I rode with him to a small Arab hamlet, scattered among the thorny thickets. There were but two mud houses, the other dwellings being merely rude tents of grass matting ; few of the inhabitants were at home, but those few were peaceable and friendly. As the Consul had a rid< of four or five hours before him, he wished me good luck and set off northward, while the sailors, who were in waiting, car ried me back to the boat. All the afternoon I sped before a strong wind up the mag nificent river. Its breadth varied from two to three miles, but its current was shallow and sluggish. The shores were sandy, and covered with groves of the gum-producing mimosa, which appeared for the first time in profusion. About four o'clock I passed a low, isolated hill on the eastern bank, which the sailors called Djar en-nebbee, and near sunset, a long ridge oil the right, two miles inland, broke the dead level of the plains of Kordofan. The sand-banks were covered with wild geese and ducks in myriads, and here and there we saw an enor mous crocodile lounging on the edge of the water. The sun went down ; the short twilight faded, and I was canopied by a superb starlit heaven. Taurus, Orion, Sirius and the South ern Cross sparkled in one long, unbroken galaxy of splendor. The breeze was mild and light, and the waves rippled with a pleasant sound against the prow. My sailors sat on the for ward deck, singing doleful songs, to which the baying of dogs and the yells of hyenas made a fit accompaniment. The dis tant shores of the river were lighted with the fires of the Mo- hammediyeh Arabs, and we heard the men shouting to each other occasionally. About nine o'clock we passed their prin L.OSS OF MY FLAG. 823 cipal village, and approached the territories of the Hassani* yehs. The wind fell about ten o'clock, and the boat came to an* chor. I awoke an hour or two after midnight and found .t blowing again fresh and strong ; whereupon I roused the rai's and sailors, and made them hoist sail. We gained so much by this move, that by sunrise we had passed the village of Shekh Moussa, and were entering the territories of the Hassa- niyeh Arabs ; the last tribe which is subject to the Pasha of Soudan Beyond them are the primitive Negro Kingdoms of Central Africa, in almost the same condition now as they have been for thousands of years past. About sunrise the rais or dered the sails to be furled, and the vessel put about. The men were rowing some time before I discovered the cause. Whilst attempting to hoist my flag, one of them let it fall into the water, and instead of jumping in after it, as I should have done had I seen it, suffered the vessel to go some distance be fore he even announced the loss. We were then so far from the spot, that any attempt to recover it would have been use less, and so the glorious stars and stripes which had floated thu? far triumphantly into Africa, met the fate of most travel lers in those regions. They lay imbedded in the mud of the Whito Nile, and I sailed away from the spot with a pang, as if a friend had been drowned there. The flag of one's country is nerer dearer to him than when it is his companion and pro tector in foreign lands. Daring the whole forenoon we sailed at the rate of six o* seven miles an hour, in the centre of the river, whose breadth varied from two to three miles. The shores no longer pre sented the same dead level as on the first day. They were 324 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. banks of sandy soil, ten or twelve feet in height, and covered with forests of the gum-bearing mimosa, under which gre\t thickets of a dense green shrub, mixed with cactus and euphor bia. The gum is a tree from twenty to thirty feet in height, with a thick trunk and spreading branched, and no Italian oak or chestnut presents a greater variety of picturesque forms to the painter's eye. The foliage is thin, allowing the manifold articulations of the boughs and twigs to be seen through it. It was most abundant on the Kordofan side, and the greater proportion of the gum annually exported to Egypt comes from that country. The broad tide of the river and the wild luxu riance of the continuous forests that girdled it, gave this part of its course an air of majesty, which recalled the Mississippi to my mind. There was not a single feature that resembled Egypt. Towards noon we reached the more thickly populated dis tricts of the Hassaniyeh. The town of Damas, on the east, and Tura, on the west, not very distant from each other, were the first I saw since leaving Khartoum. They were merely clusters of tokuls, or the straw huts of the natives, built in a circular form, with a conical roof of matting, the smoke escap ing through an opening in the top. At both these places, as well as at other points along the river, the natives had ferries, and appeared to be busy in transporting men, camels and goods from one bank to the other. On account of the breadth of the river the passage was long, and the boatmen eased their labor by making a sail of their cotton mantles, which they fastened to two upright sticks. The shores were crowded with herds of sheep and goats, and I saw near Damas a large drove of camels which were waiting an opportunity to cross. The Has SINGULAR CONJUGAL CUSTOM. 325 saniyehs own no camels, and this was probably a caravan from Khartoum, bound for Kordofan. In some places the people brought donkeys laden with water-skins, which they filled from the river. I noticed, occasionally, a small patch of beans, but nothing that looked like a regular system of cultivation. The Hassaniyehs are yellow, with straight features, and resemble the Fellahs of Lower Egypt more than any other Central- Af rican tribe. Those whom we saw at a distance from the vil lages retreated with signs of fear as my vessel approached the shore. Dr. Peney, the Medical Inspector of Soudan, describ ed to me, while in Khartoum, some singular customs of these Arabs. The rights of women, it appears, are recognized among them more thoroughly than among any other savage people in the world. When a woman is married, her father states that one fourth of her life thenceforth is reserved for her own use, and the husband is obliged to respect this reserva tion. Every fourth day she is released from the marriage vow, and if she loves some one else better than her husband, he can dwell in her tent that day, obliging the husband himself to re tire. Their hospitality is such, moreover, that if a stranger visits one of their settlements they furnish him, for four days, with a tent and a wife. They should add a family of chil dren, and then their hospitality would be complete. No re proach whatever attaches to the woman, on account of this tem porary connection. The Hassaniyeh, in other respects, are not more immoral than other tribes, and these customs appear to be connected with their religious faith. After passing Tura (the terminus of a short caravan route of four days to Obeid, the capital of Kordofan), a mountain range, some distance from the river, appeared on the right 326 JOURN'EY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. bank. The peaks were broken and conical in form, and then pale-violet hue showed with fine effect behind the dark line of the gum forests. With every hour of our progress, the vege tation grew more rank and luxuriant. On the eastern bank the gum gave place to the flowering mimosa, which rose in a dense rampart from the water's edge and filled the air with the fragrance of its blossoms. Myriads of wild geese, ducks, cranes, storks, herons and ibises sat on the narrow beaches of sand or circled in the air with hoarse clang and croaking. Among them I saw more than one specimen of that rare and curious water-bird, whose large, horny bill curves upward in stead of downward, so that it appears to have been put on the wrong way. As he eats nothing but small fish, which he swal lows with his head under water, this is not such a great incon venience as one would suppose. The bars which occasionally made out into the current served as a resting-place for croco diles, which now began to appear in companies of ten or fifteen, and the forests were filled with legions of apes, which leaped chattering down from the branches to look at us. A whole family of them sat on the bank for some time, watching us, and when we frightened them away by our shouts, it was amusing to see a mother pick up her infant ape, and scamper off with it under her arm. The wild fowl were astonishingly tame, and many of them so fat that they seemed scarcely able to fly. Here and there, along the shore, large broods of the young were making their first essays in swimming. The boatmen took great delight in menacing the old birds with pieces of wood, in order to make them dive under water. There were some superb white cranes, with a rosy tinge along the edges of their wings, and I saw two more of the crested king-herons A MID-AFRICAN LANDSCAPE. 321 After passing the island of Tshebeshi, the river, which still retains its great breadth, is bordered by a swampy growth of reeds. It is filled with numerous low islands, covered with trees, mostly dead, and with waste, white branches which have drifted down during the inundation. In the forests along the shore many trees had also been killed by the high water of the previous summer. There are no habitations on this part of the river, but all is wild, and lonely, and magnificent. I had seen no sail since leaving Khartoum, and as the sun that even ing threw his last red rays on the mighty flood, I felt for the first time that I was alone, far in the savage heart of Africa. We dashed along at a most exciting rate of speed, brushing the reeds of the low islands, or dipping into the gloom of the shad ows thrown by the unpruned forests. The innumerable swarms of wild birds filled the air with their noise, as they flew to their coverts, or ranged themselves in compact files on the sand. Above all their din, I heard at intervals, from the unseen thickets inland, the prolonged snarling roar of some wild beast. It was too deep-toned and powerful for a leopard, and we all decided that it was a lion. As I was watching the snowy cranes and silvery herons that alighted on the boughs within pistol-shot, my men pointed out a huge hippopotamus, standing in the reeds, but a short distance from the vessel. He was be tween five and six feet high, but his head, body and legs were of enormous bulk. He looked at us, opened his great jaws, gave his swine-like head a toss in the air, and plunged hastily into the water. At the same instant an immense crocodile (perhaps twenty feet in length) left his basking-place on the sand and took refuge in the river. Soon afterwards two hippo potami rose in the centre of the stream, and, after snorting the 328 JOURNEY TO CKNTKAL AFRICA. water from their nostrils, entertained us with a peculiar grunt ing sound, like the lowest rumbling note of a double-bass. The concert was continued by others, and resumed from time to tinio through the night. This was Central Africa as I had dream ed it a grand though savage picture, full of life and heat, and with a barbaric splendor even in the forms of Nature. As the new moon and the evening star went down together behind the mimosa forests on the western bank, we reached the island of Hassaniyeh, having sailed upward of one hundred and forty miles since the evening before. I had every pros pect of reaching my destination, the island of Aba, in the archipelago of the Shillooks, before noon the next day, or in two days from Khartoum a distance of more than two hun dred and fifty miles ! Better sailing than this was never made on the Nile. Four more days of such wind would have taken me to the Bahr el-Ghazal, in lat. 9 the land of lions, elephants, and giraffes, where the Nile becomes a sea of grass. It became more difficult for me to return, the further I advanced. At nine o'clock we passed the island of Hassaniyeh, and saw the fires of the Shillook negroes burning brightly on the western bank. The wind blew more briskly than ever, and I dashed onward in the starlight with the painful knowledge that I waa fast approaching the point beyond which I dared not go. 329 CHAPTER XXVI. ADVENT DUES AMONG THE SHILLOOK NEGROES. Morning Magnificence of the Island Scenery Birds and Hippopotami Flight ot ih Natives The Island of Aba Signs of Population A Band of Warriors The Shekb aiij the Sultan A Treaty of Peace The Kobe of Honor Suspicions We walk to the Village Appearance of the Shillooks The Village The Sultan gives Audienc Women and Children Ornaments of the Natives My Watch A Jar of Honey Suspicion and Alarm The Shillook and the Sultan's Black Wife Character of tho Shillooks The Land of the Lotus Population of the Shillook Kingdom The Turn ing Point A View from the Mast-Head. WE sailed nearly all night with a steady north-wind, which towards morning became so strong that the men were obliged to take in sail and let us scud under bare poles. When I rose, in the gray of early dawn, they were about hoisting the little stern-sheet, which alone sufficed to carry us along at the rate of four miles an hour. We had passed the frontier of Egyp tian Soudan soon after sunset, and were then deep in the negrc kingdom of the Shillooks. The scenery had changed consider ably since the evening. The forests "were taller and more dense, and the river more thickly studded with islands, the soil of which was entirely concealed by the luxuriant girdle of shrubs and water-plants, in which they lay imbedded. Tho JOURNEY TO CENTBAt AFRICA. ambalc, a species of aquatic shrub, with leaves resembling th sensitive plant and winged, bean-like blossoms of a rich yellow hue, grew on the edge of the shore, with its roots in the water and its long arms floating on the surface. It formed impene trable ramparts around the islands and shores, except where the hippopotamus and crocodile had trodden paths into the forests, or the lion and leopard had come down to the river'a margin to drink. Behind this floating hem of foliage and blos soms appeared other and larger shrubs, completely matted to gether with climbing vines, which covered them like a mantle and hung from their branches dangling streamers of white and purple and yellow blossoms. They even stretched to the bough:* of the large mimosa, or sont trees, which grew in the centre of the islands, thus binding all together in rounded masses. Some of the smaller islands resembled floating hills of vegetation, and their slopes and summits of impervious foli age, rolling in the wind, appeared to keep time with the rock ing of the waves that upheld them. The profusion of vegeta ble life reminded me of the Chagres River. If not so rich and gorgeous, it was on a far grander scale. The river had still a breadth of a mile and a half, where his current was free, but where island crowded on island in a vast archipelago of leafy shores, he took a much wider sweep. The waves danced and glistened in the cool northern wind, as we glided around his majestic curves, and I stood on deck watching the wonder ful panorama unfold on either side, with a feeling of exul tation to which I gave free vent. In no other river have I seen landscapes of larger or more imposing character. All the rich animal world of this region was awake and stirring before the sun. The wild fowls left their roosts ; the THE ISLANDS OF THE 8HI1.LOOK8. 331 zikzaks flew twittering over the waves, calling up their mates, the sleepy crocodiles ; the herons stretched their wings against the wind ; the monkeys leaped and chattered in the woods, and at last whole herds of hippopotami, sporting near the shore, came up spouting water from their nostrils, in a manner pre cisely similar to the grampus. I counted six together, soon after sunrise, near the end of an island. They floundered about in the shallows popping up their heads every few min utes to look at us, and at last walked out through the reeds and stood upon the shore. Soon afterwards five more appear ed on the other side of the river, and thenceforth we saw them almost constantly, and sometimes within fifty yards. I noticed one which must have been four feet in breadth across the ears, and with a head nearly five feet long. He opened his mouth wide enough to show two round, blunt tusks, or rather grinders, one on each side. They exhibited a great deal of curiosity, and frequently turned about after we had passed, and followed for some time in our wake. Soon after sunrise the rai's observed some Shillooks in the distance, who were sinking their canoes in the river, after which they hastily retreated into the woods. We ran along beside the embowering shores, till we reached the place. The canoes were carefully concealed and some pieces of drift wood thrown over the spot, as if left there by the river. The rais climbed to the mast-head and called to the people, assuring them that there was no danger, but, though we peered sharply into the thickets, we could find no signs of any human being The river here turned to the south, disclosing other and rich er groups of islands, stretching beyond one another far into the distance. Directly on our left was the northern point of tho 832 JOURNET TO CENTRAL AFRICA. island of Aba, our destination. As the island is six or eight miles in length. I determined to make the most of my bargain, and so told the rais that he must take me to its further end, and to the villages of the Shillooks, whom I had come to see. Abou-Hammed was small in body, but had a stout heart. The Consul and fat Abou-Balta had given him special instructions to keep me out of danger, yet he could not refuse my demands. We sailed two or three miles along the she re of Aba, looking into the depths of its ambak forests for traces of the Shillooks, who, according to the rais, had a village on the island. On our right extended a chain of smaller islands bowery masses of leaves and blossoms and beyond them the wild forests of the western bank. Glorious above description was that world of waves and foliage of wood, water and sky. At last, on rounding one of the coves of Aba, we came upon a flock of sheep, feeding along the shore. A light thread of smoke arose from among some dead, fallen trees, a few paces in the forest, but no person was to be seen. The boat was run to the shore, and we landed and examined the spot. The na tives had evidently just left, for the brands were burning, and we saw the prints of their long feet in the ashes. The rais and sailors walked on tiptoe through the woods, looking for the hidden inhabitants. The mimosas, which here grow to the height of fifty feet, met above our heads and made a roof against the sun. Some large gray apes, startled by our visit, leaped with wonderful dexterity from tree to tree. I found several abandoned fire-places during my walk, and near tho chore saw many footprints in the soft soil. The forest was quite clear of underwood, but the ground was cumbered with the trunks of dead trees. There were but few flowering plants, WE ENCOUNTER THE SHILLOOK8. 838 and I was too much interested in the search for the Shillook* to examine them. The rais finally descried the huts of the village at a dis tance, near the extremity of the island. "We returned to the vessel, and were about putting off in order to proceed thither, when a large body of men, armed with spears, appeared in the forest, coming towards us at a quick pace. The rais, who had already had some intercourse with these people and knew some thing of their habits, advanced alone to meet them. I could gee, through the trees, that a consultation was held, and short ly, though with some signs of doubt and hesitation, about a dozen of the savages advanced to within a short distance of the vessel, while the others sat down on the ground, still hold ing the spears in their hands. The rais now returned to the water's edge, and said that the Shillooks had come with the intention of fighting, but he had informed them that this was a visit from the Sultan's son, who came to see them as a friend, and would then return to his father's country. Thereupon they consented to speak with me, and I might venture to go on shore. I landed again, with Achmet, and walked up with the rais to the spot where the men were seated. The shekh of the island, a tall, handsome man, rose to greet me, by touch ing the palm of his right hand to mine and then raising it to his forehead. I made a like salutation, after which he sat down. The vizier (as he called himself), an old man exces sively black in complexion, then advanced, and the other war riors in succession, till all had saluted me. The conversation was carried on in the Arabic jargon of Soudan, which the shekh and some of his men spoke tolerably well, so that I could un derstand the most of what was said. " Why don't you bring 834 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. the Sultan's carpet that he may rest ? " said the shekh to one of my sailors. The carpet and pillows were immediately brought, and I stretched myself out in front of the shekh and vizier, who sat upon a fallen tree, while the others squatted upon the ground. The shekh at first took no part in the con versation, but sat looking at me steadily, from under his heavy eyebrows. Our negotiations were conducted in genuine diplo matic style. Whenever His Majesty of the Shillooks had any thing to say, he mentioned it to his vizier, who addressed Ach- met, my vizier, who communicated it to me, the Sultan. The spectators observed the most profound silence, and nothing could surpass the gravity and solemnity of the scene. In the mean time the other warriors had come up and taken their seats around us, each one greeting me before he sat down, with " ow-wow-wobba /" (probably a corruption of the Arabic ' mar-habba ? " " how d'ye do ? ") The vizier, addressing me through Achmet, said : " Tell us what you want ; if you come to fight, we are ready for you." I assured the shekh through him that I came as a friend, and had no intention of molesting them, but he was not satisfied, and repeated three or four times, drawing a mark between us on the ground : " if you are really friends, we will be friends with you ; but if you are not, we are ready to fight you." Achmet at last swore by the Pro phet Mohammed, and by the wisdom of Allah, that we had come in peace ; that the Sultan wished to pay him a visit, and would then return home. At the request of the rais we had come on shore unarmed, but it had not the anticipated effect, " Why have you no arms ? " said the shekh ; " are you afraid of us ? " I told him that it was in order to show that I had no hostile ntentions, but the people seemed to consider it as mark of THE ROBE OF HONOR. 835 either treachery or fear. I brought some tobacco with me which I gave to the shekh, but he received it coldly, and said . " Where is the dress which the Sultan has brought for me ? " This reminded me that I had entirely neglected to provide myself in Khartoum with muslin and calico, for presents. I remedied the deficiency, however, by going on board and taking one of my shirts and a silk handkerchief, as well as some beads and ear-rings for the wives of the two dignitaries. Achmet added a shirt and a pair of Turkish drawers, and brought a fresh supply of tobacco for the warriors. The shekh took the presents with evident gratification, and then came the work of clothing him. He was entirely at a loss how to put on the garments, but Achmet and the rai's unwound the cotton cloth from his loins, stuck his legs into the drawers, his arms into the shirt-sleeves, and tied the handkerchief about his head. Once clothed, he gave no more attention to his garments, but wore them with as much nonchalance as if he had never pos sessed a scantier costume. The vizier, who had shown mani fest ill-humor at being passed by, was quieted by the present of a shirt, which was put upon his shoulders in like manner. He gave me his name as Adjeb-Secdoo (" He pleases his Mas ter"), a most appropriate name for a vizier. The shekh's name, Abd-en-noor ("the Slave of Light"), was hardly so befitting, for he was remarkably dark. I was much amused at my servant Ali, who had shown great terror on the first ap pearance of the savages. He had already become so familiar, that when the shekh did not seem tr understand the us*fe of the beads and ear-rings, Ali pinched his ears very significantly %nd took hold of his neck to show how they must be worn. By this time coffee had been prepared and was brought t 336 JOURNET TO CENTRAL AFRICA. them. But they had been so accustomed to inhumanity and deception on the part of the Turks, that they still mistrusted us and no one would drink, for fear that it contained poison. To quiet them, therefore, I drank a cup first, after which the^y took it readily, but many of them, who then tasted coffee for the first time, did not seem to relish it. A drove of sheep happening to pass by, the shekh ordered one of the rams to be caught and put on board the vessel, for the Sultan's dinner. The men soon began to demand tobacco, clothes, and various other things, and grew so importunate that Achniet became alarmed, and even the rais, who was a man of some courage, seemed a little uneasy. I thought it time to give a change to affairs, and therefore rose and told the shekh I was ready to visit his village. We had intended returning on board and Bailing to the place, which was at the southern extremity of the island, about a mile distant, but reflecting that this might occasion mistrust, and that the best way of avoiding danger is to appear unconscious of it, I called Achmet and the rais to accompany me on foot. While these things were transpiring, a number of other Shillooks had arrived, so that there were now upwards of fifty. All were armed the most of them with iron-pointed spears, some with clubs, and some with long poles, having knobs of hard wood on the end. They were all tall, strong, stately people, not more than two or three under six feet in height, while the most of them were three or four inches over that standard. Some had a piece of rough cotton cloth tied around the waist or thrown over the shoulders, but the most of them were entirely naked. Their figures were large and muscular, but not symmetrical, nor was there the least grace in their movements. Their faces resembled a cross APPEARANCE OF THE SHILLOOK8. 389 between the Negro of Guinea and the North American In dian, having the high cheek bones, the narrow forehead and pointed head of the latter, with the flat nose and projecting lips of the former. Their teeth were so long as to appear like tusks, and in most of them one or two front teeth were want ing, which gave their faces a wolfish expression. Their eyes were small and had an inflamed look, which might have been occasioned by the damp exhalations of the soil on which they slej)t. Every one wore an armlet above the elbow, either a segment of an elephant's tusk, or a thick ring of plaited hippo potamus hide. The most of them had a string of glass beads around the neck, and the shekh wore a necklace of the large white variety, called " pigeon eggs " by the traders on the White Nile. They had no beards, and their hair was seared or plucked out on the forehead and temples, leaving only a circular crown of crisp wool on the top of the head. Some had rubbed their faces and heads with red ashes, which impart ed a livid, ghastly effect to their black skins. The shekh marched ahead, in his white garments and flut tering head-dress, followed by the warriors, each carrying his long spear erect in his hand. We walked in the midst of them, and I was so careful to avoid all appearance of fear that I never once looked behind, to see whether the vessel was fol lowing us. A violent dispute arose among some of the men in front, and from their frequent glances towards us, it was evi dent that we were in some way connected with the conversa tion. I did not feel quite at ease till the matter was referred to the shekh, who decided it in a way that silenced the men, if it did not satisfy them. As we approached the village, good- humor was restored, and their demeanor towards us was 15 338 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. thenceforth more friendly. They looked at me witn curiosity but without ill-will, and I could see that my dress interested them much more than my person. Finally we reached the village, which contained about one hundred tokuls of straw, built in a circular form, with conical roofs. They were arrang ed so as to inclose a space in the centre, which was evidently intended as a fold for their sheep, as it was further protected by a fence of thorns. Guards were stationed at intervals of about twenty yards, along the side fronting the river, each leaning back against his spear, with one of his legs drawn up, so that the foot rested against the opposite knee. At the principal entrance of the village, opposite which I counted twenty-seven canoes drawn up against the shore, we made halt, and the shekh ordered a seat to be brought. An angareb, the frame of which was covered with a net-work of hippopotamus thongs, was placed in the shade of a majestic mimosa tree, and the shekh and I took our seats. Another angareb was brought and placed behind us, for our respective viziers. The warriors all laid aside their spears and sat on the ground, forming a semicircle in front of us. A swarm of naked boys, from eighl to twelve years of age, crept dodging behind the trees till they reached a convenient place in the rear, where they watched me curiously, but drew back in alarm whenever I turned my head. The village was entirely deserted of its inhabitants, every one having come to behold the strange Sultan. The females kept at a distance at first, but gradually a few were so far overcome by their curiosity that they approached near enough for me to observe them closely. They were nude, except a small piece of sheepskin around the loins, and in their forms were not very easy to distinguish from th 5 men, having flat, masculine breasti SCENE AT THE VILLAGE. 839 and narrow hips. They were from five feet eight inches to six feet in height. The rai's informed me that the Shillooks fre quently sell their women and children, and that a boy or girl nan be bought for about twenty measures of dourra. After undergoing their inspection half an hour, I began to get tired of sitting in state, and had my pipe brought from the boat. I saw by an occasional sidelong glance that the shekh watched me, but I smoked carelessly until the tobacco was finished. Some of the men were already regaling themselves with that which I had given them. They had pipes with im mense globular bowls of clay, short, thick stems of reed, and mouth-pieces made of a variety of wild gourd, with a long, pointed neck. A handful of tobacco was placed in the bowl and two or three coals laid upon it, after which the orifice was closed with clay. The vizier, Adjeb-Seedoo, who had some thing of the Yankee in his angular features and the shrewd wrinkles about the corners of the eyes, chewed the tobacco and squirted out the saliva between his teeth in the true Down- East style. I bargained for his pipe at two piastres, and one of the ivory arm-rings at five, but as I had no small silver money (the only coin current among them), did not succeed in getting the former article. I obtained, however, two of the arm-rings of hippopotamus hide. While these things were go ing on, the shekh who had been observing me closely, saw the 3hain of my watch, which he seized. I took out the watch and held it to his ear. He started back in surprise, and told the men what he had heard, imitating its sound in a most amusing manner. They all crowded around to listen, and from their looks and signs seemed to think the case contained some bird or insect. I therefore opened it, and showed them 340 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. the motion of the balance-wheel and of the hand on the smalJei dial of the face. Their astonishment was now changed to awe and they looked at it silently, without daring to touch it. I profited by this impression to make a move for starting, before their greed for presents should grow into a resolve to lob us by force. I had asked the shekh two or three times to have a cup of water brought for me, but he seemed to pay no attention to the request. Soon, however, one of the men brought a large earthen jar, stopped with clay, and placed it at my feet. Thereupon the shekh turned to me, saying : " There is plenty of water in the river, and here I give you honey to mix with it." The jar was taken on board, and con tained, in fact, nearly a gallon of wild honey, which had a rich, aromatic taste, like the odor of the mimosa flowers. The trad ing-vessels on the White Nile purchase this honey, but as the natives, in their hatred of the Turks, frequently mix with it the juice of poisonous plants, they are obliged to taste it them selves before they can sell it. I did not require this proof at their hands, preferring to trust them unreservedly, at least in my demeanor. Trust always begets a kindred trust, and I am quite sure that my safety among those savages was owing to my having adopted this course of conduct. I went on board to get the money for the arm-rings, and after Achmet had paid the men, directed him and the rai's to return. Several of the Shillooks followed, offering articles for dale, and the vizier, who had waded out, holding up his new shirt so that it might not be wet, climbed upon the gunwale of the boat and peered into the cabin. I changed my position BO as to stand between him and the door, gave him two onionfl which ha saw on deck and had an appetite for, and hurried THE SCLTAJJ'S BLACK WIFE. 341 him away. The shekh and all the warriors had come down to the shore, but without their spears, and were seated on the ground, holding a consultation. By this time, however, the rais was at the helm, and the sailors had begun to shove the bow of my boat into the stream. I called out : " Shekh Abd-en-noor 1 " in a familiar way, and waved my hand as a token of parting. He rose, returned the salute, made a ges ture to his men, and they all went slowly back to the village, As we were leaving, the sailors informed me that one of the Shillooks, who had come down to the boat while I was seated with the shekh on shore, took a fancy to the fat black slave who cooks for them, and expressed his determination to take her. They told him she was one of the Sultan's wives, and that as His Majesty was now the shekh's friend, he dare not touch her. " Oh," said the Shillook, " if she is the Sultan's wife, that is enough ;" and he immediately returned to the shore. I forgave the impertinence of the sailors in passing off such a hideous creature as one of my wives, in consideration of the adroitness with which they avoided what might have been a serious difficulty. The Shillooks have not the appearance of men who are naturally malicious. The selfish impudence with winch they demand presents, is common to all savage tribes. But the Turks and even the European merchants who take part in the annual trading expeditions up the river, have dealt with them in such a shameful manner that they are now mistrustful of all strangers, and hence it is unsafe to venture among them. I attribute the friendly character of my interview with them as much to good luck as to good management. The rais after wards informed me that if the shekh had not been satisfied 842 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. with the dress I gave him, he would certainly have attempted to plunder the vessel. He stated that the Shillooks are in the habit of going down the river as far as the country of the Has- saniyehs, sinking their boats and concealing themselves in the woods in the day-time, while by night they venture into the villages and rob the people of their dourra, for which they have a great fondness. They cultivate nothing themselves, and their only employment is the chase of the elephant, hippo potamus and other wild beasts. All the region east of the river abounds with herds of elephants and giraffes, but I was not fortunate enough to get sight of them. Here is the true land of the lotus, and the Shillooks, if not the lotophagoi of the Greeks, are, with the exception of the Chinese, the only modern eaters of the plant. I was too late to see it in blossom, and there were but few specimens of it among these islands ; but not far beyond Aba it appears in great profusion, and both the seeds and roots are eaten by the natives. Dr. Knoblecher, who ate it frequently during his voyage, informed me that the root resembles the potato in con sistence and taste, with a strong flavor of celery. These islands are inhabited only by the hunters and fishers of the tribe, wuo abandon them in summer, when they are complete ly covered by the inundation. At lat. 12, or about thirty miles south of Aba, both banks of the river are cultivated, and thence, for upwards of two hundred miles, the villages are crowded so close to each other all along the shores, that they almost form two continuous towns, fronting each other. Thia part of the White Nile is the most thickly populated region in Africa, and perhaps in the world, China alone excepted. The number of the Shillooks is estimated at between two and three millions, or equal to the population of all Egypt. THE TURNING POINT. 343 As we weighed anchor, I found that the men had taken down both sails and shipped the oars for our return to Khar toum. We had reached the southern point of the island, in about lat. 12 30 ; north, and the north-wind was still blowing strongly. The rounded tops of the mimosa forests bent south ward as they tossed ; the flowery arms of the ambak-treea waved to the south, trailing against the current, and my heart sank within me at the thought of retracing my steps. We had sailed two hundred and fifty miles in forty-eight hours ; the gateway to the unknown South was open, and it seemed a treason against Fortune to turn my face towards the Mediter ranean. " Achmet ! " said I, " tell the men to set the trin- keet again. We will sail to the Bahrel-Ghazal." The Theban'a face became ghastly at the bare idea. " Master 1" he ex claimed, " are you not satisfied with your good fortune ? We are now nearly at the end of the earth, and if we go further, it will be impossible to return." Rais Abou-Hammed declared that he had kept his word, and that he should now return, as it had been agreed, before we left Khartoum. I knew there was certain danger in going further, and that I had no right to violate my agreement and peril others as well as myself; but there lay the great river, holding in his lap, to tempt me on, isles of brighter bloom and spreading out shores of yet richer foliage. I was in the centre of the Continent. Beyond me all was strange and unknown, and the Gulf of Guinea was lesa distant than the Mediterranean, which I left not three months before. Why not push on and attempt to grasp the Central African secret ? The fact that stronger, braver and bolder men had failed, was one lure the more. Happily for me, per haps, my object on commencing the voyage had been rest an ed its progress with a troubled conscience and an anxious heart. Now it paused and I flattered myself that there was the end, but the next moment the black clouds rolled up denser than ever. Thus it wavered for some time, but at last, thank God ! it seemed to fade gradually away, and I gave my self the hope that it had not extended beyond the jut of land whereon it was kindled. At noon we passed the locality marked on D'Arnaud's niup as El-Ais, but there was no sign of habitation. The rais said there had been a town some distance inland, but it is now de serted. The river here makes a curve to the west, and oui small stern-sail was bound to the foremast, in order to use the side-wind. My sailors were unremitting in their labors, and rowed, poled and tracked the whole day. I sat in the sun all the while, looking on the incomparable shores. We saw mul titudes of gazelles along the water's edge, on both sides. They were in companies of forty or fifty, and so little shy, that they often allowed us to approach within fifty yards. Wild fowl were as abundant as ever, and I greatly regretted having brought no rifle and fowling-piece. When we reached the northern extremity of Hassaniyeh, at sunset, I went ashore on the eastern bank, hoping to find a gazelle. The thickets were almost impenetrable, and I made my way with difficulty into a more open space, where the trees grew in clumps and the lion-paths had broken a way between them. Each of these clumps was woven into a single mass with vines, forming cov erts of deepest shade, wherein a beast might crouch unobserv- ed, even at mid-day. The ground was covered with dry bur- grass, whose heads pierced through my clothes. One of the sailors accompanied me with a club, but was in such deadly 860 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA, fear of lions that he obliged me to return to the shore. Cer tainly, this is the paradise of wild beasts. Such convenient lairs they can find in no other part of the world, and the thou sands of gazelles and antelopes that range through the wilder ness furnish them with a choice bill of fare. The trees and T ii.es were nearly all new to me. I noticed in particular, a Ruccuieut vine, resembling the cactus and cereus families, but with square, fluted joints. It grew so thickly as frequently to conceal entirely the tree that supported it. I also saw a shrub with leaves like the ivy, but a large, purple, bell-shaped flower, and another with delicate, fern-like leaves of a dark- green color, and white, fragrant blossoms. There was a greater variety in the vegetable world than I had yet seen. What must be the splendor of the land during the rainy sea son ! I found a peculiar fascination in tracing the wild paths through the thickets. It was a labyrinth to which there was no end, and the sense of danger gave a spice to its richness and novelty. Occasionally, I saw large holes in the ground, which my attendant said were those of serpents. No gazelle was to be seen, and when I reached the shore again, the wild geese had left. The wind fell at sunset, and the sailors rowed cheerily down stream, singing the while a barbaric chorus, which they had learned from the slaves brought from Fazogl. The sun, next morning, showed us a very different land scape from that of the previous two days. The river was broader, but the shores were clothed with a more scanty vege tation, and the few islands in the stream were but beds of sand. When the men stopped for breakfast we were in the neighbor hood of a village of Hassaniyehs, as I had previously conjec tured, from the camels and donkeys grazing among the thorns. VISIT TO A HASSANIYEH VILLAGE. 