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The Story Teller of the Desert—"Backsheesh!" / or, Life and Adventures in the Orient

Chapter 6: ILLUSTRATIONS
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The narrator recounts a voyage from Atlantic crossings through central Europe to the Ottoman world and onward into Syria, Palestine, Egypt and the Nile, combining lively travel anecdotes, descriptive sketches, and humor. Episodes depict shipboard life, river scenes, bazaars, mosques, whirling dervishes, harem curiosities, Bedouin tent-life and caravan journeys, visits to ancient sites and holy places, and encounters with officials, boatmen, and street animals. Recurring themes include cultural observation, the practice of backsheesh and local commerce, sundry eccentric characters, and vivid visual detail intended to entertain and inform the reader.

The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Story Teller of the Desert—"Backsheesh!"

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Title: The Story Teller of the Desert—"Backsheesh!"

Author: Thomas Wallace Knox

Release date: December 15, 2015 [eBook #50700]
Most recently updated: October 22, 2024

Language: English

Credits: Produced by David Widger from page images generously
provided by the Internet Archive

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY TELLER OF THE DESERT—"BACKSHEESH!" ***








THE STORY TELLER OF THE DESERT

“BACKSHEESH!”

or, Life and Adventures in the Orient

By Thomas W. Knox

With Descriptive And Humorous Sketches Of Sights And Scenes Over The Atlantic, Down The Danube, Through The Crimea J In Turkey, Greece, Asia-Minor, Syria, Palestine, And Egypt; Up The Nile, In Nubia, And Equatorial Africa, Etc., Etc.
Embellished with nearly Two Hundred and Fifty Illustrations, including Forty-Eight full page Engravings, principally executed in London, Paris, and New York, from Photographs and original Sketches.

With fine Steel-Plate Portrait of the Author.

Hartford, Conn; A. D. Worthington & Co., Publishers

1885















CONTENTS

AUTHOR’S PREFACE.

ILLUSTRATIONS

CHAPTER I—STEAMER-LIFE ON THE ATLANTIC.

CHAPTER II—SCENES IN VIENNA—DOWN THE DANUBE.

CHAPTER III—LIFE AMONG THE MAGYARS.

CHAPTER IV—NEARING THE ORIENT—“BACKSHEESH!”

CHAPTER V—THROUGH THE CRIMEA—IN AND AROUND SEVASTOPOL.

CHAPTER VI—ACROSS THE BLACK SEA.

CHAPTER VII—CONSTANTINOPLE—THE CITY OF DOGS.

CHAPTER VIII—TURKISH CURIOSITY SHOPS—SIGHTS AND SCENES IN THE BAZAARS.

CHAPTER IX—FASTING AND FEASTING—THE SULTAN AND HIS COURT.

CHAPTER X—THE MOSQUES—FAITH AND SUPERSTITIONS OF THE MUSSULMANS.

CHAPTER XI—WHIRLING AND HOWLING DERVISHES—WHO AND WHAT THEY ARE.

CHAPTER XII—ON THE BOSPHORUS.—AMONG THE ISLES OF GREECE.

CHAPTER XIII—SYRA, THE MARBLE ISLAND.—LIFE AT AN ATHENIAN HOTEL.

CHAPTER XIV—ATHENS ANCIENT AND MODERN—SIGHTS AND SCENES IN THE GRECIAN CAPITAL.

CHAPTER XV—ROUND ABOUT ATHENS.—THE COUNTRY OF THE BRIGANDS.

CHAPTER XVI—THE GLORY OF ATHENS.—ITS SIGHTS, SCENES, RUINS, AND RELICS.

CHAPTER XVII—ADVENTURES IN QUARANTINE.—RHODES AND ITS MARVELS.

CHAPTER XVIII—SYRIA, THE LAND OF THE SUN.—DRAGOMEN, GUIDES, AND COURIERS.

CHAPTER XIX—THE GROVES OF LEBANON.—A NIGHT AMONG THE ARABS.

CHAPTER XX—DAMASCUS—THE GARDEN CITY OF THE EAST.

CHAPTER XXI—SYRIAN LIFE—DEALERS IN HUMAN FLESH—WE TRY “ZE LUXURIES OF ZE BATH.”

CHAPTER XXII—TRAVELING IN A CARAVAN—SIGHTS ON THE WAY.

CHAPTER XXIII—TENT-LIFE AMONG THE BEDOUINS.—THE WARRIORS OF THE DESERT.

