Web
and Book
design, |
Click
Here to return to |
A THOUSAND MILES UP THE NILE CHAPTER
I. IT is
the
traveller’s lot to dine at many
table-d’hôtes in the course of many wanderings;
but it seldom befalls him to make one of a more miscellaneous gathering
than
that which overfills the great dining-room at Shepheard’s
Hotel in Cairo during
the beginning and height of the regular Egyptian season. Here assemble
daily
some two to three hundred persons of all ranks, nationalities, and
pursuits;
half of whom are Anglo-Indians homeward or outward bound, European
residents,
or visitors established in Cairo for the winter. The other half, it may
be
taken for granted, are going up the Nile. So composite and incongruous
is this
body of Nile-goers, young and old, well-dressed and ill-dressed,
learned and
unlearned, that the new-comer’s first impulse is to inquire
from what motives
so many persons of dissimilar tastes and training can be led to embark
upon an
expedition which is, to say the least of it, very tedious, very costly,
and of
an altogether exceptional interest. His
curiousity, however, is soon gratified. Before two days are over, he
knows
everybody’s name and everybody’s business;
distinguishes at first sight between
a Cook’s tourist and an independent traveller; and has
discovered that
nine-tenths of those whom he is likely to meet up the river are English
or American.
The rest will be mostly German, with a sprinkling of Belgian and
French. So far en bloc;
but the details are more heterogeneous still. Here are invalids
in search of health; artists in search of subjects; sportsmen keen upon
crocodiles; statesman out for a holiday; special correspondents alert
for
gossip; collectors on the scent of papyri and mummies; men of science
with only
scientific ends in view; and the usual surplus of idlers who travel for
the
mere love of travel, or the satisfaction of a purposeless curiousity. Now in a
place like Shepheard’s, where every fresh arrival has the
honor of
contributing, for at least a few minutes, to the general entertainment,
the
first appearance of L.----- and the writer, tired, dusty, and considerably
sunburnt,
may well have given rise to some of the comments in usual circulation
at those
crowded tables. People asked each other, most likely, where these two
wandering
Englishwomen had come from; why they had not dressed for dinner; what
brought
them to Egypt; and if they also were going up the Nile – to
which questions it
would have been easy to give satisfactory answers. We came
from Alexandria, having had a rough passage from Brindisi followed by
forty-eight hours of quarantine. We had not dressed for dinner because,
having
driven on from the station in advance of dragoman and luggage, we were
but just
in time to take seats with the rest. We intended, of course, to go up
the Nile;
and had any one ventured to inquire in so many words what brought us to
Egypt,
we should have replied: – “Stress of
weather.” For in
simple truth we had drifted hither by accident, with no excuse of
health, or
business, or any serious object whatever; and had just taken refuge in
Egypt as
one might turn aside into the Burlington Arcade or the Passage des
Panoramas –
to get out of the rain. And with
good reason. Having left home early in September for a few
weeks’ sketching in
central France, we had been pursued by the wettest of wet weather.
Washed out
of the hill-country, we fared no better in the plains. At Nismes, it
poured for
a month without stopping. Debating at last whether it were better to
take our
wet umbrellas back at once to England, or push on farther still in
search of
sunshine, the talk fell upon Algiers – Malta –
Cairo; and Cairo carried it.