381 Leaving the sailors to kill one of our sheep, I took Achmet and the rais, and followed the paths inland through a wood of scattering mimosas. After a walk of ten minutes we came to the village, or rather encampment, since the dwellings were mere tents of sticks and reeds. They were barely large enough to cover the two or three angarebs, which served as a bed for the whole family. Although the sun was an hour high, act more than half the inhabitants were stirring. The others, men and women, thrust their heads from under their dirty cot ton mantles and looked at us with astonishment not unmixed with fear. The women who had already risen sat on the ground kindling the fires, or spinning with a rude distaff the raw cotton which these people cultivate. We found two or three men, whom we saluted with the usual " Peace be with you ! " and the rais informed them that the Sultan's son, re turning from a visit to the Shillooks, with whom he had made a treaty of peace, had come to see them. Thereupon one of them brought an angareb and set it in the shade for me, while another caught a she-goat that was browsing among the bushes, and soon returned with a gourd half full of warm milk, which he gave me. As sour milk is considered a great delicacy among these people, a gourd of it was also procured for me. The woman who brought it knelt and placed it at my feet, but as I could not drink it and did not wish to refuse their gift, I asked one of the men to take it to the boat. He hesitated, evidently afraid to trust himself with us, whereupon the wo man said : " I am not afraid to go with the Sultan ; I will take it." As we started to return, the man, whose sense of bravery, and perhaps his jealousy also, was touched by this re mark, came likewise and accompanied us to the river. When 16 362 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. we reached the vessel I sent the milk on board for the sailor* use, and gave the woman two piastres in copper money and a handful of tobacco. She immediately put her hand to her mouth and uttered a piercing, prolonged cry. which the raifl said was intended as an expression of great joy. After repeat ing this two or three times she dropped on her knees, and be fore I could divine her intention, kissed my red slipper. In a short time I received word that the women of the village would come to perform a dance of welcome and saluta tion, if I would allow them. As the wind was blowing strong ly against us and the sailors had not finished skinning the sheep, I had iny carpet spread on the sand in the shade of a group of mimosas, and awaited their arrival. Presently we heard a sound of shrill singing and the clapping of hands in measured beat, and discerned the procession advancing slowly through the trees. They came two by two, nearly thirty in all, singing a shrill, piercing chorus, which sounded more like lamentation than greeting. When they had arrived in front of me, they ranged themselves into a semicircle with their faces towards me, and, still clapping their hands to mark the rhythm of the song, she who stood in the centre stepped forth, with her breast heaved almost to a level with her face, which was thrown back, and advanced with a slow, undulating motion till she had reached the edge of my carpet. Then, with a quick jerk, she reversed the curve of her body, throwing her head forward and downward, so that the multitude of her long twists of black hair, shining with butter, brushed my cap This was intended as a salutation and sign of welcome. I bowed my head at the same time, and she went back to hei place in the ranks. After a pause the chorus was resumed and THE DANCE OF SALUTATION. 868 another advanced, and so in succession, till all had saluted me^ a ceremony which occupied an hour. They were nearly all young, between the ages of fourteen and twenty, and some were strikingly beautiful. They had the dark-olive Arab complexion, with regular features, teeth of pearly whiteness, and black, brilliant eyes. The coarse cotton robe thrown over one shoulder left free the arms, neck and breasts, which were exquisitely moulded. Their bare feet and ankles were as slen der as those of the Venus of Cleomenes. Owing to the skirts worn by the American women I have no recollection of ever having seen an entire foot belonging to them, and therefore can make no comparison ; but I doubt if one in a thousand stands on so light and beautiful a pedestal as those wild Afri can girls. There were two or three old women in the com pany, but they contented themselves with singing and did not venture into the lists with the younger ones. Several of the men, who had followed in the rear of the women, came and sat near us, on the sand. They were all evi dently delighted with the occasion, and encouraged the more timid of the dancers by their words. One of them was an old man, with a long gray moustache and beard, carrying in his hand a spear, pointed with iron. My rai's and sailors were on the ground, and one of the latter, a splendid fellow, whose form was almost perfect in its manly strength, took his station among the women and acted as master of the ceremonies. He drew a line in the sand down the centre of the ring, and another along the edge of my carpet, and she who did not dance down the line until the final toss of her head threw her hair over the Sultan's cap, was obliged to perform her part jver again. My sailor clapped his hands, joined in the song, 864 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. and niovad with such entire and absolute grace in the dance, that he almost drew away my attention from the women. He was of the Djaaleyn tribe, and therefore of pure Arabian blood. As the ceremony was prolonged, they accompanied the dance with a hard, guttural breathing, in time with the music, and some of the old women, in their anxiety to encourage the younger and more timid dancer ", leaned forward with eager eyes, uttering short, quick icreams at intervals. It was a most remarkable scene ; the figures and the dancers were un like any thing I ever witnessed. For the first time, in fact perhaps because I had hitherto seen few women unveiled I found undoubted beauty in the Arab female countenance. The last dancer was the wife of the Shekh, who came to wards the close, with two negro slaves behind her. She was a woman of twenty, and the most beautiful of the group. Mak ing allowance for the difference in complexion, she had a strong resemblance to the Cleopatra of Guido. Her eyes were large, black and lustrous ; her face the full, ripe oval of the South, with a broad, round forehead, perfect lips and a most queenly neck and chin. She wore a diadem of white beads, under which her thick hair unfortunately plastered with butter - hung to her shoulders in at least fifty slender braids. She went through the monotonous movement of the dance with the stately ease of a swan gliding down a stream, and so delighted my sailors and the men who had come down from the village, that she was obliged to repeat her salutation several times. I bowed lower to her than to the others, but took care to keep her unctuous braids from touching my face. When all waa concluded, I directed Achmet to distribute a few handful s of copper money among them, whereupon they returned to the A SAINT MIRACULOUS FISHING. 365 village, uttering sharp yells of joy as they went. After they had left, I asked the men whether what I had heard in Khar toum, concerning the peculiar conjugal customs of the tribe, was true, and they replied that it was. As we were about leaving, one of the shekhs, or holy men of the tribe, came down to greet me. He was an old man in a blue cotton mantle, and had with him two attendants. After touching my hand twice and asking many times for my health, he commenced singing passages of the Koran, in a loud, reso nant, and not unmusical tone, somewhat resembling the subset cry of the muezzin from his minaret. The two others respon^ ed, and thus this religious entertainment was kept up for some time. But the rais was at his post and the wind had fallen, so I acted my despotic character of Sultan, by leaving the holy man in the midst of his chanting and going on board. When we left he was still standing under the mimosas, singing of Mohammed, the Prophet of God. We made but little headway during the afternoon, al though the men worked faithfully. Djebel Deyoos, whose loose cluster of peaks is seen for a great distance over the plains of Kordofan, still kept us company, and did not pass out of our horizon until the next evening. The men towed for several hours, and as the shore was flat and the river very shallow they were obliged to walk in the water. While Ach- met was preparing dinner, a fish about the size of a herring vaulted upon deck and fell at his feet. He immediately clap ped it into the frying-pan and presented me with an acceptable dish. To his unbounded astonishment and my great satisfac tion, the same thing happened three days in succession, at pre- 3isely the same hour. " Wallah, master !" he exclaimed: " it 306 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. is wonderful ! I never knew such a thing to happen in Egypt, and it must certainly be a sign of good fortune. If you were not a lucky man, the fish would never offer themselves for you* dinner in this way." By night the men could make no headway against the wind, which continued unabated nearly all the next day. They worked hard, stimulated by the promise of an abundant supply of mareesa at the next Hassaniyeh village. In the afternoon we passed Tura, which I recognized by the herds of camels on shore and the ferry-boats passing back and forth across the broad stream. I walked an hour or two while the men were towing, but was obliged to keep to the shore, on account of the burr-grass which covered all the country inland. This part of the river is thickly settled by the Hassaniyehs, whose principal wealth appears to consist in their sheep, goats and camels. They complained very much of the Shillooks, who coine down the river on predatory incursions, carry off their sheep and dourra, and frequently kill the children who tend the herds. By dint of unremitting exertions, we reached a small vil lage which the rais called Wad Shellayeh, about two hours after sunset. The men carried me ashore through the shallows, and I went with them to the village to perform my promise regarding the mareesa. We extinguished the lantern for fear of alarming th*e inhabitants, and walked slowly through the wil derness of thorns. The village lay half a mile inland, between two low hills of sand. The dwellings were mere tokuls, like those of the Shillooks, and made of the long grass of the Des ert. Each house was surrounded with a fence of thorns. The inhabitants were sitting at the doors in the moonlight, calling out to each other and exchanging jokes, while herds of th WAD SHELLAYEH. 307 slender yellow dogs of Soudan barked on all sides. Whilj the rais and sailors were procuring their mareesa I entered one of the tokuls, which was superior to those I had already seen, inasmuch as it contained an inner chamber or tent, made of fine yellow grass, and serving as a canopy to the family an- gareb. The people had kindled a fire on the ground, and the dry mimosa branches were blazing in close proximity to the straw walls of their dwelling. They were greatly inferior to the Hassaniyehs of the first village, both in appearance and cour tesy of manners. The mareesa, which the rais at last brought, was weak, insipid stuff, and I returned to the boat, leaving the men to drain the jars. In the morning we reached another large Hassaniyeh vil lage, which was also called Wad Shellayeh. It was the only village on the river worthy of notice, as it had four vessels moored to the shore, and boasted a few mud houses in addition to its array of tokuls. Several of the latter were built in tent form and covered with a striped cloth made of camel's hair. I entered the residence of the shekh, who, however, was absent with his wife to attend the funeral of a relative. The tent was thirty feet long, with an arched top, and contained two inner chambers. The sides were ornamented with gourds, skins and other articles, grouped with some taste, and large quantities of the cowries, or small white shells, which are used as currency in some parts of Central Africa, were sewed upon the cloth cover, in the form of crosses and stars. I looked into the principal chamber, which inclosed a broad and hand some angareb, made of plaited palm-leaves. The walls were entirely concealed by the articles hung upon them, and every thing exhibited a taste and neatness which is rare among the 308 JOCRNBT TO CENTRAL AFRICA. Arab tribes. The tent was in charge of the shckh's niece, a handsome girl of about eighteen, and an old woman with three children, the youngest of which was suckled by a black slave. He was an ebony Cupid of a year old, rejoicing in the bunches of white shells that hung from his neck, wrists and ankles. He exhibited a curiosity to touch me / and I took him in my arms and addressed him in Christian nursery tongue. Tho Bound of my voice, however, was more horrible than the color of my skin. He set up a yell and kicked out his little black satin-skinned legs till I was obliged to hand him over to the slave nurse. From the bank on which the village is built, I could see beyond the trees of the opposite shore, a wide stretch of the plains of Kordofan a level savanna of yellow grass, extending without a break to the horizon. During the afternoon, while the men were resting from their rowing, Bahr, the Dinka cook, got into a dispute with one of them, and finally worked herself into such a rage that she jumped overboard with the intention of drowning herself, and would have done so, had not one of the sailors plunged after her and hauled her ashore, in spite of her violent struggles and endeavors to thrust her head under water. When she found she could not indulge in this recrea tion, she sat down on the ground, burst into a paroxysm of angry tears, and in a quarter of an hour went back to grind her dourra, in the best possible humor. Her name, Bahr, sig nifies " the sea," but she was an Undine of the Black Sea ; and the White Nile refused to receive her. We went gloriously down stream that evening, with a light west wind filling the little sail and the men at their oars, sing. ing shrill choruses in the Congolese and Djaaleyn dialects. BANKS OF THE WHITE NILE. Sflft Tfle White Nile, which is here three miles broad, was aa smooth as glass, and glimmered far and bright under the moon. The shores were still, in all their dead level expanse, and had it not been for the uneven line which their belts of thorn-trees drew along the horizon, I could have imagined that we were floating in mid-ocean. While the men halted for breakfast the next morning, I landed and walked ahead, hoping to shoot a wild duck with my pistol. Notwithstanding there were hun dreds along the shore, I found it impossible to get within shooting distance, as they invariably made into the river on my approach. An attempt to gain something by running sud denly towards them, terminated in my sticking fast in the mud and losing my red slippers. I then crept through the scattering wood of mimosas to get a chance at a pigeon, but some spirit of mistrust had taken possession of the birds, and as long as I had a shot left there were none within reach. When my two barrels were spent they sat on every side in the most familiar proximity. Notwithstanding there were very few villages on the river's bank, the country was thickly inhabited. The people prefer building their dwellings a mile inland, and going to the river for water. This custom probably originated in their fear of the Shillooks, which led them to place their dwellings in situations most easy of defence. At one of the fording-places I found a number of women and children filling the water-skins and lift ing them upon the backs of donkeys. Many hundreds of the bump-backed cattle, peculiar to the country, were collected along the shore. They have straight backs behind the hump, (which is a projection above the shoulders, four to six inches nigh) clean flanks, large, powerful necks, and short, straight 16* 370 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. horus. They eyed me with an expression of great curiosity and some of the bulls evidently deliberated whether the should attack me. The people in this region were Hassani- yehs, and the men resembled those of the first village I visit ed. They were tall, with straight features and a feminine ex pression of countenance, which was probably caused by their wearing their hair parted in the middle, plaited into long braids and fastened at the back of the head. About noon we came in sight of Djebel Tinneh, which stands over against the village of Shekh Moussa, and serves as a landmark to the place. At sunset we saw the boat of Res- chid Kashif, the Governor of the tributary territories of the White Nile, anchored near the western bank. Two of my sailors had previously been employed by him, and as they had not received all their wages, they asked permission to cross the river and apply for the money. This Rescind Kashif was a boy of twelve or thirteen years of age, son of the former Gov ernor, Suleyman Kashif, who was so much esteemed by the tribes on the river that after his death the Pasha invested his young child with the office. The latter was also quite popular with the natives, who attributed to him a sagacity marvellous for his years. He paid the men the money due them, sent hia compliments to me, and inquired why I did not visit him. It was dusk by this time, and I did not wish to delay the boat ; besides, as I was a stranger and a Sultan, courtesy required that he should pay the first visit. We made the remainder of the voyage without further in cident than that of slaughtering one of our sheep, near Djebel Aullee. The wind was so light that our progress down the stream was rapid, and at sunset on Friday, January thirtieth, KHARTOUM AT MIDNIGHT. 171 I recognized the spot where Dr. Reitz took leave of ine, on th upward voyage. The evening on the broad river was glorious ; the half-moon, being just overhead, was unseen, yet filled th ' air with light, and my natal planet burned white and clear ia the west. At ten o'clock we reached the island of Omdurman, and wheeled into the Blue Nile. The camp-fires of Kordofan merchants were gleaming on the western bank The barking of the dogs in Khartoum and the creaking wheels of the sakias were welcome sounds to our ears, as we slowly glided past the gardens. Ere long, the minaret of the city glimmered faintly in the moonlight and we recognized the buildings of the Catho lic Mission. " God is great ! " said Achmet, devoutly ; " since we have been so near the end of the world, Khartoum appears to me as beautiful as Cairo." It was nearly midnight when we came to anchor, having made a voyage of about five hundred miles in nine days. My friends were all abed, and I lay down for the night in the little cabin of my beat, exclaim ing, like Achmet : " God is great 1 " 872 JOTTKNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. CHAPTEE XXIX. INCIDENTS OP LIFE IN KHARTOUM. Thfc Departure of Abd-Ov Kader Bey An Illuminated Picture The Breakfast on the Island Horsemanship The Pasha's Stories Departure of Lattif Effendl's Expedi tion A Night on the Sand Abou-Sln, and his Shukoree "Warriors Change In tb Climate Intense Heat and Its Effects Preparations for Returning A Money Transaction Farewell Visits A Dinner with Royal Guests Jolly King Dyaab A Shillook Dance Reconciliation Taking Leave of my Pets. I AROSE at sunrise, and leaving Achmet to have my baggago removed, walked through the town to my head-quarters at the Consular residence. I found Dr. Reitz's horses saddled iu the court, and himself walking in the garden. He was greatly surprised to see me, not having expected me for another week After the first greetings were over, he informed me that Ahd- el Kader Bey, the Governor of Kordofan, was about leaving for Obeid, and his friends intended to accompany him as far as the island of Moussa Bey, in the White Nile. During my absence, Mohammed Kheyr had presented Dr. Reitz with a fine Dongolese horse, which he offered to me, that I might par ticipate in the festivities. While I was at the Catholic Mis sion, relating my adventures to Dr. Knoblecher, a messenger came to announce that Abd-el Kader's boat had left, and that AN ILLUMINATED PICTURE. 3T3 he, with the other chiefs of Khartoum, were ready to set out on horseback for the White Nile. We rode at once to the house of Moussa Bey, who had quite recovered from his illness. The company was already mounted in the square before the house, and only awaited our arrival. We dashed through the lanes of the slave quarter, raising such a cloud of dust that little except red caps and horses' tails was visible, until we came out upon the open plain, where our cavalcade made a showy and picturesque appearance. The company consisted of Abd-el Kader Bey, Moussa Bey Musakar Bey, Ali Bey Khasib, Abou-Sin and Owd-el Kerim, the Shukoree chiefs, Ali Effendi, Mohammed Kheyr, Dr. Reitz, Dr. Peney and myself, besides a number of inferior officers and at least fifty attendants : in short, everybody of conse quence in Khartoum except the Pasha, who was represented by one of his Secretaries. The Beys were mounted on fine Arabian stallions, Dr. Peney on a tall dromedary, and the Arab chiefs on mules and donkeys, while the grooms and pipe- bearers ran behind on foot. I shall long remember the bril liant picture of that morning. The sky was clear and hot, and the palms rustled their shining leaves in a light wind. The fields of beans lay spread out between us and the river, their purple blossoms rolling in long drifts and flakes of color, and warm, voluptuous perfume. The red caps, the green and scar let housing* of the horses, the rich blue, brown, purple and violet dresses of the Beys, and the snowy robes of the Arabs, with their crimson borders thrown over the shoulder, projected against the tawny hue of the distant plains, and the warm blue of the sky, formed a feast of color which, in its entire richness and harmony, so charmed my eye that the sight of it became a 8V4 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFIIICA. luxury to the sense, as palpable as that of an exquisite flavoi to the palate. Away we went at full gallop, the glittering array of colors dancing and interchanging to the rapid music, as our horses' hoofs tore the bean-vines and flung their trailing blossoms into the air, until we reached the bank of the White Nile, where the Bey's vessel was just coming to land. Here the Arab shekhs and the greater part of the inferior officers embraced Abd-el Kader and returned to Khartoum. The rest of us crossed to the island of Moussa Bey and walkei over the thick green turf to a large mimosa tree, of the variety called 'araz, where the carpets were spread on the ground for us and the slaves were ready with our pipes. We lay there two or three hours, in the pleasant shade, talking, smoking, and lazily watching the motions of the attendants, who were scattered all over the island. An Albanian in a scarlet dress shot a wild goose, and Dr. Reitz tried to bring down an ibis, but failed. Finally the showrmeh an entire sheep, stuffed with rice appeared, garnished with bread, onions, radishes and grapes. We bared our right arms and buried our hands in the smoking flesh with such good will, that in half an hour the dish contained nothing but a beautiful skeleton. Abd-el Kader Bey honored me by tearing off a few choice mor sels with his own fingers and presenting them to me. A bowl of rice cooked in milk and sweetened, completed the repast. At noon we went on board the sandal, and after being ship ped to the other side, took leave of Abd-el Kader with an em brace and " God grant you a prosperous journey ! " to which he replied: " God grant it !" He sailed % off, up the White Nile, for Tura, with a fine breeze, and we turned homewards. The wind which blew across the plain in our faces, was as hot THE PASHA'S STORIES. 375 and dry as the blast of a furnace, and my head reeled undei the terrible intensity of Ihe sunshine. The Beys took everj opportunity of displaying their horsemanship, dashing over the beau-fields in wild zigzags, reining up in mid-career, throw ing their crooked canes into the air after the manner of a jereed, and describing circles and ellipses at full gallop. Tho finest of all was my handsome Albanian friend, Musakar Bey. I called upon the Pasha the same afternoon, to give him an account of my voyage up the White Nile, and was obliged to remain and dine with him. He was very much interested in my adventures with the Shillooks, but gave me to under stand that the negroes had great fear of his power, and that if they had not known I was under his protection they would cer tainly have killed me. When I spoke of the giant stature of the Shillooks he confirmed what I had already heard, that tho Kyks and Baris are full seven feet in height. He also stated that his predecessor, Achmet Pasha Menekleh, had captured in the regions beyond Fazogl thirty blacks, who were nine feet nigh and terrible to behold. They were brought to Khartoum in chains, he said, but refused to eat, howled like wild beasts, and died in paroxysms of savage fury. When I remembered that the Pasha had already told me that there was a subterra neous passage from Alexandria to the Fyoom (a distance of two hundred miles), made by Alexander the Great, and that the Sultan at Constantinople had an ape which grew to be twenty feet in height, I received this last communication with a grain of allowance. He fully believed in the existence of the N'yam-N'yams (a horribly suggestive name), or canni bals, who I have no doubt, are a fabulous race. Dr. Barth heard of them in Adamowa, south of Lake Tsad, and Dr 876 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. Knoblecher m the B*ri country, but no one has ever yet seen them. The expedition of Lattif Effendi had met with many de lays, but on Monday, the second of February, every thing was ready for its departure. It consisted of two large nekkers 01 trad ing- vessels, each armed with a cannon, and carrying six soldiers in addition to the crew. It was also provided with interpreters, who spoke the languages of the different tribes. Fat Abou-Balta, who was the owner of one of the vessels, Dr. Peney, Dr. Reitz and myself, made up a party to accompany Lattif Effendi the first stage of his voyage. We took the same little sandal in which I had sailed, and pushed away from Khartoum at sunset, followed by the nekkers. The relatives of the sailors were crowded on the bank to bid them good-bye, and as the vessels weighed anchor, the women set up the shrill " lu-lu-lu-lu-lu" which they use to express all emotions, from rapture down to despair. We had a light, but favoring wind, and at nine o'clock reached a long, sandy beach about five miles above the mouth of the White Nile, where we came to a halt. The vessels were moored to the shore, fires kindled, pipes lighted and coffee made, and we gathered into groups on the sand, in the light of the full moon. At midnight the cus tomary sheep made its appearance, accompanied by two bottles of claret, whereat Abou-Balta affected to be scandalized, so long as any Moslem attendants were in the neighborhood. When the coast was clear, he sprawled out like another Fal- Btaff, his jolly face beaming in the moonlight, and took a sly taste of the forbidden beverage, which he liked so well that he no longer resented the wicked nickname of " gamoos el-bahr' (hippopotamus), which we bestowed upon him. We tried to ABOU-SIN, THE SHUKOREE CHIEF. 37 Bleep a little, but although the sand was soft, the night air was chilly, and I believe nobody succeeded but Abou-Balta, whose enormous belly shook with the force of his snoring, as he lay stretched out on his back. By three in the morning every body was tired ; the fires had burned out, the meats of the banquet had grown cold, and the wind blew more freshly from the north. Latt'if Effendi called his sailors on board and we took leave of him. The two nekkers spread their huge wings and sailed off in the moonlight for the land of the Baris, while we made our slow way back to Khartoum, where we arrived at daybreak. During my absence there had been three distinguished ar rivals Abou-Sin, the great shekh of the Shukorees (the father of Owd-el Kerim), Melek Dyaab, the king of Dar El-Mahass, and Ali, shekh of the Ababdehs all of whom had been sum moned by the Pasha, for the purpose of consulting with them on the condition of their territories. Abou-Sin was one of the stateliest and most dignified personages I had ever seen. He was about seventy-five years of age, six feet six inches in height, straight as a lance, with a keen, fiery eye, and a gray beard which flowed to his waist. Dr. Peney, who had visited the old shekh in Takka, informed me that he could bring into the field four thousand warriors, each mounted on his own dromedary. The Shukorees wear shirts of chain-mail and helmets with chain-pieces falling on each side of the face, like their Saracen ancestors. Their weapons are still the sabre and lance, with which they have maintained their independence against all enemies, except the cannon of Mohammed Ali. Dr. Reitz took me to visit the Shekh, who was living in an humble mud building, not far from the Pasha's palace. We 3Y8 aouKNEr TO CENTRAL AFRICA. found him giving audience to a number of inferior shekhs, who were seated upon the earthen floor, below his divan. His son, Owd-el Kerim, was among them. The Consul took his seat at the shekh's side, and I did the same, but, although nothing was said, I saw that those present mentally resented our pre sumption, and felt that I had been guilty of a breach of deco rum. The object of our visit was to invite the shekh to dine with us, and he graciously complied. Owd-el Kerim was in cluded in the invitation, but he excused himself on the ground that he did not dare to eat at the same table with his father, I was delighted with this trait, which recalled the patriarchal days of the Old Testament, and justified the claim of the Arabs to the blood of Abraham. After my return the weather had suddenly changed, and every thing denoted the approach of the hot and sickly season. The thermometer stood at 105 in the shade, at noon, and there was an intensely hot wind from the south. On account of the languor and depression consequent upon such a heat, it required an extraordinary effort to make the necessary entries in my journal. I barely succeeded in moving about sufficient ly to shake off the feverish humors which in that climate so rapidly collect in the system. I always placed a cool earthen jug of water at my bedside, and when I awoke in the middle of the night with a heavy head and parched throat, would take a full draught, which immediately threw me into a profuse sweat, after which I slept soundly and healthily until morning. Ha who lives in Khartoum in the hot season must either sweat or die. M. Drovetti, of Alexandria (son of the French Consul Drovetti, with whom Belzoni nad so many quarrels), arrived about this time and was immediately prostrated with fever. CAMEI.S AND BILLS OF EXCHANGE. 379 Many of the Pranks and Egyptians were also affect jd, and Achmet, who felt plethoric symptoms, must needs go to a bar ber and be bled in the head. He besought me to return to Egypt, and as I had already accomplished much more than 1 anticipated, I began at once to prepare for the homeward journey. The route which I fixed upon was that across the Be- yooda Desert to Napata, the ancient capital of Ethiopia, thence to Dongola, and through the Nubian kingdoms to the Second Cataract of the Nile, at Wadi Haifa. The first part of the journey, through the countries of the Kababish and the Howoweet, was considered rather dangerous, and as a precau tionary measure I engaged three of the former tribe, as guide and camel-drivera I purchased two large Shukoree dromeda ries for myself and Achmet, at three hundred and two hundred and fifty piastres respectively, and hired threri others from the Kababish, at fifty piastres for the journey to Eddabe, on the Dongolese frontier, by way of Napata. The contract was for mally made in the presence of the shekh of Khartoum and Dr. Reitz, both of whom threatened the Arabs with destruction in case they should not convey me safely through the Desert. The Consul also did me good service in the negotiation of my draft on Fathalla Musallee, a Coptic merchant, who demanded twenty per cent, for the exchange. This, as my funds were getting low, would have been a serious loss, but by some arith metical legerdemain, which I could not understand, the Consul BO bewildered poor Fathalla's brain, that he was finally made to believe that a discount of five per cent, would somehow pro fit him more in the end than one of twenty per cent. Fathalla paid the money with a melancholy confusion of ideaa, and 1 880 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. doubt whether he has to this day discovered in what way he increased his profits by the operation. My provision-chests were replenished with coffee, sugar, rice, dates and mishmish (dried apricots), from the bazaar, and Achmet worked so cheerily with the prospect of leaving Soudan, that every thing was in readiness at a day's notice. Rather than wait until the following Monday, for luck's sake, I fixed upon Thursday, the fifth of February, for our depar ture. Many of the subordinate Egyptian officers prepared let ters to their families, which they intrusted to Achmet's care, and poor old Rufaa Bey, more than ever disgusted with his exile, charged me with a letter to his wife and another to Mr. Murray, through whose aid he hoped to get permission to re turn to Egypt. I paid a farewell visit to the Pasha, who re ceived me with great courtesy, informing me (what I already knew), that he was about to be superseded by Rustum Pasha, who, he predicted, would not find the government of Soudan an easy one. I was sorry to part with Vicar Knoblecher and his breth ren, Those self-sacrificing men have willingly devoted them selves to a life if life it can be called, which is little better than death in the remote heart of Africa, for the sake of in troducing a purer religion among its pagan inhabitants, and I trust they will be spared to see their benevolent plans realized. They are men of the purest character and animated by the best desires. Aboona Suleyman, as Dr. Knoblecher is called) is already widely known and, esteemed throughout Soudan, and although he can do but little at present in the way of religious teaching, he has instituted a school for the children of the Copts, which may in time reform the (so-called) Christian so- ROYAL GUESTS. 