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قراءة كتاب Secret History of the English Occupation of Egypt Being a Personal Narrative of Events

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‏اللغة: English
Secret History of the English Occupation of Egypt
Being a Personal Narrative of Events

Secret History of the English Occupation of Egypt Being a Personal Narrative of Events

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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class="td-chapnum">VIII.

Gambetta's Policy. The Joint Note 129 IX. Fall of Sherif Pasha 146 X. My Pleading in Downing Street 162 XI. The Circassian Plot 186 XII. Intrigues and Counter Intrigues 210 XIII. Dervish's Mission 228 XIV. A Last Appeal to Gladstone 251 XV. The Bombardment of Alexandria 270 XVI. The Campaign of Tel-el-Kebir 285 XVII. The Arabi Trial 323 XVIII. Dufferin's Mission 349

APPENDICES

I. Arabi's Autobiography 367 II. Text of National Programme 383 III. Text of Egyptian Constitution of 1882 388 IV. Letter from Boghos Pasha Nubar 397 V. Note as to the Berlin Congress 401 VI. The Wind and the Whirlwind 404

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Secret History of the English Occupation of Egypt

CHAPTER I
EGYPT UNDER ISMAÏL

My first visit to Egypt was in the winter of 1875-6, when I spent some pleasant months as a tourist on the lower Nile. Before, however, describing my impressions of this my earliest acquaintance made with the Egyptian people, it may be as well, that, for their benefit and the benefit of foreign readers generally, I should say a few words in explanation of what my previous life had been as far as it had had any relation to public affairs. It will show them my exact position in my own country, and help them to understand how it came about that, beginning as a mere onlooker at what was passing in their country, I gradually became interested in it politically and ended by taking an active part in the revolution which six years later developed itself among them. I was already thirty-five years of age at the date of this first visit, and had seen much of men and things.

I began life rather early. Belonging to a family of the landed gentry of the south of England with strong Conservative traditions and connected with some of the then leaders of the Tory party, I was placed at the age of eighteen in the Diplomatic Service, in the first instance as attaché to the British Legation at Athens where King Otho was still on the throne of Greece, and afterwards, during a space of twelve years, as member of other legations and embassies to the various Courts of Europe, in all of which I learned a little of my profession, amused myself, and made friends. I was thus, between 1859 and 1869, for some weeks at Constantinople in the reign of Sultan Abd-el-Mejid; for a couple of years in the Germany of the Germanic Confederation; for a year in Spain under Queen Isabella; and for another year in Paris at the climax of the Emperor's prestige under Napoleon III; and I was also for a short time in the Republic of Switzerland, in South America, and in Portugal. Everywhere my diplomatic recollections are agreeable ones, but they are without special political interest or importance of any official kind.

Our English diplomacy in those days, the years following the Crimean War, which had disgusted Englishmen with foreign adventures, was very different from what it has since become. It was essentially pacific, unaggressive, and devoid of those subtleties which have since earned it a reputation of astuteness at the cost of its honesty. Official zeal was at a discount in the public service, and nothing was more certain to bring a young diplomatist into discredit at the Foreign Office than an attempt, however laudable, to raise any new question in a form demanding a public answer. We attachés and junior secretaries were very clearly given to understand this, and that it was not our business to meddle with the politics of the Courts to which we were accredited, only to make ourselves

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