CHAPTER XXIV—ADVENTURES IN THE MOUNTAINS OF SYRIA.

CHAPTER XV—“FROM DAN TO BEERSHEBA.”—JOURNEYING THROUGH THE HOLY LAND.

CHAPTER XXVI—IN THE HEART OF PALESTINE.

CHAPTER XXVII—THE LAND OF THE PHILISTINES.—SAMARIA AND ITS PEOPLE.

CHAPTER XXVIII—FROM DAMASCUS TO JAFFA.—INCIDENTS OF THE TRIP.

CHAPTER XXIX—ENGAGING A DRAGOMAN.—OUR START FOR JERUSALEM.

CHAPTER XXX—THE LIONS OF JERUSALEM.—THE TEMPLE, THE SEPULCHRE, AND THE HOLY OF HOLIES.

CHAPTER XXXI—AMONG THE MONKS.

CHAPTER XXXII—AMONG THE BEDOUINS.—TRAVELLING UNDER ESCORT, AND LIVING IN TENTS.

CHAPTER XXXIII—THE HOLY SEPULCHRE, AND SHRINE OF THE CITY OF DAVID

CHAPTER XXXIV—THE LAND OF PHARAOH.—THROUGH THE EGYPTIAN DESERT.

CHAPTER XXXV—IN AND AROUND THE CITY OF THE CALIPHS.

CHAPTER XXXVI—AN INTERVIEW WITH THE KHEDIVE.—LIFE IN THE CITY OF THE NILE.

CHAPTER XXXVII—STREET-LIFE IN CAIRO.

CHAPTER XXXVIII—THE BAZAARS OF CAIRO.—EGYPTIAN CURIOSITY SHOPS.

CHAPTER XXXIX—ADVENTURES WITH A DONKEY.—A DAY AT THE RACES.

CHAPTER XL—THE PASHA AND THE PRIESTS.—EGYPTIAN LANGUAGE—SCHOOLS AND RELIGIOUS CEREMONIES.

CHAPTER XLI—THE GREAT PYRAMIDS.—IN THE KINGS’ BURIAL CHAMBERS.

CHAPTER XLII—A VOYAGE UP THE NILE.—THE MYSTERIES OF EGYPTIAN ART AND WORSHIP.

CHAPTER XLIII—LIFE ON THE BANKS OF THE NILE.—COPTS, JUGGLERS, AND THIEVES.—AMUSING EXPERIENCES.

CHAPTER XLIV—ADVENTURES IN UPPER EGYPT.—FUN AND FROLIC WITH THE NATIVES.

CHAPTER XLV—THE DANCING GIRLS OF KENEH.—THE TREASURES OF DENDERAH.

CHAPTER XLVI—LUXOR, THE CITY OF GIANTS.—AMONG THE MUMMIES OF ANCIENT THEBES.

CHAPTER XLVII—A VISIT TO A HAREM IN UPPER EGYPT.—LIFE AMONG THE NUBIANS.

CHAPTER XLVIII—CAMEL RIDING.—ADVENTURES AMONG THE NUBIANS.

CHAPTER XLIX—IN THE SLAVE-COUNTRY—SIR SAMUEL W. BAKER’S EXPEDITION.

CHAPTER L—SUNSET IN THE ORIENT.—VOYAGING DOWN THE NILE.

CHAPTER LI—THE WEDDING OF THE KHEDIVE’S SON.—ENJOYING A MONARCH’S HOSPITALITY.

CHAPTER LII—WOMEN AMONG THE MOHAMMEDANS—LIFE IN THE HAREM.

CHAPTER LIII.—WINTER ON THE NILE—THE KHAMSEEN AND ITS EFFECTS—BEDOUIN LIFE.

CHAPTER LIV—LAST DAYS IN EGYPT.


















AUTHOR’S PREFACE.

The following pages are the result of a peaceful crusade to the East, undertaken for purposes of pleasure and profit. The author has endeavored to combine the humorous features of the journey with the store of useful knowledge that should be the result of a tour through the Orient. He trusts that he has so combined them that both will be satisfactory, and that the reader will be amused while seeking instruction and instructed while seeking amusement.

There is a story of an honest old Quaker resident of Philadelphia, who sent his son to make the tour of Europe. The young man determined to see all that could be seen, and gave his whole mind to the search for enjoyment. When he returned from his travels his father said:

“John, thou hast been absent a twelvemonth and past, and thou hast drawn on me for eighteen thousand dollars. John, that is a great deal of money for thee to spend in one year.”

