<h2> <SPAN name="ch50" id="ch50"></SPAN>CHAPTER L. </h2>
<p>We descended from Mount Tabor, crossed a deep ravine, followed a hilly,
rocky road to Nazareth—distant two hours. All distances in the East
are measured by hours, not miles. A good horse will walk three miles an
hour over nearly any kind of a road; therefore, an hour, here, always
stands for three miles. This method of computation is bothersome and
annoying; and until one gets thoroughly accustomed to it, it carries no
intelligence to his mind until he has stopped and translated the pagan
hours into Christian miles, just as people do with the spoken words of a
foreign language they are acquainted with, but not familiarly enough to
catch the meaning in a moment. Distances traveled by human feet are also
estimated by hours and minutes, though I do not know what the base of the
calculation is. In Constantinople you ask, "How far is it to the
Consulate?" and they answer, "About ten minutes." "How far is it to the
Lloyds' Agency?" "Quarter of an hour." "How far is it to the lower
bridge?" "Four minutes." I can not be positive about it, but I think that
there, when a man orders a pair of pantaloons, he says he wants them a
quarter of a minute in the legs and nine seconds around the waist.</p>
<p>Two hours from Tabor to Nazareth—and as it was an uncommonly narrow,
crooked trail, we necessarily met all the camel trains and jackass
caravans between Jericho and Jacksonville in that particular place and
nowhere else. The donkeys do not matter so much, because they are so small
that you can jump your horse over them if he is an animal of spirit, but a
camel is not jumpable. A camel is as tall as any ordinary dwelling-house
in Syria—which is to say a camel is from one to two, and sometimes
nearly three feet taller than a good-sized man. In this part of the
country his load is oftenest in the shape of colossal sacks—one on
each side. He and his cargo take up as much room as a carriage. Think of
meeting this style of obstruction in a narrow trail. The camel would not
turn out for a king. He stalks serenely along, bringing his cushioned
stilts forward with the long, regular swing of a pendulum, and whatever is
in the way must get out of the way peaceably, or be wiped out forcibly by
the bulky sacks. It was a tiresome ride to us, and perfectly exhausting to
the horses. We were compelled to jump over upwards of eighteen hundred
donkeys, and only one person in the party was unseated less than sixty
times by the camels. This seems like a powerful statement, but the poet
has said, "Things are not what they seem." I can not think of any thing,
now, more certain to make one shudder, than to have a soft-footed camel
sneak up behind him and touch him on the ear with its cold, flabby
under-lip. A camel did this for one of the boys, who was drooping over his
saddle in a brown study. He glanced up and saw the majestic apparition
hovering above him, and made frantic efforts to get out of the way, but
the camel reached out and bit him on the shoulder before he accomplished
it. This was the only pleasant incident of the journey.</p>
<p>At Nazareth we camped in an olive grove near the Virgin Mary's fountain,
and that wonderful Arab "guard" came to collect some bucksheesh for his
"services" in following us from Tiberias and warding off invisible dangers
with the terrors of his armament. The dragoman had paid his master, but
that counted as nothing—if you hire a man to sneeze for you, here,
and another man chooses to help him, you have got to pay both. They do
nothing whatever without pay. How it must have surprised these people to
hear the way of salvation offered to them "without money and without
price." If the manners, the people or the customs of this country have
changed since the Saviour's time, the figures and metaphors of the Bible
are not the evidences to prove it by.</p>
<p>We entered the great Latin Convent which is built over the traditional
dwelling-place of the Holy Family. We went down a flight of fifteen steps
below the ground level, and stood in a small chapel tricked out with
tapestry hangings, silver lamps, and oil paintings. A spot marked by a
cross, in the marble floor, under the altar, was exhibited as the place
made forever holy by the feet of the Virgin when she stood up to receive
the message of the angel. So simple, so unpretending a locality, to be the
scene of so mighty an event! The very scene of the Annunciation—an
event which has been commemorated by splendid shrines and august temples
all over the civilized world, and one which the princes of art have made
it their loftiest ambition to picture worthily on their canvas; a spot
whose history is familiar to the very children of every house, and city,
and obscure hamlet of the furthest lands of Christendom; a spot which
myriads of men would toil across the breadth of a world to see, would
consider it a priceless privilege to look upon. It was easy to think these
thoughts. But it was not easy to bring myself up to the magnitude of the
situation. I could sit off several thousand miles and imagine the angel
appearing, with shadowy wings and lustrous countenance, and note the glory
that streamed downward upon the Virgin's head while the message from the
Throne of God fell upon her ears—any one can do that, beyond the
ocean, but few can do it here. I saw the little recess from which the
angel stepped, but could not fill its void. The angels that I know are
creatures of unstable fancy—they will not fit in niches of
substantial stone. Imagination labors best in distant fields. I doubt if
any man can stand in the Grotto of the Annunciation and people with the
