miserableness, congregate in the main street of Eski
Baba at eventide, waiting with hungry-eyed expectancy
for any morsel of food or offal that may peradventure
find its way within their reach. The Turks,
to their credit be it said, never abuse dogs; but
every male “Christian” in Eski Baba seems
to consider himself in duty bound to kick or throw
a stone at one, and scarcely a minute passes during
the whole evening without the yelp of some unfortunate
cur. These people seem to enjoy a dog’s
sufferings; and one soulless peasant, who in the course
of the evening kicks a half-starved cur so savagely
that the poor animal goes into a fit, and, after staggering
and rolling all over the street, falls down as though
really dead, is the hero of admiring comments from
the crowd, who watch the creature’s sufferings
with delight. Seeing who can get the most telling
kicks at the dogs seems to be the regular evening’s
pastime among the male population of Eski Baba unbelievers,
and everybody seems interested and delighted when
some unfortunate animal comes in for an unusually severe
visitation. A rush mat on the floor of the stable
is my bed to-night, with a dozen unlikely looking
natives, to avoid the close companionship of whom
I take up my position in dangerous proximity to a donkey’s
hind legs, and not six feet from where the same animal’s
progeny is stretched out with all the abandon of extreme
youth. Precious little sleep is obtained, for
fleas innumerable take liberties with my person.
A flourishing colony of swallows inhabiting the roof
keeps up an incessant twittering, and toward daylight
two muezzins, one on the minaret of each of the two
mosques near by, begin calling the faithful to prayer,
and howling “Allah. Allah!” with
the voices of men bent on conscientiously doing their
duty by making themselves heard by every Mussulman
for at least a mile around, robbing me of even the
short hour of repose that usually follows a sleepless
night.
It is raining heavily again on Sunday morning —
in fact, the last week has been about the rainiest
that I ever saw outside of England — and considering
the state of the roads south of Eski Baba, the prospects
look favorable for a Sunday’s experience in
an interior Turkish village. Men are solemnly
squatting around the benches of the mehana, smoking
nargilehs and sipping tiny cups of thick black coffee,
and they look on in wonder while I devour a substantial
breakfast; but whether it is the novelty of seeing
a ’cycler feed, or the novelty of seeing anybody
eat as I am doing, thus early in the morning, I am
unable to say; for no one else seems to partake of
much solid food until about noontide. All the
morning long, people swarming around are importuning
me with, " Bin, bin, bin, monsieur.” The
bicycle is locked up in a rear chamber, and thrice
I accommodatingly fetch it out and endeavor to appease
their curiosity by riding along a hundred-yard stretch
of smooth road in the rear of the mehana; but their