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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 01:47:08 -0700
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+<html>
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>Byeways in Palestine</title>
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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">Byeways in Palestine, by James Finn</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Byeways in Palestine, by James Finn
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Byeways in Palestine
+
+
+Author: James Finn
+
+
+
+Release Date: July 18, 2007 [eBook #22097]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BYEWAYS IN PALESTINE***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>This ebook was transcribed from the 1868 James Nisbet and Co. edition by
+Les Bowler.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/front.jpg">
+<img alt="Frontispiece" src="images/front.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<h1>BYEWAYS IN PALESTINE</h1>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">by</span><br />
+JAMES FINN, M.R.A.S.,<br />
+<span class="smcap">and member of the asiatic society of france</span>,<br
+/>
+<span class="smcap">late her majesty&rsquo;s consul for jerusalem and
+palestine</span>.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;The land, which we passed through to search it, is an exceeding
+good land.&rdquo;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Numb.</span> xiv. 7.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p style="text-align: center">LONDON:<br />
+JAMES NISBET &amp; CO., 21 BERNERS STREET.<br />
+<span class="smcap">mdccclxviii</span>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><!-- page iii--><a name="pageiii"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. iii</span><i>To His Excellency</i><br />
+<i>Right Hon. Francis Lord Napier</i>, <i>K.T.</i>,<br />
+<i>etc. etc. etc.</i>,<br />
+<i>Governor of the Presidency of Madras</i>,<br />
+This little Volume<br />
+<i>is inscribed</i>,<br />
+<i>in grateful acknowledgment of kindness</i><br />
+<i>received in</i><br />
+<i>Jerusalem and elsewhere</i>,</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">BY THE AUTHOR.</p>
+<p><i>London</i>, 1867.</p>
+<h2><!-- page v--><a name="pagev"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+v</span>PREFACE.</h2>
+<p>These papers on &ldquo;Byeways in Palestine&rdquo; are compiled from
+notes of certain journeys made during many years&rsquo; residence in that
+country; omitting the journeys made upon beaten roads, and through the
+principal towns, for the mere reason that they were such.</p>
+<p>Just what met the eye and ear was jotted down and is now revised after a
+lapse of time, without indulging much in meditation or reflection; these
+are rather suggested by the occurrences, that they may be followed out by
+the reader.&nbsp; Inasmuch, however, as the incidents relate to
+out-of-the-way places, and various seasons of the year, they may be found
+to contain an interest peculiar to themselves, and the account of them may
+not interfere with any other book on Palestine.</p>
+<p>I may state that, not being a professed investigator, <!-- page vi--><a
+name="pagevi"></a><span class="pagenum">p. vi</span>I carried with me no
+scientific instruments, except sometimes a common thermometer: I had no
+leisure for making excavations, for taking angles with a theodolite, or
+attending to the delicate care of any kind of barometer, being employed on
+my proper business.</p>
+<p>Riding by night or by day, in the heat of Syrian summer, or through
+snows and piercing winds of winter on the mountains, I enjoyed the pure
+climate for its own sake.&nbsp; Moreover, I lived among the people, holding
+intercourse with peasants in villages, with Bedaween in deserts, and with
+Turkish governors in towns, or dignified Druses in the Lebanon, and slept
+in native dwellings of all qualities, as well as in convents of different
+sects: in the open air at the foot of a tree, or in a village
+mosque&mdash;in a cavern by the highway side, or beneath cliffs near the
+Dead Sea: although more commonly within my own tent, accompanied by native
+servants with a small canteen.</p>
+<p>Sad cogitations would arise while traversing, hour after hour, the
+neglected soil, or passing by desolated villages which bear names of
+immense antiquity, and which stand as memorials of miraculous events which
+took place for our instruction <!-- page vii--><a name="pagevii"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. vii</span>and for that of all succeeding ages; and then,
+even while looking forward to a better time to come, the heart would sigh
+as the expression was uttered, &ldquo;How long?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>These notices will show that the land is one of remarkable fertility
+wherever cultivated, even in a slight degree&mdash;witness the vast
+wheat-plains of the south; and is one of extreme beauty&mdash;witness the
+green hill-country of the north; although such qualities are by no means
+confined to those districts.&nbsp; Thus it is not necessary, it is not
+just, that believers in the Bible, in order to hold fast their confidence
+in its predictions for the future, should rush into the extreme of
+pronouncing the Holy Land to be cursed in its present capabilities.&nbsp;
+It is verily and indeed cursed in its government and in its want of
+population; but still the soil is that of &ldquo;a land which the Lord thy
+God careth for.&rdquo;&nbsp; There is a deep meaning in the words,
+&ldquo;The earth is the Lord&rsquo;s,&rdquo; when applied to that peculiar
+country; for it is a reserved property, an estate in abeyance, and not even
+in a subordinate sense can it be the fief of the men whom it eats up.&nbsp;
+(Numb. xiii. 32, and Ezek. xxxvi. 13, 14.)&nbsp; I have seen enough to
+convince me that astonishing will be the amount <!-- page viii--><a
+name="pageviii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. viii</span>of its produce, and
+the rapidity also, when the obstacles now existing are removed.</p>
+<p>With respect to antiquarian researches, let me express my deep interest
+in the works now undertaken under the Palestine Exploration Fund.&nbsp; My
+happiness, while residing in the country, would have been much augmented
+had such operations been at that time, <i>i.e.</i>, between 1846 and 1863,
+commenced in Jerusalem or elsewhere in the Holy Land.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">J. F.</p>
+<h2><!-- page ix--><a name="pageix"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+ix</span>NOTE.</h2>
+<p>The frontispiece picture to this volume represents the relic of a small
+Roman Temple, situated on the eastern edge of the Plain of Sharon, near the
+line of hills, between the two villages Awali and
+M&rsquo;zeera&rsquo;a.</p>
+<p>It is quadrangular in form, with a door and portico on its north
+front.</p>
+<p>The portico is supported by two round columns of Corinthian order, and
+two pilasters of the same at the extremities.&nbsp; The columns are of
+small dimensions, the shafts not exceeding nine feet in length; yet in
+these the canon is observed which obtains in the larger proportions found
+in classic lands, namely, that the diameter is somewhat extended near the
+half elevation from the ground.&nbsp; The capitals are of the best
+design.</p>
+<p>The doorway is formed by a very bold and deep moulding, and in the
+upright side-posts is found the same arrangement for holding a stone bar in
+confining <!-- page x--><a name="pagex"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+x</span>the door, as is to be seen in some sepulchres about Jerusalem,
+namely, a curved groove increasing in depth of incision as it descends.</p>
+<p>The whole edifice bears the same warm tinge of yellow that all those of
+good quality acquire from age in that pure climate.</p>
+<p>The roof has been repaired, and the walls in some parts patched up.</p>
+<p>On the southern wall, internally, the Moslems have set up a Kebleh niche
+for indicating the direction of prayer.</p>
+<p>The peasants call this building the &ldquo;Boorj,&rdquo; or
+&ldquo;Tower.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Near adjoining it are remains of ancient foundations: one quite circular
+and of small diameter.</p>
+<p>There is also by the road-side, not far off, a rocky grotto, supplied
+with water by channels from the hills.</p>
+<p>My sketches of this interesting relic date from 1848 and 1859, and, as
+far as I am aware, no other traveller had seen it until lately, when the
+members of the Palestine Exploration Expedition visited and took a
+photograph of it, which is now published.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">J. F.</p>
+<h2><!-- page xi--><a name="pagexi"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xi</span>CONTENTS.</h2>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>I.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>OVER THE JORDAN, AND RETURN BY THE WEST</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page1">1</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>II.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>NORTHWARDS TO BEIS&Acirc;N, KADIS, ANTIPATRIS, ETC.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page85">85</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>III.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>SOUTHWARDS ON THE PHILISTINE PLAIN AND ITS SEA COAST</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page144">144</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>IV.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>HEBRON TO BEERSHEBA, AND HEBRON TO JAFFA</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page184">184</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>V.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>THE LAND OF BENJAMIN</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page199">199</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>VI.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>SEBUSTIEH TO CAIFFA</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page214">214</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>VII.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>ESDRAELON PLAIN AND ITS VICINITY</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page226">226</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>VIII.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>BEL&Acirc;D BESH&Acirc;RAH</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page253">253</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>IX.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>UPPER GALILEE&mdash;FOREST SCENERY</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page264">264</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>X.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>TEMPLE OF BAAL AND SEPULCHRE OF PH&OElig;NICIA</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page283">283</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>XI.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>JERUSALEM TO PETRA, AND RETURN BY THE DEAD SEA</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page289">289</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>XII.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>ACROSS THE LEBANON&mdash;(THREE PARTS,)</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page347">347</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>XIII.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>NORTH-WEST OF THE DEAD SEA</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page414">414</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>XIV.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>SOBA</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page423">423</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>XV.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>THE TWO BAIT SAHHOORS IDENTIFIED</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page428">428</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>XVI.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>THE BAKOOSH COTTAGE</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page435">435</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>APPENDIX A</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page453">453</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>APPENDIX B</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page454">454</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>INDEX OF PLACES</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p><span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page461">461</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p></p>
+<h2><!-- page 1--><a name="page1"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+1</span>I.&nbsp; OVER THE JORDAN AND RETURN BY THE WEST.</h2>
+<p>We were a dozen Englishmen, including three clergymen, undertaking the
+above journey accompanied by the large train of servants, interpreters, and
+muleteers usually required for travelling in the East.&nbsp; And it was on
+Wednesday, the 9th day of May 1855, that we started.&nbsp; This was
+considered almost late in the season for such an enterprise.&nbsp; The
+weather was hot, chiefly produced by a strong shirocco wind at the time;
+and, in crossing over the shoulder of the Mount of Olives, we found the
+country people beginning their harvest at Bethany.</p>
+<p>We were of course escorted by a party of Arab guides, partly villagers
+of either <i>Abu Dis</i> or <i>Selwan</i>, (Siloam,) and partly of those
+Ghaw&acirc;rineh Arabs not deserving the appellation of Bedaween, who live
+around and about Jericho.&nbsp; These people, of <!-- page 2--><a
+name="page2"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 2</span>both classes, form a
+partnership for convoy of travellers to the Jordan under arrangements made
+at the consulate.&nbsp; Without them it would be impossible either to find
+the way to Jericho and the river, or to pass along the deserted road, for
+there are always out-lookers about the tops of the hills to give notice
+that you are without an escort, and you would consequently still find that
+travellers may &ldquo;fall among thieves&rdquo; between Jerusalem and
+Jericho; besides that, on descending to the plain of Jericho you would
+certainly become the prey of other Arabs of real tribes, ever passing about
+there&mdash;including most probably the &rsquo;Adw&acirc;n, to whose
+hospitality, however, we were now about to commit ourselves.&nbsp; To all
+this must be added, that no other Arabs dare undertake to convoy travellers
+upon that road; the Ta&aacute;mra to the south have long felt their
+exclusion from it to be a great grievance, as the gains derived from the
+employment of escorting Europeans are very alluring.</p>
+<p>We had with us a deputed commissioner from the &rsquo;Adw&acirc;n,
+namely, Shaikh Fendi, a brother of Shaikh &rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l
+&rsquo;Azeez.&nbsp; He was delighted with the refreshment of eating a
+cucumber, when we rested by the wayside to eat oranges&mdash;the delicious
+produce of Jaffa.</p>
+<p>Passing the <i>Fountain of the Apostles</i>, (so called,) we jogged
+along a plain road till we reached a booth for selling cups of coffee, at
+the divergence of the road Nebi Moosa, (the reputed sepulchre <!-- page
+3--><a name="page3"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 3</span>of the prophet
+Moses, according to the Mohammedans,) then up an ascent still named
+<i>Tela&rsquo;at ed Dum</i>, which is certainly the ancient <a
+name="citation3"></a><a href="#footnote3" class="citation">[3]</a> Adummim,
+(Joshua xv. 7)&mdash;probably so called from broad bands of <i>red</i>
+among the strata of the rocks.&nbsp; Here there are also curious wavy lines
+of brown flint, undulating on a large scale among the limestone
+cliffs.&nbsp; This phenomenon is principally to be seen near the ruined and
+deserted Khan, or eastern lodging-place, situated at about half the
+distance of our journey.&nbsp; The name is <i>Khatroon</i>.</p>
+<p>As we proceeded, our escort, mostly on foot, went on singing merrily,
+and occasionally bringing us tufts of scented wild plants found in crevices
+by the roadside.&nbsp; Then we came to long remains of an ancient water
+conduit, leading to ruins of a small convent.&nbsp; In a few minutes after
+the latter, we found ourselves looking down a fearfully deep precipice of
+rocks on our left hand, with a stream flowing at the bottom, apparently
+very narrow indeed, and the sound of it scarcely audible.&nbsp; This is the
+brook <i>Kelt</i>, by some supposed to be the <i>Cherith</i> of
+Elijah&rsquo;s history.&nbsp; Suddenly we were on the brow of a deep
+descent, with the Gh&ocirc;r, or Jericho plain, and the Dead Sea spread out
+below.&nbsp; In going down, we had upon our left hand considerable
+fragments of ancient masonry, containing lines of Roman reticulated
+brickwork.</p>
+<p><!-- page 4--><a name="page4"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 4</span>It
+was now evening; a breeze, but not a cool one, blowing; and we left aside
+for this time the pretty camping station of Elisha&rsquo;s Fountain,
+because we had business to transact at the village of Er-Rihha, (or
+Jericho.)&nbsp; There accordingly our tents were pitched; and in a circle
+at our doors were attentive listeners to a narration of the events of
+Lieut. Molyneux&rsquo;s Expedition on the Jordan and Dead Sea in 1847.</p>
+<p>Thermometer after sunset, inside the tent, at 89&deg; Fahrenheit.&nbsp;
+Sleep very much disturbed by small black sandflies and ants.</p>
+<p><i>Thursday</i>, 10<i>th</i>.&mdash;Thermometer at 76&deg; before
+sunrise.&nbsp; The scene around us was animated and diversified; but
+several of us had been accustomed to Oriental affairs&mdash;some for a good
+many years; and some were even familiar with the particular localities and
+customs of this district.&nbsp; Others were young in age, and fresh to the
+country; expressing their wonderment at finding themselves so near to
+scenes read of from infancy&mdash;scarcely believing that they had at
+length approached near to</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&nbsp; &ldquo;That bituminous lake<br />
+Where Sodom stood,&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>and filled with joyous expectation at the visit so soon to be made to
+the Jordan, and beyond it.&nbsp; Some were quoting Scripture; some quoting
+poetry; and others taking particular notice of the wild Arabs, who were by
+this time increasing in number <!-- page 5--><a name="page5"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 5</span>about us,&mdash;their spears, their mares, their
+guttural language, and not less the barren desert scene before us, being
+objects of romantic interest.</p>
+<p>At length all the tents and luggage were loaded on the mules, and ten
+men of the village were hired for helping to convey our property across the
+river; and we went forward over the strange plain which is neither desert
+sand, as in Africa, nor wilderness of creeping plants and flowers, as on
+the way to Petra, but a puzzling, though monotonous succession of low
+eminences,&mdash;of a nature something like rotten chalk ground, if there
+be such a thing in existence,&mdash;between which eminences we had to wind
+our way, until we reached the border of tamarisk-trees, large reeds,
+willow, aspen, etc., that fringes the river; invisible till one reaches
+close upon it.</p>
+<p>At the bathing (or baptism) place of the Greeks, northwards from that of
+the Latins, to which English travellers are usually conducted, we had to
+cross, by swimming as we could. <a name="citation5"></a><a
+href="#footnote5" class="citation">[5]</a>&nbsp; King David, on his return
+from exile, had a ferry-boat to carry over his household, but we had
+none.&nbsp; Probably, on his escaping from Absalom, he crossed as we
+did.</p>
+<p>The middle part of the river was still too deep for mere fording.&nbsp;
+Horses and men had to swim; so the gentlemen sat still on their saddles,
+with <!-- page 6--><a name="page6"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+6</span>their feet put up on the necks of their horses, which were led by
+naked swimming Arabs in the water holding the bridles, one on each
+side.</p>
+<p>Baggage was carried over mostly on the animals; but had to be previously
+adjusted and tightened, so as to be least liable to get wetted.&nbsp; Small
+parcels were carried over on the heads of the swimmers.&nbsp; These all
+carried their own clothes in that manner.&nbsp; One of the luggage mules
+fell with his load in the middle of the stream.&nbsp; It was altogether a
+lively scene.&nbsp; Our Arabs were much darker over the whole body than I
+had expected to find them; and the &rsquo;Adw&acirc;n have long plaits of
+hair hanging on the shoulders when the <i>kefieh</i>, or coloured
+head-dress, is removed.&nbsp; The horses and beasts of burden were often
+restive in mid-current, and provoked a good deal of merriment.&nbsp; Some
+of the neighbouring camps having herds of cattle, sent them to drink and to
+cool themselves in the river, as the heat of the day increased.&nbsp; Their
+drivers urged them in, and then enjoyed the fun of keeping them there by
+swimming round and round them.&nbsp; One cow was very nearly lost, however,
+being carried away rapidly and helplessly in the direction of the Dead Sea,
+but she was recovered.&nbsp; The Jericho people returned home, several of
+them charged with parting letters addressed to friends in Jerusalem; and we
+were left reposing, literally reposing, on the eastern bank,&mdash;the
+English chatting happily; the Arabs smoking or sleeping under shade of
+trees; <!-- page 7--><a name="page7"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+7</span>pigeons cooing among the thick covert, and a Jordan nightingale
+soothing us occasionally, with sometimes a hawk or an eagle darting along
+the sky; while the world-renowned river rolled before our eyes.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Labitur et labetur in omne volubilis &aelig;vum.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The novelty of the scenes, and the brilliancy of the atmosphere, as well
+the vivacity of the recent transactions in &ldquo;passing over
+Jordan,&rdquo; had their duly buoyant effect upon youthful
+persons,&mdash;who were, however, not forgetful of past events in these
+places belonging to sacred history.</p>
+<p>The baggage went on; but, as the appointed halting-place was only about
+two hours distant, we remained enjoying ourselves as we were during most of
+the day.</p>
+<p>Among our novel friends is an Arab hero named <i>Gubl&acirc;n</i>, as
+they pronounce it here, (but it is really the Turkish word
+<i>Kapl&acirc;n</i>, meaning <i>Tiger</i>,) and his uncle, old
+&rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l &rsquo;Azeez.&nbsp; About three years before,
+Gubl&acirc;n had been attacked by Government soldiers at Jericho.&nbsp; He
+made a feigned retreat, and, leading them into the thickets of Neb&rsquo;k
+trees, suddenly wheeled round and killed six of them.&nbsp; The humbled
+Government force retired, and the dead were buried, by having a mound of
+earth piled over them.&nbsp; Of course, such an incident was never reported
+to the Sublime Invincible Porte at Constantinople; but it was a curious
+coincidence, that this very morning, <!-- page 8--><a
+name="page8"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 8</span>amid our circle before
+the tents, after breakfast and close to that mound, we had Gubl&acirc;n,
+&rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l &rsquo;Azeez, and the Turkish Aga of the present time,
+all peaceably smoking pipes together in our company.</p>
+<p>Among our gentlemen we had a man of fortune and literary attainments,
+who had been in Algiers, and now amused himself with dispensing with
+servants or interpreters&mdash;speaking some Arabic.&nbsp; He brought but
+very light luggage.&nbsp; This he placed upon a donkey, and drove it
+himself&mdash;wearing Algerine town costume.&nbsp; The Bedaween, however,
+as I need scarcely say, did not mistake him for an Oriental.</p>
+<p>Moving forward in the afternoon, we were passing over the <i>Plains of
+Moab</i>, &ldquo;on this [east] side Jordan by Jericho&rdquo;&mdash;where
+Balaam, son of Beor, saw, from the heights above, all Israel encamped, and
+cried out, &ldquo;How goodly are thy tents, O Jacob! and thy tabernacles, O
+Israel!&nbsp; As the valleys are they spread forth, as gardens by the
+river&rsquo;s side, as the trees of lign-aloes which the Lord hath planted,
+and as cedar-trees beside the waters. . . .&nbsp; Blessed is he that
+blesseth thee, and cursed is he that curseth thee,&rdquo; (Num. xxii. I,
+and xxiv. 5, 6, 9.)&nbsp; This territory is also called the <i>Land of
+Moab</i>, where the second covenant was made with the people by the
+ministry of Moses&mdash;the one &ldquo;beside the covenant which he made
+with them in Horeb.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Our ride was a gradual ascent; and after some <!-- page 9--><a
+name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>time we were met by young
+&rsquo;Ali, the favourite son of the principal Shaikh D&euml;&acirc;b,
+(Wolf,) with a small but chosen escort, sent on by his father to welcome
+us.&nbsp; We saw a good deal of corn land, and people reaping their
+harvest.&nbsp; This belongs to two or three scattered villages about there,
+under the immediate protection of the D&euml;&acirc;b
+&rsquo;Adw&acirc;n.&nbsp; The Arabs, however, in this part of the world, do
+condescend to countenance and even to profit by agriculture, for they buy
+slaves to sow and reap for them.</p>
+<p>In two hours and a half from the Jordan we came to our halting-place, at
+a spot called <i>Cuferain</i>, (&ldquo;two villages&rdquo;)&mdash;the
+Kiriathaim of Jer. xlviii. 23&mdash;at the foot of the mountain, with a
+strong stream of water rushing past us.&nbsp; No sign, however, of
+habitations: only, at a little distance to the south, were ruins of a
+village called <i>Er Ram</i>, (a very common name in Palestine; but this is
+not Ramoth-Gilead;) and at half an hour to the north was an inhabited
+village called <i>Nimrin</i>, from which the stream flowed to us.&mdash;See
+Jer. xlviii. 34: &ldquo;The waters of Nimrin shall be desolate.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We had a refreshing breeze from the north which is justly counted a
+luxury in summer time.&nbsp; The shaikhs came and had coffee with me.&nbsp;
+They said that on the high summits we shall have cooler temperature than in
+Jerusalem, which is very probable.</p>
+<p>After dinner I sat at my tent-door, by the rivulet side, looking
+southwards over the Dead Sea, and <!-- page 10--><a name="page10"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 10</span>to the west over the line of the promised land
+of Canaan, which I had never before had an opportunity of seeing in that
+manner, although the well-known verse had been often repeated in
+England&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh could I stand where Moses stood,<br />
+&nbsp; And view the landscape o&rsquo;er,<br />
+Not Death&rsquo;s cold stream nor Jordan&rsquo;s flood<br />
+&nbsp; Should fright me from the shore.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I then read over to myself in Arabic, the Psalms for the evening
+service&mdash;namely, liii., liv., and lv.</p>
+<p>About sunset there was an alarm that a lad who had accompanied us as a
+servant from Jerusalem was missing ever since we left the Jordan.&nbsp;
+Horse-men were sent in every direction in search of him.&nbsp; It was
+afterwards discovered that he had returned to Jericho.</p>
+<p>At about a hundred yards south of us was a valley called
+<i>Se&rsquo;eer</i>, (its brook, however, comes down from the
+north)&mdash;abounding in fine rosy oleander shrubs.</p>
+<p>During the night the water near us seemed alive with croaking
+frogs.&nbsp; Last night we had the sand-flies to keep us awake.</p>
+<p><i>Friday</i>, 11<i>th</i>.&mdash;Thermometer 66&deg; before
+sunrise.&nbsp; My earliest looks were towards Canaan, &ldquo;that goodly
+land&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;the hills, from which cometh my help.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+How keen must have been the feeling of his state of exile when David was
+driven to this side the river!</p>
+<p><!-- page 11--><a name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+11</span>Before breakfast I bathed in the Se&rsquo;eer, among bushes of
+oleander and the strong-scented <i>ghar</i>&mdash;a purple-spiked flower
+always found adjoining to or in water-beds.&nbsp; Then read my Arabic
+Psalms as usual.</p>
+<p>Before starting, young &rsquo;Ali and his party asked us all for
+presents, and got none.&nbsp; We gave answer unanimously that we meant to
+give presents to his father when we should see him.&nbsp; Strange how
+depraved the Arab mind becomes on this matter of asking for gifts wherever
+European travellers are found!&mdash;so different from the customs of
+ancient times, and it is not found in districts off the common tracks of
+resort.</p>
+<p>Our road lay up the hills, constantly growing more steep and
+precipitous, and occasionally winding between large rocks, which were often
+overgrown with honeysuckle in full luxuriance.&nbsp; The Arabs scrambled
+like wild animals over the rocks, and brought down very long streamers of
+honeysuckle, Luw&acirc;yeh, as they call it, which they wound round and
+round the necks of our horses, and generally got piastres for doing
+so.&nbsp; About two-thirds of the distance up the ascent we rested, in
+order to relieve the animals, or to sketch views, or enjoy the glorious
+scenery that lay extended below us&mdash;comprising the Dead Sea, the line
+of the river trees, Jericho, the woods of Elisha&rsquo;s Fountain, and the
+hills towards Jerusalem.&nbsp; The Bedaween have eyes like eagles; and some
+<!-- page 12--><a name="page12"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+12</span>avouched that they could see the Mount of Olives, and the minaret
+upon its summit.&nbsp; They indicated to us the positions of Es-Salt and of
+Heshb&acirc;n.</p>
+<p>We had now almost attained a botanical region resembling that of the
+Jerusalem elevation, instead of the Indian vegetation upon the Jordan
+plain; only there was <i>ret&rsquo;m</i> (the juniper of 1 Kings xix. 4) to
+be found, with pods in seed at that season; but we had also our long
+accustomed terebinth and arbutus, with honeysuckle and pink
+ground-convolvulus.&nbsp; The rocks were variegated with streaks of pink,
+purple, orange, and yellow, as at Khatroon, on the Jerusalem road.&nbsp;
+Partridges were clucking among the bushes; and the bells on the necks of
+our mules lulled us with their sweet chime, as the animals strolled
+browsing around in the gay sunshine.</p>
+<p>When we moved forward once more, it was along paths of short zigzags
+between cliffs, so that our procession was constantly broken into small
+pieces.&nbsp; At length we lost sight of the Gh&ocirc;r and the Dead Sea;
+and after some time traversing miles of red and white cistus, red
+everlasting, and fragrant thyme and sage, with occasional terebinth-trees
+festooned with honeysuckle, we came upon a district covered with millions,
+or billions, or probably trillions, of locusts, not fully grown, and only
+taking short flights; but they greatly annoyed our horses.&nbsp; My choice
+Arab, being at that time ridden by my <!-- page 13--><a
+name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 13</span>servant, fairly bolted
+away with fright for a considerable distance.</p>
+<p>At length we halted at a small spring oozing from the soil of the
+field.&nbsp; The place was called <i>Hheker Zaboot</i>&mdash;a pretty
+place, and cuckoos on the trees around us; only the locusts were
+troublesome.</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l &rsquo;Azeez proposed that instead of going at once
+to Ammon, we should make a detour by Heshbon and Elealeh, on the way to his
+encampment.&nbsp; To this we all assented.</p>
+<p>During the ride forward the old shaikh kept close to me, narrating
+incidents of his life,&mdash;such as his last year&rsquo;s losses by the
+Beni Sukh&rsquo;r, who plundered him of all his flocks and herds, horses,
+tents, and even most of his clothing,&mdash;then described the march of
+Ibrahim Pasha&rsquo;s army in their disastrous attempt upon Kerak: also
+some of the valiant achievements of his kinsman Gubl&acirc;n; and then
+proceeding to witticism, gave me his etymological origin of the name of
+Hhesb&acirc;n&mdash;namely, that, on the subsiding of the great deluge, the
+first object that Noah perceived was that castle, perched as it is upon a
+lofty peak; whereupon he exclaimed, <i>Hhus&rsquo;n
+b&acirc;n</i>&mdash;&ldquo;a castle appears!&rdquo;&nbsp; I wish I could
+recollect more of his tales.</p>
+<p>After passing through romantic scenery of rocks and evergreen trees, at
+a sudden turn of the road we came to large flocks and herds drinking, or
+couched beside a copious stream of water gushing <!-- page 14--><a
+name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 14</span>from near the foot of a
+rocky hill.&nbsp; This they called <i>&rsquo;Ain Hhesb&acirc;n</i>; and
+told us that the Egyptian army above alluded to, twenty thousand in number,
+passed the night there before arriving at Kerak.&nbsp; To many of them it
+was their last night on earth.</p>
+<p>There were remains of large masonry lying about, and the scene was truly
+beautiful&mdash;to which the bells of the goats and cows added a charming
+musical effect.</p>
+<p>I asked an Arab, who was bathing in a pool, where he had come from, and
+he sulkily answered, &ldquo;From t&rsquo;other end of the
+world!&rdquo;&nbsp; And I suppose he was right in saying so, for what
+meaning could he attach to the designation, <i>the world</i>.&nbsp; He must
+have meant the world of his own experience, or that of his tribe, or his
+parents&mdash;probably extending to the end of the Dead Sea in one
+direction, to the Lake of Tiberias in another; to the Mediterranean in the
+west, and in the east to the wilds unknown beyond the road of the
+Hh&acirc;j pilgrimage.&nbsp; &ldquo;From the other end of the world,&rdquo;
+quoth he, the companion of a shepherd boy with his flute, at a mountain
+spring, pitching pebbles at the sheep of his flock to keep them from
+wandering away over their extent of &ldquo;the world.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As we proceeded, there were several other streams issuing from the
+hills, some of them falling in pretty cascades into thickets of oleander
+below.&nbsp; All these meeting together, formed a line <!-- page 15--><a
+name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 15</span>of river flowing
+between grassy banks&mdash;near which we saw considerable remains of
+water-mills, not of great antiquity.</p>
+<p>Next we reached two small forts: the one upon our side the stream they
+called <i>Shuneh</i>, (the usual name used for that kind of building;) the
+other was across the water, and they called it <i>Shefa
+&rsquo;Amer</i>.&nbsp; I should wonder if our guides knew the existence of
+the town called <i>Shefa &rsquo;Amer</i>, near Caiffa.&nbsp; They told us
+that both these forts had been erected by D&euml;&acirc;b&rsquo;s
+grandfather, but this is incredible.</p>
+<p>Near the Shuneh I observed a very large sarcophagus, cut in the solid
+rock, but not so far finished as to allow of its being removed.&nbsp; In
+the court-yard there was nothing remarkable.&nbsp; There were, however,
+some ancient rabbeted stones lying near.&nbsp; Here I may remark, with
+respect to the sarcophagus, that such things are rare on the east of the
+Jordan, or anywhere else so far to the south.&nbsp; There are two lids of
+such lying on the plain of Sharon, alongside the Jaffa road from Jerusalem;
+and the next southernmost one that I know of (excepting those at Jerusalem)
+is an ornamented lid, near Sebustieh, the ancient Samaria; but they abound
+in Ph&oelig;nicia.</p>
+<p>Forward again we went, higher and higher, with wild flowers in
+profusion, and birds carolling all around.&nbsp; Then literally climbing up
+a mountain side, we came to a cleft in a precipice, which they called <i>El
+Buaib</i>, (the little gate,) with <!-- page 16--><a
+name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 16</span>unmistakable marks of
+ancient cuttings about there.&nbsp; Traversing a fine plain of wheat, we at
+length reached the ancient city of Heshbon, with its acropolis of temple
+and castle.</p>
+<p>That plain would be fine exercise-ground for the cavalry of Sihon, king
+of the Amorites.&nbsp; Fresh, and almost chilly, was the mountain air; but
+the sky rather cloudy.</p>
+<p>How magnificent was the prospect over to Canaan!&nbsp; We were all
+persuaded that the Mount of Olives would be visible thence on a fine day;
+and I have no doubt whatever that the site on which we were standing is
+that peak&mdash;the only peak breaking the regular outline of the Moab
+mountains which is seen from Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>We scattered ourselves about in several groups among pavements and
+columns of temples, (the most perfect of which are in the Acropolis,)
+sepulchres, cisterns, and quarries, picking up fragments of pottery, with
+some pattern work (not highly ornamental, however) upon them, and
+tesser&aelig; or the cubes of tesselated pavement, such as may be found all
+over Palestine.&nbsp; The Bedaween call them <i>muzzateem</i> or
+<i>muzzameet</i> indifferently.&nbsp; There were some good Corinthian
+capitals, fragments of cornices, and portions of semicircular arches, and
+pieces of walls that had been repaired at different periods.&nbsp; I
+entered one rock-hewn sepulchre which contained seven small chambers; six
+of these had been evidently broken into by <!-- page 17--><a
+name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 17</span>main force, the seventh
+was still closed.&nbsp; This was S.W. of the Acropolis.</p>
+<p>All the works or ornamentations above ground were of Greek or Roman
+construction, but we found no inscriptions or coins.&nbsp; Heshbon must
+have been at all periods a strong place for defence, but with an unduly
+large proportion of ornamentation to the small size of the city according
+to modern ideas.&nbsp; Before leaving this site, far inferior to
+&rsquo;Amm&acirc;n, as we found afterwards, I got the Arabs around me upon
+a rising ground, and, with a compass in hand, wrote down from their
+dictation the names of sites visible to their sharp eyesight:&mdash;</p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>To</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>To</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>S.S.W.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Umm Sheggar.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>S.E.S.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Kustul.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &ldquo;</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Neba (Nebo?).</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>S.E.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Umm el &rsquo;Aamed.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &ldquo;</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Main.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p> &ldquo;</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Khan em Meshettah.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>S.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Medeba.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p> &ldquo;</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>J&acirc;wah.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>S.E.S.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Ekfairat (Kephiroth?).</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p> &ldquo;</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Kuriet es Sook.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &ldquo;</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Jelool.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>E.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Samek.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &ldquo;</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Umm er Rum&acirc;neh.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>E.E.N.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Ela&rsquo;&acirc;l.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &ldquo;</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Zubairah.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>N.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Es-Salt.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; &ldquo;</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Manjah.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>(The town </p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>not visible.)</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p>These must have been the places that &ldquo;stood under the shadow of
+Heshbon,&rdquo; (Jer. xlviii. 45.)&nbsp; One of them at least appears in
+Joshua xiii. 17, etc., among &ldquo;the cities that are in the plain of
+Heshbon.&rdquo; <a name="citation17"></a><a href="#footnote17"
+class="citation">[17]</a></p>
+<p><!-- page 18--><a name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 18</span>In
+half an hour we came to <i>Ela&rsquo;&acirc;l</i>, (Elealeh,) (Isa. xv. 4
+and xvi. 9, and Jer. xlviii. 34.)&nbsp; Large stones were lying about, and
+one column standing upright, but without a capital.&nbsp; Fine corn-plains
+in every direction around.&nbsp; Our tents pitched at <i>Na&rsquo;oor</i>
+were visible to the E.N.E. through an opening between two hills.&nbsp; Cool
+cloudy day; all of us enjoying the ride through wheat-fields, and over
+large unoccupied plains&mdash;my old friend &rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l
+&rsquo;Azeez still adhering to me as his willing auditor.</p>
+<p>On coming up to his camp at Na&rsquo;oor, we found that Shaikh
+D&euml;&acirc;b had already arrived.</p>
+<p>And now I may pause in the narrative to describe the <i>status</i> of
+(1.) ourselves; (2.) the Arabs.</p>
+<p>(1.)&nbsp; Although apparently forming one company of English
+travellers, we were really a combination of several small sets, of two or
+three persons each&mdash;every set having its own cook, muleteer, and
+dragoman; but all the sets on terms of pleasant intercourse, and smoking or
+taking tea with each other.</p>
+<p>We calculated that our horses and mules amounted to above a hundred in
+number.</p>
+<p>(2.)&nbsp; The whole territory from Kerak to Jerash is that of our
+&rsquo;Adwan tribe, but divided into three sections&mdash;the middle
+portion being that of the supreme chief D&euml;&acirc;b, the northern third
+that of &rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l &rsquo;Azeez, and the southern that of a third
+named Altchai in the south towards Kerak; but <!-- page 19--><a
+name="page19"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 19</span>they all combine when
+necessary for a general object.</p>
+<p>The &rsquo;Adw&acirc;n sow corn by the labour of their purchased
+slaves.&nbsp; Gubl&acirc;n at Cuferain, D&euml;&acirc;b and his son
+&rsquo;Ali at Nimrin, and a portion of the tribe called &ldquo;the children
+of Eyoob&rdquo; cultivate in the same manner a tract near the Dead Sea
+called the <i>Mezraa&rsquo;</i>.&nbsp; These latter attach themselves
+sometimes to the D&euml;&acirc;b section, called the <i>Dar &rsquo;Ali</i>,
+and sometimes to the Gubl&acirc;n section, called the <i>Dar
+Nim&rsquo;r</i>.</p>
+<p>Their district is but a comparatively narrow strip at present, as they
+are pressed upon by the <i>Beni Sukh&rsquo;r</i> on the east, who are again
+pressed upon by the <i>&rsquo;Anezeh</i> farther eastward; these last are
+allies of our people.</p>
+<p>The Gh&ocirc;r or Jordan plain is open ground for all Arabs; and a few
+low fellows called Abb&acirc;d Kattaleen, hold a slip of ground downwards
+between Es-Salt and the Jordan.&nbsp; Es-Salt is a populous and thriving
+town, the only one in all that country.&nbsp; Kerak, to the south, may be
+as large, and contain more remnants of medi&aelig;val strength, but its
+affairs are not so prosperous.</p>
+<p>This station of Na&rsquo;oor <a name="citation19"></a><a
+href="#footnote19" class="citation">[19]</a> is upon a long, low, green
+plain, lying between two lines of high ground; and on a map, it would be
+nearly central between the <!-- page 20--><a name="page20"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 20</span>northern and southern extremities of the
+&rsquo;Adw&acirc;n country, or Belka. <a name="citation20"></a><a
+href="#footnote20" class="citation">[20]</a></p>
+<p>Strange and wild was the scene of the Bedawi encampment&mdash;the black
+tents of goats&rsquo; hair, the dark and ragged population sauntering
+about, the flocks and the horses, the ragged or naked children; and then
+the women in their blue, only article of dress, long-sleeved, their
+uncombed hair, and lips dyed blue, all walking with dignity of step, most
+of them employed in hanging up washed fleeces of wool to dry.&nbsp; One in
+particular I remarked for her stately appearance, with the blue dress
+trailing long behind, and the sleeves covering her hands; she was giving
+commands to others.</p>
+<p>As soon as we were well settled, and the first confusion over in making
+our several arrangements with servants, etc., Shaikh D&euml;&acirc;b sent a
+messenger asking permission for him to pay us a visit of welcome; and a
+serious ceremonial visit took place accordingly.&nbsp; The great man was
+arrayed in green silk, and carried a silver-handled sword and dagger; a few
+chosen men of the tribe formed his train; coffee, pipes, and long
+compliments followed.&nbsp; We all remarked his keen eyes, ardent like
+those of a hawk in pursuit of prey.&nbsp; On taking leave he announced his
+intention of presenting each gentleman with a sheep for our evening
+meal.</p>
+<p><!-- page 21--><a name="page21"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 21</span>As
+soon as the indispensable solemnity of his visit was over, the camp became
+more animated; the sheep were slaughtered; various parties being formed for
+the feast, which was finished by the Arabs; and I invited all to my tent
+for tea at night, when the weather became so piercing cold that I found it
+necessary to have some hot brandy and water to drink.</p>
+<p>In this place I wish to say how excellent is animal food dressed
+immediately after killing.&nbsp; The practice is found, all through the
+Bible histories, from Abraham entertaining the angels at Mamre, to the
+father of the prodigal son killing the fatted calf for his reception.&nbsp;
+At that stage the meat is exceedingly tender and delicate; whereas, if
+left, as the European practice is, for some time after killing, it has to
+go through another and less wholesome process in order to become tender
+again.&nbsp; There are numerous medical opinions in favour of the Oriental
+method of cooking the food immediately.</p>
+<p>Another observation will not be out of place, on the almost universal
+eating of mutton throughout Asia.&nbsp; I do not mean the anti-beef-eating
+Brahmins of India, but in all countries of Asia, by eating of meat is
+understood the eating of mutton, and horned cattle are reserved for
+agricultural labour.&nbsp; In case of exceptions being met with, they are
+only such few exceptions as help to prove the rule.&nbsp; This may perhaps
+be attributed to the general insecurity <!-- page 22--><a
+name="page22"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 22</span>of animal property in
+the East; but that I do not think a sufficient reason to account for
+it.&nbsp; It seems, however, that the ancient Israelites were not so much
+limited to eating from the small cattle.</p>
+<p><i>Saturday</i>, 12<i>th</i>.&mdash;Thermometer 37&deg; just before
+sunrise, nearly thirty degrees lower than under the same circumstances two
+days before.&nbsp; The night had been cold and damp; the grass was found
+wet in the places sheltered from the current of wind, which had elsewhere
+formed hoarfrost over the field.&nbsp; This reminded us of the elevation we
+had reached to; and we all exclaimed as to the reasonableness of
+Jacob&rsquo;s expostulation with Laban, when he asserted that &ldquo;in the
+day the drought [or heat] consumed him, and the frost by night,&rdquo;
+(Gen. xxxi. 40.)&nbsp; We were upon frozen ground in the month of May,
+after passing through a flight of locusts on the preceding day.</p>
+<p>A lively scene was the packing up.&nbsp; &rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l
+&rsquo;Azeez was happy at seeing us all happy, and laying hold of a couple
+of dirty, ragged urchins, he shook them well, and lifted them up from the
+ground, and offered them to me, saying, &ldquo;Here, take these little imps
+of mine, and do what you like with them; send them to England if you will,
+for they are growing up like beasts here, and what can I do?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+All I could do was to speak cheerfully to them, and make them some little
+presents.&nbsp; At the door of D&euml;&acirc;b&rsquo;s tent was his bay
+mare of high race, and his <!-- page 23--><a name="page23"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 23</span>spear planted beside her.&nbsp; He accompanied
+us as far as his own encampment, two or three hours over wide plains and
+grassy pastures.&nbsp; Soon after leaving Na&rsquo;oor he took us up a
+small hill, which was called <i>Setcher</i>, (probably <i>Setker</i> in
+town pronunciation,) where there were some ruins of no considerable amount,
+but the stones of cyclopean size.&nbsp; Query&mdash;Were these remains of
+the primeval Zamzummim?&nbsp; (Deut. ii. 20.)</p>
+<p>At <i>Dahair el Hhum&acirc;r</i> (Asses&rsquo; Hill) we alighted in
+D&euml;&acirc;b&rsquo;s own camp, not large in extent or number of people,
+probably only a small detachment from the main body brought with him for
+the occasion, but not such, or so placed, as to interfere with the camp of
+&rsquo;Abdul &rsquo;Azeez.&nbsp; However, the well-known emblems of the
+Shaikh&rsquo;s presence were observed&mdash;namely, his tent being placed
+at the west end of the line, and his spear at its entrance.&nbsp; Here took
+place the formality of returning his visit to us yesterday; and here, after
+coffee and pipes, our presents were produced and given.&nbsp; The
+travellers were collected in a very long black tent, together with
+D&euml;&acirc;b, his son and friends.&nbsp; A screen at one end divided us
+from the women&rsquo;s apartment, <i>i.e.</i>, what would be the
+<i>Hhareem</i> in houses of towns; behind this curtain the women were
+peeping, chattering, and laughing; of course we might expect this to be
+about the extraordinary-looking strangers.&nbsp; It has been conjectured
+that such a separation of the tent is implied in <!-- page 24--><a
+name="page24"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 24</span>Gen. xviii. 6 and 10,
+when &ldquo;Sarah heard it in the tent-door which was behind him;&rdquo;
+but this has no foundation in the plain narrative of Scripture, only in the
+Arabic translation the words seem to imply that understanding.</p>
+<p>The presentation of offerings was a grave and solemn affair.&nbsp; Each
+donor produced his tribute with an apology for the insignificance of the
+gift, which was then exhibited in silence by an attendant to the populace
+of the tribe crowding outside.</p>
+<p>The ceremony was concluded by shouts of welcome, and a huge meal of
+pilaff (rice and mutton upon a great tray of tinned copper) and
+l&eacute;ban, (curdled milk,) with more smoking.&nbsp; Here we took leave
+of the chief, who sent on a detachment of his tribe to escort us for the
+rest of our expedition.</p>
+<p>Remounted, and proceeded N.E. by N.; hitherto we had come due north from
+Heshbon.&nbsp; Passed a hill called <i>Jeh&acirc;arah</i>, and in a short
+time reached the source of the river of Ammon, rising out of the ground,
+with a large pavement of masonry near it.&nbsp; A numerous flock of sheep
+and goats were being watered at the spring, it being near the time of
+As&rsquo;r&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, mid-afternoon.</p>
+<p>Here the antiquities of <i>Amm&acirc;n</i> commenced; and remains of
+considerable buildings continually solicited our attention, as we passed on
+for quarter of an hour more to our tents, which we found <!-- page 25--><a
+name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 25</span>already pitched and
+waiting for us among a crowd of ancient temples and baths and
+porticoes,&mdash;in a forum between a line of eight large Corinthian
+columns and the small river; in front too of a Roman theatre in good
+condition.&nbsp; Some of the party, who were familiar with the ruins of
+Rome and Athens, exclaimed aloud, &ldquo;What would the modern Romans give
+to have so much to show as this, within a similar space!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was Saturday afternoon; and we had already resolved to spend our
+Sabbath in this wonderful and agreeable place, so remarkable in Scripture
+history, and so seldom visited by Europeans.</p>
+<p>I climbed up the seats of the theatre, and rested near the top, enjoying
+the grand spectacle of luxurious architecture around; then descended, and
+walked along its proscenium; but neither reciting passages of Euripides nor
+of Terence, as some enthusiasts might indulge themselves in doing, before
+an imagined audience of tetrarchs, centurions, or legionaries, or other</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Romanos rerum dominos, gentemque togatam.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Close to this theatre was a covered and sumptuous building, which I
+could not but suppose to be a naumachia, from its having rising rows of
+seats around the central space, with a channel leading into this from the
+river.&nbsp; As the shadows of evening lengthened, the heat of the day was
+moderated, <!-- page 26--><a name="page26"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+26</span>and I sauntered along the bank of the stream till I came to a
+large headless statue of a female figure lying in the water.&nbsp; Some men
+lifted it upon the green bank for me; but it was far too heavy to be
+transported to Jerusalem for the Literary Society&rsquo;s Museum.</p>
+<p>The swift-flowing rivulet abounded in fish, some of which the Arabs
+killed for us, either by throwing stones or shooting them with bullets,
+having no other means of getting at them; but the latter of these methods
+was too costly to be often adopted.&nbsp; However, we had some fish for
+dinner in &ldquo;Rabbah, the city of waters.&rdquo;&nbsp; This stream is
+the commencement of the Zerka, which we were to meet afterwards, after its
+course hence N.E. and then N.W.</p>
+<p>I feasted a dozen Arabs at my tent-door.&nbsp; Shaikh &rsquo;Abdul
+&rsquo;Azeez laughed when I remarked that this place was better worth
+seeing than Heshbon, and said, &ldquo;This is a king&rsquo;s city.&nbsp; It
+was the city of King <i>Gheday&ucirc;s</i>; and Jerash, which is still more
+splendid, was built by <i>Shedd&acirc;d</i>, of the primitive race of the
+<i>Beni &rsquo;Ad</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Beyond this, of course, it was
+impossible for him to imagine anything in matters of antiquity.</p>
+<p>In my evening&rsquo;s Scripture reading, I was much struck with the
+opening of the 65th Psalm: &ldquo;Praise waiteth for Thee, O God, in
+Zion,&rdquo;&mdash;which passes over all the examples of human achievement
+<!-- page 27--><a name="page27"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+27</span>elsewhere, in order to celebrate the peculiar and undying honours
+of Jerusalem.&nbsp; So now the Grecian and the Roman colonies, who erected
+the marvels of architecture around me, are gone; while the Jewish people,
+the Hebrew language, the city of Jerusalem, and the Bible revelations of
+mercy from God to man, continue for ever.&nbsp; But most particularly does
+this psalm, taken with the circumstances there before our eyes, point out
+the difference made between Ammon and Israel, and the reason for it, as
+predicted in Ezek. xxv., 1-7:&mdash;&ldquo;The word of the Lord came again
+unto me, saying, Son of man, set thy face against the Ammonites, and
+prophesy against them; and say unto the Ammonites, Hear the word of the
+Lord God: Thus saith the Lord God; Because thou saidst, Aha, against my
+sanctuary, when it was profaned; and against the land of Israel, when it
+was desolate; and against the house of Judah, when they went into
+captivity; behold, therefore I will deliver thee to the men of the east for
+a possession, and they shall set their palaces in thee, and make their
+dwellings in thee: they shall eat thy fruit, and they shall drink thy
+milk.&nbsp; And I will make Rabbah a stable for camels, and the Ammonites a
+couching-place for flocks; and ye shall know that I am the Lord.&nbsp; For
+thus saith the Lord God; Because thou hast clapped thine hands, and stamped
+with the feet, and rejoiced in heart with <!-- page 28--><a
+name="page28"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 28</span>all thy despite against
+the land of Israel; behold, therefore I will stretch out mine hand upon
+thee, and will deliver thee for a spoil to the heathen; and I will cut thee
+off from the people, and I will cause thee to perish out of the countries:
+I will destroy thee; and thou shalt know that I am the Lord.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><i>Sunday</i>, 13<i>th</i>.&mdash;Dew on the grass; but it was the
+morning dew, which, like human goodness, was soon exhaled.</p>
+<p>After meditating on the chapters in Numbers and Deuteronomy which refer
+to the conduct and destinies of Ammon and Moab, and reading Jer. xlviii.
+and xlix. within &ldquo;the flowing valley&rdquo; of the 4th verse of the
+latter, I was summoned to divine service in a tent fitted up for the
+purpose,&mdash;carpets on the floor &ldquo;honoris caus&acirc;;&rdquo; a
+table covered with simple white, and a serious congregation of Englishmen
+before it, each with his own Bible and prayer-book.&nbsp; Thank God that to
+carry such books about in the wildest deserts is a characteristic of my
+countrymen!</p>
+<p>This city of <i>&rsquo;Amm&acirc;n</i> is &ldquo;the city in the midst
+of the river&rdquo; of Joshua xiii. 9; and &ldquo;Rabbah of the children of
+Ammon&rdquo;&mdash;the royal city&mdash;&ldquo;the city of waters&rdquo; of
+2 Sam. xii. 26, 27:&mdash;to the siege of which Joab invited King David,
+&ldquo;lest he should take it, and it should be called after his
+name.&rdquo;&nbsp; Here was also deposited the huge iron bedstead of Og,
+king of Bashan.</p>
+<p><!-- page 29--><a name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+29</span>Under the Ptolemy dynasty&mdash;successors of Alexander&mdash;it
+was rebuilt, with the name of Philadelphia.&nbsp; Several of the best
+edifices here, now partially ruined, belong to that period.</p>
+<p>Under the Crusaders it was a flourishing city and district, retaining
+the Grecian name.</p>
+<p>I could not but reflect on the infinite prescience that dictated the
+prophecies of the Bible&mdash;no tongue could speak more plainly to us than
+the scene around us did, the fulfilment of the denunciations that these
+cities of Moab and Ammon should remain <i>as cities</i> &ldquo;without
+inhabitants&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;not a man to dwell therein&rdquo;&mdash;and
+&ldquo;driven out every man, right forth, and none shall gather up him that
+wandereth&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;desolate&rdquo; and &ldquo;most
+desolate.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In the afternoon we walked about to inspect the antiquities, and found
+several remains of Christian churches with bell-towers attached to
+them&mdash;certainly not originally minarets.&nbsp; These edifices had been
+afterwards, in Mohammedan times, converted into mosques, as evidenced by
+the niche made in the south wall of each, pointing to Mecca; and there are
+watch-towers for signals on all the summits of hills around.&nbsp; The city
+lies nestled in a valley between these hills.</p>
+<p>The first building I examined was among those of the citadel placed upon
+a lofty eminence <!-- page 30--><a name="page30"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 30</span>commanding the city, the ground-plan of which
+building is here shown&mdash;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p30.jpg">
+<img alt="Ground-plan of possible old church" src="images/p30.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>The interior of the walls was so profusely embellished with festoons of
+roses and vine-grapes&mdash;both sculptured in stone and wrought in stucco,
+and of very large size&mdash;that there was no room left for pictures or
+images.&nbsp; The roof of this building is almost all fallen in.&nbsp; I
+imagined this to have been a Christian church, of very remote <!-- page
+31--><a name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 31</span>antiquity, on
+account of the vine and the roses, which are peculiarly Christian
+symbols&mdash;alluding to the texts, &ldquo;I am the true Vine,&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;I am the Rose of Sharon;&rdquo; but the chambers in each corner are
+difficult to account for.&nbsp; The east and west ends have no doors.</p>
+<p>Near this is a square mass of masonry, upon which are standing six
+columns, of magnificent dimensions, which no doubt originally supported a
+roof.&nbsp; Their capitals, of chaste and correct Corinthian style, with
+portions of ornamental entablature, are lying near.&nbsp; Perhaps belonging
+to this, but at some distance, lies a ponderous piece of architrave, on
+which, between lines of moulding, is an inscription in
+Greek&mdash;illegible except the three
+letters&mdash;&Nu;&Omega;&Theta;.&nbsp; These letters were nine inches in
+length.</p>
+<p>Nigh to this, again, was a square building of rabbeted stones, equal to
+almost the largest in the walls of Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>All down the hill, descending to our camp, were fragments of columns and
+of decorated friezes of temples, that had evidently been rolled or had
+slidden down from their places.</p>
+<p>Upon various walls of dilapidated edifices I observed the curious marks,
+slightly scratched, which almost resemble alphabetical characters, but are
+not; and which have, wherever met with and wherever noticed, which is but
+seldom, puzzled <!-- page 32--><a name="page32"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 32</span>travellers, however learned, to decipher.&nbsp;
+I copied the following:&mdash;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p32a.jpg">
+<img alt="Bedaween Arab token 1" src="images/p32a.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>And from the shaft of a column still erect, half way down the hill, I
+copied the following:&mdash;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p32b.jpg">
+<img alt="Bedaween Arab token 2" src="images/p32b.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>I have since learned that they are the tokens of the Bedaween Arabs, by
+which one tribe is <!-- page 33--><a name="page33"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 33</span>distinguished from another.&nbsp; In common
+parlance they are called the <i>Ausam</i> (plural of Wasam) of the several
+tribes. <a name="citation33"></a><a href="#footnote33"
+class="citation">[33]</a></p>
+<p>In a valley to the north of us, leading westwards from the main valley,
+we found a beautiful mausoleum tomb,&mdash;a building, not an excavation in
+rock,&mdash;containing six sarcophagi, or ornamented stone coffins, ranged
+upon ledges of masonry, along three sides of the chamber.&nbsp; These were
+very large, and all of the same pattern&mdash;the lids remaining upon some
+of them, but shifted aside.&nbsp; Beautiful sculptured embellishments were
+upon the inside walls and over the portal outside, but no inscriptions to
+indicate the period or persons to whom they belonged.&nbsp; Inside,
+however, were rudely scratched the modern Arab tribe-signs, showing that
+persons of such tribes had visited there; so that Europeans are not the
+only travellers who help to disfigure ancient monuments by
+scribbling.&nbsp; Along this western valley were several other such
+mausoleums.&nbsp; Thence we mounted on a different side to the summit of
+that hill from which I have here begun my description of
+edifices&mdash;upon a gentle sloping road, evidently of artificial cutting,
+quite feasible for ascent of chariots.</p>
+<p>Near the square (possible) church before mentioned, (though I should say
+that our party were not all convinced of its being a church,) is a
+prodigiously large cistern, of good masonry.&nbsp; From the top of the
+strong walls of the building&mdash;while <!-- page 34--><a
+name="page34"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 34</span>some Arab boys below me
+were reaching birds&rsquo; nests&mdash;I got from our guide the following
+list of sites in the neighbourhood.&nbsp; They were of course unable to
+discriminate between ancient and modern names; and I do not find one Bible
+name among them all:&mdash;</p>
+<p>From north to west&mdash;</p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Thuggeret el Baider.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Esh-Shemes&acirc;ni.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Kassar Waijees.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Esh-Shwaifiyeh.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Es-Salt.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Umm Malfoof.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p>From west to east&mdash;</p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&rsquo;Abdoon.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Mesdar &rsquo;Aishah.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Umm es Swaiweeneh.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>El Mergab.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p>Towards the east&mdash;</p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Merj Merka.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>&rsquo;Ain Ghaz&acirc;l.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; Ursaifah (in a valley with a river).</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>&nbsp; El Muntar el Kassar, between two artificial hills.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p>The people informed me of a place, a little nearer than Kerak, called
+<i>Rabbah</i>.&nbsp; This latter may be a <i>Rabbath-Moab</i>.</p>
+<p>I have no further notes to transcribe respecting the architectural
+remains; but they are so numerous and so important that a week would not
+suffice for their thorough investigation.&nbsp; All our party were highly
+gratified at having visited this Rabbath-Ammon&mdash;<i>alias</i>
+Philadelphia&mdash;<i>alias</i>, at present, &rsquo;Amm&acirc;n.&nbsp; We
+were not, however, so fortunate as Lord Lindsay in finding a fulfilment of
+the prophecy (Ezek. xxv. 5) with respect to camels, either alive or
+dead.&nbsp; Probably, when he was there, it <!-- page 35--><a
+name="page35"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 35</span>was soon after an
+Egyptian military expedition to Kerak.&nbsp; The prodigious number of dead
+camels that he saw there would seem to indicate that a great Arab battle
+had been fought at that place shortly before.&nbsp; It is only in this way
+that we could account for a cannonball (about a six-pounder) which one of
+the boys carried about, in following us, all the afternoon, wishing us to
+buy it of him as a curiosity.</p>
+<p>On returning to the tents, I found an old Jerusalem acquaintance&mdash;a
+Moslem named &rsquo;Abderrahhman Bek el &rsquo;Asali&mdash;and with him
+several people from Es-Salt; among these a Christian named Abb&acirc;s.</p>
+<p>From conversation with them I got some fresh information on Arab
+affairs.&nbsp; These people took the opportunity of glorifying their native
+town; related how they are frequently at war, and that successfully, with
+the &rsquo;Adw&acirc;n; and when acting in concert with the Abb&acirc;d, or
+much more so when in alliance with the Beni Sukh&rsquo;r, can always repel
+them; only it happens that sometimes the &rsquo;Adw&acirc;n get help from
+the more distant &rsquo;Anezeh; and this is much more than enough to turn
+the balance again.&nbsp; But even now the &rsquo;Adw&acirc;n cannot come
+near the town; neither can they quite forget that the Saltiyeh people,
+during a former war, killed both the father and grandfather of
+D&euml;&acirc;b, and sent the head of the former to the tribe in a dish,
+with a pilaff of rice.</p>
+<p><!-- page 36--><a name="page36"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+36</span>All the strength of the &rsquo;Adw&acirc;n now lies in Shaikh
+D&euml;&acirc;b, with his son &rsquo;Ali, (who came to welcome us near the
+Jordan,) and Gubl&acirc;n the nephew.&nbsp; Old &rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l
+&rsquo;Azeez is considered childish, and unfit to lead them.</p>
+<p>For us travellers, however, the &rsquo;Adw&acirc;n are sufficient.&nbsp;
+The territory is theirs over which we are passing, and they do all they can
+to please us; only, of course, like all Arab guides, they take every
+opportunity of insinuating themselves into being fed by us, which is a
+condition &ldquo;not in the bond.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then came a visit of three men with good-natured countenances.&nbsp;
+These were Bedawi minstrels from Tadmor, (Palmyra,) who wander about from
+tribe to tribe, singing heroic poems to the accompaniment of their
+reb&acirc;beh, (a very primitive sort of fiddle.)&nbsp; No warfare
+interferes with the immunity of their persons or property.&nbsp; They are
+never injured or insulted, but are always and everywhere welcome, and
+liberally rewarded.&nbsp; Of course it is for their interest to gratify the
+pride of their auditors by fervid appeals to their ancestral renown, or to
+individual prowess and generosity.</p>
+<p>The Arabic of their chants is unintelligible to towns-people; it is the
+high classic language of Antar.</p>
+<p>I had made acquaintance with these same men before at Tibneen Castle,
+near the Lebanon, during a season of Bairam.&nbsp; Being Sunday, we
+requested them to visit our tents in the morning.&nbsp; Our Arabs, <!--
+page 37--><a name="page37"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 37</span>however,
+and the dragomans kept them singing till a late hour round the fires
+lighted among the tents.&nbsp; It was a cheerful scene, in the clear
+starlight, and the lustrous planet Venus reflected in the running
+stream.</p>
+<p><i>Monday</i>, 14<i>th</i>.&mdash;After breakfast, and an entertainment
+of music from our troubadours, and the bestowing of our guerdon, these left
+us on their way to the other camp at Na&rsquo;oor; and our packing up
+commenced.</p>
+<p>Strange medley of costumes and languages among the grand
+colonnades.&nbsp; Our Arabs left us, having the luggage in charge, and
+indicating to us the camping-ground where we were to meet again at
+night&mdash;thus leaving us in care of the Salt&icirc;yeh friends of ours,
+who were to escort us to their town and its neighbourhood, as the
+&rsquo;Adw&acirc;n might not go there themselves.</p>
+<p>Both the Christian and Moslem shaikhs of the town came to meet us on the
+way.&nbsp; The former was a very old man; and he could with difficulty be
+persuaded to mount his donkey in presence of a train so majestic, in his
+eyes, coming from the holy city of Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>We passed an encampment of <i>Beni Hhasan</i>.&nbsp; These people are
+few in number, and exist under the shadow of the &rsquo;Adw&acirc;n.</p>
+<p>There were plenty of locusts about the country; but we soon came to a
+vast space of land covered with storks, so numerous as completely to hide
+<!-- page 38--><a name="page38"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 38</span>the
+face of the earth, all of them busily employed in feeding&mdash;of course
+devouring the locusts.&nbsp; So great is the blessing derived from the
+visits of storks, that the natives of these countries regard it as a sin to
+destroy the birds.&nbsp; On our riding among them they rose in the air,
+entirely obscuring he sky and the sun from our view.&nbsp; One of our party
+attempted to fire among them with his revolver, but, by some heedlessness
+or accident, the bunch of barrels, being not well screwed down flew off the
+stock and was lost for a time; it took more than half an hour&rsquo;s
+search by all of us to find it again, and the Arabs considered this a just
+punishment for wishing to kill such useful creatures.</p>
+<p>We traversed a meadow where Shaikh Faisel, with a detachment of the
+&rsquo;Anezeh, had encamped for pasture, and only left it thirty-five days
+before.&nbsp; His flocks and herds were described to us as impossible to be
+counted; but our friends were unanimous in stating that his camels were
+1500 in number.</p>
+<p>Came to <i>Khirbet es Sar</i>, (<i>Jazer</i>?) whence the Dead Sea was
+again visible.&nbsp; Our Arabs declared that they could distinguish the
+Frank mountain, and see into the streets of Bethlehem.&nbsp; Here there is
+a mere heap of ruin, with cisterns, and fragments of arches, large columns,
+and capitals; also a very rough cyclopean square building of brown striped
+flint in huge masses.</p>
+<p>This site is three hours due north of Na&rsquo;oor, in <!-- page 39--><a
+name="page39"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 39</span>a straight line, not
+turning aside to D&euml;&acirc;b&rsquo;s camp or &rsquo;Amm&acirc;n.&nbsp;
+Northwards hence are the well-wooded hills of <i>&rsquo;Ajloon</i>.&nbsp;
+To my inquiries for any site with a name resembling Nebo, I was referred to
+the <i>Neba</i>, half an hour south of Heshbon, which is given in the list
+taken down by me at Heshbon.</p>
+<p>Proceeding northwards, we had the hills of <i>Jebel M&acirc;has</i>
+parallel on our right hand; and to our left, in a deep glen below, was the
+source of the stream Se&rsquo;eer, which had flowed past us at
+<i>Cuferain</i>, our first encampment after crossing the Jordan.</p>
+<p>Arrived at the ruined town (modern in appearance) of <i>Dabook</i>, from
+whence they say the <i>Dabookeh</i> grapes at Hebron <a
+name="citation39"></a><a href="#footnote39" class="citation">[39]</a> had
+their origin; but there are none to be seen here now (see Jer. xlviii. 32,
+33)&mdash;&ldquo;O vine of Sibmah, I will weep for thee with the weeping of
+Jazer: thy plants are gone over the sea, they reach even to the sea of
+Jazer: the spoiler is fallen upon thy summer fruits and upon thy
+vintage.&nbsp; And joy and gladness is taken from the plentiful field, and
+from the land of Moab; and I have caused wine to fail from the
+wine-presses,&rdquo; etc.: with nearly the same words in Isa. xvi.
+8-10.</p>
+<p>At a short distance upon our right was a ruined village called
+<i>Khuldah</i>.&nbsp; This was at the entrance of woods of the evergreen
+oak, with hawthorn, many trees of each kind twined round with
+honeysuckle.&nbsp; There Shaikh Yusuf, (the Moslem of Es-Salt,) who is a
+fine singer, entertained us with his <!-- page 40--><a
+name="page40"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 40</span>performances, often
+bursting into extemporaneous verses suitable to the occasion and
+company.</p>
+<p>On reaching an exceedingly stony and desolate place, he related the
+original story of Lokman the miser, connected with
+it:&mdash;&ldquo;Formerly this was a fertile and lovely spot, abounding in
+gardens of fruit; and as the Apostle Mohammed (peace and blessings be upon
+him!) was passing by, he asked for some of the delicious produce for his
+refreshment on the weary way, but the churlish owner Lokman denied him the
+proper hospitality, and even used insulting language to the unknown
+traveller, (far be it from us!)&nbsp; Whereupon the latter, who was aware
+beforehand of the man&rsquo;s character, and knew that he was hopelessly
+beyond the reach of exhortation and of wise instruction, invoked upon him,
+by the spirit of prophecy, the curse of God, (the almighty and
+glorious.)&nbsp; And so his gardens were converted into these barren rocks
+before us, and the fruit into mere stones.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Such was the tale.&nbsp; But similar miraculous punishments for
+inhospitality are told at Mount Carmel, as inflicted by the Prophet Elijah;
+and near Bethlehem by the Virgin Mary.</p>
+<p>From a distance we caught a distant view of the <i>Beka&rsquo; el
+Basha</i>, or Pasha&rsquo;s meadow, where we were to encamp at night, but
+turned aside westwards in order to visit the town of Es-Salt.&nbsp; Upon a
+wide level tract we came to a small patch of ground enclosed by a low wall,
+to which a space was left for entrance, <!-- page 41--><a
+name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 41</span>with a lintel thrown
+across it, but still not above four feet from ground.&nbsp; On this were
+bits of glass and beads and pebbles deposited, as votive offerings, or
+tokens of remembrance or respect.&nbsp; The place is called the Weli, or
+tomb, of a Persian Moslem saint named <i>Sardoni</i>.&nbsp; But it should
+be recollected that in Arabic the name <i>&rsquo;Ajam</i>, or Persia, is
+often used to signify any unknown distant country to the east.</p>
+<p>At <i>&rsquo;Ain el Jadoor</i> we found water springing out of the
+rocks, among vineyards and fig and walnut trees, olives also, and
+pomegranates&mdash;a beautiful oasis, redeemed from the devastation of
+Bedaween by the strong hand of the town population.&nbsp; Near this the
+Christian Shaikh Abb&acirc;s, being in our company, was met by his
+venerable mother and his son Bakhi.</p>
+<p>In every direction the town of Es-Salt is environed by fruitful gardens,
+the produce of which finds a market in Nabloos and Jerusalem.&nbsp; The
+scenery reminded me of the Lebanon in its green aspect of industry and
+wealth.</p>
+<p>Entering the town we dismounted at the house of Shaikh Yusuf, and took
+our refreshment on the open terrace, on the shady side of a wall.</p>
+<p>Some of us walked about and visited the two Christian churches: they are
+both named &ldquo;St George,&rdquo; and are very poor in furniture.&nbsp;
+Of course they have over the door the universal picture in these countries
+of St George on his prancing gray horse.&nbsp; This obtains for them some
+respect from the <!-- page 42--><a name="page42"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 42</span>Mohammedans, who also revere that martial and
+religious hero.&nbsp; Inside the churches we found some pictures with
+Russian writing upon the frames; the people informed us that these were
+presents from the Emperor Nicholas, which is worthy of notice.</p>
+<p>The ignorance of the priests here is proverbial all over
+Palestine.&nbsp; I have heard it told of them as a common practice, that
+they recite the Lord&rsquo;s Prayer and the <i>Fathhah</i>, or opening
+chapter of the Koran, alternately, on the ground that these are both very
+sublime and beautiful; and it is said that they baptize in the name of the
+Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, and the Virgin Mary.&nbsp; There is reason to
+believe them very grossly ignorant; but it may be that some of these
+reports about them emanate from the Roman Catholic authorities in
+Jerusalem, who never hesitate at propagating slanders to the detriment of
+non-Romanists.</p>
+<p>In a church porch I found a school of dirty ragged children reading the
+Psalms from the small English printed edition; not, however, learning to
+read by means of the alphabet or spelling, but learning to know the forms
+of words by rote; boys and girls together, all very slightly dressed, and
+one of the boys stark naked.</p>
+<p>People came to me to be cured of ophthalmia.&nbsp; I got out of my
+portmanteau for them some sugar of lead; but it is inconceivable the
+difficulty I had to get a vessel for making it into a lotion&mdash;bottles
+or phials were totally unknown, not even cups were to <!-- page 43--><a
+name="page43"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 43</span>be procured.&nbsp; At
+one time I thought of a gourd-shell, but there was not one <i>dried</i> in
+the town; so they told me.&nbsp; I might have lent them my drinking-cup,
+but then I wanted to prepare a large quantity to be left behind and to be
+used occasionally.&nbsp; I forget now what was the expedient adopted, but I
+think it was the last named-one, but of course only making sufficient for
+immediate use.&nbsp; I left a quantity behind me in powder, with directions
+to dilute it considerably whenever any vessel could be found; warning the
+people, however, of its poisonous nature if taken by mouth.</p>
+<p>One man came imploring me to cure him of deafness, but I could not
+undertake his case.&nbsp; In any of those countries a medical missionary
+would be of incalculable benefit to the people.</p>
+<p>There are ancient remains about the town, but not considerable in any
+respect.&nbsp; It is often taken for granted that this is the Ramoth-Gilead
+of Scripture, but I believe without any other reason than that, from the
+copious springs of water, there must always have been an important city
+there.&nbsp; The old name, however, would rather lead us north-eastwards to
+the hills of <i>Jela&rsquo;ad</i>, where there are also springs and
+ruins.</p>
+<p>On leaving the town we experienced a good deal of annoyance from the
+Moslem population, one of whom stole a gun from a gentleman of the party,
+and when detected, for a long time refused to give it up.&nbsp; Of course,
+in the end it was returned; but <!-- page 44--><a name="page44"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 44</span>I was told afterwards that the people had a
+notion that we ought to pay them something for visiting their town, just as
+we pay the wild Arabs for visiting Jerash.&nbsp; What a difference from the
+time of the strong Egyptian Government when Lord Lindsay was there!</p>
+<p>At a distance of perhaps half or three-quarters of an hour there is a
+<i>Weli</i> called <i>Nebi Osha</i>; that is to say, a sepulchre, or
+commemorative station of the Prophet Joshua, celebrated all over the
+country for the exceeding magnificence of the prospect it commands in every
+direction.&nbsp; In order to reach this, we had to pass over hills and
+plains newly taken into cultivation for vineyards, mile after mile, in
+order to supply a recent call for the peculiar grapes of the district at
+Jerusalem to be sent to London as raisins.</p>
+<p>Arrived at the Weli, we found no language sufficient to express the
+astonishment elicited by the view before us; and here it will be safest
+only to indicate the salient points of the extensive landscape, without
+indulging in the use of epithets vainly striving to portray our
+feelings.&nbsp; We were looking over the Gh&ocirc;r, with the Jordan
+sparkling in the sunshine upon its winding course below.&nbsp; In direct
+front was <i>Nabloos</i>, lying between Ebal and Gerizim; while at the same
+time we could distinguish Neby Samwil near Jerusalem, the Mount Tabor,
+Mount Carmel, and part of the Lebanon all at once!&nbsp; On our own side of
+Jordan we saw the extensive remains <!-- page 45--><a
+name="page45"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 45</span>of <i>Kala&rsquo;at
+Rubb&acirc;d</i>, and ruins of a town called <i>Mais&#277;ra</i>.&nbsp; On
+such a spot what could we do but lie in the shade of the whitewashed Weli,
+under gigantic oak-trees, and gaze and ponder and wish in
+silence,&mdash;ay, and pray and praise too,&mdash;looking back through the
+vista of thirty-three centuries to the time of the longing of Moses, the
+&ldquo;man of God,&rdquo; expressed in these words &ldquo;O Lord God, Thou
+hast begun to show Thy servant Thy greatness and Thy mighty hand: . .
+.&nbsp; I pray Thee let me go over and see the good land that is beyond
+Jordan, that goodly mountain, and Lebanon.&rdquo;&nbsp; The honoured leader
+of His people&mdash;the long-tried man &ldquo;through good report and evil
+report,&rdquo; who, during his second forty years which he spent as a
+shepherd in Midian, had been accustomed to the abstemious habits and keen
+eyesight of the desert; and, at the end of another forty years as the ruler
+of a whole nation, living in the desert, &ldquo;his eye was not
+dim,&rdquo;&mdash;added to which natural advantage, we are told that
+&ldquo;the Lord showed him all the land,&rdquo; highly cultivated as it was
+then by seven nations greater and mightier than Israel,&mdash;Moses must
+have beheld a spectacle from Pisgah and Nebo, surpassing even the glories
+of this landscape viewed by us from Nebi Osha.</p>
+<p>Turning eastwards to our evening home, we passed a ruined site called
+<i>Berga&rsquo;an</i>, where we had one more view of the Dead Sea, and
+traversed large plains of ripe corn, belonging, of course, to the people of
+Es-Salt.&nbsp; The people requested me to <!-- page 46--><a
+name="page46"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 46</span>pray to God that the
+locusts might not come there, since all that harvest was destined for
+Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>We met some of the <i>&rsquo;Abb&acirc;d Kattaleen</i> Arabs, but we
+were safe under the escort of the Salt&icirc;yeh instead of the
+&rsquo;Adw&acirc;n.&nbsp; These &rsquo;Abb&acirc;d are the people who
+assaulted and plundered some seamen of H.M.S. &ldquo;Spartan&rdquo; in
+1847, on the Jordan; for which offence they have never yet been chastised,
+notwithstanding the urgent applications made to the Turkish Pashas of
+Jerusalem, Bayroot, and Damascus.&nbsp; We did not arrive at the encampment
+till long after dark, and there was no moonlight.</p>
+<p>The site is on a plain encircled by hills, with plenty of water
+intersecting the ground; the small streams are bordered by reeds and long
+grass.&nbsp; A khan, now in ruin, is situated in the midst&mdash;a locality
+certainly deserving its name, <i>Beka&rsquo; el Bash&agrave;</i>, and is
+said to have been a favourite camping-station for the Pashas of Damascus in
+former times.</p>
+<p>Much to our vexation, the Arabs and the muleteers had pitched our tents
+in a slovenly manner among the winding water-courses, so that we had wet
+reeds, thistles, and long grass, beetles and grasshoppers inside the tents,
+which again were wetted outside with heavy dew.&nbsp; They had done this in
+order to keep the cattle immediately close to us, and therefore as free
+from forayers as possible during the night.&nbsp; Such was the reason
+assigned, and we were all too hungry and tired to argue the matter
+further.</p>
+<p>My people complained to me of the insolence of <!-- page 47--><a
+name="page47"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 47</span>the Salt&icirc;yeh
+guides that were with us; so I sent for the two shaikhs and scolded
+them.&nbsp; They persisted in it that they did not deserve the rebuke, that
+the complaints ought to be laid against a certain farrier who had come over
+from Jerusalem, etc., etc.&nbsp; My servant ended the affair by shouting at
+them, &ldquo;Take my last word with you and feed upon it&mdash;&lsquo;God
+send you a strong government.&rsquo;&rdquo;&nbsp; This at least they
+deserved, for they are often in arms against the Turkish government: and
+although so prosperous in trade and agriculture, are many years in arrear
+with their taxes.</p>
+<p><i>Tuesday</i>, 15<i>th</i>.&mdash;Early in the morning there were
+Salt&icirc;yeh people reaping harvest near us, chiefly in the Christian
+fields; for here the case is not as in Palestine, where Christians
+generally sow and reap in partnership with Moslems, for their own safety;
+but the Moslems have their fields, and the Christians have theirs apart,
+which shows that their influence is more considerable here; indeed, the
+Christians carry arms, and go out to war against the Bedaween, quite like
+the Moslems.</p>
+<p>Before we left, the day was becoming exceedingly hot, and we had six
+hours&rsquo; march before us to Jerash.</p>
+<p>The hills abound with springs of water.&nbsp; We passed one called
+<i>Umm el &rsquo;Egher</i>, another called <i>Safoot</i>, also <i>Abu
+Mus-hhaf</i>, and <i>T&acirc;bakra</i>, and <i>&rsquo;Ain Umm ed
+Dumaneer</i>, with a ruin named <i>Khirbet Saleekhi</i>.</p>
+<p><!-- page 48--><a name="page48"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+48</span>The &rsquo;Adw&acirc;n Arabs were now again our guides, the
+Salt&icirc;yeh having returned home; but for some distance the guides were
+few and without firearms, only armed with spears, and the common peasant
+sword called <i>khanjar</i>; perhaps this was by compact with the
+Salt&icirc;yeh, as in about an hour&rsquo;s time we were joined by a
+reinforcement with a few matchlock guns.&nbsp; On we went through
+corn-fields, which are sown in joint partnership with the Arabs and the
+Moslems of the town; then doubled round a long and high hill with a ruin on
+it, called <i>Jela&rsquo;ad</i>.&nbsp; This I have since suspected to be
+Ramoth-Gilead.&nbsp; We descended a hill called <i>Tallooz</i>; forward
+again between hills and rocks, and neglected evergreen woods, upon narrow
+paths.&nbsp; A numerous caravan we were, with a hundred animals of burden,
+bright costumes, and cheerful conversation, till we reached a large
+terebinth-tree under a hill called <i>Shebail</i>; the site is called
+<i>Thuggeret el Mogh&acirc;fer</i>, signifying a &ldquo;look-out
+station&rdquo; between two tribes.&nbsp; There we rested a while, till the
+above-mentioned reinforcement joined us.&nbsp; From this spot we could just
+discern <i>Jerash</i>, on the summit of a huge hill before us.</p>
+<p>We now had one long and continued descent to the river Zerka.&nbsp;
+Passed through a defile, on issuing from which we observed a little stream
+with oleander, in pink blossom, thirty feet high, and in great
+abundance.&nbsp; Halted again at a pretty spring, called
+<i>Rum&acirc;n</i>, where the water was upon nearly a dead level, and
+therefore scarcely moving; then <!-- page 49--><a name="page49"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 49</span>another small spring, called <i>Bursa</i>, and
+also <i>&rsquo;Ain el Merubb&rsquo;a&rsquo;</i>.</p>
+<p>Evergreen oak in all directions, but with broader leaf than in
+Palestine; also some terebinth-trees and wild holly-oaks.&nbsp; All the
+scenery now expanded before us in width and height and depth.</p>
+<p>We took notice of several high hills with groves of evergreen oak on
+their summits; detached hills, which we could not but consider as remains
+of the ancient <i>high places</i> for idolatrous worship.</p>
+<p>Still descended, till on a sudden turn of the road came the rushing of
+the <i>Zerka</i>, or Jabbok, water upon our ears, with a breeze sighing
+among juniper-bushes, and enormous and gorgeous oleanders, together with
+the soft zephyr feeling from the stream upon our heated faces&mdash;oh, so
+inexpressibly delicious!&nbsp; I was the first to get across, and on
+reaching the opposite bank we all dismounted, to drink freely from the
+river&mdash;a name which it deserves as at that place it is about
+two-thirds of the width of the Jordan at the usual visiting-place for
+travellers.</p>
+<p>Some of the party went bathing.&nbsp; We all had our several luncheons,
+some smoked, all got into shady nooks by the water-side; and I, with my
+heart full, lay meditating on the journey we had hitherto made.</p>
+<p>At length I had been permitted by God&rsquo;s good providence to
+traverse the territory of Moses and the chosen people antecedent to the
+writing of the <!-- page 50--><a name="page50"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+50</span>Pentateuch, when they were warring upon Ammon and Moab.&nbsp; How
+solemn are the sensations derived from pondering upon periods of such very
+hoar antiquity&mdash;a time when the deliverance at the Red Sea, the
+thunders of Sinai, the rebellion of Korah and Dathan, the erection of the
+tabernacle, and the death of Aaron, were still fresh in the memories of
+living witnesses; and the manna was still their food from heaven,
+notwithstanding the supplies from the cultivated country they were passing
+through, (Josh. v. 12.)&nbsp; Elisha did well in after times on the banks
+of Jordan, when he cried out, &ldquo;Where is the Lord God of
+Elijah?&rdquo;&nbsp; And we may exclaim, in contemplation of these
+marvellous events of the still more remote ages, &ldquo;Where is the Lord
+God of Moses, who with a mighty hand and stretched-out
+arm&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;redeemed His people from their enemies; for His
+mercy endureth for ever!&rdquo;&nbsp; Nations and generations may rise and
+pass away; phases of dominion and civilisation may vary under Assyrian,
+Egyptian, Hellenic, and Roman forms, or under our modern modifications; yet
+all this is transitory.&nbsp; The God of creation, providence, and grace,
+He lives and abides for ever.&nbsp; His power is still great as in the days
+of old, His wisdom unsearchable, and His goodness infinite.&nbsp; Ay, and
+this dispenser of kingdoms is also the guide of the humble in heart, and He
+cares for the smallest concerns of individual persons who rest upon
+Him.</p>
+<p><!-- page 51--><a name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+51</span>Strengthened by these and similar reflections, with ardent
+aspirations for the future, I rose up and pursued my journey, as
+Bunyan&rsquo;s pilgrim might have done, under the heartfelt assurance that
+&ldquo;happy is he that hath the God of <i>Jacob</i> for his
+help.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We were now leaving behind us much of the Old Testament
+country&mdash;not exclusively that of the Mosaic era, but the land which
+had been trodden by the patriarchs Abraham and Israel on their several
+removals from Padan-aram to Canaan.&nbsp; But, while looking back upon the
+grand landscape outline with an intense degree of interest, it may be well
+to remark that, among all our company, there was a feeling of uncertainty
+as to the geographical boundaries of the lands possessed by the old people
+of Ammon, Moab, and Bashan.&nbsp; Probably there had been some fluctuations
+of their towns and confines between the time of the exodus and the
+prophecies of Isaiah and Jeremiah.</p>
+<p>One thing is certain&mdash;that we all, with one heart, were confident
+that God spake by Moses and the prophets; and that, with the incidents, the
+people and the local names we had lately passed among, we might as soon
+believe in the non-existence of the sun and stars, as that the books called
+&ldquo;The Law of Moses&rdquo; are not in every word a record of infallible
+truth.</p>
+<p>We had now a different journey, and a different <!-- page 52--><a
+name="page52"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 52</span>set of scenes before
+us, entering into the half tribe of Manasseh.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p52.jpg">
+<img alt="Triumphal Arch" src="images/p52.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Ascending the steep mountain-sides with two of the guides, I preceded
+the rest of the party, and even the baggage mules.&nbsp; In perhaps half an
+hour, (it may be more,) I came to a triumphal arch, the commencement of
+Jerash.&nbsp; One of the guides told me that they call this the Amm&acirc;n
+Gate of the old city; for that, in ancient times, there were two <!-- page
+53--><a name="page53"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 53</span>brothers, one
+named Amm&acirc;n, and the other Jerash.&nbsp; Each of them built a city,
+and gave it his own name; but called the gate nearest to his
+brother&rsquo;s city, by the name of that brother.</p>
+<p>At this gateway I observed the anomaly of the columns on each side of
+the principal opening, having their capitals at the bottom of the shafts,
+and resting on the pediments, though in an upright position.&nbsp; It was
+very ridiculous.&nbsp; When could this have been done&mdash;at the original
+erection of the gate, or at a later rebuilding, after an earthquake had
+shaken the pillars?&nbsp; It would seem to me to be the former, as they are
+posted against the wall, and this is not disturbed or altered.&nbsp; The
+columns and the curve of the portal are gone, so that it cannot be seen
+whether originally they had capitals on the heads also of the
+columns.&nbsp; It is most probable that those remaining are not the true
+capitals, inasmuch as they have no volutes.</p>
+<p>Passing by inferior monuments of antiquity,&mdash;such as a sepulchre, a
+single column, a sarcophagus, and then a square elevated pavement in good
+condition, upon which are several sarcophagi, some of them broken, and all
+with the lids displaced,&mdash;I came to a large circus of Ionic columns,
+almost all standing, and joined to each other at the top by
+architraves.&nbsp; Thence holding on the same direction forwards due north,
+our way was between a double row of grand Corinthian columns with their
+<!-- page 54--><a name="page54"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+54</span>capitals, and occasional temples to the right and left.&nbsp; At
+the termination of this, but without continuing the same line, between
+columns of another Grecian order, I turned aside, at a vast Roman bath, to
+a spring of water, the commencement of a running stream, in a small meadow
+of tall grass and thorns, intending to pitch my tent there; but soon
+changed my mind, and got myself established within a wing of the Roman
+bath, which stood on higher ground, and had a good roof upon it.</p>
+<p>The other gentlemen on coming up, adopted the choice of their dragomans
+and muleteers, near the water, after having the thorns and thistles cleared
+away.&nbsp; A fresh afternoon breeze that sprang up was peculiarly grateful
+to men and cattle.</p>
+<p>After some rest, I proceeded to stroll about,&mdash;first of all to the
+great Temple of the Sun, on a rising ground to the west of the great
+colonnade, which, besides the columns along all the sides of the edifice,
+has a conspicuous portico in front, consisting of twelve magnificent
+Corinthian columns, a few of which are fallen.&nbsp; Thence I walked to the
+Naumachia, near the southern extremity of the city, (that by which we had
+arrived,) and found this in good condition, with the seats remaining, and
+the channel well defined which conveyed water for the exhibitions from the
+above-mentioned spring.&nbsp; The form is a long oval, flattened at one
+end.</p>
+<p>In passing once more between the double line of Corinthian columns, I
+counted fifty-five of them <!-- page 55--><a name="page55"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 55</span>standing, besides fragments and capitals of the
+missing ones lying on the ground.</p>
+<p>From this I diverged at right angles, through a street of small public
+buildings, towards the bridge over the stream, (and this I called Bridge
+Street&mdash;part of the pavement still remains, consisting of long slabs
+laid across the whole width from house to house;) then upon the bridge, as
+far as its broken condition would allow, and returned to my
+home&mdash;everywhere among scattered fragments of entablature; numerous
+altars entire, and sculptured with garlands; also broken buildings, with
+niches embellished inside with sculptured ornament.&nbsp; In all my
+exploration, however, I found no statues or fragments of statues&mdash;the
+Mohammedan iconoclasts had long ago destroyed all these; but there were
+some remains of inscriptions, much defaced or worn away by the work of
+time.</p>
+<p>The natural agencies by which the edifices have come to ruin seem to
+be&mdash;first, earthquakes; then the growth of weeds, thorns, and even
+trees, between the courses of stone, after the population ceased; or rain
+and snow detaching small pieces, which were followed by larger; also
+sometimes a sinking of the ground; and besides these common causes of
+decay, there comes the great destroyer&mdash;man.</p>
+<p>Yet nature is always picturesque, even after the demolition of the works
+of human art or genius; and it is pleasing to see the tendrils, leaves, and
+scarlet berries of the nightshade playfully twining <!-- page 56--><a
+name="page56"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 56</span>among the sculptured
+friezes which are scattered about in every position but straight lines; or
+other plants between the volutes, rivalling the acanthus foliage of the
+classic capitals.</p>
+<p>Sunset: a beautiful landscape all around; and a pretty view of the
+travellers&rsquo; tents, the Arabs, and the cattle below me.</p>
+<p>After dinner I walked by starlight along the Ionic colonnade, which is a
+further continuation northwards of the Corinthian, and found nearly the
+whole length, with the intermediate pavement, remaining, consisting of
+squares about two feet in length, laid down in diamond pattern.</p>
+<p>At night there were flickering lights and varieties of human voices
+below; the frogs croaking loud near the rivulet; and the rooks, whom I had
+dislodged from their home within the Roman bath, had taken refuge on the
+trees about us, unable to get to rest, being disturbed by our unusual
+sights and sounds.</p>
+<p><i>Wednesday</i>, 16<i>th</i>.&mdash;A visitor came early&mdash;namely,
+Shaikh Yusuf&mdash;with two of his people from <i>Soof</i>.&nbsp; The old
+man exhibited numerous certificates given by former travellers&mdash;all
+English&mdash;whom he had accompanied as guide either to Beis&acirc;n or
+Damascus.&nbsp; He offered his services to take us even, if we pleased, as
+far as Bozrah.</p>
+<p>Then came Shaikh Barak&acirc;t el Fraikh with a large train.&nbsp; He is
+ruler over all the <i>Jebel &rsquo;Ajloon</i>, and has been residing lately
+on the summit of a <!-- page 57--><a name="page57"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 57</span>high hill rising before us to the east, where
+there is a weli or tomb of a Moslem saint, the Nebi Hhood, who works
+miraculous cures.&nbsp; Barak&acirc;t is in delicate health, and has twenty
+wives.&nbsp; His metropolis, when he condescends to live in a house, is at
+a village called <i>Cuf&rsquo;r Enji</i>; but his district comprises
+fifteen inhabited villages, with above three hundred in ruins,&mdash;so it
+is said.</p>
+<p>As for the saint himself, he has a very respectable name for antiquity,
+too ancient for regular chronology to meddle with&mdash;it is only known
+that he preached righteousness to an impious race of men previous to their
+sudden destruction.&nbsp; The circumstance of his tomb being on the summit
+of a high hill is perfectly consonant with the sentiments of great heroes
+and chiefs, as frequently expressed in poems of the old Arabs.&nbsp; The
+restoration of health which he is supposed to bestow, must be that effected
+by means of the fine mountain air at his place.&nbsp; At
+&rsquo;Amm&acirc;n, old &rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l &rsquo;Azeez had said that
+Jerash was built by the Beni &rsquo;Ad, a primitive race mentioned in the
+Kor&acirc;n.</p>
+<p>A ridiculous figure appeared of a Turkish subaltern officer, who has
+come into this wild desert to ask the people for tribute to the
+Porte.&nbsp; A Turkish kaww&acirc;s in attendance on him, I observed to
+shrug up his shoulders when he heard nothing but Arabic being spoken among
+us.&nbsp; They arrived here in the company of Shaikh Yusuf, whose son is
+nominally a Turkish military officer, commanding <!-- page 58--><a
+name="page58"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 58</span>three hundred imaginary
+Bashi-Bozuk, or irregular cavalry.&nbsp; By means of such titles they
+tickle the vanity of the Arab leaders, and <i>claim</i> an annual tribute
+of 218 purses, (about &pound;1000,) and are thus enabled to swell out the
+published army list, and account of revenue printed in Constantinople. <a
+name="citation58"></a><a href="#footnote58" class="citation">[58]</a></p>
+<p>So that next to nothing is in reality derived from these few sparse
+villages; and from the tent Arabs less than nothing, for the Turks have to
+bribe these to abstain from plundering the regular soldiers belonging to
+Damascus.</p>
+<p>The &rsquo;Anezi Shaikh Faisel was encamped at only fourteen
+hours&rsquo; distance from us.</p>
+<p>Common Arab visitors arrived&mdash;from no one knew where: some on
+horseback, to see what could be picked up among us; even women and
+children.&nbsp; They must have travelled during the night.&nbsp; A
+handsomely-dressed and well-armed youth on horseback, from Soof, accosted
+me during one of my walks.</p>
+<p>I bought two sheep for a feast to the Arabs that came about my tent; but
+they asked to have the money value instead of the feast.&nbsp; Alas for the
+degradation!&nbsp; What would their forefathers have said to them had they
+been possibly present?</p>
+<p>Afternoon: a fine breeze sprang up, as is usual in elevated
+districts.&nbsp; I strolled again with an <!-- page 59--><a
+name="page59"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 59</span>attendant&mdash;first
+outside the ancient wall on the east side of the rivulet, where it is not
+much dilapidated; it is all built of rabbeted stones, though not of very
+large size; then crossed over to the western wall, and traced out the whole
+periphery of the city by the eye.</p>
+<p>In the great Corinthian colonnade, one of our party called me to him,
+and showed me some inscriptions about the public edifices along that line,
+and at the Temple of the Sun.&nbsp; There was one inscription in Latin, on
+a square pedestal; a similar one near it, broken across, had a Greek
+inscription.&nbsp; The rest were all in Greek, but so defaced or injured
+that seldom could a whole word be made out.&nbsp; However, we found, in a
+small temple beyond the city wall to the north, in a ploughed field, an
+inscription more perfect, containing the work <i>Nemesis</i> in the first
+line.&nbsp; There also I saw several mausoleums, with sarcophagi handsomely
+ornamented, and fragments of highly-polished red Egyptian granite columns,
+to our great surprise as to how they had arrived there, considering not
+only the distance from which they had been brought, and the variety of
+people through whose hands they had passed since being cut out roughly from
+the quarries of upper Egypt; but, moreover, the difficulty to be surmounted
+in bringing them to this elevation, across the deep Jordan valley, even
+since their disembarkation from the Mediterranean either at Jaffa or
+Caiffa.</p>
+<p><!-- page 60--><a name="page60"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+60</span>The inscriptions that I had been able to collect were as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p60.jpg">
+<img alt="Two inscriptions" src="images/p60.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Among all the hundreds of fragments of fine capitals and friezes lying
+about Jerash, there was not one that was not too heavy for us to carry
+away.&nbsp; I found no ornamented pottery, although we had found some even
+at Heshbon; neither coins, nor even bits of statues.&nbsp; And remarkable
+enough in our European ideas, so little space appeared for private common
+habitations&mdash;as usual among ruined cities of remote antiquity&mdash;it
+seemed as if almost <!-- page 61--><a name="page61"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 61</span>the whole enclosure was occupied by temples or
+other public institutions.</p>
+<p>Yet there must have habitations for a numerous population.&nbsp; And,
+again, such a city implies the existence of minor towns and of numerous
+villages around, and a complete immunity from incursions of wild Arab
+tribes.&nbsp; These latter were unknown to a population who could build
+such temples, naumachia, and colonnades, and who were protected farther
+eastwards by the numerous cities with high roads, still discoverable in
+ruins beyond this&mdash;Belka and &rsquo;Ajloon.&nbsp; But of how different
+a character must have been the daily necessities of these old populations
+from the requirements of modern European existence.&nbsp; <i>We</i> should
+not be satisfied with the mere indulgence of gazing upon the &aelig;sthetic
+beauty of temples and colonnades.&nbsp; Climate, however, has much to do in
+this matter.</p>
+<p>At night we had a general conference at the encampment respecting the
+future march, as we had now finished with the &rsquo;Adw&acirc;n Arabs. <a
+name="citation61"></a><a href="#footnote61" class="citation">[61]</a></p>
+<p><!-- page 62--><a name="page62"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+62</span>The resolution was taken to proceed on the morrow to <i>Umm
+Kais</i>, under the guidance of Shaikh Yusuf of Soof, and proceed thence to
+Tiberias.&nbsp; He, however, would not ensure but that we might be met and
+mulcted by the Beni Sukh&rsquo;r for leave to traverse their
+territory.&nbsp; He was to receive 500 piastres, (nearly &pound;5,) besides
+50 piastres for baksheesh; but whatever we might have to pay the Beni
+Sukh&rsquo;r was to be deducted from the above stipulation.</p>
+<p><i>Thursday</i>, 17<i>th</i>.&mdash;Great noise of jackdaws under my
+vaulted roof at break of day, they having mustered up courage to return to
+their nests there during the night.</p>
+<p>During the packing up of the luggage, I took a final and lonely walk
+along the colonnades to the Naumachia, and outside the wall S.W. of the
+Amm&acirc;n gate, where I observed some columns, or portions of such, of
+twisted pattern; returned by the bridge.&nbsp; The thrush, the cuckoo, and
+the partridge were heard at no great distance, near the stream.</p>
+<p>We left upon the meadow a parliamentary debate of Arabs gathered around
+the chief&rsquo;s spear, all the men ranting and screaming as only such
+people <!-- page 63--><a name="page63"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+63</span>can, and they only at the beginning or end of a bargain.</p>
+<p>Slowly we defiled in a long line over rising ground, higher and higher,
+upon a good highway, bordered on each side by numerous sarcophagi; as along
+the Roman Appian Way; passed the well of <i>Shaikh el Bakkar</i>, and a
+sarcophagus with a long inscription in Greek, which I regretted not having
+discovered yesterday, so as to allow of copying it.&nbsp; From an eminence
+we took the last view of the pompous colonnades of Jerash.</p>
+<p>Away through the green woods of broad-leaved oak, among which were to be
+found fine and numerous pine-trees, the air fragrant with honeysuckle, and
+the whole scene enlivened by sweet song of the birds, there were hills in
+sight all covered with pine.</p>
+<p>Around Soof we found none of the druidical-looking remains mentioned by
+Irby and Mangles, but some romantic landscape and vineyards all over the
+hills.</p>
+<p>Ten minutes beyond Soof we had a Roman milestone lying at our
+feet.&nbsp; Some of us set to work in clearing earth away from it,
+searching for an inscription, but could not spare sufficient time to do it
+properly.&nbsp; We found, however, the letters PIVS &middot; PONTI . .
+.&mdash;indicating the period of the Antonines.</p>
+<p>Next there met us a large party of gipsies&mdash;known, among other
+tokens, by the women&rsquo;s black hair being combed, which that of the
+Bedawi women <!-- page 64--><a name="page64"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+64</span>would not be.&nbsp; What a motley meeting we formed&mdash;of
+Moslems, Greek-Church dragomans, Protestants, and Fire-worshippers, as the
+gipsies are always believed in Asia to be.</p>
+<p>Among the oaks of gigantic size and enormously large arbutus, the effect
+of our party winding&mdash;appearing and disappearing, in varied costumes
+and brilliant colours&mdash;was very pleasing.</p>
+<p>After a time we reached some fine meadow land, on which were large
+flocks of sheep belonging to the Beni Hhassan, whose tents we saw not far
+distant.&nbsp; The black and the white sheep were kept separate from each
+other.</p>
+<p>And then appeared, in succession to the right and left, several of the
+rude erections, resembling the Celtic cromlechs, or <i>cist-vaens</i>,
+above alluded to, from Irby and Mangles.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p64.jpg">
+<img alt="Erection resembling cromlech" src="images/p64.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Our guides told us that they abound all over the hills.&nbsp; All that
+we saw were constructed each of four huge slabs of brown flinty-looking
+stone, forming a chamber&mdash;two for sides, one at the back, <!-- page
+65--><a name="page65"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 65</span>and a cover
+over all, which measured eleven feet by six.&nbsp; Their date must be long
+anterior to the Roman period.&nbsp; They are manifestly not Jewish, and
+consequently are of pagan origin.&nbsp; Are they altars? or are they of a
+sepulchral character, raised over the graves of valiant warriors, whose
+very names and nationality are lost? or do they indeed partake of both
+designs&mdash;one leading easily to the other among a superstitious people,
+who had no light of revelation?</p>
+<p>My persuasion is that they were altars, as they seldom reach above four
+feet from the ground; and if so, they would serve to show, as well as the
+uprights forming a square temple by the sea-side, between Tyre and Sidon,
+that not in every place did the Israelites sufficiently regard the
+injunction of Deut. xii. 3, to demolish the idolatrous places of worship.
+<a name="citation65"></a><a href="#footnote65"
+class="citation">[65]</a></p>
+<p>Our road gradually ascended for a considerable time, till we attained
+the brow of an eminence, where our woody, close scenery suddenly expanded
+into a glorious extent of landscape.&nbsp; Straight before our eyes,
+apparently up in the sky, was old Hermon, capped with snow.&nbsp; About his
+base was a hazy belt; below this was the Lake of Gennesaroth; and nearer
+still was an extent of meadow and woodland.</p>
+<p><!-- page 66--><a name="page66"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+66</span>The commanding object, however, was the grand mountain,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&nbsp; &ldquo;That lifts its awful form,<br />
+Swells from the vale, and midway leaves the storm.<br />
+Though round its breast the rolling clouds be spread,<br />
+Eternal sunshine settles on its head.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>At this place we rested for a time.</p>
+<p>All the day afterwards we kept upon high grounds, to avoid meeting any
+of the Beni Sukh&rsquo;r&mdash;thus greatly increasing the length of the
+day&rsquo;s march, and having to scramble over rocky hills without visible
+paths.&nbsp; All this had been brought upon us by over-cleverness in
+bargaining with Shaikh Yusuf, our guide.&nbsp; We had stipulated that, in
+case of meeting with Bedaween Arabs, whatever should be demanded as
+<i>ghufur</i>, or toll for crossing their ground, should be deducted from
+his 500 piastres.&nbsp; He had informed us that the toll would be but a
+trifle; but after the burden of it had been once thrown upon him, he
+avoided the best and direct road, and we had hours of needless fatigue in
+consequence.</p>
+<p>As a peasant himself, the Arabs allow him and his people to pass free,
+as no doubt they exact enough from the village in other forms; but they
+consider themselves entitled to levy tribute on European travellers.&nbsp;
+The latter, however, are always disposed to grumble at it.</p>
+<p>We plunged again into thick green woods,&mdash;the oaks of
+Bashan,&mdash;with merry birds carolling all <!-- page 67--><a
+name="page67"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 67</span>around.&nbsp; Oh, how
+cheering was the scene, after that devastated land across the river, where
+there is so little of forest land left in proportion to this!&nbsp; A
+friend once remarked to me, that were the two territories in the same
+relative conditions at the time of Joshua taking possession of Canaan, it
+would require double amount of faith in God&rsquo;s promises, as they
+ascended from Jericho to Ai, to believe that they had not left the promised
+land behind them.&nbsp; Now, this might be met by several satisfactory
+replies; but the plainest answer for the moment is, that the countries were
+not then in the same conditions relatively as they now are.</p>
+<p>We passed a rock-hewn sepulchre on the side of a hill, in good
+condition,&mdash;just such as may be frequently seen in Palestine
+proper,&mdash;then found a large herd of camels browsing; and passing
+through a verdant glen, which issued upon cultivated fields, we came to the
+village of <i>Mezer</i>, and soon after to <i>Tuleh</i>, where we got a
+view of Tabor, Gilboa, and Hermon, <a name="citation67"></a><a
+href="#footnote67" class="citation">[67]</a> all at the same time.&nbsp;
+Were the day clear, there could be no doubt but we should have seen also
+the village of Zer&rsquo;een (Jezreel) and the convent on Mount Carmel.</p>
+<p>The weather was hot, and our people suffering from thirst, as Ramadan
+had that day commenced.</p>
+<p>Had a distant view of a Beni Sukh&rsquo;r <!-- page 68--><a
+name="page68"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 68</span>encampment to our
+right.&nbsp; After a steep descent, and consequent rise again, we were upon
+a plain; and therefore the guide counselled us to keep close together, as a
+precaution against marauders.&nbsp; Our tedious deviation to-day had been
+far to the east: we now turned westwards, as if marching right up to Tabor,
+over corn-fields, with the village of <i>Tibni</i> at our left, and
+<i>Dair</i> at our right hand.</p>
+<p>Arrived at <i>Tayibeh</i>, and encamped there for the night.&nbsp; Among
+the first people who came up to us was an Algerine Jew, who held my horse
+as I dismounted.&nbsp; He was an itinerant working silversmith, gaining a
+livelihood by going from Tiberias among Arab villages and the Bedaween,
+repairing women&rsquo;s ornaments, etc.</p>
+<p>There are plenty of wells about this place, but none with good
+water.&nbsp; Wrangling and high words among the muleteers, and fighting of
+the animals for approach to the water-troughs.&nbsp; The day had been very
+fatiguing; and our Moslem attendants, as they had been involuntarily
+deprived of water during this the first day of Ramadan, deemed it not worth
+while at that hour to break the fast, as evening was rapidly coming
+on.&nbsp; Upon a journey, if it be a real journey on business, they are
+allowed to break the fast, on condition of making up for the number of days
+at some time before the year expires.</p>
+<p>Evening: beautiful colours on the western hills, <!-- page 69--><a
+name="page69"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 69</span>and the new moon
+appearing&mdash;a thin silver streak in the roseate glow which remains in
+the heavens after sunset.&nbsp; The night very hot, and no air moving.</p>
+<p><i>Friday</i>, 18<i>th</i>.&mdash;After a night of mosquito-plague, we
+rose at the first daybreak, with a glorious spectacle of Mount Hermon and
+its snowy summit to the north.&nbsp; Such evenings and mornings as
+travellers and residents enjoy in Asian climes are beyond all estimation,
+and can never be forgotten.</p>
+<p>We learned that there are Christians in this village of <i>Tayibeh</i>,
+as indeed there are some thinly scattered throughout the villages of
+<i>Jebel &rsquo;Ajloon</i>, <i>i.e.</i> from Jerash to near Tiberias; and
+in the corresponding villages on the western side of Jordan, as far as
+Nabloos.</p>
+<p>I always feel deeply concerned for those &ldquo;sheep without a
+shepherd,&rdquo; dispersed among an overwhelming population of
+Mohammedans.&nbsp; They are indeed ignorant,&mdash;how can they be
+otherwise, while deprived of Christian fellowship, or opportunities of
+public worship, excepting when they carry their infants a long journey for
+baptism, or when the men repair occasionally to the towns of Nabloos or
+Nazareth for trading business; or, it may be, when rarely an itinerant
+priest pays them a visit?&mdash;still they are living representatives of
+the Gentile Church of the country in primitive days, down through
+continuous ages,&mdash;their families enduring martyrdom, and to this day
+persecution and oppression, <!-- page 70--><a name="page70"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 70</span>for the name of Christ, in spite of every
+worldly inducement to renounce it.&nbsp; While we Europeans are reciting
+the Nicene Creed in our churches, they are suffering for it.&nbsp; They are
+living witnesses for the &ldquo;Light of light, and very God of very
+God;&rdquo; and although with this they mingle sundry superstitions, they
+are a people who salute each other at Easter with the words, &ldquo;Christ
+is risen,&rdquo; and the invariable response, &ldquo;He is risen
+indeed;&rdquo; also in daily practice, when pronouncing the name of Jesus,
+they add the words, &ldquo;Glory to His name.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Besides all the above, they are in many things Protestants against Papal
+corruption.&nbsp; They have no Vicar of Christ, no transubstantiation, no
+immaculate conception, no involuntary confession, and no hindrance to a
+free use of the Bible among the laity.&nbsp; For my part, I feel happy in
+sympathising much with such a people, and cannot but believe that the
+Divine Head of the Church regards with some proportion of love even the
+humblest believer in Him, who touches but the hem of His garment.</p>
+<p>In our conversation, before resuming the journey, I mentioned the
+numerous villages that were to be found about that neighbourhood, utterly
+broken up, but where the gardens of fig, vine, and olive trees still are
+growing around the ruins.&nbsp; The people pointed out to me the direction
+of other such, that were out of sight from our tents; and the Jew quoted a
+familiar proverb of the country <!-- page 71--><a name="page71"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 71</span>relating to that subject; also the Moslem
+shaikh, with his son, joined also in reciting it:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;The children of Israel built up;<br />
+The Christians kept up;<br />
+The Moslems have destroyed.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In saying this, however, by the second line they refer to the crusading
+period; and by the last line they denote the bad government of the Turks,
+under which the wild Bedaween are encroaching upon civilisation, and
+devastating the recompense of honest industry from the fertile soil.</p>
+<p>We&mdash;starting upon our last day&rsquo;s journey
+together&mdash;passed over wide fields of wheat-stubble.&nbsp; On coming
+near the village of <i>Samma</i>, the old shaikh came out to welcome us,
+and inquire if his place is written in the books of the Europeans.&nbsp; On
+examining our maps, one of our party found it in his; and the rest promised
+the friendly old man that his village should be written down.</p>
+<p>Proceeding through a green and rocky glen, between high hills, with a
+running stream, the weather was exceedingly hot.&nbsp; Here our party
+divided,&mdash;ourselves advancing towards <i>Umm Kais</i>; while the
+baggage and servants turned to the left, so as to cross the Jordan by the
+bridge <i>El Mej&acirc;ma&rsquo;a</i> for Tiberias.&nbsp; The principal
+intention of this was for the property to avoid the chance of falling into
+the hands of the Beni Sukh&rsquo;r.&nbsp; Shaikh Yusuf now showed the
+relief from his mind by beginning to <!-- page 72--><a
+name="page72"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 72</span>sing.&nbsp; This was
+all very well for him, who had nothing to lose; because, as it was said
+long ago&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Cantabit vacuus coram latrone viator.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>After wandering round and around, we descended into <i>Wadi Zahari</i>,
+&ldquo;the flowering valley,&rdquo; where, by the water-side, were reeds
+and oleanders forty or fifty feet high; and near them we observed a
+pear-tree and a fig-tree, all alone and deserted, the remains of former
+cultivation.&nbsp; This and other previous instances attest the risk that
+attends rural labour in that district, being in the immediate vicinity of
+the Bedaween, and the utter mockery of nominal Turkish rule.&nbsp; Here we
+filled our leathern water-bottles, (called <i>zumzum&icirc;a</i> in the
+Desert, and <i>m&aacute;ttara</i> by towns-people,) and climbed up a stony
+hill, the heat of the day increasing.&nbsp; No path among the rocks, and
+all of us angry at Shaikh Yusuf for saving himself the few piastres by
+conducting us among such difficulties.</p>
+<p>Then, after some time we perceived ourselves to be near Umm Kais, by the
+sarcophagi, the sepulchres, and ruts of chariot-wheels upon the
+rocks.&nbsp; We rushed up to a large tree for refreshing shelter, and near
+it found numerous sepulchres, highly ornamented, and some of them with the
+stone doors remaining on the hinges, which we swung about to test the
+reality of their remaining so perfect, (figs. 1, 2, 3.)</p>
+<p>Among these was the one remarked by Lord <!-- page 73--><a
+name="page73"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 73</span>Lindsay in his Travels,
+bearing a Hebrew name inscribed in Greek letters, but which he has not</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p73a.jpg">
+<img alt="Fig. 1" src="images/p73a.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>given quite correctly.&nbsp; It should be <i>Gaanuiph</i> instead of
+<i>Gaaniph</i>.&nbsp; This sepulchre is cut in black</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p73b.jpg">
+<img alt="Fig. 2" src="images/p73b.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>basaltic rock, and has some broken sarcophagi remaining inside.&nbsp; On
+a round fragment of a column, <!-- page 74--><a name="page74"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 74</span>near this side, is the inscription given below,
+(fig. 4.)&nbsp; The upper part is the farewell of surviving relatives</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p74a.jpg">
+<img alt="Fig. 3" src="images/p74a.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>to the daughter of SEMLACHUS. The lower part, for whomsoever
+intended,&mdash;&ldquo;<i>and thou also farewell</i>,&rdquo;&mdash;carries
+with it a touch of nature that still affects the heart, after the lapse of
+many centuries.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p74b.jpg">
+<img alt="Fig. 4" src="images/p74b.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>The mausoleums and sepulchres at the opposite end of the city were even
+more numerous, many having Greek inscriptions upon them.</p>
+<p>But the theatre is the most remarkable of all the objects of
+antiquity,&mdash;so <!-- page 75--><a name="page75"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 75</span>perfect, with its rows of seats complete,
+surrounded by numerous public edifices and lines of columns; and then
+commanding from those seats a large view of the beautiful Lake of Tiberias,
+and of the grand mountains which enclose it, as a frame to the picture.</p>
+<p>Here I stayed behind the rest of the party for a considerable time,
+charmed with the spectacle of nature, and revolving over the incidents of
+Herodian history, so vividly portrayed by Josephus.</p>
+<p>Then rejoined my friends, by galloping along a Roman road, paved with
+blocks of dark basalt.</p>
+<p>But before leaving this place, I must express my surprise at any person
+that has been there imagining for a moment that it can be the Gadara of
+Scripture.</p>
+<p>The distance from the lake is so great as to be utterly incompatible
+with the recorded transactions in the Gospels&mdash;having valleys and high
+hills intervening; and even supposing the miracle of relieving the demoniac
+to refer not to the city but to a territory named Gadara, it is
+inconceivable that the territory belonging to this city (Umm Kais) could
+extend beyond the deep natural crevasse of the river <i>Yarmuk</i>, and
+then rise up a high mountain, to descend again into a plain, all before
+reaching the lake.</p>
+<p>Our descent to the Yarmuk was long and steep; and upon the plain which
+it intersects, the heat exceeded any that I had ever encountered
+anywhere.&nbsp; <!-- page 76--><a name="page76"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 76</span>The air was like fire.&nbsp; Such a day I shall
+never forget.</p>
+<p>The Yarmuk is so considerable a river that the Arabs call it
+<i>Sheree&rsquo;a</i>, as they do the Jordan&mdash;only qualifying the
+latter as the larger one.&nbsp; It is called the <i>Sheree&rsquo;a el
+Men&acirc;dh&#277;rah</i>, from a party of Bedaween occupying its banks in
+the interior.</p>
+<p>The crevasse through which it issues is wild and romantic in the
+extreme.&nbsp; High cliffs of basalt are the confines of the water.&nbsp;
+This, on reaching the plain, is parted with several streams, (to compare
+great things with small,) in the fashion of the Nile or the Ganges; which
+the Jordan is not, either at its entrance into this lake or its entrance
+into the Dead Sea.</p>
+<p>All the streams are fringed with oleander; and, in the extreme heat of
+the day, the horses enjoyed not only their drinking, but their wading
+through the rolling water.</p>
+<p>This was the boundary between Bashan and Gilead, through the latter of
+which we had hitherto been travelling, and gave name to the great battle
+A.D. 637, where the victory obtained by the fierce <i>Khalid</i> and the
+mild <i>Abu Obeidah</i> decided the fate of Palestine, and opened the way
+of the Moslems to Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>Over an extent of four or five miles, before reaching the Jordan, a rich
+harvest of wheat was being reaped upon the plain.&nbsp; We first attempted
+to cross at <i>Samakh</i>, but finding it impossible at that season, <!--
+page 77--><a name="page77"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 77</span>had to
+turn back to the ford at the broken bridge, which the natives call the
+&lsquo;mother of arches,&rsquo; (<i>Umm el Kan&acirc;ter</i>;) and even
+there the water was still deep.</p>
+<p>Corn-fields and flocks of sheep in every direction; but all the
+shepherds carrying firearms.&nbsp; We most of us lay down on our breasts to
+drink greedily once more from the dear old river; and then we crossed the
+Jordan into the land of Canaan, going on to Tiberias, and passing on the
+way some Franciscan monks.&nbsp; What a change of associations from those
+of the country we had traversed exclusively for the last nine days!</p>
+<p>How absurd the sudden and unexpected contrast from old
+&rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l &rsquo;Azeez and the brilliant young &rsquo;Ali
+D&euml;&acirc;b in the freedom of the desert, to the cowl and the convent
+of the monks&mdash;from the grand savage language of the Ishmaelite to the
+mellifluous Italian.</p>
+<p>At the hot baths of the lake we found our tents already pitched, and my
+old friend the missionary,&mdash;Thomson, from Bayroot,&mdash;who had been
+travelling on the eastern side of the lake, (a territory so little known,)
+and, as he and I believed, had discovered the true Gadara.&nbsp; We
+compared notes about affairs of the Arabs at the time.</p>
+<p>Several of the juvenile travellers set themselves to swimming before
+dinner at sunset, the huge hills at the back casting long shadows across
+the lake.</p>
+<p>We all had tea together, as we were to separate to our several
+destinations in the morning; and on <!-- page 78--><a
+name="page78"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 78</span>my retiring to sleep,
+the thermometer was at 99&deg; Fahrenheit inside the open tent.</p>
+<p><i>Saturday</i>, 19<i>th</i>.&mdash;Bathing before the sun rose.</p>
+<p>Our travellers engaged the boat from Tiberias for the day, and it came
+up from the town to our camp with the sail spread.&nbsp; Large flights of
+aquatic birds as usual flitting and diving about the lake, and the fish
+abundant, rising and splashing at the surface.</p>
+<p>For an hour or two before starting on my way southwards, I lay on the
+beach contemplating the lovely scenery, and collecting my thoughts, both as
+to the past and for the future.&nbsp; The principal object of meditation
+was of course the placid lake itself&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear with the thoughts of Him we love so well.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Then the noble old mountain of Hermon, crowned with snow, now called
+<i>Jebel esh Shaikh</i>; which the Sidonians called Sirion; and the
+Amorites called Shenir, (Deut. iii. 9.)</p>
+<p>Next the ever-celebrated Jordan, with its typical resemblance to the
+limit dividing this life from the purchased possession of
+heaven,&mdash;recalling so much of bright images of Christian poetry
+employed to cheer the weary pilgrim, in anticipation of the time when</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll range the sweet fields on the banks of the river,<br
+/>
+And sing of salvation for ever and ever!&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Gratefully acknowledging the providence which had brought us happily so
+far, the present writer then girded up his mental loins, and returned to
+<!-- page 79--><a name="page79"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+79</span>Jerusalem; but on the way occasionally glancing towards the
+eastward range of mountains,&mdash;the land of Gilead,&mdash;now called
+Belka and &rsquo;Ajloon, lately traversed; and with a feeling unknown since
+the verses were first echoed in childhood, the words involuntarily issue
+from the lips:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Sihon, king of the Amorites,<br />
+&nbsp; For His mercy endureth for ever,<br />
+And Og the king of Bashan,<br />
+&nbsp; For His mercy endureth for ever!&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Having learned that &rsquo;Akeeli Aga el Hh&acirc;si was encamped on the
+Jordan side, at no great distance, I resolved to visit this personage, who
+has since then become much more famous as a French prot&eacute;g&eacute;,
+being an Arab of Algeria, but at this time only noted as having been the
+guide of the United States Expedition to the Dead Sea in 1848, and as being
+at the moment commissioned by the Turks as a Kaimakam of the district,
+seeing that they could not hold even nominal rule there without him.</p>
+<p>At my starting there came up from his post a messenger, Hhasan Aga, the
+Bosniac officer of Bashi Bozuk, to conduct me to the tents.&nbsp; The Aga
+was dressed in a crimson silk long coat, over which was a scarlet jacket
+embroidered in gold, and on his legs the Albanian full kilt, or fustinella,
+of white calico; his saddle cloth was of pea-green silk with a white
+border, and yellow worsted network protected the horse&rsquo;s belly from
+flies, also a rich cloth with tassels lay over the horse&rsquo;s loins.</p>
+<p><!-- page 80--><a name="page80"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+80</span>Proceeded southwards, and passed the broken bridge before
+mentioned.&nbsp; Harvest everywhere in progress, and the produce being
+carried home on asses to the village of <i>&rsquo;Abad&icirc;yeh</i>,
+adjoining to the houses of which were square and flat tents made of
+palm-leaf matting as residences of the Ghaw&acirc;rineh Arabs.</p>
+<p>Came to the ruins of a wretched little village called
+<i>Belhham&icirc;yeh</i>, formerly under the patronage of the
+&rsquo;Adw&acirc;n; and thence appeared in full view upon the hill above
+the great castle of the Crusaders called Belvoir, but now named
+<i>Cocab</i>, or <i>Cocab el Hawa</i>.&nbsp; Upon the plain by the river
+side was the encampment scattered about, and several European tents among
+the others denoted the presence of Turkish soldiers.</p>
+<p>We could see the Jis&rsquo;r el Mej&acirc;ma&rsquo;a, the bridge leading
+across to the land of Gilead.</p>
+<p>Rode up to &rsquo;Akeeli&rsquo;s tent, and found with him the formidable
+Shaikh Fendi el Faiz of the Beni Sukh&rsquo;r, and a musician with his
+reb&acirc;beh.&nbsp; A slave was making coffee on a fire of dried
+camel&rsquo;s dung, although it was in the fast of Ramad&acirc;n.&nbsp; We
+conversed guardedly about D&euml;&acirc;b and the rest of the
+&rsquo;Adw&acirc;n, and the camp at <i>Dahair el Hhum&acirc;r</i>.&nbsp;
+&rsquo;Akeeli then had brought in for his amusement a wild beast called a
+<i>fahh&rsquo;d</i>, differing from a panther in being larger and in having
+black stripes down the face; it seemed wild enough, but was confined by a
+rope, the pulling of which, and alternately <!-- page 81--><a
+name="page81"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 81</span>patting the creature
+was the amusement or occupation of the Aga.&nbsp; They brought me some
+coffee and water to drink, whereupon &rsquo;Akeeli called for some too, and
+said to me&mdash;&ldquo;These fools of Mohammedans are keeping
+Ramad&acirc;n, but I am a Frenchman,&rdquo; he then drank off the
+water.&nbsp; This man, whom Lynch, the American commander, styles a
+&ldquo;magnificent savage,&rdquo; was savage enough in manners, and dirty,
+and half-naked.&nbsp; He has since, however, made his influence felt, and
+may perhaps do so again.</p>
+<p>Altogether, my reception was not one in accordance with my notions of
+Arab hospitality.&nbsp; Perhaps he did not wish me to espy what was going
+on about him in company with Shaikh Fendi el Faiz, so I took my leave,
+riding towards Cocab.&nbsp; At an Arab encampment we got some <i>Leben
+Sheneeni</i>, (soured fresh milk, most delicious in hot weather,) and drank
+almost a pailful of it between myself, the kaww&acirc;s, and the
+muleteer.&nbsp; The heat was prodigious.&nbsp; In the camp were only women
+and children at home: the former employed in weaving and dyeing woollen
+trappings for horses,&mdash;serving to keep off the plague of
+flies,&mdash;of which articles we bought two.</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Akeeli had sent an escort to accompany us as far us the
+castle.&nbsp; One of the men was a care-worn old fellow from the far north,
+wearing a very heavy sheepskin coat with wide sleeves, to keep out the
+scorching heat of the sun, and his face covered <!-- page 82--><a
+name="page82"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 82</span>with a <i>mandeel</i>
+or cotton handkerchief, to protect him from reflection from the ground; his
+venerable musket terminated in a rusty bayonet.</p>
+<p>We went southwards until opposite the bridge, then turned westward to
+the hills, and forded the water of <i>Wadi Berreh</i>.&nbsp; The ascent was
+difficult and long, during which our escort carried on a conversation in
+the Arnaout language.</p>
+<p>At the summit I sent on the servants and baggage to Jeneen, there to
+pitch the tents for us&mdash;the sheepskin man, the kaww&acirc;s, and I
+turned aside to survey the old castle at Cocab el Hawa.&nbsp; It has been a
+large and noble erection in a strong natural position; the trench and
+sloping walls are pretty perfect, the stone-work being still sharp-edged;
+the portion of the defences looking towards the Jordan consists of large
+stones rabbeted, equal to any work in Jerusalem or elsewhere, which must be
+an indication of a fortress long before the time of the
+Crusaders&mdash;though the stones are not of dimensions equal to those of
+the Jerusalem Temple wall.</p>
+<p>All the masonry, except the rabbeted work, is constructed from the dark
+basalt which abounds in that district.&nbsp; All the space within walls,
+not remaining entire, and part of the trench, is occupied by miserable
+hovels, forming a sort of village, with patches of tobacco cultivation
+attached to the dwellings.</p>
+<p><!-- page 83--><a name="page83"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+83</span>But what can one say in description of the glorious prospect from
+that eminence?&nbsp; It seemed to me to exceed the wonders of Nebi Osha:
+the principal objects in view being the Lake of Tiberias, the river Jordan,
+Tabor, Duhy, Beis&acirc;n, Carmel, Hermon, a stretch of the Hauran, and the
+cleft of the Yarmuk.&nbsp; One thing surprised me, which was to see how far
+South Cocab is from Tabor, it had never appeared so before from the
+direction of Jeneen or of Nazareth.&nbsp; It was due east from <i>Duhy</i>;
+the best way of getting at it from Nabloos is across the plain of
+Jezreel.&nbsp; It is distinguishable from a great distance by means of a
+white-washed tower standing in the midst of the castle.</p>
+<p>Forwards we went through a village called <i>Kifereh</i>.&nbsp; As usual
+the ride over the plain is very tedious and tiring to the limbs&mdash;a
+hilly country in moderation is much more comfortable.&nbsp; We reached
+<i>Shutta</i>, then the tents of the Shi&ucirc;kh Arabs close under hills,
+and beneath a hill called <i>Nooris</i>, and at a mill called
+<i>Jalood</i>, we were overtaken by rain late in the year, being the 19th
+of May.</p>
+<p>The sun set a good while before our arriving at Zer&rsquo;een (Jezreel);
+the road was not straight, for a <i>d&eacute;tour</i> was necessary in
+order to ensure firm ground among the marshes; stagnated water abounds,
+that has been poured down from the hills of Gilboa.&nbsp; We passed the
+natural cavern from which the Jalood water issues on the side of a
+hill.&nbsp; <!-- page 84--><a name="page84"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+84</span>A large cistern is formed at the place.&nbsp; The
+inhabitants&mdash;such as we saw occasionally&mdash;were very unhealthy in
+appearance.</p>
+<p>Night came on, and dew with it, to which we had been long
+unaccustomed.&nbsp; The storm cleared off, and we travelled several hours
+by moonlight.&nbsp; Then we saw abundance of fire-flies flitting across our
+way.</p>
+<p>Overtaking our luggage, we all jogged on slowly together, very tired and
+silent, till a horseman appeared, who galloped off on our inquiry,
+&ldquo;Who goes there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At length we heard the welcome sounds of frogs croaking, then dogs
+barking, then saw the lights of Jeneen, and being Ramad&acirc;n the minaret
+there was illuminated with festoons of lamps.</p>
+<p>Then we reached the appointed well-known grove of olive trees.</p>
+<p>Our day had been very long and fatiguing&mdash;the cattle
+exhausted.&nbsp; It was Saturday night, and the week ended with the
+intelligence that Shaikh Barak&acirc;t el Fraikh had declared war against
+the Beni Sukh&rsquo;r, so that we had just passed through the Over-Jordan
+country in time to be able to do so.&nbsp; At Jerash I had met
+Barak&acirc;t, and at &rsquo;Akeeli&rsquo;s camp had met his adversary
+Fendi el Faiz.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 85--><a name="page85"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+85</span>II.&nbsp; NORTHWARDS TO BEIS&Acirc;N, KADIS, ANTIPATRIS, etc.</h2>
+<p style="text-align: right">October 23, 1850.</p>
+<p>Leaving Jerusalem upon the Nabloos road, and crossing the upper portion
+of the valley which, lower down, after a curve becomes the valley of
+Jehoshaphat, we passed almost directly over the sepulchre of Simon the
+Just, of whom such &ldquo;excellent things are spoken&rdquo; in the books
+of the Maccabees, and in whose memory an annual festival is kept by the
+Jerusalem Jews on this spot on the day called
+&#1512;&#1501;&#1493;&#1506;&#1500;&#1503;&quot;&#1500; rather more than a
+month after the passover.&nbsp; Two other saints are celebrated on the same
+day of the calendar&mdash;viz., R. Simeon bar Jochai, the cabbalist of
+Safed, author of <i>Zohar</i>, and R. Akiva of Tiberias.</p>
+<p>Then mounting up the side of Scopus, we halted for a few minutes to
+survey that view of the holy city which surpasses all others, and must have
+done so in the palmy days of history.&nbsp; It was at the time of
+mid-afternoon, when the sun&rsquo;s rays pour slantingly with grand effect
+upon the Temple site.&nbsp; <!-- page 86--><a name="page86"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 86</span>I could not but recollect that this was exactly
+the hour appointed for the daily evening sacrifice &ldquo;between the two
+evenings,&rdquo; (Hebrew of Exod. xii. 6,) and think of the choral music of
+Levitical services grandly reverberating among the semicircle of hills.</p>
+<p>Meditations of this nature would lead one far away in varied directions,
+perhaps unsuited for the commencement of a long journey lying before
+us.</p>
+<p>The next object attracting our attention was the Roman milestone lying
+beside the road, shortly</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p86.jpg">
+<img alt="Roman Milestone" src="images/p86.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>after passing <i>Sha&rsquo;af&acirc;t</i>.&nbsp; This I always make it a
+rule to examine every time of passing it.&nbsp; At one time I had it rolled
+over in order to be able to read the inscription; but I afterwards found it
+tossed with the writing downwards&mdash;perhaps all the better for its
+preservation.</p>
+<p><!-- page 87--><a name="page87"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+87</span>The inscription I read as follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p87.jpg">
+<img alt="Milestone inscription" src="images/p87.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>That is to say, a register of the names of the Antonine emperors; but
+there must have been other names on the upper part, now broken away.</p>
+<p>Then passed under <i>Er Ram</i> on our right hand, the Ramah of the Old
+Testament, but as it is not often noticed, may be found in Jeremiah xl. 1,
+as the place where the Babylonish captain of the guard, as a favour,
+released the prophet, after bringing him with the rest in chains from
+Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>Slept in a house at <i>Ram Allah</i>.&nbsp; This is a village about
+three-quarters of an hour N.W. from Er Ram.&nbsp; The weather being cold we
+first lit a fire, thereby trying the utility of a chimney that was in the
+house&mdash;in vain, for no smoke would pass up it; it all settled in the
+room itself; and the people excused themselves on the ground that it had
+never been tried before.&nbsp; Probably it was a novelty imported to the
+place by some of the people who had been employed by Europeans in
+Jerusalem; and yet I have always found that the old Saracenic <!-- page
+88--><a name="page88"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 88</span>houses of the
+Effendis in Jerusalem have all of them chimneys; and the word for
+<i>chimney</i> is well known in Arabic.</p>
+<p>This being almost exclusively a Christian village, it was interesting to
+hear the people addressing each other as Peter, James, Elijah, John, Paul,
+etc., instead of Mohammed, Ali, Omar, or other such appellations.&nbsp; It
+is a little beside the purpose, but I may remark in passing, that
+throughout these countries there are names in use common to all
+religions,&mdash;some scriptural, as Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, or
+David; and others mere epithets, as Assaad or Selim.</p>
+<p>In this village are three priests, (Greek orthodox,) idle, ignorant, and
+coarse men; but the peasantry are a bold set of fellows, speaking and
+acting very independently of clerical domination,&mdash;very indifferent as
+to whether they shall turn Protestants or Papists.&nbsp; One thing they are
+in earnest about, and that is to get schools for their children.</p>
+<p>Ram Allah exhibits the same characteristic as all other Christian
+villages in Palestine, that of being in good condition&mdash;new houses
+being built, and old ones repaired; contrary to the condition of Moslem
+villages, almost without one exception&mdash;that of falling to
+decay.&nbsp; There is, however, no water here; the women bring it in jars
+upon their heads from <i>Beeri</i>, a considerable distance.</p>
+<p>We made a <i>d&eacute;tour</i> from the high-road, in order to look for
+<i>Jifna</i>, the <i>Gophna</i> of Josephus, where Titus <!-- page 89--><a
+name="page89"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 89</span>and his renowned Tenth
+Legion (recently arrived from Britain) slept the night before reaching
+Jerusalem.&nbsp; Then the Eagles were gathered together over the doomed
+carcass of the city.&nbsp; Inquiring our way from Ram Allah to Jifna, some
+said there was a road without going to Beeri; some said there was
+none.&nbsp; At length we were put upon a pretty decent path.</p>
+<p>In ten minutes we came to a sort of well with a little water, where
+women were thumping clothes upon stones; this is called washing in the
+East.&nbsp; Magnificent view westwards of the great plain, the Great Sea,
+Jaffa, Ramlah, etc.</p>
+<p>We wandered about hills and among vineyards, and came to a small village
+named <i>Doorah</i>, in good condition, with water, and excellent
+cultivation of garden vegetables in small patches, similar to those of
+Selwan (Siloam) and Urt&acirc;s; then turning a corner saw Jifna at some
+distance, in the midst of a plain enclosed by hills; and there it must have
+been that the manipulus with S.P.Q.R. was posted in front of Italian tents,
+and the soldiers bustling about or jesting in Latin or British language,
+before their retiring to rest, in the spring season of the year A.D.
+70.</p>
+<p>Becoming entangled among a long belt of vineyards between us and it, and
+time passing away while our luggage was far on the road to Nabloos, we
+turned aside and regained the high-road at <i>&rsquo;Ain Yebrood</i>.&nbsp;
+Reluctantly I retreated from <i>Jifna</i>, <!-- page 90--><a
+name="page90"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 90</span>for I had wished to
+discover the precise road upon which Titus and his army marched towards
+Jerusalem.&nbsp; Passing <i>Sinjil</i>, <i>Lubb&acirc;n</i>, and
+<i>S&acirc;w&icirc;yeh</i>, we rested just beyond
+<i>S&acirc;w&icirc;yeh</i> under the great oak, at the divergence of the
+valley of <i>Laithma</i>.&nbsp; Beneath its wide-spreading branches a flock
+of sheep was resting at noon (Cant. i. 7.)&nbsp; From these we got good
+draughts of fresh milk.</p>
+<p>As evening approached, we were passing within the huge shadow of Mount
+Gerizim; and in Nabloos I remained till Monday morning,&mdash;this being
+the end of Thursday.</p>
+<p>28<i>th</i>.&nbsp; Preparing for descent into the Jordan valley, I
+engaged, in addition to the usual servants, a horseman of the Bashi Bozuk,
+recommended by the local governor, Suliman Bek Tok&acirc;n.&nbsp; It seemed
+prudent to obtain this man&rsquo;s attendance, as he might be known and
+recognised by disorderly persons throughout the turbulent and unknown
+country before me, whatever might be his character for valour or
+discretion.&nbsp; Two of the native Protestants of Nabloos accompanied me
+also for about four hours on the way.</p>
+<p>Passing Joseph&rsquo;s sepulchre and the village of <i>Asker</i>, (is
+not this Sychar? it is near the traditional Jacob&rsquo;s Well,) we went
+northwards over the plain of <i>Mukhneh</i>, equivalent to Makhaneh,
+&ldquo;camp,&rdquo; in Hebrew, (the <i>Moreh</i> of Gen. xii. 6, Deut. xi.
+30, and Judges vii. 1) having left the eastern valley with <i>Salem</i>
+(Gen. xxxiii. 18) on our right.&nbsp; <!-- page 91--><a
+name="page91"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 91</span>To my surprise the
+plain was soon and abruptly terminated at the foot of a very lofty
+mountain, and we commenced a descent among chasms of great convulsions of
+nature, displaying remarkable contortions of geological strata.&nbsp; This
+brought us into the Wadi <i>En-Nab</i>, so called from the growth there of
+a fruit-tree, (the Jujube,) bearing that name, better in quality than
+anywhere else in Palestine; and, indeed, the tree is found in but few other
+places.&nbsp; At the confluence of this valley with the Wadi
+<i>Bed&acirc;n</i> there are several fragments of ancient columns
+remaining, quite four feet in diameter.</p>
+<p>Hitherto we had met many more peasants travelling with merchandise than
+I had expected.&nbsp; They were all going in one direction, namely, towards
+Nabloos, and therefore from Es-Salt in Gilead, beyond Jordan.</p>
+<p>These, however, ceased after we had crossed the water of Wadi
+Bed&acirc;n into the larger <i>Wadi Fara&rsquo;ah</i>,&mdash;which is,
+however, the high-road to Es-Salt.</p>
+<p>Soon afterwards we observed, by our wayside, a square of solid ancient
+masonry, three courses high.&nbsp; In England this would be certainly the
+pedestal of some old demolished market-cross; but it may have been the
+lower part of some memorial pyramid.&nbsp; In the previous year I had seen
+just such another at Ziph (Josh. xv. 55,) beyond Hebron.</p>
+<p>Then we came upon a distinct piece of Roman paved road, which showed
+that we were upon the <!-- page 92--><a name="page92"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 92</span>high-road between Neapolis and Scythopolis,
+<i>alias</i> Shechem and Bethshan, <i>alias</i> Nabloos and
+Beis&acirc;n.&mdash;Crossed a stream richly bordered with rosy-blossomed
+oleander, and soon turned the head of the water.&nbsp; A demolished castle
+was on our right, commanding the entrance of Wadi Fara&rsquo;ah.</p>
+<p>Soon after noon we gained the olive-trees alongside of
+<i>Tub&acirc;s</i>, a prosperous village, yet inhabited by a people as rude
+and coarse as their neighbours.&nbsp; Tub&acirc;s is always liable to
+incursions from the eastern Bedaween, and always subject to the local wars
+of the Tokan and &rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l Hadi factions.&nbsp; I have known it
+to be repeatedly plundered.&nbsp; The natural soil here is so fertile that
+its wheat and its oil, together with those of <i>Hanoon</i>, fetch the
+highest prices in towns; and the grain is particularly sought after as seed
+for other districts.</p>
+<p>The place, however, is most remarkable to us as being the <i>Thebez</i>
+of Judges ix. 50, where Abimelech was slain by the women hurling a
+millstone on his head from the wall.&nbsp; The more I become acquainted
+with the peculiar population of <i>Jebel Nabloos</i>, (<i>i.e.</i> the
+territory of which Nabloos is the metropolis,) a brutish people
+&ldquo;waxing fat and kicking,&rdquo; the more does the history of the book
+of Judges, especially the first twelve chapters, read like a record of
+modern occurrences thereabouts.&nbsp; It is as truly an Arab history as any
+other oriental book can supply.&nbsp; I observed that Mount Gerizim can be
+<!-- page 93--><a name="page93"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 93</span>seen
+from Tub&acirc;s,&mdash;which fact seemed to give additional emphasis to
+the words, &ldquo;And all the evil of the men of Shechem did God render
+upon their heads; and upon those came the curse of Jotham, the son of
+Jerubbaal.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The site of Tub&acirc;s is elevated.&nbsp; It is still a considerable
+village, and possesses that decided evidence of all very ancient sites in
+Palestine&mdash;a large accumulation of rubbish and ashes.</p>
+<p>I was told that here, as well as in several of the villages around,
+there are scattered Christians, one or two families in each among the
+Moslems, without churches, without clergy, without books or education of
+any kind; still they are Christians, and carry their infants to the Greek
+Church in Nabloos for baptism.&nbsp; What a deplorable state of
+things!&nbsp; Since the date of this journey the Church Missionary
+Society&rsquo;s agents have in some degree ministered to the spiritual
+destitution of these poor people by supplying some at least with copies of
+the Holy Scriptures.</p>
+<p>Here my principal kaww&acirc;s, Hadj Mohammed es Serw&acirc;n, found the
+fever, which had been upon him more or less for the last three days, so
+greatly increased, that it was not possible for him to proceed farther with
+me.&nbsp; The fever he attributed to his having, on arrival at Nabloos,
+indulged too freely in figs and milk together.&nbsp; The general experience
+of the country warrants this conclusion.</p>
+<p>Poor fellow! after several times dismounting, <!-- page 94--><a
+name="page94"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 94</span>and renewing his
+efforts to keep up with me, he was at length totally disabled; and our
+Protestant friends, who were now about to return home, engaged to get him
+into the village, and have him carefully attended to, there and at Nabloos,
+till he should be able to return to his family at Jerusalem.&nbsp; I left
+him under a large tree, gazing wistfully after me, and endeavouring to
+persuade me not to go down to that Gehennom of a place, Beis&acirc;n. <a
+name="citation94"></a><a href="#footnote94" class="citation">[94]</a></p>
+<p>My forward journey lay through fine olive-grounds and stubble-fields of
+wheat.&nbsp; In an hour we passed <i>Kayaseer</i>, a wretched but ancient
+place, with exceedingly old olive-trees about it.&nbsp; Then going on for
+some time among green bushes and straggling shoots of trees, we descended
+to the water-bed of a valley.&nbsp; Once more upon a Roman road, on which
+at twenty minutes&rsquo; distance was a prostrate Roman milestone, but with
+no inscription to be seen; perhaps it was on the under side, upon the
+ground.&nbsp; Then the road, paved as it was with Roman work, rose before
+us on a steep slope, to a plain which was succeeded by the
+&ldquo;Robbers&rsquo; Valley,&rdquo; (Wadi el Hharam&icirc;yeh,) in which
+we met two peasants driving an ass, and inquired of them &ldquo;Is the
+plain of the Jordan safe?&rdquo;&mdash;meaning, Are there any wild Bedaween
+about?&nbsp; The reply was &ldquo;It <!-- page 95--><a
+name="page95"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 95</span>is safe;&rdquo; but the
+whole conversation consisted of four words in the question, and one in the
+answer.</p>
+<p>Over a precipitous and broken rocky hill,&mdash;the worst piece of road
+I ever met with,&mdash;till we came suddenly upon the grand savage scenery
+of the Gh&ocirc;r, with the eastern barrier of the mountains of
+Gilead.&nbsp; The river Jordan is not visible, as is the case in most
+parts, till one almost reaches the banks.</p>
+<p>Here the vegetation had changed its character,&mdash;leaving all
+civilisation of olive-trees behind, and almost all consisting of oak and
+hawthorn.&nbsp; We had instead the <i>neb&rsquo;k</i> or
+<i>d&ocirc;m-tree</i>, and the <i>ret&rsquo;m</i> or juniper of Scripture;
+the heat excessive.</p>
+<p>At the junction of the Valley with the Gh&ocirc;r are three Roman
+milestones, lying parallel and close side by side,&mdash;all of them in the
+shape and size stereotyped throughout the country.&nbsp; This, then, was
+probably a measured station of unusual importance; and from it the
+acropolis of Bethshan just comes into view.&nbsp; This is known in the
+country by the name of <i>El Hhus&rsquo;n</i>.</p>
+<p>The ground was in every direction covered with black basalt fragments,
+among which, however, was corn stubble remaining; and we were told that the
+crop belonged to the people of Tub&acirc;s.</p>
+<p>We kept upon a straight path leading directly up to Beis&acirc;n, which
+all the way was intersected by running streams issuing from the hills on
+our left, and going to the Jordan.</p>
+<p>The water was not often good for drinking; but <!-- page 96--><a
+name="page96"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 96</span>at most of these
+rivulets our attendant, Suliman Bek&rsquo;s horseman, alighted to say his
+prayers, out of fright on account of the Arab Bedaween.</p>
+<p>Tabor N.W. and Hermon N.E. were both prominent objects in the landscape,
+with the town of Beis&acirc;n between the two,&mdash;the ground abounding
+in the kali plant and neb&rsquo;k trees, with bright yellow fruit, from
+which we frequently saw clearly desert camels cropping the lower branches,
+notwithstanding the long and sharp thorns upon them.</p>
+<p>We marched straight on, from one ancient artificial mound to another,
+with Beis&acirc;n before us, the streams all the way increasing in width
+and rapidity,&mdash;some of them bordered, or even half-choked, with a
+jungle of oleander in flower, hemlock, gigantic canes, wild fig-trees,
+neb&rsquo;k, and tangled masses of blackberry.&nbsp; Some of them we had to
+ford, or even leap our horses over.&nbsp; We were surprised at such
+torrents of water rushing into the Jordan at such a season of the year.</p>
+<p>Reached Beis&acirc;n at half-past six,&mdash;a wild-looking place, with
+magnificent mountains in every direction around, but all frowning black
+with volcanic basalt; and the people horribly ugly&mdash;black and
+ferocious in physiognomy.&nbsp; They were just in the busiest time of the
+indigo harvest; but they had herds of very fine cows brought home, as the
+sun in setting threw over us the shadow of the mountains of Gilboa.&nbsp;
+My companion from Jerusalem looked up with horror to these hills, and began
+quoting <!-- page 97--><a name="page97"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+97</span>the poetic malediction of David upon them on account of the death
+of Saul and Jonathan: &ldquo;Let there be no dew, neither rain upon you,
+nor fields of offerings,&rdquo; etc.</p>
+<p>It was indeed a notable event in one&rsquo;s life to have arrived at the
+place where the body of the first king of Israel, with that of his son, the
+dear friend of David, after being beheaded, were nailed to the walls of the
+city.&nbsp; Jabesh-Gilead could not have been very far off across the
+Jordan; for its &ldquo;valiant men arose, and went all night, and took the
+body of Saul, and the bodies of his sons, from the walls of Bethshan, and
+came to Jabesh, and burnt them there.&nbsp; And they took their bones and
+buried them under a tree at Jabesh, and fasted seven days,&rdquo; (1 Sam.
+xxxi. 12, 13).&nbsp; This respectful treatment was by way of grateful
+recompense for Saul&rsquo;s past kindness, as the very first act of his
+royalty had been to deliver them from danger when besieged by Nahash the
+Ammonite (I Sam. xi.); and they kept his remains till king David removed
+them into the ancestral sepulchre within the tribe of Benjamin (2 Sam. xxi.
+14).</p>
+<p>To return.&nbsp; The people of Beis&acirc;n urged upon us their advice
+not to sleep in our tents, for fear of Arabs, who were known to be about
+the neighbourhood.&nbsp; I however preferred to remain as I was; and many
+of the people slept around the tents upon heaps of indigo plant, making
+fires for themselves from the straw.&nbsp; Before retiring to sleep, I
+several times found the horseman at his prayers by <!-- page 98--><a
+name="page98"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 98</span>moonlight.&nbsp; During
+the night the roaring of the water-torrents re-echoed loudly from the rocky
+hills.</p>
+<p>29<i>th</i>.&mdash;We learned that the indigo cultivation is not very
+laborious.&nbsp; The seed is scattered over the ground, and then the people
+turn the streams over the surface for inundation.&nbsp; There is no
+ploughing.&nbsp; This is done directly after barley-harvest from the same
+ground.&nbsp; There is no produce for two years, but after that period the
+same stalks successively for five years produce about
+seventy-two-fold.&nbsp; I bought a timnah (measure) of the seed for
+curiosity, to deposit in our museum.</p>
+<p>We finished breakfast, had the tents struck, and the mules laden, all
+before the sky began to look red, announcing the coming sun.</p>
+<p>The castle of &rsquo;Ajloon was a very conspicuous object on the
+mountainous horizon of the east.</p>
+<p>I then spent about three hours in exploring the Roman antiquities of the
+place when it bore the name of Scythopolis.&nbsp; These are all contained
+within or along a natural basin, of which I here give a rough map.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p98.jpg">
+<img alt="Scythopolis" src="images/p98.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p><!-- page 99--><a name="page99"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+99</span>The general form is that of an oval, the centre of which has four
+pediments for the arch of a bridge, or a triumphal arch, over a rivulet
+that traverses the whole obliquely.&nbsp; From this central square of four
+pediments extends right and left one long colonnade, or dromos.&nbsp;
+Within the basin, but on the south bank of the water, is the theatre; on
+the north, and outside of the oval, is the lofty mound, surmounted by
+fortified buildings, forming the acropolis, the <i>Hhus&rsquo;n</i>, which
+is visible for miles and miles over the country.&nbsp; In the S.E. corner
+is the modern village&mdash;a very insignificant one, but with remains of a
+Christian church, for I should suppose the Moslems never built so good a
+mosque at Beis&acirc;n.&nbsp; Of course the present inhabitants use it for
+their devotions.&nbsp; The building is all angular, with a square tower at
+the south end.&nbsp; The principal doorway&mdash;that at the north
+end&mdash;is perforated into a walled-up large pointed arch.</p>
+<p>The principal object of my curiosity was the theatre, which, like all
+those of the Romans and Greeks, is a building of nearly a semicircle in
+form, with the extremities connected by a chord or straight line; this
+latter was the <i>proscenium</i> or stage, and is near 200 feet in
+length.&nbsp; Upon the ground-plan, at half distance from the centre to the
+outer curve, the <i>vomitories</i> or passages for entrance and exit begin,
+leaving an open area; these are formed in concentric semicircles, divided
+across by radii, all coming from the one centre.</p>
+<p><!-- page 100--><a name="page100"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+100</span>Over these passages the seats for spectators are constructed,
+rising higher as approaching to the outer curve&mdash;and the dens for the
+wild beasts, when they were to be exhibited, were under the front
+seats.&nbsp; The vomitories are of the most perfect design for utility, and
+still remain in complete preservation, all vaulted over with admirable
+workmanship.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p100.jpg">
+<img alt="Ground plan of the Theatre" src="images/p100.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>I looked about in vain for the indentings in front of the rows of seats
+which had held the <i>&rsquo;&Eta;&chi;&epsilon;&iota;&alpha;</i> or brazen
+saucers, which indentings are stated to have been seen by Irby and Mangles;
+but we know that the <i>&rsquo;&Eta;&chi;&epsilon;&iota;&alpha;</i> were so
+placed in ancient theatres for increasing the power of voice uttered upon
+the stage.</p>
+<p>The front blocks of the stage are white, and these are brought from a
+distance.&nbsp; They measure eight feet by four each.&nbsp; But the
+peculiarity of the general building lies in its being built of the black
+<!-- page 101--><a name="page101"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+101</span>stone of the country adjacent.&nbsp; I afterwards saw Roman
+theatres at Amm&acirc;n and Umm Kais, as already mentioned in the journey
+&ldquo;Over the Jordan,&rdquo; but they were white; and another at Petra,
+but that was of rosy red.&nbsp; All the three&mdash;the black, the white,
+and the red&mdash;were each of its own one colour, without intermixture of
+others, except that here the stage was of another colour from the rest of
+the building.</p>
+<p>I then prepared to mount to the acropolis or Hhus&rsquo;n.&nbsp; The
+hill is shaped as an oblong square, sloping downwards, and rounded at the
+four edges.&nbsp; Steps have been cut into it for ascending from below.</p>
+<p>Arriving at what appears from below to be the summit, but is not, I
+found a large platform, improved by art, with remains of houses and
+cisterns, and surrounded at the edge by a parapet wall five feet
+thick,&mdash;except at the eastern end, opposite to the present town, where
+one-third of the hill has been left rising considerably higher, and
+therefore a wall is not required.</p>
+<p>In this wall, at the N.W. side, I found remains of a very massive
+gateway, with fragments of older columns and friezes built up into the side
+work.&nbsp; At this spot the rising hill above is particularly
+precipitous.&nbsp; I climbed to the extreme summit, but found there no
+remains of human labour.&nbsp; The view, however, as may be supposed, amply
+repaid the exertion.&nbsp; In one direction the prolonged Gh&ocirc;r <!--
+page 102--><a name="page102"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 102</span>of the
+Jordan; and in another appeared the opening of the plain of Esdraelon and
+Tabor, with the Mediterranean far away, and Carmel almost hull down, as one
+might say of a ship.&nbsp; In the nearer distance were lines of black Arab
+tents, an old khan, ruins of water-mills, and rushing rivulets in
+abundance, the sources of which lie so high in the adjacent hills of
+Gilboa, that the town and the irrigation of the district are supplied from
+them copiously.</p>
+<p>I picked up some tesser&aelig; about the acropolis hill, but I saw none
+elsewhere near Beis&acirc;n,&mdash;discovered no inscriptions, and heard of
+no coins.</p>
+<p>Close to the town there were thick layers of calcareous sediment,
+containing petrified reeds or canes, of which I brought away specimens for
+our museum.</p>
+<p>Thus ended my inspection of this really interesting place, so remarkable
+for being all built of black volcanic stone,&mdash;the theatre, the church,
+and the modern village, besides the rocks all about: add to this the vile
+appearance of the people, and one cannot wonder at visitors entertaining a
+dread and disgust at the whole.&mdash;I find that I have omitted to mention
+the mineral quality of the water, the most of which is undrinkable.</p>
+<p>We left Beis&acirc;n at half-past nine, after examining it more
+completely than the published accounts of former travellers lead us to
+believe they have done.&nbsp; Thomson&rsquo;s account is of later date.</p>
+<p><!-- page 103--><a name="page103"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+103</span>Our journey now lay due north, along the Gh&ocirc;r to Tiberias;
+and a very pleasing journey it proved to be.</p>
+<p>In half an hour we had to ford a pretty wide stream, and in five minutes
+more were among very extensive ruins of an ancient town; upon a tumulus at
+its farther extremity are lying portions of three huge sarcophagi, and a
+portion of a thick column.&nbsp; This must be the &ldquo;Es Soudah,&rdquo;
+(<i>i.e.</i>, <i>black</i>,) mentioned by Thomson&mdash;indeed, all ruins
+of that district are of black basalt, excepting the columns and
+sarcophagi.&nbsp; The name <i>soda</i> or <i>black</i> occurs in English as
+a synonym for <i>alkali</i>, and means the black or dark-coloured ashes of
+the plant <i>al-kali</i> when burnt for use&mdash;the white colour of it
+seen in Europe is obtained by chemical preparation.</p>
+<p>Black tents and fires of the kali burners were visible in many
+directions&mdash;a delicious breeze blowing in our faces; but above
+everything cheerful was the green line of the Jordan banks.&nbsp; No snow
+to be seen at present at that distance upon Hermon.&nbsp; At half-past
+eleven we were beneath some castellated remains of great extent, namely,
+the Crusaders&rsquo; <i>Belvoir</i>, now called <i>Cocab el Hawa</i>.&nbsp;
+Our ground had become gradually more undulated; then hilly, and the
+Gh&ocirc;r narrowed: we were obliged to cross it diagonally towards the
+Jordan; forded a running stream abounding in oleander, where, according to
+his usual custom, my Egyptian servant took a handful of the flowers to wear
+in his <!-- page 104--><a name="page104"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+104</span>waistcoat.&nbsp; Then the birds carolling so happily, recalling
+the well-known lines&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;And Jordan, those sweet banks of thine,<br />
+With woods so full of nightingales.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The songsters that I heard were certainly neither the linnets nor
+goldfinches of other parts of Palestine, but must have been the
+<i>bulbul</i>, the note of which, though rich and tender in expression, is
+not however the same with that of English nightingales.</p>
+<p>Then we came to the bridge called <i>Jis&rsquo;r el
+Mej&acirc;ma&rsquo;a</i>, which is in tolerably good condition, with one
+large and several smaller arches in two rows, and a dilapidated khan at the
+western end.&nbsp; I crossed over the bridge into the territory of
+Gilead.</p>
+<p>The khan has been a strong edifice, but the stones of the massive
+gateway, especially the great keystone, are split across, as if from the
+effects of gunpowder.</p>
+<p>When that bridge was erected, the country must have been in safe and
+prosperous circumstances; the beauty of the scenery was not found in
+contrast to the happiness of the people; there must have been rich commerce
+carried on between the far east and the towns of Palestine; and it is in
+reference to such a fortunate period that the wandering minstrels, even now
+among the Bedaween, sing the songs of the forty orphan youths who competed
+<!-- page 105--><a name="page105"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 105</span>in
+poetic compositions under the influence of love for an Arab maiden at the
+bridge of Mej&acirc;ma&rsquo;a.</p>
+<p>The name is derived from the <i>meeting</i> of two branches of the
+Jordan in that place after having separated above.&nbsp; Below the bridge
+the bed of the river is very rocky, and the course of the water disturbed,
+but above the &ldquo;meeting of the waters&rdquo; all is beautifully smooth
+and tranquil; wild aquatic birds enjoying their existence on its surface,
+and the banks fringed with willows and oleanders.&nbsp; How grateful is all
+this to the traveller after a scorching ride of several hours.</p>
+<p>Then the river, and with it our road, deflected back to the western
+hills; again the river wound in serpentine sinuosities about the middle of
+the plain, with little islands and shallow sands within its course.&nbsp; I
+am not sure that the delight we experienced was not enhanced by the
+circumstance of travelling upwards against stream.&nbsp; Whenever tourists
+find the country safe enough for the purpose, and have leisure at command,
+I certainly recommend to them this district of Jordan, between Beis&acirc;n
+and Tiberias: of course this presupposes that they visit Nazareth before or
+afterwards.</p>
+<p>Occasionally we came to rings of stones laid on the ground,&mdash;these
+mark the graves of Arabs of the vicinity; then a cattle enclosure, fenced
+in by a bank of earth, and thorns piled on the top.&nbsp; All about this
+were subterranean granaries for corn, having apertures like wells, but
+empty.&nbsp; Close to <!-- page 106--><a name="page106"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 106</span>this was a ford to the eastern bank.&nbsp; The
+river has many interruptions certainly, but yet in two days&rsquo; ride we
+had seen a good deal of smooth water for boating.&nbsp; At half-past one
+was reached the village of <i>Abad&icirc;yeh</i>.</p>
+<p>Near the village we saw people cutting twigs of tamarisk and
+willow.&nbsp; At the village were large plantations of the kitchen
+vegetable, <i>Bamia</i>, which is a <i>hibiscus</i>, (called <i>ochra</i>
+in the West Indies,) the plants four feet high, with bright yellow
+blossom.&nbsp; Near the regular houses were suburb huts made of
+reeds.&nbsp; This is often seen along the Gh&ocirc;r; they are tenanted by
+wanderers at certain seasons of the year.</p>
+<p>There was a profusion of good wheat straw lying wasting upon the ground;
+it is here too plentiful to be cared for.</p>
+<p>We saw afterwards a low wall of masonry entirely crossing the Jordan,
+but having now a broken aperture in the middle.&nbsp; In former times these
+artificial works were common, and served to irrigate the lands on each
+side.&nbsp; The river was never used for navigation.</p>
+<p>At two o&rsquo;clock we reached one well-known rendezvous, the old
+broken bridge, popularly called &ldquo;Mother of Arches.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+ford was now low in water.&nbsp; Here we rested under a neb&rsquo;k tree;
+and on getting out the luncheon, discovered that all our stores of bread,
+coffee, sugar, and arrow-root had been soaked by the splashing of streams
+and fords that we had this day encountered.</p>
+<p><!-- page 107--><a name="page107"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+107</span>The horseman fell again to his prayers.&nbsp; Several Arabs from
+the Hauran with their camels, crossed the Jordan while we were there.</p>
+<p>Another hour took us to the baths of Tiberias; the heat very great, and
+by our roadside there was a whole mountain with its dry yellow grass and
+weeds on fire.</p>
+<p>Near the south end of the lake are some palms growing wild.&nbsp; We
+dismounted at a quarter to four.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>Next day I ascended the hills to Safed, a well-known station.&nbsp; The
+place is exceedingly healthy, enjoying the purest mountain air, as is
+evinced by the healthy complexion of the numerous Jews residing there; and
+the landscape views are both extensive and beautiful.</p>
+<p>On the following day I undertook a few hours&rsquo; excursion to
+<i>Kadis</i> (Kedesh Naphtali), where Barak, son of Abinoam, and Deborah,
+collected the forces of Zebulun and Naphtali, for marching to Mount Tabor
+against Sisera.&nbsp; It was also one of the six cities of refuge for cases
+of unintentional homicide, (Josh. xx. 7;) it lies to the N.N.E. from
+Safed.</p>
+<p>In an hour we obtained a grand view of Hermon just opposite to us, and
+never lost sight of it till our return.&nbsp; Passed between the villages
+of <i>Dil&acirc;thah</i> on the right, and <i>Taitaba</i> on the left; the
+country is all strewn with volcanic basalt.&nbsp; In another <!-- page
+108--><a name="page108"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 108</span>half-hour we
+had <i>Ras el Ahhmar</i> on our left.&nbsp; Then <i>F&acirc;rah</i> and
+<i>Salhhah</i> at some distance to the left, and <i>Alma</i> just before
+us.&nbsp; The volcanic brown stones had on them occasionally a thin lichen
+of either orange colour, or a sour pale green, like verdigris.</p>
+<p>About this village were women and children gathering olives from the
+trees&mdash;first beating the boughs with poles, then picking up the fruit
+from the ground.</p>
+<p>The small district around here is named &ldquo;the Khait,&rdquo; and the
+people boast of its extraordinary fertility in corn-produce.</p>
+<p>Down a steep descent of white limestone, where it is said the torrents
+are so strong in winter that no one attempts to pass that way.&nbsp; Rising
+again, we found near the summit of the opposite hill a spring of water,
+from which some Bedaween women were carrying away water in the common
+fashion, in goat-skins upon their backs.&nbsp; They were young, pretty,
+dirty, and ragged.&nbsp; Of course their rags were blue, and their lips
+were coloured to match.</p>
+<p>Pleasant breeze springing up after the heat of the day.&nbsp; Corn
+stubble on the fields, and fine olive plantations, as we got near to Kadis,
+our place of destination; with such a wide clear road up to it, as might
+seem to be traditionally preserved as such from ancient times, if the
+Talmud be relied upon when it gives the legal width of various kinds of
+<!-- page 109--><a name="page109"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+109</span>roads, and prescribes twice as much for a highway towards the
+cities of refuge, as for any other description of road. <a
+name="citation109"></a><a href="#footnote109"
+class="citation">[109]</a></p>
+<p>The scenery around Kadis is cheerful, but the village itself consisted
+of only about half-a-dozen wretched houses.&nbsp; In passing by these,
+towards an orchard at the farther side, we saw some large ancient
+sarcophagi,&mdash;three of them lying side by side, but broken, and some
+capitals of columns.</p>
+<p>After selecting our site for the tents, and setting the cook to work in
+his peculiar vocation, not forgetting to see that the horses were being
+attended, we procured a guide to conduct us down the hill to the
+antiquities.</p>
+<p>There are still evidences remaining that the old city had been wealthy
+and celebrated&mdash;squared stones lying profusely about.&nbsp; At the
+spring of water: this was received into an embellished <!-- page 110--><a
+name="page110"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 110</span>sarcophagus for a
+trough, and adjoining to it a spacious paved reservoir.</p>
+<p>Here began a series of highly ornamental public edifices and sepulchral
+monuments.&nbsp; We went first to the farthest; and there it was greatly to
+be regretted that there was not with us an artist able to do justice to the
+exceeding beauty of the remains.</p>
+<p>It was a large oblong building, placed east and west, an ornamental
+moulding running round the whole at four feet from the ground; the roof
+fallen in.&nbsp; At the eastern extremity have been three portals, of which
+the middle one was by far the largest; each of these decorated richly by a
+bead and scroll moulding.&nbsp; The lintel of the principal gate has fallen
+from its place, and now stands perpendicular, leaning against one of the
+uprights: this is one stone of fifteen feet in length, beautifully
+sculptured.&nbsp; Some broken pillars are lying about, and several
+magnificent Corinthian capitals of square pilasters, which had been
+alongside of the principal portal.&nbsp; I have never seen anywhere in
+Palestine any relic of so pure a Grecian taste as this temple. <a
+name="citation110"></a><a href="#footnote110"
+class="citation">[110]</a></p>
+<p>Nearer to the town is a Roman erection of large well-cut stones, which
+have acquired from the effects of time the fine yellow tinge which is <!--
+page 111--><a name="page111"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+111</span>remarkable on the relic of the Church of St John Baptist at
+Sebustieh. <a name="citation111"></a><a href="#footnote111"
+class="citation">[111]</a></p>
+<p>This was a smaller building than the other, and is nearly entire, except
+that the roof is fallen in.&nbsp; It is in a square form: at each corner is
+a solid square of masonry thirty feet high, and these are connected with
+each other by semi-circular arches, two of which are fallen, and the other
+two have their keystones dangling almost in the air, so slight is the hold
+of their voussoirs to keep them from falling.&nbsp; The walls rise half way
+up these abutments; the doorway is to the south, and has the ports and
+lintel richly decorated.&nbsp; Of the use of this erection I could form no
+judgment.</p>
+<p>Between the two edifices was a mass of solid masonry, supporting a
+sarcophagus nearly ten feet long, with a double sarcophagus of the same
+dimensions at each side of it: not only the middle single one, but each
+double sarcophagus, was formed of one stone each.&nbsp; Can we doubt of the
+relation which the persons buried in the double ones bore to each
+other?&nbsp; The sides of these stone coffins are highly adorned with
+floral garlands, and the lids are lying broken across beside them.</p>
+<p>Oh! vain expectation, to preserve the human frame from violation, by
+elaborate and durable monuments!&nbsp; There is but one safe repository for
+the decaying part of man, and that is what the Almighty Maker at first
+decreed&mdash;namely, earth <!-- page 112--><a name="page112"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 112</span>to earth, ashes to ashes, and dust to
+dust.&nbsp; The poorest slave, buried in a hole within the ground, is safer
+from man&rsquo;s greed and violence than the mightiest conqueror; for the
+massive porphyry sarcophagus of Alexander was rifled by Caligula, and after
+that by others, in Egypt.&nbsp; And the same fate has befallen the tombs of
+Cyrus and Darius in Persia, for the sake of the riches entombed with
+them.</p>
+<p>Some copper coins were brought to us, but of no particular value: they
+were either corroded or broken, and of no remarkable antiquity.</p>
+<p>As twilight faded away we returned to the tents, and had the evening
+meal.&nbsp; The wind rose considerably, so that we lighted a fire on the
+lee side of my tent, and gazed round upon the strange and noble scene
+around.&nbsp; There was Hermon just before us, seen indistinctly by
+starlight; and there was sufficient novelty and non-security in the place
+to keep attention awake.</p>
+<p>The shaikh of the village came and assured us that in the Lebanon (not
+far distant) the Druses were up; that the convent at Maal&ucirc;leh had
+been sacked, and twenty-two Emirs had been seized by the beastly Turks (as
+he denominated them); that Abu Neked was up in arms, and even the villages
+in the south, about Nazareth, were fighting.&nbsp; Of course there was
+considerable exaggeration in all this, but our muleteer began to pray that
+he might be soon safe again in Jerusalem.</p>
+<p><!-- page 113--><a name="page113"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+113</span>The shaikh informed us that in the happy time of the Egyptian
+rule, under Ibrahim Pasha, his village was so populous that they cultivated
+fifty feddans of land, whereas now they could only work six; that then
+property was so safe that Arab marauders were always caught and punished,
+(he had himself had Bedaween kept prisoners in his house,) whereas now,
+under the Turks, they come into his house to steal.</p>
+<p>While he was relating this, a man came running from the village to
+announce that neighbouring Arabs were just before carrying off some of
+their cows in the dark, but on being pursued, had made off without
+them.</p>
+<p>After I got to bed, one of our people shot at a hy&aelig;na, and the
+villagers shouted from the roofs of their houses to know if we were
+attacked.&nbsp; In the morning they told us that they had seen the
+hy&aelig;na, big enough to eat a man, and that their attention had been
+attracted to it by the cry of an owl.</p>
+<p><i>Saturday</i>, <i>November</i> 2.&mdash;We returned towards Safed over
+the plain of <i>Alma</i>.&nbsp; The wheat of this district is renowned far
+and wide for quality and quantity of produce.&nbsp; The guide told us that
+at this place were splendid remains of antiquity; but, on arriving, we
+could hear of nothing but a poor cistern within a cavern.&nbsp; Here the
+black basalt recommences after the region of white limestone where we had
+been; and then again, at the distance of a good-sized field, we were upon
+common <!-- page 114--><a name="page114"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+114</span>brown agricultural soil.&nbsp; It is curious how sharply these
+division-lines of soil are drawn in every direction about this place.