“I know it, father,” was the young man’s response, “but I have had lots of fun for that money.”

In return for the labor and fatigue incident to Oriental travel, the author believes that he found an ample reward in the entertainment and information which the journey afforded.

The author is glad to avail himself of this opportunity to express the gratification he feels at seeing his book so profusely and artistically illustrated. In this department of the work the publishers have displayed their enterprise and liberality in such a creditable manner, as to justly entitle them, not only to the author’s grateful acknowledgments, but to the hearty thanks of all who may read his book.

He would also return his thanks to the artists and engravers, who have so skilfully designed and executed the illustrations, many of which were drawn and engraved in London and Paris, expressly for this volume.

Finally he would thank most cordially the many gentlemen in the various countries he visited who gave him the benefit of their personal experience and observation. Their names are too numerous to be included in this preface, and their nationalities comprise nearly all the civilized countries of the globe. T. W. K.

Principally designed, or reproduced from photographs, by Karl Giradet, Faguet, Frank Beard, James C. Beard, Arthur Lumley, L. Hopkins, and eminent artists, and mostly engraved by Messrs. Holier, Pannemaker, Laptante, Gusmand, Gauchard, and other noted engravers of Paris; by W. J. Palmer, and the London Illustration Company, of London; and by Charles Speigle, of New York.