phantom images of his mind its too tangible walls of stone.</p>
<p>They showed us a broken granite pillar, depending from the roof, which
they said was hacked in two by the Moslem conquerors of Nazareth, in the
vain hope of pulling down the sanctuary. But the pillar remained
miraculously suspended in the air, and, unsupported itself, supported then
and still supports the roof. By dividing this statement up among eight, it
was found not difficult to believe it.</p>
<p>These gifted Latin monks never do any thing by halves. If they were to
show you the Brazen Serpent that was elevated in the wilderness, you could
depend upon it that they had on hand the pole it was elevated on also, and
even the hole it stood in. They have got the "Grotto" of the Annunciation
here; and just as convenient to it as one's throat is to his mouth, they
have also the Virgin's Kitchen, and even her sitting-room, where she and
Joseph watched the infant Saviour play with Hebrew toys eighteen hundred
years ago. All under one roof, and all clean, spacious, comfortable
"grottoes." It seems curious that personages intimately connected with the
Holy Family always lived in grottoes—in Nazareth, in Bethlehem, in
imperial Ephesus—and yet nobody else in their day and generation
thought of doing any thing of the kind. If they ever did, their grottoes
are all gone, and I suppose we ought to wonder at the peculiar marvel of
the preservation of these I speak of. When the Virgin fled from Herod's
wrath, she hid in a grotto in Bethlehem, and the same is there to this
day. The slaughter of the innocents in Bethlehem was done in a grotto; the
Saviour was born in a grotto—both are shown to pilgrims yet. It is
exceedingly strange that these tremendous events all happened in grottoes—and
exceedingly fortunate, likewise, because the strongest houses must crumble
to ruin in time, but a grotto in the living rock will last forever. It is
an imposture—this grotto stuff—but it is one that all men
ought to thank the Catholics for. Wherever they ferret out a lost locality
made holy by some Scriptural event, they straightway build a massive—almost
imperishable—church there, and preserve the memory of that locality
for the gratification of future generations. If it had been left to
Protestants to do this most worthy work, we would not even know where
Jerusalem is to-day, and the man who could go and put his finger on
Nazareth would be too wise for this world. The world owes the Catholics
its good will even for the happy rascality of hewing out these bogus
grottoes in the rock; for it is infinitely more satisfactory to look at a
grotto, where people have faithfully believed for centuries that the
Virgin once lived, than to have to imagine a dwelling-place for her
somewhere, any where, nowhere, loose and at large all over this town of
Nazareth. There is too large a scope of country. The imagination can not
work. There is no one particular spot to chain your eye, rivet your
interest, and make you think. The memory of the Pilgrims can not perish
while Plymouth Rock remains to us. The old monks are wise. They know how
to drive a stake through a pleasant tradition that will hold it to its
place forever.</p>
<p>We visited the places where Jesus worked for fifteen years as a carpenter,
and where he attempted to teach in the synagogue and was driven out by a
mob. Catholic chapels stand upon these sites and protect the little
fragments of the ancient walls which remain. Our pilgrims broke off
specimens. We visited, also, a new chapel, in the midst of the town, which
is built around a boulder some twelve feet long by four feet thick; the
priests discovered, a few years ago, that the disciples had sat upon this
rock to rest, once, when they had walked up from Capernaum. They hastened
to preserve the relic. Relics are very good property. Travelers are
expected to pay for seeing them, and they do it cheerfully. We like the
idea. One's conscience can never be the worse for the knowledge that he
has paid his way like a man. Our pilgrims would have liked very well to
get out their lampblack and stencil-plates and paint their names on that
rock, together with the names of the villages they hail from in America,
but the priests permit nothing of that kind. To speak the strict truth,
however, our party seldom offend in that way, though we have men in the
ship who never lose an opportunity to do it. Our pilgrims' chief sin is
their lust for "specimens." I suppose that by this time they know the
dimensions of that rock to an inch, and its weight to a ton; and I do not
hesitate to charge that they will go back there to-night and try to carry
it off.<br/> <br/> <br/></p>
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<p><br/></p>
<p>This "Fountain of the Virgin" is the one which tradition says Mary used to
get water from, twenty times a day, when she was a girl, and bear it away
in a jar upon her head. The water streams through faucets in the face of a
wall of ancient masonry which stands removed from the houses of the
village. The young girls of Nazareth still collect about it by the dozen
and keep up a riotous laughter and sky-larking. The Nazarene girls are
homely. Some of them have large, lustrous eyes, but none of them have
pretty faces. These girls wear a single garment, usually, and it is loose,
shapeless, of undecided color; it is generally out of repair, too. They
wear, from crown to jaw, curious strings of old coins, after the manner of
the belles of Tiberias, and brass jewelry upon their wrists and in their
ears. They wear no shoes and stockings. They are the most human girls we
have found in the country yet, and the best natured. But there is no