+<p>Thence we diverged off from yesterday&rsquo;s road to visit <i>Jish</i>,
+passing through Ras el Ahhmar.&nbsp; Most magnificent views of Hermon and
+Anti-Lebanon.</p>
+<p>Had to go down into a valley, through which, on a former journey, we had
+passed on coming from <i>Bint Jebail</i>, and visited again the ancient
+monument in a vineyard by the roadside.&nbsp; It appears to have consisted
+of one small building.&nbsp; The lower parts of two upright posts of its
+doorway remain, together with a fragment of the transverse lintel: several
+pieces of columns are lying about, and pediments of these <i>in
+situ</i>.&nbsp; Besides these, there is the following fragment of
+sculpture</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p114.jpg">
+<img alt="Ancient sepulchre near Jish" src="images/p114.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p><!-- page 115--><a name="page115"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+115</span>nearly level with the ground, and is probably the entrance of a
+sepulchre, but we had no opportunity of clearing away the soil to ascertain
+that.&nbsp; The ornamentation seems to be that of laurel leaves.&nbsp; Near
+adjoining is a fragment of a round pillar, partly buried; but on seeing
+Hebrew writing upon it, I cleared it away partly.&nbsp; Some of it was but
+indistinct.&nbsp; I could only read it thus&mdash;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p115.jpg">
+<img alt="Hebrew writing" src="images/p115.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>&mdash;from which not much signification can be gathered.&nbsp; Perhaps
+some cracks in the stone have disfigured the characters; but how and when
+did a Hebrew inscription come in such a place?&nbsp; The site is very
+agreeable, with streamlets of water tinkling among trees by the
+roadside.</p>
+<p>Thence we mounted up to the village of <i>Jish</i>, the place of <i>John
+of Giscala</i>, the antagonist of Josephus.&nbsp; This seems to have been
+the centre-point of the dreadful earthquake in 1837, from which <!-- page
+116--><a name="page116"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 116</span>Safed and
+Tiberias suffered so much.&nbsp; It occurred on the New Year&rsquo;s day,
+while the people of the village were all in church; and just as the priest
+held the sacramental cup in his hand, the whole village was in a moment
+destroyed, not one soul being left alive but the priest himself, and,
+humanly speaking, his preservation was owing to the arch above his
+head.&nbsp; All the villages around shared the same fate, and the greater
+part of the towns above mentioned.&nbsp; Much damage was sustained all over
+Palestine; and a heart-rending description of the events has since been
+printed, though little known in England, by a Christian Israelite, named
+Calman, who, together with Thomson, the American missionary, hasted from
+Bayroot on hearing of the calamity, and aided in saving many lives of
+persons buried beneath the ruins of Safed and Tiberias, during several days
+after the catastrophe.</p>
+<p>This sad event serves for an era to date from; and the Jews there, when
+referring to past occurrences, are accustomed to say, it was so many years
+before (or after) the &#1513;&#1506;&#1512; (the earthquake.)</p>
+<p>Among the ruins of Jish are no remains of antiquity, except a fragment
+of the thick shaft of a column and a small sarcophagus, only large enough
+for a child, in a field half a mile distant.&nbsp; The Jews appropriate
+this to Shemaiah Abtelin.</p>
+<p>We passed between <i>Kadita</i> and <i>Taitaba</i>, over land strewn
+with volcanic stone, beginning near Jish and extending almost to those
+villages.&nbsp; The <!-- page 117--><a name="page117"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 117</span>crater, of very remote times, noticed by
+Robinson, is about one-third of the distance from Jish to Safed; not very
+imposing in appearance.</p>
+<p>The journey from Kadis to Safed is one of five hours&rsquo; common
+travelling.&nbsp; We reached the olive ground encampment shortly before
+noon.&nbsp; Being the Jewish Sabbath, there was the <i>Eruv</i> suspended
+at the exits of the principal streets.&nbsp; This is an invention of the
+Talmudists, used in unwalled towns, being a line extended from one post to
+another, indicating to Jews what is the limit which they are to consider as
+the town-wall, and certain ordinances of the Sabbath are regulated
+thereby.</p>
+<p>A strong wind from the south blew up a mist that almost concealed the
+huge dark ravine of <i>Jarmuk</i>, but the night became once more hot and
+still.</p>
+<p>3<i>d</i>.&mdash;&ldquo;And rested the Sabbath-day, according to the
+commandment,&rdquo;&mdash;neither the principal prayer-day of the
+Mohammedans, which is Friday, nor the Sabbath-day of the large population
+of Jews about me, but that which the early Christians so beautifully named
+the Lord&rsquo;s-day, while observing it as a Sabbath.&nbsp; I attended
+divine service in the English language at the house of Mr Daniel, the
+missionary to the Jews: we were six in number.&nbsp; The rest of the day
+was spent in quiet reading and meditation, with visits at one time from the
+rabbis, and at another from the missionary.</p>
+<p>4<i>th</i>.&mdash;An excursion to <i>Meroon</i> to visit the <!-- page
+118--><a name="page118"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 118</span>sepulchres
+of several eminent canonized rabbis.&nbsp; The Jews believe this place to
+be the Shimron-Meron of Joshua xii. 20.&nbsp; An odd party we formed: there
+were the missionary and his lady, Polish rabbis with very broad beaver hats
+and curled ringlets on each side of the face, a crowd of Jewish idlers
+walking, the Moslem attendants, and a peasant of the village we were going
+to.&nbsp; Certainly the rabbinical riding was not of a very dashing
+character: their reverences were all mounted on asses with mean
+accoutrements, for the adjustment of which they often had to
+dismount.&nbsp; Our place of destination lies at the foot of the great hill
+Jarmuk, and the road to it is very rough, with broken rocks fallen from the
+summit; but the place commands a grand prospect of Safed and the Lake of
+Galilee.</p>
+<p>The first object of interest was of course the sepulchre of Rabbi Simeon
+bar Jochai, the patron saint of this region, and of regions beyond.&nbsp;
+He lived a miraculous life in the second Christian century; wrote the
+famous book (Zohar), by which, if I mistake not, the Cabbalists still work
+miracles; and miracles are performed in answer to prayers at his
+tomb&mdash;so it is believed; and his commemoration festival, in the month
+Iyar (see <i>ante</i>) is attended by Jewish votaries from all parts of the
+world, many of whom practise the heathen rite of burning precious objects,
+such as gold lace, Cashmere shawls, etc., upon the tomb, to propitiate his
+favour.&nbsp; On these occasions scenes of scandalous <!-- page 119--><a
+name="page119"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 119</span>licence and riot are
+witnessed, and sometimes lives are lost in conflicts with Moslems begun in
+drunkenness.&nbsp; The rabbis, however, procure great gains from the annual
+festival or fair.</p>
+<p>(In the town of Safed there is at least one (perhaps more) <i>Beth
+ha-Midrash</i>, a sort of synagogue, with perpetual endowment, for reading
+of the Zohar day and night for ever.)</p>
+<p>First we entered a court-yard with a walnut-tree in the midst.&nbsp; At
+a farther corner of this court is a small clean apartment, with a lighted
+lamp in a frame suspended from the ceiling, which is capable of holding
+more lamps.&nbsp; In a corner of this apartment is a recess with a lamp
+burning before it; in this a roll of the law is kept; it is the shrine
+itself of the author of Zohar.&nbsp; One of our rabbis retired behind us
+for prayer.&nbsp; In another part of this chamber is buried Eleazar, son of
+the illustrious Simeon.</p>
+<p>These sepulchres are marked out upon the roof, outside of the chamber,
+by a small pillar over each, with a hollow on the top of it for burning of
+the votive offerings as above mentioned.&nbsp; Near the first entrance gate
+is a similar pillar for lamps and offerings vowed to Rabbi Isaac, a
+celebrated physician.</p>
+<p>All these three saints still perform as many miracles as ever they did;
+and the common people believe that any person forcing an entrance to the
+shrines, without express permission of the living rabbis, will be
+infallibly punished with <!-- page 120--><a name="page120"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 120</span>sudden death.&nbsp; They cited instances of
+such visitations having occurred.</p>
+<p>We then went to the ruin of what the Jews assert to have been a
+synagogue.&nbsp; It has been an oblong square building, one of its sides
+being formed by the scarped surface of a rock, and its opposite (the north)
+stands upon what is now the brink of a low precipice, probably from the
+earth having given way below at the time of the earthquake; indeed it must
+be so, for the one of the three portals at the east end, which was there,
+is now missing.&nbsp; The floor is solid surface of rock, and now used by
+the peasants for a thrashing-floor.&nbsp; The portals have been handsome,
+with bold mouldings; but no floral embellishment or inscription now
+remains.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p120.jpg">
+<img alt="Possible synagogue" src="images/p120.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>The transverse lintels are each of one stone; the central one is at
+least fifteen feet in length.</p>
+<p>Persons still living remember this building very much more entire than
+it now is.&nbsp; There is an abundance of large loose stones lying about,
+and fragments of broken columns or moulded friezes.&nbsp; Upon the rock by
+its side is a small tower that <!-- page 121--><a name="page121"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 121</span>was erected by old Daher (Volney&rsquo;s hero
+of the Report on Syria) in the eighteenth century.</p>
+<p>The village population now consists of about thirty souls, friendly to
+the Jews, from whom indeed they derive their principal subsistence, in
+consideration of guarding the sanctuaries from spoliation.&nbsp; Other
+sanctified rabbis are interred in sites about the village and the hill.
+<p>After a temperate luncheon upon the rocks among the noble scenery in the
+open air, and consulting the Hebrew book of travels of R. Joseph Schwartz,
+(who was still living in Jerusalem,) we parted from our rabbis, and
+proceeded to visit Cuf&rsquo;r Bera&rsquo;am.</p>
+<p>When we arrived close to <i>Sasa</i>, there was <i>Jish</i> before us on
+the right.&nbsp; We passed through a district of stones and underwood of
+evergreen oak; clouds and rain coming on, which overtook us sharply as we
+reached the village.</p>
+<p>Some of the party being but poor riders, we were later than I had
+expected to be; it was quite sunset; and the people of the place, (almost
+all of them Maronite Christians,) headed by their priest could do no less
+than press us to stay through the night with them, especially as the sky
+threatened a continuation of rain.&nbsp; After deliberative counsel being
+taken among us, it was resolved that we could only thank the good people
+for their intended <!-- page 122--><a name="page122"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 122</span>hospitality, and return home.&nbsp; We first
+halted before an ancient square building, the outside of which has been
+much encroached upon by the alluvial earth of ages, and the simple but
+correct Tuscan portico, encumbered with piles of fagots for the village use
+during the approaching winter.&nbsp; The three doorways of the
+fa&ccedil;ade were embellished by sculptured wreaths of vine leaves and
+grapes.&nbsp; Hearing that some Hebrew inscription was to be found beneath
+one of the windows, we had some of the fagots removed, sufficient to enable
+us to read the words &#1492;&#1504;&#1492; &#1514;&#1497;&#1489;&#1492;
+(this house, etc.); but on account of the labour required to do more with
+such a tangled and heavy mass of wood, besides the rain and the lateness of
+the hour, we were obliged to abandon the task, and go forward to the large
+decorated portal which is standing alone, without its edifice, in an
+enclosed field at about a quarter of a mile distant.&nbsp; This is erected
+upon a raised platform of masonry.&nbsp; Upon the transverse lintel we read
+the following Hebrew inscription, neatly engraved:&mdash;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p122b.jpg">
+<img alt="Hebrew inscription" src="images/p122b.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>(Peace be within this place, and all places of the sojourners . . . to
+the work . . . blessing in his works.)</p>
+<p>This is all written in one line, without breaks or stops, very small,
+and in as neat a square character as if lately copied from a printed
+book.&nbsp; The two uprights and the lintel have a <!-- page 123--><a
+name="page123"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 123</span>simple and chaste
+ornament like a bead moulding.&nbsp; The transverse lintel has in the
+middle of its length a rosette surmounted by a circular wreath, at each end
+of which may be seen upon close inspection, and in a slanting light, traces
+of a small animal, most likely a sheep, recumbent, which have been
+chiselled away.&nbsp; On a visit some years after, and on closer
+inspection, I remarked the same figures upon the fa&ccedil;ade of that
+building above mentioned, with Tuscan pillars for a portico, though pains
+have been taken, as in this instance, to obliterate them.</p>
+<p>The ground all about there is strewn with moulded stones and broken
+columns.</p>
+<p>We reached Safed, cold and wet, in the dark, having ridden but slowly,
+in order to accommodate certain individuals of the party; but it was in the
+month of November, at an altitude of above 2000 feet, with rain and gusts
+of wind coming between dark mountains.</p>
+<p>My evening reflections alone naturally ran upon the almost unknown
+circumstance of Hebrew inscriptions existing upon remains of ancient and
+decorated edifices in this part of the country, while nothing of the sort
+is known elsewhere.&nbsp; Were the two buildings at Cuf&rsquo;r
+Bera&rsquo;am, and the sepulchre in the field below Jish, really Jewish?
+and if so, when were they erected?</p>
+<p>The modern Jews, in their utter ignorance of chronology, declare these
+to be synagogues of the time of the second temple in Jerusalem; and <!--
+page 124--><a name="page124"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 124</span>affirm
+that, notwithstanding the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans, this
+province of Upper Galilee remained without its people being led into
+captivity, and that many families (for instance, the Jewish agriculturists
+still at Bokeea&rsquo;, between Safed and Acre) continue now, just as they
+were then, in the same localities.</p>
+<p>My good old friend Nicolayson, the late missionary to the Jews, was
+willing to believe a good deal about this local stability of Jews in Upper
+Galilee, and to give credit for a state of much prosperity among the Jews
+in the East during the reigns of the Antonine emperors; and his idea was
+the most probable one of any that I have heard advanced&mdash;namely, that
+these edifices (corresponding in general character with those remaining at
+Kadis) are really synagogues from the era of the Antonines, and that the
+inscriptions are of the same date; meanwhile keeping in mind that they are
+utterly wanting in the robust style of archaic Hebraism, and that the
+embellishments indicate somewhat of a low period.</p>
+<p>For myself, after two visits to the place, and many years of
+consideration, I cannot bring myself to this belief; but rather conclude
+that they were heathen temples of the Antonine epoch, and afterwards used
+as synagogues by the Jews, long ago&mdash;probably during some interval of
+tranquillity under the early Mohammedans,&mdash;and that the Hebrew
+inscriptions were then put upon them.</p>
+<p>There is some regularity and method in the <!-- page 125--><a
+name="page125"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 125</span>writing upon the
+lonely portal in the field, though even this is not so well executed as the
+contiguous moulding upon the same stone; but the other two inscriptions
+(those upon the facade of the building in the village, and that upon the
+broken column in the field below Jish) are put irregularly upon any vacant
+space that happened to be unencumbered.&nbsp; I am convinced that, in the
+latter instance, the sculpture and the writing have nothing to do with each
+other.</p>
+<p>The surest demonstration, however, to my mind, lies in the evident fact
+of animal figures having been originally upon the same lintel where the
+writing now is.&nbsp; Although their relief-projection has been chiselled
+down, the outlines of the figures are unmistakable.&nbsp; These, I feel
+certain, were coeval with the buildings, while the inscriptions are only
+coeval with their being defaced.</p>
+<p>Next day we travelled southwards towards Jerusalem.&nbsp; On leaving the
+town we passed the ruins of an old church, which they call &ldquo;The
+Church of the Forty Martyrs,&rdquo; (this seems to be a favourite
+traditional designation, as there are other such about the country) and in
+half an hour reached a stream in the midst of a wood of neb&rsquo;k trees,
+where an Arab, riding a fine mare and carrying a long spear decorated with
+black ostrich feathers, was driving a cow across the water&mdash;very
+probably plundered from some neighbouring village.</p>
+<p>At <i>Yakook</i>&mdash;the dirtiest place in the world, I <!-- page
+126--><a name="page126"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 126</span>suppose,
+there was a large Arab encampment, the men sitting apart from the women,
+and cooking going on&mdash;thence to <i>Hhatteen</i>.&nbsp; The volcanic
+stones of this region are far blacker than elsewhere; the district
+resembles some dismal coal district in the north of England.&nbsp; Thence
+out of the common road to <i>Nimrin</i>, by <i>Lubieh</i>,
+<i>Tura&rsquo;&acirc;n</i>, to <i>Cuf&rsquo;r Cana</i>, the old and true
+Cana of Galilee.</p>
+<p>At this village of peculiarly scriptural interest, the women and
+children were spreading cotton pods, just picked, on their house-roofs to
+dry.&nbsp; Here is a square-built cistern filled from a spring within it,
+and the cattle were drinking from a beautiful sarcophagus.&nbsp; Losing our
+road again we came to <i>Meshhad</i>, rather west of the usual road.&nbsp;
+Clouds lowering and frowning over Carmel.&nbsp; At the village of
+<i>Raineh</i> I noticed a man harrowing a ploughed field by dragging a
+bunch of prickly-pear leaves after a yoke of oxen.&nbsp; Arrived at
+Nazareth.</p>
+<p>Next day, across the plain of Esdraelon to <i>Jeneen</i> and
+<i>Sanoor</i>, where we slept.&nbsp; Then by a new road, untraversed by
+Europeans.&nbsp; After <i>Jeba&rsquo;</i>, we got into the plain of Sharon,
+through the large olive plantations of <i>Fendecom&icirc;a</i>,
+(<i>pente</i>, five, and <i>comai</i>, villages&mdash;in Greek,) between
+<i>Yaero</i>, (a ruin,) <i>Adjah</i>, <i>Rameeen</i>, and <i>Attarah</i>,
+with other villages in good condition.&nbsp; Saw Cuf&rsquo;r Ra&rsquo;i
+very distinctly at a distance in the West, and numerous villages
+besides.</p>
+<p>From an eminence we looked down upon an extensive prospect of shaded
+unoccupied hills, with <!-- page 127--><a name="page127"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 127</span>the wide plain beyond and the Mediterranean
+Sea; then descended into a valley, the road winding about through immense
+olive groves; the travelling was easy, and all the district bore the
+appearance of prosperity, such as could hardly be expected where we know
+that factious warfare so frequently exists.&nbsp; Passed <i>Cuf&rsquo;r
+Rum&acirc;n</i>.&nbsp; As far as <i>&rsquo;Ann&acirc;beh</i> the course had
+been for a long time westwards; but there, at the opening of the great
+plain, we turned due southwards.&nbsp; This was four hours from
+<i>Sanoor</i>, at a good pace.&nbsp; Passed between
+<i>&rsquo;Ann&acirc;beh</i> and <i>Tool el Ker&rsquo;m</i> in changing our
+course.&nbsp; Near <i>Irtahh</i> we passed a camel-party going down to
+Egypt with bales of soap and tobacco for sale.&nbsp; We were upon the
+established route of trade between Damascus and Egypt, and not very far
+distant from Dothan, where the Midianite or Ishmaelite caravan bought
+Joseph from his brethren; but we had passed this on our left hand in the
+morning.</p>
+<p>Soon passed <i>Farra&rsquo;an</i> on our left, with a weli and a cistern
+below it, by the roadside.&nbsp; <i>Kalins&acirc;wa</i> in sight, but far
+away to the right; <i>Ferd&icirc;sia</i> and <i>Zen&acirc;beh</i> on the
+left.&nbsp; The day very hot, and the peasantry observed to be, as usual in
+all the Philistine country, cleaner in their garments than those of the
+mountains.</p>
+<p>Coasted along, parallel to the line of hills, as far as
+<i>Kalkeeleh</i>, where we began to turn inwards, across the fields,
+towards the place of our destination, namely, <i>Mejdal Yaba</i>, which was
+conspicuous <!-- page 128--><a name="page128"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+128</span>on an eminence before us.&nbsp; This was at six and a half hours
+from <i>Sanoor</i>.</p>
+<p>In a field we arrived at a well, where the water must have been very low
+down, being late in the year; for it was only obtained by jars or skins
+drawn up at the end of a very long rope, worked by a long line of women
+walking across the field, and singing at their work, while the men sat
+looking on and smoking.</p>
+<p>We passed the remains of some old considerable town, where, among the
+fallen building stones and the lines of foundations, there was a cistern,
+and an ancient sarcophagus by its side; also a deep square well filled up
+with rubbish, and remains of quarrying work in the solid
+rock,&mdash;besides an unroofed building, with a semicircular arch to the
+doorway.&nbsp; Surely this must have been of Roman construction.</p>
+<p>Arrived at <i>Mejdal Yaba</i> in nine hours from Sanoor,&mdash;a hot and
+tiring journey.&nbsp; At a short distance below us was the site of <i>Ras
+el &rsquo;Ain</i>; and farther westwards, but within sight, the tall white
+tower of <i>Ramlah</i>.&nbsp; Time&mdash;sunset.</p>
+<p>I had a special object in coming off the common high-roads to this
+place, but little known, at that time not at all known, to
+Europeans,&mdash;namely, to visit Shaikh Sadek, the responsible ruler of
+the district, and regarded by the peasantry with especial deference, out of
+traditional obedience to his ancient family.</p>
+<p>We found the village and the castle in a very dilapidated condition, and
+the great shaikh not at <!-- page 129--><a name="page129"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 129</span>home.&nbsp; Some of his relatives, however,
+received us; but both they and the peasantry were surprised, if not
+alarmed, at our coming.&nbsp; To them it seemed as if we were suddenly
+dropped upon them from the sky.&nbsp; Perhaps they had never seen Europeans
+before; or they might have thought us spies sent by the Turkish
+Government.&nbsp; There were plenty of idle fellows lounging about; but
+their supplies of food from the village were scanty, and of inferior
+quality.</p>
+<p>The S&acirc;dek family apologised for apparent want of
+hospitality,&mdash;explaining that the only unbroken part of the castle was
+but just sufficient to contain the <i>hareem</i> of the women, and there
+was not a single room to give me.&nbsp; So I was glad to have my bedding
+and other paraphernalia spread upon a <i>mustabah</i>, or raised stone
+divan, just within the gate.&nbsp; A narrow vaulting covered my head; but
+it was open at the side to the square court, into which the horses, asses,
+cows, and sheep were driven for the night.</p>
+<p>After considerable delay, a rude supper was produced,&mdash;of which,
+however, I could not persuade the family to partake till after
+ourselves.&nbsp; They then ate up the remainder in company with my
+servants.&nbsp; They were very solemn and slow in conversation; indeed, I
+could not but suspect that they had some hostile schemes in preparation,
+which they did not wish to have ascertained or communicated to their
+neighbours.</p>
+<p><!-- page 130--><a name="page130"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+130</span>Troubling myself very little about their local politics, I was
+soon on my bed, and looking up at the brilliant stars.&nbsp; Sleep did not
+come very soon, as the men kept up firing guns, and the women trilling
+their songs, to a late hour.&nbsp; They said it was on account of a
+wedding.</p>
+<p>Daybreak found me up, and in full enjoyment of the exquisite luxury of
+open air, in a clear and pure Oriental climate, before sunrise.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p130.jpg">
+<img alt="Remains of old Christian church" src="images/p130.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>The servants were all busied in various occupations, and the peasantry
+driving out the cattle, while I was surveying the considerable remains of
+an old Christian church, which now forms one side of the shaikh&rsquo;s
+mansion, and is used for a stable and a store of fodder.&nbsp; This
+vignette represents its entrance, in a corner now darkened by the arcade in
+which I had slept.&nbsp; The workmanship is massive and very rude, and the
+Greek of the inscription upon the lintel not less barbarous, signifying
+<!-- page 131--><a name="page131"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+131</span>&ldquo;Martyr Memorial Church of the Holy
+Herald,&rdquo;&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, John the Baptist.</p>
+<p>This discovery interested me deeply, in that region so remote from any
+body of Christians at the present day, and among a population very like
+savages dwelling amid stern hill-scenery.</p>
+<p>Not less touching was the special designation of the saint so
+commemorated.&nbsp; I believe that the Easterns pay more respect than
+Europeans do to the memory of him whom the Saviour himself pronounced to be
+greater than all the Old Testament prophets.&nbsp; And while we are
+accustomed to ascribe to him only one of his official
+characters,&mdash;that of the Baptizer,&mdash;they take pleasure in
+recalling his other scriptural offices; as, for instance, this of the
+<i>Herald</i>, or Preacher <a name="citation131a"></a><a
+href="#footnote131a" class="citation">[131a]</a> of righteousness, and that
+of the <i>Forerunner</i>. <a name="citation131b"></a><a
+href="#footnote131b" class="citation">[131b]</a>&nbsp; Indeed, individuals
+are not unfrequently named after him in baptism by this latter appellation,
+without the name John.</p>
+<p>This building appears to have been at all times heavy and coarse in
+construction; indeed, one may fairly suppose that part of the frontal has
+at some time been taken down, and strangely put together again.</p>
+<p>This church is the only object of curiosity that I had found along the
+recent novel route.</p>
+<p>On leaving <i>Mejdal</i>, I descended to inspect once more the site so
+interesting to me of <i>Ras el &rsquo;Ain</i>, at half an hour&rsquo;s
+distance,&mdash;which I unhesitatingly <!-- page 132--><a
+name="page132"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 132</span>believe to be
+<i>Antipatris</i>, as I conceived it to be on my first seeing the place the
+preceding year.&nbsp; I had then passed it rather late in the evening, and
+upon the other side.</p>
+<p><i>Cuf&rsquo;r Saba</i>, to which I was then going, is a wretched
+village, of unburnt bricks, on the wide open plain, with no other water
+near it than the deposit of rain-water in an adjoining square tank of
+clay.&nbsp; Yet travelling authors have constantly pronounced this to be
+the locality of Antipatris.&nbsp; Not one of them, however, has visited the
+place.</p>
+<p>What does Josephus say (Antiq. xvi. 5, 2, in
+Whiston)?&mdash;&ldquo;After this solemnity and these festivals were over,
+Herod erected another city in the plain called Caphar Saba, where he chose
+out a fit place, both for plenty of water and goodness of soil, and proper
+for the production of what was there planted; where a river encompassed the
+city itself, and a grove of the best trees for magnitude was round
+about.&nbsp; This he named Antipatris, from his father
+Antipater.&rdquo;&nbsp; &Pi;&omicron;&lambda;&iota;&nu;
+&alpha;&lambda;&lambda;&eta;&nu;
+&alpha;&nu;&eta;y&epsilon;&iota;&rho;&epsilon;&nu; &epsilon;&nu;
+&tau;&omega; &pi;&epsilon;&delta;&iota;&omega; &tau;&omega;
+&lambda;&epsilon;y&omicron;&mu;&epsilon;&nu;&omega;
+&Kappa;&alpha;&phi;&alpha;&rho;&sigma;&alpha;&beta;&alpha; . . .
+&tau;&omicron;&pi;&omicron;&nu;
+&epsilon;&upsilon;&upsilon;&delta;&rho;&omicron;&nu; . . .
+&epsilon;&kappa;&lambda;&epsilon;&xi;&alpha;&sigmaf;
+&kappa;.&tau;.&lambda;.&nbsp; No words can be more distinctly descriptive;
+yet Robinson, who had not visited that district, in his positive manner
+lays down that the village of Cuf&rsquo;r Saba is the site of Antipatris;
+and &ldquo;doubtless&rdquo; all that is said about &ldquo;well
+watered,&rdquo; and &ldquo;a river encompassing the city,&rdquo; means that
+some wadi or watercourse came down from the hills in that <!-- page
+133--><a name="page133"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 133</span>direction,
+and made the place watery in the winter season.</p>
+<p>Now, what are the facts remaining at the present day?&nbsp; Upon the
+same plain with Cuf&rsquo;r Saba, and within sight of it, at hardly six
+miles&rsquo; distance, is a large mound capable of containing a small town,
+with foundations of ancient buildings, bits of marble, Roman bricks, and
+tesser&aelig; scattered about,&mdash;but especially a large strong castle
+of Saracenic work, the lower courses of the walls of real Roman
+construction; and at the foot of the mound rises the river <i>Aujeh</i> out
+of the earth in several copious streams, crowded with willows, tall wild
+canes, and bulrushes,&mdash;the resort of numerous flocks, and of large
+herds of horned cattle brought from a distance, and (as I have seen there)
+counted by the Government inspector of the district, for the levying of
+agricultural taxes upon them. <a name="citation133"></a><a
+href="#footnote133" class="citation">[133]</a>&nbsp; This is our Ras el
+&rsquo;Ain.</p>
+<p>For a considerable extent there is capital riding-ground of green grass,
+so rare in Palestine.&nbsp; Let any one familiar with that country answer,
+Could Herod have selected a better spot for a military station, (as
+Antipatris was,) just on the border, descending from the hill-country upon
+the plain?&nbsp; With this description in view, we understand all the more
+vividly the narrative of Felix sending St Paul to C&aelig;sarea.&nbsp; To
+elude the machinations of <!-- page 134--><a name="page134"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 134</span>the conspiracy, the military party travelled
+by night over the hilly region; and on reaching the castle of Antipatris,
+the spearmen and other soldiers left him to continue the journey with
+cavalry upon the plain to C&aelig;sarea, about three hours farther, (Acts
+xxiii. 23, and 31, 32.)</p>
+<p>It seems impossible to avoid the conclusion that this is the true site
+of Antipatris; and as for Josephus calling that neighbourhood &ldquo;the
+plain of Cuf&rsquo;r Saba,&rdquo; that must be for the same reason as
+another part of the same vast extent was called the Plain of
+Sharon,&mdash;or as it is now very much the custom for modern travellers to
+call the whole Philistine plain by that name.</p>
+<p>As for the statement that a river encompassed the city itself; I imagine
+that the town was not upon the elevated mound,&mdash;this was probably
+occupied by military works and a temple,&mdash;but upon the level of the
+water, among the serpentine separate streams, which soon combine into one
+river, the Aujeh, with its water-mills, and which was navigable for some
+distance inland to the north of Jaffa.&nbsp; In the course of ages some of
+these streams may have somewhat changed their direction.&nbsp; The mound
+has still a dry trench around it, which must have anciently had its current
+of water through it.</p>
+<p>It cannot be that the deep trench dug by Alexander from Antipatris to
+the sea (Antiq. xiii. 15, I, Whiston) can have begun at this village of
+Cuf&rsquo;r Saba, where no water rises, and which is far away <!-- page
+135--><a name="page135"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 135</span>from the
+hills in an open plain.&nbsp; Although the words are distinctly,
+&ldquo;from Capharzaba,&rdquo; the trench must have originated at the river
+head, <i>i.e.</i>, Antipatris, where there was a fortified castle, and
+passed round the nearest town, viz., that of Cuf&rsquo;r Saba.</p>
+<p>I should observe, that not only Herod did well in selecting this spot
+for a castle, because of its situation on the verge of the mountains,
+commanding the road from Jerusalem to either C&aelig;sarea or Joppa; but
+because it lies also upon the direct caravan track between Damascus and
+Egypt, nearly at right angles with the other road.</p>
+<p>The ruined Saracenic khan which now stands on the foundations of the
+Roman castle, is of large size, and has a broken mosque in the centre of
+the enclosure.</p>
+<p>We rested and breakfasted, from our own resources, (without taxing the
+Arab hospitality of Shaikh S&acirc;dek&rsquo;s family at Mejdal,) at the
+springs of the Aujeh,&mdash;the water bubbling up warm from the ground,
+among stones, with aquatic birds flying over us, and the morning breeze
+sighing among the gigantic reeds and the willows.</p>
+<p>We engaged a guide for what seemed likely to be a short day&rsquo;s
+journey to <i>Ras Kerker</i>, the <i>cursi</i>, or metropolis, of another
+dominant family&mdash;that of <i>Ibn Simhhan</i>&mdash;within the
+mountains; but it proved far longer than was expected.</p>
+<p>We were conducted due south, yet so far away from the line of hills that
+we missed the Roman <!-- page 136--><a name="page136"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 136</span>temple of <i>M&rsquo;zeera&rsquo;a</i>, which
+I do not know that, to this day, any European but myself has seen. <a
+name="citation136"></a><a href="#footnote136"
+class="citation">[136]</a></p>
+<p>To <i>Nebi Sari</i>, which is a pretty weli, two hour only from
+Jaffa.&nbsp; To <i>Runtieh</i>, which is a poor place.&nbsp; Then
+south-eastwards to <i>Teereh</i>; near which we started a gazelle across
+the fields.</p>
+<p>In that part of the country the population has so greatly increased of
+late years that there was a scarcity of land for cultivation; and at the
+end of autumn the villages contest the right of ploughing there by fights
+of fire-arms.</p>
+<p>Suddenly we turned into a valley, at an acute angle with our previous
+road.&nbsp; This is named <i>Wadi el Kharnoob</i>&mdash;probably from some
+conspicuous karoobah-tree.&nbsp; In ascending the hill, I looked back, and
+had a beautiful prospect of Jaffa, and a white ship sailing on the sea.</p>
+<p>We continued ascending higher and higher.&nbsp; Before us was a large
+building on a single hill, which they called <i>Dair
+Musha&rsquo;al</i>.&nbsp; Passed the ruined village,
+<i>Hhanoonah</i>.&nbsp; On our right hand, among trees, was
+<i>Desrah</i>.&nbsp; Passed through <i>Shukbeh</i>.&nbsp; How different is
+the mountain air from that of the plain, so light and so pure!</p>
+<p>Descended a little to <i>Shibtain</i>, where there was a great ancient
+well; and being surrounded by hills, the place was very hot.&nbsp; Then for
+some time over very dangerous paths, mounting upwards, till <!-- page
+137--><a name="page137"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 137</span>we reached
+the region of a cool breeze, such as I once heard a peasant say was
+&ldquo;worth a thousand purses&rdquo; on a summer&rsquo;s day.</p>
+<p>Saw <i>Ras Kerker</i>, the place of our destination, high above, in a
+very remarkable situation; but how to get at it was a puzzle which patient
+perseverance alone could solve.</p>
+<p>We rode round and round one hill after another, till we reached <i>Dair
+&rsquo;Amm&acirc;r</i>.&nbsp; Then opened upon us one of those few
+prospects which in a lifetime impress themselves indelibly on the
+mind.&nbsp; This was not lovely, but stern, consisting chiefly of a wild,
+dark alternation of lower hills, with the valleys between them.</p>
+<p>The villages hereabouts bear an appearance of prosperity&mdash;perhaps
+because Turkish officials are never seen there; but the people of <i>Dair
+&rsquo;Amm&acirc;r</i> behaved rudely.&nbsp; Down, deep deep down we went,
+leading our horses, in order to rise afterwards to a higher
+elevation.&nbsp; At length we reached a petty spring of water, where there
+were some dirty, but otherwise good-looking women, who pointed out our path
+towards the castle at the top of the hill.</p>
+<p>The <i>Ibn Simhhan</i> people (being the great rivals of <i>Abu
+Gosh</i>) had often invited me to visit them at this
+castle,&mdash;describing with ardour the abundance and excellence of its
+springs of water, and the salubrity of its atmosphere.</p>
+<p>On arriving at the &ldquo;<i>Ras</i>,&rdquo; after a tedious and very
+wearisome journey,&mdash;difficult as the place is of <!-- page 138--><a
+name="page138"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 138</span>access,&mdash;I found
+it to fall far below those promises.&nbsp; There are no springs near
+it.&nbsp; The only water is brought up by the women from the one which we
+had passed far below.&nbsp; Only within the castle (which was begun while
+building forty-four years before) some old wells, with good masonry stones,
+were discovered.&nbsp; These are now put into good order, and kept full,
+probably in readiness at any time against a siege by the faction of Abu
+Gosh.&nbsp; Many battles and sieges take place in these remote places that
+the Pasha of Jerusalem never hears of.</p>
+<p>Although of modern origin, much of the earliest part of the castle is
+already falling to decay&mdash;such as gates, steps, etc.&nbsp; It was a
+melancholy spectacle to walk about the place, reminding one of some small
+middle-aged castles that I have seen in Scotland, burnt or destroyed during
+old times of civil warfare; or resembling my recollection, after many long
+years, of Scott&rsquo;s description of the Baron Bradwardine&rsquo;s castle
+in its later period.&nbsp; And the same melancholy associations recurred
+yesterday at Mejdal Yaba.</p>
+<p>The people assured us that the tortuous and rocky road that we had taken
+from Ras el &rsquo;Ain was the best and nearest that we could have
+taken.</p>
+<p>We were received by a couple of relatives of Ibn Simhhan, who is now
+Governor of Lydd; but they conducted us to the next village,
+<i>J&acirc;niah</i>, to <!-- page 139--><a name="page139"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 139</span>be entertained there by the rest of the
+family.&nbsp; On our descent to the village, we met our hosts coming to
+meet us.</p>
+<p><i>J&acirc;niah</i> is a poor place; and we had glimpses of curious
+groups and scenes within the best one of the wretched houses.&nbsp; We were
+received in a large room, to which the access was by a steep and broken set
+of steps outside of the house.&nbsp; In the street below was a circle of
+the elders of the village; and at the time of sunset, one of them mounted
+on the corner of a garden wall to proclaim the <i>Ad&acirc;n</i>, or Moslem
+call to prayers.&nbsp; I did not observe that he was at all attended
+to.</p>
+<p>A good number of the leading people came to visit us; and one old man
+quoted and recited heaps of Arabic poetry for our entertainment while
+awaiting the supper.</p>
+<p>Then &rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l Lateef Ibn Simhhan, joined by another, (a
+humbler adherent of the family,) gave us a vivid relation of the famous
+battle of <i>Nezib</i> in 1838, and of his desertion from the Egyptian army
+to the Turkish with a hundred of his mountaineers, well armed, during the
+night; of how the Turkish Pasha refused to receive him or notice him till
+he had washed himself in a golden basin, and anointed his beard from
+vessels of gold; how the Turkish army was disgracefully routed; how he
+(&rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l Lateef) was appointed to guard the Pasha&rsquo;s harem
+during the flight, etc., etc.&nbsp; This narrative was occasionally
+attested as true by a <!-- page 140--><a name="page140"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 140</span>negro slave in the room, who had been with my
+host on that expedition.</p>
+<p>The most lively fellow, however, of the party was one Hadj
+&rsquo;Abdallah of Jerusalem, who has two wives, one a daughter of Ibn
+Simhhan, the other a daughter of Abu Gosh!!&nbsp; His property in Jerusalem
+consists chiefly of houses let out to Jews, whom he mimicked in their
+Spanish and German dialects.</p>
+<p>At length came supper; then sleep.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p><i>Saturday</i>, 9<i>th</i>.&mdash;Asaad Ibn Simhhan and Hadj
+&rsquo;Abdallah rode with us to <i>Mezra&rsquo;ah</i> to show us some ruins
+of an ancient city near it, called <i>Hharr&acirc;sheh</i>, where, as they
+told us, there are &ldquo;figures of the children of men&rdquo; cut in the
+rock.&nbsp; This roused our curiosity immensely, and I felt sure of success
+in such company; for though we were in a very wild and unknown country, we
+had the second greatest of the Ibn Simhhan family with us, and the Hadji
+was evidently popular among them all.</p>
+<p>We sent on our luggage before us to Jerusalem by <i>Bait Unah</i> and
+<i>Bait Uksa</i>.</p>
+<p>In rather less than an hour we reached <i>Mezra&rsquo;ah</i>&mdash;the
+journey much enlivened by the drollery and songs of Hadj
+&rsquo;Abdallah.&nbsp; Both he and Asaad had capital mares and ornamented
+long guns.&nbsp; The latter was all dressed in white&mdash;the turban,
+abbai, etc.&nbsp; His face was pale, and even his mare white.</p>
+<p><!-- page 141--><a name="page141"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+141</span>Arrived at the village, we all mounted to the roof of a
+house&mdash;the people paying great reverence to Asaad.&nbsp; Gradually we
+found the whole population surrounding us, and then closing nearer and
+nearer upon us.&nbsp; As the heat of the sun increased, we descended to an
+arcade of the same house, at the end of which there were some itinerant
+Christians mending shoes for the people.</p>
+<p>A breakfast was brought to us of eggs swimming in hot butter and honey,
+with the usual Arab cakes of bread.&nbsp; The crowd could not be kept off;
+and the people themselves told us it was because they had never before seen
+Europeans.</p>
+<p>One man asked for some gunpowder from my horn.&nbsp; I gave some to
+Asaad, and one of the villagers took a pinch of it from him; then went to a
+little distance, and another brought a piece of lighted charcoal to make it
+explode on his hand.&nbsp; He came to me afterwards, to show with triumph
+what good powder it must be, for it had left no mark on his skin.</p>
+<p>Ibn Simhhan had to make the people move away their lighted pipes while I
+was giving him some of the precious powder.&nbsp; He then informed the
+assembly that I had come to see <i>Hharr&acirc;sheh</i> and the sculptured
+figures.&nbsp; They refused to allow it.&nbsp; He insisted that I should
+go; and after some violent altercation and swearing the majority of the men
+ran to arm themselves and <!-- page 142--><a name="page142"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 142</span>accompany us, so as to prevent us from
+carrying off the hidden treasures.</p>
+<p>We rode away; and at every few hundred yards places were pointed out to
+us as sites of clan massacres, or wonderful legends, or surprising escapes,
+in deep glens or on high hills.&nbsp; At one time we passed between two
+cairns of stones, one covering a certain &rsquo;Ali, the other a certain
+Mohammed, both slain by ---.&nbsp; &ldquo;By whom?&rdquo; said I.&nbsp; The
+Hadji gave no other reply than pointing over his shoulder to Asaad.&nbsp; I
+felt as if transported a couple of centuries back to the wilds of
+Perthshire or Argyleshire, among the Highland clans.&nbsp; The local
+scenery was of a suitable character.</p>
+<p>In about forty minutes we arrived at some lines of big stones, that must
+have belonged to some town of enormous or incalculable antiquity; and this,
+they told us, was <i>Hharr&acirc;sheh</i>.&nbsp; As for columns, the people
+told us to stoop into a cavern; but there we could perceive nothing but a
+piece of the rock remaining as a prop in the middle.&nbsp; &ldquo;Well, now
+for the figures of the children of men.&rdquo;&nbsp; The people looked
+furious, and screamed.&nbsp; They gathered round us with their guns; but
+Asaad insisted; so a detachment of them led us down the side of a bare
+rocky hill, upon a mere goat-path; and at last they halted before a rough,
+uncut stone, whose only distinction from the many thousands lying about,
+was that it stands upright.</p>
+<p><!-- page 143--><a name="page143"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+143</span>Asaad observed our disappointment, and said something&mdash;I
+forget the exact terms now&mdash;which led me to believe that this was not
+the object he had meant, and that the ignorant, superstitious people could
+not be coerced.&nbsp; He believed that this stone had been anciently set up
+with some meaning&mdash;probably by some one who had buried treasures; not
+as indicating the exact spot, but as leading in a line connected with some
+other object, to the real place of concealment.</p>
+<p>So here the matter ended; and, when the people saw us looking
+disappointed, they went away satisfied to their village.</p>
+<p>We parted from our friend Asaad Ibn Simhhan, taking one of the peasantry
+with us to show us the way to Ram Allah, which he did through vineyards and
+cheerful scenery; and we were soon again at that village after seventeen
+days&rsquo; absence.&nbsp; In about two hours more we were in
+Jerusalem.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 144--><a name="page144"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+144</span>III.&nbsp; SOUTHWARDS ON THE PHILISTINE PLAIN AND ITS SEA
+COAST.</h2>
+<p>This extensive level is the original Palestine&mdash;the Pelesheth of
+Exod. xv. 14, and Isa. xiv. 29.&nbsp; So named because it was the country
+of the Pelishtim or Philistines (of Genesis x. 14, and <i>passim</i>) in
+the Old Testament history, extending from about C&aelig;sarea to Gaza, or
+farther southwards, and from the Mediterranean to the hill country of
+Judea, west to east.</p>
+<p>This district is so exclusively understood in modern times by the name
+Palestine or Philistia, that a deputation of Oriental Christians coming
+once on a friendly visit, inquired why upon my Arabic seal the English
+consulate was designated that of &ldquo;Jerusalem and Palestine,&rdquo;
+without mention of the other territories northwards to which its
+jurisdiction extended, such as Galilee.&nbsp; I could only answer that the
+ancient Romans called the whole country around, nay, even that beyond
+Jordan, and as far as Petra, by the name of Palestine, and this fact was
+old enough for us now-a-days to act upon.&nbsp; <!-- page 145--><a
+name="page145"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 145</span>&ldquo;Oh, the
+Romans!&rdquo; they ejaculated, with a curious expression of countenance,
+as if disappointed at the mention of such comparatively modern
+people.&nbsp; So true is it that in the Holy Land, the Bible is the only
+book of history for Christians, and scriptural incidents are the traditions
+which leap over any number of centuries at a time.&nbsp; How little of this
+state of mind existing among the inhabitants of that country is
+comprehended in England!</p>
+<p>But, in reference to the people Israel and the possession of it as the
+promised land, this allotment, shared partly by each of the tribes of
+Ephraim, Dan, and Judah, has a peculiar denomination&mdash;it is called the
+Sheph&ecirc;lah, (translated by the common word <i>vale</i> in Josh. x. 40,
+xi. 16, and elsewhere.)&nbsp; In Arabic authors also of Mohammedan period,
+this large plain bears the same name, <i>Siphla</i>, meaning the same as in
+Hebrew, the &ldquo;low country.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thus, as one expanse from the hills to the sea, it bears one territorial
+name, either Philistine or Hebraic, just as another region is called the
+<i>Negeb</i>, or south, (see in the verses referred to above,) or as others
+were designated the hill country, or the desert, or Ph&oelig;nicia.&nbsp;
+And many a time have I stood on the summits of hills to the west of
+Bethlehem, the eye ranging over its extent from the vicinity of Carmel to
+Gaza, with Jaffa and Ekron in front, and have sometimes seen beyond this,
+ships of large size sailing past on the &ldquo;great and wide sea&rdquo; of
+the 104th Psalm.</p>
+<p><!-- page 146--><a name="page146"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+146</span>The ancient Philistines were not only exceptionally, but
+generally, a large race of people, and the population there are to this day
+remarkably tall; they are, even amid disadvantages, (that especially of
+want of water,) much more cleanly in their persons and clothing than the
+peasants of the hills, and many of their habits of life are modified by
+their circumstances, such as the pressure of their wild Arab neighbours
+from the southern desert that lies between them and Egypt.</p>
+<p>Over this plain I have made several journeys at different periods, and
+now proceed to put down my jottings of an excursion in the spring of
+1849.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p><i>May</i> 1<i>st</i>.&mdash;&ldquo;Sweet May-day&rdquo; in the Holy
+Land as well as in England.</p>
+<p>At Rachel&rsquo;s sepulchre, &ldquo;in the way to Ephrath, which is
+Bethlehem,&rdquo; we parted from a company of friends who had ridden with
+us from Jerusalem, and passed along the valley <i>Duhheish&rsquo;mah</i> to
+the Pools of Solomon, then turned aside by the convent and village of <i>El
+Khud&rsquo;r</i> (or St George), surrounded by flourishing vineyards.&nbsp;
+Then mounting up a stony ridge, we came in view of the wide Philistine
+plain, the hills falling in successive gradations from our feet to the
+level of the plain, but separate objects could scarcely be distinguished on
+account of the thick air of the prevailing Shirocco; green bushes, however,
+and abundant wild flowers, <!-- page 147--><a name="page147"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 147</span>including the red everlasting,
+pheasant&rsquo;s eye, cistus, and some late anemones, were about us; the
+larks and the linnets were singing with delight.</p>
+<p>In front was the village of <i>Hhus&acirc;n</i>, and two roads led
+forward, that on the left to <i>Nahh&acirc;leen</i>, <i>Wad Fokeen</i>, and
+<i>Jeba&rsquo;</i>; this was the road that I ought to have taken to <i>Bait
+Nateef</i>, our place for the night, but being considerably ahead of our
+baggage mules, I had ridden on with a kaww&acirc;s, under
+<i>Hhus&acirc;n</i> and <i>Ras abu &rsquo;Amm&acirc;r</i>; by our wayside
+lay a defaced Roman milestone.</p>
+<p>A solitary peasant youth, from whom I inquired the names of the villages
+about us, was so alarmed at the appearance of a European with a Turkish
+attendant, in a place so remote from common high-roads, that he ran off;
+but finding our horses keeping up with his fleet pace, he dropped behind a
+large stone and levelled his gun at us in sheer terror; it was difficult to
+get a rational reply from him.</p>
+<p>Before us, a little to our left, was <i>Hhubeen</i>, half down a hill,
+at the foot of which was a valley green with waving crops of wheat and
+barley.</p>
+<p>In ten minutes more there opened a fine view of <i>Bait
+&rsquo;At&acirc;b</i>, in which were some good new buildings.&nbsp; Before
+arriving at this village, which is the chief one of the
+<i>&rsquo;Arkoob</i> district, ruled by <i>&rsquo;Othman el
+Lehh&acirc;m</i>, I dismounted for rest beneath a gigantic oak, where there
+were last year&rsquo;s acorns and their cups shed around, and half a dozen
+saplings rising <!-- page 148--><a name="page148"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 148</span>from the ground, sheltered from the sun by
+being all within the shadow of the parent tree; with arbutus bushes in
+every direction, wild thyme and other fragrant herbs serving as pasture for
+numerous humming bees, bright coloured bee-eaters were twittering in their
+swallow-like flight, and under the soothing influence of the whole, I fell
+into a pleasant slumber.</p>
+<p>Some boughs of &ldquo;the huge oak&rdquo; were decorated with bits of
+dirty rags hanging upon the boughs as votive memorials of answers to
+prayers.&nbsp; Probably the site was that of a burial-place of some
+personage of ancient and local celebrity; but my attendant was positive in
+affirming that the people do not pray at such stations more than at any
+other spot whatever.&nbsp; There are many such venerated trees in different
+parts of the country.&nbsp; I believe that the reason as well as the amount
+of such veneration is vague and unsettled in the minds of the peasantry,
+yet the object remains a local monument from generation to generation,
+honoured now, as were in the Bible times&mdash;the oak of Deborah (Gen.
+xxxv. 8), the oak of Ophrah (Judges vi. II), for instance, with others.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&nbsp; &ldquo;Multosque per annos<br />
+Multa vir&ucirc;m volvens durando s&aelig;cula vincit.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>By and by the groom overtook us on foot, having scoured about the
+neighbourhood in search of us.&nbsp; After another half an hour&rsquo;s
+rest, we followed him <!-- page 149--><a name="page149"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 149</span>across very rocky and slippery hills towards
+the place of our destination&mdash;dwarf shrubs of evergreen oak,
+honeysuckle, a spring of water, and an old well near the village of
+Hhubeen, with doves cooing, and a vulture poised in the sky above.&nbsp;
+Then a ruined village called <i>Lesed</i>, <a name="citation149"></a><a
+href="#footnote149" class="citation">[149]</a> (as well as I could catch
+the sound from a distance,) near which, among the shrubs, the gnats
+troubled our horses exceedingly as evening drew on, which would imply the
+neighbourhood of water.</p>
+<p>Arrived at <i>Bait Nateef</i> just at sunset, but no luggage had as yet
+arrived.&nbsp; This is <i>Netophah</i> in the lists of Ezra and
+Nehemiah.</p>
+<p>The chief and elders of the village were, according to custom of the
+eventide, seated in a group, chattering or consulting, or calculating,
+probably, about taxes, or respective shares of the common harvest, or the
+alliances to be contracted for the next border-warfare, or marriages being
+planned, or the dividing of inheritances, etc.&nbsp; My groom was admitted
+into their circle, most likely welcomed as bringing the latest news from
+Jerusalem, or as being able to describe this strange arrival, and the road
+to be taken by us on the morrow.</p>
+<p>I passed forward to select a spot for pitching the tents when they and
+the food should arrive.&nbsp; The village shaikh of course tendered all the
+hospitality in his power to offer, but this was <!-- page 150--><a
+name="page150"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 150</span>unnecessary beyond a
+supply of water, milk, and eggs.</p>
+<p>We waited, and waited: the sun was down; the stars came out, and the
+moon shone over us; but at length the mule bells became audible, and our
+dwellings and supplies came up.&nbsp; Supper and sleep are needless to
+mention.</p>
+<p><i>Wednesday</i> 2<i>d</i>.&mdash;The green hills around were enlivened
+by the clucking of partridges among the bushes, and the olive-trees by the
+cooing of doves.</p>
+<p>Leaving this position with its extensive prospect, and passing an
+enormous evergreen oak we crossed a noble valley, and soon reached the hill
+on which stands <i>Sh&rsquo;weikeh</i>, (or <i>Shocoh</i> in Hebrew.)&nbsp;
+This large valley runs east to west, and is the <i>Elah</i> of Scripture,
+the scene of David&rsquo;s contest with Goliath&mdash;a wide and beautiful
+plain, confined within two ranges of hills, and having a brook (dry at this
+season) winding at half distance between them.&nbsp; The modern names for
+the vale of &rsquo;Elah are <i>Musurr</i>, from the N.E. to near
+Sh&rsquo;weikeh, and <i>Sunt</i> after that.</p>
+<p>The plain was waving with heavy crops of wheat and barley, and the bed
+of the stream, bordered by old trees of acacia, called Sunt, (in that
+district called Hhar&acirc;z.)&nbsp; These are of a brilliant green in
+summer, but as there are no such trees elsewhere nearer than Egypt, or the
+Wadi &rsquo;Arabah, (for they require water,) the people relate a
+traditional <!-- page 151--><a name="page151"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+151</span>account of their origin, and say that once upon a time the
+country was invaded by a king of Egypt, named Abu Zaid, bringing a
+prodigious army; but on the occurrence of a sudden alarm, they decamped in
+such haste that their tent-pegs were left in the ground, which, being made
+of Sunt wood, struck roots at the next rainy season, and sprung up as we
+see them.&nbsp; Can this be a confused tradition of the rout of the
+Philistines to Shaaraim on the fall of Goliath?</p>
+<p>The vale or plain (for in Hebrew the word <i>Emek</i> is often applied
+to the latter also when lying between ranges of hills&mdash;sometimes even
+when they are of considerable breadth, as at Rephaim and elsewhere) is
+about three hours or twelve miles long, and spacious enough to allow of
+military occupation and action; hostile armies might of course also occupy
+the opposite hills.&nbsp; From the direction of Hebron other valleys fall
+into this wide plain.&nbsp; On another occasion I entered it by that called
+<i>Wadi &rsquo;Arab</i> or <i>Shaikh</i>, descending from <i>&rsquo;Ain
+Dirweh</i> and <i>Bezur</i> or <i>Bait Soor</i>.&nbsp; Wadi &rsquo;Arab is
+commanded at its mouth by <i>Khar&acirc;s</i> on the north and <i>Nuba</i>
+on the south.&nbsp; Near to the latter are the ruins of <i>&rsquo;Elah</i>,
+which I have no doubt gave name to the valley, and not any remarkable
+terebinth-tree, as is generally guessed by commentators on the Bible,
+unless, indeed, some remarkable terebinth-tree at first gave name to the
+village.&nbsp; Neither Robinson nor Porter appears to <!-- page 152--><a
+name="page152"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 152</span>have seen or heard of
+this site of &rsquo;Elah, neither do they mention the route by the Wadi
+&rsquo;Arab, which lies to the north of Wadi Soor, which they do
+mention.</p>
+<p>Southwards, but further inland, lies <i>Keelah</i>, which I suppose to
+be the Keilah of 1 Sam. xxiii. I, the scene of a remarkable incident in
+David&rsquo;s early career, before retiring to Ziph.&nbsp; The name is
+registered four hundred years before that in Josh. xv. 44, among the cities
+of Judah.</p>
+<p>This, then, being the valley of &rsquo;Elah near to Shocoh, must have
+been the scene of David and Goliath&rsquo;s encounter.&nbsp; How could the
+Latin monks of the middle ages, and modern Roman Catholic travellers to
+Jerusalem, ever believe that it took place at Kal&ocirc;neh near that
+city?&nbsp; The perversion can only be attributed to their ignorance
+concerning anything in the country beyond the immediate vicinity of their
+convents.</p>
+<p>We halted at the ruined village of Shocoh (now made by a grammatical
+diminutive form of Arabic into Sh&rsquo;weikeh) after picking, each of us
+his five smooth stones out of the brook, as memorials for ourselves, and
+for friends far away, endeavouring at the same time to form a mental
+picture of the scene that is so vividly narrated in sacred history, and
+familiar to us from early childhood.</p>
+<p>There are now no regular inhabitants at the place; only a few persons
+occasionally live in caves and broken houses about there.&nbsp; Some
+remnants <!-- page 153--><a name="page153"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+153</span>of antiquity, however, still exist, especially the wells, of fine
+masonry and great depth, at the foot of the hill.&nbsp; This probably
+represents the lower Shocoh mentioned by Eusebius and Jerome in the
+Onomasticon, &ldquo;<i>Soccho</i>, duo sunt vici ascendentibus
+Eleutheropoli &AElig;liam in nono milliario, alter superior, alter
+inferior, qui vocantur Socchoth in tribu Jud&aelig;.&rdquo;&nbsp; Some
+peasants wandering about brought me to the fallen lintel of the door of a
+small mosque, bearing a rudely-executed Cufic-Arabic inscription, illegible
+because, as they said, &ldquo;it had been eaten by the nights and
+days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Large flocks of sheep were pasturing over the stubble, (for some of the
+harvest was already cut in that warm sheltered locality,) led by such
+shepherd boys as David the Bethlehemite may have been, and large flights of
+blue pigeons circling in short courses over our heads.&nbsp; Among the
+demolished houses some women were churning the milk of the flocks in the
+usual mode, by swinging alternately to each other a sewed up goat-skin,
+(the bottle of the Old Testament, Josh. ix. 4; Judges iv. 19; Ps. cxix.
+83;) a hill close at hand is crowned by a Mohammedan Weli (a kind of
+solitary chapel) named <i>Salhhi</i>.</p>
+<p>The view in every direction is most imposing.&nbsp; This rough plan will
+give a tolerably good idea of the Vale of &rsquo;Elah.&nbsp; Across the
+valley, opposite to Shocoh, stands a very fine terebinth-tree.&nbsp;
+Possibly in ancient days there were many such in the <!-- page 154--><a
+name="page154"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 154</span>district, and so the
+valley and the village of &rsquo;Elah may have acquired this name.</p>
+<p><i>&rsquo;Ajoor</i> commands a view of the great plain and the
+sea.&nbsp; From that hill, looking eastwards, the vale has a magnificent
+appearance as a ground for man&oelig;uvres of an army.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p154.jpg">
+<img alt="Plan of Vale of &rsquo;Elah" src="images/p154.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Near <i>Zacariah</i> the Wadi es Sunt contains but few of those
+trees.&nbsp; We passed close under that prosperous-looking village with its
+palm-tree, mounted a rocky path, and went along a valley &ldquo;covered
+over with corn,&rdquo; (Ps. cxv. 13;) here the very paths were concealed by
+the exuberant grain, so that we had to trample for ourselves a way through
+it.</p>
+<p>Emerging on the great plain, we had to wade monotonously through an
+ocean of wheat.&nbsp; How <!-- page 155--><a name="page155"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 155</span>I longed to have with me some of the
+blasphemers of the Holy Land, who tell us that it is now a blighted and
+cursed land, and who quote Scripture amiss to show that this is a
+fulfilment of prophecy. <a name="citation155"></a><a href="#footnote155"
+class="citation">[155]</a></p>
+<p>In many places, however, we saw how the rich produce had been trampled
+down and rolled upon by camels, or by Bashi-bozuk soldiers on their
+travels, after their horses were gorged to the full with gratuitous
+feeding.&nbsp; We met a black slave of &rsquo;Othman el Lehh&acirc;m of
+Bait &rsquo;At&acirc;b, a fine fellow, well mounted and armed, and he told
+us that a large part of this wheat was his master&rsquo;s property.&nbsp;
+He had been travelling from village to village upon business.&nbsp; His
+noble bearing, and his being thus confidentially employed, reminded me of
+the Arabic proverb, that &ldquo;Even a Shaikh&rsquo;s slave is a
+Shaikh.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In one place I remarked some hundred yards square of fine oats.&nbsp;
+This was surprising, as I knew that oats are not cultivated in
+Palestine.&nbsp; The people assured me that they were of wild growth, but
+they were of excellent quality; and as the name (Khafeer) seemed to be well
+known, it seems difficult to understand that oats have not been at some
+time cultivated in that part of the country.&nbsp; With respect to its
+Arabic name, it is worth notice <!-- page 156--><a name="page156"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 156</span>how near it is to the German name (Hafer) for
+oats.&nbsp; Wetzstein has since found wild oats growing on the N.E. of the
+Haur&acirc;n.</p>
+<p>Arrived at <i>&rsquo;Ain Shems</i>, the Beth Shemesh of the Bible, (I
+Sam. vi. 9, <i>passim</i>,) where, instead of the large population of
+ancient times, we found nothing but a weli and some fragments of peasant
+houses.</p>
+<p>Due north from us as we rested, lay on the summit of a hill,
+<i>Sora&rsquo;&acirc;</i>, which is Zorah, the birthplace of Samson, where
+the angel appeared to Manoah and his wife.&nbsp; The people told us of
+<i>Amoor&icirc;ah</i> to the left, but we could not quite see it, and the
+same with respect to <i>Tibneh</i>, or <i>Dibneh</i>, the Timnath of
+Samson&rsquo;s history.</p>
+<p>All the plain and the low hills formed one waving sheet of corn, without
+divisions or trees; and often, as we had no tracks for guidance, we had to
+take sight of some object on the horizon, and work straight forward towards
+it.&nbsp; It was amid such a wonderful profusion that Samson let loose the
+foxes or jackals with firebrands, taking revenge on the Philistines, and he
+called it &ldquo;doing them a displeasure!&rdquo;&nbsp; I have seen from
+Jerusalem the smoke of corn burning, which had accidentally taken fire in
+that very district.</p>
+<p>On the summit of a hill, where were good square stones of old masonry, I
+got into a sheepfold of stone walls, looking for antiquities; but, alas!
+came out with my light-coloured clothes <!-- page 157--><a
+name="page157"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 157</span>covered with fleas;
+fortunately the clothes were not woollen.</p>
+<p>Further on we had <i>Bait Ziz</i>, or <i>Jiz</i>, on the right, with
+<i>Dej&acirc;jeh</i>, or <i>Edj&acirc;jeh</i>, and <i>Na&rsquo;ana</i>, or
+<i>Ra&rsquo;ana</i>, on the left; <i>Khulda</i> in the distance at N.W.; a
+vast expanse of growing grain in every direction.</p>
+<p>The population hereabouts are a fine race for stature, and paler in
+complexion than our peasantry on the hills; and it ought to be the reverse,
+unless, as is certainly the case, they are a distinct people.</p>
+<p>We traversed the plain to <i>&rsquo;Akir</i>, which is Ekron of
+Scripture, one of the five principal cities of the Philistines, and chief
+place of the worship of Baal-zebub, (2 Kings i. 3.)&nbsp; All our inquiries
+had been in vain for any name that could possibly have been Gath.&nbsp; The
+utter extinction of that city is remarkable&mdash;the very name
+disappearing from the Bible after Micah, B.C. 730.&nbsp; Amos, B.C. 787,
+and Zephaniah, B.C. 630, mention the four other cities of the Philistines,
+omitting Gath.&nbsp; The name never occurs in the Apocrypha or the New
+Testament.</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Akir is now a very miserable village of unburnt brick; indeed,
+all the villages of this district are of that material, owing to the
+extreme rarity of stone.&nbsp; We saw women cutting bricks out of the
+viscous alluvial soil, and boys swimming luxuriously in the pool of rain
+water settled during winter in the <!-- page 158--><a
+name="page158"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 158</span>excavation for
+bricks&mdash;quarry we might style it, if the material were stone.&nbsp;
+There was plenty of ploughing in progress for the summer crops of sesame,
+durrah, etc., and the people seemed rich in horned cattle.</p>
+<p>This last feature constitutes another difference between them and the
+hill country.&nbsp; In the mountains, where the Bedaween forays are almost
+unknown, the cattle bred are principally sheep and goats.&nbsp; On the
+plains, flocks of sheep might be easily swept off by those marauders, oxen
+not so easily; the people, therefore, principally breed this species of
+cattle, and instead of idle shepherd boys amusing themselves with little
+flutes, and guiding the sheep by throwing stones at them, the herds here
+are driven by mounted horsemen with long poles.&nbsp; The flatness of the
+country and the frequency of oxen will serve to illustrate the exactness of
+Bible narratives, particularly in the matter of the wheeled carriage and
+the kine used for conveying the ark of God from this place, Ekron, to
+Bethshemesh (I Sam. vi.)</p>
+<p>Forward we went to <i>Yabneh</i>, (Jabneel of Josh. xv. II, and Jabneh
+of 2 Chron. xxvi. 6,) where it is mentioned in connexion with Gath and
+Ashkelon.&nbsp; It was a border city of Judah, where the <i>Wadi
+Sur&acirc;r</i>, (called here the river <i>Rubin</i>,) forms the boundary
+between Judah and Dan.&nbsp; I think we may identify it as the
+&ldquo;Me-Jarkon and the border that is over against Japho,&rdquo; of Josh.
+xix. 46.&nbsp; It is the <!-- page 159--><a name="page159"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 159</span>Jamnia, where, for a long time after the Roman
+overthrow of Jerusalem, was a celebrated college of the Talmudists, before,
+however, the traditions and speculations of the rabbis were collected into
+volumes of Mishna and Gemara.&nbsp; It is believed that the truly great and
+venerable Gamaliel is buried here.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p159.jpg">
+<img alt="Ancient church, now mosque, Yabneh" src="images/p159.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Yabneh stands on a rising ground, and although a village of sun-baked
+bricks, it has remains of a Christian church, now used as a mosque, with a
+tower of stone.</p>
+<p>While resting under a tree, awaiting the coming up of our baggage,
+&rsquo;Abd&rsquo;errahhm&acirc;n Bek el &rsquo;Asali, a companion of ours
+from Jerusalem, threw a stone at a young filly and cursed her, because the
+colours of her legs were of unlucky omen.&nbsp; On such matters the native
+Moslems entertain strong prejudices, which are based upon precise and
+well-known rules.</p>
+<p><!-- page 160--><a name="page160"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+160</span>On the arrival of our mules, we pitched the tents upon a pretty
+green common with a row of trees; the verdure consisted of wild clover, and
+leaves remaining of wild flowers&mdash;chiefly of the wild pink.&nbsp; It
+is an Arab proverb that &ldquo;Green is a portion of paradise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The villages in sight were <i>Besheet</i> to the S.E., and <i>El
+Kubeibeh</i> to the N.E.&nbsp; Our day&rsquo;s journey from Bait Nateef had
+been one of only seven hours, viz., from 8 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>
+to 3 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span></p>
+<p>The population seemed very industrious: they have cheerful
+<i>bay&acirc;rahs</i>, or enclosed orchards, and the open fields were
+exceedingly well cultivated.&nbsp; The evening scene was most pleasing,
+comprising the return of flocks and herds from pasture, and the
+barley-harvest coming home upon asses and camels with bells on their
+necks&mdash;all enlivened by the singing or chattering of women and
+children.</p>
+<p>As the day advanced I was happily employed at my tent door reading the
+Arabic New Testament; it should have been in Hebrew at Yamnia, as being
+more profitable than all the Pirk&eacute; Avoth of the Talmud.&nbsp; At
+sunset our party walked out in the fields to shoot the pretty
+bee-eaters.</p>
+<p>Of this village there is a tale current among the peasantry over the
+country, which conveys an important lesson for the conduct of human
+life.</p>
+<p>An old Shaikh of Yabneh had five sons.&nbsp; When <!-- page 161--><a
+name="page161"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 161</span>very old, a complaint
+was brought to him that some one had stolen a cock; so he called together
+his sons and ordered them all to search for the cock; but it was not
+found.&nbsp; Some time afterwards it was represented to him that a sheep
+was stolen; he then commanded his sons to go and search for the cock.&nbsp;
+They replied, &ldquo;O our father, it is not a cock but a sheep that is
+stolen;&rdquo; but he persisted in his command, and they did what they well
+could, but without success.&nbsp; After that he was told that a cow was
+missing; he again commanded his sons to look after the cock.&nbsp; They
+thinking he had lost his senses, cried, &ldquo;<i>Sallem &rsquo;akalak ya
+Abuna</i>, (May God perfect thy understanding, O our father,) it is not a
+cock but a cow that is missing.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Go look for the
+cock,&rdquo; persevered the old man; they obeyed, but this time again
+without success.&nbsp; People wondered and thought him in a state of mere
+dotage.&nbsp; Next came the news that a man was killed.&nbsp; The father
+pertinaciously adhered to his first injunctions, and ordered his sons to
+look for the cock.&nbsp; Again they returned without finding it, and in the
+end it came to pass that the killing of the man brought on a blood feud
+with his relations&mdash;the factions of several villages took up the case
+for revenge, and the whole town was destroyed, and lay long in a state of
+desolation, for want of sufficient zeal in discovering and punishing the
+first offence, the stealing of the cock, which thus became a root of all
+the rest.&nbsp; There is <!-- page 162--><a name="page162"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 162</span>a good deal of wisdom contained in this
+narrative or allegory, whichever it may be considered.&nbsp; Offenders
+become emboldened by impunity, and the first beginnings should be
+checked.</p>
+<p><i>Thursday</i> 3<i>d</i>.&mdash;Early dew around the tents upon the
+green.&nbsp; We mounted at half-past six.&nbsp; I rode up to the village
+and got to the top of the tower in the village.</p>
+<p>After an hour and a half of level riding southwards, we arrived at a
+broad old sycamore in the middle of the road.</p>
+<p>Another hour brought us to <i>Asdood</i> (<i>Ashdod</i>) of the
+Philistines, with <i>Atna</i> and <i>Bait Dur&acirc;s</i> on our
+left.&nbsp; I do not know where in all the Holy Land I have seen such
+excellent agriculture of grain, olive-trees, and orchards of fruit, as here
+at Ashdod.&nbsp; The fields would do credit to English farming&mdash;the
+tall, healthy, and cleanly population wore perfectly white though coarse
+dresses, and carried no guns, only the short sword called the
+Khanjar.&nbsp; We rested in an orchard beneath a large mulberry-tree, the
+fruit of which was just setting, and the adjacent pomegranate-trees shone
+in their glazed foliage and bright scarlet blossoms, the hedges of prickly
+pear were bursting into yellow fruit, palm-trees rising beyond, the sky was
+of deep sapphire brilliancy, and the sun delightfully hot.</p>
+<p>Here then had been the principal temple of the fish-god Dagon, which
+fell nightly in presence of <!-- page 163--><a name="page163"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 163</span>the Israelitish ark.&nbsp; Not the only
+temple, however, for there is still a village near Jaffa with the name of
+<i>Bait Dajan</i>, and another still further north, in the same plain, but
+in the Nabloos district.&nbsp; Strange that this temple of Dagon at Ashdod
+should have survived and preserved its worship so late as nearly to the
+Christian era, when it was burnt by Jonathan the Jerusalem high priest,
+(Josephus Ant., xiii. 4, 4; Macc. x. 84.)</p>
+<p>Ought not Gath to be sought between this, and Ekron, according to 1 Sam.
+v.?&nbsp; See also 2 Chron. xxvi. 6.</p>
+<p>Soon after remounting we arrived at the ruin of a fine old <i>Khan</i>,
+one of the numerous establishments of the kind upon the camel road from
+Damascus to Egypt, but now every one of them is broken and unfit for
+use.&nbsp; There was a noble column of granite lying across the gateway,
+and two Welies close adjoining.</p>
+<p>Reached <i>Hham&acirc;meh</i> at 11 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>,
+from which we turned aside through lanes of gardens, and over deep sand
+towards <i>&rsquo;Ascalon</i>, leaving <i>Mejdal</i> on our left, with its
+lofty tower rising over an extensive plantation of olive-trees.&nbsp; This
+tower is believed to be of Moslem erection.&nbsp; Passing another village
+on our left, we at length came to <i>Jurah</i>, a wretched brick hamlet,
+stuck as it were against the ancient walls of &rsquo;Ascalon.</p>
+<p>We were on the sea-beach at noon.&nbsp; Upon this beach lie stupendous
+masses of overthrown <!-- page 164--><a name="page164"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 164</span>city wall, and numerous columns of blue-gray
+granite of no very imposing dimensions.&nbsp; A great number of these have
+been at some time built horizontally into those walls, from which their
+ends protrude like muzzles of cannon from a modern fortification.&nbsp;
+This arrangement, with the same effect, is also found at Tyre,
+C&aelig;sarea, and other places along the coast.</p>
+<p>The site or lie of the city is principally in two hollow basins, in
+which the detrition of houses forms now a soil for grain, for fruit gardens
+and good tobacco.</p>
+<p>We were shown the ruins of what the people call &ldquo;the
+Church,&rdquo; where there are several very large columns of polished
+granite lying prostrate, but neither there nor elsewhere could any capitals
+be found belonging to the columns.&nbsp; All over the East such objects are
+appropriated by townspeople as ornaments inside the houses, especially at
+the mouths of wells.</p>
+<p>The people pointed out to us from a distance the spot where H. E. Zareef
+Pasha had lately obtained the marble slab of bas-relief, which he sent to
+the museum at Constantinople.</p>
+<p>The walls of &rsquo;Ascal&acirc;n are clearly distinguishable in all
+their circuit, and have been of great thickness.</p>
+<p>The position of this &ldquo;Bride of Syria,&rdquo; as the Saracens
+designated it, is very fine, and the prospect around must have been
+beautiful; but of <!-- page 165--><a name="page165"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 165</span>this prize of so many sieges and neighbouring
+battles, the joy of Richard C&oelig;ur de Lion, where he laboured with his
+own hands in repairing the broken walls, only its name with the scriptural
+and later romantic history remain to claim our attention, and verify the
+prediction of the prophet Zephaniah, ii. 4-6.</p>
+<p>I found no coins there, and none were brought to me; only some were
+brought to me in an after-journey at Mejdal; I therefore pass by for this
+time the classical allusions to the fish goddess, Deceto.&nbsp; A beautiful
+head of a female statue, but blackened by fire, brought from Ascalon, has
+since been sold to me, which I delivered to our museum.</p>
+<p>We remained there an hour, then rode to <i>Naaleea</i>.&nbsp; The fine
+plain over which we galloped must have had many an English rider upon it in
+the Crusading times&mdash;many a man who never saw &ldquo;merrie
+England&rdquo; again, even in company with King Richard.</p>
+<p><i>Naaleea</i>, though built of brick, bears an appearance of real
+cleanliness; the olive plantation from Mejdal reaches thus far.</p>
+<p>The barley reaped at <i>Berberah</i> was, I believe, the finest I have
+ever seen; and there were pretty roads winding among olive groves, orchards
+well enclosed by prickly-pear hedges, with bee-eaters skimming and
+twittering before us.</p>
+<p><!-- page 166--><a name="page166"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+166</span><i>Bait Jirja</i> on the left; then after a good while <i>Bait
+Hh&acirc;noon</i> also on the left.</p>
+<p>Reached <i>Ghuzzeh</i> (Gaza) at 5 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>&nbsp;
+The very remarkable approach is by an avenue of at least a mile long, very
+wide like a boulevard, through an immense park of olive grounds, with the
+city for an object of vista at the end.</p>
+<p>We encamped on the further side of Gaza, having the old reservoir called
+<i>Birket el Bash&acirc;</i> between us and the Lazaretto.</p>
+<p>Cheerful scene of camels and asses bearing the barley-harvest home,
+attended by women and children; small flocks of sheep also, with their
+shepherd lads playing sweet and irregular airs on their <i>nayahs</i>.</p>
+<p><i>Friday</i> 4<i>th</i>.&mdash;I resolved to stay here over Sunday.</p>
+<p>The morning was cool, and though our situation was entirely unsheltered,
+I judged even the risk of exposure to the noontide sun, when it should
+arrive, not to be refused, while it gave us the blessings of free air from
+the sea and delivery from mosquitoes, which would certainly have plagued us
+under the shade of the fruit-trees.&nbsp; There was a mean suburb in front
+of our position, tenanted solely by Egyptians.</p>
+<p>The sound of the distant sea rolling on the beach (though this was out
+of sight,) was music to my ears.&nbsp; Near us was a fence of the
+prickly-pear, (named <i>Saber</i>, or &ldquo;patience&rdquo; in
+Arabic.)&nbsp; One of <!-- page 167--><a name="page167"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 167</span>our party referred to its extraordinary degree
+of vitality, even under disadvantageous circumstances.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the &rsquo;Asali, &ldquo;she has drunk of the
+water of life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I went to visit the Lazaretto, and while conversing with the doctor (M.
+Esp&eacute;ron,) and the Turkish superintendent, four wild Arabs were
+brought in, their hands fettered and chains on their legs, accused of
+striking a soldier near <i>Khan Yunas</i>.&nbsp; When identified by
+witnesses merely uttering two or three words, they were removed, cruelly
+pushed about in their chains and beaten on the head by the soldiers, who
+enjoyed the cowardly fun which they would not dare to perpetrate had the
+fine tall fellows had their limbs at liberty.</p>
+<p>The captain of the Bashi-bozuk, having called at my tents with his
+mounted troop, followed me to the Lazaretto.</p>
+<p>Returning home, and after some rest, or rather a visit from some Greek
+Christians which gave me no rest, I went to visit the newly-arrived
+kaimakam, or governor, one of the celebrated &rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l-Hadi
+family of Nabloos.&nbsp; His divan room was crowded with visitors of
+congratulation: such as shaikhs of villages, and some dignified Arab
+chiefs; the latter interceding on behalf of the men recently captured by
+the quarantine people; the former soliciting their official investitures
+for their several districts.&nbsp; The house was exceedingly mean and <!--
+page 168--><a name="page168"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+168</span>shattered, but this medley of visitors formed an interesting
+subject of study.</p>
+<p>I next visited the k&acirc;di, (judge,) who was holding his court in the
+open air, with a canvas screen to shelter his head from the sun, in the
+midst of orchards and a flower garden.&nbsp; A cause, in which some women
+were vociferating and screeching in Arabic, (to which that language lends
+peculiar facility,) was suspended in order to receive my visit, and the
+litigants had to remain in silence at some distance till I left, returning
+to the tents.</p>
+<p>All the people here praise the air and water of Gaza, and declare that
+disease of any kind is nearly unknown, except ophthalmia, which, of course,
+can be generally prevented.&nbsp; Provisions are said to be cheap; but the
+bread, as sold in the market, not so good as in Jerusalem or Nabloos.&nbsp;
+Probably their excellent wheat is exported to a distance.</p>
+<p><i>Saturday</i>, 5<i>th</i>.&mdash;Rode southwards on a day&rsquo;s
+excursion to Khan Yunas, with my people and an escort of two of the
+quarantine Bashi-bozuk.&nbsp; One of these, named Hadji Ghaneem, was a
+hardy old fellow, encircled by pistols and swords; his old gun, that was
+slung at his back, had the rusty bayonet fixed, perhaps fixed by the
+rust.&nbsp; The other, Hadji Khaleel, was an amusing companion, with plenty
+to tell and fond of talking.</p>
+<p><!-- page 169--><a name="page169"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+169</span>Started before 7 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>, passing between
+cornfields, with numerous larks trilling in the air.</p>
+<p>At some distance we came to a low hill lying on our right hand, all the
+ground about being mere sea sand drifted inland.&nbsp; This is called
+<i>Tell-ul-&rsquo;Ejel</i>, &ldquo;the Calf&rsquo;s Hill,&rdquo; so named
+from its being haunted by the ghost of a calf, which no one has yet laid
+hold of, but whenever this shall be accomplished the fortunate person will
+come into possession of the boundless treasures concealed within the
+hill.&nbsp; Some say that this good luck will happen to any one that is
+favoured with a dream of the calf three times in succession.&nbsp; All our
+party professed to believe the local tradition, especially one who had been
+in Europe, and from whom such credulity had been less expected; but he was
+sure that some tales of that nature are well founded, and if so, why not
+this?&nbsp; In my opinion, it is probably a superstition connected with
+some ancient form of idolatry.</p>
+<p>Half-way along our journey we came to a village called <i>Ed Dair</i>,
+(the convent, perhaps the <i>Dair el Belahh</i> of the list;) but this
+appellation Dair is often given to any large old edifice of which the
+origin is unknown.&nbsp; Here was a loop-holed Moslem tower occupied by
+twenty men of the Bashi-bozuk.&nbsp; Such towers are called <i>Shuneh</i>
+in the singular, <i>Shu&acirc;n</i> in the plural.</p>
+<p><i>Khan Yunas</i> is a hamlet of unburnt bricks, dirty and ruinous,
+which is not always the case with <!-- page 170--><a
+name="page170"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 170</span>other villages of
+that material; the reason of this being so, I suppose to be, that most of
+its few houses are inhabited by Turkish soldiers.&nbsp; This is the last
+station southwards held by the sultan&rsquo;s forces, the next, <i>El
+Areesh</i>, being an Egyptian outpost.&nbsp; I was desirous of visiting
+that place had time allowed, not only for the satisfaction of curiosity on
+the above account, but in order to get some idea from ocular inspection
+whether the little winter stream or Wadi there could ever have been the
+divinely-appointed boundary of the land promised to Abraham and his seed
+for ever.&nbsp; My prepossession is certainly to the contrary.</p>
+<p>However, I rode ten minutes beyond Khan Yunas, and sat to rest in a
+field beneath a fig-tree; the day was hot and brilliant, but there was a
+fine breeze coming in from the sea.&nbsp; The scene was picturesque enough,
+for there was a mosque-minaret and a broken tower rising behind a thick
+grove of palm-trees and orchards of fig, vine and pomegranate&mdash;a high
+bank of yellow sand behind the houses of the village, and the dark blue
+Mediterranean behind that.</p>
+<p>With respect to the name of the place, there are many such in the
+country, and it is a mistake to ridicule the Moslems for believing in all
+of them as true sites of the large fish vomiting out Jonah, which they do
+not.&nbsp; These are, I believe, merely commemorative stations, and we are
+not in the habit of ridiculing Christians for having several <!-- page
+171--><a name="page171"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 171</span>churches
+under the same appellation; also it is not quite certain that all the
+Welies named after Yunas (Jonas) or Moosa (Moses) do refer to the Old
+Testament prophets.&nbsp; There have been Mohammedan reputed saints bearing
+those names.</p>
+<p>Near this place is a village called <i>Beni Seheela</i>.&nbsp; On the
+return we left behind us the old Hadji Ghaneem, with his brown bayonet, and
+took a nearer road to Gaza, not so close to the sea as that by which we had
+left it.&nbsp; It was an easy pleasant ride, and there were barley crops
+almost all the way.&nbsp; We reached the tents in three hours from Khan
+Yunas.</p>
+<p>At sunset, which is the universal dinner time in the east, I went to
+dine with the Governor Mohammed &rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l Hadi; it was a
+miserable degrading scene of gorging the pilaff with the hands and
+squeezing the butter of it through the fingers, without even water for
+drink supplied by the servants.&nbsp; The guests were about a dozen in
+number, and they were crowded so closely round the tinned tray as only to
+admit of their right arms being thrust between their neighbours, in order
+to do which the sleeves had to be tucked back; there was but little
+conversation beyond that of the host encouraging the guests to eat
+more.</p>
+<p>Previous to eating, the governor and his younger brother performed their
+prayers in brief, after experiencing some difficulty in finding the true
+Kebleh direction for prayer, the rest of the company <!-- page 172--><a
+name="page172"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 172</span>gossiping around them
+all the time.&nbsp; Above our heads was suspended a rude copper lamp, and
+the terrace just outside the door was occupied by slaves and other
+attendants; boughs of adjoining palms and other trees were softly stirred
+by an evening breeze, and the imperial moon shone over all.</p>
+<p>After washing of hands and a short repose, (the other guests smoking of
+course their chibooks and narghilehs, and chatting upon topics of local
+interest,) I asked leave, according to Oriental etiquette, to take my
+departure.</p>
+<p><i>Sunday</i>, 6<i>th</i>.&mdash;Read the eighth chapter of Acts in
+Arabic, and some of our English liturgy in that noble language, with one of
+my companions.&nbsp; I feel certain, concerning the dispute whether the
+word &epsilon;&rho;&eta;&mu;&omicron;&sigmaf; (desert) in the twenty-sixth
+verse of the above chapter, refers to the city or to the road, that the
+true sense of the passage is this, &ldquo;Go toward the south unto the way
+that goeth down from Jerusalem unto Gaza&rdquo;&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, the way
+which is desert or free from towns and villages&mdash;as in Matt. iii. 1,
+and other places where the word in question does not imply the common
+European idea of any desolate wilderness.</p>
+<p>I enjoyed a Sabbath stillness during most of the day, the people having
+been instructed that English Christians observe the Lord&rsquo;s-day with
+more serious composure than it is the habit of native Christians to do.</p>
+<p><!-- page 173--><a name="page173"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+173</span>In the afternoon, however, the governor came on a visit with a
+long train of attendants mounted on beautiful horses, for which, indeed,
+this district is famed&mdash;there were specimens of M&acirc;naki, Jilfi,
+K&rsquo;baish&acirc;n, Mukhlad&icirc;yeh, etc., etc.&nbsp; Mohammed, of
+course, discoursed as well as he could on European politics, and stayed
+long.</p>
+<p>After his departure I strolled to look at some short columns of marble
+standing on a slight swell of ground; they are now inscribed to the memory
+of certain Moslem martyrs in battle of our fourteenth century, <i>i.e.</i>,
+about seven centuries after the Hej&rsquo;ra.&nbsp; These columns look very
+much as if they had been taken from some old Christian church, then each
+sawn into halves, and each of the halves partly sliced on one side to
+receive the inscription.</p>
+<p>After sunset I dined with old Ibrahim Jahhsh&acirc;n, and his numerous
+household, (the principal one of the Christian families,) and a troop of
+friends.&nbsp; It was not a better entertainment than that of the kaimakam
+yesterday; perhaps, it would not be desirable for him to surpass the
+constituted authority of the city in such matters.</p>
+<p>Among the company was the N&acirc;zir el Auk&acirc;f, (the
+superintendent of mosque-endowment property,) also a Durweesh from Lahore,
+consequently a British subject,&mdash;he was full of fun, and wanted me to
+make him a present of some fulminating balls and crackers; he assured me
+that in the Hharam (sanctuary, commonly called the Mosque <!-- page
+174--><a name="page174"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 174</span>of Omar,) at
+Jerusalem, there were at least thirty such British subjects as himself
+residing, including his own brother.&nbsp; A Turkish soldier present drank
+wine, as soon as the commissioner for inquiring into the delinquencies of
+the late governor had turned his back upon the table.</p>
+<p>Before dinner I had accompanied the family to the church, (Greek rite,)
+where the priest was waiting to receive me.&nbsp; It was a poverty-stricken
+edifice, purposely kept so, in order to obviate the envy and malice of the
+Mohammedans; and all the Christians that I saw in Gaza were a
+stupid-looking people; they are few in number, and grievously oppressed by
+their numerous Moslem fellow-townsmen, being far away from the notice of
+consuls.&nbsp; One cannot but regard with compassion a people who have for
+ages endured suffering for the name of Christ, while facilities are offered
+for acquiring wealth and honour by apostasy.&nbsp; Generation after
+generation remains still as firm in their Christian creed as those before
+them, and now perhaps more so than ever.</p>
+<p>I was surprised to learn that it is only about two generations since the
+Samaritans ceased to be a sect in Gaza, with their place of
+worship&mdash;they are now found nowhere but in Nabloos.</p>
+<p>There is a slave-traffic in Gaza; but it only consists in the
+consignment of articles already commissioned for in Egypt, on behalf of
+private purchasers in Syria&mdash;at least, so the world is given <!-- page
+175--><a name="page175"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 175</span>to
+understand.&nbsp; The boundary of the two countries is so near that the
+Arabic dialect spoken here nearly approaches the Egyptian.</p>
+<p>I made some inquiries as to the popular ideas on the achievements of
+Samson at Gaza, but only obtained such uncertain and even contradictory
+answers, that on this journey it did not seem worth while to take any great
+trouble on the subject; but I certainly had not expected to get better
+information from either the Mohammedans or from the poor ignorant
+Christians there.</p>
+<p>The night was most beautiful, with full moonlight streaming, and stars
+peering between the swaying fronds of the lofty palm-trees, which grow more
+luxuriantly in Gaza then I had seen elsewhere.</p>
+<p>The muleteers singing around their watch-fire.</p>
+<p><i>Monday</i>, 7<i>th</i>.&mdash;Tents struck and march commenced at 7
+<span class="smcap">a.m.</span>&nbsp; We returned through the great avenue
+by which we had arrived, but soon diverged upon the road to Hebron.</p>
+<p>Alongside of <i>Bait Hhanoon</i> by half-past eight, where there was
+abundance of bee-eaters, and these imply fruit-trees.&nbsp;
+&rsquo;Abd&rsquo;errahhm&acirc;n tried to shoot some, but failed, having no
+small shot, but only bullets for his gun.</p>
+<p>At nine we left <i>Timrah</i> a little on our left.&nbsp; The people
+everywhere busied in reaping barley&mdash;a very lively scene; the reapers,
+as usual all over Palestine, wearing large leather aprons exactly <!-- page
+176--><a name="page176"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 176</span>like those
+used by blacksmiths in England, only unblackened by the forge; the women
+had face veils of the Egyptian pattern.&nbsp; Cows, goats, and sheep were
+feeding at liberty in the fields upon the new stubble.</p>
+<p>In thirty-five minutes more we arrived at <i>Semsem</i>, leaving <i>Bait
+Nejed</i> on the right.</p>
+<p>At five minutes past ten we reached <i>B&rsquo;rair</i>, near which we
+rested for an hour, the day being very sultry, under an old tamarisk-tree,
+which on the plains instead of <i>Turfa</i> is called <i>Itil</i>.</p>
+<p>An intelligent old man named &rsquo;Ali came up to me from the reaping
+and conversed much on the sad condition of agricultural affairs,
+complaining of the cruel oppression suffered by the peasantry from their
+petty local tyrants, and entreated me if I had any means of letting the
+Sultan of Constantinople know of it, that I would do so.&nbsp; He
+particularly described the exactions they had to endure from Muslehh el
+&rsquo;Az&rsquo;zi of Bait Jibreen, and all his family.</p>
+<p>Thence passing over an extensive plain, we had in sight for a long time
+a distant Dair (so-called convent) and village of <i>Kar&acirc;teen</i>,
+also at one time a village called <i>Hhata</i>.</p>
+<p>At twenty minutes to one we reached <i>Falooja</i>; the heat had become
+intense, and incessant swarms of black stinging flies annoyed our horses
+beyond patience.&nbsp; In fact the Philistine plain (which, however, we
+were now soon to leave) was always noted <!-- page 177--><a
+name="page177"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 177</span>for the plague of
+flies, and this gave rise to the ancient deprecatory worship of Baal-zebub,
+&ldquo;the lord of flies,&rdquo; by that people; there is still a village
+upon the plain named <i>Dair ed Dub&acirc;n</i>, &ldquo;the convent (or
+temple) of flies.&rdquo;&nbsp; Later in the summer this plague is said to
+be so intolerable to horses and animals of burden that travelling is only
+attempted there by night-time.</p>
+<p>At length came a rustling noise along the fields and rain fell slowly in
+drops large as good teaspoonfuls, yet the heat was so great that my coat of
+nearly white linen did not for some time show marks of wetness; a black
+cloud from which the water fell accompanied us along the line of route, and
+the rain from it increased.</p>
+<p>Over the plain going eastwards we had for a long time in view a rocky
+hill with a Weli crowning its summit; on our right, <i>i.e.</i> southwards,
+a conspicuous object, and called <i>&rsquo;Ar&acirc;k Munsh&icirc;yah</i>
+(the rock of Munsh&icirc;yah.)&nbsp; This is not to be confounded with the
+similar cliff cropping out of the plain, but upon our left, and called
+<i>Tell es S&acirc;fieh</i>.</p>
+<p>We noticed several deserted villages with small breastworks and turrets
+of loose construction remaining where the peasantry had of late resisted
+the raids of the southern Bedaween, but unsuccessfully.&nbsp; We were told
+by a solitary foot-passenger of such incursions having taken place only a
+day or two before, whereupon our muleteers took fright and hurried on
+apace.&nbsp; We all examined the state <!-- page 178--><a
+name="page178"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 178</span>of our firearms,
+while the storm was driving furiously in our faces.</p>
+<p>The rain was over as we reached <i>Bait Jibreen</i>, just after 3 <span
+class="smcap">p.m.</span>&nbsp; This important place was our station for
+the day.&nbsp; We pitched in an eligible situation under a line of
+olive-trees at some distance from the houses, in view of the principal
+antique buildings.&nbsp; The principal people came out to welcome us,
+especially &rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l &rsquo;Azeez, the brother of the N&acirc;zir
+Shaikh Muslehh, for whom I had brought a letter of recommendation from the
+governor of Gaza.</p>
+<p>We were fatigued as much as anything from the effect of the shirocco
+wind.&nbsp; Then dark clouds from a distance with thunder surrounded
+us.&nbsp; As the time of sunset approached, the preparations for dinner
+were interrupted by the driving of a heavy shirocco, low, near the ground,
+which soon became so strong that the tents began to tumble over, and we
+took refuge in the house of &rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l &rsquo;Azeez; there was,
+however, no rain.</p>
+<p>Here then I was lodged in a house of sun-baked bricks plastered inside
+with mud, but as clean as such a house could possibly be.&nbsp; There were
+cupboard recesses in the walls, a fireplace and chimney, wooden nails
+driven into &ldquo;sure places&rdquo; in the walls, (see Isa. xxii. 23,)
+strange scratches of blue and red painting in fancy scrolls, etc.; a raised
+Mastabah or dais, and a lower part of course near the door, for guests to
+leave their shoes there; the <!-- page 179--><a name="page179"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 179</span>whole being roofed by a few strong beams
+wattled between with faggot-wood.&nbsp; A piece of ancient marble lay
+across the doorway.</p>
+<p>The very rudely fabricated lamp was lighted from a huge clump of wood
+taken burning from the hearth.&nbsp; Dinner as uncivilised but as
+hospitable as could be expected at half-past nine.&nbsp; I should have had
+my own long before but for the tempest outside.</p>
+<p>News arrived that eighty people from <i>Kuriet el &rsquo;Aneb</i> (the
+well-known village of Abu Gosh on the Jerusalem road from Jaffa) were
+escaping to us across the hills, on account of troubles at their home.</p>
+<p>Then we very soon lay down to sleep.</p>
+<p><i>Tuesday</i> 8<i>th</i>.&mdash;&rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l &rsquo;Azeez and
+his two young sons escorted us in looking over the ruins of old
+Eleutheropolis, as their town was called in the period of early
+Christianity.&nbsp; These consist of a church near the great well, another
+on a hill farther eastwards called St Anna, or, as the Arabs pronounce it,
+<i>Sandanna</i>, and numerous extensive caverns, probably enlargements by
+art from nature.</p>
+<p>The former church has a roof remaining only over one of the aisles; the
+ground plan of the whole edifice is, however, sufficiently marked out by
+the fragments of columns <i>in situ</i>.</p>
+<p>St Anna is larger and more perfect than this; the semicircular apse is
+entire, and there are remains of other buildings attached to the
+church.&nbsp; <!-- page 180--><a name="page180"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 180</span>It stands on high ground, and commands a very
+fine prospect.</p>
+<p>The caverns are formed in the substance of chalk hills, often in a
+circular form, with a rounded roof, through which an aperture admits both
+air and daylight.&nbsp; Antiquarians are puzzled to account for the origin
+of these, as they are too numerous and capacious to be needed for supply of
+water; besides that in common times the large well and aqueducts that bring
+water from a distance would suffice for that purpose.&nbsp; They are
+likewise too extensive and deep to be required for magazines of grain, such
+as the villages on the open plains cut into the underground rocks for
+preservation of their food from the raids of the Bedaween; perhaps,
+however, some were used for one of these purposes and some for the
+other.</p>
+<p>Near the entrance of one of these excavations, in which there are
+passages or corridors with running ornament sculptured along each side, we
+found figures (now headless, of course, since the Moslem conquest)
+resembling church saints in Europe&mdash;one, indeed, had its head
+remaining, though disfigured, and the arms posed in the manner of the
+Virgin Mary when holding the infant Saviour.&nbsp; These were sculptured in
+the chalk rock itself, and standing in niches hollowed behind them.&nbsp;
+If these were really what they seemed to be, they must have been made in
+the era of the Latin <!-- page 181--><a name="page181"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 181</span>kingdom, for the Oriental Christians have
+never made <i>images</i> of the saints.</p>
+<p>In two other of these caverns, high up on their sides or within the
+cupola, we saw short inscriptions of black paint, (if I remember rightly,)
+the large characters of which had very much the general forms of
+Cufic-Arabic, but not the Cufic of the old coins.&nbsp; There was also an
+ornamented cross in this cupola, and other crosses in other chambers.&nbsp;
+We were totally unable to satisfy ourselves as to how the inscriptions
+could have been written at such inaccessible heights.&nbsp; Certainly the
+present race of people are unable even to deface them, were they disposed
+to do so.</p>
+<p>One excavation we entered with some trouble near the top, and out of
+some labyrinthine passages we descended a spiral staircase, with a low wall
+to hold by in descending, all cut into the solid but soft rock; there were
+also small channels for conducting water from above to the
+bottom&mdash;these demonstrate the use of the whole elaborate work in this
+instance, namely for holding water.</p>
+<p>Returning to rest awhile in the house, &rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l &rsquo;Azeez
+assured me that immensely tall as he is, he had had eight brothers, all at
+least equal to himself; most of them had been killed in their faction
+battles, and his father, taller than himself, had died at the age of
+thirty-one.&nbsp; His sons could neither read nor write; they at one time
+made a <!-- page 182--><a name="page182"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+182</span>beginning, but the teacher did not stay long enough to finish the
+job.&nbsp; &ldquo;However,&rdquo; said he, pointing to the one sitting by
+us, perhaps ten years of age, &ldquo;he can ride a mare so that none of our
+enemies can possibly overtake him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We left Bait Jibreen soon after 9 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>,
+riding through a grove of olives, and soon arrived alongside of <i>Dair
+Nahh&acirc;z</i>, <a name="citation182"></a><a href="#footnote182"
+class="citation">[182]</a> and afterwards <i>Sen&acirc;brah</i>.&nbsp; By
+noon we were quite off the plain, and entering a beautiful green valley
+bounded by cliffs of rock sprinkled with dwarf evergreen oak and pines, the
+spaces between them being filled up with purple cistus, yellow salvia, and
+other flowers.&nbsp; This <!-- page 183--><a name="page183"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 183</span>continued for an hour, by which time we had
+gradually attained a considerable elevation, where we had our last survey
+for that journey of the Philistine plain and its glorious long limit, the
+Mediterranean Sea.</p>
+<p>In another quarter of an hour we rested among the wreck of <i>Khirbet en
+Nas&acirc;ra</i>, (ruins of the Christians,) not far from Hebron.&nbsp;
+Thence I despatched a messenger to my old friend the Pakeed (agent in
+temporal affairs) of the Sephardim Jews in the city, and he sent out
+provisions to my halting-place under the great oak, above a mile distant
+from Hebron.</p>
+<p>In regard to the researches after the lost site of Gath, I may mention
+that on a later visit to Bait Jibreen, I got Shaikh Muslehh (the government
+N&acirc;zir, and the head of his family) to tell me all the names of
+deserted places he could recollect in his neighbourhood.&nbsp; I wrote from
+his dictation as follows, but it does not seem that the object of inquiry
+is among them.&nbsp; In Arabic the name would most probably be <i>Jett</i>
+or <i>Jatt</i>.</p>
+<p></p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Mer&acirc;sh.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Munsoorah.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Umm Saidet.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Sagheefah.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Sheman&icirc;yeh.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>&rsquo;Ar&acirc;k Hala.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Lahh&rsquo;m.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Shaikh Am&acirc;n.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>&rsquo;Attar.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Kobaibeh.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Ob&ecirc;yah.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>St Anna.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Fort.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Ghutt.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Judaidah.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>
+<p>Martos&icirc;yah.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Ahhsan&icirc;yeh.</p>
+</td>
+<td>
+<p>Ilmah.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p></p>
+<h2><!-- page 184--><a name="page184"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+184</span>CHAPTER IV.&nbsp; HEBRON TO BEERSHEBA, AND HEBRON TO JAFFA.</h2>
+<p>In August 1849 I left my large family encampment under the branches of
+the great oak of Sibta, commonly called Abraham&rsquo;s oak by most people
+except the Jews, who do not believe in any Abraham&rsquo;s oak there.&nbsp;
+The great patriarch planted, indeed, a grove at Beersheba; but the
+&ldquo;<i>Elon&eacute; Mamre</i>&rdquo; they declare to have been
+&ldquo;plains,&rdquo; not &ldquo;oaks,&rdquo; (which would be
+<i>Allon&eacute; Mamre</i>,) and to have been situated northwards instead
+of westwards from the present Hebron.&nbsp; With a couple of attendants I
+was bound for Beersheba.&nbsp; The chief of the quarantine, not having a
+soldier at home, gave us a peasant to walk with us as far as the
+<i>Boorj</i>, (Tower,) with a letter of <i>our own</i> handwriting in his
+name, addressed to the guard there, directing them to escort us
+further.</p>
+<p>Scrambling up a steep rough lane, due south from the tree, with
+vineyards on either side richly laden with fruit, and occasional
+sumach-trees <!-- page 185--><a name="page185"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+185</span>bearing bright red berries, we were rewarded on the summit by a
+vast prospect of country, hilly before us in the south, Moab and Edom
+mountains to the left, and Philistia plains with the Mediterranean on the
+right.</p>
+<p>All nature was revived by the evening sea-breeze, and the sun in
+undiminished grandeur was retiring towards his rest.</p>
+<p>On a summit like this, with a wide expanse laid out for survey, there
+are large and lively ideas to be conceived in matters of Scriptural
+geography.&nbsp; Consider, for instance, on that spot Psalm cviii., with
+its detail of territories one after another.&nbsp; That &ldquo;psalm of
+David&rdquo; declares that God in His holiness had decreed the future
+dispensations of <i>Shechem</i>, (there is its position, Nabloos, in the
+north of the circular landscape;) then the <i>valley of Succoth</i>, (there
+it is, the Gh&ocirc;r, or vale of the Jordan,) coasting between
+<i>Gilead</i>, <i>Manasseh</i>, and <i>Ephraim</i>; also <i>Moab</i>, with
+its springs of water, where He would (speaking in human poetic language)
+wash His feet, at the period of treading with His shoe over <i>Edom</i>:
+that remarkable event paralleled in the Prophecy of Isaiah lxiii., when, in
+apparel dyed red from Bozrah, the conqueror tramples down the people in his
+anger.&nbsp; The Psalmist then has to triumph over <i>Philistia</i>, that
+large Sheph&ecirc;lah stretched between us and the sea&mdash;concluding
+with the exclamation, &ldquo;Who will bring me into the strong city
+(Petra)? who will lead me into Edom?&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 186--><a name="page186"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+186</span>All this was accomplished by the providence of God in the history
+of David, that shepherd boy of Bethlehem, at whose coronation all Israel
+was gathered together at Hebron, just behind the spectator on this
+eminence.</p>
+<p>To return, however, from the solemnity of these historical meditations
+to the commonplace transactions of the journey, we had to carry on a
+considerable amount of wrangling with the muleteers, who were continually
+allowing their animals to stumble, and the ropes of the luggage to come
+loose, so that the things fell to the ground; I sent them back, and we
+proceeded without tents or bedding, only two blankets and our cloaks.&nbsp;
+The true reason of the men&rsquo;s behaviour lay in their dread of being
+attacked by wild Arabs, and having their animals carried off.</p>
+<p>It was about sunset, and our track lay over plains of arable land,
+between hills clothed with the usual dwarf evergreens, of baloot, arbutus,
+etc., then over eminences with tall fragrant pines, and the evening breeze
+sighing among their branches, such as I had only once heard since leaving
+Scotland, and that was in the Lebanon.&nbsp; Old stumps and half trunks of
+large trees standing among myriads of infantile sprouts of pines attested
+the devastation that was going on, by means of the peasantry, for making of
+charcoal, and for supplying logs to the furnaces of Hebron, where very rude
+manufactures of glass are carried on.</p>
+<p><!-- page 187--><a name="page187"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+187</span>Along a glen which opened into an arable plain with stubble of
+millet (durrah) remaining, but no village near.&nbsp; There we met a party
+of Arab women, and after them a boy mounted on a camel, who informed us
+that he was coming from <i>Merj-ed-D&ocirc;m</i>, lying between us and
+<i>Samua&rsquo;</i>, where there are remains of antiquity, such as large
+doorways, cisterns, etc.</p>
+<p>The country was all level enough for carriages; and it is probable that
+all the way in the south is practicable in like manner, for we know that
+Joseph sent carriages from Egypt to his father at Beersheba.</p>
+<p>The <i>Boorj</i> is simply a look-out tower, now used for quarantine
+purposes, ridiculous as they may be in the pure air of the desert.</p>
+<p>There are relics of a village about it; but as the people are living in
+caverns rather than taking pains to rebuild their houses, we may infer that
+they do not feel secure on the very last remnant of fixed habitations
+towards the great southern wilderness, although under Turkish
+government.</p>
+<p>They are, however, kept in considerable awe of the petty officers
+stationed there; for when one of our party was impatient at the intrusion
+of a cat near our supper cloth, the people besought us not to injure the
+animal, seeing that it was the property of the <i>Dowleh</i>
+(Government.)&nbsp; They furnished us with eggs and milk; and, after our
+meal, we lay down on the leeward side of the town, to await the <!-- page
+188--><a name="page188"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 188</span>rising of
+the moon.&nbsp; We had a fire burning near us, its red light flickering
+over the wild scene; the sky with its milky-way over our heads, and the
+polar star in the direction of England, fixed in its well-known place.</p>
+<p>The villagers had their own chatting round the watchfire, discussing
+local politics, chiefly, as to whether &rsquo;Abderrahhman the governor of
+Hebron was likely to accept the Pasha&rsquo;s invitation to meet
+&rsquo;Abdallah Wafa Effendi, who was sent with overtures of reconciliation
+between the brothers of the Amer family.&nbsp; This being a question that
+bore very nearly on their personal interests.</p>
+<p>I awoke just as the moon gleamed in the east, but did not arouse the
+youths for another half hour, till I became apprehensive of evil effects
+from their sleeping in the moonlight.</p>
+<p>After coffee we mounted and went forward, escorted by two of the
+quarantine guardians.&nbsp; There were no more hills, but the remaining
+country was all of hard untilled ground, with sprinklings of tamarisk and
+kali bushes, which showed we were entering on a new botanical region.</p>
+<p>Arrived at an Arab encampment, where our escort were obliged to hire the
+shaikh for showing us the way, as they either did not know it, or, which I
+believe the more probable, did not dare to take travellers over his land
+without his sharing in the profits, even though they were officials of
+quarantine.&nbsp; He soon came up, riding a fine mare of the <!-- page
+189--><a name="page189"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+189</span>Sakl&acirc;wi race, and his spear over the shoulder, glittering
+in the moonlight.&nbsp; His name was <i>Ay&acirc;n</i>, and his people were
+a small offset from the great <i>Tiy&acirc;hah</i> tribe.&nbsp; We passed
+several other such stations, of which we were always made aware beforehand
+by the barking of their dogs, and by seeing the camels browsing or reposing
+at a little distance from the tents.</p>
+<p>As the night advanced, the mist rose and increased till the stars were
+obscured and the moon scarcely perceptible; our clothes also became nearly
+wet through.</p>
+<p>We reached Beersheba (now called <i>Beer-es-Seba</i>) perhaps a couple
+of hours before daylight, and after sharing some food, wrapt the blankets
+over our heads, and lay down with our heads against the parapet stones of
+the great well, and fell asleep, notwithstanding the cold wet mist.</p>
+<p>I rose before the sun, and wrote two letters to friends in England by
+morning twilight.</p>
+<p>The mist disappeared as the glorious sun came forth; and we walked about
+to survey the place.&nbsp; The wide plain around was disused arable land,
+showing in some places some stubble from a recent harvest, but only in
+small patches, which in the early spring must have been cheerful to the
+sight.</p>
+<p>Near us was a pretty water-course of a winter torrent, shallow and
+comparatively wide, but then quite dry.</p>
+<p>The great well has an internal diameter at the <!-- page 190--><a
+name="page190"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 190</span>mouth of twelve feet
+six inches, or a circumference of nearly forty feet.&nbsp; The shaft is
+formed of excellent masonry to a great depth until it reaches the rock, and
+at this juncture a spring trickles perpetually.&nbsp; Around the mouth of
+the well is a circular course of masonry, topped by a circular parapet of
+about a foot high.&nbsp; And at a distance of ten or twelve feet are stone
+troughs placed in a concentric circle with the well, the sides of which
+have deep indentions made by the wear of ropes on the upper edges.</p>
+<p>The second well, about 200 yards farther south, is not more than five
+feet in diameter, but is formed of equally good masonry, and furnishes
+equally good water.&nbsp; This is the most common size of ancient wells
+throughout Palestine.</p>
+<p>Two other wells of proportions about equal to the first well were shown
+us, but they are filled to the brim with earth and stones; and Shaikh
+Ay&acirc;n told us of two others.&nbsp; The barbarous practice of filling
+up wells from motives of hostility was adopted at this place very soon
+after Abraham had dug them.&nbsp; (Gen. xxvi. 15, etc.)&nbsp; Who can tell
+how often these have been opened, closed and opened again?</p>
+<p>All Arab-speaking people wish to count neither more nor less than seven
+wells here, and so create the name <i>Seba</i>; but even in this way the
+etymology would not hold good, for the term <i>seven wells</i> would be
+<i>Seba Bear</i>, not <i>Beer-es-Seba</i>.&nbsp; From the <!-- page
+191--><a name="page191"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 191</span>Hebrew
+history, however, we know how the designation was first given.&nbsp; Gen.
+xxi. 31, &ldquo;Wherefore he called that place Beersheba, because there
+they <i>sware</i> both of them,&rdquo; <i>i.e.</i>, Abraham and
+Abimelech.&nbsp; Yet it deserves notice that the verb <i>to swear</i> is
+identical with the numeral <i>seven</i>; and in the three preceding verses
+we find Abraham ratifying the oath by a sacrifice of <i>seven</i> ewe-lambs
+as a public guarantee for the fulfilment of the conditions; the killing of
+lambs with this view is a usage which still obtains in the country.</p>
+<p>On a rising ground near the wells are scattered lines of houses,
+covering a considerable space; but all that now appears is of inferior
+construction, and of no importance.</p>
+<p>Soon after sunrise the Arabs of the vicinity came to water their flocks
+and camels at the troughs.&nbsp; Young men stripping themselves nearly
+naked, two at each well, pulled up goat-skins of water by the same rope,
+hand over hand, and singing in loud merriment, with most uncivilised
+screams between the verse lines.&nbsp; These men were of very dark
+complexion&mdash;not quite black, but nearly so.</p>
+<p>There were linnets singing also, but in far more agreeable melody; but
+where they could be was more than I could discover&mdash;not a tree or a
+shrub was within sight-distance.</p>
+<p>After an hour we commenced our return by a different route from that of
+our arrival.&nbsp; Shaikh Ay&acirc;n and Hadj &rsquo;Othman, of the
+quarantine, <!-- page 192--><a name="page192"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+192</span>amusing themselves with jereed-playing and other mimic
+man&oelig;uvres of warfare, which they performed very cleverly.</p>
+<p>The shaikh being dismissed with sufficient compliments on each side, we
+proceeded upon the main track from Egypt across the plain towards
+<i>Doher&icirc;yeh</i>, passing occasional parcels of durrah stubble rising
+out of mere scratches of the soil, varied by the wilderness plants of
+tamarisk, etc.&nbsp; When one remembers the fact of that same land in the
+days of Abraham and Isaac producing a hundredfold of corn, (Gen. xxvi. 12,)
+how deplorable it is to see it lying untilled for want of population, and
+serving only as so much space for wild tribes to roam over it!&nbsp; Surely
+it will not always remain so.</p>
+<p>Crossing a good road at right angles with ours, we met a large caravan
+of camels going eastwards.&nbsp; The people told us they were going to
+<i>Ma&rsquo;&acirc;n</i>, (beyond Petra,) one of the Hadj stations between
+Damascus and Mecca, where stores of provisions are always laid up by the
+Government for supply of the pilgrims at the appointed season of the
+year.</p>
+<p>Approaching the hills, we rested from the heat, which had become
+considerable, beneath a neb&rsquo;k-tree, where all the roads between Egypt
+and Hebron meet at a point.</p>
+<p>At the entrance of a valley between the hills the quails were very
+numerous, and so tame as to come almost under the horses&rsquo; feet.&nbsp;
+Unfortunately, just at the time when wanted, my <!-- page 193--><a
+name="page193"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 193</span>fowling-piece was
+found to be unloaded, that is to say, not reloaded after having gone off
+yesterday by an accident.</p>
+<p>It was a relief from the great heat to mount the hills to
+Doher&icirc;yeh, although the road was tiresome, winding round and among
+the bases of almost circular hills in succession.&nbsp; At the village all
+the population was cheerfully employed in threshing or winnowing the
+harvest, and their flocks crouched in the shade of the trees.&nbsp; It was
+early in the afternoon, and we lay down to rest under the branches of a
+fig-tree growing out of a cavern, which cavern was so large that we placed
+all our horses in it.</p>
+<p>We parted from the quarantine soldiers, and took a guide for
+Hebron.&nbsp; The road was good and direct, through a pleasant country, so
+that we made quick progress.&nbsp; At an hour and three-quarters from
+Doher&icirc;yeh we arrived at a pretty glen of evergreen oak and pine; and
+at the entrance of this glen is a fountain, called <i>Afeeri</i>, of
+beautiful water issuing from a rock.</p>
+<p>Shortly after we joined the route by which we had left our encampment
+yesterday, near the fountain of <i>Dilbeh</i>, where we had drawn water
+when outward bound.&nbsp; Then came to an ancient well of good masonry,
+hexagonal in shape, but without water.&nbsp; A cistern for rain-water was
+close adjoining.</p>
+<p>Reached the oak of Sibta in twenty-eight hours after leaving it, well
+pleased with having been able to <!-- page 194--><a
+name="page194"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 194</span>visit Beersheba, the
+scene of many ancient and holy transactions, in the days when the great
+patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, walked humbly with their God, and
+God gave them a faith capable of overthrowing mountains.</p>
+<p>In conclusion, I may express my regret that, although residing in the
+country many years afterwards, I could not get an opportunity of visiting
+either Beer-la-hai-roi or Isaac&rsquo;s well of Esek.&nbsp; (Gen. xxvi.
+20.)&nbsp; Concerning the former we find some indications in an appendix to
+Williams&rsquo; <i>Holy City</i>; and I have been assured personally that
+the latter is still held in estimation by the Bedaween tribes, under the
+name of <i>Es&acirc;k</i>, and frequented as a rendezvous for making truces
+and covenants.</p>
+<p>On breaking up our camp at Abraham&rsquo;s oak, the family took the
+direct road for Jerusalem, while I struck across the Philistine plain for
+Jaffa.</p>
+<p>With one horseman and a kaww&acirc;s, I diverged westwards from the
+common road just before the descent to &rsquo;Ain Dirweh, between it and
+the ruined town of Bait Soor, (Bethzur of Joshua xv. 58,) leaving Hhalhhool
+of the same verse on my right hand.&nbsp; Advanced gradually down a woody
+glen of the usual evergreen oak and pine.&nbsp; The higher part of the
+valley is in excellent cultivation, with careful walls, and drains to keep
+off the winter rains that descend from the hills, although no villages were
+in sight except in one place on an <!-- page 195--><a
+name="page195"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 195</span>eminence to the left,
+where an apparently well-built village was entirely abandoned.&nbsp; It is
+called <i>Ma&rsquo;naeen</i>; and the history of it, as I have since
+learned, is that it was only a few years before built by a colony of
+refugees from oppression in sundry villages, who concerted to set up on
+their own account, without regard to the authority of their family
+connexions, or of the hereditary shaikhs.&nbsp; So daring an innovation
+upon national customs was resented by a coalition of all the country round,
+who made war upon them, and dispersed the people once more to their
+miserable homes.&nbsp; The Turkish Government allowed of this proceeding,
+on the ground that to suffer the establishment of new villages (which of
+course implies new shaikhs to rule them) would derange the account-books of
+the taxes, which had been definitely fixed years before under the Egyptian
+Government.</p>
+<p>Lower down, where the glen became narrow and stony, a large rock has
+been hewn into a chamber for some ancient hermit, not unlike the one in the
+Wadi Ahhmed between Rachel&rsquo;s sepulchre and Batteer (Bether) near
+Jerusalem, only in this case the entrance is shaded by venerable
+karoobah-trees, so large as to cover the road also with their branches.</p>
+<p>We were met by various camel-parties carrying kali for the glass-works
+of Hebron during the approaching winter, also fine mats and other goods
+from Damietta, which, after being landed at Jaffa, are thus conveyed by
+reliefs of camels to <!-- page 196--><a name="page196"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 196</span>their destination of Hebron, Bethlehem, and
+Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>On emerging from the valley (Wadi Arab or Shaikh) into the open Vale of
+&rsquo;Elah, we had <i>Khar&acirc;s</i> perched on an eminence close at our
+right, and <i>Nuba</i> similarly posted to our left.</p>
+<p>Also the ruins of <i>&rsquo;Elah</i> were on our left, and far behind
+our left hand, in among the hills, on a commanding height, was Keelah.</p>
+<p>We were now traversing the Valley of &rsquo;Elah, which runs
+north-westwards, and which I have described in my former journey.&nbsp;
+Now, as on that visit, I saw young shepherd lads pasturing large flocks as
+David may have done over the same ground.</p>
+<p>This time, however, I had entered the valley from a different
+point&mdash;viz., from its eastern end at Khar&acirc;s, and not where
+Shocoh and Bait Nateef lie opposite to each other.</p>
+<p>We then traversed the same country as then as far as the village of
+<i>Khuldah</i>, which is a very thriving place, and where, as usual, on the
+wide plains there are not many flocks of sheep, but herds of horned cattle
+instead, driven by men on horseback.&nbsp; This is an indication of
+insecurity, on account of forays of Bedaween Arabs, from whom on their
+approach they have to scamper as fast as they can.</p>
+<p>The same insecurity is attested by each of these villages having its
+<i>Shuneh</i>, or little rude tower <!-- page 197--><a
+name="page197"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 197</span>with a breast-work,
+in which the peasants may defend themselves when in sufficient force to do
+so.</p>
+<p>Next came <i>Saidoon</i>, where we obtained a distant prospect of Ramlah
+and Lydd, with Gimzo at the mouth of the Bethhoron Pass, (2 Chron. xxviii.
+18,) and Ras-el-Ain still beyond, with its fountains and rich lands
+conspicuous on the Great Plain, backed by the hills of Ephraim.&nbsp; Then
+we passed the poor clay-built village of <i>De&acirc;neh</i>, where the
+people were winnowing a large harvest of millet, and the Government
+tax-farmers with their soldiers, lent by the authorities, measuring the
+heaps.</p>
+<p>Lastly, we entered the vast olive grounds belonging to Ramlah, and found
+our tents (which had been sent on by another road) just as the Moeddin in
+the minaret was calling to sunset prayers.</p>
+<p>I am never weary of the scenery about Ramlah; we have there the most
+picturesque Orientalism of all Palestine&mdash;a warm climate, numerous
+waving palm-trees, with the large reservoir for cattle drinking, all gilded
+in brilliant sunlight, together with the busy voices of a considerable
+population.</p>
+<p>A burly fellow of a wandering durweesh or sorcerer, with rows of large
+black beads round his neck, came up to us, and bellowed out one of the
+ninety-nine attributes of God, according to the Moslems: &ldquo;Ya
+Daeem,&rdquo; (O thou everlasting!)&nbsp; This was by way of asking
+alms.&nbsp; My companion gave him some, which I would not have done.</p>
+<p><!-- page 198--><a name="page198"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+198</span>In the morning we ascended to the top of the great White Tower,
+called &ldquo;the Tower of the Forty,&rdquo; meaning forty martyrs.&nbsp;
+This is a favourite appellation of ancient ruins in Palestine.&nbsp; I do
+not know what it alludes to.&nbsp; And from among the Comandalune windows I
+copied the following vignette.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p198.jpg">
+<img alt="Window of the White Tower" src="images/p198.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<h2><!-- page 199--><a name="page199"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+199</span>V.&nbsp; THE LAND OF BENJAMIN.</h2>
+<p>Who has ever stood upon the Scopus hill, north of Jerusalem, (his mind
+first prepared by biblical reading and biblical feeling,) facing
+northwards, and seeing at one glance, as upon a map, the land of the tribe
+of Benjamin, without desiring to wander about there, were it only to
+experience the reality of standing and breathing upon the sites of
+&rsquo;Anathoth, Michmash, Gibea of Saul, and Gibeon?&nbsp; It can be most
+of it performed in one day, and sometimes a line through it is traversed in
+that time by English residents of Jerusalem, namely, from Jerusalem to
+Michmash and Bethel, and the return.</p>
+<p>There is also a pleasant spot above Lifta, in a grove of olives, figs,
+and pomegranates, where Europeans have sometimes established summer camps
+for their families.&nbsp; At that spot it is delightful to repose in the
+evening shadows cast by the trees, and gaze over the landscape of Benjamin,
+with a deep valley sinking in immediate front, only to rise again to the
+greater height of Nebi Samwil and a landscape view extending as far as the
+rock <!-- page 200--><a name="page200"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+200</span>Rimmon, which stands in pyramidal form upon the horizon.</p>
+<p>There are, however, several ancient and biblical sites known to exist
+within that circuit that are not visible from either of those stations, and
+only to be perceived on reaching the places themselves.&nbsp; For instance,
+Bait Hhaneena of Nehemiah xi. 32.</p>
+<p>There is <i>&rsquo;Ad&acirc;sa</i>, the scene of a great victory gained
+by Judas Maccabaeus over the mighty host of Nicanor; this I discovered from
+the peasants ploughing one day, while resting after a gazelle chase.&nbsp;
+It is not far from Gibeon.&nbsp; &ldquo;So Nicanor went out of Jerusalem,
+and pitched his tents in Bethhoron, where an host of Syrians met him.&nbsp;
+But Judas pitched in Adasa with three thousand men. . . .&nbsp; So the
+thirteenth day of the month Adar [<i>i.e.</i> on the eve of Purim] the
+hosts joined battle: but Nicanor&rsquo;s host was discomfited, and he
+himself was first slain in the battle . . . .&nbsp; Then they pursued after
+them a day&rsquo;s journey, from Adasa unto Gazera, sounding an alarm after
+them with their trumpets,&rdquo; (Macc. vii. 39-45,) <i>i.e.</i> a
+day&rsquo;s journey for an army, perhaps, that day&rsquo;s journey after
+fighting; for it is a pleasant ride with respect to distance, as I proved
+by riding to <i>Jadeerah</i>, passing through Beer Neb&acirc;la.</p>
+<p>And on another day&rsquo;s expedition alone, I was riding near
+&rsquo;An&acirc;ta (Anathoth) eastwards from the village, thinking over the
+faith of the prophet Jeremiah, in purchasing a family estate, the future
+occupation of which was contrary to all human <!-- page 201--><a
+name="page201"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 201</span>probability, and
+after recounting to myself the cities of Benjamin allotted to the priests,
+as Anathoth, (to which the treasonable priest Abiathar belonged, 1 Kings
+ii. 26,) Gibeon, and Geba, wondering what had become of the fourth city
+Almon, (Josh. xxi. 17, 18,) I came up to a hill on which appeared some
+remains of an ancient town; there my horse carried me up the steep side,
+and while passing among the lines of foundations on the summit, a peasant
+who joined me said the place was called <i>&rsquo;Alm&acirc;n</i>.&nbsp;
+Some time afterwards, I was riding on the other side of the same hill, in
+the direction of <i>Hhizmeh</i>, (the Az-maveth of Neh. vii. 28, as I
+suppose,) when a peasant informed me that the place on the hill was named
+<i>Almeet</i>.&nbsp; This corresponds to the other name of the town as
+given in 1 Chron. vi. 60, and vii. 8, where it is Alemeth.&nbsp; So
+remarkable a preservation of both names by another people than the Jews,
+after long or perhaps repeated desolations, appears to me almost
+miraculous, and is a fresh illustration of the exact verbal inspiration of
+Holy Scripture.</p>
+<p>I once visited the rock Rimmon of Judges xx. 47.&nbsp; The first part of
+the journey was made in company with Lieutenant Vandevelde, going from
+Jericho to Bethel, a totally-unknown road; it must have been the same as
+that taken by Joshua after the fall of Jericho.</p>
+<p>This was in 1852.&nbsp; The Arabs were unwilling to take us in that
+direction, probably on account <!-- page 202--><a name="page202"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 202</span>of some local hostilities to which they might
+be exposed.&nbsp; At first they denied there was any road that way, then
+said it was so difficult that we could not reach Bethel in less than two
+days, which was ridiculous, considering the shortness of the
+distance.&nbsp; At length we resolved to find a road without them, and
+ordered the luggage to go round by Khatroon, or if necessary by Jerusalem,
+but to meet us at Bethel that night.</p>
+<p>Shaikh Mohammed el Hejj&acirc;z then sent with us his slave
+Sulim&acirc;n.&nbsp; By his having that Moslem name, I should suppose this
+to be a freed-man, inasmuch as it is not the custom to give Moslem or
+Christian names to slaves; they may be only called Jewel, Diamond,
+Cornelian, Thursday, Friday, etc.&nbsp; It is not uncommon for a freed-man
+to be still called in popular speech <i>a slave</i>; but not in serious
+earnest or in matters of business, and not unless they are blacks from
+Africa.</p>
+<p>It is not unusual in the East for a slave, even though still in bondage,
+to be educated in reading and writing, to be trained in military
+accomplishments, and so to be employed as confidential agent of property,
+or trainer of children in the family, riding the best horses and carrying
+weapons of best quality.&nbsp; And this Sulim&acirc;n was a bright specimen
+of that class of men,&mdash;of good bodily presence, merry-humoured, and
+well-accoutred.</p>
+<p>The first part of the journey in crossing the Quarantana mountain was
+precipitous, and even <!-- page 203--><a name="page203"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 203</span>dangerous for strangers; but the summit being
+attained, the whole of the remaining distance was a level plain.&nbsp; We
+were upon remains of an ancient road, with wells frequently occurring by
+the wayside; many of them, however, choked up with stones and earth.</p>
+<p>Plodded quietly along, when, about two hours from Jericho, we were
+surprised by hearing human wailing and cries for mercy near us.&nbsp; This
+was discovered to come from a boy of about twelve years of age who had
+concealed himself behind a bush of <i>ret&rsquo;m</i>, (juniper of
+Scripture.)&nbsp; He had never seen Europeans before, and, on perceiving
+the Hejj&acirc;z slave at our head, was apprehensive that we should plunder
+him of his ass and her foal.&nbsp; He was a peasant of <i>Dair
+Dew&acirc;n</i>, <a name="citation203"></a><a href="#footnote203"
+class="citation">[203]</a> a village on the way before us.</p>
+<p>In half an hour more we came up to a cleanly-dressed and
+pleasant-looking shepherd lad, who was not at all afraid of us.&nbsp; He
+conducted us to a well of good water, named <i>Beer Mustafa</i>, a little
+off the road, at the heading of the small wadi <i>Krishneh</i>; there we
+rested half an hour.</p>
+<p>In another hour we reached the ruins of Abu Sabb&acirc;kh, from which we
+had <i>Remmoon</i> visible on our right.</p>
+<p>During all the day&rsquo;s journey we passed through a good deal of
+wheat and barley cultivation, the crops ripening fast, it being at the
+beginning of May.</p>
+<p><!-- page 204--><a name="page204"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+204</span>In another half hour we arrived at Dair Dew&acirc;n, the
+Beth-aven of Scripture, <a name="citation204"></a><a href="#footnote204"
+class="citation">[204]</a> a flourishing village,&mdash;remarkably so, as
+evinced by its buildings, its fruit orchards, and corn fields all
+around.&nbsp; Progress in such affairs is a sure token of a village being
+peopled by Christians.&nbsp; In the well-kept cemetery belonging to the
+place, it was pleasant to see an enormous quantity of large blue iris
+flowers growing between the graves, and often concealing them from view
+till nearly approached.</p>
+<p>Turning abruptly westward, in twenty minutes we came to the hill of
+stones called Tell-el-hajjar, which I had on a former occasion identified
+as the site of Ai, lying as it does between Beth-aven and Bethel, (Josh.
+viii.,) and having the deep valley alongside northwards.&nbsp; Here
+Vandevelde took bearings, with his theodolite, of points within sight; and
+in a quarter of an hour from this we reached Bethel, (now called Bait-een,)
+that is in less than five hours, including an hour&rsquo;s stoppage at the
+Tell from the &rsquo;Ain-es-Sult&acirc;n by Jericho, where the Arabs had,
+for their own reasons, tried to persuade us that the journey was
+impossible, or would at least occupy two days.</p>
+<p>Our tents and luggage arrived soon after we did.&nbsp; Bait-een has been
+so often described, and its biblical events so often quoted by travellers,
+that it is not necessary to do so while professedly dealing only <!-- page
+205--><a name="page205"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 205</span>with byeways
+in Palestine; yet this may be said, that no distance of time can entirely
+efface the exquisite pleasure of exploring ground and sites so accurately
+corresponding as this did to the topography of the Bible, and belonging to
+events of such antiquity as the acts of Abraham and Joshua.</p>
+<p>In the morning I separated from my friends, who were preceding towards
+Damascus, and, accompanied by Sulim&acirc;n and a kaww&acirc;s, went on my
+way to <i>Remmoon</i>, (the rock Rimmon.)&nbsp; Started at half-past seven
+in a thick shirocco atmosphere, keeping on the northern high road for about
+a quarter of an hour in the direction of <i>Yebrood</i>, then turned
+sharply eastwards over corn-fields, and descended into a deep hot
+valley.&nbsp; The flowers of the field were chiefly cistus, red or white,
+and hollyhocks four feet high.&nbsp; Then ascended to at least a
+corresponding height into terraces of fruit-trees well-cultivated; and
+still mounting, to a fine plain of wheat, at the end of which was Remmoon,
+one hour and a quarter from Bait-een.</p>
+<p>The village is built upon a mass of calcareous rock, commanding
+magnificent views towards the south, including the Dead Sea and the line of
+the Jordan; higher hills bounded the north, on which was conspicuous the
+town of <i>Tayibeh</i>, near which is a <i>weli</i> or <i>mez&acirc;r</i>
+(pilgrimage station) named after St George, who is an object of veneration
+to both Moslems and Christians.&nbsp; The people of Tayibeh <!-- page
+206--><a name="page206"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 206</span>are all or
+mostly Christians, and have a church with a resident priest.</p>
+<p>We rode up the street of Remmoon, and found the shaikh and principal men
+of the town lazily smoking in the shadow of a house.</p>
+<p>My object was of course to inquire for a cavern that might be capable of
+containing six hundred men during four months.&nbsp; The people all denied
+the existence of such a cavern, but after some parley I was conducted to
+two separate caverns on the west side of the hill, then to two others on
+the eastern side which are larger, and to each of which we had to arrive
+through a house built at its opening.&nbsp; They told me of two others upon
+the hill, but of much inferior size.&nbsp; Those that I entered were not
+remarkable for dimensions above the many that are to be found over the
+country.&nbsp; It is probable that the whole of the refugees might sleep in
+these several places, if there were no village there at the time, which
+seems probable; but it was merely my own preconceived notion that they all
+lived in one vast cavern.&nbsp; The text of Judg. xx. 47 does not say
+so.</p>
+<p>The village is in good condition, and the cultivation excellent in every
+direction around it.&nbsp; On leaving it for the return to Jerusalem I
+proceeded due southwards.&nbsp; In the fields the people were industriously
+clearing away stones&mdash;a sure symptom of peace, and consequent
+improvement.</p>
+<p>Crossed a valley named <i>Ma&rsquo;kook</i>, and arrived at <!-- page
+207--><a name="page207"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+207</span><i>Mukhin&acirc;s</i> (Michmash) in less than two hours from
+Remmoon.&nbsp; Rested in the fine grove of olive-trees in the valley on the
+north of the town for an hour.&nbsp; The birds were singing delightfully,
+though the time was high noon, and our horses enjoyed some respite from the
+sanguinary green flies which had plagued them all the way from Remmoon;
+their bellies and fetlocks were red with bleeding.&nbsp; In this matter I
+particularly admired the benevolence of the slave Sulim&acirc;n.&nbsp;
+Yesterday, after a sharp run across a field, perhaps in the vain hope of
+escaping the tormentors, he dismounted, and the mare followed him, walking
+like a lamb.&nbsp; He then sat down to switch away the flies, and rub her
+legs inwards and outwards.&nbsp; To-day he had taken off his Bedawi kefieh,
+or bright-coloured small shawl, from around his head, and suspended it
+between her legs, then, as he rode along, was continually switching between
+her ears with a long bunch of the wild mustard-plant.</p>
+<p>On leaving Mukhm&acirc;s in the hottest part of the day, we had to cross
+the Wadi <i>S&ucirc;aineet</i>, along which to our left appeared the
+northern extremity of the Dead Sea.&nbsp; At a short distance down the
+valley there are remarkable precipices on each side, which must be the
+Bozez and Seneh, <a name="citation207"></a><a href="#footnote207"
+class="citation">[207]</a> renowned for the bold adventure of Jonathan and
+his armour-bearer, <!-- page 208--><a name="page208"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 208</span>and near these projections are some large old
+karoobah-trees.</p>
+<p>Emerging upwards from this wadi one comes to <i>Jeba&rsquo;</i>, (the
+Gibeah of Saul, so often mentioned,) upon a table-land extending due east,
+in which direction I visited, five years before, an ancient ruin, which the
+people of Jeba&rsquo; call <i>El Kharjeh</i>; it consisted of one principal
+building of contiguous chambers, built of nicely squared stones, put
+together without cement, like several of the remains at Bethel.</p>
+<p>These stones are gray with weather stains, but seldom more than three
+courses in height remain in their places, though in one place five.</p>
+<p>From this site, as well as from Jeba&rsquo;, there is a very striking
+view of the northern extremity of the Dead Sea.</p>
+<p>The guide told us of a vast cavern in the Wadi S&ucirc;aineet capable of
+holding many hundred men, near to the above-mentioned karoobah-trees, and
+therefore just the suitable refuge for the Israelites, (I Sam. xiv. 11,)
+besides the Bozez and Seneh; and he told us that half-way down the
+precipice there is a course of water running towards the Gh&ocirc;r.</p>
+<p>Few incidents in the Bible are so real to the eye and feelings as the
+narrative of Jonathan and his office-bearers when read upon the spot of the
+occurrence, or near it at Jeba&rsquo;.</p>
+<p>We passed <i>Jeba&rsquo;</i> at about a quarter of a mile to <!-- page
+209--><a name="page209"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 209</span>our right,
+and in another quarter of an hour were at the strange old stone
+parallelograms under <i>Hhizmeh</i>, which had been often before visited in
+afternoon rides from Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>These are piles of large squared stones of great antiquity, carefully
+built into long parallel forms, and now deeply weather-eaten.&nbsp; No use
+of them can be imagined.&nbsp; I have visited them at all seasons of the
+year, and at different hours of the day, but they still remain
+unintelligible.&nbsp; They are disposed in different directions, as will be
+seen in the following drawing of them, carefully taken by measurement in my
+presence, and given me by a friend now in England, the Rev. G. W. Dalton of
+Wolverhampton.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p209.jpg">
+<img alt="Stone constructions under Hhizmeh" src="images/p209.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>On one face of No. 4 is a kind of entrance, and on the top surface a
+round hole about two feet in depth, but they lead to nothing, and are
+probably the work of modern peasantry, removing stones from the entire
+block; in the former case for the mere object of shade from the sun, and
+the latter for the charitable purpose common among <!-- page 210--><a
+name="page210"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 210</span>Moslems, who often
+cut basins into solid rocks, to collect rain or dew for birds of the air or
+beasts of the field.</p>
+<p>Corroded monuments like these, in so pure and dry an atmosphere, bespeak
+a far more hoary antiquity than the same amount of decay would do in an
+English climate.</p>
+<p>I know of a spot on the side of a wild hill upon the way between Ai (as
+I believe the place called the <i>Tell</i> to be) and Mukhm&acirc;s, where
+there are several huge slabs of stone, rather exceeding human size, laid
+upon the ground side by side exactly parallel.&nbsp; These can be nothing
+else than gravestones of early Israelitish period, but of which the
+memorial is now gone for ever.</p>
+<p>Crossing the torrent-bed from the parallelogram, and mounting the next
+hill, we were at Hhizmeh; then leaving &rsquo;An&acirc;ta on the left, we
+traversed the Scopus near the Mount of Olives, and reached Jerusalem in
+four hours and a half of easy riding from Remmoon.</p>
+<p>One ought not to quit the mention of this land of Benjamin by omitting
+the <i>Wadi Farah</i>.</p>
+<p>This is a most delightsome valley, with a good stream of water, at a
+distance of rather more than two hours from Jerusalem to the N.E.</p>
+<p>The way to it is through &rsquo;An&acirc;ta, already described, from
+which most of the stones were quarried for the English church in the Holy
+City, and then alongside the hill on which stands <!-- page 211--><a
+name="page211"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 211</span>the ruins with the
+double name of &rsquo;Alm&acirc;n and &rsquo;Almeet, discovered by me as
+above-described.</p>
+<p>Once, in the autumn season, a party of us went to Wadi Farah, and
+arriving on its precipitous brink found the descent too difficult for the
+horses; these, therefore, were left in charge of the servants, while we
+skipped or slid from rock to rock, carrying the luncheon with us.</p>
+<p>The copious stream was much choked near its source, which rises from the
+ground, by a thick growth of reeds, oleanders in blossom, and gigantic
+peppermint with strong smell.&nbsp; There were small fish in the stream,
+which was flowing rapidly; wild pigeons were numerous, and a shepherd boy
+playing his reed pipe, brought his flock to the water.&nbsp; Need it be
+said, how refreshing all this was to us all after the long summer of
+Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>There were remains of a bridge and considerable fragments of old
+aqueducts, <i>i.e.</i>, good-sized tubes of pottery encased in masonry, but
+now so broken as to be quite useless; these lead from the spring-head
+towards the Jordan at different levels, one above another.&nbsp; There was
+also a cistern of masonry, with indications of water-machinery having been
+at one time employed there; but all these evidences of population and
+industry are abandoned to savages and the action of the elements.</p>
+<p>Dr James Barclay of Virginia, author of &ldquo;The City of the Great
+King,&rdquo; believes this site to be <!-- page 212--><a
+name="page212"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 212</span>that of
+&ldquo;&AElig;non, near to Salim,&rdquo; where John was baptizing,
+&ldquo;because there was much water there,&rdquo; (John iii. 23.)</p>
+<p>There can scarcely be a doubt that it is the <i>Parah</i>, belonging to
+the tribe of Benjamin, in Josh. xviii. 23, and that therefore it was a
+settled and cultivated place before the children of Israel took possession
+of the land.</p>
+<p>The district around,&mdash;indeed, all eastwards of
+&rsquo;An&acirc;ta,&mdash;is now unappropriated; parts of it, however, are
+sown&mdash;not always the same patches in successive years&mdash;by the
+people of the nearest villages in a compulsory partnership with the petty
+Arabs of the Jordan plain.&nbsp; The peasantry are forced to find the seed
+and the labour, and yet are often defrauded of their share of the produce
+by the so-called partners bringing up friends and auxiliaries from the
+plain, just as the grain is ripening, and carrying off the produce by
+night, or setting fire to whatever they cannot seize in this hasty
+operation; and this takes place about two hours from the citadel and
+garrison of Jerusalem.&nbsp; Do not ask where is the Turkish
+government!</p>
+<p>The people are driven to sow the grain upon these conditions, under risk
+of having their own crops destroyed or devastated near their homesteads,
+and in no case dare they offer any resistance.</p>
+<p>I was once unwillingly present at a grievous scene near Elisha&rsquo;s
+fountain.&nbsp; N&acirc;s&rsquo;r Abu&rsquo; N&rsquo;sair, <!-- page
+213--><a name="page213"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 213</span>shaikh of
+the Ehteim&acirc;t, one of the parties at all times in the above-described
+partnerships, was seated smoking his chibook beneath an old neb&rsquo;k
+tree when some Christian peasants from <i>Tayibeh</i> approached him with
+deep humility, begging permission to sow grain upon that marvellously
+fertile plain of Jericho.&nbsp; For some reason which did not appear, it
+suited him to refuse the favour.&nbsp; In vain the suppliants raised their
+bidding of the proportion to be given him from the proceeds; they then
+endeavoured to get me to intercede in their behalf, frequently making the
+sign of the cross upon themselves, thereby invoking my sympathy as a
+fellow-Christian on their side; but on several accounts it seemed most
+prudent for me to leave the parties to their own negotiations, only
+speaking on their behalf afterwards by sending a kaww&acirc;s to recommend
+kindness in general to the Christian villages.&nbsp; It may be that this
+step met with success, but I could not but be sincerely desirous to have
+such Arab vermin as these mongrel tribes swept off the land.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 214--><a name="page214"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+214</span>VI.&nbsp; SEBUSTIEH TO CAIFFA.</h2>
+<p>In October, 1848, I found myself at Sebustieh, the ancient Samaria,
+having come thither from Jerusalem by the common route through Nabloos,
+<i>i.e.</i>, Shechem.&nbsp; Since that time I have often been there, but
+never without a feeling of very deep interest, not only in the beauty of
+its site, worthy of a royal city, or in the Roman remains still subsisting,
+but also in the remarkable fulfilments of Biblical prophecy which the place
+exhibits.&nbsp; The stones of the ancient buildings are literally poured
+down into the valley, and the foundations thereof discovered, (Micah i.
+6.)</p>
+<p>We left the hill and its miserable village by the usual track through a
+gateway at its eastern side.&nbsp; Down in the valley lay fragments of
+large mouldings of public buildings, and the lid of a sarcophagus reversed,
+measuring eight feet in length.</p>
+<p>At first we took the common road northwards, and ascending the hill
+above <i>Burka</i>, from the summit had a glorious prospect of the sea on
+one <!-- page 215--><a name="page215"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+215</span>side, and of the populous village country, well cultivated,
+stretched before us; we left the common road to <i>Sanoor</i> and
+<i>Jeneen</i>, turning aside under <i>Seeleh</i>, a double village nearest
+to us, with <i>At&acirc;ra</i> further west.</p>
+<p>The muleteers had preceded us during our survey of Sebustieh, on the way
+to &rsquo;Ar&acirc;beh, and we could see nothing of them before
+us&mdash;the road was unknown to us, and no population could be seen, all
+keeping out of sight of us and of each other on account of the alarm of
+cholera then raging in the country.</p>
+<p>At Nabloos that morning, two hours before noon, we had been told of
+twenty having been already buried that day, and we saw some funerals taking
+place.&nbsp; At Sebustieh, the people had refused for any money to be our
+guides; one youth said, &ldquo;he was afraid of the death that there was in
+the world.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So my companion and I, with a kaww&acirc;s, paced on till arriving near
+sunset at a deserted village standing on a precipice which rose above a
+tolerably high hill, and which from a distance we had been incorrectly told
+was &rsquo;Ar&acirc;beh; at that distance it had not the appearance of
+being depopulated, as we found it to be on reaching it.&nbsp; Numerous
+villages were in view, but no people visible to tell us their names.&nbsp;
+The district was utterly unknown to maps, as it lies out of the common
+travellers&rsquo; route.&nbsp; This village, we afterwards <!-- page
+216--><a name="page216"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 216</span>learned, is
+<i>Rami</i>, and antique stones and wells are found there.&nbsp; Though our
+horses were much fatigued, it was necessary to go on in search of our
+people and property, for the sun was falling rapidly.</p>
+<p>Observing a good looking village far before us to the N.W., and a path
+leading in that direction, we followed it through a wood of low shrubs, and
+arrived at the village, a place strong by nature for military defence, and
+its name is <i>Cuf&rsquo;r Ra&rsquo;i</i>.&nbsp; There was a view of the
+sea and the sun setting grandly into it.</p>
+<p>For high pay, we obtained a youth to guide us to &rsquo;Ar&acirc;beh;
+shouldering his gun, he preceded us.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you know,&rdquo; said
+he, &ldquo;why we are called Cuf&rsquo;r Ra&rsquo;i?&mdash;It is because
+the word Cuf&rsquo;r means blaspheming infidels, and so we are&mdash;we
+care for nothing.&rdquo;&nbsp; Of course, his derivation was grammatically
+wrong; for the word, which is common enough out of the Jerusalem district
+and the south, is the Hebrew word for a village, still traditionally in
+use, and this place is literally, &ldquo;the shepherd&rsquo;s
+village.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We passed an ancient sepulchre cut in the rock by our wayside, with
+small niches in it to the right and left; the material was coarse, and so
+was the workmanship, compared to ours about Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>The moon rose&mdash;a jackal crossed a field within a few yards of
+us.&nbsp; We passed through a large village called <i>Fahh&rsquo;mah</i>,
+<i>i.e.</i>, charcoal, with <!-- page 217--><a name="page217"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 217</span>fragments of old buildings and one
+palm-tree.&nbsp; Forwards over wild green hills, along precipices that
+required extreme caution.&nbsp; The villages around were discernible by
+their lights in the houses.&nbsp; At length &rsquo;Ar&acirc;beh appeared,
+with numerous and large lights, and we could hear the ring of
+blacksmiths&rsquo; hammers and anvils&mdash;we seemed almost to be
+approaching a manufacturing town in &ldquo;the black country of
+England.&rdquo; <a name="citation217"></a><a href="#footnote217"
+class="citation">[217]</a></p>
+<p>Arrived on a smooth meadow at the foot of the long hill on which the
+place is built, I fired pistols as a signal to our people should they be
+there to hear it, and one was fired in answer.&nbsp; To that spot we went,
+and found the tents and our people, but neither tents set up nor
+preparations for supper.&nbsp; Village people stood around, but refused to
+give or sell us anything, and using defiant language to all the consuls and
+pashas in the world.</p>
+<p>Till that moment I had not been aware that this was the citadel of the
+&rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l Hadi&rsquo;s factions, and a semi-fortification.&nbsp;
+[Since that time, I have had opportunities of seeing much more of the
+people and the place.]</p>
+<p>Sending a kaww&acirc;s to the castle, with my compliments to the Bek, I
+requested guards for the night, and loading my pistols afresh, stood with
+them in my hand, as did my second kaww&acirc;s with his gun, and we
+commenced erecting the tents.</p>
+<p><!-- page 218--><a name="page218"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+218</span>Down came the kaww&acirc;s in haste to announce that the Bek was
+coming himself to us, attended by his sons and a large train.</p>
+<p>First came his nephew from his part, to announce the advent; then a
+deputation of twenty; and then himself, robed in scarlet and sable fur, on
+a splendid black horse of high breed.&nbsp; I invited him to sit with me on
+my bed within the tent, widely open.&nbsp; The twenty squatted in a circle
+around us, and others stood behind them; and a present was laid before me
+of a fine water-melon and a dozen of pomegranates.</p>
+<p>Never was a friendship got up on shorter notice.&nbsp; We talked
+politics and history, which I would rather have adjourned to another time,
+being very tired and very hungry.</p>
+<p>He assured me that when my pistols were heard at the arrival, between
+700 and 800 men rushed to arms, supposing there was an invasion of their
+foes, the Tok&acirc;n and Jerr&acirc;r, or perhaps an assault by the
+Pasha&rsquo;s regulars from Jerusalem, under the pretext of cholera
+quarantine&mdash;in either case they got themselves ready.</p>
+<p>He stayed long, and then went to chat with my Arab secretary in his
+tent, leaving me to eat my supper.&nbsp; He gave orders for a strong guard
+to be about us for the night, and a party to guide us in the morning on our
+way to Carmel.</p>
+<p>This personage (as he himself told me) had been the civil governor
+inside of Acre during the <!-- page 219--><a name="page219"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 219</span>English bombardment of 1840; and his brother
+had first introduced the Egyptians into the country eleven years before
+that termination of their government.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>In 1852 I had arrived at &rsquo;Ar&acirc;beh from Nabloos by a different
+route, and turned from this place not seawards as now, but inland to
+Jeneen: whence I again visited it on my return.&nbsp; It seems worth while
+to give the details of this route.</p>
+<p>Starting from Nabloos at half-past ten we passed <i>Zuw&acirc;tah</i>
+close on our right, and <i>Bait Uzan</i> high up on the left.&nbsp; Here
+the aqueduct conveying water from the springs under Gerizim to gardens far
+westwards, was close to the high-road.&nbsp; Arriving at <i>Sebustieh</i>
+and going on to <i>Burka</i> we quitted the Jeba&rsquo; road, and turned to
+<i>Seeleh</i> which lay on our left, and <i>Fendecom&icirc;a</i> high up on
+the right, <i>Jeba&rsquo;</i> being in sight.</p>
+<p>Soon after this we turned sharply north-west to <i>&rsquo;Ajjeh</i>, and
+thence arrived at &rsquo;Ar&acirc;beh in five and a half hours from
+Nabloos.</p>
+<p>After leaving &rsquo;Ar&acirc;beh for Jeneen we got upon a fine plain,
+namely, that of Dothan.&nbsp; On this, near to another road leading to
+Kab&acirc;tiyeh, is a beautiful low hill, upon which stands Dothan, the
+only building left to represent the ancient name being a cow-shed; however,
+at the foot of the hill is a space of bright green sward, whence issues a
+plentiful stream of sparkling water, and here <!-- page 220--><a
+name="page220"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 220</span>among some trees is a
+rude stone building.&nbsp; This spot is now called <i>Hafeereh</i>, but the
+whole site was anciently Dothan, this name having been given me by one
+peasant, and Dotan by another.</p>
+<p>On my return hither a few days later I found a large herd of cattle, and
+many asses going to drink at the spring.&nbsp; Dothan is well known to
+shepherds now as a place of resort, and must have been so in ancient
+times.&nbsp; Here then, in the very best part of the fertile country of
+Ephraim, is the pasture-ground to which Joseph&rsquo;s brethren had removed
+their flocks from the paternal estate at Shechem, and where they sold their
+brother to the Arab traders on their way to Egypt.&nbsp; This may help to
+mark the season of the year at which Joseph was bought and sold.&nbsp; It
+could only be at the end of the summer that the brethren would need to
+remove their flocks from exhausted pasture-ground at Shechem to the
+perennial spring and green watered land at Dothan; this would also be
+naturally the season for the Ishmaelite caravan to carry produce into Egypt
+after the harvest was ended.&nbsp; Be it remembered that the articles they
+were conveying were produce from the district of Gilead&mdash;(&ldquo;balm
+of Gilead&rdquo; is mentioned later in Scripture)&mdash;and it is specially
+interesting to notice that Jacob&rsquo;s present, sent by his brethren to
+the unknown ruler in Egypt, consisted of these same best fruits,
+&ldquo;Take of the best fruits of the land, balm, honey, spices and myrrh,
+nuts and almonds.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 221--><a name="page221"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+221</span>Dothan is about half an hour distant from &rsquo;Ar&acirc;beh,
+and therefore six hours or a morning&rsquo;s walk for a peasant from
+Shechem.</p>
+<p>More solemn, however, than the above interesting recollection, was that
+of the horses and chariots of fire which had encircled the very hill upon
+which I stood, when Elisha &ldquo;the man of God,&rdquo; lived in Dothan,
+and smote the Syrian army at the foot with blindness, and led them away to
+Sebustieh, (Samaria,) 2 Kings vi.</p>
+<p>After leaving Dothan, at the falling in of this road to Jeneen with that
+from Kab&acirc;tieh, stands a broken tower on an eminence above the well
+<i>Bel&acirc;meh</i>, which Dr Schultz has identified with the Belmen,
+Belmaim, and Balamo of the Book of Judith, (chap. iv. 4; vii. 3; viii.