ILLUSTRATIONS


                                                              Page

     6. Head Piece...............................................033
     7. Steamer Day..............................................034
     8. The Judge’s First Day at Sea.............................035
     9. The Judge’s Second Day at Sea............................036
     10. The Race................................................039
     11. The Judge...............................................040
     12. A Practical Joke........................................044
     13. Head Piece..............................................048
     14. Fraternizing............................................050
     15. Eternal Friendship......................................051
     16. Proof of the Affray.....................................052
     17. Avenging an Insult......................................054
     18. “I must have a Duel”....................................055
     19. An Imperial Wine Cellar.................................060
     20. Head Piece..............................................063
     21. “Salt by Yer”...........................................068
     22. The Snoring Match.......................................069
     23. The Doubter.............................................071
     24. A Turkish “Hamal”.......................................073
     25. Tail Piece..............................................077
     26. Head Piece..............................................078
     27. Among the Fleas.........................................079
     28. A Toilet in Public......................................082
     29. “Natives of the Country”................................085
     30. Precautionary Measures..................................086
     31. “She is a Jewess”.......................................089
     32. The Palace Tshiragan....................................091
     33. Head Piece..............................................093
     34. Shirking the Cemetery...................................097
     35. “Fresh Paint”...........................................100
     36. Driving a Bargain.......................................104
     37. A Night at Baidar.......................................106
     38. Caught in the Act.......................................108
     39. Tail Piece..............................................109
     40. Head Piece..............................................110
     41. Putting in his “Best Licks”.............................112
     42. “Backsheesh”............................................113
     43. An Impressive Scene.....................................116
     44. Constantinople from the Tower of Golata—Full..........116
     45. Head Piece..............................................123
     46. A Street in Constantinople..............................124
     47. Strategy................................................126
     48. The Reconnoitre.........................................129
     49. The Retreat.............................................130
     50. A Damas-cussed Dog......................................131
     51. Stowing the Sandwiches..................................132
     52. Admiring the Mosque.....................................132
     53. A Sudden Attack.........................................132
     54. The Pursuit.............................................133
     55. A Hopeless Chase........................................133
     56. “Retrospection”.........................................134
     57. Tail Piece..............................................135
     58. Headpiece...............................................135
     59. A Sedan Chair...........................................136
     60. A Turkish Beauty........................................137
     61. An Importunate Moslem...................................143
     62. Extorting “Backsheesh”..................................144
     63. Head Piece..............................................145
     64. End of the Fast and Beginning of the Feast.............146
     65. “Good-Bye, my Friend, Good-Bye”.........................148
     66. A Turkish “Cavass”......................................149
     67. Head Piece..............................................153
     68. Moslems at Prayer.......................................154
     69. “Bismillah”............................................155
     70. The “Duplicate”.........................................157
     71. Muezzin announcing the Hour of Prayer...................158
     72. An Oriental Boot Jack...................................160
     73. Fartha, or Opening Chapter of the Koran.................163
     74. Tail Piece..............................................165
     75. Head Piece..............................................166
     76. A Whirling Dervish......................................170
     77. Effect of too much Whirling.............................171
     78. Howling as a Profession.................................173
     79. Homopathic Treatment....................................175
     80. Head Piece..............................................177
     81. Some of the Brothers of Far-Away Moses..................178
     82. Interviewing a Purser...................................184
     83. Head Piece..............................................187
     84. Head Piece..............................................197
     85. View of Athens and the Acropolis........................199
     86. The Decline of Greece...................................201
     87. Greek Priest of Modern Times............................204
     88. “Doing” the Ruins.......................................206
     89. Tail Piece.............................................212
     90. Head Piece..............................................213
     91. Sending Up the Ear of a Victim..........................217
     92. Head Piece.............................................225
     93. Pickling the “Doubter”..................................229
     94. “Backsheesh!” “Backsheesh!”.............................231
     95. Head Piece..............................................236
     96. Inspecting the Crew.....................................241
     97. Bad “Backsheesh.”—“It was Counterfeit”.................243
     98. St. Jean D’Acre—Full Paye..............................249
     99. A Tricky Beast..........................................254
     100. Beyrout and the Mountains of Lebanon—Full Page........257
     101. “Mou Dieu! Is this the Party for Damascus?”............262
     102. Head Piece.............................................264
     103. The Cedars of Lebanon—Full Page.......................265
     104. Cedar of Lebanon.......................................270
     105. Great Stone at Baalbek.................................272
     106. Portal of the Temple of the Sun at Baalbek.............275
     107. Court of a House in Damascus...........................279
     108. Moslem Women Weeping at a Tomb.........................282
     109. Syrian Jew with Phylactery.............................285
     110. A Money Changer in the Bazaar..........................288
     111. Flat Roofed Houses—Damascus...........................291
     112. Abd-el-Kader...........................................293
     113. We “Strip to ze buff”..................................296
     114. “You will have all ze luxuries”........................296
     115. We Enter “Ze Bain Beautiful”...........................297
     116. One of the Luxuries....................................297
     117. Softening the Asperities...............................298
     118. A Not One..............................................298
     119. “What is Curlew?”......................................305
     120. A Bedouin Encampment...................................308
     121. A Bedouin of the Desert................................309
     122. The Terror of the Desert on his Arabian Charger........311
     123. Enins of Palmyra—Full Page............................315
     124. Hebron—Full Page......................................319