Never was distant expedition entered upon with less premeditation. The
thing
was no sooner decided than we were gone. Nice, Genoa, Bologna, Ancona
flitted
by, as in a dream; and Bedreddin Hassan when he awoke at the gates of
Damascus
was scarcely more surprised than the writer of these pages, when she
found
herself on board the Simla,
and steaming out of the port of Brindisi. Here,
then, without definite plans, outfit, or any kind of Oriental
experience,
behold us arrived in Cairo on the 29th of November 1873, literally, and
most
prosaically, in search of fine weather. But what
had memory to do with rains on land, or storms at sea, or the impatient
hours
of quarantine, or anything dismal or disagreeable, when one awoke at
sunrise to
see those grey-green palms outside the window solemnly bowing their
plumed
heads towards each other, against a rose-coloured dawn? It was dark
last night,
and I had no idea that my room overlooked an enchanted garden,
far-reaching and
solitary, peopled with stately giants beneath whose tufted crowns hung
rich
clusters of maroon and amber dates. It was a still, warm morning. Grave
grey
and black crows flew heavily from tree to tree, or perched, cawing
meditatively, upon the topmost branches. Yonder, between the pillared
stems,
rose the minaret of a very distant mosque; and here where the garden
was
bounded by a high wall and a windowless house, I saw a veiled lady
walking on
the terraced roof in the midst of a cloud of pigeons. Nothing could be
more
simple than the scene and its accessories; nothing, at the same time,
more
Eastern, strange, and unreal. But in
order thoroughly to enjoy an overwhelming, ineffaceable first
impression of
Oriental out-of-doors life, one should begin in Cairo with a day in the
native
bazaars; neither buying, nor sketching, nor seeking information, but
just
taking in scene after scene, with its manifold combinations of light
and shade,
colour, costume, and architectural detail. Every shop-front, every
street
corner, every turbaned group is a ready-made picture. The old Turk who
sets up
his cake-stall in the recess of a sculptured doorway; the donkey-boy
with his
gaily caparisoned ass, waiting for customers; the beggar asleep on the
steps of
the mosque; the veiled woman filling her water jar at the public
fountain –
they all look as if they had been put there expressly to be painted. Nor is
the
background less picturesque than the figures. The houses are high and
narrow.
The upper stories project; and from these again jut windows of delicate
turned
latticework in old brown wood, like big bird-cages. The street is
roofed in
overhead with long rafters and pieces of matting, through which a dusty
sunbeam
struggles here and there, casting patches of light upon the moving
crowd. The
unpaved thoroughfare – a mere narrow lane, full of ruts and
watered profusely
twice or thrice a day – is lined with little wooden
shop-fronts, like open
cabinets full of shelves, where the merchants sit cross-legged in the
midst of
their goods, looking out at the passers-by and smoking in silence.
Meanwhile,
the crowd ebbs and flows unceasingly – a noisy, changing,
restless,
parti-coloured tide, half European, half Oriental, on foot, on
horseback, and
in carriages. Here are Syrian dragomans in baggy trousers and braided
jackets;
barefooted Egyptian fellaheen in ragged blue shirts and felt
skull-caps; Greeks
in absurdly stiff white tunics, like walking penwipers; Persians with
high
mitre-like caps of dark woven stuff; swarthy Bedouins in flowing
garments,
creamy-white with chocolate stripes a foot wide, and head-shawl of the
same
bound about the brow with a fillet of twisted camel’s hair;
Englishmen in
palm-leaf hats and knickerbockers, dangling their long legs across
almost
invisible donkeys; native women of the poorer class, in black veils
that leave
only the eyes uncovered, and long trailing garments of dark blue and
black
striped cotton; dervishes in patchwork coats, their matted hair
streaming from
under fantastic head-dresses; blue-black Abyssinians with incredibly
slender,
bowed legs, like attenuated ebony balustrades; Armenian priests,
looking
exactly like Portia as the doctor, in long black gowns and high square
caps;
majestic ghosts of Algerine Arabs, all in white; mounted Janissaries
with
jingling sabres and gold-embroidered jackets; merchants, beggars,
soldiers,
boatmen, labourers, workmen, in every variety of costume, and of every
shade of
complexion from fair to dark, from tawny to copper-colour, from deepest
bronze
to bluest black. Now a
water-carrier goes by, bending under the weight of his newly
replenished
goatskin, the legs of which being tied up, the neck fitted with a brass
cock,
and the hair left on, looks horribly bloated and life-like. Now comes a
sweetmeat-vendor with a tray of that gummy compound known to English
children
as “Lumps of Delight”; and now an Egyptian lady on
a large grey donkey led by a
servant with a showy sabre at his side. The lady wears a rose-coloured
silk
dress and white veil, besides a black silk outer garment, which, being
cloak,
hood, and veil all in one, fills out with the wind as she rides, like a
balloon. She sits astride; her naked feet, in their violet velvet
slippers,
just resting on the stirrups. She takes care to display a plump brown
arm laden
with massive gold bracelets, and, to judge by the way in which she uses
a pair
of liquid black eyes, would not be sorry to let her face be seen also.
