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قراءة كتاب Our Little Persian Cousin

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Our Little Persian Cousin

Our Little Persian Cousin

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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Our Little Persian Cousin

THE
Little Cousin Series
(TRADE MARK)
Each volume illustrated with six or more full page plates in
tint. Cloth, 12mo, with decorative cover
per volume, 60 cents

LIST OF TITLES

By Mary Hazelton Wade
(unless otherwise indicated)
  • Our Little African Cousin
  • Our Little Alaskan Cousin
  • By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
  • Our Little Arabian Cousin
  • By Blanche McManus
  • Our Little Armenian Cousin
  • Our Little Australian Cousin
  • By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
  • Our Little Brazilian Cousin
  • By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
  • Our Little Brown Cousin
  • Our Little Canadian Cousin
  • By Elizabeth R. MacDonald
  • Our Little Chinese Cousin
  • By Isaac Taylor Headland
  • Our Little Cuban Cousin
  • Our Little Dutch Cousin
  • By Blanche McManus
  • Our Little Egyptian Cousin
  • By Blanche McManus
  • Our Little English Cousin
  • By Blanche McManus
  • Our Little Eskimo Cousin
  • Our Little French Cousin
  • By Blanche McManus
  • Our Little German Cousin
  • Our Little Greek Cousin
  • By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
  • Our Little Hawaiian Cousin
  • Our Little Hindu Cousin
  • By Blanche McManus
  • Our Little Hungarian Cousin
  • By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
  • Our Little Indian Cousin
  • Our Little Irish Cousin
  • Our Little Italian Cousin
  • Our Little Japanese Cousin
  • Our Little Jewish Cousin
  • Our Little Korean Cousin
  • By H. Lee M. Pike
  • Our Little Mexican Cousin
  • By Edward C. Butler
  • Our Little Norwegian Cousin
  • Our Little Panama Cousin
  • By H. Lee M. Pike
  • Our Little Persian Cousin
  • By E. C. Shedd
  • Our Little Philippine Cousin
  • Our Little Porto Rican Cousin
  • Our Little Russian Cousin
  • Our Little Scotch Cousin
  • By Blanche McManus
  • Our Little Siamese Cousin
  • Our Little Spanish Cousin
  • By Mary F. Nixon-Roulet
  • Our Little Swedish Cousin
  • By Claire M. Coburn
  • Our Little Swiss Cousin
  • Our Little Turkish Cousin

L. C. PAGE & COMPANY
New England Building, Boston, Mass.

boy carrying a saddle
"HE CARRIED IT HOME ON HIS SHOULDER."
(See page 92.)

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Our Little Persian
Cousin

By
E. Cutler Shedd


Illustrated by

Diantha W. Horne



Emblem: Spe Labor Levis


Boston
L. C. Page & Company
MDCCCCIX
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Preface

Persia is mostly a tableland, from which rise many high mountains. In the winter come storms of snow and rain; in the spring the ground is green with grass and bright with many flowers; but in the late summer and fall it is dry and hot. Over the mountains wander the Kurds, who live in tents, and drive with them the great flocks of goats and sheep whose milk gives them food and from whose wool they weave their clothing and rugs. In many of the valleys are villages. Here live the busy Persian peasants, who have brought the water in long channels from its bed in the valleys to water their fields and orchards. Where plenty of water is found there are towns and cities.

Over two thousand years ago the kings of the Persians were the most powerful in the world, and ruled all the country from India to Europe. Some of them helped the Jews, as is told in the books of Ezra and Nehemiah in the Old Testament. Two of them tried to conquer Greece, but the brave Greeks defeated their armies in the famous battles of Marathon and Salamis. Many years later the Greeks themselves under Alexander the Great invaded Persia and won its empire. But the Persians afterwards regained the power, and for five centuries held their own against the armies of the Roman emperors.

Suddenly great armies of Arabs poured out from the wide desert land of Arabia, eager to conquer the world, and to bring others to accept the new religion taught by their prophet, Muhammad. Thousands of them entered Persia. They induced the Persians to forsake their own religion, called fire worship, and to become Muhammadans.

Six hundred years passed, when new and more terrible invaders spread over the land. These were armies of horsemen armed with bows, who came in thousands from the wide plains of Siberia. They were the ancestors of the Turks. They destroyed a great many villages and cities, and killed tens of thousands of the Persians. Even yet, after more than five hundred years, one may see in Persia ruins made by them. A great many Turks still live in northern Persia.

The Persians are now a weak and

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