+3.)</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>To resume&mdash;Away early in the morning.&nbsp; Paid the night-guard
+and sent a present of white loaf bread and some tea to the Bek.</p>
+<p>It was promised that we should reach Carmel in nine hours, across an
+unknown but pretty country in a different direction from Lejjoon and
+Ta&rsquo;annuk (Taanach of Judges i. 27,) which I had designed for my
+route, and towards the sea-coast.</p>
+<p>Our guides were gigantic men, beside whom my tall peasant servant
+Khaleel appeared to disadvantage, and their guns were of a superior
+description to what one commonly sees in Palestine.&nbsp; The peasantry
+also were large men with good guns.</p>
+<p><!-- page 222--><a name="page222"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+222</span>First, due west for quarter of an hour towards <i>Kubrus</i>,
+situated upon a hill, but before reaching it, turned sharply northwards,
+through a rocky defile of ten minutes, when we fell in with a better road
+which, they said, came also from &rsquo;Ar&acirc;beh, and on towards a fine
+village named <i>Yaabad</i> in a lovely plain richly cultivated; there were
+after the earlier crops young plantations of cotton rising, the fields
+cleared of stones and fenced in by the most regular and orderly of stone
+dykes.</p>
+<p>Before reaching <i>Yaabad</i>, we turned due west, our guides alone
+being able to judge which of the many footpaths could be the right one.</p>
+<p>Reached the poor village <i>Zebdeh</i>, then over a green hill with a
+prospect of the sea.&nbsp; C&aelig;sarea visible at a distance, and in the
+middle distance <i>Jit</i> and <i>Zeita</i>.&nbsp; Near us were ruins of a
+strong place called <i>Burtaa</i>, said to have a supply of delicious
+water.&nbsp; Our journey was all over short evergreens rising from stony
+ground.&nbsp; So lonely&mdash;none in sight but ourselves for hours after
+hours.&nbsp; &ldquo;Green is the portion of Paradise&rdquo; exclaimed our
+people.</p>
+<p>At <i>Cuf&rsquo;r Kara</i>, a clean mud village in the fragments of
+columns lying about, we rested beneath some huge fig-trees while the
+luggage, guarded by some of the escort, jogged forwards; for muleteers
+never like resting their animals, or at least do not like unpacking them
+before the end of the day&rsquo;s march; the trouble is too great in
+reloading them.&nbsp; The riding horses were tied up under the <!-- page
+223--><a name="page223"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 223</span>trees, and
+we got some melons and eggs from the village.</p>
+<p>After an hour we remounted and went on steadily north-west.&nbsp; Soon
+reached <i>Kaneer</i>, where was a cistern with wide circular opening of
+large masonry, bespeaking high antiquity.</p>
+<p>Then to <i>Sub&acirc;riyeh</i> on a small rise from a hollow with one
+palm-tree.&nbsp; The well was at a distance from the village, and the women
+washing there.&nbsp; One man asked one of them to move away while he filled
+our matara (leathern bottle.)&nbsp; She said she would not even for Ibrahim
+Pasha, whereupon he roared out, &ldquo;One sees that the world is changed,
+for if you had spoken in that manner to one of Ibrahim&rsquo;s meanest of
+grooms, he would have burned down your town for you.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+matara was then filled.</p>
+<p>In another quarter of an hour we were pacing through a wide Riding (as
+we use the term in the old English Forests for a broad avenue between
+woods.)&nbsp; This opened into a plain of rich park scenery, with timbered
+low hills all about, only of course no grass: in the centre of this stands
+<i>Zum&acirc;reen</i>, perched on a bold piece of rock.&nbsp; Many of the
+trees were entirely unknown to us Southerners; some of the evergreens were
+named to us as Maloch, etc., and there were bushes of Saris with red
+berries.</p>
+<p>Out of this we emerged upon the plain of the sea-coast, at a wretched
+village bearing the <!-- page 224--><a name="page224"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 224</span>attractive name of <i>Furadees</i>
+(Paradise.)&nbsp; Here the people were sifting their corn after its
+thrashing, and we got a boy to refresh us with milk from his flock of
+goats.&nbsp; Only those experiencing similar circumstances of hot
+travelling, can conceive the pleasure of this draught, especially after
+having had to gallop round the boy, and coax and threaten him to sell the
+milk for our money.</p>
+<p>The way lay due north, hugging to the hills parallel to the sea, but at
+a distance from it: numerous wadis run inland, and at the mouth of each is
+a village.&nbsp; The first was <i>Su&acirc;meh</i>, the next <i>&rsquo;Ain
+el Ghaz&acirc;l</i>, (Gazelles fountain,) wretched like the rest, but in a
+pretty situation&mdash;then <i>Modzha</i>, and <i>Mazaal</i>, and
+<i>&rsquo;Ain Hhood</i>, (a prosperous looking place,) and
+<i>Teeri</i>.</p>
+<p>The sun set in the blue water, and we were still far from
+Carmel&mdash;our animals could scarcely move: sometimes we dismounted and
+led them&mdash;passed the notable ruins of Tantoorah, (Dora of the Bible,)
+and Athleet on our left&mdash;moonlight and fatigue.&nbsp; There was a
+nearer way from Zum&acirc;reen, but it would have been hilly and
+wearisome.&nbsp; After a long while we overtook our muleteers without the
+baggage, for the Kaww&acirc;s Salim, they said, had been so cruel to them
+that they had allowed him to go on with the charge towards Carmel.</p>
+<p>At length we climbed up the steep to the convent.&nbsp; Being very late
+we experienced great difficulty in gaining admission.&nbsp; There was no
+food <!-- page 225--><a name="page225"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+225</span>allowed to the servants, no barley for the horses, and for a long
+time no water supplied.</p>
+<p>In the morning we found great changes had taken place since 1846.&nbsp;
+The kind president had gone on to India&mdash;the apothecary Fra Angelo was
+removed to a distance&mdash;John-Baptist was at Caiffa and unwell.&nbsp;
+The whole place bore the appearance of gloom, bigotry, dirtiness, and bad
+management.</p>
+<p>In the afternoon I left the convent, in order to enjoy a perfect Sabbath
+on the morrow in tents at the foot of the hill, open to the sea breeze of
+the north, and with a grand panorama stretched out before us.</p>
+<p>And a blessed day that was.&nbsp; We were all in need of bodily rest,
+ourselves, the servants and the cattle&mdash;and it was enjoyed to the
+full&mdash;my young friend and I derived blessing and refreshment also from
+the word of God.&nbsp; The words, &ldquo;Come unto me, all ye that labour
+and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest,&rdquo; seemed to have a
+reviving significance, as well as those of &ldquo;Whosoever drinketh of the
+water that I shall give him shall never thirst; but the water that I shall
+give him, shall be in him a well of water springing up into everlasting
+life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Such a Sabbath in the Holy Land is true enjoyment.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 226--><a name="page226"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+226</span>VII.&nbsp; ESDRAELON PLAIN AND ITS VICINITY.</h2>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>May</i> 1851.</p>
+<p>From Jeneen, (En-gannim, Josh. xxi. 29,) to Acre, <i>i.e.</i>, towards
+the north-west, and skirting the great plain under the line of the hills of
+Samaria,&mdash;thus following the western coast of Zebulon to the south of
+Asher.</p>
+<p>The road was enlivened by numerous companies of native people travelling
+from village to village.</p>
+<p>In an hour and a half from Jeneen we were at <i>Seeleh</i>, a cheerful
+and prosperous-looking place; and in three-quarters of an hour more we were
+abreast of both <i>Ta&rsquo;annuk</i> and <i>Salim</i>, at equal distances
+of quarter of an hour from the highway; the former on our left hand, and
+the latter on the right.&nbsp; These places were at that time tolerably
+well peopled.</p>
+<p>Here we gained the first view of Mount Tabor from a westerly direction,
+and indeed it was curious all along this line to see in unusual aspects the
+well-remembered sites that lie eastwards or northwards from Jeneen, such as
+Zera&rsquo;een (Jezreel,) <!-- page 227--><a name="page227"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 227</span>Jilboon (Gilboa,) Solam (Shunem,) or Fooleh
+and Afooleh.&nbsp; In fact, we overlooked the tribe or inheritance of
+Zebulon from Carmel to Tabor.</p>
+<p>With respect to the circumstance of numerous passengers, whom we met
+this morning, it was a pleasant exception to the common experience of that
+district, where it is often as true now as in the days of Shamgar the son
+of Anath (see Judges v. 6), that the population fluctuates according to the
+invasions or retiring of tyrannical strangers.&nbsp; That vast plain
+affords a tempting camping-ground for remote Arabs to visit in huge swarms
+coming from the East with their flocks for pasture; and in the ancient
+times this very site between Ta&rsquo;annuk and Lejjoon, being the opening
+southwards, gave access to the Philistines or Egyptians arriving in their
+chariots from the long plain of Sharon, or a passage over this plain to
+that of the great hosts of Syria under the Ptolemies, with their
+elephants.</p>
+<p>In all ages the poor peasantry here have been the victims of similar
+incursions, &ldquo;the highways were unoccupied, and the travellers walked
+through byeways.&rdquo;&nbsp; Yet though chased away from their homes, the
+populations returned, whenever possible, with pertinacious attachment to
+their devastated dwellings, and hence we have still the very names of the
+towns and villages perpetuated by a resident people after a lapse of almost
+thirty-three hundred years since the allotment made by Joshua, (xiii.-xxi.,
+etc.,) and the names were not then new.</p>
+<p><!-- page 228--><a name="page228"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+228</span>I have myself known villages on the Plain of Esdraelon to be
+alternately inhabited or abandoned.&nbsp; At one time Fooleh was a heap of
+ruins, while its neighbour Afooleh had its residents; on my next visit it
+was Fooleh rebuilt, and the other a heap of overthrown stones, or next time
+both of them lying in utter silence and desertion.&nbsp; The same with
+<i>Mekebleh</i>, sometimes inhabited, but more frequently a pile of
+broken-down houses, with some remains of antique sculpture lying on the
+surface of its hill; and the same occasionally, though not so frequent in
+vicissitude, with <i>Iksal</i>.</p>
+<p>From this exposure to invasion of royal armies or of nomad tribes,
+(&ldquo;children of the East,&rdquo; Judges vi. 33,) it has always been the
+case that no towns were built in the central parts of this plain; and even
+when the kings of Israel had their country residence at Jezreel, that
+situation was selected because it was nestled close to the hills, and had
+ravines on two sides of it, serving as fortifying trenches made by
+nature.</p>
+<p>At the present time there are no trees upon that broad expanse, not even
+olives, to furnish lights for dwelling, either of villages or tents.&nbsp;
+The wretched people grow castor-oil plants instead for that purpose, sown
+afresh every year, because these afford no temptation to the hostile
+Arabs.</p>
+<p>That year, however, of 1851, and probably for some time previous, the
+plain (Merj ibn Amer is its Arabic name,) had been at peace, unmolested by
+<!-- page 229--><a name="page229"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+229</span>strangers; consequently I saw large crops of wheat there, and
+fields of barley waving in the breeze.&nbsp; These were mostly the property
+of a Turkom&acirc;n tribe, who, like the Kenites of old, reside there in
+tents, neither building houses nor planting vineyards, though to some
+extent they sow seed.&nbsp; They have been long upon that ground, but move
+their tents about, according to the exigencies of pasture for their flocks
+and herds.&nbsp; I believe, however, that they pay &ldquo;khooweh&rdquo;
+(brotherhood,) <i>i.e.</i> tribute and military aid, to the Sukoor Arabs
+for protection and peace under common circumstances.</p>
+<p>We had frequently to cross small streams issuing from the ranges of
+hills, along the base of which our road lay; but they accomplished only
+short courses, for they were soon absorbed into the ground or settled into
+morasses, which emitted strong miasma under the influence of the sun.&nbsp;
+Some petty springs were seen rising from the ground itself, and near each
+of these were sure to be met some relics of antiquity, such as good squared
+building stones, or door-posts, or broken olive presses, or fragments of
+sarcophagi, while the adjacent hills exhibited the hewn lines in the form
+of steps, remaining from ancient quarrying.&nbsp; The deep alluvium of the
+plain furnishes no stone whatever for such purposes.</p>
+<p>In forty minutes from Ta&rsquo;annuk, we came to the small mills of
+<i>Lejjoon</i>, (the Roman <i>Legio</i>, named from a military station
+there.)&nbsp; At that time of the <!-- page 230--><a
+name="page230"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 230</span>year the body of
+water was not considerable, and there is no village there.</p>
+<p>In fifty minutes more we crossed a rivulet named <i>Menzel el Basha</i>,
+(the Pasha&rsquo;s halting-place,) and in twenty minutes more, the
+<i>&rsquo;Ain Kaimoon</i> with abundance of water.&nbsp; This is at the
+foot of a hill which has on its summit the vestiges of the large ancient
+town <i>Kaimoon</i>.</p>
+<p>This hill is long, narrow, and curved like a cucumber, lying at the
+south-east end of Mount Carmel, and having the Kishon river on its outer or
+north-eastern side.&nbsp; Here, therefore, we come distinctly upon the
+western geography of the Zebulon tribe.&nbsp; In Joshua xix. 11, the border
+of Zebulon is given as reaching &ldquo;to the river that is before
+Jokneam.&rdquo;&nbsp; I do not doubt that this river is the Kishon, or that
+Jokneam is the &ldquo;Jokneam of Carmel,&rdquo; in chapter xii. 22, which
+was given to the Levites &ldquo;out of the tribe of Zebulon, Jokneam with
+her suburbs,&rdquo; (chap. xxi. 34.)&nbsp; This place, Kaimoon or Yokneam,
+must have been one of particular value in a military point of view,
+commanding as it did the pass of the Kishon valley on one side, and the
+<i>Wadi Mel&rsquo;hh</i> on the other.&nbsp; Such a post would be in good
+hands, when intrusted to the bold and warlike tribe of Levi.&nbsp; In the
+same way several other defensible posts were committed to their charge all
+over the country. <a name="citation230"></a><a href="#footnote230"
+class="citation">[230]</a></p>
+<p><!-- page 231--><a name="page231"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+231</span>On my present journey I passed round the outer line of Tell
+Kaimoon, having Kishon on the right.&nbsp; In so doing we crossed various
+tributary streams&mdash;the first one, in quarter of an hour from
+&rsquo;Ain Kaimoon, was in <i>Wadi el Kasab</i>, (valley of reeds or
+canes)&mdash;the stream was bordered by reeds and a profusion of tall
+oleander in gorgeous pink flower.</p>
+<p>In this neighbourhood, the Turkom&acirc;ns had commenced reaping their
+grain.&nbsp; They are a race of people not to be mistaken for Arabs, men of
+strong build, and with a smiling expression on their clear, ruddy
+countenances.&nbsp; Besides Arabic, they speak their own coarse dialect of
+Turkish&mdash;several of them came running to us with handfuls of wheat
+from their harvest.&nbsp; They possess large herds of oxen with good
+horses.</p>
+<p>In another half hour we were at <i>&rsquo;Ain el Sufs&acirc;feh</i>,
+(the &ldquo;fountain of the willow-tree,&rdquo;) where the water issues
+from a rock, and in its bed are two willow-trees; upon the bank were plenty
+of blackberry bushes.</p>
+<p>Just before this we had by the roadside a common looking Arab
+burial-place, named <i>Shaikh S&acirc;d</i>; probably from some Mohammedan
+devotee of that name interred there; and among the stones about the graves
+is a fragment of an ancient cornice, deeply sculptured in the pattern here
+shown.</p>
+<p><!-- page 232--><a name="page232"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+232</span>
+<a href="images/p232.jpg">
+<img alt="Fragment of Sculpture at Shaikh S&acirc;d" src="images/p232.jpg"
+/>
+</a></p>
+<p>In a quarter of an hour further we passed <i>Wadi Keereh</i>, with its
+full stream of water, and plenty of oleander for adornment.</p>
+<p>Thence in about half an hour we arrived at <i>Wadi Mel&rsquo;hh</i>
+(&ldquo;Salt valley,&rdquo;) with its rivulet and wild holly-oaks, in which
+is a great highway leading southwards.&nbsp; This separates the Samaria
+ridge and Kaimoon from the extremity of the long Mount Carmel.</p>
+<p>Having thus passed from one end to the other along the side of the hill
+of Kaimoon, we turned aside from the road, for taking refreshment under a
+large oak halfway up that hill, where wild holly-oaks were springing from
+the ground to mingle with the sombre yet shining boughs of the tree.&nbsp;
+This was at the sudden contraction of the country into a narrow neck
+leading to the Plain of Acre.&nbsp; <!-- page 233--><a
+name="page233"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 233</span>This strait is
+bounded on one side by Carmel, and on the other by the Galilean hills, both
+sides clothed with abundance of growing timber; and through its midst is
+the channel of the Kishon, deeply cut into soft alluvial soil, and this
+channel also is bordered with oleander and trees that were enlivened with
+doves, thrushes, linnets, and gold-finches.&nbsp; The modern name of the
+river is the <i>Mokatta</i> (the ford,) and that of the valley <i>El
+Kasab</i>, derived from the spring and valley before-mentioned.</p>
+<p>At the narrowest part of this &ldquo;Kasab&rdquo; stands a hill, forming
+a serious impediment to the progress of armies, named <i>Tell el Kasees</i>
+(Hill of the Priest,) which name may be a traditional remembrance of
+Elijah, slaying the priests of Baal; but inasmuch as the word
+&ldquo;Kasees&rdquo; is in the singular number, the appellation may be more
+likely derived from some hermit residing there in a later age.&nbsp; At any
+rate, this Tell lies immediately below the site of that memorable
+sacrifice, and at the point where the Kishon sweeps round to the foot of
+the mountain a path descends from the &ldquo;Mohhrakah,&rdquo; <i>i.e.</i>,
+the place of the burnt-offering, to the river.&nbsp; It must therefore,
+have been the spot where the priests of Baal were slain, whether the hill
+be named from the fact or not; and nothing can be more exact than the words
+of the Bible in 1 Kings xviii. 40.</p>
+<p>We were preparing to remount for continuing the journey when our guide
+espied four wild-looking <!-- page 234--><a name="page234"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 234</span>Arabs walking with long strides up the hill,
+so as to pass behind and above us; they were well armed, and made no reply
+to our challenge.&nbsp; As our horses and the guide&rsquo;s spear would
+have benefited us little on the steep hill-side, but on the contrary were
+tempting prizes, and as our fire-arms were not so numerous as theirs, we
+thought fit to pace away before they should obtain any further advantage of
+situation over us.</p>
+<p>In another quarter of an hour we left the straight road to Caiffa, and
+struck out northwards, crossing the Kishon at a fort opposite a village on
+a hill called <i>El Hharatheeyeh</i>, just before we should otherwise have
+come to a low hill covered with a ripe crop of barley, which, from its
+formation and other circumstances, bore the appearance of an ancient
+fortified place.&nbsp; This hill was named <i>&rsquo;Asfi</i>, as I wrote
+it from pronunciation.&nbsp; This, with the <i>Hharatheeyeh</i>, one
+assisting the other, would prove a good military defence at this end of the
+valley, as Kaimoon and the Kasees were at the other.</p>
+<p>Dr Thomson, in his &ldquo;Land and the Book,&rdquo; chap. xxxi.,
+considers this site to be that of &ldquo;Harosheth of the Gentiles,&rdquo;
+(Judges iv. 13,) and I have no doubt that his supposition is correct; the
+topography agrees, and the etymology in both Hebrew and Arabic is one,
+viz., &ldquo;ploughed land.&rdquo;&nbsp; This author, however, makes no
+mention of <i>&rsquo;Asfi</i> though he speaks of &ldquo;the double
+Tell.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Whether &rsquo;Asfi was an aboriginal home of the <!-- page 235--><a
+name="page235"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 235</span>people in the modern
+<i>Esfia</i> on the summit of Carmel, I have no means of knowing; but that
+a population, when emigrating to a new settlement, sometimes carried their
+name with them, appears in Scripture in the instance of Luz, (Judges i.
+26,) and of Dan in the 19th chapter.</p>
+<p>Previous to this day&rsquo;s journey I had no adequate idea of the
+quantity of water that could be poured into the Kishon channel by the
+affluents above-mentioned, (since our passing the Lejjoon stream which runs
+in an opposite direction,) namely, the Menzel el Basha, the &rsquo;Ain
+Sufs&acirc;feh, Wadi Keereh, and Wadi Mel&rsquo;hh, all these on the Carmel
+side of the river, and omitting the more important spring called
+<i>Sa&rsquo;adeh</i>, near <i>Beled esh Shaikh</i>, on the way to
+Caiffa.</p>
+<p>Still portions of the channel are liable to be dried up in that
+direction, although the bed extending to Jeneen if not to Gilboa contains
+springs from the ground at intervals, but the level character of the
+country and the softness of the ground are unfavourable to the existence of
+a free river course.&nbsp; There was but little water at Hharatheeyeh when
+we crossed in the month of May.&nbsp; The &rsquo;Ain Sa&rsquo;adeh,
+however, which I did not then visit, never fails, and in full season, the
+Kishon near the sea becomes a formidable river, as I have more than once
+found.</p>
+<p>To return to the valley &ldquo;El Kasab,&rdquo; we were assured that in
+winter time the whole breadth <!-- page 236--><a name="page236"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 236</span>is sometimes inundated, and even after this
+has subsided, the alluvial soil is dangerous for attempting to travel in,
+it becomes a bog for animals of burden.&nbsp; Thus it is quite conceivable
+that at the occurrence of a mighty storm, divinely and specially
+commissioned to destroy, the host of Sisera and his chariots would be
+irretrievably discomfited.</p>
+<p>Where the scene opened upon the plain of Acre there was extensive
+cultivation visible, and the town of Caiffa appeared with the grove of
+palm-trees in its vicinity.</p>
+<p>The view hence of the Caiffa bay reminds us of the prophetic blessing
+pronounced by the patriarch Jacob.&nbsp; &ldquo;Zebulon shall dwell at the
+<i>haven</i> of the sea, and he shall be for a haven of ships.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+I am convinced that this Hebrew root &#1508;&#1493;&#1495; (English
+<i>haven</i> and the German <i>hafen</i>) is perpetuated not only in those
+words but in the modern appellation, Caiffa, or as it may be more properly
+written <i>Hhaifa</i>.&nbsp; The Arabic letter &#1581; is the real
+equivalent for &#1495; in Hebrew; by grammatical permutation the letter
+&#1493; rightly becomes &#1610; in Arabic, and this we have </p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p236.jpg">
+<img alt="Arabic word" src="images/p236.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Hhaifa which Europeans turn into Caiffa.</p>
+<p>We then reached a low natural mound on which are ruined walls of great
+thickness, the levelled surface on the summit had been probably all
+occupied by one castle with its outworks, but we saw it yellow with a ripe
+crop of barley.&nbsp; This place is <i>Hurbaj</i>, and the neighbourhood
+abounds with destroyed villages, the natural consequence of <!-- page
+237--><a name="page237"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 237</span>being so
+near to Acre, and being the <i>pal&oelig;stra</i> or wrestling ground of
+great nations in successive ages.</p>
+<p>We arrived at Acre in exactly twelve hours from Jeneen, and pitched the
+tents outside upon a bank between two trenches of the fortification,
+commanding extensive views in every direction, and were fanned by sea
+breezes from the bay.</p>
+<p>In conclusion, I may observe that the plain called by the Greeks
+<i>Esdraelon</i>, as a corruption of Jezreel, is that named
+&ldquo;Megiddo&rdquo; in Old Testament Scripture.&nbsp; In the New
+Testament it bears the prefix of the Hebrew word <i>Har</i> (mountain)
+minus the aspirate, being written in Greek, and so becomes
+&ldquo;Armageddon&rdquo; in the book of Revelation.</p>
+<p>For topographical reasons it is very likely that the city of Megiddo was
+at Lejjoon.&nbsp; There is a village of <i>Mujaidel</i> on the north side
+of the plain, not far from Nazareth, but this is a diminutive of the Arabic
+<i>Mejdal</i>, so common in Palestine as a variation from the Hebrew
+Migdol.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>Besides the above journey I made an excursion in 1859 on the summit of
+Carmel itself.</p>
+<p>Leaving the Convent, which is at the western termination of the
+mountain, we proceeded along the top of its main ridge to the opposite
+extremity, the <i>Mohhrakah</i>, undoubtedly the locality of Elijah&rsquo;s
+miraculous sacrifice in presence of King Ahab with the priests of Baal and
+of the groves; thence we <!-- page 238--><a name="page238"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 238</span>returned to encamp for a time at the cleanly
+Druse village of <i>&rsquo;Esfia</i>; after which a few hours&rsquo; ride
+westwards led us by the village of <i>D&acirc;liet el Carmel</i>, <a
+name="citation238"></a><a href="#footnote238" class="citation">[238]</a>
+also inhabited by Druses, to the romantic <i>&rsquo;Ain ez
+Zera&rsquo;ah</i> and over the sites of ruined places, <i>Doomeen</i>,
+<i>Shel&acirc;leh</i>, and <i>Lubieh</i>, where the hewn stones lying
+scattered over the ground were indications of much better buildings than
+those of modern villages.</p>
+<p>Then down the long and wearisome descent to <i>Teeri</i> on the
+sea-coast south of Caiffa.</p>
+<p>For topographical purposes chiefly, let me give an outline of a few
+other journeys made about the same neighbourhood.</p>
+<h3>1.&nbsp; FROM SAFED TO CARMEL.</h3>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Sept.</i> 1846.</p>
+<p>Going in the direction of the sea, that is, from Naphtali downwards into
+Zebulon, we crossed westwards the <i>Jebel Rama</i>, a long hilly range
+ending in the south at Rama, and richly wooded, but to our surprise there
+were numerous fires left by the people to consume trees and large shrubs at
+discretion, for the making of charcoal.&nbsp; Fortunately for us there was
+no wind blowing, but several times as <!-- page 239--><a
+name="page239"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 239</span>the fiery ashes had
+been drifted upon the road, our horses had no choice but to step into
+them.&nbsp; On that eminence I picked up specimens of Geodes which abound
+there, being lumps resembling fruits outside, but when broken found to be a
+crust of bright spar, and hollow in the centre; some of these were
+remarkably large.&nbsp; The hills were fragrant with wild herbs, and the
+views from them delightful.</p>
+<p>After <i>Semwan</i> we strayed from the right road and got to
+<i>Shemu&acirc;ta</i>, where we procured a guide to conduct us in the
+direction of Carmel; he undertook to conduct us as far as <i>Abu
+&rsquo;Atabeh</i>, from which Carmel would be visible, and the distance
+equal either to Acre or to Caiffa.&nbsp; From the heights we descended to
+<i>Ekwik&acirc;t</i>, and there found ourselves too tired to get further
+that night.</p>
+<p>In the morning we passed the <i>Bahhjah</i>, which had been the
+luxurious summer residence of Abdallah Pasha, but was in a ruinous
+condition, and came to <i>Abu &rsquo;Atabeh</i>, which is not a village but
+a collection of a few houses, perhaps formerly some outlying dwellings
+belonging to the Bahhjah.&nbsp; Here was a fountain, and a small aqueduct
+for conveying water to gardens.</p>
+<p>Crossed the <i>Naam&agrave;n</i> river, anciently named the
+<i>Belus</i>, on the banks of which, according to Pliny, the primitive idea
+of glass-making was discovered by accident.&nbsp; Along the beach we came
+to the Mokatta&rsquo; or Kishon, found it deep for fording, but <!-- page
+240--><a name="page240"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 240</span>got over to
+Caiffa, and mounted to the Convent of Carmel.</p>
+<h3>2.&nbsp; NAZARETH TOWARDS ACRE.</h3>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Oct.</i> 1849.</p>
+<p>Passing <i>Sefoorieh</i>, (the Sepphoris so often mentioned in Josephus)
+with a distant view of Carmel on the left, like a huge rampart of dark
+blue, we came to the ruined Khan with a fountain called the <i>&rsquo;Ain
+el Bedaweeyeh</i>, then through delightful wooded glades, on issuing from
+which we saw <i>Shefa &rsquo;Amer</i>, a handsome-looking place, with which
+I made better acquaintance in after years.</p>
+<p>On the plain of Acre I picked up a cannon ball, probably a twelve
+pounder.</p>
+<p>(This journey was repeated in March 1852, and in March 1859.)</p>
+<h3>3.&nbsp; FROM TIBERIAS TO ACRE.</h3>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>March</i> 1850.</p>
+<p>From <i>Hhatteen</i> to <i>&rsquo;Eilaboon</i>, a quiet and pretty
+village, after which we had a long stretch of &ldquo;merrie
+greenwood&rdquo; with furze in golden blossom, birds singing, and the
+clucking of partridges.&nbsp; At one place where the old trees echoed the
+shouts of country children at their sports, there rose above the summits a
+bold round tower, which on nearer approach we found to be an outwork of the
+fortification of a venerable convent called <i>Dair Hhanna</i>, which in
+comparatively recent times had been converted into a castle, but convent,
+castle, and tower are now become a picturesque ruin.</p>
+<p><!-- page 241--><a name="page241"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+241</span>Near this we saw squatted on the ground a family of three
+generations, almost entirely naked; they had a fire lighted, and the women
+were washing clothes in the water heated by it, a great rarity in
+Palestine, for they usually wash with cold water at the spring.&nbsp; Some
+Met&acirc;waleh peasants ran away from our party when we wished to make
+some inquiries of them.</p>
+<p>From an eminence we saw before us a flat plain inundated like a lake,
+left by the wintry floods.&nbsp; This occurs there yearly around the
+flourishing village of <i>&rsquo;Ar&acirc;bet el Battoof</i>, at which we
+soon arrived, after which we galloped for miles over green pastures of
+grass interspersed by trees.</p>
+<p>In three quarters of an hour further we came to <i>Sukhneen</i>, a large
+village with good cultivation extending far around.&nbsp; Still traversing
+green undulations with wooded hills to the right and left, in another hour
+we were at a small place called <i>Ne&acirc;b</i>, where the scenery
+suddenly changed for stony hills and valleys.&nbsp; In a little short of
+another hour we saw <i>Damooneh</i> at half an hour&rsquo;s distance to the
+left.&nbsp; In twenty minutes more we stopped to drink at the well
+<i>Berweh</i>, then pressed forward in haste to arrive at Acre before the
+gates (being a fortification) should be closed.&nbsp; We got there in fifty
+minutes&rsquo; hard riding from <i>&rsquo;Ain Berweh</i>.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 242--><a name="page242"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+242</span>II.&nbsp; THE REVERSE WAY FROM WEST TO EAST.</h2>
+<h3>1.&nbsp; ACRE TO TIBERIAS.</h3>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>March</i> 1850.</p>
+<p>Crossed the river Naam&acirc;n, and paced slowly over the extensive
+marshes, making for <i>Shefa &rsquo;Amer</i>.</p>
+<p>Among these marshes was a herd of about two hundred horses at free
+pasture upon the grass, weeds, and rushes, so succulent at that season of
+the year; these were on their way from Northern Syria, and were intended
+for sale.</p>
+<p>Also among the marshes was a temporary village of tabernacles or huts
+made of plaited palm-leaves, and papyrus canes or reeds, such as one sees
+on the line of the Jordan or about the lake Hhooleh, with the same class of
+proprietors in both cases, the Ghaw&acirc;rineh Arabs.&nbsp; Strange that
+this race of human beings should prefer to inhabit feverish marshes.</p>
+<p>We came upon a paved causeway (called the <i>Resheef</i>) leading from a
+large mill towards the sea, but only the portion nearest to the mill now
+remains entire.&nbsp; Probably this was turned to some account during the
+French military operations against Acre in 1799.</p>
+<p>At Shefa &rsquo;Amer we had <i>&rsquo;Ebeleen</i> in sight.&nbsp; Both
+places are conspicuous over the district around.&nbsp; At some distance
+from the town is a large well for its supply, and along the broad road
+between the well and the town, the Druse women are <!-- page 243--><a
+name="page243"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 243</span>constantly passing
+with their horns over the forehead and their jars on the shoulders.</p>
+<p>Shefa &rsquo;Amer is crowned by the remains of the Palace Castle erected
+by Shaikh Daher, (celebrated in Volney&rsquo;s &ldquo;Syria,&rdquo;) and
+the shell of a large old Christian church; near these are some very ancient
+wells cut into solid rock, but now containing no water.</p>
+<p>The majority of the inhabitants are Druses.&nbsp; There are a few
+Moslems and a few Christians; but at that time there were thirty Jewish
+families living as agriculturists, cultivating grain and olives on their
+own landed property, most of it family inheritance; some of these people
+were of Algerine descent.&nbsp; They had their own synagogue and legally
+qualified butcher, and their numbers had formerly been more considerable.
+<a name="citation243"></a><a href="#footnote243"
+class="citation">[243]</a></p>
+<p>I felt an especial interest in these people, as well as in the knowledge
+of a similar community existing at a small village not far distant named
+<i>Bokea&rsquo;h</i>.</p>
+<p>Upon the road that day, and in half an hour from the town, I met a
+couple of rosy-faced, strong peasant men, with sparkling Jewish eyes, who
+set to speaking Hebrew with some Rabbis in my company.&nbsp; It was in a
+scene of woodland and cornfields under the blue canopy of heaven; their
+costume was that of the ordinary Met&acirc;waleh <!-- page 244--><a
+name="page244"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 244</span>peasantry,
+<i>i.e.</i>, a scarlet and embroidered short coat with large dark blue
+trousers.&nbsp; I shall never forget this circumstance, of finding men of
+Israel, fresh from agricultural labour, conversing in Hebrew in their own
+land.</p>
+<p>Our road then led through glades of exceeding beauty: an English park
+backed by mountains in a Syrian climate.&nbsp; The gently undulating land
+was clothed with rich grass, and sprinkled (not thronged) with timber,
+chiefly terebinth.&nbsp; Linnets and thrushes were warbling among the
+trees.</p>
+<p><i>Cuf&rsquo;r Menda</i> was on our left; <i>Sefoorieh</i> at a distance
+on the right; <i>Rum&acirc;neh</i> and <i>&rsquo;Azair</i> before us.&nbsp;
+Then we entered upon the long plain of <i>&rsquo;Ar&acirc;bet el
+Battoof</i>, and rested a short time before sunset at <i>&rsquo;Ain
+Bedaweeyeh</i> for refreshment.&nbsp; Carpets were spread upon long grass
+which sank under the pressure.&nbsp; The horses and mules were set free to
+pasture, and we formed ourselves into separate eating groups; one
+Christian, one Jewish, and one Moslem.&nbsp; Some storks were likewise
+feeding in a neighbouring bean-field, the fragrance of which was delicious,
+as wafted to us by the evening breeze.</p>
+<p>On remounting for the road to Tiberias, several hours beyond, we put on
+cloaks to keep off the falling dew, and paced on by a beautiful moonlight,
+at first dimmed by mist or dew, which afterwards disappeared; the spear
+carried by one of the party glimmered as we went on; and the Jews whiled
+away the time by recitation of their <!-- page 245--><a
+name="page245"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 245</span>evening prayers on
+horseback, and conversing in the Hebrew language about their warrior
+forefathers of Galilee.</p>
+<h3>2.&nbsp; CAIFFA TO NAZARETH.</h3>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>July</i> 1854.</p>
+<p>Passing through the rush of <i>&rsquo;Ain Saadeh</i> water as it tumbles
+from the rocky base of Carmel, and by the <i>Beled esh Shaikh</i> and
+<i>Yajoor</i>, we crossed the Kishon bed to take a road new to me, namely,
+by <i>Damooneh</i>, leaving <i>Mujaidel</i> and <i>Yafah</i> visible on our
+right, upon the crests of hills overlooking the Plain of Esdraelon.&nbsp;
+We passed through a good deal of greenwood scenery, so refreshing in the
+month of July, but on the whole not equal in beauty to the road by Shefa
+&rsquo;Amer.</p>
+<h3>3.&nbsp; CAIFFA TO NAZARETH.</h3>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Sept.</i> 1857.</p>
+<p>By <i>Beled esh Shaikh</i> and <i>Yajoor</i>, where threshing of the
+harvest was in progress in the Galilean fashion by means of the
+<i>moraj</i>, (in Hebrew the <i>morag</i>, Isa. xli.&nbsp; 15 and 2 Sam.
+xxiv. 22,) which is a stout board of wood, with iron teeth or flints on the
+under surface.&nbsp; The plank turns upward in front, and the man or boy
+stands upon it in exactly the attitude of a Grecian charioteer: one foot
+advanced; the head and chest well thrown back; the reins in his left hand,
+and with a long thonged whip, he drives the horses that are attached to it
+at a rapid pace in a circle, shouting merrily or singing as they
+go,&mdash;a totally different operation from the drowsy <!-- page 246--><a
+name="page246"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 246</span>creeping of the oxen
+or other animals for threshing in our Southern Palestine.</p>
+<p>In due time we crossed the bed of the Kishon, which was quite dry in
+that part above the <i>Sa&rsquo;adeh</i>, except where some green stagnant
+puddles occurred at intervals.</p>
+<p>We passed a herd of camels belonging to the Turkomans, walking
+unburdened, whereas all other animals that we met were laden with grain for
+the port of Caiffa.&nbsp; At the commencement of the ascent on the opposite
+hills we rested under the <i>Tell el Hharatheeyeh</i>, beneath a noble tree
+of the evergreen oak; and near there we passed alongside of a camp of
+degraded Arabs called <i>Beramki</i>, in a few tattered tents, but they had
+some capital horses picketed around them.&nbsp; The villagers regard these
+people with ineffable disdain, as &ldquo;cousins of the
+gipsies.&rdquo;&nbsp; It seems that they subsist by singing songs among
+real Arab camps, and by letting out their horses as stallions for breeding,
+with variations of picking and stealing.&nbsp; We saw some of their women
+and children, filthy in person, painfully employed in scraping away the
+ground wherever black clay showed itself, in the hope of reaching water,
+however bad in quality.</p>
+<p>There was threshing at <i>Jaida</i> as we passed that village.&nbsp; We
+halted at the spring of <i>Samooniah</i>, and at <i>Ma&rsquo;alool</i>; the
+priest of the village was superintending the parish threshing: his
+reverence was covered with dust from the operation.</p>
+<h3><!-- page 247--><a name="page247"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+247</span>4.&nbsp; CAIFFA TO SHEFA &rsquo;AMER.</h3>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>June</i> 1859.</p>
+<p>From <i>Beled esh Shaikh</i> and <i>Yajoor</i>, across the Kishon
+channel, upon the plain of Acre, and rested a short time at the <i>Weli of
+Jedro</i>, (very like a Hebrew name,) and then near us, all close together
+were the three villages of <i>Cuf&rsquo;r Ita</i>, <i>Ja&rsquo;arah</i> and
+<i>Hurbaj</i>.&nbsp; Thence to Shefa &rsquo;Amer, first diverging somewhat
+to <i>&rsquo;Ebeleen</i>.</p>
+<h2>III.&nbsp; SOUTH SIDE OF ESDRAELON.</h2>
+<h3>1.&nbsp; PLAIN OF SHARON TO CAIFFA.</h3>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>Oct.</i> 1849.</p>
+<p>At <i>Baka</i> we leave the plain of Sharon, at its northern end, if
+indeed the extensive level from the Egyptian desert up to this point, may
+come under this one denomination; and we enter upon the hilly woodlands of
+Ephraim and Manasseh, so clearly described in Joshua xvii. 11, 17, 18.</p>
+<p>In mounting to the higher ground, there is obtained a fine view of the
+sea, and the oak and karoobah trees were larger as we advanced; from
+certain stations we obtained a totally unexpected prospect of a stretch of
+large forest scenery below us, extending towards <i>Sindianeh</i> in the
+west.</p>
+<p>At one spot we passed among scattered stones of excellent masonry, large
+and rabbeted at the edges, lying confusedly about, enough for a small town,
+but evidently belonging to a period of <!-- page 248--><a
+name="page248"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 248</span>ancient date; a few
+mud huts were adjoining these.</p>
+<p>Thence we descended into a long valley, several miles in extent, called
+<i>Wadi &rsquo;Arah</i>, fully occupied with cotton crops, and stubble of
+the last harvest of grain.&nbsp; The valley was bounded on either side by
+well timbered hills, and its direction was N.E. by E.</p>
+<p>After an hour in this long enclosure, the pleasing features of the scene
+became less defined in character, and, uncertain of our way, we climbed up
+to a village called <i>&rsquo;Ar&acirc;rah</i>, where, after an
+hour&rsquo;s trouble, we got a guide at high price for the rest of the
+day&rsquo;s journey.&nbsp; The evening was then advancing, and the gnats
+from the trees and shrubs plagued the horses.&nbsp; Among these trees were
+grand old oaks of a kind that bear gigantic acorns with mossy cups.&nbsp;
+At length the verdure ceased, and we had only stony hills.&nbsp; There was,
+however, a weli with a spring of water, and fruit trees by the roadside,
+crowded with a shoal of singing birds all rustling and chirping at once
+among the boughs as the sun was setting, and throwing a glorious red over
+the clouds which had been gradually collecting during the afternoon.</p>
+<p>We left the village of <i>Umm el Fahh&rsquo;m</i>, (&ldquo;Mother of
+Charcoal&rdquo;&mdash;a name significant of a woodland district) upon the
+right, and night closed in; our old guide on his little donkey singing
+cheerily in front, till darkness reduced us all to silence.</p>
+<p><!-- page 249--><a name="page249"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+249</span>We crossed the small rivulet at <i>Lejjoon</i> by starlight; and
+the rest of the journey in the night was not only monotonous, but even
+dangerous, over marshes and chinks in the Plain of Esdraelon.&nbsp; Our
+course was in a direction N.E. to Nazareth, which we reached in sixteen
+hours from the morning&rsquo;s starting at <i>Cuf&rsquo;r Saba</i>.</p>
+<p>There were fortunately no roaming Arabs to molest us in this night
+passage across the <i>Merj ibn &rsquo;Amer</i>.</p>
+<h3>2.&nbsp; PLAIN OF SHARON TO CAIFFA.</h3>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>June</i> 1859.</p>
+<p>As before, we left the northern extremity of the plain of Sharon, but
+this time at the eastern and minor village of <i>Baka</i>, and thus we
+missed the ruined town before noticed, but got into the same valley of
+<i>&rsquo;Arah</i>; and in the great heat of summer, confined between the
+two ridges of hills, we crept on to the extremity of the valley, and
+mounted a hill to the village of <i>Mushmusheh</i>, opposite to <i>Umm el
+Fahh&rsquo;m</i>.&nbsp; All the villages in that region are situated on
+hills, and are of no easy access.</p>
+<p>This place enjoys abundance of water springing out of the ground, and at
+any risk so precious a treasure ought not to be lost; therefore, although
+the houses were abandoned and the people scattered, they come there
+stealthily, and as opportunity arises, to do the little service to the
+ground that it required, and watch its oranges, lemons, and pomegranates,
+(from the name it would seem that <!-- page 250--><a
+name="page250"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 250</span>formerly this place
+was famous for apricots.)&nbsp; As we halted and pitched tents there, one
+by one some of the people came about us, although they had been preparing
+to leave for the night, in order to sleep at &ldquo;Charcoal&rsquo;s
+Mother,&rdquo; (the village opposite.)&nbsp; They stayed under our
+protection, and got for us certain supplies from over the way.</p>
+<p>Close beside us was a gigantic mulberry tree, around which two very
+large vines climbed to a great height, and a channel of running water
+almost surrounded the roots.</p>
+<p>I never heard such sweet-toned bells as the flocks about there carried,
+and which gave out their music near and far at every movement of the goats
+and sheep.</p>
+<p>In the morning we left this very pleasant spot and went on to
+<i>Lejjoon</i>; crossed the Sufs&acirc;feh and the other streams with their
+oleander borders, and enjoyed the magnificent prospects of Hermon, Tabor,
+and the plain; rested on the hill of <i>Kaimoon</i> under the fine oak-tree
+of former acquaintance, and at length arrived in Caiffa.</p>
+<h2>IV.&nbsp; FROM CARMEL SOUTH-EASTWARDS.</h2>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>April</i> 1859.</p>
+<p>The usual way by <i>&rsquo;Ain Sa&rsquo;adeh</i>, <i>Beled esh
+Shaikh</i> and <i>Yajoor</i>; the woody sides of Carmel diversified in
+colour at this season of spring; there was the dark green of the bellota
+oak, the yellow of the abundant broom, the dark red-brown of the <!-- page
+251--><a name="page251"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 251</span>sprouting
+terebinth and the pale green of young-leafed trees of many other
+kinds.&nbsp; There was, moreover, the fragrance of an occasional pine, and
+of the hawthorn, (Za&rsquo;aroor,) which is of stronger scent than in
+England; and the ground was sprinkled with purple and yellow crocuses; also
+with anemones of every shade of purple and white, besides the scarlet,
+which alone are found in Jud&aelig;a, but there in profusion.</p>
+<p>Turning off from the road to Jeneen, I rose upon high ground, and came
+to <i>Umm ez Zeen&acirc;t</i>, (mother of beauties.)&nbsp; Our people were
+of opinion that this name did not apply so much to the daughters of the
+village as to the landscape scenery, for near it we commanded an extensive
+prospect, including Hermon with its snows one way, and the &ldquo;great and
+wide sea&rdquo; in the opposite quarter.</p>
+<p>We lost our way for a time, leaving <i>Rehhaneeyeh</i> on our left, and
+straying as far as <i>D&acirc;liet er Rohha</i>; on recovering the right
+road we arrived at <i>Cuferain</i>, (the &ldquo;double village&rdquo;) and
+to <i>Umm el Fahh&rsquo;m</i>, marching among silent woods often tangled by
+neglected growth, and abounding in a variety of unknown trees, besides the
+Seringa and the oaks with much broader leaves than are ever seen in the
+south; also, for a long period we had frequent recurring views of snowy
+Hermon in the N.E.</p>
+<p>The considerable village of <i>&rsquo;Aneen</i> we found almost entirely
+broken up, by the recent warfare between the partisans of Tokan and
+&rsquo;Abdu&rsquo;l Hadi.&nbsp; <!-- page 252--><a name="page252"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 252</span>At length our repeated calls and promises
+echoing among the apparently forsaken houses, brought out an old man, and
+he promised to procure a guide to take us within sight of
+<i>&rsquo;Ar&acirc;beh</i>, after which several women peered out of their
+miserable dwellings.</p>
+<p>The guide conducted us through large woods on heights and in depths,
+among fragrant herbs and blossoming trees growing wild, till some time
+after sunset, when we stopped for the night at a poor village called
+<i>Harakat</i>; we were all tired, but especially the two women of a
+Christian party going to Jerusalem, who had attached themselves to us all
+the day for the benefit of our protection.</p>
+<p>The ground on which the tent was set up was wet, as there had been some
+rain at the place that day, and springs of water were running to waste near
+us; the village people served as guards around us, on being fed at our
+expense; the pilgrims spread their beds in one direction outside the tent,
+and the kaww&acirc;ses in the opposite.</p>
+<p>By the light of a brilliant morning we marched forwards to
+<i>&rsquo;Ar&acirc;beh</i>, which was being besieged by the Turkish
+government, in force of infantry, cavalry, and artillery.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 253--><a name="page253"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+253</span>VIII.&nbsp; BEL&Acirc;D BESH&Acirc;RAH.</h2>
+<p>This is the mountainous district lying east and south of Tyre, probably
+the &ldquo;Galilee of the Gentiles;&rdquo; bounded on the north by the
+river <i>Kasim&icirc;yeh</i>, the ancient Leontes; on the west by the plain
+of Tyre; on the east by the plain of Hhooleh and of the Upper Jordan; on
+the south by hills around Safed: the district is very little known to
+Europeans, and was much less so in 1848.</p>
+<p>In that year I entered it from the North, after traversing the Sidon
+country, crossing the pleasant river with its rose-coloured border of
+oleander and wild holly-oak at a ford wider than the average breadth of the
+Jordan.</p>
+<p>There we found abundance of noble trees, and some cottages near them,
+the vines belonging to which climbed up those trees to a surprising height;
+and the thickness of the vines exceeded any that I had any where or at any
+time seen.</p>
+<p>In front was the village of <i>Boorj</i>, and we mounted into a high
+table-land commanding prospects of <!-- page 254--><a
+name="page254"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 254</span>indescribable
+grandeur, which comprised parts of both Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon, the
+extreme heights of Sannin and Hermon being visible at once.</p>
+<p>The day was one of hot shirocco, and there were fires of lime-kilns
+visible in several directions, this season (late in autumn) being that
+appropriated to such employment, after all the harvests are gathered
+in.</p>
+<p>There were innumerable villages appearing in every direction.&nbsp; We
+passed <i>Ab&acirc;siyeh</i> on our right; <i>Dar Meemas</i> and
+<i>Izereiriyeh</i> distant on the left; <i>Tura</i> on the right; <i>Dar
+Kanoon</i> we almost entered; <i>Bidias</i> near us on the left; <i>Dair
+Thecla</i> on our right; <i>Bursheen</i> on the right; <i>Durtghayer</i> on
+the left; <i>Arzoon</i> further on the left; then we rested under some
+olive trees, with <i>Dar esh Shems</i> on the right; <i>Mezra&rsquo;a</i>
+on the left; <i>Dar Zibneh</i> with a castle on our right.</p>
+<p>In the distance appeared the mighty old castle of <i>Shukeef</i>
+(<i>Belfort</i> of the Crusaders) upon an eminence, with Jebel esh Shaikh,
+or Hermon, rising majestically behind it.</p>
+<p>As we descended into a deep glen between verdant hills, the partridges
+were clucking in multitudes, and so unaccustomed to intrusion, that
+sometimes they came running up towards us; magpies were flying about, and
+we were told that the glen abounds in wild beasts, which there seemed no
+reason to doubt.&nbsp; For hours we wound round <!-- page 255--><a
+name="page255"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 255</span>and round within this
+cool and refreshing labyrinth of arbutus, bellota or evergreen oak, aspen,
+clematis, broom, and what looked like the sloe, besides other and unknown
+vegetation.&nbsp; The bellota was often respectable-sized timber in girth,
+though of no considerable height; sometimes our path was overshadowed by
+their branches stretching across, and we had to stoop beneath them.&nbsp;
+On the sides of the hills were many fires of the charcoal burners.</p>
+<p>As evening came on, we could see our lofty green prison walls tipped
+with the setting sun.</p>
+<p>At length the glen seemed to be terminated by a fine round hill, crowned
+with a village standing across the passage.&nbsp; The appearance improved
+as we drew nearer; inhabitants were not few; large flocks and herds were
+winding by several ways towards it.&nbsp; The people named it <i>Khirbet
+Sellim</i>, (Sellim in ruin) but how could all this cheerful scene belong
+to a ruin?</p>
+<p>The sun set and we had another hour of the lovely glen to thread by
+starlight.&nbsp; At last we emerged by a gently inclined plain, which
+gradually became rougher, and we mounted the steep hill on which
+<i>Tibneen</i> is built.&nbsp; There we determined to halt for the night,
+as our cattle were unable to hold on to <i>Bint el Jebail</i>.</p>
+<p>We pitched on the threshing floor between the village and the
+castle.</p>
+<p>This castle is the citadel of all the Bel&acirc;d Besh&acirc;rah, <!--
+page 256--><a name="page256"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 256</span>from
+the Leontes to Safed, and Ahhmad Bek, its owner, is called by his people
+&ldquo;the Shaikh of Shaikhs;&rdquo; by the Turkish government he is
+recognised as Kaimakam of the province.</p>
+<p>The people were of ill behaviour, and talked about quarantine, but the
+population of the district are at all times a churlish race, being of the
+Sheah or &rsquo;Ali sect of Moslems; they curse and loathe our Mohammedans,
+and oppress the sparse families of Christians within their reach.&nbsp;
+They are called the Mut&acirc;waleh.</p>
+<p>At first they refused to let us have anything, till the governor, on
+ascertaining who we were, sent us down some lemonade; still we got but few
+articles of food, and our horses were left without water.</p>
+<p>My kaww&acirc;s Salim was then taken ill from the effect of having slept
+the preceding night with his head uncovered, and with reluctance our own
+people put up the small tent that travelled with us, on purpose for them;
+they always prefer sleeping in open air, only covering the head well with
+the cloak.</p>
+<p>This was Saturday night, and we had not an agreeable prospect for a
+Sabbath rest on the morrow.</p>
+<p>The wind was strong all night on that lofty situation, but there was no
+dew.</p>
+<p>In the morning, the people would not supply us with milk, even for the
+horses, and so it was impossible to stay there; we marched on towards <!--
+page 257--><a name="page257"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 257</span>Bint el
+Jebail, about three hours&rsquo; distant, a considerable place, which often
+contests with Tibneen for supremacy in the local government, and where the
+governor is a distant relative of him at Tibneen.</p>
+<p>From the tents, before starting, we could see the following villages in
+a curved line from S.E. to N:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>Haddata or Haita ez-Zoot.<br />
+Bait U&rsquo;oon.<br />
+Berasheet.<br />
+Hhooleh.<br />
+Shakrah.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And they told us of <i>El Yehudiyeh</i> on the N.W. behind the
+castle.&nbsp; The Mediterranean in sight [I became better acquainted with
+Tibneen, and on better relations with the people in after years.]</p>
+<p>Passed on through a pretty country, like all the Bel&acirc;d
+Besh&acirc;rah, with numerous villages in sight; excellent beaten roads,
+and plenty of them; with everywhere the magnificent objects in view of
+Mount Hermon, and part of the Lebanon, but not always the
+Mediterranean.</p>
+<p>Rested at half-way of our short journey under a large evergreen oak on
+the summit of a rising ground, with a refreshing breeze blowing; thence
+descended to a plain where there were about a dozen wells, and people
+drawing water for large herds of neat cattle.&nbsp; Here our horses got
+drink.</p>
+<p>Arrived at <i>Bint el Jebail</i>, a nice-looking place, with a
+commanding house for the governor, (Hhusain Sulim&acirc;n,) but the people
+were at first <!-- page 258--><a name="page258"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 258</span>even more inhospitable than those at Tibneen,
+for they drove away our man Khaleel from the village fountain, and covered
+up their mouths and noses, in fear of cholera.</p>
+<p>On application to the Bek, we got permission to draw water for
+ourselves, and he allowed us eggs and bread, with barley for the horses,
+and it was with difficulty they accepted any money in return.</p>
+<p>The Bek also invited me to visit him in his house, but stipulating not
+to shake hands.</p>
+<p>On coming near the Serai, (governor&rsquo;s house,) the ladies of the
+Hhareem were looking out of the lattices upon the cavalcade.&nbsp; A crowd
+of servants were at the door to receive us, in attendance on one of his
+sons, who had a large hunting-hawk upon his wrist; silver bells upon her
+legs.</p>
+<p>We were shown into a large baronial-looking hall, and chairs were placed
+for us upon the divan.</p>
+<p>The great man sat in the right-hand corner, upon a panther skin, one of
+the prey of the country, his brother at his right hand, and his sons ranged
+on his left.&nbsp; He wore a robe of the true Moslem apple-green, with a
+Cashmere shawl round his waist, and another on his turban.&nbsp; His
+countenance and deportment were truly aristocratic; he and all his family
+were handsome, with intelligent expression of countenance.</p>
+<p>The son who had been outside came in, and put his hawk upon her perch,
+then took his place.&nbsp; They gave us sherbet, coffee, and abundant <!--
+page 259--><a name="page259"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+259</span>compliments: we talked of hawking in England, and English ladies
+riding to the sport.&nbsp; London, and the Queen on the throne were
+discussed; also Jerusalem, where the Bek had never been.&nbsp; On the whole
+the reception was satisfactory.&nbsp; Pity that the people were afraid of
+cholera; they did not exhibit the virtue of resignation to Divine
+predestination any more than our Sooni-Moslems of the south had done.</p>
+<p>Our tents were in a sunny situation, but still we had in them a rest for
+Sunday afternoon.</p>
+<p>At sunset the Bek sent me a present of grapes, those that were purple
+were of large size.</p>
+<p>Starlight night, but no dew; jackals were howling in troops, sometimes
+very close to us.&nbsp; An armed nominal quarantine was placed over us
+during the night&mdash;ridiculous enough after a pretty free intercourse of
+the people all day.</p>
+<p>The morning very cool.&nbsp; A poor Maronite priest from &rsquo;Ain
+Nebel came to me in his black robes and dark blue turban, and, leaning on
+his staff, gave a lamentable account of persecutions suffered by the four
+or five Christian villages about there, and imploring English help on their
+behalf.&nbsp; Alas! nothing could be done for him, only the case of the
+servant of the governor of Tibneen shooting a poor Christian, while on
+compulsory work at the lime-kilns, got inquiry made into it at
+Bayroot.&nbsp; On asking his name, and writing it down, the miserable man
+said to the secretary, &ldquo;Tell the consul <!-- page 260--><a
+name="page260"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 260</span>that I have already
+written his name on my heart.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hitherto our journey had been entirely novel&mdash;there is no record
+published of any traveller passing through that country, from the Leontes,
+its northern boundary, before that date.&nbsp; Going forwards, we passed
+through pretty green lanes along the sides of hills.&nbsp; From the crest
+of a hill, whence the view was very extensive, we had <i>Yaroon</i> on the
+right, and beyond it the ruined convent of St George.&nbsp; I afterwards
+learned that the church there exhibits proof of great size and
+magnificence.</p>
+<p>By the roadside was a huge undecorated sarcophagus, in excellent
+preservation, standing on a raised platform of masonry; single and alone in
+a wide expanse, no village or remnant of human works near it.&nbsp; The
+masonry in front had been wilfully damaged, enough to make the sarcophagus
+lean, but not to fall, and the ponderous cover was removed from its
+place&mdash;total length, eight feet by five, and four in height, the
+hollow cut out from the body left the thickness of a foot all round
+it.&nbsp; No inscription gives any record of the doubtless important
+personage for whom it was prepared, and no embellishments even provide a
+clue to the period to which it belongs.&nbsp; It stands well-preserved,
+great in its simplicity and position.</p>
+<p>Villages of <i>F&acirc;rah</i> and <i>Salchah</i> on our left.</p>
+<p>Thence we descended into a glen of blazing <!-- page 261--><a
+name="page261"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 261</span>white stone, without
+any verdure, in which were a diversity of paths, and a petty runlet of
+water issuing from the ground, but soon showing only stagnant green pools
+and mud, with frogs in abundance, then evaporated altogether.&nbsp; Near
+this, Salim was taken with vomiting and purging, and was hardly able to
+remain on his horse; the dragoman also fainting and giddy, and the rest
+frightened with the terrors of expected cholera.&nbsp; Our guide wanted to
+desert us and return home.</p>
+<p>The muleteers and luggage had taken another road, but after a time we
+met again.&nbsp; Moving on, the ground became a gradual rise, and a stream
+coming down it toward us, became clearer as we ascended, and fruit-trees
+were rather numerous.</p>
+<p>Under some fig-trees the kaww&acirc;s laid himself down, and we stayed
+there three hours with him; water was poured over his head to obviate
+fever, and I administered some pills.</p>
+<p>During the interval I found some sculptured stones with Hebrew
+inscriptions, which I have elsewhere described, and took pains to decipher
+the words, but without much result.&nbsp; They were lying in a ploughed
+field by the roadside.&nbsp; We were now entering on classic ground of the
+Talmudists, and upon a precipice above us, upon wide table-ground, was the
+village of <i>Jish</i>, the Giscala of Josephus.</p>
+<p>When evening brought coolness, we proceeded towards Safed.</p>
+<p><!-- page 262--><a name="page262"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+262</span>A peasant passing us was carrying home his plough upon his
+shoulder, except the iron share, which his little daughter, of two or three
+years old, carried on her head.</p>
+<p>Some of our horses were so stung by flies that the blood flowed to the
+stones under their feet as they went along.</p>
+<p>There were traces of ancient pavement along the road, and cavern holes
+in chalk-rock sides.&nbsp; Then traversing a few miles of dark volcanic
+stone we neared a crater in the ground, whose gloomy aspect was fully in
+keeping with the destruction which such a phenomenon bespeaks as having
+occurred&mdash;silent as the death it produced, and void of all pleasurable
+features, of wild flowers, or even the thorns of nature.</p>
+<p>The whole vicinity bore traces of the earthquakes that have often
+occurred there, especially that of 1837.</p>
+<p>After this a glorious prospect burst upon us of Safed, &ldquo;set upon a
+hill,&rdquo; and the gloomy hill of Jarmuk beside it.&nbsp; Tabor also in
+view far in advance, throwing a vast shadow of late afternoon-time over
+other hills, and glimpses of the lake Tiberias.</p>
+<p>Encamped on our former site among the great old olive-trees north of the
+town.&nbsp; Some Jewesses gleaning olives from the ground were frightened
+away.&nbsp; Visitors were out at once to welcome us in English, Arabic, and
+Judisch, (Jewish-German.)&nbsp; We were surrounded by fair and rosy <!--
+page 263--><a name="page263"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+263</span>complexions of Jews, the effect of the pure bracing air of the
+mountain.</p>
+<p>My sick people took to their beds, and only after a week&rsquo;s care
+(medical such as we could get) were able to continue the journey, one
+remaining behind to recover strength.&nbsp; The complaint, however, had not
+been cholera, it was rather what is denominated &ldquo;Syrian
+fever.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 264--><a name="page264"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+264</span>IX.&nbsp; UPPER GALILEE.&mdash;FOREST SCENERY.</h2>
+<p>Tibneen has been already mentioned as one of the two capital villages of
+the Bel&acirc;d Besh&acirc;rah, and lying S.E. from Tyre.&nbsp; We have now
+before us the Galilean country that lies southwards between that place and
+Nazareth.</p>
+<p><i>July</i> 1853.&mdash;After honourable entertainment and refreshing
+sleep in the Castle of Tibneen, I awoke early to look out on the dark and
+broad mass of Mount Hermon by starlight.</p>
+<p>Coffee was served, and I was mounted on my &ldquo;gallant gray,&rdquo;
+still by twilight, parting with some friends who had been rambling with me
+for three weeks over Ph&oelig;nicia and the Lebanon.&nbsp; I set my face in
+the direction of Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>We were guided by the Shaikh of <i>Rumaish</i>, a Christian village that
+lay upon the road before us, he being furnished with a written mandate from
+Hhamed el Bek, the ruler of Tibneen, to take four men of his place as our
+escort through the forest.</p>
+<p>In the outskirts of the forest belonging to the <!-- page 265--><a
+name="page265"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 265</span>castle we found
+peasants already proceeding to the threshing-floors; women in lines
+marching to the wells with jars cleverly balanced upon their heads; and
+camels kneeling on the ground munching their breakfast of cut straw, with
+most serious and unchanging expression of countenance, only the large soft
+eyes were pleasant to look at.</p>
+<p>In half-an-hour we were at <i>Aita</i>.</p>
+<p>This country is famous for the quality of its tobacco, a plant that is
+most esteemed when grown among the ruined parts of villages, because the
+nitre contained in the old cement of houses not only serves to quicken the
+vegetation, but imparts to the article that sparkling effect which is
+admired when lighted in the pipe.</p>
+<p>Vines are also extensively cultivated, and the people take pleasure in
+training them aloft upon the high trees, as oak, terebinth, poplar, etc.,
+and allowing them to droop down in the graceful festoons of nature, which
+also gives an agreeable variety of green colour among the timber trees.</p>
+<p>We were entering the gay woodland and reaching the top of a hill, when
+the sun rose at our left hand, and the glory of that moment surpassed all
+common power of description.&nbsp; Crowds of linnets and finches burst
+suddenly into song; the crested larks &ldquo;that tira-lira chant,&rdquo;
+<a name="citation265"></a><a href="#footnote265" class="citation">[265]</a>
+rose into the merry blue sky, with <!-- page 266--><a
+name="page266"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 266</span>the sunlight gleaming
+on their plump and speckled breasts; the wood-pigeons, too, were not
+silent; but all, in harmonious concert, did their best to praise the
+blessed Creator, who delights in the happiness of His creatures.</p>
+<p>Forwards we marched with light spirits, through dense woods, varied by
+the occasional clearings, which are called &ldquo;the rides&rdquo; in old
+English forests, and sometimes we drew near to snug villages, or got
+glimpses of such, by the names of <i>Teereh</i>, <i>Hhaneen</i>, and
+<i>&rsquo;Ain Nebel</i>; the latter at two hours from Tibneen; the people
+there are Christian, and they cultivate silk and tobacco.&nbsp; In some
+places we observed ancient sarcophagi, hewn into solid rock without being
+entirely detached, they had therefore been left unfinished, though partly
+ornamented.</p>
+<p>On a ground rising opposite to us I saw the screw of a large press,
+standing out of the field; this I was told is used for extracting resin
+from the red berries of terebinth trees for domestic lamp-lighting&mdash;a
+circumstance which of itself bespeaks the prevalence of woodland round
+about, and is a variation from the practice of that unhappy thin population
+on the plain of Esdraelon, who are obliged to use castor-oil for the same
+purpose, because the <i>palma Christi</i> plants which produce the oil are
+of less value to Bedaween marauders than olive-trees would be, and damage
+done to <!-- page 267--><a name="page267"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+267</span>them is of less importance than it would be among the latter.</p>
+<p>Arrived at <i>Rumaish</i>, the Shaikh rode up to his village while we
+awaited him under the branches of an old oak overshadowing the road.&nbsp;
+Rumaish is a neat little place, but, like almost every village throughout
+Palestine, oppressed by the heavy debts incurred with the forestallers of
+their produce (generally Europeans) in the seaport towns.</p>
+<p>Our friend returned with another horseman, and three men on foot, all
+armed with guns, as our future way lay through a Druse neighbourhood.</p>
+<p>These men for our escort were Maronite Christians, and they showered
+upon me abundant salutations, expressing their satisfaction at the
+circumstance of a Christian (myself) being treated with such distinguished
+consideration in Tibneen Castle, and concluding with the hope that I would
+visit them yearly, in order to give countenance to poor, depressed
+Christianity.&nbsp; The two priests of the village had desired to come out
+and greet me, but their people had persuaded them that the distance was too
+great for their walking in the sun&mdash;near mid-day in July.</p>
+<p>Resting for a while before resuming the journey, the newcomers sat round
+in a circle to smoke their fragrant local tobacco, and find some relief to
+the mind in relating tales of suffering under persecution.&nbsp; They said
+they had more reason to be satisfied with <!-- page 268--><a
+name="page268"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 268</span>the rule of my host,
+Hhamed el Bek, than with that of Tamar Bek at Bint Jebail, which they
+described as most cruel and capricious.&nbsp; That I could easily believe
+after the incident that came to my knowledge in that vicinity five years
+before,&mdash;that of the wanton murder of a poor Christian, at the
+lime-kiln works, by a servant of that governor.&nbsp; I have already
+mentioned that it was narrated to me by the village priest of &rsquo;Ain
+Nebel.&nbsp; An inquiry was instituted into the case by the authorities at
+Bayroot; but there must be many such instances occurring that are never
+known by those who would or could bring them to light and justice.</p>
+<p>At length the signal was given for mounting.&nbsp; The mules were
+collected together, after straying about for such pasture as could be got,
+their bells gently ringing all the time, and the pipes were stowed away:
+those of the muleteers being placed down the backs of their jackets, with
+the bowls uppermost, reaching to the men&rsquo;s necks.</p>
+<p>We then plunged into the forest of <i>Tarsheehhah</i>, where the Shaikh
+of the principal village, that which gives name to the district, is a
+fanatic Moslem, who was then preaching religious revivals, and was said to
+engraft upon his doctrine the pantheism of the Persian Soofis.&nbsp; This
+was not considered improbable, seeing that the Moslems of the Bel&acirc;d
+Besh&acirc;rah are all of the Sheah sect, (here called
+<i>Met&acirc;wala</i>,) out of which the Soofi heresy is developed.&nbsp;
+The new doctrines had spread rapidly <!-- page 269--><a
+name="page269"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 269</span>in various
+directions, and were professed by several of the Effendi class in
+Jerusalem&mdash;the old story repeated of Sadducean principles obtaining
+among the rich and the luxurious.&nbsp; This Shaikh was described as
+excessively intolerant of Christianity, and at that period, viz., the
+commencement of the Russian war, was in the habit of travelling about with
+a train of disciples, all carrying iron-shod staves in their hands, and
+distinguished by having a portion of the muslin of the turban hanging
+loosely behind, doing their utmost to excite tumult and hatred of the
+Christians by shouting aloud the Mohammedan formula of belief, &ldquo;There
+is no God but Allah, and Mohammed is the Apostle of God,&rdquo; striking
+the ground with their iron-shod staves by way of emphasis.</p>
+<p>Among the evergreens, and the gall-oaks, and karoobah-trees, our path
+often became very narrow&mdash;sometimes subsiding into sunless hollows,
+then mounting afresh into a chequered brilliancy&mdash;but always passing
+between woods of dark and glossy foliage.&nbsp; At one place was a pretty
+spring of water, where one of the party halted to drink while the rest
+proceeded.&nbsp; On finding him fail to come up with us, a horseman and two
+footmen were despatched in search.&nbsp; Their shouts gave animation to the
+scene, but gradually became fainter as the distance between us
+increased.</p>
+<p>The whole of the day&rsquo;s journey hitherto was remarkable for absence
+of human population.</p>
+<p><!-- page 270--><a name="page270"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+270</span>Came to <i>Herfaish</i>, a Druse village, in the very heart of
+the forest, but passed on, still toiling in the hot sunshine.&nbsp;
+Occasionally the paths were so rocky that we had to dismount and lead the
+horses.</p>
+<p>It was evident from the deportment and conversation of our guides, that
+whenever Christians (who in that neighbourhood are all Maronites) enter
+that division of the forest where the Druses of Herfaish prevail they find
+it necessary to travel in companies and armed.&nbsp; Fortunately we
+encountered none of the fanatics of Tarsheehhah.&nbsp; The escort told me
+that they themselves only became acquainted with these cross roads in the
+direction of Nazareth by means of their journeys thither at the
+ecclesiastical festivals of Easter, Christmas, etc.</p>
+<p>At this hot season there were not many flowers to be noticed, beyond
+some varieties of salvia, yellow broom, bright-coloured thistles, the pink
+flax, blackberry blossoms, and one kind of heath, together with some plants
+unknown to me.</p>
+<p>The trees were not of large dimensions, but mostly evergreen and of slow
+growth; many were very wide-spreading, and all dense enough to afford good
+shelter from either sun or rain.</p>
+<p>After six hours and a half of uninterrupted forest we arrived at a small
+trickling spring called <i>&rsquo;Ain Noom</i>, when large trees began to
+give place to shrubs and underwood, and human inhabitants <!-- page
+271--><a name="page271"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 271</span>again
+cheered the sight, they bringing cattle to the water for drinking.</p>
+<p>At <i>Bait Jan</i> we were overtaken by the missing member of our
+party.&nbsp; At this place there is considerable vine cultivation.&nbsp;
+Very soon afterwards we were suddenly upon the brow of a deep
+descent&mdash;sheer steep down to the plain of <i>Battoof</i>, and the
+prospect from that spot was amazing, not only beyond expectation, for we
+had not expected any remarkable scene to come in our way, but beyond all
+previous experience.</p>
+<p>The whole of Lower Galilee, Samaria, and Gilead, was laid like a map at
+our feet; and from so great an elevation the Mediterranean and the Sea of
+Galilee were brought close together.&nbsp; Among the most conspicuous
+geographical points were Tabor, a very small object beneath; then the line
+of Carmel; and Ebal in Samaria; there was Hhatteen, the last battle-field
+of the Crusaders; King Baldwin&rsquo;s castle of Cocab; the entrance of the
+Jordan into the lake, and both the supposed sites of Capernaum; also Acre
+with her blue bay, and a small amount of shipping off Caiffa.&nbsp; Pity
+that I had no aneroid barometer for ascertaining the elevation of that
+site.</p>
+<p>The map-like appearance of the wide panorama suggested to memory the
+song of Deborah the prophetess, with her recapitulation of the succours
+furnished or omitted by the several tribes of Israel at the battle of the
+Kishon and Harosheth of the Gentiles.&nbsp; From such a site she would turn
+to the <!-- page 272--><a name="page272"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+272</span>left hand for expostulation with Reuben, and to the right for
+rebuking Dan and Asher upon the sea-coast, after that the Lord had defeated
+the national foe without them, and sold Sisera into the hands of a
+woman.</p>
+<p>Our descent was by a narrow path of zig-zags, veering alternately
+towards Acre or Tiberias, although those towns were soon concealed by
+intervening hills; the plain below was a large dark patch of olive
+plantation.</p>
+<p>In an hour and ten minutes of wearisome toil in leading the horses down,
+with no possible interval of rest, we came to the village of <i>Rama</i>;
+having long before lost sight of the Mediterranean.</p>
+<p>We took refuge from the sun in the house of a Christian named Ibrahim
+Hhanna, and after an hour&rsquo;s sleep rose up to a feast of eggs, olives,
+bread, and cream cheese, after sharing in which our guides from Rumaish
+took their leave, with kindly wishes on both sides.</p>
+<p>Next we hired a guide for our crossing the plain to &rsquo;Ar&acirc;beh
+el Battoof on the way to Nazareth, and travelled over alternate corn
+stubble and balloot underwood.&nbsp; In one short valley that we crossed
+there were six <i>jeldeh</i> or short aqueducts to water-mills.</p>
+<p>The weather was still extremely hot.</p>
+<p>Passed near <i>Dair Hhanna</i>, a large ruin of a fortification upon a
+hill rising out of the plain; probably, as the name would seem to intimate,
+an old <!-- page 273--><a name="page273"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+273</span>castle of the Knights of St John of Jerusalem.&nbsp; A few poor
+people here have built huts for themselves within the great walls, in the
+manner of the Italian peasants in Goldsmith&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Traveller,&rdquo; who do the same within the confines of a
+C&aelig;sar&rsquo;s palace&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;And wondering man can want the larger pile,<br />
+Exult and own their cottage with a smile.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Two small towers, now also in ruin, flank the castle at short
+distances.&nbsp; These were erected by Shaikh Daher about eighty years
+since, who employed the whole for military defence in his revolt against
+the Turks.</p>
+<p>Near this &rsquo;Ar&acirc;beh lie some time-eaten fragments of large old
+columns.&nbsp; There we dismissed the guide, as he wished to be at home
+again before dark, and we traversed the plain of <i>Sefur&icirc;yeh</i>,
+the celebrated Sepphoris of Josephus&rsquo; wars.</p>
+<p>It is to be observed that in that afternoon we had crossed three narrow
+but long parallel plains, all running east and west, and divided from each
+other by lines of rocky hills.&nbsp; The northern one contains <i>Rama</i>
+and <i>&rsquo;Ar&acirc;beh</i>; the middle one has <i>Sefur&icirc;yeh</i>;
+and the southern one has <i>Tura&rsquo;&acirc;n</i> and <i>Cuf&rsquo;r
+Cana</i>, the place of the miracle at the marriage in St John&rsquo;s
+Gospel.</p>
+<p>Hoping to reach our destination by a shorter track, after passing
+<i>Rum&acirc;neh</i> and Jerjer we mounted a hill to <i>Mesh-had</i>, that
+was in sight, but as darkness came on, lost our way for a considerable
+time; <!-- page 274--><a name="page274"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+274</span>rain threatened and fell a short time.&nbsp; Once we came near a
+large cattle-fold, which we afterwards learned belonged to the Latin
+Convent of Nazareth, but no people appeared to answer us; then we got a
+gloomy view of Mount Tabor; at length, however, we were cheered with
+discovering the window lights of Nazareth, after being fourteen hours in
+the saddle, omitting the two hours&rsquo; rest at Rama, and the half-hour
+at Rumaish.</p>
+<p>The whole country we had traversed is particularly interesting; but at
+the close of the day the company were all too tired to sing aloud, as might
+have been performed under other circumstances, that Arab song well known
+over the country, with its wild high note (not cadence) at the end of each
+line:</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&nbsp; &ldquo;If thy horse be indeed<br />
+&nbsp; A creature of speed<br />
+Thou wilt lodge for the night in Nazareth.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In December of the next year (1854) I traversed the Rama plain
+lengthwise, that is to say, from Tiberias to the plain of Acre.</p>
+<p>After <i>Mejdal</i> and the <i>Wadi el Ham&acirc;m</i>, or &ldquo;Valley
+of the Doves,&rdquo; we soon struck out due westwards, and passed under a
+hill with ruins on its top called <i>Sab&acirc;neh</i>; then some more
+considerable ruins in a similar position called <i>Memileh</i>.&nbsp; At a
+good way to our left a small village was pointed out called
+<i>&rsquo;Ailabool</i>, containing, among other inhabitants, a few
+Christians, who have their chapel and a priest.</p>
+<p><!-- page 275--><a name="page275"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+275</span>The whole road was extremely picturesque&mdash;the scenery
+consisting of broken rocks of ochreous tinge and shoots of balloot oak; and
+for a long distance at every turn, in looking backwards, there showed
+itself the still lovely lake of the Gospel narratives&mdash;that object
+which no one can ever forget who has had once the privilege to be near
+it.</p>
+<p>We kept <i>Mansoorah</i> steadily before the eye, but on arriving at the
+hill upon which this stands, the road deviated a little, and rose over an
+eminence side by side with the village.&nbsp; Here we got a view of those
+several separated objects&mdash;Tabor; the Sea of Galilee; and Dair
+Hhanna.</p>
+<p>We were accosted by some Druse peasantry when the village of
+<i>Mogh&acirc;r</i> was somewhat on our left.</p>
+<p>While passing the large olive plantations of <i>Rama</i>, we gazed up at
+the long and steep ladder of the precipice by which we had descended last
+year.</p>
+<p>Rama is at some height above the level of the plain, although low in
+proportion to the mountain at its back.</p>
+<p>Just before sunset we halted under the trees for refreshment about a
+quarter of an hour, then engaged a guide to conduct us to <i>Yerka</i>, on
+the plain of Acre.</p>
+<p>The man purposely led us up to the village of Rama, over a very stony
+road, hoping to induce us to stay there for the night on the way to
+Yerka.&nbsp; <!-- page 276--><a name="page276"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+276</span>When I refused to remain, and insisted on going forwards, he took
+us into places even worse for travelling, to the peril of limbs to
+ourselves and the horses and mules: and great was our just wrath on finding
+ourselves every few minutes in augmented trouble in utter darkness; for
+there was no moon, and the stars were hid by clouds.&nbsp; The
+horses&rsquo; feet were sometimes caught between close-wedged rocks, so
+that we had to lift them out with our hands, and our boots were with
+difficulty extricated from the same catch-traps; nevertheless the traitor
+trudged on nimbly a-head of us, heedless of our embarrassments.&nbsp; Had
+he not led us up to Rama at the beginning we should have kept upon a
+pleasant, well-beaten road on the level of the general plain.</p>
+<p>At length by our own efforts we got down to this highway, and trudged on
+at a good pace, the guide still trotting on in advance, out of reach of our
+hands, fearful of consequences, until we reached <i>Mejdal Croom</i>, (or
+<i>Migdol</i>, or Tower of the Vineyards in Hebrew,) where he swore that
+Yerka was still three hours before us, and that he was exhausted with
+fatigue.&nbsp; As we were so in reality, we halted, and with great trouble
+obtained a room in the village for the night.</p>
+<p>In the morning it was discovered that Yerka was only half-an-hour in
+advance, but the mischievous fellow was already gone back to where we had
+unfortunately picked him up.</p>
+<p><!-- page 277--><a name="page277"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+277</span>In the house of our lodging I was amused by seeing rude paintings
+upon the white-washed walls, rather good for native Palestine artists of
+the nineteenth century.&nbsp; The principal object was a three-masted ship,
+actually containing what were intended for human figures; (perhaps it was a
+Christian, not a Mohammedan house.)&nbsp; On the masts were very large
+flags of no special nationality, but one of them in exactly the opposite
+direction from the others.&nbsp; The three men, (constructed of lines for
+limbs and a dot for the head,) looking through telescopes, were taking
+observations in different quarters; but perhaps this may be
+allowed&mdash;two men formed the crew.&nbsp; There were no sails, and the
+mainmast had one yard-arm, the rest had none.&nbsp; Up in the air, near the
+ship&rsquo;s masts, were two Arabs on horseback carrying spears; the whole
+tableau was coloured, as such works in the East always are, of a uniform
+dull red.</p>
+<p><i>N.B.</i>&mdash;We were within sight of the sea and the fortress of
+Acre.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>The three previous chapters, and this one at its commencement, relate in
+no inconsiderable proportion to woods, glens, and glades included in proper
+forest scenery; but inasmuch as travellers in Palestine, describing only
+what they have themselves seen along high-roads from town to town, under
+the guidance of professional dragomans and muleteers, generally deny the
+existence of forest <!-- page 278--><a name="page278"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 278</span>scenery in Palestine, I may subjoin some
+remarks on this particular subject.</p>
+<p>Passing over the extensive olive plantations of Gaza, and the Sahara of
+twenty square miles between Bayroot and Saida, as not exactly belonging to
+the class of timber trees; and the &ldquo;pine forest&rdquo; near Bayroot,
+which is of artificial formation for accomplishing a preconceived design;
+also the neb&rsquo;k and other thorny trees unfit for mechanical purposes,
+extending for miles in wild profusion beyond Jericho, and adding beauty to
+the scenery; there remain the veritable forests of Gilead and Bashan beyond
+Jordan, seldom visited by European travellers, and the two large forests in
+Western Palestine, accessible to the tourists who have leisure and will for
+knowing the country.</p>
+<p>First, the Bel&acirc;d Besh&acirc;rah to the north, north-east, and east
+of Tibneen, and also west and south-west of Safed, through all of which I
+have travelled with unceasing admiration and indulgence of the early taste
+implanted in childhood among old forests of England.&nbsp; The verdure and
+the shade from the Syrian sun were delightful, with the glades and vistas,
+as well as the amusing alternations often occurring of stooping to the
+horse&rsquo;s neck in passing below the venerable branches that stretched
+across the roadway.&nbsp; Those sylvan scenes abound in game, and are known
+to contain formidable wild animals.</p>
+<p>Secondly, the forest extending in length at least <!-- page 279--><a
+name="page279"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 279</span>thirty miles from
+below C&aelig;sarea, northwards to the plain of Battoof beyond
+Sepphoris.&nbsp; This was designated the &ldquo;ingens sylva&rdquo; by the
+ancient Romans.&nbsp; I have crossed this in several lines between Nazareth
+and Acre or Caiffa; and twice from the Plain of Sharon to Carmel through
+the <i>Wadi &rsquo;Arah</i> by <i>Umm el Fahh&rsquo;m</i>, a village, the
+very name of which (&ldquo;mother of charcoal&rdquo;) belongs to a woodland
+region; besides the line from Carmel to <i>&rsquo;Ar&acirc;beh</i>.</p>
+<p>The portion of this forest immediately contiguous inland from Carmel is
+named &ldquo;the R&ocirc;hha,&rdquo; clearly from the fragrance exhaled by
+the pine and terebinth trees, with the wild herbs upon the hills; this,
+together with the dark wooded sides of the long mountain, constitutes
+&ldquo;the forest of his Carmel&rdquo; mentioned in the boasting of the
+King of Assyria, (Isa. xxxvii. 24; also x. 18, in Hebrew,) and it is the
+<i>Drymos</i> of the Septuagint and of Josephus, (Wars, i. 13, 2,) in the
+which a battle was fought by those Jews who were aiding the Parthians on
+behalf of Antigonus.&nbsp; No wonder that the loss of men was considerable
+among the woods and thickets there.&nbsp; I note the accuracy of assigning
+the name <i>&Delta;&rho;&nu;&mu;&omicron;&sigmaf;</i> to this region,
+consisting as it does almost exclusively of oak.</p>
+<p>Besides these wide tracts of woodland, there are also the summit and
+sides of Tabor, with woods along its north-eastern base.</p>
+<p>And the district south and south-west of Hebron, in which, besides oak,
+etc., pine timber is frequent,<!-- page 280--><a name="page280"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 280</span>&mdash;I should rather say was, for of late
+years it has been much devastated, and that too in an unmethodical manner,
+to meet the increased requirements of Jerusalem, Bethlehem, etc., for fuel;
+nay, as I have been told, shiploads of it are constantly conveyed away to
+Egypt, especially for works on the Suez Canal.&nbsp; In like manner, in
+creeks of the sea between Acre and Bayroot, may frequently be seen small
+vessels loading with wood for Egypt.</p>
+<p>Throughout all the period of my experience in Palestine, I have had
+reason to deplore destruction of the growing timber by charcoal-burners in
+various provinces.&nbsp; I have seen the sides of whole hills in a blaze,
+purposely kindled and then left by these men to perform the work with least
+trouble to themselves: the Government takes no heed in the matter, and no
+care is employed for propagation of new trees to succeed the blackened ruin
+thus produced.</p>
+<p>So it would appear that in ancient periods, when the land was well
+peopled, the very wants of that population would, as in every other
+country, keep down the growth of forests.&nbsp; In the military periods of
+Roman and other invasions, large timber was required for offensive and
+defensive operations; and in our generation, when the population there is
+exceedingly diminished, the ignorance, the bad government, and the
+wastefulness of uncivilisation, produce the same result of destroying or
+hindering the increase of timber growth.</p>
+<p><!-- page 281--><a name="page281"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+281</span>There are not many parts of Palestine more bare of timber trees
+than the interval between Jerusalem and Bethlehem; yet there are old houses
+in the latter town whose owners pride themselves on the strong, stout
+rafters and planks they contain, of a quality known far around by the name
+of Bethlehem oak, and there are persons still living who can remember
+oak-trees near Solomon&rsquo;s pools.</p>
+<p>That this neighbourhood was formerly well wooded is still proved by the
+tufts of evergreen oak which spring up everywhere over the hills.&nbsp;
+These tufts of brushwood are found to come from immense roots, each one
+enough for several camel-loads of fire-wood.&nbsp; They are dug up by the
+peasantry, and sold in Jerusalem for fuel, under the name of
+Car&acirc;meh.</p>
+<p>It is popularly said that &ldquo;once upon a time&rdquo; a man of
+Jerusalem went to reside at Hebron, and the usual chequered events of life
+occurred, ending in the calamity of losing his eyesight.&nbsp; In extreme
+old age he resolved upon returning to his native city, and when he reached
+the Convent of Mar Elias, half-way between Bethlehem and Jerusalem, the
+weather being hot, he took off his turban to rest it on the saddle before
+him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh, our father,&rdquo; said his sons, who were walking by
+his side, &ldquo;why art thou uncovering the bareness of thy
+head?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;It is,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;that I may enjoy
+the coolness that is to be enjoyed beneath the trees that I remember to
+have been by the roadside all the way <!-- page 282--><a
+name="page282"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 282</span>hence to
+Jerusalem.&rdquo;&nbsp; They assured him that not only did no such avenue
+exist, but that not a tree was to be seen in any direction, right or left,
+and that much of the change was owing to the hostilities that had been
+carried on among the villages under the laxity of the Turkish
+government.&nbsp; &ldquo;Is it so?&rdquo; said he: &ldquo;then turn back,
+my sons, and let me die where I have lived so long; Jerusalem is no longer
+what it was.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This anecdote, current among the peasantry, describes strongly, by its
+very simplicity, the process that for centuries has been in operation to
+reduce that country to the condition in which we now find it.</p>
+<p>I ought not to leave the subject of forest scenery in Palestine without
+inviting attention to the eloquent passages in Dr Thomson&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Land and the Book&rdquo; upon that subject.&nbsp; This veteran
+missionary of the Lebanon knows the whole country well, and being an
+American of the Far West, has been accustomed to large forests, huge trees,
+and charms of woodland scenery; yet he speaks with rapture of the groves
+about Banias&mdash;the solemn glens and verdure of the Bel&acirc;d
+Besh&acirc;rah, and the magnificence of the Sindi&acirc;neh.&nbsp; This
+author has a keen relish for all the varied beauties of nature, and
+possesses the faculty of describing them so as to enable us to share in its
+healthful gratifications.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 283--><a name="page283"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+283</span>X.&nbsp; A TEMPLE OF BAAL AND SEPULCHRE OF PH&OElig;NICIA.</h2>
+<p>About midway between Tyre and Sidon lies what has been called by Porter
+and Tristram a kind of Syrian Stonehenge; but neither they nor Vandevelde,
+who likewise mentions it, really visited the spot.</p>
+<p>The remains are not even mentioned in Carl Ritter&rsquo;s elaborate
+compilation, the &ldquo;Erd-Kunde,&rdquo; nor in Robinson or Thompson; but
+as I have visited them five times, namely in October 1848, October 1849,
+September 1855, October 1857, and September 1859, I may as well tell what I
+know of these monuments, which I believe to be of some importance.</p>
+<p>The site on which they stand is a large open cultivated ground, nearly
+opposite <i>Sarafend</i>, (Sarepta,) between the high-road and the sea, a
+quarter of an hour south of the vestiges of <i>Adloon</i>, whose broken
+columns and large pieces of tesselated pavement lie actually upon the
+highway, so that our horses and mules walk over the household pavements, or
+the road pavement of hexagonal slabs.&nbsp; <!-- page 284--><a
+name="page284"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 284</span>Adloon may be at half
+distance between Soor and Saida.&nbsp; It has been conjectured that the
+name is an Arabic modification of <i>Adnoun</i>, and that again derived
+from <i>Ad nonum</i>, meaning the ninth Roman mile from Tyre; but as far as
+my memory serves me, that does not correspond with the real distance.</p>
+<p>There are upright stones standing from four to six feet each above the
+present level of the ground, but which may not be the original level.&nbsp;
+There may have been a considerable rise accumulated in process of
+time.&nbsp; The largest stone still shows six feet by a breadth of
+two.&nbsp; They anciently formed a parallelogram, (not a circle, which is
+commonly believed to be an emblem belonging to Baal-worship,) as may be
+seen in the following plan, which represents their present
+appearance:&mdash;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p284.jpg">
+<img alt="Ancient construction at Adloon" src="images/p284.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>The twelve stones marked <i>0</i> are still erect; the rest, whose
+places are marked by dots, are either <!-- page 285--><a
+name="page285"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 285</span>prostrate on the
+ground, or have entirely disappeared.&nbsp; Between them all are spaces of
+two or three yards each.&nbsp; The stones appear to have been carefully
+hewn originally, though now the edges are worn off, or pieces have fallen
+away from the substances of most of them.&nbsp; They bear, however, no
+chisel-indications of having been connected by lintels across the tops:
+they have not been placed as trilithons.</p>
+<p>Outside the parallelogram, at the distance of six yards, stand two other
+stones of the same description, which probably served as a portal of
+approach.</p>
+<p>Within the enclosure is a depression of ground, in an oval shape, almost
+filled up with weeds, which demands but little effort of imagination to
+suggest the position of an altar now removed, leaving only the hollow
+orifice of a channel for carrying away blood or ashes.&nbsp; This may be
+worth an examination hereafter.</p>
+<p>There are tokens of buildings having stood near, but these may have been
+of later date.&nbsp; I picked up a fragment of tesselated pavement there,
+but that may have come there by means of any conceivable accident from
+Adloon.</p>
+<p>Such is my simple account of what I cannot but believe to have been a
+temple of Baal-worship for the old Ph&oelig;nicians, certainly of earlier
+period than any Greek or Roman architecture in the country; and vestiges
+such as these, of antique Syrian monuments, may, on careful examination,
+furnish <!-- page 286--><a name="page286"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+286</span>us with data, useful in enabling us to understand the Celtic
+remains still found in Europe.</p>
+<p>The nearest village to these remains, though at some distance upon the
+hills, is <i>Sairi</i>, hence the place is named <i>Sook Sairi</i>, from
+the circumstance of a &ldquo;market&rdquo; of cattle and general goods
+being held there periodically for the district around.&nbsp; But why should
+this spot above all others in the long-deserted plain be used for such a
+market?&nbsp; Is it not a traditional continuance of some remote custom in
+connexion with the importance conferred by the ancient temple and its
+now-forgotten worship?&nbsp; Who can tell us through how many ages this
+rural fair has been held at Sairi or Adloon?</p>
+<p>The peasant account of the stones is that they were formerly men, whom
+God, or a prophet in His name, turned into stones for their wickedness,
+while they were employed in reaping a harvest; further my informant could
+not tell.&nbsp; The narrative closely resembled the explanation given me by
+country people in England respecting some almost similar stones at
+Long-Compton, on the border between Oxfordshire and Warwickshire; and I
+think I remember to have read of similar instances in other parts of
+England.</p>
+<p>Vandevelde was told that this miracle was wrought by Nebi Zer, (whose
+weli is in the neighbourhood,) and that this prophet Zer was nephew to
+Joshua, the son of Nun,&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, if he understood his interpreter
+aright.</p>
+<p><!-- page 287--><a name="page287"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+287</span>I cannot well leave that vicinity without mentioning the long
+lines of sepulchres excavated in the cliff-line which runs parallel to the
+sea, eastwards of the highway, and upon the crest of which line Sarafend
+and other villages are posted.&nbsp; These sepulchres have been noticed by
+travellers generally, even while merely passing along without leaving the
+beaten track, others have taken the trouble to visit them, but without
+finding any inscriptions.&nbsp; I have seen one inscription, the following
+in Greek, and apparently unfinished:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&Pi;&Alpha;&Tau;&Epsilon;&Rho;<br />
+&Alpha;&Rho;&Iota;&Sigma;&Tau;&Omicron;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Although in some respects these resemble the sepulchres near Jerusalem,
+they are not so elaborately formed into passages and inner chambers as the
+latter.&nbsp; Many of the excavations high above the ground have been at
+some era adapted to residences for hermits.</p>
+<p>Near Saida I have been shown sepulchres that were entered by steps and
+passages, and coated with very hard stucco, on which were pictures in
+fresco of festoons of olive and vine leaves alternated, these leaves being
+diversified sometimes with tints of autumnal brown, also trees of palm or
+olive, with birds upon their branches; the birds being all of one kind,
+with long tails, and coloured bright yellow and red, with brown
+backs.&nbsp; Inasmuch as these portray living creatures they must be <!--
+page 288--><a name="page288"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+288</span>ascribed to some classical, <i>i.e.</i>, ante-Islamitic
+epoch.&nbsp; The designing and colouring of them are excellent, and the
+work remains in good preservation; they are most likely of Roman art, for
+their style much resembles the wall pictures of Pompeii.</p>
+<p>I have met with no mention of these decorated sepulchres, but in
+Ritter&rsquo;s quotation from Mariti, (Saida&rsquo;s Umgebungen in vol. iv.
+I, page 410,) and that only lately.</p>
+<p>The sepulchre which I entered consisted of one principal chamber, at
+each side of which were three smaller recesses, besides two such opposite
+the entrance.&nbsp; These latter have others proceeding further within
+them.&nbsp; There are no low shelves as in the Jud&aelig;an sepulchres, but
+the dead were laid in shallow trenches sunk in the rocky floor.&nbsp; The
+stucco has only been employed to the right and left of the principal
+chamber.</p>
+<p>I pass over, as not belonging to this subject, the more recent discovery
+by others near the town in 1855 of the two sarcophagi, one of them bearing
+a Ph&oelig;nician inscription.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p288.jpg">
+<img alt="Temple of Baal (see p284)" src="images/p288.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<h2><!-- page 289--><a name="page289"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+289</span>XI.&nbsp; JERUSALEM TO PETRA, AND RETURN BY THE DEAD SEA.</h2>
+<p>During the last twenty years there have been many English and other
+visitors to Petra; but they have usually taken it in the way from Egypt
+towards Jerusalem, which is probably convenient with respect to the season
+of the year, inasmuch as they thereby get a warm winter before the
+&ldquo;sights&rdquo; of Jerusalem (as some irreverently speak) begin.&nbsp;
+It would not be so well to take Egypt after Easter.</p>
+<p>But, on hearing that several travellers had been unable to reach Petra
+even after &rsquo;Akabah, on account of hostilities arising between the
+Alaween and the Tiy&acirc;hah Arabs, or on account of the exorbitant
+demands of money made by the former of these, I thought the time had
+arrived for me to show the practicability of getting at the wonders of
+Petra from Jerusalem, under escort of the Jeh&acirc;leen Arabs near
+Hebron.</p>
+<p>I went accordingly, and treated with the Fellahheen of Wadi Moosa in the
+place itself; and numerous travellers have since availed themselves of this
+<!-- page 290--><a name="page290"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+290</span>advantage, though none have published an account of their
+expedition.</p>
+<p>On looking back at my notes of the journey, I am astonished at the rapid
+flight of time; for although my recollection is on the whole very vivid,
+these notes are dated in April 1851.&nbsp; Full occupation during the
+intervening period has seemed to shorten the interval.&nbsp; The scene,
+too, is now changed; for instead of the arid desert and the blasted
+porphyry cliffs of Edom, then before my eyes, these lines are penned among
+the bright green meadows of England, with the broad Thames in view, bearing
+large three-masted ships on its tide, freighted with imports from the most
+distant parts of the world.</p>
+<p>With an officer of dragoons, being a traveller in Jerusalem, and under
+escort of Hamzeh, the Hebron agent for the Jeh&acirc;leen, we proceeded
+across country to meet the Arabs in their wilderness.</p>
+<p>Leaving the Hebron road at <i>&rsquo;Ain Dirweh</i>, we ascended the
+lofty hill to the little village and weli of <i>Nebi Yunas</i>, (Prophet
+Jonah,) which is so conspicuous an object far away in every
+direction,&mdash;the minaret which rises from the building giving it very
+much the appearance of a rural church in Europe.&nbsp; Thence through
+well-cultivated fields of wheat and barley,&mdash;green at that
+season,&mdash;towards the village of <i>Beni Naim</i>; but at quarter of
+the intermediate distance, passed considerable remains of good masonry,
+named Khirbet <i>Bait Ainoon</i>, <!-- page 291--><a
+name="page291"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 291</span>(ruins of Beth
+Enon.)&nbsp; At <i>Beni Naim</i> is the reputed sepulchre of the Prophet
+Lot, according to the Moslems; that of his daughters being on an opposite
+hill at no great distance.&nbsp; This village commands a grand prospect of
+the Dead Sea, although there is no view of the kind from all the country
+around.&nbsp; Is not this the place whence Abraham, after the departure of
+the angels, saw the smoke of Sodom and Gomorrah rising as the smoke of a
+furnace?&nbsp; (Gen. xix. 27, 28.)</p>
+<p>Here was a travelling durweesh, fantastically dressed, amusing the
+peasants by dancing and cracking a long whip; while a lad accompanying him
+thumped a large drum,&mdash;both the thonged whip and the large drum being
+rare objects in that country.</p>
+<p>In a quarter of an hour we terminated our short day&rsquo;s journey
+(about six hours and a half) in a meadow of long green grass.&nbsp; The
+site is called <i>Beerain</i>, from the two wells there.&nbsp;
+Sel&acirc;meh, the brother of the Arab chief, with several of his people,
+were awaiting our arrival; and they were to lead us forward in the
+morning.</p>
+<p><i>April</i> 2.&mdash;My right knee was much swollen from the strain of
+a sinew, caused by an unexpected step down a bank taken by my horse when
+near <i>Hhalhhool</i>, on the road from Jerusalem; consequently, feeling
+feverish, and with a headache all night, I was not soothed by the camels
+groaning, quarrelling, or champing their food close to my tent.</p>
+<p><!-- page 292--><a name="page292"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+292</span>In the morning we made our bargain with Sel&acirc;meh, for the
+hire of camels, the escort, etc.&nbsp; The captain and I, with my
+attendants, were to ride our horses in the desert,&mdash;taking camels to
+carry an extra supply of water for them.</p>
+<p>We started, but in a very short time became disgusted at the slow
+travelling of our caravan, as we were compelled to moderate the pace of our
+riding to suit the leisurely tread of the camels.&nbsp; Sel&acirc;meh
+bestrode a very young colt of the K&rsquo;baishi race; but I rated my pony,
+of the Jilfi stock, still higher than his.</p>
+<p>The wide expanse before us was sprinkled with wild flowers, including
+the yellow furze, (I have beside me, while writing this, a bunch of the
+same, of English growth;) and the ret&rsquo;m, or juniper, seven or eight
+feet in height, covered with white blossom, the fragrance of which
+resembled, or, if possible, was an improvement upon, the smell of a
+bean-field in flower.</p>
+<p>Near <i>Ziph</i>, the rocks have many ancient wells cut into their solid
+substance.&nbsp; About noon we halted at a rough natural cistern, for the
+purpose of filling our barrels and kirbehs (goat and camel skins) with
+water.&nbsp; This task occupied an hour, during which I contrived to find
+just enough shade for my head under a big stone, but took refuge in the
+cistern itself while the camels were being reloaded.</p>
+<p>Leaving this, we found the waste plains abounding in locusts
+innumerable, and not full grown.&nbsp; As <!-- page 293--><a
+name="page293"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 293</span>a natural
+consequence, there were storks hovering about and feasting upon them.&nbsp;
+On account of the benefit thus conferred on mankind by these birds, the
+Arabs call them <i>Abu Sa&rsquo;ad</i>, <i>i.e.</i>, &ldquo;Father of good
+fortune.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In the middle of the afternoon we arrived at the encampment of the
+Jeh&acirc;leen, under the north-east side of Tell <i>&rsquo;Ar&acirc;d</i>,
+the site of the Canaanitish city in Num. xxi. I, xxxiii. 40; Judges i.
+16.&nbsp; It was a cheerful green site, though the verdure consisted merely
+of a thin and poor grass.</p>
+<p>We had to be introduced to the real shaikh on his own territorial
+domain, namely, Hadji Daif Allah abu Dahook,&mdash;a sharp fellow in
+driving a bargain,&mdash;a taller and stouter man than any of his people,
+who were all extremely dirty in person and dress, and several of them but
+small, withered-looking old men.&nbsp; One of the women, however, was tall,
+and walked with exceeding dignity of manner.</p>
+<p>Our European tents were pitched at some distance from the black hair
+tents of the Arabs and we observed, soon after our arrival, that three
+strangers came up on horseback, carrying spears tufted with black ostrich
+feathers, on a visit to our shaikh.&nbsp; They were well received; and
+songs, with clapping of hands, continued during a great part of the night,
+with a monotonous accompaniment of the women grinding corn in their
+hand-mills!</p>
+<p><!-- page 294--><a name="page294"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+294</span><i>April</i> 3.&mdash;We rose early, enjoying the indescribable
+beauty and purity of starlight in an oriental desert, thermometer,
+Fahrenheit, 53&frac14;&deg;, at sunrise; but before sunrise I mounted to
+the summit of the hill, where I found no vestiges of a city, only the
+foundation of a castle, or some such edifice, of about a hundred feet by
+sixty.&nbsp; In fact, this covered nearly the whole surface of the
+summit.&nbsp; The city must, therefore, have been situated on the plain,
+the metropolis of a petty Canaanitish king; but every trace of it is
+gone.</p>
+<p>Low hills bounded the view on every side, over which some peaks of the
+Moab mountains showed themselves in the east.</p>
+<p>When fairly started on the march at 10 past 6 <span
+class="smcap">a.m.</span>, we went along very cheerily, accompanied by
+Hadji Daif Allah and the three strangers, till, on a sudden, the latter
+wheeled about, and required from us the ghuf&rsquo;r, or toll, for our
+future passage through their country.&nbsp; The shaikh recommended us to
+make them a present of a couple of dollars, as they were neighbours of
+Petra, and without their good-will we should not be able to succeed in the
+expedition.</p>
+<p>We complied, and they rode off southwards, Abu Dahook returning to his
+camp.</p>
+<p>Wearisome indeed is travelling with camels; but what would it have been
+had we been mounted upon them, as is generally the case with travellers
+from Sinai and &rsquo;Akabah!&nbsp; We horsemen frequently <!-- page
+295--><a name="page295"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 295</span>imitated the
+practice of old Fadladeen in <i>Lalla Rookh</i>, when he rode ahead of his
+caravan, and alighted now and then to enjoy the spectacle of the procession
+coming up and passing, then mounted again to repeat the pleasure.</p>
+<p>The strongest and worst tempered one of our camels having the barrels of
+water to carry, suddenly lay down and rolled them from him.&nbsp; Had his
+burden been the skins of water instead, they would have burst, and we
+should have lost their precious contents.&nbsp; Our Arabs not being
+accustomed to the convoy of travellers, were as yet unskilful in loading
+the camels, or in poising the burdens in equal divisions; and most
+extraordinary noises did they make in urging the beasts
+forward,&mdash;sounds utterly indescribable in European writing, or even by
+any combinations of the Arabic alphabet!</p>
+<p>We had about half a dozen men, mostly trudging on foot, and but slightly
+armed, commanded by Sel&acirc;meh; and one of them, named Salem, was the
+merry-andrew of the party, full of verbal and practical jokes.&nbsp; The
+ride was exhilarating,&mdash;over a level plain, green with thin grass or
+weeds, and low shrubs, whose roots extended to surprising distances, mostly
+above the surface of the ground; the morning breeze delicious, with larks
+trilling high above us in the sky, and smaller birds that sang among the
+bushes.</p>
+<p>Sometimes we caught distant views of <!-- page 296--><a
+name="page296"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 296</span>innumerable storks
+devouring the infant locusts upon the hill-sides.</p>
+<p>Passed <i>&rsquo;Ain Mel&rsquo;hh</i>, (Salt-fountain,) which Robinson
+identifies with the Moladah of Joshua xix. 2, by means of the transition
+name of Malatha in Greek.&nbsp; The only building now remaining is a square
+weli, surmounted by a dome.&nbsp; Here we were not far from Beersheba, upon
+our right, and fell in with the common route from Gaza and Hebron to
+Ma&rsquo;&acirc;n.&nbsp; Finding a flock of goats, we got new milk from the
+shepherd; when diluted with water, this is a refreshing beverage.</p>
+<p>On coming up to a camp of Saadeen Arabs, our cook, a vain-glorious
+Maronite from the Lebanon, and ignorant of Arab customs, attempted to fire
+upon a watch-dog at the tents for barking at him; and it was judged
+necessary to deprive him of his pistols for the rest of the journey.&nbsp;
+Had he succeeded in his folly, we should have got into considerable
+trouble; for an Arab watch-dog is accounted so valuable, that to kill one
+of them might have entailed upon us a long delay, and a formal trial in a
+council of elders of different tribes, collected for the purpose; followed
+by the penalty awarded by the unwritten laws which obtain in the desert,
+namely, a payment of as much fine wheat as would entirely cover the dog
+when held up by his tail, and the nose touching the ground, and this is no
+small quantity; such <!-- page 297--><a name="page297"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 297</span>delay would have probably thwarted our whole
+journey.</p>
+<p>At a narrow pass, called <i>Daiket &rsquo;Ar&acirc;r</i>, was the shell
+of an old building, now roofless.&nbsp; Near this, and by the wayside, as
+we advanced, were considerable remains of foundations of houses.&nbsp;
+There must have been a town of note at that place, it is the &rsquo;Aroer
+of 1 Sam. xxx. 28.&nbsp; Our course now suddenly trended towards the east,
+instead of southwards.</p>
+<p>In less than another hour we came to <i>Kubbet el Baul</i>, merely the
+foundation of a small weli.&nbsp; Sel&acirc;meh told us that this had
+belonged to a tribe called Bali, (or Baul in the plural.)&nbsp; I have no
+doubt that this is the site of <i>Balah</i> of Joshua xix. 3; and that from
+it the Arabs, settling near it afterwards, derived their appellation.</p>
+<p>We soon afterwards, 3 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>, passed
+<i>Curnub</i>, a ruined place on the right, and descended the slope of
+<i>Muzaikah</i>.</p>
+<p>In another hour and a half, namely, at half-past four, we halted for the
+night, after a journey of ten hours.&nbsp; It was on a smooth, pebbly
+plain, dotted with shrubs, having lines of chalky hills to the south-west,
+for which our people had no other name than <i>Jebel el Ghurb</i>, or the
+&ldquo;western mountain.&rdquo;&nbsp; The whole scene was that of a mere
+desert; no creatures were to be seen or heard but ourselves.&nbsp; No
+Turkish authorities ever intrude into <!-- page 298--><a
+name="page298"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 298</span>this purely Arab
+wilderness; still less was the landscape spoiled by the smoke of European
+factories.&nbsp; No speck of cloud had we seen the whole day through.</p>
+<p>Not far from this must have transpired the incidents recorded of Hagar
+and Ishmael,&mdash;incidents that might have occurred yesterday, or last
+week; for a few thousand years count but little in so primitive a
+region.</p>
+<p>Our ragged fellows ran about singing, in search of thorns or long roots,
+or even the straggling plants of bitter colocynth, as fuel for our
+cooking-fire.</p>
+<p>Stars arose, but such stars! not like the spangles of the English
+poet&rsquo;s conception, those &ldquo;patines of bright gold,&rdquo; though
+that idea is beautiful; but one could see that they were round orbs that
+flashed streams of diamond light from out their bigness.</p>
+<p>So luxurious a bed as that spread upon the desert sand, amid such pure
+air for breathing, is scarcely to be obtained but in exactly similar
+circumstances; and we were undisturbed by cries of any wild beasts,
+although jackals and hyenas are common at night in the more cultivated
+parts of Palestine.</p>
+<p><i>April</i> 4.&mdash;Thermometer, Fahrenheit, 53&frac34;&deg; at
+sunrise.&nbsp; We had our breakfast, and were off again by sunrise.&nbsp;
+It is said that</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Early to bed, and early to rise,<br />
+Makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><!-- page 299--><a name="page299"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+299</span>It remained to be seen what the effect would be upon us.</p>
+<p>The groom being left behind a short time for packing up the kitchen
+utensils, allowed us to get out of sight without his observing the
+direction we had taken; and, when mounted, he took a wrong course.&nbsp; It
+was therefore necessary to give chase towards the hills to recover him.</p>
+<p>In an hour we reached two tul&rsquo;hh (acacia or mimosa) trees, from
+which, I believe, the gum-arabic is obtained, and the stump of a
+third.&nbsp; These were the first that we had seen.&nbsp; Then descended,
+during about half an hour, to the broken walls of a town called
+<i>Suf&acirc;h</i>, below which commenced the very remarkable
+nuk&rsquo;beh, or precipitous slope into the great Wadi
+&rsquo;Arabah.&nbsp; Before commencing this, however, we paused to survey
+the savage scenery around us, and the glorious expanse of the plain, which
+extends from the Dead Sea to the Red Sea, and is bounded on one side by the
+hills of Jud&aelig;a, and on the other by the mountains of Edom,&mdash;on
+an average of 3500 feet above the level,&mdash;including Mount Hor, the
+most conspicuous peak among them.&nbsp; At that time, however, the range
+was capped with rolling mists of the morning.</p>
+<p>This <i>Suf&acirc;h</i> is most likely the <i>Zephath</i> of Judges i.
+17,&mdash;the frontier town of King Arad the Canaanite, which the tribes of
+Judah and Simeon destroyed, and called the site Hormah, (<i>i.e.</i>,
+&ldquo;devoted to destruction.&rdquo;)&nbsp; If so, it is strange that the
+<!-- page 300--><a name="page300"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+300</span>Canaanitish name should outlive the one intentionally given by
+the early Israelites.&nbsp; Probably, the surrounding tribes never adopted
+the Hebrew name, and preserved the original one.</p>
+<p>We were standing among crevasses of shivered mountains, whose strata are
+tossed about in fantastic contortions; and what we had yet to traverse
+below this, was something like a thousand feet of very slippery rock, lying
+in flakes, and sloping two ways at once.&nbsp; The greater length forms a
+rough line, at an angle of what seemed to the eye to be one of forty-five
+degrees,&mdash;not so steep as the Ter&acirc;beh that we came to
+afterwards, but longer and more perilous.&nbsp; Yet this is the only
+approach to Jud<i>&aelig;</i>a from the desert for many leagues
+around.&nbsp; Was it here that King Amaziah destroyed his Edomite prisoners
+after his victory in the &ldquo;valley of salt?&rdquo;&nbsp; (2 Chron. xxv.
+12.)</p>
+<p>Half way down, one of our barrels of water slipped off a camel, and
+rolled into a chasm with noise and echoes like thunder.&nbsp; Wonderful to
+relate, it was not broken, and we were thankful for its preservation.</p>
+<p>At the bottom of the precipice, just beyond the shingle or debris of the
+mountain, the captain and I rested, and drank some camels&rsquo;
+milk.&nbsp; This the Bedaween consider very strengthening.&nbsp; There were
+several tul&rsquo;hh-trees in a torrent-bed beside us, and some
+neb&rsquo;k.&nbsp; With some twine that we <!-- page 301--><a
+name="page301"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 301</span>gave him, and a stout
+thorn of tul&rsquo;hh, one of our Arabs mended his sandal, which was in
+need of repair.&nbsp; We, having preceded the beasts of burthen over the
+slippery rock, sat watching them and the men creeping slowly down, in
+curved lines, like moving dots, towards us.</p>
+<p>Upon the ground we found some dried palm-branches and slips of vine,
+which must have belonged to some former travellers, passing from the
+western towns to Ma&rsquo;&acirc;n, for neither palm nor vine grows in this
+wilderness, of which it may be truly said, &ldquo;It is no place of seed,
+or of figs, or of vines, or of pomegranates,&rdquo; (Num. xx. 5;) and it is
+now become like a past dream, that Virgil and Lucan mentioned the
+palm-trees of Idum&aelig;a. <a name="citation301"></a><a
+href="#footnote301" class="citation">[301]</a></p>
+<p>So at length we were upon the great &rsquo;Arabah, or &ldquo;wilderness
+of Zin,&rdquo; of the Israelitish wanderings; and our path was to be
+diagonally across this, pointed direct at Mount Hor in the south-east.</p>
+<p>On crossing a shallow wadi named <i>Fik&rsquo;r</i>, they told us of a
+spring of water to be found in it, at a good distance to the
+north-east.</p>
+<p>After some hours, we came to <i>Wadi Jaib</i>, sometimes styled the
+Jeshimon, as well as its corresponding plain on the north of the Dead Sea,
+and in Arabic both are called &ldquo;the Gh&ocirc;r,&rdquo; in the shallow
+<!-- page 302--><a name="page302"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+302</span>bed of which were receptacles for water, concealed by canes and
+brushwood laid in the utmost disorder, so as to produce the appearance of
+mere random drift of winter storms.&nbsp; Without the Arabs, of course, we
+should never have suspected the existence of such valuable stores.&nbsp;
+Probably also the Bedaween from a distance would not be aware of such
+resources there.&nbsp; The covering would, besides, serve to prevent a
+speedy evaporation of the water by the sun&rsquo;s heat.&nbsp; These spots
+were shaded likewise by tul&rsquo;hh, sunt, and neb&rsquo;k-trees.&nbsp;
+There we watered the cattle and filled our vessels. <a
+name="citation302"></a><a href="#footnote302"
+class="citation">[302]</a>&nbsp; In another half hour we rested for the
+night, having made a march of nearly twelve hours, over more tiring ground
+than that of yesterday.</p>
+<p><i>&rsquo;Ain Weibeh</i> was to our right, which Robinson conjectured to
+be Kadesh Barnea.</p>
+<p>We perceived footprints of gazelles and of hyenas.</p>
+<p><i>April</i> 5.&nbsp; Sunrise, Fahrenheit, 62&frac14;&deg;.&nbsp; Our
+Jerusalem bread being now exhausted, we took to that of the desert-baking,
+which is very good while fresh and hot from the stones on which the
+improvisation of baking is performed, but not otherwise for a European
+digestion: and our servants, with the Bedaween, had to chase the chickens
+<!-- page 303--><a name="page303"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+303</span>every morning.&nbsp; The survivors of those brought from
+Jerusalem being humanely let out of their cages for feeding every evening,
+the scene of running after them, or flinging cloaks in the air when they
+took short flights, not to mention the shouts of the men and the screams of
+the birds, was very ludicrous, but annoying, when time is precious.&nbsp;
+The merry little Salem enjoyed all this, as well as the amusements of our
+people, during the monotony of daily travelling: as, for instance, the
+captain rolling oranges along the ground, as prizes for running, or his
+mounting a camel himself, or riding backwards, etc.&mdash;anything for
+variety.</p>
+<p>The desert may be described as a dried pudding of sand and pebbles, in
+different proportions in different places,&mdash;sometimes the sand
+predominating, and sometimes the pebbles,&mdash;with occasionally an
+abundance of very small fragments of flint, serving to give a firmer
+consistency to the sand.&nbsp; Round boulders are also met with on
+approaching the hill-sides.&nbsp; In one place large drifts of soft yellow
+sand were wrinkled by the wind, as a smooth sea-beach is by the ripples of
+a receding tide.&nbsp; These wrinkles, together with the glare of a burning
+sun upon them, affected the eyes, so as to make the head giddy in passing
+over them.</p>
+<p>Wild flowers and shrubs are not wanting; and the former are often very
+fragrant.&nbsp; I observed among those that are so, a prevalence in their
+names of the letter &#1594; (gh); as Ghurrah, <!-- page 304--><a
+name="page304"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 304</span>Ghubbeh, Ghurkud,
+Ghuraim, etc.&nbsp; They brought me a handful of <i>meijainineh</i>, which
+was said to be good for pains in the stomach; and the starry flower, called
+<i>dibbaihh</i>, not unlike a wild pink, is eaten by the people, both
+petals, calyx, and stalk.</p>
+<p>The tul&rsquo;hh, or mimosa-tree, has a strange appearance, very like an
+open fan, or the letter V filled up.</p>
+<p>The green foliage of it is particularly vivid at the season when we saw
+it, and the thorns long and sharp. <a name="citation304"></a><a
+href="#footnote304" class="citation">[304]</a></p>
+<p>Distances are hard to judge of in such <!-- page 305--><a
+name="page305"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 305</span>extensive plains and
+in so clear an atmosphere.&nbsp; We had been nearly two days in sight of
+Mount Hor, straight before us; yet the mountain only grew in size as we
+approached it, not in distinctness.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p305.jpg">
+<img alt="Tul&rsquo;hh Trees" src="images/p305.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>As we came nearer to the eastern mountains, we found innumerable and
+huge blocks of porphyry rock scattered over the ground.&nbsp; The Arabs
+called the range of Seir by the name of <i>Jebel Sherreh</i>.</p>
+<p>At about eight hours from our last night&rsquo;s station, we turned off
+the Wadi &rsquo;Arabah by the narrow <i>Wadi Tayibeh</i> into the heart of
+the mountains, at the foot of Hor.</p>
+<p>Ascended a series of precipices, and, at some elevation, met two young
+English gentlemen, with a pair of double-barrelled pistols shared between
+them, and their fingers ready on the triggers.&nbsp; They had a tale to
+relate of grievous exactions made by the Fellahheen of Petra,&mdash;which,
+however, seemed to me, by their account, to have been <!-- page 306--><a
+name="page306"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 306</span>brought on
+unconsciously by themselves, in having taken an escort of Tiy&acirc;hah
+Arabs from Nukh&rsquo;l instead of the Alaween; and they informed me that a
+clergyman from Cambridge was still detained there, as he refused to comply
+with the excessive demands of the people.</p>
+<p>On what a stupendous scale is geology to be studied in Mount Seir, where
+you have masses of red sandstone 1500 feet in depth; yellow sandstone
+extending miles away in ranges of hills, and the sandy desert beneath; all
+of this incapable of cultivation; and inspiring a sensation of deep
+sadness, in connexion with the denunciations of God&rsquo;s prophecies!</p>
+<p>At a quarter before four we caught the first glimpse of the Mez&acirc;r
+of Aaron&rsquo;s tomb, and at five pitched our tents on the rugged side of
+Hor, among crags and scented plants, enlivened by numerous cuckoos, and the
+sweet warbling of one little bird.&nbsp; What reminiscences of dear old
+England the song of the cuckoos awakened!&nbsp; Now, however, from
+henceforth, being in England, their song will infallibly recall the memory
+to large bare mountains, extreme heat of climate, and the fragrance of
+Elijah&rsquo;s ret&rsquo;m plant.</p>
+<p>During the last hour we had seen some blue pigeons, one partridge, and,
+separately, two large eagles, to which our attention had been drawn by
+their shadows moving on the ground before us; then, on looking upwards, the
+royal birds were seen <!-- page 307--><a name="page307"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 307</span>sailing along, silently and slowly, against
+the blue vault of ether.</p>
+<p>This had been the hottest day of our whole journey; and the atmosphere
+became thick as the evening stole over the hills.</p>
+<p><i>April</i> 6<i>th</i>.&mdash;Sunrise, Fahrenheit 77&deg;.&nbsp; In the
+morning we advanced upwards towards Aaron&rsquo;s tomb.&nbsp; Walking in
+front of the luggage, we met the clergyman of whom we had heard the day
+before.&nbsp; He had been allowed to leave Petra on suffering the people to
+take money out of his pockets,&mdash;reserving to himself the intention of
+complaining against them officially to the consul in Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>He had been to the summit of Hor, and pronounced the view from it to be
+more grand and striking than that from Sinai.&nbsp; On bidding him
+farewell, we took Sel&acirc;meh and one kaww&acirc;s, for clambering on our
+hands and knees to the summit, leaving the luggage to proceed and wait for
+us farther on; but had to rest occasionally in the shade of large trees of
+&rsquo;Ar&acirc;r, which Robinson considered to be the true juniper, and
+not the ret&rsquo;m.&nbsp; The latter (the <i>rothem</i> of the Hebrew
+Bible, under which the Prophet Elijah reposed) was very abundant, and
+covered with white blossom, shedding the richest perfume.&nbsp; Is it
+possible that all this fragrance, and the warbling of the birds, is but
+&ldquo;wasted in the desert air?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The mountain is all of dark-red colour; and the <!-- page 308--><a
+name="page308"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 308</span>higher we ascended,
+the more difficult we found the progress to be.&nbsp; At length all farther
+advance seemed impossible, till, on looking round, we observed an
+excavation for a well, with masonry around it; and beyond this were steps
+cut into the rock, which rock was sloped at an angle of between fifty and
+sixty degrees.&nbsp; This encouraged us to persevere.</p>
+<p>Still higher, I picked up some tesser&aelig; of mosaic, and morsels of
+marble and alabaster,&mdash;a piece of the latter now lies on the table
+before me.</p>
+<p>At length we attained the highest peak, where there was scarcely more
+space than sufficient to contain the small weli-building, which was at the
+time untenanted, though we had expected to find a Moslem devotee in
+permanent residence there.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p308.jpg">
+<img alt="Small weli-building" src="images/p308.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>I utterly despair of being able to describe the prospect around us; and
+can only say that extensive mountain-peaks lay in lines below, and might be
+compared to those made upon embossed maps, but that the whole scene was
+vast, savage, and abandoned to sombre desolation&mdash;both the hills and
+the desert&mdash;in every direction.</p>
+<p><!-- page 309--><a name="page309"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+309</span>The atmosphere was too thick and hazy to allow of very distant
+views.&nbsp; Neither of the two waters&mdash;the Red Sea or the Dead
+Sea&mdash;was visible.</p>
+<p>Let those who take pleasure in doing so, doubt that on that peak lies
+interred Aaron, the first high priest of Israel, &ldquo;the saint of the
+Lord,&rdquo; and that there was effected the first personal transfer of the
+pontifical office from him to Eleazer his son.&nbsp; Rather let me believe
+that there my unworthy footsteps have been placed on the same pieces of
+rock with the two venerable brothers who led up the redeemed people from
+Egypt, &ldquo;the house of bondage,&rdquo; and that it was there they
+parted, leaving Moses to carry on the task alone.</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Three Hebrew cradles, the Nile-palms under,<br />
+&nbsp; Rock&rsquo;d three sweet babes upon Egypt&rsquo;s plain:<br />
+Three desert graves must those dear ones sunder,<br />
+&nbsp; Three sorrowful links of a broken chain.<br />
+Kadesh and Hor, and Nebo yonder,<br />
+&nbsp; Three waymarks now for the pilgrim train.&rdquo; <a
+name="citation309"></a><a href="#footnote309"
+class="citation">[309]</a></p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I seated myself, and wrote a brief letter to a dear relative in
+England.</p>
+<p>Entering the weli, we found near the door a common-looking tomb, with an
+Arabic inscription,&mdash;which, however, I found too illegible to allow of
+its being copied; and over the tomb was spread a pall of silk, striped in
+red, green, and white, but much faded.&nbsp; Against a pillar, which
+supports the roof, were hung rows of coloured rags and threads of yarn,
+with snail-shells and sea-shells strung <!-- page 310--><a
+name="page310"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 310</span>among them by way of
+further ornament.&nbsp; A wooden bowl, at one end of the tomb, was probably
+intended to receive alms for the support of the devotee who claims the
+place, and who practises the curing of diseases by charms among the wild
+Arabs.</p>
+<p>The floor of the chamber has been handsomely paved with tesselated bits
+of coloured marble, much of which still remains.&nbsp; Over the tomb are
+suspended some ostrich eggs on a line, as is common in oriental churches;
+and near it is a mihr&acirc;b, or niche in the wall, to indicate the
+southerly direction for Moslem prayers.</p>
+<p>In a corner of the floor, a flight of steps leads down to a crypt; and,
+providing ourselves with a light, we descended thither, in expectation of
+finding there the more ancient tomb, believed to be genuine, as it is the
+usual practice in Moslem welies to have an imitation tomb on the common
+floor at the entrance, while the true one is exactly beneath it.&nbsp; But
+we only found an iron grating, swinging loose to the touch, and within it a
+plain wall, from which part of the plaster having fallen away, allowed to
+be seen the corner of a kind of stone sarcophagus.&nbsp; The portion
+visible was not, however, sufficient to enable us to judge of its probable
+era.&nbsp; The ceiling of the crypt is blackened by the smoke of lamps.</p>
+<p>I then mounted, by the outside of the building, to the top of the dome,
+but could see nothing <!-- page 311--><a name="page311"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 311</span>thence of Petra, so deeply sunk is that valley
+betwixt high hills.</p>
+<p>Descending the mountain by the opposite side of that of our
+arrival,&mdash;namely, on the side next to Petra,&mdash;we discovered that
+more pains in roadmaking had been bestowed there, and that the ascent in
+that direction would be comparatively easy.&nbsp; Cuckoos and partridges
+were heard plentifully; and, on looking back, I saw a very large raven
+hovering over the weli.</p>
+<p>In an hour&rsquo;s descent we rejoined our servants and horses, but were
+not yet at the foot of the mountain.</p>
+<p>Entering a valley of red rocks, much streaked with blue in wavy lines,
+the first work of antiquity that met our view was a square turret on each
+side of the road.&nbsp; Then we passed some tombs, or chambers, cut into
+the massive red cliffs with architectural cornices, pediments, and
+pilasters, some of them very handsome.&nbsp; Next was what Laborde marks in
+his map as &ldquo;the solitary column.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is standing
+solitary; but then near its base lie other columns of the same edifice,
+with the circular slices (or <i>drums</i>, as architects term them) that
+composed them, scarcely disturbed as they slid down in falling.</p>
+<p>In five minutes more we halted for the night close to what Laborde
+designates the Acropolis, where a pile of fine building lies prostrate, and
+the columns on the ground, in their segments, still touching each
+other.</p>
+<p><!-- page 312--><a name="page312"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+312</span>At the foot of this heap stands what is named the Palace of
+Pharaoh; and our station within it appeared, from the black relics of fires
+there, to be a frequent resting-place for travellers.</p>
+<p>Here, then, we were fairly lodged among the wonders which so deservedly
+excite the curiosity of the world, and proceeded to improve time, before
+the Fellahheen of the district should arrive to annoy us, by crowding and
+importunity.</p>
+<p>It is not my design to recount in detail the marvels of the
+place,&mdash;this has been done by Laborde, Lord Lindsay, Wilson, and
+Robinson,&mdash;but just to say, that having with me the small edition of
+Laborde and some manuscript notes extracted from other books, by their help
+I saw most of what was to be seen.&nbsp; I wandered through streets of the
+middle town; surveyed and entered palaces hewn into crimson rocks; sat
+reading on the solid benches of the theatre, and walked along its stage;
+then gazed with unwearied admiration on the beautiful Khazneh, its delicate
+tints and graceful proportions, and went to rest upon a green bank opposite
+to it, with a running stream at my feet, bordered by gorgeous oleanders,
+where I chatted with some wild Arabs arriving from the south.&nbsp; Such a
+harmony of ruddy tints, from the darkest buds of the oleander, through
+gradations on the rocks, to the most delicate pink, was truly a feast of
+nature for the eyes.</p>
+<p>These are incidents never to be forgotten, and <!-- page 313--><a
+name="page313"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 313</span>the memory of them is
+unspeakably charming.&nbsp; I made a few rough sketches; but it may be
+sufficient here to give only a specimen of the capitals of columns that are
+peculiar to Petra.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p313.jpg">
+<img alt="Capital of column" src="images/p313.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>During the afternoon the thermometer stood inside the tent at 95&deg;
+Fahrenheit.</p>
+<p>The captain, my companion, went alone to explore the chasm called the
+<i>Sik</i>, as my slight sprain, after being almost forgotten during the
+journey, had become painful again from the effects of climbing upon Mount
+Hor.</p>
+<p>But I had come to Petra for business; and the indigenous peasantry of
+Wadi Moosa were gathering around our tents from different directions.&nbsp;
+They had not been prepared for the reception of guests arriving from the
+north, <i>i.e.</i>, Jerusalem, as travellers usually come from
+&rsquo;Akabah or Sinai, through Nukh&rsquo;l.</p>
+<p><!-- page 314--><a name="page314"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+314</span>Our Arabs, both Jeh&acirc;leen and some strangers, set to making
+themselves comfortable.&nbsp; There arrived a large body of the Fellahheen,
+headed by Shaikh Sulim&acirc;n es Said, a ragged and ugly crew, he as dirty
+as the rest, but strutting about in a robe of bright scarlet.</p>
+<p>Then commenced the negotiations and disputes between them and ours;
+noise and menace speedily ensued, alternated with diplomatic
+man&oelig;uvres, for our champion, Sel&acirc;meh, was an able practitioner
+in such matters, at least he had a reputation for it.&nbsp; The stormy
+scenes were not concluded till late in the night, and they ended by an
+arrangement that travellers, arriving by the new road from Jerusalem,
+should pay the same pecuniary acknowledgment to the territorial owners as
+had been hitherto claimed from those arriving under Alaween escort from
+Nukh&rsquo;l or &rsquo;Akabah; and this agreement I ratified orally, as
+writing or sealing would have been altogether out of place there.&nbsp; One
+might think that so simple a matter could have been finished in five
+minutes; but just as in European business of that nature, it is always
+necessary for the contracting parties to be allowed scope for the display
+of their professional talents.</p>
+<p><i>April</i> 7<i>th</i>.&mdash;Sunrise, Fahrenheit
+65&frac34;&deg;.&nbsp; An inundation of strange Arabs from the desert had
+arrived during the night, and it was computed that there were not less than
+two hundred guns round our tents, while our party had not more than five,
+<!-- page 315--><a name="page315"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+315</span>with a few pistols.&nbsp; We were hemmed in by the newcomers, and
+the crags over us were occupied by men with guns laid in position between
+crevices.&nbsp; Some men were scattered about, shooting at birds; but it
+seemed to me their real object was rather the making of signals.</p>
+<p>These people were &rsquo;Ali Rasheed&rsquo;s branch of the Alaween, from
+a district not so distant as &rsquo;Akabah.&nbsp; Our Jeh&acirc;leen party
+looked very insignificant among them; they had evidently not expected this
+turn of events.</p>
+<p>As soon as we Europeans showed ourselves after breakfast, the Fellahheen
+rushed forward to serve as guides in exhibiting the curiosities.&nbsp;
+Feeling rather lame, I decided on remaining at the tents with my two
+kaww&acirc;ses as sentinels; the more disposed to do so, as the strangers
+had, during the night, purloined some articles from the Jeh&acirc;leen.</p>
+<p>It was a warm, misty morning, and in the absence of my companion I found
+considerable amusement in the screams of multitudes of wild birds, high
+aloft &ldquo;among the holes of the rocks, and the tops of the rugged
+rocks,&rdquo;&mdash;probably all of them birds of prey,&mdash;which echoed
+and reverberated with sounds closely resembling the laughter and shouts of
+children in their vociferous games.&nbsp; On their return, the Fellahheen
+were rapacious in demands for remuneration of their services, but were at
+length contented.&nbsp; This was the signal for the others to take their
+advantage.&nbsp; They wanted <!-- page 316--><a name="page316"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 316</span>toll to be paid for crossing part of the
+desert on which they thought the Jeh&acirc;leen had no right or precedent
+for bringing strangers.&nbsp; So, on our preparing to leave the ground,
+they rushed up the bank, secured commanding points for their guns, and thus
+exacted their fee.&nbsp; The screams and hubbub were at length terminated
+by some small backsheesh, (to our surprise, how little was required,) and
+we all marched away in a northern direction, the opposite to that of our
+arrival.</p>
+<p>This gave us an opportunity of passing again in front of the principal
+edifices, if they may be so denominated, including what I had not before
+seen, the sepulchre with the Latin inscription in large letters, QVINTVS.
+PR&AElig;TEXTVS. FLORENTINVS.</p>
+<p>It is to be noticed that Petra itself is called by the Arabs, Wadi
+Phara&ocirc;n, <a name="citation316"></a><a href="#footnote316"
+class="citation">[316]</a> not Wadi Moosa.&nbsp; The two valleys are
+adjoining, but in the latter there are no antiquities or wonders.&nbsp; At
+a distance, however, the journey to Petra is usually called a journey to
+Wadi Moosa, because the Fellahheen of the region about there, and to whom
+toll is paid, are cultivators of the Wadi Moosa.</p>
+<p>Before leaving the place, it may be observed that the neighbourhood must
+have been kept in a high <!-- page 317--><a name="page317"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 317</span>state of cultivation during the Roman empire
+for the maintenance of so numerous and luxurious a population of the city,
+instead of the absence of necessaries of civilised life that we now see
+there; and that good state of things must have continued in later Christian
+periods, when the district formed &ldquo;the third Palestine,&rdquo; and
+deputed bishops to the synods of Jerusalem and elsewhere.</p>
+<p>With respect to the colouring of the hills and rocks, it is truly
+surprising to behold such huge masses of deep red colour, variegated with
+wavy lines of violet and purple and blue, especially in the direction
+towards Mount Hor.&nbsp; We did not, however, remark so much of yellow and
+orange as Laborde or Irby and Mangles describe.</p>
+<p>I find since that Dr Wilson states these rocks to be highly saliferous,
+and says the Arabs scrape them with knives to obtain saltpetre for making
+their rude gunpowder.&nbsp; He is of opinion that in some geological era
+the whole place has been formed in a salt-water lake.&nbsp; Few people have
+had so much leisure for making researches there as he had.</p>
+<p>The temperature was high in the valley, because closely confined between
+lines of hills; notwithstanding that the elevation is supposed to exceed
+2000 feet above the Mediterranean.&nbsp; What it may be in a more advanced
+season than April I cannot tell; but I perceived neither scorpions nor
+serpents there, (as some represent the place to abound in,) no creeping
+things worse than earwigs.</p>
+<p><!-- page 318--><a name="page318"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+318</span>When on the march, we learned that the robbery of the night by
+&rsquo;Ali Rasheed&rsquo;s people, amounted to one camel, one gun, and old
+Sel&acirc;meh&rsquo;s sandals.&nbsp; Also, that those three men whom we saw
+on the 2d April at Abu Dahook&rsquo;s camp were of the same faction,
+probably also my visitors of the Khazneh yesterday.&nbsp; Sel&acirc;meh
+thought that for a couple of gazis (about three shillings and sixpence) he
+might succeed in a redemption of his goods.&nbsp; These I gave him, and he
+trudged back over the hills with one of his people, while we kept on our
+way.&nbsp; He was to meet us at our night&rsquo;s station.</p>
+<p>The last glance given to Petra showed us the palace of Pharaoh, and the
+peak of Hor with Aaron&rsquo;s tomb.</p>
+<p>Our way led us over a tolerable plain, made agreeable by the fragrance
+of the ret&rsquo;m, as wafted along by the breeze; this plant sometimes
+almost covering the small branch valleys.</p>
+<p>Soon after noon we were in the <i>Wadi Nemela</i>, through which we
+travelled for nearly two hours,&mdash;a scene of broken rocks on each side,
+and the intermediate space with a profusion of oleander, ret&rsquo;m and
+&rsquo;ar&acirc;r, all in flower, some of the latter having trunks of ten
+feet in circumference.</p>
+<p>Thence we issued upon a heath covered with low fragrant herbs; our Arabs
+singing, and the camels striding on famously, followed by a poor little
+lamb that we had bought at Petra.&nbsp; This, of course, we did not intend
+to convey all the way to Jerusalem; <!-- page 319--><a
+name="page319"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 319</span>but his presence
+constantly reminded me of the text, (Isa. xvi. 1,) &ldquo;Send ye the lamb
+(to) the ruler of the land from Sela [<i>i.e.</i> Petra] to the wilderness,
+unto the mount of the daughter of Zion.&rdquo;&nbsp; This is no longer the
+time when the king of Moab paid tribute &ldquo;to the king of Israel,
+100,000 lambs and 100,000 rams, with the wool,&rdquo; (2 Kings iii. 4.)</p>
+<p>Soon after two <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> we were passing over
+ledges of porphyry mountain-cliffs, dark and gloomy, but enlivened by large
+yellow salvia in bloom, and plenty of flowers visible in the hollow below;
+the whole scene most romantic and fantastic in formation.&nbsp; Such huge
+piles of porphyry I had not seen since those of the coast of Peterhead and
+Buchan, lashed by the great billows coming from the Baltic Sea.&nbsp;
+Occasionally we came to standing pools of water, which, lying on this hard
+kind of stone, could not filter away or be absorbed, as in our Palestine
+limestone would be the case.&nbsp; From these settlements our water vessels
+were supplied.&nbsp; Thermometer in shade of a rocky cliff, 75&frac34;&deg;
+Fahrenheit.</p>
+<p>We were soon again upon sandstone cliffs, but wildly broken, and
+descending into lower ground with its juniper and oleander.&nbsp; Then
+ascended again, and attained our greatest elevation by half-past three, at
+least equal to Robinson&rsquo;s calculation of 1500 feet above the
+&rsquo;Arabah.&nbsp; For two hours more we had to traverse cliffs, gullies,
+crags, and precipices of red porphyry or green syenite alternately, in
+enormous masses, split by convulsions of <!-- page 320--><a
+name="page320"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 320</span>nature, and next
+arrived in a valley strewed with huge fragments, angular, not rounded
+boulders, yet fallen from the adjacent mountains.&nbsp; But we were still
+high above the wide level of the &rsquo;Arabah.</p>
+<p>Halted at half-past five; thermometer, Fahrenheit 71&frac14;&deg;, and,
+during our dinner, old Sel&acirc;meh rejoined us, having failed in his
+dealings with the Alaween, who refused to restore their plunder, as they
+said their object was to punish the Jeh&acirc;leen, for bringing travellers
+through their country, instead of making them go by way of Egypt. <a
+name="citation320"></a><a href="#footnote320"
+class="citation">[320]</a>&nbsp; He reported that thirty more Arabs had
+arrived at Petra, half-an-hour after our starting.</p>
+<p><i>April</i> 8<i>th</i>.&mdash;Sunrise, Fahrenheit 59&deg;.&nbsp; Moving
+again at six o&rsquo;clock.&nbsp; In half an hour we were clear of the
+mountains of Seir or Edom; but for another hour the ground was still strewn
+with blocks of porphyry and green syenite, too hard for any of our
+implements to break off bits from them, and fragments small enough to be
+carried away were very difficult to find; however, we got some.&nbsp; These
+large stumbling-blocks, together with dry watercourses, rendered our
+travelling unusually troublesome to the horses and camels, and wearisome to
+ourselves.</p>
+<p>At length we got upon the free &rsquo;Arabah, among green shrubs and
+trees of tul&rsquo;hh and neb&rsquo;k.</p>
+<p><!-- page 321--><a name="page321"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+321</span>At nine o&rsquo;clock we came to a high sandbank, beneath which
+was a verdant line of tamarisk, and gh&acirc;r, and tall canes, with frogs
+croaking among them.&nbsp; All of these were indications of water; and,
+accordingly, we found a spring named <i>&rsquo;Ain Ta&auml;s&acirc;n</i>,
+being one of those which together form the stream of
+<i>Buwairdeh</i>.&nbsp; Here we filled our water vessels to the utmost, as
+it was not expected we should find any more good water for two days to
+come.</p>
+<p>The surrounding prospect was one of utter desolation, and I took out my
+Bible and read the words of 2 Kings iii. 8,-9, and 20: &ldquo;And he said,
+Which way shall we go up?&nbsp; And he answered, The way through the
+wilderness of Edom.&nbsp; So the king of Israel went, and the king of
+Judah, and the king of Edom; and they fetched a compass of seven
+days&rsquo; journey: and there was no water for the host, and for the
+cattle that followed them . . .&nbsp; And it came to pass in the morning,
+when the meat-offering was offered, that, behold, there came water by the
+way of Edom, and the country was filled with water.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the spot, as well as at the present time, I remembered with pain the
+deplorable weakness and wickedness of the remarks on this event contained
+in Paine&rsquo;s &ldquo;Age of Reason,&rdquo; and which I do not choose to
+repeat.&nbsp; The most charitable opinion that one can entertain of such
+writers is that they know nothing of the nature of the country under <!--
+page 322--><a name="page322"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+322</span>consideration.&nbsp; Thank God that the world at large, and that
+land in particular, is now better known than formerly, and, as a
+consequence, our evidences of the truth of the blessed Bible are daily the
+more confirmed.</p>
+<p>We then proceeded northwards along the bed of that stream; but in a few
+minutes its water was lost in the sand.&nbsp; In another hour we entered
+the dry bed of the <i>Wadi el Jaib</i>, and continued along its course in
+the direction of the Dead Sea.</p>
+<p>The hills were misty on both sides, and the ground hot beneath, as we
+tramped along, all our voices hushed during the &ldquo;strength of the
+heat,&rdquo; (according to Arab expression,) and the footfall of the camels
+entirely without noise.</p>
+<p>Who can sufficiently admire the adaptation of this creature to the
+desert, in which the Maker and Ruler of all has placed him?&nbsp; No heat
+exceeds the power of his endurance; steadily, patiently, silently he stalks
+his long strides over the yellow ground&mdash;one animal following another
+in regular military step.&nbsp; And during our travels at least he never
+flagged&mdash;the large eyes never lost their brightness; and who ever saw
+a camel, even though his master may seek rest or shade as he finds
+opportunity, shrink from the blazing brightness of the sun?</p>
+<p>Halted for the night shortly before five <span
+class="smcap">p.m.</span>, the journey having been one of eleven
+hours.&nbsp; But the Arabs insisted on our being placed behind the corner
+of a re-entering valley, in order that our fire <!-- page 323--><a
+name="page323"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 323</span>and smoke might not
+be seen during the night by hostile people from a distance.</p>
+<p>Thermometer at sunset, 81&frac12;&deg; Fahrenheit.</p>
+<p>We found footprints of gazelles, storks, and hyenas.</p>
+<p>Mount Hor at that distance, and in that direction, very much resembles
+the Salisbury Crags of Edinburgh.</p>
+<p><i>April</i> 9<i>th</i>&mdash;Sunrise, Fahrenheit 63&frac12;&deg;.&nbsp;
+Tents struck, and all on the march by half-past five.&nbsp; Losing sight of
+Mount Hor.</p>
+<p>At a quarter to eight a breeze sprung up from the north, so refreshing
+in that hot and dry wilderness as to merit the praise of the Bedawi poem,
+beginning&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Shem&acirc;li, ya hawa ed-deeret shem&acirc;li.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The north!&nbsp; O thou wind of the northern direction,<br />
+It has increased my blessing, and all that belongs to me,<br />
+And after weakness of state, has changed my condition.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I find, however, that this literal translation gives but a very poor
+idea of the feeling concentrated in the words of the original, and only
+feebly expresses the reminiscence of that time as still preserved at the
+moment of this writing.</p>
+<p>Soon after eight o&rsquo;clock we were out of the Wadi el Jaib, that is
+to say, the high cliffs of marl on each side abruptly terminated, previous
+to which, they had been at first more than a hundred feet above our heads,
+and then gradually diminishing in height as we advanced.&nbsp; We descended
+gradually into the semicircular expanse of marshes <!-- page 324--><a
+name="page324"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 324</span>called El Ghuwair or
+the Little Gh&ocirc;r, with the large Dead Sea and the <i>Khash&rsquo;m
+Usdum</i>, or salt mountain of Sodom, spread out before us.</p>
+<p>The course of the wadi we had left trended from south-east to
+north-east, on issuing from which we took the line on the western side of
+the Ghuwair, and easily descended over small eminences.&nbsp; This place is
+most probably the &ldquo;ascent of Akrabbim,&rdquo; (Num. xxxiv. 4, and
+Josh. xv. 3,) the southern boundary of the land given to Israel, and named
+after its abundance of scorpions.&nbsp; In our hasty passage over it we saw
+none of these.</p>
+<p>Among the marshes we found several palms growing wild.&nbsp; They were
+stumpy in stature, and ragged in form for want of cultivation, or perhaps
+of congenial soil.&nbsp; The miasma was strongly perceptible to the smell,
+and our horses were plagued with flies and gnats.&nbsp; How great was this
+change from the pure dry air of the mountains!</p>
+<p>Quarter to ten at <i>&rsquo;Ain &rsquo;Aroos</i>, (the
+bridegroom&rsquo;s fountain,) but the water was brackish.</p>
+<p>Thermometer in the shade, 83&frac12;&deg; Fahrenheit.</p>
+<p>For an hour past our people had been on the alert, on account of a feud
+between them and the Ghaw&acirc;rineh Arabs.&nbsp; On coming up to the
+print of a human footstep, this was carefully examined as to its size,
+direction of the tread, etc.&nbsp; The circumstances were not, however,
+exactly parallel to the occurrence in Robinson Crusoe, which naturally came
+to mind.</p>
+<p><!-- page 325--><a name="page325"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+325</span>At twenty minutes to eleven, having completed the western curve
+of the Ghuwair, we fell in with the <i>Wadi Hhuggereh</i>, which came up
+from the south-west, and on looking back, perceived a distinct mirage
+visible over the dry sands which occupy part of the Ghuwair, probably the
+effect of a salty deposit.</p>
+<p>About noon we arrived at a clear, running stream of water, but which
+proved, on tasting, to be highly impregnated with salt.&nbsp; The surface
+of the plain was in a great measure covered with a white
+efflorescence.&nbsp; Along the middle of this plain there was a sunken
+channel of a mile and a half in length, occupied by an overflowing of the
+Dead Sea, which, however, did not interfere with our track.</p>
+<p>At the end of this, and on approaching the corner of the salt mountain,
+we had an <i>incident</i> to enliven the tediousness of the hot
+journey.&nbsp; A party of Arabs came in sight.&nbsp; Our men discovered
+them first, and running forwards, primed their guns, or lighted the match
+of the lock, drew their swords and screamed, making bare the right arm, as
+if prepared for awful deeds.&nbsp; The others took up position behind low
+rocks, unslung their fire-arms, and screamed <i>not</i>.&nbsp; Presently a
+real or fictitious recognition took place, the guns on both sides were
+fired up in the air, and swords were brandished for very joy.&nbsp; Both
+parties rushed into each other&rsquo;s embraces, smiling and kissing with
+the greatest fervour.</p>
+<p>The comers proved to be some of their own <!-- page 326--><a
+name="page326"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 326</span>Jeh&acirc;leen,
+escorting some Hebron townsmen to Kerak.&nbsp; There were two women among
+the latter, some old men, and some conjurers with monkeys, who thereupon
+set up a dance to the music of tambourines.&nbsp; Upon something like
+equanimity being restored, the strangers informed us of certain doings that
+had taken place, on our account, since we had passed by there, and which
+nearly concerned us.</p>
+<p>The two parties soon separated, taking opposite directions.</p>
+<p>As we were close upon the western side, there was the southern end of
+the Dead Sea at our right hand, coming up imperceptibly upon the land,
+flush with it, so that no limit could be distinguished between water and
+the wet beach.</p>
+<p>At a few minutes past one we all alighted before the large cavern which
+runs into the heart of the salt mountain; and a picturesque group our party
+formed, spread about in some shade of the hill, with a great variety of
+costumes and colours&mdash;the camels kneeling and the horses picketed upon
+the bay of the sea of Sodom and Gomorrah.</p>
+<p>Entering the cavern, we found relics of the recent French expedition
+thither, under M. de Saulcy, such as egg-shells and torn paper coverings of
+candles, with French shopkeepers&rsquo; names upon them.&nbsp; We did not
+penetrate far inwards, but could see traces of occasional overflowings of
+the lake into the interior.</p>
+<p><!-- page 327--><a name="page327"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+327</span>The mountain itself is a wonder: five miles of salt above ground,
+and a hundred feet, probably in some places two hundred feet high.&nbsp;
+The colour is not bright, but of a dull gray.&nbsp; The best parts of it
+are very hard to break, and with difficulty we brought away some pieces for
+curiosity.</p>
+<p>As for Lot&rsquo;s wife,&mdash;the pillar of salt, mentioned and
+portrayed by the American expedition in 1848, and of which it is said they
+took a fragment for a museum at home,&mdash;after a good deal of search, we
+only discovered a crooked thin spire of rock-salt in one place of the
+mountain; but it would not have been very remarkable if many such had been
+found to exist in similar circumstances.</p>
+<p>It was a place for inducing solemn reflections and intense sensations,
+such as one could hardly venture to record at the time of being there, or
+endeavour to repeat now after so long an interval.&nbsp; Much may, however,
+be imagined by devout readers of the holy Scriptures&mdash;not only as
+contained in the records of the Book of Genesis, but also as inculcated
+with intense emphasis in the Epistle of Jude in a later period.&nbsp;
+Still, there is a vividness of impression to be derived only from being
+actually on the spot, and surveying the huge extent of water that differs
+from any other in the world,&mdash;placid and bright on its surface, yet
+awful in its rocky boundaries.&nbsp; But where are the cities and their
+punished inhabitants, except in the Bible, and the traditions preserved by
+Tacitus, the <!-- page 328--><a name="page328"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+328</span>Kor&acirc;n, and by the present inhabitants of the country?</p>
+<p>Some morsels of bitumen were found upon the beach; but the principal
+season of the year for finding it is in winter, especially at the
+commencement of winter, when the lake becomes unusually agitated, and
+breaks off masses of it from the bottom, often of very large size&mdash;the
+peasants of Hebron, with exaggeration, say, &ldquo;As large as
+ships;&rdquo; but I have seen many camel-loads of it brought up to
+Jerusalem at a time, for export to Europe.&nbsp; It is, however, a monopoly
+of the crown.</p>
+<p>We should note that in Gen. xiv. 10, the district was full of bitumen
+pits previous to the overthrow of the cities of the plain.</p>
+<p>At twenty minutes to three we came to a rude heap of stones called
+<i>Zoghal</i> or <i>Zoghar</i>.&nbsp; This cannot well be Zoar, among other
+reasons, because it lies upon the beach, and is not upon an eminence.&nbsp;
+It is well to mention that M. de Saulcy&rsquo;s extravagant ideas of the
+Pentapolis of Sodom, etc., had not then been published.</p>
+<p>In another quarter of an hour we had reached the extremity of the
+&ldquo;Salt Mountain,&rdquo; with all its distorted, sometimes even
+perpendicular stratification.&nbsp; By this time we were convinced that the
+whole of the mountain is not salt, but that a good deal of the upper length
+of it is a mixture of salt and marl or sand.&nbsp; Between it and the
+water&rsquo;s <!-- page 329--><a name="page329"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 329</span>edge we frequently saw blocks and spires of
+rock-salt protruding through the flat beach.</p>
+<p>There can be no doubt that the Arabic name, <i>Usdum</i>, is identical
+with Sodom, by a well-known custom of the language to invert the consonant
+and vowel of the first syllable.&nbsp; But even this is brought back to the
+original state in the adjective form.&nbsp; Thus I heard our guides speak
+of the Jebel Sid&rsquo;mi, meaning the Khash&rsquo;m or Jebel Usdum, or
+promontory of Sodom.</p>
+<p>The <i>Wadi Netheeleh</i> comes up from the southwest to the shore at
+this northern end of the mountain, parallel to the Wadi Hhuggereh at the
+southern end.</p>
+<p>We kept along the sea-side, and on rising to a higher level, near five
+o&rsquo;clock, halted for the night at the mouth of a valley where some
+water was to be procured, and near us was a broken tower.&nbsp; This site
+is named <i>Mobugghek</i> or <i>Umm-Bugghek</i>.&nbsp; As we were scarcely
+out of the reach of the Ghaw&acirc;rineh Arabs, our people had to go out in
+armed detachments for collecting firewood.</p>
+<p>During the process of pitching the tents, one of our men, named
+&rsquo;Odeh, perceived a stranger at a great distance, and half stripping
+himself, ran nimbly up a steep sand hill, ready for whatever operation
+might be necessary.&nbsp; Our European, I might rather say, our civilised
+eyes, could not have discovered the ill-omened object at that distance, but
+those of desert Arabs are far more powerful <!-- page 330--><a
+name="page330"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 330</span>than ours.&nbsp; I do
+not know that I shall ever forget the ardent brilliancy of Shaikh
+Sel&acirc;meh&rsquo;s eyes at all times, as witnessed constantly during our
+excursion.</p>
+<p>While we rambled on the beach in search of bitumen or sulphur, we
+suddenly heard a furious screaming in the direction of our tents, and
+hastily returning, found a number of strangers coming down a winding
+path.&nbsp; Our men were gathered together, and armed.&nbsp; The captain
+also examined the state of his double-barrelled pistols.&nbsp; However, on
+their arrival, the newcomers were recognised as people <i>not hostile</i>
+to the Jeh&acirc;leen, and their general location is near &rsquo;Ain
+&rsquo;Aroos.&nbsp; So, after some squabbling and arrangement, they agreed
+to share our supper with us in peace.&nbsp; Had the case been otherwise,
+our position was not an enviable one; for we were shut in between their
+hills and the sea, they were more numerous than our Arabs, and they had
+entire command of our spring of water.&nbsp; Our camels, too, were all
+unloaded, and the packages scattered on the ground.</p>
+<p>The scenery was desolate and gloomy in the extreme, undoubtedly blasted
+by the wrath of Almighty God, although a place which had at one time been
+&ldquo;well watered everywhere . . . even as the garden of the Lord, like
+the land of Egypt,&rdquo; (Gen. xiii. 10;) and it required strong faith to
+expect the possibility of this &ldquo;wilderness&rdquo;
+(<i>&rsquo;Arabah</i>) being again made &ldquo;like Eden, and her desert
+like the garden of the Lord,&rdquo; (Isa. li. 3.)&nbsp; Indeed, that <!--
+page 331--><a name="page331"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 331</span>promise
+does not seem to apply to this peculiar locality, by comparing it with
+Ezek. xlvii. 10, 11, although these unwholesome waters are to be healed,
+and are to have fish of various kinds in them, with fishermen&rsquo;s nets
+employed there.</p>
+<p>It deserves observation, that now the sea is so utterly lifeless that
+the American explorers there were unable, by the most powerful microscopes,
+to find any animalcul&aelig; in its water.&nbsp; Yet Lynch was of opinion
+that the atmosphere or vapour there was not in any way prejudicial to human
+health; and since then, Mr Holman Hunt spent a considerable time near the
+brink without injury derived from it.</p>
+<p>The air was very warm all night, with no freshening dew, and the sound
+of slow, rippling water on the strand, during the still starlight hours,
+was one to which our ears had not been of late accustomed.</p>
+<p>The Arab figures and conversation round the watch-fire were romantic
+enough.&nbsp; Thermometer at eight <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>,
+90&frac12;&deg; Fahrenheit.</p>
+<p><i>April</i> 10<i>th</i>.&mdash;Sunrise, Fahrenheit
+70&frac14;&deg;.&nbsp; In taking this last note of the thermometer at
+sunrise, I may observe that the marking of it at that moment gives but a
+feeble idea of the heat that we experienced during the days&rsquo; marches
+throughout this excursion,&mdash;the temperature rapidly increased after
+sunrise, and at later hours within the confined hollows, such as Petra and
+the basin of the Dead Sea, rose to that of (I suppose) an Indian
+climate&mdash;but above all the effects of heat <!-- page 332--><a
+name="page332"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 332</span>was that produced by
+the weight of atmospheric pressure at probably the lowest position in the
+whole surface of the globe: about 1300 feet below the Mediterranean.</p>
+<p>Before six o&rsquo;clock we were on the march, over broken and
+precipitous rocky paths, on which the progress was slow and toilsome.&nbsp;
+Then down again upon the beach.&nbsp; I am sure that if the Dead Sea were
+already covering the ground that it now does, before the time of
+Chedorlaomer, the &ldquo;four kings against five&rdquo; could not possibly
+have mustered or man&oelig;uvred their armies on any side or place between
+the mountains on each side of the water. <a name="citation332"></a><a
+href="#footnote332" class="citation">[332]</a>&nbsp; At a quarter past
+seven the thermometer stood at 86&deg; Fahrenheit.</p>
+<p>There is always a close, heavy heat in this depressed region, inducing
+profuse perspiration.</p>
+<p>At ten minutes past nine we were at the spot where the great eastern
+peninsula projects nearest to us, having in view the two extremities,
+north-east and south-west, now named on the maps, the former as Point
+Costigan, after the unfortunate explorer of 1835, and the latter, Point
+Molyneux, after my friend, the lieutenant of H.M.S. <i>Spartan</i>, who was
+there in 1847.&nbsp; But at that season of the year we could perceive no
+traces of the shallow or <!-- page 333--><a name="page333"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 333</span>ford by which the Arabs occasionally pass over
+to it on the way to Kerak.</p>
+<p>At half-past nine we were in front of <i>Sebbeh</i>, with a view of the
+ruins of Masada on its summit, to which, however, we did not climb, but
+contented ourselves with recalling to memory the heroic events of the
+Jewish defenders, as related by Josephus.&nbsp; Here the sea, retiring
+towards our side, forms a semicircular bay, terminating at <i>&rsquo;Ain
+Jidi</i>, (Engeddi,) where we arrived at two o&rsquo;clock.&nbsp; There we
+were at a considerable elevation above the shore, which we now abandoned,
+not only because all further advance in that direction is impracticable,
+but because our route towards Jerusalem lay in a different direction.</p>
+<p>We were upon a platform abounding in springs of water and luxuriant
+neglected vegetation.&nbsp; The pleasure derived from the sound of gushing
+streams can only be appreciated by those who have been in our
+circumstances.&nbsp; The contrast is not to be understood merely from words
+laid before a reader, between this and the dry wilderness of Edom or the
+salt beach of Sodom.&nbsp; One of our camels not only drank his fill, but
+rolled himself in the water.</p>
+<p>There were some neb&rsquo;k trees, some trees of the
+<i>&rsquo;osher</i>, (apple of Sodom,) and some of the shrub <i>solanum
+melongena</i>, all of which may be found near Jericho, though not peculiar
+to that region.&nbsp; Canes and large weeds almost filled the watercourses,
+<!-- page 334--><a name="page334"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+334</span>but not a blossom of any wild-flower could I find upon the
+ground.</p>
+<p>The streams abound in petrifactions of vegetation, which would show that
+the water cannot be very wholesome for drinking.&nbsp; A monster crab was
+brought us out of a channel; my horse in drinking had been startled at the
+sight of it.</p>
+<p>There were traces of buildings about the place, such as foundations of
+walls almost razed to the ground, and one broken tower.</p>
+<p>But the prospect eastwards, including the peninsula, and the mountains
+and huge crevasses of Moab, or southwards, including Sebbeh and the Salt
+mountain, are magnificent beyond expression.&nbsp; We could not be sure
+that Mount Hor was distinguishable.&nbsp; At a quarter past three, and
+under shade of trees, the thermometer was at 86&deg; Fahrenheit.</p>
+<p>After considerable repose and some feeding there, we prepared for the
+remaining ascent, called by our people &ldquo;The Ladder of
+<i>Ter&acirc;beh</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; This was a very toilsome climbing of
+near two hours up a nearly perpendicular cliff, by means of curves and
+zigzags turning away four or five yards.&nbsp; Most of the way we were
+dismounted, but still the horses and camels were greatly distressed by the
+effort of the ascent.&nbsp; At first the camel-drivers sang to cheer their
+animals.&nbsp; This, however, dwindled into occasional prolonged notes,
+which again were deteriorated into groans instead of music.</p>
+<p>It was a curious sight for us who were untroubled <!-- page 335--><a
+name="page335"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 335</span>with the care of
+camels, and consequently getting on faster than they, to look down upon the
+wavy lines of moving creatures, and hear the echoes of their voices from
+below.</p>
+<p>Reached the summit at half-past four, and after an hour&rsquo;s progress
+upon level ground, we halted for the night.&nbsp; Poor old Sel&acirc;meh
+fell down flat, not so much from the effect of mere fatigue, as from having
+had his ankle bitten by a spiteful camel in the morning, and then the long
+climbing in addition.</p>
+<p>This was to be our last night together, and we enjoyed to the utmost the
+social gathering round the bivouac fire with our Arab companions, to whom,
+after ten days association, to the exclusion of all the rest of the world,
+we could not but feel something of temporary personal attachment.&nbsp;
+There was Sel&acirc;meh, with his mended shoe and his bitten ankle, who had
+been our officer and diplomatist, ready for fun or a row at any minute;
+&rsquo;Odeh the champion, called out upon emergencies; Khamees, the slave
+boy, a general domestic, if this latter word may be allowed for a Bedawi
+Arab; and Salem the merry-man, short in stature, and drawing into the vale
+of years.&nbsp; We chatted over the fire about the events of the
+expedition, while some of the men were kneading and baking fresh bread upon
+stones made hot in the fire.</p>
+<p>Yet this is a sad aimless life that such people lead&mdash;of course our
+excursion under their <!-- page 336--><a name="page336"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 336</span>protection was an event to supply matter for
+many a conversation afterwards.</p>
+<p>As for religion: they seem to have little or no sense of its
+responsibility or benefit, or even its formalities.&nbsp; I asked
+Sel&acirc;meh about prayers or reading, and all he had to say was that
+annually in Ramadan they hire a reader from some mosque of a town to come
+and read the Kor&acirc;n to them; but not one, not even Abu Dahook could
+read for himself.&nbsp; I never heard these Jeh&acirc;leen mention either
+the word <i>Moslem</i> or <i>Ghiaour</i>, much less the technical words
+<i>Mushrakeen</i> or <i>Seerat el Mustakeem</i>.&nbsp; Thermometer at
+sunset, 79&frac14;&deg; Fahrenheit.</p>
+<p><i>April</i> 11<i>th</i>.&mdash;Our camels were loaded for the last
+time, as usual grunting, groaning, and tossing the head backwards while the
+burdens were placed upon them, and, as must be known to all desert
+travellers, the smell exhaled from these animals after a long journey is
+particularly disagreeable.</p>
+<p>We were marching forward at half-past five, and in an hour and a half we
+caught a distant view of our old familiar Frank mountain, which was lost
+again afterwards.&nbsp; About ten o&rsquo;clock, we saw in a valley at our
+left an encampment of Sa&iuml;r Arabs; and soon afterwards in a valley at
+our right, a circle of the Ta&rsquo;amri tents.&nbsp; In another hour we
+arrived at a square enclosure of very large ancient stones, which was
+denominated <i>&rsquo;Arkoob Sah&acirc;ba</i>.&nbsp; The breezes on this
+high land were most refreshing after our southern excursion.</p>
+<p><!-- page 337--><a name="page337"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+337</span>Passed <i>Thekua&rsquo;</i> or Tekua&rsquo;, (Tekoa,) and at some
+distance forwards, to the north-east, some ruins called
+<i>Abu&rsquo;n-jaib</i>, or perhaps Abu N&rsquo;jaim.</p>
+<p>Then we approached the well-remembered fragrance of the wild herbs on
+the uncultivated hills about Urtas and Bethlehem, redolent of homeward
+associations, and between two and three o&rsquo;clock were at Jerusalem,
+grateful for special and numerous mercies of Divine Providence.</p>
+<p>Jewish friends were much interested in my report of Aaron&rsquo;s tomb
+on Mount Hor, and regarded it as a great achievement to have visited and
+returned from &ldquo;Joktheel,&rdquo; as they called Petra, in compliance
+with 2 Kings xiv. 7, where King Amaziah restored its more ancient name from
+<i>Selah</i>, (see Joshua xv. 38.)</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>In conclusion of this expedition to Petra, I have a few observations to
+make, arising from local peculiarities connected with it.</p>
+<p>A.&nbsp; <i>On the payment of toll</i>, <i>or Ghuf&rsquo;r</i>, <i>as it
+is termed</i>, <i>for traversing unfrequented districts</i>.</p>
+<p>Of course, this custom could never obtain in a country enjoying the
+benefits of a vigorous central government; but it is, and perhaps always
+has been, common in the far East.&nbsp; In Persia or Tartary, wherever a
+chief is able to lay hold of a tower, and collect around him a band of
+followers, he invariably exacts this tribute from strangers; just as in our
+middle ages of Europe was done by <!-- page 338--><a
+name="page338"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 338</span>the same class of
+persons in countries where feudal institutions prevailed.&nbsp; The petty
+barons were the shaikhs of their place and period.</p>
+<p>But some considerations may serve to show that there is, after all,
+something useful in the practice.</p>
+<p>1.&nbsp; In such countries, the payment of this toll exempts the
+traveller from the violence of all other claimants.</p>
+<p>2.&nbsp; Those who get the toll, (I speak now of Palestine,) are always
+ready to perform small services in return, which would be assuredly missed
+if omitted, independently of the price paid for hire of camels.</p>
+<p>3.&nbsp; If there were a better government existing, the traveller would
+expect that government to provide good roads and bridges, and to establish
+military posts for guarding them.&nbsp; This expense would be defrayed from
+tolls, or some such mode of taxation, and so the fee or duty would be only
+removed from one receiver to another.&nbsp; This is done at present, and
+probably has been for many centuries, at the <i>Jis&rsquo;r ben&acirc;t
+Ya&rsquo;koob</i>, between Safed and Damascus.</p>
+<p>One cannot be surprised at the peasantry of Wadi Moosa exacting a toll
+from travellers on entering the valley of Petra, to see the wonders of
+antiquity which are attracting the attention of the most remote nations;
+remembering, too, the position of the place, viz., in a hollow, surrounded
+by <!-- page 339--><a name="page339"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+339</span>crags and hills, where no Turkish rulers have ever been.</p>
+<p>In like manner, we shall only be in a condition to remonstrate on paying
+ghuf&rsquo;r in the shape of presents to the Adwan beyond Jordan, when we
+are able to find our way to Amm&acirc;n and Jerash without them, or to keep
+off the Beni Sukh&rsquo;r and &rsquo;Anezeh, either by our own right hand
+or by means of the Turks. <a name="citation339"></a><a href="#footnote339"
+class="citation">[339]</a></p>
+<p>Finally, it must be borne in mind that the Turkish government itself
+pays ghuf&rsquo;r to the Eastern Bedaween for allowing the Hadj pilgrims to
+pass from Damascus to Mecca.</p>
+<p>B.&nbsp; <i>On the Fellahheen</i>, <i>or peasants of Wadi Moosa</i>.</p>
+<p>The most experienced travellers that have visited Petra, have remarked
+that these men are of a different race from the Bedaween Arabs around
+them.&nbsp; They are ugly, bad in expression of countenance, and have a
+reputation for cruelty and treachery.</p>
+<p>Laborde says, that the Alaween looked upon them &ldquo;with contempt
+<i>and fear</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Lord Lindsay says, that Shaikh Hhussain, from
+&rsquo;Akabah, &ldquo;was <i>in fear</i> all the time of being
+there.&rdquo;&nbsp; Irby and Mangles were told by the Jeh&acirc;leen that
+these <!-- page 340--><a name="page340"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+340</span>Fellahheen murdered thirty Moslem pilgrims from Barbary, the year
+before their visit.</p>
+<p>Dr Wilson stayed among them longer, I believe, than any other European,
+and he did not like them, yet found them gradually improve under civil
+treatment, which always, like some other things,</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Emollit mores nec sinit esse feros.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>He divides them into two classes as cultivators of land.&nbsp; First,
+Those residing in a village called <i>Eljy</i>; and, second, Those residing
+in tents under one Abu Zeitoon.</p>
+<p>He describes them as a very exclusive people, never intermarrying with
+Arabs, nor burying in common grounds with them; and having a different set
+of personal names among them from those used by Arabs, which names greatly
+resemble those found in the Old Testament Scriptures.</p>
+<p>He concludes that they are descendants of the ancient Edomites.</p>
+<p>A most remarkable circumstance that he observed, was their calling
+themselves children of Israel, (Beni Isra&iuml;n.)&nbsp; This he regards as
+a feeble traditional reminiscence of their proselytism to the faith of
+Israel by the sword of the Maccab&aelig;an conquerors.</p>
+<p>For my own part, I distinctly aver that during the altercation upon my
+arrival there, between them and my Jeh&acirc;leen, I did hear the words
+&ldquo;children of Israel&rdquo; used.&nbsp; I had not chosen to take a
+part in the conference, or to remain long at a time <!-- page 341--><a
+name="page341"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 341</span>among the disputants,
+but only passed occasionally in and out of the tent, and my mind was
+chiefly engrossed with the subject-matter in hand, so that on hearing the
+words, &ldquo;children of Israel,&rdquo; I thought they were alluding to
+some history or tradition of the Hebrew people.&nbsp; But afterwards, on
+connecting the fact with Dr Wilson&rsquo;s assertion, I cannot but consider
+it very remarkable.</p>
+<p>But the whole subject of these Fellahheen seems to merit closer
+attention from those who have the leisure and opportunity for it.</p>
+<p>I know that numerous travellers, including ladies, have been there in
+safety; and it is probable that some of the disputes which have arisen were
+occasioned either through ignorance, or from insolence of the
+dragomans.&nbsp; It would be interesting to compare the accounts of those
+who have suffered annoyances in Petra, so as to ascertain how far the
+Fellahheen were to blame, or whether difficulties are not rather due to the
+Arab tribes who are in the habit of tyrannising over the Fellahheen from
+the outside.</p>
+<p>C.&nbsp; <i>On the &rsquo;Arabah and the Dead Sea</i>.</p>
+<p>While on the spot, I had wished to believe in the theory of Leake in
+1822, and afterwards turned almost into poetry by Lord Lindsay,
+notwithstanding the demonstrations of Bertou in 1838, and of the American
+expedition of 1848, namely, that the Jordan formerly flowed the whole
+length from the Anti-Lebanon to the Red Sea, and that the <!-- page
+342--><a name="page342"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 342</span>Asphaltite
+Lake, or Dead Sea, is only formed by a stoppage of its stream.</p>
+<p>Two facts, however, which militate against this theory, were visible to
+our eyes on this journey.</p>
+<p>1.&nbsp; That the valleys south of the Dead Sea all point towards it,
+and incline the slope of their beds in that direction.&nbsp; This was most
+particularly the case with the Wadi el Jaib, where the banks between which
+the torrents had cut a channel became higher, which is equivalent to saying
+that the water fell lower as it passed northwards.</p>
+<p>2.&nbsp; That wherever there were trees or shrubs to arrest the currents
+of water, we found that all the rushes, thorns, or reeds carried on by the
+streams, were arrested on the south side of those trees, and there they
+remained in the dry season.</p>
+<p>The course of the torrents was therefore from the south, towards the
+Dead Sea.</p>
+<p>The best dissertation on the relative levels of lands and seas, bearing
+on this subject, and that which I believe to be exhaustive on the subject,
+till we get more of scientific realities, is contained in vol. xviii., part
+2, of the Royal Geographical Society&rsquo;s Journal of 1848.</p>
+<p>Still, allowing the facts that I myself observed, as well as all the
+scientific calculations in the Journal above referred to, (indeed, making
+use of them,) there seem to remain certain considerations undisposed of, in
+favour of the theory that the Jordan formerly ran into the Red Sea.</p>
+<p><!-- page 343--><a name="page343"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+343</span>1.&nbsp; The &rsquo;Arabah, south of the Dead Sea, and the
+Gh&ocirc;r on its north, are one continued hollow between the same parallel
+lines of hills; and Robinson has shown that by the Arabian geographers they
+are both called the &rsquo;Arabah; the native Arabs also still call by the
+name of Ghuwair, or little Gh&ocirc;r, a space at the southern extremity of
+the water.</p>
+<p>In the Hebrew Bible also, the northern part is called &rsquo;Arabah, as
+in Joshua iii. 16, where it is said the Israelites crossed &ldquo;the sea
+of &rsquo;Arabah, namely, the sea of salt.&rdquo;&nbsp; In 2 Sam. iv. 7,
+the murderers of Ish-bosheth went all night from Mahanaim to Hebron along
+the &rsquo;Arabah, this was clearly not south of the Dead Sea.&nbsp; Josh.