Nor is
the steed less well dressed than his mistress. His close-shaven legs
and
hindquarters are painted in blue and white zigzags picked out with
bands of
pale yellow; his high-pommelled saddle is resplendent with velvet and
embroidery; and his headgear is all tags, tassels, and fringes. Such a
donkey
as this is worth from sixty to a hundred pounds sterling. Next passes
an open
barouche full of laughing Englishwomen; or a grave provincial sheykh
all in
black, riding a handsome bay Arab, demi-sang;
or an Egyptian gentleman
in European dress and Turkish fez, driven by an English groom in an
English
phaeton. Before him, wand in hand, bare-legged, eager-eyed, in Greek
skull-cap
and gorgeous gold-embroidered waistcoat and fluttering white tunic,
flies a
native Saïs, or running footman. No person of position drives
in Cairo without
one or two of these attendants. The Saïs (strong, light, and
beautiful, like
John of Bologna’s Mercury) are said to die young. The pace
kills them. Next
passes a lemonade-seller, with his tin jar in one hand, and his
decanter and
brass cups in the other; or an itinerant slipper-vendor with a bunch of
red and
yellow morocco shoes dangling at the end of a long pole; or a
London-built
miniature brougham containing two ladies in transparent Turkish veils,
preceded
by a Nubian outrider in semi-military livery; or, perhaps, a train of
camels,
ill-tempered and supercilious, craning their scrannel necks above the
crowd,
and laden with canvas bales scrawled over with Arabic addresses. But the
Egyptian, Arab, and Turkish merchants, whether mingling in the general
tide or
sitting on their counters, are the most picturesque personages in all
this busy
scene. They wear ample turbans, for the most part white; long vests of
striped
Syrian silk reaching to the feet; and an outer robe of braided cloth or
cashmere. The vest is confined round the waist by a rich sash; and the
outer robe,
or gibbeh,
is generally of some beautiful degraded color, such as maize,
mulberry, olive, peach, sea-green, salmon-pink, sienna-brown, and the
like.
That these stately beings should vulgarly buy and sell, instead of
reposing all
their lives on luxurious divans and being waited upon by beautiful
Circassians,
seems altogether contrary to the eternal fitness of things. Here, for
instance,
is a Grand Vizier in a gorgeous white and amber satin vest, who
condescends to
retail pipe-bowls, – dull red clay pipe-bowls of all sizes
and prices. He sells
nothing else, and has not only a pile of them on the counter, but a
binful at
the back of his shop. They are made at Siout in Upper Egypt, and may be
bought
at the Algerine shops in London almost as cheaply as in Cairo. Another
majestic
Pasha deals in brass and copper vessels, drinking-cups, basins, ewers,
trays,
incense-burners, chafing-dishes, and the like; some of which are
exquisitely
engraved with Arabesque patterns or sentences from the poets. A third
sells silk
from the looms of Lebanon, and gold and silver tissues from Damascus.
Others,
again, sell old arms, old porcelain, old embroideries, second-hand
prayer-carpets, and quaint little stools and cabinets of ebony inlaid
with
mother-of-pearl. Here, too, the tobacco-merchant sits behind a huge
cake of
Latakia as big as his own body; and the sponge-merchant smokes his long
chibouk
in a bower of sponges. Most
amusing of all, however, are those bazaars in which each trade occupies
its
separate quarter. You pass through an old stone gateway or down a
narrow
turning, and find yourself amid a colony of saddlers stitching,
hammering,
punching, riveting. You walk up one alley and down another, between
shop-fronts
hung round with tasselled head-gear and hump-backed saddles of all
qualities
and colours. Here are ladies’ saddles, military saddles,
donkey-saddles, and
saddles for great officers of state; saddles covered with red leather,
with
crimson and violet velvet, with maroon, and grey, and purple cloth;
saddles
embroidered with gold and silver, studded with brass-headed nails, or
trimmed
with braid. Another
turn or two, and you are in the slipper bazaar, walking down avenues of
red and
yellow morocco slippers; the former of home manufacture, the latter
from Tunis.
