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Egypt of the Pharaohs and of the Khedivé

Egypt of the Pharaohs and of the Khedivé

Author(s): ,

Genre(s): ,

Narrators: , , , , , , , , , ,

Number of Chapters: 62

Length: 16 hours and 55 minutes

Language: English

Those particulars of the History of Egypt, and of its present condition, in which it differs from other countries, are factors of the idea this famous name stands for, which must be brought prominently into view in any honest and useful construction of the idea. Something of this kind is what the author of the following work has been desirous of attempting, and so was unable, as he was also unwilling, to pass by any point, or question, which fell within the requirements of his design. His aim, throughout, has been to aid those who have not studied the subject much, or perhaps at all, in understanding what it is in the past, and in the present, that gives to Egypt a claim on their attention. The pictures of things, and the thoughts about them, which he offers to his readers, are the materials with which the idea of Egypt has been built up in his own mind: they will judge how far with, or without, reason.

The work had its origin in a tour the author made through the country in the early months of this year. It consists, indeed, of the thoughts that actually occurred to him at the time, and while the objects that called them forth were still before him; with, of course, some[x] pruning, and, here and there, some expansion or addition. They are presented to the reader with somewhat more of methodical arrangement than would have been possible had the hap-hazard sequence, in which the objects and places that suggested them were visited, been adhered to.

As he started for Egypt at a few hours’ notice, it did not occur to him to take any books with him. This temporary absence of the means of reference, and verification, will, in some measure, account for the disposition manifested throughout to follow up the trains of thought Egyptian objects quicken in the beholder’s mind. These excursus, however, as they will appear to those who take little interest in the internal, and ask only for the external, incidents of travel, have been retained, not merely because they were necessary for what came to be the design of the work, but also because, had they been excluded, the work would have ceased to be something real; for then it would not have been what it professes to be, that is, a transcript of the thoughts which the sights of Egypt actually gave rise to in the authors mind.

Wherstead Vicarage: May 13, 1871. - Summary by from the Introduction to the first edition.

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Egypt and the Nile (CBilson)
How in Egypt Nature affected Man (LadyBirdD)
Who were the Egyptians? (LadyBirdD)
Egypt the Japan of the Old World (Chuck Lavazzi)
Backsheesh.—The Girl of Bethany (Chuck Lavazzi)
Antiquity and Character of the Pyramid Civilization (LadyBirdD)
Labour was Squandered on the Pyramids because it could not be bottled up (Chuck Lavazzi)
The Great Pyramid looks down on the Cataract of Philæ (Chuck Lavazzi)
The Wooden Statue in the Boulak Museum (Chuck Lavazzi)
Date of Building with Stone (Chuck Lavazzi)
Going to the Top of the Great Pyramid (Chuck Lavazzi)
Luncheon at the Pyramids. Kêf (Sarah Rothwell)
Abydos (Chuck Lavazzi)
The Faioum (Chuck Lavazzi)
Heliopolis (Joy Dunne)
Thebes—Luxor and Karnak (Sarah Rothwell)
Thebes—The Necropolis (Sarah Rothwell)
Thebes—The Temple-Palaces (Sarah Rothwell)
Rameses the Great goes forth from Egypt (Chuck Lavazzi)
Germanicus at Thebes (George Banfield)
Moses’s Wife (James Thomson)
Egyptian Donkey-boys (Olga Geiling)
Scarabs (Olga Geiling)
Egyptian Belief in a Future Life (pipes)
Why the Hebrew Scriptures ignore the Future Life (Cbteddy)
Why the Hebrew Scriptures ignore the Future Life continued (Cbteddy)
The Effect of Eastern Travel on Belief (pipes)
The Historical Method of Interpretation (pipes)
The Delta—Disappearance of its Monuments (pipes)
Post-Pharaohnic Temples in Upper Egypt (pipes)
The Rationale of the Monuments (LadyBirdD)
The Wisdom of Egypt, and its Fall (Olga Geiling)
Egyptian Landlordism (Olga Geiling)
Caste (Olga Geiling)
Persistency of Custom in the East (Olga Geiling)
Are all Orientals Mad? (Olga Geiling)
The Koran (Olga Geiling)
Oriental Prayer (Olga Geiling)
Pilgrimage (Olga Geiling)
Arab Superstitions.—The Evil Eye (Olga Geiling)
Oriental Cleanliness (Olga Geiling)
Why Orientals are not Republicans (Olga Geiling)
Polygamy—Its Cause (Olga Geiling)
Houriism (Chuck Lavazzi)
Can anything be done for the East? (Chuck Lavazzi)
Achmed tried in the Balance with Hodge (Chuck Lavazzi)
Water-Jars and Water-Carriers (George Banfield)
Want of Wood in Egypt, and its Consequences (Olga Geiling)
Trees in Egypt (BettyB)
Gardening in Egypt (BettyB)
Animal Life in Egypt.—The Camel (LadyBirdD)
The Ass.—The Horse (LadyBirdD)
The Dog.—The Unclean Animal.—The Buffalo.—The Ox.—The Goat and the Sheep.—Feræ Naturæ (Olga Geiling)
Birds in Egypt (BettyB)
The Egyptian Turtle (Olga Geiling)
Insect Plagues (Olga Geiling)
The Shadoof (Olga Geiling)
Alexandria (BettyB)
Cairo (LadyBirdD)
The Canalization of the Isthmus (Chuck Lavazzi)
Conclusion (Olga Geiling)
Conclusion continued (Olga Geiling)
The audiobook Egypt of the Pharaohs and of the Khedivé falls under the genres of , . It is written by , .