+xii. i., &ldquo;From the river Arnon to mount Hermon, and all the
+&rsquo;Arabah on the east,&rdquo; going northwards; this is explained in
+the 3d verse as &ldquo;the &rsquo;Arabah, (beginning at Hermon,) unto the
+sea of Chinnereth, (sea of Tiberias) on the east, and unto the sea of the
+&rsquo;Arabah, the sea of salt, on the east.&rdquo;&nbsp; The same words
+occur also in Deut. iii. 17, and iv. 49.&nbsp; That the present Arab
+&rsquo;Arabah on the south of the Dead Sea bore the same name, may be seen
+in Deut. ii. 8, where Moses speaks of &ldquo;the way of the
+&lsquo;&rsquo;Arabah&rsquo; from Elath, and from Ezion-gaber.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Therefore, according to Hebrew and Arabic authorities, the &rsquo;Arabah
+and Gh&ocirc;r form one line from the Lebanon to the Red Sea.</p>
+<p>2.&nbsp; The Book of Job takes cognisance of the <!-- page 344--><a
+name="page344"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 344</span>river Jordan, and
+describes river scenery in the land of Edom, <i>i.e.</i>, south of the Dead
+Sea.</p>
+<p>3.&nbsp; No lake existed in that locality before the catastrophe of
+Sodom, although a river may have traversed it.&nbsp; This I deduce from the
+march of the army of Chedorlaomer, shortly previous to that catastrophe,
+(Gen. xiv.)&nbsp; After the taking of Seir and Paran, he crossed the valley
+to Hazezon-Tamar, which is Engedi, (2 Chron. xx. 2,) and the confederates
+were met by the kings of the plain in the vale of Siddim.&nbsp; And I have
+heretofore shown that this is utterly impossible to be done with the
+present lake in the way.&nbsp; The words, therefore, of Gen. xiv. 3
+obviously signify, as given in the Latin Vulgate and in Luther&rsquo;s
+German, &ldquo;the vale of Siddim, which is <i>now</i> the Salt
+Sea.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The inference from all these points is, that between the time of
+Chedorlaomer and Moses, some tellural convulsions took place which impeded
+the course of the river towards the Dead Sea, and thereby formed the
+present lake.&nbsp; There is no mention of a river in the lower
+&rsquo;Arabah during the wanderings of the Israelites under the leading of
+Moses.</p>
+<p>It is another matter to discuss whether the overthrow of the guilty
+cities of Sodom and Gomorrah is connected with that convulsion of nature,
+with or without miracle, which formed the depression of the great valley;
+yet it is remarkable that the deepest part of the lake is at the spot which
+<!-- page 345--><a name="page345"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+345</span>tradition has always pointed out for the site of those cities,
+and nigh to the salt mountain, which still bears the name of Sodom.</p>
+<p>To this spot the slopes both ways tend, and there they meet.&nbsp;
+Calculating the whole line of depression, as Petermann does, at 190 miles,
+the slope from the north, <i>i.e.</i>, from the &ldquo;Bridge of the
+daughters of Jacob,&rdquo; near Safed, is comparatively gradual for 140
+miles; and that from the south, <i>i.e.</i>, from the elevation in the
+southern &rsquo;Arabah, where the level meets again from the north, is more
+precipitous for 50 miles.&nbsp; Action and reaction being equal in natural
+effects, the rapid declivity in the shorter distance is equal to the more
+gradual declivity in the longer measure.</p>
+<p>But that centre of <i>seismal action</i> is taken for the site of
+Sodom&mdash;hence the site of the destruction of Sodom and the starting
+point of earthquake are the same.&nbsp; The record of the destruction is,
+therefore, the record of some dreadful convulsion capable of stopping the
+Jordan, so as to form a lake there; and the only <i>adequate</i> cause in
+nature assigned by geologists for such a depression, is earthquake
+accompanied by volcanic action.</p>
+<p>While on the subject of possible depression of the Jordan bed, I may
+mention an indication which I have often pointed out to others, namely, the
+remarkable ledge traceable along the face of the Moab mountains at a
+considerable height, as seen from the neighbourhood of Jerusalem.&nbsp;
+<!-- page 346--><a name="page346"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 346</span>It
+is distinctly marked, and forms a curious record of some natural change
+having occurred on a large scale.</p>
+<p>Dr Wilson, in his &ldquo;Lands of the Bible,&rdquo; contends that an
+earthquake capable of depressing a straight line of the length of the
+Gh&ocirc;r and &rsquo;Arabah, must have convulsed all the lands of Canaan,
+Moab, Ammon, Edom, and the Desert, with their inhabitants; but that no such
+convulsion took place, for Zoar on the east, and Hebron on the west, are
+known to have remained.</p>
+<p>Does it, however, necessarily follow that seismal devastation spreads in
+<i>every</i> direction?&nbsp; On the contrary, earthquakes act in
+oscillations from east to west, returning from west to east; or from north
+to south, returning from south to north: but not in the manner of a flood
+of water spreading in every direction at once.&nbsp; If so, a mighty
+earthquake, extending along the whole Gh&ocirc;r and &rsquo;Arabah, would
+be exactly such a cause as might spare a city on each side of its
+progress.</p>
+<p>The whole subject still admits of much careful investigation on sundry
+points; but, meanwhile, until geologists have given us more data from which
+to form conclusions, I must take my stand upon the distinct record of
+Genesis; that what was the Salt Sea when Moses wrote, had been the Vale or
+Plain (Emek) of Siddim, containing cities with kings, who fought and were
+subdued by Chedarlaomer upon that plain in the time of Abraham; and that
+those cities were the same as those that were penally destroyed soon
+after.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 347--><a name="page347"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+347</span>XII.&nbsp; ACROSS THE LEBANON.</h2>
+<p>I have traversed the Lebanon eastwards and southwards of Bayroot several
+times; once in 1849; again in 1853; and also in 1855: but it seems
+advisable to narrate the incidents separately, and although on two
+occasions I passed over nearly the same ground, it will be curious to
+compare or contrast those journeys, inasmuch as the circumstances were
+dissimilar.</p>
+<p>PART I.&mdash;1849.</p>
+<p>The course of the first journey was as follows:&mdash;From Sidon on the
+sea-coast we gradually climbed the Lebanon range eastward; then descending
+by tortuous roads, and turning somewhat to the south, we crossed to where
+Hhasbeya lies at the foot of Anti-Lebanon; after which we followed the
+general direction of the streams southwards, and uniting above the waters
+of Merom form the Jordan.&nbsp; Holding on at the western side of the plain
+we arrived at Safed in Galilee.</p>
+<p><!-- page 348--><a name="page348"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+348</span><i>Oct.</i> 25<i>th</i>.&mdash;We left Saida for Joon, which had
+been for many years the residence of Lady Hester Stanhope, and the
+vice-consul furnished us with a kaww&acirc;s who had been a servant of her
+ladyship.</p>
+<p>Turned off from the high road of the sea-coast, at the river Awali,
+which is believed by the native Christians to have been the limit of our
+Lord&rsquo;s ministry on earth, when it is said that He went into
+&ldquo;the coasts of Tyre and Sidon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We outflanked the rich scene of fruit plantations belonging to the town,
+but picked blackberries, hips, and haws, from their hedges alongside the
+runnels of water which supply those gardens.</p>
+<p>On its approach to the sea the river Awali has two separate channels,
+along either of which it flows in different years, according to the volume
+of water at the beginning of winter, but never in both at the same
+time.</p>
+<p>Through lovely scenery we gradually mounted higher and higher, till
+arriving at the village of <i>Joon</i>, where rooms were to be prepared for
+us in a native house.</p>
+<p>The nature of the district thereabout is that of numerous round hills,
+separated from each other by deep valleys.&nbsp; On one of these hills
+stands the village, on another the large &ldquo;Convent of the
+Saviour,&rdquo; (Dair el Mokhallis,) which is the central station of the
+Greek Catholic sect; <i>i.e.</i>, of those who, while retaining their
+Oriental rites and calendar, acknowledge the supremacy of the Pope <!--
+page 349--><a name="page349"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 349</span>of
+Rome; and on the third hill is Lady Hester Stanhope&rsquo;s house, the
+three forming the points of nearly an equilateral triangle.&nbsp; The
+village commands a fine prospect of the Mediterranean.</p>
+<p>Without dismounting, we proceeded at once to the desolate house of Lady
+Hester, but, owing to the precipitous nature of the ground, it takes some
+considerable time to reach it, yet voices are easily distinguishable from
+one place to the other.</p>
+<p>The house presents a melancholy spectacle, though, from the purity of
+the atmosphere, the walls appear clean and almost new; no roof remains, all
+timbers having been purposely removed immediately after her death,
+according to legal right of the proprietor from whom the place was
+rented.&nbsp; There has been an extensive suite of rooms, not adapted to
+stateliness, but meant for the reception of guests; these are all of small
+dimensions, and were mostly built by Lady Hester.&nbsp; We were told that
+she kept an establishment of a hundred servants, forty of whom were
+women.&nbsp; For the last five years she never travelled beyond the garden,
+and during that time the renowned two mares, Leilah and Lulu, (the former
+of which was the one with the hollow back, reserved for entering Jerusalem
+together with the new Messiah,) became so broken in health for want of
+exercise, that when Lady Hester died, they were sold with difficulty for
+300 piastres (less than three pounds) each.</p>
+<p><!-- page 350--><a name="page350"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+350</span>The stables still remaining were very extensive.</p>
+<p>The gardens and terraces must have been beautiful, for we were told they
+were carefully kept and arranged.&nbsp; We saw large myrtle shrubs in
+abundance, besides fruit trees now utterly neglected&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;And still where many a garden flower grows wild,&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>for there were red roses blooming without the least care or notice.</p>
+<p>No one now resides on any part of that hill.</p>
+<p>The eccentric lady is buried in the garden, and in the same grave (we
+were assured) with Captain, son of General Loustaneau, a crazy French
+enthusiast who lived for above twenty-five years a pensioner on her
+bounty.&nbsp; The grave is covered with this simple stone monument, of a
+pattern very common in the country.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p350.jpg">
+<img alt="Tomb of Lady Hester Stanhope" src="images/p350.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>At the distance of a few yards is the monument over a former Moslem
+proprietor of the house.</p>
+<p>Lady Hester died in June 1839, lonely and <!-- page 351--><a
+name="page351"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 351</span>miserable, and so
+ended her wild dreams and fancied importance.&nbsp; During her long
+residence there she had meddled in local dissensions, patronising the
+Jonbl&acirc;ts of Mokht&acirc;rah against the Ameer Besheer and the
+Egyptian invaders; she kept spies in the principal towns, as Acre and
+Saida, and had even supplied ammunition to the citadel of Acre for the
+Turks, but did not live to see the Egyptians ousted from the country.</p>
+<p>There was good deal of exaggeration afloat at the time respecting her
+and some of her habits of life, though scarcely more extraordinary than the
+reality of other matters, as we are now able to judge of them; but at that
+period Syria and the Lebanon were very little understood in Europe,
+<i>i.e.</i>, from 1823 to 1839.&nbsp; She was not so utterly removed from
+human society as is often supposed.&nbsp; She was not perched like an eagle
+on an inaccessible mountain, for there are villages near, besides the great
+Convent of Mokhallis, and she had constant communication with Saida for
+money and provisions.</p>
+<p>The view around is indeed stern and cheerless in character, devoid of
+romantic accessories, without the rippling streams, the pines or the
+poplars of either Mokht&acirc;rah or Beteddeen; her hill like its
+neighbours was a lump of stone, with some scanty cultivation in the valley
+below, very little of this, and her small garden attached to the
+dwelling.</p>
+<p><!-- page 352--><a name="page352"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+352</span>Before leaving this subject, I may as well state with respect to
+the common belief of Lady Hester being crowned Queen of Palmyra by the
+desert Arabs, that from information which I consider reliable this is all a
+mistake, or as it was expressed to me, a &ldquo;French enthusiasm,&rdquo;
+the truth being that in consequence of her lavish largesses among the wild
+people, they expressed their joy by acclamations in which they compared her
+to the &ldquo;Queen of Sheba&rdquo; who had come among them; and then by
+her flatterers, or those who were unskilled in the language, the term
+&ldquo;Melekeh&rdquo; (Queen) was interpreted as above: and as for a
+coronation the Arab tribes have no such a custom; the greatest chiefs, nay,
+even the kings of the settled Arabs, such as Mohammed and his successors,
+have never received such an inauguration.</p>
+<p>Returning to the village, we found our lodging provided in the house of
+a Greek Catholic family; unlike to our south country houses, it was built
+with ponderous rafters of timber in the roofs, and these rafters and planks
+between them are painted in coloured patterns.&nbsp; It was a cheerful
+scene as the family sat inquiring about Jerusalem, or chatting otherwise on
+the mustabeh (a wide stone seat) outside, with the effulgence of the
+setting sun reflected on the convent before us, and then the twilight pink
+and violet tints upon the mountain-range behind.</p>
+<p><!-- page 353--><a name="page353"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+353</span>Then again in the early morning, how delicious were the air and
+the scenery of the mountains!</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&nbsp; &ldquo;Yet sluggards deem it but a foolish chase<br />
+&nbsp; And marvel men should quit their easy chair,<br />
+&nbsp; The weary mile and long, long league to trace;<br />
+&nbsp; Oh, there is sweetness in the mountain air,<br />
+And life that bloated ease may never hope to share!&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>While mounting for the departure, our host pressing his hospitality upon
+us, adjured us in these words:&mdash;&ldquo;May your religion be your
+adversary if ever you pass my door without entering it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Arriving at Dair el Mokhallis we were there also received with
+cordiality.&nbsp; In the church a service was going on, gabbled over by a
+priest arrayed in white silk and gold, waving incense before the altar, his
+congregation consisting of one person, a sort of sacristan or beadle.&nbsp;
+There were some good pictures on the walls, but others together with them
+of degraded rank as works of art.</p>
+<p>On being invited to visit the President, we found him a jovial, handsome
+man of middle age, reclining on cushions at a large window with wide views
+of the sea and the mountains before him, besides <i>Dar Joon</i>, Lady
+Hester&rsquo;s house.</p>
+<p>This establishment is not only the largest convent and church of the
+Greek Catholic sect, but also a college for clerical education; their most
+celebrated clergy have been trained there.&nbsp; The <!-- page 354--><a
+name="page354"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 354</span>inmates at this time,
+of all employments, were 110 in number, exclusive of servants.&nbsp; Those
+whom we saw appeared very well fed, and we were not a little surprised to
+find so many women servants employed within the walls.</p>
+<p>A nunnery of the same rite, and rules of St Basil, with forty persons
+under vows, is a good building at half-a-mile distance, between which and
+the male institution a very excellent road has been made, notwithstanding
+the hilly nature of the ground; other roads are being improved, and all the
+contiguous grounds are in a state of the highest cultivation.</p>
+<p>As we proceeded on our journey, the scenery became more and more
+romantic, till on a sudden turn of the road a wondrous picture of nature
+was opened before us, consisting of mountains, including our own, all
+sloping down into a plain in which was a river, and a village with its
+orchards and poplars; cascades rolled down the furrowed sides of these
+hills, their bounding and dashing were evident to the sight, but no sound
+audible owing to their distance; it was a fairy scene, or like a beautiful
+dream.</p>
+<p>In the descent we passed a Maronite priest riding, attended by a guide
+on foot; the former was greeted by our party with his title of Abuna, a
+novelty to us Jerusalemites.</p>
+<p>We forded the river <i>Barook</i>, a tributary to the Awali, in front of
+the above-mentioned village, <!-- page 355--><a name="page355"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 355</span>which is <i>Bisrah</i>, amid tall poplars
+quivering in the breeze, for their foliage had stalks long like the
+aspen.</p>
+<p>Our luggage having gone on during the visit to the convent, we could get
+no tidings of it and our people, but a guide was procured for part of the
+day&rsquo;s journey before us; and we betook ourselves to a hill over which
+was, what we were assured, the only road to Hhasbeya.&nbsp; A road so steep
+and thickly entangled by bushes and trees, that we inquired of every
+passer-by in his turn whether we could possibly be upon the
+<i>Sult&acirc;neh</i>, or high road.&nbsp; At first through an olive
+plantation, then among evergreen oak, and higher still the fragrant
+mountain pines.&nbsp; The zigzags of the road were necessarily so short and
+abrupt, that at each turn we had to peer up perpendicularly, guessing which
+way the next twist would go.&nbsp; Then still higher, towards the frowning
+sombre cliffs that seemed to touch the brilliant blue sky, the arbutus
+glowed with their scarlet berries, and the pine-trees became more tall,
+straight, and numerous.&nbsp; No wonder that the Assyrian king, when he
+boasted of being able to cut down the cedars of Lebanon, included also
+&ldquo;the choice fir-trees thereof,&rdquo; (2 Kings xix. 23.)</p>
+<p>Near what seemed to be the climax, we unexpectedly reached a village,
+named <i>&rsquo;Azoor</i>, where a school of boys hummed their lessons in
+the open air on the shady side of a house; and near them a <!-- page
+356--><a name="page356"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 356</span>plank of
+wood was suspended, such as serves for a church-bell in parts of the
+country where the Moslems predominate, and bells are not tolerated.&nbsp;
+Here in the Lebanon every village and convent may have its bells; and they
+generally have them, for the Mohammedans scarcely exist throughout
+&ldquo;the mountain,&rdquo; as the whole range is popularly termed from
+Tarabulus to Saida.</p>
+<p>The higher we ascended, the more we obtained of a brisk breeze playing
+and sighing musically among the noble pines, and the ground was clothed
+with heather and fragrant herbs.&nbsp; Still onwards,
+&ldquo;excelsior,&rdquo; the pines were more straight and lofty; there were
+patches of wild myrtle on the ground, some in white blossom; and we looked
+down upon the flat roofs of villages below, an appearance so strange to us
+after the round domes of the south country.</p>
+<p>About noon we overtook the luggage, and the servant-boy of the muleteer
+swore that his head had turned gray since we left him, four hours ago, by
+reason of the bodily labour and anguish of mind that he had suffered on so
+fearful a road.&nbsp; He was incessantly calling upon God by epithets out
+of the Kor&acirc;n, as &ldquo;O thou Father of bounty!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;O thou knower of former things!&rdquo; mingled with curses hurled at
+the mule, or prayers that her back might be strengthened: being a
+Jerusalemite, he had not been accustomed to travelling of that
+description.&nbsp; This youth was nicknamed by his fellows as <!-- page
+357--><a name="page357"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 357</span><i>Abu
+Tabanjah</i>, &ldquo;the father of a pistol,&rdquo; from his carrying a
+single pistol in his girdle: it being unusual for persons in his employment
+to carry any belligerent weapons.</p>
+<p>Next came the descent to <i>Jezzeen</i>, over a slippery road, with
+purple crocuses in blossom at intervals.</p>
+<p>Jezzeen is romantically situated among broken rocks, with a stream of
+water, called the <i>Zaid</i>, bordered by a profusion of sycamore,
+(<i>i.e.</i>, what is called so in England, a variety of the plane-tree,)
+walnut, and aspen trees.&nbsp; We halted beneath a spreading walnut-tree,
+whose leaves had already begun to change colour.</p>
+<p>The inhabitants are Greek Catholic, Maronite, and a few
+Mut&acirc;waleh.&nbsp; Here we had to get another guide for an hour or two
+forwards&mdash;a task not easily accomplished&mdash;and he assured us that
+the road before us was far worse than that we had already
+traversed&mdash;he would on no account go the whole day&rsquo;s journey
+with us.</p>
+<p>Forwards.&mdash;Thin white clouds were resting upon the peaks high above
+us, the vine terraces and poplars were succeeded by whitish-gray rocks and
+olive-trees, till we issued upon a comparative level of confused chaos of
+rugged rocks pitched and hurled about in the most fantastic combinations,
+rendering the road almost impassable for our cattle.&nbsp; Darker clouds
+than before were around, but not immediately over us; and the atmosphere
+was hot like the breath of a furnace, with now and then a <!-- page
+358--><a name="page358"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 358</span>momentary
+gush of piercing cold coming between sharp peaks and round summits.</p>
+<p>In little more than two hours from Jezzeen we were at <i>Cuf&rsquo;r
+Hooneh</i>, a pretty village surrounded by sycamore, walnut, poplar, and
+vineyards, with numerous running streams of water, bordered by oleanders in
+rosy blossom, very tall&mdash;girt in with romantic precipices, and rooks
+were cawing overhead.&nbsp; A spring of water issuing from the ground, of
+which we drank, was cold like ice.</p>
+<p>After this the road improved, the rocks were more friable, and were
+often streaked with pink and yellow colour; indicating, I suppose, the
+existence of copper mineral, (see Deut. viii. 9,) &ldquo;out of whose hills
+thou mayest dig brass,&rdquo; <i>i.e.</i>, copper.</p>
+<p>All about this region fossil shells were numerous.</p>
+<p>In half an hour we attained our greatest elevation, with a long line of
+Mediterranean visible in the west.&nbsp; The Anti-Lebanon stretched before
+us on the east, and among the hills to the south our guide declared he
+could distinguish Safed.&nbsp; Here he left us, returning homewards.</p>
+<p>Upon this eminence the air was reviving, and as the fervour of the sun
+abated, our horses recovered energy.&nbsp; Thence we descended to a green
+level space as void of inhabitants as the wild scenes that we had
+traversed; and from that to a stage lower, over a very long fertile plain
+running southwards, where we fell in with two or three of our <!-- page
+359--><a name="page359"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 359</span>fellow human
+beings, and over this the wind blew very cold.&nbsp; Forwards into another
+level, a glen of wild verdure, then through chalk fissures and red slopes,
+till in a moment there burst upon our view a prospect beyond all power of
+description in words; Mount Hermon, (Jebel esh Shaikh,) and the intervening
+long plain, also the Lit&acirc;ni river on our right, winding between
+tremendous cliffs, and passing the castle of Shukeef towards the sea.</p>
+<p>That river passing the foot of our mountain, and over which we had
+afterwards to cross, appeared like a narrow ribbon of pale green, so silent
+was it to us, for no sound from that depth could reach up so high; to this
+we had to descend by a precipitous path of zigzags roughly made in the face
+of the hill.</p>
+<p>Half way down I first distinguished the rushing sound of the water; a
+flock of goats upon its margin resembled mere black spots, but the bells
+among them became faintly audible.</p>
+<p>On reaching the river Lit&acirc;ni, (the classic Leontes, and named the
+&ldquo;Kasimiyeh&rdquo; when debouching to the sea near Tyre,) we found it
+to be a strong stream, and the dark border, which from a distance had
+seemed to be low bushes, were in truth gigantic and numerous trees; on our
+way to the bridge, along the river side for some distance, were parapets
+erected for the safety of travellers and flocks of cattle.</p>
+<p>It was after sunset, but we rested awhile to <!-- page 360--><a
+name="page360"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 360</span>stretch our limbs
+after the cramp brought on by the steep and long descent.</p>
+<p>The moon was shining as we crossed the bridge, and its light was broken
+in the heady dashing of the stream; the land swelled gradually upwards as
+we proceeded S.-E. till we passed a ridge and turned N.-E. to the village
+of <i>Cocaba</i> on the great plain, which has the river
+<i>Hhasb&acirc;ni</i> flowing through it, from which village we got
+directions how to find Hhasbeya.&nbsp; Thoroughly tired as we all were, the
+rest of the way was most wearisome, though not so much so as it would have
+been in the heat of day, after so many hours on horseback.&nbsp; The night
+was bright and clear.</p>
+<p>Reached <i>Hhasbeya</i> in thirteen hours from Joon in the morning.</p>
+<p>The town is perched up in the line of the Anti-Lebanon, at the end of a
+<i>cul-de-sac</i> running inwards from the plain, and stands at an
+elevation of more than 2000 feet above the sea-level, though this is
+scarcely apparent by reason of the lofty mountains everywhere around,
+especially Hermon, under the shadow of which Hhasbeya is nestled.&nbsp;
+This was the cleanest town and the one in best repair at that time that I
+had hitherto seen in Palestine or Syria; what it may be since the
+calamities of 1860, I know not.&nbsp; The majority of the inhabitants were
+Christian, with a good many Druses, and a few Moslems and Jews.</p>
+<p>We had a most friendly reception from the native <!-- page 361--><a
+name="page361"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 361</span>Protestants, and from
+the governor, Ameer Saad ed Deen Sheh&acirc;b and his family.</p>
+<p>In the afternoon of the next day we passed on to <i>Banias</i>.&nbsp;
+How different a matter is travelling in that country from merely drawing a
+pencil line across the map from one point to another, and measuring the
+distance of that line.&nbsp; By such a method of making a journey it is but
+a trifle of thirty miles from Soor to Hhasbeya, and less than a hundred and
+twenty from the latter to Jerusalem.&nbsp; (I mention these places because
+they belong to the journey here described,) and it may be said by
+stay-at-home travellers in a carpeted saloon, at a mahogany table, that
+these distances can be covered on horseback in a determinate number of
+hours, allowing so many miles to an hour; but Palestine is not so smooth as
+the greater part of England, and the ways (one cannot well call them roads)
+are not drawn in direct lines; climate also counts for something; and
+unforeseen incidents will occur to mar the plans of even those habituated
+to the country.</p>
+<p>To-day&rsquo;s progress, however, was tolerably plain, though not level,
+and it occupied six or seven hours.</p>
+<p>In an hour and a half we caught first sight of the lake <i>Hhooleh</i>
+(the Semechonitis of Josephus) in the due south, and at this point we
+entered upon a district strewn with volcanic basalt, in dark-brown pieces,
+porous and rounded at the edges.&nbsp; A <!-- page 362--><a
+name="page362"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 362</span>peasant directed us
+forwards to the <i>Tell el K&acirc;di</i>, which at length we
+reached&mdash;an eminence rising from the plain, out of which issues a
+river all formed at once, gushing from the hill over a stony bed.&nbsp;
+This is one of the heads of the Jordan, and the place is that of
+<i>Dan</i>, which Josephus erroneously supposed to supply the last syllable
+of that river&rsquo;s name.</p>
+<p>But beyond all question it is the site of the city Dan known throughout
+Scripture history for many ages, and under a variety of circumstances:
+among the rest for the forcible invasion of it by a number of colonists
+from the tribe of Dan in the south of Palestine, where they found their
+allotted district too strait for their possession; and being established
+here, they gave the city the name of their patriarchal chief.</p>
+<p>That history of their migration reads with peculiar interest and force
+on the spot, and strange to say that Tell el K&acirc;di seems to retain
+their tribal name, inasmuch as <i>Tell</i> signifies &ldquo;a hill,&rdquo;
+and K&acirc;di is but the Arabic for the Hebrew word <i>Dan</i>, &ldquo;a
+judge,&rdquo; (Gen. xlix. 16.)&nbsp; It is not however common, very much
+the contrary, for names to be transmitted in this way according to their
+signification through the lapse of ages&mdash;they are usually perpetuated
+through their orthography.</p>
+<p>The Amorite or Sidonian people living here &ldquo;at ease&rdquo; were
+worshippers of Baal and Ashtaroth, or Astarte.&nbsp; Suddenly they were
+assailed by the <!-- page 363--><a name="page363"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 363</span>Danites, who &ldquo;smote them with the edge
+of the sword, and burned their city with fire;&rdquo; and the newcomers set
+up &ldquo;the graven image, and the molten image, and the teraphim,&rdquo;
+which they had stolen on their way thither over Mount Ephraim, appointing
+the young Levite, the owner of the images, to be priest of their
+idolatry.&nbsp; In later times it was a station of the golden calf of
+Jeroboam&rsquo;s institution, that is to say, the revived emblem of Baal,
+going back to the practice of the Leshemites; and there is yet an idea
+prevailing in our days that the Druses of the neighbourhood retain that
+emblem or idol among them&mdash;a remarkable instance of the perpetuity of
+idolatry, and one form of idolatry under different names, modified only by
+circumstances in the same locality.&nbsp; I forbear to pursue further the
+reflections that can be evolved at large from that idea, as they might
+bring us into other countries than Syria or Palestine.</p>
+<p>Riding our horses up the full stream for a short distance, we forded it,
+and entered into the shade upon the hill, where we reposed under a large
+evergreen oak, decorated with rags as votive offerings to an Arab shaikh
+buried beside it.&nbsp; Near this tree is an extraordinary jungle of
+brambles and gigantic flowering shrubs, through which it seemed impossible
+to penetrate, but out of which tangled mass the copious stream issues, as
+also a minor current, which after some deflection meets the other, and
+forms one stream on leaving the hill, <!-- page 364--><a
+name="page364"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 364</span>and this, when joined
+by the waters of Banias, to which we were now going, combines into one
+river, Jordan, then enters and passes through the Lake Hhooleh.&nbsp; For
+the present I omit the consideration of the Hhasb&acirc;ni and its spring,
+which not only helps to form the Jordan, but actually commences further
+beyond the springs of Dan and Banias.</p>
+<p>It wanted about an hour to sunset when we turned in eastwards, round the
+foot of old Hermon, for <i>Banias</i>, the C&aelig;sarea Philippi of the
+New Testament, whose hill and ancient castle appeared not far distant.</p>
+<p>We observed numerous small runlets of water flowing from the north and
+east towards the Tell el K&acirc;di, one especially of nearly four feet
+wide.&nbsp; Yet with all these blessings the district is mostly neglected,
+and abandoned to a sparse population of wretched Ghaw&acirc;rineh Arabs and
+their buffaloes.</p>
+<p>We passed through neb&rsquo;k trees and stunted oaks, some karoobah
+trees and sumach about twenty feet high, with their red berries, besides
+myrtles almost as lofty.&nbsp; Signs of the existence of inhabitants
+appeared in patches of cultivation and an occasional flock of goats.&nbsp;
+Trees became closer together than at first, and at length Banias stood in
+face of us, touching the foot of Hermon, which formed a magnificent
+background of receding heights, but its summit withdrawn from view at that
+position.&nbsp; An ancient castle crowns a high peak rising above the
+village, and which for <!-- page 365--><a name="page365"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 365</span>grandeur of situation and noble aspect is
+unsurpassed by any ruin that I have seen in Syria.&nbsp; Yet how small was
+all this in comparison with the mighty mass at its back!&nbsp; I regret the
+having been unable to examine this remarkable fortress, the modern name of
+which is the <i>Kula&rsquo;at es Subeibeh</i>.</p>
+<p>The halt was in an olive plantation, and while the tents were being
+raised, I rode forwards to the other celebrated source of the Jordan,
+namely, that issuing from the cavern, and drank of its water, but first had
+to swim the horse through a strong current.</p>
+<p>How beautiful was the evening scene of rocks, trees, blue mountains, and
+the extended plain, with the thread of the Hhasb&acirc;ni winding through
+it on the western side!&nbsp; There were also herds of cattle coming in,
+and a shepherd boy playing his rural pipes.&nbsp; What a scene for
+Poussin!&nbsp; I offered to buy the Pandean pipe (of several reeds joined
+laterally) from the boy, wishing to have it for my own, obtained at the
+mythological home of Pan himself&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Pan primus calamos cer&acirc; conjungere plures<br />
+Instituit,&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>but the lad asked an exorbitant price for it, and strode away.</p>
+<p>Then rushed up to make use of the fading twilight for catching at least
+a glimpse of the Greek inscriptions and Pan&rsquo;s grotto, from which the
+<!-- page 366--><a name="page366"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+366</span>river issues, not in infantile weakness, but boldly striking an
+echo against the sides of the natural cavity.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Great Pan is dead!&rdquo; as the superstitious peasants of
+Thessaly said, when they imagined they heard the echo formed into words,
+sixteen hundred years ago; and while musing on the &ldquo;rise and
+fall&rdquo; of the classic idolatry, a bat flew past me out of the grotto,
+but I saw no moles for the old idols to be thrown to, (Isa. ii. 20.)</p>
+<p>Pan was the mythological deity presiding over caverns, woods, and
+streams, from whom this place received its denomination of Panion or Paneas
+in Greek, or Panium in Latin; and the word Paneas becomes Banias in Arabic,
+as it is at this day.&nbsp; Here costly temples and altars were raised, and
+Herod built a temple in honour of Augustus C&aelig;sar.&nbsp; These
+edifices have fallen to the ground, the idols have been demolished by early
+Christians, Jews, and Mohammedans; but niches with pedestals, on which the
+dumb figures stood, accompanied by inscriptions, still remain in
+attestation of written history.</p>
+<p>Of these inscriptions I took copies next morning, as others have also
+done, but with special pains to insure accuracy.&nbsp; Every one of them
+has the name of the god Pan; two of them have the name of Agrippa; one is
+set up by a priest of Pan, &ldquo;for the welfare of the lords the
+emperors;&rdquo; and another is dedicated by Agrippa, son of <!-- page
+367--><a name="page367"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 367</span>Marcus, who
+had been for eight years Archon, and had been admonished in a dream by the
+god Pan.&nbsp; The breaks in the words caused by defaced letters make it
+difficult to get more signification out of them.</p>
+<p>Some further remarks on the same, as well as copies of the tablets, will
+be found in appendix B.</p>
+<p>In a field near our tents, were two prostrate granite columns of about
+fifteen feet length of shaft by two in diameter; besides a piece of column
+of common stone three feet in diameter.&nbsp; In another part of the same
+field was a square capital of pilaster with some plain moulding, and an
+abundance of squared stones of two to three feet dimensions; such, however,
+are to be seen scattered in every direction around.</p>
+<p>A small ancient bridge crosses one of the several streams branching away
+from the main course, and all running between steep banks.&nbsp; By this
+bridge I approached a noble gateway, leading into a very large square
+fortress, with strong ancient towers at each corner.&nbsp; The arches of
+both gate and bridge were Roman; parts of the walls remained in their
+regular courses, and numerous large rabbeted stones were rolled down in
+disorder upon the slope and into a military trench.&nbsp; But the whole
+scene, whether of rugged rocks or of the work of man, was fringed and
+clothed with brambles, ferns, evergreens, and the rosy oleander.</p>
+<p><!-- page 368--><a name="page368"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+368</span>The principal charm, however, belongs to the grotto with the
+river which it discharges&mdash;the site of which may be described as a
+semicircular termination of a valley on a natural platform half way up a
+cliff&mdash;the water tumbles down in short cascades for some distance; the
+grotto inside is untouched by chisel squarings or embellishment, just as
+Juvenal wished the grot of &AElig;geria to be.</p>
+<p>All this is particularly romantic, but a more exalted interest is
+attached to the town and vicinity of Banias from its being a certainly
+known station of our Redeemer&rsquo;s journeys&mdash;He who in all His
+travels &ldquo;went about doing good&rdquo;&mdash;but, inasmuch as some
+records of His blessed footsteps are connected with incidents of higher
+importance than others, this one rises into transcendant value, as being
+the place where His eternal divinity was distinctly enunciated.</p>
+<p>At that very time the temple of Augustus, erected by Herod, was in its
+freshest beauty; the votive inscriptions with the name of Agrippa were
+newly chiselled; and the priests of Pan were celebrating sacrifices and
+incense, together with rustic offerings, upon his altar; the worship, too,
+of Baal was still in existence, under some modifications, upon the mountain
+overhead.&nbsp; At such a place, and under such circumstances, was the
+Church universal promised to be founded on the rock of faith to which Peter
+had given utterance.</p>
+<p>It may be here observed that at that period this <!-- page 369--><a
+name="page369"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 369</span>C&aelig;sarea
+Philippi was not a secluded spot, as commentators generally make it,
+because Banias is so now; but the town was one of notoriety, adorned, as we
+have just seen, with expensive public edifices.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>On returning to the tents, the shaikh of the village came, attended by
+some of his relatives belonging to Hhasbeya, begging for some quinine
+medicine: I gave him eight of my twelve remaining pills.&nbsp; On the
+adjacent plain there must needs be fever and ague; in fact, so unwilling
+was I on account of malaria to remain longer at Banias, that we resumed our
+travelling by night.</p>
+<p>At three o&rsquo;clock, <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>, we were
+mounted&mdash;there was a little rain at the time, and clouds that
+threatened more of it obscured the setting moon; there was lightning also
+in the same direction.&nbsp; I even altered my plan of going on to
+&ldquo;the bridge of the daughters of Jacob,&rdquo; (the thoroughfare
+between Safed and Damascus,) in order to escape from the plain as quickly
+as possible.&nbsp; For this purpose we turned westwards, and had to
+struggle through marshes and rough ground by starlight and lightning.&nbsp;
+Most unwisely we had neglected to take a meal before starting, not
+expecting the district to be so plashy and unwholesome as it proved to
+be.&nbsp; The plain, north of the Lake Hhooleh, is traversed by innumerable
+channels of water, among which rice is grown, of which I gathered a handful
+as a <!-- page 370--><a name="page370"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+370</span>trophy to exhibit in Jerusalem.&nbsp; And there were lines of
+tents of the poor Ghaw&acirc;rineh Arabs upon dry ground, besides small
+scaffolds standing in the rice marshes, from which elevations the people
+watch the crops and fire upon wild beasts that come to injure or devour the
+crops; dogs barked as we passed, and fires were visible in several
+directions.</p>
+<p>Arriving at the bridge of <i>El Ghujar</i>, my companion and I both felt
+sick, and had to dismount and rest for a time.</p>
+<p>Our guide&rsquo;s account of the river differed from that given in
+Robinson; instead of the stream being the Hhasb&acirc;ni and the bridge
+named El Ghujar, he averred that the river is El Ghujar, and that it rises
+out of the ground like the waters of Banias and of Tell el
+K&acirc;di.&nbsp; Perhaps this may account for Porter more recently placing
+the bridge El Ghujar in a different situation, much farther north.&nbsp;
+The circumstance is not without value in inquiries as to the collective
+formation of the Jordan.</p>
+<p>As daylight broke we could see herds of buffaloes among the marshes, or
+swimming in the water with only their heads raised above the surface; the
+village of <i>Khalsah</i> was half way up the hill-side.</p>
+<p>From this point the road was level, dry, and comfortable, running due
+southwards along the western margin of the plain, but with streams
+occasionally crossing it, rushing from the hills towards the lake.</p>
+<p><!-- page 371--><a name="page371"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+371</span>Near <i>&rsquo;Ain el Mell&acirc;hhah</i> two Arabs rode up to us
+and planted their spears in the ground near our horses heads as a warning
+to stop, and I suppose to pay ghuf&rsquo;r.&nbsp; I kept on, leaving the
+kaww&acirc;s to parley with them.</p>
+<p>Not far from the fountain we rested under a terebinth tree (not a
+favourable specimen) upon a rising ground; beneath us, but at a short
+distance, the strong stream turns a mill, passing through a house, and
+escapes to the plain.</p>
+<p>The Arabs met us again, and said they were looking for a horse that was
+lost, and we saw no more of them.</p>
+<p>In another hour my companion was taken with a strong fit of ague, which
+urged us the more to press onward for Safed.&nbsp; From the hills, as we
+rose higher and higher, the Lake Hhooleh was perceived to be, above
+one-third of it, choked up with weeds and rushes.&nbsp; Old Hermon showed
+himself in surpassing grandeur; not a confused mass&mdash;as he does from
+the plain looking upwards from close beneath him&mdash;but as one grand
+&ldquo;monarch of mountains.&rdquo;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;On a throne of rocks, with a robe of clouds,<br />
+&nbsp; And a diadem of snow.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The sun was hot and the hills chalky over which we passed.&nbsp; In one
+place by our wayside, and at considerable elevation, I found squared
+masonry stones and traces of houses, with fragments of columns.</p>
+<p><!-- page 372--><a name="page372"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+372</span>A poor Arab peasant, driving an ass laden with a wooden box, was
+groaning with pain, and implored us for a draught of water, but I fear that
+our people had neglected to bring any with them, as they expected to be so
+soon in Safed.</p>
+<p>Rested under the shade of some large stones, and sent on a message
+before us to the town.&nbsp; In quarter of an hour, however, some peals of
+thunder roused us to pursue the journey; the strong wind that arose at the
+same time was not good for ague patients.&nbsp; Across the great plain as
+we looked back was a broad faint piece of rainbow, and the huge mountain,
+mantled with clouds about his shoulders, but bright below, appeared
+peculiarly fantastic, with flickering shadows of clouds chasing over his
+sunny sides.</p>
+<p>On the outskirts of Safed we found, as customary at that season,
+(Bairam,) the newly white-washed graves of the Moslems, adorned with
+bunches of myrtle.</p>
+<p>At Safed we lodged in the house of a Russo-British Jew, and letters from
+Jerusalem that had awaited us came safe to hand, after which followed the
+necessary reception of visitors, very troublesome to weary and exhausted
+travellers, and at last a supper which had been long in preparing&mdash;at
+least so it seemed to be.</p>
+<p><!-- page 373--><a name="page373"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+373</span>PART II.</p>
+<p>This, like the journey last described, of six years before, was portion
+of a much longer tour, but I omit all that cannot come under the
+designation of a Byeway in Palestine.&nbsp; The two routes were very
+similar to each other, with the exception of the passage from Banias to
+Safed.</p>
+<p>Starting from Saida, and trending south-eastwards towards Hhasbeya, we
+climbed the mountains, which here rise almost from the sea-shore, and
+crossed romantic passes of rugged eminences and deeply cleft ravines.</p>
+<p>From Hhasbeya the line was due south to Banias, thence westward by Tell
+el K&acirc;di, and Hhuneen, and Tibneen, the capital of the Bel&acirc;d
+Besh&acirc;rah, thus almost reaching once more the plain of Ph&oelig;nicia
+on its eastern verge; next by the antiquities of Kadesh Naphtali southwards
+to Safed; and homewards to Jerusalem, but this latter route is not to be
+described, for the reason given above.</p>
+<p>I was accompanied by my niece and another lady, a settled resident of
+Jerusalem.&nbsp; The first object after quitting Saida was to visit Joon,
+and to show my companions the residence of Lady Hester Stanhope in years
+gone by.&nbsp; This we reached just before sunset, on the 2d of October
+1855.</p>
+<p><!-- page 374--><a name="page374"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+374</span>The tomb was found much dilapidated; in 1853 it was no longer in
+so good a condition as it had been in 1849, but it was now even worse, and
+the whole spectacle of house, stables, and gardens, was melancholy in the
+extreme: the deprivation of roofs gives a peculiar aspect of desolation to
+any abandoned dwelling, especially when the gardens have still their
+cultivable flowers remaining, but running riot within their marked-out
+beds; these had now been sixteen years neglected, yet the roses and myrtle
+only required pruning.</p>
+<p>We proceeded to the convent, the road was stony, and we had to find the
+way by twilight and starlight.</p>
+<p>At the great door we were received by the new president, and several of
+the clergy chanting psalms for welcome, and the great bell was ringing at
+the same time.&nbsp; I could not but attribute all this unusual display to
+the operation of political affairs in Europe.</p>
+<p>On taking possession of the rooms allotted to us, I received a visit of
+the Greek Catholic Bishop of Saida, he being there on business connected
+with the election of a new patriarch in the place of Maximus; his
+deportment was that of a man of polite society.&nbsp; Our rooms were
+lighted by huge ecclesiastical tapers of wax.</p>
+<p>Next morning, after returning the visit of the bishop at the patriarchal
+residence in front of the convent, we breakfasted in the corridor with the
+<!-- page 375--><a name="page375"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+375</span>president and another of the convent clergy.&nbsp; Our ladies
+then set themselves to sketching the view from the window, and talking
+about church singing from notes, whereupon the president sent a deacon to
+fetch his book, and the latter sang for us an anthem, the vociferation and
+screechings of which was so alarming, not to mention the nasal twang, that
+my niece had to run away to indulge in an obstreperous laugh, and her
+senior companion had also much difficulty in refraining from the same kind
+of expression of opinion.&nbsp; The Oriental system of church musical
+notation is very complicated, having no stave-lines or bars, but only
+certain arbitrary marks over the notes to designate high or low, plain or
+flourishing.</p>
+<p>Afterwards we inspected the church; then the refectory, and there they
+showed us the desk at which one of the community reads to the rest at meal
+time, triumphantly assuring me that they read the Bible, yet the two books
+I found on the desk were, one the Apocryphal writings, the other some
+homilies of St Basil, under whose rule the convent is constituted.</p>
+<p>Next we walked over the roof, and looked at the great bell, and the
+gong; the view, as might be expected, repaid the trouble.&nbsp; After this
+the kitchen and the store-rooms.</p>
+<p>On leaving the convent we proceeded to the nunnery in the
+neighbourhood.&nbsp; The ladies visited the inmates, while I remained in an
+outer <!-- page 376--><a name="page376"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+376</span>apartment chatting with a priest, till a curtain was drawn aside,
+and there, behold! were the lady-president and her flock, curious to see a
+consul, and blaming the servants for not having admitted me together with
+my companions.</p>
+<p>The latter gave me afterwards as their opinion of the establishment,
+that it very much resembled a comfortable asylum or almshouse for old
+women.</p>
+<p>By this deviation from the high roads we lost the fairy view in that
+neighbourhood which had charmed me so much in 1849.</p>
+<p>There is a pleasing novelty to us non-Lebanonites in being in a native
+Christian country.&nbsp; Every hill there has its convent, every convent
+its bells; clergy are continually passing along the road; and on our
+descent of the hill we met a nice old gentleman in clerical dress, with a
+very white beard, holding a crimson umbrella over his head, (this is not
+uncommon in Palestine,) and preceded by a kaww&acirc;s with a silver-headed
+official staff, also accompanied by a few peasants carrying
+guns,&mdash;this was a Maronite bishop.</p>
+<p>Crossed the river Barook at <i>Bisrah</i>, and ascended the usual
+highway leading to Hhasbeya.</p>
+<p>At the village of <i>Ineer</i> we took further directions, and followed
+over a very wild scene to nearly the summit of a mountain called
+<i>Rummet-er-Room</i>, (the Ramah, or high-place, of the Greeks,) from
+which the glorious landscape surpasses all power of description&mdash;it is
+one not to be forgotten.</p>
+<p><!-- page 377--><a name="page377"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+377</span>At <i>&rsquo;Azoor</i>, a clean pleasant village, the women and
+girls ran in crowds to gaze at my ladies; one of the women shouted
+&ldquo;Bon soir&rdquo; in good French, and a man, accompanied by his wife,
+saluted us in Italian.</p>
+<p>Rested in a beautiful wood of pines, though rather late for luncheon, as
+the sun was falling below the western mountains.&nbsp; Rising higher on the
+march we got into rolling misty clouds, and the brilliant effect of
+sunbeams between the hills and clouds could not but be surprising.&nbsp;
+Our clothes, however, got damp and chill.</p>
+<p>At <i>Jezzeen</i> our tents were found ready pitched in a grove of noble
+walnut-trees, with the brook <i>Zaid</i> running among them; near alongside
+was a Maronite convent, with a bridge.</p>
+<p>The muleteers having left us in the morning, lost their way, and had
+taken the more precipitous road by <i>Dair Mushmushi</i>.</p>
+<p>Here the people behaved with great hospitality to us.</p>
+<p>The night was very cold, and in the morning the water for washing felt
+like ice.&nbsp; The position of our encampment, as perceived by daylight,
+was so low between hills that the sun could not reach us till the day
+should be considerably advanced, yet we were at a very high altitude.&nbsp;
+Pity that we had no aneroid barometer with us to ascertain the amount of
+our elevation above the sea.&nbsp; The poplar-trees and walnut-trees, with
+fruit trees of <!-- page 378--><a name="page378"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 378</span>various kinds, showed we were in a totally
+different region from that of Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>Jezzeen is almost exclusively a Christian village, with a Greek Catholic
+church, besides two Maronite churches, and the small convent mentioned
+above.</p>
+<p>There were clergy walking about; the people cleanly and well clothed,
+the children modestly behaved, and even when rendering a service, not
+asking for bakhsheesh.</p>
+<p>At the time of our leaving, a party of women were wailing over a dead
+body under a tree.</p>
+<p>The scene gradually became more romantic; and we soon came to a village,
+if such it may be denominated, where the only dwellings are dispersed among
+vineyards.&nbsp; These vineyards were, at that autumn season, becoming of a
+brown and golden tint.</p>
+<p>After traversing the wondrous chaos referred to in the former journey,
+we passed through the villages of <i>Cuf&rsquo;r Hooneh</i> and
+<i>Deheedeh</i>, adjoining each other; where there was abundance of water,
+and oleander bushes fringing the streamlets, with poplar and maple
+trees.</p>
+<p>The rest of the journey had no remarkable difference from that of 1849,
+except that on the brow of the great descent to the plain, between Lebanon
+and the Anti-Lebanon, we rested beneath an olive-tree entwined with
+honeysuckle, enraptured with the magnificence of the scene, which would
+<!-- page 379--><a name="page379"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+379</span>require a Milton to portray it in words, or a Martin in
+painting.&nbsp; I observed that the prevailing tints of the whole great
+prospect were of russet and ochreous colours.</p>
+<p>Crossed the bridge, charmed with the beauteous verdure and freshening
+rapid stream of the Leontes river; and when arrived at Hhasbeya, repaired
+to the house of the native Protestant pastor, (Mr John Wartabed,) till a
+house could be prepared for us.</p>
+<p>Next morning some deputations of the religious sects of the town called
+upon me; also the Ameer Saad ed Deen and his five sons in rich dresses; and
+lastly, an old Druse who had distinguished himself as a friend of the
+Protestant movement.&nbsp; Among all these, my visit there had a beneficial
+effect upon the existence and progress of native Protestantism.&nbsp; In
+the Lebanon the Druses have always favoured the missionaries, their schools
+and their chapels, while the native Christian communities, under the
+direction of their clergy, have naturally opposed them by every possible
+means of the direst persecution.&nbsp; In proper time and place I may
+hereafter have more to say respecting this visit to Hhasbeya.</p>
+<p>In the afternoon, Mr Wartabed and the Khoja Bashi, (representative
+member in the town-council,) of the Protestants, named Naseef er Reis, rode
+with us to the source of the Hhasbani river, which ought to be regarded as
+the origin of the Jordan, even though Banias lower down has been for ages
+<!-- page 380--><a name="page380"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+380</span>recognised as such.&nbsp; We saw the bubbles at their earliest
+birth issue from the ground, and in a few yards this becomes a flowing
+stream.&nbsp; Higher above this spot the bed of a torrent brings down water
+in rainy seasons, adding to the springs of the Hhasb&acirc;ni, but this not
+being permanent, cannot fairly be counted as having part or lot in the
+Jordan.</p>
+<p>The ladies sat down to take sketches, and in haste I pencilled down in
+short-hand&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>O Jordan, dear Jordan, the feelings that throng<br />
+And press on the heart must awaken to song,<br />
+When the bubbles from pebbles break forth into view<br />
+As clear as the spangles of morn&rsquo;s early dew.</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Mid the poplars that rising surpass other trees,<br />
+And twinkle as moved by the scarce mountain breeze,<br />
+And the wild oleander in rose-colour&rsquo;d bloom,<br />
+With trill of the linnet, and shrubs of perfume.</p>
+<p>I have drunk from each source that advances a claim<br />
+To share with our Jordan its time-honour&rsquo;d name;<br />
+Here now at Hhasbeya&mdash;and the old site of Dan;<br />
+Or the gush that escapes from the grotto of Pan.</p>
+<p>How oft on far banks of its tortuous course,<br />
+In the scenes of repose or of cataract force,<br />
+Where the bulbul, &rsquo;mid willows and tamarisk shades,<br />
+Still warbles&mdash;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, ladies, the horses are ready, and we have further to
+go,&rdquo; broke in upon the muse of Lebanon.&nbsp; The day&rsquo;s work
+had to be finished, and time was short; so we rode away to the bitumen <!--
+page 381--><a name="page381"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 381</span>pits in
+the neighbourhood of Cocaba.&nbsp; These are not worked in warm weather,
+for the people are afraid of the possible effects of their gas generated
+under a hot sun.&nbsp; One of the pits is seventy ells, or cubits, deep,
+and the bitumen is reached through a crust of chalky soil.&nbsp; The
+property is a government monopoly, rented by natives, and the business is
+lazily and irregularly carried on; therefore, sometimes the success is
+greater than at others.&nbsp; We found two men living in a tent as
+guardians of the place, who were very civil to us, and permitted us to
+carry away some specimens.&nbsp; These were all of a very soft consistency;
+but at the bitumen works at four hours north of Hhasbeya, the mineral is of
+a still softer description, almost liquid.</p>
+<p>Next morning, the K&acirc;di paid us a visit, accompanied by a merchant
+of Damascus, a correspondent of an English house in India for indigo.</p>
+<p>On Sunday we attended divine service at the native Protestant church,
+which the people call the English church, and in virtue thereof have set up
+a bell above it; because, although the mission is carried on by American
+money and under the direction of American agents, the American consuls are
+forbidden by their home-government from taking any steps in behalf of their
+undertakings; and thus, but for the protection given them by Mr Wood,
+British consul of Damascus, and his consular friends at Bayroot, the
+American Mission, with <!-- page 382--><a name="page382"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 382</span>all their schools and printing-presses, would,
+upon all human calculation, have been crushed long ago.</p>
+<p>In conformity with Oriental usage, the congregation was divided
+according to the sexes.&nbsp; In the old Eastern churches the women are
+placed in a gallery above the men, but here the equality of the sexes was
+maintained by their occupying the same floor, while separated from each
+other by a wall built rather higher than the usual stature of a man; the
+pulpit being equally visible from each division.&nbsp; A large jar of water
+stood in the corner within the door, to which the men repaired
+occasionally, as they felt thirsty.&nbsp; There were no chairs or benches,
+except such as were brought from the house for our party, the congregation
+were sitting on their heels, in which posture they sang the hymns, and
+remained so during the prayer, only covering the face with the right hand;
+a few men, however, stood up.</p>
+<p>The singing (Arabic) was good, of course all in unison.&nbsp; The first
+hymn was to the tune of our &ldquo;Old Hundredth,&rdquo; the chapters read
+by the minister were Ezek. xviii. and Rom. iii., and the text of the sermon
+was Ps. lxxxix. 14, &ldquo;Justice and judgment are the habitation of thy
+throne: mercy and truth shall go before thy face.&rdquo;&nbsp; The style of
+language in the sermon was that of good Arabic, but of simple, unpretending
+character, without admixture of foreign words or phrases: this was insured
+by the circumstance of the minister being a <!-- page 383--><a
+name="page383"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 383</span>native of the
+country, though originally belonging to the Armenian Church.</p>
+<p>At the afternoon service the chapters read were Num. xxiii. and Heb.
+xiii.&nbsp; The text for the sermon was Heb. xiii. 8, &ldquo;Jesus Christ,
+the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever,&rdquo; and the hymn was sung to a
+sweet plaintive air of American origin.</p>
+<p>Afterwards, that is after sunset, we spent some hours with the
+pastor&rsquo;s family, who all understood English well.&nbsp; Mr Wartabed
+played the flute to the hymn-singing, and his sister&rsquo;s voice was
+clear as a flageolet.&nbsp; The evening was one of comfort and refreshment
+on both sides; it was one of a Sabbath, &ldquo;a delight, the holy of the
+Lord, honourable,&rdquo; (Isa. lviii. 13.)</p>
+<p>The poor Protestants have not always been in such satisfactory
+circumstances.&nbsp; Their principal man had narratives to relate of chains
+and imprisonment endured in past times from the present Ameer, whose policy
+was now in their favour.</p>
+<p>Next morning we left Hhasbeya, and I have not been there since.&nbsp;
+Little could it be foreseen that in five years afterwards one
+indiscriminate butchery would be made of the Ameer and his son,
+notwithstanding their high descent of family and profession of Islam,
+together with all the Christians of whatever sect in the town, driven like
+sheep within the walls of his palace&mdash;a deed of treachery unexampled
+even in that period of bloody Turkish <!-- page 384--><a
+name="page384"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 384</span>treachery.&nbsp;
+Since then my lady companions are both in their graves, the one at
+Jerusalem, the other at Bayroot, let me rather say in &ldquo;a better
+country,&rdquo; while I am left alone to narrate this in the distant
+security of England.</p>
+<p>On our way towards Banias we met a party of Druses returning from a
+small lake beyond Hhooleh, carrying leeches in earthen jars and cotton bags
+upon asses, they themselves walking.&nbsp; A green hill on our right was
+said to be frequented by wild boars&mdash;all the rest of our scenery was
+bare and stony.</p>
+<p>A weli was a conspicuous object at some distance to the south, and near
+to the Lake Hhooleh, which the Moslems name after &ldquo;Judah the son of
+Jacob.&rdquo;&nbsp; One of the Hhasbeya Protestants, who was with us,
+quoted in his native Arabic &ldquo;The sceptre shall not depart from
+Judah,&rdquo; etc.</p>
+<p>At Tell el K&acirc;di we reposed beneath the great tree near the gush of
+its branch of the Jordan, the same tree (evergreen oak) as afforded us
+shelter in 1849.&nbsp; Both this spring of the river and that of Banias are
+far more striking objects than the humble source of the Hhasb&acirc;ni,
+into which stream they run as affluents, making up the Jordan.</p>
+<p>It was a beautiful evening of mellow sunlight, and the scene most
+peaceful at the foot of Hermon.</p>
+<p>On nearing Banias we were met by the son of the shaikh of the village,
+sent out to invite us.&nbsp; It was harvest time of the Simsim,
+(Sesam&eacute;,) and the produce was very abundant; sheaves of it were <!--
+page 385--><a name="page385"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 385</span>piled
+up into large stacks, and the length of the plant in stalk exceeded all I
+had ever seen before,&mdash;a natural effect of growing on these
+well-watered plains.</p>
+<p>There were also my old friends the myrtles scattered about among the
+other trees.</p>
+<p>At Banias our attendants had pitched the tents, to our disgust, near the
+village, and with the stench of carrion not far off; much better places
+might have been taken, but this was selected probably in consequence of the
+invitation from the shaikh.&nbsp; Our short remainder of twilight was
+employed in viewing the inscriptions and the grotto of Pan.</p>
+<p>Next morning I was making fresh transcriptions of the Greek votive
+dedications before the sun was up, so as to get them as accurately as
+possible without sunshine and shadows.&nbsp; Then the same once more after
+breakfast, with the sun full upon them.&nbsp; These, together with the
+copies taken in 1849 by afternoon sunlight, and consequently the shadows
+thrown in the reverse direction, ought to ensure for me a correct
+delineation, saving and except those letters that are defaced by the action
+of weather during fifteen centuries, or across which small cracks have been
+made by the same cause.</p>
+<p>The shaikh came to transact some business of consequence to him.&nbsp;
+Before noon we resumed our journey; going due west through the
+Sesam&eacute; harvest and the myrtle trees to Tell el K&acirc;di; straight
+across the plain through marshes, frequent small <!-- page 386--><a
+name="page386"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 386</span>streams, and large
+fields of rice, which they said would be fit for reaping in twenty days
+more, that is, by the end of October.</p>
+<p>Crossed the Ghujar bridge, but did not as before turn off to Safed; our
+object now was to reach Tibneen in the Bel&acirc;d Besh&acirc;rah, and
+therefore we kept on due west, ascending up to the great crusading castle
+and the village of <i>Huneen</i>, from which the look back upon Jebel esh
+Shaikh (Hermon) was indescribably grand.</p>
+<p>A little farther on, a glimpse was caught of the Mediterranean Sea! the
+mountain breeze most delightful.&nbsp; Rested by the roadside for luncheon;
+came to the village of <i>Hhooleh</i>, thence into lower valleys of green
+woods, often with scarce room to pass ourselves, our horses, and the
+luggage between branches of trees for some successive hours.&nbsp; Then
+under the village of <i>Jahh&acirc;rah</i>, where were charcoal burners
+working at their kilns.</p>
+<p>The scene opened into verdant glades, alternated with woodland; the
+breathing most pure as exhaled from trees upon firm dry ground, contrasted
+with the noxious vapours from the marshes in the early morning.</p>
+<p>Flocks and shepherds appeared, and there was the sound of the axe busy
+in the woods; not the ringing sound of the bright large English axe, this
+being wanted in the stroke of the petty Oriental tools.</p>
+<p>As evening drew on, and broad shadows fell from <!-- page 387--><a
+name="page387"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 387</span>green hills across
+our way, Tibneen Castle came nobly into view, and there a goodly reception
+awaited us.&nbsp; A strange medley of splendour, with fleas and dust,
+obtained throughout the establishment, and our ladies visited those of the
+Hhareem, concerning whom they brought back no agreeable report.</p>
+<p>We remained over two nights at Tibneen; the latter of which was,
+throughout its whole duration, one of furious storm, rattling the wooden
+lattices that served for windows; a storm not uncommon in the East, when an
+adverse wind meets and drives back a strong shirocco.&nbsp; At daybreak the
+first sound of the morning was that of a large trained hawk near the
+window, chained to his perch, and screaming out his delight in the bluster
+of the tempest.&nbsp; Mount Hermon appeared, not in his summer glow, but in
+solemn majesty, defying the clouds and the winds that raged in vain against
+his solid substance.</p>
+<p>Our progress was thence towards Safed, which, however, we did not reach
+in less than eleven hours and a half, instead of six, because of our
+circuit made to see the antiquities of Kadis and Cuf&rsquo;r
+Bera&rsquo;am.</p>
+<p>Turning off before Bint el Jebail, we came to <i>&rsquo;Ain Atha</i>,
+and next to <i>Aitur&acirc;n</i>.&nbsp; At Kadis (Kedesh Naphtali) I found
+that much of the principal and beautiful temple had been lately despoiled
+by our late host of Tibneen (&rsquo;Ali Bek) for the <!-- page 388--><a
+name="page388"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 388</span>ornamentation of his
+Hhareem or women&rsquo;s apartments, and balconies or galleries.&nbsp; Then
+to <i>Yaroon</i>, near which was still the ponderous sarcophagus upon a
+platform in the open country, and likely to stay there for ages to
+come.&nbsp; It is too plain and devoid of ornament or inscription for
+antiquarians from Europe to covet it, and to remove it for no particular
+use would demand too much exertion from the natives of the country.&nbsp;
+My groom, however, thought it might be useful as a depository of barley in
+the stable!</p>
+<p>We overtook a party of Safed people returning from the weekly market at
+Bint el Jebail.</p>
+<p>At Cuf&rsquo;r Bera&rsquo;am we inspected the ancient buildings now
+bearing Hebrew inscriptions, and I was more than ever convinced in my own
+mind, that neither these nor any edifices at Kadis have any relation to the
+Jewish people, in their origin or intention.&nbsp; The Hebrew writing is of
+inferior style, and very modern character, far, far unequal to the beauty
+of the architecture; besides having evident traces of animal figures which
+have been hastily chiselled off.</p>
+<p>The sun set, and a bad road had to be traversed in order to reach our
+destination at Safed.</p>
+<p><!-- page 389--><a name="page389"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+389</span>PART III.</p>
+<p>In my two journeys just described, the route was over the southern part
+of the long Lebanon range, not only on the main ridge, but crossing some of
+the innumerable spurs thrown out towards the sea.&nbsp; This time, however,
+we have to deal with a more northerly and higher region; and it is because
+of its being in a different direction from those of 1849 and 1855 that I
+have not observed the consecutive order of date&mdash;this was in
+1853.&nbsp; We shall start from the coast, where the most projecting and
+western spur subsides into Ras Bayroot, and the climbing begins almost
+immediately after leaving deep yellow sands and the pine forest.</p>
+<p>The object was to reach Mokht&acirc;rah, perched high in the heart of
+the Shoof or central ridge of Lebanon, like an eyrie, as it was then, for
+the princely house of Jonbl&acirc;t.&nbsp; Mokht&acirc;rah lies S.-E. from
+Bayroot, and to arrive there we had to cross the intervening spurs,
+climbing as we went.</p>
+<p>The town of Dair el Kamar and the palace of Beteddeen, formerly the
+headquarters of the house of Sheh&acirc;b, lay upon the road.&nbsp; The
+remainder of the journey after Mokht&acirc;rah consisted in a rapid descent
+to Sidon, the great port in antiquity for Damascus, Ph&oelig;nicia, and the
+Lebanon.</p>
+<p>This tour comprised the finest range of the territory occupied by the
+Druse nation.</p>
+<p><!-- page 390--><a name="page390"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+390</span>1853.&nbsp; <i>July</i>.&mdash;From Bayroot, with its bewitching
+scenery and its gorgeous colouring of mountains and the sea, we went to
+<i>&rsquo;Abeih</i>, the best known of the American missionary stations in
+the Lebanon.</p>
+<p>Through the woods of pines, with their reviving fragrance, and through
+<i>El Hadeth</i>, an entirely Christian village, where the bell of the
+Maronite convent was ringing as we passed, we came to
+<i>Shuwaif&acirc;t</i>, and rose still higher towards the mountain pines
+and the breezes so desirable in Syria in the month of July, leaving below
+the olive in abundance, the mulberry and the fig-trees.</p>
+<p>Beside the fountain called <i>&rsquo;Ain Bes&acirc;ba</i> was a pottery
+factory.&nbsp; The nature of the rocks around was soft sandstone; a
+gigantic pear-tree stood conspicuous among the excellent cultivation of the
+neighbourhood; higher still, between straight tall pines and wild
+holly-oaks, our road curved round and round the hills.</p>
+<p>We overtook a company of Christians, the women riding and the men
+walking&mdash;this circumstance alone would show they were not
+Mohammedans.&nbsp; The two parties had to pass each other with much
+caution, as the path was narrow and the precipice deep below.</p>
+<p>At <i>&rsquo;Ain &rsquo;Anoob</i>, where a copious supply of water
+issues from three spouts, the fountain has on each side the representation
+of a chained lion, sculptured in stone.&nbsp; One&rsquo;s first impression
+would <!-- page 391--><a name="page391"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+391</span>be that this were a relic of the Genoese or Venetian crusaders;
+but these figures, whatever their meaning or origin, are not infrequent
+upon fountains about the Lebanon, even when only rustically daubed in red
+ochre; and it has not been often noticed that there are similar lions
+facing each other, only without the chains, one on each side of St
+Stephen&rsquo;s Gate at Jerusalem.&nbsp; Some of the women at the fountains
+wore the horns on their head, the fashion for which is gradually passing
+away.&nbsp; The terraces on the hills were in the highest state of
+cultivation, and gave abundant promise of fruit for the coming season; the
+sun was near setting, the rooks cawing overhead, and we saw two little
+girls each bring a lamb to the fountain to drink and then proceed to wash
+them.</p>
+<p>Sidi Ahhmad, a Druse &rsquo;Akal, with, of course, a white turban,
+undertook to be our guide as far as &rsquo;Abeih.</p>
+<p>Fresh air to breathe! how different from the oppressive heat of
+Bayroot!&nbsp; We all drank of every spring by the way, and by consequence
+lifted up the drooping head, (Ps. cx. 7,) thinking each fountain colder
+than that before it.</p>
+<p>The most rugged portion of the road was between <i>&rsquo;Ain
+&rsquo;Anoob</i> and <i>&rsquo;Ainab</i>, and zigzag were the worn tracks
+of the way.&nbsp; Sometimes a musical jingle of bells announced the coming
+of travellers in front, who were however invisible till they pounced upon
+us from between two pinnacles of <!-- page 392--><a
+name="page392"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 392</span>rocks.&nbsp; On the
+steepest ascents it was necessary to halt and await the coming up of our
+baggage mules.</p>
+<p>From mountain heights it is often difficult to distinguish the blue
+expanse of the Mediterranean Sea from the similar blue expanse of the sky,
+until the actual moment of sunset, when the bright orb becoming suddenly
+flattened on its lower curve reveals the exact horizon line; and so it was
+this evening.</p>
+<p>Wearied with the climbing position of the saddle, hour after hour, I
+passed <i>&rsquo;Ain Kesoor</i> on foot, the &rsquo;Akal leading the
+horse.&nbsp; This was shortly before &rsquo;Abeih, but there I rode up to
+the mansion of Kasim Bek, the local governor, to ask hospitality; it was
+dark night, and Saturday.&nbsp; My intention was to spend the Sunday in a
+Christian manner among the American missionaries.&nbsp; The journey had
+been one of five hours and a half from Bayroot.</p>
+<p>We were heartily received into a fine old house, in which were shaikhs
+and chiefs of sundry grades seated on the divan with the host, and
+immediately the means for washing were brought by the domestics with great
+respect.&nbsp; A good supper was prepared, the Bek eating with us, to my
+surprise, but I afterwards learned that this is not uncommon with a
+non-&rsquo;Akal Druse, as he was.</p>
+<p><i>Sunday</i>.&mdash;Quiet morning.&nbsp; Bell of the Capuchin Convent
+almost adjoining the house.&nbsp; From the <!-- page 393--><a
+name="page393"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 393</span>windows there is a
+fine prospect of Bayroot and the coast-outline.</p>
+<p>After breakfast I went up to the chapel of the American missionaries,
+and entered just as the Arabic service was about to commence&mdash;Dr de
+Forest in the pulpit; and his sermon was preached with fluency of language
+equal to that of a native.&nbsp; The subject was taken from 1 Cor. i. 12,
+13, concerning those who named themselves followers of Paul or of
+Apollos.&nbsp; The women were screened off from the men in the
+congregation.</p>
+<p>After service Dr de Forest welcomed me, and led me up the hill to the
+mission-house, where I found my old friend, Dr Eli Smith, who was unwell,
+and about to leave them on the morrow for his home at
+B&rsquo;hamdoon.&nbsp; With Mrs de Forest there was a young lady just
+arrived from the United States to be a teacher in the school.</p>
+<p>The residence is a good one; with the girls&rsquo; school on the ground
+plan, and the dwelling apartments above.&nbsp; The scenery and prospect
+equal all that the highest imagination could conceive of the Lebanon.&nbsp;
+Over the sea, the island of Cyprus can occasionally be distinguished from
+the terrace, that is to say, three peaks of a mountain show themselves at
+sunset, particularly if the wind be in the north, in the month of May or
+the beginning of June.&nbsp; This view, therefore, gives the outskirts of
+&ldquo;the isles of Chittim,&rdquo; as seen from the Holy Land, (Num. xxiv.
+24, and Jer. ii. 10.)</p>
+<p><!-- page 394--><a name="page394"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+394</span>After dinner we all went together to the English service in the
+chapel.&nbsp; Mr Colquhoun preached a simple but impressive sermon from
+John x. 4; which text he illustrated by an incident that he had witnessed
+in a recent journey northwards.</p>
+<p>A shepherd with a flock arrived at a river of some impetuosity.&nbsp; He
+entered it first, trying the depths with his staff, got over at the best
+place, and then with his voice called over the sheep to him.&nbsp; From
+which the following points were deduced:&mdash;</p>
+<p>1.&nbsp; That the shepherd led the way, and the flock waited for his
+call.</p>
+<p>2.&nbsp; That the sheep followed when he called, although not all of
+them at the precise ford he had discovered.&nbsp; Some of them trusted to
+their own judgment, and these generally got out of their depths for a
+time.&nbsp; His way was certainly the best one.</p>
+<p>3.&nbsp; That as the shepherd stood on the opposite bank, he showed no
+symptoms of uneasiness, for he was confident that every one of the flock
+would get safely across.</p>
+<p>4.&nbsp; That the sheep in passing over used each his own efforts to get
+across, apparently just as much as if there were no one present to help;
+although no doubt the presence of the shepherd had a good effect upon their
+exertions.&nbsp; It is beyond our reach to explain the metaphysical mystery
+of this.</p>
+<p>5.&nbsp; The shepherd in first crossing the stream <!-- page 395--><a
+name="page395"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 395</span>himself tested the
+force of the stream.&nbsp; Each individual creature had to do the same; but
+those who followed the closest upon his track had an easy passage, while
+those who tried new ways for themselves were some of them swept down the
+current for a distance, and had to make hard struggles to rejoin their
+companions and to reach the beloved shepherd.</p>
+<p>6.&nbsp; All got safely over, for they were his sheep; he knew them all
+by name; he had tried the way before them and shown it; he then called them
+to himself.</p>
+<p>Of course each of these points was made use of as personally applicable
+to the hearers.&nbsp; The sermon did me much good from its quiet and
+truthful character.</p>
+<p>At this service, it is needless to observe, that there was no separation
+of sexes in the congregation.&nbsp; The girls of the school (who are all
+taught English) were there placed by themselves, and prettily dressed,
+wearing the Oriental <i>iz&acirc;r</i>, (or large white veil,) with
+flowered borders, a novelty to us.</p>
+<p>Returning to the mission-house, the late afternoon and the time of
+sunset and twilight were spent in rational conversation of Christian
+character.&nbsp; And such was our Sabbath-day of devotion and repose.</p>
+<p>How glorious were the colours spread over the vast extent of mountain
+and sea, modified by length of shadows as the sun declined!&nbsp; Oh how
+<!-- page 396--><a name="page396"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+396</span>deep are such beauties and the perception of their value laid in
+the innermost recesses of our soul&rsquo;s nature, only to be completely
+gratified in the eternity to come.&nbsp; Here, below, we have gorgeous
+tints differing in succession, even after actual sunset, to be followed by
+a delicate after-glow, which again gives place to the splendour of
+night.&nbsp; And as in earth, so in heaven, with the exception of night;
+for surely there will be alternations of beauteous scenes above; surely
+there will be developments and variety in light, colour, music, harmony,
+and the rest of those &ldquo;pleasures for evermore,&rdquo; which are
+everywhere emanations from the direct love of &ldquo;Him who first loved
+us,&rdquo;&mdash;His gifts, who even here bestows prismatic hues upon
+icebergs in the arctic circle, and a rosy flush to the peaks of Jebel
+Sanneen in the Lebanon.</p>
+<p><i>Monday</i>.&mdash;Letters were brought at a late hour last night in
+four hours from Bayroot, giving recent intelligence from our
+fleet&mdash;all political affairs going on successfully.</p>
+<p>Everybody speaks well of our host the governor, and his family.&nbsp; He
+is a studious man, and has acquired from the Americans a good deal of
+history and general knowledge; his youngest brother attends the
+natural-history class of the mission-school.&nbsp; He is a relative of the
+famous Abu Neked, and his wife (Druses have but one wife each) is of the
+Jonbl&acirc;t family.&nbsp; The ancestral mansion he inhabits was built by
+one of the <!-- page 397--><a name="page397"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+397</span>ancient race called the T&rsquo;noohh, who flourished there from
+the 10th to the 17th century, and artists had been brought for the purpose
+from Constantinople; the symmetry of the masonry is admirable, and
+consequently the shadows formed from it are particularly straight and sharp
+in outline.</p>
+<p>The village contains specimens of every form of religion to be found
+throughout the Lebanon; each sect, however, keeps somewhat apart from the
+rest, which practice being common in the mountain, may account for the
+villages appearing to a stranger to consist of separate pieces not quite
+joined together.</p>
+<p>Some women still wear horns, although the Christian clergy set
+themselves strongly against these ornaments; some even refusing the
+Communion-Sacrament to those who persist in retaining that heathenish
+emblem derived from ancient mythology.</p>
+<p>Among the Druse men, the &rsquo;Ak&acirc;l are not so marked in their
+difference of costume from the Juh&acirc;l as formerly, except in the
+extreme cleanliness and careful plaiting of the white turban.&nbsp; My
+host, notwithstanding the antiquity of his family and his studious
+character, is not one of the initiated, he is but a J&acirc;hel, yet he
+probably serves his people best in that capacity, as he is thereby enabled
+to hold government employments.</p>
+<p>From his windows we could see on the south side of Ras Bayroot several
+small vessels engaged <!-- page 398--><a name="page398"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 398</span>in sponge-fishing; the crews of these are
+generally Greeks from the islands: yesterday with the telescope we had a
+good view of the mail-steamer arriving.</p>
+<p>We went to take leave of the American friends, who showed us some
+excellent specimens of English writing, and of drawing from the
+girls&rsquo; school.</p>
+<p>Returning to the Druse friends, I visited Seleem, a brother of the
+Bek.&nbsp; On hearing that we were proceeding to Mokht&acirc;rah,
+Naam&acirc;n, (brother of Sa&iuml;d Bek Jonbl&acirc;t,) who has retired
+from worldly affairs, and become a devout &rsquo;Akal, requested one of my
+party to ask Sa&iuml;d to send him some orange-flower water.&nbsp; I have
+no doubt that this message (&Phi;&omega;&nu;&alpha;&nu;&tau;&alpha;
+&sigma;&upsilon;&nu;&#941;&tau;&omicron;&iota;&sigma;&iota;&nu;) covered
+some political meaning.</p>
+<p>The house of Seleem was simplicity and neatness in the extreme, the only
+ornamentation being that of rich robes, pistols, swords, and the silver
+decorations of horses, suspended on pegs round the principal apartment; all
+thoroughly Oriental of olden time.</p>
+<p>The Christian secretary of the Bek attended us to <i>Cuf&rsquo;r
+Natta</i> on a fine Jilfi mare, where he got for us a pedestrian guide to
+Dair el Kamar.&nbsp; A very deep valley lay before us, into which we had to
+descend, lounging leftwards, and then to mount the opposite hill, returning
+rightwards, to an elevation higher than that of Cuf&rsquo;r Natta.&nbsp;
+Down we went by zigzags through groves of pine that were stirred gently on
+their tops by the mountain breeze, <!-- page 399--><a
+name="page399"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 399</span>and there was plenty
+of wild myrtle on the ground; we frequently met with specimens of iron ore,
+and pink or yellow metallic streaks in the rocks, to the river
+Suff&acirc;r, being the upper part of the river that is called Damoor upon
+the sea-coast.&nbsp; This is crossed by the bridge <i>Jisr&rsquo; el
+K&acirc;di</i>, (so named from an ameer of the house of T&rsquo;noohh,
+surnamed the K&acirc;di, or Judge, from his legal acquirements, and who
+erected the bridge in old times,) near which the limestone rock of the
+water-bed is worn into other channels by the occasional escapements of
+winter torrents.&nbsp; There are mills adjoining.</p>
+<p>We all rested in a coffee-station at the end of the bridge.&nbsp;
+Several parties of muleteers had halted there at the same time.&nbsp; By
+the little fireside a large hawk was perched, and the owner of the place
+had his apparatus for shoemaking in the middle of the room.</p>
+<p>Flowering oleander and fruit trees imparted liveliness to the scene
+outside, our several parties in variegated costumes adding not a little to
+the same.</p>
+<p>Crossing the bridge, (which is level, and has no side parapets,) we
+commenced the great ascent; the hill-side was largely planted with
+sherabeen, (sprouts,) of a kind of cedar, not the real cedar of
+Lebanon.&nbsp; At a spring half way up we found a poor Turkish infantry
+soldier resting all alone, he was a pitiable object in a district so
+unfriendly to him.</p>
+<p><!-- page 400--><a name="page400"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+400</span>What a different country would Palestine or all Syria be were it
+like the Lebanon, industriously cultivated inch by inch!&nbsp; How
+different would the Lebanon be were this industry and its produce never
+interrupted by intestine warfare!</p>
+<p>Higher still we saw a train of shaikhs on horseback, attended by men on
+foot, coming in our direction longitudinally on the opposite hill from a
+remote village.</p>
+<p>All the distance, I think, from Jis&rsquo;r el K&acirc;di forwards,
+notwithstanding the steep nature of the country, was over a paved or made
+road.&nbsp; There is no such a thing in the south; here, however, the
+desolation of Turkish rule is but little known, and the people are not only
+industrious, but a fine muscular race.</p>
+<p>We overtook small groups of village people who had, it seems, gone out
+to meet the important riding party lately seen by us.&nbsp; Suddenly, at a
+turn of the road, the cheerful town of Dair el Kamar opened out to view,
+with the hills and palaces of Beteddeen behind.&nbsp; This was at three
+hours from &rsquo;Abeih, exclusive of the hour&rsquo;s rest at the
+bridge.</p>
+<p>The town appeared to be well built, better than many a European town,
+notwithstanding the destruction arising from recent warfare, and the people
+cleanly; it was, however, no proof of the latter quality that I saw a pig
+being fed at a house-door as we passed along.</p>
+<p><!-- page 401--><a name="page401"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+401</span>We alighted at the best Arab house I had ever entered, namely,
+that of the influential Mesh&acirc;kah family.&nbsp; After some repose the
+host took me and the friends who had accompanied me from Soor and Saida to
+look about the town.&nbsp; Through streets and bazaars we came to a large
+open place occupied by silk weavers at work, among whom was the father of
+Faris, the Arabic teacher in the Protestant school at Jerusalem, he having
+been instructed by the Americans at &rsquo;Abeih, and whose sister I had
+seen there the day preceding.&nbsp; The silk stuffs of the town maintain a
+respectable rivalry with those of Damascus.</p>
+<p>Turkish soldiers were dawdling about the streets.</p>
+<p>We called at some Christian houses, in one of which (very handsome, with
+a garden) the recesses in the wall of one side of the divan room,
+containing bedding as usual in the East, were screened by a wide curtain of
+white muslin spangled with gold.&nbsp; Upon the other sides of the room
+were rude fresco paintings.&nbsp; Opposite the door on entering was the
+Virgin and Child; over the door was a dove with an olive branch; and the
+remaining side was embellished by the picture of a fine water-melon, with a
+slice cut off and lying at its side, the knife still upright in the melon,
+and an angel flying above it, blowing a trumpet!</p>
+<p>The town is romantically situated upon successive levels of terraces in
+the hill, and environed by orchards of fruit.&nbsp; As evening approached,
+the <!-- page 402--><a name="page402"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+402</span>opposite hill was suffused in a glow of pink, followed by purple
+light, and the Ramad&acirc;n gun was fired from Beteddeen when the
+sun&rsquo;s orb dropped upon the horizon.&nbsp; Suddenly the hills
+exchanged their warm colours for a cold gray, in harmony with the gloaming
+or evening twilight.</p>
+<p>The population of Dair el Kamar at that time numbered 700 full-grown men
+of Maronites, 220 of Greek Catholics, 150 of Druses, with a few Moslems and
+Jews&mdash;each of the sects living apart from the rest.&nbsp; The silk
+manufacture was more extensive than that of Saida, and a constant
+communication was kept up with Damascus, which is at twenty hours&rsquo;
+distance.&nbsp; The Christians are far more hardy than their
+fellow-Christians the Maronites are in their special district to the
+north.&nbsp; The whole population is industrious, and the Druses maintain
+their characteristic steadfastness of purpose, secrecy, and union among
+themselves.</p>
+<p>The house in which I was so hospitably received had been almost entirely
+destroyed in the war of 1841; and its proprietor (brother of the two
+brothers now its owners) shot dead in his own court, by persons who owed
+him money, namely, the Druse party of Abu Neked, two hundred of whom had
+for a fortnight lived at free quarters there.</p>
+<p>The two brothers who were my hosts are Christians of the Greek Catholic
+sect, named Gabriel and Raphael.&nbsp; A third surviving brother is the
+<!-- page 403--><a name="page403"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+403</span>talented Protestant controversialist residing in Damascus, and
+practising medicine as learned from the Americans.&nbsp; The one who was
+shot by the Druses was Andrew; the eldest of all is Ibrahim, settled in
+Bayroot, and his son named Khaleel is dragoman of the English consulate
+there&mdash;it was he who furnished us with the introduction to this house
+in Dair el Kamar.</p>
+<p>How curious is the domestic life of these Oriental families.&nbsp;
+Eating takes place in the principal room, with a throng of women and
+children passing heedlessly about, or visitors entering as they
+please.&nbsp; Among these, during the dinner time, came in a Jew speaking
+Jewish-German.&nbsp; He was a dyer, who had known me at Jerusalem, and
+conversed with remarkable self-possession: it seemed as if the mountain
+air, and absence from the Rabbis of Jerusalem, had made a man of him.&nbsp;
+In attendance on the meal was an ancient woman-servant of the family, very
+wrinkled, but wearing the tantoor or horn on her head.</p>
+<p>On retiring from the table, if we may use that expression as applicable
+to an Oriental dinner, there came in the Greek Catholic Bishop of Saida,
+and several heads of houses of the Maronites, on visits of ceremony.</p>
+<p>The fatigue of the day was closed, and rewarded by a night of sleep upon
+a bed of down and crimson silk, under a covering of the same.</p>
+<p>In the morning our journey was resumed; but <!-- page 404--><a
+name="page404"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 404</span>before quitting this
+interesting town, I cannot forbear quoting Dr Porter&rsquo;s admirable
+description of Dair el Kamar, from Murray&rsquo;s &ldquo;Handbook for Syria
+and Palestine,&rdquo; part ii. page 413:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Deir el Kamr is a picturesque mountain village, or rather town,
+of some 8000 inhabitants, whose houses are built along a steep, rocky
+hill-side.&nbsp; A sublime glen runs beneath it, and on the opposite side,
+on a projecting ledge, stands the palace of Btedd&icirc;n.&nbsp; Both the
+banks, as well as the slopes above them, are covered with terraces,
+supporting soil on which a well-earned harvest waves in early summer, amid
+rows of mulberries and olives and straggling vines.&nbsp; Industry has here
+triumphed over apparent impossibilities, having converted naked rocky
+declivities into a paradise.&nbsp; In Palestine we have passed through vast
+plains of the richest soil all waste and desolate&mdash;here we see the
+mountain&rsquo;s rugged side clothed with soil not its own, and watered by
+a thousand rills led captive from fountains far away.&nbsp; Every spot on
+which a handful of soil can rest, every cranny to which a vine can cling,
+every ledge on which a mulberry can stand, is occupied.&nbsp; The people
+too, now nearly all Christians, have a thrifty well-to-do look, and the
+children, thanks to the energy of the American missionaries, are well
+taught.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was in 1857, and the description corresponds to what I witnessed in
+1853; but, alas! how great a change ensued in 1860.&nbsp; I must <!-- page
+405--><a name="page405"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 405</span>refrain,
+however, from enlarging upon the melancholy tragedy that occurred there
+during the insurrection of that memorable year.</p>
+<p>First we went to Beteddeen, and witnessed the sad spectacle of the Ameer
+Besheer&rsquo;s luxurious palace in a process of daily destruction by the
+Turkish soldiery, who occupied it as a barrack.&nbsp; Accounts had been
+read by me in Europe <a name="citation405"></a><a href="#footnote405"
+class="citation">[405]</a> of its size and costliness, but the description
+had not exceeded the reality.</p>
+<p>The officer in command gave us permission to be guided over the palatial
+courts and chambers.&nbsp; We wandered through the Hhareem-rooms, and saw
+baths of marble and gilding, sculptured inscriptions in the passages,
+coloured mosaics in profusion on the floors, painted roofs, rich columns,
+brass gates, carved doors, marble fountains, and basins with gold
+fish.&nbsp; We entered the state reception room, and the old ameer&rsquo;s
+little business div&acirc;n, in a balcony commanding a view of the
+approaches in every direction, of the meid&acirc;n for equestrian practice,
+of the inner courts, of the gardens below, and of a cascade of water
+rolling over lofty cliffs, at the exact distance whence the sound came
+gently soothing the ear, and from that spot also was obtained a distant
+view of the Mediterranean; not omitting the advantage of witnessing <!--
+page 406--><a name="page406"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 406</span>every
+important movement that could be made in the streets of Dair el Kamar,
+across the deep valley.</p>
+<p>Beteddeen had been a truly princely establishment, but now adds one more
+lesson to the many others of instability in human greatness.&nbsp; Fourteen
+years before, it was all in its glory&mdash;the courts were thronged with
+Druse and Maronite chiefs arrayed in cloth of gold, with soldiers, with
+secretaries, with flatterers and suppliants; whereas now, before our eyes,
+the dirty canaille of Turkish soldiers were tearing up marble squares of
+pavement to chuck about for sport, doors were plucked down and burned, even
+the lightning-rods were demolished, and every species of devastation
+practised for passing away their idle time.</p>
+<p>I shall not here describe the political movements that led to this great
+reverse of fortune, or to the present condition of the family of
+Shehab.</p>
+<p>The mountains around were still in careful cultivation, chiefly with the
+vine and olive; and the aqueduct still brings water from the springs of
+Suff&acirc;r at several miles&rsquo; distance, and this it is which, after
+supplying the palace, forms the cascade above described, and afterwards
+turns two mills.</p>
+<p>At short distances are smaller palaces, erected also by this powerful
+ameer for his mother and his married sons; but the same fate has overtaken
+them all&mdash;Turkish devastation.</p>
+<p><!-- page 407--><a name="page407"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+407</span>Before leaving the place, I visited the tomb of the ameer&rsquo;s
+mother and that of his principal wife, who was a Christian; they are near
+the house, and surrounded by five cypresses.</p>
+<p>Took the road towards Mokht&acirc;rah, the seat of the rival chief, the
+Druse Jonbl&acirc;t.&nbsp; For some distance after Beteddeen the roads have
+been carefully constructed, over an unusually level plateau for the
+Lebanon; but an enormous ridge of mountain stands conspicuous in the
+N.-E.&nbsp; This is the highest part of the Shoof, near the sources of the
+river <i>Barook</i>, so named from being the first place where the Arab
+camels <i>knelt</i> on arriving in the Lebanon in A.D. 821.&nbsp; The sad
+spectacle of villages and good farm-houses desolate and blackened by fire,
+frequently met the view; for this open tract, called the
+<i>Sumkan&icirc;yeh</i>, has frequently been a scene of conflict between
+the leading factions; it was especially the ground of the considerable
+battle of the Ameer Besheer and the Jonblat&icirc;yeh in 1825.&nbsp; At
+length, from the commencement of a descent, we saw Mokht&acirc;rah upon an
+opposite hill, commanding the view of our approach&mdash;a great advantage
+in times of warfare.&nbsp; Our road lay downwards by odd turns and twists,
+and over a precipice to the river Barook, with its romantic banks and
+fruit-trees peering between overhanging rocks.</p>
+<p>On our arrival, the great man, Said Bek <!-- page 408--><a
+name="page408"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 408</span>Jonbl&acirc;t, <a
+name="citation408"></a><a href="#footnote408" class="citation">[408]</a>
+came out with a train of &rsquo;Ak&acirc;l councillors and a crowd of
+humbler retainers.&nbsp; He was a handsome man of about twenty-eight, and
+richly apparelled.&nbsp; Beneath a large abai or cloak of black Cashmere,
+with Indian patterns embroidered about the collar and skirts, he wore a
+long gombaz of very dark green silk embossed with tambour work; his sash
+was of the plainest purple silk, and his sidr&icirc;yeh or vest was of
+entire cloth of gold with gold filigree buttons: on the head a plain
+tarboosh, and in his hand sometimes a cane ornamented with ivory or a
+rosary of sandal-wood.&nbsp; His gold watch and chain were in the best
+European taste.</p>
+<p>I need not here expatiate on the sumptuous reception afforded us; it may
+be enough to say, that having some hours to spare before sunset&mdash;the
+universal time for dinner in the East&mdash;we walked about, and the Bek
+shewed me the yet unrepaired damages, inflicted in his father&rsquo;s time,
+at the hands of the victorious Ameer Besheer&rsquo;s faction, on that
+palace and paradise which his father Besheer had created there, thus
+teaching the Sheh&acirc;b Ameer how to build its rival of
+Beteddeen,&mdash;and the limpid stream brought from the high sources of the
+Barook to supply cascades and fountains for the marble courts, which the
+other also imitated in bringing down the Suff&acirc;r to his place.&nbsp;
+We sat <!-- page 409--><a name="page409"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+409</span>beside those streams and cascades, so grateful at that season of
+the year, conversing about the Arab factions of Kaisi and Yemeni, or the
+Jonbl&acirc;t and Yesbeck parties of the Druses, or his own early years
+spent in exile either in the Hauran or with Mohammed &rsquo;Ali in
+Egypt,&mdash;but not a word about actual circumstances of the Lebanon, or
+about his plans for restoring the palace to more than its former splendour,
+which he afterwards carried out.&nbsp; This was all very agreeable, but a
+curious fit of policy assumed at the time rendered my host to some degree
+apparently inhospitable to us Christians.</p>
+<p>It is well known that the Druse religion allows its votaries to profess
+outwardly the forms of any other religion according to place and
+circumstances.&nbsp; The Bek was now adopting Moslem observances;
+consequently, it being the month of Ramad&acirc;n, we could have nothing to
+eat till after sunset.&nbsp; What could have been his reason for this
+temporary disguisement I have never been able to discover.&nbsp; Even the
+ad&acirc;n was cried on the roof of his house, summoning people to prayer
+in the canonical formula of the Moslems, and Sa&iuml;d Bek, with his
+councillors, retired to a shed for devotional exercises, as their prayers
+may be appropriately termed; and I remarked that at every rising attitude
+he was lifted reverently by the hands and elbows, by his
+attendants,&mdash;an assistance which no true Mohammedan of any rank, that
+I had ever met with, would have tolerated.</p>
+<p><!-- page 410--><a name="page410"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+410</span>At length the sunlight ceased to gild the lofty peaks above us,
+and pipes, sherbet, and ice were served up as a preparation for the coming
+dinner.</p>
+<p>There is in front of the house a square reservoir of water, with a
+current flowing in and out of it; this is bordered by large cypress-trees,
+and in a corner near the house wall grows a large acacia-tree, the
+light-green colour and drooping foliage of which gave somewhat of an Indian
+appearance to the scene.</p>
+<p>Lamps were then lit beneath an arcade, and near the water a huge cresset
+was filled with resinous pine splinters, and the light of its burning
+flickered fantastically over the pool, the house, and the trees.</p>
+<p>Next came the dinner, late for the appetites of us travellers, and
+tedious in its duration&mdash;with music outside the open windows.</p>
+<p>After the meal the Bek withdrew to the corner of his divan for
+transaction of business with his people, as the Moslems do at that
+season.&nbsp; His part of the affairs consisted in endorsing a word or two
+upon the petitions or addresses that were produced by the
+secretaries&mdash;these were written on small rolls of paper like tiny
+cigarettes, pinched at one end.&nbsp; How very un-European to carry on
+business in so few words, either written or spoken!</p>
+<p>Sa&iuml;d Bek was a man of few words in such transactions, but what he
+did say seemed always to hit exactly the point intended; and the wave of
+his <!-- page 411--><a name="page411"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+411</span>finger was sufficient to summon a number of men to receive his
+commands.&nbsp; He was evidently a person of a different stamp from the
+coarse leaders of Lebanon factions, the Abu Neked, the Shibli el
+&rsquo;Ari&acirc;n, and such like; he is proud of his family antiquity,
+refined in dress and manners, and has always, like the rest of the Druses,
+courted the favour of the English nation.</p>
+<p>On the entrance of his son, named Nejib, probably four or five years
+old, all the Ak&acirc;l councillors and military officers rose to receive
+him.</p>
+<p>In the morning we took our departure, when Sa&iuml;d Bek accompanied us
+as far as the Meid&acirc;n, and a profusion of Druse compliments filled up
+the leave-taking.</p>
+<p>We now passed for some hours along the river side, through the utmost
+loveliness of Lebanon scenery.&nbsp; Among other trees that lined its
+banks, or adorned the precipitous cliffs, or followed the rising and
+falling road, were noble specimens of platanus (plane) and lofty
+zanzalacht, (the peepul of India;) crystal rills tumbled down the rocks, as
+if sparkling alive with enjoyment; then the usual poplar, walnut, evergreen
+oak, and a large plantation of olive: the river sometimes smiled with the
+fringe of oleander.&nbsp; We halted for a time under a wide-branching
+platanus at the end of a bridge, between the masonry of which grew bunches
+of the caper plant, then in blossom of white and lilac, and at the piers of
+which grew straggling <!-- page 412--><a name="page412"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 412</span>blackberry brambles and wild fig-trees in
+picturesque irregularity, while the water bubbled and gurgled over a pebbly
+bed or fragments of rock.</p>
+<p>Peasantry passed us with ass-loads of wood for fuel, (camels being
+unknown in that region.)&nbsp; The same features continually repeated
+themselves as we advanced; large broken cliffs were overhanging us, and
+birds singing in the solitude; it need not be added that the sun was
+cloudless the whole day long.</p>
+<p>Forward we went to the Convent of the Dair el Mokhallis, which we
+reached in four hours and a half from Mokht&acirc;rah, where we rested a
+few hours; then visited once more the house of Lady Hester Stanhope.</p>
+<p>Thence descending to the sea beach, we crossed the river Awali, and
+looked back with regret to the heights of Lebanon.&nbsp; Just as the last
+gun of Ramad&acirc;n was fired, (for it was the termination of that fast
+and the commencement of Beiram,) we galloped our horses into the sea-wave
+near the walls of Sidon, which they enjoyed as refreshing to their heated
+fetlocks, and we found a luxury in the breeze and in the rustling sound of
+the endless roll of wavelets upon the shelly beach.</p>
+<p>How different were the temperature and the scenery from those of
+Mokht&acirc;rah in the early morning!</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>Even now in the nineteenth century one can <!-- page 413--><a
+name="page413"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 413</span>understand how it was
+that in ancient Bible times the peoples inhabiting those romantic districts
+were distinct from each other within a small space, having separate kings
+and alien interests, for here in the lapse of few hours I had traversed
+regions where the inhabitants differed greatly in religion, in manners,
+customs, dress, and physical aspect.&nbsp; The Maronite and the Druse of
+Lebanon; the Syrian and the Turk of Bayroot, Saida, and Soor; the
+Metaw&acirc;li of the Ph&oelig;nician district, no more resemble each other
+than if they were men or women of different nations, as indeed they are by
+derivation; each of these is but a fragment of antiquity, representing to
+us his several ancient race; yet all these fragments are united for the
+present by the slenderest of bonds, those of using one common language, the
+Arabic, and of an unwilling subjection to the Ottoman scymitar.</p>
+<p>Alas! for the beautiful country thus parcelled out by peoples, who,
+cherishing ancient rivalries and modern blood-feuds, have, and can have no
+national life, or sentiment of patriotism.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 414--><a name="page414"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+414</span>XIII.&nbsp; NORTH-WEST OF THE DEAD SEA.</h2>
+<p>In December 1856, I met, by appointment, at Jericho the Rev. A. A.
+Isaacs, and my friend James Graham, who were going with photographic
+apparatus to take views at the site called Wadi Gumr&acirc;n, near
+&rsquo;Ain Feshkah, where a few years before M. de Saulcy, under the
+guidance of an ardent imagination, believed he had found extensive and
+cyclopean remains of the city Gomorrah, and had published an account of
+that interesting discovery.</p>
+<p>It was on Christmas eve that we rose early by starlight, and had our
+cups of coffee in the open air, beside the <i>Kala&rsquo;at er Reehha</i>,
+(Castle of Jericho,) while the tents were being struck and rolled up for
+returning to Jerusalem, where we were to meet them at night.</p>
+<p>Only the artistic apparatus and a small canteen were to accompany us;
+but the muleteer for these was even more dilatory in his preparations than
+is usual with his professional brethren&mdash;and that is <!-- page
+415--><a name="page415"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 415</span>saying much;
+no doubt he entertained a dread of visiting the Dead Sea at points out of
+the beaten track for travellers; considerable time was also occupied in
+getting a stone out of the mule&rsquo;s shoe; then just as that was
+triumphantly effected, my mare happened to bolt off free into the
+wilderness; when she was recovered, it was ascertained that my cloak was
+lost from her back; during the search for this, the guide abandoned us, and
+it was with much difficulty that we hired one from Jericho.</p>
+<p>At length we commenced the march, leaving the kaww&acirc;s to look for
+the cloak, (which, however, he did not succeed in recovering; it would be a
+prize for the thieves of the village, or even, if it should fall in their
+way, for one of the Bashi-bozuk,) and got to <i>&rsquo;Ain Feshkah</i>,
+much in need of a real breakfast.&nbsp; There the water was found to be too
+brackish for use&mdash;as unpalatable, probably, as the water of &rsquo;Ain
+es Sult&acirc;n was before being healed by the prophet Elisha; so we drank
+native wine instead of coffee, while seated among tall reeds of the marshy
+ground, and not pleased with the mephitic odour all around us.</p>
+<p>Our photographers having ascertained the site for their researches by
+means of the guide, and by the indications furnished in the work of De
+Saulcy; they set themselves to work, during which they were frequently
+uttering ejaculations at the exaggerations of size and quantity made by my
+French friend.&nbsp; The cyclopean ruins seemed to <!-- page 416--><a
+name="page416"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 416</span>us nothing but
+remnants of water-courses for irrigation of plantations, such as may be
+seen in the neighbourhood of Elisha&rsquo;s fountain, or heaps of boulders,
+etc., that had been rolled down from the adjacent cliffs by natural causes
+during a succession of ages.</p>
+<p>Mr Isaacs has since published a book descriptive of this expedition,
+containing illustrations from his photographs taken on the spot.&nbsp; In
+this he has given the reasons for our differing from M. de Saulcy, and
+considering his theories unfounded.</p>
+<p>At the end of a strip of beach, which the discoverer calls &ldquo;the
+plain,&rdquo; the cliffs have a narrow crevasse, down which water rushes in
+the season when there is water to form a cascade.&nbsp; This is difficult
+to reach from &ldquo;the plain,&rdquo; and very narrow; and it is what our
+Arabs called the Wadi Gumr&acirc;n.&nbsp; In front of this opening is a
+hill with some ruins upon it; thither we mounted easily, and saw vestiges
+of some ancient fort with a cistern.</p>
+<p>When all the observations were taken upon points considered necessary,
+we prepared to return home by way of Mar Saba, hardly expecting to arrive
+by daylight at Jerusalem.&nbsp; We were, however, desirous of spending
+Christmas day there rather than in the bleak wilderness.</p>
+<p>On the way we fortunately got some camel&rsquo;s milk from a party
+passing near us.&nbsp; The weather was hot, but exceedingly clear.&nbsp;
+The Salt <!-- page 417--><a name="page417"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+417</span>mountain of Sodom, (Khash&rsquo;m Usdum,) showed itself well at
+the southern extremity of the lake, thirty miles distant; and from a raised
+level near its northern end we gained superb views of Mount Hermon (Jebel
+esh Shaikh) in the Anti-Lebanon, capped with snow.&nbsp; This was entirely
+unexpected and gratifying; but I could nowhere find a spot from which both
+Hermon and Sodom could be seen at once.&nbsp; Perhaps such a view may be
+had somewhere on the hills.</p>
+<p>We turned aside through the <i>Wadi Dubber</i>, as the guide termed it,
+within a circuitous winding, out of which, at a spot called &rsquo;Ain
+Merubba&rsquo;, I had passed a night in the open air some years before.</p>
+<p>Long, dreary, and tiresome was the journey; the two Bashi-bozuk men
+complained of it as much as we did.&nbsp; At sunset we came to a well with
+some water left in troughs near it, but not enough for all our horses, and
+we had no means of getting more out of the well.&nbsp; This was in a wide,
+treeless, trackless wilderness.</p>
+<p>No one of our party felt quite sure of being on the true road, but we
+followed slight tracks in the general direction in which the convent lay;
+we guessed and went on.&nbsp; Occasionally we got sight of the summit of
+the Frank mountain or lost it again, according to the rise or fall of the
+ground.&nbsp; Conversation flagged; but at length we struck up a Christmas
+hymn to enliven us.</p>
+<p><!-- page 418--><a name="page418"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+418</span>In the valley of Mar Saba we saw lights in the convent, but
+passed on.&nbsp; Saw an Arab encampment, with fire and lights glimmering,
+where the dogs came out to bark at us; another such in half an hour more;
+and a larger camp in another half-hour, where men were discussing matters
+with much vociferation in a cavern by a blazing fire; a scout called out,
+inquiring if we were friends or foes?</p>
+<p>The night grew very cold, and I should have been glad had my cloak not
+been lost near Jericho.&nbsp; The temperature differed greatly from that of
+the Dead Sea&mdash;a keen wind was in keeping with the end of
+December.&nbsp; The stars were most brilliant: Venus richly lustrous;
+Sirius, dazzling; and the huge Orion showing to best advantage.&nbsp; The
+road was alternately rough in the valley, or over slippery ledges.&nbsp; At
+length, however, we got cheered by coming to known objects.&nbsp; Passed
+Beer Eyoob, (En Rogel,) and saw the battlemented walls of the Holy City
+sharply marked against the sky.</p>
+<p>The key had been left by the authorities at the city gate, to allow of
+our admission; but the rusty lock required a long time for turning it, and
+the heavy hinges of the large gate moved very slowly, at least so it seemed
+in our impatience to reach home.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>It is said above that I once spent a night at the &rsquo;Ain
+Merubba&rsquo;&mdash;this was on the occasion of an attempt, which ended in
+failure, to reach &rsquo;Ain Jidi <!-- page 419--><a
+name="page419"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 419</span>(En-gaddi) from the
+&rsquo;Ain Feshkah in the common way of travelling. <a
+name="citation419"></a><a href="#footnote419"
+class="citation">[419]</a></p>
+<p>Hhamdan, Shaikh of the Ta&rsquo;amra, with about a dozen of his men,
+escorted me and one kaww&acirc;s in that direction.&nbsp; Instead of
+proceeding to Jericho or Elisha&rsquo;s fountain, we turned aside into the
+wildest of wildernesses for passing the night.&nbsp; Traversing the length
+of an extremely narrow ridge, something like the back of a knife, we
+descended to a great depth below; but the risk being judged too great for
+conveying the tent and bed over there by the mule, these were left spread
+upon the ground for the night under the canopy of heaven; while the men
+carried our food for us to make the evening meal.&nbsp; Crawling or
+sliding, and leading the horses gently, we got to the bottom, and then
+followed up a very narrow glen, winding in and out, and round about between
+extraordinary precipices rising to enormous heights, till all at once the
+men halted, shouted, and sang, and stripped themselves to bathe in small
+pools formed in holes of the rock by settlements of rain-water.</p>
+<p>This was our halting-place, but the scene beggars all power of
+description.&nbsp; We were shut into a contracted glen by a maze of
+tortuous windings, between mountains of yellow marl on either side; but
+broken, rugged, naked of all vegetation,&mdash;referring one&rsquo;s
+imagination to the period when the <!-- page 420--><a
+name="page420"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 420</span>earth was yet
+&ldquo;without form and void,&rdquo; or to the subsiding of the deluge from
+which Noah was delivered.</p>
+<p>Looking upwards to a great height we could just see the tops of the
+imprisoning hills gilded awhile by the setting sun, and a small space of
+blue making up the interval between the precipices.&nbsp; Those precipices
+were not, however, entirely yellow, but variegated with occasional red or
+somewhat of brown ochre.&nbsp; So fantastic in position or shape were the
+masses hurled or piled about, and the place so utterly removed &ldquo;from
+humanity&rsquo;s reach,&rdquo; that it might be imagined suitable to mould
+the genius of Martin into the most extravagant conceptions of chaos, or to
+suggest the colouring of Turner without his indistinctness of outline.</p>
+<p>The echoes of the men&rsquo;s voices and bursts of laughter (the latter
+so uncommon among Arabs) when splashing in the water, were reverberated
+from hill to hill and back again; but there were no wild birds among the
+rocks to scream in rejoinder as at Petra.</p>
+<p>After a time a voice was heard from above, very high, (it is wonderful
+how far the human voice is carried in that pure atmosphere and in such a
+locality,) and on looking up I saw a dark speck against the sky waving his
+arms about.&nbsp; It was one of the Ta&rsquo;amra asking if he should bring
+down my mattress.&nbsp; Consent was given, and, behold, down came tumbling
+from rock to rock the <!-- page 421--><a name="page421"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 421</span>mattress and blanket tied up into a parcel;
+when approaching near us, it was taken up by the man who followed it, and
+carried on his back; and when still nearer to us it was carefully borne
+between two men.&nbsp; Thus I enjoyed the distinction above all the rest of
+having a mattress to lie upon; the shaikh had a couple of cloaks, the
+kaww&acirc;s had one, and the others were utterly without such luxurious
+accessories, and slept profoundly.</p>
+<p>Our people called the place <i>&rsquo;Ain Merubba&rsquo;</i>, (the
+square fountain.)&nbsp; I saw no fountain of any form, but there must have
+been one, for we had a supply of good water, and the designation
+&ldquo;&rsquo;Ain,&rdquo; or fountain, is one of too serious importance to
+be employed for any but its literal signification.</p>
+<p>Very early in the morning we started afresh, and took the beach of the
+lake towards &rsquo;Ain Feshkah.</p>
+<p>A great part of the day was spent in clambering our ponies over broken
+rocks of a succession of promontories, one following another, where it
+seemed that no creatures but goats could make way; the Arabs protesting all
+the while that the attempt was hopeless, and besides, that the distance
+even over better ground was too great for one day&rsquo;s march.</p>
+<p>At length I relinquished the undertaking to reach &rsquo;Ain Jidi by
+that way, and for that year had no leisure from business to try it from
+other directions.</p>
+<p><!-- page 422--><a name="page422"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+422</span>Hhamdan and I sat on a rock in his free open air dominion,
+discussing possibilities, and what &rsquo;Ain Jidi was like, as well as the
+&ldquo;Ladder of Ter&acirc;beh,&rdquo; (see p. 334.)&nbsp; At length we
+rose and turned towards Jerusalem.&nbsp; I am not sure that I ever saw him
+again, for not long afterwards he was drowned in the Jordan while
+attempting to swim his horse through the stream at its highest, after
+assisting in a battle on the side of the D&euml;ab &rsquo;Adw&acirc;n.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 423--><a name="page423"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+423</span>XIV.&nbsp; SOBA.</h2>
+<p>On the crest of a high hill two or three hours west from Jerusalem,
+stands the village of Soba, and it has long been imagined to be Modin, the
+birth-place and burial-place of the Maccab&aelig;an heroes; though I never
+heard any reason assigned for that identification, except the circumstance
+of the sea being visible from it, and therefore of its being visible from
+the sea, which was supposed to tally with the description given in 1 Macc.
+xiii., 27-30, of the monuments erected there,&mdash;&ldquo;Simon also built
+a monument upon the sepulchre of his father and his brethren, and raised it
+aloft to the sight, with hewn stone behind and before.&nbsp; Moreover, he
+set up seven pyramids, one against another, for his father, and his mother,
+and his four brethren.&nbsp; And in these he made cunning devices, about
+the which he set great pillars, and upon the pillars he made all their
+armour for a perpetual memory; and by the armour ships carved, that they
+might be seen of all that sail on the sea.&nbsp; This is the <!-- page
+424--><a name="page424"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 424</span>sepulchre
+which he made at Modin, and it standeth yet unto this day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I never was persuaded that the words implied that ships carved on
+pillars at Soba, could be distinguished from the sea, or even that the
+columns themselves were visible from ships off the coast; but only this,
+that the deliverers of their country from the intolerable yoke of the
+Syrians, having opened up communication with the Grecians and Romans,
+marine intercourse had become more frequent than before, a matter that the
+Maccab&aelig;an family were proud of; and therefore they had ships carved
+on the pillars, as might be observed by seafaring people who might go
+there; yet, whatever the words might signify, they could not prove that
+Modin was so far inland, and among the hills, as Soba.</p>
+<p>However, in 1858, I went with my son and a couple of friends to inspect
+the place itself, considering it at least worth while to make one&rsquo;s
+own observations on the spot.</p>
+<p>We passed through <i>&rsquo;Ain Carem</i>, the <i>Karem</i> of the
+Septuagint, to <i>Satt&acirc;f</i>, and rested during the heat of the day
+in a vineyard, near a spring of water and plots of garden vegetables,
+belonging to the few houses that had been rebuilt after several years of
+devastation by village warfare.</p>
+<p>The approach to the place from any direction is through the very rough
+torrent bed of the Wadi Bait Hhaneena, and along very narrow ledges <!--
+page 425--><a name="page425"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 425</span>upon
+the sides of steep hills, quite as perilous as any that are used for
+travelling in any part of the Lebanon; too dangerous to admit of
+dismounting and leading the horse after the risk has once begun, by far the
+safest method of advancing is to hold the reins very loose, and if you wish
+it, to shut your eyes.</p>
+<p>Opposite to Satt&acirc;f, directly across the valley, the Latins had
+lately rebuilt a small chapel of former times, said to have been the prison
+of John the Baptist; they name it the Chapel of the <i>Hhabees</i>,
+<i>i.e.</i>, the imprisoned one.</p>
+<p>Leaving Satt&acirc;f we gradually ascended to Soba; at first through
+lemon and orange plantations near the water, and then through vineyards
+with a few pomegranate-trees interspersed.</p>
+<p>It is noteworthy how, throughout most of the tribe of Judah, small
+springs of water are found dribbling from the rocks, (besides the larger
+sources of Urtas, Lifta, Faghoor &rsquo;Aroob, Dirweh, and Hebron,) which
+were doubtless more copious in the ancient times, when the land was more
+clothed with timber, and there were men, industrious men, aware of their
+blessings, and ready to prevent the streams from slipping away beneath the
+seams of limestone formation.</p>
+<p>At Soba we mounted the steep hill to the <i>Shooneh</i>, or small
+look-out tower at the summit, enjoying the breadth of landscape and the
+stretch of the Mediterranean before our eyes.</p>
+<p><!-- page 426--><a name="page426"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+426</span>In the village we found remains of old masonry, most likely the
+basement of a fortification of early Saracenic or the Crusaders&rsquo; era;
+besides which there was a piece of wall in excellent condition of the best
+character of Jewish rabbeted stones.</p>
+<p>One man invited us to see some old stones inside of his house; but they
+formed a portion of the basement above-mentioned, against which the rest of
+his house was built.&nbsp; The people were unanimous in declaring that
+there was nothing else of such a nature in the village.&nbsp; So that our
+researches issued in no corroboration of Soba being Modin.</p>
+<p>Leaving the place we descended to the high road of Jaffa to Jerusalem,
+and saw a number of olive-trees dead of age; none of us, however long
+resident in Palestine, had seen such before or elsewhere; we concluded them
+to have been withered by age from their bearing no visible tokens of
+destruction, while the ground was well ploughed around them, and from
+finding others near them in progressive stages of decay, down to the utter
+extinction of foliage.</p>
+<p>Arrived at <i>Kal&ocirc;neh</i> upon the highway, certainly the site of
+a Roman garrison or &ldquo;colonia,&rdquo; (see Acts xvi. 12,) leaving
+Kustul behind, which is also a derivation from the Latin word for a
+castle.</p>
+<p>Near the bridge of Kal&ocirc;neh, where there are good specimens of
+ancient rabbeted stones, one gets a glimpse of &rsquo;Ain Carem through the
+olive <!-- page 427--><a name="page427"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+427</span>plantation; and the return that day was by a cross way from
+<i>Dair Yaseen</i> through vineyards to Jerusalem.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>It is only at a comparatively late period that attention has been
+directed to the text of Eusebius and Jerome in the
+&ldquo;Onomasticon,&rdquo; where it is distinctly said that Modin was near
+Lydd, and that the monuments were at that time (in the fourth century)
+still shown there.</p>
+<p>Porter considers that therefore <i>Latroon</i> is the true site of
+Modin: in this supposition I wish to concur; for the general run of the
+Maccab&aelig;an history becomes peculiarly intelligible when read with the
+idea in the mind that Modin lay in just such a situation, namely, upon a
+hill, rising alone from the great plain, but adjacent to the mountain
+ridge, and to defiles into which the insurgents might easily retire, or
+from which they might issue suddenly and surprise regular armies in their
+camp.&nbsp; I know of no place so suitable for such operations as
+Latroon.</p>
+<p>The word
+&epsilon;&pi;&nu;&gamma;&epsilon;&gamma;&lambda;&upsilon;&mu;&mu;&#941;&nu;&alpha;,
+used for the armour and the ships, must mean &ldquo;carved in
+relievo,&rdquo; and such objects could never be distinguished by persons
+actually passing upon the sea, if placed either at Soba, Latroon, Lydd, or
+even Jaffa; it is difficult enough to imagine that the pyramids and columns
+were visible from the sea at Latroon.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 428--><a name="page428"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+428</span>XV.&nbsp; THE TWO BAIT SAHHOORS IDENTIFIED WITH BETHSURA AND BATH
+ZACHARIAS.</h2>
+<p>There are two villages in the neighbourhood of Jerusalem bearing the
+name of Bait Sahhoor.&nbsp; One lies near to the city, beyond En-Rogel, a
+little way down the valley of the Kedron; the other is farther off, close
+under Bethlehem.&nbsp; By way of distinction, the former is called
+&ldquo;Bait Sahhoor of the W&acirc;di,&rdquo; and the latter, &ldquo;Bait
+Sahhoor of the Christians.&rdquo;&nbsp; I think that it can be shown that
+these places, though now fallen from their high estate, once played their
+part in important events,&mdash;that Bait Sahhoor of the W&acirc;di is
+identical with Bethsura,&mdash;and that Bait Sahhoor of the Christians is
+identical with Bath Zacharias&mdash;both of Maccab&aelig;an history.</p>
+<p>In the year 150 of the Seleucidan era, being the fifth year of the
+liberty of Zion, (the term used upon the Maccab&aelig;an coins,) a vast
+army of Syrians invaded Palestine from Antioch, headed by King Antiochus
+Eupator, in the twelfth year of his age, and under the official command of
+Lysias, one of <!-- page 429--><a name="page429"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 429</span>his relatives.&nbsp; The army consisted of
+both subjects and hired aliens, even from the islands of the sea.&nbsp;
+They numbered &ldquo;a hundred thousand infantry, and twenty thousand
+cavalry, with thirty-two elephants exercised in battle,&rdquo; (I Macc. vi.
+30.)</p>
+<p>The object of the expedition was to crush the Maccab&aelig;an
+insurrection, and wipe out the disgrace of defeats already sustained.&nbsp;
+The first attempt was to be the relief of the garrison at Jerusalem, which
+was at this time beleaguered by Judas from the temple part of the city.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The army was very great and mighty,&rdquo; (ver. 41.)&nbsp;
+&ldquo;When the sun shone upon the shields of gold and brass, the mountains
+glistered therewith, and shined like lamps of fire,&rdquo; (ver. 39.)&nbsp;
+Each of the thirty-two elephants was attended by &ldquo;a thousand men
+armed with coats of mail, and with helmets of brass on their heads; and
+besides this, for every beast was ordained five hundred horsemen of the
+best&mdash;these were ready at every occasion: wheresoever the beast was,
+and whithersoever the beast went they went also, neither departed they from
+him; and upon the beasts were there strong towers of wood, which covered
+every one of them, and were girt fast unto them with devices; there were
+upon every one thirty-two strong men that fought upon them, beside the
+Indian that ruled him,&rdquo; (ver. 35, etc.)</p>
+<p>This strange host marched along the Philistine plain southwards to
+Idumea, which is on the south <!-- page 430--><a name="page430"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 430</span>of Hebron: this being the only way for such an
+army and its elephants to get at Jerusalem.&nbsp; Thence they swept the
+land before them northwards, &ldquo;and pitched against Bethsura, which
+they assaulted many days, making engines of war, but they of the city came
+out and fought valiantly,&rdquo; (ver. 31.)</p>
+<p>Whereupon Judas desisted from his siege of the citadel&mdash;which, I
+may remark in passing, must have been on Acra, not like David&rsquo;s
+citadel taken from the Jebusites, on Zion&mdash;and hastened to attack the
+royal host, mighty though it was.</p>
+<p>Some have supposed that Bethsura is to be found at Bait Zur, near
+Hebron, the Beth Zur of Josh. xv. 33; whereas this place is more than a
+hundred furlongs from Jerusalem, being not much more than an hour (north)
+from Hebron, and is altogether too far removed to answer the description of
+Bethsura, and the operations carried on there, close to the Holy City.</p>
+<p>The 5th verse of the 11th chapter of 2 Maccabees sets the whole question
+at rest; the words are distinctly, &ldquo;So he (Lysias) came to Judea and
+drew near to Bethsura, which was a strong town, but distant from Jerusalem
+<i>about five furlongs</i>, and he laid sore siege unto it.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Again, immediately after taking the city of Jerusalem and dedicating the
+temple, Judas &ldquo;fortified Bethsura in order to preserve it,&rdquo;
+(that is, Mount Zion,) that the people might have a defence against Idumea,
+(I Macc. iv. 61.)&nbsp; And the accusation which had been formerly <!--
+page 431--><a name="page431"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 431</span>made to
+the King Antiochus Epiphanes in Persia against Judas and his men was
+&ldquo;that they had compassed about the sanctuary with high walls as
+before, and his city Bethsura;&rdquo; also to the present king at Antioch,
+&ldquo;that the sanctuary also and Bethsura have they fortified,&rdquo;
+(chap. vi. 7, 26.)&nbsp; It is clear that one was an outwork of the other,
+Bethsura being the defence of Jerusalem against incursions from the
+south.</p>
+<p>I know not how to doubt that Bait Sahhoor of the valley is the very
+place.&nbsp; It lies upon a lofty hill across the valley not far beyond
+En-Rogel.&nbsp; This is at present a wretched village, only inhabited for a
+few weeks in the year; but the position is naturally one of great
+strength.&nbsp; The distance from the city answers precisely the
+requirements of the history,&mdash;a signal by trumpet, if not the human
+voice, could be heard from one garrison to the other.&nbsp; I have ridden
+repeatedly to the spot and examined the ground.&nbsp; The south-eastern
+angle of the temple wall at Jerusalem (where the great stones are found) is
+distinctly visible from the houses.&nbsp; I sat there upon my horse and
+remarked how unassailable by cavalry and elephants this site must have
+been, and how great its value for a military outwork to the sanctuary of
+the temple.&nbsp; The pediment and moulding of a column lay at my
+feet,&mdash;around and opposite across the valley were numerous sepulchres
+hewn in the solid rock; yet the infantry of the Syrians were sufficient to
+<!-- page 432--><a name="page432"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+432</span>overwhelm the gallant defenders.&nbsp; Judas in this emergency
+resolved to come to their relief, raising the siege of the citadel and
+outflanking the enemy.&nbsp; For this purpose he &ldquo;pitched at Bath
+Zacharias over against the king&rsquo;s camp,&rdquo; (ver. 32.)&nbsp; This
+was seventy stadia, or nearly nine Roman, or eight and a half English miles
+distant from Bethsura, (Josephus&rsquo; Antiq. xii. 9, 4.)&nbsp; I believe
+Bath Zacharias to be the village which now bears the name of &ldquo;Bait
+Sahhoor of the Christians,&rdquo; close to Bethlehem. <a
+name="citation432"></a><a href="#footnote432"
+class="citation">[432]</a>&nbsp; I have ridden over the space between the
+two villages called Bait Sahhoor; the distance upon a well marked and
+rather winding road, answers well to the description of the
+historian.&nbsp; The stratagem of Judas becomes here very intelligible,
+which was to take the invaders in the rear, and placing them between two
+hostile Jewish forces, to draw away the main attack from Bethsura and
+Jerusalem; besides cutting off any assistance from the south.&nbsp;
+Antiochus did face round in order to attack him, and was met in narrow
+straits between the two localities.&nbsp; This I take to be the broken
+ground south-east of Mar Elias, where certainly it would be just as
+impossible now for two elephants to go abreast as it was when Josephus
+wrote his lively <!-- page 433--><a name="page433"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 433</span>description of the engagement that ensued; of
+the shouts of the men echoing among the mountains, and the glitter of the
+rising sun upon the polished accoutrements.&nbsp; It was summer, for they
+excited the elephants with the blood of the grape and the mulberry.&nbsp;
+The road is to this day defined by true tokens of antiquity, such as lines
+of stones covered with hoary lichen, old cisterns, especially a noble one
+called the <i>Beer el Kott</i>, with here and there steps cut in the
+shelves of solid rock.&nbsp; The last part of the road on the south is
+among slippery, rocky, narrow defiles and paths, half-way down the
+hill-sides.</p>
+<p>Here six hundred of the Syrian army were cut off and Eleazar, the heroic
+brother of Judas, was crushed under an elephant which he had killed.&nbsp;
+Yet the fortune of the day was not decisive in favour of the
+Maccab&aelig;an army, which retired and entrenched itself within the temple
+fortress.</p>
+<p>The outlying post of Bethsura was obliged to capitulate.</p>
+<p>Philological grounds for the above identification are not wanting.&nbsp;
+Bethsura and Bath Zacharias may have easily represented the Arabic or
+Hebrew form of Bait Sahhoor.&nbsp; The guttural letter in the middle
+naturally disappears in the Greek text, just as the Greek word
+&ldquo;Assidean&rdquo; represents the Hebrew Chasidim in the same
+history.</p>
+<p>The following is a simple demonstration of the transition:&mdash;</p>
+<p><!-- page 434--><a name="page434"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+434</span>
+<a href="images/p434.jpg">
+<img alt="Transition from Hebrew via Greek to Arabic" src="images/p434.jpg"
+/>
+</a></p>
+<p>It may be asked, why did neither Josephus nor the author of the Books of
+Maccabees tell us that Beth Zachariah was near Bethlehem?&nbsp; I answer:
+first, the narrative did not make this necessary; secondly, Bethlehem was
+then &ldquo;among the least of the thousands of Judah,&rdquo; her great day
+had not yet arrived; and thus it might have been quite as necessary to say
+that Bethlehem was near Beth Zachariah, as to say that Beth Zachariah was
+near Bethlehem.</p>
+<p>The modern name &ldquo;Bait Sahhoor of the Christians&rdquo; arises most
+likely from the fact that a majority of the inhabitants,&mdash;thirty
+families to twenty in the year 1851,&mdash;were of that religion, and from
+its nearness to the field where it is believed the angels appeared to the
+shepherds announcing the birth of Christ, with its subterranean chapel, the
+crypt of a large church in former times.</p>
+<p>The other Bait Sahhoor (El Wad&icirc;yeh) is so named from its position
+on the side of the Wadi in Nar, or valley of the Kedron.&nbsp; It is only
+occasionally inhabited, the people who claim it being too few to clear out
+the encumbered cisterns for their use, but prefer to identify themselves
+during most of the year with other villages, such as Siloam near at hand,
+where water is more abundant.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 435--><a name="page435"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+435</span>XVI.&nbsp; THE BAKOOSH COTTAGE.</h2>
+<p>At about seven miles from Jerusalem lie the Pools of Solomon, commonly
+called the &ldquo;Bur&acirc;k,&rdquo; upon the road to Hebron, which passes
+by the head of the westernmost of them, on the left hand of the traveller
+to that city; while immediately on the right hand, stands a hill with some
+cultivation of vineyards and fig-trees, with a few olive-trees; apparently
+half-way up that hill is a stone cottage, roughly but well built.&nbsp; It
+is of that cottage and its grounds that I am about to speak, for there I
+resided with my family for some weeks in 1860, and through the summer of
+1862.</p>
+<p>There is no village close at hand, the nearest one being <i>El
+Khud&rsquo;r</i>, (or St George, so named from a small Greek convent in its
+midst,) which, however, is only visible from the highway for a few minutes
+at a particular bend of the road before reaching the Pools; the next
+nearest, but in the opposite or eastern direction, is Urt&acirc;s, with its
+profitable cultivation, nestled in a well-watered valley.</p>
+<p><!-- page 436--><a name="page436"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+436</span>After these, in other directions again, are <i>Bait Jala</i>,
+near Rachel&rsquo;s sepulchre, and Bethlehem, the sacred town whose name is
+echoed wherever Christ is mentioned throughout the whole world, and will
+continue to do so till the consummation of all things,&mdash;&ldquo;there
+is no speech or language where its name is not heard.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Adjoining the Pools is the shell of a dilapidated khan, of old Saracenic
+period, the outer enclosure alone being now entire.&nbsp; Two or three
+Bashi-bozuk soldiers used to be stationed there, living in wretched hovels
+inside the enclosure, made of fallen building stones, put together with
+mud.&nbsp; On account of this being a government post, the peasantry of the
+country, ignorant of all the world but themselves, denominate this old
+square wall, &ldquo;The Castle,&rdquo; and that name is repeated by
+dragomans to their European employers.</p>
+<p>These were our nearest neighbours.</p>
+<p>Close to the khan-gate and to the Pools is a perennial spring of
+excellent water, which, of course, is of great value, and considering how
+several roads meet at that point, and what a diversity of character there
+is continually passing or halting there, it would seem to form the
+perfection of an opening scene to some romantic tale.</p>
+<p>Thus the Hebron highway lay between the Pools, with the khan on one
+side, and the Bakoosh hill on the other, and no person or quadruped could
+pass along it unobserved from our window.</p>
+<p><!-- page 437--><a name="page437"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+437</span>From the cottage, the more extended prospect comprised the stony,
+treeless hills in every direction, the Pools forming the head of the valley
+leading to Urt&acirc;s, and the outskirt beginning of green cultivation
+there; then the streets and houses of Bethlehem; also the Frank mountain;
+and at the back of all the Moab range of mountains.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p437.jpg">
+<img alt="Ancient Sepulchre on the Bakoosh" src="images/p437.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Within the wall enclosing the property of the cottage, with its fruit
+trees already mentioned, there is one of the little round towers such as
+are commonly seen about Bethlehem for summer residence of the cultivator
+and his family during the season of fruit ripening, and which are meant by
+the Biblical term of a tower built in the midst of a vineyard, (see Matthew
+xxi. 33, and Isaiah v. 2.)&nbsp; It is remarkable how perfectly circular
+these are <!-- page 438--><a name="page438"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+438</span>always built, though so small in size.&nbsp; We had also a
+receptacle for beehives, and an ancient sepulchre.</p>
+<p>The hill rises very steeply, but being as usual formed into ledges or
+terraces, upon one of these, in a corner near the wall, the stable was
+constructed of a small tent, near a big tree, within the shadow of which,
+and of a bank, the horses were picketed.</p>
+<p>Upon the other ledges were arranged the tents for sleeping in at night,
+and alongside of the cottage a kitchen was made of a wall and a roof made
+of branches of trees brought from a distance.</p>
+<p>Such was our abode in the pure mountain breezes, with unclouded
+sunshine, and plenty of good spring water within reach.</p>
+<p>Inside the stone walls of the house we stayed during the heat of the
+day; the children learned their lessons there, and I transacted business in
+writing, when my presence in Jerusalem was not absolutely required by those
+carrying on the current daily affairs; indeed the reason for resorting to
+this place was the necessity for obtaining recruitment of health, after a
+serious illness brought on by arduous labour.&nbsp; Had not unforeseen
+anxieties come upon us, no lot on earth could have been more perfectly
+delicious in the quality of enjoyment, both for body and spirit, than that
+sojourn upon the wild hill; among ourselves were innocence and union,
+consequently peace; time <!-- page 439--><a name="page439"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 439</span>was profitably spent; and our recreations
+were, practice in the tonic sol-fa singing lessons, with sketching and
+rambling on foot or on horseback over the breezy heights of Judah.</p>
+<p>And whether by evening twilight, or at the rising of the sun out of the
+Moab mountains, or earlier still, by summer morning starlight, when Sirius
+and Canopus (the latter unseen in England) vied with each other in
+sparkling their varied colours to praise their Maker in the firmament, His
+handiwork; those rambles were sources of delight that cannot be expressed
+in human language; they were, however, not novelties after so many
+years&rsquo; residence in that Asiatic climate, but had become wrought into
+our very existence.</p>
+<p>Our Sabbaths were happy and conscientiously observed; we kept up the
+services of the Church of England as far as practicable, and sometimes had
+a visitor to join us in the same, not omitting the hymn singing.</p>
+<p>The two domestic servants were of different Christian communities; for
+the woman was a Latin, and would sometimes repair to her church-service at
+Bethlehem, and the Abyssinian lad might be heard morning and evening, or at
+night in the moonlight&mdash;such moonlight as we had there!&mdash;reading
+the Gospels and Psalms in his soft native language, or even singing to a
+kir&acirc;r (or lute) of his own making, hymns with a chorus of
+&ldquo;Alleluia, Amen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 440--><a name="page440"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+440</span>Another of our gratifications should not be omitted, namely, the
+hearing of the large church bell of the Latins in Bethlehem on certain
+occasions, and always on Sunday mornings; at the moment of the sun peering
+over the eastern horizon that great bell struck, and was followed by a gush
+of the sweetest irregular music from smaller bells, probably belonging to
+the Greeks, and then by the nakoos (plank) of the Armenians, a relic of
+their primitive customs, serving for a bell, <a name="citation440"></a><a
+href="#footnote440" class="citation">[440]</a>&mdash;all these acting with
+one consent and with one intention, that of celebrating &ldquo;the
+Lord&rsquo;s day,&rdquo; as the early Christians delighted to call the
+first day of the week.</p>
+<p>From our window we had the city of David and of David&rsquo;s Lord
+before us, and over the window on the inside I had inscribed in large
+Arabic inscription-characters, &ldquo;O Son of David, have mercy upon
+us!&rdquo; we had therefore the writing and the town at the same glance of
+view.</p>
+<p>We were not without visitors: sometimes a friend or two or three would
+arrive from Jerusalem&mdash;travellers along the road would mount the hill
+to see us&mdash;rabbis of Hebron on the way to Jerusalem, or Jews from the
+distance of Tiberias <!-- page 441--><a name="page441"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 441</span>passing to Hebron, would turn aside to pay
+their respects&mdash;Arab chiefs, such as Ismaeen Hhamd&acirc;n of the
+Ta&rsquo;amra&mdash;Turkish officers, or even the Pasha himself, found the
+way to the cottage&mdash;also officers of the British navy, when visiting
+the sacred localities from Jaffa.&nbsp; Among these I would not forget the
+chaplain of one of our men-of-war, who brought up ten of his best men,
+namely, the Bible and temperance class under his charge, to see the
+venerated places, Jerusalem, Bethlehem, and the Mount of Olives.&nbsp; On
+one occasion we had a surveying party with their instruments from H.M.S.
+<i>Firefly</i>, who passed some nights with us.</p>
+<p>On the higher boundary the land was still in its natural condition of
+stones, fossil shells, and green shrubs with fragrant herbs.&nbsp; There
+might be seen occasionally starting up before the intruding wanderer,
+partridges, hares, quails, the wild pigeon, the fox, or even</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;The wild gazelle on Judah&rsquo;s hills<br />
+&nbsp; Exultingly would bound,&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>and escape also, for I carried no gun with me.</p>
+<p>Mounting still higher we came upon the <i>Dahar-es-Sal&acirc;hh</i>, a
+mountain whence the prospect of all Philistia and the coast from almost
+Gaza to Carmel expands like a map&mdash;no, rather like a thing of still
+life before the eye, with the two seas, namely, the Mediterranean and the
+Dead Sea, visible at once, with likewise the mountains of <!-- page
+442--><a name="page442"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 442</span>Samaria and
+Gerizim, besides the Moab country eastward, and Jerusalem and Bethlehem
+nearer home.</p>
+<p>Close at hand upon the mountain on which we thus stand, are vestiges of
+a monastic house and chapel called &ldquo;Khirbet el Kasees,&rdquo; (the
+priest&rsquo;s ruins,) and even more interesting objects still, the remains
+of older edifices, distinguished by ponderous rabbeted stones.</p>
+<p>On the mountain top is a large oval space, which has been walled round,
+fragments of the enclosure are easily traceable, as also some broken
+columns, gray and weather-beaten.&nbsp; This has every appearance of having
+been one of the many sun-temples devoted to Baal by early Syrians.</p>
+<p>By temple I here mean a succession of open-air courts, with a central
+altar for sacrifice; a mound actually exists on the highest spot of
+elevation, which may well have been the site of the altar.</p>
+<p>What a vast prospect does this spot command, not only of landscape in
+every direction, but of sky from which the false worshipper might survey
+the sun&rsquo;s entire daily course, from its rising out of the vague
+remote lands of &ldquo;the children of the East,&rdquo; and riding in
+meridian splendour over the land of Israel&rsquo;s God, till, slowly
+descending and cloudless to the very last, it dips behind the blue waters
+of &ldquo;the great sea!&rdquo;&nbsp; Alas! to think that such a spot as
+this should ever have been desecrated by worship of the creature within
+actual <!-- page 443--><a name="page443"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+443</span>sight of that holy mountain where the divine glory appeared, more
+dazzling than the brightest effulgence of the created sun.</p>
+<p>Sloping westwards from the <i>Dahar-es-Sal&acirc;hh</i> were agreeable
+rides over a wilderness of green shrubs with occasional pine and karoobah
+trees, and rough rocks on the way to <i>Nahh&acirc;leen</i> or <i>Bait
+Ezk&acirc;reh</i>, from which we catch a view of the valley of Shocoh, the
+scene of David&rsquo;s triumph over Goliath, and beyond that the hill of
+Santa Anna at <i>Bait Jibreen</i>.&nbsp; The region there is lonely and
+silent, with some petty half-depopulated villages in sight, but all far
+away; sometimes a couple or so of peasants may be met upon the road driving
+an ass loaded with charcoal or broken old roots of the evergreen oak.&nbsp;
+Evening excursions in that direction were not infrequent for the purpose of
+seeing the sun set into the sea, from which the breeze came up so
+refreshingly.</p>
+<p>The home resources gave us among the fruit trees, goldfinches,
+bee-eaters in blue or green and gold, and beccaficas, the latter for food,
+but so tame that they would stay upon the branches while the gun was
+levelled at them; in fact, little Alexander, returning one day with several
+of them that he had shot, complained of want of sport, quoting the lines of
+his namesake Selkirk in Cowper,&mdash;&ldquo;Their tameness is shocking to
+me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Occasionally we got water-hens or coots that had been shot upon the
+Pools of Solomon; only <!-- page 444--><a name="page444"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 444</span>sometimes it was not possible to fish them out
+as they fell into the water, and so became entangled among the gigantic
+weeds that grow up from the bottom to the level of the surface, and among
+which the men were afraid to venture their swimming.&nbsp; Pelicans we did
+not see, although one had been previously brought from thence to Jerusalem,
+and was stuffed for the Museum.&nbsp; Then we had water-cresses from the
+aqueduct, at a place where its side was partly broken between the upper and
+the second pool.&nbsp; Often for a treat we had water particularly light
+for drinking brought from the spring of Etam, (2 Chron. xi. 6.)&nbsp; Figs
+and grapes were furnished from the ground itself, and at the end of August
+the Shaikh Jad Allah sent us a present of fresh honeycomb, according to the
+custom on opening a hive at the end of summer, (in that country the bees
+are never destroyed for the sake of the honey;) presents thereof are sent
+round to neighbours, and of course presents of some other produce are given
+in return.&nbsp; Palestine is still a land abounding in honey.</p>
+<p>Occasional incidents occurred on the plain at the foot of the
+hill,&mdash;such as a long line of camels kneeling and growling upon the
+high road, while their drivers were swimming during the blaze of noontide
+in the parts of the large pool free from weeds; or military expeditions
+passing on to Hebron during the night, and called up by bugle after resting
+a couple of hours at the castle-gate; <!-- page 445--><a
+name="page445"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 445</span>or camel-loads of
+pine-branches swinging in stately procession from the southern hills beyond
+Hebron towards Jerusalem, to furnish tabernacles for the Jewish festival;
+or an immense party of Kerak people from beyond the Dead Sea, with their
+camels, asses, mules, besides flocks, for sale, conveying butter and wheat
+to Jerusalem, encamped below us and singing at their watch-fires by
+night.</p>
+<p>Large fires were sometimes visible upon the Moab mountains at the
+distance of thirty or forty miles in a straight line.&nbsp; These may have
+arisen from carelessness, or accidental circumstances, among either
+standing corn or the heaps of harvest in the open air; or they may even
+have been wilful conflagrations made by hostile tribes in their raids upon
+each other.&nbsp; In any case they showed that wherever such things
+occurred in ancient times, Ruth the Moabitess, when settled in Bethlehem,
+might still have been reminded in that way of her native country, which lay
+before her view.</p>
+<p>At the Bakoosh we heard the single gun-fire at sunrise or sunset while
+the Pasha had his camp at Hebron; and from the highest part of our hill
+could see the flash of the guns in the castle of Jerusalem when saluting
+the birthday of Mohammed.</p>
+<p>For domestic incidents we had the children pelting each other with
+acorns by moonlight; bonfires made by them and the servants on the terrace
+to show us the way when returning at a late hour from Jerusalem; large
+bunches of grapes from <!-- page 446--><a name="page446"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 446</span>the adjoining vineyard, the <i>Karaweesh</i>,
+suspended against the wall, reserved to become raisins.&nbsp; Then family
+presents upon a birthday, all derived from the ground itself,&mdash;one
+person bringing a bunch of wild thyme in purple blossom,&mdash;another some
+sprigs from a terebinth tree, with the reviving odour of its gum that was
+exuding from the bark,&mdash;and another a newly-caught chameleon.</p>
+<p>The latter was for several days afterwards indulged with a fresh bough
+of a tree for his residence, changed about, one day of oak, next of
+terebinth, then of sumach, or of pine, etc.</p>
+<p>Such was our &ldquo;sweet home&rdquo; and family life on the Byeways of
+Palestine.</p>
+<p>But a time came when care and anxiety told heavily upon mine and my
+wife&rsquo;s health.&nbsp; For some days I was confined to bed in the tent,
+unable to move up to the house; yet enjoying the reading of my chapters in
+Hebrew in the land of Israel, or ruminating over the huge emphasis of St
+Paul&rsquo;s Greek in 2 Cor. iv. 17, &kappa;&alpha;&theta;
+&upsilon;&pi;&epsilon;&rho;&beta;&omicron;&lambda;&eta;&nu;
+&epsilon;&iota;&sigmaf;
+&upsilon;&pi;&epsilon;&rho;&beta;&omicron;&lambda;&eta;&nu;.