381 slety of Khartoum. If he should succeed in establishing a mission in the country of the Baris, the result will be not less important to Science than to Christianity, and the experiment is one which should interest the world. On the evening before my departure the shekhs Abou-Sin. Ali, the Ababdeh, and Mclek Dyaab came to dine with Dr Reilz. Abou-Sin was grave and stately as ever, and I never looked at him without thinking of his four thousand mailed warriors on their dromedaries, sweeping over the plains of Takka. Shekh Ali was of medium size, with a kind, amiable face, and a touch of native refinement in his manner. King Dyaab, however, who wore a capacious white turban and a robe of dark-blue cloth, was the " merry monarch " of Central Africa. His large eyes twinkled with good humor and his round face beamed with the radiance of a satisfied spirit. He brought a black Dongolese horse as a present for Dr. Reitz, and requested me to put him through his paces, on the plain before the house, as it would have been contrary to African etiquette for the Doctor himself to test the character of the gift. I complied, but the saddle was adapted only for the short legs of the fat king, and after running a circular course with my knees drawn up nearly to my chin, the resemblance of the scene to the monkey-riding of the circus struck me so forcibly, that I jumped oif and refused to mount again, greatly to the monarch's disappointment. Shekhs Abou-Sin and Ali took their departure shortly after the disposal of the roast sheep and salad which constitut ed the dinner, but King Dyaab and Dr. Peney remained until a late hour, smoking a parting pipe with me, and partaking of a mixture of claret, lemons, pomegranate juice and spices 382 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. which the Consul compounded into a sherbet of the most deh cious flavor. King Dyaab drank my health with a profusion of good wishes, begging me to remain another week and ac* company his caravan. His palace in Dar El-Mahass, he said, was entirely at my disposal and I must remain several wceka with him. But there is nothing so unpleasant to me as to postpone a journey after all the preparations are made, and I was reluctantly obliged to decline his invitation. I take plea sure, however, in testifying to the King's good qualities, which fully entitle him to the throne of Dar El Mahass, and were I installed in his capital of Kuke, as court-poet, I should cer tainly write a national ballad for the Mahassees, commencing in this wise : " El Melek Dyaab is a jolly old King, And a jolly old King is he," etc. After the Melek had bestowed a parting embrace by throw ing his arms around my waist and dropping his round head on my shoulder like a sixty-eight pound shot, he was sent home in state on the back of Sultan, the Dar-Fur stallion. The moonlight was so beautiful that the Consul and I accompanied Dr. Peney to his residence. The latter suggested another pipe in the open air of his court-yard, and awoke his Shillook slaves, who were lying asleep near the house, to perform a dance for our amusement. There were three two males and a female and their midnight dance was the most uncouth and barbaric thing I saw in Khartoum. They brandished their clubs, leaped into the air, alighting sometimes on one foot and Bometimes on both, and accompanied their motions with a series of short, quick howls, not unlike the laughter of a hye TAKING LEAVE Of Mt PETH. &9 ua. After the dance, Dr. Reitz effected a reconciliation be tween one of the men and the woman, who had been married, but were about to separate. They knelt before him, side by side, and recounted their complaints of each other, which were sufficiently ludicrous, but a present of three piastres (fifteen cents '), purchased forgetfulness of the past and renewed vows for the future. I felt a shadow of regret when I reflected that it was my last night in Khartoum. After we walked home I roused the old lioness in her corner, gave her a farewell hug and sat down on her passive back until she stretched out her paws and went to sleep again. I then visited the leopard in the garden, made him jump upon my shoulders and play his antics over once more. The hyenas danced and laughed fiendishly, as usual when they saw me, but the tall Kordofan antelope came up softly and rubbed his nose against my leg, asking for the dourra which I was accustomed to give him. I gave him, and the gazelles, and the leopard, iach an affectionate kiss, but poked the surly hyenas until they howled, on my way to bed. JOCRNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. CHAPTER XXX. THE COMMERCE OF SOUDAN. Vtif Comtrerce of Soudan Avenues of Trade The Merchants Character of Hie Im- jiorts Speculation The Gum Trade of Kordofan The Ivory Trade Abusijs of tb Government The Traffic in Slaves Prices of Slaves Their Treatment BEFOF.S taking a final leave of Soudan, it may be well to say a few words concerning the trade of the country. As the Nile is the principal avenue of communication between the Medi terranean and the eastern half of Central Africa, Soudan is thus made a centre of commerce, the character of which may be taken as an index to all the interior traffic of the continent. European goods reach Soudan through two principal chan nels ; by the port of Sowakin, on the Red Sea, and the cara van route up the Nile and across the Great Nubian Desert Of late years the latter has become the principal thoroughfare, as winter is the commercial season, and the storms on the Red Sea are very destructive to the small Arab craft. The mer chants leave Cairo through the autumn, principally between the first of October and the first of December, as they travel slowly and rarely make the journey in less than two months and a half. The great proportion of them take the same route THE MERCHANTS OF SOUDAN. 38fi [ followed, from Korosko to Berber, where they ship again foi Khartoum Those who buy their own camels at Assouan, make the whole trip by land ; but it is more usual for them to buy camels in Soudan for the return journey, as they can sell them in Upper Egypt at advanced prices. In fact, the trade in camels alons is not inconsiderable. On my way to Khar toum I met many thousands, in droves of from one to five hundred, on their way to Egypt. The merchants who make this yearly trip to Soudan are mostly Egyptians and Nubians. There are a number of Syr ians established in the country, but they are for the most part connected with houses in Cairo, and their caravans between the two places are in charge of agents, natives, whose charac ter has been proved by long service. There were also three or four French and Italian merchants, and one Englishman (Mr. Peterick, in Kordofin), who carried on their business in the same manner. It is no unusual thing for Nubians who have amassed two or three thousand piastres by household service in Cairo, to form partnerships, invest their money in cotton goods, and after a year or two on the journey (for time is any thing but money to them), return to Egypt with a few hundred weight of gum or half a dozen camels. They earn a few pias tres, perhaps, in return for the long toils and privations they have endured ; but their pride is gratified by the title of Djel- labiat merchants. It is reckoned a good school, and not without reason, for young Egyptians who devote themselves to commerce. I met even the sons of Beys among this class. Those who are prudent, and have a fair capital to start upon, can generally gain enough in two or "ihree years to establish themselves respectably in Egypt. 17 336 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. The goods brought into Central Africa consist principally of English muslins and calicoes, the light red woollen stuffs of Barbary, cutlery, beads and trinkets. Cloths, silks, powder tobacco, and arakee, are also brought in considerable quanti ties, while in the large towns there is always a good sale for sugar, rice, coffee and spices. The Turkish officials and the Franks are very fond of the aniseed cordial of Scio, maraschi no, rosoglio, and the other Levantine liquors ; and even the heavy, resinous wines of Smyrna and Cyprus find their way here. The natives prefer for clothing the coarse, unbleached cotton stuffs of their own manufacture, one mantle of which is sufficient for years. As may readily be supposed, the market is frequently glutted with goods of this description, whence the large houses often send money from Cairo for the purchase of gum and ivory, in preference to running any risk. At the time of my visit, all sorts of muslins and calicoes might be had in Khartoum at a very slight advance on Cairo prices, and the merchants who were daily arriving with additional bales, com plained that the sale would not pay the expenses of their jour ney. The remarkable success of the caravans of the previovu year had brought a crowd of adventurers into the lists, very few of whom realized their expectations. It was the Califor nia experience in another form. No passion is half so blind as the greed for gain. Khartoum is the great metropolis of all this region. Some few caravans strike directly through the Beyooda Desert, from Dongola to Kordofan, but the great part come directly to the former place, where they dispose of their goods, and then pro ceed to Kordofan for gum, or wait the return of the yearly ex pedition up the White Nile, to stock themselves with ivory. 6TTM AND IVORY. 337 On both these articles there is generally a good, sometimes a great, profit. The gum comes almost entirely from Kordofan, where the quantity annually gathered amounts to thirty thou sand contar, or cwt. It is collected by the natives from that variety of the mimosa called the ashaba, and sold by them at from fifty-five to sixty piastres the contar. Lattif Pasha at one time issued a decree prohibiting any person from selling it at less than sixty piastres, but Dr. Reitz, by an energetic protest, obtained the revocation of this arbitrary edict. The cost of carrying it to Cairo is very nearly fifty piastres the contar, exclusive of a government tax of twelve and a half per cent. ; and as the price of gum in Cairo fluctuates according to the demand from one hundred and fifty to two hundred and fifty piastres, the merchant's gain may be as low as ten or as high as one hundred per cent. The gum brought from Yemen and the shores of the Red Sea is considered superior in quality but is not produced in such abundance. The ivory is mostly obtained from the negro tribes on the White Nile. Small quantities are occasionally brought from Dar-Fur and the unknown regions towards Bornou, by Arab caravans. The trading expeditions up the White Nile, until the winter of 18512, were entirely under the control of the Pasha of Soudan, in spite of the treaty of 1838, making it free to all nations. The expedition of that winter, which sailed from Khartoum about two months before my arrival, consisted of seven vessels, accompanied by an armed force. The parties interested in it consisted of the Pasha, the Egyptian mer chants, and the raydhs, or European merchants. The gaina were to be divided into twenty-four parts, eight of which went to the Pasha, nine to the Turks and seven to the Franks. Dr. 388 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA.. Reitz undertook to enforce the treaty, and actually ran twc vessels belonging to Austrian proteges past the guard estab lished at the junction of the Niles. The Pasha thereupon had all the sailors belonging to these vessels arrested, but after two days of violent manoeuvres and counter-manoeuvres, allowed the vessels to proceed. The unjust monopoly was therefore virtually annulled an important fact to Europeans who ma} wish to engage in the trade. The vessels take with them great quantities of glass beads, ear, arm and nose rings, and the like, for which the natives readily barter their elephants' teeth. These are not found in abundance before reaching the laud of the Nuehrs and the Kyks, about lat. 7, and the best specimens come from regions still further south. They are sold in Khartoum at the rate of twelve hundred piastres the cwt., and in Cairo at twenty-two hundred, burdened with a tax of twelve and a half per cent. The Government has done its best to cramp and injure Trade, the only life of that stagnant land. In addition to the custom-house at Assouan, where every thing going into Egypt must pay duty, the Pasha and his satellites had established an illegal custom-house at Dongola, and obliged merchants to pay another toll, midway on their journey. This was afterwards abolished, on account of the remonstrances which were forward ed to Cairo. I found the Pasha so uniformly courteous and affable, that at first I rejected many of the stories told me of his oppression and cruelty, but I was afterwards informed of circumstances which exhibited his character in a still more hideous light. Nevertheless, I believe he was in most respects superior to his predecessors in the office, and certainly to his successor. THE SLAVE TRADE. 380 The traffic in slaves has decreased very much of late. The wealthy Egyptians still purchase slaves, and will continue to do so, till the " institution " is wholly abolished, but the despotic rule exercised by the Pasha in Nubia has had the effect of greatly lessening the demand. Vast numbers of Nu bians go into Egypt, where they are engaged as dorue3tic ser vants, and their paid labor, cheap as it is, is found more profitable than the unpaid service of negro slaves. Besides, the tax on the latter has been greatly increased, so that mer chants find the commodity less profitable than gum or ivory. Ten years ago, the duty paid at Assouan was thirty piastres for a negro and fifty for an Abyssinian : at present it is three hundred and fifty for the former and five hundred and fifty for the latter, while the tax can be wholly avoided by making the slave free. Prices have risen in consequence, and the traffic is proportionately diminished. The Government probably de rives as large a revenue as ever from it, on account of the in creased tax, so that it has seemed to satisfy the demands of some of the European powers by restricting the trade, while it actually loses nothing thereby. The Government slave hunts in the interior, however, are no longer carried on. The great er part of the slaves brought to Khartoum, are purchased from the Galla and Shangalla tribes on the borders of Abyssinia, or from the Shillooks and Dinkas, on the White Nile. The cap tives taken in the wars between the various tribes are invari ably sold. The Abyssinian girls, who are in great demand among the Egyptians, for wives, are frequently sold by their own parents. They are treated with great respect, and their .ot is probably no worse than that of any Arab or Turkish ciiiale. The more beautiful of them often bring from twc 390 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. hundred to five hundred dollars. Ordinary household servants may be had from one to two thousand piastres. My drago man, Achmet, purchased a small girl for twelve hundred piastres, as a present for his wife. He intended making her free, which he declared to be a good thing, according to his religion; but the true reason, I suspect, was the tax at Assouan. The Egyptians rarely maltreat their slaves, and instances of cruelty are much less frequent among them than among the Europeans settled here. The latter became so notorious for their violence that the Government was obliged to establish a law forbidding any Frank to strike his slave ; but in case of disobedience to send him before the Cadi, or Judge, who could decide on the proper punishment. Slavery prevails through out all the native kingdoms of Central Africa, in more or lesa aggravated forms. The Egyptian merchants who are located in Khartoum as agents for houses in Cairo, consider themselves as worse than exiles, and indemnify themselves by sensual indulgence for being obliged to remain in a country which they detest. They live in large houses, keep their harems of Inky slaves, eat, drink and smoke away their languid and wearisome days. All the material which they need for such a life is so cheap that their love of gain does not suffer thereby. One of the richest merchants in the place gave me an account of his housekeeping. He had a large mud palace, a garden, and twenty servants and slaves, to maintain which cost him eight thousand piastres (four hundred dollars) a year. He paid his servants twenty piastres a month, and his slaves also at least so he told me, but I did not believe it. THfi NATIVES OF SOUDAN. 891 As for the native Fellahs of Soudan, they are so crushed and imposed upon, that it is difficult to judge what theif natural capacities really are. Foreigners, Frank as well as Egyptian, universally complain of their stupidity, and I heard the Pusha himself say, that if he could have done any thing with them Abbas Pasha might whistle to get Soudan from him. That they are very stupid, is true, but that they have every encouragement to be so, is equally true. Dr. Knoblecher, who, of all the men I saw in Khartoum, was best qualified to judge correctly, assured me that they needed only a just and pater nal government, to make rapid progress in the arts of civiliza tion. 892 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA CHAPTER XXXI. FROM KHARTOUM TO EL METEMMA. Farewell Breakfast Departure from Khartoum Parting with Dr. Reltz A Predic tion and Its Fulfilment Drear7 Appearance of the Country Lions Burying- Grounds The Natives My Kababish Guide, Mohammed Character of the Arabi Habits of Deception My Dromedary Mutton and Mareesa A Soudan Ditty The Kowyan Akaba Gerri Heat and Scenery An Altercation with the Guide A Mishap A Landscape Tedious Approach to El Metemma Appearance of the Town Preparations for the Desert Meeting Old Acquaintances. THE wind blew so violently on the morning of my departure from Khartoum, that the ferry-boat which had been engaged to convey my equipage to the Kordofan shore, could not round the point at the junction of the Niles. My camels, with the Kababish guide and drivers, had been ferried over the evening previous, and were in readiness to start. In this dilemma Dr. Peney, with whom I had engaged to take a parting breakfast, kindly gave me the use of his neklcer and its crew. Our breakfast was a fete champetre under the beautiful nebbuk tree in the Doctor's court-yard, and consisted of a highly* spiced salmi of his own compounding, a salad of lettuce and tomatoes, and a bottle of Cyprus wine. The coolness and force of the north-wind gave us a keen appetite, and our kind DEPARTURE FROM 3CHARTOUM. 398 host could not say that we Blighted his culinary skill, for verily there was nothing but empty plates to be seen, when we arose from the table. Dr. Reitz and I hastened on board the nek- ker, which immediately put off. I left Khartoum, regretting to leave a few friends behind me in that furnace of Soudan, yet glad to escape therefrom myself. A type of the character of the place was furnished us while making our way to Omdur- man. We passed the body of a woman, who had been stran gled and thrown into the water ; a sight which the natives regarded without the least surprise. The Consul immediately dispatched one of his servants to the Governor of the city, ask ing him to have the body taken away and properly interred. It was full two hours before we reached the western bank of the Nile, opposite Omdurman. Achmet, who had preceded me, had drummed up the Kababish, and they were in readi ness with my camels. The work of apportioning and loading the baggage was finished by noon, and the caravan started, preceded by the guide, Mohammed, who shook his long spear in a general defiance of all enemies. Dr. Reitz and I, with our attendants, set off in advance on a quick trot. Our path led over a bleak, barren plain, cover ed with thorns, through which the wind whistled with a wintry sound. The air was filled with clouds of sand, which gave a pale and sickly cast to the sunshine. My friend was unwel. and desponding, and after we had ridden eight milen, he halt' ed to rest in a deep, rocky gully, where we were sheltered from the wind. Here we lay down upon the sand until the caravan came along, when we parted from each other. " You are going back to Europe and Civilization ; " said he mournfully ; " you have an encouraging future before you while I can only 17* 394 JOUKNKY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. look forward, tu tne prospect ot leaving my bones in this accursed land." He then embraced me, mounted his drome dary, and was soon lost to my sight among the sand and thorns Little did I then imagine that his last words were the unhappj prediction which another year would see verified ! * We halted for the night near the village of Gerrari. I slept but indifferently, with the heavy head and gloomy spirits I had brought from Khartoum ; but the free life of my tent did not fail of its usual effect, and I rose the next morning fresh, strong, and courageous. We were obliged to travel slowly, on account of the nature of the road, which, for the greater part of the distance to El Metemma, lay in the Desert, just beyond the edge of the cultivated land. For the first day * Dr. Constantine Reitz died about a year after my departure from Soudan, from the effects of the climate. He had been ill for some months,.and while making a journey to Kordofan, felt himself growing worse so rapidly that he returned to Khartoum, where he expired in a few days. He was about thirty-three years of age, and his many ac quirements, joined to a character of singular energy and persistence, had led his friends to hope for important results from his residence in Central Africa. With manners of great brusqueness and eccentricity, bis generosity was unbounded, and this, combined with his intrepidity and his skill as a horseman and a hunter, made him a general favorite with the Arab chieftains of Ethiopia, whose cause he was always ready to advocate, against the oppressive measures of the Egyptian Government. It will always be a source of satisfaction to the author, that, in passing through Germany in September, 1852, he visited the parents of Dr. Reitz, whose father is a Forstmeister, or Inspector of Forests, near Darmstadt The joy which they exhibited on hearing from their son through one who had so recently seen him, was mixed with sadness as they expressed the fear that they would never see him again-* a fear, alas ! too soon realized. APPEARANCE OF THE COUNTRY. 396 01 mo, *re rede over dry, stony plains, covered wilt thickets of *be jflnsl! thorny mimosa and patches of long yellow grass. TL.e country is crossed by deep gullies, through which the streams formed by the summer rains flow to the Nile. Their banks are lined with a thick growth of sont, nebbuk, and othei trees peculiar to Central Africa, in which many lions make their lairs and prey upon the flocks of the Arabs. One bold, fierce fellow had established himself on the island of Musakar Bey, just below the junction of the Nile, and carried off night ly a sheep or calf, defying the attempts of the natives to take him. Our view was confined to the thorns, on whose branches we left many shreds of clothing as mementoes of the journey, and to the barren range of Djebel Gerrari, stretching west ward into the Desert. Occasionally, however, in crossing the low spurs which ran out from this chain, the valley of the Nile the one united Nile again lay before us, far to the east and north-east, the river glistening in the sun as he spread his arms round island after island, till his lap could hold no more. The soil is a poor, coarse gravel, and the inhabitants support themselves by their herds of sheep and goats, which browse on the thorns. In places there are large thickets of the usher, or euphorbia, twenty feet high. It grows about the huts of the natives, who make no attempt to exterminate it, notwithstanding the poisonous nature of its juice. Every mile or two we passed a large Arab burying-ground, crowded with rough head and foot-stones, except where white pennons, flut tering on poles, denoted a more than ordinary sanctity in the deceased. The tomb of the Shekh, or holy man of Merreh, was a conical structure of stones and clay, about fifteen feet in breadth at the base, and twenty feet high. The graves are so 896 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. numerous and the dwellings so few, that one nas the impres sion of travelling in a country depopulated by the pestilence , yet we met many persons on the road partly Kababish, and partly natives of Dongola and Mahass. The men touched their lips and foreheads on passing me, and the women greek ed me with that peculiar " hab-bab-ba ! " which seems to be the universal expression of salutation among the various tribea of Central Africa. My guide, Mohammed, was a Kababish, and the vainest and silliest Arab I ever knew. He wore his hair in long braids, extending from the forehead and temples to the nape of the neck, and kept in their places by a layer of mutton-fat, half an inch thick, which filled up the intervening spacea His hollow cheeks, deep-sunken eyes, thin and wiry beard, and the long spear he carried in his hand made him a fair represen tative of Don Quixote, and the resemblance was not diminished by the gaunt and ungainly camel on which he jogged along at the head of my caravan. He was very devout, praying for quite an unreasonable length of time before and after meals, and always had a large patch of sand on his forehead, from striking it on the ground, as he knelt towards Mecca. Both his arms, above the elbows, were covered with rings of hippo potamus hide, to which were attached square leathern cases, containing sentences of the Koran, as charms to keep away sickness and evil spirits. The other man, Said, was a Shy- gheean, willing and good-natured enough, but slow and regard less of truth, as all Arabs are. Indeed, the best definition of an Arab which I can give, is -a philosophizing sinner. His fatalism gives him a calm and equable temperament under all Bircumstances, and "God wills it!" or "God is merciful I' CHARACTER OF THF ARABS. 39*? is the solace for every misfortune. But this same careless ness to the usual accidents of life extends also to his speech and his dealings with other men. I will not say that an Arab never speaks truth : on the contrary, he always does, if he happens to remember it, and there is no object to be gained by suppressing it; but rather than trouble himself to answer correctly a question which requires some thought, he tells you whatever comes uppermost in his mind, though certain to be detected the next minute. He is like a salesman, who, if he does not happen to have the article you want, offers you some thing else, rather than let you go away empty-handed. In regard to his dealings, what Sir Gardner Wilkinson says of Egypt, that " nobody parts with money without an effort to defraud," is equally true of Nubia and Soudan. The people do not steal outright; but they have a thousand ways of doing it in an indirect and civilized manner, and they are perfect masters of all those petty arts of fraud which thrive so greenly in the great commercial cities of Christendom. With these slight drawbacks, there is much to like in the Arabs, and they are certainly the most patient, assiduous and good-humored people in the world. If they fail in cheating you, they re spect you the more, and they are so attentive to you, so ready to take their mood from yours to laugh when you are cheer ful, and be silent when you are grave so light-hearted in the performance of severe duties, that if you commence your ac quaintance by despising, you finish by cordially liking them. On a journey like that which I was then commencing, it is absolutely necessary to preserve a good understanding with your men and beasts ; otherwise travel will be a task, and a severe one, instead of a recreation. After my men had vainlj 898 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. tried a number of expedients, to get the upper hand of me, 1 drilled them into absolute obedience, and found their charac ter much improved thereby. With my dromedary, whom I called Abou-Sin, (the Father of Teeth), from the great shekh of the Shukoree Arabs, to whom he originally belonged, I was soon on good terms. He was a beast of excellent temper, with a spice of humor in his composition, and a fondness for playing practical jokes. But as I always paid them back, neither party could complain, though Abou-Sin sometimes gurgled out of his long throat a string of Arabic gutturals, in remonstrance. He came up to my tent and knelt at precisely the same hour every evening, to get his feed of dourra, and when I was at breakfast always held his lips pursed up, ready to take the pieces of bread I gave him. My men, whom I agreed to provide with food during the journey, were regaled every day with mutton and mareesa, the two only really good things to be found in Soudan. A fat sheep cost 8 piastres (40 cents), and we killed one every three days. The meat was of excel" lent flavor. Mareesa is made of the coarse grain called dour ra, which is pounded into flour by hand, mixed with water, and heated over a fire in order to produce speedy fermentation. It is always drunk the day after being made, as it turns sour on the third day. It is a little stronger than small beer, and has a taste similar to wheat bran, unpleasant on the first trial and highly palatable on the second. A jar holding two gallons costs one piastre, and as few families, however poor, are with out it, we always found plenty of it for sale in the villages. It is nutritious, promotive of digestion, and my experience went to prove that it was not only a harmless but most wholesome drink in that stifling climate. Om bilbil, the mother of nightingales, A SOUDAN DITTY. 398 which is made from wheat, is stronger, and has a pungent flavor. The people in general are remarkably temperate, but sailors and camel-men are often not content without arakee, a sort of weak brandy made from dates. I have heard this song sung so often that I cannot choose but recollect the words. It is in the Arabic jargon of Soudan : "El-toombak sheraboo dowaia, Oo el karafeen ed dowa il 'es-sufa'ia, Oo el arakee legheetoo monnaia, Om bilbil bukkoosoo burraia." [Tobacco I smoke in the pipe ; and mareesa is a medicine to the sufala ; (i. e. the bag of palm fibres through which it is strained), but arakee makes me perfectly contented, and then T will not even look at bilbil]. The third day after leaving Khartoum, I reached the mountains of Gerri, through which the Nile breaks his way in a narrow pass. Here I hailed as an old acquaintance the island-hill of Rowyan (the watered, or unthirsty). This is truly a magnificent peak, notwithstanding its height is not more than seven hundred feet. Neither is Soracte high, yet it produces a striking effect, even with the loftier Apennines behind it. The Rowyan is somewhat similar to Soracte in form. There are a few trees on the top, which shows that there must be a deposit of soil above its barren ramparts, and were I a merchant of Khartoum I should build a summer resi dence there, and by means of hydraulics create a grove and garden around it. The akaba, or desert pass, which we were obliged to take in order to reach the river again, is six hours tn length, through a wild, stony tract, covered with immense 400 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. boulders of granite, hurled and heaped together in the same chaotic manner as is exhibited in the rocks between Assouan and Philse. After passing the range, a wide plain again open ed before us, the course of the Nile marked in its centre by the darker hue of the nebbuks and sycamores, rising above the long gray belts of thorn-trees. The mountains which inclose the fallen temples of Mesowurat and Naga appeared far to tho east. The banks of the river here are better cultivated than further up the stream. The wheat, which was just sprouting, during my upward journey, was now two feet high, and rolled before the wind in waves of dark, intense, burning green. The brilliancy of color in these mid- African landscapes is truly astonishing. The north-wind, which blew the sand furiously in our facea during the first three days of the journey, ceased at this point and the weather became once more intensely hot. The first two or three hours of the morning were, nevertheless, deli cious. The temperature was mild, and there was a June-like breeze which bore far and wide the delicate odor of the mimo sa blossoms. The trees were large and thick, as on the White Nile, forming long, orchard-like belts between the grain-fields and the thorny clumps of the Desert. The flocks of black goats which the natives breed, were scattered among these trees, and numbers of the animals stood perfectly upright on their hind legs, as they nibbled off the ends of the higher branches. On the morning after leaving Akaba Gerri, I had two al tercations with my men. Mohammed had left Khartoum without a camel, evidently for the purpose of saving money. In a day or two, however, he limped so much that I put him AN ALTERCATION WITH THE GUIDE. 401 npon Achmet's dromedary for a few hours. This was an im position, for every guide is obliged to furnish his own camel, and I told the old man that he should ride no more. He there- upon prevailed upon Said to declare that their contract was to take me to Ambukol, instead of Merawe. This, considering that the route had been distinctly stated to them by Dr. Eeitz, in my presence, and put in writing by the moodir, Abdallah Effendi, and that the name of Ambukol was not once mention ed, was a falsehood of the most brazen character. I told the men they were liars, and that sooner than yield to them I would return to Khartoum and have them punished, where upon they saw they had gone too far, and made a seeming com promise by declaring that they would willingly take me to Merawe, if I wished it. Towards noon we reached the village of Derreira, nearly opposite the picturesque rapids of the Nile. I gave Moham med half a piastre and sent him after mareesa, two gallons of which he speedily procured. A large gourd was filled for me, and I drank about a quart without taking breath. Before it had left my lips, I experienced a feeling of vigor and elasticity throughout my whole frame, which refreshed me for the re mainder of the day. Mohammed stated that the tents of some of his tribe were only about four hours distant, and asked leave to go and procure a camel, promising to rejoin us at El Me- temma the next day. As Said knew the way, and could have piloted me in case the old sinner should not return, I gave him leave to go. Achmet and I rode for nearly two hours over a stony, thorny plain, before we overtook the baggage camels. When at last we came in sight of them, the brown camel was running 402 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. loose without his load and Said trying to catch him. My pro vision-chests were tumbled upon the ground, the cafass broken to pieces and the chickens enjoying the liberty of the Desert Said, it seemed, had stopped to talk with some women, leaving the camel, which was none too gentle, to take care of himself, Achmet was so incensed that he struck the culprit in the face, whereupon he cried out, with a rueful voice : " ya Idiosara /' (oh, what a misfortune !). After half an hour's labor the boxes were repacked, minus their broken crockery, the chickens caught and the camel loaded. The inhabitants of this region were mostly Shygheeans, who had emigrated thither. They are smaller and darker than the people of Mahass, but resem ble them in character. In one of the villages which we pass ed, the soog, or market, was being held. I rode through the crowd to see what they had to sell, but found only the simplest articles : camels, donkeys, sheep, goats ; mats, onions, butter, with some baskets of raw cotton and pieces of stuff spun and woven by the natives. The sales must be principally by bar ter, as there is little money in the country. In the afternoon we passed another akaba, even more diffi cult for camels than that of Gerri. The tracks were rough and stony, crossed by frequent strata of granite and porphyry. From the top of one of the ridges I had a fine view of a little valley of mimosas which lay embayed in the hills and washed by the Nile, which here curved grandly round from west to south, his current glittering blue and broad in the sun. The opposite bank was flat and belted with wheat fields, beyond which stretched a gray forest of thorns and then the yellow sa vannas of Shendy, walled in the distance by long, blue, broken ranges of mountains. The summit of a hill near our read was APPROACH TO EL METEMMA. 403 surrounded with a thick wall, formed of natural blocks of black porphyry. It had square, projecting bastions at regular inter vals, and an entrance on the western side. From its appear ance, form and position, it had undoubtedly been a stronghold of some one of the Arab tribes, and can claim no great antiqui ty. I travelled on until after sunset, when, as no village ap peared, I camped in a grove of large mimosas, not far from the Nile. A few Shygheean herdsmen were living in brush huts near at hand, and dogs and jackals howled incessantly through the night. On the fifth day I reached the large town of El Metemma, nearly opposite Shendy, and the capital of a negro kingdom, before the Egyptian usurpation. The road, on approaching it, leads over a narrow plain, covered with a shrub resembling heather, bordered on one side by the river, and on the other by a long range of bare red sand-hills. We journeyed for more than three hours, passing point after point of the hills, only to find other spurs stretching out ahead of us. From the intense heat I was very anxious to reach El Metemma, and was not a little rejoiced when I discerned a grove of date-trees, which had been pointed out to me from Shendy, a month before, as the landmark of the place. Soon a cluster of buildings ap peared on the sandy slopes, but as we approached, I saw they were ruins. "We turned another point, and reached another group of tokuls and clay houses ruins also. Another point, and more ruins, and so for more than a mile before we reach ed the town, which commences at the last spur of the hills, and extends along the plain for a mile and a half. It is a long mass of one-story mud buildings, and the most miserable place of its size that I have seen in Central Africa, 404 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. There is no bazaar, but an open market-place, where the peo pie sit on the ground and sell their produce, consisting of dourra, butter, dates, onions, tobacco and a few grass mats. There may be a mosque in the place, but in the course of iny ramble through the streets, I saw nothing that looked like one, Half the houses appeared to be uninhabited, and the natives were a hideous mixture of the red tribes of Mahass end Shygheea and the negro races of Soudan. A few people were moving lazily through the dusty and filthy lanes, but the greater portion were sitting in the earth, on the shady side of the houses. In one of the streets I was taken for the Medical Inspector of the town, a part of whose business it is to see that it is kept free from filth. Two women came hastily out of the houses and began sweeping vigorously, saying to me as I came up : " You see, we are sweeping very clean." It would have been much more agreeable to me, had the true Inspector gone his round? the day before. El Metemma and Shendy are probably the most immoral towns in all Central Africa. The people informed me that it was a regular business for persons to buy female slaves, and hire them for the purpose of prosti tution, all the money received in this vile way going into the owner's pocket. I was occupied the rest of the day and the next morning in procuring and filling additional water-skins, and preparing to cross the Beyooda. Achmet bad a quantity of bread baked, for the journey would occupy seven or eight days, and them was no possibility of procuring provisions on the road. Mo hammed did not make his appearance at the appointed time, and I determined to start without him, my caravan being in creased by a Dongolese merchant, and a poor Shygheean, MEETING OLD ACQUAINTANCES. 40fi .whose only property was a club and a wooden bowl, and who asked leave to help tend the camels for the sake of food and water on the way. All of the Beyooda, which term is applied to the broad desert region west of the Nile and extending southward from Nubia to Kordofan and Dar-Far, is infested with marauding tribes of Arabs, and though at present their depredations are less frequent than formerly, still, from the total absence of all protection, the traveller is exposed to con siderable risk. For this reason, it is not usual to find small parties traversing this route, as in the Nubian Desert. I added to my supplies a fat sheep, a water-skin filled with mareesa, a sheaf of raw onions (which are a great luxury in the Desert), and as many fowls as could be procured in El Metemma. Just as we were loading the camels, who should come up but Beshir and two or three more of the Mahassee sailors, who had formed part of my crew from Berber to Khartoum. They came up and kissed my hand, exclaiming . " May God prosper you, Efiendi ! " They immediately set about helping to load the camels, giving us, meanwhile, news of every thing that had happened. Beshir's countenance fell when I asked him about his Metemma sweetheart, Gammero- Betahadjero ; she had proved faithless to him. The America was again on her way from Berber to Khartoum, with a com pany of merchants. The old slave, Bakhita, unable to bear the imputation of being a hundred and fifty years old, had run away from the vessel. When the camels were loaded and we were ready to mount, I gave the sailors a few piastres to buy mareesa anl sont them away rejoicing. JOURNEY 10 CENTRAL AFRU1A. CHAPTER XXXII. THE BEYOODA D I] 8 E R T. Enteiing the Desert Character of the Scenery Wells Fear of thr Arabs The L loom Tree Effect of the llot Wind Mohammed overtakes us Arab Endurance An unpleasant Bedfellow Comedy of the Crows Gazelles We encounter a Sand stormThe Mountain of Thirst The Wells of Djeekdud A Mountain Pass- Desert Intoxication Scenery of the Table-land Blr Khannlk The Kababisli Arabs Gazelles again Ruins of an Ancient Coptic Monastery Distant View of the Nile Valley Djebel Berkel We come into Port. " He sees the red sirocco wheeling Its Bandy columns o'er the waste, And streams through palmy valleys stealing. Where the plumed ostrich speeds in haste." FREIUORATH. WE left El Metemma at noon, on the tenth of February. Crossing the low ridge of red sand, at the foot of which the town is built, the wind came fresh to meet us, across the long level savanna of yellow grass and shrubs which stretched awaj to the west and north, without a bound. The prospect wae exhilarating, after the continual hem of thorns, which had lined our road from Khartoum. It was a great relief to turn the eye from the bare, scorching mud walls of the town, to the freshness and freedom of the Desert. I took a last look at the wheat-fields of the Nile, and then turned my face northward, ENTERING THE DESERT. 