Here are slippers with pointed toes, turned-up toes, and toes as round
and flat
as horse-shoes; walking slippers with thick soles, and soft yellow
slippers to
be worn as inside socks, which have no soles at all. These absurd
little
scarlet bluchers with tassels are for little boys; the brown morocco
shoes are
for grooms; the velvet slippers embroidered with gold and beads and
seed-pearls
are for wealthy hareems, and are sold at prices varying from five
shillings to
five pounds the pair. The
carpet
bazaar is of considerable extent, and consists of a network of alleys
and
counter-alleys opening off to the right of the Muski, which is the
Regent
Street of Cairo. The houses in most of these alleys are rich in antique
lattice-windows and Saracenic doorways. One little square is tapestried
all
round with Persian and Syrian rugs, Damascus saddle-bags, and Turkish
prayer-carpets. The merchants sit and smoke in the midst of their
goods; and up
in one corner an old “Kahwagee,” or coffee-seller,
plies his humble trade. He has
set up his little stove and hanging-shelf beside the doorway of a
dilapidated
Khan, the walls of which are faced with Arabesque panellings in old
carved
stone. It is one of the most picturesque “bits” in
Cairo. The striped carpets
of Tunis; the dim grey and blue, or grey and red fabrics of Algiers;
the shaggy
rugs of Laodicea and Smyrna; the rich blues and greens and subdued reds
of
Turkey; and the wonderfully varied, harmonious patterns of Persia, have
each
their local habitation in the neighbouring alleys. One is never tired
of
traversing these half-lighted avenues all aglow with gorgeous color and
peopled
with figures that come and go like the actors in some Christmas piece
of
Oriental pageantry. In the Khan Khaleel, the place of the gold and
silver smiths’
bazaar, there is found, on the contrary, scarcely any display of goods
for
sale. The alleys are so narrow in this part that two persons can with
difficulty walk in them abreast; and the shops, tinier than ever, are
mere
cupboards with about three feet of frontage. The back of each cupboard
is
fitted with tiers of little drawers and pigeon-holes, and in front is a
kind of
matted stone step, called a mastabah, which serves for seat and
counter. The
customer sits on the edge of the mastabah; the merchant squats,
cross-legged,
inside. In this position he can, without rising, take out drawer after
drawer;
and thus the space between the two becomes piled with gold and silver
ornaments. These differ from each other only in the metal, the patterns
being
identical; and they are sold by weight, with a due margin for profit.
In
dealing with strangers who do not understand the Egyptian system of
weights,
silver articles are commonly weighed against rupees or five-franc
pieces, and
gold articles against napoleons or sovereigns. The ornaments made in
Cairo
consist chiefly of chains and earrings, anklets, bangles, necklaces
strung with
coins or tusk-shaped pendants, amulet-cases of filigree or
repoussé work, and
penannular bracelets of rude execution, but rich and ancient designs.
As for
the merchants, their civility and patience are inexhaustible. One may
turn over
their whole stock, try on all their bracelets, go away again and again
without
buying, and yet be always welcomed and dismissed with smiles. L.----- and
the writer
spent many an hour practising Arabic in the Khan Khaleel, without, it
is to be
feared, a corresponding degree of benefit to the merchants. There
are
many other special bazaars in Cairo, as the Sweetmeat Bazaar; the
Hardware
Bazaar; the Tobacco Bazaar; the Sword-mounters’ and
Coppersmiths’ Bazaars; the
Moorish Bazaar, where fez caps, burnouses, and Barbary goods are sold;
and some
extensive bazaars for the sale of English and French muslins, and
Manchester
cotton goods; but these last are, for the most part, of inferior
interest.
Among certain fabrics manufactured in England expressly for the Eastern
market,
we observed a most hideous printed muslin representing small black
devils
capering over a yellow ground, and we learned that it was much in favor
for
children’s dresses. But the
bazaars, however picturesque, are far from being the only sights of
Cairo.