+&kappa;.&tau;.&lambda;.&nbsp; The curtains of the tent were thrown wide
+open at each side for the admission of air; the children were playing or
+reading on the shady side of another tent; muleteer and camel parties I
+could observe mounting or falling with the rises and dips of the Hebron
+road; and the jingle of bells or the singing of the men was audible or
+alternately lost according to the same circumstances.&nbsp; I lay watching
+the progress of <!-- page 447--><a name="page447"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 447</span>sunshine or shadow around the Frank mountain
+as the hours rolled on; then as evening approached the Egyptian groom took
+down the Egyptian mare to water at the spring, followed by the foal of pure
+Sakl&acirc;wi race, that never till the preceding day had had even so much
+as a halter put across his head,&mdash;a Bashi-bozuk soldier with his pipe
+looking on,&mdash;the Abyssinian lad carrying pitchers of water to the
+several tents, and the pools of bright blue becoming darker blue when
+rippled by the evening air.&nbsp; All this was food for enjoyment of the
+picturesque, but at the same time God Almighty was leading us into deep
+trials of faith in Himself, and bringing out the value of that
+promise,&mdash;&ldquo;When thou passest through the waters, I will be with
+thee; and through the rivers, they shall not overflow thee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As the autumn advanced, some slight sprinkling of rain fell&mdash;dews
+at night were heavy&mdash;mists rose from below&mdash;mornings and evenings
+became cooled&mdash;new flowers began to appear, such as the purple crocus,
+and certain yellow blossoms belonging to the season, the name of which I do
+not know.&nbsp; We therefore began to take farewell rides about the
+neighbourhood, as to places we were never to see again.&nbsp; One of these
+was to a very archaic pile of rude masonry, deeply weather-eaten, at a
+ruined site called <i>Bait Saweer</i>, through green woods and
+arbutus-trees, glowing with scarlet berries; a place which had only
+recently been <!-- page 448--><a name="page448"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 448</span>brought to my notice, and of which no European
+had any knowledge.</p>
+<p>The old building, whose use we could not discover, was composed, not of
+ordinary blocks of stone, but of huge flat slabs, unchiselled at edges or
+corners, laid one over another, but forming decidedly an intentional
+edifice.&nbsp; It is well worth further examination.&nbsp; At the time we
+had with us no materials for sketching, and never had an opportunity of
+going thither afterwards.</p>
+<p>It lies among the wild green scene west from the Hebron road, near
+where, on the opposite, or east side, is the opening of the Wadi
+&rsquo;Aroob, with its copious springs.</p>
+<p>Then we went to <i>Marseea&rsquo;</i>, beyond the <i>Dair el
+Ben&acirc;t</i>&mdash;equally unknown to Europeans&mdash;and, lastly, to
+the green slopes and precipices towards <i>Nahh&acirc;leen</i>, where,
+lingering till after sunset, we became in a few minutes enveloped in a
+cloud of mist tossed and rolled along by gusts of wind, and several large
+eagles rose screaming from perches among rocks below us into the misty air,
+as if rejoicing in the boisterous weather.</p>
+<p>Three months before, we had been on the same spot at the moment of
+sunset, and saw the whole Philistine plain hidden in a white mist in a
+single minute, but, of course, far below us; and this, we were told, was
+the usual state of things, and would remain so for another month, after
+which the plain would have no mist, but we should have it all on <!-- page
+449--><a name="page449"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 449</span>the
+mountains at sunset&mdash;so it was now found to be the case.</p>
+<p>From one spot on our own grounds we were able to point out as objects in
+the magnificent prospect&mdash;the Moab mountains, the crevasse of the
+Jabbok into the Gh&ocirc;r, that of Calirrhoe into the Dead Sea, Hhalhhool
+near Hebron, El Khud&rsquo;r below us, Rachel&rsquo;s sepulchre, Bethlehem,
+Nebi Samwil, the Scopus, Jerusalem, and our house there, to which we were
+soon to remove.</p>
+<p>Before, however, quitting this subject of the Bakoosh, I may refer to
+one very special attraction that held us to the place, namely, an
+agricultural undertaking in its neighbourhood.&nbsp; A friend, of whom I
+hope to speak more in another time and place, superintended for me the
+rebuilding of an ancient Biblical village that lay a heap and a desolation,
+and cleared out its spring of water, which, by being choked up with
+rubbish, made its way unseen under ground, it thus became nearly as copious
+as that alongside of Solomon&rsquo;s Pools.&nbsp; I gathered people into
+the village, vineyards were planted, crops were sown and reaped there,
+taxes were paid to the government; and the vicinity, which previously had
+been notorious for robberies on the Hebron road, became perfectly
+secure.</p>
+<p>On one of my visits, a list was presented to me of ninety-eight
+inhabitants, where a year and a half before there was not one.&nbsp;
+Homesteads <!-- page 450--><a name="page450"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+450</span>were rebuilt; the people possessed horned cattle and flocks of
+sheep and goats, as well as beehives.&nbsp; I saw women grinding at the
+mill, and at one of the doors a cat and a kitten.&nbsp; All was going on
+prosperously.</p>
+<p>Purer pleasure have I never experienced than when, in riding over
+occasionally with our children, we saw the threshing of wheat and barley in
+progress, and heard the women singing, or the little children shouting at
+their games.&nbsp; Sixty cows used to be driven at noon to drink at the
+spring.</p>
+<p>We returned to Jerusalem on the 21st of October, and on the 28th of
+November that village was again a mass of ruin&mdash;the houses
+demolished&mdash;the people dispersed&mdash;their newly-sown corn and the
+vineyards ploughed over&mdash;the fine spring of water choked up once
+more&mdash;and my Australian trees planted there torn up by the
+roots.&nbsp; All this was allowed to be done within nine miles of
+Jerusalem, to gratify persons engaged in an intrigue which ended in deeds
+far worse than this.</p>
+<p>Our village was <i>Faghoor</i>, and had been one of the ancient towns of
+the tribe of Judah.&nbsp; Its place in the Bible is Joshua xv., where it is
+found in the Greek Septuagint together with Tekoah, Etham, and Bethlehem,
+all noted places&mdash;neither of which is contained in the Hebrew text,
+and therefore not in the English translation.</p>
+<p>It seems difficult to account for this; but it may possibly be that
+neither of these towns were <!-- page 451--><a name="page451"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 451</span>ever in the Hebrew of that chapter, that they
+were not well known at the time of the original Hebrew being written; but
+that when the translation of the Septuagint was made, the writers knew by
+other means, though living in Egypt, that Tekoah, Etham, Bethlehem, and
+Faghoor had been for a long period famous within the tribe of Judah, and
+therefore they filled up what seemed to them a deficiency in the
+register.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 452--><a name="page452"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+452</span>APPENDIX.</h2>
+<h3>A.&mdash;Page 32.</h3>
+<p>The signs here referred to were guessed by Buckingham (about 1816) to be
+possibly some distinctive tokens of Arab tribes; but he seemed rather
+inclined to connect them with marks that are found in Indian caverns, or
+those on the rocks about Mount Sinai.</p>
+<p>He was thus nearer to the truth than the latest of travellers, De
+Saulcy, who, with all his knowledge of Semitic alphabets, says of some of
+these <i>graffiti</i>, or scratchings, at &rsquo;Amm&acirc;n, which he
+copied: &ldquo;Tout cela, je regrette fort, est lettre close pour
+moi.&nbsp; Quelle est cette &eacute;criture?&nbsp; Je
+l&rsquo;ignore.&rdquo;&nbsp; (Voyage en Terre Sainte.&nbsp; Tom. i. p.256.
+Paris, 1865.)</p>
+<p>They are characters adopted by Arabs to distinguish one tribe from
+another, and commonly used for branding the camels on the shoulders and
+haunches, by which means the animals may be recovered, if straying and
+found by Arabs not hostile to the owners.</p>
+<p>I have, however, seen them scratched upon walls in many places
+frequented by Bedaween, as, for instance, in <!-- page 453--><a
+name="page453"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 453</span>the ruined convents,
+churches, etc., on the plain of the Jordan, and occasionally, as at
+&rsquo;Amm&acirc;n, several such cyphers are united into one complex
+character.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p454.jpg">
+<img alt="Appendix A characters" src="images/p454.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<h3>B.&mdash;Page 367.</h3>
+<p>Considerable discrepancy may be found among the transcripts furnished by
+travellers in their published works, of the Greek votive inscriptions about
+the entrance of the cavern of Pan at Banias.</p>
+<p>I give the following as the result of careful study of <!-- page
+454--><a name="page454"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 454</span>them in
+1849, and again, after the lapse of six years, in 1855, each time examining
+the writing, under varieties of light and shade, at different hours of the
+day.</p>
+<p>There are some other inscriptions, which are entirely blackened with
+smoke, in the niches, made perhaps by ancient burning of lamps or of
+incense there.&nbsp; This is particularly the case in one large hollow made
+in the rock, which has almost its whole surface covered with Greek
+writing.&nbsp; Within this hollow a niche is cut out, now empty.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p455.jpg">
+<img alt="Sculptured niche" src="images/p455.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>One small niche has its inscription so much defaced by violence that
+only the letters &Pi;&Alpha;&Nu; are connectedly legible.</p>
+<p><!-- page 455--><a name="page455"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+455</span>This sculptured niche has no inscription, but only the pedestal
+on which the statue was placed.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p456.jpg">
+<img alt="Ornamental niche" src="images/p456.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>This ornamental niche has beneath it, on a tablet, the words as at
+present legible.</p>
+<p><!-- page 456--><a name="page456"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+456</span>The inscription in the highest situation is as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p457.jpg">
+<img alt="Inscription in the highest situation" src="images/p457.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p><!-- page 457--><a name="page457"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+457</span>Beneath this is the following:&mdash;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p458a.jpg">
+<img alt="Inscription beneath" src="images/p458a.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Above the smoked recess, but below an upper niche, we find&mdash;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p458b.jpg">
+<img alt="Inscription below upper niche" src="images/p458b.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p><!-- page 458--><a name="page458"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+458</span>In this inscription &ldquo;the emperors&rdquo; can mean no others
+than Vespasian and Titus, who had had one and the same Triumph in Rome on
+account of the conquest of Judea; and this very title is used in Josephus,
+(&ldquo;Wars,&rdquo; vii. xi. 4,)</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p459.jpg">
+<img alt="Greek title" src="images/p459.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>It is peculiarly suitable to that place, inasmuch as Titus, previous to
+leaving the country, had celebrated there the birthday of his brother
+Domitian, with magnificent public spectacles&mdash;amid which, however,
+more than 2500 Jews were destroyed for popular amusement, by burning,
+fighting, and in combats with wild beasts.</p>
+<p>Although these are copied with much painstaking, there may be errors
+unperceived in some of the letters; but at least one of the words is
+misspelt by the provincial artist, namely,
+&Omicron;&Nu;&Iota;&Rho;&Omega;.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 461--><a name="page461"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+461</span>INDEX OF PLACES.</h2>
+<p>N.B.&mdash;<i>Names with the asterisk are ancient and not
+modern</i>.</p>
+<p>A</p>
+<p>Aaron&rsquo;s tomb <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page306">306</a></span><br />
+Abad&icirc;yeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page80">80</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page106">106</a></span><br />
+Abasiyeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page254">254</a></span><br />
+Abdoon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page34">34</a></span><br />
+Abeih <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page392">392</a></span><br />
+Abu Atabeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page239">239</a></span><br
+/>
+Abu Dis <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page1">1</a></span><br />
+Abu Mus-hhaf <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page47">47</a></span><br
+/>
+Abu&rsquo;n Jaib (Jaim) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page337">337</a></span><br />
+Abu Sab&acirc;kh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page203">203</a></span><br />
+Acre <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page237">237</a></span><br />
+Ad&acirc;sa <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page200">200</a></span><br
+/>
+Afeeri <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page193">193</a></span><br />
+Afooleh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page227">227</a></span><br />
+Ahhsan&icirc;yeh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page183">183</a></span><br />
+Ai <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page204">204</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ainab <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page391">391</a></span><br
+/>
+&rsquo;Ain &rsquo;Anoob <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page390">390</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page391">391</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain &rsquo;Aroos <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page324">324</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Atha <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page387">387</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Bedaw&icirc;yeh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page240">240</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page244">244</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Berweh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page241">241</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Bes&acirc;ba <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page390">390</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Carem <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page424">424</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Dirweh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page151">151</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page194">194</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page290">290</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Ghazal <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page34">34</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Ghazal <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page224">224</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Hhood <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page224">224</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Jadoor <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page41">41</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Jidi <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page333">333</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Kaimoon <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page230">230</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Kesoor <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page392">392</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Mel&rsquo;hh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page296">296</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Mell&acirc;hhah <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page371">371</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Merubba&rsquo; <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page48">48</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Merubba&rsquo; <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page417">417</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page419">419</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Nebel <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page259">259</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page266">266</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Noom <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page270">270</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Saadeh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page235">235</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page245">245</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page250">250</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Shems <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page156">156</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Sufs&acirc;feh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page231">231</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page250">250</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Ta&auml;s&acirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page321">321</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Weibeh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page302">302</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Yebrood <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page89">89</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ain Zera&rsquo;ah <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page238">238</a></span><br />
+Aita <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page265">265</a></span><br />
+Aitur&acirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page387">387</a></span><br />
+Ajjeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page126">126</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page219">219</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ajloon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page38">38</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page56">56</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page69">69</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page79">79</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ajoor <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page153">153</a></span><br
+/>
+&rsquo;Akir <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page157">157</a></span><br
+/>
+Alma <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page108">108</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Alman <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page201">201</a></span><br
+/>
+&rsquo;Almeet <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page201">201</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Amm&acirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page24">24-36</a></span><br />
+Amoor&icirc;ah <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page156">156</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;An&acirc;ta <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page200">200</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page210">210</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Aneen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page251">251</a></span><br
+/>
+Ann&acirc;beh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page127">127</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Arabah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page301">301</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page320">320</a></span> etc<br />
+&rsquo;Ar&acirc;beh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page217">217</a></span> etc <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page251">251</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ar&acirc;bet el Battoof <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page241">241</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ar&acirc;k el Ameer <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page19">19</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ar&acirc;k Hala <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page183">183</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ar&acirc;k Munshiyah <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page177">177</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Ar&acirc;rah <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page248">248</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Arkoob <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page147">147</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Arkoob Sahh&acirc;ba <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page336">336</a></span><br />
+Arzoon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page254">254</a></span><br />
+Ascal&acirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page163">163</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page182">182</a></span><br />
+Asdood <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page164">164</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Asfi <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page234">234</a></span><br
+/>
+&rsquo;Asker <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page90">90</a></span><br
+/>
+At&acirc;rah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page126">126</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page215">215</a></span><br />
+Athleet <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page224">224</a></span><br />
+Atna <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page162">162</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Attar <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page183">183</a></span><br
+/>
+Aujeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page133">133</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page134">134</a></span><br />
+Awali <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page348">348</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page412">412</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Azair <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page244">244</a></span><br
+/>
+&rsquo;Azoor <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page355">355</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page377">377</a></span></p>
+<p>B</p>
+<p>Bahhjah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page239">239</a></span><br
+/>
+Bait Ainoon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page290">290</a></span><br
+/>
+Bait At&acirc;b <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page147">147</a></span><br />
+Bait Dajan <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page163">163</a></span><br
+/>
+Bait Dur&acirc;s <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page162">162</a></span><br />
+Bait Ezk&acirc;reh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page443">443</a></span><br />
+Bait Hhaneena <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page200">200</a></span><br />
+Bait Hhanoon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page175">175</a></span><br
+/>
+Bait Jala <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page436">436</a></span><br />
+Bait Jan <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page271">271</a></span><br />
+Bait Jirja <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page166">166</a></span><br
+/>
+Bait Jibreen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page178">178</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page443">443</a></span><br />
+Bait Nateef <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page147">147</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page149">149</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page196">196</a></span><br />
+Bait Nejed <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page176">176</a></span><br
+/>
+Bait Sahhoor in Nas&acirc;ra <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page428">428</a></span><br />
+Bait Sahhoor el Wad <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page428">428</a></span><br />
+Bait Saweer <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page447">447</a></span><br
+/>
+Bait Soor (see Bezur)<br />
+Bait Uksa <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page140">140</a></span><br />
+Bait Unah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page140">140</a></span><br />
+Bait U&rsquo;oon <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page257">257</a></span><br />
+Bait Uzan <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page219">219</a></span><br />
+Bait Ziz (Jiz) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page157">157</a></span><br />
+Baka <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page247">247</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page249">249</a></span><br />
+Bakoosh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page435">435</a></span> etc<br
+/>
+*Balah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page297">297</a></span><br />
+Banias <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page364">364</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page384">384</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page385">385</a></span><br />
+Barook <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page354">354</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page376">376</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page407">407</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page411">411</a></span><br />
+*Bashan <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page66">66</a></span><br />
+Batteer <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page195">195</a></span><br />
+Battoof <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page271">271</a></span><br />
+Bayroot <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page390">390</a></span><br />
+Beerain <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page291">291</a></span><br />
+Beeri <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page88">88</a></span><br />
+Beer Eyoob <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page418">418</a></span><br
+/>
+Beer El Kott <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page433">433</a></span><br
+/>
+Beer Mustafa <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page203">203</a></span><br
+/>
+Beer Neb&acirc;la <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page200">200</a></span><br />
+Beer es Seba (Beersheba) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page189">189</a></span> etc<br />
+Beisan <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page94">94</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page96">96</a></span> etc<br />
+Beka&rsquo; el Bash&acirc; <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page40">40</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page46">46</a></span><br />
+Balameh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page221">221</a></span><br />
+Beled esh Shai&rsquo;kh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page235">235</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page245">245</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page247">247</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page250">250</a></span><br />
+Belhham&icirc;yeh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page80">80</a></span><br />
+Belka <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page19">19</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page79">79</a></span><br />
+*Belus <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page239">239</a></span><br />
+Beni Naim <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page290">290</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page291">291</a></span><br />
+Beni Saheela <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page171">171</a></span><br
+/>
+Berasheet <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page257">257</a></span><br />
+Berberah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page165">165</a></span><br />
+Berga&rsquo;an <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page45">45</a></span><br
+/>
+Besheet <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page160">160</a></span><br />
+Buteadeen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page405">405</a></span>
+etc<br />
+*Bethany <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page1">1</a></span><br />
+*Bethlehem <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page436">436</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page437">437</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page440">440</a></span><br />
+Beth Zacharias <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page432">432</a></span><br />
+Bezur <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page152">152</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page194">194</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page430">430</a></span><br />
+Bidias <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page254">254</a></span><br />
+Bint el Jebail <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page114">114</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page255">255</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page257">257</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page388">388</a></span><br />
+Bisrah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page355">355</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page376">376</a></span><br />
+Boorj (near Hebron) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page184">184</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page287">287</a></span><br />
+Boorj (near Saida) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page253">253</a></span><br />
+Brair <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page176">176</a></span><br />
+Bur&acirc;k <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page435">435</a></span><br
+/>
+Burka <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page214">214</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page219">219</a></span><br />
+Bursa <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page48">48</a></span><br />
+Burtaa <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page222">222</a></span><br />
+Bursheen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page254">254</a></span><br />
+Buwairdeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page321">321</a></span></p>
+<p>C</p>
+<p>Caiffa <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page236">236</a></span><br />
+*Carmel <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page44">44</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page67">67</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page224">224</a></span><br />
+*C&aelig;sarea Philippi <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page364">364</a></span><br />
+Cocab el Hawa <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page80">80</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page82">82</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page83">83</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page103">103</a></span><br />
+Cocaba <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page360">360</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page381">381</a></span><br />
+Cuf&rsquo;r Bera&rsquo;am <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page121">121</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page388">388</a></span><br />
+Cuf&rsquo;r Cana <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page126">126</a></span><br />
+Cuf&rsquo;r Enji <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page57">57</a></span><br />
+Cuf&rsquo;r Hhooneh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page358">358</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page378">378</a></span><br />
+Cuf&rsquo;r Ita <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page247">247</a></span><br />
+Cuf&rsquo;r Kara <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page222">222</a></span><br />
+Cuf&rsquo;r Menda <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page244">244</a></span><br />
+Cuf&rsquo;r Natta <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page398">398</a></span><br />
+Cuf&rsquo;r Rai <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page126">126</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page216">216</a></span><br />
+Cuf&rsquo;r Rum&acirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page127">127</a></span><br />
+Cuf&rsquo;r Saba <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page132">132</a></span> etc<br />
+Cuf&rsquo;r Yuba <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page58">58</a></span><br />
+Cuferain (beyond Jordan) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page9">9</a></span><br />
+Cuferain (near Carmel) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page251">251</a></span><br />
+Curnub <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page297">297</a></span></p>
+<p>D</p>
+<p>Dabook <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page39">39</a></span><br />
+Dahair el Hhum&acirc;r <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page23">23</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page80">80</a></span><br />
+Dahar es Salahh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page441">441</a></span><br />
+Daiket &rsquo;Ar&acirc;r <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page297">297</a></span><br />
+Dair <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page68">68</a></span><br />
+Dair &rsquo;Amm&acirc;r <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page137">137</a></span><br />
+Dair el Belahh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page169">169</a></span><br />
+Dair el Ben&acirc;t <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page448">448</a></span><br />
+Dair Dew&acirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page203">203</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page204">204</a></span><br />
+Dair ed Dub&acirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page177">177</a></span><br />
+Dair Hhanna <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page240">240</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page272">272</a></span><br />
+Dair el Kamar <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page400">400</a></span>
+etc<br />
+Dair el Mokhallis <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page348">348</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page374">374</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page412">412</a></span><br />
+Dair el Musha&rsquo;al <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page136">136</a></span><br />
+Dair el Mushmushi <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page377">377</a></span><br />
+Dair en Nakh&acirc;z <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page182">182</a></span><br />
+Dair Thecla <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page254">254</a></span><br
+/>
+Dair Yaseen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page427">427</a></span><br
+/>
+Daliet Carmel <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page238">238</a></span><br />
+Daliet er Rohha <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page238">238</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page251">251</a></span><br />
+Damooneh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page241">241</a></span><br />
+*Dan <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page362">362</a></span><br />
+Dar Joon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page349">349</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page353">353</a></span><br />
+Dar Kanoon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page254">254</a></span><br
+/>
+Dar Meemas <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page254">254</a></span><br
+/>
+Dar Shems <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page254">254</a></span><br />
+Dar Zibneh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page254">254</a></span><br
+/>
+Dead Sea <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page3">3</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page4">4</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page12">12</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page326">326</a></span> etc<br />
+De&acirc;neh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page197">197</a></span><br
+/>
+Deheedeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page378">378</a></span><br />
+Dej&acirc;jeh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page157">157</a></span><br />
+Desrah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page136">136</a></span><br />
+Dibneh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page156">156</a></span><br />
+Dil&acirc;thah <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page107">107</a></span><br />
+Dilbeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page193">193</a></span><br />
+Doher&icirc;yeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page192">192</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page193">193</a></span><br />
+Doomeen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page238">238</a></span><br />
+Dothan <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page127">127</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page219">219</a></span> etc<br />
+Duhheish&rsquo;meh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page146">146</a></span><br />
+D&uuml;rtghayer <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page254">254</a></span></p>
+<p>E</p>
+<p>Ebeleen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page242">242</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page247">247</a></span><br />
+Ed Dair <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page169">169</a></span><br />
+Edj&acirc;jeh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page157">157</a></span><br />
+Eilaboon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page240">240</a></span><br />
+Ekfair&acirc;t <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page17">17</a></span><br
+/>
+Ekwik&acirc;t <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page239">239</a></span><br />
+Elah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page150">150</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page151">151</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page153">153</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page196">196</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Elealeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page13">13</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page17">17</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page18">18</a></span><br />
+El &rsquo;Areesh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page170">170</a></span><br />
+El Hhabees <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page425">425</a></span><br
+/>
+El Khait <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page108">108</a></span><br />
+El Kharjeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page208">208</a></span><br
+/>
+El Khud&rsquo;r <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page146">146</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page435">435</a></span><br />
+El Mergab <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page34">34</a></span><br />
+El Muntar el Kassar <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page34">34</a></span><br />
+Er-Ram (beyond Jordan) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page9">9</a></span><br />
+Er-Ram (near Jerusalem) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page87">87</a></span><br />
+Er-Rihha <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page4">4</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page414">414</a></span><br />
+Esak <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page194">194</a></span><br />
+&rsquo;Esfia <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page235">235</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page238">238</a></span><br />
+Es-Salt <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page12">12</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page17">17</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page33">33</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page41">41</a></span><br />
+Esh-Shemes&acirc;ni <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page33">33</a></span><br />
+Esh-Shwaifiyeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page33">33</a></span><br
+/>
+Etam <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page444">444</a></span></p>
+<p>F</p>
+<p>Faghoor <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page449">449</a></span>
+etc<br />
+Fahh&rsquo;mah <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page216">216</a></span><br />
+Falooja <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page176">176</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page182">182</a></span><br />
+F&acirc;rah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page108">108</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page260">260</a></span><br />
+Farra&rsquo;&acirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page127">127</a></span><br />
+Fendecomia <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page126">126</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page219">219</a></span><br />
+Ferdisia <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page127">127</a></span><br />
+Fooleh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page227">227</a></span><br />
+Fort <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page183">183</a></span><br />
+Fountain of Apostles <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page2">2</a></span><br />
+Furadees <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page224">224</a></span></p>
+<p>G</p>
+<p>*Gadara <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page77">77</a></span><br />
+*Gath <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page157">157</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page163">163</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page183">183</a></span><br />
+Ghawair <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page324">324</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page325">325</a></span><br />
+Gh&ocirc;r <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page3">3</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page12">12</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page301">301</a></span><br />
+Ghoraniyeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page5">5</a></span><br />
+Ghujar <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page370">370</a></span><br />
+Ghutt <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page183">183</a></span><br />
+Ghuzzeh (Gaza) <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page166">166</a></span>
+etc<br />
+*Gilboa <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page67">67</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page102">102</a></span><br />
+Gumr&ocirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page414">414</a></span>
+416</p>
+<p>H</p>
+<p>Haddata <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page257">257</a></span><br
+/>
+Hadeth <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page390">390</a></span><br />
+Hafeereh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page220">220</a></span><br />
+Haita ez Zoot <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page257">257</a></span><br />
+Harakat <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page252">252</a></span><br />
+Herfaish <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page270">270</a></span><br />
+*Hermon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page67">67</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page78">78</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page264">264</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page359">359</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page364">364</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page371">371</a></span><br />
+Hhalhhool <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page194">194</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page291">291</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page449">449</a></span><br />
+Hham&acirc;meh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page163">163</a></span><br />
+Hhaneen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page266">266</a></span><br />
+Hhanooneh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page136">136</a></span><br />
+Hharr&acirc;sheh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page140">140</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page141">141</a></span><br />
+Hharatheeyeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page234">234</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page246">246</a></span><br />
+Hhasb&acirc;ni <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page360">360</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page380">380</a></span><br />
+Hhasbeya <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page360">360</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page379">379</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page381">381</a></span> etc<br />
+Hhata <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page176">176</a></span><br />
+Hhatteen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page126">126</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page240">240</a></span><br />
+Hheker Zaboot <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page13">13</a></span><br
+/>
+Hhesb&acirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page13">13</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page16">16</a></span><br />
+Hhizmeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page201">201</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page209">209</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page210">210</a></span><br />
+Hhooleh (Lake) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page361">361</a></span><br />
+Hhooleh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page257">257</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page386">386</a></span><br />
+Hhubeen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page147">147</a></span><br />
+Hhus&acirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page147">147</a></span><br
+/>
+*Hor <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page301">301</a></span> etc<br />
+*Hormah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page299">299</a></span><br />
+Huneen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page386">386</a></span><br />
+Hurbaj <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page236">236</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page247">247</a></span></p>
+<p>I</p>
+<p>Idsaid <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page182">182</a></span><br />
+Iksal <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page228">228</a></span><br />
+Ilmah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page183">183</a></span><br />
+Ineer <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page376">376</a></span><br />
+Irt&acirc;hh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page127">127</a></span><br
+/>
+Izereiriyeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page254">254</a></span></p>
+<p>J</p>
+<p>Ja&rsquo;arah <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page247">247</a></span><br />
+Jadeerah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page200">200</a></span><br />
+Jahh&acirc;rah <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page386">386</a></span><br />
+Jaida <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page246">246</a></span><br />
+Jalood <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page83">83</a></span><br />
+J&acirc;niah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page138">138</a></span><br
+/>
+Jarmuk <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page117">117</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page118">118</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page262">262</a></span><br />
+J&acirc;wah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page17">17</a></span><br />
+Jeba&rsquo; <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page126">126</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page219">219</a></span><br />
+Jeba&rsquo; (Gibeah of Saul) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page208">208</a></span><br />
+Jeba&rsquo; <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page147">147</a></span><br
+/>
+Jebel el Ghurb <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page297">297</a></span><br />
+Jebel M&acirc;has <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page39">39</a></span><br />
+Jebel esh Shaikh (See Hermon)<br />
+Jebel Sherreh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page305">305</a></span><br />
+Jeh&acirc;arah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page24">24</a></span><br
+/>
+Jelaad <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page43">43</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page48">48</a></span><br />
+Jelboon (Gilboa) <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page96">96</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page227">227</a></span><br />
+Jelool <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page17">17</a></span><br />
+Jeneen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page84">84</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page126">126</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page226">226</a></span><br />
+Jerash <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page18">18</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page48">48</a></span> etc<br />
+*Jericho (See Er-Rihha)<br />
+*Jeshimon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page301">301</a></span><br />
+Jezzeen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page357">357</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page377">377</a></span><br />
+Jifna <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page88">88</a></span><br />
+Jish <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page114">114</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page115">115</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page121">121</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page261">261</a></span><br />
+Jis&rsquo;r el K&acirc;di <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page399">399</a></span><br />
+Jit <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page222">222</a></span><br />
+*Jokneam <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page230">230</a></span><br />
+*Joktheel <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page337">337</a></span><br />
+Joon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page348">348</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page353">353</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page373">373</a></span><br />
+*Jordan <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page5">5</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page6">6</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page77">77</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page104">104</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page105">105</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page364">364</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page380">380</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page384">384</a></span><br />
+Judaidah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page183">183</a></span><br />
+Julis <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page182">182</a></span><br />
+Jurah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page164">164</a></span></p>
+<p>K</p>
+<p>Kab&acirc;tieh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page219">219</a></span><br />
+*Kadesh Barnea <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page302">302</a></span><br />
+Kadis <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page107">107</a></span><br />
+Kadita <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page116">116</a></span><br />
+Kaimoon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page230">230</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page250">250</a></span><br />
+Kala&rsquo;at er Reehha <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page414">414</a></span><br />
+Kala&rsquo;at Rubb&acirc;d <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page44">44</a></span><br />
+Kala&rsquo;at Subeibeh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page365">365</a></span><br />
+Kalins&acirc;wa <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page127">127</a></span><br />
+Kalkeeleh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page127">127</a></span><br />
+Kal&ocirc;neh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page426">426</a></span><br />
+Kanneer <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page223">223</a></span><br />
+Karatiya <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page176">176</a></span><br />
+Karaweesh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page446">446</a></span><br />
+Kasimiyeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page253">253</a></span><br />
+Kassar Waijees <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page33">33</a></span><br
+/>
+Kayaseer <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page94">94</a></span><br />
+Keelah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page152">152</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page196">196</a></span><br />
+Kelt <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page3">3</a></span><br />
+Kerak <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page14">14</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page18">18</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page34">34</a></span><br />
+Khalsah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page370">370</a></span><br />
+Khan em Meshettah <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page17">17</a></span><br />
+Khan Yunas <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page169">169</a></span>
+etc<br />
+Khar&acirc;s <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page151">151</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page196">196</a></span><br />
+Khash&rsquo;m Usdum <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page324">324</a></span> etc<br />
+Khatroon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page3">3</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page202">202</a></span><br />
+Khirbet el Kasees <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page442">442</a></span><br />
+Khirbet en Nas&acirc;ra <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page183">183</a></span><br />
+Khirbet es Sar <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page38">38</a></span><br
+/>
+Khirbet Saleekhi <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page47">47</a></span><br />
+Khirbet Sellim <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page255">255</a></span><br />
+Khuldah (beyond Jordan) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page39">39</a></span><br />
+Khuldah (on the Plain) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page157">157</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page196">196</a></span><br />
+Kifereh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page83">83</a></span><br />
+Kobaibeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page183">183</a></span><br />
+Krishneh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page203">203</a></span><br />
+Kubbet el Baul <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page297">297</a></span><br />
+Kubeibeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page160">160</a></span><br />
+Kubrus <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page222">222</a></span><br />
+Kuriet el &rsquo;Aneb <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page179">179</a></span><br />
+Kuriet es Sook <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page17">17</a></span><br
+/>
+Kustul (beyond Jordan) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page17">17</a></span><br />
+Kustul (near Jerusalem) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page426">426</a></span></p>
+<p>L</p>
+<p>Lahh&rsquo;m <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page183">183</a></span><br />
+Laithma <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page90">90</a></span><br />
+Latroon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page427">427</a></span><br />
+Lejjoon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page221">221</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page229">229</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page249">249</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page250">250</a></span><br />
+Lesed <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page149">149</a></span><br />
+Lit&acirc;ni <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page359">359</a></span><br
+/>
+Lubb&acirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page90">90</a></span><br
+/>
+Lubieh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page126">126</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page238">238</a></span></p>
+<p>M</p>
+<p>Ma&rsquo;alool <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page246">246</a></span><br />
+Ma&rsquo;an <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page192">192</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page301">301</a></span><br />
+Main <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page17">17</a></span><br />
+Maisera <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page44">44</a></span><br />
+Ma&rsquo;kook <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page206">206</a></span><br />
+Ma&rsquo;naeen <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page195">195</a></span><br />
+Manjah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page17">17</a></span><br />
+Mar Saba <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page418">418</a></span><br />
+Marseea&rsquo; <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page448">448</a></span><br />
+Martosiyah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page183">183</a></span><br
+/>
+Mazaal <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page224">224</a></span><br />
+Medeba <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page17">17</a></span><br />
+Mej&acirc;ma&rsquo;a <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page71">71</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page104">104</a></span><br />
+Mejdal <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page163">163</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page182">182</a></span><br />
+Mejdal Yaba <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page127">127</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page128">128</a></span> etc<br />
+Mekebleh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page228">228</a></span><br />
+Menzel el Basha <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page230">230</a></span><br />
+Merash <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page183">183</a></span><br />
+Meroon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page117">117</a></span> etc<br
+/>
+Merj ibn Amer <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page228">228</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page249">249</a></span><br />
+Merj ed D&ocirc;m <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page187">187</a></span><br />
+Med Merka <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page34">34</a></span><br />
+Mesdar Aishah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page34">34</a></span><br
+/>
+Mesh-had <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page126">126</a></span><br />
+*Me-Yarkon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page158">158</a></span><br
+/>
+Mezer <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page67">67</a></span><br />
+Mezra&rsquo;a <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page19">19</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page140">140</a></span><br />
+Mezra&rsquo;ah <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page254">254</a></span><br />
+Mobugghuk <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page329">329</a></span><br />
+Modzha <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page224">224</a></span><br />
+Mohhrakah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page233">233</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page237">237</a></span><br />
+Mokatta&rsquo; <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page233">233</a></span><br />
+Mokht&acirc;rah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page407">407</a></span>
+etc<br />
+*Mol&acirc;dah <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page296">296</a></span><br />
+*Moreh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page90">90</a></span><br />
+Mujaidel <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page237">237</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page245">245</a></span><br />
+Mukhm&acirc;s <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page207">207</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page210">210</a></span><br />
+Mukhneh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page90">90</a></span><br />
+Munsoorah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page183">183</a></span><br />
+Mushmusheh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page249">249</a></span><br
+/>
+Muzaikah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page297">297</a></span><br />
+M&rsquo;zeera&rsquo;a <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page136">136</a></span></p>
+<p>N</p>
+<p>Naa&rsquo;eea <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page165">165</a></span><br />
+Naam&acirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page239">239</a></span><br
+/>
+Na&rsquo;ana <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page157">157</a></span><br
+/>
+Na&rsquo;oor <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page18">18</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page19">19</a></span><br />
+Nabloos <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page44">44</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page90">90</a></span><br />
+Nahh&acirc;leen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page147">147</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page443">443</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page448">448</a></span><br />
+*Nazareth <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page126">126</a></span><br />
+Ne&acirc;b <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page241">241</a></span><br
+/>
+Neba&rsquo; <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page17">17</a></span><br />
+Nebi Hhood <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page56">56</a></span><br />
+Nebi Moosa <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page2">2</a></span><br />
+Nebi Osha <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page44">44</a></span><br />
+Nebi Samwil <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page44">44</a></span><br />
+Nebi Sari <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page136">136</a></span><br />
+Nebi Yunas <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page290">290</a></span><br
+/>
+*Negeb <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page145">145</a></span><br />
+*Nimrin <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page126">126</a></span><br />
+Nooris <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page83">83</a></span><br />
+Nuba <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page152">152</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page196">196</a></span></p>
+<p>O</p>
+<p>Obeyah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page183">183</a></span><br />
+*Olivet <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page1">1</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page16">16</a></span></p>
+<p>P</p>
+<p>*Parah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page212">212</a></span><br />
+*Pelesheth <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page144">144</a></span><br
+/>
+Petra <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page311">311</a></span> etc<br />
+Point Costigan <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page332">332</a></span><br />
+Point Molyneux <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page332">332</a></span></p>
+<p>Q</p>
+<p>Quarantana <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page202">202</a></span></p>
+<p>R</p>
+<p>Ra&rsquo;ana <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page157">157</a></span><br />
+Rabbah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page34">34</a></span><br />
+Raineh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page126">126</a></span><br />
+Rama <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page238">238</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page272">272</a></span><br />
+Ram Allah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page87">87</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page143">143</a></span><br />
+Rameen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page126">126</a></span><br />
+Rami <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page216">216</a></span><br />
+Ramlah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page128">128</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page197">197</a></span><br />
+Ras el Ahhmar <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page108">108</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page114">114</a></span><br />
+Ras el &rsquo;Ain <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page131">131</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page132">132</a></span><br />
+Ras abu Amm&acirc;r <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page147">147</a></span><br />
+Ras Kerker <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page135">135</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page137">137</a></span> etc<br />
+Rehhan&icirc;yeh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page251">251</a></span><br />
+Remmoon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page203">203</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page205">205</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page206">206</a></span><br />
+Resheef <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page242">242</a></span><br />
+Rubin <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page158">158</a></span><br />
+Rumaish <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page264">264</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page267">267</a></span><br />
+Rum&acirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page48">48</a></span><br />
+Rum&acirc;neh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page244">244</a></span><br />
+Rummet er Room <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page376">376</a></span><br />
+Runtieh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page136">136</a></span></p>
+<p>S</p>
+<p>Safed <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page107">107</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page117">117</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page262">262</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page372">372</a></span><br />
+Safoot <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page47">47</a></span><br />
+Sagheefah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page183">183</a></span><br />
+Saida <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page348">348</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page412">412</a></span><br />
+Saidoon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page197">197</a></span><br />
+Salem <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page90">90</a></span><br />
+Salhhah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page108">108</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page260">260</a></span><br />
+Salhhi <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page153">153</a></span><br />
+Salim <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page226">226</a></span><br />
+Salt Mountain <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page326">326</a></span><br />
+Samakh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page76">76</a></span><br />
+Samek <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page17">17</a></span><br />
+Samma <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page71">71</a></span><br />
+Samooniah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page246">246</a></span><br />
+Samua&rsquo; <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page187">187</a></span><br
+/>
+Sanneen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page254">254</a></span><br />
+Sanoor <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page126">126</a></span><br />
+Sasa <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page121">121</a></span><br />
+Satt&acirc;f <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page424">424</a></span><br
+/>
+Sawafeer Mesalkah <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page182">182</a></span><br />
+Sawafeer Odeh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page182">182</a></span><br />
+Saw&icirc;yeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page90">90</a></span><br
+/>
+*Scopus <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page199">199</a></span><br />
+Sebustieh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page15">15</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page111">111</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page215">215</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page219">219</a></span><br />
+Se&rsquo;eer <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page10">10</a></span><br
+/>
+Seeleh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page215">215</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page219">219</a></span><br />
+Seeleh (on Esdraelon) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page226">226</a></span><br />
+Sefoor&icirc;yeh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page240">240</a></span><br />
+*Seir <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page305">305</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page306">306</a></span><br />
+*Selah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page337">337</a></span><br />
+Selw&acirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page1">1</a></span><br />
+Semsem <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page176">176</a></span><br />
+Semw&acirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page239">239</a></span><br
+/>
+Sen&acirc;brah <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page182">182</a></span><br />
+Setcher (Seeker) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page22">22</a></span><br />
+Sha&rsquo;af&acirc;t <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page86">86</a></span><br />
+Shaikh Am&acirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page183">183</a></span><br />
+Shaikh el Bakkar <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page63">63</a></span><br />
+Shaikh S&acirc;d <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page231">231</a></span><br />
+Shakrah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page257">257</a></span><br />
+Sharon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page15">15</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page127">127</a></span> etc<br />
+Shefa &rsquo;Amer (beyond Jordan) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page15">15</a></span><br />
+Shefa &rsquo;Amer (near Acre) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page240">240</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page242">242</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page243">243</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page247">247</a></span><br />
+Shel&acirc;leh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page238">238</a></span><br />
+Shemu&acirc;ta <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page239">239</a></span><br />
+Shemaniyeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page183">183</a></span><br
+/>
+*Sheph&ecirc;lah <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page145">145</a></span><br />
+Sheree&rsquo;ah (See Jordan)<br />
+Shereeat el Men&acirc;dherah <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page76">76</a></span><br />
+Shibtain <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page136">136</a></span><br />
+Shukbeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page136">136</a></span><br />
+Shukeef <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page254">254</a></span><br />
+Shutta <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page83">83</a></span><br />
+Sh&rsquo;waif&acirc;t <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page390">390</a></span><br />
+Sh&rsquo;weikeh (Shocoh) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page150">150</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page152">152</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page196">196</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page443">443</a></span><br />
+Sibta <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page193">193</a></span><br />
+Sik <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page313">313</a></span><br />
+Sindi&acirc;neh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page247">247</a></span><br />
+Sinjil <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page90">90</a></span><br />
+Siphla <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page145">145</a></span><br />
+Soba <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page423">423</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page425">425</a></span><br />
+Solam <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page227">227</a></span><br />
+Sora&rsquo;a <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page156">156</a></span><br
+/>
+Santa Anna <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page179">179</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page183">183</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page443">443</a></span><br />
+Su&acirc;meh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page224">224</a></span><br
+/>
+Subar&icirc;yeh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page223">223</a></span><br />
+Suf&acirc;h <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page299">299</a></span><br
+/>
+Sufs&acirc;feh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page231">231</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page250">250</a></span><br />
+Sukhneen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page241">241</a></span><br />
+Sumkaniyeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page407">407</a></span></p>
+<p>T</p>
+<p>Ta&rsquo;annuk <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page221">221</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page226">226</a></span><br />
+Tabakra <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page47">47</a></span><br />
+*Tabor <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page44">44</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page67">67</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page226">226</a></span><br />
+Taitaba <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page107">107</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page116">116</a></span><br />
+Tallooz <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page48">48</a></span><br />
+Tantoorah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page224">224</a></span><br />
+Tarsheehhah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page268">268</a></span><br
+/>
+Tayibeh (beyond Jordan) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page68">68</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page69">69</a></span><br />
+Tayibeh (near Jerusalem) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page205">205</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page213">213</a></span><br />
+Teereh (on Sharon) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page136">136</a></span><br />
+Teereh (in Galilee) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page266">266</a></span><br />
+Teeri <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page224">224</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page238">238</a></span><br />
+Tela&rsquo;at ed Dum <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page3">3</a></span><br />
+Tell &rsquo;Ar&acirc;d <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page293">293</a></span><br />
+Tell u&rsquo;l &rsquo;Ejel <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page169">169</a></span><br />
+Tell el Hajjar <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page204">204</a></span><br />
+Tell el K&acirc;di <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page362">362</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page384">384</a></span><br />
+Tell el Kasees <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page233">233</a></span><br />
+Tell es S&acirc;fieh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page177">177</a></span><br />
+Thekua&rsquo; (Tekoa) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page337">337</a></span><br />
+Ter&acirc;beh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page334">334</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page422">422</a></span><br />
+Thuggeret el Baider <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page33">33</a></span><br />
+*Thuggeret el Mogh&acirc;fer <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page48">48</a></span><br />
+Tiberias <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page78">78</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page105">105</a></span><br />
+Tibneen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page255">255</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page264">264</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page387">387</a></span><br />
+Tibneh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page156">156</a></span><br />
+Tibni <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page68">68</a></span><br />
+Timrah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page175">175</a></span><br />
+Tool el Ker&rsquo;m <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page127">127</a></span><br />
+Tub&acirc;s <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page92">92</a></span><br />
+Tuleh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page67">67</a></span><br />
+Tura <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page254">254</a></span><br />
+Tura&rsquo;an <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page126">126</a></span></p>
+<p>U</p>
+<p>Umm el &rsquo;Aamed <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page17">17</a></span><br />
+Umm Bugghek <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page329">329</a></span><br
+/>
+Umm ed Damaneer <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page47">47</a></span><br />
+Umm el &rsquo;Egher <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page47">47</a></span><br />
+Umm el Fahh&rsquo;m <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page248">248</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page249">249</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page251">251</a></span><br />
+Umm Kais <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page62">62</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page71">71</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page72">72</a></span><br />
+Umm el Kan&acirc;ter <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page77">77</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page106">106</a></span><br />
+Umm Malfoof <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page33">33</a></span><br />
+Umm er Rum&acirc;neh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page17">17</a></span><br />
+Umm Saidet <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page183">183</a></span><br
+/>
+Umm Sheggar <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page17">17</a></span><br />
+Umm es Swaiweeneh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page34">34</a></span><br />
+Umm ez Zeen&acirc;t <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page251">251</a></span><br />
+Ursaifah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page34">34</a></span><br />
+Urtas <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page435">435</a></span></p>
+<p>W</p>
+<p>Wadi Ahhmed <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page195">195</a></span><br />
+Wadi &rsquo;Arab (or Shaikh) <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page151">151</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page196">196</a></span><br />
+Wadi &rsquo;Arab <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page248">248</a></span><br />
+Wadi &rsquo;Aroob <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page448">448</a></span><br />
+Wadi Bait Hhaneena <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page424">424</a></span><br />
+Wadi Bed&acirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page91">91</a></span><br />
+Wadi Berreh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page82">82</a></span><br />
+Wadi Dubber <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page417">417</a></span><br
+/>
+Wadi En-nab <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page91">91</a></span><br />
+Wadi Farah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page210">210</a></span><br
+/>
+Wadi Fara&rsquo;ah <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page91">91</a></span><br />
+Wadi Fik&rsquo;r <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page301">301</a></span><br />
+Wadi Fokeen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page147">147</a></span><br
+/>
+Wadi el Hharam&icirc;yeh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page94">94</a></span><br />
+Wadi Hhuggereh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page325">325</a></span><br />
+Wadi el Jaib <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page301">301</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page322">322</a></span><br />
+Wadi el Kasab <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page231">231</a></span><br />
+Wadi Keereh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page232">232</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page235">235</a></span><br />
+Wadi el Kharnoob <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page136">136</a></span><br />
+Wadi Mel&rsquo;hh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page230">230</a></span> <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page232">232</a></span><br />
+Wadi Moosa <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page316">316</a></span><br
+/>
+Wadi Musurr <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page150">150</a></span><br
+/>
+Wadi Nemela <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page318">318</a></span><br
+/>
+Wadi Netheeleh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page329">329</a></span><br />
+Wadi Phara&ocirc;n <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page316">316</a></span><br />
+Wadi Soor <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page151">151</a></span><br />
+Wadi Sunt <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page150">150</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page154">154</a></span><br />
+Wadi Surar <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page158">158</a></span><br
+/>
+Wadi Suaineet <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page207">207</a></span><br />
+Wadi Tayibeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page305">305</a></span><br
+/>
+Wadi Zahari <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page72">72</a></span><br />
+Weli Jedro <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page247">247</a></span><br
+/>
+Weli Sard&ocirc;ni <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page40">40</a></span></p>
+<p>Y</p>
+<p>Yaabad <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page222">222</a></span><br />
+Yabneh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page158">158</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page159">159</a></span><br />
+Yaero <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page126">126</a></span><br />
+Yafah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page245">245</a></span><br />
+Yajoor <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page245">245</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page247">247</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page250">250</a></span><br />
+Yakook <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page125">125</a></span><br />
+Yarmuk <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page75">75</a></span><br />
+Yaroon <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page260">260</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page388">388</a></span><br />
+Yehud&icirc;yeh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page257">257</a></span></p>
+<p>Z</p>
+<p>Zacariah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page154">154</a></span><br
+/>
+Zaid <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page357">357</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page377">377</a></span><br />
+Zebdeh <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page222">222</a></span><br />
+Zeita <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page182">182</a></span><br />
+Zen&acirc;beh <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page127">127</a></span><br />
+*Zephath <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page299">299</a></span><br />
+Zer&rsquo;een <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page67">67</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page83">83</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page226">226</a></span><br />
+Zerka <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page48">48</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page49">49</a></span><br />
+*Zin <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page301">301</a></span><br />
+Ziph <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page152">152</a></span> <span
+class="indexpageno"><a href="#page292">292</a></span><br />
+Zoghal <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page328">328</a></span><br />
+Zubairah <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page17">17</a></span><br />
+Zum&acirc;reen <span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page223">223</a></span>
+<span class="indexpageno"><a href="#page224">224</a></span><br />
+Zuw&acirc;tah <span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page219">219</a></span></p>
+<h2>FOOTNOTES.</h2>
+<p><a name="footnote3"></a><a href="#citation3"
+class="footnote">[3]</a>&nbsp; This is one of the frequent instances of
+Arabic local names preserving the sound, while departing from the
+signification.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote5"></a><a href="#citation5"
+class="footnote">[5]</a>&nbsp; This ford was called
+<i>Ghoran&ecirc;yeh</i>.&nbsp; The other is called <i>El
+Meshraa&rsquo;</i>.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote17"></a><a href="#citation17"
+class="footnote">[17]</a>&nbsp; Tristram has since expressed (p. 535) a
+doubt of the verity of this name of a site, but I had it given to me both
+at Heshbon and Jerash, and De Saulcy has since been there.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote19"></a><a href="#citation19"
+class="footnote">[19]</a>&nbsp; How often have I regretted since that we
+did not know of the existence of &rsquo;Ar&acirc;k el Ameer, which has of
+late commanded so much interest.&nbsp; We might have so easily turned aside
+for that short distance.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote20"></a><a href="#citation20"
+class="footnote">[20]</a>&nbsp; This word signifies &ldquo;a
+desert.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is often found in the Arabic Bible, especially in
+the prophetic books.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote33"></a><a href="#citation33"
+class="footnote">[33]</a>&nbsp; See Appendix A.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote39"></a><a href="#citation39"
+class="footnote">[39]</a>&nbsp; The largest sort grown there.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote58"></a><a href="#citation58"
+class="footnote">[58]</a>&nbsp; The officer deputed from the Porte lives in
+a pretty village called Cuf&rsquo;r Yuba, and is said to have become
+enormously rich upon the levies which he does not transmit to
+Constantinople.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote61"></a><a href="#citation61"
+class="footnote">[61]</a>&nbsp; Travellers of late report that enormous
+sums are exacted by the &rsquo;Adw&acirc;n for their escort upon this same
+journey as ours.&nbsp; It may, therefore, be acceptable to learn what was
+our contract, and that it was honourably acted upon&mdash;namely, three of
+the party to pay 1000 piastres each, and 200 each for all the rest.&nbsp;
+As there were twelve in the party, the amount was</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">1000 x 3 = 3000<br />
+200 x 9 = 1800<br />
+----<br />
+4800</p>
+<p>This total we among ourselves divided equally, equal to 400 each.</p>
+<p>We also agreed to make a present from each when in the territory,
+besides giving a feast at &rsquo;Amm&acirc;n, and another at
+Jerash&mdash;the feasts were a mere trifle.</p>
+<p>A hundred piastres came to rather less than a pound sterling.</p>
+<p>I am glad to confirm the recent testimonies of Tristram and De Saulcy as
+to the honourable and noble deportment of Gubl&acirc;n and the other
+leaders of the &rsquo;Adw&acirc;n people.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote65"></a><a href="#citation65"
+class="footnote">[65]</a>&nbsp; Were not these the altars or other objects
+employed in idolatrous worship by the Geshurites and Maachathites who
+remained among the Israelites of Gad and Reuben?&mdash;(See Josh. xiii.
+13.)</p>
+<p><a name="footnote67"></a><a href="#citation67"
+class="footnote">[67]</a>&nbsp; I mean Jebel esh Shaikh of the
+Anti-Lebanon, as I do not believe in the existence of any <i>little
+Hermon</i> in the Bible.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote94"></a><a href="#citation94"
+class="footnote">[94]</a>&nbsp; He afterwards died of fever in my service,
+caught by rapid travelling in the heat of July 1860, during the Lebanon
+insurrection, whither he accompanied my Cancelliere to rescue some of the
+unfortunate Christians in my district.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote109"></a><a href="#citation109"
+class="footnote">[109]</a>&nbsp; According to the Talmud, private roads
+were made four cubits wide; public roads sixteen cubits; but the approaches
+to a city of refuge were thirty-two cubits in width.&nbsp; See
+Lightfoot&rsquo;s &ldquo;Decas Chorographica,&rdquo; VII.&nbsp; Latitudo
+viarum Tradunt Rabini.&nbsp; Via privata &#1512;&#1497;&#1514;&#1514;
+&#1499;&#1512;&#1512; est quatuor cubitorum&mdash;via ab urbe in urbem est
+octo cubitorum&mdash;via publica &#1502;&#1497;&#1498;&#1512;&#1495;
+&#1499;&#1512;&#1512; est sedecm cubitorum&mdash;via ad civitates refugii
+est triginta duorum cubitorum.&rdquo;&nbsp; Bava Batra fol., 100&nbsp; From
+Lightfoot&rsquo;s &ldquo;Centuria Chorographica.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Synhedrio incubuit vias ad civitates hasee accommodare eas
+dilatando, atque omne offendiculum in quod titubare aut impingere posses
+amovendo.&nbsp; Non permissus in vi&acirc; ullus tumulus aut fluvius super
+quem non esset pons erat que via illuc ducens ad minimum 32 cubitorum lata
+atque in omni bivio, aut viarum partitione scriptum erat
+&#1496;&#1511;&#1500;&#1505; &#1496;&#1511;&#1500;&#1505; <i>Refugium</i>
+ne eo fugiens a vi&acirc; erraret.&rdquo;&mdash;Maimon in
+&#1495;&#1490;&#1491;&#1512; cap. 8.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote110"></a><a href="#citation110"
+class="footnote">[110]</a>&nbsp; On visiting Kadis some years after, I was
+grieved to find all this much demolished, and the ornamentation taken away,
+by Ali Bek, to adorn the new works at his castle of Tibneen.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote111"></a><a href="#citation111"
+class="footnote">[111]</a>&nbsp; Since fallen almost to the ground.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote131a"></a><a href="#citation131a"
+class="footnote">[131a]</a>&nbsp; &Kappa;&eta;&rho;&nu;&xi;.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote131b"></a><a href="#citation131b"
+class="footnote">[131b]</a>&nbsp;
+&Eta;&rho;&omicron;&delta;&rho;&omicron;&mu;&omicron;&sigmaf;.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote133"></a><a href="#citation133"
+class="footnote">[133]</a>&nbsp; I have been there three times, twice late
+in autumn, and once in July, and always found water abundant.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote136"></a><a href="#citation136"
+class="footnote">[136]</a>&nbsp; Since writing the above I have seen the
+photograph taken of this temple by the Palestine explorators in 1866.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote149"></a><a href="#citation149"
+class="footnote">[149]</a>&nbsp; I do not find this place in any lists or
+books of travels.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote155"></a><a href="#citation155"
+class="footnote">[155]</a>&nbsp; Since that journey I have been told by the
+country people that between Gaza and Beersheba it is the practice to sow
+wheat very thinly indeed, and to expect every seed to produce thirty to
+fifty stalks, and every stalk to give forty seeds.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote182"></a><a href="#citation182"
+class="footnote">[182]</a>&nbsp; In a journey to Gaza from Hebron, in the
+spring season of 1853, I was proceeding from the great oak down a long
+valley&mdash;but I was induced to deviate from the direct line by the
+tidings of <i>Bait Jibreen</i> being infested or taken by the Tiy&acirc;hah
+Arabs.</p>
+<p>We everywhere found the peasantry armed, and on arriving before <i>Dair
+Nahh&acirc;z</i>, almost within sight of that town, and communicating with
+the village for water to drink, as I rested under a tree, Mohammed
+&rsquo;Abd en Nebi sent me word that Bait Jibreen was recovered from the
+Arabs, and now occupied by themselves; that thirty-five corpses of Arabs
+were lying round Bait Jibreen, and one of the two Arab chiefs (Amer) was
+slain&mdash;he himself was wounded in the knee.</p>
+<p>From hence to Gaza we passed <i>Zeita</i>, where a breastwork had been
+hastily thrown up by the peasantry, and into which a number of armed men
+rushed from a concealment, and parleyed before they would allow us to pass
+on.&nbsp; Then to <i>Falooja</i>, and between <i>Idsaid</i> and
+<i>Karatiyah</i> on our right, and the Ar&acirc;k Munsh&icirc;yah on the
+left.&nbsp; Halted at Brair for the night.</p>
+<p>The return from Gaza was by Ascal&acirc;n, Mejdal, Julis, the two
+Sawafeers, Kasteeneh, Mesm&icirc;yeh, and Latron, on the Jaffa road to
+Jerusalem.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote203"></a><a href="#citation203"
+class="footnote">[203]</a>&nbsp; Pronounced sometimes <i>Dew&acirc;n</i>,
+sometimes <i>Debwan</i>.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote204"></a><a href="#citation204"
+class="footnote">[204]</a>&nbsp; <i>Beth</i> is represented by the modern
+word <i>Dair</i>, and <i>Aven</i> has become <i>Ew&acirc;n</i>, with the
+Syriac <i>d</i>&rsquo; signifying <i>of</i>.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote207"></a><a href="#citation207"
+class="footnote">[207]</a>&nbsp; It is worthy of notice that Suw&acirc;n
+(in Arabic) (diminutive, <i>Suwaineet</i>) signifies
+&ldquo;flint.&rdquo;&nbsp; These rocks being flinty, it is possible that
+<i>Seneh</i> in Hebrew may have had the same meaning.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote217"></a><a href="#citation217"
+class="footnote">[217]</a>&nbsp; &rsquo;Ar&acirc;beh does not appear in any
+map before Vandevelde in 1854.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote230"></a><a href="#citation230"
+class="footnote">[230]</a>&nbsp; As Hebron, Bethshemesh, Gibeon, Shechem,
+Beth-horon, Ta&rsquo;annuk, Jeneen, etc., besides the cities of refuge.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote238"></a><a href="#citation238"
+class="footnote">[238]</a>&nbsp; It is worthy of note, that in this single
+place the ancient name of Carmel is preserved among the people.&nbsp; This
+being called <i>D&acirc;liet el Carmel</i> to distinguish it from the
+D&acirc;lieh of the Rohha district, yet the denomination Carmel is not
+otherwise given to this mountain by the Arab population.&nbsp; D&acirc;lieh
+signifies &ldquo;a vine,&rdquo; this, therefore, is the &ldquo;vine of
+Carmel,&rdquo; and Carmel itself signifies &ldquo;God&rsquo;s
+vineyard!&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote243"></a><a href="#citation243"
+class="footnote">[243]</a>&nbsp; They afterwards dwindled to two families,
+the rest removing to Caiffa as that port rose in prosperity.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote265"></a><a href="#citation265"
+class="footnote">[265]</a>&nbsp; Shakespeare; or as Ronsard has
+it:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &ldquo;qui <i>tire l&rsquo;ire</i><br />
+Des esprits mieux que je n&rsquo;ecris.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><a name="footnote301"></a><a href="#citation301"
+class="footnote">[301]</a>&nbsp; Yet there was a &ldquo;city of
+palm-trees&rdquo; towards the south, which the Kenites abandoned for this
+district south of Arad,&mdash;probably the present <i>Nukh&rsquo;l</i>; the
+name has that signification.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote302"></a><a href="#citation302"
+class="footnote">[302]</a>&nbsp; There are many such <i>cachets</i> of
+water in the desert, but known only to the tribes of each district.&nbsp;
+During the Israelitish wanderings, Hobab, a native of the desert, may have
+guided them to many such.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote304"></a><a href="#citation304"
+class="footnote">[304]</a>&nbsp; It is not to be supposed, however, that
+this is a just representation of all that &ldquo;great and terrible
+wilderness&rdquo; through which the Israelites were led for forty
+years.&nbsp; It is indeed &ldquo;a land not sown,&rdquo; (Jer. ii. 2,) and
+a land of pits and drought fearful to contemplate, as a journey for a
+wandering population of nearly two millions of souls, especially in the
+hottest seasons of the year; but the peculiarly terrible wilderness must
+have been among the defiles, hemmed in by scorching cliffs in the Sinaitic
+peninsula.</p>
+<p>In that direction also were the &ldquo;fiery flying serpents,&rdquo;
+concerning which I have never been able to learn anything more satisfactory
+than that, in the hot and unpeopled gorges west of the Dead Sea, there is a
+thin and yellow serpent called the Neshabiyeh, which flings itself across
+from one point to another in the air with astonishing velocity and
+force.&nbsp; It is therefore named after Nesh&acirc;beh, a dart or arrow in
+Arabic.&nbsp; The natives also apply to it the epithet of
+&ldquo;flying.&rdquo;&nbsp; The wound which it inflicts is said to be
+highly inflammatory and deadly, and from this effect it may be called
+&ldquo;fiery.&rdquo;&nbsp; It may be also that, from being of a yellow
+colour, it may glitter like a flame when flying with rapidity in the
+sunshine.</p>
+<p>It is only in Isaiah xxx. 6, that the epithet &ldquo;flying&rdquo; is
+used for these serpents.&nbsp; Observe, however, in Hebrew Lexicons the
+several applications of this word &#1514;&#1493;&#1506;.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote309"></a><a href="#citation309"
+class="footnote">[309]</a>&nbsp; Dr H. Bonar.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote316"></a><a href="#citation316"
+class="footnote">[316]</a>&nbsp; They take a pride in attributing
+everything of antiquity here to Pharaoh, the cursed king of Egypt,&mdash;as
+those about the Euphrates attribute all their old wonders to the cursed
+king Nimrod.&nbsp; These names are learned from the Kor&acirc;n.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote320"></a><a href="#citation320"
+class="footnote">[320]</a>&nbsp; Numerous travellers, however, have since
+gone from Jerusalem in virtue of the agreement made on this occasion by me,
+and returned without molestation from these people.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote332"></a><a href="#citation332"
+class="footnote">[332]</a>&nbsp; This I repeat after having travelled at
+different times on most parts, north, west, and south of the lake, and read
+all that has been printed about the eastern side.&nbsp; (1867.)</p>
+<p><a name="footnote339"></a><a href="#citation339"
+class="footnote">[339]</a>&nbsp; Since writing the above, we learn from
+Lieutenant Warren&rsquo;s very interesting letters that the Turkish
+Government have sent a large force into the trans-Jordanic region, with a
+view of chastising the Arabs: it remains to be seen whether this measure
+will leave any permanent effects.&mdash;(<i>Nov.</i> 1867.)</p>
+<p><a name="footnote405"></a><a href="#citation405"
+class="footnote">[405]</a>&nbsp; Especially in a book probably little
+known, but published as &ldquo;Memoirs of a Babylonian Princess.&nbsp; By
+(herself) Marie Therese Asmar,&rdquo; who was in London in 1845, and
+supported for a time by fashionable patronesses of romantic
+Orientalism.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote408"></a><a href="#citation408"
+class="footnote">[408]</a>&nbsp; The events of 1860-61 led to a tragical
+termination of the career of this young chieftain.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote419"></a><a href="#citation419"
+class="footnote">[419]</a>&nbsp; Mr Tristram has since done this, but on
+foot, the rugged road being impassable in any other way.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote432"></a><a href="#citation432"
+class="footnote">[432]</a>&nbsp; Bait Zac&acirc;ri and Zecariah lie far
+away among the mountains in the south-west.&nbsp; Neither of them would
+command the road which Judas desired to intercept&mdash;neither of them
+therefore answers to the Bath Zacharias of the history any more than
+Baitzur near Hebron does to Bethsura&mdash;all are equally out of the
+question by reason of their distance.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote440"></a><a href="#citation440"
+class="footnote">[440]</a>&nbsp; Very common in Oriental Christendom, and
+called by the Greeks the &Sigma;&eta;&mu;&#940;&nu;&tau;&rho;&omicron;&nu;
+(semantron.)</p>
+<p>The ancient Britons used to summon the congregation to church service by
+means of &ldquo;sacra ligna,&rdquo; is it not likely that these were the
+same as the above, seeing that the Celtic nations were derived from the
+East?</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BYEWAYS IN PALESTINE***</p>
+<pre>
+
+
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Byeways in Palestine, by James Finn
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Byeways in Palestine
+
+
+Author: James Finn
+
+
+
+Release Date: July 18, 2007 [eBook #22097]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BYEWAYS IN PALESTINE***
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1868 James Nisbet and Co. edition by Les Bowler.
+
+ [Picture: Frontispiece]
+
+
+
+
+
+BYEWAYS IN PALESTINE
+
+
+ BY
+ JAMES FINN, M.R.A.S.,
+ AND MEMBER OF THE ASIATIC SOCIETY OF FRANCE,
+ LATE HER MAJESTY'S CONSUL FOR JERUSALEM AND PALESTINE.
+
+ "The land, which we passed through to search it, is an exceeding good
+ land."--NUMB. xiv. 7.
+
+ LONDON:
+ JAMES NISBET & CO., 21 BERNERS STREET.
+ MDCCCLXVIII.
+
+ _To His Excellency_
+ _Right Hon. Francis Lord Napier_, _K.T._,
+ _etc. etc. etc._,
+ _Governor of the Presidency of Madras_,
+ This little Volume
+ _is inscribed_,
+ _in grateful acknowledgment of kindness_
+ _received in_
+ _Jerusalem and elsewhere_,
+
+ BY THE AUTHOR.
+
+_London_, 1867.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+These papers on "Byeways in Palestine" are compiled from notes of certain
+journeys made during many years' residence in that country; omitting the
+journeys made upon beaten roads, and through the principal towns, for the
+mere reason that they were such.
+
+Just what met the eye and ear was jotted down and is now revised after a
+lapse of time, without indulging much in meditation or reflection; these
+are rather suggested by the occurrences, that they may be followed out by
+the reader. Inasmuch, however, as the incidents relate to out-of-the-way
+places, and various seasons of the year, they may be found to contain an
+interest peculiar to themselves, and the account of them may not
+interfere with any other book on Palestine.
+
+I may state that, not being a professed investigator, I carried with me
+no scientific instruments, except sometimes a common thermometer: I had
+no leisure for making excavations, for taking angles with a theodolite,
+or attending to the delicate care of any kind of barometer, being
+employed on my proper business.
+
+Riding by night or by day, in the heat of Syrian summer, or through snows
+and piercing winds of winter on the mountains, I enjoyed the pure climate
+for its own sake. Moreover, I lived among the people, holding
+intercourse with peasants in villages, with Bedaween in deserts, and with
+Turkish governors in towns, or dignified Druses in the Lebanon, and slept
+in native dwellings of all qualities, as well as in convents of different
+sects: in the open air at the foot of a tree, or in a village mosque--in
+a cavern by the highway side, or beneath cliffs near the Dead Sea:
+although more commonly within my own tent, accompanied by native servants
+with a small canteen.
+
+Sad cogitations would arise while traversing, hour after hour, the
+neglected soil, or passing by desolated villages which bear names of
+immense antiquity, and which stand as memorials of miraculous events
+which took place for our instruction and for that of all succeeding ages;
+and then, even while looking forward to a better time to come, the heart
+would sigh as the expression was uttered, "How long?"
+
+These notices will show that the land is one of remarkable fertility
+wherever cultivated, even in a slight degree--witness the vast
+wheat-plains of the south; and is one of extreme beauty--witness the
+green hill-country of the north; although such qualities are by no means
+confined to those districts. Thus it is not necessary, it is not just,
+that believers in the Bible, in order to hold fast their confidence in
+its predictions for the future, should rush into the extreme of
+pronouncing the Holy Land to be cursed in its present capabilities. It
+is verily and indeed cursed in its government and in its want of
+population; but still the soil is that of "a land which the Lord thy God
+careth for." There is a deep meaning in the words, "The earth is the
+Lord's," when applied to that peculiar country; for it is a reserved
+property, an estate in abeyance, and not even in a subordinate sense can
+it be the fief of the men whom it eats up. (Numb. xiii. 32, and Ezek.
+xxxvi. 13, 14.) I have seen enough to convince me that astonishing will
+be the amount of its produce, and the rapidity also, when the obstacles
+now existing are removed.
+
+With respect to antiquarian researches, let me express my deep interest
+in the works now undertaken under the Palestine Exploration Fund. My
+happiness, while residing in the country, would have been much augmented
+had such operations been at that time, _i.e._, between 1846 and 1863,
+commenced in Jerusalem or elsewhere in the Holy Land.
+
+ J. F.
+
+
+
+
+NOTE.
+
+
+The frontispiece picture to this volume represents the relic of a small
+Roman Temple, situated on the eastern edge of the Plain of Sharon, near
+the line of hills, between the two villages Awali and M'zeera'a.
+
+It is quadrangular in form, with a door and portico on its north front.
+
+The portico is supported by two round columns of Corinthian order, and
+two pilasters of the same at the extremities. The columns are of small
+dimensions, the shafts not exceeding nine feet in length; yet in these
+the canon is observed which obtains in the larger proportions found in
+classic lands, namely, that the diameter is somewhat extended near the
+half elevation from the ground. The capitals are of the best design.
+
+The doorway is formed by a very bold and deep moulding, and in the
+upright side-posts is found the same arrangement for holding a stone bar
+in confining the door, as is to be seen in some sepulchres about
+Jerusalem, namely, a curved groove increasing in depth of incision as it
+descends.
+
+The whole edifice bears the same warm tinge of yellow that all those of
+good quality acquire from age in that pure climate.
+
+The roof has been repaired, and the walls in some parts patched up.
+
+On the southern wall, internally, the Moslems have set up a Kebleh niche
+for indicating the direction of prayer.
+
+The peasants call this building the "Boorj," or "Tower."
+
+Near adjoining it are remains of ancient foundations: one quite circular
+and of small diameter.
+
+There is also by the road-side, not far off, a rocky grotto, supplied
+with water by channels from the hills.
+
+My sketches of this interesting relic date from 1848 and 1859, and, as
+far as I am aware, no other traveller had seen it until lately, when the
+members of the Palestine Exploration Expedition visited and took a
+photograph of it, which is now published.
+
+ J. F.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+I. OVER THE JORDAN, AND 1
+ RETURN BY THE WEST
+II. NORTHWARDS TO BEISAN, 85
+ KADIS, ANTIPATRIS,
+ ETC.
+III. SOUTHWARDS ON THE 144
+ PHILISTINE PLAIN AND
+ ITS SEA COAST
+IV. HEBRON TO BEERSHEBA, 184
+ AND HEBRON TO JAFFA
+V. THE LAND OF BENJAMIN 199
+VI. SEBUSTIEH TO CAIFFA 214
+VII. ESDRAELON PLAIN AND 226
+ ITS VICINITY
+VIII. BELAD BESHARAH 253
+IX. UPPER GALILEE--FOREST 264
+ SCENERY
+X. TEMPLE OF BAAL AND 283
+ SEPULCHRE OF
+ PHOENICIA
+XI. JERUSALEM TO PETRA, 289
+ AND RETURN BY THE
+ DEAD SEA
+XII. ACROSS THE 347
+ LEBANON--(THREE
+ PARTS,)
+XIII. NORTH-WEST OF THE 414
+ DEAD SEA
+XIV. SOBA 423
+XV. THE TWO BAIT SAHHOORS 428
+ IDENTIFIED
+XVI. THE BAKOOSH COTTAGE 435
+ APPENDIX A 453
+ APPENDIX B 454
+ INDEX OF PLACES 461
+
+
+
+
+
+I. OVER THE JORDAN AND RETURN BY THE WEST.
+
+
+We were a dozen Englishmen, including three clergymen, undertaking the
+above journey accompanied by the large train of servants, interpreters,
+and muleteers usually required for travelling in the East. And it was on
+Wednesday, the 9th day of May 1855, that we started. This was considered
+almost late in the season for such an enterprise. The weather was hot,
+chiefly produced by a strong shirocco wind at the time; and, in crossing
+over the shoulder of the Mount of Olives, we found the country people
+beginning their harvest at Bethany.
+
+We were of course escorted by a party of Arab guides, partly villagers of
+either _Abu Dis_ or _Selwan_, (Siloam,) and partly of those Ghawarineh
+Arabs not deserving the appellation of Bedaween, who live around and
+about Jericho. These people, of both classes, form a partnership for
+convoy of travellers to the Jordan under arrangements made at the
+consulate. Without them it would be impossible either to find the way to
+Jericho and the river, or to pass along the deserted road, for there are
+always out-lookers about the tops of the hills to give notice that you
+are without an escort, and you would consequently still find that
+travellers may "fall among thieves" between Jerusalem and Jericho;
+besides that, on descending to the plain of Jericho you would certainly
+become the prey of other Arabs of real tribes, ever passing about
+there--including most probably the 'Adwan, to whose hospitality, however,
+we were now about to commit ourselves. To all this must be added, that
+no other Arabs dare undertake to convoy travellers upon that road; the
+Taamra to the south have long felt their exclusion from it to be a great
+grievance, as the gains derived from the employment of escorting
+Europeans are very alluring.
+
+We had with us a deputed commissioner from the 'Adwan, namely, Shaikh
+Fendi, a brother of Shaikh 'Abdu'l 'Azeez. He was delighted with the
+refreshment of eating a cucumber, when we rested by the wayside to eat
+oranges--the delicious produce of Jaffa.
+
+Passing the _Fountain of the Apostles_, (so called,) we jogged along a
+plain road till we reached a booth for selling cups of coffee, at the
+divergence of the road Nebi Moosa, (the reputed sepulchre of the prophet
+Moses, according to the Mohammedans,) then up an ascent still named
+_Tela'at ed Dum_, which is certainly the ancient {3} Adummim, (Joshua xv.
+7)--probably so called from broad bands of _red_ among the strata of the
+rocks. Here there are also curious wavy lines of brown flint, undulating
+on a large scale among the limestone cliffs. This phenomenon is
+principally to be seen near the ruined and deserted Khan, or eastern
+lodging-place, situated at about half the distance of our journey. The
+name is _Khatroon_.
+
+As we proceeded, our escort, mostly on foot, went on singing merrily, and
+occasionally bringing us tufts of scented wild plants found in crevices
+by the roadside. Then we came to long remains of an ancient water
+conduit, leading to ruins of a small convent. In a few minutes after the
+latter, we found ourselves looking down a fearfully deep precipice of
+rocks on our left hand, with a stream flowing at the bottom, apparently
+very narrow indeed, and the sound of it scarcely audible. This is the
+brook _Kelt_, by some supposed to be the _Cherith_ of Elijah's history.
+Suddenly we were on the brow of a deep descent, with the Ghor, or Jericho
+plain, and the Dead Sea spread out below. In going down, we had upon our
+left hand considerable fragments of ancient masonry, containing lines of
+Roman reticulated brickwork.
+
+It was now evening; a breeze, but not a cool one, blowing; and we left
+aside for this time the pretty camping station of Elisha's Fountain,
+because we had business to transact at the village of Er-Rihha, (or
+Jericho.) There accordingly our tents were pitched; and in a circle at
+our doors were attentive listeners to a narration of the events of Lieut.
+Molyneux's Expedition on the Jordan and Dead Sea in 1847.
+
+Thermometer after sunset, inside the tent, at 89 degrees Fahrenheit.
+Sleep very much disturbed by small black sandflies and ants.
+
+_Thursday_, 10_th_.--Thermometer at 76 degrees before sunrise. The scene
+around us was animated and diversified; but several of us had been
+accustomed to Oriental affairs--some for a good many years; and some were
+even familiar with the particular localities and customs of this
+district. Others were young in age, and fresh to the country; expressing
+their wonderment at finding themselves so near to scenes read of from
+infancy--scarcely believing that they had at length approached near to
+
+ "That bituminous lake
+ Where Sodom stood,"
+
+and filled with joyous expectation at the visit so soon to be made to the
+Jordan, and beyond it. Some were quoting Scripture; some quoting poetry;
+and others taking particular notice of the wild Arabs, who were by this
+time increasing in number about us,--their spears, their mares, their
+guttural language, and not less the barren desert scene before us, being
+objects of romantic interest.
+
+At length all the tents and luggage were loaded on the mules, and ten men
+of the village were hired for helping to convey our property across the
+river; and we went forward over the strange plain which is neither desert
+sand, as in Africa, nor wilderness of creeping plants and flowers, as on
+the way to Petra, but a puzzling, though monotonous succession of low
+eminences,--of a nature something like rotten chalk ground, if there be
+such a thing in existence,--between which eminences we had to wind our
+way, until we reached the border of tamarisk-trees, large reeds, willow,
+aspen, etc., that fringes the river; invisible till one reaches close
+upon it.
+
+At the bathing (or baptism) place of the Greeks, northwards from that of
+the Latins, to which English travellers are usually conducted, we had to
+cross, by swimming as we could. {5} King David, on his return from
+exile, had a ferry-boat to carry over his household, but we had none.
+Probably, on his escaping from Absalom, he crossed as we did.
+
+The middle part of the river was still too deep for mere fording. Horses
+and men had to swim; so the gentlemen sat still on their saddles, with
+their feet put up on the necks of their horses, which were led by naked
+swimming Arabs in the water holding the bridles, one on each side.
+
+Baggage was carried over mostly on the animals; but had to be previously
+adjusted and tightened, so as to be least liable to get wetted. Small
+parcels were carried over on the heads of the swimmers. These all
+carried their own clothes in that manner. One of the luggage mules fell
+with his load in the middle of the stream. It was altogether a lively
+scene. Our Arabs were much darker over the whole body than I had
+expected to find them; and the 'Adwan have long plaits of hair hanging on
+the shoulders when the _kefieh_, or coloured head-dress, is removed. The
+horses and beasts of burden were often restive in mid-current, and
+provoked a good deal of merriment. Some of the neighbouring camps having
+herds of cattle, sent them to drink and to cool themselves in the river,
+as the heat of the day increased. Their drivers urged them in, and then
+enjoyed the fun of keeping them there by swimming round and round them.
+One cow was very nearly lost, however, being carried away rapidly and
+helplessly in the direction of the Dead Sea, but she was recovered. The
+Jericho people returned home, several of them charged with parting
+letters addressed to friends in Jerusalem; and we were left reposing,
+literally reposing, on the eastern bank,--the English chatting happily;
+the Arabs smoking or sleeping under shade of trees; pigeons cooing among
+the thick covert, and a Jordan nightingale soothing us occasionally, with
+sometimes a hawk or an eagle darting along the sky; while the
+world-renowned river rolled before our eyes.
+
+ "Labitur et labetur in omne volubilis aevum."
+
+The novelty of the scenes, and the brilliancy of the atmosphere, as well
+the vivacity of the recent transactions in "passing over Jordan," had
+their duly buoyant effect upon youthful persons,--who were, however, not
+forgetful of past events in these places belonging to sacred history.
+
+The baggage went on; but, as the appointed halting-place was only about
+two hours distant, we remained enjoying ourselves as we were during most
+of the day.
+
+Among our novel friends is an Arab hero named _Gublan_, as they pronounce
+it here, (but it is really the Turkish word _Kaplan_, meaning _Tiger_,)
+and his uncle, old 'Abdu'l 'Azeez. About three years before, Gublan had
+been attacked by Government soldiers at Jericho. He made a feigned
+retreat, and, leading them into the thickets of Neb'k trees, suddenly
+wheeled round and killed six of them. The humbled Government force
+retired, and the dead were buried, by having a mound of earth piled over
+them. Of course, such an incident was never reported to the Sublime
+Invincible Porte at Constantinople; but it was a curious coincidence,
+that this very morning, amid our circle before the tents, after breakfast
+and close to that mound, we had Gublan, 'Abdu'l 'Azeez, and the Turkish
+Aga of the present time, all peaceably smoking pipes together in our
+company.
+
+Among our gentlemen we had a man of fortune and literary attainments, who
+had been in Algiers, and now amused himself with dispensing with servants
+or interpreters--speaking some Arabic. He brought but very light
+luggage. This he placed upon a donkey, and drove it himself--wearing
+Algerine town costume. The Bedaween, however, as I need scarcely say,
+did not mistake him for an Oriental.
+
+Moving forward in the afternoon, we were passing over the _Plains of
+Moab_, "on this [east] side Jordan by Jericho"--where Balaam, son of
+Beor, saw, from the heights above, all Israel encamped, and cried out,
+"How goodly are thy tents, O Jacob! and thy tabernacles, O Israel! As
+the valleys are they spread forth, as gardens by the river's side, as the
+trees of lign-aloes which the Lord hath planted, and as cedar-trees
+beside the waters. . . . Blessed is he that blesseth thee, and cursed is
+he that curseth thee," (Num. xxii. I, and xxiv. 5, 6, 9.) This territory
+is also called the _Land of Moab_, where the second covenant was made
+with the people by the ministry of Moses--the one "beside the covenant
+which he made with them in Horeb."
+
+Our ride was a gradual ascent; and after some time we were met by young
+'Ali, the favourite son of the principal Shaikh Deab, (Wolf,) with a
+small but chosen escort, sent on by his father to welcome us. We saw a
+good deal of corn land, and people reaping their harvest. This belongs
+to two or three scattered villages about there, under the immediate
+protection of the Deab 'Adwan. The Arabs, however, in this part of the
+world, do condescend to countenance and even to profit by agriculture,
+for they buy slaves to sow and reap for them.
+
+In two hours and a half from the Jordan we came to our halting-place, at
+a spot called _Cuferain_, ("two villages")--the Kiriathaim of Jer.
+xlviii. 23--at the foot of the mountain, with a strong stream of water
+rushing past us. No sign, however, of habitations: only, at a little
+distance to the south, were ruins of a village called _Er Ram_, (a very
+common name in Palestine; but this is not Ramoth-Gilead;) and at half an
+hour to the north was an inhabited village called _Nimrin_, from which
+the stream flowed to us.--See Jer. xlviii. 34: "The waters of Nimrin
+shall be desolate."
+
+We had a refreshing breeze from the north which is justly counted a
+luxury in summer time. The shaikhs came and had coffee with me. They
+said that on the high summits we shall have cooler temperature than in
+Jerusalem, which is very probable.
+
+After dinner I sat at my tent-door, by the rivulet side, looking
+southwards over the Dead Sea, and to the west over the line of the
+promised land of Canaan, which I had never before had an opportunity of
+seeing in that manner, although the well-known verse had been often
+repeated in England--
+
+ "Oh could I stand where Moses stood,
+ And view the landscape o'er,
+ Not Death's cold stream nor Jordan's flood
+ Should fright me from the shore."
+
+I then read over to myself in Arabic, the Psalms for the evening
+service--namely, liii., liv., and lv.
+
+About sunset there was an alarm that a lad who had accompanied us as a
+servant from Jerusalem was missing ever since we left the Jordan.
+Horse-men were sent in every direction in search of him. It was
+afterwards discovered that he had returned to Jericho.
+
+At about a hundred yards south of us was a valley called _Se'eer_, (its
+brook, however, comes down from the north)--abounding in fine rosy
+oleander shrubs.
+
+During the night the water near us seemed alive with croaking frogs.
+Last night we had the sand-flies to keep us awake.
+
+_Friday_, 11_th_.--Thermometer 66 degrees before sunrise. My earliest
+looks were towards Canaan, "that goodly land"--"the hills, from which
+cometh my help." How keen must have been the feeling of his state of
+exile when David was driven to this side the river!
+
+Before breakfast I bathed in the Se'eer, among bushes of oleander and the
+strong-scented _ghar_--a purple-spiked flower always found adjoining to
+or in water-beds. Then read my Arabic Psalms as usual.
+
+Before starting, young 'Ali and his party asked us all for presents, and
+got none. We gave answer unanimously that we meant to give presents to
+his father when we should see him. Strange how depraved the Arab mind
+becomes on this matter of asking for gifts wherever European travellers
+are found!--so different from the customs of ancient times, and it is not
+found in districts off the common tracks of resort.
+
+Our road lay up the hills, constantly growing more steep and precipitous,
+and occasionally winding between large rocks, which were often overgrown
+with honeysuckle in full luxuriance. The Arabs scrambled like wild
+animals over the rocks, and brought down very long streamers of
+honeysuckle, Luwayeh, as they call it, which they wound round and round
+the necks of our horses, and generally got piastres for doing so. About
+two-thirds of the distance up the ascent we rested, in order to relieve
+the animals, or to sketch views, or enjoy the glorious scenery that lay
+extended below us--comprising the Dead Sea, the line of the river trees,
+Jericho, the woods of Elisha's Fountain, and the hills towards Jerusalem.
+The Bedaween have eyes like eagles; and some avouched that they could see
+the Mount of Olives, and the minaret upon its summit. They indicated to
+us the positions of Es-Salt and of Heshban.
+
+We had now almost attained a botanical region resembling that of the
+Jerusalem elevation, instead of the Indian vegetation upon the Jordan
+plain; only there was _ret'm_ (the juniper of 1 Kings xix. 4) to be
+found, with pods in seed at that season; but we had also our long
+accustomed terebinth and arbutus, with honeysuckle and pink
+ground-convolvulus. The rocks were variegated with streaks of pink,
+purple, orange, and yellow, as at Khatroon, on the Jerusalem road.
+Partridges were clucking among the bushes; and the bells on the necks of
+our mules lulled us with their sweet chime, as the animals strolled
+browsing around in the gay sunshine.
+
+When we moved forward once more, it was along paths of short zigzags
+between cliffs, so that our procession was constantly broken into small
+pieces. At length we lost sight of the Ghor and the Dead Sea; and after
+some time traversing miles of red and white cistus, red everlasting, and
+fragrant thyme and sage, with occasional terebinth-trees festooned with
+honeysuckle, we came upon a district covered with millions, or billions,
+or probably trillions, of locusts, not fully grown, and only taking short
+flights; but they greatly annoyed our horses. My choice Arab, being at
+that time ridden by my servant, fairly bolted away with fright for a
+considerable distance.
+
+At length we halted at a small spring oozing from the soil of the field.
+The place was called _Hheker Zaboot_--a pretty place, and cuckoos on the
+trees around us; only the locusts were troublesome.
+
+'Abdu'l 'Azeez proposed that instead of going at once to Ammon, we should
+make a detour by Heshbon and Elealeh, on the way to his encampment. To
+this we all assented.
+
+During the ride forward the old shaikh kept close to me, narrating
+incidents of his life,--such as his last year's losses by the Beni
+Sukh'r, who plundered him of all his flocks and herds, horses, tents, and
+even most of his clothing,--then described the march of Ibrahim Pasha's
+army in their disastrous attempt upon Kerak: also some of the valiant
+achievements of his kinsman Gublan; and then proceeding to witticism,
+gave me his etymological origin of the name of Hhesban--namely, that, on
+the subsiding of the great deluge, the first object that Noah perceived
+was that castle, perched as it is upon a lofty peak; whereupon he
+exclaimed, _Hhus'n ban_--"a castle appears!" I wish I could recollect
+more of his tales.
+
+After passing through romantic scenery of rocks and evergreen trees, at a
+sudden turn of the road we came to large flocks and herds drinking, or
+couched beside a copious stream of water gushing from near the foot of a
+rocky hill. This they called _'Ain Hhesban_; and told us that the
+Egyptian army above alluded to, twenty thousand in number, passed the
+night there before arriving at Kerak. To many of them it was their last
+night on earth.
+
+There were remains of large masonry lying about, and the scene was truly
+beautiful--to which the bells of the goats and cows added a charming
+musical effect.
+
+I asked an Arab, who was bathing in a pool, where he had come from, and
+he sulkily answered, "From t'other end of the world!" And I suppose he
+was right in saying so, for what meaning could he attach to the
+designation, _the world_. He must have meant the world of his own
+experience, or that of his tribe, or his parents--probably extending to
+the end of the Dead Sea in one direction, to the Lake of Tiberias in
+another; to the Mediterranean in the west, and in the east to the wilds
+unknown beyond the road of the Hhaj pilgrimage. "From the other end of
+the world," quoth he, the companion of a shepherd boy with his flute, at
+a mountain spring, pitching pebbles at the sheep of his flock to keep
+them from wandering away over their extent of "the world."
+
+As we proceeded, there were several other streams issuing from the hills,
+some of them falling in pretty cascades into thickets of oleander below.
+All these meeting together, formed a line of river flowing between grassy
+banks--near which we saw considerable remains of water-mills, not of
+great antiquity.
+
+Next we reached two small forts: the one upon our side the stream they
+called _Shuneh_, (the usual name used for that kind of building;) the
+other was across the water, and they called it _Shefa 'Amer_. I should
+wonder if our guides knew the existence of the town called _Shefa 'Amer_,
+near Caiffa. They told us that both these forts had been erected by
+Deab's grandfather, but this is incredible.
+
+Near the Shuneh I observed a very large sarcophagus, cut in the solid
+rock, but not so far finished as to allow of its being removed. In the
+court-yard there was nothing remarkable. There were, however, some
+ancient rabbeted stones lying near. Here I may remark, with respect to
+the sarcophagus, that such things are rare on the east of the Jordan, or
+anywhere else so far to the south. There are two lids of such lying on
+the plain of Sharon, alongside the Jaffa road from Jerusalem; and the
+next southernmost one that I know of (excepting those at Jerusalem) is an
+ornamented lid, near Sebustieh, the ancient Samaria; but they abound in
+Phoenicia.
+
+Forward again we went, higher and higher, with wild flowers in profusion,
+and birds carolling all around. Then literally climbing up a mountain
+side, we came to a cleft in a precipice, which they called _El Buaib_,
+(the little gate,) with unmistakable marks of ancient cuttings about
+there. Traversing a fine plain of wheat, we at length reached the
+ancient city of Heshbon, with its acropolis of temple and castle.
+
+That plain would be fine exercise-ground for the cavalry of Sihon, king
+of the Amorites. Fresh, and almost chilly, was the mountain air; but the
+sky rather cloudy.
+
+How magnificent was the prospect over to Canaan! We were all persuaded
+that the Mount of Olives would be visible thence on a fine day; and I
+have no doubt whatever that the site on which we were standing is that
+peak--the only peak breaking the regular outline of the Moab mountains
+which is seen from Jerusalem.
+
+We scattered ourselves about in several groups among pavements and
+columns of temples, (the most perfect of which are in the Acropolis,)
+sepulchres, cisterns, and quarries, picking up fragments of pottery, with
+some pattern work (not highly ornamental, however) upon them, and
+tesserae or the cubes of tesselated pavement, such as may be found all
+over Palestine. The Bedaween call them _muzzateem_ or _muzzameet_
+indifferently. There were some good Corinthian capitals, fragments of
+cornices, and portions of semicircular arches, and pieces of walls that
+had been repaired at different periods. I entered one rock-hewn
+sepulchre which contained seven small chambers; six of these had been
+evidently broken into by main force, the seventh was still closed. This
+was S.W. of the Acropolis.
+
+All the works or ornamentations above ground were of Greek or Roman
+construction, but we found no inscriptions or coins. Heshbon must have
+been at all periods a strong place for defence, but with an unduly large
+proportion of ornamentation to the small size of the city according to
+modern ideas. Before leaving this site, far inferior to 'Amman, as we
+found afterwards, I got the Arabs around me upon a rising ground, and,
+with a compass in hand, wrote down from their dictation the names of
+sites visible to their sharp eyesight:--
+
+To To
+S.S.W. Umm Sheggar. S.E.S. Kustul.
+ " Neba (Nebo?). S.E. Umm el 'Aamed.
+ " Main. " Khan em Meshettah.
+S. Medeba. " Jawah.
+S.E.S. Ekfairat " Kuriet es Sook.
+ (Kephiroth?).
+ " Jelool. E. Samek.
+ " Umm er Rumaneh. E.E.N. Ela'al.
+ " Zubairah. N. Es-Salt.
+ " Manjah. (The town not visible.)
+
+These must have been the places that "stood under the shadow of Heshbon,"
+(Jer. xlviii. 45.) One of them at least appears in Joshua xiii. 17,
+etc., among "the cities that are in the plain of Heshbon." {17}
+
+In half an hour we came to _Ela'al_, (Elealeh,) (Isa. xv. 4 and xvi. 9,
+and Jer. xlviii. 34.) Large stones were lying about, and one column
+standing upright, but without a capital. Fine corn-plains in every
+direction around. Our tents pitched at _Na'oor_ were visible to the
+E.N.E. through an opening between two hills. Cool cloudy day; all of us
+enjoying the ride through wheat-fields, and over large unoccupied
+plains--my old friend 'Abdu'l 'Azeez still adhering to me as his willing
+auditor.
+
+On coming up to his camp at Na'oor, we found that Shaikh Deab had already
+arrived.
+
+And now I may pause in the narrative to describe the _status_ of (1.)
+ourselves; (2.) the Arabs.
+
+(1.) Although apparently forming one company of English travellers, we
+were really a combination of several small sets, of two or three persons
+each--every set having its own cook, muleteer, and dragoman; but all the
+sets on terms of pleasant intercourse, and smoking or taking tea with
+each other.
+
+We calculated that our horses and mules amounted to above a hundred in
+number.
+
+(2.) The whole territory from Kerak to Jerash is that of our 'Adwan
+tribe, but divided into three sections--the middle portion being that of
+the supreme chief Deab, the northern third that of 'Abdu'l 'Azeez, and
+the southern that of a third named Altchai in the south towards Kerak;
+but they all combine when necessary for a general object.
+
+The 'Adwan sow corn by the labour of their purchased slaves. Gublan at
+Cuferain, Deab and his son 'Ali at Nimrin, and a portion of the tribe
+called "the children of Eyoob" cultivate in the same manner a tract near
+the Dead Sea called the _Mezraa'_. These latter attach themselves
+sometimes to the Deab section, called the _Dar 'Ali_, and sometimes to
+the Gublan section, called the _Dar Nim'r_.
+
+Their district is but a comparatively narrow strip at present, as they
+are pressed upon by the _Beni Sukh'r_ on the east, who are again pressed
+upon by the _'Anezeh_ farther eastward; these last are allies of our
+people.
+
+The Ghor or Jordan plain is open ground for all Arabs; and a few low
+fellows called Abbad Kattaleen, hold a slip of ground downwards between
+Es-Salt and the Jordan. Es-Salt is a populous and thriving town, the
+only one in all that country. Kerak, to the south, may be as large, and
+contain more remnants of mediaeval strength, but its affairs are not so
+prosperous.
+
+This station of Na'oor {19} is upon a long, low, green plain, lying
+between two lines of high ground; and on a map, it would be nearly
+central between the northern and southern extremities of the 'Adwan
+country, or Belka. {20}
+
+Strange and wild was the scene of the Bedawi encampment--the black tents
+of goats' hair, the dark and ragged population sauntering about, the
+flocks and the horses, the ragged or naked children; and then the women
+in their blue, only article of dress, long-sleeved, their uncombed hair,
+and lips dyed blue, all walking with dignity of step, most of them
+employed in hanging up washed fleeces of wool to dry. One in particular
+I remarked for her stately appearance, with the blue dress trailing long
+behind, and the sleeves covering her hands; she was giving commands to
+others.
+
+As soon as we were well settled, and the first confusion over in making
+our several arrangements with servants, etc., Shaikh Deab sent a
+messenger asking permission for him to pay us a visit of welcome; and a
+serious ceremonial visit took place accordingly. The great man was
+arrayed in green silk, and carried a silver-handled sword and dagger; a
+few chosen men of the tribe formed his train; coffee, pipes, and long
+compliments followed. We all remarked his keen eyes, ardent like those
+of a hawk in pursuit of prey. On taking leave he announced his intention
+of presenting each gentleman with a sheep for our evening meal.
+
+As soon as the indispensable solemnity of his visit was over, the camp
+became more animated; the sheep were slaughtered; various parties being
+formed for the feast, which was finished by the Arabs; and I invited all
+to my tent for tea at night, when the weather became so piercing cold
+that I found it necessary to have some hot brandy and water to drink.
+
+In this place I wish to say how excellent is animal food dressed
+immediately after killing. The practice is found, all through the Bible
+histories, from Abraham entertaining the angels at Mamre, to the father
+of the prodigal son killing the fatted calf for his reception. At that
+stage the meat is exceedingly tender and delicate; whereas, if left, as
+the European practice is, for some time after killing, it has to go
+through another and less wholesome process in order to become tender
+again. There are numerous medical opinions in favour of the Oriental
+method of cooking the food immediately.
+
+Another observation will not be out of place, on the almost universal
+eating of mutton throughout Asia. I do not mean the anti-beef-eating
+Brahmins of India, but in all countries of Asia, by eating of meat is
+understood the eating of mutton, and horned cattle are reserved for
+agricultural labour. In case of exceptions being met with, they are only
+such few exceptions as help to prove the rule. This may perhaps be
+attributed to the general insecurity of animal property in the East; but
+that I do not think a sufficient reason to account for it. It seems,
+however, that the ancient Israelites were not so much limited to eating
+from the small cattle.
+
+_Saturday_, 12_th_.--Thermometer 37 degrees just before sunrise, nearly
+thirty degrees lower than under the same circumstances two days before.
+The night had been cold and damp; the grass was found wet in the places
+sheltered from the current of wind, which had elsewhere formed hoarfrost
+over the field. This reminded us of the elevation we had reached to; and
+we all exclaimed as to the reasonableness of Jacob's expostulation with
+Laban, when he asserted that "in the day the drought [or heat] consumed
+him, and the frost by night," (Gen. xxxi. 40.) We were upon frozen
+ground in the month of May, after passing through a flight of locusts on
+the preceding day.
+
+A lively scene was the packing up. 'Abdu'l 'Azeez was happy at seeing us
+all happy, and laying hold of a couple of dirty, ragged urchins, he shook
+them well, and lifted them up from the ground, and offered them to me,
+saying, "Here, take these little imps of mine, and do what you like with
+them; send them to England if you will, for they are growing up like
+beasts here, and what can I do?" All I could do was to speak cheerfully
+to them, and make them some little presents. At the door of Deab's tent
+was his bay mare of high race, and his spear planted beside her. He
+accompanied us as far as his own encampment, two or three hours over wide
+plains and grassy pastures. Soon after leaving Na'oor he took us up a
+small hill, which was called _Setcher_, (probably _Setker_ in town
+pronunciation,) where there were some ruins of no considerable amount,
+but the stones of cyclopean size. Query--Were these remains of the
+primeval Zamzummim? (Deut. ii. 20.)
+
+At _Dahair el Hhumar_ (Asses' Hill) we alighted in Deab's own camp, not
+large in extent or number of people, probably only a small detachment
+from the main body brought with him for the occasion, but not such, or so
+placed, as to interfere with the camp of 'Abdul 'Azeez. However, the
+well-known emblems of the Shaikh's presence were observed--namely, his
+tent being placed at the west end of the line, and his spear at its
+entrance. Here took place the formality of returning his visit to us
+yesterday; and here, after coffee and pipes, our presents were produced
+and given. The travellers were collected in a very long black tent,
+together with Deab, his son and friends. A screen at one end divided us
+from the women's apartment, _i.e._, what would be the _Hhareem_ in houses
+of towns; behind this curtain the women were peeping, chattering, and
+laughing; of course we might expect this to be about the
+extraordinary-looking strangers. It has been conjectured that such a
+separation of the tent is implied in Gen. xviii. 6 and 10, when "Sarah
+heard it in the tent-door which was behind him;" but this has no
+foundation in the plain narrative of Scripture, only in the Arabic
+translation the words seem to imply that understanding.
+
+The presentation of offerings was a grave and solemn affair. Each donor
+produced his tribute with an apology for the insignificance of the gift,
+which was then exhibited in silence by an attendant to the populace of
+the tribe crowding outside.
+
+The ceremony was concluded by shouts of welcome, and a huge meal of
+pilaff (rice and mutton upon a great tray of tinned copper) and leban,
+(curdled milk,) with more smoking. Here we took leave of the chief, who
+sent on a detachment of his tribe to escort us for the rest of our
+expedition.
+
+Remounted, and proceeded N.E. by N.; hitherto we had come due north from
+Heshbon. Passed a hill called _Jehaarah_, and in a short time reached
+the source of the river of Ammon, rising out of the ground, with a large
+pavement of masonry near it. A numerous flock of sheep and goats were
+being watered at the spring, it being near the time of As'r--_i.e._,
+mid-afternoon.
+
+Here the antiquities of _Amman_ commenced; and remains of considerable
+buildings continually solicited our attention, as we passed on for
+quarter of an hour more to our tents, which we found already pitched and
+waiting for us among a crowd of ancient temples and baths and
+porticoes,--in a forum between a line of eight large Corinthian columns
+and the small river; in front too of a Roman theatre in good condition.
+Some of the party, who were familiar with the ruins of Rome and Athens,
+exclaimed aloud, "What would the modern Romans give to have so much to
+show as this, within a similar space!"
+
+This was Saturday afternoon; and we had already resolved to spend our
+Sabbath in this wonderful and agreeable place, so remarkable in Scripture
+history, and so seldom visited by Europeans.
+
+I climbed up the seats of the theatre, and rested near the top, enjoying
+the grand spectacle of luxurious architecture around; then descended, and
+walked along its proscenium; but neither reciting passages of Euripides
+nor of Terence, as some enthusiasts might indulge themselves in doing,
+before an imagined audience of tetrarchs, centurions, or legionaries, or
+other
+
+ "Romanos rerum dominos, gentemque togatam."
+
+Close to this theatre was a covered and sumptuous building, which I could
+not but suppose to be a naumachia, from its having rising rows of seats
+around the central space, with a channel leading into this from the
+river. As the shadows of evening lengthened, the heat of the day was
+moderated, and I sauntered along the bank of the stream till I came to a
+large headless statue of a female figure lying in the water. Some men
+lifted it upon the green bank for me; but it was far too heavy to be
+transported to Jerusalem for the Literary Society's Museum.
+
+The swift-flowing rivulet abounded in fish, some of which the Arabs
+killed for us, either by throwing stones or shooting them with bullets,
+having no other means of getting at them; but the latter of these methods
+was too costly to be often adopted. However, we had some fish for dinner
+in "Rabbah, the city of waters." This stream is the commencement of the
+Zerka, which we were to meet afterwards, after its course hence N.E. and
+then N.W.
+
+I feasted a dozen Arabs at my tent-door. Shaikh 'Abdul 'Azeez laughed
+when I remarked that this place was better worth seeing than Heshbon, and
+said, "This is a king's city. It was the city of King _Ghedayus_; and
+Jerash, which is still more splendid, was built by _Sheddad_, of the
+primitive race of the _Beni 'Ad_." Beyond this, of course, it was
+impossible for him to imagine anything in matters of antiquity.
+
+In my evening's Scripture reading, I was much struck with the opening of
+the 65th Psalm: "Praise waiteth for Thee, O God, in Zion,"--which passes
+over all the examples of human achievement elsewhere, in order to
+celebrate the peculiar and undying honours of Jerusalem. So now the
+Grecian and the Roman colonies, who erected the marvels of architecture
+around me, are gone; while the Jewish people, the Hebrew language, the
+city of Jerusalem, and the Bible revelations of mercy from God to man,
+continue for ever. But most particularly does this psalm, taken with the
+circumstances there before our eyes, point out the difference made
+between Ammon and Israel, and the reason for it, as predicted in Ezek.
+xxv., 1-7:--"The word of the Lord came again unto me, saying, Son of man,
+set thy face against the Ammonites, and prophesy against them; and say
+unto the Ammonites, Hear the word of the Lord God: Thus saith the Lord
+God; Because thou saidst, Aha, against my sanctuary, when it was
+profaned; and against the land of Israel, when it was desolate; and
+against the house of Judah, when they went into captivity; behold,
+therefore I will deliver thee to the men of the east for a possession,
+and they shall set their palaces in thee, and make their dwellings in
+thee: they shall eat thy fruit, and they shall drink thy milk. And I
+will make Rabbah a stable for camels, and the Ammonites a couching-place
+for flocks; and ye shall know that I am the Lord. For thus saith the
+Lord God; Because thou hast clapped thine hands, and stamped with the
+feet, and rejoiced in heart with all thy despite against the land of
+Israel; behold, therefore I will stretch out mine hand upon thee, and
+will deliver thee for a spoil to the heathen; and I will cut thee off
+from the people, and I will cause thee to perish out of the countries: I
+will destroy thee; and thou shalt know that I am the Lord."
+
+_Sunday_, 13_th_.--Dew on the grass; but it was the morning dew, which,
+like human goodness, was soon exhaled.
+
+After meditating on the chapters in Numbers and Deuteronomy which refer
+to the conduct and destinies of Ammon and Moab, and reading Jer. xlviii.
+and xlix. within "the flowing valley" of the 4th verse of the latter, I
+was summoned to divine service in a tent fitted up for the
+purpose,--carpets on the floor "honoris causa;" a table covered with
+simple white, and a serious congregation of Englishmen before it, each
+with his own Bible and prayer-book. Thank God that to carry such books
+about in the wildest deserts is a characteristic of my countrymen!
+
+This city of _'Amman_ is "the city in the midst of the river" of Joshua
+xiii. 9; and "Rabbah of the children of Ammon"--the royal city--"the city
+of waters" of 2 Sam. xii. 26, 27:--to the siege of which Joab invited
+King David, "lest he should take it, and it should be called after his
+name." Here was also deposited the huge iron bedstead of Og, king of
+Bashan.
+
+Under the Ptolemy dynasty--successors of Alexander--it was rebuilt, with
+the name of Philadelphia. Several of the best edifices here, now
+partially ruined, belong to that period.
+
+Under the Crusaders it was a flourishing city and district, retaining the
+Grecian name.
+
+I could not but reflect on the infinite prescience that dictated the
+prophecies of the Bible--no tongue could speak more plainly to us than
+the scene around us did, the fulfilment of the denunciations that these
+cities of Moab and Ammon should remain _as cities_ "without
+inhabitants"--"not a man to dwell therein"--and "driven out every man,
+right forth, and none shall gather up him that wandereth"--"desolate" and
+"most desolate."
+
+In the afternoon we walked about to inspect the antiquities, and found
+several remains of Christian churches with bell-towers attached to
+them--certainly not originally minarets. These edifices had been
+afterwards, in Mohammedan times, converted into mosques, as evidenced by
+the niche made in the south wall of each, pointing to Mecca; and there
+are watch-towers for signals on all the summits of hills around. The
+city lies nestled in a valley between these hills.
+
+The first building I examined was among those of the citadel placed upon
+a lofty eminence commanding the city, the ground-plan of which building
+is here shown--
+
+ [Picture: Ground-plan of possible old church]
+
+The interior of the walls was so profusely embellished with festoons of
+roses and vine-grapes--both sculptured in stone and wrought in stucco,
+and of very large size--that there was no room left for pictures or
+images. The roof of this building is almost all fallen in. I imagined
+this to have been a Christian church, of very remote antiquity, on
+account of the vine and the roses, which are peculiarly Christian
+symbols--alluding to the texts, "I am the true Vine," and "I am the Rose
+of Sharon;" but the chambers in each corner are difficult to account for.
+The east and west ends have no doors.
+
+Near this is a square mass of masonry, upon which are standing six
+columns, of magnificent dimensions, which no doubt originally supported a
+roof. Their capitals, of chaste and correct Corinthian style, with
+portions of ornamental entablature, are lying near. Perhaps belonging to
+this, but at some distance, lies a ponderous piece of architrave, on
+which, between lines of moulding, is an inscription in Greek--illegible
+except the three letters--[Greek text]. These letters were nine inches
+in length.
+
+Nigh to this, again, was a square building of rabbeted stones, equal to
+almost the largest in the walls of Jerusalem.
+
+All down the hill, descending to our camp, were fragments of columns and
+of decorated friezes of temples, that had evidently been rolled or had
+slidden down from their places.
+
+Upon various walls of dilapidated edifices I observed the curious marks,
+slightly scratched, which almost resemble alphabetical characters, but
+are not; and which have, wherever met with and wherever noticed, which is
+but seldom, puzzled travellers, however learned, to decipher. I copied
+the following:--
+
+ [Picture: Bedaween Arab token 1]
+
+And from the shaft of a column still erect, half way down the hill, I
+copied the following:--
+
+ [Picture: Bedaween Arab token 2]
+
+I have since learned that they are the tokens of the Bedaween Arabs, by
+which one tribe is distinguished from another. In common parlance they
+are called the _Ausam_ (plural of Wasam) of the several tribes. {33}
+
+In a valley to the north of us, leading westwards from the main valley,
+we found a beautiful mausoleum tomb,--a building, not an excavation in
+rock,--containing six sarcophagi, or ornamented stone coffins, ranged
+upon ledges of masonry, along three sides of the chamber. These were
+very large, and all of the same pattern--the lids remaining upon some of
+them, but shifted aside. Beautiful sculptured embellishments were upon
+the inside walls and over the portal outside, but no inscriptions to
+indicate the period or persons to whom they belonged. Inside, however,
+were rudely scratched the modern Arab tribe-signs, showing that persons
+of such tribes had visited there; so that Europeans are not the only
+travellers who help to disfigure ancient monuments by scribbling. Along
+this western valley were several other such mausoleums. Thence we
+mounted on a different side to the summit of that hill from which I have
+here begun my description of edifices--upon a gentle sloping road,
+evidently of artificial cutting, quite feasible for ascent of chariots.
+
+Near the square (possible) church before mentioned, (though I should say
+that our party were not all convinced of its being a church,) is a
+prodigiously large cistern, of good masonry. From the top of the strong
+walls of the building--while some Arab boys below me were reaching birds'
+nests--I got from our guide the following list of sites in the
+neighbourhood. They were of course unable to discriminate between
+ancient and modern names; and I do not find one Bible name among them
+all:--
+
+From north to west--
+Thuggeret el Baider. Esh-Shemesani.
+Kassar Waijees. Esh-Shwaifiyeh.
+Es-Salt. Umm Malfoof.
+From west to east--
+'Abdoon. Mesdar 'Aishah.
+Umm es Swaiweeneh. El Mergab.
+Towards the east--
+Merj Merka. 'Ain Ghazal.
+ Ursaifah (in a valley with a
+river).
+ El Muntar el Kassar, between two
+artificial hills.
+
+The people informed me of a place, a little nearer than Kerak, called
+_Rabbah_. This latter may be a _Rabbath-Moab_.
+
+I have no further notes to transcribe respecting the architectural
+remains; but they are so numerous and so important that a week would not
+suffice for their thorough investigation. All our party were highly
+gratified at having visited this Rabbath-Ammon--_alias_
+Philadelphia--_alias_, at present, 'Amman. We were not, however, so
+fortunate as Lord Lindsay in finding a fulfilment of the prophecy (Ezek.
+xxv. 5) with respect to camels, either alive or dead. Probably, when he
+was there, it was soon after an Egyptian military expedition to Kerak.
+The prodigious number of dead camels that he saw there would seem to
+indicate that a great Arab battle had been fought at that place shortly
+before. It is only in this way that we could account for a cannonball
+(about a six-pounder) which one of the boys carried about, in following
+us, all the afternoon, wishing us to buy it of him as a curiosity.
+
+On returning to the tents, I found an old Jerusalem acquaintance--a
+Moslem named 'Abderrahhman Bek el 'Asali--and with him several people
+from Es-Salt; among these a Christian named Abbas.
+
+From conversation with them I got some fresh information on Arab affairs.
+These people took the opportunity of glorifying their native town;
+related how they are frequently at war, and that successfully, with the
+'Adwan; and when acting in concert with the Abbad, or much more so when
+in alliance with the Beni Sukh'r, can always repel them; only it happens
+that sometimes the 'Adwan get help from the more distant 'Anezeh; and
+this is much more than enough to turn the balance again. But even now
+the 'Adwan cannot come near the town; neither can they quite forget that
+the Saltiyeh people, during a former war, killed both the father and
+grandfather of Deab, and sent the head of the former to the tribe in a
+dish, with a pilaff of rice.
+
+All the strength of the 'Adwan now lies in Shaikh Deab, with his son
+'Ali, (who came to welcome us near the Jordan,) and Gublan the nephew.
+Old 'Abdu'l 'Azeez is considered childish, and unfit to lead them.
+
+For us travellers, however, the 'Adwan are sufficient. The territory is
+theirs over which we are passing, and they do all they can to please us;
+only, of course, like all Arab guides, they take every opportunity of
+insinuating themselves into being fed by us, which is a condition "not in
+the bond."
+
+Then came a visit of three men with good-natured countenances. These
+were Bedawi minstrels from Tadmor, (Palmyra,) who wander about from tribe
+to tribe, singing heroic poems to the accompaniment of their rebabeh, (a
+very primitive sort of fiddle.) No warfare interferes with the immunity
+of their persons or property. They are never injured or insulted, but
+are always and everywhere welcome, and liberally rewarded. Of course it
+is for their interest to gratify the pride of their auditors by fervid
+appeals to their ancestral renown, or to individual prowess and
+generosity.
+
+The Arabic of their chants is unintelligible to towns-people; it is the
+high classic language of Antar.
+
+I had made acquaintance with these same men before at Tibneen Castle,
+near the Lebanon, during a season of Bairam. Being Sunday, we requested
+them to visit our tents in the morning. Our Arabs, however, and the
+dragomans kept them singing till a late hour round the fires lighted
+among the tents. It was a cheerful scene, in the clear starlight, and
+the lustrous planet Venus reflected in the running stream.
+
+_Monday_, 14_th_.--After breakfast, and an entertainment of music from
+our troubadours, and the bestowing of our guerdon, these left us on their
+way to the other camp at Na'oor; and our packing up commenced.
+
+Strange medley of costumes and languages among the grand colonnades. Our
+Arabs left us, having the luggage in charge, and indicating to us the
+camping-ground where we were to meet again at night--thus leaving us in
+care of the Saltiyeh friends of ours, who were to escort us to their town
+and its neighbourhood, as the 'Adwan might not go there themselves.
+
+Both the Christian and Moslem shaikhs of the town came to meet us on the
+way. The former was a very old man; and he could with difficulty be
+persuaded to mount his donkey in presence of a train so majestic, in his
+eyes, coming from the holy city of Jerusalem.
+
+We passed an encampment of _Beni Hhasan_. These people are few in
+number, and exist under the shadow of the 'Adwan.
+
+There were plenty of locusts about the country; but we soon came to a
+vast space of land covered with storks, so numerous as completely to hide
+the face of the earth, all of them busily employed in feeding--of course
+devouring the locusts. So great is the blessing derived from the visits
+of storks, that the natives of these countries regard it as a sin to
+destroy the birds. On our riding among them they rose in the air,
+entirely obscuring he sky and the sun from our view. One of our party
+attempted to fire among them with his revolver, but, by some heedlessness
+or accident, the bunch of barrels, being not well screwed down flew off
+the stock and was lost for a time; it took more than half an hour's
+search by all of us to find it again, and the Arabs considered this a
+just punishment for wishing to kill such useful creatures.
+
+We traversed a meadow where Shaikh Faisel, with a detachment of the
+'Anezeh, had encamped for pasture, and only left it thirty-five days
+before. His flocks and herds were described to us as impossible to be
+counted; but our friends were unanimous in stating that his camels were
+1500 in number.
+
+Came to _Khirbet es Sar_, (_Jazer_?) whence the Dead Sea was again
+visible. Our Arabs declared that they could distinguish the Frank
+mountain, and see into the streets of Bethlehem. Here there is a mere
+heap of ruin, with cisterns, and fragments of arches, large columns, and
+capitals; also a very rough cyclopean square building of brown striped
+flint in huge masses.
+
+This site is three hours due north of Na'oor, in a straight line, not
+turning aside to Deab's camp or 'Amman. Northwards hence are the
+well-wooded hills of _'Ajloon_. To my inquiries for any site with a name
+resembling Nebo, I was referred to the _Neba_, half an hour south of
+Heshbon, which is given in the list taken down by me at Heshbon.
+
+Proceeding northwards, we had the hills of _Jebel Mahas_ parallel on our
+right hand; and to our left, in a deep glen below, was the source of the
+stream Se'eer, which had flowed past us at _Cuferain_, our first
+encampment after crossing the Jordan.
+
+Arrived at the ruined town (modern in appearance) of _Dabook_, from
+whence they say the _Dabookeh_ grapes at Hebron {39} had their origin;
+but there are none to be seen here now (see Jer. xlviii. 32, 33)--"O vine
+of Sibmah, I will weep for thee with the weeping of Jazer: thy plants are
+gone over the sea, they reach even to the sea of Jazer: the spoiler is
+fallen upon thy summer fruits and upon thy vintage. And joy and gladness
+is taken from the plentiful field, and from the land of Moab; and I have
+caused wine to fail from the wine-presses," etc.: with nearly the same
+words in Isa. xvi. 8-10.
+
+At a short distance upon our right was a ruined village called _Khuldah_.
+This was at the entrance of woods of the evergreen oak, with hawthorn,
+many trees of each kind twined round with honeysuckle. There Shaikh
+Yusuf, (the Moslem of Es-Salt,) who is a fine singer, entertained us with
+his performances, often bursting into extemporaneous verses suitable to
+the occasion and company.
+
+On reaching an exceedingly stony and desolate place, he related the
+original story of Lokman the miser, connected with it:--"Formerly this
+was a fertile and lovely spot, abounding in gardens of fruit; and as the
+Apostle Mohammed (peace and blessings be upon him!) was passing by, he
+asked for some of the delicious produce for his refreshment on the weary
+way, but the churlish owner Lokman denied him the proper hospitality, and
+even used insulting language to the unknown traveller, (far be it from
+us!) Whereupon the latter, who was aware beforehand of the man's
+character, and knew that he was hopelessly beyond the reach of
+exhortation and of wise instruction, invoked upon him, by the spirit of
+prophecy, the curse of God, (the almighty and glorious.) And so his
+gardens were converted into these barren rocks before us, and the fruit
+into mere stones."
+
+Such was the tale. But similar miraculous punishments for inhospitality
+are told at Mount Carmel, as inflicted by the Prophet Elijah; and near
+Bethlehem by the Virgin Mary.
+
+From a distance we caught a distant view of the _Beka' el Basha_, or
+Pasha's meadow, where we were to encamp at night, but turned aside
+westwards in order to visit the town of Es-Salt. Upon a wide level tract
+we came to a small patch of ground enclosed by a low wall, to which a
+space was left for entrance, with a lintel thrown across it, but still
+not above four feet from ground. On this were bits of glass and beads
+and pebbles deposited, as votive offerings, or tokens of remembrance or
+respect. The place is called the Weli, or tomb, of a Persian Moslem
+saint named _Sardoni_. But it should be recollected that in Arabic the
+name _'Ajam_, or Persia, is often used to signify any unknown distant
+country to the east.
+
+At _'Ain el Jadoor_ we found water springing out of the rocks, among
+vineyards and fig and walnut trees, olives also, and pomegranates--a
+beautiful oasis, redeemed from the devastation of Bedaween by the strong
+hand of the town population. Near this the Christian Shaikh Abbas, being
+in our company, was met by his venerable mother and his son Bakhi.
+
+In every direction the town of Es-Salt is environed by fruitful gardens,
+the produce of which finds a market in Nabloos and Jerusalem. The
+scenery reminded me of the Lebanon in its green aspect of industry and
+wealth.
+
+Entering the town we dismounted at the house of Shaikh Yusuf, and took
+our refreshment on the open terrace, on the shady side of a wall.
+
+Some of us walked about and visited the two Christian churches: they are
+both named "St George," and are very poor in furniture. Of course they
+have over the door the universal picture in these countries of St George
+on his prancing gray horse. This obtains for them some respect from the
+Mohammedans, who also revere that martial and religious hero. Inside the
+churches we found some pictures with Russian writing upon the frames; the
+people informed us that these were presents from the Emperor Nicholas,
+which is worthy of notice.
+
+The ignorance of the priests here is proverbial all over Palestine. I
+have heard it told of them as a common practice, that they recite the
+Lord's Prayer and the _Fathhah_, or opening chapter of the Koran,
+alternately, on the ground that these are both very sublime and
+beautiful; and it is said that they baptize in the name of the Father,
+Son, and Holy Ghost, and the Virgin Mary. There is reason to believe
+them very grossly ignorant; but it may be that some of these reports
+about them emanate from the Roman Catholic authorities in Jerusalem, who
+never hesitate at propagating slanders to the detriment of non-Romanists.
+
+In a church porch I found a school of dirty ragged children reading the
+Psalms from the small English printed edition; not, however, learning to
+read by means of the alphabet or spelling, but learning to know the forms
+of words by rote; boys and girls together, all very slightly dressed, and
+one of the boys stark naked.
+
+People came to me to be cured of ophthalmia. I got out of my portmanteau
+for them some sugar of lead; but it is inconceivable the difficulty I had
+to get a vessel for making it into a lotion--bottles or phials were
+totally unknown, not even cups were to be procured. At one time I
+thought of a gourd-shell, but there was not one _dried_ in the town; so
+they told me. I might have lent them my drinking-cup, but then I wanted
+to prepare a large quantity to be left behind and to be used
+occasionally. I forget now what was the expedient adopted, but I think
+it was the last named-one, but of course only making sufficient for
+immediate use. I left a quantity behind me in powder, with directions to
+dilute it considerably whenever any vessel could be found; warning the
+people, however, of its poisonous nature if taken by mouth.
+
+One man came imploring me to cure him of deafness, but I could not
+undertake his case. In any of those countries a medical missionary would
+be of incalculable benefit to the people.
+
+There are ancient remains about the town, but not considerable in any
+respect. It is often taken for granted that this is the Ramoth-Gilead of
+Scripture, but I believe without any other reason than that, from the
+copious springs of water, there must always have been an important city
+there. The old name, however, would rather lead us north-eastwards to
+the hills of _Jela'ad_, where there are also springs and ruins.
+
+On leaving the town we experienced a good deal of annoyance from the
+Moslem population, one of whom stole a gun from a gentleman of the party,
+and when detected, for a long time refused to give it up. Of course, in
+the end it was returned; but I was told afterwards that the people had a
+notion that we ought to pay them something for visiting their town, just
+as we pay the wild Arabs for visiting Jerash. What a difference from the
+time of the strong Egyptian Government when Lord Lindsay was there!
+
+At a distance of perhaps half or three-quarters of an hour there is a
+_Weli_ called _Nebi Osha_; that is to say, a sepulchre, or commemorative
+station of the Prophet Joshua, celebrated all over the country for the
+exceeding magnificence of the prospect it commands in every direction.
+In order to reach this, we had to pass over hills and plains newly taken
+into cultivation for vineyards, mile after mile, in order to supply a
+recent call for the peculiar grapes of the district at Jerusalem to be
+sent to London as raisins.
+
+Arrived at the Weli, we found no language sufficient to express the
+astonishment elicited by the view before us; and here it will be safest
+only to indicate the salient points of the extensive landscape, without
+indulging in the use of epithets vainly striving to portray our feelings.
+We were looking over the Ghor, with the Jordan sparkling in the sunshine
+upon its winding course below. In direct front was _Nabloos_, lying
+between Ebal and Gerizim; while at the same time we could distinguish
+Neby Samwil near Jerusalem, the Mount Tabor, Mount Carmel, and part of
+the Lebanon all at once! On our own side of Jordan we saw the extensive
+remains of _Kala'at Rubbad_, and ruins of a town called _Maisera_. On
+such a spot what could we do but lie in the shade of the whitewashed
+Weli, under gigantic oak-trees, and gaze and ponder and wish in
+silence,--ay, and pray and praise too,--looking back through the vista of
+thirty-three centuries to the time of the longing of Moses, the "man of
+God," expressed in these words "O Lord God, Thou hast begun to show Thy
+servant Thy greatness and Thy mighty hand: . . . I pray Thee let me go
+over and see the good land that is beyond Jordan, that goodly mountain,
+and Lebanon." The honoured leader of His people--the long-tried man
+"through good report and evil report," who, during his second forty years
+which he spent as a shepherd in Midian, had been accustomed to the
+abstemious habits and keen eyesight of the desert; and, at the end of
+another forty years as the ruler of a whole nation, living in the desert,
+"his eye was not dim,"--added to which natural advantage, we are told
+that "the Lord showed him all the land," highly cultivated as it was then
+by seven nations greater and mightier than Israel,--Moses must have
+beheld a spectacle from Pisgah and Nebo, surpassing even the glories of
+this landscape viewed by us from Nebi Osha.
+
+Turning eastwards to our evening home, we passed a ruined site called
+_Berga'an_, where we had one more view of the Dead Sea, and traversed
+large plains of ripe corn, belonging, of course, to the people of
+Es-Salt. The people requested me to pray to God that the locusts might
+not come there, since all that harvest was destined for Jerusalem.
+
+We met some of the _'Abbad Kattaleen_ Arabs, but we were safe under the
+escort of the Saltiyeh instead of the 'Adwan. These 'Abbad are the
+people who assaulted and plundered some seamen of H.M.S. "Spartan" in
+1847, on the Jordan; for which offence they have never yet been
+chastised, notwithstanding the urgent applications made to the Turkish
+Pashas of Jerusalem, Bayroot, and Damascus. We did not arrive at the
+encampment till long after dark, and there was no moonlight.
+
+The site is on a plain encircled by hills, with plenty of water
+intersecting the ground; the small streams are bordered by reeds and long
+grass. A khan, now in ruin, is situated in the midst--a locality
+certainly deserving its name, _Beka' el Basha_, and is said to have been
+a favourite camping-station for the Pashas of Damascus in former times.
+
+Much to our vexation, the Arabs and the muleteers had pitched our tents
+in a slovenly manner among the winding water-courses, so that we had wet
+reeds, thistles, and long grass, beetles and grasshoppers inside the
+tents, which again were wetted outside with heavy dew. They had done
+this in order to keep the cattle immediately close to us, and therefore
+as free from forayers as possible during the night. Such was the reason
+assigned, and we were all too hungry and tired to argue the matter
+further.
+
+My people complained to me of the insolence of the Saltiyeh guides that
+were with us; so I sent for the two shaikhs and scolded them. They
+persisted in it that they did not deserve the rebuke, that the complaints
+ought to be laid against a certain farrier who had come over from
+Jerusalem, etc., etc. My servant ended the affair by shouting at them,
+"Take my last word with you and feed upon it--'God send you a strong
+government.'" This at least they deserved, for they are often in arms
+against the Turkish government: and although so prosperous in trade and
+agriculture, are many years in arrear with their taxes.
+
+_Tuesday_, 15_th_.--Early in the morning there were Saltiyeh people
+reaping harvest near us, chiefly in the Christian fields; for here the
+case is not as in Palestine, where Christians generally sow and reap in
+partnership with Moslems, for their own safety; but the Moslems have
+their fields, and the Christians have theirs apart, which shows that
+their influence is more considerable here; indeed, the Christians carry
+arms, and go out to war against the Bedaween, quite like the Moslems.
+
+Before we left, the day was becoming exceedingly hot, and we had six
+hours' march before us to Jerash.
+
+The hills abound with springs of water. We passed one called _Umm el
+'Egher_, another called _Safoot_, also _Abu Mus-hhaf_, and _Tabakra_, and
+_'Ain Umm ed Dumaneer_, with a ruin named _Khirbet Saleekhi_.
+
+The 'Adwan Arabs were now again our guides, the Saltiyeh having returned
+home; but for some distance the guides were few and without firearms,
+only armed with spears, and the common peasant sword called _khanjar_;
+perhaps this was by compact with the Saltiyeh, as in about an hour's time
+we were joined by a reinforcement with a few matchlock guns. On we went
+through corn-fields, which are sown in joint partnership with the Arabs
+and the Moslems of the town; then doubled round a long and high hill with
+a ruin on it, called _Jela'ad_. This I have since suspected to be
+Ramoth-Gilead. We descended a hill called _Tallooz_; forward again
+between hills and rocks, and neglected evergreen woods, upon narrow
+paths. A numerous caravan we were, with a hundred animals of burden,
+bright costumes, and cheerful conversation, till we reached a large
+terebinth-tree under a hill called _Shebail_; the site is called
+_Thuggeret el Moghafer_, signifying a "look-out station" between two
+tribes. There we rested a while, till the above-mentioned reinforcement
+joined us. From this spot we could just discern _Jerash_, on the summit
+of a huge hill before us.
+
+We now had one long and continued descent to the river Zerka. Passed
+through a defile, on issuing from which we observed a little stream with
+oleander, in pink blossom, thirty feet high, and in great abundance.
+Halted again at a pretty spring, called _Ruman_, where the water was upon
+nearly a dead level, and therefore scarcely moving; then another small
+spring, called _Bursa_, and also _'Ain el Merubb'a'_.
+
+Evergreen oak in all directions, but with broader leaf than in Palestine;
+also some terebinth-trees and wild holly-oaks. All the scenery now
+expanded before us in width and height and depth.
+
+We took notice of several high hills with groves of evergreen oak on
+their summits; detached hills, which we could not but consider as remains
+of the ancient _high places_ for idolatrous worship.
+
+Still descended, till on a sudden turn of the road came the rushing of
+the _Zerka_, or Jabbok, water upon our ears, with a breeze sighing among
+juniper-bushes, and enormous and gorgeous oleanders, together with the
+soft zephyr feeling from the stream upon our heated faces--oh, so
+inexpressibly delicious! I was the first to get across, and on reaching
+the opposite bank we all dismounted, to drink freely from the river--a
+name which it deserves as at that place it is about two-thirds of the
+width of the Jordan at the usual visiting-place for travellers.
+
+Some of the party went bathing. We all had our several luncheons, some
+smoked, all got into shady nooks by the water-side; and I, with my heart
+full, lay meditating on the journey we had hitherto made.
+
+At length I had been permitted by God's good providence to traverse the
+territory of Moses and the chosen people antecedent to the writing of the
+Pentateuch, when they were warring upon Ammon and Moab. How solemn are
+the sensations derived from pondering upon periods of such very hoar
+antiquity--a time when the deliverance at the Red Sea, the thunders of
+Sinai, the rebellion of Korah and Dathan, the erection of the tabernacle,
+and the death of Aaron, were still fresh in the memories of living
+witnesses; and the manna was still their food from heaven,
+notwithstanding the supplies from the cultivated country they were
+passing through, (Josh. v. 12.) Elisha did well in after times on the
+banks of Jordan, when he cried out, "Where is the Lord God of Elijah?"
+And we may exclaim, in contemplation of these marvellous events of the
+still more remote ages, "Where is the Lord God of Moses, who with a
+mighty hand and stretched-out arm"--"redeemed His people from their
+enemies; for His mercy endureth for ever!" Nations and generations may
+rise and pass away; phases of dominion and civilisation may vary under
+Assyrian, Egyptian, Hellenic, and Roman forms, or under our modern
+modifications; yet all this is transitory. The God of creation,
+providence, and grace, He lives and abides for ever. His power is still
+great as in the days of old, His wisdom unsearchable, and His goodness
+infinite. Ay, and this dispenser of kingdoms is also the guide of the
+humble in heart, and He cares for the smallest concerns of individual
+persons who rest upon Him.
+
+Strengthened by these and similar reflections, with ardent aspirations
+for the future, I rose up and pursued my journey, as Bunyan's pilgrim
+might have done, under the heartfelt assurance that "happy is he that
+hath the God of _Jacob_ for his help."
+
+We were now leaving behind us much of the Old Testament country--not
+exclusively that of the Mosaic era, but the land which had been trodden
+by the patriarchs Abraham and Israel on their several removals from
+Padan-aram to Canaan. But, while looking back upon the grand landscape
+outline with an intense degree of interest, it may be well to remark
+that, among all our company, there was a feeling of uncertainty as to the
+geographical boundaries of the lands possessed by the old people of
+Ammon, Moab, and Bashan. Probably there had been some fluctuations of
+their towns and confines between the time of the exodus and the
+prophecies of Isaiah and Jeremiah.
+
+One thing is certain--that we all, with one heart, were confident that
+God spake by Moses and the prophets; and that, with the incidents, the
+people and the local names we had lately passed among, we might as soon
+believe in the non-existence of the sun and stars, as that the books
+called "The Law of Moses" are not in every word a record of infallible
+truth.
+
+We had now a different journey, and a different set of scenes before us,
+entering into the half tribe of Manasseh.
+
+ [Picture: Triumphal Arch]
+
+Ascending the steep mountain-sides with two of the guides, I preceded the
+rest of the party, and even the baggage mules. In perhaps half an hour,
+(it may be more,) I came to a triumphal arch, the commencement of Jerash.
+One of the guides told me that they call this the Amman Gate of the old
+city; for that, in ancient times, there were two brothers, one named
+Amman, and the other Jerash. Each of them built a city, and gave it his
+own name; but called the gate nearest to his brother's city, by the name
+of that brother.
+
+At this gateway I observed the anomaly of the columns on each side of the
+principal opening, having their capitals at the bottom of the shafts, and
+resting on the pediments, though in an upright position. It was very
+ridiculous. When could this have been done--at the original erection of
+the gate, or at a later rebuilding, after an earthquake had shaken the
+pillars? It would seem to me to be the former, as they are posted
+against the wall, and this is not disturbed or altered. The columns and
+the curve of the portal are gone, so that it cannot be seen whether
+originally they had capitals on the heads also of the columns. It is
+most probable that those remaining are not the true capitals, inasmuch as
+they have no volutes.
+
+Passing by inferior monuments of antiquity,--such as a sepulchre, a
+single column, a sarcophagus, and then a square elevated pavement in good
+condition, upon which are several sarcophagi, some of them broken, and
+all with the lids displaced,--I came to a large circus of Ionic columns,
+almost all standing, and joined to each other at the top by architraves.
+Thence holding on the same direction forwards due north, our way was
+between a double row of grand Corinthian columns with their capitals, and
+occasional temples to the right and left. At the termination of this,
+but without continuing the same line, between columns of another Grecian
+order, I turned aside, at a vast Roman bath, to a spring of water, the
+commencement of a running stream, in a small meadow of tall grass and
+thorns, intending to pitch my tent there; but soon changed my mind, and
+got myself established within a wing of the Roman bath, which stood on
+higher ground, and had a good roof upon it.
+
+The other gentlemen on coming up, adopted the choice of their dragomans
+and muleteers, near the water, after having the thorns and thistles
+cleared away. A fresh afternoon breeze that sprang up was peculiarly
+grateful to men and cattle.
+
+After some rest, I proceeded to stroll about,--first of all to the great
+Temple of the Sun, on a rising ground to the west of the great colonnade,
+which, besides the columns along all the sides of the edifice, has a
+conspicuous portico in front, consisting of twelve magnificent Corinthian
+columns, a few of which are fallen. Thence I walked to the Naumachia,
+near the southern extremity of the city, (that by which we had arrived,)
+and found this in good condition, with the seats remaining, and the
+channel well defined which conveyed water for the exhibitions from the
+above-mentioned spring. The form is a long oval, flattened at one end.
+
+In passing once more between the double line of Corinthian columns, I
+counted fifty-five of them standing, besides fragments and capitals of
+the missing ones lying on the ground.
+
+From this I diverged at right angles, through a street of small public
+buildings, towards the bridge over the stream, (and this I called Bridge
+Street--part of the pavement still remains, consisting of long slabs laid
+across the whole width from house to house;) then upon the bridge, as far
+as its broken condition would allow, and returned to my home--everywhere
+among scattered fragments of entablature; numerous altars entire, and
+sculptured with garlands; also broken buildings, with niches embellished
+inside with sculptured ornament. In all my exploration, however, I found
+no statues or fragments of statues--the Mohammedan iconoclasts had long
+ago destroyed all these; but there were some remains of inscriptions,
+much defaced or worn away by the work of time.
+
+The natural agencies by which the edifices have come to ruin seem to
+be--first, earthquakes; then the growth of weeds, thorns, and even trees,
+between the courses of stone, after the population ceased; or rain and
+snow detaching small pieces, which were followed by larger; also
+sometimes a sinking of the ground; and besides these common causes of
+decay, there comes the great destroyer--man.
+
+Yet nature is always picturesque, even after the demolition of the works
+of human art or genius; and it is pleasing to see the tendrils, leaves,
+and scarlet berries of the nightshade playfully twining among the
+sculptured friezes which are scattered about in every position but
+straight lines; or other plants between the volutes, rivalling the
+acanthus foliage of the classic capitals.
+
+Sunset: a beautiful landscape all around; and a pretty view of the
+travellers' tents, the Arabs, and the cattle below me.
+
+After dinner I walked by starlight along the Ionic colonnade, which is a
+further continuation northwards of the Corinthian, and found nearly the
+whole length, with the intermediate pavement, remaining, consisting of
+squares about two feet in length, laid down in diamond pattern.
+
+At night there were flickering lights and varieties of human voices
+below; the frogs croaking loud near the rivulet; and the rooks, whom I
+had dislodged from their home within the Roman bath, had taken refuge on
+the trees about us, unable to get to rest, being disturbed by our unusual
+sights and sounds.
+
+_Wednesday_, 16_th_.--A visitor came early--namely, Shaikh Yusuf--with
+two of his people from _Soof_. The old man exhibited numerous
+certificates given by former travellers--all English--whom he had
+accompanied as guide either to Beisan or Damascus. He offered his
+services to take us even, if we pleased, as far as Bozrah.
+
+Then came Shaikh Barakat el Fraikh with a large train. He is ruler over
+all the _Jebel 'Ajloon_, and has been residing lately on the summit of a
+high hill rising before us to the east, where there is a weli or tomb of
+a Moslem saint, the Nebi Hhood, who works miraculous cures. Barakat is
+in delicate health, and has twenty wives. His metropolis, when he
+condescends to live in a house, is at a village called _Cuf'r Enji_; but
+his district comprises fifteen inhabited villages, with above three
+hundred in ruins,--so it is said.
+
+As for the saint himself, he has a very respectable name for antiquity,
+too ancient for regular chronology to meddle with--it is only known that
+he preached righteousness to an impious race of men previous to their
+sudden destruction. The circumstance of his tomb being on the summit of
+a high hill is perfectly consonant with the sentiments of great heroes
+and chiefs, as frequently expressed in poems of the old Arabs. The
+restoration of health which he is supposed to bestow, must be that
+effected by means of the fine mountain air at his place. At 'Amman, old
+'Abdu'l 'Azeez had said that Jerash was built by the Beni 'Ad, a
+primitive race mentioned in the Koran.
+
+A ridiculous figure appeared of a Turkish subaltern officer, who has come
+into this wild desert to ask the people for tribute to the Porte. A
+Turkish kawwas in attendance on him, I observed to shrug up his shoulders
+when he heard nothing but Arabic being spoken among us. They arrived
+here in the company of Shaikh Yusuf, whose son is nominally a Turkish
+military officer, commanding three hundred imaginary Bashi-Bozuk, or
+irregular cavalry. By means of such titles they tickle the vanity of the
+Arab leaders, and _claim_ an annual tribute of 218 purses, (about 1000
+pounds,) and are thus enabled to swell out the published army list, and
+account of revenue printed in Constantinople. {58}
+
+So that next to nothing is in reality derived from these few sparse
+villages; and from the tent Arabs less than nothing, for the Turks have
+to bribe these to abstain from plundering the regular soldiers belonging
+to Damascus.
+
+The 'Anezi Shaikh Faisel was encamped at only fourteen hours' distance
+from us.
+
+Common Arab visitors arrived--from no one knew where: some on horseback,
+to see what could be picked up among us; even women and children. They
+must have travelled during the night. A handsomely-dressed and
+well-armed youth on horseback, from Soof, accosted me during one of my
+walks.
+
+I bought two sheep for a feast to the Arabs that came about my tent; but
+they asked to have the money value instead of the feast. Alas for the
+degradation! What would their forefathers have said to them had they
+been possibly present?
+
+Afternoon: a fine breeze sprang up, as is usual in elevated districts. I
+strolled again with an attendant--first outside the ancient wall on the
+east side of the rivulet, where it is not much dilapidated; it is all
+built of rabbeted stones, though not of very large size; then crossed
+over to the western wall, and traced out the whole periphery of the city
+by the eye.
+
+In the great Corinthian colonnade, one of our party called me to him, and
+showed me some inscriptions about the public edifices along that line,
+and at the Temple of the Sun. There was one inscription in Latin, on a
+square pedestal; a similar one near it, broken across, had a Greek
+inscription. The rest were all in Greek, but so defaced or injured that
+seldom could a whole word be made out. However, we found, in a small
+temple beyond the city wall to the north, in a ploughed field, an
+inscription more perfect, containing the work _Nemesis_ in the first
+line. There also I saw several mausoleums, with sarcophagi handsomely
+ornamented, and fragments of highly-polished red Egyptian granite
+columns, to our great surprise as to how they had arrived there,
+considering not only the distance from which they had been brought, and
+the variety of people through whose hands they had passed since being cut
+out roughly from the quarries of upper Egypt; but, moreover, the
+difficulty to be surmounted in bringing them to this elevation, across
+the deep Jordan valley, even since their disembarkation from the
+Mediterranean either at Jaffa or Caiffa.
+
+The inscriptions that I had been able to collect were as follows:--
+
+ [Picture: Two inscriptions]
+
+Among all the hundreds of fragments of fine capitals and friezes lying
+about Jerash, there was not one that was not too heavy for us to carry
+away. I found no ornamented pottery, although we had found some even at
+Heshbon; neither coins, nor even bits of statues. And remarkable enough
+in our European ideas, so little space appeared for private common
+habitations--as usual among ruined cities of remote antiquity--it seemed
+as if almost the whole enclosure was occupied by temples or other public
+institutions.
+
+Yet there must have habitations for a numerous population. And, again,
+such a city implies the existence of minor towns and of numerous villages
+around, and a complete immunity from incursions of wild Arab tribes.
+These latter were unknown to a population who could build such temples,
+naumachia, and colonnades, and who were protected farther eastwards by
+the numerous cities with high roads, still discoverable in ruins beyond
+this--Belka and 'Ajloon. But of how different a character must have been
+the daily necessities of these old populations from the requirements of
+modern European existence. _We_ should not be satisfied with the mere
+indulgence of gazing upon the aesthetic beauty of temples and colonnades.
+Climate, however, has much to do in this matter.
+
+At night we had a general conference at the encampment respecting the
+future march, as we had now finished with the 'Adwan Arabs. {61}
+
+The resolution was taken to proceed on the morrow to _Umm Kais_, under
+the guidance of Shaikh Yusuf of Soof, and proceed thence to Tiberias.
+He, however, would not ensure but that we might be met and mulcted by the
+Beni Sukh'r for leave to traverse their territory. He was to receive 500
+piastres, (nearly 5 pounds,) besides 50 piastres for baksheesh; but
+whatever we might have to pay the Beni Sukh'r was to be deducted from the
+above stipulation.
+
+_Thursday_, 17_th_.--Great noise of jackdaws under my vaulted roof at
+break of day, they having mustered up courage to return to their nests
+there during the night.
+
+During the packing up of the luggage, I took a final and lonely walk
+along the colonnades to the Naumachia, and outside the wall S.W. of the
+Amman gate, where I observed some columns, or portions of such, of
+twisted pattern; returned by the bridge. The thrush, the cuckoo, and the
+partridge were heard at no great distance, near the stream.
+
+We left upon the meadow a parliamentary debate of Arabs gathered around
+the chief's spear, all the men ranting and screaming as only such people
+can, and they only at the beginning or end of a bargain.
+
+Slowly we defiled in a long line over rising ground, higher and higher,
+upon a good highway, bordered on each side by numerous sarcophagi; as
+along the Roman Appian Way; passed the well of _Shaikh el Bakkar_, and a
+sarcophagus with a long inscription in Greek, which I regretted not
+having discovered yesterday, so as to allow of copying it. From an
+eminence we took the last view of the pompous colonnades of Jerash.
+
+Away through the green woods of broad-leaved oak, among which were to be
+found fine and numerous pine-trees, the air fragrant with honeysuckle,
+and the whole scene enlivened by sweet song of the birds, there were
+hills in sight all covered with pine.
+
+Around Soof we found none of the druidical-looking remains mentioned by
+Irby and Mangles, but some romantic landscape and vineyards all over the
+hills.
+
+Ten minutes beyond Soof we had a Roman milestone lying at our feet. Some
+of us set to work in clearing earth away from it, searching for an
+inscription, but could not spare sufficient time to do it properly. We
+found, however, the letters PIVS . PONTI . . .--indicating the period of
+the Antonines.
+
+Next there met us a large party of gipsies--known, among other tokens, by
+the women's black hair being combed, which that of the Bedawi women would
+not be. What a motley meeting we formed--of Moslems, Greek-Church
+dragomans, Protestants, and Fire-worshippers, as the gipsies are always
+believed in Asia to be.
+
+Among the oaks of gigantic size and enormously large arbutus, the effect
+of our party winding--appearing and disappearing, in varied costumes and
+brilliant colours--was very pleasing.
+
+After a time we reached some fine meadow land, on which were large flocks
+of sheep belonging to the Beni Hhassan, whose tents we saw not far
+distant. The black and the white sheep were kept separate from each
+other.
+
+And then appeared, in succession to the right and left, several of the
+rude erections, resembling the Celtic cromlechs, or _cist-vaens_, above
+alluded to, from Irby and Mangles.
+
+ [Picture: Erection resembling cromlech]
+
+Our guides told us that they abound all over the hills. All that we saw
+were constructed each of four huge slabs of brown flinty-looking stone,
+forming a chamber--two for sides, one at the back, and a cover over all,
+which measured eleven feet by six. Their date must be long anterior to
+the Roman period. They are manifestly not Jewish, and consequently are
+of pagan origin. Are they altars? or are they of a sepulchral character,
+raised over the graves of valiant warriors, whose very names and
+nationality are lost? or do they indeed partake of both designs--one
+leading easily to the other among a superstitious people, who had no
+light of revelation?
+
+My persuasion is that they were altars, as they seldom reach above four
+feet from the ground; and if so, they would serve to show, as well as the
+uprights forming a square temple by the sea-side, between Tyre and Sidon,
+that not in every place did the Israelites sufficiently regard the
+injunction of Deut. xii. 3, to demolish the idolatrous places of worship.
+{65}
+
+Our road gradually ascended for a considerable time, till we attained the
+brow of an eminence, where our woody, close scenery suddenly expanded
+into a glorious extent of landscape. Straight before our eyes,
+apparently up in the sky, was old Hermon, capped with snow. About his
+base was a hazy belt; below this was the Lake of Gennesaroth; and nearer
+still was an extent of meadow and woodland.
+
+The commanding object, however, was the grand mountain,
+
+ "That lifts its awful form,
+ Swells from the vale, and midway leaves the storm.
+ Though round its breast the rolling clouds be spread,
+ Eternal sunshine settles on its head."
+
+At this place we rested for a time.
+
+All the day afterwards we kept upon high grounds, to avoid meeting any of
+the Beni Sukh'r--thus greatly increasing the length of the day's march,
+and having to scramble over rocky hills without visible paths. All this
+had been brought upon us by over-cleverness in bargaining with Shaikh
+Yusuf, our guide. We had stipulated that, in case of meeting with
+Bedaween Arabs, whatever should be demanded as _ghufur_, or toll for
+crossing their ground, should be deducted from his 500 piastres. He had
+informed us that the toll would be but a trifle; but after the burden of
+it had been once thrown upon him, he avoided the best and direct road,
+and we had hours of needless fatigue in consequence.
+
+As a peasant himself, the Arabs allow him and his people to pass free, as
+no doubt they exact enough from the village in other forms; but they
+consider themselves entitled to levy tribute on European travellers. The
+latter, however, are always disposed to grumble at it.
+
+We plunged again into thick green woods,--the oaks of Bashan,--with merry
+birds carolling all around. Oh, how cheering was the scene, after that
+devastated land across the river, where there is so little of forest land
+left in proportion to this! A friend once remarked to me, that were the
+two territories in the same relative conditions at the time of Joshua
+taking possession of Canaan, it would require double amount of faith in
+God's promises, as they ascended from Jericho to Ai, to believe that they
+had not left the promised land behind them. Now, this might be met by
+several satisfactory replies; but the plainest answer for the moment is,
+that the countries were not then in the same conditions relatively as
+they now are.
+
+We passed a rock-hewn sepulchre on the side of a hill, in good
+condition,--just such as may be frequently seen in Palestine
+proper,--then found a large herd of camels browsing; and passing through
+a verdant glen, which issued upon cultivated fields, we came to the
+village of _Mezer_, and soon after to _Tuleh_, where we got a view of
+Tabor, Gilboa, and Hermon, {67} all at the same time. Were the day
+clear, there could be no doubt but we should have seen also the village
+of Zer'een (Jezreel) and the convent on Mount Carmel.
+
+The weather was hot, and our people suffering from thirst, as Ramadan had
+that day commenced.
+
+Had a distant view of a Beni Sukh'r encampment to our right. After a
+steep descent, and consequent rise again, we were upon a plain; and
+therefore the guide counselled us to keep close together, as a precaution
+against marauders. Our tedious deviation to-day had been far to the
+east: we now turned westwards, as if marching right up to Tabor, over
+corn-fields, with the village of _Tibni_ at our left, and _Dair_ at our
+right hand.
+
+Arrived at _Tayibeh_, and encamped there for the night. Among the first
+people who came up to us was an Algerine Jew, who held my horse as I
+dismounted. He was an itinerant working silversmith, gaining a
+livelihood by going from Tiberias among Arab villages and the Bedaween,
+repairing women's ornaments, etc.
+
+There are plenty of wells about this place, but none with good water.
+Wrangling and high words among the muleteers, and fighting of the animals
+for approach to the water-troughs. The day had been very fatiguing; and
+our Moslem attendants, as they had been involuntarily deprived of water
+during this the first day of Ramadan, deemed it not worth while at that
+hour to break the fast, as evening was rapidly coming on. Upon a
+journey, if it be a real journey on business, they are allowed to break
+the fast, on condition of making up for the number of days at some time
+before the year expires.
+
+Evening: beautiful colours on the western hills, and the new moon
+appearing--a thin silver streak in the roseate glow which remains in the
+heavens after sunset. The night very hot, and no air moving.
+
+_Friday_, 18_th_.--After a night of mosquito-plague, we rose at the first
+daybreak, with a glorious spectacle of Mount Hermon and its snowy summit
+to the north. Such evenings and mornings as travellers and residents
+enjoy in Asian climes are beyond all estimation, and can never be
+forgotten.
+
+We learned that there are Christians in this village of _Tayibeh_, as
+indeed there are some thinly scattered throughout the villages of _Jebel
+'Ajloon_, _i.e._ from Jerash to near Tiberias; and in the corresponding
+villages on the western side of Jordan, as far as Nabloos.
+
+I always feel deeply concerned for those "sheep without a shepherd,"
+dispersed among an overwhelming population of Mohammedans. They are
+indeed ignorant,--how can they be otherwise, while deprived of Christian
+fellowship, or opportunities of public worship, excepting when they carry
+their infants a long journey for baptism, or when the men repair
+occasionally to the towns of Nabloos or Nazareth for trading business;
+or, it may be, when rarely an itinerant priest pays them a visit?--still
+they are living representatives of the Gentile Church of the country in
+primitive days, down through continuous ages,--their families enduring
+martyrdom, and to this day persecution and oppression, for the name of
+Christ, in spite of every worldly inducement to renounce it. While we
+Europeans are reciting the Nicene Creed in our churches, they are
+suffering for it. They are living witnesses for the "Light of light, and
+very God of very God;" and although with this they mingle sundry
+superstitions, they are a people who salute each other at Easter with the
+words, "Christ is risen," and the invariable response, "He is risen
+indeed;" also in daily practice, when pronouncing the name of Jesus, they
+add the words, "Glory to His name."
+
+Besides all the above, they are in many things Protestants against Papal
+corruption. They have no Vicar of Christ, no transubstantiation, no
+immaculate conception, no involuntary confession, and no hindrance to a
+free use of the Bible among the laity. For my part, I feel happy in
+sympathising much with such a people, and cannot but believe that the
+Divine Head of the Church regards with some proportion of love even the
+humblest believer in Him, who touches but the hem of His garment.
+
+In our conversation, before resuming the journey, I mentioned the
+numerous villages that were to be found about that neighbourhood, utterly
+broken up, but where the gardens of fig, vine, and olive trees still are
+growing around the ruins. The people pointed out to me the direction of
+other such, that were out of sight from our tents; and the Jew quoted a
+familiar proverb of the country relating to that subject; also the Moslem
+shaikh, with his son, joined also in reciting it:--
+
+ "The children of Israel built up;
+ The Christians kept up;
+ The Moslems have destroyed."
+
+In saying this, however, by the second line they refer to the crusading
+period; and by the last line they denote the bad government of the Turks,
+under which the wild Bedaween are encroaching upon civilisation, and
+devastating the recompense of honest industry from the fertile soil.
+
+We--starting upon our last day's journey together--passed over wide
+fields of wheat-stubble. On coming near the village of _Samma_, the old
+shaikh came out to welcome us, and inquire if his place is written in the
+books of the Europeans. On examining our maps, one of our party found it
+in his; and the rest promised the friendly old man that his village
+should be written down.
+
+Proceeding through a green and rocky glen, between high hills, with a
+running stream, the weather was exceedingly hot. Here our party
+divided,--ourselves advancing towards _Umm Kais_; while the baggage and
+servants turned to the left, so as to cross the Jordan by the bridge _El
+Mejama'a_ for Tiberias. The principal intention of this was for the
+property to avoid the chance of falling into the hands of the Beni
+Sukh'r. Shaikh Yusuf now showed the relief from his mind by beginning to
+sing. This was all very well for him, who had nothing to lose; because,
+as it was said long ago--
+
+ "Cantabit vacuus coram latrone viator."