question that these picturesque maidens sadly lack comeliness.</p>
<p>A pilgrim—the "Enthusiast"—said: "See that tall, graceful
girl! look at the Madonna-like beauty of her countenance!"</p>
<p>Another pilgrim came along presently and said: "Observe that tall,
graceful girl; what queenly Madonna-like gracefulness of beauty is in her
countenance."</p>
<p>I said: "She is not tall, she is short; she is not beautiful, she is
homely; she is graceful enough, I grant, but she is rather boisterous."</p>
<p>The third and last pilgrim moved by, before long, and he said: "Ah, what a
tall, graceful girl! what Madonna-like gracefulness of queenly beauty!"<br/>
<br/> <br/></p>
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<p><br/></p>
<p>The verdicts were all in. It was time, now, to look up the authorities for
all these opinions. I found this paragraph, which follows. Written by
whom? Wm. C. Grimes:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"After we were in the saddle, we rode down to the spring to have a last
look at the women of Nazareth, who were, as a class, much the prettiest
that we had seen in the East. As we approached the crowd a tall girl of
nineteen advanced toward Miriam and offered her a cup of water. Her
movement was graceful and queenly. We exclaimed on the spot at the
Madonna-like beauty of her countenance. Whitely was suddenly thirsty,
and begged for water, and drank it slowly, with his eyes over the top of
the cup, fixed on her large black eyes, which gazed on him quite as
curiously as he on her. Then Moreright wanted water. She gave it to him
and he managed to spill it so as to ask for another cup, and by the time
she came to me she saw through the operation; her eyes were full of fun
as she looked at me. I laughed outright, and she joined me in as gay a
shout as ever country maiden in old Orange county. I wished for a
picture of her. A Madonna, whose face was a portrait of that beautiful
Nazareth girl, would be a 'thing of beauty' and 'a joy forever.'"</p>
</blockquote>
<p>That is the kind of gruel which has been served out from Palestine for
ages. Commend me to Fenimore Cooper to find beauty in the Indians, and to
Grimes to find it in the Arabs. Arab men are often fine looking, but Arab
women are not. We can all believe that the Virgin Mary was beautiful; it
is not natural to think otherwise; but does it follow that it is our duty
to find beauty in these present women of Nazareth?</p>
<p>I love to quote from Grimes, because he is so dramatic. And because he is
so romantic. And because he seems to care but little whether he tells the
truth or not, so he scares the reader or excites his envy or his
admiration.</p>
<p>He went through this peaceful land with one hand forever on his revolver,
and the other on his pocket-handkerchief. Always, when he was not on the
point of crying over a holy place, he was on the point of killing an Arab.
More surprising things happened to him in Palestine than ever happened to
any traveler here or elsewhere since Munchausen died.</p>
<p>At Beit Jin, where nobody had interfered with him, he crept out of his
tent at dead of night and shot at what he took to be an Arab lying on a
rock, some distance away, planning evil. The ball killed a wolf. Just
before he fired, he makes a dramatic picture of himself—as usual, to
scare the reader:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"Was it imagination, or did I see a moving object on the surface of the
rock? If it were a man, why did he not now drop me? He had a beautiful
shot as I stood out in my black boornoose against the white tent. I had
the sensation of an entering bullet in my throat, breast, brain."</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Reckless creature!</p>
<p>Riding toward Genessaret, they saw two Bedouins, and "we looked to our
pistols and loosened them quietly in our shawls," etc. Always cool.</p>
<p>In Samaria, he charged up a hill, in the face of a volley of stones; he
fired into the crowd of men who threw them. He says:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"I never lost an opportunity of impressing the Arabs with the perfection
of American and English weapons, and the danger of attacking any one of
the armed Franks. I think the lesson of that ball not lost."</p>
</blockquote>
<p>At Beit Jin he gave his whole band of Arab muleteers a piece of his mind,
and then—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"I contented myself with a solemn assurance that if there occurred
another instance of disobedience to orders I would thrash the
responsible party as he never dreamed of being thrashed, and if I could
not find who was responsible, I would whip them all, from first to last,
whether there was a governor at hand to do it or I had to do it myself"</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Perfectly fearless, this man.</p>
<p>He rode down the perpendicular path in the rocks, from the Castle of
Banias to the oak grove, at a flying gallop, his horse striding "thirty
feet" at every bound. I stand prepared to bring thirty reliable witnesses
to prove that Putnam's famous feat at Horseneck was insignificant compared
to this.<br/> <br/> <br/></p>
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<p><br/></p>
<p>Behold him—always theatrical—looking at Jerusalem—this
time, by an oversight, with his hand off his pistol for once.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"I stood in the road, my hand on my horse's neck, and with my dim eyes
sought to trace the outlines of the holy places which I had long before
fixed in my mind, but the fast-flowing tears forbade my succeeding.