There are mosques in plenty; grand old Saracenic gates; ancient Coptic
churches; the museum of Egyptian antiquities; and, within driving
distance, the
tombs of the Caliphs, Heliopolis, the pyramids, and the Sphinx. To
remember in
what order the present travellers saw these things would now be
impossible; for
they lived in a dream, and were at first too bewildered to catalogue
their
impressions very methodically. Some places they were for the present
obliged to
dismiss with only a passing glance; others had to be wholly deferred
till their
return to Cairo. In the
meanwhile, our first business was to look at dahabeeyahs; and the
looking at
dahabeeyahs compelled us constantly to turn our steps and our thoughts
in the
direction of Boulak – a desolate place by the river, where
some two or three
hundred Nile-boats lay moored for hire. Now, most persons know
something of the
miseries of house-hunting; but only those who have experienced them
know how
much keener are the miseries of dahabeeyah-hunting. It is more
bewildering and
more fatiguing, and is beset by its own special and peculiar
difficulties. The
boats, in the first place, are built on the same plan, which is not the
case
with houses; and except as they run bigger or smaller, cleaner or
dirtier, are
as like each other as twin oysters. The same may be said of their
captains,
with the same differences; for to a person who has been only a few days
in
Egypt, one black or copper-coloured man is exactly like every other
black or
copper-coloured man. Then each Reïs, or captain, displays the
certificates
given to him by former travellers; and these certificates, being
apparently in
active circulation, have a mysterious way of turning up again and again
on
board different boats and in the hands of different claimants. Nor is
this all.
Dahabeeyahs are given to changing their places, which houses do not do;
so that
the boat which lay yesterday alongside the eastern bank may be over at
the
western bank to-day, or hidden in the midst of a dozen others half a
mile lower
down the river. All this is very perplexing; yet it is as nothing
compared with
the state of confusion one gets into when attempting to weigh the
advantages or
disadvantages of boats with six cabins and boats with eight; boats
provided
with canteen, and boats without; boats that can pass the cataract, and
boats
that can’t; boats that are only twice as dear as they ought
to be, and boats
with that defect five or six times multiplied. Their names, again,
– ghazal, sarawa, fostat, dongola, – unlike any names one has ever
heard before, afford
as yet no kind of help to the memory. Neither do the names of their
captains;
for they are all Mohammeds or Hassans. Neither do their prices; for
they vary
from day to day, according to the state of the market as shown by the
returns
of arrivals at the principal hotels. Add to
all
this the fact that no Reïs speaks anything but Arabic, and
that every word of
inquiry or negotiation has to be filtered, more or less inaccurately,
through a
dragoman, and then perhaps those who have not yet tried this variety of
the
pleasures of the chase may be able to form some notion of the weary,
hopeless,
puzzling work which lies before the dahabeeyah hunter in Cairo. Thus it
came to pass that, for the first ten days or so, some three or four
hours had
to be devoted every morning to the business of the boats; at the end of
which
time we were no nearer a conclusion than at first. The small boats were
too
small for either comfort or safety, especially in what Nile-travellers
call “a
big wind.” The medium-sized boats (which lie under the
suspicion of being used
in summer for the transport of cargo) were for the most part of
doubtful
cleanliness. The largest boats, which alone seemed unexceptionable,
contained
from eight to ten cabins, besides two saloons, and were obviously too
large for
a party consisting of only L.-----, the writer, and a maid. And all were
exorbitantly dear. Encompassed by these manifold difficulties;
listening now to
this and now to that person’s opinion; deliberating,
haggling, comparing,
hesitating, we vibrated daily between Boulak and Cairo, and led a
miserable
life. Meanwhile, however, we met some former acquaintances; made some
new ones;
and when not too tired or down-hearted, saw what we could of the sights
of
Cairo – which helped a little to soften the asperities of our
lot. One of
our
first excursions was, of course, to the pyramids, which lie within an
hour and
a half’s easy drive from the hotel door. We started
immediately after an early
luncheon, followed an excellent road all the way, and were back in time
for
dinner at half-past six. But it must be understood that we did not go
to see
the pyramids. We went only to look at them. Later on (having meanwhile
been up
the Nile and back, and gone through months of training), we came again
not only
with due leisure, but also with some practical understanding of the
manifold
phases through which the arts and architecture of Egypt had passed,
since those
far-off days of Cheops and Chephren. Then, only, we can be said to have
seen
the pyramids; and till we arrived at that stage of our pilgrimage, it
will be
well to defer everything like a detailed account of them or their
surroundings.