401 towards the point where I expected to meet his current again. The plain was very level, and the road excellent for our camels. In places where there was a slight depression of the soil, a long, slender species of grass grew in thick tufts, afford ing nourishment to the herds of the wandering Arab tribes. There were also narrow belts of white thorn and a curious shrub, with leaves resembling the jasmine. In two hours we reached a well, where some Kababish were drawing water for their goats and asses. It was about twenty feet deep, and the water was drawn in skins let down with ropes. "We kept on until sunset, when we encamped in an open, gravelly space, surrounded with patches of grass, on which the camels brows ed. The hot weather of the past two or three days had called into life a multitude of winged and creeping insects, and they assailed me on all sides. The next morning, after travelling more than two houra over the plain, we reached a series of low hills, or rather swells of the Desert, covered with black gravel and fragments of por- phyritic rock. They appeared to be outlying spurs of a moun tain range which we saw to the northwest. From the highest of them we saw before us a long, shallow valley, opening far to the north-east. It was thickly covered with tufts of yellow ish-green grass, sprinkled with trees of various kinds. The merchant pointed out a grove in the distance as the location of Bir Abou-leer, the first well on the road. His sharp eye discerned a company of Arabs, who were encamped near it, and who, seeing Achmet and myself in our Turkish dresses, were preparing to fly. He urged his dromedary into a fast trot and rode ahead to reassure them. They were a tall, wild-looking people, very scantily dressed ; the men had long black hair 408 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. moustaches and beards, and carried spears in their hands* They looked at us with suspicion, but did not refuse the cus tomary u hab-bab-ba ! " The wells were merely pits, not more than four or five feet deep, dug in the clayey soil, and contain ing at the bottom a constant supply of cool, sweet water. We watered our camels in basins scooped for that purpose in the earth , and then took breakfast under the thorns. Among the trees in the wady was one resembling the flebbuk in foliage, and with a fruit similar in appearance, but larger and of different flavor. The Arabs called it laloom, and gathered some of the fruit for me to taste. It has a thin, brittle outer rind, con taining a hard stone, covered with a layer of gummy paste, most intensely sweet and bitter in the mouth. It has precise ly the flavor of the medicine known to children as Hive Syrup, We resumed our course along the wady, nearly to its ter mination at the foot of the mountains, when the road turned to the right over another succession of hard, gravelly ridges, flanked on the west by hills of coal-black porphyry. During the afternoon the wind was sometimes as hot as a furnace- blast, and I felt mj very blood drying up in its intensity. I had no means of ascertaining the temperature, but it could not have been less than 105. Nevertheless, the sky was so clear and blue, the sunshine so perfect, and the Desert so inspiring that I was in the most exulting mood. In fact, the powerful dry heat of the air produced upon me a bracing effect, similar to that of sharp cold. It gave me a sensation of fierce, savaga vigor, and I longed for an Arab lance and the fleet hoofs of the red stallion I had left in Khartoum. At times the burn ing blasts were flavored with a strong aromatic odor, like that of dried lavender, which was as stimulating to the lungs aa MOHAMMED OVERTAKES US. 409 herb-tea to the stomach. Our provisions soon felt the effecta of this continual dry heat. Dates became as pebbles of jasper, and when I asked my servant for bread, he gave me a stone, As we were journeying along over the plain, we spied a man on a camel trotting behind us, and in half an hour, lo ! Mohammed the guide. The old scamp came up with a younger brother behind him, whom he had brought without asking permission, and without bringing food for him. This made eight persons I was obliged to feed, and as our bread and meat were only calculated for six, I put them on allow ance. Mohammed had his hair newly plaited and covered with a layer of mutton-fat, a quarter of an inch thick. I saw very little of the vaunted temperance of the Arabs. True, they will live on dates when they can get nothing else ; and they will go without water for a day when they have none. I found a quart of water daily amply sufficient for my own needs, notwithstanding the great heat we endured ; but I do not think one of the men drank less than a gallon in the same time, and as for their eating, Achmet frequently declared that they would finish a whole sheep before getting to "el hamdu lillah ! " the usual Arabic grace after meat. Towards sunset we reached an open space of ground which had not been touched since the rains of the previous summer. The soil had been washed smooth and then dried away in the sun, leaving a thin, cracked crust, like that which frequently forms after a light snow-fall. Our camel's feet broke through at every step, making the only trails which crossed it, except those of gazelles and vultures. Achmet was about to pitch my tent near some snaky-looking holes, but I had it moved to a clearer spot. I slept without interruption, but in the mon> 18 10 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. ing, as he was about to roll up my mattrass, he suddenly let it drop and rushed out of the tent, exclaiming : " Oh master come out ! come out ! There is a great snake in your bed ! " I looked, and truly enough, there was an ugly spotted reptile coiled up on the straw matting. The men heard the alarm, and my servant Ali immediately came running up with a club. As he was afraid to enter the tent, he threw it to me, and with one blow I put the snake beyond the power of doing harm. It was not more than two feet long, but thick and club- shaped, and with a back covered with green, brown and yellow scales, very hard and bright. The Arabs, who by this time had come to the rescue, said it was a most venomous creature, its bite causing instant death. "Allah kereemf" (God is merciful !) I exclaimed, and they all heartily respond ed : " God be praised ! " They said that the occurrence de noted long life to me. Although no birds were to be seen at the time, not ten minutes had elapsed before two large crows appeared in the air. After wheeling over us once or twice, they alighted near the snake. At first, they walked around it at a distance, occasionally exchanging glances, and turning up their heads in a shrewd manner, which plainly said : " No you don't, old fellow! want to make us believe you're dead, do you ? " They bantered each other to take hold of it first, and at last the boldest seized it suddenly by the tail, jumped back ward two or three feet and then let it fall He looked at the other, as much as to say : " If he's not dead, it's a capital sham ! " The other made a similar essay, after which they alternately dragged and shook it, and consulted some time, before they agreed that it was actually dead. One of them then took it by the tail and sailed off through the air, its scales glittering in the sun as it dangled downward. WE ENCOUNTER A SAND-STORM. 411 On the third day we left the plain and entered on a rcgior of black, stony ridges, with grass and thorns in the long hcl- lows between them. . The sky was so clear that the nt.oon (in her last quarter) was visible until nearly noon. About ten o'clock, from one of the porphyry hills, I caught sight of Djebel Attshan, or the Mountain of Thirst, which crosses the middle of the Beyooda. It was in the north and north-west, apparently about thirty miles distant. During the morning I saw four beautiful gazelles, not more than a stone's throw distant. One of them was lame, which induced me to believe that I could catch it. I got down from my cameJ and crept stealthily to the crest of the ridge, but when I looked down the other side, no gazelle was to be seen. Half a dozen nar row gullies branched away among the loose mounds of st-ones, and further search would have been useless. At noon we reached another and different region. The grass and thorns disappeared, and the swells of black gravel gave place to long drifts of bright yellow sand which extended on all sides as far as the eye could reach. We toiled on, over drift after drift, but there was still the same dreary yellow waste, whitening in the distance under the glare of the sun. At first, the air was so tremulous with the radiated heat, that the whole landscape glittered and wavered like the sea, and the brain became giddy from gazing on its unsteady lines. But as the wind began to blow more violently, this disappeared. The eky then became obscured nearly to the zenith, with a dull purple haze, arising from the myriads of fine grains of sand with which the air was filled. The sun became invisible, although there were no clouds in the sky, and we seemed to b journeying under a firmament of rusty copper. The drifts 412 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. were constantly forming and changing shape, and the sand vibrated along their edges or scudded in swift ripples over th< plain, with that dry, sharp sound one hears in winter, when tho " North-wind's masonry" is going on. The air was with ering in its fierce heat and occasioned intense thirst, winch, fortunately, we were able to relieve. The storm grew more violent and the burning labyrinths of sand more intricate, as we advanced. The path was hidden under drifts five or six feet in height, and the tall yellow walls were creeping every minute nearer, to cover it completely. The piles of stones, however, which the Arabs have made on the tops of the ridges and replace as often as they are thrown down, guided us, and after three hours and a half in a spot which might serve as the fourth circle of Dante's Hell, we emerged on the open plain and saw again the Mountain of Thirst, which had been hidden all this time. The camels, which were restless and uneasy in the sand, now walked more cheerily. The sun came out again, but the sky still retained its lurid purple hue. We all drank deeply of the brown leathery contents of our water-skins and pushed steadily onward till camping-time, at sunset. While the storm lasted, the Arabs crouched close under the flanks of the camels and sheltered themselves from the sand. Achmet and the Dongolese merchant unrolled their turbans and muffled them around their faces, but on following their exam ple I experienced such a stifling sensation of heat that I at once desisted, and rode with my head exposed as usual. We halted in a meadow-like hollow, full of abundant grass, in which the weary camels made amends for their hardships. The wind howled so fiercely around my tent that I went to eleep expecting to have it blown about my ears before morn THE WELLS OF DJEEKDUD. 413 Ing. Djebel Attshan was dimly visible in the starlight, and we saw the light of fires kindled by the Arabs who live at the wells of Djeekdud. Said was anxious to go on to the wells and have a carouse with the natives, and when I refused threatened to leave me and go on alone to Merawe. " Go ! ' said I, " just as soon as you like " but this was the very thing he did not want. The heat which I had absorbed through the day began to ooze out again as the temperature of the air fell, and my body glowed until midnight like a mass of molten metal. On lifting up my blanket, that night, a large scorpion tumbled out, but scampered away so quickly that we could not kill him. We were up betimes the next morning, and off for Bit Djeekdud. At ten o'clock we entered a wide valley extending to the southern base of the mountains. It was quite over grown with bushy tufts of grass and scattering clumps of trees. Herds of goats and sheep, with a few camels and don- keys, were browsing over its surface, and I saw the Arab herds men at a distance. The wells lie in a narrow wady, shut in by the mountains, about two miles east of the caravan track. We therefore halted in the shade of a spreading mimosa, and sent Said and the guide's brother with the water-skins. I took my breakfast leisurely, and was lying on my back, half lulled to sleep by the singing of the wind, when the Congolese arrived, He gave us to drink from his fresh supply of water, and in formed us that the wells in the valley were not good, but that there was a deposit in the rocks above, which was pure and sweet. I therefore sent Ali off in all haste on one of my dromedaries, to have my skins filled from the latter place, which occasioned a further delay of two hours. An Arat 414 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. family of the small Saurat tribe, which inhabits that region, was encamped at a little distance, but did not venture tc approach. AH described the well as a vast natural hollow in the porphyry rock, in the centre of a basin, or valley, near the top of the mountain. The water is held as in a tank ; it is from twenty to thirty feet deep, and as clear as crystal. The taste is deliciously pure and fresh. If I had known this in time, I should have visited the place. The valley of Djeekdud is about two miles broad, inclosed on the north by the dark-red porphyry rocks of the Mountain of Thirst, and on the south by a smaller group of similar formation. It is crossed in two places by broad strata of red granite. As water can readily be obtained in any part of it by digging, the whole of it is capable of cultivation. Leaving our halting place, we journeyed westward through a gate of the mountains into a broader valley, where numerous herds of sheep were feeding. I saw but few Arabs, and those were mostly children, who had charge of the herds. The tribe resides principally in the mountains, on account of great er security against the attacks of enemies. The afternoon was hot like all preceding ones, and my Arabs drank immense quantities of water. We kept on our course until five o'clock, when we encamped opposite a broad valley, which broke into the mountains at right angles to their course. It was a wild spot, and the landscape, barren as it was, possessed much natural beauty. During the afternoon we left the high road to Ambukol, and took a branch track leading to Merawe, which lay more to the northward. The nest morning, after skirting the porphyry range fra DESERT INTGXKUTIDB; 416 several hours, we entered a narrow valley leading into its depths. The way was stony and rough, and we travelled for three hours, constantly ascending, up the dry bed of a summei stream. The mountains rose a thousand feet above us in some places. Near the entrance of the valley, we passed an Arab watering a large flock of sheep at a pool of green water which lay in a hollow of the rocks. After ascending the pass for nearly four hours, we crossed the summit ridge and enter ed on a high table-land, eight or ten miles in length and entirely surrounded by branches of the mountain chain. The plain was thinly covered with grass, mimosas and nebbuk, among which a single camel was browsing. At night we reached the opposite side, and encamped at the foot of a lofty black spur of the mountains, not far from a well which Moham med called Bir Abou-Seray. During the night I was troubled with a heavy feeling in the head, and found it almost impossible to sleep. I arose with a sensation of giddiness, which continued all day. At times I found it very difficult to maintain my seat on the dromedary It required a great effort to keep my eyes open, as the suncshine increased the symptoms. This condition affected my mind in a singular manner. Past scenes in my life revived, with so strong an impression of reality, that I no longer knew where I was. The hot, yellow landscape around me, was a dream ; the cries of my camel-drivers were fantastic Rounds which my imagination had conjured up. After a most bewildering and fatiguing day, I drank several cups of strong tea, rolled myself in a thick cotton quilt, and sweat to distrac tion until morning. The moisture I lost relieved my head, aa a showar clears a sultry sky, and the symptoms gradually left 416 TOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. me. Whether they were caused by breathing a more rarefied atmosphere, for the plain was nearly fifteen hundred feet above the Nile level in a heat more than usually intense, or by an attack of that malady which Richardson aptly calls the " intoxication of the Desert," I cannot decide. After leaving Bir Abou-Seray, we continued our slow de scent of the northern side of the mountain range, by a wind ing valley, following the dry bed of a summer river. The mountains were a thousand feet high and linked in regular ranges, which had a general north-east and south-west direc tion. The landscapes of the day were all exceedingly wild and picturesque. The vegetation was abundant along the banks of the river-bed, the doum-palm appearing occasionally among the groves of thorn and nebbuk. In some places the river had washed the bases of the mountains and laid bare their huge strata of rock, whose round black masses glittered in the sunshine, showing the gradual polish of the waves. Towards noon the pass enlarged into a broad plain, six miles in diameter, and entirely bounded by mountains. To the north east it opened into another and larger plain, across whose blue surface rose the pyramidal peaks of a higher mountain chain than I had yet seen. Some of them were upwards of two thousand feet in height. The scenery here was truly grand and imposing. Beyond the plain we passed into a broader valley, girdled by lower hills. The river-bed, which we crossed from time to time, increased in breadth and showed a more dense vegetation on its banks. We expected to have reached another well, but there was no sign of it at sunset, and as I had already found that my guide, Mohammed, knew nothing of the road, I encamped at once. A BARBARIC SCENE. 417 "We arose by daybreak, hoping to reach the Nile. After somewhat more than two hours' journey, we met a caravan ot about three hundred camels, laden with bales of cotton drill ings, for the clothing of the new regiments of soldiers then being raised in Soudan. The foremost camels were a mile from Bir Khannik, while the hindmost were still drinking at the well. The caravan had Kababish drivers and guides wild, long-haired, half-naked Arabs, with spears in their hands and shields of hippopotamus hide on their shoulders. They told us we were still a day and a half from Merawe. We rode on to the well, which was an immense pit, dug in the open plain. It was about fifty feet deep, and the Arabs were oblig ed to draw the water in skins let down with ropes. The top curved into the well like a shallow bowl, from the earth con tinually crumbling down, and the mouth of the shaft was pro tected by trunks of trees, on which the men stood while they drew the water. Around the top were shallow basins lined with clay, out of which the camels drank. The fierce Kababish were shouting and gesticulating on all sides as we rode up some leading the camels to kneel and drink, some holding the water-skins, and others brandishing their spears and swords in angry contention. Under the hot sun, on the sandy plain, it was a picture truly mid- African in all its features. The water had an insipid, brackish taste, and I was very glad that I had prevented my Arabs from drinking all we had brought from the porphyry fountain of Djeekdud We watered our camels, however, which detained us long enough to see a fight be tween two of the Kababish guides. There were so many persons to interfere that neither could injure the other, but the whole group of actors and sympathizers struggling on 18* 418 JOURNEY 10 CENTRAL AFRICA. the brink of the well, came near being precipitated to tht bottom. Our road now turned to the north, through a gap in th low hills and over a tract of burnt, barren, rolling wastes of white sand and gravel Towards evening we came again to the river-bed, here broad and shallow. This part of the Desert is inhabited by the Saurat and Huni tribes, and we saw large herds of sheep and goats wherever the halfeh grass abounded. At sunset there were no signs of the Nile, so I had the ten 1 pitched in the middle of the dry river-channel. In front of us, on a low mound, the red walls of a ruined building shone in the last rays of the sun. The next day the eighth since leaving El Metemma was intensely hot and sultry, without a breath of air stirring. While walking towards the ruins, I came upon two herds of gazelles, so tame that I approached within thirty yards, and could plainly see the expression of surprise and curiosity in their dark eyes. When I came too near, they would bleat like lambs, bound away a little distance and then stop again. The building, which stood on the stony slope of a hill, was sur rounded with loose walls, in a dilapidated condition. The foundation, rising about six feet above the earth, is stone, above which the walls are of brick, covered with a thin coating of cement. The building is about eighty fret in length by forty in breadth, but the walls which remain are not more than twenty feet high. It is believed to have been an ancient Cop tic monastery, and probably dates from the earlier ages of Christianity. The ruins of other houses, built of loose stones, surround the principal edifice, which was undoubtedly a church and the ground around is strewn with fragments of burnt brick DISTANT VIEW OF TILE NILE. 41 and pottery. There is a churchyard near at hand, with tombstones which contain inscriptions both in Greek and Coptic. We rode slowly down the broad river-bed, which gradually widened, and after two or three hours saw far in advance a line of red, glowing sand-hills, which I knew could not be on the southern side of the Nile. Still we went on, under the clear, hot sky, the valley widening into a plain the while, and I sought anxiously for some sign that the weary Desert was crossed. Finally, I saw, above the endless clusters of thorns, a line of darker, richer green, far away in the burning distance, and knew it to be a grove of date-palms the glorious signal of the Nile. This put new life into me, and thenceforth I felt the scorching heat no longer. To the north, beyond the palms, appeared an isolated mountain of singular form the summit being flat and the sides almost perpendicular. It must be Djebel Berkel, I thought, and I told Mohammed so, but he said it was not. Just then, I saw an Arab herdsman among the thorns and called out to him to know the name of tho mountain. " Djebel Berkel," said he. He then accosted Mo hammed : "Where are you going?" " To Merawe." "Are you the guide ?" he again inquired, bursting into a loud laugh. " You are a fine guide ; there is Merawe ! " pointing in a di rection very different from that we were going. This complet ed the old fellow's discomfiture. We were still five or six miles distant from the river and took a random path over the plain, in the direction indicated by the herdsman. The palms rose higher and showed a richer foliage ; mud walls appeared in their shade, and a tall minaret on the opposite bank of tho river pointed out the location of the town. I rode down ou* 420 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. of the drear, hot sand the sea where I had been drifting for seven wearisome days to the little village of Abdom, embow- ered in a paradise of green ; palms above, dazzling wheat-fields dark cotton-fields and blossoming Ixjans below. A blessed resting-place ! OUR WHEREABOUTS. 421 Bhekh Abd e'-DjebaL CHAPTER XXXIII. THREE DAYS AT NAPATA. Dur whereabouts Slu-kh Mohammed Abd e'-Djebal My residence at Abdom Cross ing the Elver A Superb Landscape The Town of Merawe Eide to Djebel Berkai The Temples of Napata Ascent of the Mountain Ethiopian Panorama Losl and Found The Pyramids The Governor of Merawe A Scene in the Divan The Shekh and I The Governor Dines with me Euins of the City of Napata A Talk about Eeligious Engaging Camels for Wadi-IIalfa The Shekh's Parting Blessing. "Under the palm-trees by the river's side." KEATS. ABDOM, the friendly haven into which I had drifted after tn eight days' voyage in the fiery sea of the Desert, is a village on the eastern bank of the Nile, which, after passing Abou- Hammed, flows to the south-west and south untill it readies 422 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. the frontier of Dongola. On the opposite bank is Merawe, the former capital of Dar Shygheea, which must not be confounded with the ancient Meroe, the ruins of which, near Shendy, I have already described. True, the identity of the names at first deceived antiquarians, who supposed the temples and pyra mids in this neighborhood to have belonged to the capital of the old Hierarchy of Meroe ; but it is now satisfactorily estab lished that they mark the site of Napata, the capital of Ethio pia up to the time of the Csesars. It was the limit of the cele brated expedition of the Roman soldiers, under Petronius. Djebel Berkel, at whose base the principal remains are found, is in lat. 18 35', or thereabouts. I was welcomed to Abdom by the Shekh or holy man of the place, who met me on the verge of the Desert, and con ducted me to the best of his two houses. Shekh Mohammed, Abd e'-Djebal (Mohammed, the Slave of the Mountains), was a dignified old man of sixty, with a gray beard and brown com plexion, and was the owner of a water-mill, several fields of wheat and cotton, and an abundance of palm-trees. He had two wives, each of whom, with her family, occupied a separate house a great mark of discretion on the part of Mohammed. Domestic quiet was thus secured to him, while he possessed that in which the Arab most glories and rejoices a numerous family of children. His youngest wife, a woman of thirty, immediately vacated the house on my arrival, and took up her temporary residence in a tent of palm-matting, with her four children. The dwelling into which I was ushered was a square structure of clay, one story high, with one door and no windows. It had a flat roof of palm logs, covered with thatch, and the inside walls were hung with large mats, plaited with MT RESIDENCE AT ABD^M. , 4?3 brilliantly-colored palm blades. Fancy vessels of baked clay, baskets, ostrich eggs, and other ornaments were suspended from the roof in slings of palm fibre, and a very large white mat covered half the floor. Here my bed was laid, and my camp-stool, placed in front of it, formed a table. The Shekh, who was with me nearly all the time of my stay, sat on the floor in front of me, and never entered or departed from the house, without saying " Bismillahi" ("in the name of God"), as he crossed the threshold. Outside of the door was a broad divan, running along the north side of the house. It therefore pointed towards Mecca and was a most agreeable praying-place for the holy man. On my arrival, after first having taken a bath in the Nile, I sat there the rest of the day, tasting the luxury of coolness and shade, and steeping my eyes in the balm of refreshing colors. A clump of some twenty date-trees grew in front of the door, throwing over us a gorgeous canopy of leaves. Fields of wheat in head, waist-deep, surrounded tho house, insulating it in a sea of greenness, over which I saw the hills ot the Desert, no longer terrible, but soft and fair and far as clouds smouldering in the roseate fires of an Eastern Bunrise. Very early the next morning the Shekh and his sons and their asses were in readiness to accompany me to Djebel Berkel. We walked down between the Shekh's gardens to the Nile, where the ferry-boat was waiting to convey us across. I was enchanted with the picture which the shores presented. The air was filled with a light, silvery vapor (a characteristic of sultry weather in Africa), softening the deep, rich color of the landscape. The eastern bank was one bower of palms, stand ing motionless, in perfect groups, above the long, sloping banks 424 , JOURNEY 1C CENTRAL AFRICA. of beans in blossom. Such grace and glory, such silence and repose, 1 thought I had never before seen in the vegetable world. Opposite, the ruined palaces of the old Shygheean Kings and the mud and stone hovels of modern Meiawe rose in picturesque piles above the river bank and below the red sandstone bluffs of the Nubian Desert, which overhung them and poured the sand through deep rents and fissures upon their very roofs. The mosque, with a tall, circular minaret, stood embowered in a garden of date-palms, under one of the highest bluffs. Up the river, which stretched glittering into the dis tance, the forest of trees shut out the view of the Desert, ex cept Djebel Berkel, which stood high and grand above them, the morning painting its surface with red lights and purple shadows. Over the misty horizon of the river rose a single conical peak, far away. The sky was a pale, sleepy blue, and all that I saw seemed beautiful dream-pictures every where grace, beauty, splendor of coloring, steeped in Elysian repose. It is impossible to describe the glory of that passage across the river. It paid me for all the hardships of the Desert. When we touched the other shore and mounted the little donkeys we had taken across with us, the ideal character of the scene disappeared, but left a reality picturesque and poetic enough. The beasts were without bridles, and were only fur nished with small wooden saddles, without girths or stirrups. One was obliged to keep his poise, and leave the rest to the donkey, who, however, suffered himself to be guided by strik ing the side of his neck. We rode under a cluster of ruined stone buildings, one of which occupied considerable space, ris ing pylon-like, to the height of thirty feet. The Shekh in formed me that it had been the palace of a Shygheean king, be. THE SCENERY OF MERAWE. 42 fore the Turks got possession of the country. It was whollj dilapidated, but a few Arab families were living in the stone dwellings which surround it. These clusters of shattered buildings extend for more than a mile along the river, and are all now known as Merawe. Our road led between fields of ripening wheat, rolling in green billows before the breeze, on one side, and on the other, not more than three yards distant, the naked sandstone walls of the Desert, where a blade of grass never grew. Over the wheat, along the bank of the Nile, rose a long forest of palms, so thickly ranged that the eye could scarcely penetrate their dense, cool shade ; while on the other hand the glaring sand-hills showed their burning shoulders above the bluffs. It was a most violent contrast, and yet, withal, there was a certain harmony in these opposite features. A remarkably fat man, riding on a donkey, met us. The Shekh compared him to a hippopotamus, and said that his fat came from eating mutton and drinking om biltril day and night, At the end of the town we came to a sort of guard-house, shaded by two sycamores. A single soldier was in attendance, and apparently tired of having nothing to do, as he immediate ly caught his donkey and rode with us to Djebel Berkel. We now approached the mountain, which is between three and four miles from the town. It rises from out the sands of the Nubian Desert, to the height of five hundred feet, present- ing a front completely perpendicular towards the river. It is inaccessible on all sides except the north, which in one place has an inclination of 45. Its scarred and shattered walls of naked standstone stand up stern and sublime in the midst of the hot and languid landscape. As we approached, a group of pyramids appeared on the brow of a sand-hill to the left, and 1 420 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. discerned at the base of the mountain aeveral isolated pillars, the stone-piles of ruined pylons, and other remains of temples. The first we reached was at the south-eastern corner of the mountain. Amid heaps of sandstone blocks and disjointed segments of pillars, five columns of an exceedingly old form Btill point out the court of a temple, whose adyta are hewn within in the mountain. They are not more than ten feet high and three in diameter, circular, and without capital or abacus, unless a larger block, rudely sculptured with the out lines of a Typhon-head, may be considered as such. The doorway is hurled down and defaced, but the cartouches of kings may still be traced on th fragments. There are three chambers in the rock, the walls of which are covered with sculptures, for the most part representing the Egyptian divini ties. The temple was probably dedicated to Typhon, or the Evil Principle, as one of the columns is still faced with a caryatid of the short, plump, big-mouthed and bat-eared figure, which elsewhere represents him. Over the entrance is the sacred winged globe, and the ceiling shows the marks of bril liant coloring. The temple is not remarkable for its architec ture, and can only be interesting in an antiquarian point of view. It bears some resemblance in its general style to the Temple-palace of Goorneh, at Thebes. The eastern base of the mountain, which fronts the Nile, is strewn with hewn blocks, fragments of capitals, immense masses of dark bluish-gray granite, and other remains, which prove that a large and magnificent temple once stood there, The excavations made by Lepsius and others have uncovered the substructions sufficiently to show the general plan of two buildings. The main temple was at the north-eastern corner CLIMBING DJEBEL BERKEL. 427 of the mountain, under the highest point of its perpendiculai crags. The remains of its small propylons stand in advance, about two hundred yards from the rock, going towards which you climb the mound formed by the ruins of a large pylon, at the foot of which are two colossal ram-headed sphinxes of blue granite, buried to their necks in the sand. Beyond this is a portico and pillared court, followed by other courts and laby rinths of chambers. Several large blocks of granite, all more or less broken and defaced, lie on the surface or half quarried from the rubbish. They are very finely polished and contain figures of kings, evidently arranged in genealogical order, each accompanied with his name. The shekh had a great deal to tell me of the Franks, who dug up all the place, and set the people to work at hauling away the lions and rams, which they carried off in ships. I looked in vain for the celebrated pedes tal ; it has probably become the spoil of Lepsius. While taking a sketch of the mountain from the eastern Bide, I found the heat almost insupportable. The shekh look ed over my shoulder all the time, and at the end pronounced it temam " perfect." I then proposed climbing the moun tain, as he had said one could see the whole world from the top. He was bound to go with me wherever I went, but shrank from climbing El Berkel. It would require two hours, he said, to go up. After eating a slice of watermelon in the shade of one of the pillars, I took off my jacket and started alone, and very soon he was at my side, panting and sweating with the exertion. We began at the point most easy of ascent vet found it toilsome enough. After passing the loose frag tueuts which lie scattered around the base, we came upon s steep slope of sliding sand and stones, blown from the desert 428 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. We sank in this nearly to the knees, and slid backward at each step at least half as far as we had stepped forward. We were obliged to rest every three or four steps, and take breath, moistening the sand meanwhile with a rain of sweat-drops. " Surely there is no other mountain in the world so high aa this," said the shekh, and I was ready to agree with him. At last we reached the top, a nearly level space of about ten acres. There was a pleasant breeze here, but the Ethiopian world below was dozing in an atmosphere of blue heat. There was too much vapor in the air to see the farthest objects distinctly, and the pyramids of Noori, further up the river, on its eastern bank, were not visible. The Nile lay curved in the middle of the picture like a flood of molten glass, on either side its palmy " knots of paradise," then the wheat fields, lying like slabs of emerald against the tawny sands, that rolled in hot drifts and waves and long ridgy swells to the horizon north and south, broken Uere and there by the jagged porphyry peaks. Before me, to the south-east, were the rugged hills of tha Beyooda ; behind me, to the north and west, the burning wil derness of the Great Nubian Desert. As I sought for my glass, to see the view more distinctly, I became aware that I had lost my pocket-book on the way up. As it contained some money and all my keys, I was not a little troubled, and mentioned my loss to Shekh Mohammed We immediately returned in search of it, sliding down the Band and feeling with our hands and feet therein. We had made more than half the descent, and I began to consider the search hopeless, when the fhekh, who was a little in advance, cried out : " Sidi ! God be praised ! God be praised ! " He eaw the corner sticking oat of the sand, took it up kissed it, THE PYRAMIDS. 429 and laid it on one eye, while he knelt with his old head turned up, that I might take it off". I tied it securely in a corner of inj ehawl and we slid to the bottom, where we found Achmet and the young shekhs in the shade of a huge projecting cliff, with breakfast spread out on the sand. It was now noon, and only the pyramids remained to be seen on that side of the river. The main group is about a third of a mile from the mountain, on the ridge of a sand-hill. There are six pyramids, nearly entire, and the foundations of others. They are almost precisely similar to those of the real Meroe, each having a small exterior chamber on the eastern side. Like the latter, they are built of sandstone blocks, only filled at the corners, which are covered with a hem or mould ing ; the sides of two of them are convex. On all of them the last eight or ten courses next the top have been smoothed to follow the slope of the side. It was no doubt intended to finish them all in this manner. One of them has also the cor ner moulding rounded, so as to form a scroll, like that on the cornice of many of the Egyptian temples. They are not more than fifty feet in height, with very narrow bases. One of them, indeed, seems to be the connecting link between the pyramid and the obelisk. Nearer the river is an older pyra mid, though no regular courses of stone are to be seen any longer. These sepulchral remains, however, are much inferior to those of Meroe. The oldest names found at Napata are those of Amenoph III. and Kemeses II. (1630 B. C. and 1400 B. C.) both of whom subjected Nubia to their rule. The remains of Ethi opian art, however, go no further than King Tirkaka, 730 B. C. the Ethiopian monarch, who, in the time of Hezekiah, 430 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. marched into Palestine to meet Sennacherib, King of Assj ria Napata, therefore, occupies an intermediate place in history between Thebes and Meroe, showing the gradual southward progress of Egyptian art and civilization. It is a curious fact that the old religion of Egypt should have been here met face to face, and overthrown, by Christianity, which, starting in the mountains of Abyssinia, followed the course of the Nile north ward. In the sixth century of our era, Ethiopia and Nubia were converted to Christianity and remained thus until the fourteenth century, when they fell beneath the sword of Islam. We rode back to the town on our uneasy donkey saddles. As I wanted small money, the shekh proposed my calling on Achmedar Kashif, the Governor of Merawe and Ambukol, and asking him to change me some mcdjids. We accordingly rodo under the imposing stone piles of the old kings to the residence of the Kashif, a two-story mud house with a portico in front, covered with matting. It was the day for the people of the neighborhood to pay their tulbeh, or tax, and some of his officers were seated on the ground in the shade, settling this ousincss with a crowd of Arabs. I went up stairs to the divan, and found the Kashif rolling himself in his shawl for dinner, which his slaves had just brought up. He received me cordially, and I took my seat beside him on the floor and dipped my fingers into the various dishes. There was a pan of baked fish, which was excellent, after which came a tray of scarlet watermelon slices, coffee, pipes, and lastly a cup of hot sugar syrup. He readily promised to change me the money, and afterwards accepted my invitation to dinner. I stayed an hour longer, and had an opportunity of witness ing some remarkable scenes. A woman came in to complain A SCENE IN THE DIVAN. 