Letters from Egypt eBook

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

Letters from Egypt eBook

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

Many thanks for your letter and for all the trouble you have taken.  I wish you were better.

There is such a group all stitching away at the big new sail; Omar, the Reis, two or three volunteers, some old sailors of mine, and little Darfour.  If I die I think you must have that tiny nigger over; he is such a merry little soul, I am sure you would love him, he is quite a civilized being and has a charming temper, and he seems very small to be left alone in the world.

I hope Maurice is not of the faction of the ennuyes of this generation.  I am more and more of Omar’s opinion, who said, with a pleased sigh, as we sat on the deck under some lovely palm-trees in the bright moon-light, moored far from all human dwellings, ’how sweet are the quiet places of the world.’

I wonder when Europe will drop the absurd delusion about Christians being persecuted by Muslims.  It is absolutely the other way,—­here at all events.  The Christians know that they will always get backed by some Consul or other, and it is the Muslims who go to the wall invariably.  The brute of a Patriarch is resolved to continue his persecution of the converts, and I was urged the other day by a Sheykh to go to the Sheykh ul-Islam himself and ask him to demand equal rights for all religions, which is the law, on behalf of these Coptic Protestants.  Everywhere the Ulema have done what they could to protect them, even at Siout, where the American missionaries had caused them (the Ulemas) a good deal of annoyance on a former occasion.  No one in Europe can conceive how much the Copts have the upper hand in the villages.  They are backed by the Government, and they know that the Europeans will always side with them.

September 13.—­Omar is crazy with delight at the idea of Maurice’s arrival, and Reis Mohammed is planning what men to take who can make fantasia, and not ask too much wages.  Let me know what boat Maurice comes by that I may send Omar to Alexandria to meet him.  Omar begs me to give you and Sitti Rainie his best salaam, and his assurance that he will take great care of the young master and ‘keep him very tight.’  I think Maurice will be diverted with small Darfour.  Mabrook now really cooks very fairly under Omar’s orders, but he is beyond belief uncouth, and utters the wildest howls now that his voice is grown big and strong like himself.  Moreover he ‘won’t be spoken to,’ as our servants say; but he is honest, clean, and careful.  I should not have thought any human creature could remain so completely a savage in a civilized community.  I rather respect his savage hauteur, especially as it is combined with truth and honesty.

October 17, 1867:  Sir Alexander Duff Gordon

To Sir Alexander Duff Gordon
BOULAK,
BOAT MARIE LOUISE,
October 17, 1867.

Dearest Alick,

You must not be wroth with me because I have not written for a long time—­I have been ill, but am much better.  Omar will go down to Alexandria to meet Maurice on Monday.

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Letters from Egypt from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.