Of this first brief visit, enough therefore a brief record. The
first
glimpse that most travellers now get of the pyramids is from the window
of the
railway carriage as they come from Alexandria; and it is not
impressive. It
does not take one’s breath away, for instance, like a first
sight of the Alps
from the high level of the Neufchâtel line, or the outline of
the Acropolis at
Athens, as one first recognises it from the sea. The well-known
triangular
forms look small and shadowy, and are too familiar to be in any way
startling.
And the same, I think, is true of every distant view of them
– that is, of
every view which is too distant to afford the means of scaling them
against
other objects. It is only in approaching them, and observing how they
grow with
every foot of the road, that one begins to feel they are not so
familiar after
all. But when
at last the edge of the desert is reached, and the long sand-slope
climbed, and
the rocky platform gained, and the great pyramid in all its unexpected
bulk and
majesty towers close above one’s head, the effect is as
sudden as it is
overwhelming. It shuts out the sky and the horizon. It shuts out all
the other pyramids. It shuts out everything but the sense of awe and wonder. Now,
too,
one discovers that it was with the forms of the pyramids, and only
their forms,
that one had been acquainted all these years past. Of their surface,
their
colour, their relative position, their number (to say nothing of their
size),
one had hitherto entertained no kind of definite idea. The most careful
study
of plans and measurements, the clearest photographs, the most elaborate
descriptions, had done little or nothing, after all, to make one know
the place
beforehand. This undulating table-land of sand and rock, pitted with
open graves
and cumbered with mounds of shapeless masonry, is wholly unlike the
desert of
our dreams. The pyramids of Cheops and Chephren are bigger than we had
expected; the pyramid of Mycerinus is smaller. Here, too, are nine pyramids,
instead of three. They are all entered in the plans and mentioned in
the
guide-books; but, somehow, one is unprepared to find them there, and
cannot
help looking upon them as intruders. These six extra pyramids are small
and
greatly dilapidated. One, indeed, is little more than a big cairn. Even the great pyramid puzzles us with an unexpected sense of unlikeness. We all
know,
and have known from childhood, that it was stripped of its outer blocks
some
five hundred years ago to build Arab mosques and palaces; but the
rugged, rock-like
aspect of that giant staircase takes us by surprise, nevertheless. Nor
does it
look like a partial ruin, either. It looks as if it had been left
unfinished,
and as if the workmen might be coming back to-morrow morning. The
colour
again is a surprise. Few persons can be aware beforehand of the rich
tawny hue
that Egyptian limestone assumes after ages of exposure to the blaze of
an
Egyptian sky. Seen in certain lights, the pyramids look like piles of
massy
gold. Having
but
one hour and forty minutes to spend on the spot, we resolutely refused
on this
first occasion to be shown anything, or told anything, or to be taken
anywhere,
– except, indeed, for a few minutes to the brink of the
sand-hollow in which
the Sphinx lies couchant. We wished to give our whole attention, and
all the
short time at our disposal, to the great pyramid only. To gain some
impression
of the outer aspect and size of this enormous structure, – to
steady our minds
to something like an understanding of its age, – was enough,
and more than
enough, for so brief a visit. For it
is
no easy task to realize, however imperfectly, the duration of six or
seven
thousand years; and the great pyramid, which is supposed to have been
some four
thousand two hundred and odd years old at the time of the birth of
Christ, is
now in its seventh millennary. Standing there close against the base of
it;
touching it; measuring her own height against one of its lowest blocks;
looking
up all the stages of that vast, receding, rugged wall, which leads
upward like
an Alpine buttress and seems almost to touch the sky, the writer
suddenly
became aware that these remote dates had never presented themselves to
her mind
until this moment as anything but abstract numerals. Now, for the first
time,