+
+After wandering round and around, we descended into _Wadi Zahari_, "the
+flowering valley," where, by the water-side, were reeds and oleanders
+forty or fifty feet high; and near them we observed a pear-tree and a
+fig-tree, all alone and deserted, the remains of former cultivation.
+This and other previous instances attest the risk that attends rural
+labour in that district, being in the immediate vicinity of the Bedaween,
+and the utter mockery of nominal Turkish rule. Here we filled our
+leathern water-bottles, (called _zumzumia_ in the Desert, and _mattara_
+by towns-people,) and climbed up a stony hill, the heat of the day
+increasing. No path among the rocks, and all of us angry at Shaikh Yusuf
+for saving himself the few piastres by conducting us among such
+difficulties.
+
+Then, after some time we perceived ourselves to be near Umm Kais, by the
+sarcophagi, the sepulchres, and ruts of chariot-wheels upon the rocks.
+We rushed up to a large tree for refreshing shelter, and near it found
+numerous sepulchres, highly ornamented, and some of them with the stone
+doors remaining on the hinges, which we swung about to test the reality
+of their remaining so perfect, (figs. 1, 2, 3.)
+
+Among these was the one remarked by Lord Lindsay in his Travels, bearing
+a Hebrew name inscribed in Greek letters, but which he has not
+
+ [Picture: Fig. 1]
+
+given quite correctly. It should be _Gaanuiph_ instead of _Gaaniph_.
+This sepulchre is cut in black
+
+ [Picture: Fig. 2]
+
+basaltic rock, and has some broken sarcophagi remaining inside. On a
+round fragment of a column, near this side, is the inscription given
+below, (fig. 4.) The upper part is the farewell of surviving relatives
+
+ [Picture: Fig. 3]
+
+to the daughter of SEMLACHUS. The lower part, for whomsoever
+intended,--"_and thou also farewell_,"--carries with it a touch of nature
+that still affects the heart, after the lapse of many centuries.
+
+ [Picture: Fig. 4]
+
+The mausoleums and sepulchres at the opposite end of the city were even
+more numerous, many having Greek inscriptions upon them.
+
+But the theatre is the most remarkable of all the objects of
+antiquity,--so perfect, with its rows of seats complete, surrounded by
+numerous public edifices and lines of columns; and then commanding from
+those seats a large view of the beautiful Lake of Tiberias, and of the
+grand mountains which enclose it, as a frame to the picture.
+
+Here I stayed behind the rest of the party for a considerable time,
+charmed with the spectacle of nature, and revolving over the incidents of
+Herodian history, so vividly portrayed by Josephus.
+
+Then rejoined my friends, by galloping along a Roman road, paved with
+blocks of dark basalt.
+
+But before leaving this place, I must express my surprise at any person
+that has been there imagining for a moment that it can be the Gadara of
+Scripture.
+
+The distance from the lake is so great as to be utterly incompatible with
+the recorded transactions in the Gospels--having valleys and high hills
+intervening; and even supposing the miracle of relieving the demoniac to
+refer not to the city but to a territory named Gadara, it is
+inconceivable that the territory belonging to this city (Umm Kais) could
+extend beyond the deep natural crevasse of the river _Yarmuk_, and then
+rise up a high mountain, to descend again into a plain, all before
+reaching the lake.
+
+Our descent to the Yarmuk was long and steep; and upon the plain which it
+intersects, the heat exceeded any that I had ever encountered anywhere.
+The air was like fire. Such a day I shall never forget.
+
+The Yarmuk is so considerable a river that the Arabs call it _Sheree'a_,
+as they do the Jordan--only qualifying the latter as the larger one. It
+is called the _Sheree'a el Menadherah_, from a party of Bedaween
+occupying its banks in the interior.
+
+The crevasse through which it issues is wild and romantic in the extreme.
+High cliffs of basalt are the confines of the water. This, on reaching
+the plain, is parted with several streams, (to compare great things with
+small,) in the fashion of the Nile or the Ganges; which the Jordan is
+not, either at its entrance into this lake or its entrance into the Dead
+Sea.
+
+All the streams are fringed with oleander; and, in the extreme heat of
+the day, the horses enjoyed not only their drinking, but their wading
+through the rolling water.
+
+This was the boundary between Bashan and Gilead, through the latter of
+which we had hitherto been travelling, and gave name to the great battle
+A.D. 637, where the victory obtained by the fierce _Khalid_ and the mild
+_Abu Obeidah_ decided the fate of Palestine, and opened the way of the
+Moslems to Jerusalem.
+
+Over an extent of four or five miles, before reaching the Jordan, a rich
+harvest of wheat was being reaped upon the plain. We first attempted to
+cross at _Samakh_, but finding it impossible at that season, had to turn
+back to the ford at the broken bridge, which the natives call the 'mother
+of arches,' (_Umm el Kanater_;) and even there the water was still deep.
+
+Corn-fields and flocks of sheep in every direction; but all the shepherds
+carrying firearms. We most of us lay down on our breasts to drink
+greedily once more from the dear old river; and then we crossed the
+Jordan into the land of Canaan, going on to Tiberias, and passing on the
+way some Franciscan monks. What a change of associations from those of
+the country we had traversed exclusively for the last nine days!
+
+How absurd the sudden and unexpected contrast from old 'Abdu'l 'Azeez and
+the brilliant young 'Ali Deab in the freedom of the desert, to the cowl
+and the convent of the monks--from the grand savage language of the
+Ishmaelite to the mellifluous Italian.
+
+At the hot baths of the lake we found our tents already pitched, and my
+old friend the missionary,--Thomson, from Bayroot,--who had been
+travelling on the eastern side of the lake, (a territory so little
+known,) and, as he and I believed, had discovered the true Gadara. We
+compared notes about affairs of the Arabs at the time.
+
+Several of the juvenile travellers set themselves to swimming before
+dinner at sunset, the huge hills at the back casting long shadows across
+the lake.
+
+We all had tea together, as we were to separate to our several
+destinations in the morning; and on my retiring to sleep, the thermometer
+was at 99 degrees Fahrenheit inside the open tent.
+
+_Saturday_, 19_th_.--Bathing before the sun rose.
+
+Our travellers engaged the boat from Tiberias for the day, and it came up
+from the town to our camp with the sail spread. Large flights of aquatic
+birds as usual flitting and diving about the lake, and the fish abundant,
+rising and splashing at the surface.
+
+For an hour or two before starting on my way southwards, I lay on the
+beach contemplating the lovely scenery, and collecting my thoughts, both
+as to the past and for the future. The principal object of meditation
+was of course the placid lake itself--
+
+ "Dear with the thoughts of Him we love so well."
+
+Then the noble old mountain of Hermon, crowned with snow, now called
+_Jebel esh Shaikh_; which the Sidonians called Sirion; and the Amorites
+called Shenir, (Deut. iii. 9.)
+
+Next the ever-celebrated Jordan, with its typical resemblance to the
+limit dividing this life from the purchased possession of
+heaven,--recalling so much of bright images of Christian poetry employed
+to cheer the weary pilgrim, in anticipation of the time when
+
+ "We'll range the sweet fields on the banks of the river,
+ And sing of salvation for ever and ever!"
+
+Gratefully acknowledging the providence which had brought us happily so
+far, the present writer then girded up his mental loins, and returned to
+Jerusalem; but on the way occasionally glancing towards the eastward
+range of mountains,--the land of Gilead,--now called Belka and 'Ajloon,
+lately traversed; and with a feeling unknown since the verses were first
+echoed in childhood, the words involuntarily issue from the lips:
+
+ "Sihon, king of the Amorites,
+ For His mercy endureth for ever,
+ And Og the king of Bashan,
+ For His mercy endureth for ever!"
+
+Having learned that 'Akeeli Aga el Hhasi was encamped on the Jordan side,
+at no great distance, I resolved to visit this personage, who has since
+then become much more famous as a French protege, being an Arab of
+Algeria, but at this time only noted as having been the guide of the
+United States Expedition to the Dead Sea in 1848, and as being at the
+moment commissioned by the Turks as a Kaimakam of the district, seeing
+that they could not hold even nominal rule there without him.
+
+At my starting there came up from his post a messenger, Hhasan Aga, the
+Bosniac officer of Bashi Bozuk, to conduct me to the tents. The Aga was
+dressed in a crimson silk long coat, over which was a scarlet jacket
+embroidered in gold, and on his legs the Albanian full kilt, or
+fustinella, of white calico; his saddle cloth was of pea-green silk with
+a white border, and yellow worsted network protected the horse's belly
+from flies, also a rich cloth with tassels lay over the horse's loins.
+
+Proceeded southwards, and passed the broken bridge before mentioned.
+Harvest everywhere in progress, and the produce being carried home on
+asses to the village of _'Abadiyeh_, adjoining to the houses of which
+were square and flat tents made of palm-leaf matting as residences of the
+Ghawarineh Arabs.
+
+Came to the ruins of a wretched little village called _Belhhamiyeh_,
+formerly under the patronage of the 'Adwan; and thence appeared in full
+view upon the hill above the great castle of the Crusaders called
+Belvoir, but now named _Cocab_, or _Cocab el Hawa_. Upon the plain by
+the river side was the encampment scattered about, and several European
+tents among the others denoted the presence of Turkish soldiers.
+
+We could see the Jis'r el Mejama'a, the bridge leading across to the land
+of Gilead.
+
+Rode up to 'Akeeli's tent, and found with him the formidable Shaikh Fendi
+el Faiz of the Beni Sukh'r, and a musician with his rebabeh. A slave was
+making coffee on a fire of dried camel's dung, although it was in the
+fast of Ramadan. We conversed guardedly about Deab and the rest of the
+'Adwan, and the camp at _Dahair el Hhumar_. 'Akeeli then had brought in
+for his amusement a wild beast called a _fahh'd_, differing from a
+panther in being larger and in having black stripes down the face; it
+seemed wild enough, but was confined by a rope, the pulling of which, and
+alternately patting the creature was the amusement or occupation of the
+Aga. They brought me some coffee and water to drink, whereupon 'Akeeli
+called for some too, and said to me--"These fools of Mohammedans are
+keeping Ramadan, but I am a Frenchman," he then drank off the water.
+This man, whom Lynch, the American commander, styles a "magnificent
+savage," was savage enough in manners, and dirty, and half-naked. He has
+since, however, made his influence felt, and may perhaps do so again.
+
+Altogether, my reception was not one in accordance with my notions of
+Arab hospitality. Perhaps he did not wish me to espy what was going on
+about him in company with Shaikh Fendi el Faiz, so I took my leave,
+riding towards Cocab. At an Arab encampment we got some _Leben
+Sheneeni_, (soured fresh milk, most delicious in hot weather,) and drank
+almost a pailful of it between myself, the kawwas, and the muleteer. The
+heat was prodigious. In the camp were only women and children at home:
+the former employed in weaving and dyeing woollen trappings for
+horses,--serving to keep off the plague of flies,--of which articles we
+bought two.
+
+'Akeeli had sent an escort to accompany us as far us the castle. One of
+the men was a care-worn old fellow from the far north, wearing a very
+heavy sheepskin coat with wide sleeves, to keep out the scorching heat of
+the sun, and his face covered with a _mandeel_ or cotton handkerchief, to
+protect him from reflection from the ground; his venerable musket
+terminated in a rusty bayonet.
+
+We went southwards until opposite the bridge, then turned westward to the
+hills, and forded the water of _Wadi Berreh_. The ascent was difficult
+and long, during which our escort carried on a conversation in the
+Arnaout language.
+
+At the summit I sent on the servants and baggage to Jeneen, there to
+pitch the tents for us--the sheepskin man, the kawwas, and I turned aside
+to survey the old castle at Cocab el Hawa. It has been a large and noble
+erection in a strong natural position; the trench and sloping walls are
+pretty perfect, the stone-work being still sharp-edged; the portion of
+the defences looking towards the Jordan consists of large stones
+rabbeted, equal to any work in Jerusalem or elsewhere, which must be an
+indication of a fortress long before the time of the Crusaders--though
+the stones are not of dimensions equal to those of the Jerusalem Temple
+wall.
+
+All the masonry, except the rabbeted work, is constructed from the dark
+basalt which abounds in that district. All the space within walls, not
+remaining entire, and part of the trench, is occupied by miserable
+hovels, forming a sort of village, with patches of tobacco cultivation
+attached to the dwellings.
+
+But what can one say in description of the glorious prospect from that
+eminence? It seemed to me to exceed the wonders of Nebi Osha: the
+principal objects in view being the Lake of Tiberias, the river Jordan,
+Tabor, Duhy, Beisan, Carmel, Hermon, a stretch of the Hauran, and the
+cleft of the Yarmuk. One thing surprised me, which was to see how far
+South Cocab is from Tabor, it had never appeared so before from the
+direction of Jeneen or of Nazareth. It was due east from _Duhy_; the
+best way of getting at it from Nabloos is across the plain of Jezreel.
+It is distinguishable from a great distance by means of a white-washed
+tower standing in the midst of the castle.
+
+Forwards we went through a village called _Kifereh_. As usual the ride
+over the plain is very tedious and tiring to the limbs--a hilly country
+in moderation is much more comfortable. We reached _Shutta_, then the
+tents of the Shiukh Arabs close under hills, and beneath a hill called
+_Nooris_, and at a mill called _Jalood_, we were overtaken by rain late
+in the year, being the 19th of May.
+
+The sun set a good while before our arriving at Zer'een (Jezreel); the
+road was not straight, for a _detour_ was necessary in order to ensure
+firm ground among the marshes; stagnated water abounds, that has been
+poured down from the hills of Gilboa. We passed the natural cavern from
+which the Jalood water issues on the side of a hill. A large cistern is
+formed at the place. The inhabitants--such as we saw occasionally--were
+very unhealthy in appearance.
+
+Night came on, and dew with it, to which we had been long unaccustomed.
+The storm cleared off, and we travelled several hours by moonlight. Then
+we saw abundance of fire-flies flitting across our way.
+
+Overtaking our luggage, we all jogged on slowly together, very tired and
+silent, till a horseman appeared, who galloped off on our inquiry, "Who
+goes there?"
+
+At length we heard the welcome sounds of frogs croaking, then dogs
+barking, then saw the lights of Jeneen, and being Ramadan the minaret
+there was illuminated with festoons of lamps.
+
+Then we reached the appointed well-known grove of olive trees.
+
+Our day had been very long and fatiguing--the cattle exhausted. It was
+Saturday night, and the week ended with the intelligence that Shaikh
+Barakat el Fraikh had declared war against the Beni Sukh'r, so that we
+had just passed through the Over-Jordan country in time to be able to do
+so. At Jerash I had met Barakat, and at 'Akeeli's camp had met his
+adversary Fendi el Faiz.
+
+
+
+
+II. NORTHWARDS TO BEISAN, KADIS, ANTIPATRIS, etc.
+
+
+ October 23, 1850.
+
+Leaving Jerusalem upon the Nabloos road, and crossing the upper portion
+of the valley which, lower down, after a curve becomes the valley of
+Jehoshaphat, we passed almost directly over the sepulchre of Simon the
+Just, of whom such "excellent things are spoken" in the books of the
+Maccabees, and in whose memory an annual festival is kept by the
+Jerusalem Jews on this spot on the day called [Hebrew text] rather more
+than a month after the passover. Two other saints are celebrated on the
+same day of the calendar--viz., R. Simeon bar Jochai, the cabbalist of
+Safed, author of _Zohar_, and R. Akiva of Tiberias.
+
+Then mounting up the side of Scopus, we halted for a few minutes to
+survey that view of the holy city which surpasses all others, and must
+have done so in the palmy days of history. It was at the time of
+mid-afternoon, when the sun's rays pour slantingly with grand effect upon
+the Temple site. I could not but recollect that this was exactly the
+hour appointed for the daily evening sacrifice "between the two
+evenings," (Hebrew of Exod. xii. 6,) and think of the choral music of
+Levitical services grandly reverberating among the semicircle of hills.
+
+Meditations of this nature would lead one far away in varied directions,
+perhaps unsuited for the commencement of a long journey lying before us.
+
+The next object attracting our attention was the Roman milestone lying
+beside the road, shortly
+
+ [Picture: Roman Milestone]
+
+after passing _Sha'afat_. This I always make it a rule to examine every
+time of passing it. At one time I had it rolled over in order to be able
+to read the inscription; but I afterwards found it tossed with the
+writing downwards--perhaps all the better for its preservation.
+
+The inscription I read as follows:--
+
+ [Picture: Milestone inscription]
+
+That is to say, a register of the names of the Antonine emperors; but
+there must have been other names on the upper part, now broken away.
+
+Then passed under _Er Ram_ on our right hand, the Ramah of the Old
+Testament, but as it is not often noticed, may be found in Jeremiah xl.
+1, as the place where the Babylonish captain of the guard, as a favour,
+released the prophet, after bringing him with the rest in chains from
+Jerusalem.
+
+Slept in a house at _Ram Allah_. This is a village about three-quarters
+of an hour N.W. from Er Ram. The weather being cold we first lit a fire,
+thereby trying the utility of a chimney that was in the house--in vain,
+for no smoke would pass up it; it all settled in the room itself; and the
+people excused themselves on the ground that it had never been tried
+before. Probably it was a novelty imported to the place by some of the
+people who had been employed by Europeans in Jerusalem; and yet I have
+always found that the old Saracenic houses of the Effendis in Jerusalem
+have all of them chimneys; and the word for _chimney_ is well known in
+Arabic.
+
+This being almost exclusively a Christian village, it was interesting to
+hear the people addressing each other as Peter, James, Elijah, John,
+Paul, etc., instead of Mohammed, Ali, Omar, or other such appellations.
+It is a little beside the purpose, but I may remark in passing, that
+throughout these countries there are names in use common to all
+religions,--some scriptural, as Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, or David;
+and others mere epithets, as Assaad or Selim.
+
+In this village are three priests, (Greek orthodox,) idle, ignorant, and
+coarse men; but the peasantry are a bold set of fellows, speaking and
+acting very independently of clerical domination,--very indifferent as to
+whether they shall turn Protestants or Papists. One thing they are in
+earnest about, and that is to get schools for their children.
+
+Ram Allah exhibits the same characteristic as all other Christian
+villages in Palestine, that of being in good condition--new houses being
+built, and old ones repaired; contrary to the condition of Moslem
+villages, almost without one exception--that of falling to decay. There
+is, however, no water here; the women bring it in jars upon their heads
+from _Beeri_, a considerable distance.
+
+We made a _detour_ from the high-road, in order to look for _Jifna_, the
+_Gophna_ of Josephus, where Titus and his renowned Tenth Legion (recently
+arrived from Britain) slept the night before reaching Jerusalem. Then
+the Eagles were gathered together over the doomed carcass of the city.
+Inquiring our way from Ram Allah to Jifna, some said there was a road
+without going to Beeri; some said there was none. At length we were put
+upon a pretty decent path.
+
+In ten minutes we came to a sort of well with a little water, where women
+were thumping clothes upon stones; this is called washing in the East.
+Magnificent view westwards of the great plain, the Great Sea, Jaffa,
+Ramlah, etc.
+
+We wandered about hills and among vineyards, and came to a small village
+named _Doorah_, in good condition, with water, and excellent cultivation
+of garden vegetables in small patches, similar to those of Selwan
+(Siloam) and Urtas; then turning a corner saw Jifna at some distance, in
+the midst of a plain enclosed by hills; and there it must have been that
+the manipulus with S.P.Q.R. was posted in front of Italian tents, and the
+soldiers bustling about or jesting in Latin or British language, before
+their retiring to rest, in the spring season of the year A.D. 70.
+
+Becoming entangled among a long belt of vineyards between us and it, and
+time passing away while our luggage was far on the road to Nabloos, we
+turned aside and regained the high-road at _'Ain Yebrood_. Reluctantly I
+retreated from _Jifna_, for I had wished to discover the precise road
+upon which Titus and his army marched towards Jerusalem. Passing
+_Sinjil_, _Lubban_, and _Sawiyeh_, we rested just beyond _Sawiyeh_ under
+the great oak, at the divergence of the valley of _Laithma_. Beneath its
+wide-spreading branches a flock of sheep was resting at noon (Cant. i.
+7.) From these we got good draughts of fresh milk.
+
+As evening approached, we were passing within the huge shadow of Mount
+Gerizim; and in Nabloos I remained till Monday morning,--this being the
+end of Thursday.
+
+28_th_. Preparing for descent into the Jordan valley, I engaged, in
+addition to the usual servants, a horseman of the Bashi Bozuk,
+recommended by the local governor, Suliman Bek Tokan. It seemed prudent
+to obtain this man's attendance, as he might be known and recognised by
+disorderly persons throughout the turbulent and unknown country before
+me, whatever might be his character for valour or discretion. Two of the
+native Protestants of Nabloos accompanied me also for about four hours on
+the way.
+
+Passing Joseph's sepulchre and the village of _Asker_, (is not this
+Sychar? it is near the traditional Jacob's Well,) we went northwards over
+the plain of _Mukhneh_, equivalent to Makhaneh, "camp," in Hebrew, (the
+_Moreh_ of Gen. xii. 6, Deut. xi. 30, and Judges vii. 1) having left the
+eastern valley with _Salem_ (Gen. xxxiii. 18) on our right. To my
+surprise the plain was soon and abruptly terminated at the foot of a very
+lofty mountain, and we commenced a descent among chasms of great
+convulsions of nature, displaying remarkable contortions of geological
+strata. This brought us into the Wadi _En-Nab_, so called from the
+growth there of a fruit-tree, (the Jujube,) bearing that name, better in
+quality than anywhere else in Palestine; and, indeed, the tree is found
+in but few other places. At the confluence of this valley with the Wadi
+_Bedan_ there are several fragments of ancient columns remaining, quite
+four feet in diameter.
+
+Hitherto we had met many more peasants travelling with merchandise than I
+had expected. They were all going in one direction, namely, towards
+Nabloos, and therefore from Es-Salt in Gilead, beyond Jordan.
+
+These, however, ceased after we had crossed the water of Wadi Bedan into
+the larger _Wadi Fara'ah_,--which is, however, the high-road to Es-Salt.
+
+Soon afterwards we observed, by our wayside, a square of solid ancient
+masonry, three courses high. In England this would be certainly the
+pedestal of some old demolished market-cross; but it may have been the
+lower part of some memorial pyramid. In the previous year I had seen
+just such another at Ziph (Josh. xv. 55,) beyond Hebron.
+
+Then we came upon a distinct piece of Roman paved road, which showed that
+we were upon the high-road between Neapolis and Scythopolis, _alias_
+Shechem and Bethshan, _alias_ Nabloos and Beisan.--Crossed a stream
+richly bordered with rosy-blossomed oleander, and soon turned the head of
+the water. A demolished castle was on our right, commanding the entrance
+of Wadi Fara'ah.
+
+Soon after noon we gained the olive-trees alongside of _Tubas_, a
+prosperous village, yet inhabited by a people as rude and coarse as their
+neighbours. Tubas is always liable to incursions from the eastern
+Bedaween, and always subject to the local wars of the Tokan and 'Abdu'l
+Hadi factions. I have known it to be repeatedly plundered. The natural
+soil here is so fertile that its wheat and its oil, together with those
+of _Hanoon_, fetch the highest prices in towns; and the grain is
+particularly sought after as seed for other districts.
+
+The place, however, is most remarkable to us as being the _Thebez_ of
+Judges ix. 50, where Abimelech was slain by the women hurling a millstone
+on his head from the wall. The more I become acquainted with the
+peculiar population of _Jebel Nabloos_, (_i.e._ the territory of which
+Nabloos is the metropolis,) a brutish people "waxing fat and kicking,"
+the more does the history of the book of Judges, especially the first
+twelve chapters, read like a record of modern occurrences thereabouts.
+It is as truly an Arab history as any other oriental book can supply. I
+observed that Mount Gerizim can be seen from Tubas,--which fact seemed to
+give additional emphasis to the words, "And all the evil of the men of
+Shechem did God render upon their heads; and upon those came the curse of
+Jotham, the son of Jerubbaal."
+
+The site of Tubas is elevated. It is still a considerable village, and
+possesses that decided evidence of all very ancient sites in Palestine--a
+large accumulation of rubbish and ashes.
+
+I was told that here, as well as in several of the villages around, there
+are scattered Christians, one or two families in each among the Moslems,
+without churches, without clergy, without books or education of any kind;
+still they are Christians, and carry their infants to the Greek Church in
+Nabloos for baptism. What a deplorable state of things! Since the date
+of this journey the Church Missionary Society's agents have in some
+degree ministered to the spiritual destitution of these poor people by
+supplying some at least with copies of the Holy Scriptures.
+
+Here my principal kawwas, Hadj Mohammed es Serwan, found the fever, which
+had been upon him more or less for the last three days, so greatly
+increased, that it was not possible for him to proceed farther with me.
+The fever he attributed to his having, on arrival at Nabloos, indulged
+too freely in figs and milk together. The general experience of the
+country warrants this conclusion.
+
+Poor fellow! after several times dismounting, and renewing his efforts to
+keep up with me, he was at length totally disabled; and our Protestant
+friends, who were now about to return home, engaged to get him into the
+village, and have him carefully attended to, there and at Nabloos, till
+he should be able to return to his family at Jerusalem. I left him under
+a large tree, gazing wistfully after me, and endeavouring to persuade me
+not to go down to that Gehennom of a place, Beisan. {94}
+
+My forward journey lay through fine olive-grounds and stubble-fields of
+wheat. In an hour we passed _Kayaseer_, a wretched but ancient place,
+with exceedingly old olive-trees about it. Then going on for some time
+among green bushes and straggling shoots of trees, we descended to the
+water-bed of a valley. Once more upon a Roman road, on which at twenty
+minutes' distance was a prostrate Roman milestone, but with no
+inscription to be seen; perhaps it was on the under side, upon the
+ground. Then the road, paved as it was with Roman work, rose before us
+on a steep slope, to a plain which was succeeded by the "Robbers'
+Valley," (Wadi el Hharamiyeh,) in which we met two peasants driving an
+ass, and inquired of them "Is the plain of the Jordan safe?"--meaning,
+Are there any wild Bedaween about? The reply was "It is safe;" but the
+whole conversation consisted of four words in the question, and one in
+the answer.
+
+Over a precipitous and broken rocky hill,--the worst piece of road I ever
+met with,--till we came suddenly upon the grand savage scenery of the
+Ghor, with the eastern barrier of the mountains of Gilead. The river
+Jordan is not visible, as is the case in most parts, till one almost
+reaches the banks.
+
+Here the vegetation had changed its character,--leaving all civilisation
+of olive-trees behind, and almost all consisting of oak and hawthorn. We
+had instead the _neb'k_ or _dom-tree_, and the _ret'm_ or juniper of
+Scripture; the heat excessive.
+
+At the junction of the Valley with the Ghor are three Roman milestones,
+lying parallel and close side by side,--all of them in the shape and size
+stereotyped throughout the country. This, then, was probably a measured
+station of unusual importance; and from it the acropolis of Bethshan just
+comes into view. This is known in the country by the name of _El
+Hhus'n_.
+
+The ground was in every direction covered with black basalt fragments,
+among which, however, was corn stubble remaining; and we were told that
+the crop belonged to the people of Tubas.
+
+We kept upon a straight path leading directly up to Beisan, which all the
+way was intersected by running streams issuing from the hills on our
+left, and going to the Jordan.
+
+The water was not often good for drinking; but at most of these rivulets
+our attendant, Suliman Bek's horseman, alighted to say his prayers, out
+of fright on account of the Arab Bedaween.
+
+Tabor N.W. and Hermon N.E. were both prominent objects in the landscape,
+with the town of Beisan between the two,--the ground abounding in the
+kali plant and neb'k trees, with bright yellow fruit, from which we
+frequently saw clearly desert camels cropping the lower branches,
+notwithstanding the long and sharp thorns upon them.
+
+We marched straight on, from one ancient artificial mound to another,
+with Beisan before us, the streams all the way increasing in width and
+rapidity,--some of them bordered, or even half-choked, with a jungle of
+oleander in flower, hemlock, gigantic canes, wild fig-trees, neb'k, and
+tangled masses of blackberry. Some of them we had to ford, or even leap
+our horses over. We were surprised at such torrents of water rushing
+into the Jordan at such a season of the year.
+
+Reached Beisan at half-past six,--a wild-looking place, with magnificent
+mountains in every direction around, but all frowning black with volcanic
+basalt; and the people horribly ugly--black and ferocious in physiognomy.
+They were just in the busiest time of the indigo harvest; but they had
+herds of very fine cows brought home, as the sun in setting threw over us
+the shadow of the mountains of Gilboa. My companion from Jerusalem
+looked up with horror to these hills, and began quoting the poetic
+malediction of David upon them on account of the death of Saul and
+Jonathan: "Let there be no dew, neither rain upon you, nor fields of
+offerings," etc.
+
+It was indeed a notable event in one's life to have arrived at the place
+where the body of the first king of Israel, with that of his son, the
+dear friend of David, after being beheaded, were nailed to the walls of
+the city. Jabesh-Gilead could not have been very far off across the
+Jordan; for its "valiant men arose, and went all night, and took the body
+of Saul, and the bodies of his sons, from the walls of Bethshan, and came
+to Jabesh, and burnt them there. And they took their bones and buried
+them under a tree at Jabesh, and fasted seven days," (1 Sam. xxxi. 12,
+13). This respectful treatment was by way of grateful recompense for
+Saul's past kindness, as the very first act of his royalty had been to
+deliver them from danger when besieged by Nahash the Ammonite (I Sam.
+xi.); and they kept his remains till king David removed them into the
+ancestral sepulchre within the tribe of Benjamin (2 Sam. xxi. 14).
+
+To return. The people of Beisan urged upon us their advice not to sleep
+in our tents, for fear of Arabs, who were known to be about the
+neighbourhood. I however preferred to remain as I was; and many of the
+people slept around the tents upon heaps of indigo plant, making fires
+for themselves from the straw. Before retiring to sleep, I several times
+found the horseman at his prayers by moonlight. During the night the
+roaring of the water-torrents re-echoed loudly from the rocky hills.
+
+29_th_.--We learned that the indigo cultivation is not very laborious.
+The seed is scattered over the ground, and then the people turn the
+streams over the surface for inundation. There is no ploughing. This is
+done directly after barley-harvest from the same ground. There is no
+produce for two years, but after that period the same stalks successively
+for five years produce about seventy-two-fold. I bought a timnah
+(measure) of the seed for curiosity, to deposit in our museum.
+
+We finished breakfast, had the tents struck, and the mules laden, all
+before the sky began to look red, announcing the coming sun.
+
+The castle of 'Ajloon was a very conspicuous object on the mountainous
+horizon of the east.
+
+I then spent about three hours in exploring the Roman antiquities of the
+place when it bore the name of Scythopolis. These are all contained
+within or along a natural basin, of which I here give a rough map.
+
+ [Picture: Scythopolis]
+
+The general form is that of an oval, the centre of which has four
+pediments for the arch of a bridge, or a triumphal arch, over a rivulet
+that traverses the whole obliquely. From this central square of four
+pediments extends right and left one long colonnade, or dromos. Within
+the basin, but on the south bank of the water, is the theatre; on the
+north, and outside of the oval, is the lofty mound, surmounted by
+fortified buildings, forming the acropolis, the _Hhus'n_, which is
+visible for miles and miles over the country. In the S.E. corner is the
+modern village--a very insignificant one, but with remains of a Christian
+church, for I should suppose the Moslems never built so good a mosque at
+Beisan. Of course the present inhabitants use it for their devotions.
+The building is all angular, with a square tower at the south end. The
+principal doorway--that at the north end--is perforated into a walled-up
+large pointed arch.
+
+The principal object of my curiosity was the theatre, which, like all
+those of the Romans and Greeks, is a building of nearly a semicircle in
+form, with the extremities connected by a chord or straight line; this
+latter was the _proscenium_ or stage, and is near 200 feet in length.
+Upon the ground-plan, at half distance from the centre to the outer
+curve, the _vomitories_ or passages for entrance and exit begin, leaving
+an open area; these are formed in concentric semicircles, divided across
+by radii, all coming from the one centre.
+
+Over these passages the seats for spectators are constructed, rising
+higher as approaching to the outer curve--and the dens for the wild
+beasts, when they were to be exhibited, were under the front seats. The
+vomitories are of the most perfect design for utility, and still remain
+in complete preservation, all vaulted over with admirable workmanship.
+
+ [Picture: Ground plan of the Theatre]
+
+I looked about in vain for the indentings in front of the rows of seats
+which had held the [Greek text] or brazen saucers, which indentings are
+stated to have been seen by Irby and Mangles; but we know that the [Greek
+text] were so placed in ancient theatres for increasing the power of
+voice uttered upon the stage.
+
+The front blocks of the stage are white, and these are brought from a
+distance. They measure eight feet by four each. But the peculiarity of
+the general building lies in its being built of the black stone of the
+country adjacent. I afterwards saw Roman theatres at Amman and Umm Kais,
+as already mentioned in the journey "Over the Jordan," but they were
+white; and another at Petra, but that was of rosy red. All the
+three--the black, the white, and the red--were each of its own one
+colour, without intermixture of others, except that here the stage was of
+another colour from the rest of the building.
+
+I then prepared to mount to the acropolis or Hhus'n. The hill is shaped
+as an oblong square, sloping downwards, and rounded at the four edges.
+Steps have been cut into it for ascending from below.
+
+Arriving at what appears from below to be the summit, but is not, I found
+a large platform, improved by art, with remains of houses and cisterns,
+and surrounded at the edge by a parapet wall five feet thick,--except at
+the eastern end, opposite to the present town, where one-third of the
+hill has been left rising considerably higher, and therefore a wall is
+not required.
+
+In this wall, at the N.W. side, I found remains of a very massive
+gateway, with fragments of older columns and friezes built up into the
+side work. At this spot the rising hill above is particularly
+precipitous. I climbed to the extreme summit, but found there no remains
+of human labour. The view, however, as may be supposed, amply repaid the
+exertion. In one direction the prolonged Ghor of the Jordan; and in
+another appeared the opening of the plain of Esdraelon and Tabor, with
+the Mediterranean far away, and Carmel almost hull down, as one might say
+of a ship. In the nearer distance were lines of black Arab tents, an old
+khan, ruins of water-mills, and rushing rivulets in abundance, the
+sources of which lie so high in the adjacent hills of Gilboa, that the
+town and the irrigation of the district are supplied from them copiously.
+
+I picked up some tesserae about the acropolis hill, but I saw none
+elsewhere near Beisan,--discovered no inscriptions, and heard of no
+coins.
+
+Close to the town there were thick layers of calcareous sediment,
+containing petrified reeds or canes, of which I brought away specimens
+for our museum.
+
+Thus ended my inspection of this really interesting place, so remarkable
+for being all built of black volcanic stone,--the theatre, the church,
+and the modern village, besides the rocks all about: add to this the vile
+appearance of the people, and one cannot wonder at visitors entertaining
+a dread and disgust at the whole.--I find that I have omitted to mention
+the mineral quality of the water, the most of which is undrinkable.
+
+We left Beisan at half-past nine, after examining it more completely than
+the published accounts of former travellers lead us to believe they have
+done. Thomson's account is of later date.
+
+Our journey now lay due north, along the Ghor to Tiberias; and a very
+pleasing journey it proved to be.
+
+In half an hour we had to ford a pretty wide stream, and in five minutes
+more were among very extensive ruins of an ancient town; upon a tumulus
+at its farther extremity are lying portions of three huge sarcophagi, and
+a portion of a thick column. This must be the "Es Soudah," (_i.e._,
+_black_,) mentioned by Thomson--indeed, all ruins of that district are of
+black basalt, excepting the columns and sarcophagi. The name _soda_ or
+_black_ occurs in English as a synonym for _alkali_, and means the black
+or dark-coloured ashes of the plant _al-kali_ when burnt for use--the
+white colour of it seen in Europe is obtained by chemical preparation.
+
+Black tents and fires of the kali burners were visible in many
+directions--a delicious breeze blowing in our faces; but above everything
+cheerful was the green line of the Jordan banks. No snow to be seen at
+present at that distance upon Hermon. At half-past eleven we were
+beneath some castellated remains of great extent, namely, the Crusaders'
+_Belvoir_, now called _Cocab el Hawa_. Our ground had become gradually
+more undulated; then hilly, and the Ghor narrowed: we were obliged to
+cross it diagonally towards the Jordan; forded a running stream abounding
+in oleander, where, according to his usual custom, my Egyptian servant
+took a handful of the flowers to wear in his waistcoat. Then the birds
+carolling so happily, recalling the well-known lines--
+
+ "And Jordan, those sweet banks of thine,
+ With woods so full of nightingales."
+
+The songsters that I heard were certainly neither the linnets nor
+goldfinches of other parts of Palestine, but must have been the _bulbul_,
+the note of which, though rich and tender in expression, is not however
+the same with that of English nightingales.
+
+Then we came to the bridge called _Jis'r el Mejama'a_, which is in
+tolerably good condition, with one large and several smaller arches in
+two rows, and a dilapidated khan at the western end. I crossed over the
+bridge into the territory of Gilead.
+
+The khan has been a strong edifice, but the stones of the massive
+gateway, especially the great keystone, are split across, as if from the
+effects of gunpowder.
+
+When that bridge was erected, the country must have been in safe and
+prosperous circumstances; the beauty of the scenery was not found in
+contrast to the happiness of the people; there must have been rich
+commerce carried on between the far east and the towns of Palestine; and
+it is in reference to such a fortunate period that the wandering
+minstrels, even now among the Bedaween, sing the songs of the forty
+orphan youths who competed in poetic compositions under the influence of
+love for an Arab maiden at the bridge of Mejama'a.
+
+The name is derived from the _meeting_ of two branches of the Jordan in
+that place after having separated above. Below the bridge the bed of the
+river is very rocky, and the course of the water disturbed, but above the
+"meeting of the waters" all is beautifully smooth and tranquil; wild
+aquatic birds enjoying their existence on its surface, and the banks
+fringed with willows and oleanders. How grateful is all this to the
+traveller after a scorching ride of several hours.
+
+Then the river, and with it our road, deflected back to the western
+hills; again the river wound in serpentine sinuosities about the middle
+of the plain, with little islands and shallow sands within its course. I
+am not sure that the delight we experienced was not enhanced by the
+circumstance of travelling upwards against stream. Whenever tourists
+find the country safe enough for the purpose, and have leisure at
+command, I certainly recommend to them this district of Jordan, between
+Beisan and Tiberias: of course this presupposes that they visit Nazareth
+before or afterwards.
+
+Occasionally we came to rings of stones laid on the ground,--these mark
+the graves of Arabs of the vicinity; then a cattle enclosure, fenced in
+by a bank of earth, and thorns piled on the top. All about this were
+subterranean granaries for corn, having apertures like wells, but empty.
+Close to this was a ford to the eastern bank. The river has many
+interruptions certainly, but yet in two days' ride we had seen a good
+deal of smooth water for boating. At half-past one was reached the
+village of _Abadiyeh_.
+
+Near the village we saw people cutting twigs of tamarisk and willow. At
+the village were large plantations of the kitchen vegetable, _Bamia_,
+which is a _hibiscus_, (called _ochra_ in the West Indies,) the plants
+four feet high, with bright yellow blossom. Near the regular houses were
+suburb huts made of reeds. This is often seen along the Ghor; they are
+tenanted by wanderers at certain seasons of the year.
+
+There was a profusion of good wheat straw lying wasting upon the ground;
+it is here too plentiful to be cared for.
+
+We saw afterwards a low wall of masonry entirely crossing the Jordan, but
+having now a broken aperture in the middle. In former times these
+artificial works were common, and served to irrigate the lands on each
+side. The river was never used for navigation.
+
+At two o'clock we reached one well-known rendezvous, the old broken
+bridge, popularly called "Mother of Arches." The ford was now low in
+water. Here we rested under a neb'k tree; and on getting out the
+luncheon, discovered that all our stores of bread, coffee, sugar, and
+arrow-root had been soaked by the splashing of streams and fords that we
+had this day encountered.
+
+The horseman fell again to his prayers. Several Arabs from the Hauran
+with their camels, crossed the Jordan while we were there.
+
+Another hour took us to the baths of Tiberias; the heat very great, and
+by our roadside there was a whole mountain with its dry yellow grass and
+weeds on fire.
+
+Near the south end of the lake are some palms growing wild. We
+dismounted at a quarter to four.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Next day I ascended the hills to Safed, a well-known station. The place
+is exceedingly healthy, enjoying the purest mountain air, as is evinced
+by the healthy complexion of the numerous Jews residing there; and the
+landscape views are both extensive and beautiful.
+
+On the following day I undertook a few hours' excursion to _Kadis_
+(Kedesh Naphtali), where Barak, son of Abinoam, and Deborah, collected
+the forces of Zebulun and Naphtali, for marching to Mount Tabor against
+Sisera. It was also one of the six cities of refuge for cases of
+unintentional homicide, (Josh. xx. 7;) it lies to the N.N.E. from Safed.
+
+In an hour we obtained a grand view of Hermon just opposite to us, and
+never lost sight of it till our return. Passed between the villages of
+_Dilathah_ on the right, and _Taitaba_ on the left; the country is all
+strewn with volcanic basalt. In another half-hour we had _Ras el Ahhmar_
+on our left. Then _Farah_ and _Salhhah_ at some distance to the left,
+and _Alma_ just before us. The volcanic brown stones had on them
+occasionally a thin lichen of either orange colour, or a sour pale green,
+like verdigris.
+
+About this village were women and children gathering olives from the
+trees--first beating the boughs with poles, then picking up the fruit
+from the ground.
+
+The small district around here is named "the Khait," and the people boast
+of its extraordinary fertility in corn-produce.
+
+Down a steep descent of white limestone, where it is said the torrents
+are so strong in winter that no one attempts to pass that way. Rising
+again, we found near the summit of the opposite hill a spring of water,
+from which some Bedaween women were carrying away water in the common
+fashion, in goat-skins upon their backs. They were young, pretty, dirty,
+and ragged. Of course their rags were blue, and their lips were coloured
+to match.
+
+Pleasant breeze springing up after the heat of the day. Corn stubble on
+the fields, and fine olive plantations, as we got near to Kadis, our
+place of destination; with such a wide clear road up to it, as might seem
+to be traditionally preserved as such from ancient times, if the Talmud
+be relied upon when it gives the legal width of various kinds of roads,
+and prescribes twice as much for a highway towards the cities of refuge,
+as for any other description of road. {109}
+
+The scenery around Kadis is cheerful, but the village itself consisted of
+only about half-a-dozen wretched houses. In passing by these, towards an
+orchard at the farther side, we saw some large ancient sarcophagi,--three
+of them lying side by side, but broken, and some capitals of columns.
+
+After selecting our site for the tents, and setting the cook to work in
+his peculiar vocation, not forgetting to see that the horses were being
+attended, we procured a guide to conduct us down the hill to the
+antiquities.
+
+There are still evidences remaining that the old city had been wealthy
+and celebrated--squared stones lying profusely about. At the spring of
+water: this was received into an embellished sarcophagus for a trough,
+and adjoining to it a spacious paved reservoir.
+
+Here began a series of highly ornamental public edifices and sepulchral
+monuments. We went first to the farthest; and there it was greatly to be
+regretted that there was not with us an artist able to do justice to the
+exceeding beauty of the remains.
+
+It was a large oblong building, placed east and west, an ornamental
+moulding running round the whole at four feet from the ground; the roof
+fallen in. At the eastern extremity have been three portals, of which
+the middle one was by far the largest; each of these decorated richly by
+a bead and scroll moulding. The lintel of the principal gate has fallen
+from its place, and now stands perpendicular, leaning against one of the
+uprights: this is one stone of fifteen feet in length, beautifully
+sculptured. Some broken pillars are lying about, and several magnificent
+Corinthian capitals of square pilasters, which had been alongside of the
+principal portal. I have never seen anywhere in Palestine any relic of
+so pure a Grecian taste as this temple. {110}
+
+Nearer to the town is a Roman erection of large well-cut stones, which
+have acquired from the effects of time the fine yellow tinge which is
+remarkable on the relic of the Church of St John Baptist at Sebustieh.
+{111}
+
+This was a smaller building than the other, and is nearly entire, except
+that the roof is fallen in. It is in a square form: at each corner is a
+solid square of masonry thirty feet high, and these are connected with
+each other by semi-circular arches, two of which are fallen, and the
+other two have their keystones dangling almost in the air, so slight is
+the hold of their voussoirs to keep them from falling. The walls rise
+half way up these abutments; the doorway is to the south, and has the
+ports and lintel richly decorated. Of the use of this erection I could
+form no judgment.
+
+Between the two edifices was a mass of solid masonry, supporting a
+sarcophagus nearly ten feet long, with a double sarcophagus of the same
+dimensions at each side of it: not only the middle single one, but each
+double sarcophagus, was formed of one stone each. Can we doubt of the
+relation which the persons buried in the double ones bore to each other?
+The sides of these stone coffins are highly adorned with floral garlands,
+and the lids are lying broken across beside them.
+
+Oh! vain expectation, to preserve the human frame from violation, by
+elaborate and durable monuments! There is but one safe repository for
+the decaying part of man, and that is what the Almighty Maker at first
+decreed--namely, earth to earth, ashes to ashes, and dust to dust. The
+poorest slave, buried in a hole within the ground, is safer from man's
+greed and violence than the mightiest conqueror; for the massive porphyry
+sarcophagus of Alexander was rifled by Caligula, and after that by
+others, in Egypt. And the same fate has befallen the tombs of Cyrus and
+Darius in Persia, for the sake of the riches entombed with them.
+
+Some copper coins were brought to us, but of no particular value: they
+were either corroded or broken, and of no remarkable antiquity.
+
+As twilight faded away we returned to the tents, and had the evening
+meal. The wind rose considerably, so that we lighted a fire on the lee
+side of my tent, and gazed round upon the strange and noble scene around.
+There was Hermon just before us, seen indistinctly by starlight; and
+there was sufficient novelty and non-security in the place to keep
+attention awake.
+
+The shaikh of the village came and assured us that in the Lebanon (not
+far distant) the Druses were up; that the convent at Maaluleh had been
+sacked, and twenty-two Emirs had been seized by the beastly Turks (as he
+denominated them); that Abu Neked was up in arms, and even the villages
+in the south, about Nazareth, were fighting. Of course there was
+considerable exaggeration in all this, but our muleteer began to pray
+that he might be soon safe again in Jerusalem.
+
+The shaikh informed us that in the happy time of the Egyptian rule, under
+Ibrahim Pasha, his village was so populous that they cultivated fifty
+feddans of land, whereas now they could only work six; that then property
+was so safe that Arab marauders were always caught and punished, (he had
+himself had Bedaween kept prisoners in his house,) whereas now, under the
+Turks, they come into his house to steal.
+
+While he was relating this, a man came running from the village to
+announce that neighbouring Arabs were just before carrying off some of
+their cows in the dark, but on being pursued, had made off without them.
+
+After I got to bed, one of our people shot at a hyaena, and the villagers
+shouted from the roofs of their houses to know if we were attacked. In
+the morning they told us that they had seen the hyaena, big enough to eat
+a man, and that their attention had been attracted to it by the cry of an
+owl.
+
+_Saturday_, _November_ 2.--We returned towards Safed over the plain of
+_Alma_. The wheat of this district is renowned far and wide for quality
+and quantity of produce. The guide told us that at this place were
+splendid remains of antiquity; but, on arriving, we could hear of nothing
+but a poor cistern within a cavern. Here the black basalt recommences
+after the region of white limestone where we had been; and then again, at
+the distance of a good-sized field, we were upon common brown
+agricultural soil. It is curious how sharply these division-lines of
+soil are drawn in every direction about this place. {114}
+
+Thence we diverged off from yesterday's road to visit _Jish_, passing
+through Ras el Ahhmar. Most magnificent views of Hermon and
+Anti-Lebanon.
+
+Had to go down into a valley, through which, on a former journey, we had
+passed on coming from _Bint Jebail_, and visited again the ancient
+monument in a vineyard by the roadside. It appears to have consisted of
+one small building. The lower parts of two upright posts of its doorway
+remain, together with a fragment of the transverse lintel: several pieces
+of columns are lying about, and pediments of these _in situ_. Besides
+these, there is the following fragment of sculpture
+
+ [Picture: Ancient sepulchre near Jish]
+
+nearly level with the ground, and is probably the entrance of a
+sepulchre, but we had no opportunity of clearing away the soil to
+ascertain that. The ornamentation seems to be that of laurel leaves.
+Near adjoining is a fragment of a round pillar, partly buried; but on
+seeing Hebrew writing upon it, I cleared it away partly. Some of it was
+but indistinct. I could only read it thus--
+
+ [Picture: Hebrew writing]
+
+--from which not much signification can be gathered. Perhaps some cracks
+in the stone have disfigured the characters; but how and when did a
+Hebrew inscription come in such a place? The site is very agreeable,
+with streamlets of water tinkling among trees by the roadside.
+
+Thence we mounted up to the village of _Jish_, the place of _John of
+Giscala_, the antagonist of Josephus. This seems to have been the
+centre-point of the dreadful earthquake in 1837, from which Safed and
+Tiberias suffered so much. It occurred on the New Year's day, while the
+people of the village were all in church; and just as the priest held the
+sacramental cup in his hand, the whole village was in a moment destroyed,
+not one soul being left alive but the priest himself, and, humanly
+speaking, his preservation was owing to the arch above his head. All the
+villages around shared the same fate, and the greater part of the towns
+above mentioned. Much damage was sustained all over Palestine; and a
+heart-rending description of the events has since been printed, though
+little known in England, by a Christian Israelite, named Calman, who,
+together with Thomson, the American missionary, hasted from Bayroot on
+hearing of the calamity, and aided in saving many lives of persons buried
+beneath the ruins of Safed and Tiberias, during several days after the
+catastrophe.
+
+This sad event serves for an era to date from; and the Jews there, when
+referring to past occurrences, are accustomed to say, it was so many
+years before (or after) the [Hebrew text] (the earthquake.)
+
+Among the ruins of Jish are no remains of antiquity, except a fragment of
+the thick shaft of a column and a small sarcophagus, only large enough
+for a child, in a field half a mile distant. The Jews appropriate this
+to Shemaiah Abtelin.
+
+We passed between _Kadita_ and _Taitaba_, over land strewn with volcanic
+stone, beginning near Jish and extending almost to those villages. The
+crater, of very remote times, noticed by Robinson, is about one-third of
+the distance from Jish to Safed; not very imposing in appearance.
+
+The journey from Kadis to Safed is one of five hours' common travelling.
+We reached the olive ground encampment shortly before noon. Being the
+Jewish Sabbath, there was the _Eruv_ suspended at the exits of the
+principal streets. This is an invention of the Talmudists, used in
+unwalled towns, being a line extended from one post to another,
+indicating to Jews what is the limit which they are to consider as the
+town-wall, and certain ordinances of the Sabbath are regulated thereby.
+
+A strong wind from the south blew up a mist that almost concealed the
+huge dark ravine of _Jarmuk_, but the night became once more hot and
+still.
+
+3_d_.--"And rested the Sabbath-day, according to the
+commandment,"--neither the principal prayer-day of the Mohammedans, which
+is Friday, nor the Sabbath-day of the large population of Jews about me,
+but that which the early Christians so beautifully named the Lord's-day,
+while observing it as a Sabbath. I attended divine service in the
+English language at the house of Mr Daniel, the missionary to the Jews:
+we were six in number. The rest of the day was spent in quiet reading
+and meditation, with visits at one time from the rabbis, and at another
+from the missionary.
+
+4_th_.--An excursion to _Meroon_ to visit the sepulchres of several
+eminent canonized rabbis. The Jews believe this place to be the
+Shimron-Meron of Joshua xii. 20. An odd party we formed: there were the
+missionary and his lady, Polish rabbis with very broad beaver hats and
+curled ringlets on each side of the face, a crowd of Jewish idlers
+walking, the Moslem attendants, and a peasant of the village we were
+going to. Certainly the rabbinical riding was not of a very dashing
+character: their reverences were all mounted on asses with mean
+accoutrements, for the adjustment of which they often had to dismount.
+Our place of destination lies at the foot of the great hill Jarmuk, and
+the road to it is very rough, with broken rocks fallen from the summit;
+but the place commands a grand prospect of Safed and the Lake of Galilee.
+
+The first object of interest was of course the sepulchre of Rabbi Simeon
+bar Jochai, the patron saint of this region, and of regions beyond. He
+lived a miraculous life in the second Christian century; wrote the famous
+book (Zohar), by which, if I mistake not, the Cabbalists still work
+miracles; and miracles are performed in answer to prayers at his tomb--so
+it is believed; and his commemoration festival, in the month Iyar (see
+_ante_) is attended by Jewish votaries from all parts of the world, many
+of whom practise the heathen rite of burning precious objects, such as
+gold lace, Cashmere shawls, etc., upon the tomb, to propitiate his
+favour. On these occasions scenes of scandalous licence and riot are
+witnessed, and sometimes lives are lost in conflicts with Moslems begun
+in drunkenness. The rabbis, however, procure great gains from the annual
+festival or fair.
+
+(In the town of Safed there is at least one (perhaps more) _Beth
+ha-Midrash_, a sort of synagogue, with perpetual endowment, for reading
+of the Zohar day and night for ever.)
+
+First we entered a court-yard with a walnut-tree in the midst. At a
+farther corner of this court is a small clean apartment, with a lighted
+lamp in a frame suspended from the ceiling, which is capable of holding
+more lamps. In a corner of this apartment is a recess with a lamp
+burning before it; in this a roll of the law is kept; it is the shrine
+itself of the author of Zohar. One of our rabbis retired behind us for
+prayer. In another part of this chamber is buried Eleazar, son of the
+illustrious Simeon.
+
+These sepulchres are marked out upon the roof, outside of the chamber, by
+a small pillar over each, with a hollow on the top of it for burning of
+the votive offerings as above mentioned. Near the first entrance gate is
+a similar pillar for lamps and offerings vowed to Rabbi Isaac, a
+celebrated physician.
+
+All these three saints still perform as many miracles as ever they did;
+and the common people believe that any person forcing an entrance to the
+shrines, without express permission of the living rabbis, will be
+infallibly punished with sudden death. They cited instances of such
+visitations having occurred.
+
+We then went to the ruin of what the Jews assert to have been a
+synagogue. It has been an oblong square building, one of its sides being
+formed by the scarped surface of a rock, and its opposite (the north)
+stands upon what is now the brink of a low precipice, probably from the
+earth having given way below at the time of the earthquake; indeed it
+must be so, for the one of the three portals at the east end, which was
+there, is now missing. The floor is solid surface of rock, and now used
+by the peasants for a thrashing-floor. The portals have been handsome,
+with bold mouldings; but no floral embellishment or inscription now
+remains.
+
+ [Picture: Possible synagogue]
+
+The transverse lintels are each of one stone; the central one is at least
+fifteen feet in length.
+
+Persons still living remember this building very much more entire than it
+now is. There is an abundance of large loose stones lying about, and
+fragments of broken columns or moulded friezes. Upon the rock by its
+side is a small tower that was erected by old Daher (Volney's hero of the
+Report on Syria) in the eighteenth century.
+
+The village population now consists of about thirty souls, friendly to
+the Jews, from whom indeed they derive their principal subsistence, in
+consideration of guarding the sanctuaries from spoliation. Other
+sanctified rabbis are interred in sites about the village and the hill.
+{121}
+
+After a temperate luncheon upon the rocks among the noble scenery in the
+open air, and consulting the Hebrew book of travels of R. Joseph
+Schwartz, (who was still living in Jerusalem,) we parted from our rabbis,
+and proceeded to visit Cuf'r Bera'am.
+
+When we arrived close to _Sasa_, there was _Jish_ before us on the right.
+We passed through a district of stones and underwood of evergreen oak;
+clouds and rain coming on, which overtook us sharply as we reached the
+village.
+
+Some of the party being but poor riders, we were later than I had
+expected to be; it was quite sunset; and the people of the place, (almost
+all of them Maronite Christians,) headed by their priest could do no less
+than press us to stay through the night with them, especially as the sky
+threatened a continuation of rain. After deliberative counsel being
+taken among us, it was resolved that we could only thank the good people
+for their intended hospitality, and return home. We first halted before
+an ancient square building, the outside of which has been much encroached
+upon by the alluvial earth of ages, and the simple but correct Tuscan
+portico, encumbered with piles of fagots for the village use during the
+approaching winter. The three doorways of the facade were embellished by
+sculptured wreaths of vine leaves and grapes. Hearing that some Hebrew
+inscription was to be found beneath one of the windows, we had some of
+the fagots removed, sufficient to enable us to read the words [Hebrew
+text] (this house, etc.); but on account of the labour required to do
+more with such a tangled and heavy mass of wood, besides the rain and the
+lateness of the hour, we were obliged to abandon the task, and go forward
+to the large decorated portal which is standing alone, without its
+edifice, in an enclosed field at about a quarter of a mile distant. This
+is erected upon a raised platform of masonry. Upon the transverse lintel
+we read the following Hebrew inscription, neatly engraved:--
+
+ [Picture: Hebrew inscription]
+
+(Peace be within this place, and all places of the sojourners . . . to
+the work . . . blessing in his works.)
+
+This is all written in one line, without breaks or stops, very small, and
+in as neat a square character as if lately copied from a printed book.
+The two uprights and the lintel have a simple and chaste ornament like a
+bead moulding. The transverse lintel has in the middle of its length a
+rosette surmounted by a circular wreath, at each end of which may be seen
+upon close inspection, and in a slanting light, traces of a small animal,
+most likely a sheep, recumbent, which have been chiselled away. On a
+visit some years after, and on closer inspection, I remarked the same
+figures upon the facade of that building above mentioned, with Tuscan
+pillars for a portico, though pains have been taken, as in this instance,
+to obliterate them.
+
+The ground all about there is strewn with moulded stones and broken
+columns.
+
+We reached Safed, cold and wet, in the dark, having ridden but slowly, in
+order to accommodate certain individuals of the party; but it was in the
+month of November, at an altitude of above 2000 feet, with rain and gusts
+of wind coming between dark mountains.
+
+My evening reflections alone naturally ran upon the almost unknown
+circumstance of Hebrew inscriptions existing upon remains of ancient and
+decorated edifices in this part of the country, while nothing of the sort
+is known elsewhere. Were the two buildings at Cuf'r Bera'am, and the
+sepulchre in the field below Jish, really Jewish? and if so, when were
+they erected?
+
+The modern Jews, in their utter ignorance of chronology, declare these to
+be synagogues of the time of the second temple in Jerusalem; and affirm
+that, notwithstanding the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans, this
+province of Upper Galilee remained without its people being led into
+captivity, and that many families (for instance, the Jewish
+agriculturists still at Bokeea', between Safed and Acre) continue now,
+just as they were then, in the same localities.
+
+My good old friend Nicolayson, the late missionary to the Jews, was
+willing to believe a good deal about this local stability of Jews in
+Upper Galilee, and to give credit for a state of much prosperity among
+the Jews in the East during the reigns of the Antonine emperors; and his
+idea was the most probable one of any that I have heard advanced--namely,
+that these edifices (corresponding in general character with those
+remaining at Kadis) are really synagogues from the era of the Antonines,
+and that the inscriptions are of the same date; meanwhile keeping in mind
+that they are utterly wanting in the robust style of archaic Hebraism,
+and that the embellishments indicate somewhat of a low period.
+
+For myself, after two visits to the place, and many years of
+consideration, I cannot bring myself to this belief; but rather conclude
+that they were heathen temples of the Antonine epoch, and afterwards used
+as synagogues by the Jews, long ago--probably during some interval of
+tranquillity under the early Mohammedans,--and that the Hebrew
+inscriptions were then put upon them.
+
+There is some regularity and method in the writing upon the lonely portal
+in the field, though even this is not so well executed as the contiguous
+moulding upon the same stone; but the other two inscriptions (those upon
+the facade of the building in the village, and that upon the broken
+column in the field below Jish) are put irregularly upon any vacant space
+that happened to be unencumbered. I am convinced that, in the latter
+instance, the sculpture and the writing have nothing to do with each
+other.
+
+The surest demonstration, however, to my mind, lies in the evident fact
+of animal figures having been originally upon the same lintel where the
+writing now is. Although their relief-projection has been chiselled
+down, the outlines of the figures are unmistakable. These, I feel
+certain, were coeval with the buildings, while the inscriptions are only
+coeval with their being defaced.
+
+Next day we travelled southwards towards Jerusalem. On leaving the town
+we passed the ruins of an old church, which they call "The Church of the
+Forty Martyrs," (this seems to be a favourite traditional designation, as
+there are other such about the country) and in half an hour reached a
+stream in the midst of a wood of neb'k trees, where an Arab, riding a
+fine mare and carrying a long spear decorated with black ostrich
+feathers, was driving a cow across the water--very probably plundered
+from some neighbouring village.
+
+At _Yakook_--the dirtiest place in the world, I suppose, there was a
+large Arab encampment, the men sitting apart from the women, and cooking
+going on--thence to _Hhatteen_. The volcanic stones of this region are
+far blacker than elsewhere; the district resembles some dismal coal
+district in the north of England. Thence out of the common road to
+_Nimrin_, by _Lubieh_, _Tura'an_, to _Cuf'r Cana_, the old and true Cana
+of Galilee.
+
+At this village of peculiarly scriptural interest, the women and children
+were spreading cotton pods, just picked, on their house-roofs to dry.
+Here is a square-built cistern filled from a spring within it, and the
+cattle were drinking from a beautiful sarcophagus. Losing our road again
+we came to _Meshhad_, rather west of the usual road. Clouds lowering and
+frowning over Carmel. At the village of _Raineh_ I noticed a man
+harrowing a ploughed field by dragging a bunch of prickly-pear leaves
+after a yoke of oxen. Arrived at Nazareth.
+
+Next day, across the plain of Esdraelon to _Jeneen_ and _Sanoor_, where
+we slept. Then by a new road, untraversed by Europeans. After _Jeba'_,
+we got into the plain of Sharon, through the large olive plantations of
+_Fendecomia_, (_pente_, five, and _comai_, villages--in Greek,) between
+_Yaero_, (a ruin,) _Adjah_, _Rameeen_, and _Attarah_, with other villages
+in good condition. Saw Cuf'r Ra'i very distinctly at a distance in the
+West, and numerous villages besides.
+
+From an eminence we looked down upon an extensive prospect of shaded
+unoccupied hills, with the wide plain beyond and the Mediterranean Sea;
+then descended into a valley, the road winding about through immense
+olive groves; the travelling was easy, and all the district bore the
+appearance of prosperity, such as could hardly be expected where we know
+that factious warfare so frequently exists. Passed _Cuf'r Ruman_. As
+far as _'Annabeh_ the course had been for a long time westwards; but
+there, at the opening of the great plain, we turned due southwards. This
+was four hours from _Sanoor_, at a good pace. Passed between _'Annabeh_
+and _Tool el Ker'm_ in changing our course. Near _Irtahh_ we passed a
+camel-party going down to Egypt with bales of soap and tobacco for sale.
+We were upon the established route of trade between Damascus and Egypt,
+and not very far distant from Dothan, where the Midianite or Ishmaelite
+caravan bought Joseph from his brethren; but we had passed this on our
+left hand in the morning.
+
+Soon passed _Farra'an_ on our left, with a weli and a cistern below it,
+by the roadside. _Kalinsawa_ in sight, but far away to the right;
+_Ferdisia_ and _Zenabeh_ on the left. The day very hot, and the
+peasantry observed to be, as usual in all the Philistine country, cleaner
+in their garments than those of the mountains.
+
+Coasted along, parallel to the line of hills, as far as _Kalkeeleh_,
+where we began to turn inwards, across the fields, towards the place of
+our destination, namely, _Mejdal Yaba_, which was conspicuous on an
+eminence before us. This was at six and a half hours from _Sanoor_.
+
+In a field we arrived at a well, where the water must have been very low
+down, being late in the year; for it was only obtained by jars or skins
+drawn up at the end of a very long rope, worked by a long line of women
+walking across the field, and singing at their work, while the men sat
+looking on and smoking.
+
+We passed the remains of some old considerable town, where, among the
+fallen building stones and the lines of foundations, there was a cistern,
+and an ancient sarcophagus by its side; also a deep square well filled up
+with rubbish, and remains of quarrying work in the solid rock,--besides
+an unroofed building, with a semicircular arch to the doorway. Surely
+this must have been of Roman construction.
+
+Arrived at _Mejdal Yaba_ in nine hours from Sanoor,--a hot and tiring
+journey. At a short distance below us was the site of _Ras el 'Ain_; and
+farther westwards, but within sight, the tall white tower of _Ramlah_.
+Time--sunset.
+
+I had a special object in coming off the common high-roads to this place,
+but little known, at that time not at all known, to Europeans,--namely,
+to visit Shaikh Sadek, the responsible ruler of the district, and
+regarded by the peasantry with especial deference, out of traditional
+obedience to his ancient family.
+
+We found the village and the castle in a very dilapidated condition, and
+the great shaikh not at home. Some of his relatives, however, received
+us; but both they and the peasantry were surprised, if not alarmed, at
+our coming. To them it seemed as if we were suddenly dropped upon them
+from the sky. Perhaps they had never seen Europeans before; or they
+might have thought us spies sent by the Turkish Government. There were
+plenty of idle fellows lounging about; but their supplies of food from
+the village were scanty, and of inferior quality.
+
+The Sadek family apologised for apparent want of hospitality,--explaining
+that the only unbroken part of the castle was but just sufficient to
+contain the _hareem_ of the women, and there was not a single room to
+give me. So I was glad to have my bedding and other paraphernalia spread
+upon a _mustabah_, or raised stone divan, just within the gate. A narrow
+vaulting covered my head; but it was open at the side to the square
+court, into which the horses, asses, cows, and sheep were driven for the
+night.
+
+After considerable delay, a rude supper was produced,--of which, however,
+I could not persuade the family to partake till after ourselves. They
+then ate up the remainder in company with my servants. They were very
+solemn and slow in conversation; indeed, I could not but suspect that
+they had some hostile schemes in preparation, which they did not wish to
+have ascertained or communicated to their neighbours.
+
+Troubling myself very little about their local politics, I was soon on my
+bed, and looking up at the brilliant stars. Sleep did not come very
+soon, as the men kept up firing guns, and the women trilling their songs,
+to a late hour. They said it was on account of a wedding.
+
+Daybreak found me up, and in full enjoyment of the exquisite luxury of
+open air, in a clear and pure Oriental climate, before sunrise.
+
+ [Picture: Remains of old Christian church]
+
+The servants were all busied in various occupations, and the peasantry
+driving out the cattle, while I was surveying the considerable remains of
+an old Christian church, which now forms one side of the shaikh's
+mansion, and is used for a stable and a store of fodder. This vignette
+represents its entrance, in a corner now darkened by the arcade in which
+I had slept. The workmanship is massive and very rude, and the Greek of
+the inscription upon the lintel not less barbarous, signifying "Martyr
+Memorial Church of the Holy Herald,"--_i.e._, John the Baptist.
+
+This discovery interested me deeply, in that region so remote from any
+body of Christians at the present day, and among a population very like
+savages dwelling amid stern hill-scenery.
+
+Not less touching was the special designation of the saint so
+commemorated. I believe that the Easterns pay more respect than
+Europeans do to the memory of him whom the Saviour himself pronounced to
+be greater than all the Old Testament prophets. And while we are
+accustomed to ascribe to him only one of his official characters,--that
+of the Baptizer,--they take pleasure in recalling his other scriptural
+offices; as, for instance, this of the _Herald_, or Preacher {131a} of
+righteousness, and that of the _Forerunner_. {131b} Indeed, individuals
+are not unfrequently named after him in baptism by this latter
+appellation, without the name John.
+
+This building appears to have been at all times heavy and coarse in
+construction; indeed, one may fairly suppose that part of the frontal has
+at some time been taken down, and strangely put together again.
+
+This church is the only object of curiosity that I had found along the
+recent novel route.
+
+On leaving _Mejdal_, I descended to inspect once more the site so
+interesting to me of _Ras el 'Ain_, at half an hour's distance,--which I
+unhesitatingly believe to be _Antipatris_, as I conceived it to be on my
+first seeing the place the preceding year. I had then passed it rather
+late in the evening, and upon the other side.
+
+_Cuf'r Saba_, to which I was then going, is a wretched village, of
+unburnt bricks, on the wide open plain, with no other water near it than
+the deposit of rain-water in an adjoining square tank of clay. Yet
+travelling authors have constantly pronounced this to be the locality of
+Antipatris. Not one of them, however, has visited the place.
+
+What does Josephus say (Antiq. xvi. 5, 2, in Whiston)?--"After this
+solemnity and these festivals were over, Herod erected another city in
+the plain called Caphar Saba, where he chose out a fit place, both for
+plenty of water and goodness of soil, and proper for the production of
+what was there planted; where a river encompassed the city itself, and a
+grove of the best trees for magnitude was round about. This he named
+Antipatris, from his father Antipater." [Greek text]. No words can be
+more distinctly descriptive; yet Robinson, who had not visited that
+district, in his positive manner lays down that the village of Cuf'r Saba
+is the site of Antipatris; and "doubtless" all that is said about "well
+watered," and "a river encompassing the city," means that some wadi or
+watercourse came down from the hills in that direction, and made the
+place watery in the winter season.
+
+Now, what are the facts remaining at the present day? Upon the same
+plain with Cuf'r Saba, and within sight of it, at hardly six miles'
+distance, is a large mound capable of containing a small town, with
+foundations of ancient buildings, bits of marble, Roman bricks, and
+tesserae scattered about,--but especially a large strong castle of
+Saracenic work, the lower courses of the walls of real Roman
+construction; and at the foot of the mound rises the river _Aujeh_ out of
+the earth in several copious streams, crowded with willows, tall wild
+canes, and bulrushes,--the resort of numerous flocks, and of large herds
+of horned cattle brought from a distance, and (as I have seen there)
+counted by the Government inspector of the district, for the levying of
+agricultural taxes upon them. {133} This is our Ras el 'Ain.
+
+For a considerable extent there is capital riding-ground of green grass,
+so rare in Palestine. Let any one familiar with that country answer,
+Could Herod have selected a better spot for a military station, (as
+Antipatris was,) just on the border, descending from the hill-country
+upon the plain? With this description in view, we understand all the
+more vividly the narrative of Felix sending St Paul to Caesarea. To
+elude the machinations of the conspiracy, the military party travelled by
+night over the hilly region; and on reaching the castle of Antipatris,
+the spearmen and other soldiers left him to continue the journey with
+cavalry upon the plain to Caesarea, about three hours farther, (Acts
+xxiii. 23, and 31, 32.)
+
+It seems impossible to avoid the conclusion that this is the true site of
+Antipatris; and as for Josephus calling that neighbourhood "the plain of
+Cuf'r Saba," that must be for the same reason as another part of the same
+vast extent was called the Plain of Sharon,--or as it is now very much
+the custom for modern travellers to call the whole Philistine plain by
+that name.
+
+As for the statement that a river encompassed the city itself; I imagine
+that the town was not upon the elevated mound,--this was probably
+occupied by military works and a temple,--but upon the level of the
+water, among the serpentine separate streams, which soon combine into one
+river, the Aujeh, with its water-mills, and which was navigable for some
+distance inland to the north of Jaffa. In the course of ages some of
+these streams may have somewhat changed their direction. The mound has
+still a dry trench around it, which must have anciently had its current
+of water through it.
+
+It cannot be that the deep trench dug by Alexander from Antipatris to the
+sea (Antiq. xiii. 15, I, Whiston) can have begun at this village of Cuf'r
+Saba, where no water rises, and which is far away from the hills in an
+open plain. Although the words are distinctly, "from Capharzaba," the
+trench must have originated at the river head, _i.e._, Antipatris, where
+there was a fortified castle, and passed round the nearest town, viz.,
+that of Cuf'r Saba.
+
+I should observe, that not only Herod did well in selecting this spot for
+a castle, because of its situation on the verge of the mountains,
+commanding the road from Jerusalem to either Caesarea or Joppa; but
+because it lies also upon the direct caravan track between Damascus and
+Egypt, nearly at right angles with the other road.
+
+The ruined Saracenic khan which now stands on the foundations of the
+Roman castle, is of large size, and has a broken mosque in the centre of
+the enclosure.
+
+We rested and breakfasted, from our own resources, (without taxing the
+Arab hospitality of Shaikh Sadek's family at Mejdal,) at the springs of
+the Aujeh,--the water bubbling up warm from the ground, among stones,
+with aquatic birds flying over us, and the morning breeze sighing among
+the gigantic reeds and the willows.
+
+We engaged a guide for what seemed likely to be a short day's journey to
+_Ras Kerker_, the _cursi_, or metropolis, of another dominant
+family--that of _Ibn Simhhan_--within the mountains; but it proved far
+longer than was expected.
+
+We were conducted due south, yet so far away from the line of hills that
+we missed the Roman temple of _M'zeera'a_, which I do not know that, to
+this day, any European but myself has seen. {136}
+
+To _Nebi Sari_, which is a pretty weli, two hour only from Jaffa. To
+_Runtieh_, which is a poor place. Then south-eastwards to _Teereh_; near
+which we started a gazelle across the fields.
+
+In that part of the country the population has so greatly increased of
+late years that there was a scarcity of land for cultivation; and at the
+end of autumn the villages contest the right of ploughing there by fights
+of fire-arms.
+
+Suddenly we turned into a valley, at an acute angle with our previous
+road. This is named _Wadi el Kharnoob_--probably from some conspicuous
+karoobah-tree. In ascending the hill, I looked back, and had a beautiful
+prospect of Jaffa, and a white ship sailing on the sea.
+
+We continued ascending higher and higher. Before us was a large building
+on a single hill, which they called _Dair Musha'al_. Passed the ruined
+village, _Hhanoonah_. On our right hand, among trees, was _Desrah_.
+Passed through _Shukbeh_. How different is the mountain air from that of
+the plain, so light and so pure!
+
+Descended a little to _Shibtain_, where there was a great ancient well;
+and being surrounded by hills, the place was very hot. Then for some
+time over very dangerous paths, mounting upwards, till we reached the
+region of a cool breeze, such as I once heard a peasant say was "worth a
+thousand purses" on a summer's day.
+
+Saw _Ras Kerker_, the place of our destination, high above, in a very
+remarkable situation; but how to get at it was a puzzle which patient
+perseverance alone could solve.
+
+We rode round and round one hill after another, till we reached _Dair
+'Ammar_. Then opened upon us one of those few prospects which in a
+lifetime impress themselves indelibly on the mind. This was not lovely,
+but stern, consisting chiefly of a wild, dark alternation of lower hills,
+with the valleys between them.
+
+The villages hereabouts bear an appearance of prosperity--perhaps because
+Turkish officials are never seen there; but the people of _Dair 'Ammar_
+behaved rudely. Down, deep deep down we went, leading our horses, in
+order to rise afterwards to a higher elevation. At length we reached a
+petty spring of water, where there were some dirty, but otherwise
+good-looking women, who pointed out our path towards the castle at the
+top of the hill.
+
+The _Ibn Simhhan_ people (being the great rivals of _Abu Gosh_) had often
+invited me to visit them at this castle,--describing with ardour the
+abundance and excellence of its springs of water, and the salubrity of
+its atmosphere.
+
+On arriving at the "_Ras_," after a tedious and very wearisome
+journey,--difficult as the place is of access,--I found it to fall far
+below those promises. There are no springs near it. The only water is
+brought up by the women from the one which we had passed far below. Only
+within the castle (which was begun while building forty-four years
+before) some old wells, with good masonry stones, were discovered. These
+are now put into good order, and kept full, probably in readiness at any
+time against a siege by the faction of Abu Gosh. Many battles and sieges
+take place in these remote places that the Pasha of Jerusalem never hears
+of.
+
+Although of modern origin, much of the earliest part of the castle is
+already falling to decay--such as gates, steps, etc. It was a melancholy
+spectacle to walk about the place, reminding one of some small
+middle-aged castles that I have seen in Scotland, burnt or destroyed
+during old times of civil warfare; or resembling my recollection, after
+many long years, of Scott's description of the Baron Bradwardine's castle
+in its later period. And the same melancholy associations recurred
+yesterday at Mejdal Yaba.
+
+The people assured us that the tortuous and rocky road that we had taken
+from Ras el 'Ain was the best and nearest that we could have taken.
+
+We were received by a couple of relatives of Ibn Simhhan, who is now
+Governor of Lydd; but they conducted us to the next village, _Janiah_, to
+be entertained there by the rest of the family. On our descent to the
+village, we met our hosts coming to meet us.
+
+_Janiah_ is a poor place; and we had glimpses of curious groups and
+scenes within the best one of the wretched houses. We were received in a
+large room, to which the access was by a steep and broken set of steps
+outside of the house. In the street below was a circle of the elders of
+the village; and at the time of sunset, one of them mounted on the corner
+of a garden wall to proclaim the _Adan_, or Moslem call to prayers. I
+did not observe that he was at all attended to.
+
+A good number of the leading people came to visit us; and one old man
+quoted and recited heaps of Arabic poetry for our entertainment while
+awaiting the supper.
+
+Then 'Abdu'l Lateef Ibn Simhhan, joined by another, (a humbler adherent
+of the family,) gave us a vivid relation of the famous battle of _Nezib_
+in 1838, and of his desertion from the Egyptian army to the Turkish with
+a hundred of his mountaineers, well armed, during the night; of how the
+Turkish Pasha refused to receive him or notice him till he had washed
+himself in a golden basin, and anointed his beard from vessels of gold;
+how the Turkish army was disgracefully routed; how he ('Abdu'l Lateef)
+was appointed to guard the Pasha's harem during the flight, etc., etc.
+This narrative was occasionally attested as true by a negro slave in the
+room, who had been with my host on that expedition.
+
+The most lively fellow, however, of the party was one Hadj 'Abdallah of
+Jerusalem, who has two wives, one a daughter of Ibn Simhhan, the other a
+daughter of Abu Gosh!! His property in Jerusalem consists chiefly of
+houses let out to Jews, whom he mimicked in their Spanish and German
+dialects.
+
+At length came supper; then sleep.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_Saturday_, 9_th_.--Asaad Ibn Simhhan and Hadj 'Abdallah rode with us to
+_Mezra'ah_ to show us some ruins of an ancient city near it, called
+_Hharrasheh_, where, as they told us, there are "figures of the children
+of men" cut in the rock. This roused our curiosity immensely, and I felt
+sure of success in such company; for though we were in a very wild and
+unknown country, we had the second greatest of the Ibn Simhhan family
+with us, and the Hadji was evidently popular among them all.
+
+We sent on our luggage before us to Jerusalem by _Bait Unah_ and _Bait
+Uksa_.
+
+In rather less than an hour we reached _Mezra'ah_--the journey much
+enlivened by the drollery and songs of Hadj 'Abdallah. Both he and Asaad
+had capital mares and ornamented long guns. The latter was all dressed
+in white--the turban, abbai, etc. His face was pale, and even his mare
+white.
+
+Arrived at the village, we all mounted to the roof of a house--the people
+paying great reverence to Asaad. Gradually we found the whole population
+surrounding us, and then closing nearer and nearer upon us. As the heat
+of the sun increased, we descended to an arcade of the same house, at the
+end of which there were some itinerant Christians mending shoes for the
+people.
+
+A breakfast was brought to us of eggs swimming in hot butter and honey,
+with the usual Arab cakes of bread. The crowd could not be kept off; and
+the people themselves told us it was because they had never before seen
+Europeans.
+
+One man asked for some gunpowder from my horn. I gave some to Asaad, and
+one of the villagers took a pinch of it from him; then went to a little
+distance, and another brought a piece of lighted charcoal to make it
+explode on his hand. He came to me afterwards, to show with triumph what
+good powder it must be, for it had left no mark on his skin.
+
+Ibn Simhhan had to make the people move away their lighted pipes while I
+was giving him some of the precious powder. He then informed the
+assembly that I had come to see _Hharrasheh_ and the sculptured figures.
+They refused to allow it. He insisted that I should go; and after some
+violent altercation and swearing the majority of the men ran to arm
+themselves and accompany us, so as to prevent us from carrying off the
+hidden treasures.
+
+We rode away; and at every few hundred yards places were pointed out to
+us as sites of clan massacres, or wonderful legends, or surprising
+escapes, in deep glens or on high hills. At one time we passed between
+two cairns of stones, one covering a certain 'Ali, the other a certain
+Mohammed, both slain by ---. "By whom?" said I. The Hadji gave no other
+reply than pointing over his shoulder to Asaad. I felt as if transported
+a couple of centuries back to the wilds of Perthshire or Argyleshire,
+among the Highland clans. The local scenery was of a suitable character.
+
+In about forty minutes we arrived at some lines of big stones, that must
+have belonged to some town of enormous or incalculable antiquity; and
+this, they told us, was _Hharrasheh_. As for columns, the people told us
+to stoop into a cavern; but there we could perceive nothing but a piece
+of the rock remaining as a prop in the middle. "Well, now for the
+figures of the children of men." The people looked furious, and
+screamed. They gathered round us with their guns; but Asaad insisted; so
+a detachment of them led us down the side of a bare rocky hill, upon a
+mere goat-path; and at last they halted before a rough, uncut stone,
+whose only distinction from the many thousands lying about, was that it
+stands upright.
+
+Asaad observed our disappointment, and said something--I forget the exact
+terms now--which led me to believe that this was not the object he had
+meant, and that the ignorant, superstitious people could not be coerced.
+He believed that this stone had been anciently set up with some
+meaning--probably by some one who had buried treasures; not as indicating
+the exact spot, but as leading in a line connected with some other
+object, to the real place of concealment.
+
+So here the matter ended; and, when the people saw us looking
+disappointed, they went away satisfied to their village.
+
+We parted from our friend Asaad Ibn Simhhan, taking one of the peasantry
+with us to show us the way to Ram Allah, which he did through vineyards
+and cheerful scenery; and we were soon again at that village after
+seventeen days' absence. In about two hours more we were in Jerusalem.
+
+
+
+
+III. SOUTHWARDS ON THE PHILISTINE PLAIN AND ITS SEA COAST.
+
+
+This extensive level is the original Palestine--the Pelesheth of Exod.
+xv. 14, and Isa. xiv. 29. So named because it was the country of the
+Pelishtim or Philistines (of Genesis x. 14, and _passim_) in the Old
+Testament history, extending from about Caesarea to Gaza, or farther
+southwards, and from the Mediterranean to the hill country of Judea, west
+to east.
+
+This district is so exclusively understood in modern times by the name
+Palestine or Philistia, that a deputation of Oriental Christians coming
+once on a friendly visit, inquired why upon my Arabic seal the English
+consulate was designated that of "Jerusalem and Palestine," without
+mention of the other territories northwards to which its jurisdiction
+extended, such as Galilee. I could only answer that the ancient Romans
+called the whole country around, nay, even that beyond Jordan, and as far
+as Petra, by the name of Palestine, and this fact was old enough for us
+now-a-days to act upon. "Oh, the Romans!" they ejaculated, with a
+curious expression of countenance, as if disappointed at the mention of
+such comparatively modern people. So true is it that in the Holy Land,
+the Bible is the only book of history for Christians, and scriptural
+incidents are the traditions which leap over any number of centuries at a
+time. How little of this state of mind existing among the inhabitants of
+that country is comprehended in England!
+
+But, in reference to the people Israel and the possession of it as the
+promised land, this allotment, shared partly by each of the tribes of
+Ephraim, Dan, and Judah, has a peculiar denomination--it is called the
+Shephelah, (translated by the common word _vale_ in Josh. x. 40, xi. 16,
+and elsewhere.) In Arabic authors also of Mohammedan period, this large
+plain bears the same name, _Siphla_, meaning the same as in Hebrew, the
+"low country."
+
+Thus, as one expanse from the hills to the sea, it bears one territorial
+name, either Philistine or Hebraic, just as another region is called the
+_Negeb_, or south, (see in the verses referred to above,) or as others
+were designated the hill country, or the desert, or Phoenicia. And many
+a time have I stood on the summits of hills to the west of Bethlehem, the
+eye ranging over its extent from the vicinity of Carmel to Gaza, with
+Jaffa and Ekron in front, and have sometimes seen beyond this, ships of
+large size sailing past on the "great and wide sea" of the 104th Psalm.
+
+The ancient Philistines were not only exceptionally, but generally, a
+large race of people, and the population there are to this day remarkably
+tall; they are, even amid disadvantages, (that especially of want of
+water,) much more cleanly in their persons and clothing than the peasants
+of the hills, and many of their habits of life are modified by their
+circumstances, such as the pressure of their wild Arab neighbours from
+the southern desert that lies between them and Egypt.
+
+Over this plain I have made several journeys at different periods, and
+now proceed to put down my jottings of an excursion in the spring of
+1849.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_May_ 1_st_.--"Sweet May-day" in the Holy Land as well as in England.
+
+At Rachel's sepulchre, "in the way to Ephrath, which is Bethlehem," we
+parted from a company of friends who had ridden with us from Jerusalem,
+and passed along the valley _Duhheish'mah_ to the Pools of Solomon, then
+turned aside by the convent and village of _El Khud'r_ (or St George),
+surrounded by flourishing vineyards. Then mounting up a stony ridge, we
+came in view of the wide Philistine plain, the hills falling in
+successive gradations from our feet to the level of the plain, but
+separate objects could scarcely be distinguished on account of the thick
+air of the prevailing Shirocco; green bushes, however, and abundant wild
+flowers, including the red everlasting, pheasant's eye, cistus, and some
+late anemones, were about us; the larks and the linnets were singing with
+delight.
+
+In front was the village of _Hhusan_, and two roads led forward, that on
+the left to _Nahhaleen_, _Wad Fokeen_, and _Jeba'_; this was the road
+that I ought to have taken to _Bait Nateef_, our place for the night, but
+being considerably ahead of our baggage mules, I had ridden on with a
+kawwas, under _Hhusan_ and _Ras abu 'Ammar_; by our wayside lay a defaced
+Roman milestone.
+
+A solitary peasant youth, from whom I inquired the names of the villages
+about us, was so alarmed at the appearance of a European with a Turkish
+attendant, in a place so remote from common high-roads, that he ran off;
+but finding our horses keeping up with his fleet pace, he dropped behind
+a large stone and levelled his gun at us in sheer terror; it was
+difficult to get a rational reply from him.
+
+Before us, a little to our left, was _Hhubeen_, half down a hill, at the
+foot of which was a valley green with waving crops of wheat and barley.
+
+In ten minutes more there opened a fine view of _Bait 'Atab_, in which
+were some good new buildings. Before arriving at this village, which is
+the chief one of the _'Arkoob_ district, ruled by _'Othman el Lehham_, I
+dismounted for rest beneath a gigantic oak, where there were last year's
+acorns and their cups shed around, and half a dozen saplings rising from
+the ground, sheltered from the sun by being all within the shadow of the
+parent tree; with arbutus bushes in every direction, wild thyme and other
+fragrant herbs serving as pasture for numerous humming bees, bright
+coloured bee-eaters were twittering in their swallow-like flight, and
+under the soothing influence of the whole, I fell into a pleasant
+slumber.
+
+Some boughs of "the huge oak" were decorated with bits of dirty rags
+hanging upon the boughs as votive memorials of answers to prayers.
+Probably the site was that of a burial-place of some personage of ancient
+and local celebrity; but my attendant was positive in affirming that the
+people do not pray at such stations more than at any other spot whatever.
+There are many such venerated trees in different parts of the country. I
+believe that the reason as well as the amount of such veneration is vague
+and unsettled in the minds of the peasantry, yet the object remains a
+local monument from generation to generation, honoured now, as were in
+the Bible times--the oak of Deborah (Gen. xxxv. 8), the oak of Ophrah
+(Judges vi. II), for instance, with others.
+
+ "Multosque per annos
+ Multa virum volvens durando saecula vincit."
+
+By and by the groom overtook us on foot, having scoured about the
+neighbourhood in search of us. After another half an hour's rest, we
+followed him across very rocky and slippery hills towards the place of
+our destination--dwarf shrubs of evergreen oak, honeysuckle, a spring of
+water, and an old well near the village of Hhubeen, with doves cooing,
+and a vulture poised in the sky above. Then a ruined village called
+_Lesed_, {149} (as well as I could catch the sound from a distance,) near
+which, among the shrubs, the gnats troubled our horses exceedingly as
+evening drew on, which would imply the neighbourhood of water.
+
+Arrived at _Bait Nateef_ just at sunset, but no luggage had as yet
+arrived. This is _Netophah_ in the lists of Ezra and Nehemiah.
+
+The chief and elders of the village were, according to custom of the
+eventide, seated in a group, chattering or consulting, or calculating,
+probably, about taxes, or respective shares of the common harvest, or the
+alliances to be contracted for the next border-warfare, or marriages
+being planned, or the dividing of inheritances, etc. My groom was
+admitted into their circle, most likely welcomed as bringing the latest
+news from Jerusalem, or as being able to describe this strange arrival,
+and the road to be taken by us on the morrow.
+
+I passed forward to select a spot for pitching the tents when they and
+the food should arrive. The village shaikh of course tendered all the
+hospitality in his power to offer, but this was unnecessary beyond a
+supply of water, milk, and eggs.
+
+We waited, and waited: the sun was down; the stars came out, and the moon
+shone over us; but at length the mule bells became audible, and our
+dwellings and supplies came up. Supper and sleep are needless to
+mention.
+
+_Wednesday_ 2_d_.--The green hills around were enlivened by the clucking
+of partridges among the bushes, and the olive-trees by the cooing of
+doves.
+
+Leaving this position with its extensive prospect, and passing an
+enormous evergreen oak we crossed a noble valley, and soon reached the
+hill on which stands _Sh'weikeh_, (or _Shocoh_ in Hebrew.) This large
+valley runs east to west, and is the _Elah_ of Scripture, the scene of
+David's contest with Goliath--a wide and beautiful plain, confined within
+two ranges of hills, and having a brook (dry at this season) winding at
+half distance between them. The modern names for the vale of 'Elah are
+_Musurr_, from the N.E. to near Sh'weikeh, and _Sunt_ after that.
+
+The plain was waving with heavy crops of wheat and barley, and the bed of
+the stream, bordered by old trees of acacia, called Sunt, (in that
+district called Hharaz.) These are of a brilliant green in summer, but
+as there are no such trees elsewhere nearer than Egypt, or the Wadi
+'Arabah, (for they require water,) the people relate a traditional
+account of their origin, and say that once upon a time the country was
+invaded by a king of Egypt, named Abu Zaid, bringing a prodigious army;
+but on the occurrence of a sudden alarm, they decamped in such haste that
+their tent-pegs were left in the ground, which, being made of Sunt wood,
+struck roots at the next rainy season, and sprung up as we see them. Can
+this be a confused tradition of the rout of the Philistines to Shaaraim
+on the fall of Goliath?
+
+The vale or plain (for in Hebrew the word _Emek_ is often applied to the
+latter also when lying between ranges of hills--sometimes even when they
+are of considerable breadth, as at Rephaim and elsewhere) is about three
+hours or twelve miles long, and spacious enough to allow of military
+occupation and action; hostile armies might of course also occupy the
+opposite hills. From the direction of Hebron other valleys fall into
+this wide plain. On another occasion I entered it by that called _Wadi
+'Arab_ or _Shaikh_, descending from _'Ain Dirweh_ and _Bezur_ or _Bait
+Soor_. Wadi 'Arab is commanded at its mouth by _Kharas_ on the north and
+_Nuba_ on the south. Near to the latter are the ruins of _'Elah_, which
+I have no doubt gave name to the valley, and not any remarkable
+terebinth-tree, as is generally guessed by commentators on the Bible,
+unless, indeed, some remarkable terebinth-tree at first gave name to the
+village. Neither Robinson nor Porter appears to have seen or heard of
+this site of 'Elah, neither do they mention the route by the Wadi 'Arab,
+which lies to the north of Wadi Soor, which they do mention.
+
+Southwards, but further inland, lies _Keelah_, which I suppose to be the
+Keilah of 1 Sam. xxiii. I, the scene of a remarkable incident in David's
+early career, before retiring to Ziph. The name is registered four
+hundred years before that in Josh. xv. 44, among the cities of Judah.
+
+This, then, being the valley of 'Elah near to Shocoh, must have been the
+scene of David and Goliath's encounter. How could the Latin monks of the
+middle ages, and modern Roman Catholic travellers to Jerusalem, ever
+believe that it took place at Kaloneh near that city? The perversion can
+only be attributed to their ignorance concerning anything in the country
+beyond the immediate vicinity of their convents.
+
+We halted at the ruined village of Shocoh (now made by a grammatical
+diminutive form of Arabic into Sh'weikeh) after picking, each of us his
+five smooth stones out of the brook, as memorials for ourselves, and for
+friends far away, endeavouring at the same time to form a mental picture
+of the scene that is so vividly narrated in sacred history, and familiar
+to us from early childhood.
+
+There are now no regular inhabitants at the place; only a few persons
+occasionally live in caves and broken houses about there. Some remnants
+of antiquity, however, still exist, especially the wells, of fine masonry
+and great depth, at the foot of the hill. This probably represents the
+lower Shocoh mentioned by Eusebius and Jerome in the Onomasticon,
+"_Soccho_, duo sunt vici ascendentibus Eleutheropoli AEliam in nono
+milliario, alter superior, alter inferior, qui vocantur Socchoth in tribu
+Judae." Some peasants wandering about brought me to the fallen lintel of
+the door of a small mosque, bearing a rudely-executed Cufic-Arabic
+inscription, illegible because, as they said, "it had been eaten by the
+nights and days."
+
+Large flocks of sheep were pasturing over the stubble, (for some of the
+harvest was already cut in that warm sheltered locality,) led by such
+shepherd boys as David the Bethlehemite may have been, and large flights
+of blue pigeons circling in short courses over our heads. Among the
+demolished houses some women were churning the milk of the flocks in the
+usual mode, by swinging alternately to each other a sewed up goat-skin,
+(the bottle of the Old Testament, Josh. ix. 4; Judges iv. 19; Ps. cxix.
+83;) a hill close at hand is crowned by a Mohammedan Weli (a kind of
+solitary chapel) named _Salhhi_.
+
+The view in every direction is most imposing. This rough plan will give
+a tolerably good idea of the Vale of 'Elah. Across the valley, opposite
+to Shocoh, stands a very fine terebinth-tree. Possibly in ancient days
+there were many such in the district, and so the valley and the village
+of 'Elah may have acquired this name.
+
+_'Ajoor_ commands a view of the great plain and the sea. From that hill,
+looking eastwards, the vale has a magnificent appearance as a ground for
+manoeuvres of an army.
+
+ [Picture: Plan of Vale of 'Elah]
+
+Near _Zacariah_ the Wadi es Sunt contains but few of those trees. We
+passed close under that prosperous-looking village with its palm-tree,
+mounted a rocky path, and went along a valley "covered over with corn,"
+(Ps. cxv. 13;) here the very paths were concealed by the exuberant grain,
+so that we had to trample for ourselves a way through it.
+
+Emerging on the great plain, we had to wade monotonously through an ocean
+of wheat. How I longed to have with me some of the blasphemers of the
+Holy Land, who tell us that it is now a blighted and cursed land, and who
+quote Scripture amiss to show that this is a fulfilment of prophecy.
+{155}
+
+In many places, however, we saw how the rich produce had been trampled
+down and rolled upon by camels, or by Bashi-bozuk soldiers on their
+travels, after their horses were gorged to the full with gratuitous
+feeding. We met a black slave of 'Othman el Lehham of Bait 'Atab, a fine
+fellow, well mounted and armed, and he told us that a large part of this
+wheat was his master's property. He had been travelling from village to
+village upon business. His noble bearing, and his being thus
+confidentially employed, reminded me of the Arabic proverb, that "Even a
+Shaikh's slave is a Shaikh."
+
+In one place I remarked some hundred yards square of fine oats. This was
+surprising, as I knew that oats are not cultivated in Palestine. The
+people assured me that they were of wild growth, but they were of
+excellent quality; and as the name (Khafeer) seemed to be well known, it
+seems difficult to understand that oats have not been at some time
+cultivated in that part of the country. With respect to its Arabic name,
+it is worth notice how near it is to the German name (Hafer) for oats.
+Wetzstein has since found wild oats growing on the N.E. of the Hauran.
+
+Arrived at _'Ain Shems_, the Beth Shemesh of the Bible, (I Sam. vi. 9,
+_passim_,) where, instead of the large population of ancient times, we
+found nothing but a weli and some fragments of peasant houses.
+
+Due north from us as we rested, lay on the summit of a hill, _Sora'a_,
+which is Zorah, the birthplace of Samson, where the angel appeared to
+Manoah and his wife. The people told us of _Amooriah_ to the left, but
+we could not quite see it, and the same with respect to _Tibneh_, or
+_Dibneh_, the Timnath of Samson's history.
+
+All the plain and the low hills formed one waving sheet of corn, without
+divisions or trees; and often, as we had no tracks for guidance, we had
+to take sight of some object on the horizon, and work straight forward
+towards it. It was amid such a wonderful profusion that Samson let loose
+the foxes or jackals with firebrands, taking revenge on the Philistines,
+and he called it "doing them a displeasure!" I have seen from Jerusalem
+the smoke of corn burning, which had accidentally taken fire in that very
+district.
+
+On the summit of a hill, where were good square stones of old masonry, I
+got into a sheepfold of stone walls, looking for antiquities; but, alas!
+came out with my light-coloured clothes covered with fleas; fortunately
+the clothes were not woollen.
+
+Further on we had _Bait Ziz_, or _Jiz_, on the right, with _Dejajeh_, or
+_Edjajeh_, and _Na'ana_, or _Ra'ana_, on the left; _Khulda_ in the
+distance at N.W.; a vast expanse of growing grain in every direction.
+
+The population hereabouts are a fine race for stature, and paler in
+complexion than our peasantry on the hills; and it ought to be the
+reverse, unless, as is certainly the case, they are a distinct people.
+
+We traversed the plain to _'Akir_, which is Ekron of Scripture, one of
+the five principal cities of the Philistines, and chief place of the
+worship of Baal-zebub, (2 Kings i. 3.) All our inquiries had been in
+vain for any name that could possibly have been Gath. The utter
+extinction of that city is remarkable--the very name disappearing from
+the Bible after Micah, B.C. 730. Amos, B.C. 787, and Zephaniah, B.C.
+630, mention the four other cities of the Philistines, omitting Gath.
+The name never occurs in the Apocrypha or the New Testament.
+
+'Akir is now a very miserable village of unburnt brick; indeed, all the
+villages of this district are of that material, owing to the extreme
+rarity of stone. We saw women cutting bricks out of the viscous alluvial
+soil, and boys swimming luxuriously in the pool of rain water settled
+during winter in the excavation for bricks--quarry we might style it, if
+the material were stone. There was plenty of ploughing in progress for
+the summer crops of sesame, durrah, etc., and the people seemed rich in
+horned cattle.
+
+This last feature constitutes another difference between them and the
+hill country. In the mountains, where the Bedaween forays are almost
+unknown, the cattle bred are principally sheep and goats. On the plains,
+flocks of sheep might be easily swept off by those marauders, oxen not so
+easily; the people, therefore, principally breed this species of cattle,
+and instead of idle shepherd boys amusing themselves with little flutes,
+and guiding the sheep by throwing stones at them, the herds here are
+driven by mounted horsemen with long poles. The flatness of the country
+and the frequency of oxen will serve to illustrate the exactness of Bible
+narratives, particularly in the matter of the wheeled carriage and the
+kine used for conveying the ark of God from this place, Ekron, to
+Bethshemesh (I Sam. vi.)
+
+Forward we went to _Yabneh_, (Jabneel of Josh. xv. II, and Jabneh of 2
+Chron. xxvi. 6,) where it is mentioned in connexion with Gath and
+Ashkelon. It was a border city of Judah, where the _Wadi Surar_, (called
+here the river _Rubin_,) forms the boundary between Judah and Dan. I
+think we may identify it as the "Me-Jarkon and the border that is over
+against Japho," of Josh. xix. 46. It is the Jamnia, where, for a long
+time after the Roman overthrow of Jerusalem, was a celebrated college of
+the Talmudists, before, however, the traditions and speculations of the
+rabbis were collected into volumes of Mishna and Gemara. It is believed
+that the truly great and venerable Gamaliel is buried here.
+
+ [Picture: Ancient church, now mosque, Yabneh]
+
+Yabneh stands on a rising ground, and although a village of sun-baked
+bricks, it has remains of a Christian church, now used as a mosque, with
+a tower of stone.
+
+While resting under a tree, awaiting the coming up of our baggage,
+'Abd'errahhman Bek el 'Asali, a companion of ours from Jerusalem, threw a
+stone at a young filly and cursed her, because the colours of her legs
+were of unlucky omen. On such matters the native Moslems entertain
+strong prejudices, which are based upon precise and well-known rules.
+
+On the arrival of our mules, we pitched the tents upon a pretty green
+common with a row of trees; the verdure consisted of wild clover, and
+leaves remaining of wild flowers--chiefly of the wild pink. It is an
+Arab proverb that "Green is a portion of paradise."
+
+The villages in sight were _Besheet_ to the S.E., and _El Kubeibeh_ to
+the N.E. Our day's journey from Bait Nateef had been one of only seven
+hours, viz., from 8 A.M. to 3 P.M.
+
+The population seemed very industrious: they have cheerful _bayarahs_, or
+enclosed orchards, and the open fields were exceedingly well cultivated.
+The evening scene was most pleasing, comprising the return of flocks and
+herds from pasture, and the barley-harvest coming home upon asses and
+camels with bells on their necks--all enlivened by the singing or
+chattering of women and children.
+
+As the day advanced I was happily employed at my tent door reading the
+Arabic New Testament; it should have been in Hebrew at Yamnia, as being
+more profitable than all the Pirke Avoth of the Talmud. At sunset our
+party walked out in the fields to shoot the pretty bee-eaters.
+
+Of this village there is a tale current among the peasantry over the
+country, which conveys an important lesson for the conduct of human life.
+
+An old Shaikh of Yabneh had five sons. When very old, a complaint was
+brought to him that some one had stolen a cock; so he called together his
+sons and ordered them all to search for the cock; but it was not found.
+Some time afterwards it was represented to him that a sheep was stolen;
+he then commanded his sons to go and search for the cock. They replied,
+"O our father, it is not a cock but a sheep that is stolen;" but he
+persisted in his command, and they did what they well could, but without
+success. After that he was told that a cow was missing; he again
+commanded his sons to look after the cock. They thinking he had lost his
+senses, cried, "_Sallem 'akalak ya Abuna_, (May God perfect thy
+understanding, O our father,) it is not a cock but a cow that is
+missing." "Go look for the cock," persevered the old man; they obeyed,
+but this time again without success. People wondered and thought him in
+a state of mere dotage. Next came the news that a man was killed. The
+father pertinaciously adhered to his first injunctions, and ordered his
+sons to look for the cock. Again they returned without finding it, and
+in the end it came to pass that the killing of the man brought on a blood
+feud with his relations--the factions of several villages took up the
+case for revenge, and the whole town was destroyed, and lay long in a
+state of desolation, for want of sufficient zeal in discovering and
+punishing the first offence, the stealing of the cock, which thus became
+a root of all the rest. There is a good deal of wisdom contained in this
+narrative or allegory, whichever it may be considered. Offenders become
+emboldened by impunity, and the first beginnings should be checked.
+
+_Thursday_ 3_d_.--Early dew around the tents upon the green. We mounted
+at half-past six. I rode up to the village and got to the top of the
+tower in the village.
+
+After an hour and a half of level riding southwards, we arrived at a
+broad old sycamore in the middle of the road.
+
+Another hour brought us to _Asdood_ (_Ashdod_) of the Philistines, with
+_Atna_ and _Bait Duras_ on our left. I do not know where in all the Holy
+Land I have seen such excellent agriculture of grain, olive-trees, and
+orchards of fruit, as here at Ashdod. The fields would do credit to
+English farming--the tall, healthy, and cleanly population wore perfectly
+white though coarse dresses, and carried no guns, only the short sword
+called the Khanjar. We rested in an orchard beneath a large
+mulberry-tree, the fruit of which was just setting, and the adjacent
+pomegranate-trees shone in their glazed foliage and bright scarlet
+blossoms, the hedges of prickly pear were bursting into yellow fruit,
+palm-trees rising beyond, the sky was of deep sapphire brilliancy, and
+the sun delightfully hot.
+
+Here then had been the principal temple of the fish-god Dagon, which fell
+nightly in presence of the Israelitish ark. Not the only temple,
+however, for there is still a village near Jaffa with the name of _Bait
+Dajan_, and another still further north, in the same plain, but in the
+Nabloos district. Strange that this temple of Dagon at Ashdod should
+have survived and preserved its worship so late as nearly to the
+Christian era, when it was burnt by Jonathan the Jerusalem high priest,
+(Josephus Ant., xiii. 4, 4; Macc. x. 84.)
+
+Ought not Gath to be sought between this, and Ekron, according to 1 Sam.
+v.? See also 2 Chron. xxvi. 6.
+
+Soon after remounting we arrived at the ruin of a fine old _Khan_, one of
+the numerous establishments of the kind upon the camel road from Damascus
+to Egypt, but now every one of them is broken and unfit for use. There
+was a noble column of granite lying across the gateway, and two Welies
+close adjoining.
+
+Reached _Hhamameh_ at 11 A.M., from which we turned aside through lanes
+of gardens, and over deep sand towards _'Ascalon_, leaving _Mejdal_ on
+our left, with its lofty tower rising over an extensive plantation of
+olive-trees. This tower is believed to be of Moslem erection. Passing
+another village on our left, we at length came to _Jurah_, a wretched
+brick hamlet, stuck as it were against the ancient walls of 'Ascalon.
+
+We were on the sea-beach at noon. Upon this beach lie stupendous masses
+of overthrown city wall, and numerous columns of blue-gray granite of no
+very imposing dimensions. A great number of these have been at some time
+built horizontally into those walls, from which their ends protrude like
+muzzles of cannon from a modern fortification. This arrangement, with
+the same effect, is also found at Tyre, Caesarea, and other places along
+the coast.
+
+The site or lie of the city is principally in two hollow basins, in which
+the detrition of houses forms now a soil for grain, for fruit gardens and
+good tobacco.
+
+We were shown the ruins of what the people call "the Church," where there
+are several very large columns of polished granite lying prostrate, but
+neither there nor elsewhere could any capitals be found belonging to the
+columns. All over the East such objects are appropriated by townspeople
+as ornaments inside the houses, especially at the mouths of wells.
+
+The people pointed out to us from a distance the spot where H. E. Zareef
+Pasha had lately obtained the marble slab of bas-relief, which he sent to
+the museum at Constantinople.
+
+The walls of 'Ascalan are clearly distinguishable in all their circuit,
+and have been of great thickness.
+
+The position of this "Bride of Syria," as the Saracens designated it, is
+very fine, and the prospect around must have been beautiful; but of this
+prize of so many sieges and neighbouring battles, the joy of Richard
+Coeur de Lion, where he laboured with his own hands in repairing the
+broken walls, only its name with the scriptural and later romantic
+history remain to claim our attention, and verify the prediction of the
+prophet Zephaniah, ii. 4-6.
+
+I found no coins there, and none were brought to me; only some were
+brought to me in an after-journey at Mejdal; I therefore pass by for this
+time the classical allusions to the fish goddess, Deceto. A beautiful
+head of a female statue, but blackened by fire, brought from Ascalon, has
+since been sold to me, which I delivered to our museum.
+
+We remained there an hour, then rode to _Naaleea_. The fine plain over
+which we galloped must have had many an English rider upon it in the
+Crusading times--many a man who never saw "merrie England" again, even in
+company with King Richard.
+
+_Naaleea_, though built of brick, bears an appearance of real
+cleanliness; the olive plantation from Mejdal reaches thus far.
+
+The barley reaped at _Berberah_ was, I believe, the finest I have ever
+seen; and there were pretty roads winding among olive groves, orchards
+well enclosed by prickly-pear hedges, with bee-eaters skimming and
+twittering before us.
+
+_Bait Jirja_ on the left; then after a good while _Bait Hhanoon_ also on
+the left.
+
+Reached _Ghuzzeh_ (Gaza) at 5 P.M. The very remarkable approach is by an
+avenue of at least a mile long, very wide like a boulevard, through an
+immense park of olive grounds, with the city for an object of vista at
+the end.
+
+We encamped on the further side of Gaza, having the old reservoir called
+_Birket el Basha_ between us and the Lazaretto.
+
+Cheerful scene of camels and asses bearing the barley-harvest home,
+attended by women and children; small flocks of sheep also, with their
+shepherd lads playing sweet and irregular airs on their _nayahs_.
+
+_Friday_ 4_th_.--I resolved to stay here over Sunday.
+
+The morning was cool, and though our situation was entirely unsheltered,
+I judged even the risk of exposure to the noontide sun, when it should
+arrive, not to be refused, while it gave us the blessings of free air
+from the sea and delivery from mosquitoes, which would certainly have
+plagued us under the shade of the fruit-trees. There was a mean suburb
+in front of our position, tenanted solely by Egyptians.
+
+The sound of the distant sea rolling on the beach (though this was out of
+sight,) was music to my ears. Near us was a fence of the prickly-pear,
+(named _Saber_, or "patience" in Arabic.) One of our party referred to
+its extraordinary degree of vitality, even under disadvantageous
+circumstances. "Yes," replied the 'Asali, "she has drunk of the water of
+life."
+
+I went to visit the Lazaretto, and while conversing with the doctor (M.
+Esperon,) and the Turkish superintendent, four wild Arabs were brought
+in, their hands fettered and chains on their legs, accused of striking a
+soldier near _Khan Yunas_. When identified by witnesses merely uttering
+two or three words, they were removed, cruelly pushed about in their
+chains and beaten on the head by the soldiers, who enjoyed the cowardly
+fun which they would not dare to perpetrate had the fine tall fellows had
+their limbs at liberty.
+
+The captain of the Bashi-bozuk, having called at my tents with his
+mounted troop, followed me to the Lazaretto.
+
+Returning home, and after some rest, or rather a visit from some Greek
+Christians which gave me no rest, I went to visit the newly-arrived
+kaimakam, or governor, one of the celebrated 'Abdu'l-Hadi family of
+Nabloos. His divan room was crowded with visitors of congratulation:
+such as shaikhs of villages, and some dignified Arab chiefs; the latter
+interceding on behalf of the men recently captured by the quarantine
+people; the former soliciting their official investitures for their
+several districts. The house was exceedingly mean and shattered, but
+this medley of visitors formed an interesting subject of study.
+
+I next visited the kadi, (judge,) who was holding his court in the open
+air, with a canvas screen to shelter his head from the sun, in the midst
+of orchards and a flower garden. A cause, in which some women were
+vociferating and screeching in Arabic, (to which that language lends
+peculiar facility,) was suspended in order to receive my visit, and the
+litigants had to remain in silence at some distance till I left,
+returning to the tents.
+
+All the people here praise the air and water of Gaza, and declare that
+disease of any kind is nearly unknown, except ophthalmia, which, of
+course, can be generally prevented. Provisions are said to be cheap; but
+the bread, as sold in the market, not so good as in Jerusalem or Nabloos.
+Probably their excellent wheat is exported to a distance.
+
+_Saturday_, 5_th_.--Rode southwards on a day's excursion to Khan Yunas,
+with my people and an escort of two of the quarantine Bashi-bozuk. One
+of these, named Hadji Ghaneem, was a hardy old fellow, encircled by
+pistols and swords; his old gun, that was slung at his back, had the
+rusty bayonet fixed, perhaps fixed by the rust. The other, Hadji
+Khaleel, was an amusing companion, with plenty to tell and fond of
+talking.
+
+Started before 7 A.M., passing between cornfields, with numerous larks
+trilling in the air.
+
+At some distance we came to a low hill lying on our right hand, all the
+ground about being mere sea sand drifted inland. This is called
+_Tell-ul-'Ejel_, "the Calf's Hill," so named from its being haunted by
+the ghost of a calf, which no one has yet laid hold of, but whenever this
+shall be accomplished the fortunate person will come into possession of
+the boundless treasures concealed within the hill. Some say that this
+good luck will happen to any one that is favoured with a dream of the
+calf three times in succession. All our party professed to believe the
+local tradition, especially one who had been in Europe, and from whom
+such credulity had been less expected; but he was sure that some tales of
+that nature are well founded, and if so, why not this? In my opinion, it
+is probably a superstition connected with some ancient form of idolatry.
+
+Half-way along our journey we came to a village called _Ed Dair_, (the
+convent, perhaps the _Dair el Belahh_ of the list;) but this appellation
+Dair is often given to any large old edifice of which the origin is
+unknown. Here was a loop-holed Moslem tower occupied by twenty men of
+the Bashi-bozuk. Such towers are called _Shuneh_ in the singular,
+_Shuan_ in the plural.
+
+_Khan Yunas_ is a hamlet of unburnt bricks, dirty and ruinous, which is
+not always the case with other villages of that material; the reason of
+this being so, I suppose to be, that most of its few houses are inhabited
+by Turkish soldiers. This is the last station southwards held by the
+sultan's forces, the next, _El Areesh_, being an Egyptian outpost. I was
+desirous of visiting that place had time allowed, not only for the
+satisfaction of curiosity on the above account, but in order to get some
+idea from ocular inspection whether the little winter stream or Wadi
+there could ever have been the divinely-appointed boundary of the land
+promised to Abraham and his seed for ever. My prepossession is certainly
+to the contrary.
+
+However, I rode ten minutes beyond Khan Yunas, and sat to rest in a field
+beneath a fig-tree; the day was hot and brilliant, but there was a fine
+breeze coming in from the sea. The scene was picturesque enough, for
+there was a mosque-minaret and a broken tower rising behind a thick grove
+of palm-trees and orchards of fig, vine and pomegranate--a high bank of
+yellow sand behind the houses of the village, and the dark blue
+Mediterranean behind that.
+
+With respect to the name of the place, there are many such in the
+country, and it is a mistake to ridicule the Moslems for believing in all
+of them as true sites of the large fish vomiting out Jonah, which they do
+not. These are, I believe, merely commemorative stations, and we are not
+in the habit of ridiculing Christians for having several churches under
+the same appellation; also it is not quite certain that all the Welies
+named after Yunas (Jonas) or Moosa (Moses) do refer to the Old Testament
+prophets. There have been Mohammedan reputed saints bearing those names.
+
+Near this place is a village called _Beni Seheela_. On the return we
+left behind us the old Hadji Ghaneem, with his brown bayonet, and took a
+nearer road to Gaza, not so close to the sea as that by which we had left
+it. It was an easy pleasant ride, and there were barley crops almost all
+the way. We reached the tents in three hours from Khan Yunas.
+
+At sunset, which is the universal dinner time in the east, I went to dine
+with the Governor Mohammed 'Abdu'l Hadi; it was a miserable degrading
+scene of gorging the pilaff with the hands and squeezing the butter of it
+through the fingers, without even water for drink supplied by the
+servants. The guests were about a dozen in number, and they were crowded
+so closely round the tinned tray as only to admit of their right arms
+being thrust between their neighbours, in order to do which the sleeves
+had to be tucked back; there was but little conversation beyond that of
+the host encouraging the guests to eat more.
+
+Previous to eating, the governor and his younger brother performed their
+prayers in brief, after experiencing some difficulty in finding the true
+Kebleh direction for prayer, the rest of the company gossiping around
+them all the time. Above our heads was suspended a rude copper lamp, and
+the terrace just outside the door was occupied by slaves and other
+attendants; boughs of adjoining palms and other trees were softly stirred
+by an evening breeze, and the imperial moon shone over all.
+
+After washing of hands and a short repose, (the other guests smoking of
+course their chibooks and narghilehs, and chatting upon topics of local
+interest,) I asked leave, according to Oriental etiquette, to take my
+departure.
+
+_Sunday_, 6_th_.--Read the eighth chapter of Acts in Arabic, and some of
+our English liturgy in that noble language, with one of my companions. I
+feel certain, concerning the dispute whether the word [Greek word]
+(desert) in the twenty-sixth verse of the above chapter, refers to the
+city or to the road, that the true sense of the passage is this, "Go
+toward the south unto the way that goeth down from Jerusalem unto
+Gaza"--_i.e._, the way which is desert or free from towns and
+villages--as in Matt. iii. 1, and other places where the word in question
+does not imply the common European idea of any desolate wilderness.
+
+I enjoyed a Sabbath stillness during most of the day, the people having
+been instructed that English Christians observe the Lord's-day with more
+serious composure than it is the habit of native Christians to do.
+
+In the afternoon, however, the governor came on a visit with a long train
+of attendants mounted on beautiful horses, for which, indeed, this
+district is famed--there were specimens of Manaki, Jilfi, K'baishan,
+Mukhladiyeh, etc., etc. Mohammed, of course, discoursed as well as he
+could on European politics, and stayed long.
+
+After his departure I strolled to look at some short columns of marble
+standing on a slight swell of ground; they are now inscribed to the
+memory of certain Moslem martyrs in battle of our fourteenth century,
+_i.e._, about seven centuries after the Hej'ra. These columns look very
+much as if they had been taken from some old Christian church, then each
+sawn into halves, and each of the halves partly sliced on one side to
+receive the inscription.
+
+After sunset I dined with old Ibrahim Jahhshan, and his numerous
+household, (the principal one of the Christian families,) and a troop of
+friends. It was not a better entertainment than that of the kaimakam
+yesterday; perhaps, it would not be desirable for him to surpass the
+constituted authority of the city in such matters.
+
+Among the company was the Nazir el Aukaf, (the superintendent of
+mosque-endowment property,) also a Durweesh from Lahore, consequently a
+British subject,--he was full of fun, and wanted me to make him a present
+of some fulminating balls and crackers; he assured me that in the Hharam
+(sanctuary, commonly called the Mosque of Omar,) at Jerusalem, there were
+at least thirty such British subjects as himself residing, including his
+own brother. A Turkish soldier present drank wine, as soon as the
+commissioner for inquiring into the delinquencies of the late governor
+had turned his back upon the table.
+
+Before dinner I had accompanied the family to the church, (Greek rite,)
+where the priest was waiting to receive me. It was a poverty-stricken
+edifice, purposely kept so, in order to obviate the envy and malice of
+the Mohammedans; and all the Christians that I saw in Gaza were a
+stupid-looking people; they are few in number, and grievously oppressed
+by their numerous Moslem fellow-townsmen, being far away from the notice
+of consuls. One cannot but regard with compassion a people who have for
+ages endured suffering for the name of Christ, while facilities are
+offered for acquiring wealth and honour by apostasy. Generation after
+generation remains still as firm in their Christian creed as those before
+them, and now perhaps more so than ever.
+
+I was surprised to learn that it is only about two generations since the
+Samaritans ceased to be a sect in Gaza, with their place of worship--they
+are now found nowhere but in Nabloos.
+
+There is a slave-traffic in Gaza; but it only consists in the consignment
+of articles already commissioned for in Egypt, on behalf of private
+purchasers in Syria--at least, so the world is given to understand. The
+boundary of the two countries is so near that the Arabic dialect spoken
+here nearly approaches the Egyptian.
+
+I made some inquiries as to the popular ideas on the achievements of
+Samson at Gaza, but only obtained such uncertain and even contradictory
+answers, that on this journey it did not seem worth while to take any
+great trouble on the subject; but I certainly had not expected to get
+better information from either the Mohammedans or from the poor ignorant
+Christians there.
+
+The night was most beautiful, with full moonlight streaming, and stars
+peering between the swaying fronds of the lofty palm-trees, which grow
+more luxuriantly in Gaza then I had seen elsewhere.
+
+The muleteers singing around their watch-fire.
+
+_Monday_, 7_th_.--Tents struck and march commenced at 7 A.M. We returned
+through the great avenue by which we had arrived, but soon diverged upon
+the road to Hebron.
+
+Alongside of _Bait Hhanoon_ by half-past eight, where there was abundance
+of bee-eaters, and these imply fruit-trees. 'Abd'errahhman tried to
+shoot some, but failed, having no small shot, but only bullets for his
+gun.
+
+At nine we left _Timrah_ a little on our left. The people everywhere
+busied in reaping barley--a very lively scene; the reapers, as usual all
+over Palestine, wearing large leather aprons exactly like those used by
+blacksmiths in England, only unblackened by the forge; the women had face
+veils of the Egyptian pattern. Cows, goats, and sheep were feeding at
+liberty in the fields upon the new stubble.
+
+In thirty-five minutes more we arrived at _Semsem_, leaving _Bait Nejed_
+on the right.
+
+At five minutes past ten we reached _B'rair_, near which we rested for an
+hour, the day being very sultry, under an old tamarisk-tree, which on the
+plains instead of _Turfa_ is called _Itil_.
+
+An intelligent old man named 'Ali came up to me from the reaping and
+conversed much on the sad condition of agricultural affairs, complaining
+of the cruel oppression suffered by the peasantry from their petty local
+tyrants, and entreated me if I had any means of letting the Sultan of
+Constantinople know of it, that I would do so. He particularly described
+the exactions they had to endure from Muslehh el 'Az'zi of Bait Jibreen,
+and all his family.
+
+Thence passing over an extensive plain, we had in sight for a long time a
+distant Dair (so-called convent) and village of _Karateen_, also at one
+time a village called _Hhata_.
+
+At twenty minutes to one we reached _Falooja_; the heat had become
+intense, and incessant swarms of black stinging flies annoyed our horses
+beyond patience. In fact the Philistine plain (which, however, we were
+now soon to leave) was always noted for the plague of flies, and this
+gave rise to the ancient deprecatory worship of Baal-zebub, "the lord of
+flies," by that people; there is still a village upon the plain named
+_Dair ed Duban_, "the convent (or temple) of flies." Later in the summer
+this plague is said to be so intolerable to horses and animals of burden
+that travelling is only attempted there by night-time.
+
+At length came a rustling noise along the fields and rain fell slowly in
+drops large as good teaspoonfuls, yet the heat was so great that my coat
+of nearly white linen did not for some time show marks of wetness; a
+black cloud from which the water fell accompanied us along the line of
+route, and the rain from it increased.
+
+Over the plain going eastwards we had for a long time in view a rocky
+hill with a Weli crowning its summit; on our right, _i.e._ southwards, a
+conspicuous object, and called _'Arak Munshiyah_ (the rock of Munshiyah.)
+This is not to be confounded with the similar cliff cropping out of the
+plain, but upon our left, and called _Tell es Safieh_.
+
+We noticed several deserted villages with small breastworks and turrets
+of loose construction remaining where the peasantry had of late resisted
+the raids of the southern Bedaween, but unsuccessfully. We were told by
+a solitary foot-passenger of such incursions having taken place only a
+day or two before, whereupon our muleteers took fright and hurried on
+apace. We all examined the state of our firearms, while the storm was
+driving furiously in our faces.
+
+The rain was over as we reached _Bait Jibreen_, just after 3 P.M. This
+important place was our station for the day. We pitched in an eligible
+situation under a line of olive-trees at some distance from the houses,
+in view of the principal antique buildings. The principal people came
+out to welcome us, especially 'Abdu'l 'Azeez, the brother of the Nazir
+Shaikh Muslehh, for whom I had brought a letter of recommendation from
+the governor of Gaza.
+
+We were fatigued as much as anything from the effect of the shirocco
+wind. Then dark clouds from a distance with thunder surrounded us. As
+the time of sunset approached, the preparations for dinner were
+interrupted by the driving of a heavy shirocco, low, near the ground,
+which soon became so strong that the tents began to tumble over, and we
+took refuge in the house of 'Abdu'l 'Azeez; there was, however, no rain.
+
+Here then I was lodged in a house of sun-baked bricks plastered inside
+with mud, but as clean as such a house could possibly be. There were
+cupboard recesses in the walls, a fireplace and chimney, wooden nails
+driven into "sure places" in the walls, (see Isa. xxii. 23,) strange
+scratches of blue and red painting in fancy scrolls, etc.; a raised
+Mastabah or dais, and a lower part of course near the door, for guests to
+leave their shoes there; the whole being roofed by a few strong beams
+wattled between with faggot-wood. A piece of ancient marble lay across
+the doorway.
+
+The very rudely fabricated lamp was lighted from a huge clump of wood
+taken burning from the hearth. Dinner as uncivilised but as hospitable
+as could be expected at half-past nine. I should have had my own long
+before but for the tempest outside.
+
+News arrived that eighty people from _Kuriet el 'Aneb_ (the well-known
+village of Abu Gosh on the Jerusalem road from Jaffa) were escaping to us
+across the hills, on account of troubles at their home.
+
+Then we very soon lay down to sleep.
+
+_Tuesday_ 8_th_.--'Abdu'l 'Azeez and his two young sons escorted us in
+looking over the ruins of old Eleutheropolis, as their town was called in
+the period of early Christianity. These consist of a church near the
+great well, another on a hill farther eastwards called St Anna, or, as
+the Arabs pronounce it, _Sandanna_, and numerous extensive caverns,
+probably enlargements by art from nature.
+
+The former church has a roof remaining only over one of the aisles; the
+ground plan of the whole edifice is, however, sufficiently marked out by
+the fragments of columns _in situ_.
+
+St Anna is larger and more perfect than this; the semicircular apse is
+entire, and there are remains of other buildings attached to the church.
+It stands on high ground, and commands a very fine prospect.
+
+The caverns are formed in the substance of chalk hills, often in a
+circular form, with a rounded roof, through which an aperture admits both
+air and daylight. Antiquarians are puzzled to account for the origin of
+these, as they are too numerous and capacious to be needed for supply of
+water; besides that in common times the large well and aqueducts that
+bring water from a distance would suffice for that purpose. They are
+likewise too extensive and deep to be required for magazines of grain,
+such as the villages on the open plains cut into the underground rocks
+for preservation of their food from the raids of the Bedaween; perhaps,
+however, some were used for one of these purposes and some for the other.
+
+Near the entrance of one of these excavations, in which there are
+passages or corridors with running ornament sculptured along each side,
+we found figures (now headless, of course, since the Moslem conquest)
+resembling church saints in Europe--one, indeed, had its head remaining,
+though disfigured, and the arms posed in the manner of the Virgin Mary
+when holding the infant Saviour. These were sculptured in the chalk rock
+itself, and standing in niches hollowed behind them. If these were
+really what they seemed to be, they must have been made in the era of the
+Latin kingdom, for the Oriental Christians have never made _images_ of
+the saints.
+
+In two other of these caverns, high up on their sides or within the
+cupola, we saw short inscriptions of black paint, (if I remember
+rightly,) the large characters of which had very much the general forms
+of Cufic-Arabic, but not the Cufic of the old coins. There was also an
+ornamented cross in this cupola, and other crosses in other chambers. We
+were totally unable to satisfy ourselves as to how the inscriptions could
+have been written at such inaccessible heights. Certainly the present
+race of people are unable even to deface them, were they disposed to do
+so.
+
+One excavation we entered with some trouble near the top, and out of some
+labyrinthine passages we descended a spiral staircase, with a low wall to
+hold by in descending, all cut into the solid but soft rock; there were
+also small channels for conducting water from above to the bottom--these
+demonstrate the use of the whole elaborate work in this instance, namely
+for holding water.
+
+Returning to rest awhile in the house, 'Abdu'l 'Azeez assured me that
+immensely tall as he is, he had had eight brothers, all at least equal to
+himself; most of them had been killed in their faction battles, and his
+father, taller than himself, had died at the age of thirty-one. His sons
+could neither read nor write; they at one time made a beginning, but the
+teacher did not stay long enough to finish the job. "However," said he,
+pointing to the one sitting by us, perhaps ten years of age, "he can ride
+a mare so that none of our enemies can possibly overtake him."
+
+We left Bait Jibreen soon after 9 A.M., riding through a grove of olives,
+and soon arrived alongside of _Dair Nahhaz_, {182} and afterwards
+_Senabrah_. By noon we were quite off the plain, and entering a
+beautiful green valley bounded by cliffs of rock sprinkled with dwarf
+evergreen oak and pines, the spaces between them being filled up with
+purple cistus, yellow salvia, and other flowers. This continued for an
+hour, by which time we had gradually attained a considerable elevation,
+where we had our last survey for that journey of the Philistine plain and
+its glorious long limit, the Mediterranean Sea.
+
+In another quarter of an hour we rested among the wreck of _Khirbet en
+Nasara_, (ruins of the Christians,) not far from Hebron. Thence I
+despatched a messenger to my old friend the Pakeed (agent in temporal
+affairs) of the Sephardim Jews in the city, and he sent out provisions to
+my halting-place under the great oak, above a mile distant from Hebron.
+
+In regard to the researches after the lost site of Gath, I may mention
+that on a later visit to Bait Jibreen, I got Shaikh Muslehh (the
+government Nazir, and the head of his family) to tell me all the names of
+deserted places he could recollect in his neighbourhood. I wrote from
+his dictation as follows, but it does not seem that the object of inquiry
+is among them. In Arabic the name would most probably be _Jett_ or
+_Jatt_.
+
+
+Merash. Munsoorah. Umm Saidet.
+Sagheefah. Shemaniyeh. 'Arak Hala.
+Lahh'm. Shaikh Aman. 'Attar.
+Kobaibeh. Obeyah. St Anna.
+Fort. Ghutt. Judaidah.
+Martosiyah. Ahhsaniyeh. Ilmah.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. HEBRON TO BEERSHEBA, AND HEBRON TO JAFFA.
+
+
+In August 1849 I left my large family encampment under the branches of
+the great oak of Sibta, commonly called Abraham's oak by most people
+except the Jews, who do not believe in any Abraham's oak there. The
+great patriarch planted, indeed, a grove at Beersheba; but the "_Elone
+Mamre_" they declare to have been "plains," not "oaks," (which would be
+_Allone Mamre_,) and to have been situated northwards instead of
+westwards from the present Hebron. With a couple of attendants I was
+bound for Beersheba. The chief of the quarantine, not having a soldier
+at home, gave us a peasant to walk with us as far as the _Boorj_,
+(Tower,) with a letter of _our own_ handwriting in his name, addressed to
+the guard there, directing them to escort us further.
+
+Scrambling up a steep rough lane, due south from the tree, with vineyards
+on either side richly laden with fruit, and occasional sumach-trees
+bearing bright red berries, we were rewarded on the summit by a vast
+prospect of country, hilly before us in the south, Moab and Edom
+mountains to the left, and Philistia plains with the Mediterranean on the
+right.
+
+All nature was revived by the evening sea-breeze, and the sun in
+undiminished grandeur was retiring towards his rest.
+
+On a summit like this, with a wide expanse laid out for survey, there are
+large and lively ideas to be conceived in matters of Scriptural
+geography. Consider, for instance, on that spot Psalm cviii., with its
+detail of territories one after another. That "psalm of David" declares
+that God in His holiness had decreed the future dispensations of
+_Shechem_, (there is its position, Nabloos, in the north of the circular
+landscape;) then the _valley of Succoth_, (there it is, the Ghor, or vale
+of the Jordan,) coasting between _Gilead_, _Manasseh_, and _Ephraim_;
+also _Moab_, with its springs of water, where He would (speaking in human
+poetic language) wash His feet, at the period of treading with His shoe
+over _Edom_: that remarkable event paralleled in the Prophecy of Isaiah
+lxiii., when, in apparel dyed red from Bozrah, the conqueror tramples
+down the people in his anger. The Psalmist then has to triumph over
+_Philistia_, that large Shephelah stretched between us and the
+sea--concluding with the exclamation, "Who will bring me into the strong
+city (Petra)? who will lead me into Edom?"
+
+All this was accomplished by the providence of God in the history of
+David, that shepherd boy of Bethlehem, at whose coronation all Israel was
+gathered together at Hebron, just behind the spectator on this eminence.
+
+To return, however, from the solemnity of these historical meditations to
+the commonplace transactions of the journey, we had to carry on a
+considerable amount of wrangling with the muleteers, who were continually
+allowing their animals to stumble, and the ropes of the luggage to come
+loose, so that the things fell to the ground; I sent them back, and we
+proceeded without tents or bedding, only two blankets and our cloaks.
+The true reason of the men's behaviour lay in their dread of being
+attacked by wild Arabs, and having their animals carried off.
+
+It was about sunset, and our track lay over plains of arable land,
+between hills clothed with the usual dwarf evergreens, of baloot,
+arbutus, etc., then over eminences with tall fragrant pines, and the
+evening breeze sighing among their branches, such as I had only once
+heard since leaving Scotland, and that was in the Lebanon. Old stumps
+and half trunks of large trees standing among myriads of infantile
+sprouts of pines attested the devastation that was going on, by means of
+the peasantry, for making of charcoal, and for supplying logs to the
+furnaces of Hebron, where very rude manufactures of glass are carried on.
+
+Along a glen which opened into an arable plain with stubble of millet
+(durrah) remaining, but no village near. There we met a party of Arab
+women, and after them a boy mounted on a camel, who informed us that he
+was coming from _Merj-ed-Dom_, lying between us and _Samua'_, where there
+are remains of antiquity, such as large doorways, cisterns, etc.
+
+The country was all level enough for carriages; and it is probable that
+all the way in the south is practicable in like manner, for we know that
+Joseph sent carriages from Egypt to his father at Beersheba.
+
+The _Boorj_ is simply a look-out tower, now used for quarantine purposes,
+ridiculous as they may be in the pure air of the desert.
+
+There are relics of a village about it; but as the people are living in
+caverns rather than taking pains to rebuild their houses, we may infer
+that they do not feel secure on the very last remnant of fixed
+habitations towards the great southern wilderness, although under Turkish
+government.
+
+They are, however, kept in considerable awe of the petty officers
+stationed there; for when one of our party was impatient at the intrusion
+of a cat near our supper cloth, the people besought us not to injure the
+animal, seeing that it was the property of the _Dowleh_ (Government.)
+They furnished us with eggs and milk; and, after our meal, we lay down on
+the leeward side of the town, to await the rising of the moon. We had a
+fire burning near us, its red light flickering over the wild scene; the
+sky with its milky-way over our heads, and the polar star in the
+direction of England, fixed in its well-known place.
+
+The villagers had their own chatting round the watchfire, discussing
+local politics, chiefly, as to whether 'Abderrahhman the governor of
+Hebron was likely to accept the Pasha's invitation to meet 'Abdallah Wafa
+Effendi, who was sent with overtures of reconciliation between the
+brothers of the Amer family. This being a question that bore very nearly
+on their personal interests.
+
+I awoke just as the moon gleamed in the east, but did not arouse the
+youths for another half hour, till I became apprehensive of evil effects
+from their sleeping in the moonlight.
+
+After coffee we mounted and went forward, escorted by two of the
+quarantine guardians. There were no more hills, but the remaining
+country was all of hard untilled ground, with sprinklings of tamarisk and
+kali bushes, which showed we were entering on a new botanical region.
+
+Arrived at an Arab encampment, where our escort were obliged to hire the
+shaikh for showing us the way, as they either did not know it, or, which
+I believe the more probable, did not dare to take travellers over his
+land without his sharing in the profits, even though they were officials
+of quarantine. He soon came up, riding a fine mare of the Saklawi race,
+and his spear over the shoulder, glittering in the moonlight. His name
+was _Ayan_, and his people were a small offset from the great _Tiyahah_
+tribe. We passed several other such stations, of which we were always
+made aware beforehand by the barking of their dogs, and by seeing the
+camels browsing or reposing at a little distance from the tents.
+
+As the night advanced, the mist rose and increased till the stars were
+obscured and the moon scarcely perceptible; our clothes also became
+nearly wet through.
+
+We reached Beersheba (now called _Beer-es-Seba_) perhaps a couple of
+hours before daylight, and after sharing some food, wrapt the blankets
+over our heads, and lay down with our heads against the parapet stones of
+the great well, and fell asleep, notwithstanding the cold wet mist.
+
+I rose before the sun, and wrote two letters to friends in England by
+morning twilight.
+
+The mist disappeared as the glorious sun came forth; and we walked about
+to survey the place. The wide plain around was disused arable land,
+showing in some places some stubble from a recent harvest, but only in
+small patches, which in the early spring must have been cheerful to the
+sight.
+
+Near us was a pretty water-course of a winter torrent, shallow and
+comparatively wide, but then quite dry.
+
+The great well has an internal diameter at the mouth of twelve feet six
+inches, or a circumference of nearly forty feet. The shaft is formed of
+excellent masonry to a great depth until it reaches the rock, and at this
+juncture a spring trickles perpetually. Around the mouth of the well is
+a circular course of masonry, topped by a circular parapet of about a
+foot high. And at a distance of ten or twelve feet are stone troughs
+placed in a concentric circle with the well, the sides of which have deep
+indentions made by the wear of ropes on the upper edges.
+
+The second well, about 200 yards farther south, is not more than five
+feet in diameter, but is formed of equally good masonry, and furnishes
+equally good water. This is the most common size of ancient wells
+throughout Palestine.
+
+Two other wells of proportions about equal to the first well were shown
+us, but they are filled to the brim with earth and stones; and Shaikh
+Ayan told us of two others. The barbarous practice of filling up wells
+from motives of hostility was adopted at this place very soon after
+Abraham had dug them. (Gen. xxvi. 15, etc.) Who can tell how often
+these have been opened, closed and opened again?
+
+All Arab-speaking people wish to count neither more nor less than seven
+wells here, and so create the name _Seba_; but even in this way the
+etymology would not hold good, for the term _seven wells_ would be _Seba
+Bear_, not _Beer-es-Seba_. From the Hebrew history, however, we know how
+the designation was first given. Gen. xxi. 31, "Wherefore he called that
+place Beersheba, because there they _sware_ both of them," _i.e._,
+Abraham and Abimelech. Yet it deserves notice that the verb _to swear_
+is identical with the numeral _seven_; and in the three preceding verses
+we find Abraham ratifying the oath by a sacrifice of _seven_ ewe-lambs as
+a public guarantee for the fulfilment of the conditions; the killing of
+lambs with this view is a usage which still obtains in the country.
+
+On a rising ground near the wells are scattered lines of houses, covering
+a considerable space; but all that now appears is of inferior
+construction, and of no importance.
+
+Soon after sunrise the Arabs of the vicinity came to water their flocks
+and camels at the troughs. Young men stripping themselves nearly naked,
+two at each well, pulled up goat-skins of water by the same rope, hand
+over hand, and singing in loud merriment, with most uncivilised screams
+between the verse lines. These men were of very dark complexion--not
+quite black, but nearly so.
+
+There were linnets singing also, but in far more agreeable melody; but
+where they could be was more than I could discover--not a tree or a shrub
+was within sight-distance.
+
+After an hour we commenced our return by a different route from that of
+our arrival. Shaikh Ayan and Hadj 'Othman, of the quarantine, amusing
+themselves with jereed-playing and other mimic manoeuvres of warfare,
+which they performed very cleverly.
+
+The shaikh being dismissed with sufficient compliments on each side, we
+proceeded upon the main track from Egypt across the plain towards
+_Doheriyeh_, passing occasional parcels of durrah stubble rising out of
+mere scratches of the soil, varied by the wilderness plants of tamarisk,
+etc. When one remembers the fact of that same land in the days of
+Abraham and Isaac producing a hundredfold of corn, (Gen. xxvi. 12,) how
+deplorable it is to see it lying untilled for want of population, and
+serving only as so much space for wild tribes to roam over it! Surely it
+will not always remain so.
+
+Crossing a good road at right angles with ours, we met a large caravan of
+camels going eastwards. The people told us they were going to _Ma'an_,
+(beyond Petra,) one of the Hadj stations between Damascus and Mecca,
+where stores of provisions are always laid up by the Government for
+supply of the pilgrims at the appointed season of the year.
+
+Approaching the hills, we rested from the heat, which had become
+considerable, beneath a neb'k-tree, where all the roads between Egypt and
+Hebron meet at a point.
+
+At the entrance of a valley between the hills the quails were very
+numerous, and so tame as to come almost under the horses' feet.
+Unfortunately, just at the time when wanted, my fowling-piece was found
+to be unloaded, that is to say, not reloaded after having gone off
+yesterday by an accident.
+
+It was a relief from the great heat to mount the hills to Doheriyeh,
+although the road was tiresome, winding round and among the bases of
+almost circular hills in succession. At the village all the population
+was cheerfully employed in threshing or winnowing the harvest, and their
+flocks crouched in the shade of the trees. It was early in the
+afternoon, and we lay down to rest under the branches of a fig-tree
+growing out of a cavern, which cavern was so large that we placed all our
+horses in it.
+
+We parted from the quarantine soldiers, and took a guide for Hebron. The
+road was good and direct, through a pleasant country, so that we made
+quick progress. At an hour and three-quarters from Doheriyeh we arrived
+at a pretty glen of evergreen oak and pine; and at the entrance of this
+glen is a fountain, called _Afeeri_, of beautiful water issuing from a
+rock.
+
+Shortly after we joined the route by which we had left our encampment
+yesterday, near the fountain of _Dilbeh_, where we had drawn water when
+outward bound. Then came to an ancient well of good masonry, hexagonal
+in shape, but without water. A cistern for rain-water was close
+adjoining.
+
+Reached the oak of Sibta in twenty-eight hours after leaving it, well
+pleased with having been able to visit Beersheba, the scene of many
+ancient and holy transactions, in the days when the great patriarchs,
+Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, walked humbly with their God, and God gave
+them a faith capable of overthrowing mountains.
+
+In conclusion, I may express my regret that, although residing in the
+country many years afterwards, I could not get an opportunity of visiting
+either Beer-la-hai-roi or Isaac's well of Esek. (Gen. xxvi. 20.)
+Concerning the former we find some indications in an appendix to
+Williams' _Holy City_; and I have been assured personally that the latter
+is still held in estimation by the Bedaween tribes, under the name of
+_Esak_, and frequented as a rendezvous for making truces and covenants.
+
+On breaking up our camp at Abraham's oak, the family took the direct road
+for Jerusalem, while I struck across the Philistine plain for Jaffa.
+
+With one horseman and a kawwas, I diverged westwards from the common road
+just before the descent to 'Ain Dirweh, between it and the ruined town of
+Bait Soor, (Bethzur of Joshua xv. 58,) leaving Hhalhhool of the same
+verse on my right hand. Advanced gradually down a woody glen of the
+usual evergreen oak and pine. The higher part of the valley is in
+excellent cultivation, with careful walls, and drains to keep off the
+winter rains that descend from the hills, although no villages were in
+sight except in one place on an eminence to the left, where an apparently
+well-built village was entirely abandoned. It is called _Ma'naeen_; and
+the history of it, as I have since learned, is that it was only a few
+years before built by a colony of refugees from oppression in sundry
+villages, who concerted to set up on their own account, without regard to
+the authority of their family connexions, or of the hereditary shaikhs.
+So daring an innovation upon national customs was resented by a coalition
+of all the country round, who made war upon them, and dispersed the
+people once more to their miserable homes. The Turkish Government
+allowed of this proceeding, on the ground that to suffer the
+establishment of new villages (which of course implies new shaikhs to
+rule them) would derange the account-books of the taxes, which had been
+definitely fixed years before under the Egyptian Government.
+
+Lower down, where the glen became narrow and stony, a large rock has been
+hewn into a chamber for some ancient hermit, not unlike the one in the
+Wadi Ahhmed between Rachel's sepulchre and Batteer (Bether) near
+Jerusalem, only in this case the entrance is shaded by venerable
+karoobah-trees, so large as to cover the road also with their branches.
+
+We were met by various camel-parties carrying kali for the glass-works of
+Hebron during the approaching winter, also fine mats and other goods from
+Damietta, which, after being landed at Jaffa, are thus conveyed by
+reliefs of camels to their destination of Hebron, Bethlehem, and
+Jerusalem.
+
+On emerging from the valley (Wadi Arab or Shaikh) into the open Vale of
+'Elah, we had _Kharas_ perched on an eminence close at our right, and
+_Nuba_ similarly posted to our left.
+
+Also the ruins of _'Elah_ were on our left, and far behind our left hand,
+in among the hills, on a commanding height, was Keelah.
+
+We were now traversing the Valley of 'Elah, which runs north-westwards,
+and which I have described in my former journey. Now, as on that visit,
+I saw young shepherd lads pasturing large flocks as David may have done
+over the same ground.
+
+This time, however, I had entered the valley from a different
+point--viz., from its eastern end at Kharas, and not where Shocoh and
+Bait Nateef lie opposite to each other.
+
+We then traversed the same country as then as far as the village of
+_Khuldah_, which is a very thriving place, and where, as usual, on the
+wide plains there are not many flocks of sheep, but herds of horned
+cattle instead, driven by men on horseback. This is an indication of
+insecurity, on account of forays of Bedaween Arabs, from whom on their
+approach they have to scamper as fast as they can.
+
+The same insecurity is attested by each of these villages having its
+_Shuneh_, or little rude tower with a breast-work, in which the peasants
+may defend themselves when in sufficient force to do so.
+
+Next came _Saidoon_, where we obtained a distant prospect of Ramlah and
+Lydd, with Gimzo at the mouth of the Bethhoron Pass, (2 Chron. xxviii.
+18,) and Ras-el-Ain still beyond, with its fountains and rich lands
+conspicuous on the Great Plain, backed by the hills of Ephraim. Then we
+passed the poor clay-built village of _Deaneh_, where the people were
+winnowing a large harvest of millet, and the Government tax-farmers with
+their soldiers, lent by the authorities, measuring the heaps.
+
+Lastly, we entered the vast olive grounds belonging to Ramlah, and found
+our tents (which had been sent on by another road) just as the Moeddin in
+the minaret was calling to sunset prayers.
+
+I am never weary of the scenery about Ramlah; we have there the most
+picturesque Orientalism of all Palestine--a warm climate, numerous waving
+palm-trees, with the large reservoir for cattle drinking, all gilded in
+brilliant sunlight, together with the busy voices of a considerable
+population.
+
+A burly fellow of a wandering durweesh or sorcerer, with rows of large
+black beads round his neck, came up to us, and bellowed out one of the
+ninety-nine attributes of God, according to the Moslems: "Ya Daeem," (O
+thou everlasting!) This was by way of asking alms. My companion gave
+him some, which I would not have done.
+
+In the morning we ascended to the top of the great White Tower, called
+"the Tower of the Forty," meaning forty martyrs. This is a favourite
+appellation of ancient ruins in Palestine. I do not know what it alludes
+to. And from among the Comandalune windows I copied the following
+vignette.
+
+ [Picture: Window of the White Tower]
+
+
+
+
+V. THE LAND OF BENJAMIN.
+
+
+Who has ever stood upon the Scopus hill, north of Jerusalem, (his mind
+first prepared by biblical reading and biblical feeling,) facing
+northwards, and seeing at one glance, as upon a map, the land of the
+tribe of Benjamin, without desiring to wander about there, were it only
+to experience the reality of standing and breathing upon the sites of
+'Anathoth, Michmash, Gibea of Saul, and Gibeon? It can be most of it
+performed in one day, and sometimes a line through it is traversed in
+that time by English residents of Jerusalem, namely, from Jerusalem to
+Michmash and Bethel, and the return.
+
+There is also a pleasant spot above Lifta, in a grove of olives, figs,
+and pomegranates, where Europeans have sometimes established summer camps
+for their families. At that spot it is delightful to repose in the
+evening shadows cast by the trees, and gaze over the landscape of
+Benjamin, with a deep valley sinking in immediate front, only to rise
+again to the greater height of Nebi Samwil and a landscape view extending
+as far as the rock Rimmon, which stands in pyramidal form upon the
+horizon.
+
+There are, however, several ancient and biblical sites known to exist
+within that circuit that are not visible from either of those stations,
+and only to be perceived on reaching the places themselves. For
+instance, Bait Hhaneena of Nehemiah xi. 32.
+
+There is _'Adasa_, the scene of a great victory gained by Judas
+Maccabaeus over the mighty host of Nicanor; this I discovered from the
+peasants ploughing one day, while resting after a gazelle chase. It is
+not far from Gibeon. "So Nicanor went out of Jerusalem, and pitched his
+tents in Bethhoron, where an host of Syrians met him. But Judas pitched
+in Adasa with three thousand men. . . . So the thirteenth day of the
+month Adar [_i.e._ on the eve of Purim] the hosts joined battle: but
+Nicanor's host was discomfited, and he himself was first slain in the
+battle . . . . Then they pursued after them a day's journey, from Adasa
+unto Gazera, sounding an alarm after them with their trumpets," (Macc.
+vii. 39-45,) _i.e._ a day's journey for an army, perhaps, that day's
+journey after fighting; for it is a pleasant ride with respect to
+distance, as I proved by riding to _Jadeerah_, passing through Beer
+Nebala.
+
+And on another day's expedition alone, I was riding near 'Anata
+(Anathoth) eastwards from the village, thinking over the faith of the
+prophet Jeremiah, in purchasing a family estate, the future occupation of
+which was contrary to all human probability, and after recounting to
+myself the cities of Benjamin allotted to the priests, as Anathoth, (to
+which the treasonable priest Abiathar belonged, 1 Kings ii. 26,) Gibeon,
+and Geba, wondering what had become of the fourth city Almon, (Josh. xxi.
+17, 18,) I came up to a hill on which appeared some remains of an ancient
+town; there my horse carried me up the steep side, and while passing
+among the lines of foundations on the summit, a peasant who joined me
+said the place was called _'Alman_. Some time afterwards, I was riding
+on the other side of the same hill, in the direction of _Hhizmeh_, (the
+Az-maveth of Neh. vii. 28, as I suppose,) when a peasant informed me that
+the place on the hill was named _Almeet_. This corresponds to the other
+name of the town as given in 1 Chron. vi. 60, and vii. 8, where it is
+Alemeth. So remarkable a preservation of both names by another people
+than the Jews, after long or perhaps repeated desolations, appears to me
+almost miraculous, and is a fresh illustration of the exact verbal
+inspiration of Holy Scripture.
+
+I once visited the rock Rimmon of Judges xx. 47. The first part of the
+journey was made in company with Lieutenant Vandevelde, going from
+Jericho to Bethel, a totally-unknown road; it must have been the same as
+that taken by Joshua after the fall of Jericho.
+
+This was in 1852. The Arabs were unwilling to take us in that direction,
+probably on account of some local hostilities to which they might be
+exposed. At first they denied there was any road that way, then said it
+was so difficult that we could not reach Bethel in less than two days,
+which was ridiculous, considering the shortness of the distance. At
+length we resolved to find a road without them, and ordered the luggage
+to go round by Khatroon, or if necessary by Jerusalem, but to meet us at
+Bethel that night.
+
+Shaikh Mohammed el Hejjaz then sent with us his slave Suliman. By his
+having that Moslem name, I should suppose this to be a freed-man,
+inasmuch as it is not the custom to give Moslem or Christian names to
+slaves; they may be only called Jewel, Diamond, Cornelian, Thursday,
+Friday, etc. It is not uncommon for a freed-man to be still called in
+popular speech _a slave_; but not in serious earnest or in matters of
+business, and not unless they are blacks from Africa.
+
+It is not unusual in the East for a slave, even though still in bondage,
+to be educated in reading and writing, to be trained in military
+accomplishments, and so to be employed as confidential agent of property,
+or trainer of children in the family, riding the best horses and carrying
+weapons of best quality. And this Suliman was a bright specimen of that
+class of men,--of good bodily presence, merry-humoured, and
+well-accoutred.
+
+The first part of the journey in crossing the Quarantana mountain was
+precipitous, and even dangerous for strangers; but the summit being
+attained, the whole of the remaining distance was a level plain. We were
+upon remains of an ancient road, with wells frequently occurring by the
+wayside; many of them, however, choked up with stones and earth.
+
+Plodded quietly along, when, about two hours from Jericho, we were
+surprised by hearing human wailing and cries for mercy near us. This was
+discovered to come from a boy of about twelve years of age who had
+concealed himself behind a bush of _ret'm_, (juniper of Scripture.) He
+had never seen Europeans before, and, on perceiving the Hejjaz slave at
+our head, was apprehensive that we should plunder him of his ass and her
+foal. He was a peasant of _Dair Dewan_, {203} a village on the way
+before us.
+
+In half an hour more we came up to a cleanly-dressed and pleasant-looking
+shepherd lad, who was not at all afraid of us. He conducted us to a well
+of good water, named _Beer Mustafa_, a little off the road, at the
+heading of the small wadi _Krishneh_; there we rested half an hour.
+
+In another hour we reached the ruins of Abu Sabbakh, from which we had
+_Remmoon_ visible on our right.
+
+During all the day's journey we passed through a good deal of wheat and
+barley cultivation, the crops ripening fast, it being at the beginning of
+May.
+
+In another half hour we arrived at Dair Dewan, the Beth-aven of
+Scripture, {204} a flourishing village,--remarkably so, as evinced by its
+buildings, its fruit orchards, and corn fields all around. Progress in
+such affairs is a sure token of a village being peopled by Christians.
+In the well-kept cemetery belonging to the place, it was pleasant to see
+an enormous quantity of large blue iris flowers growing between the
+graves, and often concealing them from view till nearly approached.
+
+Turning abruptly westward, in twenty minutes we came to the hill of
+stones called Tell-el-hajjar, which I had on a former occasion identified
+as the site of Ai, lying as it does between Beth-aven and Bethel, (Josh.
+viii.,) and having the deep valley alongside northwards. Here Vandevelde
+took bearings, with his theodolite, of points within sight; and in a
+quarter of an hour from this we reached Bethel, (now called Bait-een,)
+that is in less than five hours, including an hour's stoppage at the Tell
+from the 'Ain-es-Sultan by Jericho, where the Arabs had, for their own
+reasons, tried to persuade us that the journey was impossible, or would
+at least occupy two days.
+
+Our tents and luggage arrived soon after we did. Bait-een has been so
+often described, and its biblical events so often quoted by travellers,
+that it is not necessary to do so while professedly dealing only with
+byeways in Palestine; yet this may be said, that no distance of time can
+entirely efface the exquisite pleasure of exploring ground and sites so
+accurately corresponding as this did to the topography of the Bible, and
+belonging to events of such antiquity as the acts of Abraham and Joshua.
+
+In the morning I separated from my friends, who were preceding towards
+Damascus, and, accompanied by Suliman and a kawwas, went on my way to
+_Remmoon_, (the rock Rimmon.) Started at half-past seven in a thick
+shirocco atmosphere, keeping on the northern high road for about a
+quarter of an hour in the direction of _Yebrood_, then turned sharply
+eastwards over corn-fields, and descended into a deep hot valley. The
+flowers of the field were chiefly cistus, red or white, and hollyhocks
+four feet high. Then ascended to at least a corresponding height into
+terraces of fruit-trees well-cultivated; and still mounting, to a fine
+plain of wheat, at the end of which was Remmoon, one hour and a quarter
+from Bait-een.
+
+The village is built upon a mass of calcareous rock, commanding
+magnificent views towards the south, including the Dead Sea and the line
+of the Jordan; higher hills bounded the north, on which was conspicuous
+the town of _Tayibeh_, near which is a _weli_ or _mezar_ (pilgrimage
+station) named after St George, who is an object of veneration to both
+Moslems and Christians. The people of Tayibeh are all or mostly
+Christians, and have a church with a resident priest.
+
+We rode up the street of Remmoon, and found the shaikh and principal men
+of the town lazily smoking in the shadow of a house.
+
+My object was of course to inquire for a cavern that might be capable of
+containing six hundred men during four months. The people all denied the
+existence of such a cavern, but after some parley I was conducted to two
+separate caverns on the west side of the hill, then to two others on the
+eastern side which are larger, and to each of which we had to arrive
+through a house built at its opening. They told me of two others upon
+the hill, but of much inferior size. Those that I entered were not
+remarkable for dimensions above the many that are to be found over the
+country. It is probable that the whole of the refugees might sleep in
+these several places, if there were no village there at the time, which
+seems probable; but it was merely my own preconceived notion that they
+all lived in one vast cavern. The text of Judg. xx. 47 does not say so.
+
+The village is in good condition, and the cultivation excellent in every
+direction around it. On leaving it for the return to Jerusalem I
+proceeded due southwards. In the fields the people were industriously
+clearing away stones--a sure symptom of peace, and consequent
+improvement.
+
+Crossed a valley named _Ma'kook_, and arrived at _Mukhinas_ (Michmash) in
+less than two hours from Remmoon. Rested in the fine grove of
+olive-trees in the valley on the north of the town for an hour. The
+birds were singing delightfully, though the time was high noon, and our
+horses enjoyed some respite from the sanguinary green flies which had
+plagued them all the way from Remmoon; their bellies and fetlocks were
+red with bleeding. In this matter I particularly admired the benevolence
+of the slave Suliman. Yesterday, after a sharp run across a field,
+perhaps in the vain hope of escaping the tormentors, he dismounted, and
+the mare followed him, walking like a lamb. He then sat down to switch
+away the flies, and rub her legs inwards and outwards. To-day he had
+taken off his Bedawi kefieh, or bright-coloured small shawl, from around
+his head, and suspended it between her legs, then, as he rode along, was
+continually switching between her ears with a long bunch of the wild
+mustard-plant.
+
+On leaving Mukhmas in the hottest part of the day, we had to cross the
+Wadi _Suaineet_, along which to our left appeared the northern extremity
+of the Dead Sea. At a short distance down the valley there are
+remarkable precipices on each side, which must be the Bozez and Seneh,
+{207} renowned for the bold adventure of Jonathan and his armour-bearer,
+and near these projections are some large old karoobah-trees.
