Egyptian DaysHoughton Mifflin, 1912 - 329 pages |
From inside the book
Page 41
... shrine , and further must lave themselves at the fountain in the midst of the open court . Once , I suppose , the Christian dogs had to unshoe themselves as well , but it has been discovered that Occidental curiosity is fully equal to ...
... shrine , and further must lave themselves at the fountain in the midst of the open court . Once , I suppose , the Christian dogs had to unshoe themselves as well , but it has been discovered that Occidental curiosity is fully equal to ...
Page 57
... shrine . But still the other three tended to grow some- what larger than at first , until at last there came to be four well - defined transepts , forming with the central quadrangle a huge cross ; and in each of the arcades the priests ...
... shrine . But still the other three tended to grow some- what larger than at first , until at last there came to be four well - defined transepts , forming with the central quadrangle a huge cross ; and in each of the arcades the priests ...
Page 59
... shrines , untenanted pulpits , win- dows of wonderful arabesque tracery , walls adorned with gilded texts , but only in a rare instance will it be found that any such edifice stands out sharp and clear from the mass . For the most part ...
... shrines , untenanted pulpits , win- dows of wonderful arabesque tracery , walls adorned with gilded texts , but only in a rare instance will it be found that any such edifice stands out sharp and clear from the mass . For the most part ...
Page 87
... shrine of St. Sergius , where the ancient worship still goes on as we may believe it did in the time of the blessed St. Mark , in a language which neither priest nor penitent pretends longer to understand . I may have remarked elsewhere ...
... shrine of St. Sergius , where the ancient worship still goes on as we may believe it did in the time of the blessed St. Mark , in a language which neither priest nor penitent pretends longer to understand . I may have remarked elsewhere ...
Page 93
Philip Sanford Marden. said of these things relates almost equally to both tomb and shrine as a preparation of the visitor to understand them . By far the larger portion of the surviving relics of the remoter ages is made up of the ...
Philip Sanford Marden. said of these things relates almost equally to both tomb and shrine as a preparation of the visitor to understand them . By far the larger portion of the surviving relics of the remoter ages is made up of the ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abydos Amenhotep Amenhotep III Ammon Ammon-Ra ancient appears Arabs Assiut Assuan backsheesh bank bazaars Beni Hassan body building Cairo camel carved cemetery chapel Cheops Citadel cliffs colossi columns court dead decoration delightful Dendera desert donkey doubtless dragoman Dynasty Edfû Egypt Egyptian erected Esneh eternal face feet feluccas Ghizeh gods Hassan Hatasu Hathor history of Egypt Horus huge hypostyle hall impressive Isis Karnak Khephrên king KOM OMBO land later lofty Luxor magnificent massive mastaba mastaba tomb Memphis midst miles modern Mohammed monarchs monument mortuary mosque Mouski mummy native Nile once Osiris passed Pharaoh Philæ Professor Ptolemies pylon pyramids Rameses Rameses II Ramesseum Raschid ride river rock ruin sacred Sakkâra sands seems seen Seti shrine side sort sowaheen Sphinx spot steamer stone Taiyah tarbush temple Thebes thing Thutmosis Thutmosis III tion to-day towers valley visitor walls worship
Popular passages
Page 103 - Those who, avoiding great expense, desire the middle way, they prepare in the following manner. When they have charged their syringes with oil made from cedar, they fill the abdomen of the corpse without making any incision or taking out the bowels, but inject it at the fundament ; and having prevented the injection from escaping, they steep the body in natrum for the prescribed number of days, and on the last day they let out from the abdomen the oil of cedar which they had before injected, and...
Page 103 - ... infusion of drugs. Then with a sharp Ethiopian stone they make an incision in the side and take out all the bowels; and having cleansed the abdomen and rinsed it with palm-wine, they next sprinkle it with pounded perfumes. Then, having filled the belly with pure myrrh pounded, and cassia, and other perfumes, frankincense excepted, they sew it up again; and when they have done this they steep it in natrum, leaving it under for seventy days ; for a longer time than this it is not lawful to steep...
Page 103 - First they draw out the brains through the nostrils with an iron hook, taking part of it out in this manner, the rest by the infusion of drugs. Then with a sharp Ethiopian stone they make an incision in the side, and take out all the bowels; and having cleansed the abdomen and rinsed it with palm wine, they next sprinkle it with pounded perfumes. Then having filled the belly with pure myrrh pounded, and cassia, and other perfumes, frankincense excepted, they sew it up again; and when they have done...
Page 103 - Then having filled the belly with pure myrrh pounded, and cassia, and other perfumes, frankincense excepted, they sew it up again ; and when they have done this, they steep it in natrum, leaving it under for seventy days ; for a longer time than this it is not lawful to steep it. At the expiration of the seventy days they wash the corpse, and wrap the whole body in bandages of flaxen cloth, smearing it with gum, which the Egyptians commonly use instead of glue. After this the relations, having taken...
Page 104 - ... from escaping, they steep the body in natrum for the prescribed number of days, and on the last day they let out from the abdomen the oil of cedar which they had before injected, and it has such power that it brings away the intestines and vitals in a state of dissolution ; the natrum dissolves the flesh, and nothing of the body remains but the skin and the bones.
Page 104 - ... which they had before injected, and it has such power that it brings away the intestines and vitals in a state of dissolution ; the natrum dissolves the flesh, and nothing of the body remains but the skin and the bones. When they have done this they return the body without any further operation.
Page 56 - ... window-ledge just over the spot where condemned criminals were wont to be garroted in the brave days of old, intent on securing a picture of the old gate, the Red Mosque behind, the stream of passing traffic below, and the soaring minaret above, — but all in vain. It was a dismal failure. In no city are street scenes more difficult to photograph than in Cairo, where the upper air is so brilliant and the lower levels so shrouded in shadow.
Page 186 - I fancy this occasional contact with the African continent under our feet will become so common an occurrence that we shall soon pay little heed to it.