481 of her husband, who had married another woman, leaving hei with one child. She had a cow of her own. which he had forcibly taken and given to his new wife. The Kashif listen cd to her story, and then detaching his seal from his button hole, gave it to an attendant, as a summons which the delin quent dare not disobey. A company of men afterwards came to adjust some dispute about a water-mill. They spoke so fast and in such a violent and excited manner, that I could not comprehend the nature of the quarrel; but the group they made was most remarkable. They leaned forward with flash ing teeth and eyes, holding the folds of their long mantles with one hand, while they dashed and hurled the other in the air, in the violence of their contention. One would suppose that they must all perish the next instant by spontaneous combus tion. The Kashif was calmness itself all the while, and after getting the particulars a feat which I considered marvellous quietly gave his decision. Some of the party protested against it, whereupon he listened attentively, but, finding no reason to change his judgment, repeated it. Still the Arabs screamed and gesticulated. He ejaculated imsliee ! (" get away ! ") in a thundering tone, dealt the nearest ones a vigorous blow with his fist, and speedily cleared the divan. The Kashif offered to engage camels and a guide for New Dongola, in case I chose to go by the Nubian Desert a journey of three or four days, through a terrible waste of sand and rocks, without grass or water. The route being new, had some attractions, but I afterwards decided to adhere to my original plan of following the course of the river to Ambukol and Old Dongola. I made preparations for giving the Kashif a handsome dinner. I had mutton and fowls, and Achmet procu;c- eggs 432 JOURNET TO CENTRAL AFRICA. milk and vegetables, and set his whole available force to work Meanwhile the shekh and I sat on the divan outside the door and exchanged compliments. He sold me a sword from Bornou, which he had purchased from an Arab merchant who had worn it to Mecca. He told me he considered me as his two ejes, and would give me one of his sons, if I desired Then he rendered me an account of his family, occasionally pointing out the members thereof, as they passed to and fro among the palms. He asked me how many children I had, and I was obliged to confess myself wholly his inferior in this respect. " God grant," said he, " that when you go back to your own country, you may have many sons, just like that one," pointing to a naked Cupidon of four years old, of a rich chocolate-brown color. " God grant it," I was obliged to reply, conformably to the rules of Arab politeness, but I men- tally gave the words the significance of " God forbid it ! " The shekh, who was actually quite familiar with the ruins in Ethiopia, and an excellent guide to them, informed me that they were four thousand years old ; that the country was at that time in possession of the English, but afterwards the Arabs drove them out. This corresponds with an idea very prevalent in Egypt, that the temples were built by the fore fathers of the Frank travellers, who once lived there, and that is the reason why the Franks make a hadj, or pilgrimage to see them. I related to the shekh the history of the warlike Queen Candace, who once lived there, in her capital of Napata, and he was so much interested in the story that he wrote it down, transforming her name into Kandasiyeh. Some later traveller will be surprised to find a tradition of the aforesaid i|ueen, no doubt with many grotesque embellishments, told him on the site of her capital. VISIT FROM THE KASIIIF. 439 Dinner was ready at sunset, the appointed time, but the Kashif did not come. I waited one hour, two hours ; still he 3ame not. Thereupon I invited Achmet and the shekh, and vre made an excellent dinner in Turkish style. It was just over, and I was stretched out without jacket or tarboosh, en joying my pipe, when we heard the ferrymen singing on the river below, and soon afterwards the Kashif appeared at the door. He apologized, saying he had been occupied in hia divan. I had dinner served again, and tasted the dishes to encourage him, but it appeared that he had not been able to keep his appetite so long, and had dined also. Still, he ate enough to satisfy me that he relished my dishes, and after wards drank a sherbet of sugar and vinegar with great gusto. He had three or four attendants, and with him came a Berber merchant, who had lately been in Khartoum. I produced my sketch-book and maps, and astonished the company for three hours. I happened to have a book of Shaksperean views, which I had purchased in Stratford-on-Avon. The picture of Shakspere gave the Kashif and shekh great delight, and the former considered the hovel in which the poet was born, " very grand." The church in Stratford they thought a marvellous building, and the merchant confessed that it was greater than Lattif Pasha's palace in Khartoum, which he had supposed to be the finest building in the world. The next morning the shekh proposed going with me to the remains of a temple, half an hour distant, on the eastern bank of the river ; the place, he said, where the people found the little images, agates and scarabei, which they brought to ine in great quantities. After walking a mile and a half over the sands, which have here crowded the vegetation to the very 19 434 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. water's edge, we came to a broad mound of stones, broken bricks and pottery, with a foundation wall of heavy limestone blocks, along the western side. There were traces of doors and niches, and on the summit of the mound the pedestals of columns similar to those of El Berkel. From this place com menced a waste of ruins, extending for nearly two miles to wards the north-west, while the breadth, from east to west, was about equal. For the most part, the buildings were en tirely concealed by the sand, which was filled with fragments of pottery and glass, and with shining pebbles of jasper, agate and chalcedony. Half a mile further, we struck on another mound, of greater extent, though the buildings were entirely level with the earth. The foundations of pillars were abun dant, and fragments of circular limestone blocks lay crumbling to pieces in the rubbish. The most interesting object was a mutilated figure of blue granite, of which only a huge pair of wings could be recognized. The shekh said that all the Frank travellers who came there broke off a piece and carried it away with them. I did not follow their example. Towards the river were many remains of crude brick walls, and the ground was strewn with pieces of excellent hard-burnt bricks. The Band evidently conceals many interesting objects. I saw in one place, where it had fallen in, the entrance to a chamber, wholly below the surface. The Arabs were at work in various parts of the plain, digging up the sand, which they filled in baskets and carried away on donkeys. The shekh said it con tained salt, and was very good to make wheat grow, whence 1 inferred that the earth is nitrous. We walked for an hour or two over the ruins, finding everywhere the evidence that a large capital had once stood on the spot. The bits of water- WK COMPARE UEUOIOSS. 435 jars which we picked up were frequently painted and glazed with much skill. The soil was in many places wholly oompos- cd of the debris of the former dwellings. This was, without doubt, the ancient Napata, of which Djebel Berkel was only the necropolis. Napata must have been one of the greatest cities of Ancient Africa, after Thebes, Memphis and Carthage. I felt a peculiar interest in wandering over the site of that half-forgotten capital, whereof the ancient historians knew lit tle more than we. That so little is said by them in relation to it is somewhat surprising, notwithstanding its distance from the Roman frontier. In the afternoon, Achmet, with great exertion, backed by all the influence of the Kashif, succeeded in obtaining ten pias tres worth of bread. The latter sent me the shekh of the camels, who furnished me with three animals and three men, to Wadi Haifa, at ninety-five piastres apiece. They were to accompany my caravan to Ambukol, on the Congolese frontier where the camels from Khartoum were to be discharged. 1 spent tho. rest- of the day talking with the shekh on religious matters. He ave me the history of Christ, in return for which I relattri to him that of the Soul of Mahomet, from one hundred and ten thousand years before the Creation of the World, until his birth, according to the Arab Chronicles This quite overcame him. He seized my hand and kissed it with fervor, acknowledging me as the more holy man of the iwo. He said he had read the Books of Moses, the Psalms of David and the Gospel of Christ, but liked David best, whose urords flowed like the sound of the zumarra, or Arab flute. To illustrate it, he chanted one of the Psalms in a series of not unmusical cadences. He then undertook to repeat the ninety. 436 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. attributes of God, and thought he succeeded, but I noticed that several of the epithets were repeated more than once. The north wind increased during the afternoon, and towards night blew a very gale. The sand came in through the door in such quantities that I was obliged to move my bed to a more sheltered part of my house. Numbers of huge black beetles, as hard and heavy as grape-shot, were dislodged from their holes and dropped around me with such loud raps that 1 was scarcely able to sleep. The sky was dull and dark, hardly a star to be seen, and the wind roared in the palms like a November gale let loose among the boughs of a Northern forest. It was a grand roar, drowning the sharp rustle of the leaves when lightly stirred, and rocked my fancies as glorious ly as the pine. In another country than Africa, I should have predicted rain, hail, equinoctial storms, or something of the kind, but there I went to sleep with a positive certainty of sunshine on the morrow. I was up at dawn, and had breakfast by sunrise ; neverthe less, we were obliged to wait a long while for the camels, or rather the pestiferous Kababish who went after them. The new men and camels were in readiness, as the camel-shekh came over the river to see that all was right. The Kashif sent me a fine black ram, as provision for the journey. Finally, towards eight o'clock, every thing was in order and my cara van began to move. I felt real regret at leaving the pleasant spot, especially the beautiful bower of palms at the door of my house. When my effects had been taken out, the shekh called his eldest son Saad, his wife Fatima, and their two young sons, ';o make their salaams. They all kissed my hand, and I then gave thn old man and Saad my backsheesh for their services THE SHEKH 'S BLESSING. 431 The shekh took the two gold medjids readily, without any hypocritical show of reluctance, and lifted my hand to his lips and forehead. When all was ready, he repeated the Fatha t or opening paragraph of the Koran, as each camel rose from its knees, in order to secure the blessing of Allah upon our journey. He then took me in his arms, kissed both my cheeks, and with tears in his eyes, stood showering pious phrases after me, till I was out of hearing. With no more vanity or self ishness than is natural to an Arab, Shekh Mohammed Abd e'-Djebal had many excellent qualities, and there arc few of my Central African acquaintances whom I would rattier set igaia 138 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. CHAPTER XXXIV. OLD DONGOLA AND NEW DONGOLA. A ppeanrncs of the Country Korti The Town of Ambukol The Caravan roorstsn lied A Fiery Bide We reach Edabbe An Illuminated Landscape A Tormen Nubian Agriculture Old Dongola The Palace-Mosque of the Nubian Kings A Panorama of Desolation The Old City Nubian Gratitude Another Sand-Storm A Dreary Journey The Approach to Ilandak A House of Doubtful Character The Inmates Journey to El Ordee (New Dongola) Khoorshid Bey Appearance of the Town. I LEFT Abdom on the morning of February twentieth. Our road lay southward, along the edge of the wheat-fields, over whose waves we saw the island-like groups of palms at a little distance. For several miles the bank of the river was covered with a continuous string of villages. After skirting this glori ous garden land for two hours, we crossed a sandy tract, over grown with the poisonous euphorbia, to avoid a curve in the river. During the whole of the afternoon, we travelled along the edge of the cultivated land, and sometimes in the midst of it, obliging my camels to stumble clumsily over the raised trenches which carried water from the river to the distant parts of the fields. Large, ruined forts of unburnt brick, exceeding ly picturesque at a distance, stood at intervals between the desert and the harvest-land. KORTI AND AMRCKOL. 439 The next morning was hot and sultry, with not a breath of air stirring. I rose at dawn and walked ahead for two hours, through thickets of euphorbia higher than my head, and over patches of strong, dark-green grass. The saJcias were groan ing all along the shore, and the people every where at work in the fields. The wheat was in various stages of growth, from the first thick green of the young blades to the full head. Barley was turning a pale yellow, and the dookhn, the heads of which had already been gathered, stood brown and dry. Djebel Deeka, on my right, rose bold and fair above the lines of palms, and showed a picturesque glen winding in between its black-purple peaks. It was a fine feature of the landscape, which would have been almost too soft and lovely without it. Before nine o'clock we passed the large town of Korti, which, however, is rather a cluster of small towns, scattered along between the wheat-fields and the river. Some of the houses were large and massive, and with their blank walls and block-like groups, over which the doum-tree spread its arch and the date-palm hung its feathery crown, made fine African pictures admirable types of the scenery along the Nubian Nile. Beyond the town we came upon a hot, dusty plain, sprinkled with stunted euphorbia, over which I could seo the point where the Nile turns westward. Towards noon we reached the town of Ambukol, which I found to be a large agglomeration of mud and human beings, on the sand-hills, a quarter of a mile from the river. An extensive pile of mud in the centre denoted a fortress or government station of some sort There were a few lazy Arabs sitting on the ground, on the shady side of the walls, and some women going back and forth with water-jars, but otherwise, for all the life it present* 140 JOtftNEY TO CENTRAL AFHICA. ed, the place might have been deserted. The people we met saluted me with much respect, and those who were seated rose and remained standing until I had passed. I did not enter the town, but made direct for a great acacia tree near its west ern end. The nine camels and nine men of my caravan all rested under the shade, and there was room for as many more. A number of Arabs looked on from a distance, or hailed my camel-men, to satisfy their curiosity regarding me, but no one came near or annoyed us in any way. I took breakfast leisure ly on my carpet, drank half a gourd of mareesa, and had still an hour to wait, before the new camels were laden. The Kababish, who had accompanied me from Khartoum, wanted a certificate, so I certified that Said was a good camel-man and Mohammed worthless as a guide. They then drank a parting jar of mareesa, and we went from under the cool acacia into the glare of the fierce sun. Our road all the afternoon was in the Desert, and we were obliged to endure a most intense and sultry heat. The next day I travelled westward over long aTcdbas, 01 /caches of the Desert, covered with clumps of thorns, nebbuk and the jasmine tree. The long mountain on the opposite bank was painted in rosy light against the sky, as if touched with the beams of a perpetual sunrise. My eyes always turn ed to it with a sense of refreshment, after the weary glare of the sand. In the morning there was a brisk wind from the north-east, but towards noon it veered to the south-west, and then to the south, continuing to blow all day with great force. As I rode westward through the hot hours of the afternoon, it played against my face like a sheet of flame. The sky became obscured with a dull, bluish hazo, and A FIERY RIDE. 441 the sands of the Beyooda, on my left, glimmered white and dim, as if swept by the blast of a furnace. There were occa sional gusts that made the flesh shrink as if touched with a hot iron, and I found it impossible to bear the wind full on my face. One who has never felt it, cannot conceive the withering effect of such a heat. The earth seems swept with the first fires of that conflagration beneath which the heavens will shrivel up as a scroll, and you instinctively wonder to see the palms standing green and unsinged. My camel-men crept behind the camels to get away from it, and Achmet and Ali muffled up their faces completely. I could not endure the sultry heat occasioned by such a preparation, and so rode all day with my head in the fire. About three o'clock in the afternoon we approached the Nile again. There was a grove of sont and doum-trees on the bank, surrounding a large quadrangular structure of clay, with square towers at the corners. Grave-yards stretched for nearly a mile along the edge of the Desert, and six large, dome-like heaps of clay denoted the tombs of as many holy men. We next came upon the ruins of a large village, with a fort and a heavy palace-like building of mud. Before reaching Edabbe, the terminus of the caravan route from Kordofan, the same evening, I rode completely around the bend of the Nile, so that my dromedary's head was at last turned towards Wadi Haifa. I was hot, tired, and out of temper, but a gourd of cool water, at the first house we reached, made all right again, There were seven vessels in the river, waiting for the caravans. One had just arrived from Kordofan, and the packages of gum were piled up along the shore. We were immediately followed by the sailors, who were anxious that I should hire their vefr 19* U2 JOURNEl TO CENTKAL AFRICA. sels I rode past the town, which does not contain more than thirty houses in all and had my tent pitched on the river bank. The Nile is here half a mile broad, and a long reach of hia current is visible to the north and south. The opposite bank was high and steep, lined at the water's edge with a belt of beans and lupins, behind which rose a line of palms, and still higher the hills of pale, golden-hued sand, spotted like a leop ard's hide, with clumps of a small mimosa. The ground was a clear, tawny yellow, but the spots were deep emerald. Below the gorgeous drapery of these hills, the river glittered in a dark, purple-blue sheet. The coloring of the mid- African land scapes is truly unparalleled. To me, it became more than a simple sense ; it grew to be an appetite. When, after a jour ney in the Desert, I again beheld the dazzling green palms and wheat-fields of the Nile, I imagined that there was a positive sensation on the retina. I felt, or seemed to feel, physically, the colored rays beams of pure emerald, topaz and amethys tine lustre as they struck the eye. At Edabbe I first made acquaintance with a terrible pest, which for many days afterwards occasioned me much torment a small black fly, as venomous as the musquito, and much more difficult to drive away. I sat during the evening with my head, neck and ears closely bound up, notwithstanding the heat. After the flies left, a multitude of beetles, moths, wing ed ants and other nameless creatures came in their place. I bat and sweltered, murmuring for the waters of Abana and Pharpar, rivers of Damascus, and longing for a glass of sherbet cooled with the snows of Lebanon. We were up with the first glimmering of davn. The aky THE COUNTRY OP DONGOLA. 443 was d ill and hazy, and the sun came up like a shield of rustj copper, as we started. Our path lay through the midst of the cultivated land, sometimes skirting the banks of the Nile, and sometimes swerving off to the belts of sont and euphorbia which shut out the sand. The sakias, turned by a yoke of oxen each, were in motion on the river, and the men were wading through the squares of wheat, cotton and barley, turning the water into them. All farming processes from sowing to reaping, were going on at the same time. The cultivated land was frequently more than a mile in breadth, and all watered from the river. The sakias are taxed four hundred and seventy-five piastres each, notwithstanding the sum fixed by Government is only three hundred. The remain der goes into the private treasuries of the Governors. For thia reason, many persons, unable to pay the tax, emigrate into Kordofan and elsewhere. This may account for the frequent tracts of the finest soil which are abandoned. I passed many fine fields, given up to the halfeh grass, which grew most rank and abundant. My dromedary had a rare time of it, cropping the juicy bunches as he went along. The country is thickly settled, and our road was animated with natives, passing back and forth. About noon, we saw in advance, on the eastern bank of the Nile, a bold, bluff ridge, crowned with a large square building. This the people pointed out to us as the location of Old Dongola. As we approached nearer, a long line of mud buildings appeared along the brow of the hill, whoso northern slope was cumbered with ruins. We left the cara van track and rode down to the ferry place at the river, over a long stretch of abandoned fields, where the cotton was almosl 444 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. choked out with grass, and the beans and lentils were growing wild in bunches. After my tent had been pitched in a cotton- patch, I took a grateful bath in the river, and then crossed in the ferry-boat to the old town. The hill upon which it ia built terminates abruptly in a precipice of red sandstone rock, about a hundred feet in height. Four enormous fragments have been broken off, and lie as they fell, on the edge of the water. A steep path through drifts of sliding yellow sand leads around the cliffs, up to the dwellings. I found the ascent laborious, as the wind, which had veered to the west, was as hot as on the previous day ; but a boatman and one of my camel-men seized a hand each and hauled me up most con veniently. At the summit, all was ruin; interminable lines of walls broken down, and streets filled up with sand. I went first to the Kasr, or Palace, which stands on the highest part of the hill. It is about forty feet in height, having two stories and a broad foundation wall, and is built mostly of burnt brick and sandstone. It is the palace of the former Dongolese Kings, and a more imposing building than one would expect to find in such a place. Near the entrance is an arched pas sage, leading down to some subterranean chambers, which 1 did not explore. It needed something more than the assu rance of an old Nubian, however, to convince me that there was an underground passage from this place to Djebel Berkel. A broad flight of stone steps ascended to the second story, in which are many chambers and passages. The walls are cover ed with Arabic inscriptions, written in the plaster while it waa yet moist. The hall of audience had once a pavement of marble, several blocks of which still remain, and the ceiling is supported in the centre by three shafts of granite, taken :Cron7 THE RUINS OF OLD DONOOLA. 445 some old Egyptian ruin. The floors are covered -with tiles of burnt brick, but the palm -logs which support them have given away in many places, rendering one's footing insecure. Be hind the hall of audience is a passage, with a niche, in each side of which is also an ancient pillar of granite. From the tenor of one of the Arabic inscriptions, it appears that the building was originally designed for a mosque, and that it waa erected in the year 1317, by Saf-ed-deen Abdallah, after a victory over the infidels. I ascended to the roof of the palace, which is flat and paved with stones. The view was most remarkable. The height on which Old Dongola is built, falls off on all sides, inland as well as towards the river, so that to the east one overlooks a wide extent of desert low hills of red sand, stretching away to a dim, hot horizon. To the north, the hill slopes gradually to the Nile, covered with the ruins of old buildings. North east, hardly visible through the sandy haze, rose a high, isolat ed peak, with something like a tower on its summit. To the south and east the dilapidated city covered the top of the hill a mass of ashy-gray walls of mud and stone, for the most part roofless and broken down, while the doors, courts and alleys between them were half choked up with the loose sand blown in from the Desert. The graveyards of the former in habitants extended for more than a mile through the sand, over the dreary hills behind the town. Among them were a great number of conical, pointed structures of clay and stones, from twenty to thirty feet in height. The camel-men said they were the tombs of rossool prophets, or holy men. I eounted twenty-five in that portion of the cemetery which was risible. The whole view was one of entire and absolute deso 446 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. lation, heightened the more by the clouds of sand which filled the air, and which, in their withering heat, seemed to be rain, ing ruin upon the land. I afterwards walked through the city, and was surprised to find many large, strong houses of stone and burnt brick, with Bpacious rooms, the walls of which were plastered and white washed. The lintels of the doors and windows were stone, the roofs in many places, where they still remained, covered with tiles, and every thing gave evidence of a rich and power ful city. Now, probably not more than one-fifth of the houses are inhabited. Here and there the people have spread a roof ing of mats over the open walls, and nestled themselves in the sand. I saw several such places, the doors, or rather entrances to which, were at the bottom of loose sand-hills that constantly slid down and filled the dingy dwellings. In my walk I met but one or two persons, but as we returned again to the river, I saw a group of Dongolese women on the highest part of the cliff. They were calling in shrill tones and waving their hands to some persons in the ferry-boat on the river below, and need ed no fancy to represent the daughters of Old Dongola la menting over its fall. Some Dongolese djellabidt, or merchants, just returned from Kordofan, were in the ferry-boat. One of them showed me a snuff-box which he had bought from a native of Fertit, beyond Dar-Fur. It was formed of the shell of some fruit, with a silver neck attached. By striking the head of the box on the thumb-nail, exactly one pinch was produced. The rai'a took off his mantle, tied one end of it to the ring in the bow and stood thereon, holding the other end with both handa stretched above his head. He made a fino bronze figure-head GRATITUDE. 441 for the boat, and it was easy to divine her name : Tite bian. We had on board a number of copper-hued women, whose eyelids were stained with Jcohl, which gave them a ghastly appearance. Soon after my tent had been pitched, in the afternoon, a man came riding up from the river on a donkey, leading a horse behind him. He had just crossed one of the water courses on his donkey, and was riding on, holding the horse'* rope in his hand, when the animal started back at the water course, jerking the man over the donkey's tail and throwing him violently on the ground. He lay as if dead for a quarter of an hour, but Achmet finally brought him to consciousness by pouring the contents of a leathern water-flask over his head, and raising him to a sitting posture. His brother, who had charge of a sakia on the bank, brought me an angareb in the evening, in acknowledgment of this good office. It is a good trait in the people, that they are always grateful for kindness. The angareb, however, did not prove of much service, for I was so beset by the black gnats that it was impossible to sleep. They assailed my nose, mouth, ears and eyes in such numbers that I was almost driven mad. I rubbed my face with strong vinegar, but it only seemed to attract them the more. I un wound my turban, and rolled it around my neck and ears, but they crept under the folds and buzzed and bit until I was forced to give up the attempt. Our road, the next morning, lay near the river, through tracks of thick halfeh, four or five feet high. We constantly passed the ruins of villages and the naked frames of abandon- ed sakias. The soil was exceedingly rich, as the exuberant growth of halfeh proved, but for miles and miles there was no 448 JOURNEV TO CENTRAL AFRICA. sign of life. The tyranny of the Turks has depopulated one of the fairest districts of Nubia. The wind blew violently from the north, and the sandy haze and gray vapor in the air became so dense that I could scarcely distinguish the opposite bank of the Nile. The river was covered with white caps, and broke on the beach below with a wintry roar. As we journey ed along through the wild green grass and orchards of sont, passing broken walls and the traces of old water-courses, I could have believed myself travelling through some deserted landscape of the North. I was chilled with the strong wind, which roared in the sont and made my beard whistle under my nose like a wisp of dry grass. Several ships passed us, scudding up stream under bare poles, and one, which had a single reef shaken out of her large sail, dashed by like a high- pressure steamer. After two or three hours we passed out of this region. The Desert extended almost to the water's edge, and we had nothing but sand and thorns. The wind by this time was more furious than ever, and the air was so full of sand that we could not see more than a hundred yards on either hand. The sun gave out a white, ghastly light, which increased the drear iness of the day. All trace of the road was obliterated, and we could only travel at random among the thorns, following the course of the Nile, which we were careful to keep in view. My eyes, ears, and nostrils were soon filled with sand, and I was obliged to bind my turban so as nearly to cover my face, leaving only space enough to take a blind view of the way we were going. At breakfast time, after two hours of this mar tyrdom, I found a clump of thorns so thick as to shut off the wind, but no sooner had I dismounted and crept under its ANOTHER SAND-STORM. 449 shelter than I experienced a scorching heat from the sun, and was attacked by myriads of the black gnats. I managed to eat something in a mad sort of way, boating my face and ears continually, and was glad to thrust my head again into the sand-storm, which drove off the worse pests. So for hours we pursued our journey. I could not look in the face of the wind, which never once fell. The others suffered equally, and two of the camel-men lagged so, that we lost sight of them entire ly. It was truly a good fortune that I did not take the short road, east of the Nile, from Merawe to New Dongola. In the terrible wastes of the Nubian Desert, we could scarcely have survived such a storm. Nearly all the afternoon we passed over deserted tracts, which were once covered with flourishing fields. The water courses extend for nearly two miles from the river, and cross the road at intervals of fifty yards. But now the villages are level with the earth, and the sand whistles over the traces of fields and gardens, which it has not yet effaced. Two hours before sunset the sun disappeared, and I began to long for the town of Handak, our destination. Achrnet and I were ahead, and the other camels were not to be seen any longer, so as sun set came on I grew restless and uneasy. The palms by this time had appeared again on the river's brink, and there was a village on our left, in the sand. We asked again for Handak. " Just at the corner of yon palms," said the people. They poke with a near emphasis, which encouraged me. The Ara bic dialect of Central Africa has one curious characteristic, which evidently springs from the want of a copious vocabulary. Degree, or intensity of meaning is usually indicated by accent ilone. Thus, when they point to an object near at hand thej 450 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. Bay : kenak, " there ;" if it is a moderate distance off, the} lengthen the sound into " hen-a-a~ak ;" while, if it is so far as to be barely visible, the last syllable is sustained with a full breath " hen-a-a-a-a-a-dk ! " In the same way, saa signifies " an hour " sa-a-a-a, " two hours," &c. This habit of speech gives the language a very singular and eccentric character. We pushed on till the spot was reached, but as far ahead as the sand would permit us to see, could discern no house We asked again ; the town commenced at the next corner of the palms ahead of us. I think this thing must have happen ed to us five or six times, till at last I got into that peculiarly amiable mood which sees nothing good in Heaven or Earth. If my best friend had come to meet me, I should have given him but a sour greeting. My eyes were blinded, my head dull and stupid, and my bones sore from twelve hours in the saddle. As it grew dark, we were overtaken by four riders mounted on fine dromedaries. They were going at a sweeping trot, and our beasts were ambitious enough to keep pace with them for some time. One of them was a stately shekh, with a white robe and broad gold border and fringe. From what the people said of him, I took him to be the Melek, or King of Dongola. Meanwhile, it was growing dark. We could see nothing of the town, though a woman who had been walking beside us, said we were there already. She said she had a fine house, which we could have for the night, since it was almost impos- jible for a tent to stand in such a wind. As I had already dipped into the night, I determined to reach Handak at all hazards, and after yet another hour, succeeded. Achawt and I dismounted in a ruined court-yard, and while I sat on a MY LODGING IN HANDAK. 461 broken wall, holding the camels, he went to look for our men. It was a dismal place, in the gathering darkness, with the wind howling and the sand drifting on all sides, and I wonder ed what fiend had ever tempted me to travel in Africa. Be fore long the woman appeared and guided us to a collection of miserable huts on the top of the hill. Her fine house proved to be a narrow, mud-walled room, with a roof of smoked dour- ra-stalks. It shut off the wind, however, and when I entered and found the occupants (two other women), talking to each other by the light of a pile of blazing corn-stalks, it looked ab solutely cheerful. I stretched myself out on one of the anga- rebs, and soon relapsed into a better humor. But I am afraid we were not lodged in the most respectable house of Handak, for the women showed no disposition to leave, when we made preparations for sleeping. They paid no attention to my re quests, except by some words of endearment, which, from such creatures, were sufficiently disgusting, and I was obliged to threaten them with forcible ejection, before they vacated the house. The camel-men informed me that the place is noto rious for its harlotry. As we had made a forced march of forty miles in one day, I gave the caravan a rest until noon, and treated the men to mutton and mareesa. Prices had already increased, since leaving Soudan, and I could not procure a sheep for less than seventeen piastres. The women, who had returned at sunrise, begged me to give them the entrails, which they cut into pieces and ate raw, with the addition of some onions and salt. The ld woman told me a piteous tale of the death of her son, and her own distress, and how King Dyaab (who had passed through Handak the day previous, on hia way to Dar El-Ma- 462 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. bass) had given her two piastres, and she hoped I would also give her something, that she might buy a new dress. I gav her the same as King Dyaab, which she at once asked me to take back again, as she expected at least nine piastres. See ing I was about to take her at her word, she made haste to se cure the money. Her youngest daughter, a bold, masculine thing, with hair cut close to her head, now came to me for backsheesh. " Oh ! " said I, " you are going to do as the old woman did, are you?" "No," she exclaimed; "if you will give me two piastres, I will ask for no more. The old woman is a miserable wretch ! " and she spat upon the ground to show her disgust. " Go ! " I said ; " I shall give nothing to a girl who insults her mother." From Handak to El Ordee is two days' journey. The country presents the same aspect of desertion and ruin as that in the neighborhood of Old Dongola. Untenanted villages line the road during nearly the whole distance. The face of the country is level, and there is no mountain to be seen on either bank of the Nile. It is a melancholy, deserted re gion, showing only palms growing wildly and rankly along the river, fields covered with halfeh, water-courses broken down, sakias dismantled, and everywhere dwellings in ruin. Here and there a few inhabitants still lingered, tending their fields of stunted cotton, or watering some patches of green wheat. The general aspect of desolation was heightened by the strong north-wind, which filled the air with clouds of sand, making the sunshine so cold and white, that all the color faded out of the landscape. The palms were dull and dark, and the sand hills beyond the Nile a dead, lifeless yellow. All this district warms witli black gnats, which seemed to have been sent as a APPROACH TO El, ORDEE. 46? curse upon its desertion, for they never appeared where the country was thickly inhabited and all the soil cultivated. On the first day after leaving Handak, we passed the vil lages of Kiar, Sori and Urub, and stopped at a place called Tetti. The wind blew so violently during the night that every thing in my tent, my head included, was thickly covered with dust. The next day we passed a large town called Hannak. The greater part of it was levelled to the earth, and evidently by violence, for the walls were of stone. It stood on a rocky rise, near the river, and had on its highest part the remains of some defences, and a small palace, in tolerable preservation. The hills behind were covered for half a mile with the graves of the former inhabitants, among which I noticed the cones and pyramids of several holy men. As we approached El Or- dee (by which name New Dongola is usually called), the ap pearance of the country improved, although there was still as much deserted as cultivated land. The people we met were partly Dongolese and partly Arabs from the Desert, the latter with bushy hair, shining with grease, and spears in their hands. They cheered us with the news that El Ordee was not distant, and we would arrive there at asser the time of after noon prayer, two hours before sunset. My camel-men rejoiced at the prospect of again having rnareesa to drink, and I asked old Mohammed if he supposed the saints drank mareesa in Paradise. "Why!" he joyfully exclaimed; "do you know about Paradise ?" " Certainly ;" said I, " if you lead a good life, you will go straight there, but if you are wicked, Eblis will carry you down into the flames." " Wallah ! " said the old fellow, aside to Achmet ; " but this is a good Frank. He has Islam in his heart." 