+
+Emerging upwards from this wadi one comes to _Jeba'_, (the Gibeah of
+Saul, so often mentioned,) upon a table-land extending due east, in which
+direction I visited, five years before, an ancient ruin, which the people
+of Jeba' call _El Kharjeh_; it consisted of one principal building of
+contiguous chambers, built of nicely squared stones, put together without
+cement, like several of the remains at Bethel.
+
+These stones are gray with weather stains, but seldom more than three
+courses in height remain in their places, though in one place five.
+
+From this site, as well as from Jeba', there is a very striking view of
+the northern extremity of the Dead Sea.
+
+The guide told us of a vast cavern in the Wadi Suaineet capable of
+holding many hundred men, near to the above-mentioned karoobah-trees, and
+therefore just the suitable refuge for the Israelites, (I Sam. xiv. 11,)
+besides the Bozez and Seneh; and he told us that half-way down the
+precipice there is a course of water running towards the Ghor.
+
+Few incidents in the Bible are so real to the eye and feelings as the
+narrative of Jonathan and his office-bearers when read upon the spot of
+the occurrence, or near it at Jeba'.
+
+We passed _Jeba'_ at about a quarter of a mile to our right, and in
+another quarter of an hour were at the strange old stone parallelograms
+under _Hhizmeh_, which had been often before visited in afternoon rides
+from Jerusalem.
+
+These are piles of large squared stones of great antiquity, carefully
+built into long parallel forms, and now deeply weather-eaten. No use of
+them can be imagined. I have visited them at all seasons of the year,
+and at different hours of the day, but they still remain unintelligible.
+They are disposed in different directions, as will be seen in the
+following drawing of them, carefully taken by measurement in my presence,
+and given me by a friend now in England, the Rev. G. W. Dalton of
+Wolverhampton.
+
+ [Picture: Stone constructions under Hhizmeh]
+
+On one face of No. 4 is a kind of entrance, and on the top surface a
+round hole about two feet in depth, but they lead to nothing, and are
+probably the work of modern peasantry, removing stones from the entire
+block; in the former case for the mere object of shade from the sun, and
+the latter for the charitable purpose common among Moslems, who often cut
+basins into solid rocks, to collect rain or dew for birds of the air or
+beasts of the field.
+
+Corroded monuments like these, in so pure and dry an atmosphere, bespeak
+a far more hoary antiquity than the same amount of decay would do in an
+English climate.
+
+I know of a spot on the side of a wild hill upon the way between Ai (as I
+believe the place called the _Tell_ to be) and Mukhmas, where there are
+several huge slabs of stone, rather exceeding human size, laid upon the
+ground side by side exactly parallel. These can be nothing else than
+gravestones of early Israelitish period, but of which the memorial is now
+gone for ever.
+
+Crossing the torrent-bed from the parallelogram, and mounting the next
+hill, we were at Hhizmeh; then leaving 'Anata on the left, we traversed
+the Scopus near the Mount of Olives, and reached Jerusalem in four hours
+and a half of easy riding from Remmoon.
+
+One ought not to quit the mention of this land of Benjamin by omitting
+the _Wadi Farah_.
+
+This is a most delightsome valley, with a good stream of water, at a
+distance of rather more than two hours from Jerusalem to the N.E.
+
+The way to it is through 'Anata, already described, from which most of
+the stones were quarried for the English church in the Holy City, and
+then alongside the hill on which stands the ruins with the double name of
+'Alman and 'Almeet, discovered by me as above-described.
+
+Once, in the autumn season, a party of us went to Wadi Farah, and
+arriving on its precipitous brink found the descent too difficult for the
+horses; these, therefore, were left in charge of the servants, while we
+skipped or slid from rock to rock, carrying the luncheon with us.
+
+The copious stream was much choked near its source, which rises from the
+ground, by a thick growth of reeds, oleanders in blossom, and gigantic
+peppermint with strong smell. There were small fish in the stream, which
+was flowing rapidly; wild pigeons were numerous, and a shepherd boy
+playing his reed pipe, brought his flock to the water. Need it be said,
+how refreshing all this was to us all after the long summer of Jerusalem.
+
+There were remains of a bridge and considerable fragments of old
+aqueducts, _i.e._, good-sized tubes of pottery encased in masonry, but
+now so broken as to be quite useless; these lead from the spring-head
+towards the Jordan at different levels, one above another. There was
+also a cistern of masonry, with indications of water-machinery having
+been at one time employed there; but all these evidences of population
+and industry are abandoned to savages and the action of the elements.
+
+Dr James Barclay of Virginia, author of "The City of the Great King,"
+believes this site to be that of "AEnon, near to Salim," where John was
+baptizing, "because there was much water there," (John iii. 23.)
+
+There can scarcely be a doubt that it is the _Parah_, belonging to the
+tribe of Benjamin, in Josh. xviii. 23, and that therefore it was a
+settled and cultivated place before the children of Israel took
+possession of the land.
+
+The district around,--indeed, all eastwards of 'Anata,--is now
+unappropriated; parts of it, however, are sown--not always the same
+patches in successive years--by the people of the nearest villages in a
+compulsory partnership with the petty Arabs of the Jordan plain. The
+peasantry are forced to find the seed and the labour, and yet are often
+defrauded of their share of the produce by the so-called partners
+bringing up friends and auxiliaries from the plain, just as the grain is
+ripening, and carrying off the produce by night, or setting fire to
+whatever they cannot seize in this hasty operation; and this takes place
+about two hours from the citadel and garrison of Jerusalem. Do not ask
+where is the Turkish government!
+
+The people are driven to sow the grain upon these conditions, under risk
+of having their own crops destroyed or devastated near their homesteads,
+and in no case dare they offer any resistance.
+
+I was once unwillingly present at a grievous scene near Elisha's
+fountain. Nas'r Abu' N'sair, shaikh of the Ehteimat, one of the parties
+at all times in the above-described partnerships, was seated smoking his
+chibook beneath an old neb'k tree when some Christian peasants from
+_Tayibeh_ approached him with deep humility, begging permission to sow
+grain upon that marvellously fertile plain of Jericho. For some reason
+which did not appear, it suited him to refuse the favour. In vain the
+suppliants raised their bidding of the proportion to be given him from
+the proceeds; they then endeavoured to get me to intercede in their
+behalf, frequently making the sign of the cross upon themselves, thereby
+invoking my sympathy as a fellow-Christian on their side; but on several
+accounts it seemed most prudent for me to leave the parties to their own
+negotiations, only speaking on their behalf afterwards by sending a
+kawwas to recommend kindness in general to the Christian villages. It
+may be that this step met with success, but I could not but be sincerely
+desirous to have such Arab vermin as these mongrel tribes swept off the
+land.
+
+
+
+
+VI. SEBUSTIEH TO CAIFFA.
+
+
+In October, 1848, I found myself at Sebustieh, the ancient Samaria,
+having come thither from Jerusalem by the common route through Nabloos,
+_i.e._, Shechem. Since that time I have often been there, but never
+without a feeling of very deep interest, not only in the beauty of its
+site, worthy of a royal city, or in the Roman remains still subsisting,
+but also in the remarkable fulfilments of Biblical prophecy which the
+place exhibits. The stones of the ancient buildings are literally poured
+down into the valley, and the foundations thereof discovered, (Micah i.
+6.)
+
+We left the hill and its miserable village by the usual track through a
+gateway at its eastern side. Down in the valley lay fragments of large
+mouldings of public buildings, and the lid of a sarcophagus reversed,
+measuring eight feet in length.
+
+At first we took the common road northwards, and ascending the hill above
+_Burka_, from the summit had a glorious prospect of the sea on one side,
+and of the populous village country, well cultivated, stretched before
+us; we left the common road to _Sanoor_ and _Jeneen_, turning aside under
+_Seeleh_, a double village nearest to us, with _Atara_ further west.
+
+The muleteers had preceded us during our survey of Sebustieh, on the way
+to 'Arabeh, and we could see nothing of them before us--the road was
+unknown to us, and no population could be seen, all keeping out of sight
+of us and of each other on account of the alarm of cholera then raging in
+the country.
+
+At Nabloos that morning, two hours before noon, we had been told of
+twenty having been already buried that day, and we saw some funerals
+taking place. At Sebustieh, the people had refused for any money to be
+our guides; one youth said, "he was afraid of the death that there was in
+the world."
+
+So my companion and I, with a kawwas, paced on till arriving near sunset
+at a deserted village standing on a precipice which rose above a
+tolerably high hill, and which from a distance we had been incorrectly
+told was 'Arabeh; at that distance it had not the appearance of being
+depopulated, as we found it to be on reaching it. Numerous villages were
+in view, but no people visible to tell us their names. The district was
+utterly unknown to maps, as it lies out of the common travellers' route.
+This village, we afterwards learned, is _Rami_, and antique stones and
+wells are found there. Though our horses were much fatigued, it was
+necessary to go on in search of our people and property, for the sun was
+falling rapidly.
+
+Observing a good looking village far before us to the N.W., and a path
+leading in that direction, we followed it through a wood of low shrubs,
+and arrived at the village, a place strong by nature for military
+defence, and its name is _Cuf'r Ra'i_. There was a view of the sea and
+the sun setting grandly into it.
+
+For high pay, we obtained a youth to guide us to 'Arabeh; shouldering his
+gun, he preceded us. "Do you know," said he, "why we are called Cuf'r
+Ra'i?--It is because the word Cuf'r means blaspheming infidels, and so we
+are--we care for nothing." Of course, his derivation was grammatically
+wrong; for the word, which is common enough out of the Jerusalem district
+and the south, is the Hebrew word for a village, still traditionally in
+use, and this place is literally, "the shepherd's village."
+
+We passed an ancient sepulchre cut in the rock by our wayside, with small
+niches in it to the right and left; the material was coarse, and so was
+the workmanship, compared to ours about Jerusalem.
+
+The moon rose--a jackal crossed a field within a few yards of us. We
+passed through a large village called _Fahh'mah_, _i.e._, charcoal, with
+fragments of old buildings and one palm-tree. Forwards over wild green
+hills, along precipices that required extreme caution. The villages
+around were discernible by their lights in the houses. At length 'Arabeh
+appeared, with numerous and large lights, and we could hear the ring of
+blacksmiths' hammers and anvils--we seemed almost to be approaching a
+manufacturing town in "the black country of England." {217}
+
+Arrived on a smooth meadow at the foot of the long hill on which the
+place is built, I fired pistols as a signal to our people should they be
+there to hear it, and one was fired in answer. To that spot we went, and
+found the tents and our people, but neither tents set up nor preparations
+for supper. Village people stood around, but refused to give or sell us
+anything, and using defiant language to all the consuls and pashas in the
+world.
+
+Till that moment I had not been aware that this was the citadel of the
+'Abdu'l Hadi's factions, and a semi-fortification. [Since that time, I
+have had opportunities of seeing much more of the people and the place.]
+
+Sending a kawwas to the castle, with my compliments to the Bek, I
+requested guards for the night, and loading my pistols afresh, stood with
+them in my hand, as did my second kawwas with his gun, and we commenced
+erecting the tents.
+
+Down came the kawwas in haste to announce that the Bek was coming himself
+to us, attended by his sons and a large train.
+
+First came his nephew from his part, to announce the advent; then a
+deputation of twenty; and then himself, robed in scarlet and sable fur,
+on a splendid black horse of high breed. I invited him to sit with me on
+my bed within the tent, widely open. The twenty squatted in a circle
+around us, and others stood behind them; and a present was laid before me
+of a fine water-melon and a dozen of pomegranates.
+
+Never was a friendship got up on shorter notice. We talked politics and
+history, which I would rather have adjourned to another time, being very
+tired and very hungry.
+
+He assured me that when my pistols were heard at the arrival, between 700
+and 800 men rushed to arms, supposing there was an invasion of their
+foes, the Tokan and Jerrar, or perhaps an assault by the Pasha's regulars
+from Jerusalem, under the pretext of cholera quarantine--in either case
+they got themselves ready.
+
+He stayed long, and then went to chat with my Arab secretary in his tent,
+leaving me to eat my supper. He gave orders for a strong guard to be
+about us for the night, and a party to guide us in the morning on our way
+to Carmel.
+
+This personage (as he himself told me) had been the civil governor inside
+of Acre during the English bombardment of 1840; and his brother had first
+introduced the Egyptians into the country eleven years before that
+termination of their government.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In 1852 I had arrived at 'Arabeh from Nabloos by a different route, and
+turned from this place not seawards as now, but inland to Jeneen: whence
+I again visited it on my return. It seems worth while to give the
+details of this route.
+
+Starting from Nabloos at half-past ten we passed _Zuwatah_ close on our
+right, and _Bait Uzan_ high up on the left. Here the aqueduct conveying
+water from the springs under Gerizim to gardens far westwards, was close
+to the high-road. Arriving at _Sebustieh_ and going on to _Burka_ we
+quitted the Jeba' road, and turned to _Seeleh_ which lay on our left, and
+_Fendecomia_ high up on the right, _Jeba'_ being in sight.
+
+Soon after this we turned sharply north-west to _'Ajjeh_, and thence
+arrived at 'Arabeh in five and a half hours from Nabloos.
+
+After leaving 'Arabeh for Jeneen we got upon a fine plain, namely, that
+of Dothan. On this, near to another road leading to Kabatiyeh, is a
+beautiful low hill, upon which stands Dothan, the only building left to
+represent the ancient name being a cow-shed; however, at the foot of the
+hill is a space of bright green sward, whence issues a plentiful stream
+of sparkling water, and here among some trees is a rude stone building.
+This spot is now called _Hafeereh_, but the whole site was anciently
+Dothan, this name having been given me by one peasant, and Dotan by
+another.
+
+On my return hither a few days later I found a large herd of cattle, and
+many asses going to drink at the spring. Dothan is well known to
+shepherds now as a place of resort, and must have been so in ancient
+times. Here then, in the very best part of the fertile country of
+Ephraim, is the pasture-ground to which Joseph's brethren had removed
+their flocks from the paternal estate at Shechem, and where they sold
+their brother to the Arab traders on their way to Egypt. This may help
+to mark the season of the year at which Joseph was bought and sold. It
+could only be at the end of the summer that the brethren would need to
+remove their flocks from exhausted pasture-ground at Shechem to the
+perennial spring and green watered land at Dothan; this would also be
+naturally the season for the Ishmaelite caravan to carry produce into
+Egypt after the harvest was ended. Be it remembered that the articles
+they were conveying were produce from the district of Gilead--("balm of
+Gilead" is mentioned later in Scripture)--and it is specially interesting
+to notice that Jacob's present, sent by his brethren to the unknown ruler
+in Egypt, consisted of these same best fruits, "Take of the best fruits
+of the land, balm, honey, spices and myrrh, nuts and almonds."
+
+Dothan is about half an hour distant from 'Arabeh, and therefore six
+hours or a morning's walk for a peasant from Shechem.
+
+More solemn, however, than the above interesting recollection, was that
+of the horses and chariots of fire which had encircled the very hill upon
+which I stood, when Elisha "the man of God," lived in Dothan, and smote
+the Syrian army at the foot with blindness, and led them away to
+Sebustieh, (Samaria,) 2 Kings vi.
+
+After leaving Dothan, at the falling in of this road to Jeneen with that
+from Kabatieh, stands a broken tower on an eminence above the well
+_Belameh_, which Dr Schultz has identified with the Belmen, Belmaim, and
+Balamo of the Book of Judith, (chap. iv. 4; vii. 3; viii. 3.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To resume--Away early in the morning. Paid the night-guard and sent a
+present of white loaf bread and some tea to the Bek.
+
+It was promised that we should reach Carmel in nine hours, across an
+unknown but pretty country in a different direction from Lejjoon and
+Ta'annuk (Taanach of Judges i. 27,) which I had designed for my route,
+and towards the sea-coast.
+
+Our guides were gigantic men, beside whom my tall peasant servant Khaleel
+appeared to disadvantage, and their guns were of a superior description
+to what one commonly sees in Palestine. The peasantry also were large
+men with good guns.
+
+First, due west for quarter of an hour towards _Kubrus_, situated upon a
+hill, but before reaching it, turned sharply northwards, through a rocky
+defile of ten minutes, when we fell in with a better road which, they
+said, came also from 'Arabeh, and on towards a fine village named
+_Yaabad_ in a lovely plain richly cultivated; there were after the
+earlier crops young plantations of cotton rising, the fields cleared of
+stones and fenced in by the most regular and orderly of stone dykes.
+
+Before reaching _Yaabad_, we turned due west, our guides alone being able
+to judge which of the many footpaths could be the right one.
+
+Reached the poor village _Zebdeh_, then over a green hill with a prospect
+of the sea. Caesarea visible at a distance, and in the middle distance
+_Jit_ and _Zeita_. Near us were ruins of a strong place called _Burtaa_,
+said to have a supply of delicious water. Our journey was all over short
+evergreens rising from stony ground. So lonely--none in sight but
+ourselves for hours after hours. "Green is the portion of Paradise"
+exclaimed our people.
+
+At _Cuf'r Kara_, a clean mud village in the fragments of columns lying
+about, we rested beneath some huge fig-trees while the luggage, guarded
+by some of the escort, jogged forwards; for muleteers never like resting
+their animals, or at least do not like unpacking them before the end of
+the day's march; the trouble is too great in reloading them. The riding
+horses were tied up under the trees, and we got some melons and eggs from
+the village.
+
+After an hour we remounted and went on steadily north-west. Soon reached
+_Kaneer_, where was a cistern with wide circular opening of large
+masonry, bespeaking high antiquity.
+
+Then to _Subariyeh_ on a small rise from a hollow with one palm-tree.
+The well was at a distance from the village, and the women washing there.
+One man asked one of them to move away while he filled our matara
+(leathern bottle.) She said she would not even for Ibrahim Pasha,
+whereupon he roared out, "One sees that the world is changed, for if you
+had spoken in that manner to one of Ibrahim's meanest of grooms, he would
+have burned down your town for you." The matara was then filled.
+
+In another quarter of an hour we were pacing through a wide Riding (as we
+use the term in the old English Forests for a broad avenue between
+woods.) This opened into a plain of rich park scenery, with timbered low
+hills all about, only of course no grass: in the centre of this stands
+_Zumareen_, perched on a bold piece of rock. Many of the trees were
+entirely unknown to us Southerners; some of the evergreens were named to
+us as Maloch, etc., and there were bushes of Saris with red berries.
+
+Out of this we emerged upon the plain of the sea-coast, at a wretched
+village bearing the attractive name of _Furadees_ (Paradise.) Here the
+people were sifting their corn after its thrashing, and we got a boy to
+refresh us with milk from his flock of goats. Only those experiencing
+similar circumstances of hot travelling, can conceive the pleasure of
+this draught, especially after having had to gallop round the boy, and
+coax and threaten him to sell the milk for our money.
+
+The way lay due north, hugging to the hills parallel to the sea, but at a
+distance from it: numerous wadis run inland, and at the mouth of each is
+a village. The first was _Suameh_, the next _'Ain el Ghazal_, (Gazelles
+fountain,) wretched like the rest, but in a pretty situation--then
+_Modzha_, and _Mazaal_, and _'Ain Hhood_, (a prosperous looking place,)
+and _Teeri_.
+
+The sun set in the blue water, and we were still far from Carmel--our
+animals could scarcely move: sometimes we dismounted and led them--passed
+the notable ruins of Tantoorah, (Dora of the Bible,) and Athleet on our
+left--moonlight and fatigue. There was a nearer way from Zumareen, but
+it would have been hilly and wearisome. After a long while we overtook
+our muleteers without the baggage, for the Kawwas Salim, they said, had
+been so cruel to them that they had allowed him to go on with the charge
+towards Carmel.
+
+At length we climbed up the steep to the convent. Being very late we
+experienced great difficulty in gaining admission. There was no food
+allowed to the servants, no barley for the horses, and for a long time no
+water supplied.
+
+In the morning we found great changes had taken place since 1846. The
+kind president had gone on to India--the apothecary Fra Angelo was
+removed to a distance--John-Baptist was at Caiffa and unwell. The whole
+place bore the appearance of gloom, bigotry, dirtiness, and bad
+management.
+
+In the afternoon I left the convent, in order to enjoy a perfect Sabbath
+on the morrow in tents at the foot of the hill, open to the sea breeze of
+the north, and with a grand panorama stretched out before us.
+
+And a blessed day that was. We were all in need of bodily rest,
+ourselves, the servants and the cattle--and it was enjoyed to the
+full--my young friend and I derived blessing and refreshment also from
+the word of God. The words, "Come unto me, all ye that labour and are
+heavy laden, and I will give you rest," seemed to have a reviving
+significance, as well as those of "Whosoever drinketh of the water that I
+shall give him shall never thirst; but the water that I shall give him,
+shall be in him a well of water springing up into everlasting life."
+
+Such a Sabbath in the Holy Land is true enjoyment.
+
+
+
+
+VII. ESDRAELON PLAIN AND ITS VICINITY.
+
+
+ _May_ 1851.
+
+From Jeneen, (En-gannim, Josh. xxi. 29,) to Acre, _i.e._, towards the
+north-west, and skirting the great plain under the line of the hills of
+Samaria,--thus following the western coast of Zebulon to the south of
+Asher.
+
+The road was enlivened by numerous companies of native people travelling
+from village to village.
+
+In an hour and a half from Jeneen we were at _Seeleh_, a cheerful and
+prosperous-looking place; and in three-quarters of an hour more we were
+abreast of both _Ta'annuk_ and _Salim_, at equal distances of quarter of
+an hour from the highway; the former on our left hand, and the latter on
+the right. These places were at that time tolerably well peopled.
+
+Here we gained the first view of Mount Tabor from a westerly direction,
+and indeed it was curious all along this line to see in unusual aspects
+the well-remembered sites that lie eastwards or northwards from Jeneen,
+such as Zera'een (Jezreel,) Jilboon (Gilboa,) Solam (Shunem,) or Fooleh
+and Afooleh. In fact, we overlooked the tribe or inheritance of Zebulon
+from Carmel to Tabor.
+
+With respect to the circumstance of numerous passengers, whom we met this
+morning, it was a pleasant exception to the common experience of that
+district, where it is often as true now as in the days of Shamgar the son
+of Anath (see Judges v. 6), that the population fluctuates according to
+the invasions or retiring of tyrannical strangers. That vast plain
+affords a tempting camping-ground for remote Arabs to visit in huge
+swarms coming from the East with their flocks for pasture; and in the
+ancient times this very site between Ta'annuk and Lejjoon, being the
+opening southwards, gave access to the Philistines or Egyptians arriving
+in their chariots from the long plain of Sharon, or a passage over this
+plain to that of the great hosts of Syria under the Ptolemies, with their
+elephants.
+
+In all ages the poor peasantry here have been the victims of similar
+incursions, "the highways were unoccupied, and the travellers walked
+through byeways." Yet though chased away from their homes, the
+populations returned, whenever possible, with pertinacious attachment to
+their devastated dwellings, and hence we have still the very names of the
+towns and villages perpetuated by a resident people after a lapse of
+almost thirty-three hundred years since the allotment made by Joshua,
+(xiii.-xxi., etc.,) and the names were not then new.
+
+I have myself known villages on the Plain of Esdraelon to be alternately
+inhabited or abandoned. At one time Fooleh was a heap of ruins, while
+its neighbour Afooleh had its residents; on my next visit it was Fooleh
+rebuilt, and the other a heap of overthrown stones, or next time both of
+them lying in utter silence and desertion. The same with _Mekebleh_,
+sometimes inhabited, but more frequently a pile of broken-down houses,
+with some remains of antique sculpture lying on the surface of its hill;
+and the same occasionally, though not so frequent in vicissitude, with
+_Iksal_.
+
+From this exposure to invasion of royal armies or of nomad tribes,
+("children of the East," Judges vi. 33,) it has always been the case that
+no towns were built in the central parts of this plain; and even when the
+kings of Israel had their country residence at Jezreel, that situation
+was selected because it was nestled close to the hills, and had ravines
+on two sides of it, serving as fortifying trenches made by nature.
+
+At the present time there are no trees upon that broad expanse, not even
+olives, to furnish lights for dwelling, either of villages or tents. The
+wretched people grow castor-oil plants instead for that purpose, sown
+afresh every year, because these afford no temptation to the hostile
+Arabs.
+
+That year, however, of 1851, and probably for some time previous, the
+plain (Merj ibn Amer is its Arabic name,) had been at peace, unmolested
+by strangers; consequently I saw large crops of wheat there, and fields
+of barley waving in the breeze. These were mostly the property of a
+Turkoman tribe, who, like the Kenites of old, reside there in tents,
+neither building houses nor planting vineyards, though to some extent
+they sow seed. They have been long upon that ground, but move their
+tents about, according to the exigencies of pasture for their flocks and
+herds. I believe, however, that they pay "khooweh" (brotherhood,) _i.e._
+tribute and military aid, to the Sukoor Arabs for protection and peace
+under common circumstances.
+
+We had frequently to cross small streams issuing from the ranges of
+hills, along the base of which our road lay; but they accomplished only
+short courses, for they were soon absorbed into the ground or settled
+into morasses, which emitted strong miasma under the influence of the
+sun. Some petty springs were seen rising from the ground itself, and
+near each of these were sure to be met some relics of antiquity, such as
+good squared building stones, or door-posts, or broken olive presses, or
+fragments of sarcophagi, while the adjacent hills exhibited the hewn
+lines in the form of steps, remaining from ancient quarrying. The deep
+alluvium of the plain furnishes no stone whatever for such purposes.
+
+In forty minutes from Ta'annuk, we came to the small mills of _Lejjoon_,
+(the Roman _Legio_, named from a military station there.) At that time
+of the year the body of water was not considerable, and there is no
+village there.
+
+In fifty minutes more we crossed a rivulet named _Menzel el Basha_, (the
+Pasha's halting-place,) and in twenty minutes more, the _'Ain Kaimoon_
+with abundance of water. This is at the foot of a hill which has on its
+summit the vestiges of the large ancient town _Kaimoon_.
+
+This hill is long, narrow, and curved like a cucumber, lying at the
+south-east end of Mount Carmel, and having the Kishon river on its outer
+or north-eastern side. Here, therefore, we come distinctly upon the
+western geography of the Zebulon tribe. In Joshua xix. 11, the border of
+Zebulon is given as reaching "to the river that is before Jokneam." I do
+not doubt that this river is the Kishon, or that Jokneam is the "Jokneam
+of Carmel," in chapter xii. 22, which was given to the Levites "out of
+the tribe of Zebulon, Jokneam with her suburbs," (chap. xxi. 34.) This
+place, Kaimoon or Yokneam, must have been one of particular value in a
+military point of view, commanding as it did the pass of the Kishon
+valley on one side, and the _Wadi Mel'hh_ on the other. Such a post
+would be in good hands, when intrusted to the bold and warlike tribe of
+Levi. In the same way several other defensible posts were committed to
+their charge all over the country. {230}
+
+On my present journey I passed round the outer line of Tell Kaimoon,
+having Kishon on the right. In so doing we crossed various tributary
+streams--the first one, in quarter of an hour from 'Ain Kaimoon, was in
+_Wadi el Kasab_, (valley of reeds or canes)--the stream was bordered by
+reeds and a profusion of tall oleander in gorgeous pink flower.
+
+In this neighbourhood, the Turkomans had commenced reaping their grain.
+They are a race of people not to be mistaken for Arabs, men of strong
+build, and with a smiling expression on their clear, ruddy countenances.
+Besides Arabic, they speak their own coarse dialect of Turkish--several
+of them came running to us with handfuls of wheat from their harvest.
+They possess large herds of oxen with good horses.
+
+In another half hour we were at _'Ain el Sufsafeh_, (the "fountain of the
+willow-tree,") where the water issues from a rock, and in its bed are two
+willow-trees; upon the bank were plenty of blackberry bushes.
+
+Just before this we had by the roadside a common looking Arab
+burial-place, named _Shaikh Sad_; probably from some Mohammedan devotee
+of that name interred there; and among the stones about the graves is a
+fragment of an ancient cornice, deeply sculptured in the pattern here
+shown.
+
+[Picture: Fragment of Sculpture at Shaikh Sad]
+
+In a quarter of an hour further we passed _Wadi Keereh_, with its full
+stream of water, and plenty of oleander for adornment.
+
+Thence in about half an hour we arrived at _Wadi Mel'hh_ ("Salt valley,")
+with its rivulet and wild holly-oaks, in which is a great highway leading
+southwards. This separates the Samaria ridge and Kaimoon from the
+extremity of the long Mount Carmel.
+
+Having thus passed from one end to the other along the side of the hill
+of Kaimoon, we turned aside from the road, for taking refreshment under a
+large oak halfway up that hill, where wild holly-oaks were springing from
+the ground to mingle with the sombre yet shining boughs of the tree.
+This was at the sudden contraction of the country into a narrow neck
+leading to the Plain of Acre. This strait is bounded on one side by
+Carmel, and on the other by the Galilean hills, both sides clothed with
+abundance of growing timber; and through its midst is the channel of the
+Kishon, deeply cut into soft alluvial soil, and this channel also is
+bordered with oleander and trees that were enlivened with doves,
+thrushes, linnets, and gold-finches. The modern name of the river is the
+_Mokatta_ (the ford,) and that of the valley _El Kasab_, derived from the
+spring and valley before-mentioned.
+
+At the narrowest part of this "Kasab" stands a hill, forming a serious
+impediment to the progress of armies, named _Tell el Kasees_ (Hill of the
+Priest,) which name may be a traditional remembrance of Elijah, slaying
+the priests of Baal; but inasmuch as the word "Kasees" is in the singular
+number, the appellation may be more likely derived from some hermit
+residing there in a later age. At any rate, this Tell lies immediately
+below the site of that memorable sacrifice, and at the point where the
+Kishon sweeps round to the foot of the mountain a path descends from the
+"Mohhrakah," _i.e._, the place of the burnt-offering, to the river. It
+must therefore, have been the spot where the priests of Baal were slain,
+whether the hill be named from the fact or not; and nothing can be more
+exact than the words of the Bible in 1 Kings xviii. 40.
+
+We were preparing to remount for continuing the journey when our guide
+espied four wild-looking Arabs walking with long strides up the hill, so
+as to pass behind and above us; they were well armed, and made no reply
+to our challenge. As our horses and the guide's spear would have
+benefited us little on the steep hill-side, but on the contrary were
+tempting prizes, and as our fire-arms were not so numerous as theirs, we
+thought fit to pace away before they should obtain any further advantage
+of situation over us.
+
+In another quarter of an hour we left the straight road to Caiffa, and
+struck out northwards, crossing the Kishon at a fort opposite a village
+on a hill called _El Hharatheeyeh_, just before we should otherwise have
+come to a low hill covered with a ripe crop of barley, which, from its
+formation and other circumstances, bore the appearance of an ancient
+fortified place. This hill was named _'Asfi_, as I wrote it from
+pronunciation. This, with the _Hharatheeyeh_, one assisting the other,
+would prove a good military defence at this end of the valley, as Kaimoon
+and the Kasees were at the other.
+
+Dr Thomson, in his "Land and the Book," chap. xxxi., considers this site
+to be that of "Harosheth of the Gentiles," (Judges iv. 13,) and I have no
+doubt that his supposition is correct; the topography agrees, and the
+etymology in both Hebrew and Arabic is one, viz., "ploughed land." This
+author, however, makes no mention of _'Asfi_ though he speaks of "the
+double Tell."
+
+Whether 'Asfi was an aboriginal home of the people in the modern _Esfia_
+on the summit of Carmel, I have no means of knowing; but that a
+population, when emigrating to a new settlement, sometimes carried their
+name with them, appears in Scripture in the instance of Luz, (Judges i.
+26,) and of Dan in the 19th chapter.
+
+Previous to this day's journey I had no adequate idea of the quantity of
+water that could be poured into the Kishon channel by the affluents
+above-mentioned, (since our passing the Lejjoon stream which runs in an
+opposite direction,) namely, the Menzel el Basha, the 'Ain Sufsafeh, Wadi
+Keereh, and Wadi Mel'hh, all these on the Carmel side of the river, and
+omitting the more important spring called _Sa'adeh_, near _Beled esh
+Shaikh_, on the way to Caiffa.
+
+Still portions of the channel are liable to be dried up in that
+direction, although the bed extending to Jeneen if not to Gilboa contains
+springs from the ground at intervals, but the level character of the
+country and the softness of the ground are unfavourable to the existence
+of a free river course. There was but little water at Hharatheeyeh when
+we crossed in the month of May. The 'Ain Sa'adeh, however, which I did
+not then visit, never fails, and in full season, the Kishon near the sea
+becomes a formidable river, as I have more than once found.
+
+To return to the valley "El Kasab," we were assured that in winter time
+the whole breadth is sometimes inundated, and even after this has
+subsided, the alluvial soil is dangerous for attempting to travel in, it
+becomes a bog for animals of burden. Thus it is quite conceivable that
+at the occurrence of a mighty storm, divinely and specially commissioned
+to destroy, the host of Sisera and his chariots would be irretrievably
+discomfited.
+
+Where the scene opened upon the plain of Acre there was extensive
+cultivation visible, and the town of Caiffa appeared with the grove of
+palm-trees in its vicinity.
+
+The view hence of the Caiffa bay reminds us of the prophetic blessing
+pronounced by the patriarch Jacob. "Zebulon shall dwell at the _haven_
+of the sea, and he shall be for a haven of ships." I am convinced that
+this Hebrew root [Hebrew text] (English _haven_ and the German _hafen_)
+is perpetuated not only in those words but in the modern appellation,
+Caiffa, or as it may be more properly written _Hhaifa_. The Arabic
+letter [Arabic letter] is the real equivalent for [Hebrew letter] in
+Hebrew; by grammatical permutation the letter [Hebrew letter] rightly
+becomes [Arabic letter] in Arabic, and this we have
+
+ [Picture: Arabic word]
+
+Hhaifa which Europeans turn into Caiffa.
+
+We then reached a low natural mound on which are ruined walls of great
+thickness, the levelled surface on the summit had been probably all
+occupied by one castle with its outworks, but we saw it yellow with a
+ripe crop of barley. This place is _Hurbaj_, and the neighbourhood
+abounds with destroyed villages, the natural consequence of being so near
+to Acre, and being the _paloestra_ or wrestling ground of great nations
+in successive ages.
+
+We arrived at Acre in exactly twelve hours from Jeneen, and pitched the
+tents outside upon a bank between two trenches of the fortification,
+commanding extensive views in every direction, and were fanned by sea
+breezes from the bay.
+
+In conclusion, I may observe that the plain called by the Greeks
+_Esdraelon_, as a corruption of Jezreel, is that named "Megiddo" in Old
+Testament Scripture. In the New Testament it bears the prefix of the
+Hebrew word _Har_ (mountain) minus the aspirate, being written in Greek,
+and so becomes "Armageddon" in the book of Revelation.
+
+For topographical reasons it is very likely that the city of Megiddo was
+at Lejjoon. There is a village of _Mujaidel_ on the north side of the
+plain, not far from Nazareth, but this is a diminutive of the Arabic
+_Mejdal_, so common in Palestine as a variation from the Hebrew Migdol.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Besides the above journey I made an excursion in 1859 on the summit of
+Carmel itself.
+
+Leaving the Convent, which is at the western termination of the mountain,
+we proceeded along the top of its main ridge to the opposite extremity,
+the _Mohhrakah_, undoubtedly the locality of Elijah's miraculous
+sacrifice in presence of King Ahab with the priests of Baal and of the
+groves; thence we returned to encamp for a time at the cleanly Druse
+village of _'Esfia_; after which a few hours' ride westwards led us by
+the village of _Daliet el Carmel_, {238} also inhabited by Druses, to the
+romantic _'Ain ez Zera'ah_ and over the sites of ruined places,
+_Doomeen_, _Shelaleh_, and _Lubieh_, where the hewn stones lying
+scattered over the ground were indications of much better buildings than
+those of modern villages.
+
+Then down the long and wearisome descent to _Teeri_ on the sea-coast
+south of Caiffa.
+
+For topographical purposes chiefly, let me give an outline of a few other
+journeys made about the same neighbourhood.
+
+
+
+1. FROM SAFED TO CARMEL.
+
+
+ _Sept._ 1846.
+
+Going in the direction of the sea, that is, from Naphtali downwards into
+Zebulon, we crossed westwards the _Jebel Rama_, a long hilly range ending
+in the south at Rama, and richly wooded, but to our surprise there were
+numerous fires left by the people to consume trees and large shrubs at
+discretion, for the making of charcoal. Fortunately for us there was no
+wind blowing, but several times as the fiery ashes had been drifted upon
+the road, our horses had no choice but to step into them. On that
+eminence I picked up specimens of Geodes which abound there, being lumps
+resembling fruits outside, but when broken found to be a crust of bright
+spar, and hollow in the centre; some of these were remarkably large. The
+hills were fragrant with wild herbs, and the views from them delightful.
+
+After _Semwan_ we strayed from the right road and got to _Shemuata_,
+where we procured a guide to conduct us in the direction of Carmel; he
+undertook to conduct us as far as _Abu 'Atabeh_, from which Carmel would
+be visible, and the distance equal either to Acre or to Caiffa. From the
+heights we descended to _Ekwikat_, and there found ourselves too tired to
+get further that night.
+
+In the morning we passed the _Bahhjah_, which had been the luxurious
+summer residence of Abdallah Pasha, but was in a ruinous condition, and
+came to _Abu 'Atabeh_, which is not a village but a collection of a few
+houses, perhaps formerly some outlying dwellings belonging to the
+Bahhjah. Here was a fountain, and a small aqueduct for conveying water
+to gardens.
+
+Crossed the _Naaman_ river, anciently named the _Belus_, on the banks of
+which, according to Pliny, the primitive idea of glass-making was
+discovered by accident. Along the beach we came to the Mokatta' or
+Kishon, found it deep for fording, but got over to Caiffa, and mounted to
+the Convent of Carmel.
+
+
+
+2. NAZARETH TOWARDS ACRE.
+
+
+ _Oct._ 1849.
+
+Passing _Sefoorieh_, (the Sepphoris so often mentioned in Josephus) with
+a distant view of Carmel on the left, like a huge rampart of dark blue,
+we came to the ruined Khan with a fountain called the _'Ain el
+Bedaweeyeh_, then through delightful wooded glades, on issuing from which
+we saw _Shefa 'Amer_, a handsome-looking place, with which I made better
+acquaintance in after years.
+
+On the plain of Acre I picked up a cannon ball, probably a twelve
+pounder.
+
+(This journey was repeated in March 1852, and in March 1859.)
+
+
+
+3. FROM TIBERIAS TO ACRE.
+
+
+ _March_ 1850.
+
+From _Hhatteen_ to _'Eilaboon_, a quiet and pretty village, after which
+we had a long stretch of "merrie greenwood" with furze in golden blossom,
+birds singing, and the clucking of partridges. At one place where the
+old trees echoed the shouts of country children at their sports, there
+rose above the summits a bold round tower, which on nearer approach we
+found to be an outwork of the fortification of a venerable convent called
+_Dair Hhanna_, which in comparatively recent times had been converted
+into a castle, but convent, castle, and tower are now become a
+picturesque ruin.
+
+Near this we saw squatted on the ground a family of three generations,
+almost entirely naked; they had a fire lighted, and the women were
+washing clothes in the water heated by it, a great rarity in Palestine,
+for they usually wash with cold water at the spring. Some Metawaleh
+peasants ran away from our party when we wished to make some inquiries of
+them.
+
+From an eminence we saw before us a flat plain inundated like a lake,
+left by the wintry floods. This occurs there yearly around the
+flourishing village of _'Arabet el Battoof_, at which we soon arrived,
+after which we galloped for miles over green pastures of grass
+interspersed by trees.
+
+In three quarters of an hour further we came to _Sukhneen_, a large
+village with good cultivation extending far around. Still traversing
+green undulations with wooded hills to the right and left, in another
+hour we were at a small place called _Neab_, where the scenery suddenly
+changed for stony hills and valleys. In a little short of another hour
+we saw _Damooneh_ at half an hour's distance to the left. In twenty
+minutes more we stopped to drink at the well _Berweh_, then pressed
+forward in haste to arrive at Acre before the gates (being a
+fortification) should be closed. We got there in fifty minutes' hard
+riding from _'Ain Berweh_.
+
+
+
+
+II. THE REVERSE WAY FROM WEST TO EAST.
+
+
+1. ACRE TO TIBERIAS.
+
+
+ _March_ 1850.
+
+Crossed the river Naaman, and paced slowly over the extensive marshes,
+making for _Shefa 'Amer_.
+
+Among these marshes was a herd of about two hundred horses at free
+pasture upon the grass, weeds, and rushes, so succulent at that season of
+the year; these were on their way from Northern Syria, and were intended
+for sale.
+
+Also among the marshes was a temporary village of tabernacles or huts
+made of plaited palm-leaves, and papyrus canes or reeds, such as one sees
+on the line of the Jordan or about the lake Hhooleh, with the same class
+of proprietors in both cases, the Ghawarineh Arabs. Strange that this
+race of human beings should prefer to inhabit feverish marshes.
+
+We came upon a paved causeway (called the _Resheef_) leading from a large
+mill towards the sea, but only the portion nearest to the mill now
+remains entire. Probably this was turned to some account during the
+French military operations against Acre in 1799.
+
+At Shefa 'Amer we had _'Ebeleen_ in sight. Both places are conspicuous
+over the district around. At some distance from the town is a large well
+for its supply, and along the broad road between the well and the town,
+the Druse women are constantly passing with their horns over the forehead
+and their jars on the shoulders.
+
+Shefa 'Amer is crowned by the remains of the Palace Castle erected by
+Shaikh Daher, (celebrated in Volney's "Syria,") and the shell of a large
+old Christian church; near these are some very ancient wells cut into
+solid rock, but now containing no water.
+
+The majority of the inhabitants are Druses. There are a few Moslems and
+a few Christians; but at that time there were thirty Jewish families
+living as agriculturists, cultivating grain and olives on their own
+landed property, most of it family inheritance; some of these people were
+of Algerine descent. They had their own synagogue and legally qualified
+butcher, and their numbers had formerly been more considerable. {243}
+
+I felt an especial interest in these people, as well as in the knowledge
+of a similar community existing at a small village not far distant named
+_Bokea'h_.
+
+Upon the road that day, and in half an hour from the town, I met a couple
+of rosy-faced, strong peasant men, with sparkling Jewish eyes, who set to
+speaking Hebrew with some Rabbis in my company. It was in a scene of
+woodland and cornfields under the blue canopy of heaven; their costume
+was that of the ordinary Metawaleh peasantry, _i.e._, a scarlet and
+embroidered short coat with large dark blue trousers. I shall never
+forget this circumstance, of finding men of Israel, fresh from
+agricultural labour, conversing in Hebrew in their own land.
+
+Our road then led through glades of exceeding beauty: an English park
+backed by mountains in a Syrian climate. The gently undulating land was
+clothed with rich grass, and sprinkled (not thronged) with timber,
+chiefly terebinth. Linnets and thrushes were warbling among the trees.
+
+_Cuf'r Menda_ was on our left; _Sefoorieh_ at a distance on the right;
+_Rumaneh_ and _'Azair_ before us. Then we entered upon the long plain of
+_'Arabet el Battoof_, and rested a short time before sunset at _'Ain
+Bedaweeyeh_ for refreshment. Carpets were spread upon long grass which
+sank under the pressure. The horses and mules were set free to pasture,
+and we formed ourselves into separate eating groups; one Christian, one
+Jewish, and one Moslem. Some storks were likewise feeding in a
+neighbouring bean-field, the fragrance of which was delicious, as wafted
+to us by the evening breeze.
+
+On remounting for the road to Tiberias, several hours beyond, we put on
+cloaks to keep off the falling dew, and paced on by a beautiful
+moonlight, at first dimmed by mist or dew, which afterwards disappeared;
+the spear carried by one of the party glimmered as we went on; and the
+Jews whiled away the time by recitation of their evening prayers on
+horseback, and conversing in the Hebrew language about their warrior
+forefathers of Galilee.
+
+
+
+2. CAIFFA TO NAZARETH.
+
+
+ _July_ 1854.
+
+Passing through the rush of _'Ain Saadeh_ water as it tumbles from the
+rocky base of Carmel, and by the _Beled esh Shaikh_ and _Yajoor_, we
+crossed the Kishon bed to take a road new to me, namely, by _Damooneh_,
+leaving _Mujaidel_ and _Yafah_ visible on our right, upon the crests of
+hills overlooking the Plain of Esdraelon. We passed through a good deal
+of greenwood scenery, so refreshing in the month of July, but on the
+whole not equal in beauty to the road by Shefa 'Amer.
+
+
+
+3. CAIFFA TO NAZARETH.
+
+
+ _Sept._ 1857.
+
+By _Beled esh Shaikh_ and _Yajoor_, where threshing of the harvest was in
+progress in the Galilean fashion by means of the _moraj_, (in Hebrew the
+_morag_, Isa. xli. 15 and 2 Sam. xxiv. 22,) which is a stout board of
+wood, with iron teeth or flints on the under surface. The plank turns
+upward in front, and the man or boy stands upon it in exactly the
+attitude of a Grecian charioteer: one foot advanced; the head and chest
+well thrown back; the reins in his left hand, and with a long thonged
+whip, he drives the horses that are attached to it at a rapid pace in a
+circle, shouting merrily or singing as they go,--a totally different
+operation from the drowsy creeping of the oxen or other animals for
+threshing in our Southern Palestine.
+
+In due time we crossed the bed of the Kishon, which was quite dry in that
+part above the _Sa'adeh_, except where some green stagnant puddles
+occurred at intervals.
+
+We passed a herd of camels belonging to the Turkomans, walking
+unburdened, whereas all other animals that we met were laden with grain
+for the port of Caiffa. At the commencement of the ascent on the
+opposite hills we rested under the _Tell el Hharatheeyeh_, beneath a
+noble tree of the evergreen oak; and near there we passed alongside of a
+camp of degraded Arabs called _Beramki_, in a few tattered tents, but
+they had some capital horses picketed around them. The villagers regard
+these people with ineffable disdain, as "cousins of the gipsies." It
+seems that they subsist by singing songs among real Arab camps, and by
+letting out their horses as stallions for breeding, with variations of
+picking and stealing. We saw some of their women and children, filthy in
+person, painfully employed in scraping away the ground wherever black
+clay showed itself, in the hope of reaching water, however bad in
+quality.
+
+There was threshing at _Jaida_ as we passed that village. We halted at
+the spring of _Samooniah_, and at _Ma'alool_; the priest of the village
+was superintending the parish threshing: his reverence was covered with
+dust from the operation.
+
+
+
+4. CAIFFA TO SHEFA 'AMER.
+
+
+ _June_ 1859.
+
+From _Beled esh Shaikh_ and _Yajoor_, across the Kishon channel, upon the
+plain of Acre, and rested a short time at the _Weli of Jedro_, (very like
+a Hebrew name,) and then near us, all close together were the three
+villages of _Cuf'r Ita_, _Ja'arah_ and _Hurbaj_. Thence to Shefa 'Amer,
+first diverging somewhat to _'Ebeleen_.
+
+
+
+
+III. SOUTH SIDE OF ESDRAELON.
+
+
+1. PLAIN OF SHARON TO CAIFFA.
+
+
+ _Oct._ 1849.
+
+At _Baka_ we leave the plain of Sharon, at its northern end, if indeed
+the extensive level from the Egyptian desert up to this point, may come
+under this one denomination; and we enter upon the hilly woodlands of
+Ephraim and Manasseh, so clearly described in Joshua xvii. 11, 17, 18.
+
+In mounting to the higher ground, there is obtained a fine view of the
+sea, and the oak and karoobah trees were larger as we advanced; from
+certain stations we obtained a totally unexpected prospect of a stretch
+of large forest scenery below us, extending towards _Sindianeh_ in the
+west.
+
+At one spot we passed among scattered stones of excellent masonry, large
+and rabbeted at the edges, lying confusedly about, enough for a small
+town, but evidently belonging to a period of ancient date; a few mud huts
+were adjoining these.
+
+Thence we descended into a long valley, several miles in extent, called
+_Wadi 'Arah_, fully occupied with cotton crops, and stubble of the last
+harvest of grain. The valley was bounded on either side by well timbered
+hills, and its direction was N.E. by E.
+
+After an hour in this long enclosure, the pleasing features of the scene
+became less defined in character, and, uncertain of our way, we climbed
+up to a village called _'Ararah_, where, after an hour's trouble, we got
+a guide at high price for the rest of the day's journey. The evening was
+then advancing, and the gnats from the trees and shrubs plagued the
+horses. Among these trees were grand old oaks of a kind that bear
+gigantic acorns with mossy cups. At length the verdure ceased, and we
+had only stony hills. There was, however, a weli with a spring of water,
+and fruit trees by the roadside, crowded with a shoal of singing birds
+all rustling and chirping at once among the boughs as the sun was
+setting, and throwing a glorious red over the clouds which had been
+gradually collecting during the afternoon.
+
+We left the village of _Umm el Fahh'm_, ("Mother of Charcoal"--a name
+significant of a woodland district) upon the right, and night closed in;
+our old guide on his little donkey singing cheerily in front, till
+darkness reduced us all to silence.
+
+We crossed the small rivulet at _Lejjoon_ by starlight; and the rest of
+the journey in the night was not only monotonous, but even dangerous,
+over marshes and chinks in the Plain of Esdraelon. Our course was in a
+direction N.E. to Nazareth, which we reached in sixteen hours from the
+morning's starting at _Cuf'r Saba_.
+
+There were fortunately no roaming Arabs to molest us in this night
+passage across the _Merj ibn 'Amer_.
+
+
+
+2. PLAIN OF SHARON TO CAIFFA.
+
+
+ _June_ 1859.
+
+As before, we left the northern extremity of the plain of Sharon, but
+this time at the eastern and minor village of _Baka_, and thus we missed
+the ruined town before noticed, but got into the same valley of _'Arah_;
+and in the great heat of summer, confined between the two ridges of
+hills, we crept on to the extremity of the valley, and mounted a hill to
+the village of _Mushmusheh_, opposite to _Umm el Fahh'm_. All the
+villages in that region are situated on hills, and are of no easy access.
+
+This place enjoys abundance of water springing out of the ground, and at
+any risk so precious a treasure ought not to be lost; therefore, although
+the houses were abandoned and the people scattered, they come there
+stealthily, and as opportunity arises, to do the little service to the
+ground that it required, and watch its oranges, lemons, and pomegranates,
+(from the name it would seem that formerly this place was famous for
+apricots.) As we halted and pitched tents there, one by one some of the
+people came about us, although they had been preparing to leave for the
+night, in order to sleep at "Charcoal's Mother," (the village opposite.)
+They stayed under our protection, and got for us certain supplies from
+over the way.
+
+Close beside us was a gigantic mulberry tree, around which two very large
+vines climbed to a great height, and a channel of running water almost
+surrounded the roots.
+
+I never heard such sweet-toned bells as the flocks about there carried,
+and which gave out their music near and far at every movement of the
+goats and sheep.
+
+In the morning we left this very pleasant spot and went on to _Lejjoon_;
+crossed the Sufsafeh and the other streams with their oleander borders,
+and enjoyed the magnificent prospects of Hermon, Tabor, and the plain;
+rested on the hill of _Kaimoon_ under the fine oak-tree of former
+acquaintance, and at length arrived in Caiffa.
+
+
+
+
+IV. FROM CARMEL SOUTH-EASTWARDS.
+
+
+ _April_ 1859.
+
+The usual way by _'Ain Sa'adeh_, _Beled esh Shaikh_ and _Yajoor_; the
+woody sides of Carmel diversified in colour at this season of spring;
+there was the dark green of the bellota oak, the yellow of the abundant
+broom, the dark red-brown of the sprouting terebinth and the pale green
+of young-leafed trees of many other kinds. There was, moreover, the
+fragrance of an occasional pine, and of the hawthorn, (Za'aroor,) which
+is of stronger scent than in England; and the ground was sprinkled with
+purple and yellow crocuses; also with anemones of every shade of purple
+and white, besides the scarlet, which alone are found in Judaea, but
+there in profusion.
+
+Turning off from the road to Jeneen, I rose upon high ground, and came to
+_Umm ez Zeenat_, (mother of beauties.) Our people were of opinion that
+this name did not apply so much to the daughters of the village as to the
+landscape scenery, for near it we commanded an extensive prospect,
+including Hermon with its snows one way, and the "great and wide sea" in
+the opposite quarter.
+
+We lost our way for a time, leaving _Rehhaneeyeh_ on our left, and
+straying as far as _Daliet er Rohha_; on recovering the right road we
+arrived at _Cuferain_, (the "double village") and to _Umm el Fahh'm_,
+marching among silent woods often tangled by neglected growth, and
+abounding in a variety of unknown trees, besides the Seringa and the oaks
+with much broader leaves than are ever seen in the south; also, for a
+long period we had frequent recurring views of snowy Hermon in the N.E.
+
+The considerable village of _'Aneen_ we found almost entirely broken up,
+by the recent warfare between the partisans of Tokan and 'Abdu'l Hadi.
+At length our repeated calls and promises echoing among the apparently
+forsaken houses, brought out an old man, and he promised to procure a
+guide to take us within sight of _'Arabeh_, after which several women
+peered out of their miserable dwellings.
+
+The guide conducted us through large woods on heights and in depths,
+among fragrant herbs and blossoming trees growing wild, till some time
+after sunset, when we stopped for the night at a poor village called
+_Harakat_; we were all tired, but especially the two women of a Christian
+party going to Jerusalem, who had attached themselves to us all the day
+for the benefit of our protection.
+
+The ground on which the tent was set up was wet, as there had been some
+rain at the place that day, and springs of water were running to waste
+near us; the village people served as guards around us, on being fed at
+our expense; the pilgrims spread their beds in one direction outside the
+tent, and the kawwases in the opposite.
+
+By the light of a brilliant morning we marched forwards to _'Arabeh_,
+which was being besieged by the Turkish government, in force of infantry,
+cavalry, and artillery.
+
+
+
+
+VIII. BELAD BESHARAH.
+
+
+This is the mountainous district lying east and south of Tyre, probably
+the "Galilee of the Gentiles;" bounded on the north by the river
+_Kasimiyeh_, the ancient Leontes; on the west by the plain of Tyre; on
+the east by the plain of Hhooleh and of the Upper Jordan; on the south by
+hills around Safed: the district is very little known to Europeans, and
+was much less so in 1848.
+
+In that year I entered it from the North, after traversing the Sidon
+country, crossing the pleasant river with its rose-coloured border of
+oleander and wild holly-oak at a ford wider than the average breadth of
+the Jordan.
+
+There we found abundance of noble trees, and some cottages near them, the
+vines belonging to which climbed up those trees to a surprising height;
+and the thickness of the vines exceeded any that I had any where or at
+any time seen.
+
+In front was the village of _Boorj_, and we mounted into a high
+table-land commanding prospects of indescribable grandeur, which
+comprised parts of both Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon, the extreme heights of
+Sannin and Hermon being visible at once.
+
+The day was one of hot shirocco, and there were fires of lime-kilns
+visible in several directions, this season (late in autumn) being that
+appropriated to such employment, after all the harvests are gathered in.
+
+There were innumerable villages appearing in every direction. We passed
+_Abasiyeh_ on our right; _Dar Meemas_ and _Izereiriyeh_ distant on the
+left; _Tura_ on the right; _Dar Kanoon_ we almost entered; _Bidias_ near
+us on the left; _Dair Thecla_ on our right; _Bursheen_ on the right;
+_Durtghayer_ on the left; _Arzoon_ further on the left; then we rested
+under some olive trees, with _Dar esh Shems_ on the right; _Mezra'a_ on
+the left; _Dar Zibneh_ with a castle on our right.
+
+In the distance appeared the mighty old castle of _Shukeef_ (_Belfort_ of
+the Crusaders) upon an eminence, with Jebel esh Shaikh, or Hermon, rising
+majestically behind it.
+
+As we descended into a deep glen between verdant hills, the partridges
+were clucking in multitudes, and so unaccustomed to intrusion, that
+sometimes they came running up towards us; magpies were flying about, and
+we were told that the glen abounds in wild beasts, which there seemed no
+reason to doubt. For hours we wound round and round within this cool and
+refreshing labyrinth of arbutus, bellota or evergreen oak, aspen,
+clematis, broom, and what looked like the sloe, besides other and unknown
+vegetation. The bellota was often respectable-sized timber in girth,
+though of no considerable height; sometimes our path was overshadowed by
+their branches stretching across, and we had to stoop beneath them. On
+the sides of the hills were many fires of the charcoal burners.
+
+As evening came on, we could see our lofty green prison walls tipped with
+the setting sun.
+
+At length the glen seemed to be terminated by a fine round hill, crowned
+with a village standing across the passage. The appearance improved as
+we drew nearer; inhabitants were not few; large flocks and herds were
+winding by several ways towards it. The people named it _Khirbet
+Sellim_, (Sellim in ruin) but how could all this cheerful scene belong to
+a ruin?
+
+The sun set and we had another hour of the lovely glen to thread by
+starlight. At last we emerged by a gently inclined plain, which
+gradually became rougher, and we mounted the steep hill on which
+_Tibneen_ is built. There we determined to halt for the night, as our
+cattle were unable to hold on to _Bint el Jebail_.
+
+We pitched on the threshing floor between the village and the castle.
+
+This castle is the citadel of all the Belad Besharah, from the Leontes to
+Safed, and Ahhmad Bek, its owner, is called by his people "the Shaikh of
+Shaikhs;" by the Turkish government he is recognised as Kaimakam of the
+province.
+
+The people were of ill behaviour, and talked about quarantine, but the
+population of the district are at all times a churlish race, being of the
+Sheah or 'Ali sect of Moslems; they curse and loathe our Mohammedans, and
+oppress the sparse families of Christians within their reach. They are
+called the Mutawaleh.
+
+At first they refused to let us have anything, till the governor, on
+ascertaining who we were, sent us down some lemonade; still we got but
+few articles of food, and our horses were left without water.
+
+My kawwas Salim was then taken ill from the effect of having slept the
+preceding night with his head uncovered, and with reluctance our own
+people put up the small tent that travelled with us, on purpose for them;
+they always prefer sleeping in open air, only covering the head well with
+the cloak.
+
+This was Saturday night, and we had not an agreeable prospect for a
+Sabbath rest on the morrow.
+
+The wind was strong all night on that lofty situation, but there was no
+dew.
+
+In the morning, the people would not supply us with milk, even for the
+horses, and so it was impossible to stay there; we marched on towards
+Bint el Jebail, about three hours' distant, a considerable place, which
+often contests with Tibneen for supremacy in the local government, and
+where the governor is a distant relative of him at Tibneen.
+
+From the tents, before starting, we could see the following villages in a
+curved line from S.E. to N:--
+
+ Haddata or Haita ez-Zoot.
+ Bait U'oon.
+ Berasheet.
+ Hhooleh.
+ Shakrah.
+
+And they told us of _El Yehudiyeh_ on the N.W. behind the castle. The
+Mediterranean in sight [I became better acquainted with Tibneen, and on
+better relations with the people in after years.]
+
+Passed on through a pretty country, like all the Belad Besharah, with
+numerous villages in sight; excellent beaten roads, and plenty of them;
+with everywhere the magnificent objects in view of Mount Hermon, and part
+of the Lebanon, but not always the Mediterranean.
+
+Rested at half-way of our short journey under a large evergreen oak on
+the summit of a rising ground, with a refreshing breeze blowing; thence
+descended to a plain where there were about a dozen wells, and people
+drawing water for large herds of neat cattle. Here our horses got drink.
+
+Arrived at _Bint el Jebail_, a nice-looking place, with a commanding
+house for the governor, (Hhusain Suliman,) but the people were at first
+even more inhospitable than those at Tibneen, for they drove away our man
+Khaleel from the village fountain, and covered up their mouths and noses,
+in fear of cholera.
+
+On application to the Bek, we got permission to draw water for ourselves,
+and he allowed us eggs and bread, with barley for the horses, and it was
+with difficulty they accepted any money in return.
+
+The Bek also invited me to visit him in his house, but stipulating not to
+shake hands.
+
+On coming near the Serai, (governor's house,) the ladies of the Hhareem
+were looking out of the lattices upon the cavalcade. A crowd of servants
+were at the door to receive us, in attendance on one of his sons, who had
+a large hunting-hawk upon his wrist; silver bells upon her legs.
+
+We were shown into a large baronial-looking hall, and chairs were placed
+for us upon the divan.
+
+The great man sat in the right-hand corner, upon a panther skin, one of
+the prey of the country, his brother at his right hand, and his sons
+ranged on his left. He wore a robe of the true Moslem apple-green, with
+a Cashmere shawl round his waist, and another on his turban. His
+countenance and deportment were truly aristocratic; he and all his family
+were handsome, with intelligent expression of countenance.
+
+The son who had been outside came in, and put his hawk upon her perch,
+then took his place. They gave us sherbet, coffee, and abundant
+compliments: we talked of hawking in England, and English ladies riding
+to the sport. London, and the Queen on the throne were discussed; also
+Jerusalem, where the Bek had never been. On the whole the reception was
+satisfactory. Pity that the people were afraid of cholera; they did not
+exhibit the virtue of resignation to Divine predestination any more than
+our Sooni-Moslems of the south had done.
+
+Our tents were in a sunny situation, but still we had in them a rest for
+Sunday afternoon.
+
+At sunset the Bek sent me a present of grapes, those that were purple
+were of large size.
+
+Starlight night, but no dew; jackals were howling in troops, sometimes
+very close to us. An armed nominal quarantine was placed over us during
+the night--ridiculous enough after a pretty free intercourse of the
+people all day.
+
+The morning very cool. A poor Maronite priest from 'Ain Nebel came to me
+in his black robes and dark blue turban, and, leaning on his staff, gave
+a lamentable account of persecutions suffered by the four or five
+Christian villages about there, and imploring English help on their
+behalf. Alas! nothing could be done for him, only the case of the
+servant of the governor of Tibneen shooting a poor Christian, while on
+compulsory work at the lime-kilns, got inquiry made into it at Bayroot.
+On asking his name, and writing it down, the miserable man said to the
+secretary, "Tell the consul that I have already written his name on my
+heart."
+
+Hitherto our journey had been entirely novel--there is no record
+published of any traveller passing through that country, from the
+Leontes, its northern boundary, before that date. Going forwards, we
+passed through pretty green lanes along the sides of hills. From the
+crest of a hill, whence the view was very extensive, we had _Yaroon_ on
+the right, and beyond it the ruined convent of St George. I afterwards
+learned that the church there exhibits proof of great size and
+magnificence.
+
+By the roadside was a huge undecorated sarcophagus, in excellent
+preservation, standing on a raised platform of masonry; single and alone
+in a wide expanse, no village or remnant of human works near it. The
+masonry in front had been wilfully damaged, enough to make the
+sarcophagus lean, but not to fall, and the ponderous cover was removed
+from its place--total length, eight feet by five, and four in height, the
+hollow cut out from the body left the thickness of a foot all round it.
+No inscription gives any record of the doubtless important personage for
+whom it was prepared, and no embellishments even provide a clue to the
+period to which it belongs. It stands well-preserved, great in its
+simplicity and position.
+
+Villages of _Farah_ and _Salchah_ on our left.
+
+Thence we descended into a glen of blazing white stone, without any
+verdure, in which were a diversity of paths, and a petty runlet of water
+issuing from the ground, but soon showing only stagnant green pools and
+mud, with frogs in abundance, then evaporated altogether. Near this,
+Salim was taken with vomiting and purging, and was hardly able to remain
+on his horse; the dragoman also fainting and giddy, and the rest
+frightened with the terrors of expected cholera. Our guide wanted to
+desert us and return home.
+
+The muleteers and luggage had taken another road, but after a time we met
+again. Moving on, the ground became a gradual rise, and a stream coming
+down it toward us, became clearer as we ascended, and fruit-trees were
+rather numerous.
+
+Under some fig-trees the kawwas laid himself down, and we stayed there
+three hours with him; water was poured over his head to obviate fever,
+and I administered some pills.
+
+During the interval I found some sculptured stones with Hebrew
+inscriptions, which I have elsewhere described, and took pains to
+decipher the words, but without much result. They were lying in a
+ploughed field by the roadside. We were now entering on classic ground
+of the Talmudists, and upon a precipice above us, upon wide table-ground,
+was the village of _Jish_, the Giscala of Josephus.
+
+When evening brought coolness, we proceeded towards Safed.
+
+A peasant passing us was carrying home his plough upon his shoulder,
+except the iron share, which his little daughter, of two or three years
+old, carried on her head.
+
+Some of our horses were so stung by flies that the blood flowed to the
+stones under their feet as they went along.
+
+There were traces of ancient pavement along the road, and cavern holes in
+chalk-rock sides. Then traversing a few miles of dark volcanic stone we
+neared a crater in the ground, whose gloomy aspect was fully in keeping
+with the destruction which such a phenomenon bespeaks as having
+occurred--silent as the death it produced, and void of all pleasurable
+features, of wild flowers, or even the thorns of nature.
+
+The whole vicinity bore traces of the earthquakes that have often
+occurred there, especially that of 1837.
+
+After this a glorious prospect burst upon us of Safed, "set upon a hill,"
+and the gloomy hill of Jarmuk beside it. Tabor also in view far in
+advance, throwing a vast shadow of late afternoon-time over other hills,
+and glimpses of the lake Tiberias.
+
+Encamped on our former site among the great old olive-trees north of the
+town. Some Jewesses gleaning olives from the ground were frightened
+away. Visitors were out at once to welcome us in English, Arabic, and
+Judisch, (Jewish-German.) We were surrounded by fair and rosy
+complexions of Jews, the effect of the pure bracing air of the mountain.
+
+My sick people took to their beds, and only after a week's care (medical
+such as we could get) were able to continue the journey, one remaining
+behind to recover strength. The complaint, however, had not been
+cholera, it was rather what is denominated "Syrian fever."
+
+
+
+
+IX. UPPER GALILEE.--FOREST SCENERY.
+
+
+Tibneen has been already mentioned as one of the two capital villages of
+the Belad Besharah, and lying S.E. from Tyre. We have now before us the
+Galilean country that lies southwards between that place and Nazareth.
+
+_July_ 1853.--After honourable entertainment and refreshing sleep in the
+Castle of Tibneen, I awoke early to look out on the dark and broad mass
+of Mount Hermon by starlight.
+
+Coffee was served, and I was mounted on my "gallant gray," still by
+twilight, parting with some friends who had been rambling with me for
+three weeks over Phoenicia and the Lebanon. I set my face in the
+direction of Jerusalem.
+
+We were guided by the Shaikh of _Rumaish_, a Christian village that lay
+upon the road before us, he being furnished with a written mandate from
+Hhamed el Bek, the ruler of Tibneen, to take four men of his place as our
+escort through the forest.
+
+In the outskirts of the forest belonging to the castle we found peasants
+already proceeding to the threshing-floors; women in lines marching to
+the wells with jars cleverly balanced upon their heads; and camels
+kneeling on the ground munching their breakfast of cut straw, with most
+serious and unchanging expression of countenance, only the large soft
+eyes were pleasant to look at.
+
+In half-an-hour we were at _Aita_.
+
+This country is famous for the quality of its tobacco, a plant that is
+most esteemed when grown among the ruined parts of villages, because the
+nitre contained in the old cement of houses not only serves to quicken
+the vegetation, but imparts to the article that sparkling effect which is
+admired when lighted in the pipe.
+
+Vines are also extensively cultivated, and the people take pleasure in
+training them aloft upon the high trees, as oak, terebinth, poplar, etc.,
+and allowing them to droop down in the graceful festoons of nature, which
+also gives an agreeable variety of green colour among the timber trees.
+
+We were entering the gay woodland and reaching the top of a hill, when
+the sun rose at our left hand, and the glory of that moment surpassed all
+common power of description. Crowds of linnets and finches burst
+suddenly into song; the crested larks "that tira-lira chant," {265} rose
+into the merry blue sky, with the sunlight gleaming on their plump and
+speckled breasts; the wood-pigeons, too, were not silent; but all, in
+harmonious concert, did their best to praise the blessed Creator, who
+delights in the happiness of His creatures.
+
+Forwards we marched with light spirits, through dense woods, varied by
+the occasional clearings, which are called "the rides" in old English
+forests, and sometimes we drew near to snug villages, or got glimpses of
+such, by the names of _Teereh_, _Hhaneen_, and _'Ain Nebel_; the latter
+at two hours from Tibneen; the people there are Christian, and they
+cultivate silk and tobacco. In some places we observed ancient
+sarcophagi, hewn into solid rock without being entirely detached, they
+had therefore been left unfinished, though partly ornamented.
+
+On a ground rising opposite to us I saw the screw of a large press,
+standing out of the field; this I was told is used for extracting resin
+from the red berries of terebinth trees for domestic lamp-lighting--a
+circumstance which of itself bespeaks the prevalence of woodland round
+about, and is a variation from the practice of that unhappy thin
+population on the plain of Esdraelon, who are obliged to use castor-oil
+for the same purpose, because the _palma Christi_ plants which produce
+the oil are of less value to Bedaween marauders than olive-trees would
+be, and damage done to them is of less importance than it would be among
+the latter.
+
+Arrived at _Rumaish_, the Shaikh rode up to his village while we awaited
+him under the branches of an old oak overshadowing the road. Rumaish is
+a neat little place, but, like almost every village throughout Palestine,
+oppressed by the heavy debts incurred with the forestallers of their
+produce (generally Europeans) in the seaport towns.
+
+Our friend returned with another horseman, and three men on foot, all
+armed with guns, as our future way lay through a Druse neighbourhood.
+
+These men for our escort were Maronite Christians, and they showered upon
+me abundant salutations, expressing their satisfaction at the
+circumstance of a Christian (myself) being treated with such
+distinguished consideration in Tibneen Castle, and concluding with the
+hope that I would visit them yearly, in order to give countenance to
+poor, depressed Christianity. The two priests of the village had desired
+to come out and greet me, but their people had persuaded them that the
+distance was too great for their walking in the sun--near mid-day in
+July.
+
+Resting for a while before resuming the journey, the newcomers sat round
+in a circle to smoke their fragrant local tobacco, and find some relief
+to the mind in relating tales of suffering under persecution. They said
+they had more reason to be satisfied with the rule of my host, Hhamed el
+Bek, than with that of Tamar Bek at Bint Jebail, which they described as
+most cruel and capricious. That I could easily believe after the
+incident that came to my knowledge in that vicinity five years
+before,--that of the wanton murder of a poor Christian, at the lime-kiln
+works, by a servant of that governor. I have already mentioned that it
+was narrated to me by the village priest of 'Ain Nebel. An inquiry was
+instituted into the case by the authorities at Bayroot; but there must be
+many such instances occurring that are never known by those who would or
+could bring them to light and justice.
+
+At length the signal was given for mounting. The mules were collected
+together, after straying about for such pasture as could be got, their
+bells gently ringing all the time, and the pipes were stowed away: those
+of the muleteers being placed down the backs of their jackets, with the
+bowls uppermost, reaching to the men's necks.
+
+We then plunged into the forest of _Tarsheehhah_, where the Shaikh of the
+principal village, that which gives name to the district, is a fanatic
+Moslem, who was then preaching religious revivals, and was said to
+engraft upon his doctrine the pantheism of the Persian Soofis. This was
+not considered improbable, seeing that the Moslems of the Belad Besharah
+are all of the Sheah sect, (here called _Metawala_,) out of which the
+Soofi heresy is developed. The new doctrines had spread rapidly in
+various directions, and were professed by several of the Effendi class in
+Jerusalem--the old story repeated of Sadducean principles obtaining among
+the rich and the luxurious. This Shaikh was described as excessively
+intolerant of Christianity, and at that period, viz., the commencement of
+the Russian war, was in the habit of travelling about with a train of
+disciples, all carrying iron-shod staves in their hands, and
+distinguished by having a portion of the muslin of the turban hanging
+loosely behind, doing their utmost to excite tumult and hatred of the
+Christians by shouting aloud the Mohammedan formula of belief, "There is
+no God but Allah, and Mohammed is the Apostle of God," striking the
+ground with their iron-shod staves by way of emphasis.
+
+Among the evergreens, and the gall-oaks, and karoobah-trees, our path
+often became very narrow--sometimes subsiding into sunless hollows, then
+mounting afresh into a chequered brilliancy--but always passing between
+woods of dark and glossy foliage. At one place was a pretty spring of
+water, where one of the party halted to drink while the rest proceeded.
+On finding him fail to come up with us, a horseman and two footmen were
+despatched in search. Their shouts gave animation to the scene, but
+gradually became fainter as the distance between us increased.
+
+The whole of the day's journey hitherto was remarkable for absence of
+human population.
+
+Came to _Herfaish_, a Druse village, in the very heart of the forest, but
+passed on, still toiling in the hot sunshine. Occasionally the paths
+were so rocky that we had to dismount and lead the horses.
+
+It was evident from the deportment and conversation of our guides, that
+whenever Christians (who in that neighbourhood are all Maronites) enter
+that division of the forest where the Druses of Herfaish prevail they
+find it necessary to travel in companies and armed. Fortunately we
+encountered none of the fanatics of Tarsheehhah. The escort told me that
+they themselves only became acquainted with these cross roads in the
+direction of Nazareth by means of their journeys thither at the
+ecclesiastical festivals of Easter, Christmas, etc.
+
+At this hot season there were not many flowers to be noticed, beyond some
+varieties of salvia, yellow broom, bright-coloured thistles, the pink
+flax, blackberry blossoms, and one kind of heath, together with some
+plants unknown to me.
+
+The trees were not of large dimensions, but mostly evergreen and of slow
+growth; many were very wide-spreading, and all dense enough to afford
+good shelter from either sun or rain.
+
+After six hours and a half of uninterrupted forest we arrived at a small
+trickling spring called _'Ain Noom_, when large trees began to give place
+to shrubs and underwood, and human inhabitants again cheered the sight,
+they bringing cattle to the water for drinking.
+
+At _Bait Jan_ we were overtaken by the missing member of our party. At
+this place there is considerable vine cultivation. Very soon afterwards
+we were suddenly upon the brow of a deep descent--sheer steep down to the
+plain of _Battoof_, and the prospect from that spot was amazing, not only
+beyond expectation, for we had not expected any remarkable scene to come
+in our way, but beyond all previous experience.
+
+The whole of Lower Galilee, Samaria, and Gilead, was laid like a map at
+our feet; and from so great an elevation the Mediterranean and the Sea of
+Galilee were brought close together. Among the most conspicuous
+geographical points were Tabor, a very small object beneath; then the
+line of Carmel; and Ebal in Samaria; there was Hhatteen, the last
+battle-field of the Crusaders; King Baldwin's castle of Cocab; the
+entrance of the Jordan into the lake, and both the supposed sites of
+Capernaum; also Acre with her blue bay, and a small amount of shipping
+off Caiffa. Pity that I had no aneroid barometer for ascertaining the
+elevation of that site.
+
+The map-like appearance of the wide panorama suggested to memory the song
+of Deborah the prophetess, with her recapitulation of the succours
+furnished or omitted by the several tribes of Israel at the battle of the
+Kishon and Harosheth of the Gentiles. From such a site she would turn to
+the left hand for expostulation with Reuben, and to the right for
+rebuking Dan and Asher upon the sea-coast, after that the Lord had
+defeated the national foe without them, and sold Sisera into the hands of
+a woman.
+
+Our descent was by a narrow path of zig-zags, veering alternately towards
+Acre or Tiberias, although those towns were soon concealed by intervening
+hills; the plain below was a large dark patch of olive plantation.
+
+In an hour and ten minutes of wearisome toil in leading the horses down,
+with no possible interval of rest, we came to the village of _Rama_;
+having long before lost sight of the Mediterranean.
+
+We took refuge from the sun in the house of a Christian named Ibrahim
+Hhanna, and after an hour's sleep rose up to a feast of eggs, olives,
+bread, and cream cheese, after sharing in which our guides from Rumaish
+took their leave, with kindly wishes on both sides.
+
+Next we hired a guide for our crossing the plain to 'Arabeh el Battoof on
+the way to Nazareth, and travelled over alternate corn stubble and
+balloot underwood. In one short valley that we crossed there were six
+_jeldeh_ or short aqueducts to water-mills.
+
+The weather was still extremely hot.
+
+Passed near _Dair Hhanna_, a large ruin of a fortification upon a hill
+rising out of the plain; probably, as the name would seem to intimate, an
+old castle of the Knights of St John of Jerusalem. A few poor people
+here have built huts for themselves within the great walls, in the manner
+of the Italian peasants in Goldsmith's "Traveller," who do the same
+within the confines of a Caesar's palace--
+
+ "And wondering man can want the larger pile,
+ Exult and own their cottage with a smile."
+
+Two small towers, now also in ruin, flank the castle at short distances.
+These were erected by Shaikh Daher about eighty years since, who employed
+the whole for military defence in his revolt against the Turks.
+
+Near this 'Arabeh lie some time-eaten fragments of large old columns.
+There we dismissed the guide, as he wished to be at home again before
+dark, and we traversed the plain of _Sefuriyeh_, the celebrated Sepphoris
+of Josephus' wars.
+
+It is to be observed that in that afternoon we had crossed three narrow
+but long parallel plains, all running east and west, and divided from
+each other by lines of rocky hills. The northern one contains _Rama_ and
+_'Arabeh_; the middle one has _Sefuriyeh_; and the southern one has
+_Tura'an_ and _Cuf'r Cana_, the place of the miracle at the marriage in
+St John's Gospel.
+
+Hoping to reach our destination by a shorter track, after passing
+_Rumaneh_ and Jerjer we mounted a hill to _Mesh-had_, that was in sight,
+but as darkness came on, lost our way for a considerable time; rain
+threatened and fell a short time. Once we came near a large cattle-fold,
+which we afterwards learned belonged to the Latin Convent of Nazareth,
+but no people appeared to answer us; then we got a gloomy view of Mount
+Tabor; at length, however, we were cheered with discovering the window
+lights of Nazareth, after being fourteen hours in the saddle, omitting
+the two hours' rest at Rama, and the half-hour at Rumaish.
+
+The whole country we had traversed is particularly interesting; but at
+the close of the day the company were all too tired to sing aloud, as
+might have been performed under other circumstances, that Arab song well
+known over the country, with its wild high note (not cadence) at the end
+of each line:
+
+ "If thy horse be indeed
+ A creature of speed
+ Thou wilt lodge for the night in Nazareth."
+
+In December of the next year (1854) I traversed the Rama plain
+lengthwise, that is to say, from Tiberias to the plain of Acre.
+
+After _Mejdal_ and the _Wadi el Hamam_, or "Valley of the Doves," we soon
+struck out due westwards, and passed under a hill with ruins on its top
+called _Sabaneh_; then some more considerable ruins in a similar position
+called _Memileh_. At a good way to our left a small village was pointed
+out called _'Ailabool_, containing, among other inhabitants, a few
+Christians, who have their chapel and a priest.
+
+The whole road was extremely picturesque--the scenery consisting of
+broken rocks of ochreous tinge and shoots of balloot oak; and for a long
+distance at every turn, in looking backwards, there showed itself the
+still lovely lake of the Gospel narratives--that object which no one can
+ever forget who has had once the privilege to be near it.
+
+We kept _Mansoorah_ steadily before the eye, but on arriving at the hill
+upon which this stands, the road deviated a little, and rose over an
+eminence side by side with the village. Here we got a view of those
+several separated objects--Tabor; the Sea of Galilee; and Dair Hhanna.
+
+We were accosted by some Druse peasantry when the village of _Moghar_ was
+somewhat on our left.
+
+While passing the large olive plantations of _Rama_, we gazed up at the
+long and steep ladder of the precipice by which we had descended last
+year.
+
+Rama is at some height above the level of the plain, although low in
+proportion to the mountain at its back.
+
+Just before sunset we halted under the trees for refreshment about a
+quarter of an hour, then engaged a guide to conduct us to _Yerka_, on the
+plain of Acre.
+
+The man purposely led us up to the village of Rama, over a very stony
+road, hoping to induce us to stay there for the night on the way to
+Yerka. When I refused to remain, and insisted on going forwards, he took
+us into places even worse for travelling, to the peril of limbs to
+ourselves and the horses and mules: and great was our just wrath on
+finding ourselves every few minutes in augmented trouble in utter
+darkness; for there was no moon, and the stars were hid by clouds. The
+horses' feet were sometimes caught between close-wedged rocks, so that we
+had to lift them out with our hands, and our boots were with difficulty
+extricated from the same catch-traps; nevertheless the traitor trudged on
+nimbly a-head of us, heedless of our embarrassments. Had he not led us
+up to Rama at the beginning we should have kept upon a pleasant,
+well-beaten road on the level of the general plain.
+
+At length by our own efforts we got down to this highway, and trudged on
+at a good pace, the guide still trotting on in advance, out of reach of
+our hands, fearful of consequences, until we reached _Mejdal Croom_, (or
+_Migdol_, or Tower of the Vineyards in Hebrew,) where he swore that Yerka
+was still three hours before us, and that he was exhausted with fatigue.
+As we were so in reality, we halted, and with great trouble obtained a
+room in the village for the night.
+
+In the morning it was discovered that Yerka was only half-an-hour in
+advance, but the mischievous fellow was already gone back to where we had
+unfortunately picked him up.
+
+In the house of our lodging I was amused by seeing rude paintings upon
+the white-washed walls, rather good for native Palestine artists of the
+nineteenth century. The principal object was a three-masted ship,
+actually containing what were intended for human figures; (perhaps it was
+a Christian, not a Mohammedan house.) On the masts were very large flags
+of no special nationality, but one of them in exactly the opposite
+direction from the others. The three men, (constructed of lines for
+limbs and a dot for the head,) looking through telescopes, were taking
+observations in different quarters; but perhaps this may be allowed--two
+men formed the crew. There were no sails, and the mainmast had one
+yard-arm, the rest had none. Up in the air, near the ship's masts, were
+two Arabs on horseback carrying spears; the whole tableau was coloured,
+as such works in the East always are, of a uniform dull red.
+
+_N.B._--We were within sight of the sea and the fortress of Acre.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The three previous chapters, and this one at its commencement, relate in
+no inconsiderable proportion to woods, glens, and glades included in
+proper forest scenery; but inasmuch as travellers in Palestine,
+describing only what they have themselves seen along high-roads from town
+to town, under the guidance of professional dragomans and muleteers,
+generally deny the existence of forest scenery in Palestine, I may
+subjoin some remarks on this particular subject.
+
+Passing over the extensive olive plantations of Gaza, and the Sahara of
+twenty square miles between Bayroot and Saida, as not exactly belonging
+to the class of timber trees; and the "pine forest" near Bayroot, which
+is of artificial formation for accomplishing a preconceived design; also
+the neb'k and other thorny trees unfit for mechanical purposes, extending
+for miles in wild profusion beyond Jericho, and adding beauty to the
+scenery; there remain the veritable forests of Gilead and Bashan beyond
+Jordan, seldom visited by European travellers, and the two large forests
+in Western Palestine, accessible to the tourists who have leisure and
+will for knowing the country.
+
+First, the Belad Besharah to the north, north-east, and east of Tibneen,
+and also west and south-west of Safed, through all of which I have
+travelled with unceasing admiration and indulgence of the early taste
+implanted in childhood among old forests of England. The verdure and the
+shade from the Syrian sun were delightful, with the glades and vistas, as
+well as the amusing alternations often occurring of stooping to the
+horse's neck in passing below the venerable branches that stretched
+across the roadway. Those sylvan scenes abound in game, and are known to
+contain formidable wild animals.
+
+Secondly, the forest extending in length at least thirty miles from below
+Caesarea, northwards to the plain of Battoof beyond Sepphoris. This was
+designated the "ingens sylva" by the ancient Romans. I have crossed this
+in several lines between Nazareth and Acre or Caiffa; and twice from the
+Plain of Sharon to Carmel through the _Wadi 'Arah_ by _Umm el Fahh'm_, a
+village, the very name of which ("mother of charcoal") belongs to a
+woodland region; besides the line from Carmel to _'Arabeh_.
+
+The portion of this forest immediately contiguous inland from Carmel is
+named "the Rohha," clearly from the fragrance exhaled by the pine and
+terebinth trees, with the wild herbs upon the hills; this, together with
+the dark wooded sides of the long mountain, constitutes "the forest of
+his Carmel" mentioned in the boasting of the King of Assyria, (Isa.
+xxxvii. 24; also x. 18, in Hebrew,) and it is the _Drymos_ of the
+Septuagint and of Josephus, (Wars, i. 13, 2,) in the which a battle was
+fought by those Jews who were aiding the Parthians on behalf of
+Antigonus. No wonder that the loss of men was considerable among the
+woods and thickets there. I note the accuracy of assigning the name
+[Greek text] to this region, consisting as it does almost exclusively of
+oak.
+
+Besides these wide tracts of woodland, there are also the summit and
+sides of Tabor, with woods along its north-eastern base.
+
+And the district south and south-west of Hebron, in which, besides oak,
+etc., pine timber is frequent,--I should rather say was, for of late
+years it has been much devastated, and that too in an unmethodical
+manner, to meet the increased requirements of Jerusalem, Bethlehem, etc.,
+for fuel; nay, as I have been told, shiploads of it are constantly
+conveyed away to Egypt, especially for works on the Suez Canal. In like
+manner, in creeks of the sea between Acre and Bayroot, may frequently be
+seen small vessels loading with wood for Egypt.
+
+Throughout all the period of my experience in Palestine, I have had
+reason to deplore destruction of the growing timber by charcoal-burners
+in various provinces. I have seen the sides of whole hills in a blaze,
+purposely kindled and then left by these men to perform the work with
+least trouble to themselves: the Government takes no heed in the matter,
+and no care is employed for propagation of new trees to succeed the
+blackened ruin thus produced.
+
+So it would appear that in ancient periods, when the land was well
+peopled, the very wants of that population would, as in every other
+country, keep down the growth of forests. In the military periods of
+Roman and other invasions, large timber was required for offensive and
+defensive operations; and in our generation, when the population there is
+exceedingly diminished, the ignorance, the bad government, and the
+wastefulness of uncivilisation, produce the same result of destroying or
+hindering the increase of timber growth.
+
+There are not many parts of Palestine more bare of timber trees than the
+interval between Jerusalem and Bethlehem; yet there are old houses in the
+latter town whose owners pride themselves on the strong, stout rafters
+and planks they contain, of a quality known far around by the name of
+Bethlehem oak, and there are persons still living who can remember
+oak-trees near Solomon's pools.
+
+That this neighbourhood was formerly well wooded is still proved by the
+tufts of evergreen oak which spring up everywhere over the hills. These
+tufts of brushwood are found to come from immense roots, each one enough
+for several camel-loads of fire-wood. They are dug up by the peasantry,
+and sold in Jerusalem for fuel, under the name of Carameh.
+
+It is popularly said that "once upon a time" a man of Jerusalem went to
+reside at Hebron, and the usual chequered events of life occurred, ending
+in the calamity of losing his eyesight. In extreme old age he resolved
+upon returning to his native city, and when he reached the Convent of Mar
+Elias, half-way between Bethlehem and Jerusalem, the weather being hot,
+he took off his turban to rest it on the saddle before him. "Oh, our
+father," said his sons, who were walking by his side, "why art thou
+uncovering the bareness of thy head?" "It is," he replied, "that I may
+enjoy the coolness that is to be enjoyed beneath the trees that I
+remember to have been by the roadside all the way hence to Jerusalem."
+They assured him that not only did no such avenue exist, but that not a
+tree was to be seen in any direction, right or left, and that much of the
+change was owing to the hostilities that had been carried on among the
+villages under the laxity of the Turkish government. "Is it so?" said
+he: "then turn back, my sons, and let me die where I have lived so long;
+Jerusalem is no longer what it was."
+
+This anecdote, current among the peasantry, describes strongly, by its
+very simplicity, the process that for centuries has been in operation to
+reduce that country to the condition in which we now find it.
+
+I ought not to leave the subject of forest scenery in Palestine without
+inviting attention to the eloquent passages in Dr Thomson's "Land and the
+Book" upon that subject. This veteran missionary of the Lebanon knows
+the whole country well, and being an American of the Far West, has been
+accustomed to large forests, huge trees, and charms of woodland scenery;
+yet he speaks with rapture of the groves about Banias--the solemn glens
+and verdure of the Belad Besharah, and the magnificence of the Sindianeh.
+This author has a keen relish for all the varied beauties of nature, and
+possesses the faculty of describing them so as to enable us to share in
+its healthful gratifications.
+
+
+
+
+X. A TEMPLE OF BAAL AND SEPULCHRE OF PHOENICIA.
+
+
+About midway between Tyre and Sidon lies what has been called by Porter
+and Tristram a kind of Syrian Stonehenge; but neither they nor
+Vandevelde, who likewise mentions it, really visited the spot.
+
+The remains are not even mentioned in Carl Ritter's elaborate
+compilation, the "Erd-Kunde," nor in Robinson or Thompson; but as I have
+visited them five times, namely in October 1848, October 1849, September
+1855, October 1857, and September 1859, I may as well tell what I know of
+these monuments, which I believe to be of some importance.
+
+The site on which they stand is a large open cultivated ground, nearly
+opposite _Sarafend_, (Sarepta,) between the high-road and the sea, a
+quarter of an hour south of the vestiges of _Adloon_, whose broken
+columns and large pieces of tesselated pavement lie actually upon the
+highway, so that our horses and mules walk over the household pavements,
+or the road pavement of hexagonal slabs. Adloon may be at half distance
+between Soor and Saida. It has been conjectured that the name is an
+Arabic modification of _Adnoun_, and that again derived from _Ad nonum_,
+meaning the ninth Roman mile from Tyre; but as far as my memory serves
+me, that does not correspond with the real distance.
+
+There are upright stones standing from four to six feet each above the
+present level of the ground, but which may not be the original level.
+There may have been a considerable rise accumulated in process of time.
+The largest stone still shows six feet by a breadth of two. They
+anciently formed a parallelogram, (not a circle, which is commonly
+believed to be an emblem belonging to Baal-worship,) as may be seen in
+the following plan, which represents their present appearance:--
+
+ [Picture: Ancient construction at Adloon]
+
+The twelve stones marked _0_ are still erect; the rest, whose places are
+marked by dots, are either prostrate on the ground, or have entirely
+disappeared. Between them all are spaces of two or three yards each.
+The stones appear to have been carefully hewn originally, though now the
+edges are worn off, or pieces have fallen away from the substances of
+most of them. They bear, however, no chisel-indications of having been
+connected by lintels across the tops: they have not been placed as
+trilithons.
+
+Outside the parallelogram, at the distance of six yards, stand two other
+stones of the same description, which probably served as a portal of
+approach.
+
+Within the enclosure is a depression of ground, in an oval shape, almost
+filled up with weeds, which demands but little effort of imagination to
+suggest the position of an altar now removed, leaving only the hollow
+orifice of a channel for carrying away blood or ashes. This may be worth
+an examination hereafter.
+
+There are tokens of buildings having stood near, but these may have been
+of later date. I picked up a fragment of tesselated pavement there, but
+that may have come there by means of any conceivable accident from
+Adloon.
+
+Such is my simple account of what I cannot but believe to have been a
+temple of Baal-worship for the old Phoenicians, certainly of earlier
+period than any Greek or Roman architecture in the country; and vestiges
+such as these, of antique Syrian monuments, may, on careful examination,
+furnish us with data, useful in enabling us to understand the Celtic
+remains still found in Europe.
+
+The nearest village to these remains, though at some distance upon the
+hills, is _Sairi_, hence the place is named _Sook Sairi_, from the
+circumstance of a "market" of cattle and general goods being held there
+periodically for the district around. But why should this spot above all
+others in the long-deserted plain be used for such a market? Is it not a
+traditional continuance of some remote custom in connexion with the
+importance conferred by the ancient temple and its now-forgotten worship?
+Who can tell us through how many ages this rural fair has been held at
+Sairi or Adloon?
+
+The peasant account of the stones is that they were formerly men, whom
+God, or a prophet in His name, turned into stones for their wickedness,
+while they were employed in reaping a harvest; further my informant could
+not tell. The narrative closely resembled the explanation given me by
+country people in England respecting some almost similar stones at
+Long-Compton, on the border between Oxfordshire and Warwickshire; and I
+think I remember to have read of similar instances in other parts of
+England.
+
+Vandevelde was told that this miracle was wrought by Nebi Zer, (whose
+weli is in the neighbourhood,) and that this prophet Zer was nephew to
+Joshua, the son of Nun,--_i.e._, if he understood his interpreter aright.
+
+I cannot well leave that vicinity without mentioning the long lines of
+sepulchres excavated in the cliff-line which runs parallel to the sea,
+eastwards of the highway, and upon the crest of which line Sarafend and
+other villages are posted. These sepulchres have been noticed by
+travellers generally, even while merely passing along without leaving the
+beaten track, others have taken the trouble to visit them, but without
+finding any inscriptions. I have seen one inscription, the following in
+Greek, and apparently unfinished:--
+
+ [Greek text]
+
+Although in some respects these resemble the sepulchres near Jerusalem,
+they are not so elaborately formed into passages and inner chambers as
+the latter. Many of the excavations high above the ground have been at
+some era adapted to residences for hermits.
+
+Near Saida I have been shown sepulchres that were entered by steps and
+passages, and coated with very hard stucco, on which were pictures in
+fresco of festoons of olive and vine leaves alternated, these leaves
+being diversified sometimes with tints of autumnal brown, also trees of
+palm or olive, with birds upon their branches; the birds being all of one
+kind, with long tails, and coloured bright yellow and red, with brown
+backs. Inasmuch as these portray living creatures they must be ascribed
+to some classical, _i.e._, ante-Islamitic epoch. The designing and
+colouring of them are excellent, and the work remains in good
+preservation; they are most likely of Roman art, for their style much
+resembles the wall pictures of Pompeii.
+
+I have met with no mention of these decorated sepulchres, but in Ritter's
+quotation from Mariti, (Saida's Umgebungen in vol. iv. I, page 410,) and
+that only lately.
+
+The sepulchre which I entered consisted of one principal chamber, at each
+side of which were three smaller recesses, besides two such opposite the
+entrance. These latter have others proceeding further within them.
+There are no low shelves as in the Judaean sepulchres, but the dead were
+laid in shallow trenches sunk in the rocky floor. The stucco has only
+been employed to the right and left of the principal chamber.
+
+I pass over, as not belonging to this subject, the more recent discovery
+by others near the town in 1855 of the two sarcophagi, one of them
+bearing a Phoenician inscription.
+
+ [Picture: Temple of Baal (see p284)]
+
+
+
+
+XI. JERUSALEM TO PETRA, AND RETURN BY THE DEAD SEA.
+
+
+During the last twenty years there have been many English and other
+visitors to Petra; but they have usually taken it in the way from Egypt
+towards Jerusalem, which is probably convenient with respect to the
+season of the year, inasmuch as they thereby get a warm winter before the
+"sights" of Jerusalem (as some irreverently speak) begin. It would not
+be so well to take Egypt after Easter.
+
+But, on hearing that several travellers had been unable to reach Petra
+even after 'Akabah, on account of hostilities arising between the Alaween
+and the Tiyahah Arabs, or on account of the exorbitant demands of money
+made by the former of these, I thought the time had arrived for me to
+show the practicability of getting at the wonders of Petra from
+Jerusalem, under escort of the Jehaleen Arabs near Hebron.
+
+I went accordingly, and treated with the Fellahheen of Wadi Moosa in the
+place itself; and numerous travellers have since availed themselves of
+this advantage, though none have published an account of their
+expedition.
+
+On looking back at my notes of the journey, I am astonished at the rapid
+flight of time; for although my recollection is on the whole very vivid,
+these notes are dated in April 1851. Full occupation during the
+intervening period has seemed to shorten the interval. The scene, too,
+is now changed; for instead of the arid desert and the blasted porphyry
+cliffs of Edom, then before my eyes, these lines are penned among the
+bright green meadows of England, with the broad Thames in view, bearing
+large three-masted ships on its tide, freighted with imports from the
+most distant parts of the world.
+
+With an officer of dragoons, being a traveller in Jerusalem, and under
+escort of Hamzeh, the Hebron agent for the Jehaleen, we proceeded across
+country to meet the Arabs in their wilderness.
+
+Leaving the Hebron road at _'Ain Dirweh_, we ascended the lofty hill to
+the little village and weli of _Nebi Yunas_, (Prophet Jonah,) which is so
+conspicuous an object far away in every direction,--the minaret which
+rises from the building giving it very much the appearance of a rural
+church in Europe. Thence through well-cultivated fields of wheat and
+barley,--green at that season,--towards the village of _Beni Naim_; but
+at quarter of the intermediate distance, passed considerable remains of
+good masonry, named Khirbet _Bait Ainoon_, (ruins of Beth Enon.) At
+_Beni Naim_ is the reputed sepulchre of the Prophet Lot, according to the
+Moslems; that of his daughters being on an opposite hill at no great
+distance. This village commands a grand prospect of the Dead Sea,
+although there is no view of the kind from all the country around. Is
+not this the place whence Abraham, after the departure of the angels, saw
+the smoke of Sodom and Gomorrah rising as the smoke of a furnace? (Gen.
+xix. 27, 28.)
+
+Here was a travelling durweesh, fantastically dressed, amusing the
+peasants by dancing and cracking a long whip; while a lad accompanying
+him thumped a large drum,--both the thonged whip and the large drum being
+rare objects in that country.
+
+In a quarter of an hour we terminated our short day's journey (about six
+hours and a half) in a meadow of long green grass. The site is called
+_Beerain_, from the two wells there. Selameh, the brother of the Arab
+chief, with several of his people, were awaiting our arrival; and they
+were to lead us forward in the morning.
+
+_April_ 2.--My right knee was much swollen from the strain of a sinew,
+caused by an unexpected step down a bank taken by my horse when near
+_Hhalhhool_, on the road from Jerusalem; consequently, feeling feverish,
+and with a headache all night, I was not soothed by the camels groaning,
+quarrelling, or champing their food close to my tent.
+
+In the morning we made our bargain with Selameh, for the hire of camels,
+the escort, etc. The captain and I, with my attendants, were to ride our
+horses in the desert,--taking camels to carry an extra supply of water
+for them.
+
+We started, but in a very short time became disgusted at the slow
+travelling of our caravan, as we were compelled to moderate the pace of
+our riding to suit the leisurely tread of the camels. Selameh bestrode a
+very young colt of the K'baishi race; but I rated my pony, of the Jilfi
+stock, still higher than his.
+
+The wide expanse before us was sprinkled with wild flowers, including the
+yellow furze, (I have beside me, while writing this, a bunch of the same,
+of English growth;) and the ret'm, or juniper, seven or eight feet in
+height, covered with white blossom, the fragrance of which resembled, or,
+if possible, was an improvement upon, the smell of a bean-field in
+flower.
+
+Near _Ziph_, the rocks have many ancient wells cut into their solid
+substance. About noon we halted at a rough natural cistern, for the
+purpose of filling our barrels and kirbehs (goat and camel skins) with
+water. This task occupied an hour, during which I contrived to find just
+enough shade for my head under a big stone, but took refuge in the
+cistern itself while the camels were being reloaded.
+
+Leaving this, we found the waste plains abounding in locusts innumerable,
+and not full grown. As a natural consequence, there were storks hovering
+about and feasting upon them. On account of the benefit thus conferred
+on mankind by these birds, the Arabs call them _Abu Sa'ad_, _i.e._,
+"Father of good fortune."
+
+In the middle of the afternoon we arrived at the encampment of the
+Jehaleen, under the north-east side of Tell _'Arad_, the site of the
+Canaanitish city in Num. xxi. I, xxxiii. 40; Judges i. 16. It was a
+cheerful green site, though the verdure consisted merely of a thin and
+poor grass.
+
+We had to be introduced to the real shaikh on his own territorial domain,
+namely, Hadji Daif Allah abu Dahook,--a sharp fellow in driving a
+bargain,--a taller and stouter man than any of his people, who were all
+extremely dirty in person and dress, and several of them but small,
+withered-looking old men. One of the women, however, was tall, and
+walked with exceeding dignity of manner.
+
+Our European tents were pitched at some distance from the black hair
+tents of the Arabs and we observed, soon after our arrival, that three
+strangers came up on horseback, carrying spears tufted with black ostrich
+feathers, on a visit to our shaikh. They were well received; and songs,
+with clapping of hands, continued during a great part of the night, with
+a monotonous accompaniment of the women grinding corn in their
+hand-mills!
+
+_April_ 3.--We rose early, enjoying the indescribable beauty and purity
+of starlight in an oriental desert, thermometer, Fahrenheit, 53.25
+degrees, at sunrise; but before sunrise I mounted to the summit of the
+hill, where I found no vestiges of a city, only the foundation of a
+castle, or some such edifice, of about a hundred feet by sixty. In fact,
+this covered nearly the whole surface of the summit. The city must,
+therefore, have been situated on the plain, the metropolis of a petty
+Canaanitish king; but every trace of it is gone.
+
+Low hills bounded the view on every side, over which some peaks of the
+Moab mountains showed themselves in the east.
+
+When fairly started on the march at 10 past 6 A.M., we went along very
+cheerily, accompanied by Hadji Daif Allah and the three strangers, till,
+on a sudden, the latter wheeled about, and required from us the ghuf'r,
+or toll, for our future passage through their country. The shaikh
+recommended us to make them a present of a couple of dollars, as they
+were neighbours of Petra, and without their good-will we should not be
+able to succeed in the expedition.
+
+We complied, and they rode off southwards, Abu Dahook returning to his
+camp.
+
+Wearisome indeed is travelling with camels; but what would it have been
+had we been mounted upon them, as is generally the case with travellers
+from Sinai and 'Akabah! We horsemen frequently imitated the practice of
+old Fadladeen in _Lalla Rookh_, when he rode ahead of his caravan, and
+alighted now and then to enjoy the spectacle of the procession coming up
+and passing, then mounted again to repeat the pleasure.
+
+The strongest and worst tempered one of our camels having the barrels of
+water to carry, suddenly lay down and rolled them from him. Had his
+burden been the skins of water instead, they would have burst, and we
+should have lost their precious contents. Our Arabs not being accustomed
+to the convoy of travellers, were as yet unskilful in loading the camels,
+or in poising the burdens in equal divisions; and most extraordinary
+noises did they make in urging the beasts forward,--sounds utterly
+indescribable in European writing, or even by any combinations of the
+Arabic alphabet!
+
+We had about half a dozen men, mostly trudging on foot, and but slightly
+armed, commanded by Selameh; and one of them, named Salem, was the
+merry-andrew of the party, full of verbal and practical jokes. The ride
+was exhilarating,--over a level plain, green with thin grass or weeds,
+and low shrubs, whose roots extended to surprising distances, mostly
+above the surface of the ground; the morning breeze delicious, with larks
+trilling high above us in the sky, and smaller birds that sang among the
+bushes.
+
+Sometimes we caught distant views of innumerable storks devouring the
+infant locusts upon the hill-sides.
+
+Passed _'Ain Mel'hh_, (Salt-fountain,) which Robinson identifies with the
+Moladah of Joshua xix. 2, by means of the transition name of Malatha in
+Greek. The only building now remaining is a square weli, surmounted by a
+dome. Here we were not far from Beersheba, upon our right, and fell in
+with the common route from Gaza and Hebron to Ma'an. Finding a flock of
+goats, we got new milk from the shepherd; when diluted with water, this
+is a refreshing beverage.
+
+On coming up to a camp of Saadeen Arabs, our cook, a vain-glorious
+Maronite from the Lebanon, and ignorant of Arab customs, attempted to
+fire upon a watch-dog at the tents for barking at him; and it was judged
+necessary to deprive him of his pistols for the rest of the journey. Had
+he succeeded in his folly, we should have got into considerable trouble;
+for an Arab watch-dog is accounted so valuable, that to kill one of them
+might have entailed upon us a long delay, and a formal trial in a council
+of elders of different tribes, collected for the purpose; followed by the
+penalty awarded by the unwritten laws which obtain in the desert, namely,
+a payment of as much fine wheat as would entirely cover the dog when held
+up by his tail, and the nose touching the ground, and this is no small
+quantity; such delay would have probably thwarted our whole journey.
+
+At a narrow pass, called _Daiket 'Arar_, was the shell of an old
+building, now roofless. Near this, and by the wayside, as we advanced,
+were considerable remains of foundations of houses. There must have been
+a town of note at that place, it is the 'Aroer of 1 Sam. xxx. 28. Our
+course now suddenly trended towards the east, instead of southwards.
+
+In less than another hour we came to _Kubbet el Baul_, merely the
+foundation of a small weli. Selameh told us that this had belonged to a
+tribe called Bali, (or Baul in the plural.) I have no doubt that this is
+the site of _Balah_ of Joshua xix. 3; and that from it the Arabs,
+settling near it afterwards, derived their appellation.
+
+We soon afterwards, 3 P.M., passed _Curnub_, a ruined place on the right,
+and descended the slope of _Muzaikah_.
+
+In another hour and a half, namely, at half-past four, we halted for the
+night, after a journey of ten hours. It was on a smooth, pebbly plain,
+dotted with shrubs, having lines of chalky hills to the south-west, for
+which our people had no other name than _Jebel el Ghurb_, or the "western
+mountain." The whole scene was that of a mere desert; no creatures were
+to be seen or heard but ourselves. No Turkish authorities ever intrude
+into this purely Arab wilderness; still less was the landscape spoiled by
+the smoke of European factories. No speck of cloud had we seen the whole
+day through.
+
+Not far from this must have transpired the incidents recorded of Hagar
+and Ishmael,--incidents that might have occurred yesterday, or last week;
+for a few thousand years count but little in so primitive a region.
+
+Our ragged fellows ran about singing, in search of thorns or long roots,
+or even the straggling plants of bitter colocynth, as fuel for our
+cooking-fire.
+
+Stars arose, but such stars! not like the spangles of the English poet's
+conception, those "patines of bright gold," though that idea is
+beautiful; but one could see that they were round orbs that flashed
+streams of diamond light from out their bigness.
+
+So luxurious a bed as that spread upon the desert sand, amid such pure
+air for breathing, is scarcely to be obtained but in exactly similar
+circumstances; and we were undisturbed by cries of any wild beasts,
+although jackals and hyenas are common at night in the more cultivated
+parts of Palestine.
+
+_April_ 4.--Thermometer, Fahrenheit, 53.75 degrees at sunrise. We had
+our breakfast, and were off again by sunrise. It is said that
+
+ "Early to bed, and early to rise,
+ Makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise."
+
+It remained to be seen what the effect would be upon us.
+
+The groom being left behind a short time for packing up the kitchen
+utensils, allowed us to get out of sight without his observing the
+direction we had taken; and, when mounted, he took a wrong course. It
+was therefore necessary to give chase towards the hills to recover him.
+
+In an hour we reached two tul'hh (acacia or mimosa) trees, from which, I
+believe, the gum-arabic is obtained, and the stump of a third. These
+were the first that we had seen. Then descended, during about half an
+hour, to the broken walls of a town called _Sufah_, below which commenced
+the very remarkable nuk'beh, or precipitous slope into the great Wadi
+'Arabah. Before commencing this, however, we paused to survey the savage
+scenery around us, and the glorious expanse of the plain, which extends
+from the Dead Sea to the Red Sea, and is bounded on one side by the hills
+of Judaea, and on the other by the mountains of Edom,--on an average of
+3500 feet above the level,--including Mount Hor, the most conspicuous
+peak among them. At that time, however, the range was capped with
+rolling mists of the morning.
+
+This _Sufah_ is most likely the _Zephath_ of Judges i. 17,--the frontier
+town of King Arad the Canaanite, which the tribes of Judah and Simeon
+destroyed, and called the site Hormah, (_i.e._, "devoted to
+destruction.") If so, it is strange that the Canaanitish name should
+outlive the one intentionally given by the early Israelites. Probably,
+the surrounding tribes never adopted the Hebrew name, and preserved the
+original one.
+
+We were standing among crevasses of shivered mountains, whose strata are
+tossed about in fantastic contortions; and what we had yet to traverse
+below this, was something like a thousand feet of very slippery rock,
+lying in flakes, and sloping two ways at once. The greater length forms
+a rough line, at an angle of what seemed to the eye to be one of
+forty-five degrees,--not so steep as the Terabeh that we came to
+afterwards, but longer and more perilous. Yet this is the only approach
+to Jud_ae_a from the desert for many leagues around. Was it here that
+King Amaziah destroyed his Edomite prisoners after his victory in the
+"valley of salt?" (2 Chron. xxv. 12.)
+
+Half way down, one of our barrels of water slipped off a camel, and
+rolled into a chasm with noise and echoes like thunder. Wonderful to
+relate, it was not broken, and we were thankful for its preservation.
+
+At the bottom of the precipice, just beyond the shingle or debris of the
+mountain, the captain and I rested, and drank some camels' milk. This
+the Bedaween consider very strengthening. There were several
+tul'hh-trees in a torrent-bed beside us, and some neb'k. With some twine
+that we gave him, and a stout thorn of tul'hh, one of our Arabs mended
+his sandal, which was in need of repair. We, having preceded the beasts
+of burthen over the slippery rock, sat watching them and the men creeping
+slowly down, in curved lines, like moving dots, towards us.
+
+Upon the ground we found some dried palm-branches and slips of vine,
+which must have belonged to some former travellers, passing from the
+western towns to Ma'an, for neither palm nor vine grows in this
+wilderness, of which it may be truly said, "It is no place of seed, or of
+figs, or of vines, or of pomegranates," (Num. xx. 5;) and it is now
+become like a past dream, that Virgil and Lucan mentioned the palm-trees
+of Idumaea. {301}
+
+So at length we were upon the great 'Arabah, or "wilderness of Zin," of
+the Israelitish wanderings; and our path was to be diagonally across
+this, pointed direct at Mount Hor in the south-east.
+
+On crossing a shallow wadi named _Fik'r_, they told us of a spring of
+water to be found in it, at a good distance to the north-east.
+
+After some hours, we came to _Wadi Jaib_, sometimes styled the Jeshimon,
+as well as its corresponding plain on the north of the Dead Sea, and in
+Arabic both are called "the Ghor," in the shallow bed of which were
+receptacles for water, concealed by canes and brushwood laid in the
+utmost disorder, so as to produce the appearance of mere random drift of
+winter storms. Without the Arabs, of course, we should never have
+suspected the existence of such valuable stores. Probably also the
+Bedaween from a distance would not be aware of such resources there. The
+covering would, besides, serve to prevent a speedy evaporation of the
+water by the sun's heat. These spots were shaded likewise by tul'hh,
+sunt, and neb'k-trees. There we watered the cattle and filled our
+vessels. {302} In another half hour we rested for the night, having made
+a march of nearly twelve hours, over more tiring ground than that of
+yesterday.
+
+_'Ain Weibeh_ was to our right, which Robinson conjectured to be Kadesh
+Barnea.
+
+We perceived footprints of gazelles and of hyenas.
+
+_April_ 5. Sunrise, Fahrenheit, 62.25 degrees. Our Jerusalem bread
+being now exhausted, we took to that of the desert-baking, which is very
+good while fresh and hot from the stones on which the improvisation of
+baking is performed, but not otherwise for a European digestion: and our
+servants, with the Bedaween, had to chase the chickens every morning.
+The survivors of those brought from Jerusalem being humanely let out of
+their cages for feeding every evening, the scene of running after them,
+or flinging cloaks in the air when they took short flights, not to
+mention the shouts of the men and the screams of the birds, was very
+ludicrous, but annoying, when time is precious. The merry little Salem
+enjoyed all this, as well as the amusements of our people, during the
+monotony of daily travelling: as, for instance, the captain rolling
+oranges along the ground, as prizes for running, or his mounting a camel
+himself, or riding backwards, etc.--anything for variety.
+
+The desert may be described as a dried pudding of sand and pebbles, in
+different proportions in different places,--sometimes the sand
+predominating, and sometimes the pebbles,--with occasionally an abundance
+of very small fragments of flint, serving to give a firmer consistency to
+the sand. Round boulders are also met with on approaching the
+hill-sides. In one place large drifts of soft yellow sand were wrinkled
+by the wind, as a smooth sea-beach is by the ripples of a receding tide.
+These wrinkles, together with the glare of a burning sun upon them,
+affected the eyes, so as to make the head giddy in passing over them.
+
+Wild flowers and shrubs are not wanting; and the former are often very
+fragrant. I observed among those that are so, a prevalence in their
+names of the letter [Arabic letter] (gh); as Ghurrah, Ghubbeh, Ghurkud,
+Ghuraim, etc. They brought me a handful of _meijainineh_, which was said
+to be good for pains in the stomach; and the starry flower, called
+_dibbaihh_, not unlike a wild pink, is eaten by the people, both petals,
+calyx, and stalk.
+
+The tul'hh, or mimosa-tree, has a strange appearance, very like an open
+fan, or the letter V filled up.
+
+The green foliage of it is particularly vivid at the season when we saw
+it, and the thorns long and sharp. {304}
+
+Distances are hard to judge of in such extensive plains and in so clear
+an atmosphere. We had been nearly two days in sight of Mount Hor,
+straight before us; yet the mountain only grew in size as we approached
+it, not in distinctness.
+
+ [Picture: Tul'hh Trees]
+
+As we came nearer to the eastern mountains, we found innumerable and huge
+blocks of porphyry rock scattered over the ground. The Arabs called the
+range of Seir by the name of _Jebel Sherreh_.
+
+At about eight hours from our last night's station, we turned off the
+Wadi 'Arabah by the narrow _Wadi Tayibeh_ into the heart of the
+mountains, at the foot of Hor.
+
+Ascended a series of precipices, and, at some elevation, met two young
+English gentlemen, with a pair of double-barrelled pistols shared between
+them, and their fingers ready on the triggers. They had a tale to relate
+of grievous exactions made by the Fellahheen of Petra,--which, however,
+seemed to me, by their account, to have been brought on unconsciously by
+themselves, in having taken an escort of Tiyahah Arabs from Nukh'l
+instead of the Alaween; and they informed me that a clergyman from
+Cambridge was still detained there, as he refused to comply with the
+excessive demands of the people.
+
+On what a stupendous scale is geology to be studied in Mount Seir, where
+you have masses of red sandstone 1500 feet in depth; yellow sandstone
+extending miles away in ranges of hills, and the sandy desert beneath;
+all of this incapable of cultivation; and inspiring a sensation of deep
+sadness, in connexion with the denunciations of God's prophecies!
+
+At a quarter before four we caught the first glimpse of the Mezar of
+Aaron's tomb, and at five pitched our tents on the rugged side of Hor,
+among crags and scented plants, enlivened by numerous cuckoos, and the
+sweet warbling of one little bird. What reminiscences of dear old
+England the song of the cuckoos awakened! Now, however, from henceforth,
+being in England, their song will infallibly recall the memory to large
+bare mountains, extreme heat of climate, and the fragrance of Elijah's
+ret'm plant.
+
+During the last hour we had seen some blue pigeons, one partridge, and,
+separately, two large eagles, to which our attention had been drawn by
+their shadows moving on the ground before us; then, on looking upwards,
+the royal birds were seen sailing along, silently and slowly, against the
+blue vault of ether.
+
+This had been the hottest day of our whole journey; and the atmosphere
+became thick as the evening stole over the hills.
+
+_April_ 6_th_.--Sunrise, Fahrenheit 77 degrees. In the morning we
+advanced upwards towards Aaron's tomb. Walking in front of the luggage,
+we met the clergyman of whom we had heard the day before. He had been
+allowed to leave Petra on suffering the people to take money out of his
+pockets,--reserving to himself the intention of complaining against them
+officially to the consul in Jerusalem.
+
+He had been to the summit of Hor, and pronounced the view from it to be
+more grand and striking than that from Sinai. On bidding him farewell,
+we took Selameh and one kawwas, for clambering on our hands and knees to
+the summit, leaving the luggage to proceed and wait for us farther on;
+but had to rest occasionally in the shade of large trees of 'Arar, which
+Robinson considered to be the true juniper, and not the ret'm. The
+latter (the _rothem_ of the Hebrew Bible, under which the Prophet Elijah
+reposed) was very abundant, and covered with white blossom, shedding the
+richest perfume. Is it possible that all this fragrance, and the
+warbling of the birds, is but "wasted in the desert air?"
+
+The mountain is all of dark-red colour; and the higher we ascended, the
+more difficult we found the progress to be. At length all farther
+advance seemed impossible, till, on looking round, we observed an
+excavation for a well, with masonry around it; and beyond this were steps
+cut into the rock, which rock was sloped at an angle of between fifty and
+sixty degrees. This encouraged us to persevere.
+
+Still higher, I picked up some tesserae of mosaic, and morsels of marble
+and alabaster,--a piece of the latter now lies on the table before me.
+
+At length we attained the highest peak, where there was scarcely more
+space than sufficient to contain the small weli-building, which was at
+the time untenanted, though we had expected to find a Moslem devotee in
+permanent residence there.
+
+ [Picture: Small weli-building]
+
+I utterly despair of being able to describe the prospect around us; and
+can only say that extensive mountain-peaks lay in lines below, and might
+be compared to those made upon embossed maps, but that the whole scene
+was vast, savage, and abandoned to sombre desolation--both the hills and
+the desert--in every direction.
+
+The atmosphere was too thick and hazy to allow of very distant views.
+Neither of the two waters--the Red Sea or the Dead Sea--was visible.
+
+Let those who take pleasure in doing so, doubt that on that peak lies
+interred Aaron, the first high priest of Israel, "the saint of the Lord,"
+and that there was effected the first personal transfer of the pontifical
+office from him to Eleazer his son. Rather let me believe that there my
+unworthy footsteps have been placed on the same pieces of rock with the
+two venerable brothers who led up the redeemed people from Egypt, "the
+house of bondage," and that it was there they parted, leaving Moses to
+carry on the task alone.
+
+ "Three Hebrew cradles, the Nile-palms under,
+ Rock'd three sweet babes upon Egypt's plain:
+ Three desert graves must those dear ones sunder,
+ Three sorrowful links of a broken chain.
+ Kadesh and Hor, and Nebo yonder,
+ Three waymarks now for the pilgrim train." {309}
+
+I seated myself, and wrote a brief letter to a dear relative in England.
+
+Entering the weli, we found near the door a common-looking tomb, with an
+Arabic inscription,--which, however, I found too illegible to allow of
+its being copied; and over the tomb was spread a pall of silk, striped in
+red, green, and white, but much faded. Against a pillar, which supports
+the roof, were hung rows of coloured rags and threads of yarn, with
+snail-shells and sea-shells strung among them by way of further ornament.
+A wooden bowl, at one end of the tomb, was probably intended to receive
+alms for the support of the devotee who claims the place, and who
+practises the curing of diseases by charms among the wild Arabs.
+
+The floor of the chamber has been handsomely paved with tesselated bits
+of coloured marble, much of which still remains. Over the tomb are
+suspended some ostrich eggs on a line, as is common in oriental churches;
+and near it is a mihrab, or niche in the wall, to indicate the southerly
+direction for Moslem prayers.
+
+In a corner of the floor, a flight of steps leads down to a crypt; and,
+providing ourselves with a light, we descended thither, in expectation of
+finding there the more ancient tomb, believed to be genuine, as it is the
+usual practice in Moslem welies to have an imitation tomb on the common
+floor at the entrance, while the true one is exactly beneath it. But we
+only found an iron grating, swinging loose to the touch, and within it a
+plain wall, from which part of the plaster having fallen away, allowed to
+be seen the corner of a kind of stone sarcophagus. The portion visible
+was not, however, sufficient to enable us to judge of its probable era.
+The ceiling of the crypt is blackened by the smoke of lamps.
+
+I then mounted, by the outside of the building, to the top of the dome,
+but could see nothing thence of Petra, so deeply sunk is that valley
+betwixt high hills.
+
+Descending the mountain by the opposite side of that of our
+arrival,--namely, on the side next to Petra,--we discovered that more
+pains in roadmaking had been bestowed there, and that the ascent in that
+direction would be comparatively easy. Cuckoos and partridges were heard
+plentifully; and, on looking back, I saw a very large raven hovering over
+the weli.
+
+In an hour's descent we rejoined our servants and horses, but were not
+yet at the foot of the mountain.
+
+Entering a valley of red rocks, much streaked with blue in wavy lines,
+the first work of antiquity that met our view was a square turret on each
+side of the road. Then we passed some tombs, or chambers, cut into the
+massive red cliffs with architectural cornices, pediments, and pilasters,
+some of them very handsome. Next was what Laborde marks in his map as
+"the solitary column." It is standing solitary; but then near its base
+lie other columns of the same edifice, with the circular slices (or
+_drums_, as architects term them) that composed them, scarcely disturbed
+as they slid down in falling.
+
+In five minutes more we halted for the night close to what Laborde
+designates the Acropolis, where a pile of fine building lies prostrate,
+and the columns on the ground, in their segments, still touching each
+other.
+
+At the foot of this heap stands what is named the Palace of Pharaoh; and
+our station within it appeared, from the black relics of fires there, to
+be a frequent resting-place for travellers.
+
+Here, then, we were fairly lodged among the wonders which so deservedly
+excite the curiosity of the world, and proceeded to improve time, before
+the Fellahheen of the district should arrive to annoy us, by crowding and
+importunity.
+
+It is not my design to recount in detail the marvels of the place,--this
+has been done by Laborde, Lord Lindsay, Wilson, and Robinson,--but just
+to say, that having with me the small edition of Laborde and some
+manuscript notes extracted from other books, by their help I saw most of
+what was to be seen. I wandered through streets of the middle town;
+surveyed and entered palaces hewn into crimson rocks; sat reading on the
+solid benches of the theatre, and walked along its stage; then gazed with
+unwearied admiration on the beautiful Khazneh, its delicate tints and
+graceful proportions, and went to rest upon a green bank opposite to it,
+with a running stream at my feet, bordered by gorgeous oleanders, where I
+chatted with some wild Arabs arriving from the south. Such a harmony of
+ruddy tints, from the darkest buds of the oleander, through gradations on
+the rocks, to the most delicate pink, was truly a feast of nature for the
+eyes.
+
+These are incidents never to be forgotten, and the memory of them is
+unspeakably charming. I made a few rough sketches; but it may be
+sufficient here to give only a specimen of the capitals of columns that
+are peculiar to Petra.
+
+ [Picture: Capital of column]
+
+During the afternoon the thermometer stood inside the tent at 95 degrees
+Fahrenheit.
+
+The captain, my companion, went alone to explore the chasm called the
+_Sik_, as my slight sprain, after being almost forgotten during the
+journey, had become painful again from the effects of climbing upon Mount
+Hor.
+
+But I had come to Petra for business; and the indigenous peasantry of
+Wadi Moosa were gathering around our tents from different directions.
+They had not been prepared for the reception of guests arriving from the
+north, _i.e._, Jerusalem, as travellers usually come from 'Akabah or
+Sinai, through Nukh'l.
+
+Our Arabs, both Jehaleen and some strangers, set to making themselves
+comfortable. There arrived a large body of the Fellahheen, headed by
+Shaikh Suliman es Said, a ragged and ugly crew, he as dirty as the rest,
+but strutting about in a robe of bright scarlet.
+
+Then commenced the negotiations and disputes between them and ours; noise
+and menace speedily ensued, alternated with diplomatic manoeuvres, for
+our champion, Selameh, was an able practitioner in such matters, at least
+he had a reputation for it. The stormy scenes were not concluded till
+late in the night, and they ended by an arrangement that travellers,
+arriving by the new road from Jerusalem, should pay the same pecuniary
+acknowledgment to the territorial owners as had been hitherto claimed
+from those arriving under Alaween escort from Nukh'l or 'Akabah; and this
+agreement I ratified orally, as writing or sealing would have been
+altogether out of place there. One might think that so simple a matter
+could have been finished in five minutes; but just as in European
+business of that nature, it is always necessary for the contracting
+parties to be allowed scope for the display of their professional
+talents.
+
+_April_ 7_th_.--Sunrise, Fahrenheit 65.75 degrees. An inundation of
+strange Arabs from the desert had arrived during the night, and it was
+computed that there were not less than two hundred guns round our tents,
+while our party had not more than five, with a few pistols. We were
+hemmed in by the newcomers, and the crags over us were occupied by men
+with guns laid in position between crevices. Some men were scattered
+about, shooting at birds; but it seemed to me their real object was
+rather the making of signals.
+
+These people were 'Ali Rasheed's branch of the Alaween, from a district
+not so distant as 'Akabah. Our Jehaleen party looked very insignificant
+among them; they had evidently not expected this turn of events.
+
+As soon as we Europeans showed ourselves after breakfast, the Fellahheen
+rushed forward to serve as guides in exhibiting the curiosities. Feeling
+rather lame, I decided on remaining at the tents with my two kawwases as
+sentinels; the more disposed to do so, as the strangers had, during the
+night, purloined some articles from the Jehaleen.
+
+It was a warm, misty morning, and in the absence of my companion I found
+considerable amusement in the screams of multitudes of wild birds, high
+aloft "among the holes of the rocks, and the tops of the rugged
+rocks,"--probably all of them birds of prey,--which echoed and
+reverberated with sounds closely resembling the laughter and shouts of
+children in their vociferous games. On their return, the Fellahheen were
+rapacious in demands for remuneration of their services, but were at
+length contented. This was the signal for the others to take their
+advantage. They wanted toll to be paid for crossing part of the desert
+on which they thought the Jehaleen had no right or precedent for bringing
+strangers. So, on our preparing to leave the ground, they rushed up the
+bank, secured commanding points for their guns, and thus exacted their
+fee. The screams and hubbub were at length terminated by some small
+backsheesh, (to our surprise, how little was required,) and we all
+marched away in a northern direction, the opposite to that of our
+arrival.
+
+This gave us an opportunity of passing again in front of the principal
+edifices, if they may be so denominated, including what I had not before
+seen, the sepulchre with the Latin inscription in large letters, QVINTVS.
+PRAETEXTVS. FLORENTINVS.
+
+It is to be noticed that Petra itself is called by the Arabs, Wadi
+Pharaon, {316} not Wadi Moosa. The two valleys are adjoining, but in the
+latter there are no antiquities or wonders. At a distance, however, the
+journey to Petra is usually called a journey to Wadi Moosa, because the
+Fellahheen of the region about there, and to whom toll is paid, are
+cultivators of the Wadi Moosa.
+
+Before leaving the place, it may be observed that the neighbourhood must
+have been kept in a high state of cultivation during the Roman empire for
+the maintenance of so numerous and luxurious a population of the city,
+instead of the absence of necessaries of civilised life that we now see
+there; and that good state of things must have continued in later
+Christian periods, when the district formed "the third Palestine," and
+deputed bishops to the synods of Jerusalem and elsewhere.
+
+With respect to the colouring of the hills and rocks, it is truly
+surprising to behold such huge masses of deep red colour, variegated with
+wavy lines of violet and purple and blue, especially in the direction
+towards Mount Hor. We did not, however, remark so much of yellow and
+orange as Laborde or Irby and Mangles describe.
+
+I find since that Dr Wilson states these rocks to be highly saliferous,
+and says the Arabs scrape them with knives to obtain saltpetre for making
+their rude gunpowder. He is of opinion that in some geological era the
+whole place has been formed in a salt-water lake. Few people have had so
+much leisure for making researches there as he had.
+
+The temperature was high in the valley, because closely confined between
+lines of hills; notwithstanding that the elevation is supposed to exceed
+2000 feet above the Mediterranean. What it may be in a more advanced
+season than April I cannot tell; but I perceived neither scorpions nor
+serpents there, (as some represent the place to abound in,) no creeping
+things worse than earwigs.
+
+When on the march, we learned that the robbery of the night by 'Ali
+Rasheed's people, amounted to one camel, one gun, and old Selameh's
+sandals. Also, that those three men whom we saw on the 2d April at Abu
+Dahook's camp were of the same faction, probably also my visitors of the
+Khazneh yesterday. Selameh thought that for a couple of gazis (about
+three shillings and sixpence) he might succeed in a redemption of his
+goods. These I gave him, and he trudged back over the hills with one of
+his people, while we kept on our way. He was to meet us at our night's
+station.
+
+The last glance given to Petra showed us the palace of Pharaoh, and the
+peak of Hor with Aaron's tomb.
+
+Our way led us over a tolerable plain, made agreeable by the fragrance of
+the ret'm, as wafted along by the breeze; this plant sometimes almost
+covering the small branch valleys.
+
+Soon after noon we were in the _Wadi Nemela_, through which we travelled
+for nearly two hours,--a scene of broken rocks on each side, and the
+intermediate space with a profusion of oleander, ret'm and 'arar, all in
+flower, some of the latter having trunks of ten feet in circumference.
+
+Thence we issued upon a heath covered with low fragrant herbs; our Arabs
+singing, and the camels striding on famously, followed by a poor little
+lamb that we had bought at Petra. This, of course, we did not intend to
+convey all the way to Jerusalem; but his presence constantly reminded me
+of the text, (Isa. xvi. 1,) "Send ye the lamb (to) the ruler of the land
+from Sela [_i.e._ Petra] to the wilderness, unto the mount of the
+daughter of Zion." This is no longer the time when the king of Moab paid
+tribute "to the king of Israel, 100,000 lambs and 100,000 rams, with the
+wool," (2 Kings iii. 4.)
+
+Soon after two P.M. we were passing over ledges of porphyry
+mountain-cliffs, dark and gloomy, but enlivened by large yellow salvia in
+bloom, and plenty of flowers visible in the hollow below; the whole scene
+most romantic and fantastic in formation. Such huge piles of porphyry I
+had not seen since those of the coast of Peterhead and Buchan, lashed by
+the great billows coming from the Baltic Sea. Occasionally we came to
+standing pools of water, which, lying on this hard kind of stone, could
+not filter away or be absorbed, as in our Palestine limestone would be
+the case. From these settlements our water vessels were supplied.
+Thermometer in shade of a rocky cliff, 75.75 degrees Fahrenheit.
+
+We were soon again upon sandstone cliffs, but wildly broken, and
+descending into lower ground with its juniper and oleander. Then
+ascended again, and attained our greatest elevation by half-past three,
+at least equal to Robinson's calculation of 1500 feet above the 'Arabah.
+For two hours more we had to traverse cliffs, gullies, crags, and
+precipices of red porphyry or green syenite alternately, in enormous
+masses, split by convulsions of nature, and next arrived in a valley
+strewed with huge fragments, angular, not rounded boulders, yet fallen
+from the adjacent mountains. But we were still high above the wide level
+of the 'Arabah.
+
+Halted at half-past five; thermometer, Fahrenheit 71.25 degrees, and,
+during our dinner, old Selameh rejoined us, having failed in his dealings
+with the Alaween, who refused to restore their plunder, as they said
+their object was to punish the Jehaleen, for bringing travellers through
+their country, instead of making them go by way of Egypt. {320} He
+reported that thirty more Arabs had arrived at Petra, half-an-hour after
+our starting.
+
+_April_ 8_th_.--Sunrise, Fahrenheit 59 degrees. Moving again at six
+o'clock. In half an hour we were clear of the mountains of Seir or Edom;
+but for another hour the ground was still strewn with blocks of porphyry
+and green syenite, too hard for any of our implements to break off bits
+from them, and fragments small enough to be carried away were very
+difficult to find; however, we got some. These large stumbling-blocks,
+together with dry watercourses, rendered our travelling unusually
+troublesome to the horses and camels, and wearisome to ourselves.
+
+At length we got upon the free 'Arabah, among green shrubs and trees of
+tul'hh and neb'k.
+
+At nine o'clock we came to a high sandbank, beneath which was a verdant
+line of tamarisk, and ghar, and tall canes, with frogs croaking among
+them. All of these were indications of water; and, accordingly, we found
+a spring named _'Ain Taasan_, being one of those which together form the
+stream of _Buwairdeh_. Here we filled our water vessels to the utmost,
+as it was not expected we should find any more good water for two days to
+come.
+
+The surrounding prospect was one of utter desolation, and I took out my
+Bible and read the words of 2 Kings iii. 8,-9, and 20: "And he said,
+Which way shall we go up? And he answered, The way through the
+wilderness of Edom. So the king of Israel went, and the king of Judah,
+and the king of Edom; and they fetched a compass of seven days' journey:
+and there was no water for the host, and for the cattle that followed
+them . . . And it came to pass in the morning, when the meat-offering
+was offered, that, behold, there came water by the way of Edom, and the
+country was filled with water."
+
+On the spot, as well as at the present time, I remembered with pain the
+deplorable weakness and wickedness of the remarks on this event contained
+in Paine's "Age of Reason," and which I do not choose to repeat. The
+most charitable opinion that one can entertain of such writers is that
+they know nothing of the nature of the country under consideration.
+Thank God that the world at large, and that land in particular, is now
+better known than formerly, and, as a consequence, our evidences of the
+truth of the blessed Bible are daily the more confirmed.
+
+We then proceeded northwards along the bed of that stream; but in a few
+minutes its water was lost in the sand. In another hour we entered the
+dry bed of the _Wadi el Jaib_, and continued along its course in the
+direction of the Dead Sea.
+
+The hills were misty on both sides, and the ground hot beneath, as we
+tramped along, all our voices hushed during the "strength of the heat,"
+(according to Arab expression,) and the footfall of the camels entirely
+without noise.
+
+Who can sufficiently admire the adaptation of this creature to the
+desert, in which the Maker and Ruler of all has placed him? No heat
+exceeds the power of his endurance; steadily, patiently, silently he
+stalks his long strides over the yellow ground--one animal following
+another in regular military step. And during our travels at least he
+never flagged--the large eyes never lost their brightness; and who ever
+saw a camel, even though his master may seek rest or shade as he finds
+opportunity, shrink from the blazing brightness of the sun?
+
+Halted for the night shortly before five P.M., the journey having been
+one of eleven hours. But the Arabs insisted on our being placed behind
+the corner of a re-entering valley, in order that our fire and smoke
+might not be seen during the night by hostile people from a distance.
+
+Thermometer at sunset, 81.5 degrees Fahrenheit.
+
+We found footprints of gazelles, storks, and hyenas.
+
+Mount Hor at that distance, and in that direction, very much resembles
+the Salisbury Crags of Edinburgh.
+
+_April_ 9_th_--Sunrise, Fahrenheit 63.5 degrees. Tents struck, and all
+on the march by half-past five. Losing sight of Mount Hor.
+
+At a quarter to eight a breeze sprung up from the north, so refreshing in
+that hot and dry wilderness as to merit the praise of the Bedawi poem,
+beginning--
+
+ "Shemali, ya hawa ed-deeret shemali."
+
+ "The north! O thou wind of the northern direction,
+ It has increased my blessing, and all that belongs to me,
+ And after weakness of state, has changed my condition."
+
+I find, however, that this literal translation gives but a very poor idea
+of the feeling concentrated in the words of the original, and only feebly
+expresses the reminiscence of that time as still preserved at the moment
+of this writing.
+
+Soon after eight o'clock we were out of the Wadi el Jaib, that is to say,
+the high cliffs of marl on each side abruptly terminated, previous to
+which, they had been at first more than a hundred feet above our heads,
+and then gradually diminishing in height as we advanced. We descended
+gradually into the semicircular expanse of marshes called El Ghuwair or
+the Little Ghor, with the large Dead Sea and the _Khash'm Usdum_, or salt
+mountain of Sodom, spread out before us.
+
+The course of the wadi we had left trended from south-east to north-east,
+on issuing from which we took the line on the western side of the
+Ghuwair, and easily descended over small eminences. This place is most
+probably the "ascent of Akrabbim," (Num. xxxiv. 4, and Josh. xv. 3,) the
+southern boundary of the land given to Israel, and named after its
+abundance of scorpions. In our hasty passage over it we saw none of
+these.
+
+Among the marshes we found several palms growing wild. They were stumpy
+in stature, and ragged in form for want of cultivation, or perhaps of
+congenial soil. The miasma was strongly perceptible to the smell, and
+our horses were plagued with flies and gnats. How great was this change
+from the pure dry air of the mountains!
+
+Quarter to ten at _'Ain 'Aroos_, (the bridegroom's fountain,) but the
+water was brackish.
+
+Thermometer in the shade, 83.5 degrees Fahrenheit.
+
+For an hour past our people had been on the alert, on account of a feud
+between them and the Ghawarineh Arabs. On coming up to the print of a
+human footstep, this was carefully examined as to its size, direction of
+the tread, etc. The circumstances were not, however, exactly parallel to
+the occurrence in Robinson Crusoe, which naturally came to mind.
+
+At twenty minutes to eleven, having completed the western curve of the
+Ghuwair, we fell in with the _Wadi Hhuggereh_, which came up from the
+south-west, and on looking back, perceived a distinct mirage visible over
+the dry sands which occupy part of the Ghuwair, probably the effect of a
+salty deposit.
+
+About noon we arrived at a clear, running stream of water, but which
+proved, on tasting, to be highly impregnated with salt. The surface of
+the plain was in a great measure covered with a white efflorescence.
+Along the middle of this plain there was a sunken channel of a mile and a
+half in length, occupied by an overflowing of the Dead Sea, which,
+however, did not interfere with our track.
+
+At the end of this, and on approaching the corner of the salt mountain,
+we had an _incident_ to enliven the tediousness of the hot journey. A
+party of Arabs came in sight. Our men discovered them first, and running
+forwards, primed their guns, or lighted the match of the lock, drew their
+swords and screamed, making bare the right arm, as if prepared for awful
+deeds. The others took up position behind low rocks, unslung their
+fire-arms, and screamed _not_. Presently a real or fictitious
+recognition took place, the guns on both sides were fired up in the air,
+and swords were brandished for very joy. Both parties rushed into each
+other's embraces, smiling and kissing with the greatest fervour.
+
+The comers proved to be some of their own Jehaleen, escorting some Hebron
+townsmen to Kerak. There were two women among the latter, some old men,
+and some conjurers with monkeys, who thereupon set up a dance to the
+music of tambourines. Upon something like equanimity being restored, the
+strangers informed us of certain doings that had taken place, on our
+account, since we had passed by there, and which nearly concerned us.
+
+The two parties soon separated, taking opposite directions.
+
+As we were close upon the western side, there was the southern end of the
+Dead Sea at our right hand, coming up imperceptibly upon the land, flush
+with it, so that no limit could be distinguished between water and the
+wet beach.
+
+At a few minutes past one we all alighted before the large cavern which
+runs into the heart of the salt mountain; and a picturesque group our
+party formed, spread about in some shade of the hill, with a great
+variety of costumes and colours--the camels kneeling and the horses
+picketed upon the bay of the sea of Sodom and Gomorrah.
+
+Entering the cavern, we found relics of the recent French expedition
+thither, under M. de Saulcy, such as egg-shells and torn paper coverings
+of candles, with French shopkeepers' names upon them. We did not
+penetrate far inwards, but could see traces of occasional overflowings of
+the lake into the interior.
+
+The mountain itself is a wonder: five miles of salt above ground, and a
+hundred feet, probably in some places two hundred feet high. The colour
+is not bright, but of a dull gray. The best parts of it are very hard to
+break, and with difficulty we brought away some pieces for curiosity.
+
+As for Lot's wife,--the pillar of salt, mentioned and portrayed by the
+American expedition in 1848, and of which it is said they took a fragment
+for a museum at home,--after a good deal of search, we only discovered a
+crooked thin spire of rock-salt in one place of the mountain; but it
+would not have been very remarkable if many such had been found to exist
+in similar circumstances.
+
+It was a place for inducing solemn reflections and intense sensations,
+such as one could hardly venture to record at the time of being there, or
+endeavour to repeat now after so long an interval. Much may, however, be
+imagined by devout readers of the holy Scriptures--not only as contained
+in the records of the Book of Genesis, but also as inculcated with
+intense emphasis in the Epistle of Jude in a later period. Still, there
+is a vividness of impression to be derived only from being actually on
+the spot, and surveying the huge extent of water that differs from any
+other in the world,--placid and bright on its surface, yet awful in its
+rocky boundaries. But where are the cities and their punished
+inhabitants, except in the Bible, and the traditions preserved by
+Tacitus, the Koran, and by the present inhabitants of the country?
+
+Some morsels of bitumen were found upon the beach; but the principal
+season of the year for finding it is in winter, especially at the
+commencement of winter, when the lake becomes unusually agitated, and
+breaks off masses of it from the bottom, often of very large size--the
+peasants of Hebron, with exaggeration, say, "As large as ships;" but I
+have seen many camel-loads of it brought up to Jerusalem at a time, for
+export to Europe. It is, however, a monopoly of the crown.
+
+We should note that in Gen. xiv. 10, the district was full of bitumen
+pits previous to the overthrow of the cities of the plain.
+
+At twenty minutes to three we came to a rude heap of stones called
+_Zoghal_ or _Zoghar_. This cannot well be Zoar, among other reasons,
+because it lies upon the beach, and is not upon an eminence. It is well
+to mention that M. de Saulcy's extravagant ideas of the Pentapolis of
+Sodom, etc., had not then been published.
+
+In another quarter of an hour we had reached the extremity of the "Salt
+Mountain," with all its distorted, sometimes even perpendicular
+stratification. By this time we were convinced that the whole of the
+mountain is not salt, but that a good deal of the upper length of it is a
+mixture of salt and marl or sand. Between it and the water's edge we
+frequently saw blocks and spires of rock-salt protruding through the flat
+beach.
+
+There can be no doubt that the Arabic name, _Usdum_, is identical with
+Sodom, by a well-known custom of the language to invert the consonant and
+vowel of the first syllable. But even this is brought back to the
+original state in the adjective form. Thus I heard our guides speak of
+the Jebel Sid'mi, meaning the Khash'm or Jebel Usdum, or promontory of
+Sodom.
+
+The _Wadi Netheeleh_ comes up from the southwest to the shore at this
+northern end of the mountain, parallel to the Wadi Hhuggereh at the
+southern end.
+
+We kept along the sea-side, and on rising to a higher level, near five
+o'clock, halted for the night at the mouth of a valley where some water
+was to be procured, and near us was a broken tower. This site is named
+_Mobugghek_ or _Umm-Bugghek_. As we were scarcely out of the reach of
+the Ghawarineh Arabs, our people had to go out in armed detachments for
+collecting firewood.
+
+During the process of pitching the tents, one of our men, named 'Odeh,
+perceived a stranger at a great distance, and half stripping himself, ran
+nimbly up a steep sand hill, ready for whatever operation might be
+necessary. Our European, I might rather say, our civilised eyes, could
+not have discovered the ill-omened object at that distance, but those of
+desert Arabs are far more powerful than ours. I do not know that I shall
+ever forget the ardent brilliancy of Shaikh Selameh's eyes at all times,
+as witnessed constantly during our excursion.
+
+While we rambled on the beach in search of bitumen or sulphur, we
+suddenly heard a furious screaming in the direction of our tents, and
+hastily returning, found a number of strangers coming down a winding
+path. Our men were gathered together, and armed. The captain also
+examined the state of his double-barrelled pistols. However, on their
+arrival, the newcomers were recognised as people _not hostile_ to the
+Jehaleen, and their general location is near 'Ain 'Aroos. So, after some
+squabbling and arrangement, they agreed to share our supper with us in
+peace. Had the case been otherwise, our position was not an enviable
+one; for we were shut in between their hills and the sea, they were more
+numerous than our Arabs, and they had entire command of our spring of
+water. Our camels, too, were all unloaded, and the packages scattered on
+the ground.
+
+The scenery was desolate and gloomy in the extreme, undoubtedly blasted
+by the wrath of Almighty God, although a place which had at one time been
+"well watered everywhere . . . even as the garden of the Lord, like the
+land of Egypt," (Gen. xiii. 10;) and it required strong faith to expect
+the possibility of this "wilderness" (_'Arabah_) being again made "like
+Eden, and her desert like the garden of the Lord," (Isa. li. 3.) Indeed,
+that promise does not seem to apply to this peculiar locality, by
+comparing it with Ezek. xlvii. 10, 11, although these unwholesome waters
+are to be healed, and are to have fish of various kinds in them, with
+fishermen's nets employed there.
+
+It deserves observation, that now the sea is so utterly lifeless that the
+American explorers there were unable, by the most powerful microscopes,
+to find any animalculae in its water. Yet Lynch was of opinion that the
+atmosphere or vapour there was not in any way prejudicial to human
+health; and since then, Mr Holman Hunt spent a considerable time near the
+brink without injury derived from it.
+
+The air was very warm all night, with no freshening dew, and the sound of
+slow, rippling water on the strand, during the still starlight hours, was
+one to which our ears had not been of late accustomed.
+
+The Arab figures and conversation round the watch-fire were romantic
+enough. Thermometer at eight P.M., 90.5 degrees Fahrenheit.
+
+_April_ 10_th_.--Sunrise, Fahrenheit 70.25 degrees. In taking this last
+note of the thermometer at sunrise, I may observe that the marking of it
+at that moment gives but a feeble idea of the heat that we experienced
+during the days' marches throughout this excursion,--the temperature
+rapidly increased after sunrise, and at later hours within the confined
+hollows, such as Petra and the basin of the Dead Sea, rose to that of (I
+suppose) an Indian climate--but above all the effects of heat was that
+produced by the weight of atmospheric pressure at probably the lowest
+position in the whole surface of the globe: about 1300 feet below the
+Mediterranean.
+
+Before six o'clock we were on the march, over broken and precipitous
+rocky paths, on which the progress was slow and toilsome. Then down
+again upon the beach. I am sure that if the Dead Sea were already
+covering the ground that it now does, before the time of Chedorlaomer,
+the "four kings against five" could not possibly have mustered or
+manoeuvred their armies on any side or place between the mountains on
+each side of the water. {332} At a quarter past seven the thermometer
+stood at 86 degrees Fahrenheit.
+
+There is always a close, heavy heat in this depressed region, inducing
+profuse perspiration.
+
+At ten minutes past nine we were at the spot where the great eastern
+peninsula projects nearest to us, having in view the two extremities,
+north-east and south-west, now named on the maps, the former as Point
+Costigan, after the unfortunate explorer of 1835, and the latter, Point
+Molyneux, after my friend, the lieutenant of H.M.S. _Spartan_, who was
+there in 1847. But at that season of the year we could perceive no
+traces of the shallow or ford by which the Arabs occasionally pass over
+to it on the way to Kerak.
+
+At half-past nine we were in front of _Sebbeh_, with a view of the ruins
+of Masada on its summit, to which, however, we did not climb, but
+contented ourselves with recalling to memory the heroic events of the
+Jewish defenders, as related by Josephus. Here the sea, retiring towards
+our side, forms a semicircular bay, terminating at _'Ain Jidi_,
+(Engeddi,) where we arrived at two o'clock. There we were at a
+considerable elevation above the shore, which we now abandoned, not only
+because all further advance in that direction is impracticable, but
+because our route towards Jerusalem lay in a different direction.
+
+We were upon a platform abounding in springs of water and luxuriant
+neglected vegetation. The pleasure derived from the sound of gushing
+streams can only be appreciated by those who have been in our
+circumstances. The contrast is not to be understood merely from words
+laid before a reader, between this and the dry wilderness of Edom or the
+salt beach of Sodom. One of our camels not only drank his fill, but
+rolled himself in the water.
+
+There were some neb'k trees, some trees of the _'osher_, (apple of
+Sodom,) and some of the shrub _solanum melongena_, all of which may be
+found near Jericho, though not peculiar to that region. Canes and large
+weeds almost filled the watercourses, but not a blossom of any
+wild-flower could I find upon the ground.
+
+The streams abound in petrifactions of vegetation, which would show that
+the water cannot be very wholesome for drinking. A monster crab was
+brought us out of a channel; my horse in drinking had been startled at
+the sight of it.
+
+There were traces of buildings about the place, such as foundations of
+walls almost razed to the ground, and one broken tower.
+
+But the prospect eastwards, including the peninsula, and the mountains
+and huge crevasses of Moab, or southwards, including Sebbeh and the Salt
+mountain, are magnificent beyond expression. We could not be sure that
+Mount Hor was distinguishable. At a quarter past three, and under shade
+of trees, the thermometer was at 86 degrees Fahrenheit.
+
+After considerable repose and some feeding there, we prepared for the
+remaining ascent, called by our people "The Ladder of _Terabeh_." This
+was a very toilsome climbing of near two hours up a nearly perpendicular
+cliff, by means of curves and zigzags turning away four or five yards.
+Most of the way we were dismounted, but still the horses and camels were
+greatly distressed by the effort of the ascent. At first the
+camel-drivers sang to cheer their animals. This, however, dwindled into
+occasional prolonged notes, which again were deteriorated into groans
+instead of music.
+
+It was a curious sight for us who were untroubled with the care of
+camels, and consequently getting on faster than they, to look down upon
+the wavy lines of moving creatures, and hear the echoes of their voices
+from below.
+
+Reached the summit at half-past four, and after an hour's progress upon
+level ground, we halted for the night. Poor old Selameh fell down flat,
+not so much from the effect of mere fatigue, as from having had his ankle
+bitten by a spiteful camel in the morning, and then the long climbing in
+addition.
+
+This was to be our last night together, and we enjoyed to the utmost the
+social gathering round the bivouac fire with our Arab companions, to
+whom, after ten days association, to the exclusion of all the rest of the
+world, we could not but feel something of temporary personal attachment.
+There was Selameh, with his mended shoe and his bitten ankle, who had
+been our officer and diplomatist, ready for fun or a row at any minute;
+'Odeh the champion, called out upon emergencies; Khamees, the slave boy,
+a general domestic, if this latter word may be allowed for a Bedawi Arab;
+and Salem the merry-man, short in stature, and drawing into the vale of
+years. We chatted over the fire about the events of the expedition,
+while some of the men were kneading and baking fresh bread upon stones
+made hot in the fire.
+
+Yet this is a sad aimless life that such people lead--of course our
+excursion under their protection was an event to supply matter for many a
+conversation afterwards.
+
+As for religion: they seem to have little or no sense of its
+responsibility or benefit, or even its formalities. I asked Selameh
+about prayers or reading, and all he had to say was that annually in
+Ramadan they hire a reader from some mosque of a town to come and read
+the Koran to them; but not one, not even Abu Dahook could read for
+himself. I never heard these Jehaleen mention either the word _Moslem_
+or _Ghiaour_, much less the technical words _Mushrakeen_ or _Seerat el
+Mustakeem_. Thermometer at sunset, 79.25 degrees Fahrenheit.
+
+_April_ 11_th_.--Our camels were loaded for the last time, as usual
+grunting, groaning, and tossing the head backwards while the burdens were
+placed upon them, and, as must be known to all desert travellers, the
+smell exhaled from these animals after a long journey is particularly
+disagreeable.
+
+We were marching forward at half-past five, and in an hour and a half we
+caught a distant view of our old familiar Frank mountain, which was lost
+again afterwards. About ten o'clock, we saw in a valley at our left an
+encampment of Sair Arabs; and soon afterwards in a valley at our right, a
+circle of the Ta'amri tents. In another hour we arrived at a square
+enclosure of very large ancient stones, which was denominated _'Arkoob
+Sahaba_. The breezes on this high land were most refreshing after our
+southern excursion.
+
+Passed _Thekua'_ or Tekua', (Tekoa,) and at some distance forwards, to
+the north-east, some ruins called _Abu'n-jaib_, or perhaps Abu N'jaim.
+
+Then we approached the well-remembered fragrance of the wild herbs on the
+uncultivated hills about Urtas and Bethlehem, redolent of homeward
+associations, and between two and three o'clock were at Jerusalem,
+grateful for special and numerous mercies of Divine Providence.
+
+Jewish friends were much interested in my report of Aaron's tomb on Mount
+Hor, and regarded it as a great achievement to have visited and returned
+from "Joktheel," as they called Petra, in compliance with 2 Kings xiv. 7,
+where King Amaziah restored its more ancient name from _Selah_, (see
+Joshua xv. 38.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In conclusion of this expedition to Petra, I have a few observations to
+make, arising from local peculiarities connected with it.
+
+A. _On the payment of toll_, _or Ghuf'r_, _as it is termed_, _for
+traversing unfrequented districts_.
+
+Of course, this custom could never obtain in a country enjoying the
+benefits of a vigorous central government; but it is, and perhaps always
+has been, common in the far East. In Persia or Tartary, wherever a chief
+is able to lay hold of a tower, and collect around him a band of
+followers, he invariably exacts this tribute from strangers; just as in
+our middle ages of Europe was done by the same class of persons in
+countries where feudal institutions prevailed. The petty barons were the
+shaikhs of their place and period.
+
+But some considerations may serve to show that there is, after all,
+something useful in the practice.
+
+1. In such countries, the payment of this toll exempts the traveller
+from the violence of all other claimants.
+
+2. Those who get the toll, (I speak now of Palestine,) are always ready
+to perform small services in return, which would be assuredly missed if
+omitted, independently of the price paid for hire of camels.
+
+3. If there were a better government existing, the traveller would
+expect that government to provide good roads and bridges, and to
+establish military posts for guarding them. This expense would be
+defrayed from tolls, or some such mode of taxation, and so the fee or
+duty would be only removed from one receiver to another. This is done at
+present, and probably has been for many centuries, at the _Jis'r benat
+Ya'koob_, between Safed and Damascus.
+
+One cannot be surprised at the peasantry of Wadi Moosa exacting a toll
+from travellers on entering the valley of Petra, to see the wonders of
+antiquity which are attracting the attention of the most remote nations;
+remembering, too, the position of the place, viz., in a hollow,
+surrounded by crags and hills, where no Turkish rulers have ever been.
+
+In like manner, we shall only be in a condition to remonstrate on paying
+ghuf'r in the shape of presents to the Adwan beyond Jordan, when we are
+able to find our way to Amman and Jerash without them, or to keep off the
+Beni Sukh'r and 'Anezeh, either by our own right hand or by means of the
+Turks. {339}
+
+Finally, it must be borne in mind that the Turkish government itself pays
+ghuf'r to the Eastern Bedaween for allowing the Hadj pilgrims to pass
+from Damascus to Mecca.
+
+B. _On the Fellahheen_, _or peasants of Wadi Moosa_.
+
+The most experienced travellers that have visited Petra, have remarked
+that these men are of a different race from the Bedaween Arabs around
+them. They are ugly, bad in expression of countenance, and have a
+reputation for cruelty and treachery.
+
+Laborde says, that the Alaween looked upon them "with contempt _and
+fear_." Lord Lindsay says, that Shaikh Hhussain, from 'Akabah, "was _in
+fear_ all the time of being there." Irby and Mangles were told by the
+Jehaleen that these Fellahheen murdered thirty Moslem pilgrims from
+Barbary, the year before their visit.
+
+Dr Wilson stayed among them longer, I believe, than any other European,
+and he did not like them, yet found them gradually improve under civil
+treatment, which always, like some other things,
+
+ "Emollit mores nec sinit esse feros."
+
+He divides them into two classes as cultivators of land. First, Those
+residing in a village called _Eljy_; and, second, Those residing in tents
+under one Abu Zeitoon.
+
+He describes them as a very exclusive people, never intermarrying with
+Arabs, nor burying in common grounds with them; and having a different
+set of personal names among them from those used by Arabs, which names
+greatly resemble those found in the Old Testament Scriptures.
+
+He concludes that they are descendants of the ancient Edomites.
+
+A most remarkable circumstance that he observed, was their calling
+themselves children of Israel, (Beni Israin.) This he regards as a
+feeble traditional reminiscence of their proselytism to the faith of
+Israel by the sword of the Maccabaean conquerors.
+
+For my own part, I distinctly aver that during the altercation upon my
+arrival there, between them and my Jehaleen, I did hear the words
+"children of Israel" used. I had not chosen to take a part in the
+conference, or to remain long at a time among the disputants, but only
+passed occasionally in and out of the tent, and my mind was chiefly
+engrossed with the subject-matter in hand, so that on hearing the words,
+"children of Israel," I thought they were alluding to some history or
+tradition of the Hebrew people. But afterwards, on connecting the fact
+with Dr Wilson's assertion, I cannot but consider it very remarkable.
+
+But the whole subject of these Fellahheen seems to merit closer attention
+from those who have the leisure and opportunity for it.
+
+I know that numerous travellers, including ladies, have been there in
+safety; and it is probable that some of the disputes which have arisen
+were occasioned either through ignorance, or from insolence of the
+dragomans. It would be interesting to compare the accounts of those who
+have suffered annoyances in Petra, so as to ascertain how far the
+Fellahheen were to blame, or whether difficulties are not rather due to
+the Arab tribes who are in the habit of tyrannising over the Fellahheen
+from the outside.
+
+C. _On the 'Arabah and the Dead Sea_.
+
+While on the spot, I had wished to believe in the theory of Leake in
+1822, and afterwards turned almost into poetry by Lord Lindsay,
+notwithstanding the demonstrations of Bertou in 1838, and of the American
+expedition of 1848, namely, that the Jordan formerly flowed the whole
+length from the Anti-Lebanon to the Red Sea, and that the Asphaltite
+Lake, or Dead Sea, is only formed by a stoppage of its stream.
+
+Two facts, however, which militate against this theory, were visible to
+our eyes on this journey.
+
+1. That the valleys south of the Dead Sea all point towards it, and
+incline the slope of their beds in that direction. This was most
+particularly the case with the Wadi el Jaib, where the banks between
+which the torrents had cut a channel became higher, which is equivalent
+to saying that the water fell lower as it passed northwards.
+
+2. That wherever there were trees or shrubs to arrest the currents of
+water, we found that all the rushes, thorns, or reeds carried on by the
+streams, were arrested on the south side of those trees, and there they
+remained in the dry season.
+
+The course of the torrents was therefore from the south, towards the Dead
+Sea.