     125. Mount Carmel—Full Page................................323
     126. An Inhabited Boot,.....................................325
     127. Ploughing in Syria,....................................332
     128. All that remains of Capernaum,.........................334
     129. “Backsheesh! O Howadji!”...............................335
     130. The Sea of Tibenas—Full Page..........................337
     131. Magdala,...............................................339
     132. Unhorsing the “Doubter,”...............................342
     133. Nazareth—Full Page....................................345
     134. Jeivs of Nazareth—Full Page...........................349
     135. A Syrian Water Bearer,.................................353
     136. Jerusalem and Surrounding Country—Full Page...........359
     137. Sidon—Full Page.......................................365
     138. Tyre,..................................................368
     139. Tail Piece,............................................369
     140. Jaffa—Full Page.......................................371
     141. Our Dragoman, Ali Soloman,............................374
     141. “Backsheesh,”..........................................376
     143. Jerusalem from the Mount of Olives—Full Page..........377
     144. Ancient Arch; Portion of the Haram Wall,...............380
     145. A Street in Jerusalem,................................381
     146. Arched Street and Fountain, Jerusalem,.................382
     147. Jdrindpal Street of Jerusalem—Full Page...............383
     148. The Golden Gate, Jerusalem,...........................386
     149. Interior of the Golden Gate,...........................387
     150. Site of the Temple, Jerusalem,.........................388
     151. Ancient Signet Ring,...................................389
     152. Ancient Signet Ring,...................................389
     153. Exploring the Substructions,...........................390
     154. Underground—Beneath the City of Jerusalem.............391
     155. The Valley of Jehoshapliat,............................393
     156. Wailing Place of the Jews, Jerusalem,..................394
     157. Walls of the Church of the Presentation—Full Page.....395
     158. Bethlehem—Full Page..................................399
     159. Chinch of the Nativity, Bethlehem—Full Page...........405
     160. Monastery of Mar Saba—Full Page.......................409
     161. A Formidable Escort,...................................414
     162. Bathing Place of the Pilgrims on the Jordan............417
     163. The “Doubter’s” Mishap,................................420
     164. The Mount of Olives—Full Page.........................423
     165. Pool of Hezekiah,......................................426
     166. West Door, Church of the Holy Sepulchre................427
     167. Church of the Holy Sepulchre—Full Page................429
     168. The Fountain of the Virgin,............................433
     169. Doubter’—Sixpence,”...................................436
     170. Jaffa Orange Seller,...................................438
     171. Tail Piece,............................................439
     172. Water Bearers at the Railway Station, Cairo,...........447
     173. Praying in the Streets of Cairo,.......................448
     174. Cairo—Full Page.......................................449
     175. Massacre of the Mamalukes—Full Page...................455
     176. Ismail Pasha, Khedive of Egypt,........................458
     177. A Tough One,...........................................459
     178. Head Piece.............................................468
     179. Tombs of the Sultans—Cairo—Full Page..................469
     180. “O Ye Thirsty,”........................................472
     181. Children Bread Sellers in the Streets of Cairo,.......473
     182. Mosque of the Sultan Hassan, at Cairo—Full Page.......475
     183. Young Street Arabs of Cairo,...........................477
     184. Shoe Peddler in the Bazaar,............................479
     185. Latticed Windows—Cairo,...............................480
     186. An Auctioneer in the Bazaars,..........................485
     187. A Syce,...............................................489
     188. Donkey Drivers of Cairo—Full Page.....................491
     189. Not up to the Dodge,...................................494
     190. An Egyptian Eunuch,....................................496
     191. An Arab School—Full Page..............................503
     192. Ceremony of the Doseh,.................................510
     193. A Shadoof for Drawing Water from the Nile.............515
     194. Climbing the Pyramid,..................................518
     195. The Ascent of the Judge,...............................520
     196. An Arab Feat,.........................................522
     197. The Sphinx and the Great Pyramid of Gizeh..............523
     198. A Nile Boat............................................530
     199. The Serapeum—Memphis—Full Page........................537
     200. Landing Place at Beni-Soef—Full Page.................545
     201. Sugar Cane Seller at Minieh,..........................549
     202. An Inconvenient Position,..............................552
     203. Siout—Upper Egypt—Full Page..........................555
     204. “Nargeeleh,”...........................................557
     205. Siout Egg Merchant,....................................558
     206. Egyptian Gamblers,.....................................559
     207. “Aoz, Eh?”.............................................663
     208. “Dusting” for “Backsheesh,”............................566
     209. An Egyptian Ghawazee,..................................569
     210. Ghawazee and Musicians,................................570
     211. An Egyptian Musician,..................................574
     212. Egyptian Water Carriers Filling their Jars.............575
     213. Ruins of the Temple of Denderah, Upper Egypt...........579
     214. Entrance to the Temple of Luxor........................587
     215. The Memnonlum and the Ruined Statue....................593
     216. Sitting Colossi,.......................................595
     217. A Fresh One............................................599
     218. Interior of a Harem....................................601
     219. A Murderous Assault,...................................607
     220. A Nubian Belle,........................................609
     221. A Nubian Lady..........................................610
     222. An Egyptian Sakfdeh, Drawing Water from the Nile.......611
     213. All Affectionate Beast.................................613
     214. Luxuries of Camel Riding...............................615
     225. Egyptian God Osiris....................................617
     226. Egyptian Goddess Isis..................................618
     227. Island of Phike, or Sacred Island—Full Page...........619
     218. Sacred Lotus of the Egyptians—Full Page...............627
     219. Modern Egyptian Gristmill..............................630
     230. A Nubian Warrior.......................................632
     231. Papyrus of the Egyptians—Full Page....................633
     231. Biting the Dust........................................641
     233. Women of Cairo—Full Page..............................655
     234. Bread Seller in the Streets of Cairo...................659
     235. A Lady of the Harem....................................662
     236. An Egyptian Barber.....................................665
     237. Alexandria—Full Page..................................671
     238. Court of a House in Egypt,.............................673
     239. A Bedouin Encampment near Cairo,.......................675
     240. The Madonna Tree,......................................676
     241. Boot Blacks of Cairo,..................................679
     242. Mosque of Sultan Berkook, and Fountain of Ismail.......682
     243. Modern Egyptian Oven,..................................683
     244. Palace of the Viceroy, near Alexandria—Full Page......689