454 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. About two o'clock, we descried the minaret of El Ordee its sugar-loaf top glittering white in the sun. The place wa three or four miles distant, and we did not reach it until after more than an hour's travel. As we approached, it presented the usual appearance of the Nubian towns a long line of blank mud walls, above which rise, perhaps, the second storiea of a few more ambitious mud houses ; here a sycamore, there a palm or two, denoting a garden within ; a wide waste of sand round about, some filthy people basking in the sun, and a mul titude of the vilest kind of dogs. Near the river there are some fine large gardens, as in Khartoum. I had already de cided to stop two days, to rest my caravan, before commenc ing the long and toilsome march to Wadi-Halfa, but instead of hiring a house I went around the town and pitched my tent on the northern side, on a sandy plain, where I secured pure air and freedom from molestation by the inhabitants. The morning after my arrival, the Governor, Khoorshid Bey, called at my tent, and I returned the visit in the after noon. He was a stout, fair- skinned and brown-bearded man of thirty-eight, and looked more like an American than a Turk. I found him in the shop of a Turkish merchant, opposite the door of the mosque, which is built in the centre of the bazaar. Two soldiers were in attendance, and brought me coffee and sherbet. The Bey was particularly anxious to know whether the railroad from Alexandria to Cairo would be built, and how much it would cost. While I was sitting with him, the molldhs were chanting in the mosque opposite, as it was the Moslem Sunday, and groups of natives were flocking thither to say their prayers. Presently the voice of the muezzin was Heard from the top of the minaret, chanting io a loud, EL ORDEE (NEW DOKOOLX). 45i dious, melancholy cadence the call to prayer a singular cry, the effect of which, especially at sunset, is really poetic and suggestive. I took my leave, as the Bey was expected to per form his devotions with the other worshippers. The town may be seen in an hour. It contains no sights, except the bazaar, which has about twenty tolerable shops- principally stocked with cottons and calicoes, and a great quan tity of white shawls with crimson borders, which the people here are fond of wearing over their shoulders. Outside the bazaar, which has a roof of palm-logs covered with matting, are a few shops, containing spices, tobacco, beads, trinkets and the like small articles. Beyond this was the soog, where the people came with their coarse tobacco, baskets of raw cotton, onions, palm-mats, gourds, dates, faggots of fire-wood, sheep and fowls. In this market-place, which ascended and descend ed with the dirt-heaps left from ruined houses, there were four ostriches, which walked about, completely naturalized to the place. One of them was more chan eight feet high a most powerful and graceful creature. They were not out of place, among the groups of wild-haired Kababish and Bisharee, who frequented the market. Below the river-bank, which is high, upwards of twenty small trading craft were lying. One had just arrived with a load of lime, which the naked sailors were carrying up the bank in baskets, on their heads. The channel of the Nile here is mainly taken up with the large, sandy island of Tor, and the stream is very narrow. The shore was crowded with women, washing clrthes or filling their water-jars, men hoisting full water-skins on the backs of donkeys, and boys of all shades, from whity-yellow to perfect black, bathing and playing on the 4G JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. brink. The northern part of the town appeared to be desert ed, and several spacious two-story buildings were falling into ruins. I noticed not more than half a dozen houses which would be considered handsome in Berber or Khartoum. El Ordee ranks next after those places, in all the Egyptian terri tory beyond Assouan, but has the disadvantage of being more filthy than they. BTART FOR CHAPTER XXXV. JOURNEY THROUGH CAR EL-MAHASS AND SOKK6T. Vf start for "Wadi-IIalfa The Plague of Black Gnats Mohammed's Coffin Tbi IslanJ of Argo Market-DayScenery of tho Nile Entering Bar El-Mahass Euined Fortresses The Camel-Men A Eocky Chaos Fakir Bender The Akaba of Mahass Camp in the Wilderness The Charm of Desolation The Nile again Pilgrims from Dar-Fur The Struggle of the Nile An Arcadian Landscape The Temple of Soleb Dar Snkkot The Land of Dates The Island of Sai A Sea ol Sand Camp by the Eiver A Hyena Barbecue. WE left El Ordee or New Dongola, before sunrise on tho twenty-ninth of February. A boy of about fourteen years old came out from the town, helped load the camels, and insisted on accompanying me to Cairo. As my funds were diminish ing, and I had no need of additional service, I refused to take him, and he went home greatly disappointed. We were all in fine health and spirits, from the two days' rest, and our ships of the Desert sailed briskly along the sands, with the palmy toasts green and fair on our right. For some miles from the town the land is tolerably well cultivated, but the grain was all much younger than in the neighborhood of Old Dongola, Beyond this, the country was again deserted and melancholy ; everywhere villages in ruin, fields given up to sand and thorua, 20 453 jotraNRT TO CENTRAL and groves of date trees wasting their vigor in rank, nnpruned shoots. The edge of the Desert was covered with grave-yards to a considerable extent, each one boasting its cluster of pyra mids and cones, raised over the remains of holy shekhs. To wards noon I dismounted for breakfast in a grove of sont trees, but had no sooner seated myself on niy carpet, than the small black flies came in such crowds that I was scarcely ablo to eat. They assailed my temples, ears, eyes and nostrils, and it was utterly impossible to drive them away. I was half crazy with the infliction, and at night ray neck and temples were swollen -and covered with blotches worse than those made by mosquito stings In fact, mosquitoes are mild and merci ful in comparison. Had not my road been mostly in the Desert, away from the trees, I could scarcely have endured the journey. The few inhabitants along the river kindled fires of green wood and sat in the smoke. In the afternoon the monotony of the Desert on the western bank was broken by a solitary mountain of a remarkable form. It precisely resembled an immense coffin, the ends being appa rently cut square off, and as the effect of a powerful inirag< j lifted it above the horizon, it seemed like the sarcophagus of the Prophet, in the Kaaba, to be suspended between heaven and earth. The long island of Argo, which I saw occasionally across an arm of the Nile, appeared rich and well cultivated. It belongs mostly to Melek Hammed, King of Dongola, who tf as expected at home the day I passed, on his return from Cairo, where he had been three months or more, for the pur pose of representing to Abbas Fasha the distressed condition of the country, and obtaining some melioration of the system of misrule inflicted upon it. Near the town of Argo, on the THE PLAGUK OF BLACK GNATS. 459 opposite side of the island my map indicated a ruined temple, and I made a strong effort to see it ; buc at Binni, which was the nearest point, there was no ferry, and the people knew nothing of the temple nor of any thing else. I left the main road and followed the bank, but the terrible flies drove me a\vay, and so, maddened and disgusted, I came at last to a sakia, where the people informed me that the ferry was still ahead and the ruins already some distance behind me. They paid this deliberately and carelessly, sitting like black spectres in the midst of thick smoke, while I was crazily beating my ears. " Tell the caravan to go ahead," I said to Achmet, at length, " and don't talk to me of temples until we have got away from these flies." The next morning Achmet had some difficulty in awaking me, so wrapt was I in dreams of home. I sat shivering in the cool air, trying to discover who and where I was, but the yel low glimmer of my tent-lining in the dim light of dawn soon informed me. During the day we passed through a more thickly settled country, and owing to the partial cultivation of the soil, were less troubled by that Nubian plague, which is always worse about the ruined villages and the fields given up to halfeh grass. It was market-day at the village of Hafier, and we met and passed many natives, some with baskets of raw cotton and some with grain. I noticed one man riding a donkey and carrying before him a large squash, for which ho would possibly get twenty paras (2 cents). My camel-men, ivlio had neglected to buy dourra in El Ordee, wanted to stop until noon in order to get it, and as I would not wait, remained behind. The scenery had a wild and picturesque air, from the iso- 460 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. lated mountain peaks, which now appeared on both sides 01 the river Djebel Arainbo, with its high, precipitous sides and notched summit, stood steeped in soft purple vapor a beautiful object above the long lines of palms and the green level of the islands in the river. The fields on the western bank were mostly taken up with young wheat, though I saw a single one of ripe barley, which a black Barabra was reaping, cutting off the stalks about one-third of the way below the heads, and depositing them in heaps. By noon, I knew from the land-marks that we must be opposite the island of Tonibos, where there are some ruins. I made inquiries for it, but the bank was almost deserted, and the few inhabitants I found gathered in straw huts here and there among the rank palm- groves, could tell me nothing about it. All agreed, however, that there was no ferry at this part of the Nile, and to swim across was out of the question. The crocodiles swarm here, and are quite delicate in their tastes, much preferring white flesh to black. So my hope of Tombos vanished like that of Argo. Beyond the island is a little ruined village, called Hannek, and here I took leave of Dar Dongola, in which I had been travelling ten days, and entered Dar El-Mahass, the kingdom of my friend Melek Dyaab. The character of thvj country changed on the very border. Long ridges of loose blocks of sandstone and granite, as at Assouan and Akaba Gerri, in Soudan, appeared in front, at first on the western bank, but soon throwing their lines across the stream and forming weirs and rapids in its current. The river is quite narrow, in soma places not a hundred yards broad, and leads a very tortuouii course, bearing away towards the north-west, until it meets the majestic barrier rf Djebel Foga, when it turns to the north RUINED FORTRESSES. 461 east. About two hours after passing Djebel Arambo, which etands opposite the northern extremity of Tombos, we reached the large and hilly island of Mosul, where the river divides its waters and flows for several miles through deep, crooked, rocky channels, before they meet again. Here there is no cultiva tion, the stony ridges running to the water's edge. The river bed is so crowded and jammed with granite rocks, that from the shore it appears in some places to be entirely cut off. At this point there are three castellated mud ruins in sight, which at a distance resemble the old feudal fortresses of Europe. The one nearest which we passed was quadrangular, with cor ner bastions, three round and one square, all tapering inward towards the top. The lower part of the wall was stone and the upper part mud, while the towers were nearly fifty feet high. That on an island in the river, strongly resembled an Egyptian temple, with its pylons, porticoes, and walls of cir cuit. They were evidently built before the Turkish invasion, and were probably frontier forts of the Kings of El-Mahass, to prevent incursions from the side of Dongola. "We reached the eastern base of Djebel Foga about four o'clock, and I thought it best to encamp, on account of the camel-men, who had a walk of twenty-three miles with bags of dourra on their shoulders, before they could reach us. I had no sooner selected a place for my tent, on the top of a high bank overlooking the river, than they appeared, much fatigued and greatly vexed at me for leaving them in the lurch, I ordered my pipe to be filled, and smoked quietly, making no reply to their loud complaints, and in a short time the most complete harmony prevailed in our camp. The Nile at this place flowed in the bottom of a deep gorge, filled with rocks. 462 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. The banks were almost perpendicular, but covered with a ricb growth of halfeh, which our camels greedily cropped, at the hazard of losing their balance and tumbling down into the river. I fancied there was already a taste of Egypt in the mountain air, and flattered myself that I had breathed the last of the languid atmosphere of Soudan. The next morning led us deeper into the rocky chaos. The bed of the Nile was properly a gorge, so deep was it sunk among the stony hills, and confined within such narrow limits. The ridges of loose blocks of granite and porphyry roll after each other like waves, and their crests assume the most fantas tic variety of forms. They are piled in heaps and balanced on each other, topped with round boulders or thrown together in twos and threes, as if some brood of Titan children had been at play in those regions and were frightened away in tho midst of their employment. It is impossible to lose the im pression that some freak of human or superhuman fancy gave the stones their quaint grouping. Between the ridges are shallow hollows, terminating towards the west in deep, rocky clefts, and opening on the river in crescent-like coves, between the jaggy headlands which tumble their boulders into its bed. High peaks, or rather conical piles of porphyry rock, rise hero and there out of this sterile chaos. Toward the east, where the Nile winds away in a long chain of mazy curves, they form ranges and show compact walls and pinnacles. The few palms and the little eddies of wheat sprinkled along both banks of tho river, are of a glorious depth and richness of hue, by con trast with the gray and purple wastes of the hills. In the sweet, clear air of the morning, the scenery was truly inspir ing, and I rode over the high ridges in a mood the very oppo site of that I had felt the day previous. THE AKABA OF MAIIASS. 463 The Nile makes a great curve through the land of Mahass, to avoid which the road passes through an akaba, about forty miles in length. At the corner, where the river curves at a right angle from west to south, is a small ruined place called Fakir Bender. The high bank is a little less steep here than at other places, and its sides are planted with lupins. At the end of the village is an immense sont tree, apparently very old. A large earthen water-jar, with a gourd beside it, stood in the shade. The fakeer, or holy man, from whom the place is named, was soon in attendance, and as our camels knelt under the tree, presented me with a gourd of cool water, " in the name of God." I gave him ten paras before we left, but he did not appear to be satisfied, for these holy men have great expectations. I ordered two water-skins filled, and after an hour's delay, we entered on the akaha. Over rough and stony ridges, which made hrxrd travelling for the camels, we came upon a rollLug plain, bounded in the distance by a chain of hills, which we reached by the middle of the afternoon. The path, instead ot seeking a pass or gorge, led directly up the side, which, though not very high, was exceedingly steep and covered with loose sand, up which the camels could scarcely climb. The top was a stratuir of red porphyry, cropping out of the sand in iirmense masses. Be hind us the dreary Desert extended to Dpebel Foga s-?d the mountains about the cataract : the palms of the Nile wer> jusi visible in the distance. Crossing the summit ridge, we enter ed a narrow plateau, surrounded by naked black peaks a most Bavage and infernal landscape. The northern plope was com pletely covered with immense porphyry boulders, among whivfa our path wound. Nearly every rock had a pile of sci^ll stone* 464 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. heaped upon it, as a guide to caravans, and merely for descend ing this ridge there were at least two hundred of them. The plain now extended away to the north and east, bounded by a confusion of black, barren mountains, out of which rose two lofty peaks. Towards evening we met a Nubian family, with their donkeys, on their way southward. They begged for water, which we gave them, as their supply was entirely ex hausted. I found a bed of hard gravel large enough for my tent, but we had great difficulty in driving the pegs. The camel-men selected the softest places among the rocks for their beds, but the camels stretched their long necks on all sides in the vain search for vegetation. I sat at my tent door, and watched the short twilight of the South gather over the stony wilderness, with that strange feeling of happiness which the contemplation of waste and desolate landscapes always inspires. There was not a blade of grass to be seen ; the rocks, which assumed weird and grotesque forms in the twi light, were as black as ink; beyond my camp there was no life in the Desert except the ostrich and the hyena yet I would not have exchanged the charm of that scene for a bower in the gardens of the Hesperides. The dawn was glimmering gray and cold when I arose, and the black summits of the mountains showed dimly through a watery vapor. The air, however, was dry, though cool and invigorating, and I walked ahead for two hours, singing and shouting from the overflow of spirits. I hoped to catch a glimpse of the Nile before mounting my dromedary, but one long black ridge of stones rose after another, and there was nc sudden flash of green across the darkness of the Desert. At last, towards noon, through a notch in the drear and stonj THE STRUGGLE OP THE NILE. 46 rhaos, the double line of palms appeared in the north east. The river came from the east, out of the black mountain wil derness. The valley is very narrow, and cultivation is only possible in the coves of soil embayed among the hills. I came down on one of them a meadow of halfeh, back of the little village of Koyee and stopped an hour to rest the camels. A caravan of merchants, bound for Kordofan and Dar-Fur, had just encamped there, to rest during the hot hours, according to their custom. Among them were some hadji, or pilgrims from Dar-Fur, on their way home from Mecca, and a negro from Fazogl, who had belonged to a European, and had lived in Naples. He was now free and going home, wearing a shabby Frank dress, but without money, as he came at once to beg of me. A Nubian woman came from the huts near at hand, bringing me a large gourd of buttermilk, which I shared with the camel-drivers. I set the camels in motion again, and we entered a short akaba, in order to cross a broad stony ridge, which advanced quite to the river's edge. The path was up and down the sides of steep hollows, over a terrible waste of stones. Down these hollows, which shelved towards the river, we saw the palms of the opposite bank a single dark-green line, backed by another wilderness, equally savage. Through all this country of Mahass the Desert makes a desperate effort to cut off the glorious old River. It flings rocks into its bed, squeezes him between iron mountains, compels him to turn and twist through a hundred labyrinths to find a passage, but he pushes and winds his way through all, and carries his bright waters in triumph down to his beloved Egypt. There was, to me, aomothing exceedingly touching in watching his course through 90* 466 JOCRNEY TO CENTRA.L AFRICA.. that fragment of the pre-Adamite chaos in seeing the type ol Beauty and Life stealing quietly through the heart of a region of Desolation and Death. From the stony slopes of the hills I looked down on his everlasting palms with the same old joy new-created hi my heart. After passing the akaba, I came to a village which I took to be Soleb, but on inquiring, the people pointed ahead. I rode on, around a slight curve of the trees, and was startled by a landscape of most unexpected interest and beauty. Before me, over the crest of a black, rocky ridge, a cluster of shatter ed pillars stood around the falling doorway of a temple, the whole forming a picturesque group, cut clear against the sky. Its tint of soft yellow-gray, was finely relieved by the dark green of the palms and the pure violet of some distant jagged peaks on the eastern bank. Beyond it, to the west, three peaks of white and purple limestone rock trembled in the fiery glare from the desert sands. The whole picture, the Desert excepted, was more Grecian than Egyptian, and was perfect in its forms and groupings. I know of no other name for the ruin than the Temple of Soleb. It was erected by Amunoph III. or Memnon, and the Arcadian character of the landscape of which it is the central feature, harmonized thoroughly with my fancy, that Amunoph was a poet. The temple stands on the west bank, near the river, and from whatever point it is viewed, has a striking effect. The remains consist of a portico, on a raised platform, leading to a court once surrounded by pillars. Then follows a second and more spacious portico, with a double row of three pillars on each side. This opens upon a second pillared court, at the opposite end of whick is a massive doorway, leading to the THE TEMPLE OP SOLEB. 467 cryta of the temple, now completely levelled to the earth. Thfc entire length of the ruin is about two hundred feet. There are nine pillars, with a single block of their architrave, and portions of two of the porticoes still standing : the remainder of the temple is a mass of ruins. The greatest pains have been taken to destroy it completely, and all the mound on which it stands is covered with huge blocks, thrown one over the other in the wildest confusion. In one place, only, I noticed the disjointed segments of a column, still lying as they fell. The pedestals remain in many places, so that one can partially restore the original order. When complete, it must have been a majestic and imposing edifice. The material is the white limestone of the adjacent mountains, veined with purple streaks, and now much decomposed from the sun and r.ain. From the effect of this decomposition, the columns which remain standing are cracked and split in many places, and in the fissures thus made, numbers of little swallows and star lings have built their nests, where they sit peeping out through the sculptures of gods. The columns and doorways arc cover ed with figures, now greatly blurred, though still legible. I noticed a new style of joining the portrait of a monarch with his cartouche, the latter representing his body, out of which his head and arms issued, like the crest of a coat of arms. The columns represent the stalks of eight water-plants Vound together, with a capital, or rather prolonged abacus, like the Qsiride column. They are thirty feet in height, without the pedestal, and five feet in diameter. This is the sum of my observations : the rest belongs to the antiquarian. Before night, we passed a third akaba, to get around the jaiestone ridge, which here builds a buttress of naked rock 468 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA, over the Nile, and at sunset again saw the palms but this time the renowned palms of Dar Sukkot, for we had crossed the border of Dar El-Mahass. They lined the river in a thick grove of stems, with crowns of leafy luxuriance. The village of Noolwee, scattered for half a mile in their shade, was better built than any I saw in Dongola. Many of the houses wero inclosed in square courts, and had a second story, the massive mud walls sloping towards each other like a truncated pyra mid. Achmet, AH and myself bought about fifty piastres worth of the celebrated dates of Sukkot. They were the largest and best flavored I ever saw, and are said to preserve their quality for years. They are sold at a piastre for an earthen measure containing about two hundred. When gath ered, they are first slightly dried in the large magazines, and then buried in the earth. The population of Sukkot subsists apparently on the profits of selling them, for little else is culti vated along the river. Even here, nevertheless, where the people are better able to bear the grinding rule of Egypt, one meets with deserted fields and ruined dwellings. The King of El-Mahass informed me, when in Khartoum, that his people were obliged to pay six hundred piastres (thirty dollars) tax on each water-mill, being just double the lawful amount, (which, alone, is very oppressive), and that his country was fast becoming depopulated, in consequence. On the following day I passed the large island of Sai. The country here is more open and the Nile has a less vexed course. The mountains, especially the lofty blue mass of Djebel Abyr, have not the forced and violent forms common to the porphyry formation. Their outlines are long, sloping, and with that Blight but exquisite undulation which so charmed me in the A SEA 01 SAND. 469 hills of Arcadia, in Greece, and in Monte Albano near Rome. Their soft, clear, pale-violet hue showed with the loveliest effect behind the velvety green of the thick palm clusters, which were parted here and there by gleams of the bright blue river. From the northern end of Sai, the river gradually curves to the east. The western shore is completely invaded by the sands, and the road takes a wide sweep inland to avoid the loose, sliding drifts piled up along the bank. We had not gone far before we found a drift of brilliant yellow sand thirty feet high and two hundred yards in length, lying exactly acrosa our road. It had evidently been formed within a few days. It was almost precisely crescent-shaped, and I could not account for the action of the wind in building such a mound on an open plain, which elsewhere was entirely free from sand. We rounded it and soon afterwards entered on a region of sand, where to the west and north the rolling yellow waves extended to the horizon, unbroken by a speck of any other color. It was a boundless, fathomless sea of sand to the eye, which could scarcely bear the radiated light playing over its hot surface. The day (for a wonder) was somewhat overcast, and as the shadows of small clouds followed one another rapidly over the glaring billows, they seemed to heave and roll like those of the sea. I was forced to turn away my head, faint and giddy with the sight. My camels tugged painfully through this region, and after two hours we reached a single sont tree, standing beside a well, and called sugger el-dbd (the Tree oi the Slave). It was pointed out by the camel-men as being half-way between El Ordee and Wadi Haifa. We journeyed on all the afternoon through a waste of sandy and stony ridges, and as night drew near, I became anxious to 170 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFKldA fcich the river, no trace of which could be seen. I rode up ci c of the highest ridges, and lo ! there were the tops of the ds.te-groves in a hollow, not a quarter of a mile distant, on in t right. The camels' heads were soon turned in that direc tion, and I encamped at once on the bank, where my beasts found sufficient grass and thorns for the first time in three days. The river here flows in a deep channel, buried among the hills, and there is neither cultivation nor population on the western bank. On the opposite side there was a narrow strip of soil, thickly planted with date-trees. My camel-men kindled a fire in the splendid moonlight, and regaled themselves with the hind-quarters of a hyena, which they roasted in the coals and devoured with much relish. I had curiosity enough to eat a small piece, which was well- flavored though tough. The Nile roared grandly below out camp all night, in the pauses of the wind. Abou-Sin, my Dromedary. CHAPTER XXXVI. THE BATN EL-HADJAR. The Batn EMIadjar, or Belly of Stone Ancient Granite Quarries The Village of Dal A Ruined Fortress A Wilderness of Stones Tlie Hot Springs of Ukme A Windy Night A Dreary Day in the Desert The Slu'kh's Camel Fails Descent tc Ssinneh The Temjile and Cataract Meersheh The Sale of Abou-Sin \Ye Emerge from the Belly of Stone A Kababish Caravan The Rock of Abou-SeiT View of the Second Cataract We reach Wadi-IIalfa Selling my Dromedaries- Farewell to Abou-Siu Thanksgiving on the Ferry-boat Parting with the Camel men. ON the sixth day after leaving Dongola I passed through Sukkot, and reached the commencement of Batn El-Hadjar The Belly of Stone as the savage mountain country for a 472 JOURKEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA, aundred miles south of the Second Cataract is termed. With each day the road became more rough and toilsome, and my camels moved more languidly. In spite of the fatigue which we all endured, I felt so much strengthened by our free life and so much interested in the remarkable country through which we were passing, that I felt something like regret on approaching the southern limit of travel on the Nile. Not sc my dragoman and servant, who could not enough thank God and the Prophet for having taken them in safety through countries which they deemed the verge of the world. Achmet positively declared he would never make the trip again, for no second journey could be equally fortunate. My camel-men, I found, had never before travelled to Wadi Haifa by the west* ern bank, but by a wonderful Arab instinct, they never went astray from the road. The Batn El-Hadjar marks its commencement by a range- of granite hills, which break the river into a foaming cataract. After leaving camp, our road lay along the Nile, behind some high sand-hills. In front of us appeared Djebel Ufeer, a peak about fifteen hundred feet in height, its naked sides tinted of a deep, rich purple hue by the glowing air. The Nile flows directly towards its base, making a slight curve, as if to pass it on the eastern side, but finding the granite rocks heaped together too thickly, changes its course and washes the western foot of the mountain. The granite lies scattered about in vast masses, taking all sorts of quaint and fanciful shapes. The hills themselves arc merely collections of boulders of all sizes, from three to twenty feet in diameter, piled on an enormous bed or stratum of the same. Intermixed with this are beds of a rich yellowish-red granite, which crops out under the piles GKAN1TE QUARRIES DAL. 473 of gray, and has been worked, wherever it appears in large masses. The traces of the ancient quarrymen still remain, in the blocks bearing marks of the wooden wedges by which they were split. In one place I noticed two fragments of a column, similar to those in the palace at Old Dougola. The granite ia equal in quality and still more abundant than that at Assouan, but was only quarried to a limited extent. The aspect of the country is rugged in the highest degree, and how the Nile gets through it became more and more a wonder to me. His bed is deep-sunken between enormous stone-piles, back of which are high stone mountains, and wherever there is a hollow between them, it is filled with sand. The only vegetation was a few bunches of miserable grass, and some of those desert shrubs which grow at the very doors of Tartarus, so tenacious of life are they. A narrow shelf, on the opposite bank, high above the river, bore the renowned palm of Sukkot, and frequently in the little coves I saw the living green of the young wheat. The steep banks were planted with lupins, as the people there had nothing to fear from the hippopotami. While I was breakfasting off a great granite table, a man who rode by on a donkey cheered me with the news that the village of Dal was but a short distance ahead. I had fixed upon this as our resting-place for the night, but on finding it BO near, resolved to push on to some natural hot springs and ruins of ancient baths, which the camel-men had informed me were about four hours further, to the right of the caravan track. At Dal, however, a difficult akaba commences, and my camels already marched so slowly and wearily that I judged it best to stop and give them a little rest. About the village Ihere are some scattering doum and date-palms, which lead a 474 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFR104. hard existence, half buried in sand and choked with the old leaves, which the natives are too idle to prune. The people were in the fields, cutting some wheat which was just ripe, and two sak'ias, shaded by clusters of palms, watered a few patches of cotton. I made inquiries, but had much difficulty in finding fcho location of the hot springs. Finally, one of the men con sented to become my guide in the morning, and conducted ua to a camping-ground, where there was a little grass for the camels. Lured by the promise of backsheesh, he brought me the leanest of young sheep, which I purchased for eight pias tres. The night was calm, cool and delicious, and steeped my whole frame in balm, after the burning day. The moon, near ly full, shone with a gray and hazy lustre, and some insect that shrilled like a tree-toad, reminded me of home. Our Bailee guide, Hadji Mohammed, as he was called from having made two pilgrimages to Mecca, was on hand be fore sunrise. Starting in advance of the caravan, I walked along the river-bank, towards a castellated building on an emi nence which I had noticed the previous evening, while sketch ing the landscape. My path was over huge beds of gray granite, from which the old Egyptians might have cut obelisks of a single block, not only one hundred, but five hundred feet in length. The enormous masses which had been separated from these beds and rolled into rounded masses by the chafing of primeval floods, lay scattered on the surface, singly, or piled in fantastic groups. The building was a large fortress ot stones and clay, with massive walls, on the summit of an island-like peak overhanging the river, and separated from the bank by a deep chasm, which is filled with water during the inundations, but was then dry, and its sides green with wheal A WILDERNESS OF STONES. 475 and beans. Wild doum-palms, hanging heavy with green fruit, grew in the patches of soil among the rocks and overhung the ravine. The fortress was a very picturesque object, with its three square towers, backed by the roaring flood and the dark violet-blue crags of Djebel Meme behind. The forms of the landscape except the palms were all of the far North, but the coloring was that of the ripe and glowing South. I was so absorbed in the scene, that the caravan passed unnoticed, hav ing taken a path further from the river. After wandering about for some time, I climbed one of the granite piles and scanned the country in all directions, but could see nothing. Finally I descried a distant trail, and on reaching it, recog nized the tracks of my camels. I hurried on, and in half an Lour met Hadji Mohammed and one of my camel-men, coming back in great tribulation, fearful that I was lost. Near the Cataract of Dal, an akaba commences, which ex tends to the village of Ukme, in the Batn el-Hadjar, a dis tance of about fifteen miles. We passed behind some peaks of black porphyry, whose shoulders were covered with steep, slid ing drifts of yellow sand, and travelled on through a wilder ness of stones. All the refuse odds and ends of Creation the pieces left after the rocks and mountains of the rest of the world were fashioned have been thrown together here. It was a sea of black stone-mounds, out of which rose occasional peaks of still blacker stone. Through this we passed into a region of gray stone and then into another of red stone, jour neying for four hours up one mound and down another, by paths and no paths, which were most laborious for our cainela T began to be fearful we should never get out of the geological labyrinth into which the hadji cond acted us, but the majestio 476 JOURNEY 1O CENTRAL AFRICA. range of Djebel El-Lamool, beyond the Nile, served him as a guide. He looked occasionally towards a bastion-like projec tion in the sheer walls of porphyry, and at last, when I was quite tired and famished, took us up a ridge whence I saw the river again below us. The road into the valley was next to impracticable, but our camels stumbled and scrambled and slid till they reached the ledge of halfeh overhanging the river. Below us was a square mass of burnt brick, about ten feet in height part of a building long since destroyed. " Here is the bath," said the hadji. We dismounted, and he conducted as to the foot of the ruin, where, in a hole in the earth, a spring of water bubbled up profusely, and trickled away, through a trough of stones. There was an end of my antici pations of a refreshing bath, for which I had come prepared. The water was hot enough, in truth (131), and I could not bear my hand below the surface. Under the bank, a dozen springs with a smaller flow of water, oozed through the soil, which was covered with a whitish deposit in places. To atone for my disappointment, I took breakfast in the shadow of the ruined wall, while my camel-men bathed themselves in the wa ter, with many exclamations of " Bismittiihi f " (In the name of God). The hadji then left us, and we followed the Nile past the cataracts of Song and Tangoori, which latter we heard all night, roaring grandly between the gusts of wind. During the night the wind blew violently, and I had great fears that my tent would come down about my ears. I helped the sand against it on the outside, for further protection, but every thing within was so covered that its original color could no longer be discerned. The moon shone between wild and stormy clouds, and all signs betokened a gust of rain. We A DREARY DAY IN THE DESERT. 477 took more than ordinary precautions in the disposition of our baggage, as this part of the road was much infested with ma rauding bands of Kababish, who came from the side of Dar- Fur and plundered the inhabitants along the river, as well aa small caravans. I trusted in the protection afforded by my tent, which, from its appearance, would be taken as belonging fco an officer of the government. Ou the eighth day we rose for the first time in all mj African travel in a cold, raw and cloudy dawn. Fortunately for us, a company of merchants, bound for Wadi-Halfa, passed at daybreak, for we entered on an akaba of unknown length, and the wind had blown so violently within the last few days that the old caravan trail was not to be found. The country was a wilderness even more drear than those we had passed On climbing the long stony surges, I sometimes flattered my self with the hope of seeing beyond the Desert ; but no I had only a more extended horizon. Long, shadowy streaks 01 rain swept along the eastern horizon, and the mountain-chains which lay against them were colored the darkest and intensest shade of violet precisely that of the lower leaves of the pansy. As we advanced, the air grew colder, and a shower of large, scattering drops passed over us. The camels shrank and trem bled, and my men crept behind them for shelter. Though it was a satisfaction to know that those African skies can rain sometimes, I was soon so benumbed as to need my capote. The temperature was perhaps not lower than 60, yet I felt it severely, About ten o'clock, the shekh's camel, which had be fore shown symptoms of fatigue, lay down and refused to go further. As it was impossible to stop in the Desert, I dis tributed its load among the other four, and ordered him to 478 JOURNET TO CENTRAL AFRICA. drive it loose behind us. This, however, was of no avail, and at last he concluded to wait till it had rested a little. I gave him the water-skin, and we pushed on. Half an hour af terwards, when I was eating breakfast under the lee of a sand-hill, Ali, who had remained behind with him, came up, saying they had examined the camel and decided that it was sick. The shekh thereupon wept most vehemently, fearing it would die, and turned about with it to make his way home. Ali lent him a dollar and promised to take him the rest of the noney due him. The other men were quite downcast by the shekh's misfortune. There was nothing to be done, how ever, but to push ahead, as the other camels were well nigh worn out. We kept on all the afternoon, with the cold wind blowing in our faces, and occasionally a shower of colder rain dashed upon us. The road ascended until towards noon, when we passed through a gateway between two peaks of granite, whose loose masses threatened to topple down the sides and crush us. Then for three or four hours we travelled over more elevated ranges, from the crests of which we had wide glimpses over the terrible tract, yet could see nothing but sand and stones stones and sand. In the east a long mountain-range lay dark and distant, under the shadow of the rain-clouds, and it was some comfort to know that it was beyond the Nile. As night ap proached, I feared we should be obliged to camp in the akaba, and without water, but after ten hours of most wearisome travel, we reached a ridge, whence we looked into a vast basin of rocky hills, between us and the mountains, whose long chain of jagged peaks, touched with the full yellow light of the set- ting sun, stood against the black gust that rolled away beyond TEMPLE AND CATARACT OP 8AMNEH. 