Oriental Encounters: Palestine and Syria, 1894-6. Marmaduke William Pickthall

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       Marmaduke William Pickthall

      Oriental Encounters: Palestine and Syria, 1894-6

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066226183

       INTRODUCTION ToC

       CHAPTER I ToC

       CHAPTER II ToC

       CHAPTER III ToC

       CHAPTER IV ToC

       CHAPTER V ToC

       CHAPTER VI ToC

       CHAPTER VII ToC

       CHAPTER VIII ToC

       CHAPTER IX ToC

       CHAPTER X ToC

       CHAPTER XI ToC

       CHAPTER XII ToC

       CHAPTER XIII ToC

       CHAPTER XIV ToC

       CHAPTER XV ToC

       CHAPTER XVI ToC

       CHAPTER XVII ToC

       CHAPTER XVIII ToC

       CHAPTER XIX ToC

       CHAPTER XX ToC

       CHAPTER XXI ToC

       CHAPTER XXII ToC

       CHAPTER XXIII ToC

       CHAPTER XXIV ToC

       CHAPTER XXV ToC

       CHAPTER XXVI ToC

       CHAPTER XXVII ToC

       CHAPTER XXVIII ToC

       CHAPTER XXIX ToC

       CHAPTER XXX ToC

       CHAPTER XXXI ToC

       CHAPTER XXXII ToC

       CHAPTER XXXIII ToC

       Table of Contents

      Early in the year 1894 I was a candidate for one of two vacancies in the Consular Service for Turkey, Persia, and the Levant, but failed to gain the necessary place in the competitive examination. I was in despair. All my hopes for months had been turned towards sunny countries and old civilisations, away from the drab monotone of London fog, which seemed a nightmare when the prospect of escape eluded me. I was eighteen years old, and, having failed in one or two adventures, I thought myself an all-round failure, and was much depressed. I dreamed of Eastern sunshine, palm trees, camels, desert sand, as of a Paradise which I had lost by my shortcomings. What was my rapture when my mother one fine day suggested that it might be good for me to travel in the East, because my longing for it seemed to indicate a natural instinct, with which she herself, possessing Eastern memories, was in full sympathy!

      I fancy there was some idea at the time that if I learnt the languages and studied life upon the spot I might eventually find some backstairs way into the service of the Foreign Office; but that idea, though cherished by my elders as some excuse for the expenses of my expedition, had never, from the first, appealed to me; and from the moment when I got to Egypt, my first destination, it lost whatever lustre it had had at home. For then the European ceased to interest me, appearing somehow inappropriate and false in those surroundings. At first I tried to overcome this feeling or perception which, while I lived with English people, seemed unlawful. All my education until then had tended to impose on me the cult of the thing done habitually upon a certain plane of our society. To seek to mix on an equality with Orientals, of whatever breeding, was one of those things which were never done, nor even contemplated, by the kind of person who had always been my model.

      My sneaking wish to know the natives of the country intimately, like other unconventional desires I had at times experienced, might have remained a sneaking

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