There were our Mohammedan servants, a Latin monk, two Armenians and a
Jew in our cortege, and all alike gazed with overflowing eyes."</p>
</blockquote>
<p>If Latin monks and Arabs cried, I know to a moral certainty that the
horses cried also, and so the picture is complete.</p>
<p>But when necessity demanded, he could be firm as adamant. In the Lebanon
Valley an Arab youth—a Christian; he is particular to explain that
Mohammedans do not steal—robbed him of a paltry ten dollars' worth
of powder and shot. He convicted him before a sheik and looked on while he
was punished by the terrible bastinado. Hear him:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"He (Mousa) was on his back in a twinkling, howling, shouting,
screaming, but he was carried out to the piazza before the door, where
we could see the operation, and laid face down. One man sat on his back
and one on his legs, the latter holding up his feet, while a third laid
on the bare soles a rhinoceros-hide koorbash —["A Koorbash is
Arabic for cowhide, the cow being a rhinoceros. It is the most cruel
whip known to fame. Heavy as lead, and flexible as India-rubber, usually
about forty inches long and tapering gradually from an inch in diameter
to a point, it administers a blow which leaves its mark for time."—Scow
Life in Egypt, by the same author.]—that whizzed through the air
at every stroke. Poor Moreright was in agony, and Nama and Nama the
Second (mother and sister of Mousa,) were on their faces begging and
wailing, now embracing my knees and now Whitely's, while the brother,
outside, made the air ring with cries louder than Mousa's. Even Yusef
came and asked me on his knees to relent, and last of all, Betuni—the
rascal had lost a feed-bag in their house and had been loudest in his
denunciations that morning—besought the Howajji to have mercy on
the fellow."</p>
</blockquote>
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<p><br/></p>
<p>But not he! The punishment was "suspended," at the fifteenth blow to hear
the confession. Then Grimes and his party rode away, and left the entire
Christian family to be fined and as severely punished as the Mohammedan
sheik should deem proper.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"As I mounted, Yusef once more begged me to interfere and have mercy on
them, but I looked around at the dark faces of the crowd, and I couldn't
find one drop of pity in my heart for them."</p>
</blockquote>
<p>He closes his picture with a rollicking burst of humor which contrasts
finely with the grief of the mother and her children.</p>
<p>One more paragraph:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"Then once more I bowed my head. It is no shame to have wept in
Palestine. I wept, when I saw Jerusalem, I wept when I lay in the
starlight at Bethlehem. I wept on the blessed shores of Galilee. My hand
was no less firm on the rein, my anger did not tremble on the trigger of
my pistol when I rode with it in my right hand along the shore of the
blue sea" (weeping.) "My eye was not dimmed by those tears nor my heart
in aught weakened. Let him who would sneer at my emotion close this
volume here, for he will find little to his taste in my journeyings
through Holy Land."</p>
</blockquote>
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<p><br/></p>
<p>He never bored but he struck water.</p>
<p>I am aware that this is a pretty voluminous notice of Mr. Grimes' book.
However, it is proper and legitimate to speak of it, for "Nomadic Life in
Palestine" is a representative book—the representative of a class of
Palestine books—and a criticism upon it will serve for a criticism
upon them all. And since I am treating it in the comprehensive capacity of
a representative book, I have taken the liberty of giving to both book and
author fictitious names. Perhaps it is in better taste, any how, to do
this.<br/> <br/> <br/> <br/> <br/> <br/></p>
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