4^9 them into the Great Nubian Desert. The Nile was not lo be seen, yet deep in the centre of this landscape, I caught a glimpse of some thorny bushes, which our further descent showed to be near the village and cataract of Samneh. The bed of the river was filled with masses of black rock, and the cataract, just below the village, roared magnificently all through the night. The wind blew again, and so violently, that I awoke with my ears, mouth and nostrils filled with sand. The morning was cold, with a violent wind, but I strength ened my camels with an abundant feed of bean-vines and dour ra, and set off early. I walked ahead to the temple of Sam neh, which stands on a rocky eminence above the cataract. The hill is surrounded with the remains of a massive brick wall, and there are traces of a road leading to the summit The temple is quite small, and of simple though graceful do- sign, containing only one chamber, at the end of which a head less statue lies on its back. From the little portico in front there is a fine view of the gorge through which the river breaks. A broad stratum of porphyry crosses his bed, broken only in the centre by a gap or flood-gate, not twenty yards across. Through this the whole force of his current is poured, and at the time of my visit, when the water was low, he seemed but a pigmy flood. In fact, for a mile or two below this cataract, there is scarcely any point in all his tortuous and difficult course where one might not throw a stone across. After leav> ing the temple, our road led over the desolate stony hills, high above the river's bed. We looked down into the deep and narrow defile through which he flows, and which his waters scarcely brightened or cheered, for there was no vegetation on liis banks except sow and then a bunch of halfeh grass cr a 480 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. few stunted thorns. The air was so bracing that I felt nc more fatigue, but only regret, that the journey was so near its close. Old Mohammed walked ahead, singing his accustomed song : " Koolloo nasee fee djennatee, tefoddhel, ya er-ralch- man ! " (0 Most Merciful, grant that all my people may enter thy Heavens !) Thus we travelled all day, and towards even ing came down to the Nile again at the little village of Meer- eheh. This place is a beautiful little oasis in the midst of th savage Belly of Stone. The Nile has a more gentle current, and his banks have room enough for some groves of luxuriant date-trees, and fields of wheat and cotton. My tent was pitched beside the rustling palms, and I sat down with a glad heart and a full pipe, on the last night of my long and toil some journey by land. During the evening one of the natives took a fancy to my Abou-Sin, and made numerous small offers for the purchase of him. I refused, preferring to send him on to Assouan, but in the morning the man came again, and at last, with many struggles, raised his price to one hundred and ninety piastres, whereupon I thought it best to sell and so avoid all further trouble. I stipulated, however, that Abou- Sin was to be delivered to him at Wadi-Halfa, and that he should accompany us thither on the morrow. The night was intensely cold, although the air was probably not below 60 I could hardly bear the coldness of the water in the morning It stung my burnt face like fire, and increased the pains of mj unfortunate cracked nose. The Barabras brought me some milk for my coffee in a basket of closely-plaited grass, smeared with grease on tne inside. It precisely resembled those bas sets made by the Indians of California, which will carry water A KABAB1SH CARAVAN. 481 The railk, however, had a taste of the rancid grease, which prevented me from drinking much of it. We arose shivering in the early dawn, and for the last time put the loads on our fagged and unwilling camels, Soon after starting, I saw ahead, through a gateway of black porphyry rocks, the long, yellow sand-hills of the Libyan Desert, like those which line the western bank of the Nile, from Assouan to Korosko. This was a joyful token that we had reached the end of the savage Batn El-Hadjar. As we were travelling over the rolling upland of yellow sand, enjoying the view of the wild frontier of the Belly of Stone, out of which we had just issued, a large caravan of Kababish Arabs, returning towards Dar-Fur with empty camels, met us. There were upwards of fifty camels and thirty men half-naked savages, with projecting features, wild eyes, and a wilderness of hair on their heads. The Kababish were easily distinguished by their long plaits, laid close to the head, and smeared with fat. The others, who had enormous masses of wool, standing out in all directions for a foot or more, were probably Howoweet, from the side of Dar-Fur. We asked the distance to Wadi Haifa, and were answered with the universal " hassa" (just now !) whereby these people designate any indefinite period of time. After three or four hours, I began to look out for Abou- Seer, a lofty cliff to which travellers repair for a bird's-eye view of the Second Cataract to them the turning point of their Nile journey, to me the termination of my long mid- African rambles, and the commencement of my return to the living world. Our road was a mile or two behind the river, and as Achmet had only visited the mountain from the side of Wadi Haifa, he could not serve as a guide. I turned into the 21 182 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. hills, taking him, Mohammed and Ali, and leaving the other man to go on with the baggage camels. We wandered for some time over the rough ridges, and at last reached a spur of the hills which Achmet took to be Abou-Seer, but which was not it. I was so hungry that I stopped for breakfast, and before I had finished, Ali, who was overflowing with joy at the idea of reaching Wadi Haifa, came to me with the news that he had been climbing a high point, whence he could see the end of the mountains. The Nile, beyond, he said, was broad and smooth, and there were more date-trees than he had seen since leaving Sukkot. I left him to ride my Abou-Sin, and walked on to the peak he had climbed. As I reached its base, however, I saw that the true headland projected still further beyond, terminating in a cone-like summit. As I came out from among the hills behind it, the view suddenly opened before me far to the north and east, and I saw the long date- groves of Wadi Haifa apparently at my feet. Abou-Seer is a cliff of calcareous rock, and its base is com pletely covered with the names of tourists who have visited it. Achmet wanted me to add my name to theirs, but as I had brought no hammer and chisel from Cairo, like most travellers, I could not gratify him. A few steps took me to the summit of the cliff, which drops on the eastern side in a sheer preci pice to the water's edge. It is at least three hundred feet in perpendicular height, and as it forms the corner of the range, the view on three sides is uninterrupted for many leagues. The panorama is truly grand, and probably unlike any other in the world. To the south the mountains of the Batn El- Hadjar rise like a black wall, out of which the Nile forces its way, not in a broad sheet, but in a hundred vexed streams, THE SECOND CATARACT. 483 gurgling up amid chaotic heaps of rocks as if from subterra nean sources, foaming and fretting their difficult way round endless islands and reefs, meeting and separating, seeking every where an outlet and finding none, till at last, as if weary of the long contest, the rocks recede, and the united waters spread themselves out, sluggish and exhausted, on the sands below. It is a wonderful picture of strife between two mate rial forces, but so intricate and labyrinthine in its features, that the eye can scarcely succeed in separating them, or in viewing it other than as a whole. The streams, in their thou sand windings, appear to flow towards all points of the compass, and from their continual noise and motion on all sides, the whole fantastic wilderness of rock seems to heave and tug, as it is throttled by the furious waters. This is the last great struggle and triumph of the Nile. Henceforth, his tortured waters find repose. He goes down to Egypt as a conquerer, crowned with a double majesty after all his toils. Is it to be wondered at, that the ancient race which existed by his bounty should worship him as a God ? But by this time we saw our baggage-camels, like specks on the sand, approaching Wadi Haifa. Ali, unable to contain himself, started off on a run, and we soon lost sight of him. I mounted my faithful big dromedary, Abou-Sin, and after two more hours on his lofty hump, dismounted at the ferry-place, opposite Wadi Haifa, never, alas ! to mount him again. A boat with a company of merchants from Cairo had just arrived, and the sailors were unloading their packages of merchandise. The merchants came up and saluted me, and could scarcely believe that I had been so far as the White Nile. They were bound for Dongola, and one of them, learning that ray brown 484 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. dromedary was for sale, offered to buy it. Achrnet conducted the business for me, for the bargaining lasted at least two hours, before the purchaser succeeded in slowly struggling up to a decent price. The Barabra who had bought Abou-Sin was also on hand, to ratify the bargain, and I was thus saved from the necessity of sending the animals to the markets of Assouan. I must do both the men the justice to say that they afterwards made every exertion to cheat me, in the way of counting money and offering bad pieces, and at last gave a large pile of copper coin, which, when it was counted, lacked two piastres of the right amount. When all was finished, I delivered Abou-Sin into the hands of his rascally new master, with a sorrowful heart, for the old fellow and I were good friends. Had he known we were to be separated, I am sure those large black eyes of his would have dropped a few tears, and that capacious throat gurgled out a sound of lamentation. Achmet threw his arms around the beast's big head and kissed him tenderly. I was about to do the same thing, when I remembered that the never-sweating skin of a dromedary exhales not the freshest of odors, and preferred caressing him with my hand rather than my lips. So farewell to Abou-Sin, and may he never want dourra and bean-vines, nor complain under too heavy loads : and should he die soon (for he is waxing in years), may some son of his strong loins be there to carry me, when next I visit Central Africa ! My arrival at Wsdi Haifa terminated the journey of thirty- four days from Khartoum. In that time my little caravan had travelled between eight and nine hundred miles, and at least half of it as rough travelling as can be found in Africa. Now we were beyond danger and done with fatigue, and could THANKSGIVING AND PARTINO. 485 look forward to seeing Cairo in another month. Not until we were all seated in the ferry-boat, crossing from the opposite bank, did I fairly realize that our severe journey was over. The camels were left behind, the baggage piled up on board, and as we were rowed slowly across the river, it suddenly flashed through my mind that the same gentle motion of oara and waves was thenceforth to rock me all the way to Cairo. I drew a long breath, and fervently ejaculated : " el hamdu lillah ! " to which the others, as in duty bound, responded. Achmet, who usually postponed his prayers until he reached home, recited a chapter from the Koran, and All, who never prayed, broke into sailor-songs by starts, and laughed continu ally, from inward delight. After my tent was pitched on the beach, I called my camel- men, Ali and Mohammed, who had crossed with me, and gave them each the forty piastres still due, with a Maria Theresa dollar abou-zerdr, or the Father of Buttons, as this coin is called in Central Africa, from the button which clasps the drapery on the Empress's shoulder as backsheesh. The men were delighted, and kissed my hand, in token of gratitude. I gave them also the money for the shekh, and took leave of them with the exclamation : " May God grant you a prosper ous return to your country !" They replied, warmly: "May God prolong your days, Effendi ! " and as they moved away, I overheard old Mohammed again declare to Achmet : " Wal lah, but this is a- good Frank ! He certainly has Islam in his hoart I" 486 JOtJKKEY TO CKMTllAI. CHAPTER XXXVII. THE ROCK TEMPLES OF ABOU-SIMBEL. Wad. Haifa A Boat for Assouan "We Embark on the Nile Again An Egyptian Dream The Temples of Abou-Simbel The Smaller Temple The Colossi ot Eemeses II. Vulgarity of Travellers Entering the Great Temple My Impies- sions Character of Abou-Simbel Tho Smaller Chambers The Races of Men Kemeses and the Captive Kings Departure. WADI HALF A is an ordinary Arab village, and noted only for being the head of navigation on the Nubian Nile. There were six or seven boats in port, some of them loaded with gum and ready to start for Assouan. They were all nekkers, or trading boats, built of heavy wood, and not to be moved down stream against a strong head-wind. I therefore engaged the ferry-boat in which I had crossed a light, open boat, manned by two Nubian boys. The rais made a frame of sticks near the stern, and covered it with palm-mats, to serve as a cabin. The open hold was turned into a kitchen, and taken possession of by my two men. There was barely room enough for all of as and our baggage, and a fat sheep I bought, as provision for the voyage, but as I proposed being gloriously lazy, to make up for the foregone toils, I needed no more. VOYAGE DOWN THE NILE. 48? The morning after my arrival at Wadi Haifa all was ready. A few children came down to greet me with the hate ful word " backsheesh," which I had not heard for three months and hoped never to hear again ; but a few Arabic ex clamations soon put them to flight. We shoved away from the beach, followed by the cries of a dozen lazy sailors, who also wanted backsheesh for saying " salaam " at parting. I stretch ed myself out on my bed, on deck, and lay looking on the receding shore, where my camel-men and camels (Abou-Sic still among them) were encamped. Abou-Sin's head was turn ed towards the river, as if looking for his master, for the hapless creature certainly thought I should go over to mount him on the morrow. Alas, my brave old dromedary ! we shall never again play friendly tricks upon each other. Rais Ram adan took his station at the helm, and the boys plied their oars actively, so that we soon lost sight of Wadi Haifa. All the afternoon we glided slowly down the stream between rich palm-groves and grain-fields. The appearance of thrift and fertility, which the country presented, was most agreeable after the waste fields of Dongola, and the unproductive rocks and sands of the intermediate districts. The mountains behind vere lower and rounder in their outlines, and the landscapes softer an richer than any I had seen since leaving beautiful Dar Shygheea. By sunset we had made ; uch good progress, that there was every hope of reaching Abou-Simbel in the morning. There was no wind during the night, and the boys worked bravely. About two hours after midnight I was awakened from a deep sleep by the shock of the boat striking the shore. I opened my eyes and saw, as I lay, without moving my head, 488 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. a huge wall of rock before me, against which six enormous statues leaned as they looked from deep niches cut in its front. Their solemn faces were touched by the moon, which shone full on the cliff, and only their feet were wrapped in shadow. The lines of deep-cut hieroglyphics over the portal of this rocky temple were also filled with shadow and painted legibly on the gray, moonlit rock. Below them yawned the door a square of complete darkness. A little to the left, over a long drift of sand that sloped from the summit of the cliff nearly to the water's edge, peered the mitred head of a statue of still more colossal proportions. I gazed on this broad, dim, and wonderful picture for a moment, so awed by its majesty that I did not ask myself where nor what it was. This is some grand Egyptian dream, was my first thought, and I closed my eyes for a few seconds, to see whether it would vanish. But it stood fast and silent as ever, and I knew it to be Abou- Simbel. My servants all slept, and the rai's and boys noise lessly moored the boat to the shore, and then lay down and slept also. Still I lay, and the great statues looked solemnly down upon me, and the moon painted their kingly nomens and banners with yet darker distinctness on the gray rock. The river made no sound below, the long grass stirred not a blade at the foot of the crags, and the slopes of sand were white and dumb as snow. I lay in too deep a repose for thought, and was not then conscious how grateful was such a silence in Na ture, while the moon held up that picture before me. It might have been two minutes or twenty, before the current slowly swung the stern of the boat around, and the picture as slowly ehifted from my view, leaving instead the Southern Cross in tig shrine of stars. THE TEMPLES OF ABO0-SIMBEL. 489 In the morning, I found that we lay at the foot of the smaller temple. I quietly waited for my cup of coffee, for the morning reality was infinitely less grand than my vision of the night. I then climbed to the door and entered. The interior is not large nor imposing, after one has seen the temples of Egypt. The exterior, however, is on such a colossal scale, that, not withstanding the want of proportion in the different statues, the effect is very striking. The largest ones are about thirty- five feet high, and not identical, as are those of the great tem ple. One, who stands with one leg advanced, while he holds a sword with the handle pressed against his breast, is executed with much more spirit than is usually met with in statues of this period. The sculptures of the interior are interesting and being of the time of Remeses the Great, whose history they illustrate, are executed with much skill and labor. The head of the goddess Athor, on the face of the columns in the hall, is much less beautiful than that of the same goddess at Dendera. It is, in fact, almost broad and distorted enough to represent the genius Typhon. The front of the great temple is not parallel to that of the other, nor does it face the river, which here flows in a north east course. The line of the cliff is broken between the two, so that the figures of the great Remeses, seated on each side of the door, look to the east, the direction of the line of the face being nearly north. Through the gap in front, the sands have poured down from the Desert behind, almost wholly fill ing up the space between the two cliffs ; and though since the temple was first opened, in 1817, it has been cleared nearly to the base more than once, the rapid accumulation of sand has igain almost closed the entrance The southern colossus is 21* 490 JOURNEY" TO CENTRAL AFRICA. only buried about half way to the knee, but of the two northern ones there is little else to be seen except the heads. Obscured as is the effect of this grand front, it is still without parallel in the world. I had not thought it possible that in statues of Buch enormous magnitude there could be such singular beauty of expression. The face of Remeses, the same in each, is un doubtedly a portrait, as it resembles the faces of the statues in the interior and those of the King in other places. Besides, there is an individuality in some of the features which is too marked to represent any general type of the Egyptian head. The fullness of the drooping eyelid, which yet does not cover the large, oblong Egyptian eye ; the nose, at first slightly in clining to the aquiline, but curving to the round, broad nos trils ; the generous breadth of the calm lips, and the placid, serene expression of the face, are worthy of the conqueror of Africa and the builder of Karnak and Medeenet Abou. The statue next the door, on the southern side, has been shivered to the throne on which it is seated, and the fragments are not to be seen, except a few which lie upon the knees. The ridiculous vanity of tourists has not even spared these sublime monuments, and they are covered wherever a hand can reach, with the names of noble and ignoble snobs. The enthu siastic antiquaries who cleared away the sands have recorded the fact in modest inscriptions, near the door, where they do not offend the eye; and one readily pardons the liberty the writers have taken. But there are two Germans (whose namt ! I will not mention, since it would help give them the very noto riety they covet), who have carved their names in letters a foot long, on the thigh of one of the statues, and afterwards filled them with black paint. I should like to sec them subjected to a THE INTERIOR OF THE GREAT TEMPLE. 491 merciless bastinado, on the same part of their own bodies Certainly, to have one of the statues seated on their breasts ag a nightmare, every night of their lives, would not be too much punishment for such a desecration. The great doorway of the temple is so choked up with sand that I was obliged to creep in on my knees. The sun by this time had risen exactly to the only point where it can illumine the interior, and the rays, taking a more yellow hue from the rock and sand on which they fell, shone down the long drift between the double row of colossal statues, and lighted up the entrance to the second hall of the temple. I sat down in the sand, awed and half frightened by the singular appearance of the place. The sunshine, falling obliquely on the sands, struck a dim reflection against the sculptured roof, and even lighted up the farthest recesses of the grand hall sufficiently to show its imposing dimensions. Eight square pillars four on either side of the central aisle seem to uphold the roof, and en their inner sides, facing each other, are eight statues of the King. The features of all are preserved, and have something of the grace and serenity, though not the majesty of the great statues outside. They look into each other's eyes, with an eternal question on their fixed countenances, but none can give answer. There was something so stern and strange in these eight faces, that I felt a shudder of fear creep over me. The strong arms are all crossed on their breasts, and the hands hold various sacred and regal symbols, conspicuous among which is something resembling a flail, which one sees often in Egyptian sculpture. I thought of a marvellous story I once read, in which a genie, armed with a brazen flail, stands at the entrance of an enchanted castle, crushing with the stroke of 492 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. his terrible weapon all who come to seek the treasure withia For a moment the childish faith in the supernatural was a. strong as ever, and I looked at the gloomy entrance beyond, wishing to enter, but fearing the stony flails of the terrible Remesi on either hand. The faces were once partially colored, and the black eyeball, still remaining on the blank eye of stone, gives them an expression of stupor, of death-in-life, which accounted to me for the nervous shock I experienced on enter ing. There is nothing in Egypt which can be likened to the great temple of Abou-Simbel. Karnak is grander, but its grandeur is human. This belongs rather to the superhuman fancies of the East the halls of the Afrites or to the realm of the dethroned Titans, of early Greek mythology. This im pression is not diminished, on passing the second hall and corridor, and entering the adytum, or sacred chamber of the temple. There the granite altar yet stands in the centre, before the undestroyed figures of the gods, who, seated side by side, calmly await the offerings of their worshippers. The peculiar individuality of each deity is strikingly shown in these large statues, and their attitude is much less constrained than in the sitting statues in the tombs of Thebes. These look as if they could rise, if they would. The walls are covered with sculptures of them and of the contemplar deities, in the grand, bold style of the age of Remeses. Some visitors had left a supply of dry palm branches near the entrance, and of these 1 made torches, which blazed and crackled fiercely, flaring with a rich red light on the sculptured and painted walls. There was sufficient to enable me to examine all the smaller chambers, of which there are eight or nine cut laterally into the rock, THE RACES OF MEN. 493 without any attempt at symmetry )f form, or regularity of arrangement. Several of them have seats running around three sides, exactly like the divans in modern Egyptian houses. They were probably designed for the apartments of the priest? or servants connected with the temple. The sculptures on the walls of the grand hall are, after those of Medeenet Abou, and on the exterior wall of Karnak the most interesting I have seen in Egypt. On the end wall on either side of the entrance, is a colossal bas-relief, repre setting Renieses slaying a group of captive kings, whom he holds by the hair of their heads. There are ten or twelve in each group, and the features, though they are not colored, exhibit the same distinction of race as I had previously remark ed in Belzoni's tomb, at Thebes. There is the Negro, the Persian, the Jew, and one other form of countenance which I could not make out all imploring with uplifted hands the mercy of the conqueror. On the southern wall, the distinction between the Negro and the Egyptian is made still more obvi ous by the coloring of the figures. In fact, I see no reason whatever to doubt that the peculiar characteristics of the dif ferent races of men were as strongly marked in the days of Remeses as at present. This is an interesting fact in discus sing the question of the unity of origin of the race. Admitting the different races of men to have had originally one origin, the date of the first appearance of Man on the earth, must have been nearer fifty thousand than five thousand years ago. If climate, customs, and the like have been the only agents in producing that variety of race, which we find so strongly mark ed nearly four thousand years ago, surely those agents must Tiave been at work for a vastly longer period than that usually 494 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. accepted as the age of Man. We are older than we know ; but our beginning, like our end, is darkness and mystery. The sculptures on the side walls of the temple represent the wars of Rerneses, who, as at Medeenet Abou, stands in a chariot which two horses at full speed whirl into the ranks of the enemy. The king discharges his arrows against them, and directly in front of him a charioteer, mortally wounded, is hurled from his overthrown chariot. The groups are chiselled with great spirit and boldness ; the figures of the king and his horses are full of life. Towering over all, as well by his supe rior proportions as by the majesty and courage of his attitude^ Remeses stands erect and motionless amid the shock and jar and riot of battle. There is no exultation in his face ; only the inflexible calmness of Destiny. I spent some time contemplating these grand and remark able memorials of the greatest age of Egypt, and left with my feeling for Egyptian art even stronger than before. I watched the giant figures of the portico, as the swift current carried aiy boat down stream, reluctant to lose sight of their majestic features. But the yellow of the cliff turned to purple, and at Last other crags passed before it. LOSE MY SUNSHIHK. 495 CHAPTER XXXVIII. RETURN TO EGYPT. I Lose tny Sunshine, and Regain it Nubian Scenery Derr The Temple of Amads Mysterious Rappings Familiar Scenes Halt at Korosko Escape from Ship wreck The Temple of Sebooa Chasing other Boats Temple of DjerfHossayn A Backsheesh Experiment Kalabshee Temple of Dabod "Wo reach the Egyp tian Frontier. THE distressing coldness of the temperature the night before reaching Wadi Haifa, affected me more painfully than all the roastings I had endured in Soudan. My nose after losing six coats of skin, became so hard and coppery, that like Anthony Van Corlear's, the reflected rays from it might have pierced even the tough skin of a crocodile. My frame was so steeped in heat, that had our fuel fallen short, I might have " drawn " my tea, by hugging the kettle in my arms. I had been so bathed and rolled in light, the sun had so constantly, with each succeeding day, showered upon me his burning baptism, that I came to regard myself as one of his special representa tives, and to fancy that, wherever I went, there was a sort of nimbus or radiation around me. But those few drops of rain, among the stony mountains of the Batn El-Hadjar, quenched %t once the glow of my outer surface, and the cold winds which 4tM5 J OCRS BY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. followed, never ceased blowing till they extinguished even the central fires. I was like an incipient comet, snuffed out of existence and made satellite to some frozen planet. My frame was racked with pains, which turned into misery the refresh ing indolence of the Nile. I had no medicines, but put my philosophy into practice : the climate of Nubia, I said, has given me this infliction, therefore the country must supply the remedy. So 1 sent the ra'is ashore in search of it. He came back with a cup of oil which a shining daughter of the land was about bestowing upon her crispy tresses, and I drank it with a heroic faith in the efficacy of my theory. I was not disappointed, and on the third day sat once more in the sun, in the bow of my boat, trying to regain the effluence I had lost. The scenery of the Nile below Abou-Simbel is very beauti ful. The mountains recede again from the bank, and show themselves occasionally in picturesque peaks. The shores are low and rich and the groves of date-trees most luxuriant. The weather was delightfully calm and warm, and the Nile, though swift, ran smooth and shining as the oil of his own castor bean-fields. During the sweet, quiet hour before and after sunset, we floated down through the lovely region about Bos- tan and Teshka. Three tall peaks of dark-brown rock rose inland, beyond the groves of the beautiful Ibreemee palm, whose leaves, longer and more slender than those of the Egyp tian date-tree, are gracefully parted at the sides half of them shooting upward in a plumy tuft, while the other half droop around the tall shaft of the tree. The boys worked during the second night with unabated force. I awoke as the moon was rising through black clouds, and found the lofty crags of THE TEMPLE OF AMADA. 497 Ibreem overhanging us. We swept silently under the base of the heights, which in the indistinct light, appeared to rise four or five hundred feet above us. By sunrise, the date- groves of Derr, the capital of the Nuba country, were in sight, and we were soon moored beside the beach in front of the town, Derr stretches for some distance along the shore, and presents an agreeable front to the river. A merchant, from a boat near ours, brought me two small loaves of delicious Egyptian bread. He had been in Soudan, and knew how such bread would relish, after the black manufacture of that country. An hour afterwards my boat ran to the eastern bank, to allow me to visit the little temple of Amada. This temple stands on a slight rise in the sands, which surround and en tirely overwhelm it. It consists only of a low portico, sup ported by eight pillars, a narrow corridor and the usual three chambers all of very small dimensions. The sculptures on the walls are remarkable for the excellent preservation of their colors. The early Christians, who used this temple for their worship, broke holes in the roof, which admit sufficient light for the examination of the interior. Without knowing any thing of the hieroglyphic inscriptions on the temple, I should judge that it was erected by some private person or persons. The figures making the offerings have not the usual symbols of royalty, and the objects they present consist principally of the fruits of the earth, which are heaped upon a table placed before the divinity. The coloring of the fruit is quite rich and glowing, and there are other objects which appear to be cakes or pastry. While I was examining the central chamber I heard a sound as of some one sharply striking one of the out 498 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. side pillars with a stick. It was repeated three times with an interval between, and was so clear and distinct that I imagined it to be Achmet, following me. I called, but on receiving no answer, went out, and was not a little surprised to find no per eon there or within sight. The temple stands at a considera ble distance from any dwelling, and there is no place in the smooth sands on all sides of it where a man could hide. When I mentioned this circumstance, on returning to the boat, Achmet and the rai's immediately declared it to be the work of a djin, or afrite, who frequently are heard among the ruins, and were greatly shocked when I refused to accept this explanation. I record the circumstance to show that even in the heart of Nubia there are mysterious rappings. Beyond Derr I entered the mountain region of granite, sandstone and porphyry, which extends all the way to As souan. As I approached Korosko, which is only about twelve miles further, the south-wind increased till it became a genuine khamseen, almost blotting out the landscape with the clouds of sand which it whirled from the recesses of the Biban. We were obliged to creep along under the bank till we reached Korosko, where we ran up to the same old landing-place at which I had stopped in December. The bank was eight feet higher than then, the river having fallen that much in the mean time. There was the same house, open on the river side, the same old Turk sitting within, the dark sycamores shading the bank, the dusty terrace with the familiar palms tossing their leaves against the wind, the water-mill, the whito minaret at the foot of the mountain, and, lastly, the bold, peaked ridge of Djebel Korosko behind. There was the very spot where my tent had stood, and where I first mounted a OLD ACQUAINTANCES AT KOKOSKO. 499 dromedary for the long march through the Nubian Desert There was also the corner by which I turned into the moun tain-pass, and took leave of the Nile. I recognized all these points with a grateful feeling that my long wandering in Cen tral Africa was over, without a single untoward incident to mar my recollection of it. I had my pipe and carpet brought under the shade jf the sycamore, while Achmet went up to the Governor's house, with the rais and one of the boys. Be fore l(-ng, the latter appeared with his shirt full of pigeons (for I had not forgotten the delicious roast pigeons we took from Korosko into the Desert), then the rais with my sack of char coal, the Governor having only used about one-third of it dur ing my absence, and finally the Governor himself. Moussa Effer.di shook me cordially by the hand and welcomed me many times, thanking God that I had returned in safety. We sat on my carpet, talked for an hour about my journey, took coffee, and I then left the worthy man and his wretched vil lage, more delighted at having seen them again than I can vrell express. The same evening, the wind veered to the north-west, near ly at right-angles to our course, and just at dusk, as the rais and Ali were rowing vigorously to keep the boat on the western side of the river (the other being full of dangerous reefs), the rope which held the long oar in its place broke, and Ali tumbled heels over head into the wooden cooking bowl of the rai's. The wind carried us rapidly towards the opposite shore, and while Ali and Lalee were trying to fix the oar in its place, we heard the water roaring over the rocks. " Prophet!" "0 Apostle!" "Prophet of God, help us!' were the exclamations of the rais, but little black 'Med Roc 500 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. mec, who sat at the helm, like Charlemagne on a similar 000* eion, said nothing. He looked keenly through the gloom for the reef, and at last discerned it in time for the boat to be sculled around with the remaining oar, and brought to land juat above the dangerous point. A shipwreck in the Nile is a more serious matter than one would imagine, who has never seen the river during a strong wind. Its waves run as rough ly and roar as loudly as those of a small sea. We reached Sebooa during the night, and I walked up to the temple as soon as I rose. Early as it was, several Arabs descried me from a distance, and followed. The temple, which is small and uninteresting, is almost buried under drifts from the Desert, which completely fill its interior chambers. Only the portico and court, with three pillars on each side, to which colossal caryatides are attached, remain visible. Before the pylon there is an avenue of lion-headed sphinxes, six of which, and a colossal elatue of sandstone, raise their heads above the sand. I was followed to the vessel by the men, who impor tuned me for backsheesh. When I demanded what reason they had for expecting it, they answered that all strangers who go there give it to them. This was reason enough for them ; as they knew not why it was given, so they knew not why it should be refused. The crowd of travellers during the winter had completely spoiled the Barabras. I said to the men : " You have done nothing for me ; you are beggars," but instead of feeling the term a reproach, they answered. " You are right we are beggars." With such people one can do nothing. For the next two days we lagged along, against a head wind. My two boys did the work of two men, and I stimu- MY FLAG DJERF H3SSAYN. 