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قراءة كتاب Letters from the Holy Land

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Letters from the Holy Land

Letters from the Holy Land

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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LETTERS FROM

THE  HOLY  LAND

BY
ELIZABETH  BUTLER

WITH SIXTEEN ILLUSTRATIONS IN COLOUR BY THE AUTHOR

colophon

LONDON
ADAM AND CHARLES BLACK
1906

Published March 1903
Reprinted July 1906

 

TO   MY   MOTHER
CHRISTIANA   THOMPSON

PREFACE

THESE letters, written to my mother, and published chiefly at her request, can lay no claim to literary worth; their only possible value lies in their being descriptive of impressions received on the spot of that Land which stands alone in its character upon the map of the world. But the reader will more easily excuse the shortcomings of my pen than, I hope, he will ever do those of my pencil!

I will make no apologies for the sketches, save to remind the reader that most of them had to be done in haste. They are necessarily considerably reduced in size in the reproduction, so as to suit them to the book form.

It was a happy circumstance for me that my husband’s appointment to the Command at Alexandria should have enabled us to realize this journey. A four-weeks’ leave just allowed of our accomplishing the whole tour. The wider round that includes Damascus and Palmyra would, of course, necessitate a much more extended holiday.

The time of year chosen by my husband for our visit was one in which no religious festivals were being celebrated, so that we should be spared the sight of that distressing warring of creeds that one regrets at Jerusalem more than anywhere else. Also the spring season is the healthiest and most agreeable, and we timed our journey so as to begin and end it with the moon which beautified all our nights.

We are chiefly indebted to Mr. Aquilina, the very capable and courteous agent for Messrs. Cook and Son at Alexandria, for the perfect way in which the machinery of the expedition was managed for us. Without such good transport and camps one does not travel as smoothly as we did. To the Archbishop of Alexandria we owe a debt of gratitude for his kind offices in helping to render our way so pleasant.

ELIZABETH BUTLER.

Government House, Devonport,
Christmas Day, 1902.

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

1. Frontispiece  
FACING PAGE
2. Jaffa 8
3. The “Cenaculum.” Site of the House of the Last Supper 26
4. In the Garden of Gethsemane. Noonday. Looking towards Valley of Jehoshaphat 30
5. Bethany 32
6. “Ain Kareem,” reputed birthplace of John the Baptist, from roof of Convent of the Visitation 36
7. Solomon’s Pools, near Jerusalem, looking towards Dead Sea 38
8. Bethlehem from the Sheepfold, Field of Boaz 42
9. The Plain of the Jordan, looking from “New Jericho” towards Mount Pisgah 48
10. The Plain of Esdraelon, from foot of Tabor, with the village of Naim in distance 60
11. Our First Sight of Lake Galilee 62
12. Galilee, looking towards Hermon 64

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