they resolved themselves into something concrete, definite, real. They
were no
longer figures, but years with their changes of season, their high and
low
Niles, their seed-times and harvests. The consciousness of that moment
will
never, perhaps, quite wear away. It was as if one had been snatched up
for an
instant to some vast height overlooking the plains of Time, and had
seen the
centuries mapped out beneath one’s feet. To
appreciate the size of the great pyramid is less difficult than to
apprehend
its age. No one who has walked the length of one side, climbed to the
top, and
learned the dimensions from Murray, can fail to form a tolerably clear
idea of
its mere bulk. The measurements given by Sir Gardner Wilkinson are as
follows:
– length of each side, 732 feet; perpendicular height, 480
feet 9 inches; area
535,824 square feet.1 That is to say, it stands 115 feet 9
inches
higher than
the cross on the top of St. Paul’s, and about 20 feet lower
than Box Hill in
Surrey; and if transported bodily to London, it would a little more
than cover
the whole area of Lincoln’s Inn Fields. These are
sufficiently matter-of-fact
statements, and sufficiently intelligible; but, like most calculations
of the
kind, they diminish rather than do justice to the dignity of the
subject. More
impressive by far than the weightiest array of figures of the most
striking
comparisons, was the shadow cast by the great pyramid as the sun went
down.
That mighty shadow, sharp and distinct, stretched across the stony
platform of
the desert and over full three-quarters of a mile of the green plain
below. It
divided the sunlight where it fell, just as its great original divided
the
sunlight in the upper air; and it darkened the space it covered, like
an
eclipse. It was not without a thrill of something approaching to awe
that one
remembered how this self-same shadow had gone on registering, not only
the
height of the most stupendous gnomon ever set up by human hands, but
the slow
passage, day by day, of more than sixty centuries of the
world’s history. It was
still lengthening over the landscape as we went down the long
sand-slope and
regained the carriage. Some six or eight Arabs in fluttering white
garments ran
on ahead to bid us a last good-bye. That we should have driven over
from Cairo
only to sit quietly down and look at the great pyramid had filled them
with
unfeigned astonishment. With such energy and despatch as the modern
traveller
uses, we might have been to the top, and seen the temple of the Sphinx,
and
done two or three of the principal tombs in the time. “You
come
again!” said they. “Good Arab show you everything.
You see nothing this time!” So,
promising to return ere long, we drove away; well content,
nevertheless, with
the way in which our time had been spent. The pyramid Bedouins have been plentifully abused by travellers and
guide-books,
but we found no reason to complain of them now or afterwards. They
neither
crowded round us, nor followed us, nor importuned us in any way. They
are
naturally vivacious and very talkative; yet the gentle fellows were
dumb as
mutes when they found we wished for silence. And they were satisfied
with a
very moderate bakhshish at parting. As a
fitting sequel to this excursion, we went, I think next day, to see the
mosque
of Sultan Hassan, which is one of those medieval structures said to
have been
built with the casing-stones of the great pyramid.
1 Since
the first edition of this book was issued, the publication of Mr. W. M.
Flinders Petrie’s standard work, entitled "The Pyramids and Temples of Gizeh,"
has for the first time placed a thoroughly accurate and scientific
description
of the great pyramid at the disposal of students. Calculating from the
rock-cut
sockets at the four corners, and from the true level of the pavement,
Mr.
Petrie finds that the square of the original base of the structure, in
inches,
is of these dimensions:
For the
height, Mr. Petrie, after duly weighing all data, such as the thickness
of the
three casing-stones yet in situ,
and the presumed thickness of those
which formerly faced the upper courses of the masonry, gives from his
observations of the mean angle of the pyramid, a height from base to
apex of
5776.0 ± 7.0 inches. See "The
Pyramids and Temples of Gizeh,"
chap. vi. pp.
37 to 43. [Note to the second edition.] |