+
+The best dissertation on the relative levels of lands and seas, bearing
+on this subject, and that which I believe to be exhaustive on the
+subject, till we get more of scientific realities, is contained in vol.
+xviii., part 2, of the Royal Geographical Society's Journal of 1848.
+
+Still, allowing the facts that I myself observed, as well as all the
+scientific calculations in the Journal above referred to, (indeed, making
+use of them,) there seem to remain certain considerations undisposed of,
+in favour of the theory that the Jordan formerly ran into the Red Sea.
+
+1. The 'Arabah, south of the Dead Sea, and the Ghor on its north, are
+one continued hollow between the same parallel lines of hills; and
+Robinson has shown that by the Arabian geographers they are both called
+the 'Arabah; the native Arabs also still call by the name of Ghuwair, or
+little Ghor, a space at the southern extremity of the water.
+
+In the Hebrew Bible also, the northern part is called 'Arabah, as in
+Joshua iii. 16, where it is said the Israelites crossed "the sea of
+'Arabah, namely, the sea of salt." In 2 Sam. iv. 7, the murderers of
+Ish-bosheth went all night from Mahanaim to Hebron along the 'Arabah,
+this was clearly not south of the Dead Sea. Josh. xii. i., "From the
+river Arnon to mount Hermon, and all the 'Arabah on the east," going
+northwards; this is explained in the 3d verse as "the 'Arabah, (beginning
+at Hermon,) unto the sea of Chinnereth, (sea of Tiberias) on the east,
+and unto the sea of the 'Arabah, the sea of salt, on the east." The same
+words occur also in Deut. iii. 17, and iv. 49. That the present Arab
+'Arabah on the south of the Dead Sea bore the same name, may be seen in
+Deut. ii. 8, where Moses speaks of "the way of the ''Arabah' from Elath,
+and from Ezion-gaber."
+
+Therefore, according to Hebrew and Arabic authorities, the 'Arabah and
+Ghor form one line from the Lebanon to the Red Sea.
+
+2. The Book of Job takes cognisance of the river Jordan, and describes
+river scenery in the land of Edom, _i.e._, south of the Dead Sea.
+
+3. No lake existed in that locality before the catastrophe of Sodom,
+although a river may have traversed it. This I deduce from the march of
+the army of Chedorlaomer, shortly previous to that catastrophe, (Gen.
+xiv.) After the taking of Seir and Paran, he crossed the valley to
+Hazezon-Tamar, which is Engedi, (2 Chron. xx. 2,) and the confederates
+were met by the kings of the plain in the vale of Siddim. And I have
+heretofore shown that this is utterly impossible to be done with the
+present lake in the way. The words, therefore, of Gen. xiv. 3 obviously
+signify, as given in the Latin Vulgate and in Luther's German, "the vale
+of Siddim, which is _now_ the Salt Sea."
+
+The inference from all these points is, that between the time of
+Chedorlaomer and Moses, some tellural convulsions took place which
+impeded the course of the river towards the Dead Sea, and thereby formed
+the present lake. There is no mention of a river in the lower 'Arabah
+during the wanderings of the Israelites under the leading of Moses.
+
+It is another matter to discuss whether the overthrow of the guilty
+cities of Sodom and Gomorrah is connected with that convulsion of nature,
+with or without miracle, which formed the depression of the great valley;
+yet it is remarkable that the deepest part of the lake is at the spot
+which tradition has always pointed out for the site of those cities, and
+nigh to the salt mountain, which still bears the name of Sodom.
+
+To this spot the slopes both ways tend, and there they meet. Calculating
+the whole line of depression, as Petermann does, at 190 miles, the slope
+from the north, _i.e._, from the "Bridge of the daughters of Jacob," near
+Safed, is comparatively gradual for 140 miles; and that from the south,
+_i.e._, from the elevation in the southern 'Arabah, where the level meets
+again from the north, is more precipitous for 50 miles. Action and
+reaction being equal in natural effects, the rapid declivity in the
+shorter distance is equal to the more gradual declivity in the longer
+measure.
+
+But that centre of _seismal action_ is taken for the site of Sodom--hence
+the site of the destruction of Sodom and the starting point of earthquake
+are the same. The record of the destruction is, therefore, the record of
+some dreadful convulsion capable of stopping the Jordan, so as to form a
+lake there; and the only _adequate_ cause in nature assigned by
+geologists for such a depression, is earthquake accompanied by volcanic
+action.
+
+While on the subject of possible depression of the Jordan bed, I may
+mention an indication which I have often pointed out to others, namely,
+the remarkable ledge traceable along the face of the Moab mountains at a
+considerable height, as seen from the neighbourhood of Jerusalem. It is
+distinctly marked, and forms a curious record of some natural change
+having occurred on a large scale.
+
+Dr Wilson, in his "Lands of the Bible," contends that an earthquake
+capable of depressing a straight line of the length of the Ghor and
+'Arabah, must have convulsed all the lands of Canaan, Moab, Ammon, Edom,
+and the Desert, with their inhabitants; but that no such convulsion took
+place, for Zoar on the east, and Hebron on the west, are known to have
+remained.
+
+Does it, however, necessarily follow that seismal devastation spreads in
+_every_ direction? On the contrary, earthquakes act in oscillations from
+east to west, returning from west to east; or from north to south,
+returning from south to north: but not in the manner of a flood of water
+spreading in every direction at once. If so, a mighty earthquake,
+extending along the whole Ghor and 'Arabah, would be exactly such a cause
+as might spare a city on each side of its progress.
+
+The whole subject still admits of much careful investigation on sundry
+points; but, meanwhile, until geologists have given us more data from
+which to form conclusions, I must take my stand upon the distinct record
+of Genesis; that what was the Salt Sea when Moses wrote, had been the
+Vale or Plain (Emek) of Siddim, containing cities with kings, who fought
+and were subdued by Chedarlaomer upon that plain in the time of Abraham;
+and that those cities were the same as those that were penally destroyed
+soon after.
+
+
+
+
+XII. ACROSS THE LEBANON.
+
+
+I have traversed the Lebanon eastwards and southwards of Bayroot several
+times; once in 1849; again in 1853; and also in 1855: but it seems
+advisable to narrate the incidents separately, and although on two
+occasions I passed over nearly the same ground, it will be curious to
+compare or contrast those journeys, inasmuch as the circumstances were
+dissimilar.
+
+PART I.--1849.
+
+The course of the first journey was as follows:--From Sidon on the
+sea-coast we gradually climbed the Lebanon range eastward; then
+descending by tortuous roads, and turning somewhat to the south, we
+crossed to where Hhasbeya lies at the foot of Anti-Lebanon; after which
+we followed the general direction of the streams southwards, and uniting
+above the waters of Merom form the Jordan. Holding on at the western
+side of the plain we arrived at Safed in Galilee.
+
+_Oct._ 25_th_.--We left Saida for Joon, which had been for many years the
+residence of Lady Hester Stanhope, and the vice-consul furnished us with
+a kawwas who had been a servant of her ladyship.
+
+Turned off from the high road of the sea-coast, at the river Awali, which
+is believed by the native Christians to have been the limit of our Lord's
+ministry on earth, when it is said that He went into "the coasts of Tyre
+and Sidon."
+
+We outflanked the rich scene of fruit plantations belonging to the town,
+but picked blackberries, hips, and haws, from their hedges alongside the
+runnels of water which supply those gardens.
+
+On its approach to the sea the river Awali has two separate channels,
+along either of which it flows in different years, according to the
+volume of water at the beginning of winter, but never in both at the same
+time.
+
+Through lovely scenery we gradually mounted higher and higher, till
+arriving at the village of _Joon_, where rooms were to be prepared for us
+in a native house.
+
+The nature of the district thereabout is that of numerous round hills,
+separated from each other by deep valleys. On one of these hills stands
+the village, on another the large "Convent of the Saviour," (Dair el
+Mokhallis,) which is the central station of the Greek Catholic sect;
+_i.e._, of those who, while retaining their Oriental rites and calendar,
+acknowledge the supremacy of the Pope of Rome; and on the third hill is
+Lady Hester Stanhope's house, the three forming the points of nearly an
+equilateral triangle. The village commands a fine prospect of the
+Mediterranean.
+
+Without dismounting, we proceeded at once to the desolate house of Lady
+Hester, but, owing to the precipitous nature of the ground, it takes some
+considerable time to reach it, yet voices are easily distinguishable from
+one place to the other.
+
+The house presents a melancholy spectacle, though, from the purity of the
+atmosphere, the walls appear clean and almost new; no roof remains, all
+timbers having been purposely removed immediately after her death,
+according to legal right of the proprietor from whom the place was
+rented. There has been an extensive suite of rooms, not adapted to
+stateliness, but meant for the reception of guests; these are all of
+small dimensions, and were mostly built by Lady Hester. We were told
+that she kept an establishment of a hundred servants, forty of whom were
+women. For the last five years she never travelled beyond the garden,
+and during that time the renowned two mares, Leilah and Lulu, (the former
+of which was the one with the hollow back, reserved for entering
+Jerusalem together with the new Messiah,) became so broken in health for
+want of exercise, that when Lady Hester died, they were sold with
+difficulty for 300 piastres (less than three pounds) each.
+
+The stables still remaining were very extensive.
+
+The gardens and terraces must have been beautiful, for we were told they
+were carefully kept and arranged. We saw large myrtle shrubs in
+abundance, besides fruit trees now utterly neglected--
+
+ "And still where many a garden flower grows wild,"
+
+for there were red roses blooming without the least care or notice.
+
+No one now resides on any part of that hill.
+
+The eccentric lady is buried in the garden, and in the same grave (we
+were assured) with Captain, son of General Loustaneau, a crazy French
+enthusiast who lived for above twenty-five years a pensioner on her
+bounty. The grave is covered with this simple stone monument, of a
+pattern very common in the country.
+
+ [Picture: Tomb of Lady Hester Stanhope]
+
+At the distance of a few yards is the monument over a former Moslem
+proprietor of the house.
+
+Lady Hester died in June 1839, lonely and miserable, and so ended her
+wild dreams and fancied importance. During her long residence there she
+had meddled in local dissensions, patronising the Jonblats of Mokhtarah
+against the Ameer Besheer and the Egyptian invaders; she kept spies in
+the principal towns, as Acre and Saida, and had even supplied ammunition
+to the citadel of Acre for the Turks, but did not live to see the
+Egyptians ousted from the country.
+
+There was good deal of exaggeration afloat at the time respecting her and
+some of her habits of life, though scarcely more extraordinary than the
+reality of other matters, as we are now able to judge of them; but at
+that period Syria and the Lebanon were very little understood in Europe,
+_i.e._, from 1823 to 1839. She was not so utterly removed from human
+society as is often supposed. She was not perched like an eagle on an
+inaccessible mountain, for there are villages near, besides the great
+Convent of Mokhallis, and she had constant communication with Saida for
+money and provisions.
+
+The view around is indeed stern and cheerless in character, devoid of
+romantic accessories, without the rippling streams, the pines or the
+poplars of either Mokhtarah or Beteddeen; her hill like its neighbours
+was a lump of stone, with some scanty cultivation in the valley below,
+very little of this, and her small garden attached to the dwelling.
+
+Before leaving this subject, I may as well state with respect to the
+common belief of Lady Hester being crowned Queen of Palmyra by the desert
+Arabs, that from information which I consider reliable this is all a
+mistake, or as it was expressed to me, a "French enthusiasm," the truth
+being that in consequence of her lavish largesses among the wild people,
+they expressed their joy by acclamations in which they compared her to
+the "Queen of Sheba" who had come among them; and then by her flatterers,
+or those who were unskilled in the language, the term "Melekeh" (Queen)
+was interpreted as above: and as for a coronation the Arab tribes have no
+such a custom; the greatest chiefs, nay, even the kings of the settled
+Arabs, such as Mohammed and his successors, have never received such an
+inauguration.
+
+Returning to the village, we found our lodging provided in the house of a
+Greek Catholic family; unlike to our south country houses, it was built
+with ponderous rafters of timber in the roofs, and these rafters and
+planks between them are painted in coloured patterns. It was a cheerful
+scene as the family sat inquiring about Jerusalem, or chatting otherwise
+on the mustabeh (a wide stone seat) outside, with the effulgence of the
+setting sun reflected on the convent before us, and then the twilight
+pink and violet tints upon the mountain-range behind.
+
+Then again in the early morning, how delicious were the air and the
+scenery of the mountains!
+
+ "Yet sluggards deem it but a foolish chase
+ And marvel men should quit their easy chair,
+ The weary mile and long, long league to trace;
+ Oh, there is sweetness in the mountain air,
+ And life that bloated ease may never hope to share!"
+
+While mounting for the departure, our host pressing his hospitality upon
+us, adjured us in these words:--"May your religion be your adversary if
+ever you pass my door without entering it."
+
+Arriving at Dair el Mokhallis we were there also received with
+cordiality. In the church a service was going on, gabbled over by a
+priest arrayed in white silk and gold, waving incense before the altar,
+his congregation consisting of one person, a sort of sacristan or beadle.
+There were some good pictures on the walls, but others together with them
+of degraded rank as works of art.
+
+On being invited to visit the President, we found him a jovial, handsome
+man of middle age, reclining on cushions at a large window with wide
+views of the sea and the mountains before him, besides _Dar Joon_, Lady
+Hester's house.
+
+This establishment is not only the largest convent and church of the
+Greek Catholic sect, but also a college for clerical education; their
+most celebrated clergy have been trained there. The inmates at this
+time, of all employments, were 110 in number, exclusive of servants.
+Those whom we saw appeared very well fed, and we were not a little
+surprised to find so many women servants employed within the walls.
+
+A nunnery of the same rite, and rules of St Basil, with forty persons
+under vows, is a good building at half-a-mile distance, between which and
+the male institution a very excellent road has been made, notwithstanding
+the hilly nature of the ground; other roads are being improved, and all
+the contiguous grounds are in a state of the highest cultivation.
+
+As we proceeded on our journey, the scenery became more and more
+romantic, till on a sudden turn of the road a wondrous picture of nature
+was opened before us, consisting of mountains, including our own, all
+sloping down into a plain in which was a river, and a village with its
+orchards and poplars; cascades rolled down the furrowed sides of these
+hills, their bounding and dashing were evident to the sight, but no sound
+audible owing to their distance; it was a fairy scene, or like a
+beautiful dream.
+
+In the descent we passed a Maronite priest riding, attended by a guide on
+foot; the former was greeted by our party with his title of Abuna, a
+novelty to us Jerusalemites.
+
+We forded the river _Barook_, a tributary to the Awali, in front of the
+above-mentioned village, which is _Bisrah_, amid tall poplars quivering
+in the breeze, for their foliage had stalks long like the aspen.
+
+Our luggage having gone on during the visit to the convent, we could get
+no tidings of it and our people, but a guide was procured for part of the
+day's journey before us; and we betook ourselves to a hill over which
+was, what we were assured, the only road to Hhasbeya. A road so steep
+and thickly entangled by bushes and trees, that we inquired of every
+passer-by in his turn whether we could possibly be upon the _Sultaneh_,
+or high road. At first through an olive plantation, then among evergreen
+oak, and higher still the fragrant mountain pines. The zigzags of the
+road were necessarily so short and abrupt, that at each turn we had to
+peer up perpendicularly, guessing which way the next twist would go.
+Then still higher, towards the frowning sombre cliffs that seemed to
+touch the brilliant blue sky, the arbutus glowed with their scarlet
+berries, and the pine-trees became more tall, straight, and numerous. No
+wonder that the Assyrian king, when he boasted of being able to cut down
+the cedars of Lebanon, included also "the choice fir-trees thereof," (2
+Kings xix. 23.)
+
+Near what seemed to be the climax, we unexpectedly reached a village,
+named _'Azoor_, where a school of boys hummed their lessons in the open
+air on the shady side of a house; and near them a plank of wood was
+suspended, such as serves for a church-bell in parts of the country where
+the Moslems predominate, and bells are not tolerated. Here in the
+Lebanon every village and convent may have its bells; and they generally
+have them, for the Mohammedans scarcely exist throughout "the mountain,"
+as the whole range is popularly termed from Tarabulus to Saida.
+
+The higher we ascended, the more we obtained of a brisk breeze playing
+and sighing musically among the noble pines, and the ground was clothed
+with heather and fragrant herbs. Still onwards, "excelsior," the pines
+were more straight and lofty; there were patches of wild myrtle on the
+ground, some in white blossom; and we looked down upon the flat roofs of
+villages below, an appearance so strange to us after the round domes of
+the south country.
+
+About noon we overtook the luggage, and the servant-boy of the muleteer
+swore that his head had turned gray since we left him, four hours ago, by
+reason of the bodily labour and anguish of mind that he had suffered on
+so fearful a road. He was incessantly calling upon God by epithets out
+of the Koran, as "O thou Father of bounty!" "O thou knower of former
+things!" mingled with curses hurled at the mule, or prayers that her back
+might be strengthened: being a Jerusalemite, he had not been accustomed
+to travelling of that description. This youth was nicknamed by his
+fellows as _Abu Tabanjah_, "the father of a pistol," from his carrying a
+single pistol in his girdle: it being unusual for persons in his
+employment to carry any belligerent weapons.
+
+Next came the descent to _Jezzeen_, over a slippery road, with purple
+crocuses in blossom at intervals.
+
+Jezzeen is romantically situated among broken rocks, with a stream of
+water, called the _Zaid_, bordered by a profusion of sycamore, (_i.e._,
+what is called so in England, a variety of the plane-tree,) walnut, and
+aspen trees. We halted beneath a spreading walnut-tree, whose leaves had
+already begun to change colour.
+
+The inhabitants are Greek Catholic, Maronite, and a few Mutawaleh. Here
+we had to get another guide for an hour or two forwards--a task not
+easily accomplished--and he assured us that the road before us was far
+worse than that we had already traversed--he would on no account go the
+whole day's journey with us.
+
+Forwards.--Thin white clouds were resting upon the peaks high above us,
+the vine terraces and poplars were succeeded by whitish-gray rocks and
+olive-trees, till we issued upon a comparative level of confused chaos of
+rugged rocks pitched and hurled about in the most fantastic combinations,
+rendering the road almost impassable for our cattle. Darker clouds than
+before were around, but not immediately over us; and the atmosphere was
+hot like the breath of a furnace, with now and then a momentary gush of
+piercing cold coming between sharp peaks and round summits.
+
+In little more than two hours from Jezzeen we were at _Cuf'r Hooneh_, a
+pretty village surrounded by sycamore, walnut, poplar, and vineyards,
+with numerous running streams of water, bordered by oleanders in rosy
+blossom, very tall--girt in with romantic precipices, and rooks were
+cawing overhead. A spring of water issuing from the ground, of which we
+drank, was cold like ice.
+
+After this the road improved, the rocks were more friable, and were often
+streaked with pink and yellow colour; indicating, I suppose, the
+existence of copper mineral, (see Deut. viii. 9,) "out of whose hills
+thou mayest dig brass," _i.e._, copper.
+
+All about this region fossil shells were numerous.
+
+In half an hour we attained our greatest elevation, with a long line of
+Mediterranean visible in the west. The Anti-Lebanon stretched before us
+on the east, and among the hills to the south our guide declared he could
+distinguish Safed. Here he left us, returning homewards.
+
+Upon this eminence the air was reviving, and as the fervour of the sun
+abated, our horses recovered energy. Thence we descended to a green
+level space as void of inhabitants as the wild scenes that we had
+traversed; and from that to a stage lower, over a very long fertile plain
+running southwards, where we fell in with two or three of our fellow
+human beings, and over this the wind blew very cold. Forwards into
+another level, a glen of wild verdure, then through chalk fissures and
+red slopes, till in a moment there burst upon our view a prospect beyond
+all power of description in words; Mount Hermon, (Jebel esh Shaikh,) and
+the intervening long plain, also the Litani river on our right, winding
+between tremendous cliffs, and passing the castle of Shukeef towards the
+sea.
+
+That river passing the foot of our mountain, and over which we had
+afterwards to cross, appeared like a narrow ribbon of pale green, so
+silent was it to us, for no sound from that depth could reach up so high;
+to this we had to descend by a precipitous path of zigzags roughly made
+in the face of the hill.
+
+Half way down I first distinguished the rushing sound of the water; a
+flock of goats upon its margin resembled mere black spots, but the bells
+among them became faintly audible.
+
+On reaching the river Litani, (the classic Leontes, and named the
+"Kasimiyeh" when debouching to the sea near Tyre,) we found it to be a
+strong stream, and the dark border, which from a distance had seemed to
+be low bushes, were in truth gigantic and numerous trees; on our way to
+the bridge, along the river side for some distance, were parapets erected
+for the safety of travellers and flocks of cattle.
+
+It was after sunset, but we rested awhile to stretch our limbs after the
+cramp brought on by the steep and long descent.
+
+The moon was shining as we crossed the bridge, and its light was broken
+in the heady dashing of the stream; the land swelled gradually upwards as
+we proceeded S.-E. till we passed a ridge and turned N.-E. to the village
+of _Cocaba_ on the great plain, which has the river _Hhasbani_ flowing
+through it, from which village we got directions how to find Hhasbeya.
+Thoroughly tired as we all were, the rest of the way was most wearisome,
+though not so much so as it would have been in the heat of day, after so
+many hours on horseback. The night was bright and clear.
+
+Reached _Hhasbeya_ in thirteen hours from Joon in the morning.
+
+The town is perched up in the line of the Anti-Lebanon, at the end of a
+_cul-de-sac_ running inwards from the plain, and stands at an elevation
+of more than 2000 feet above the sea-level, though this is scarcely
+apparent by reason of the lofty mountains everywhere around, especially
+Hermon, under the shadow of which Hhasbeya is nestled. This was the
+cleanest town and the one in best repair at that time that I had hitherto
+seen in Palestine or Syria; what it may be since the calamities of 1860,
+I know not. The majority of the inhabitants were Christian, with a good
+many Druses, and a few Moslems and Jews.
+
+We had a most friendly reception from the native Protestants, and from
+the governor, Ameer Saad ed Deen Shehab and his family.
+
+In the afternoon of the next day we passed on to _Banias_. How different
+a matter is travelling in that country from merely drawing a pencil line
+across the map from one point to another, and measuring the distance of
+that line. By such a method of making a journey it is but a trifle of
+thirty miles from Soor to Hhasbeya, and less than a hundred and twenty
+from the latter to Jerusalem. (I mention these places because they
+belong to the journey here described,) and it may be said by stay-at-home
+travellers in a carpeted saloon, at a mahogany table, that these
+distances can be covered on horseback in a determinate number of hours,
+allowing so many miles to an hour; but Palestine is not so smooth as the
+greater part of England, and the ways (one cannot well call them roads)
+are not drawn in direct lines; climate also counts for something; and
+unforeseen incidents will occur to mar the plans of even those habituated
+to the country.
+
+To-day's progress, however, was tolerably plain, though not level, and it
+occupied six or seven hours.
+
+In an hour and a half we caught first sight of the lake _Hhooleh_ (the
+Semechonitis of Josephus) in the due south, and at this point we entered
+upon a district strewn with volcanic basalt, in dark-brown pieces, porous
+and rounded at the edges. A peasant directed us forwards to the _Tell el
+Kadi_, which at length we reached--an eminence rising from the plain, out
+of which issues a river all formed at once, gushing from the hill over a
+stony bed. This is one of the heads of the Jordan, and the place is that
+of _Dan_, which Josephus erroneously supposed to supply the last syllable
+of that river's name.
+
+But beyond all question it is the site of the city Dan known throughout
+Scripture history for many ages, and under a variety of circumstances:
+among the rest for the forcible invasion of it by a number of colonists
+from the tribe of Dan in the south of Palestine, where they found their
+allotted district too strait for their possession; and being established
+here, they gave the city the name of their patriarchal chief.
+
+That history of their migration reads with peculiar interest and force on
+the spot, and strange to say that Tell el Kadi seems to retain their
+tribal name, inasmuch as _Tell_ signifies "a hill," and Kadi is but the
+Arabic for the Hebrew word _Dan_, "a judge," (Gen. xlix. 16.) It is not
+however common, very much the contrary, for names to be transmitted in
+this way according to their signification through the lapse of ages--they
+are usually perpetuated through their orthography.
+
+The Amorite or Sidonian people living here "at ease" were worshippers of
+Baal and Ashtaroth, or Astarte. Suddenly they were assailed by the
+Danites, who "smote them with the edge of the sword, and burned their
+city with fire;" and the newcomers set up "the graven image, and the
+molten image, and the teraphim," which they had stolen on their way
+thither over Mount Ephraim, appointing the young Levite, the owner of the
+images, to be priest of their idolatry. In later times it was a station
+of the golden calf of Jeroboam's institution, that is to say, the revived
+emblem of Baal, going back to the practice of the Leshemites; and there
+is yet an idea prevailing in our days that the Druses of the
+neighbourhood retain that emblem or idol among them--a remarkable
+instance of the perpetuity of idolatry, and one form of idolatry under
+different names, modified only by circumstances in the same locality. I
+forbear to pursue further the reflections that can be evolved at large
+from that idea, as they might bring us into other countries than Syria or
+Palestine.
+
+Riding our horses up the full stream for a short distance, we forded it,
+and entered into the shade upon the hill, where we reposed under a large
+evergreen oak, decorated with rags as votive offerings to an Arab shaikh
+buried beside it. Near this tree is an extraordinary jungle of brambles
+and gigantic flowering shrubs, through which it seemed impossible to
+penetrate, but out of which tangled mass the copious stream issues, as
+also a minor current, which after some deflection meets the other, and
+forms one stream on leaving the hill, and this, when joined by the waters
+of Banias, to which we were now going, combines into one river, Jordan,
+then enters and passes through the Lake Hhooleh. For the present I omit
+the consideration of the Hhasbani and its spring, which not only helps to
+form the Jordan, but actually commences further beyond the springs of Dan
+and Banias.
+
+It wanted about an hour to sunset when we turned in eastwards, round the
+foot of old Hermon, for _Banias_, the Caesarea Philippi of the New
+Testament, whose hill and ancient castle appeared not far distant.
+
+We observed numerous small runlets of water flowing from the north and
+east towards the Tell el Kadi, one especially of nearly four feet wide.
+Yet with all these blessings the district is mostly neglected, and
+abandoned to a sparse population of wretched Ghawarineh Arabs and their
+buffaloes.
+
+We passed through neb'k trees and stunted oaks, some karoobah trees and
+sumach about twenty feet high, with their red berries, besides myrtles
+almost as lofty. Signs of the existence of inhabitants appeared in
+patches of cultivation and an occasional flock of goats. Trees became
+closer together than at first, and at length Banias stood in face of us,
+touching the foot of Hermon, which formed a magnificent background of
+receding heights, but its summit withdrawn from view at that position.
+An ancient castle crowns a high peak rising above the village, and which
+for grandeur of situation and noble aspect is unsurpassed by any ruin
+that I have seen in Syria. Yet how small was all this in comparison with
+the mighty mass at its back! I regret the having been unable to examine
+this remarkable fortress, the modern name of which is the _Kula'at es
+Subeibeh_.
+
+The halt was in an olive plantation, and while the tents were being
+raised, I rode forwards to the other celebrated source of the Jordan,
+namely, that issuing from the cavern, and drank of its water, but first
+had to swim the horse through a strong current.
+
+How beautiful was the evening scene of rocks, trees, blue mountains, and
+the extended plain, with the thread of the Hhasbani winding through it on
+the western side! There were also herds of cattle coming in, and a
+shepherd boy playing his rural pipes. What a scene for Poussin! I
+offered to buy the Pandean pipe (of several reeds joined laterally) from
+the boy, wishing to have it for my own, obtained at the mythological home
+of Pan himself--
+
+ "Pan primus calamos cera conjungere plures
+ Instituit,"
+
+but the lad asked an exorbitant price for it, and strode away.
+
+Then rushed up to make use of the fading twilight for catching at least a
+glimpse of the Greek inscriptions and Pan's grotto, from which the river
+issues, not in infantile weakness, but boldly striking an echo against
+the sides of the natural cavity.
+
+"Great Pan is dead!" as the superstitious peasants of Thessaly said, when
+they imagined they heard the echo formed into words, sixteen hundred
+years ago; and while musing on the "rise and fall" of the classic
+idolatry, a bat flew past me out of the grotto, but I saw no moles for
+the old idols to be thrown to, (Isa. ii. 20.)
+
+Pan was the mythological deity presiding over caverns, woods, and
+streams, from whom this place received its denomination of Panion or
+Paneas in Greek, or Panium in Latin; and the word Paneas becomes Banias
+in Arabic, as it is at this day. Here costly temples and altars were
+raised, and Herod built a temple in honour of Augustus Caesar. These
+edifices have fallen to the ground, the idols have been demolished by
+early Christians, Jews, and Mohammedans; but niches with pedestals, on
+which the dumb figures stood, accompanied by inscriptions, still remain
+in attestation of written history.
+
+Of these inscriptions I took copies next morning, as others have also
+done, but with special pains to insure accuracy. Every one of them has
+the name of the god Pan; two of them have the name of Agrippa; one is set
+up by a priest of Pan, "for the welfare of the lords the emperors;" and
+another is dedicated by Agrippa, son of Marcus, who had been for eight
+years Archon, and had been admonished in a dream by the god Pan. The
+breaks in the words caused by defaced letters make it difficult to get
+more signification out of them.
+
+Some further remarks on the same, as well as copies of the tablets, will
+be found in appendix B.
+
+In a field near our tents, were two prostrate granite columns of about
+fifteen feet length of shaft by two in diameter; besides a piece of
+column of common stone three feet in diameter. In another part of the
+same field was a square capital of pilaster with some plain moulding, and
+an abundance of squared stones of two to three feet dimensions; such,
+however, are to be seen scattered in every direction around.
+
+A small ancient bridge crosses one of the several streams branching away
+from the main course, and all running between steep banks. By this
+bridge I approached a noble gateway, leading into a very large square
+fortress, with strong ancient towers at each corner. The arches of both
+gate and bridge were Roman; parts of the walls remained in their regular
+courses, and numerous large rabbeted stones were rolled down in disorder
+upon the slope and into a military trench. But the whole scene, whether
+of rugged rocks or of the work of man, was fringed and clothed with
+brambles, ferns, evergreens, and the rosy oleander.
+
+The principal charm, however, belongs to the grotto with the river which
+it discharges--the site of which may be described as a semicircular
+termination of a valley on a natural platform half way up a cliff--the
+water tumbles down in short cascades for some distance; the grotto inside
+is untouched by chisel squarings or embellishment, just as Juvenal wished
+the grot of AEgeria to be.
+
+All this is particularly romantic, but a more exalted interest is
+attached to the town and vicinity of Banias from its being a certainly
+known station of our Redeemer's journeys--He who in all His travels "went
+about doing good"--but, inasmuch as some records of His blessed footsteps
+are connected with incidents of higher importance than others, this one
+rises into transcendant value, as being the place where His eternal
+divinity was distinctly enunciated.
+
+At that very time the temple of Augustus, erected by Herod, was in its
+freshest beauty; the votive inscriptions with the name of Agrippa were
+newly chiselled; and the priests of Pan were celebrating sacrifices and
+incense, together with rustic offerings, upon his altar; the worship,
+too, of Baal was still in existence, under some modifications, upon the
+mountain overhead. At such a place, and under such circumstances, was
+the Church universal promised to be founded on the rock of faith to which
+Peter had given utterance.
+
+It may be here observed that at that period this Caesarea Philippi was
+not a secluded spot, as commentators generally make it, because Banias is
+so now; but the town was one of notoriety, adorned, as we have just seen,
+with expensive public edifices.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On returning to the tents, the shaikh of the village came, attended by
+some of his relatives belonging to Hhasbeya, begging for some quinine
+medicine: I gave him eight of my twelve remaining pills. On the adjacent
+plain there must needs be fever and ague; in fact, so unwilling was I on
+account of malaria to remain longer at Banias, that we resumed our
+travelling by night.
+
+At three o'clock, A.M., we were mounted--there was a little rain at the
+time, and clouds that threatened more of it obscured the setting moon;
+there was lightning also in the same direction. I even altered my plan
+of going on to "the bridge of the daughters of Jacob," (the thoroughfare
+between Safed and Damascus,) in order to escape from the plain as quickly
+as possible. For this purpose we turned westwards, and had to struggle
+through marshes and rough ground by starlight and lightning. Most
+unwisely we had neglected to take a meal before starting, not expecting
+the district to be so plashy and unwholesome as it proved to be. The
+plain, north of the Lake Hhooleh, is traversed by innumerable channels of
+water, among which rice is grown, of which I gathered a handful as a
+trophy to exhibit in Jerusalem. And there were lines of tents of the
+poor Ghawarineh Arabs upon dry ground, besides small scaffolds standing
+in the rice marshes, from which elevations the people watch the crops and
+fire upon wild beasts that come to injure or devour the crops; dogs
+barked as we passed, and fires were visible in several directions.
+
+Arriving at the bridge of _El Ghujar_, my companion and I both felt sick,
+and had to dismount and rest for a time.
+
+Our guide's account of the river differed from that given in Robinson;
+instead of the stream being the Hhasbani and the bridge named El Ghujar,
+he averred that the river is El Ghujar, and that it rises out of the
+ground like the waters of Banias and of Tell el Kadi. Perhaps this may
+account for Porter more recently placing the bridge El Ghujar in a
+different situation, much farther north. The circumstance is not without
+value in inquiries as to the collective formation of the Jordan.
+
+As daylight broke we could see herds of buffaloes among the marshes, or
+swimming in the water with only their heads raised above the surface; the
+village of _Khalsah_ was half way up the hill-side.
+
+From this point the road was level, dry, and comfortable, running due
+southwards along the western margin of the plain, but with streams
+occasionally crossing it, rushing from the hills towards the lake.
+
+Near _'Ain el Mellahhah_ two Arabs rode up to us and planted their spears
+in the ground near our horses heads as a warning to stop, and I suppose
+to pay ghuf'r. I kept on, leaving the kawwas to parley with them.
+
+Not far from the fountain we rested under a terebinth tree (not a
+favourable specimen) upon a rising ground; beneath us, but at a short
+distance, the strong stream turns a mill, passing through a house, and
+escapes to the plain.
+
+The Arabs met us again, and said they were looking for a horse that was
+lost, and we saw no more of them.
+
+In another hour my companion was taken with a strong fit of ague, which
+urged us the more to press onward for Safed. From the hills, as we rose
+higher and higher, the Lake Hhooleh was perceived to be, above one-third
+of it, choked up with weeds and rushes. Old Hermon showed himself in
+surpassing grandeur; not a confused mass--as he does from the plain
+looking upwards from close beneath him--but as one grand "monarch of
+mountains."
+
+ "On a throne of rocks, with a robe of clouds,
+ And a diadem of snow."
+
+The sun was hot and the hills chalky over which we passed. In one place
+by our wayside, and at considerable elevation, I found squared masonry
+stones and traces of houses, with fragments of columns.
+
+A poor Arab peasant, driving an ass laden with a wooden box, was groaning
+with pain, and implored us for a draught of water, but I fear that our
+people had neglected to bring any with them, as they expected to be so
+soon in Safed.
+
+Rested under the shade of some large stones, and sent on a message before
+us to the town. In quarter of an hour, however, some peals of thunder
+roused us to pursue the journey; the strong wind that arose at the same
+time was not good for ague patients. Across the great plain as we looked
+back was a broad faint piece of rainbow, and the huge mountain, mantled
+with clouds about his shoulders, but bright below, appeared peculiarly
+fantastic, with flickering shadows of clouds chasing over his sunny
+sides.
+
+On the outskirts of Safed we found, as customary at that season,
+(Bairam,) the newly white-washed graves of the Moslems, adorned with
+bunches of myrtle.
+
+At Safed we lodged in the house of a Russo-British Jew, and letters from
+Jerusalem that had awaited us came safe to hand, after which followed the
+necessary reception of visitors, very troublesome to weary and exhausted
+travellers, and at last a supper which had been long in preparing--at
+least so it seemed to be.
+
+PART II.
+
+This, like the journey last described, of six years before, was portion
+of a much longer tour, but I omit all that cannot come under the
+designation of a Byeway in Palestine. The two routes were very similar
+to each other, with the exception of the passage from Banias to Safed.
+
+Starting from Saida, and trending south-eastwards towards Hhasbeya, we
+climbed the mountains, which here rise almost from the sea-shore, and
+crossed romantic passes of rugged eminences and deeply cleft ravines.
+
+From Hhasbeya the line was due south to Banias, thence westward by Tell
+el Kadi, and Hhuneen, and Tibneen, the capital of the Belad Besharah,
+thus almost reaching once more the plain of Phoenicia on its eastern
+verge; next by the antiquities of Kadesh Naphtali southwards to Safed;
+and homewards to Jerusalem, but this latter route is not to be described,
+for the reason given above.
+
+I was accompanied by my niece and another lady, a settled resident of
+Jerusalem. The first object after quitting Saida was to visit Joon, and
+to show my companions the residence of Lady Hester Stanhope in years gone
+by. This we reached just before sunset, on the 2d of October 1855.
+
+The tomb was found much dilapidated; in 1853 it was no longer in so good
+a condition as it had been in 1849, but it was now even worse, and the
+whole spectacle of house, stables, and gardens, was melancholy in the
+extreme: the deprivation of roofs gives a peculiar aspect of desolation
+to any abandoned dwelling, especially when the gardens have still their
+cultivable flowers remaining, but running riot within their marked-out
+beds; these had now been sixteen years neglected, yet the roses and
+myrtle only required pruning.
+
+We proceeded to the convent, the road was stony, and we had to find the
+way by twilight and starlight.
+
+At the great door we were received by the new president, and several of
+the clergy chanting psalms for welcome, and the great bell was ringing at
+the same time. I could not but attribute all this unusual display to the
+operation of political affairs in Europe.
+
+On taking possession of the rooms allotted to us, I received a visit of
+the Greek Catholic Bishop of Saida, he being there on business connected
+with the election of a new patriarch in the place of Maximus; his
+deportment was that of a man of polite society. Our rooms were lighted
+by huge ecclesiastical tapers of wax.
+
+Next morning, after returning the visit of the bishop at the patriarchal
+residence in front of the convent, we breakfasted in the corridor with
+the president and another of the convent clergy. Our ladies then set
+themselves to sketching the view from the window, and talking about
+church singing from notes, whereupon the president sent a deacon to fetch
+his book, and the latter sang for us an anthem, the vociferation and
+screechings of which was so alarming, not to mention the nasal twang,
+that my niece had to run away to indulge in an obstreperous laugh, and
+her senior companion had also much difficulty in refraining from the same
+kind of expression of opinion. The Oriental system of church musical
+notation is very complicated, having no stave-lines or bars, but only
+certain arbitrary marks over the notes to designate high or low, plain or
+flourishing.
+
+Afterwards we inspected the church; then the refectory, and there they
+showed us the desk at which one of the community reads to the rest at
+meal time, triumphantly assuring me that they read the Bible, yet the two
+books I found on the desk were, one the Apocryphal writings, the other
+some homilies of St Basil, under whose rule the convent is constituted.
+
+Next we walked over the roof, and looked at the great bell, and the gong;
+the view, as might be expected, repaid the trouble. After this the
+kitchen and the store-rooms.
+
+On leaving the convent we proceeded to the nunnery in the neighbourhood.
+The ladies visited the inmates, while I remained in an outer apartment
+chatting with a priest, till a curtain was drawn aside, and there,
+behold! were the lady-president and her flock, curious to see a consul,
+and blaming the servants for not having admitted me together with my
+companions.
+
+The latter gave me afterwards as their opinion of the establishment, that
+it very much resembled a comfortable asylum or almshouse for old women.
+
+By this deviation from the high roads we lost the fairy view in that
+neighbourhood which had charmed me so much in 1849.
+
+There is a pleasing novelty to us non-Lebanonites in being in a native
+Christian country. Every hill there has its convent, every convent its
+bells; clergy are continually passing along the road; and on our descent
+of the hill we met a nice old gentleman in clerical dress, with a very
+white beard, holding a crimson umbrella over his head, (this is not
+uncommon in Palestine,) and preceded by a kawwas with a silver-headed
+official staff, also accompanied by a few peasants carrying guns,--this
+was a Maronite bishop.
+
+Crossed the river Barook at _Bisrah_, and ascended the usual highway
+leading to Hhasbeya.
+
+At the village of _Ineer_ we took further directions, and followed over a
+very wild scene to nearly the summit of a mountain called
+_Rummet-er-Room_, (the Ramah, or high-place, of the Greeks,) from which
+the glorious landscape surpasses all power of description--it is one not
+to be forgotten.
+
+At _'Azoor_, a clean pleasant village, the women and girls ran in crowds
+to gaze at my ladies; one of the women shouted "Bon soir" in good French,
+and a man, accompanied by his wife, saluted us in Italian.
+
+Rested in a beautiful wood of pines, though rather late for luncheon, as
+the sun was falling below the western mountains. Rising higher on the
+march we got into rolling misty clouds, and the brilliant effect of
+sunbeams between the hills and clouds could not but be surprising. Our
+clothes, however, got damp and chill.
+
+At _Jezzeen_ our tents were found ready pitched in a grove of noble
+walnut-trees, with the brook _Zaid_ running among them; near alongside
+was a Maronite convent, with a bridge.
+
+The muleteers having left us in the morning, lost their way, and had
+taken the more precipitous road by _Dair Mushmushi_.
+
+Here the people behaved with great hospitality to us.
+
+The night was very cold, and in the morning the water for washing felt
+like ice. The position of our encampment, as perceived by daylight, was
+so low between hills that the sun could not reach us till the day should
+be considerably advanced, yet we were at a very high altitude. Pity that
+we had no aneroid barometer with us to ascertain the amount of our
+elevation above the sea. The poplar-trees and walnut-trees, with fruit
+trees of various kinds, showed we were in a totally different region from
+that of Jerusalem.
+
+Jezzeen is almost exclusively a Christian village, with a Greek Catholic
+church, besides two Maronite churches, and the small convent mentioned
+above.
+
+There were clergy walking about; the people cleanly and well clothed, the
+children modestly behaved, and even when rendering a service, not asking
+for bakhsheesh.
+
+At the time of our leaving, a party of women were wailing over a dead
+body under a tree.
+
+The scene gradually became more romantic; and we soon came to a village,
+if such it may be denominated, where the only dwellings are dispersed
+among vineyards. These vineyards were, at that autumn season, becoming
+of a brown and golden tint.
+
+After traversing the wondrous chaos referred to in the former journey, we
+passed through the villages of _Cuf'r Hooneh_ and _Deheedeh_, adjoining
+each other; where there was abundance of water, and oleander bushes
+fringing the streamlets, with poplar and maple trees.
+
+The rest of the journey had no remarkable difference from that of 1849,
+except that on the brow of the great descent to the plain, between
+Lebanon and the Anti-Lebanon, we rested beneath an olive-tree entwined
+with honeysuckle, enraptured with the magnificence of the scene, which
+would require a Milton to portray it in words, or a Martin in painting.
+I observed that the prevailing tints of the whole great prospect were of
+russet and ochreous colours.
+
+Crossed the bridge, charmed with the beauteous verdure and freshening
+rapid stream of the Leontes river; and when arrived at Hhasbeya, repaired
+to the house of the native Protestant pastor, (Mr John Wartabed,) till a
+house could be prepared for us.
+
+Next morning some deputations of the religious sects of the town called
+upon me; also the Ameer Saad ed Deen and his five sons in rich dresses;
+and lastly, an old Druse who had distinguished himself as a friend of the
+Protestant movement. Among all these, my visit there had a beneficial
+effect upon the existence and progress of native Protestantism. In the
+Lebanon the Druses have always favoured the missionaries, their schools
+and their chapels, while the native Christian communities, under the
+direction of their clergy, have naturally opposed them by every possible
+means of the direst persecution. In proper time and place I may
+hereafter have more to say respecting this visit to Hhasbeya.
+
+In the afternoon, Mr Wartabed and the Khoja Bashi, (representative member
+in the town-council,) of the Protestants, named Naseef er Reis, rode with
+us to the source of the Hhasbani river, which ought to be regarded as the
+origin of the Jordan, even though Banias lower down has been for ages
+recognised as such. We saw the bubbles at their earliest birth issue
+from the ground, and in a few yards this becomes a flowing stream.
+Higher above this spot the bed of a torrent brings down water in rainy
+seasons, adding to the springs of the Hhasbani, but this not being
+permanent, cannot fairly be counted as having part or lot in the Jordan.
+
+The ladies sat down to take sketches, and in haste I pencilled down in
+short-hand--
+
+ O Jordan, dear Jordan, the feelings that throng
+ And press on the heart must awaken to song,
+ When the bubbles from pebbles break forth into view
+ As clear as the spangles of morn's early dew.
+
+ 'Mid the poplars that rising surpass other trees,
+ And twinkle as moved by the scarce mountain breeze,
+ And the wild oleander in rose-colour'd bloom,
+ With trill of the linnet, and shrubs of perfume.
+
+ I have drunk from each source that advances a claim
+ To share with our Jordan its time-honour'd name;
+ Here now at Hhasbeya--and the old site of Dan;
+ Or the gush that escapes from the grotto of Pan.
+
+ How oft on far banks of its tortuous course,
+ In the scenes of repose or of cataract force,
+ Where the bulbul, 'mid willows and tamarisk shades,
+ Still warbles--
+
+"Now, ladies, the horses are ready, and we have further to go," broke in
+upon the muse of Lebanon. The day's work had to be finished, and time
+was short; so we rode away to the bitumen pits in the neighbourhood of
+Cocaba. These are not worked in warm weather, for the people are afraid
+of the possible effects of their gas generated under a hot sun. One of
+the pits is seventy ells, or cubits, deep, and the bitumen is reached
+through a crust of chalky soil. The property is a government monopoly,
+rented by natives, and the business is lazily and irregularly carried on;
+therefore, sometimes the success is greater than at others. We found two
+men living in a tent as guardians of the place, who were very civil to
+us, and permitted us to carry away some specimens. These were all of a
+very soft consistency; but at the bitumen works at four hours north of
+Hhasbeya, the mineral is of a still softer description, almost liquid.
+
+Next morning, the Kadi paid us a visit, accompanied by a merchant of
+Damascus, a correspondent of an English house in India for indigo.
+
+On Sunday we attended divine service at the native Protestant church,
+which the people call the English church, and in virtue thereof have set
+up a bell above it; because, although the mission is carried on by
+American money and under the direction of American agents, the American
+consuls are forbidden by their home-government from taking any steps in
+behalf of their undertakings; and thus, but for the protection given them
+by Mr Wood, British consul of Damascus, and his consular friends at
+Bayroot, the American Mission, with all their schools and
+printing-presses, would, upon all human calculation, have been crushed
+long ago.
+
+In conformity with Oriental usage, the congregation was divided according
+to the sexes. In the old Eastern churches the women are placed in a
+gallery above the men, but here the equality of the sexes was maintained
+by their occupying the same floor, while separated from each other by a
+wall built rather higher than the usual stature of a man; the pulpit
+being equally visible from each division. A large jar of water stood in
+the corner within the door, to which the men repaired occasionally, as
+they felt thirsty. There were no chairs or benches, except such as were
+brought from the house for our party, the congregation were sitting on
+their heels, in which posture they sang the hymns, and remained so during
+the prayer, only covering the face with the right hand; a few men,
+however, stood up.
+
+The singing (Arabic) was good, of course all in unison. The first hymn
+was to the tune of our "Old Hundredth," the chapters read by the minister
+were Ezek. xviii. and Rom. iii., and the text of the sermon was Ps.
+lxxxix. 14, "Justice and judgment are the habitation of thy throne: mercy
+and truth shall go before thy face." The style of language in the sermon
+was that of good Arabic, but of simple, unpretending character, without
+admixture of foreign words or phrases: this was insured by the
+circumstance of the minister being a native of the country, though
+originally belonging to the Armenian Church.
+
+At the afternoon service the chapters read were Num. xxiii. and Heb.
+xiii. The text for the sermon was Heb. xiii. 8, "Jesus Christ, the same
+yesterday, to-day, and for ever," and the hymn was sung to a sweet
+plaintive air of American origin.
+
+Afterwards, that is after sunset, we spent some hours with the pastor's
+family, who all understood English well. Mr Wartabed played the flute to
+the hymn-singing, and his sister's voice was clear as a flageolet. The
+evening was one of comfort and refreshment on both sides; it was one of a
+Sabbath, "a delight, the holy of the Lord, honourable," (Isa. lviii. 13.)
+
+The poor Protestants have not always been in such satisfactory
+circumstances. Their principal man had narratives to relate of chains
+and imprisonment endured in past times from the present Ameer, whose
+policy was now in their favour.
+
+Next morning we left Hhasbeya, and I have not been there since. Little
+could it be foreseen that in five years afterwards one indiscriminate
+butchery would be made of the Ameer and his son, notwithstanding their
+high descent of family and profession of Islam, together with all the
+Christians of whatever sect in the town, driven like sheep within the
+walls of his palace--a deed of treachery unexampled even in that period
+of bloody Turkish treachery. Since then my lady companions are both in
+their graves, the one at Jerusalem, the other at Bayroot, let me rather
+say in "a better country," while I am left alone to narrate this in the
+distant security of England.
+
+On our way towards Banias we met a party of Druses returning from a small
+lake beyond Hhooleh, carrying leeches in earthen jars and cotton bags
+upon asses, they themselves walking. A green hill on our right was said
+to be frequented by wild boars--all the rest of our scenery was bare and
+stony.
+
+A weli was a conspicuous object at some distance to the south, and near
+to the Lake Hhooleh, which the Moslems name after "Judah the son of
+Jacob." One of the Hhasbeya Protestants, who was with us, quoted in his
+native Arabic "The sceptre shall not depart from Judah," etc.
+
+At Tell el Kadi we reposed beneath the great tree near the gush of its
+branch of the Jordan, the same tree (evergreen oak) as afforded us
+shelter in 1849. Both this spring of the river and that of Banias are
+far more striking objects than the humble source of the Hhasbani, into
+which stream they run as affluents, making up the Jordan.
+
+It was a beautiful evening of mellow sunlight, and the scene most
+peaceful at the foot of Hermon.
+
+On nearing Banias we were met by the son of the shaikh of the village,
+sent out to invite us. It was harvest time of the Simsim, (Sesame,) and
+the produce was very abundant; sheaves of it were piled up into large
+stacks, and the length of the plant in stalk exceeded all I had ever seen
+before,--a natural effect of growing on these well-watered plains.
+
+There were also my old friends the myrtles scattered about among the
+other trees.
+
+At Banias our attendants had pitched the tents, to our disgust, near the
+village, and with the stench of carrion not far off; much better places
+might have been taken, but this was selected probably in consequence of
+the invitation from the shaikh. Our short remainder of twilight was
+employed in viewing the inscriptions and the grotto of Pan.
+
+Next morning I was making fresh transcriptions of the Greek votive
+dedications before the sun was up, so as to get them as accurately as
+possible without sunshine and shadows. Then the same once more after
+breakfast, with the sun full upon them. These, together with the copies
+taken in 1849 by afternoon sunlight, and consequently the shadows thrown
+in the reverse direction, ought to ensure for me a correct delineation,
+saving and except those letters that are defaced by the action of weather
+during fifteen centuries, or across which small cracks have been made by
+the same cause.
+
+The shaikh came to transact some business of consequence to him. Before
+noon we resumed our journey; going due west through the Sesame harvest
+and the myrtle trees to Tell el Kadi; straight across the plain through
+marshes, frequent small streams, and large fields of rice, which they
+said would be fit for reaping in twenty days more, that is, by the end of
+October.
+
+Crossed the Ghujar bridge, but did not as before turn off to Safed; our
+object now was to reach Tibneen in the Belad Besharah, and therefore we
+kept on due west, ascending up to the great crusading castle and the
+village of _Huneen_, from which the look back upon Jebel esh Shaikh
+(Hermon) was indescribably grand.
+
+A little farther on, a glimpse was caught of the Mediterranean Sea! the
+mountain breeze most delightful. Rested by the roadside for luncheon;
+came to the village of _Hhooleh_, thence into lower valleys of green
+woods, often with scarce room to pass ourselves, our horses, and the
+luggage between branches of trees for some successive hours. Then under
+the village of _Jahharah_, where were charcoal burners working at their
+kilns.
+
+The scene opened into verdant glades, alternated with woodland; the
+breathing most pure as exhaled from trees upon firm dry ground,
+contrasted with the noxious vapours from the marshes in the early
+morning.
+
+Flocks and shepherds appeared, and there was the sound of the axe busy in
+the woods; not the ringing sound of the bright large English axe, this
+being wanted in the stroke of the petty Oriental tools.
+
+As evening drew on, and broad shadows fell from green hills across our
+way, Tibneen Castle came nobly into view, and there a goodly reception
+awaited us. A strange medley of splendour, with fleas and dust, obtained
+throughout the establishment, and our ladies visited those of the
+Hhareem, concerning whom they brought back no agreeable report.
+
+We remained over two nights at Tibneen; the latter of which was,
+throughout its whole duration, one of furious storm, rattling the wooden
+lattices that served for windows; a storm not uncommon in the East, when
+an adverse wind meets and drives back a strong shirocco. At daybreak the
+first sound of the morning was that of a large trained hawk near the
+window, chained to his perch, and screaming out his delight in the
+bluster of the tempest. Mount Hermon appeared, not in his summer glow,
+but in solemn majesty, defying the clouds and the winds that raged in
+vain against his solid substance.
+
+Our progress was thence towards Safed, which, however, we did not reach
+in less than eleven hours and a half, instead of six, because of our
+circuit made to see the antiquities of Kadis and Cuf'r Bera'am.
+
+Turning off before Bint el Jebail, we came to _'Ain Atha_, and next to
+_Aituran_. At Kadis (Kedesh Naphtali) I found that much of the principal
+and beautiful temple had been lately despoiled by our late host of
+Tibneen ('Ali Bek) for the ornamentation of his Hhareem or women's
+apartments, and balconies or galleries. Then to _Yaroon_, near which was
+still the ponderous sarcophagus upon a platform in the open country, and
+likely to stay there for ages to come. It is too plain and devoid of
+ornament or inscription for antiquarians from Europe to covet it, and to
+remove it for no particular use would demand too much exertion from the
+natives of the country. My groom, however, thought it might be useful as
+a depository of barley in the stable!
+
+We overtook a party of Safed people returning from the weekly market at
+Bint el Jebail.
+
+At Cuf'r Bera'am we inspected the ancient buildings now bearing Hebrew
+inscriptions, and I was more than ever convinced in my own mind, that
+neither these nor any edifices at Kadis have any relation to the Jewish
+people, in their origin or intention. The Hebrew writing is of inferior
+style, and very modern character, far, far unequal to the beauty of the
+architecture; besides having evident traces of animal figures which have
+been hastily chiselled off.
+
+The sun set, and a bad road had to be traversed in order to reach our
+destination at Safed.
+
+PART III.
+
+In my two journeys just described, the route was over the southern part
+of the long Lebanon range, not only on the main ridge, but crossing some
+of the innumerable spurs thrown out towards the sea. This time, however,
+we have to deal with a more northerly and higher region; and it is
+because of its being in a different direction from those of 1849 and 1855
+that I have not observed the consecutive order of date--this was in 1853.
+We shall start from the coast, where the most projecting and western spur
+subsides into Ras Bayroot, and the climbing begins almost immediately
+after leaving deep yellow sands and the pine forest.
+
+The object was to reach Mokhtarah, perched high in the heart of the Shoof
+or central ridge of Lebanon, like an eyrie, as it was then, for the
+princely house of Jonblat. Mokhtarah lies S.-E. from Bayroot, and to
+arrive there we had to cross the intervening spurs, climbing as we went.
+
+The town of Dair el Kamar and the palace of Beteddeen, formerly the
+headquarters of the house of Shehab, lay upon the road. The remainder of
+the journey after Mokhtarah consisted in a rapid descent to Sidon, the
+great port in antiquity for Damascus, Phoenicia, and the Lebanon.
+
+This tour comprised the finest range of the territory occupied by the
+Druse nation.
+
+1853. _July_.--From Bayroot, with its bewitching scenery and its
+gorgeous colouring of mountains and the sea, we went to _'Abeih_, the
+best known of the American missionary stations in the Lebanon.
+
+Through the woods of pines, with their reviving fragrance, and through
+_El Hadeth_, an entirely Christian village, where the bell of the
+Maronite convent was ringing as we passed, we came to _Shuwaifat_, and
+rose still higher towards the mountain pines and the breezes so desirable
+in Syria in the month of July, leaving below the olive in abundance, the
+mulberry and the fig-trees.
+
+Beside the fountain called _'Ain Besaba_ was a pottery factory. The
+nature of the rocks around was soft sandstone; a gigantic pear-tree stood
+conspicuous among the excellent cultivation of the neighbourhood; higher
+still, between straight tall pines and wild holly-oaks, our road curved
+round and round the hills.
+
+We overtook a company of Christians, the women riding and the men
+walking--this circumstance alone would show they were not Mohammedans.
+The two parties had to pass each other with much caution, as the path was
+narrow and the precipice deep below.
+
+At _'Ain 'Anoob_, where a copious supply of water issues from three
+spouts, the fountain has on each side the representation of a chained
+lion, sculptured in stone. One's first impression would be that this
+were a relic of the Genoese or Venetian crusaders; but these figures,
+whatever their meaning or origin, are not infrequent upon fountains about
+the Lebanon, even when only rustically daubed in red ochre; and it has
+not been often noticed that there are similar lions facing each other,
+only without the chains, one on each side of St Stephen's Gate at
+Jerusalem. Some of the women at the fountains wore the horns on their
+head, the fashion for which is gradually passing away. The terraces on
+the hills were in the highest state of cultivation, and gave abundant
+promise of fruit for the coming season; the sun was near setting, the
+rooks cawing overhead, and we saw two little girls each bring a lamb to
+the fountain to drink and then proceed to wash them.
+
+Sidi Ahhmad, a Druse 'Akal, with, of course, a white turban, undertook to
+be our guide as far as 'Abeih.
+
+Fresh air to breathe! how different from the oppressive heat of Bayroot!
+We all drank of every spring by the way, and by consequence lifted up the
+drooping head, (Ps. cx. 7,) thinking each fountain colder than that
+before it.
+
+The most rugged portion of the road was between _'Ain 'Anoob_ and
+_'Ainab_, and zigzag were the worn tracks of the way. Sometimes a
+musical jingle of bells announced the coming of travellers in front, who
+were however invisible till they pounced upon us from between two
+pinnacles of rocks. On the steepest ascents it was necessary to halt and
+await the coming up of our baggage mules.
+
+From mountain heights it is often difficult to distinguish the blue
+expanse of the Mediterranean Sea from the similar blue expanse of the
+sky, until the actual moment of sunset, when the bright orb becoming
+suddenly flattened on its lower curve reveals the exact horizon line; and
+so it was this evening.
+
+Wearied with the climbing position of the saddle, hour after hour, I
+passed _'Ain Kesoor_ on foot, the 'Akal leading the horse. This was
+shortly before 'Abeih, but there I rode up to the mansion of Kasim Bek,
+the local governor, to ask hospitality; it was dark night, and Saturday.
+My intention was to spend the Sunday in a Christian manner among the
+American missionaries. The journey had been one of five hours and a half
+from Bayroot.
+
+We were heartily received into a fine old house, in which were shaikhs
+and chiefs of sundry grades seated on the divan with the host, and
+immediately the means for washing were brought by the domestics with
+great respect. A good supper was prepared, the Bek eating with us, to my
+surprise, but I afterwards learned that this is not uncommon with a
+non-'Akal Druse, as he was.
+
+_Sunday_.--Quiet morning. Bell of the Capuchin Convent almost adjoining
+the house. From the windows there is a fine prospect of Bayroot and the
+coast-outline.
+
+After breakfast I went up to the chapel of the American missionaries, and
+entered just as the Arabic service was about to commence--Dr de Forest in
+the pulpit; and his sermon was preached with fluency of language equal to
+that of a native. The subject was taken from 1 Cor. i. 12, 13,
+concerning those who named themselves followers of Paul or of Apollos.
+The women were screened off from the men in the congregation.
+
+After service Dr de Forest welcomed me, and led me up the hill to the
+mission-house, where I found my old friend, Dr Eli Smith, who was unwell,
+and about to leave them on the morrow for his home at B'hamdoon. With
+Mrs de Forest there was a young lady just arrived from the United States
+to be a teacher in the school.
+
+The residence is a good one; with the girls' school on the ground plan,
+and the dwelling apartments above. The scenery and prospect equal all
+that the highest imagination could conceive of the Lebanon. Over the
+sea, the island of Cyprus can occasionally be distinguished from the
+terrace, that is to say, three peaks of a mountain show themselves at
+sunset, particularly if the wind be in the north, in the month of May or
+the beginning of June. This view, therefore, gives the outskirts of "the
+isles of Chittim," as seen from the Holy Land, (Num. xxiv. 24, and Jer.
+ii. 10.)
+
+After dinner we all went together to the English service in the chapel.
+Mr Colquhoun preached a simple but impressive sermon from John x. 4;
+which text he illustrated by an incident that he had witnessed in a
+recent journey northwards.
+
+A shepherd with a flock arrived at a river of some impetuosity. He
+entered it first, trying the depths with his staff, got over at the best
+place, and then with his voice called over the sheep to him. From which
+the following points were deduced:--
+
+1. That the shepherd led the way, and the flock waited for his call.
+
+2. That the sheep followed when he called, although not all of them at
+the precise ford he had discovered. Some of them trusted to their own
+judgment, and these generally got out of their depths for a time. His
+way was certainly the best one.
+
+3. That as the shepherd stood on the opposite bank, he showed no
+symptoms of uneasiness, for he was confident that every one of the flock
+would get safely across.
+
+4. That the sheep in passing over used each his own efforts to get
+across, apparently just as much as if there were no one present to help;
+although no doubt the presence of the shepherd had a good effect upon
+their exertions. It is beyond our reach to explain the metaphysical
+mystery of this.
+
+5. The shepherd in first crossing the stream himself tested the force of
+the stream. Each individual creature had to do the same; but those who
+followed the closest upon his track had an easy passage, while those who
+tried new ways for themselves were some of them swept down the current
+for a distance, and had to make hard struggles to rejoin their companions
+and to reach the beloved shepherd.
+
+6. All got safely over, for they were his sheep; he knew them all by
+name; he had tried the way before them and shown it; he then called them
+to himself.
+
+Of course each of these points was made use of as personally applicable
+to the hearers. The sermon did me much good from its quiet and truthful
+character.
+
+At this service, it is needless to observe, that there was no separation
+of sexes in the congregation. The girls of the school (who are all
+taught English) were there placed by themselves, and prettily dressed,
+wearing the Oriental _izar_, (or large white veil,) with flowered
+borders, a novelty to us.
+
+Returning to the mission-house, the late afternoon and the time of sunset
+and twilight were spent in rational conversation of Christian character.
+And such was our Sabbath-day of devotion and repose.
+
+How glorious were the colours spread over the vast extent of mountain and
+sea, modified by length of shadows as the sun declined! Oh how deep are
+such beauties and the perception of their value laid in the innermost
+recesses of our soul's nature, only to be completely gratified in the
+eternity to come. Here, below, we have gorgeous tints differing in
+succession, even after actual sunset, to be followed by a delicate
+after-glow, which again gives place to the splendour of night. And as in
+earth, so in heaven, with the exception of night; for surely there will
+be alternations of beauteous scenes above; surely there will be
+developments and variety in light, colour, music, harmony, and the rest
+of those "pleasures for evermore," which are everywhere emanations from
+the direct love of "Him who first loved us,"--His gifts, who even here
+bestows prismatic hues upon icebergs in the arctic circle, and a rosy
+flush to the peaks of Jebel Sanneen in the Lebanon.
+
+_Monday_.--Letters were brought at a late hour last night in four hours
+from Bayroot, giving recent intelligence from our fleet--all political
+affairs going on successfully.
+
+Everybody speaks well of our host the governor, and his family. He is a
+studious man, and has acquired from the Americans a good deal of history
+and general knowledge; his youngest brother attends the natural-history
+class of the mission-school. He is a relative of the famous Abu Neked,
+and his wife (Druses have but one wife each) is of the Jonblat family.
+The ancestral mansion he inhabits was built by one of the ancient race
+called the T'noohh, who flourished there from the 10th to the 17th
+century, and artists had been brought for the purpose from
+Constantinople; the symmetry of the masonry is admirable, and
+consequently the shadows formed from it are particularly straight and
+sharp in outline.
+
+The village contains specimens of every form of religion to be found
+throughout the Lebanon; each sect, however, keeps somewhat apart from the
+rest, which practice being common in the mountain, may account for the
+villages appearing to a stranger to consist of separate pieces not quite
+joined together.
+
+Some women still wear horns, although the Christian clergy set themselves
+strongly against these ornaments; some even refusing the
+Communion-Sacrament to those who persist in retaining that heathenish
+emblem derived from ancient mythology.
+
+Among the Druse men, the 'Akal are not so marked in their difference of
+costume from the Juhal as formerly, except in the extreme cleanliness and
+careful plaiting of the white turban. My host, notwithstanding the
+antiquity of his family and his studious character, is not one of the
+initiated, he is but a Jahel, yet he probably serves his people best in
+that capacity, as he is thereby enabled to hold government employments.
+
+From his windows we could see on the south side of Ras Bayroot several
+small vessels engaged in sponge-fishing; the crews of these are generally
+Greeks from the islands: yesterday with the telescope we had a good view
+of the mail-steamer arriving.
+
+We went to take leave of the American friends, who showed us some
+excellent specimens of English writing, and of drawing from the girls'
+school.
+
+Returning to the Druse friends, I visited Seleem, a brother of the Bek.
+On hearing that we were proceeding to Mokhtarah, Naaman, (brother of Said
+Bek Jonblat,) who has retired from worldly affairs, and become a devout
+'Akal, requested one of my party to ask Said to send him some
+orange-flower water. I have no doubt that this message ([Greek text])
+covered some political meaning.
+
+The house of Seleem was simplicity and neatness in the extreme, the only
+ornamentation being that of rich robes, pistols, swords, and the silver
+decorations of horses, suspended on pegs round the principal apartment;
+all thoroughly Oriental of olden time.
+
+The Christian secretary of the Bek attended us to _Cuf'r Natta_ on a fine
+Jilfi mare, where he got for us a pedestrian guide to Dair el Kamar. A
+very deep valley lay before us, into which we had to descend, lounging
+leftwards, and then to mount the opposite hill, returning rightwards, to
+an elevation higher than that of Cuf'r Natta. Down we went by zigzags
+through groves of pine that were stirred gently on their tops by the
+mountain breeze, and there was plenty of wild myrtle on the ground; we
+frequently met with specimens of iron ore, and pink or yellow metallic
+streaks in the rocks, to the river Suffar, being the upper part of the
+river that is called Damoor upon the sea-coast. This is crossed by the
+bridge _Jisr' el Kadi_, (so named from an ameer of the house of T'noohh,
+surnamed the Kadi, or Judge, from his legal acquirements, and who erected
+the bridge in old times,) near which the limestone rock of the water-bed
+is worn into other channels by the occasional escapements of winter
+torrents. There are mills adjoining.
+
+We all rested in a coffee-station at the end of the bridge. Several
+parties of muleteers had halted there at the same time. By the little
+fireside a large hawk was perched, and the owner of the place had his
+apparatus for shoemaking in the middle of the room.
+
+Flowering oleander and fruit trees imparted liveliness to the scene
+outside, our several parties in variegated costumes adding not a little
+to the same.
+
+Crossing the bridge, (which is level, and has no side parapets,) we
+commenced the great ascent; the hill-side was largely planted with
+sherabeen, (sprouts,) of a kind of cedar, not the real cedar of Lebanon.
+At a spring half way up we found a poor Turkish infantry soldier resting
+all alone, he was a pitiable object in a district so unfriendly to him.
+
+What a different country would Palestine or all Syria be were it like the
+Lebanon, industriously cultivated inch by inch! How different would the
+Lebanon be were this industry and its produce never interrupted by
+intestine warfare!
+
+Higher still we saw a train of shaikhs on horseback, attended by men on
+foot, coming in our direction longitudinally on the opposite hill from a
+remote village.
+
+All the distance, I think, from Jis'r el Kadi forwards, notwithstanding
+the steep nature of the country, was over a paved or made road. There is
+no such a thing in the south; here, however, the desolation of Turkish
+rule is but little known, and the people are not only industrious, but a
+fine muscular race.
+
+We overtook small groups of village people who had, it seems, gone out to
+meet the important riding party lately seen by us. Suddenly, at a turn
+of the road, the cheerful town of Dair el Kamar opened out to view, with
+the hills and palaces of Beteddeen behind. This was at three hours from
+'Abeih, exclusive of the hour's rest at the bridge.
+
+The town appeared to be well built, better than many a European town,
+notwithstanding the destruction arising from recent warfare, and the
+people cleanly; it was, however, no proof of the latter quality that I
+saw a pig being fed at a house-door as we passed along.
+
+We alighted at the best Arab house I had ever entered, namely, that of
+the influential Meshakah family. After some repose the host took me and
+the friends who had accompanied me from Soor and Saida to look about the
+town. Through streets and bazaars we came to a large open place occupied
+by silk weavers at work, among whom was the father of Faris, the Arabic
+teacher in the Protestant school at Jerusalem, he having been instructed
+by the Americans at 'Abeih, and whose sister I had seen there the day
+preceding. The silk stuffs of the town maintain a respectable rivalry
+with those of Damascus.
+
+Turkish soldiers were dawdling about the streets.
+
+We called at some Christian houses, in one of which (very handsome, with
+a garden) the recesses in the wall of one side of the divan room,
+containing bedding as usual in the East, were screened by a wide curtain
+of white muslin spangled with gold. Upon the other sides of the room
+were rude fresco paintings. Opposite the door on entering was the Virgin
+and Child; over the door was a dove with an olive branch; and the
+remaining side was embellished by the picture of a fine water-melon, with
+a slice cut off and lying at its side, the knife still upright in the
+melon, and an angel flying above it, blowing a trumpet!
+
+The town is romantically situated upon successive levels of terraces in
+the hill, and environed by orchards of fruit. As evening approached, the
+opposite hill was suffused in a glow of pink, followed by purple light,
+and the Ramadan gun was fired from Beteddeen when the sun's orb dropped
+upon the horizon. Suddenly the hills exchanged their warm colours for a
+cold gray, in harmony with the gloaming or evening twilight.
+
+The population of Dair el Kamar at that time numbered 700 full-grown men
+of Maronites, 220 of Greek Catholics, 150 of Druses, with a few Moslems
+and Jews--each of the sects living apart from the rest. The silk
+manufacture was more extensive than that of Saida, and a constant
+communication was kept up with Damascus, which is at twenty hours'
+distance. The Christians are far more hardy than their fellow-Christians
+the Maronites are in their special district to the north. The whole
+population is industrious, and the Druses maintain their characteristic
+steadfastness of purpose, secrecy, and union among themselves.
+
+The house in which I was so hospitably received had been almost entirely
+destroyed in the war of 1841; and its proprietor (brother of the two
+brothers now its owners) shot dead in his own court, by persons who owed
+him money, namely, the Druse party of Abu Neked, two hundred of whom had
+for a fortnight lived at free quarters there.
+
+The two brothers who were my hosts are Christians of the Greek Catholic
+sect, named Gabriel and Raphael. A third surviving brother is the
+talented Protestant controversialist residing in Damascus, and practising
+medicine as learned from the Americans. The one who was shot by the
+Druses was Andrew; the eldest of all is Ibrahim, settled in Bayroot, and
+his son named Khaleel is dragoman of the English consulate there--it was
+he who furnished us with the introduction to this house in Dair el Kamar.
+
+How curious is the domestic life of these Oriental families. Eating
+takes place in the principal room, with a throng of women and children
+passing heedlessly about, or visitors entering as they please. Among
+these, during the dinner time, came in a Jew speaking Jewish-German. He
+was a dyer, who had known me at Jerusalem, and conversed with remarkable
+self-possession: it seemed as if the mountain air, and absence from the
+Rabbis of Jerusalem, had made a man of him. In attendance on the meal
+was an ancient woman-servant of the family, very wrinkled, but wearing
+the tantoor or horn on her head.
+
+On retiring from the table, if we may use that expression as applicable
+to an Oriental dinner, there came in the Greek Catholic Bishop of Saida,
+and several heads of houses of the Maronites, on visits of ceremony.
+
+The fatigue of the day was closed, and rewarded by a night of sleep upon
+a bed of down and crimson silk, under a covering of the same.
+
+In the morning our journey was resumed; but before quitting this
+interesting town, I cannot forbear quoting Dr Porter's admirable
+description of Dair el Kamar, from Murray's "Handbook for Syria and
+Palestine," part ii. page 413:--
+
+"Deir el Kamr is a picturesque mountain village, or rather town, of some
+8000 inhabitants, whose houses are built along a steep, rocky hill-side.
+A sublime glen runs beneath it, and on the opposite side, on a projecting
+ledge, stands the palace of Bteddin. Both the banks, as well as the
+slopes above them, are covered with terraces, supporting soil on which a
+well-earned harvest waves in early summer, amid rows of mulberries and
+olives and straggling vines. Industry has here triumphed over apparent
+impossibilities, having converted naked rocky declivities into a
+paradise. In Palestine we have passed through vast plains of the richest
+soil all waste and desolate--here we see the mountain's rugged side
+clothed with soil not its own, and watered by a thousand rills led
+captive from fountains far away. Every spot on which a handful of soil
+can rest, every cranny to which a vine can cling, every ledge on which a
+mulberry can stand, is occupied. The people too, now nearly all
+Christians, have a thrifty well-to-do look, and the children, thanks to
+the energy of the American missionaries, are well taught."
+
+This was in 1857, and the description corresponds to what I witnessed in
+1853; but, alas! how great a change ensued in 1860. I must refrain,
+however, from enlarging upon the melancholy tragedy that occurred there
+during the insurrection of that memorable year.
+
+First we went to Beteddeen, and witnessed the sad spectacle of the Ameer
+Besheer's luxurious palace in a process of daily destruction by the
+Turkish soldiery, who occupied it as a barrack. Accounts had been read
+by me in Europe {405} of its size and costliness, but the description had
+not exceeded the reality.
+
+The officer in command gave us permission to be guided over the palatial
+courts and chambers. We wandered through the Hhareem-rooms, and saw
+baths of marble and gilding, sculptured inscriptions in the passages,
+coloured mosaics in profusion on the floors, painted roofs, rich columns,
+brass gates, carved doors, marble fountains, and basins with gold fish.
+We entered the state reception room, and the old ameer's little business
+divan, in a balcony commanding a view of the approaches in every
+direction, of the meidan for equestrian practice, of the inner courts, of
+the gardens below, and of a cascade of water rolling over lofty cliffs,
+at the exact distance whence the sound came gently soothing the ear, and
+from that spot also was obtained a distant view of the Mediterranean; not
+omitting the advantage of witnessing every important movement that could
+be made in the streets of Dair el Kamar, across the deep valley.
+
+Beteddeen had been a truly princely establishment, but now adds one more
+lesson to the many others of instability in human greatness. Fourteen
+years before, it was all in its glory--the courts were thronged with
+Druse and Maronite chiefs arrayed in cloth of gold, with soldiers, with
+secretaries, with flatterers and suppliants; whereas now, before our
+eyes, the dirty canaille of Turkish soldiers were tearing up marble
+squares of pavement to chuck about for sport, doors were plucked down and
+burned, even the lightning-rods were demolished, and every species of
+devastation practised for passing away their idle time.
+
+I shall not here describe the political movements that led to this great
+reverse of fortune, or to the present condition of the family of Shehab.
+
+The mountains around were still in careful cultivation, chiefly with the
+vine and olive; and the aqueduct still brings water from the springs of
+Suffar at several miles' distance, and this it is which, after supplying
+the palace, forms the cascade above described, and afterwards turns two
+mills.
+
+At short distances are smaller palaces, erected also by this powerful
+ameer for his mother and his married sons; but the same fate has
+overtaken them all--Turkish devastation.
+
+Before leaving the place, I visited the tomb of the ameer's mother and
+that of his principal wife, who was a Christian; they are near the house,
+and surrounded by five cypresses.
+
+Took the road towards Mokhtarah, the seat of the rival chief, the Druse
+Jonblat. For some distance after Beteddeen the roads have been carefully
+constructed, over an unusually level plateau for the Lebanon; but an
+enormous ridge of mountain stands conspicuous in the N.-E. This is the
+highest part of the Shoof, near the sources of the river _Barook_, so
+named from being the first place where the Arab camels _knelt_ on
+arriving in the Lebanon in A.D. 821. The sad spectacle of villages and
+good farm-houses desolate and blackened by fire, frequently met the view;
+for this open tract, called the _Sumkaniyeh_, has frequently been a scene
+of conflict between the leading factions; it was especially the ground of
+the considerable battle of the Ameer Besheer and the Jonblatiyeh in 1825.
+At length, from the commencement of a descent, we saw Mokhtarah upon an
+opposite hill, commanding the view of our approach--a great advantage in
+times of warfare. Our road lay downwards by odd turns and twists, and
+over a precipice to the river Barook, with its romantic banks and
+fruit-trees peering between overhanging rocks.
+
+On our arrival, the great man, Said Bek Jonblat, {408} came out with a
+train of 'Akal councillors and a crowd of humbler retainers. He was a
+handsome man of about twenty-eight, and richly apparelled. Beneath a
+large abai or cloak of black Cashmere, with Indian patterns embroidered
+about the collar and skirts, he wore a long gombaz of very dark green
+silk embossed with tambour work; his sash was of the plainest purple
+silk, and his sidriyeh or vest was of entire cloth of gold with gold
+filigree buttons: on the head a plain tarboosh, and in his hand sometimes
+a cane ornamented with ivory or a rosary of sandal-wood. His gold watch
+and chain were in the best European taste.
+
+I need not here expatiate on the sumptuous reception afforded us; it may
+be enough to say, that having some hours to spare before sunset--the
+universal time for dinner in the East--we walked about, and the Bek
+shewed me the yet unrepaired damages, inflicted in his father's time, at
+the hands of the victorious Ameer Besheer's faction, on that palace and
+paradise which his father Besheer had created there, thus teaching the
+Shehab Ameer how to build its rival of Beteddeen,--and the limpid stream
+brought from the high sources of the Barook to supply cascades and
+fountains for the marble courts, which the other also imitated in
+bringing down the Suffar to his place. We sat beside those streams and
+cascades, so grateful at that season of the year, conversing about the
+Arab factions of Kaisi and Yemeni, or the Jonblat and Yesbeck parties of
+the Druses, or his own early years spent in exile either in the Hauran or
+with Mohammed 'Ali in Egypt,--but not a word about actual circumstances
+of the Lebanon, or about his plans for restoring the palace to more than
+its former splendour, which he afterwards carried out. This was all very
+agreeable, but a curious fit of policy assumed at the time rendered my
+host to some degree apparently inhospitable to us Christians.
+
+It is well known that the Druse religion allows its votaries to profess
+outwardly the forms of any other religion according to place and
+circumstances. The Bek was now adopting Moslem observances;
+consequently, it being the month of Ramadan, we could have nothing to eat
+till after sunset. What could have been his reason for this temporary
+disguisement I have never been able to discover. Even the adan was cried
+on the roof of his house, summoning people to prayer in the canonical
+formula of the Moslems, and Said Bek, with his councillors, retired to a
+shed for devotional exercises, as their prayers may be appropriately
+termed; and I remarked that at every rising attitude he was lifted
+reverently by the hands and elbows, by his attendants,--an assistance
+which no true Mohammedan of any rank, that I had ever met with, would
+have tolerated.
+
+At length the sunlight ceased to gild the lofty peaks above us, and
+pipes, sherbet, and ice were served up as a preparation for the coming
+dinner.
+
+There is in front of the house a square reservoir of water, with a
+current flowing in and out of it; this is bordered by large
+cypress-trees, and in a corner near the house wall grows a large
+acacia-tree, the light-green colour and drooping foliage of which gave
+somewhat of an Indian appearance to the scene.
+
+Lamps were then lit beneath an arcade, and near the water a huge cresset
+was filled with resinous pine splinters, and the light of its burning
+flickered fantastically over the pool, the house, and the trees.
+
+Next came the dinner, late for the appetites of us travellers, and
+tedious in its duration--with music outside the open windows.
+
+After the meal the Bek withdrew to the corner of his divan for
+transaction of business with his people, as the Moslems do at that
+season. His part of the affairs consisted in endorsing a word or two
+upon the petitions or addresses that were produced by the
+secretaries--these were written on small rolls of paper like tiny
+cigarettes, pinched at one end. How very un-European to carry on
+business in so few words, either written or spoken!
+
+Said Bek was a man of few words in such transactions, but what he did say
+seemed always to hit exactly the point intended; and the wave of his
+finger was sufficient to summon a number of men to receive his commands.
+He was evidently a person of a different stamp from the coarse leaders of
+Lebanon factions, the Abu Neked, the Shibli el 'Arian, and such like; he
+is proud of his family antiquity, refined in dress and manners, and has
+always, like the rest of the Druses, courted the favour of the English
+nation.
+
+On the entrance of his son, named Nejib, probably four or five years old,
+all the Akal councillors and military officers rose to receive him.
+
+In the morning we took our departure, when Said Bek accompanied us as far
+as the Meidan, and a profusion of Druse compliments filled up the
+leave-taking.
+
+We now passed for some hours along the river side, through the utmost
+loveliness of Lebanon scenery. Among other trees that lined its banks,
+or adorned the precipitous cliffs, or followed the rising and falling
+road, were noble specimens of platanus (plane) and lofty zanzalacht, (the
+peepul of India;) crystal rills tumbled down the rocks, as if sparkling
+alive with enjoyment; then the usual poplar, walnut, evergreen oak, and a
+large plantation of olive: the river sometimes smiled with the fringe of
+oleander. We halted for a time under a wide-branching platanus at the
+end of a bridge, between the masonry of which grew bunches of the caper
+plant, then in blossom of white and lilac, and at the piers of which grew
+straggling blackberry brambles and wild fig-trees in picturesque
+irregularity, while the water bubbled and gurgled over a pebbly bed or
+fragments of rock.
+
+Peasantry passed us with ass-loads of wood for fuel, (camels being
+unknown in that region.) The same features continually repeated
+themselves as we advanced; large broken cliffs were overhanging us, and
+birds singing in the solitude; it need not be added that the sun was
+cloudless the whole day long.
+
+Forward we went to the Convent of the Dair el Mokhallis, which we reached
+in four hours and a half from Mokhtarah, where we rested a few hours;
+then visited once more the house of Lady Hester Stanhope.
+
+Thence descending to the sea beach, we crossed the river Awali, and
+looked back with regret to the heights of Lebanon. Just as the last gun
+of Ramadan was fired, (for it was the termination of that fast and the
+commencement of Beiram,) we galloped our horses into the sea-wave near
+the walls of Sidon, which they enjoyed as refreshing to their heated
+fetlocks, and we found a luxury in the breeze and in the rustling sound
+of the endless roll of wavelets upon the shelly beach.
+
+How different were the temperature and the scenery from those of
+Mokhtarah in the early morning!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Even now in the nineteenth century one can understand how it was that in
+ancient Bible times the peoples inhabiting those romantic districts were
+distinct from each other within a small space, having separate kings and
+alien interests, for here in the lapse of few hours I had traversed
+regions where the inhabitants differed greatly in religion, in manners,
+customs, dress, and physical aspect. The Maronite and the Druse of
+Lebanon; the Syrian and the Turk of Bayroot, Saida, and Soor; the
+Metawali of the Phoenician district, no more resemble each other than if
+they were men or women of different nations, as indeed they are by
+derivation; each of these is but a fragment of antiquity, representing to
+us his several ancient race; yet all these fragments are united for the
+present by the slenderest of bonds, those of using one common language,
+the Arabic, and of an unwilling subjection to the Ottoman scymitar.
+
+Alas! for the beautiful country thus parcelled out by peoples, who,
+cherishing ancient rivalries and modern blood-feuds, have, and can have
+no national life, or sentiment of patriotism.
+
+
+
+
+XIII. NORTH-WEST OF THE DEAD SEA.
+
+
+In December 1856, I met, by appointment, at Jericho the Rev. A. A.
+Isaacs, and my friend James Graham, who were going with photographic
+apparatus to take views at the site called Wadi Gumran, near 'Ain
+Feshkah, where a few years before M. de Saulcy, under the guidance of an
+ardent imagination, believed he had found extensive and cyclopean remains
+of the city Gomorrah, and had published an account of that interesting
+discovery.
+
+It was on Christmas eve that we rose early by starlight, and had our cups
+of coffee in the open air, beside the _Kala'at er Reehha_, (Castle of
+Jericho,) while the tents were being struck and rolled up for returning
+to Jerusalem, where we were to meet them at night.
+
+Only the artistic apparatus and a small canteen were to accompany us; but
+the muleteer for these was even more dilatory in his preparations than is
+usual with his professional brethren--and that is saying much; no doubt
+he entertained a dread of visiting the Dead Sea at points out of the
+beaten track for travellers; considerable time was also occupied in
+getting a stone out of the mule's shoe; then just as that was
+triumphantly effected, my mare happened to bolt off free into the
+wilderness; when she was recovered, it was ascertained that my cloak was
+lost from her back; during the search for this, the guide abandoned us,
+and it was with much difficulty that we hired one from Jericho.
+
+At length we commenced the march, leaving the kawwas to look for the
+cloak, (which, however, he did not succeed in recovering; it would be a
+prize for the thieves of the village, or even, if it should fall in their
+way, for one of the Bashi-bozuk,) and got to _'Ain Feshkah_, much in need
+of a real breakfast. There the water was found to be too brackish for
+use--as unpalatable, probably, as the water of 'Ain es Sultan was before
+being healed by the prophet Elisha; so we drank native wine instead of
+coffee, while seated among tall reeds of the marshy ground, and not
+pleased with the mephitic odour all around us.
+
+Our photographers having ascertained the site for their researches by
+means of the guide, and by the indications furnished in the work of De
+Saulcy; they set themselves to work, during which they were frequently
+uttering ejaculations at the exaggerations of size and quantity made by
+my French friend. The cyclopean ruins seemed to us nothing but remnants
+of water-courses for irrigation of plantations, such as may be seen in
+the neighbourhood of Elisha's fountain, or heaps of boulders, etc., that
+had been rolled down from the adjacent cliffs by natural causes during a
+succession of ages.
+
+Mr Isaacs has since published a book descriptive of this expedition,
+containing illustrations from his photographs taken on the spot. In this
+he has given the reasons for our differing from M. de Saulcy, and
+considering his theories unfounded.
+
+At the end of a strip of beach, which the discoverer calls "the plain,"
+the cliffs have a narrow crevasse, down which water rushes in the season
+when there is water to form a cascade. This is difficult to reach from
+"the plain," and very narrow; and it is what our Arabs called the Wadi
+Gumran. In front of this opening is a hill with some ruins upon it;
+thither we mounted easily, and saw vestiges of some ancient fort with a
+cistern.
+
+When all the observations were taken upon points considered necessary, we
+prepared to return home by way of Mar Saba, hardly expecting to arrive by
+daylight at Jerusalem. We were, however, desirous of spending Christmas
+day there rather than in the bleak wilderness.
+
+On the way we fortunately got some camel's milk from a party passing near
+us. The weather was hot, but exceedingly clear. The Salt mountain of
+Sodom, (Khash'm Usdum,) showed itself well at the southern extremity of
+the lake, thirty miles distant; and from a raised level near its northern
+end we gained superb views of Mount Hermon (Jebel esh Shaikh) in the
+Anti-Lebanon, capped with snow. This was entirely unexpected and
+gratifying; but I could nowhere find a spot from which both Hermon and
+Sodom could be seen at once. Perhaps such a view may be had somewhere on
+the hills.
+
+We turned aside through the _Wadi Dubber_, as the guide termed it, within
+a circuitous winding, out of which, at a spot called 'Ain Merubba', I had
+passed a night in the open air some years before.
+
+Long, dreary, and tiresome was the journey; the two Bashi-bozuk men
+complained of it as much as we did. At sunset we came to a well with
+some water left in troughs near it, but not enough for all our horses,
+and we had no means of getting more out of the well. This was in a wide,
+treeless, trackless wilderness.
+
+No one of our party felt quite sure of being on the true road, but we
+followed slight tracks in the general direction in which the convent lay;
+we guessed and went on. Occasionally we got sight of the summit of the
+Frank mountain or lost it again, according to the rise or fall of the
+ground. Conversation flagged; but at length we struck up a Christmas
+hymn to enliven us.
+
+In the valley of Mar Saba we saw lights in the convent, but passed on.
+Saw an Arab encampment, with fire and lights glimmering, where the dogs
+came out to bark at us; another such in half an hour more; and a larger
+camp in another half-hour, where men were discussing matters with much
+vociferation in a cavern by a blazing fire; a scout called out, inquiring
+if we were friends or foes?
+
+The night grew very cold, and I should have been glad had my cloak not
+been lost near Jericho. The temperature differed greatly from that of
+the Dead Sea--a keen wind was in keeping with the end of December. The
+stars were most brilliant: Venus richly lustrous; Sirius, dazzling; and
+the huge Orion showing to best advantage. The road was alternately rough
+in the valley, or over slippery ledges. At length, however, we got
+cheered by coming to known objects. Passed Beer Eyoob, (En Rogel,) and
+saw the battlemented walls of the Holy City sharply marked against the
+sky.
+
+The key had been left by the authorities at the city gate, to allow of
+our admission; but the rusty lock required a long time for turning it,
+and the heavy hinges of the large gate moved very slowly, at least so it
+seemed in our impatience to reach home.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is said above that I once spent a night at the 'Ain Merubba'--this was
+on the occasion of an attempt, which ended in failure, to reach 'Ain Jidi
+(En-gaddi) from the 'Ain Feshkah in the common way of travelling. {419}
+
+Hhamdan, Shaikh of the Ta'amra, with about a dozen of his men, escorted
+me and one kawwas in that direction. Instead of proceeding to Jericho or
+Elisha's fountain, we turned aside into the wildest of wildernesses for
+passing the night. Traversing the length of an extremely narrow ridge,
+something like the back of a knife, we descended to a great depth below;
+but the risk being judged too great for conveying the tent and bed over
+there by the mule, these were left spread upon the ground for the night
+under the canopy of heaven; while the men carried our food for us to make
+the evening meal. Crawling or sliding, and leading the horses gently, we
+got to the bottom, and then followed up a very narrow glen, winding in
+and out, and round about between extraordinary precipices rising to
+enormous heights, till all at once the men halted, shouted, and sang, and
+stripped themselves to bathe in small pools formed in holes of the rock
+by settlements of rain-water.
+
+This was our halting-place, but the scene beggars all power of
+description. We were shut into a contracted glen by a maze of tortuous
+windings, between mountains of yellow marl on either side; but broken,
+rugged, naked of all vegetation,--referring one's imagination to the
+period when the earth was yet "without form and void," or to the
+subsiding of the deluge from which Noah was delivered.
+
+Looking upwards to a great height we could just see the tops of the
+imprisoning hills gilded awhile by the setting sun, and a small space of
+blue making up the interval between the precipices. Those precipices
+were not, however, entirely yellow, but variegated with occasional red or
+somewhat of brown ochre. So fantastic in position or shape were the
+masses hurled or piled about, and the place so utterly removed "from
+humanity's reach," that it might be imagined suitable to mould the genius
+of Martin into the most extravagant conceptions of chaos, or to suggest
+the colouring of Turner without his indistinctness of outline.
+
+The echoes of the men's voices and bursts of laughter (the latter so
+uncommon among Arabs) when splashing in the water, were reverberated from
+hill to hill and back again; but there were no wild birds among the rocks
+to scream in rejoinder as at Petra.
+
+After a time a voice was heard from above, very high, (it is wonderful
+how far the human voice is carried in that pure atmosphere and in such a
+locality,) and on looking up I saw a dark speck against the sky waving
+his arms about. It was one of the Ta'amra asking if he should bring down
+my mattress. Consent was given, and, behold, down came tumbling from
+rock to rock the mattress and blanket tied up into a parcel; when
+approaching near us, it was taken up by the man who followed it, and
+carried on his back; and when still nearer to us it was carefully borne
+between two men. Thus I enjoyed the distinction above all the rest of
+having a mattress to lie upon; the shaikh had a couple of cloaks, the
+kawwas had one, and the others were utterly without such luxurious
+accessories, and slept profoundly.
+
+Our people called the place _'Ain Merubba'_, (the square fountain.) I
+saw no fountain of any form, but there must have been one, for we had a
+supply of good water, and the designation "'Ain," or fountain, is one of
+too serious importance to be employed for any but its literal
+signification.
+
+Very early in the morning we started afresh, and took the beach of the
+lake towards 'Ain Feshkah.
+
+A great part of the day was spent in clambering our ponies over broken
+rocks of a succession of promontories, one following another, where it
+seemed that no creatures but goats could make way; the Arabs protesting
+all the while that the attempt was hopeless, and besides, that the
+distance even over better ground was too great for one day's march.
+
+At length I relinquished the undertaking to reach 'Ain Jidi by that way,
+and for that year had no leisure from business to try it from other
+directions.
+
+Hhamdan and I sat on a rock in his free open air dominion, discussing
+possibilities, and what 'Ain Jidi was like, as well as the "Ladder of
+Terabeh," (see p. 334.) At length we rose and turned towards Jerusalem.
+I am not sure that I ever saw him again, for not long afterwards he was
+drowned in the Jordan while attempting to swim his horse through the
+stream at its highest, after assisting in a battle on the side of the
+Deab 'Adwan.
+
+
+
+
+XIV. SOBA.
+
+
+On the crest of a high hill two or three hours west from Jerusalem,
+stands the village of Soba, and it has long been imagined to be Modin,
+the birth-place and burial-place of the Maccabaean heroes; though I never
+heard any reason assigned for that identification, except the
+circumstance of the sea being visible from it, and therefore of its being
+visible from the sea, which was supposed to tally with the description
+given in 1 Macc. xiii., 27-30, of the monuments erected there,--"Simon
+also built a monument upon the sepulchre of his father and his brethren,
+and raised it aloft to the sight, with hewn stone behind and before.
+Moreover, he set up seven pyramids, one against another, for his father,
+and his mother, and his four brethren. And in these he made cunning
+devices, about the which he set great pillars, and upon the pillars he
+made all their armour for a perpetual memory; and by the armour ships
+carved, that they might be seen of all that sail on the sea. This is the
+sepulchre which he made at Modin, and it standeth yet unto this day."
+
+I never was persuaded that the words implied that ships carved on pillars
+at Soba, could be distinguished from the sea, or even that the columns
+themselves were visible from ships off the coast; but only this, that the
+deliverers of their country from the intolerable yoke of the Syrians,
+having opened up communication with the Grecians and Romans, marine
+intercourse had become more frequent than before, a matter that the
+Maccabaean family were proud of; and therefore they had ships carved on
+the pillars, as might be observed by seafaring people who might go there;
+yet, whatever the words might signify, they could not prove that Modin
+was so far inland, and among the hills, as Soba.
+
+However, in 1858, I went with my son and a couple of friends to inspect
+the place itself, considering it at least worth while to make one's own
+observations on the spot.
+
+We passed through _'Ain Carem_, the _Karem_ of the Septuagint, to
+_Sattaf_, and rested during the heat of the day in a vineyard, near a
+spring of water and plots of garden vegetables, belonging to the few
+houses that had been rebuilt after several years of devastation by
+village warfare.
+
+The approach to the place from any direction is through the very rough
+torrent bed of the Wadi Bait Hhaneena, and along very narrow ledges upon
+the sides of steep hills, quite as perilous as any that are used for
+travelling in any part of the Lebanon; too dangerous to admit of
+dismounting and leading the horse after the risk has once begun, by far
+the safest method of advancing is to hold the reins very loose, and if
+you wish it, to shut your eyes.
+
+Opposite to Sattaf, directly across the valley, the Latins had lately
+rebuilt a small chapel of former times, said to have been the prison of
+John the Baptist; they name it the Chapel of the _Hhabees_, _i.e._, the
+imprisoned one.
+
+Leaving Sattaf we gradually ascended to Soba; at first through lemon and
+orange plantations near the water, and then through vineyards with a few
+pomegranate-trees interspersed.
+
+It is noteworthy how, throughout most of the tribe of Judah, small
+springs of water are found dribbling from the rocks, (besides the larger
+sources of Urtas, Lifta, Faghoor 'Aroob, Dirweh, and Hebron,) which were
+doubtless more copious in the ancient times, when the land was more
+clothed with timber, and there were men, industrious men, aware of their
+blessings, and ready to prevent the streams from slipping away beneath
+the seams of limestone formation.
+
+At Soba we mounted the steep hill to the _Shooneh_, or small look-out
+tower at the summit, enjoying the breadth of landscape and the stretch of
+the Mediterranean before our eyes.
+
+In the village we found remains of old masonry, most likely the basement
+of a fortification of early Saracenic or the Crusaders' era; besides
+which there was a piece of wall in excellent condition of the best
+character of Jewish rabbeted stones.
+
+One man invited us to see some old stones inside of his house; but they
+formed a portion of the basement above-mentioned, against which the rest
+of his house was built. The people were unanimous in declaring that
+there was nothing else of such a nature in the village. So that our
+researches issued in no corroboration of Soba being Modin.
+
+Leaving the place we descended to the high road of Jaffa to Jerusalem,
+and saw a number of olive-trees dead of age; none of us, however long
+resident in Palestine, had seen such before or elsewhere; we concluded
+them to have been withered by age from their bearing no visible tokens of
+destruction, while the ground was well ploughed around them, and from
+finding others near them in progressive stages of decay, down to the
+utter extinction of foliage.
+
+Arrived at _Kaloneh_ upon the highway, certainly the site of a Roman
+garrison or "colonia," (see Acts xvi. 12,) leaving Kustul behind, which
+is also a derivation from the Latin word for a castle.
+
+Near the bridge of Kaloneh, where there are good specimens of ancient
+rabbeted stones, one gets a glimpse of 'Ain Carem through the olive
+plantation; and the return that day was by a cross way from _Dair Yaseen_
+through vineyards to Jerusalem.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is only at a comparatively late period that attention has been
+directed to the text of Eusebius and Jerome in the "Onomasticon," where
+it is distinctly said that Modin was near Lydd, and that the monuments
+were at that time (in the fourth century) still shown there.
+
+Porter considers that therefore _Latroon_ is the true site of Modin: in
+this supposition I wish to concur; for the general run of the Maccabaean
+history becomes peculiarly intelligible when read with the idea in the
+mind that Modin lay in just such a situation, namely, upon a hill, rising
+alone from the great plain, but adjacent to the mountain ridge, and to
+defiles into which the insurgents might easily retire, or from which they
+might issue suddenly and surprise regular armies in their camp. I know
+of no place so suitable for such operations as Latroon.
+
+The word [Greek text], used for the armour and the ships, must mean
+"carved in relievo," and such objects could never be distinguished by
+persons actually passing upon the sea, if placed either at Soba, Latroon,
+Lydd, or even Jaffa; it is difficult enough to imagine that the pyramids
+and columns were visible from the sea at Latroon.
+
+
+
+
+XV. THE TWO BAIT SAHHOORS IDENTIFIED WITH BETHSURA AND BATH ZACHARIAS.
+
+
+There are two villages in the neighbourhood of Jerusalem bearing the name
+of Bait Sahhoor. One lies near to the city, beyond En-Rogel, a little
+way down the valley of the Kedron; the other is farther off, close under
+Bethlehem. By way of distinction, the former is called "Bait Sahhoor of
+the Wadi," and the latter, "Bait Sahhoor of the Christians." I think
+that it can be shown that these places, though now fallen from their high
+estate, once played their part in important events,--that Bait Sahhoor of
+the Wadi is identical with Bethsura,--and that Bait Sahhoor of the
+Christians is identical with Bath Zacharias--both of Maccabaean history.
+
+In the year 150 of the Seleucidan era, being the fifth year of the
+liberty of Zion, (the term used upon the Maccabaean coins,) a vast army
+of Syrians invaded Palestine from Antioch, headed by King Antiochus
+Eupator, in the twelfth year of his age, and under the official command
+of Lysias, one of his relatives. The army consisted of both subjects and
+hired aliens, even from the islands of the sea. They numbered "a hundred
+thousand infantry, and twenty thousand cavalry, with thirty-two elephants
+exercised in battle," (I Macc. vi. 30.)
+
+The object of the expedition was to crush the Maccabaean insurrection,
+and wipe out the disgrace of defeats already sustained. The first
+attempt was to be the relief of the garrison at Jerusalem, which was at
+this time beleaguered by Judas from the temple part of the city.
+
+"The army was very great and mighty," (ver. 41.) "When the sun shone
+upon the shields of gold and brass, the mountains glistered therewith,
+and shined like lamps of fire," (ver. 39.) Each of the thirty-two
+elephants was attended by "a thousand men armed with coats of mail, and
+with helmets of brass on their heads; and besides this, for every beast
+was ordained five hundred horsemen of the best--these were ready at every
+occasion: wheresoever the beast was, and whithersoever the beast went
+they went also, neither departed they from him; and upon the beasts were
+there strong towers of wood, which covered every one of them, and were
+girt fast unto them with devices; there were upon every one thirty-two
+strong men that fought upon them, beside the Indian that ruled him,"
+(ver. 35, etc.)
+
+This strange host marched along the Philistine plain southwards to
+Idumea, which is on the south of Hebron: this being the only way for such
+an army and its elephants to get at Jerusalem. Thence they swept the
+land before them northwards, "and pitched against Bethsura, which they
+assaulted many days, making engines of war, but they of the city came out
+and fought valiantly," (ver. 31.)
+
+Whereupon Judas desisted from his siege of the citadel--which, I may
+remark in passing, must have been on Acra, not like David's citadel taken
+from the Jebusites, on Zion--and hastened to attack the royal host,
+mighty though it was.
+
+Some have supposed that Bethsura is to be found at Bait Zur, near Hebron,
+the Beth Zur of Josh. xv. 33; whereas this place is more than a hundred
+furlongs from Jerusalem, being not much more than an hour (north) from
+Hebron, and is altogether too far removed to answer the description of
+Bethsura, and the operations carried on there, close to the Holy City.
+
+The 5th verse of the 11th chapter of 2 Maccabees sets the whole question
+at rest; the words are distinctly, "So he (Lysias) came to Judea and drew
+near to Bethsura, which was a strong town, but distant from Jerusalem
+_about five furlongs_, and he laid sore siege unto it." Again,
+immediately after taking the city of Jerusalem and dedicating the temple,
+Judas "fortified Bethsura in order to preserve it," (that is, Mount
+Zion,) that the people might have a defence against Idumea, (I Macc. iv.
+61.) And the accusation which had been formerly made to the King
+Antiochus Epiphanes in Persia against Judas and his men was "that they
+had compassed about the sanctuary with high walls as before, and his city
+Bethsura;" also to the present king at Antioch, "that the sanctuary also
+and Bethsura have they fortified," (chap. vi. 7, 26.) It is clear that
+one was an outwork of the other, Bethsura being the defence of Jerusalem
+against incursions from the south.
+
+I know not how to doubt that Bait Sahhoor of the valley is the very
+place. It lies upon a lofty hill across the valley not far beyond
+En-Rogel. This is at present a wretched village, only inhabited for a
+few weeks in the year; but the position is naturally one of great
+strength. The distance from the city answers precisely the requirements
+of the history,--a signal by trumpet, if not the human voice, could be
+heard from one garrison to the other. I have ridden repeatedly to the
+spot and examined the ground. The south-eastern angle of the temple wall
+at Jerusalem (where the great stones are found) is distinctly visible
+from the houses. I sat there upon my horse and remarked how unassailable
+by cavalry and elephants this site must have been, and how great its
+value for a military outwork to the sanctuary of the temple. The
+pediment and moulding of a column lay at my feet,--around and opposite
+across the valley were numerous sepulchres hewn in the solid rock; yet
+the infantry of the Syrians were sufficient to overwhelm the gallant
+defenders. Judas in this emergency resolved to come to their relief,
+raising the siege of the citadel and outflanking the enemy. For this
+purpose he "pitched at Bath Zacharias over against the king's camp,"
+(ver. 32.) This was seventy stadia, or nearly nine Roman, or eight and a
+half English miles distant from Bethsura, (Josephus' Antiq. xii. 9, 4.)
+I believe Bath Zacharias to be the village which now bears the name of
+"Bait Sahhoor of the Christians," close to Bethlehem. {432} I have
+ridden over the space between the two villages called Bait Sahhoor; the
+distance upon a well marked and rather winding road, answers well to the
+description of the historian. The stratagem of Judas becomes here very
+intelligible, which was to take the invaders in the rear, and placing
+them between two hostile Jewish forces, to draw away the main attack from
+Bethsura and Jerusalem; besides cutting off any assistance from the
+south. Antiochus did face round in order to attack him, and was met in
+narrow straits between the two localities. This I take to be the broken
+ground south-east of Mar Elias, where certainly it would be just as
+impossible now for two elephants to go abreast as it was when Josephus
+wrote his lively description of the engagement that ensued; of the shouts
+of the men echoing among the mountains, and the glitter of the rising sun
+upon the polished accoutrements. It was summer, for they excited the
+elephants with the blood of the grape and the mulberry. The road is to
+this day defined by true tokens of antiquity, such as lines of stones
+covered with hoary lichen, old cisterns, especially a noble one called
+the _Beer el Kott_, with here and there steps cut in the shelves of solid
+rock. The last part of the road on the south is among slippery, rocky,
+narrow defiles and paths, half-way down the hill-sides.
+
+Here six hundred of the Syrian army were cut off and Eleazar, the heroic
+brother of Judas, was crushed under an elephant which he had killed. Yet
+the fortune of the day was not decisive in favour of the Maccabaean army,
+which retired and entrenched itself within the temple fortress.
+
+The outlying post of Bethsura was obliged to capitulate.
+
+Philological grounds for the above identification are not wanting.
+Bethsura and Bath Zacharias may have easily represented the Arabic or
+Hebrew form of Bait Sahhoor. The guttural letter in the middle naturally
+disappears in the Greek text, just as the Greek word "Assidean"
+represents the Hebrew Chasidim in the same history.
+
+The following is a simple demonstration of the transition:--
+
+[Picture: Transition from Hebrew via Greek to Arabic]
+
+It may be asked, why did neither Josephus nor the author of the Books of
+Maccabees tell us that Beth Zachariah was near Bethlehem? I answer:
+first, the narrative did not make this necessary; secondly, Bethlehem was
+then "among the least of the thousands of Judah," her great day had not
+yet arrived; and thus it might have been quite as necessary to say that
+Bethlehem was near Beth Zachariah, as to say that Beth Zachariah was near
+Bethlehem.
+
+The modern name "Bait Sahhoor of the Christians" arises most likely from
+the fact that a majority of the inhabitants,--thirty families to twenty
+in the year 1851,--were of that religion, and from its nearness to the
+field where it is believed the angels appeared to the shepherds
+announcing the birth of Christ, with its subterranean chapel, the crypt
+of a large church in former times.
+
+The other Bait Sahhoor (El Wadiyeh) is so named from its position on the
+side of the Wadi in Nar, or valley of the Kedron. It is only
+occasionally inhabited, the people who claim it being too few to clear
+out the encumbered cisterns for their use, but prefer to identify
+themselves during most of the year with other villages, such as Siloam
+near at hand, where water is more abundant.
+
+
+
+
+XVI. THE BAKOOSH COTTAGE.
+
+
+At about seven miles from Jerusalem lie the Pools of Solomon, commonly
+called the "Burak," upon the road to Hebron, which passes by the head of
+the westernmost of them, on the left hand of the traveller to that city;
+while immediately on the right hand, stands a hill with some cultivation
+of vineyards and fig-trees, with a few olive-trees; apparently half-way
+up that hill is a stone cottage, roughly but well built. It is of that
+cottage and its grounds that I am about to speak, for there I resided
+with my family for some weeks in 1860, and through the summer of 1862.
+
+There is no village close at hand, the nearest one being _El Khud'r_, (or
+St George, so named from a small Greek convent in its midst,) which,
+however, is only visible from the highway for a few minutes at a
+particular bend of the road before reaching the Pools; the next nearest,
+but in the opposite or eastern direction, is Urtas, with its profitable
+cultivation, nestled in a well-watered valley.
+
+After these, in other directions again, are _Bait Jala_, near Rachel's
+sepulchre, and Bethlehem, the sacred town whose name is echoed wherever
+Christ is mentioned throughout the whole world, and will continue to do
+so till the consummation of all things,--"there is no speech or language
+where its name is not heard."
+
+Adjoining the Pools is the shell of a dilapidated khan, of old Saracenic
+period, the outer enclosure alone being now entire. Two or three
+Bashi-bozuk soldiers used to be stationed there, living in wretched
+hovels inside the enclosure, made of fallen building stones, put together
+with mud. On account of this being a government post, the peasantry of
+the country, ignorant of all the world but themselves, denominate this
+old square wall, "The Castle," and that name is repeated by dragomans to
+their European employers.
+
+These were our nearest neighbours.
+
+Close to the khan-gate and to the Pools is a perennial spring of
+excellent water, which, of course, is of great value, and considering how
+several roads meet at that point, and what a diversity of character there
+is continually passing or halting there, it would seem to form the
+perfection of an opening scene to some romantic tale.
+
+Thus the Hebron highway lay between the Pools, with the khan on one side,
+and the Bakoosh hill on the other, and no person or quadruped could pass
+along it unobserved from our window.
+
+From the cottage, the more extended prospect comprised the stony,
+treeless hills in every direction, the Pools forming the head of the
+valley leading to Urtas, and the outskirt beginning of green cultivation
+there; then the streets and houses of Bethlehem; also the Frank mountain;
+and at the back of all the Moab range of mountains.
+
+ [Picture: Ancient Sepulchre on the Bakoosh]
+
+Within the wall enclosing the property of the cottage, with its fruit
+trees already mentioned, there is one of the little round towers such as
+are commonly seen about Bethlehem for summer residence of the cultivator
+and his family during the season of fruit ripening, and which are meant
+by the Biblical term of a tower built in the midst of a vineyard, (see
+Matthew xxi. 33, and Isaiah v. 2.) It is remarkable how perfectly
+circular these are always built, though so small in size. We had also a
+receptacle for beehives, and an ancient sepulchre.
+
+The hill rises very steeply, but being as usual formed into ledges or
+terraces, upon one of these, in a corner near the wall, the stable was
+constructed of a small tent, near a big tree, within the shadow of which,
+and of a bank, the horses were picketed.
+
+Upon the other ledges were arranged the tents for sleeping in at night,
+and alongside of the cottage a kitchen was made of a wall and a roof made
+of branches of trees brought from a distance.
+
+Such was our abode in the pure mountain breezes, with unclouded sunshine,
+and plenty of good spring water within reach.
+
+Inside the stone walls of the house we stayed during the heat of the day;
+the children learned their lessons there, and I transacted business in
+writing, when my presence in Jerusalem was not absolutely required by
+those carrying on the current daily affairs; indeed the reason for
+resorting to this place was the necessity for obtaining recruitment of
+health, after a serious illness brought on by arduous labour. Had not
+unforeseen anxieties come upon us, no lot on earth could have been more
+perfectly delicious in the quality of enjoyment, both for body and
+spirit, than that sojourn upon the wild hill; among ourselves were
+innocence and union, consequently peace; time was profitably spent; and
+our recreations were, practice in the tonic sol-fa singing lessons, with
+sketching and rambling on foot or on horseback over the breezy heights of
+Judah.
+
+And whether by evening twilight, or at the rising of the sun out of the
+Moab mountains, or earlier still, by summer morning starlight, when
+Sirius and Canopus (the latter unseen in England) vied with each other in
+sparkling their varied colours to praise their Maker in the firmament,
+His handiwork; those rambles were sources of delight that cannot be
+expressed in human language; they were, however, not novelties after so
+many years' residence in that Asiatic climate, but had become wrought
+into our very existence.
+
+Our Sabbaths were happy and conscientiously observed; we kept up the
+services of the Church of England as far as practicable, and sometimes
+had a visitor to join us in the same, not omitting the hymn singing.
+
+The two domestic servants were of different Christian communities; for
+the woman was a Latin, and would sometimes repair to her church-service
+at Bethlehem, and the Abyssinian lad might be heard morning and evening,
+or at night in the moonlight--such moonlight as we had there!--reading
+the Gospels and Psalms in his soft native language, or even singing to a
+kirar (or lute) of his own making, hymns with a chorus of "Alleluia,
+Amen."
+
+Another of our gratifications should not be omitted, namely, the hearing
+of the large church bell of the Latins in Bethlehem on certain occasions,
+and always on Sunday mornings; at the moment of the sun peering over the
+eastern horizon that great bell struck, and was followed by a gush of the
+sweetest irregular music from smaller bells, probably belonging to the
+Greeks, and then by the nakoos (plank) of the Armenians, a relic of their
+primitive customs, serving for a bell, {440}--all these acting with one
+consent and with one intention, that of celebrating "the Lord's day," as
+the early Christians delighted to call the first day of the week.
+
+From our window we had the city of David and of David's Lord before us,
+and over the window on the inside I had inscribed in large Arabic
+inscription-characters, "O Son of David, have mercy upon us!" we had
+therefore the writing and the town at the same glance of view.
+
+We were not without visitors: sometimes a friend or two or three would
+arrive from Jerusalem--travellers along the road would mount the hill to
+see us--rabbis of Hebron on the way to Jerusalem, or Jews from the
+distance of Tiberias passing to Hebron, would turn aside to pay their
+respects--Arab chiefs, such as Ismaeen Hhamdan of the Ta'amra--Turkish
+officers, or even the Pasha himself, found the way to the cottage--also
+officers of the British navy, when visiting the sacred localities from
+Jaffa. Among these I would not forget the chaplain of one of our
+men-of-war, who brought up ten of his best men, namely, the Bible and
+temperance class under his charge, to see the venerated places,
+Jerusalem, Bethlehem, and the Mount of Olives. On one occasion we had a
+surveying party with their instruments from H.M.S. _Firefly_, who passed
+some nights with us.
+
+On the higher boundary the land was still in its natural condition of
+stones, fossil shells, and green shrubs with fragrant herbs. There might
+be seen occasionally starting up before the intruding wanderer,
+partridges, hares, quails, the wild pigeon, the fox, or even
+
+ "The wild gazelle on Judah's hills
+ Exultingly would bound,"
+
+and escape also, for I carried no gun with me.
+
+Mounting still higher we came upon the _Dahar-es-Salahh_, a mountain
+whence the prospect of all Philistia and the coast from almost Gaza to
+Carmel expands like a map--no, rather like a thing of still life before
+the eye, with the two seas, namely, the Mediterranean and the Dead Sea,
+visible at once, with likewise the mountains of Samaria and Gerizim,
+besides the Moab country eastward, and Jerusalem and Bethlehem nearer
+home.
+
+Close at hand upon the mountain on which we thus stand, are vestiges of a
+monastic house and chapel called "Khirbet el Kasees," (the priest's
+ruins,) and even more interesting objects still, the remains of older
+edifices, distinguished by ponderous rabbeted stones.
+
+On the mountain top is a large oval space, which has been walled round,
+fragments of the enclosure are easily traceable, as also some broken
+columns, gray and weather-beaten. This has every appearance of having
+been one of the many sun-temples devoted to Baal by early Syrians.
+
+By temple I here mean a succession of open-air courts, with a central
+altar for sacrifice; a mound actually exists on the highest spot of
+elevation, which may well have been the site of the altar.
+
+What a vast prospect does this spot command, not only of landscape in
+every direction, but of sky from which the false worshipper might survey
+the sun's entire daily course, from its rising out of the vague remote
+lands of "the children of the East," and riding in meridian splendour
+over the land of Israel's God, till, slowly descending and cloudless to
+the very last, it dips behind the blue waters of "the great sea!" Alas!
+to think that such a spot as this should ever have been desecrated by
+worship of the creature within actual sight of that holy mountain where
+the divine glory appeared, more dazzling than the brightest effulgence of
+the created sun.
+
+Sloping westwards from the _Dahar-es-Salahh_ were agreeable rides over a
+wilderness of green shrubs with occasional pine and karoobah trees, and
+rough rocks on the way to _Nahhaleen_ or _Bait Ezkareh_, from which we
+catch a view of the valley of Shocoh, the scene of David's triumph over
+Goliath, and beyond that the hill of Santa Anna at _Bait Jibreen_. The
+region there is lonely and silent, with some petty half-depopulated
+villages in sight, but all far away; sometimes a couple or so of peasants
+may be met upon the road driving an ass loaded with charcoal or broken
+old roots of the evergreen oak. Evening excursions in that direction
+were not infrequent for the purpose of seeing the sun set into the sea,
+from which the breeze came up so refreshingly.
+
+The home resources gave us among the fruit trees, goldfinches, bee-eaters
+in blue or green and gold, and beccaficas, the latter for food, but so
+tame that they would stay upon the branches while the gun was levelled at
+them; in fact, little Alexander, returning one day with several of them
+that he had shot, complained of want of sport, quoting the lines of his
+namesake Selkirk in Cowper,--"Their tameness is shocking to me."
+
+Occasionally we got water-hens or coots that had been shot upon the Pools
+of Solomon; only sometimes it was not possible to fish them out as they
+fell into the water, and so became entangled among the gigantic weeds
+that grow up from the bottom to the level of the surface, and among which
+the men were afraid to venture their swimming. Pelicans we did not see,
+although one had been previously brought from thence to Jerusalem, and
+was stuffed for the Museum. Then we had water-cresses from the aqueduct,
+at a place where its side was partly broken between the upper and the
+second pool. Often for a treat we had water particularly light for
+drinking brought from the spring of Etam, (2 Chron. xi. 6.) Figs and
+grapes were furnished from the ground itself, and at the end of August
+the Shaikh Jad Allah sent us a present of fresh honeycomb, according to
+the custom on opening a hive at the end of summer, (in that country the
+bees are never destroyed for the sake of the honey;) presents thereof are
+sent round to neighbours, and of course presents of some other produce
+are given in return. Palestine is still a land abounding in honey.
+
+Occasional incidents occurred on the plain at the foot of the hill,--such
+as a long line of camels kneeling and growling upon the high road, while
+their drivers were swimming during the blaze of noontide in the parts of
+the large pool free from weeds; or military expeditions passing on to
+Hebron during the night, and called up by bugle after resting a couple of
+hours at the castle-gate; or camel-loads of pine-branches swinging in
+stately procession from the southern hills beyond Hebron towards
+Jerusalem, to furnish tabernacles for the Jewish festival; or an immense
+party of Kerak people from beyond the Dead Sea, with their camels, asses,
+mules, besides flocks, for sale, conveying butter and wheat to Jerusalem,
+encamped below us and singing at their watch-fires by night.
+
+Large fires were sometimes visible upon the Moab mountains at the
+distance of thirty or forty miles in a straight line. These may have
+arisen from carelessness, or accidental circumstances, among either
+standing corn or the heaps of harvest in the open air; or they may even
+have been wilful conflagrations made by hostile tribes in their raids
+upon each other. In any case they showed that wherever such things
+occurred in ancient times, Ruth the Moabitess, when settled in Bethlehem,
+might still have been reminded in that way of her native country, which
+lay before her view.
+
+At the Bakoosh we heard the single gun-fire at sunrise or sunset while
+the Pasha had his camp at Hebron; and from the highest part of our hill
+could see the flash of the guns in the castle of Jerusalem when saluting
+the birthday of Mohammed.
+
+For domestic incidents we had the children pelting each other with acorns
+by moonlight; bonfires made by them and the servants on the terrace to
+show us the way when returning at a late hour from Jerusalem; large
+bunches of grapes from the adjoining vineyard, the _Karaweesh_, suspended
+against the wall, reserved to become raisins. Then family presents upon
+a birthday, all derived from the ground itself,--one person bringing a
+bunch of wild thyme in purple blossom,--another some sprigs from a
+terebinth tree, with the reviving odour of its gum that was exuding from
+the bark,--and another a newly-caught chameleon.
+
+The latter was for several days afterwards indulged with a fresh bough of
+a tree for his residence, changed about, one day of oak, next of
+terebinth, then of sumach, or of pine, etc.
+
+Such was our "sweet home" and family life on the Byeways of Palestine.
+
+But a time came when care and anxiety told heavily upon mine and my
+wife's health. For some days I was confined to bed in the tent, unable
+to move up to the house; yet enjoying the reading of my chapters in
+Hebrew in the land of Israel, or ruminating over the huge emphasis of St
+Paul's Greek in 2 Cor. iv. 17, [Greek text]. The curtains of the tent
+were thrown wide open at each side for the admission of air; the children
+were playing or reading on the shady side of another tent; muleteer and
+camel parties I could observe mounting or falling with the rises and dips
+of the Hebron road; and the jingle of bells or the singing of the men was
+audible or alternately lost according to the same circumstances. I lay
+watching the progress of sunshine or shadow around the Frank mountain as
+the hours rolled on; then as evening approached the Egyptian groom took
+down the Egyptian mare to water at the spring, followed by the foal of
+pure Saklawi race, that never till the preceding day had had even so much
+as a halter put across his head,--a Bashi-bozuk soldier with his pipe
+looking on,--the Abyssinian lad carrying pitchers of water to the several
+tents, and the pools of bright blue becoming darker blue when rippled by
+the evening air. All this was food for enjoyment of the picturesque, but
+at the same time God Almighty was leading us into deep trials of faith in
+Himself, and bringing out the value of that promise,--"When thou passest
+through the waters, I will be with thee; and through the rivers, they
+shall not overflow thee."
+
+As the autumn advanced, some slight sprinkling of rain fell--dews at
+night were heavy--mists rose from below--mornings and evenings became
+cooled--new flowers began to appear, such as the purple crocus, and
+certain yellow blossoms belonging to the season, the name of which I do
+not know. We therefore began to take farewell rides about the
+neighbourhood, as to places we were never to see again. One of these was
+to a very archaic pile of rude masonry, deeply weather-eaten, at a ruined
+site called _Bait Saweer_, through green woods and arbutus-trees, glowing
+with scarlet berries; a place which had only recently been brought to my
+notice, and of which no European had any knowledge.
+
+The old building, whose use we could not discover, was composed, not of
+ordinary blocks of stone, but of huge flat slabs, unchiselled at edges or
+corners, laid one over another, but forming decidedly an intentional
+edifice. It is well worth further examination. At the time we had with
+us no materials for sketching, and never had an opportunity of going
+thither afterwards.
+
+It lies among the wild green scene west from the Hebron road, near where,
+on the opposite, or east side, is the opening of the Wadi 'Aroob, with
+its copious springs.
+
+Then we went to _Marseea'_, beyond the _Dair el Benat_--equally unknown
+to Europeans--and, lastly, to the green slopes and precipices towards
+_Nahhaleen_, where, lingering till after sunset, we became in a few
+minutes enveloped in a cloud of mist tossed and rolled along by gusts of
+wind, and several large eagles rose screaming from perches among rocks
+below us into the misty air, as if rejoicing in the boisterous weather.
+
+Three months before, we had been on the same spot at the moment of
+sunset, and saw the whole Philistine plain hidden in a white mist in a
+single minute, but, of course, far below us; and this, we were told, was
+the usual state of things, and would remain so for another month, after
+which the plain would have no mist, but we should have it all on the
+mountains at sunset--so it was now found to be the case.
+
+From one spot on our own grounds we were able to point out as objects in
+the magnificent prospect--the Moab mountains, the crevasse of the Jabbok
+into the Ghor, that of Calirrhoe into the Dead Sea, Hhalhhool near
+Hebron, El Khud'r below us, Rachel's sepulchre, Bethlehem, Nebi Samwil,
+the Scopus, Jerusalem, and our house there, to which we were soon to
+remove.
+
+Before, however, quitting this subject of the Bakoosh, I may refer to one
+very special attraction that held us to the place, namely, an
+agricultural undertaking in its neighbourhood. A friend, of whom I hope
+to speak more in another time and place, superintended for me the
+rebuilding of an ancient Biblical village that lay a heap and a
+desolation, and cleared out its spring of water, which, by being choked
+up with rubbish, made its way unseen under ground, it thus became nearly
+as copious as that alongside of Solomon's Pools. I gathered people into
+the village, vineyards were planted, crops were sown and reaped there,
+taxes were paid to the government; and the vicinity, which previously had
+been notorious for robberies on the Hebron road, became perfectly secure.
+
+On one of my visits, a list was presented to me of ninety-eight
+inhabitants, where a year and a half before there was not one.
+Homesteads were rebuilt; the people possessed horned cattle and flocks of
+sheep and goats, as well as beehives. I saw women grinding at the mill,
+and at one of the doors a cat and a kitten. All was going on
+prosperously.
+
+Purer pleasure have I never experienced than when, in riding over
+occasionally with our children, we saw the threshing of wheat and barley
+in progress, and heard the women singing, or the little children shouting
+at their games. Sixty cows used to be driven at noon to drink at the
+spring.
+
+We returned to Jerusalem on the 21st of October, and on the 28th of
+November that village was again a mass of ruin--the houses
+demolished--the people dispersed--their newly-sown corn and the vineyards
+ploughed over--the fine spring of water choked up once more--and my
+Australian trees planted there torn up by the roots. All this was
+allowed to be done within nine miles of Jerusalem, to gratify persons
+engaged in an intrigue which ended in deeds far worse than this.
+
+Our village was _Faghoor_, and had been one of the ancient towns of the
+tribe of Judah. Its place in the Bible is Joshua xv., where it is found
+in the Greek Septuagint together with Tekoah, Etham, and Bethlehem, all
+noted places--neither of which is contained in the Hebrew text, and
+therefore not in the English translation.
+
+It seems difficult to account for this; but it may possibly be that
+neither of these towns were ever in the Hebrew of that chapter, that they
+were not well known at the time of the original Hebrew being written; but
+that when the translation of the Septuagint was made, the writers knew by
+other means, though living in Egypt, that Tekoah, Etham, Bethlehem, and
+Faghoor had been for a long period famous within the tribe of Judah, and
+therefore they filled up what seemed to them a deficiency in the
+register.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+
+A.--Page 32.
+
+
+The signs here referred to were guessed by Buckingham (about 1816) to be
+possibly some distinctive tokens of Arab tribes; but he seemed rather
+inclined to connect them with marks that are found in Indian caverns, or
+those on the rocks about Mount Sinai.
+
+He was thus nearer to the truth than the latest of travellers, De Saulcy,
+who, with all his knowledge of Semitic alphabets, says of some of these
+_graffiti_, or scratchings, at 'Amman, which he copied: "Tout cela, je
+regrette fort, est lettre close pour moi. Quelle est cette ecriture? Je
+l'ignore." (Voyage en Terre Sainte. Tom. i. p.256. Paris, 1865.)
+
+They are characters adopted by Arabs to distinguish one tribe from
+another, and commonly used for branding the camels on the shoulders and
+haunches, by which means the animals may be recovered, if straying and
+found by Arabs not hostile to the owners.
+
+I have, however, seen them scratched upon walls in many places frequented
+by Bedaween, as, for instance, in the ruined convents, churches, etc., on
+the plain of the Jordan, and occasionally, as at 'Amman, several such
+cyphers are united into one complex character.
+
+ [Picture: Appendix A characters]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+B.--Page 367.
+
+
+Considerable discrepancy may be found among the transcripts furnished by
+travellers in their published works, of the Greek votive inscriptions
+about the entrance of the cavern of Pan at Banias.
+
+I give the following as the result of careful study of them in 1849, and
+again, after the lapse of six years, in 1855, each time examining the
+writing, under varieties of light and shade, at different hours of the
+day.
+
+There are some other inscriptions, which are entirely blackened with
+smoke, in the niches, made perhaps by ancient burning of lamps or of
+incense there. This is particularly the case in one large hollow made in
+the rock, which has almost its whole surface covered with Greek writing.
+Within this hollow a niche is cut out, now empty.
+
+ [Picture: Sculptured niche]
+
+One small niche has its inscription so much defaced by violence that only
+the letters [Greek text] are connectedly legible.
+
+This sculptured niche has no inscription, but only the pedestal on which
+the statue was placed.
+
+ [Picture: Ornamental niche]
+
+This ornamental niche has beneath it, on a tablet, the words as at
+present legible.
+
+The inscription in the highest situation is as follows:--
+
+ [Picture: Inscription in the highest situation]
+
+Beneath this is the following:--
+
+ [Picture: Inscription beneath]
+
+Above the smoked recess, but below an upper niche, we find--
+
+ [Picture: Inscription below upper niche]
+
+In this inscription "the emperors" can mean no others than Vespasian and
+Titus, who had had one and the same Triumph in Rome on account of the
+conquest of Judea; and this very title is used in Josephus, ("Wars," vii.
+xi. 4,)
+
+ [Picture: Greek title]
+
+It is peculiarly suitable to that place, inasmuch as Titus, previous to
+leaving the country, had celebrated there the birthday of his brother
+Domitian, with magnificent public spectacles--amid which, however, more
+than 2500 Jews were destroyed for popular amusement, by burning,
+fighting, and in combats with wild beasts.
+
+Although these are copied with much painstaking, there may be errors
+unperceived in some of the letters; but at least one of the words is
+misspelt by the provincial artist, namely, [Greek word].
+
+
+
+
+INDEX OF PLACES.
+
+
+N.B.--_Names with the asterisk are ancient and not modern_.
+
+A
+
+Aaron's tomb 306
+Abadiyeh 80 106
+Abasiyeh 254
+Abdoon 34
+Abeih 392
+Abu Atabeh 239
+Abu Dis 1
+Abu Mus-hhaf 47
+Abu'n Jaib (Jaim) 337
+Abu Sabakh 203
+Acre 237
+Adasa 200
+Afeeri 193
+Afooleh 227
+Ahhsaniyeh 183
+Ai 204
+'Ainab 391
+'Ain 'Anoob 390 391
+'Ain 'Aroos 324
+'Ain Atha 387
+'Ain Bedawiyeh 240 244
+'Ain Berweh 241
+'Ain Besaba 390
+'Ain Carem 424
+'Ain Dirweh 151 194 290
+'Ain Ghazal 34
+'Ain Ghazal 224
+'Ain Hhood 224
+'Ain Jadoor 41
+'Ain Jidi 333
+'Ain Kaimoon 230
+'Ain Kesoor 392
+'Ain Mel'hh 296
+'Ain Mellahhah 371
+'Ain Merubba' 48
+'Ain Merubba' 417 419
+'Ain Nebel 259 266
+'Ain Noom 270
+'Ain Saadeh 235 245 250
+'Ain Shems 156
+'Ain Sufsafeh 231 250
+'Ain Taasan 321
+'Ain Weibeh 302
+'Ain Yebrood 89
+'Ain Zera'ah 238
+Aita 265
+Aituran 387
+Ajjeh 126 219
+'Ajloon 38 56 69 79
+'Ajoor 153
+'Akir 157
+Alma 108
+'Alman 201
+'Almeet 201
+'Amman 24-36
+Amooriah 156
+'Anata 200 210
+'Aneen 251
+Annabeh 127
+'Arabah 301 320 etc
+'Arabeh 217 etc 251
+'Arabet el Battoof 241
+'Arak el Ameer 19
+'Arak Hala 183
+'Arak Munshiyah 177
+'Ararah 248
+'Arkoob 147
+'Arkoob Sahhaba 336
+Arzoon 254
+Ascalan 163 182
+Asdood 164
+'Asfi 234
+'Asker 90
+Atarah 126 215
+Athleet 224
+Atna 162
+'Attar 183
+Aujeh 133 134
+Awali 348 412
+'Azair 244
+'Azoor 355 377
+
+B
+
+Bahhjah 239
+Bait Ainoon 290
+Bait Atab 147
+Bait Dajan 163
+Bait Duras 162
+Bait Ezkareh 443
+Bait Hhaneena 200
+Bait Hhanoon 175
+Bait Jala 436
+Bait Jan 271
+Bait Jirja 166
+Bait Jibreen 178 443
+Bait Nateef 147 149 196
+Bait Nejed 176
+Bait Sahhoor in Nasara 428
+Bait Sahhoor el Wad 428
+Bait Saweer 447
+Bait Soor (see Bezur)
+Bait Uksa 140
+Bait Unah 140
+Bait U'oon 257
+Bait Uzan 219
+Bait Ziz (Jiz) 157
+Baka 247 249
+Bakoosh 435 etc
+*Balah 297
+Banias 364 384 385
+Barook 354 376 407 411
+*Bashan 66
+Batteer 195
+Battoof 271
+Bayroot 390
+Beerain 291
+Beeri 88
+Beer Eyoob 418
+Beer El Kott 433
+Beer Mustafa 203
+Beer Nebala 200
+Beer es Seba (Beersheba) 189 etc
+Beisan 94 96 etc
+Beka' el Basha 40 46
+Balameh 221
+Beled esh Shai'kh 235 245 247 250
+Belhhamiyeh 80
+Belka 19 79
+*Belus 239
+Beni Naim 290 291
+Beni Saheela 171
+Berasheet 257
+Berberah 165
+Berga'an 45
+Besheet 160
+Buteadeen 405 etc
+*Bethany 1
+*Bethlehem 436 437 440
+Beth Zacharias 432
+Bezur 152 194 430
+Bidias 254
+Bint el Jebail 114 255 257 388
+Bisrah 355 376
+Boorj (near Hebron) 184 287
+Boorj (near Saida) 253
+Brair 176
+Burak 435
+Burka 214 219
+Bursa 48
+Burtaa 222
+Bursheen 254
+Buwairdeh 321
+
+C
+
+Caiffa 236
+*Carmel 44 67 224
+*Caesarea Philippi 364
+Cocab el Hawa 80 82 83 103
+Cocaba 360 381
+Cuf'r Bera'am 121 388
+Cuf'r Cana 126
+Cuf'r Enji 57
+Cuf'r Hhooneh 358 378
+Cuf'r Ita 247
+Cuf'r Kara 222
+Cuf'r Menda 244
+Cuf'r Natta 398
+Cuf'r Rai 126 216
+Cuf'r Ruman 127
+Cuf'r Saba 132 etc
+Cuf'r Yuba 58
+Cuferain (beyond Jordan) 9
+Cuferain (near Carmel) 251
+Curnub 297
+
+D
+
+Dabook 39
+Dahair el Hhumar 23 80
+Dahar es Salahh 441
+Daiket 'Arar 297
+Dair 68
+Dair 'Ammar 137
+Dair el Belahh 169
+Dair el Benat 448
+Dair Dewan 203 204
+Dair ed Duban 177
+Dair Hhanna 240 272
+Dair el Kamar 400 etc
+Dair el Mokhallis 348 374 412
+Dair el Musha'al 136
+Dair el Mushmushi 377
+Dair en Nakhaz 182
+Dair Thecla 254
+Dair Yaseen 427
+Daliet Carmel 238
+Daliet er Rohha 238 251
+Damooneh 241
+*Dan 362
+Dar Joon 349 353
+Dar Kanoon 254
+Dar Meemas 254
+Dar Shems 254
+Dar Zibneh 254
+Dead Sea 3 4 12 326 etc
+Deaneh 197
+Deheedeh 378
+Dejajeh 157
+Desrah 136
+Dibneh 156
+Dilathah 107
+Dilbeh 193
+Doheriyeh 192 193
+Doomeen 238
+Dothan 127 219 etc
+Duhheish'meh 146
+Durtghayer 254
+
+E
+
+Ebeleen 242 247
+Ed Dair 169
+Edjajeh 157
+Eilaboon 240
+Ekfairat 17
+Ekwikat 239
+Elah 150 151 153 196
+'Elealeh 13 17 18
+El 'Areesh 170
+El Hhabees 425
+El Khait 108
+El Kharjeh 208
+El Khud'r 146 435
+El Mergab 34
+El Muntar el Kassar 34
+Er-Ram (beyond Jordan) 9
+Er-Ram (near Jerusalem) 87
+Er-Rihha 4 414
+Esak 194
+'Esfia 235 238
+Es-Salt 12 17 33 41
+Esh-Shemesani 33
+Esh-Shwaifiyeh 33
+Etam 444
+
+F
+
+Faghoor 449 etc
+Fahh'mah 216
+Falooja 176 182
+Farah 108 260
+Farra'an 127
+Fendecomia 126 219
+Ferdisia 127
+Fooleh 227
+Fort 183
+Fountain of Apostles 2
+Furadees 224
+
+G
+
+*Gadara 77
+*Gath 157 163 183
+Ghawair 324 325
+Ghor 3 12 301
+Ghoraniyeh 5
+Ghujar 370
+Ghutt 183
+Ghuzzeh (Gaza) 166 etc
+*Gilboa 67 102
+Gumron 414 416
+
+H
+
+Haddata 257
+Hadeth 390
+Hafeereh 220
+Haita ez Zoot 257
+Harakat 252
+Herfaish 270
+*Hermon 67 78 264 359 364 371
+Hhalhhool 194 291 449
+Hhamameh 163
+Hhaneen 266
+Hhanooneh 136
+Hharrasheh 140 141
+Hharatheeyeh 234 246
+Hhasbani 360 380
+Hhasbeya 360 379 381 etc
+Hhata 176
+Hhatteen 126 240
+Hheker Zaboot 13
+Hhesban 13 16
+Hhizmeh 201 209 210
+Hhooleh (Lake) 361
+Hhooleh 257 386
+Hhubeen 147
+Hhusan 147
+*Hor 301 etc
+*Hormah 299
+Huneen 386
+Hurbaj 236 247
+
+I
+
+Idsaid 182
+Iksal 228
+Ilmah 183
+Ineer 376
+Irtahh 127
+Izereiriyeh 254
+
+J
+
+Ja'arah 247
+Jadeerah 200
+Jahharah 386
+Jaida 246
+Jalood 83
+Janiah 138
+Jarmuk 117 118 262
+Jawah 17
+Jeba' 126 219
+Jeba' (Gibeah of Saul) 208
+Jeba' 147
+Jebel el Ghurb 297
+Jebel Mahas 39
+Jebel esh Shaikh (See Hermon)
+Jebel Sherreh 305
+Jehaarah 24
+Jelaad 43 48
+Jelboon (Gilboa) 96 227
+Jelool 17
+Jeneen 84 126 226
+Jerash 18 48 etc
+*Jericho (See Er-Rihha)
+*Jeshimon 301
+Jezzeen 357 377
+Jifna 88
+Jish 114 115 121 261
+Jis'r el Kadi 399
+Jit 222
+*Jokneam 230
+*Joktheel 337
+Joon 348 353 373
+*Jordan 5 6 77 104 105 364 380 384
+Judaidah 183
+Julis 182
+Jurah 164
+
+K
+
+Kabatieh 219
+*Kadesh Barnea 302
+Kadis 107
+Kadita 116
+Kaimoon 230 250
+Kala'at er Reehha 414
+Kala'at Rubbad 44
+Kala'at Subeibeh 365
+Kalinsawa 127
+Kalkeeleh 127
+Kaloneh 426
+Kanneer 223
+Karatiya 176
+Karaweesh 446
+Kasimiyeh 253
+Kassar Waijees 33
+Kayaseer 94
+Keelah 152 196
+Kelt 3
+Kerak 14 18 34
+Khalsah 370
+Khan em Meshettah 17
+Khan Yunas 169 etc
+Kharas 151 196
+Khash'm Usdum 324 etc
+Khatroon 3 202
+Khirbet el Kasees 442
+Khirbet en Nasara 183
+Khirbet es Sar 38
+Khirbet Saleekhi 47
+Khirbet Sellim 255
+Khuldah (beyond Jordan) 39
+Khuldah (on the Plain) 157 196
+Kifereh 83
+Kobaibeh 183
+Krishneh 203
+Kubbet el Baul 297
+Kubeibeh 160
+Kubrus 222
+Kuriet el 'Aneb 179
+Kuriet es Sook 17
+Kustul (beyond Jordan) 17
+Kustul (near Jerusalem) 426
+
+L
+
+Lahh'm 183
+Laithma 90
+Latroon 427
+Lejjoon 221 229 249 250
+Lesed 149
+Litani 359
+Lubban 90
+Lubieh 126 238
+
+M
+
+Ma'alool 246
+Ma'an 192 301
+Main 17
+Maisera 44
+Ma'kook 206
+Ma'naeen 195
+Manjah 17
+Mar Saba 418
+Marseea' 448
+Martosiyah 183
+Mazaal 224
+Medeba 17
+Mejama'a 71 104
+Mejdal 163 182
+Mejdal Yaba 127 128 etc
+Mekebleh 228
+Menzel el Basha 230
+Merash 183
+Meroon 117 etc
+Merj ibn Amer 228 249
+Merj ed Dom 187
+Med Merka 34
+Mesdar Aishah 34
+Mesh-had 126
+*Me-Yarkon 158
+Mezer 67
+Mezra'a 19 140
+Mezra'ah 254
+Mobugghuk 329
+Modzha 224
+Mohhrakah 233 237
+Mokatta' 233
+Mokhtarah 407 etc
+*Moladah 296
+*Moreh 90
+Mujaidel 237 245
+Mukhmas 207 210
+Mukhneh 90
+Munsoorah 183
+Mushmusheh 249
+Muzaikah 297
+M'zeera'a 136
+
+N
+
+Naa'eea 165
+Naaman 239
+Na'ana 157
+Na'oor 18 19
+Nabloos 44 90
+Nahhaleen 147 443 448
+*Nazareth 126
+Neab 241
+Neba' 17
+Nebi Hhood 56
+Nebi Moosa 2
+Nebi Osha 44
+Nebi Samwil 44
+Nebi Sari 136
+Nebi Yunas 290
+*Negeb 145
+*Nimrin 126
+Nooris 83
+Nuba 152 196
+
+O
+
+Obeyah 183
+*Olivet 1 16
+
+P
+
+*Parah 212
+*Pelesheth 144
+Petra 311 etc
+Point Costigan 332
+Point Molyneux 332
+
+Q
+
+Quarantana 202
+
+R
+
+Ra'ana 157
+Rabbah 34
+Raineh 126
+Rama 238 272
+Ram Allah 87 143
+Rameen 126
+Rami 216
+Ramlah 128 197
+Ras el Ahhmar 108 114
+Ras el 'Ain 131 132
+Ras abu Ammar 147
+Ras Kerker 135 137 etc
+Rehhaniyeh 251
+Remmoon 203 205 206
+Resheef 242
+Rubin 158
+Rumaish 264 267
+Ruman 48
+Rumaneh 244
+Rummet er Room 376
+Runtieh 136
+
+S
+
+Safed 107 117 262 372
+Safoot 47
+Sagheefah 183
+Saida 348 412
+Saidoon 197
+Salem 90
+Salhhah 108 260
+Salhhi 153
+Salim 226
+Salt Mountain 326
+Samakh 76
+Samek 17
+Samma 71
+Samooniah 246
+Samua' 187
+Sanneen 254
+Sanoor 126
+Sasa 121
+Sattaf 424
+Sawafeer Mesalkah 182
+Sawafeer Odeh 182
+Sawiyeh 90
+*Scopus 199
+Sebustieh 15 111 215 219
+Se'eer 10
+Seeleh 215 219
+Seeleh (on Esdraelon) 226
+Sefooriyeh 240
+*Seir 305 306
+*Selah 337
+Selwan 1
+Semsem 176
+Semwan 239
+Senabrah 182
+Setcher (Seeker) 22
+Sha'afat 86
+Shaikh Aman 183
+Shaikh el Bakkar 63
+Shaikh Sad 231
+Shakrah 257
+Sharon 15 127 etc
+Shefa 'Amer (beyond Jordan) 15
+Shefa 'Amer (near Acre) 240 242 243 247
+Shelaleh 238
+Shemuata 239
+Shemaniyeh 183
+*Shephelah 145
+Sheree'ah (See Jordan)
+Shereeat el Menadherah 76
+Shibtain 136
+Shukbeh 136
+Shukeef 254
+Shutta 83
+Sh'waifat 390
+Sh'weikeh (Shocoh) 150 152 196 443
+Sibta 193
+Sik 313
+Sindianeh 247
+Sinjil 90
+Siphla 145
+Soba 423 425
+Solam 227
+Sora'a 156
+Santa Anna 179 183 443
+Suameh 224
+Subariyeh 223
+Sufah 299
+Sufsafeh 231 250
+Sukhneen 241
+Sumkaniyeh 407
+
+T
+
+Ta'annuk 221 226
+Tabakra 47
+*Tabor 44 67 226
+Taitaba 107 116
+Tallooz 48
+Tantoorah 224
+Tarsheehhah 268
+Tayibeh (beyond Jordan) 68 69
+Tayibeh (near Jerusalem) 205 213
+Teereh (on Sharon) 136
+Teereh (in Galilee) 266
+Teeri 224 238
+Tela'at ed Dum 3
+Tell 'Arad 293
+Tell u'l 'Ejel 169
+Tell el Hajjar 204
+Tell el Kadi 362 384
+Tell el Kasees 233
+Tell es Safieh 177
+Thekua' (Tekoa) 337
+Terabeh 334 422
+Thuggeret el Baider 33
+*Thuggeret el Moghafer 48
+Tiberias 78 105
+Tibneen 255 264 387
+Tibneh 156
+Tibni 68
+Timrah 175
+Tool el Ker'm 127
+Tubas 92
+Tuleh 67
+Tura 254
+Tura'an 126
+
+U
+
+Umm el 'Aamed 17
+Umm Bugghek 329
+Umm ed Damaneer 47
+Umm el 'Egher 47
+Umm el Fahh'm 248 249 251
+Umm Kais 62 71 72
+Umm el Kanater 77 106
+Umm Malfoof 33
+Umm er Rumaneh 17
+Umm Saidet 183
+Umm Sheggar 17
+Umm es Swaiweeneh 34
+Umm ez Zeenat 251
+Ursaifah 34
+Urtas 435
+
+W
+
+Wadi Ahhmed 195
+Wadi 'Arab (or Shaikh) 151 196
+Wadi 'Arab 248
+Wadi 'Aroob 448
+Wadi Bait Hhaneena 424
+Wadi Bedan 91
+Wadi Berreh 82
+Wadi Dubber 417
+Wadi En-nab 91
+Wadi Farah 210
+Wadi Fara'ah 91
+Wadi Fik'r 301
+Wadi Fokeen 147
+Wadi el Hharamiyeh 94
+Wadi Hhuggereh 325
+Wadi el Jaib 301 322
+Wadi el Kasab 231
+Wadi Keereh 232 235
+Wadi el Kharnoob 136
+Wadi Mel'hh 230 232
+Wadi Moosa 316
+Wadi Musurr 150
+Wadi Nemela 318
+Wadi Netheeleh 329
+Wadi Pharaon 316
+Wadi Soor 151
+Wadi Sunt 150 154
+Wadi Surar 158
+Wadi Suaineet 207
+Wadi Tayibeh 305
+Wadi Zahari 72
+Weli Jedro 247
+Weli Sardoni 40
+
+Y
+
+Yaabad 222
+Yabneh 158 159
+Yaero 126
+Yafah 245
+Yajoor 245 247 250
+Yakook 125
+Yarmuk 75
+Yaroon 260 388
+Yehudiyeh 257
+
+Z
+
+Zacariah 154
+Zaid 357 377
+Zebdeh 222
+Zeita 182
+Zenabeh 127
+*Zephath 299
+Zer'een 67 83 226
+Zerka 48 49
+*Zin 301
+Ziph 152 292
+Zoghal 328
+Zubairah 17
+Zumareen 223 224
+Zuwatah 219
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES.
+
+
+{3} This is one of the frequent instances of Arabic local names
+preserving the sound, while departing from the signification.
+
+{5} This ford was called _Ghoraneyeh_. The other is called _El
+Meshraa'_.
+
+{17} Tristram has since expressed (p. 535) a doubt of the verity of this
+name of a site, but I had it given to me both at Heshbon and Jerash, and
+De Saulcy has since been there.
+
+{19} How often have I regretted since that we did not know of the
+existence of 'Arak el Ameer, which has of late commanded so much
+interest. We might have so easily turned aside for that short distance.
+
+{20} This word signifies "a desert." It is often found in the Arabic
+Bible, especially in the prophetic books.
+
+{33} See Appendix A.
+
+{39} The largest sort grown there.
+
+{58} The officer deputed from the Porte lives in a pretty village called
+Cuf'r Yuba, and is said to have become enormously rich upon the levies
+which he does not transmit to Constantinople.
+
+{61} Travellers of late report that enormous sums are exacted by the
+'Adwan for their escort upon this same journey as ours. It may,
+therefore, be acceptable to learn what was our contract, and that it was
+honourably acted upon--namely, three of the party to pay 1000 piastres
+each, and 200 each for all the rest. As there were twelve in the party,
+the amount was
+
+ 1000 x 3 = 3000
+ 200 x 9 = 1800
+ ----
+ 4800
+
+This total we among ourselves divided equally, equal to 400 each.
+
+We also agreed to make a present from each when in the territory, besides
+giving a feast at 'Amman, and another at Jerash--the feasts were a mere
+trifle.
+
+A hundred piastres came to rather less than a pound sterling.
+
+I am glad to confirm the recent testimonies of Tristram and De Saulcy as
+to the honourable and noble deportment of Gublan and the other leaders of
+the 'Adwan people.
+
+{65} Were not these the altars or other objects employed in idolatrous
+worship by the Geshurites and Maachathites who remained among the
+Israelites of Gad and Reuben?--(See Josh. xiii. 13.)
+
+{67} I mean Jebel esh Shaikh of the Anti-Lebanon, as I do not believe in
+the existence of any _little Hermon_ in the Bible.
+
+{94} He afterwards died of fever in my service, caught by rapid
+travelling in the heat of July 1860, during the Lebanon insurrection,
+whither he accompanied my Cancelliere to rescue some of the unfortunate
+Christians in my district.
+
+{109} According to the Talmud, private roads were made four cubits wide;
+public roads sixteen cubits; but the approaches to a city of refuge were
+thirty-two cubits in width. See Lightfoot's "Decas Chorographica," VII.
+Latitudo viarum Tradunt Rabini. Via privata [Hebrew text] est quatuor
+cubitorum--via ab urbe in urbem est octo cubitorum--via publica [Hebrew
+text] est sedecm cubitorum--via ad civitates refugii est triginta duorum
+cubitorum." Bava Batra fol., 100 From Lightfoot's "Centuria
+Chorographica." "Synhedrio incubuit vias ad civitates hasee accommodare
+eas dilatando, atque omne offendiculum in quod titubare aut impingere
+posses amovendo. Non permissus in via ullus tumulus aut fluvius super
+quem non esset pons erat que via illuc ducens ad minimum 32 cubitorum
+lata atque in omni bivio, aut viarum partitione scriptum erat [Hebrew
+text] _Refugium_ ne eo fugiens a via erraret."--Maimon in [Hebrew text]
+cap. 8.
+
+{110} On visiting Kadis some years after, I was grieved to find all this
+much demolished, and the ornamentation taken away, by Ali Bek, to adorn
+the new works at his castle of Tibneen.
+
+{111} Since fallen almost to the ground.
+
+{131a} [Greek text].
+
+{131b} [Greek text].
+
+{133} I have been there three times, twice late in autumn, and once in
+July, and always found water abundant.
+
+{136} Since writing the above I have seen the photograph taken of this
+temple by the Palestine explorators in 1866.
+
+{149} I do not find this place in any lists or books of travels.
+
+{155} Since that journey I have been told by the country people that
+between Gaza and Beersheba it is the practice to sow wheat very thinly
+indeed, and to expect every seed to produce thirty to fifty stalks, and
+every stalk to give forty seeds.
+
+{182} In a journey to Gaza from Hebron, in the spring season of 1853, I
+was proceeding from the great oak down a long valley--but I was induced
+to deviate from the direct line by the tidings of _Bait Jibreen_ being
+infested or taken by the Tiyahah Arabs.
+
+We everywhere found the peasantry armed, and on arriving before _Dair
+Nahhaz_, almost within sight of that town, and communicating with the
+village for water to drink, as I rested under a tree, Mohammed 'Abd en
+Nebi sent me word that Bait Jibreen was recovered from the Arabs, and now
+occupied by themselves; that thirty-five corpses of Arabs were lying
+round Bait Jibreen, and one of the two Arab chiefs (Amer) was slain--he
+himself was wounded in the knee.
+
+From hence to Gaza we passed _Zeita_, where a breastwork had been hastily
+thrown up by the peasantry, and into which a number of armed men rushed
+from a concealment, and parleyed before they would allow us to pass on.
+Then to _Falooja_, and between _Idsaid_ and _Karatiyah_ on our right, and
+the Arak Munshiyah on the left. Halted at Brair for the night.
+
+The return from Gaza was by Ascalan, Mejdal, Julis, the two Sawafeers,
+Kasteeneh, Mesmiyeh, and Latron, on the Jaffa road to Jerusalem.
+
+{203} Pronounced sometimes _Dewan_, sometimes _Debwan_.
+
+{204} _Beth_ is represented by the modern word _Dair_, and _Aven_ has
+become _Ewan_, with the Syriac _d_' signifying _of_.
+
+{207} It is worthy of notice that Suwan (in Arabic) (diminutive,
+_Suwaineet_) signifies "flint." These rocks being flinty, it is possible
+that _Seneh_ in Hebrew may have had the same meaning.
+
+{217} 'Arabeh does not appear in any map before Vandevelde in 1854.
+
+{230} As Hebron, Bethshemesh, Gibeon, Shechem, Beth-horon, Ta'annuk,
+Jeneen, etc., besides the cities of refuge.
+
+{238} It is worthy of note, that in this single place the ancient name
+of Carmel is preserved among the people. This being called _Daliet el
+Carmel_ to distinguish it from the Dalieh of the Rohha district, yet the
+denomination Carmel is not otherwise given to this mountain by the Arab
+population. Dalieh signifies "a vine," this, therefore, is the "vine of
+Carmel," and Carmel itself signifies "God's vineyard!"
+
+{243} They afterwards dwindled to two families, the rest removing to
+Caiffa as that port rose in prosperity.
+
+{265} Shakespeare; or as Ronsard has it:--
+
+ "qui _tire l'ire_
+ Des esprits mieux que je n'ecris."
+
+{301} Yet there was a "city of palm-trees" towards the south, which the
+Kenites abandoned for this district south of Arad,--probably the present
+_Nukh'l_; the name has that signification.
+
+{302} There are many such _cachets_ of water in the desert, but known
+only to the tribes of each district. During the Israelitish wanderings,
+Hobab, a native of the desert, may have guided them to many such.
+
+{304} It is not to be supposed, however, that this is a just
+representation of all that "great and terrible wilderness" through which
+the Israelites were led for forty years. It is indeed "a land not sown,"
+(Jer. ii. 2,) and a land of pits and drought fearful to contemplate, as a
+journey for a wandering population of nearly two millions of souls,
+especially in the hottest seasons of the year; but the peculiarly
+terrible wilderness must have been among the defiles, hemmed in by
+scorching cliffs in the Sinaitic peninsula.
+
+In that direction also were the "fiery flying serpents," concerning which
+I have never been able to learn anything more satisfactory than that, in
+the hot and unpeopled gorges west of the Dead Sea, there is a thin and
+yellow serpent called the Neshabiyeh, which flings itself across from one
+point to another in the air with astonishing velocity and force. It is
+therefore named after Neshabeh, a dart or arrow in Arabic. The natives
+also apply to it the epithet of "flying." The wound which it inflicts is
+said to be highly inflammatory and deadly, and from this effect it may be
+called "fiery." It may be also that, from being of a yellow colour, it
+may glitter like a flame when flying with rapidity in the sunshine.
+
+It is only in Isaiah xxx. 6, that the epithet "flying" is used for these
+serpents. Observe, however, in Hebrew Lexicons the several applications
+of this word [Hebrew text].
+
+{309} Dr H. Bonar.
+
+{316} They take a pride in attributing everything of antiquity here to
+Pharaoh, the cursed king of Egypt,--as those about the Euphrates
+attribute all their old wonders to the cursed king Nimrod. These names
+are learned from the Koran.
+
+{320} Numerous travellers, however, have since gone from Jerusalem in
+virtue of the agreement made on this occasion by me, and returned without
+molestation from these people.
+
+{332} This I repeat after having travelled at different times on most
+parts, north, west, and south of the lake, and read all that has been
+printed about the eastern side. (1867.)
+
+{339} Since writing the above, we learn from Lieutenant Warren's very
+interesting letters that the Turkish Government have sent a large force
+into the trans-Jordanic region, with a view of chastising the Arabs: it
+remains to be seen whether this measure will leave any permanent
+effects.--(_Nov._ 1867.)
+
+{405} Especially in a book probably little known, but published as
+"Memoirs of a Babylonian Princess. By (herself) Marie Therese Asmar,"
+who was in London in 1845, and supported for a time by fashionable
+patronesses of romantic Orientalism.
+
+{408} The events of 1860-61 led to a tragical termination of the career
+of this young chieftain.
+
+{419} Mr Tristram has since done this, but on foot, the rugged road
+being impassable in any other way.
+
+{432} Bait Zacari and Zecariah lie far away among the mountains in the
+south-west. Neither of them would command the road which Judas desired
+to intercept--neither of them therefore answers to the Bath Zacharias of
+the history any more than Baitzur near Hebron does to Bethsura--all are
+equally out of the question by reason of their distance.
+
+{440} Very common in Oriental Christendom, and called by the Greeks the
+[Greek text] (semantron.)
+
+The ancient Britons used to summon the congregation to church service by
+means of "sacra ligna," is it not likely that these were the same as the
+above, seeing that the Celtic nations were derived from the East?
+
+
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #22097 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/22097)