the rag-bedecked, flea-bitten objects that come outside
to gaze at us, if such a thing were possible, compare
unfavorably even with the Dele Baba Koords. There
is apparent at once, however, a difference between
the respective dispositions of the two peoples:
the Koords are inclined to be pig-headed and obtrusive,
as though possessed of their full share of the spirit
of self-assertion; the Sup Ogwanis people, on the
contrary, act like beings utterly destitute of anything
of the kind, cowering beneath one’s look and
shunning immediate contact as though habitually overcome
with a sense of their own inferiority. The two
priests come out to see the bicycle ridden; they are
stout, bushy-whiskered, greasy-looking old jokers,
with small twinkling black eyes, whose expression
would seem to betoken anything rather than saintliness,
and, although the Euphrates flows hard by, they are
evidently united in their enmity against soap and water,
if in nothing else; in fact, judging from outward appearances,
water is about the only thing concerning which they
practise abstemiousness. The monastery itself
is a massive structure of hewn stone, surrounded by
a high wall loop-holed for defence; attached to the
wall inside is a long row of small rooms or cells,
the habitations of the monks in more prosperous days;
a few of them are occupied at present by the older
men.; At 5.30 P.M., the bell tolls for evening service,
and I accompany my guide into the monastery; it is
a large, empty-looking edifice of simple, massive
architecture, and appears to have been built with a
secondary purpose of withstanding a siege or an assault,
and as a place of refuge for the people in troublous
times; containing among other secular appliances a
large brick oven for baking bread. During the
last war, the place was actually bombarded by the
Russiaus in an effort to dislodge a body of Koords
who had taken possession of the monastery, and from
behind its solid walls, harassed the Russian troops
advancing toward Erzeroum. The patched up holes
made by the Russians’ shots are pointed out,
as also some light earthworks thrown up on the Russian
position across the river. In these degenerate
days one portion of the building is utilized as a
storehouse for grain; hundreds of pigeons are cooing
and roosting on the crossbeams, making the place their
permanent abode, passing in and out of narrow openings
near the roof; and the whole interior is in a disgustingly
filthy condition. Rude fresco representations
of the different saints in the Gregorian calendar
formerly adorned the walls, and bright colored tiles
embellished the approach to the altar. Nothing
is distinguishable these days but the crumbling and
half-obliterated evidences of past glories; both priests
and people seem hopelessly sunk in the quagmire of
avariciousness and low cunning on the one hand, and
of blind ignorance and superstition on the other.
Clad in greasy and seedy-looking cowls, the priests
go through a few nonsensical manosuvres, consisting