501 lated them with presents of mutton and tobacco. Three Eng lish boats (the last of the season), left Wadi-Halfa three days before me, and by inquiring at the village, I found I was fast gaining on them. I began to feel some curiosity concerning the world's doings during the winter, and as these Englishmen were at least three months in advance of the point where I left off, they became important objects to me, and the chaso of them grew exciting. I prepared for ray encounter with them and other belated travellers on the Nile, by making an Aineri can flag out of some stuff which I had bought for that purpose in Dongola. The blue and white were English muslin, and the red the woollen fabric of Barbary, but they harmonized well, and my flag, though I say it, was one of the handsomest ou the river. The temple of Djerf Hossayu is excavated in the rock, uear the summit of a hill behind the village. A rough path, over heaps of stones, which abound with fragments of pottery, denoting the existence of an ancient town, leads up to it. When I reached the platform in front of the entrance I had a convoy of more than a dozen persons, mostly stout, able-bodied men. I determined to try an experiment, and so told them at the start to go back, for they would get nothing; but they were not to be shaken off. I avoided with the greatest care and patience all their endeavors to place me under obligations to them ; for these cunning Barabras are most assiduous in their efforts to render some slight service. If it is only kicking a stone out of your path, it constitutes a claim for backsheesh, and they represent their case in such a way that it would be the most glaring ingratitude on your part not to give it. On entering the temple, the vast square pillars of the hall. 502 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. with the colossal figures attached to them, produce a striking impression. The effect of these pillars, which fill nearly half the space of the hall itself, is to increase its apparent dimen sions, so that the temple, at the first glance, seems to be on a grander scale than is really the case. I had some curiosity regarding this place, from the enthusiastic description of Wai- burton, and the disparaging remarks of Wilkinson. After see ing it, I find them both correct, in a great measure. The co lossal statues of the grand hall are truly, as the latter ob serves, clumsy and badly executed, and the sculptures on the walls are unworthy the age of Remeses ; but it is also true that their .size, and the bulk of the six pillars, which are lofty enough to be symmetrical, would have a fine effect when seen at night, by the light of torches, as Warburton saw them. A! the chambers have suffered from smoke and bats, and tb bigotry of the old Christians. The walls are so black that i is difficult to trace out the figures upon them. This, however rather heightens the impression of a grand, though uncouth, and barbarous art, which the temple suggests. I made but a brief visit, and marched down the hill with the population of Djerf Hossayn in my train. The boat had gone ahead, as the only approach to the shore was a mile or two beyond, but they insisted on following me. I ordered them to leave, fearing lest the very fact of their walking so far in the hot sun would in duce me to break my resolution. It would have been, indeed, a satisfaction to give ten piastres and be freed from theru, and I took no little credit to myself for persisting in refusing them. They all dropped off at last, except two, who came almost to the spot where the boat was moored, and only turned back because I was in ad vat ce and ordered the rais to move KAL&BASHEE. 503 on as soon as I got on board. I should like to know Iheh opinion of me. I have no d:>ubt the people considered me the most eccentric Frank who ever came among them. The next morning we reached Kalabshee, and before sun rise I was standing on the long stone platform before the tem ple. The pylon of hewn sandstone rises grandly above the Bpacious portal, and from the exterior the building has a most imposing air. Its interior once, probably, did not diminish the impression thus given ; but at present it is such an utter mass of ruin that the finest details are entirely lost. The temple is so covered with the enormous fragments of the roof and walls that it is a work of some difficulty to examine it ; but it does not repay any laborious inspection. The outer wall which surrounds it has also been hurled down, and the whole place is a complete wreck I know of no temple which has been subjected to such violence, unless it be that of Soleb in Dar El-Mahass. Below the temple we passed the Bab (Gate) El-Kalabshee, where the river is hemmed in between enormous boulders of granite and porphyry. The morning was cold and dark, and had there been firs instead of palms, I could have believed my self on some flood among the hills of Norway. I urged on the boys, as I wished to reach Dabod before dark, and as Ali, who was anxious to get back to Egypt, took a hand at the oar oc casionally, our boat touched the high bank below the temple just after sunset. There is a little village near the place, and the reapers in the ripe wheat-fields behind it were closing theii day's labor. One old man, who had no doubt been a servant in Cairo, greeted me with " Inwna sera ! " Achmet followed, to keep off the candidates for backsheesh, and I stood alone in 504 JOURNEY TO CENTRA1 AFRICA. the portico of the temple, just as the evening star began tc twinkle in the fading amber and rose. Like Kalabshee, the temple is of the times of the Caesars, and unfinished. There are three chambers, the interior walls of which are covered with sculptures, but little else is represented than the offerings to the gods. Indeed, none of the sculptures in the temples of the Caesars have the historic interest of those of the Eighteenth Egyptian dynasty. The object of the later architects appear? to have been merely to cover the walls, and consequently we find an endless repetition of the same subjects. The novice in Egyptian art might at first 1 e deceived by the fresher appear ance of the figures, their profusion and the neatness of their chiselling; but a little experience will satisfy him how truly superior were the ancient workmen, both in the design and execution of their historic sculptures. In Dabod, I saw the last of the Nubian temples, in number nearly equal to those of Egypt, and after Thebes, quite equal to them in interest. No one who has not been beyond Assouan, can presume to say that he has a thorough idea of Egyptian art. And the Nile, the glorious river, is only half known by those who forsake him at Philae. After dark, we floated past the Shaymt-el-Wah, a powerful eddy or whirlpool in the stream, and in the night came to a small village within hearing of the Cataract. Here the rais had his family, and stopped to see them. We lay there quiet ly the rest of the night, but with the first glimpse of light I was stirring, and called him to his duty. The dawn was deep ening into a clear golden whiteness in the East, but a few large stars were sparkling overhead, as we approached Philae. Its long colonnades of light sandstone glimmered in th* AKRIVAL AT ASSOUAN. 60fi shadows of the palms, between the dark masses of the moun tains on either hand, and its tall pylons rose beyond, distincl against the sky. The little hamlets on the shores were still in the hush of sleep, and there was no sound to disturb the im pression of that fairy picture. The pillars of the airy chapel of Athor are perfect in their lightness and grace, when seen thus from a boat coming down the river, with the palm-groves behind them and the island-quay below. We glided softly past that vision of silence and beauty, took the rapid between the gates of granite, and swept down to the village at the head of the Cataract. The sun had just risen, lighting up the fleet of trading boats at anchor, and the crowds of Arabs, Egyptians and Barabras on the beach. The two English dahabiyehs I had been chasing were rowed out for the descent of the Cata ract, as I jumped ash jre and finished my travels in Nubia. 22 &0fl JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. CHAPTER XXXIX. VOYAGE DOWN THE KILE. &SEOUWI A Boat for Cairo English Tourists A Head-wind Ophthalmia Esneb A Mummied Princess All Effendi's Stories A Donkey Afrite Arrival at Luion The Egyptian Autumn A Day at Thebos Songs of the Sailors AH leaves me Eide to Dendera Head-winds again Visit to Tahtah The House of Rufaii Bey. I REACHED the Egyptian frontier on the morning of the six teenth of March, having been forty days in making the jour ney from Khartoum. Immediately upon our arrival, I took a donkey and rode around the Cataract to Assouan, leaving All to take care of the baggage-camels. I went directly to the beach, where a crowd of vessels were moored, in expectation of the caravans of gum from the South. An Egyptian Bey, going to Khartoum in the train of Rustum Pasha, had arrived the day before in a small dahabiyeh, and the captain thereof immediately offered it to me for the return to Cairo. It was a neat and beautiful little vessel, with a clean cabin, couch, divan, and shady portico on deck. He asked twelve hundred piastres ; I offered him nine hundred ; we agreed on a thou sand, and when my camels arrived there was a new refuge pre pared for my household gods. I set Achmet to work at get ENGLISH TOTTRISTS. 507 ting the necessary supplies, sent the ra'is to bake bread for the voyage, and then went to see the jolly, flat-nosed Governor. He received me very cordially, and had a great deal to say of the unparalleled herd of travellers on the Nile during the winter. Ninety-six vessels and eleven steamboats had reached tho harbor of Assouan, and of these the greater number were Americans. " Mashallah ! your countrymen must be very rich," said the Governor. When I left the divan, the firing of guns announced the safe arrival of the English boats below the Cataract. Very soon I saw two burnt-faced, tarbooshed individuals, with eye glasses in their eyes, strolling up the beach. For once I threw off the reserve which a traveller usually feels towards every one speaking his own language, and accosted them. They met my advances half-way, and before long my brain was in a ferment of French and English politics. Europe was still quiet then, but how unlike the quiet of the Orient ! The Englishmen had plenty of news for me, but knew nothing of the news I most wanted those of my own country. Had our positions been reversed, the result would have been different. They left at sunset for the return to Thebes, but I was detain ed until noon the next day, when I set off in company with the boat of Signer Drovetti, of Alexandria, who left Khar toum a few days after me. I had six men, but only two of them were good oarsmen. In the morning, when I awoke, the broken pylon of Ombos tottered directly over the boat. I rushed on deck in time to catch another sight of the beautiful double portico, looking down from the drifted sands. The wind blew very strongly from the north, but in the afternoon we succeeded in reaching 50ft .JOT'HXKY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. Djebel Silsileh, where the English boats were moored. Wt exchanged pistol salutes, and I ran up to the bank to visit eome curious sculptured tablets and grottoes, which we did not Bee on the upward voyage. During the night the wind increased to such an extent that all the boats were obliged to lay to The morning found our four dahabiyehs floating slow ly down in company, crossing from side to side transversely, in order to make a little headway. After three or four hours, however, the wind grew so strong that they were driven up stream, and all ran to the lee of a high bank for shelter. There we lay nearly all day. The Englishmen went ashore and shot quails, but I lounged on my divan, unable to do any thing, for the change from the dry, hot desert air, to the damp Nile blasts, brought on an inflammation of the eyes, resembling ophthalmia. I was unable to read or write, and had no reme dies except water, which I tried both warm and cold, with very little effect. Towards evening the wind fell ; after dark we passed the pylon of Edfoo, and at noon the next day reached Esneh. 1 went at once to the temple, so beautiful in my memory, yet still more beautiful when I saw it again. The boys who admitted me, lifted the lids of the large coflin and showed the royal mummies, which are there crumbling to pieces from the neglect of the Egyptian authorities, who dug them up at G-oorneh. The coffins were of thick plank and still sound, the wood having become exceedingly dry and light. The mum mies were all more or less mutilated, but the heads of some were well preserved. In form, they differ considerably from the Arab head of the present day, showing a better balance of the intellectual and moral faculties. On one of them the hail iLI EFFENDl's STORIES. 509 was still fresh and uncorrupted. It was of a fine, silky tex ture and a bright auburn color. The individual was a woman ; with a very symmetrical head, and small, regular features. She may have been a beauty once, but nothing could be more hideous. I pulled off a small lock of hair, and took it with me as a curious relic. Esneh appeared much more beautiful to me than on my upward journey; possibly, by contrast with the mud-built houses of Soudan. I went to a coffee-shop and smoked a sheesheh, while the muezzin called down from the mosque in front : " God is great ; there is no God but God ; Mohammed is the Prophet of God." Ali Effendi, the agent of the Moodir, or Governor, came to see me and afterwards went on board my vessel As tho wind was blowing so furiously that we could not leave, I invit ed him to dinner, and in the meantime we had a long talk on afrites and other evil spirits. I learned many curious things concerning Arabic faith in such matters. The belief in spirits is universal, although an intelligent Arab will not readily con fess the fact to a Frank, unless betrayed into it by a simulated belief on the part of the latter. Ali Effendi informed me that the spirit of a man who is killed by violence, haunts the spot where his body is buried, until the number of years has elapsed, which he would otherwise have lived. He stated, with the greatest earnestness, that formerly, in passing at night over the plain between Embabeh and the Pyramids, where Napo leon defeated the Mamelukes, he had frequently heard a con fusion of noises, cries of pain, and agony, and wrath but that now there were but few sounds to be heard, as the time of service of the ghosts had for the most part expired. One of his personal experiences with an afrite amused UK- 510 JOURNEF TO CENTRAL AFRICA. exceedingly. He was walking one night on the road from Cairo to Shoobra, when he suddenly saw a donkey before him. As he was somewhat fatigued, and the donkey did not appear to have an owner, he mounted, and was riding along very pleasantly, when he was startled by the fact that the animal was gradually increasing in size. In a few minutes it became nearly as large as a camel ; and he thereby knew that it was no donkey, but an afrite. At first he was in such terror that the hairs of his beard stood straight out from his face, but suddenly remembering that an afrite may be brought to reveal his true nature by wounding him with a sharp instrument, he cautiously drew his dagger and was about to plunge it into the creature's back. The donkey-fiend, however, kept a sharp watch upon him with one of his eyes, which was turned back wards, and no sooner saw the dagger than he contracted to his original shape, shook off his rider and whisked away with a yell of infernal laughter, and the jeering exclamation : " Ha ! ha ! you want to ride, do you ? " We had scarcely left Esneh before a fresh gale arose, and kept us tossing about in the same spot all night. These blasts on the Nile cause a rise of waves which so shake the vessel that one sometimes feels a premonition of sea-sickness. They whistle drearily through the ropes, like a gale on the open sea The air at these times is filled with a gray haze, and the mountain chains on either hand have a dim, watery loom, like that of mountains along the sea-coast. For half a day I lay in sight of Esneh, but during the following night, aa there was no wind, I could not sleep for the songs of the sail ors. The sunrise touched the colonnade of Luxor. I slept bejond my usual time, and on going out of the cabin what THEBES REVISITED. 511 pnould I see but my former guide, Hassan, leading down the beach the same little brown mare on which I had raced with him around Karnak. We mounted and rode again down the now familiar road, but the harvests whose planting I had wit nessed in December were standing ripe or already gathered in. It was autumn in Egypt. The broad rings of clay were beaten for threshing floors, and camels, laden with stacks of wheat-sheaves paced slowly towards them over the stubble fields. Herds of donkeys were to be seen constantly, carrying heavy sacks of wheat to the magazines, and the capacious freight-boats were gathering at the towns along the Nile to carry off the winter's produce. It was a bright, warm and quiet day that I spent at Thebes. The great plain, girdled by its three mountain- chains, lay in a sublime repose. There was no traveller there, and, as the people were expecting none, they had already given up the ruins to their summer silence and loneliness. I had no company, on either side of the rivoj, but my former guides, who had now become as old friends. We rode to Karnak, to Medeenet Abou, to the Memnonium, and the Colossi of the Plain. The ruins had now not only a memory for me, but a language. They no longer crushed me with their cold, stern, incomprehensible grandeur. I was calm as the Sphinx, whose lips no longer closed on a mystery. I had gotten over the awe of a neophyte, and, though so little had been revealed to me, walked among the temples with the feelings of a master. Let no one condemn this expression as presumptuous, foj nothing is so simple as Art, when once we have the clue to her infinite meanings. White among the many white days of my travel, that daj 512 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. at Thebes is registered ; and if I left with pain, and the vast regret we feel on turning away from such spots, at least I took with me the joy that Thebes, the mighty and the eternal, was greater to me in its living reality than it had ever been in all the shadow-pictures my anticipation had drawn. Nor did the faultless pillars of the Memnonium, nor the obelisks of Kar- nak, take away my delight in the humbler objects which kept a recognition for me. The horses, whose desert blood sent ita contagion into mine ; the lame water-boy, always at my elbow with his earthen bottle ; the grave guides, who considered my smattering of Arabic as something miraculous, and thence dubbed me " Taylor Effendi ; " the half-naked Fellahs in the harvest-fields, who remembered some idle joke of mine, all these combined to touch the great landscape with a home-like influence, and to make it seem, in some wise, like an old rest ing-place of my heart. Mustapha Achmet Aga, the English agent at Luxor, had a great deal to tell me of the squabbles of travellers during the winter : how the beach was lined with foreign boats and the temples crowded day after day with scores of visitors ; how these quarrelled with their dragomen, and those with their boatmen, and the latter with each other, till I thanked Heaven for having kept me away from Thebes at such a riotous period. Towards evening there was a complete calm, and every thing was so favorable for our downward voyage that I declined Mustapha's invitation to dine with him the next day, and set off for Kenneh. The sailors rowed lustily, my servant Ali taking the leading oar. Ali was beside himself with joy, at the prospect of reaching his home and astonishing his family irith his marvellous adventures in Soudan. He led the chorus SONGS OF THE SAILORS. 618 with a voice so strong and cheery that it rang from shore to shore. As I was unable to write or read, I sat on deck, with the boy Hossayn at my elbow to replenish the pipe as occasion required, and listened to the songs of the sailors. Their repertory was so large that I was unable to exhaust it during the voyage. One of their favorite songs was in irregular trochaic lines, consisting of alternate questions and answers, such as " ed-dookan el-liboodeh fayn ? " (where's the shop of the cotton caps ?) sung by the leader, to which the chorus re sponded : " Bahari Luxor beshwoytayn." (A little to the northward of Luxor). Another favorite chorus was : Imlal- imlal-imlalee ! " (Fill, fill, fill to me !) Many of the songa wore of too broad a character to be translated, but there were two of a more refined nature, and these, from the mingled passion, tenderness and melancholy of the airs to which they were sung, became great favorites of mine.* * I give the following translations of these two songs, as nearly litei- al as possible : L Look at me with your eyes, O gazelle, gazelle I The blossom of your cheeks is dear to me ; your breasts burst the silk of your vest ; I cannot loose the shawl about yoiir waist ; it sinks into your soft waist. Who possesses you is blessed by heaven. Look at me with your eyes, O gazelle, O gazelle ! Your forehead is like the moon ; your face is fairer than all the flowers of the garden ; your bed is of diamonds ; h is richer than a King who can sleep thereon. Look at me with your eyes, O gazelle, gazelle 1 IL O night, O night darling, I lie on the sands. I languish for the light of your face ; if you do not have pity on me, I shall die. night, O night darling, I lie on the sands. I have changed coior 22* 514 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. Before sunrise we reached Kenneh. Here I was obliged to stop a day to let the men bake their bread, and I employed the time in taking a Turkish bath and revisiting the temple of Dendera. My servant Ali left me, as his family resided in the place. I gave him a good present, in consideration of his service during the toilsome journey we had just closed. He kissed my hand very gratefully, and I felt some regret at parting with, as I believed, an honest servant, and a worthy, though wild young fellow. What was my mortification on discovering the next day that he had stolen from me the beau tiful stick, which had been given me in Khartoum by the Sul tana Nasra. The actual worth of the stick was trifling, but the action betrayed an ingratitude which I had not expected, even In an Arab. I had a charming ride to Dendera, over the fra grant grassy plain, rippled by the warm west wind. I was ac companied only by the Fellah who owned my donkey an amia ble fellow, who told me many stories about the robbers who used formerly to come in from the Desert and plunder the country We passed a fine field of wheat, growing on land which had been uncultivated for twenty years. My attendant said that this was the work of a certain Effendi, who, having seen the neglected field, said that it was wrong to let God's good ground lie idle, and so planted it. " But he was truly a good man," he added ; " and that is the reason why the crop is so good. If he had been a bad man, the wheat would not have grown so tinely as you see it." from my longing and my sorrow; you only can restore me, O my darling. night, night darling, I lie on the sands. O darling, tase me in: give me a place by youi side, or I must go back wretched to my own country DESCENDING THE NILE. 51fl For three days after leaving Kenneh, a furious head- wind did its best to beat me back, and in that time we only made sixty miles. I sighed when I thought of the heaps of letters awaiting me in Cairo, and Achmet could not sleep, from tho desire of seeing his family once more. He considered himself as one risen from the dead. He had heard in Luxor that his wife was alarmed at his long absence, and that his little son went daily to Boulak to make inquiries among the returning boats. Besides, my eyes were no better. I could not go ashore, as we kept the middle of the stream, and my only employment was to lounge on the outside divan and gossip with the rai's. One evening, when the sky was overcast, and the wind whirled through the palm-trees, we saw a boy on the bank crying for his brother, who had started to cross the river but was no longer to be seen. Presently an old man came out to look for him, in a hollow palm-log, which rolled on the rough waves. We feared the boy had been drowned, but not long afterwards came upon him, drifting at the mercy of the current, having broken his oar. By the old man's assistance he got back to the shore in safety. On the fourth day the wind ceased. The Lotus floated down the stream as lightly as the snowy blossom whose name I gave her. We passed Grirgeh, Ekhmin ; and at noon we brushed the foot of Djebel Shekh Hereedee and reached the landing-place of Tahtah. I had a letter from Rufaa Bey in Khartoum to his family in the latter town, and accordingly walked thither through fields of superb wheat, heavy with ripening ears. Tahtah is a beautiful old town ; the houses are of burnt brick ; the wood-work shows the same fanciful Sara- jenic patterns as in Cairo, and the bazaar is as auiet, dim and 516 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. spicy as an Oriental dream. I found the Bey's house, and delivered my letter through a slave. The wife, or wives, who remained in the hareem, invisible, entertained me with coffee and pipes, in the same manner, while a servant went to bring the Bey's son from school. Two Copts, who had assisted me in finding the house, sat in the court-yard, and entertained them selves with speculations concerning my journey, not supposing that I understood them. " Grirgos," said one to the other, " the Frank must have a great deal of money to spend. n " You may well say that; " his friend replied, " this journey to Soudan must have cost him at least three hundred purses." In a short time the Bey's son came, accompanied by the schoolmaster. He was a weak, languid boy of eight or nine years old, and our interview was not very interesting. I there fore sent the slave to bring donkeys and we rode back to the boat. BKi'JT IN HARVEST -TIMK. 51 1 CHAPTER XL. THE RETURN TO CAIRO CONCLUSION. Siout In Harvest-time A kind Englishwoman A Slight Experience of Hasheesh Tlie Calm Kapid Progress down the Nile The Last Day of the Voyage Arrival at Cairo Tourists preparing for the Desert Parting with Achmet Conclusion. WE reached Siout oa the morning of the twenty-eighth of March, twelve days after leaving Assouan. I had seen the town, during the Spring of an Egyptian November, glittering over seas of lusty clover and young wheat, and thought it never could look so lovely again ; but as I rode up the long dyke, overlooking the golden waves of harvest, and breathing the balm wafted from lemon groves spangled all over with their milky bloom, I knew not which picture to place in my mind's gallery. I remained half a day in the place, partly for old ac quaintance sake, and partly to enjoy the bath, the cleanest and most luxurious in Egypt. I sought for some relief to my eyes, and as they continued to pain me considerably, I went on board an English boat which had arrived before me, in the hope of finding some medicine adapted to my case. The trav ellers were a most innocent-faced Englishman and his wife a beautiful, home-like little creature, with as kind a heart as 518 JOURNEY TO CKNTKAL AFRICA. ever beat. They had no medicine, but somebody had recom mended a decoction of parsley, and the amiable woman spoiled their soup to make me some, and I half suspect threw awaj her Eau de Cologne to get a bottle to put it in. I am sure I bathed my eyes duly, with a strong faith in its efficacy, and fancied that they were actually improving, but on the second day the mixture turned sour and I was thrown back on my hot water and cold water. While in Egypt, I had frequently heard mention of the curious effects produced by hasheesh, a preparation made from the cannabis indica. On reaching Siout, I took occasion to buy some, for the purpose of testing it. It was a sort of paste, made of the leaves of the plant, mixed with sugar and spices. The taste is aromatic and slightly pungent, but by no means disagreeable. About sunset, I took what Achmet considered to be a large dose, and waited half an hour without feeling the slightest effect. I then repeated it, and drank a cup of hot tea immediately afterwards. In about ten minutes, I became con scious of the gentlest and balmiest feeling of rest stealing over me. The couch on which I sat grew soft and yielding as air my flesh was purged from all gross quality, and became a gossamer filagree of exquisite nerves, every one tingling with a sensation which was too dim and soft to be pleasure, but which resembled nothing else so nearly. No sum could have tempt ed me to move a finger. The slightest shock seemed enough to crush a structure so frail and delicate as I had become. I telt like one of those wonderful sprays of brittle spar which hang for ages in the unstirred air of a cavern, but are shivered to pieces by the breath of the first explorer. As this sensation, which lasted but a short time, was A SLIGHT EXPERIENCE OF HASHEESH. 619 gradually fading away, I found myself infected with a ten dency to view the most common objects in a ridiculous light Achmet was sitting on one of the provision chests, as was his mistom of an evening. I thought : was there ever any thing BO absurd as to see him sitting on that chest ? and laughed im moderately at the idea. The turban worn by the captain next put on such a quizzical appearance that I chuckled over it for some time. Of all turbans in the world it was the most ludi crous. Various other things affected me in like manner, and at last it seemed to me that my eyes were increasing in breadth. " Achmet," I called out, " how is this ? my eyes aro precisely like two onions." This was my crowning piece of absurdity. I laughed so loud and long at the singular com parison I had made, that when I ceased from sheer weariness the effect was over. But on the following morning my eyes were much better, and I was able to write, for the first time in a week. The calm we had prayed for was given to us. The Lotus floated, sailed and was rowed down the Nile at the rate of seventy miles a day, all hands singing in chorus day and night, while the rais and his nephew Hossayn beat the tarabooka or played the reedy zumarra. It was a triumphal march ; for my six men outrowed the ten men of the Englishman. Some times the latter came running behind us till they were within hail, whereupon my men would stand up in their places, and thundering out their contemptuous chorus of " he torn, tom^ koosbarra ! " strike the water so furiously with their long oars, that their rivals soon slunk out of hearing. So we went down, all excitement, passing in one day a space, which it had taken us four days to make, on our ascent. One day at Man- 620 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. t'aloot; the next at Minyek : the next at Benisooef ; the next in sight of the Pyramids ; and so it came to pass that in spito of all my delays before reaching Siout, on the sixteenth day after leaving Assouan, I saw the gray piles of Dashoor and Sakkara pass behind me and grow dim under the Libyan Hills. And now dawns the morning of the first of April, 1852 a day which will be ever memorable to Achmet and myself, aa that of our return to Cairo. When the first cock crowed in Borne village on shore, we all arose and put the Lotus in mo tion. Over the golden wheat-fields of the western bank the pyramids of Dashoor stand clear and purple in the distance. It is a superb morning ; calm, bright, mild, and vocal with the songs of a thousand birds among the palms. Ten o'clock comes, and Achmet, who has been standing on the cabin-roof, cries : " my master ! God be praised ! there are the mina rets of Sultan. Hassan ! " At noon there is a strong head wind, but the men dare not stop. We rejoice over every mile they make. The minaret of old Cairo is in sight, and I give the boat until three o'clock to reach the place. If it fails, I shall land and walk. The wind slackens a little and we work down towards the island of Roda, Gizeh on our left. At last we enter the narrow channel between the island and Old Cairo; it is not yet three o'clock. I have my pistols loaded with a double charge of powder. There are donkeys and donkey-boys on the shore, but Arabian chargers with Persian grooms were not a more welcome sight. We call them, and a horde comes rushing down to the water. I fire my pistols against the bank of Roda, stunning the gardeners and frightening the donkey boys. Mounted at last, leaving Achmet to go on with the ARRIVAL AT CAIRO. 52 \ boat to Boulak, I dash at full speed down the long street lead, ing into the heart of Cairo. No heed now of a broken neck : away we go, upsetting Turks, astonishing Copts and making Christians indignant, till I pull up in the shady alley before the British consulate. The door is not closed, and I go up stairs with three leaps and ask for letters. None ; but a quantity of papers which the shirt of my donkey-boy is scarce ly capacious enough to hold. And now at full speed to my banker's. " Are there any letters for me ? " " Letters ? a drawer full ! " and he reaches me the missives, more precious than gold. Was not that a sweet repayment for my five months in the heat and silence and mystery of mid- Africa, when I sat by my window, opening on the great square of Cai ro, fanned by cool airs from the flowering lemon groves, with the words of home in my ears, and my heart beating a fervent response to the sunset call from the minarets : " God is great ! God is merciful ! " 1 stayed eight days in Cairo, to allow my eyes time to heal. The season of winter travel was over, and the few tourists who still lingered, were about starting for Palestine, by way of Gaza. People were talking of the intense heat, and dreading the advent of the khamseen, or south-wind, so called because it blows fifty days. I found the temperature rather cool than warm, and the khamseen, which blew occasionally, filling the city with dust, was mild as a zephyr, compared to the furnace-like blasts of the African Desert. Gentlemen pre pared themselves for the journey across the Desert, by pur chasing broad-brimmed hats, green veils, double-lined umbre^ 522 JOURNEY TO CENTRAL AFRICA. las, and blue spectacles. These may be all very good, but I have never seen the sun nor felt the heat which could induce me to adopt them. I would not exchange my recollections of the fierce red Desert, blazing all over with intensest light, foi any amount of green, gauzy sky and blue sand. And as for an umbrella, the Desert with a continual shade around you, is no desert at all. You must let the Sun lay his sceptre on your head, if you want to know his power. I left Cairo with regret, as I left Thebes and the White Nile, and every other place which gives one all that he came to seek. Moreover, I left behind me my faithful dragoman, Achmet. He had found a new son in his home, but also an invalid wife, who demanded his care, and so he was obliged to give up the journey with me through Syria. He had quite en deared himself to me by his constant devotion, his activity, honesty and intelligence, and I had always treated him rather as a friend than servant. I believe the man really loved me, for he turned pale under all the darkness of his skin, when we parted at Boulak. I took the steamer for Alexandria, and two or three days afterwards sailed for fresh adventures in another Continent. If the reader, who has been my companion during the journey which is now closed, should experience no more fatigue than I did, we may hereafter share also in those adventures. FINIS. RECENT VOLUMES OF TRAVEL. Spain and the Spaniards. By EDMONDO DE AMICIS, author of " Studies of Paris," " Holland," etc. Octavo, with full-page illustrations, $2.00. " Rarely do we meet with a more generous writer. He tells us that the first feeling that inspires him in visiting a foreign country is sympathy, a desire not to find any thing to censure, but to pardon what seem to be de fects. If there were more of this spirit abroad among us the literature of travel would be oftener enriched by such books as this, where the truth is never sacrificed or exaggerated for effect, and where there is such excellent evidence of honest judgment and acute observation set forth amid picturesque effects." N. V. Critic. Unbeaten Tracks in Japan. By ISABELLA BIRD, author of "A Lady's Life in the Rocky Mountains," etc. 2 vols., octavo, bevelled boards, illustrated, $5.00. Also " The Popular Edition," 2 vols. in I, illustrated, $3.00. ' Beyond question the most valuable and the most interesting of recent books concerning Japanese travel. * * * One of the most profitable of recent travel records." Evening Post. Six Months Among the Palm Groves, Coral Reefs, and Vol canoes of the Sandwich Islands. By ISABELLA BIRD, author of " Unbeaten Tracks in Japan," etc. A new and cheaper edition. Octavo, cloth, illustrated, $2.50. Norsk, Lapp, and Finn. By FRANK VINCENT, Jr. , author of "The Land of the White Elephant," " Through and Through the Tropics," etc. Octavo, cloth, with frontispiece and map, $1.50. " Under the above title Frank Vincent, Jr., has produced a book which is full of interesting and instructive matter, and which, we have no doubt, will find a large number of appreciative readers." N. Y. Plerald. " A most interesting book of travel." Denver Republican. A Scandinavian Summer Up to the Midnight Sun. By KATHARINE E. TYLER. Octavo, cloth, $1.75. A fresh and picturesque narrative of a summer ramble in the far North by a writer who evidently knows what to observe and how to describe. Cuban Sketches. By JAMES W. STEELE. Octavo, cloth extra, $1.50. CONTENTS. Going There First Impressions In General The Cuban at Home The Spaniard in Cuba La Senorita Spanish Rule War Times Toilers The Town Rural Cuba Tropical Weather Domestic Institu tions Municipal Conveniences Passions and Amusements Mother Church What We Eat Island Ideas The American in Cuba. Graphic studies of life and character by an old resident, who has a keen sense of humor and an exceptionally picturesque style. *.| C * For sale by all Booksellers. G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS, 27 & 29 West 236 St., New York. PUBLICATIONS OF G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS. BAYARD TAYLOR'S TRAVELS. Eldorado ; OR, ADVENTURES IN THE PATH OF EMPIRE (Mexico and California). i2mo. Houshold edition, $i .50 " To those who have more recently pitched their tents in California, the narrative of Taylor will have interest as assisting them to appreciate the wondrous changes tl:at have been affected in this region since the days of .turmoil, excitement, and daring speculation of which the tourist speaks." Sacramento Union. Central Africa. LIFE AND LANDSCAPE FROM CAIRO TO THE WHITE NILE. Two plates and cuts. 12010. House hold edition, $ l -5 " We have read many of Bayard Taylor's readable books and he never wrote one that was not extremely interesting but we have never been so well pleased with any of his writings as we arc with the volume now before us, ' A Journey to Central Africa.' " Binghamton Republican. Greece and Russia. WITH AN EXCURSION TO CRETE. Two plates. i2mo. Household edition, . . $1.50 " In point of flowing narrative and graphic description, this volume is fully equal to the previous works which have given Mr. Bayaid Taylor such an eminent place among modern travellers." Harper's Montniy. Home and Abroad. A SKETCH-BOOK OF LIFE, SCENERY, AND MEN. Two plates. lamo. Household edition, $1.50 (Second Series.) With two plates. i2mo. Household edition, $1.50 " This is one of the most interesting books that Bayard Taylor has ever made. It is in a large measure autobiographical. Whatever has most im pressed him in any part of the earth is noted in some one of these letters." Taunton Gazette. " A volume from Bayard Taytor is always a pleasure. He not only knows how to travel and how to enjoy it, but he excels in giving entertain ment by his narration to others." Bangor Whig. India, China, and Japan. Two plates, i2mo. House hold edition, ....... $i-5 " Of all travellers, no one pleases us more than Bayard Taylor. He sees w'nat we most desire that he should see, and he tells us that which we most desire to know." New Bedford Met cury. Land of the Saracen ; OR, PICTURES OF PALESTINE, ASIA MINOR, SICILY, AND SPAIN. With two plates. I2mo. Household edition S^S i UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT LOS ANGELES THE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY This book is DUE on the last date stamped below APft 17 MAR- -7" 19511 AUG SS 8 1951 * 1NTERLIBRAR MAR 2 2 DUE TWO WEEKS FROM M979 ' LOANS 979 EJATEOERECELO: or- APR 5197S Form L-9-15m-2 ,'36 UCLA-Young Research Library PS2989 .E83 y II I I II ' L 009 606 557 8 UC SOUTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY AA 001 230 241 o E raj -." IB ' .