友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!阅读过程发现任何错误请告诉我们,谢谢!! 报告错误
哔哔读书 返回本书目录 我的书架 我的书签 TXT全本下载 进入书吧 加入书签

egypt-第38章

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!




one of the marvels of the world by reason of its great temple of Isis;

surrounded by palm…trees。 But between ourselves; one may say that the

beautiful goddess was a little old…fashioned for our times。 She and

her mysteries had had their day。 Besides; if there should be any

chagrined soul who might regret the disappearance of the island; care

has been taken to perpetuate the memory of it; in the same way as that

of the cataract。 Charming coloured postcards; taken before the

submerging of the island and the sanctuary; are on sale in all the

bookshops along the quay。



Oh! this quay of Assouan; already so British in its orderliness; its

method! Nothing better cared for; nothing more altogether charming

could be conceived。 First of all there is the railway; which; passing

between balustrades painted a grass…green; gives out its fascinating

noise and joyous smoke。 On one side is a row of hotels and shops; all

European in characterhairdressers; perfumers; and numerous dark

rooms for the use of the many amateur photographers; who make a point

of taking away with them photographs of their travelling companions

grouped tastefully before some celebrated hypogeum。



And then numerous cafes; where the whisky is of excellent quality。

And; I ought to add; in justice to the result of the /Entente

Cordiale/; you may see there; too; aligned in considerable quantities

on the shelves; the products of those great French philanthropists; to

whom indeed our generation does not render sufficient homage for all

the good they have done to its stomach and its head。 The reader will

guess that I have named Pernod; Picon and Cusenier。



It may be indeed that the honest fellahs and Nubians of the

neighbourhood; so sober a little while ago; are apt to abuse these

tonics a little。 But that is the effect of novelty; and will pass。 And

anyhow; amongst us Europeans; there is no need to conceal the fact

for we do not all make use of it involuntarily?that alcoholism is a

powerful auxiliary in the propagation of our ideas; and that the

dealer in wines and spirits constitutes a valuable vanguard pioneer

for our Western civilisation。 Races; insensibly depressed by the abuse

of our 〃appetisers;〃 become more supple; more easy to lead in the true

path of progress and liberty。



On this quay of Assouan; so carefully levelled; defiles briskly a

continual stream of fair travellers ravishingly dressed as only those

know how who have made a tour with Cook & Son (Egypt Ltd。)。 And along

the Nile; in the shade of the young trees; planted with the utmost

nicety and precision; the flower…beds and straight…cut turf are

protected efficaciously by means of wire…netting against certain acts

of forgetfulness to which dogs; alas; are only too much addicted。



Here; too; everything is ticketed; everything has its number: the

donkeys; the donkey…drivers; the stations even where they are allowed

to stand〃Stand for six donkeys; stand for ten; etc。〃 Some very

handsome camels; fitted with riding saddles; wait also in their

respective places and a number of Cook ladies; meticulous on the point

of local colour; even when it is merely a question of making some

purchases in the town; readily mount for some moments one or other of

these 〃ships of the desert。〃



And at every fifty yards a policeman; still Egyptian in his

countenance; but quite English in his bearing and costume; keeps a

vigilant eye on everythingwould never suffer; for example; that an

eleventh donkey should dare to take a place in a stand for ten; which

was already full。



Certain people; inclined to be critical; might consider; perhaps; that

these policemen were a little too ready to chide their fellow…

countrymen; whereas on the contrary they showed themselves very

respectful and obliging whenever they were addressed by a traveler in

a cork helmet。 But that is in virtue of an equitable and logical

principle; derived by them from the high places of the new

administrationnamely; that the Egypt of to…day belongs far less to

the Egyptians than to the noble foreigners who have come to brandish

there the torch of civilisation。



In the evening; after dark; the really respectable travellers do not

quit the brilliant dining saloons of the hotels; and the quay is left

quite solitary beneath the stars。 It is at such a time that one is

able to realise how extremely hospitable certain of the natives are

become。 If; in an hour of melancholy; you walk alone on the bank of

the Nile; smoking a cigarette; you will not fail to be accosted by one

of these good people; who misunderstanding the cause of the unrest in

your soul; offers eagerly; and with a touching frankness; to introduce

you to the gayest of the young ladies of the country。



In the other towns; which still remain purely Egyptian; the people

would never practise such an excess of affability and good manners;

which have been learnt; beyond all question from our beneficent

contact。



Assouan possesses also its little Oriental bazaara little

improvised; a little new perhaps; but then one; at least; was needed;

and that as quickly as possible; in order that nothing might be

wanting to the tourists。



The shopkeepers have contrived to provision themselves (in the leading

shops; under the arcades of the Rue de Rivoli) with as much tact as

good taste; and the Cook ladies have the innocent illusion of making

bargains every day。 One may even buy there; hung up by the tail;

stuffed with straw and looking extremely real; the last crocodiles of

Egypt; which; particularly at the end of the season; may be had at

very advantageous prices。



Even the old Nile has allowed itself to be fretted and brought up to

date in the progress of evolution。



First; the women; draped in black veils; who come daily to draw the

precious water; have forsaken the fragile amphorae of baked earth;

which had come to them from barbarous timesand which the

Orientalists grossly abused in their picture; and in their stead have

taken to old tin oil…cans; placed at their disposal by the kindness of

the big hotels。 But they carry them in the same easy graceful manner

as erstwhile the discarded pottery; and without losing in the least

the gracious tanagrine outline。



And then there are the great tourist boats of the Agencies; which are

here in abundance; for Assouan has the privilege of being the terminus

of the line; and their whistlings; their revolving motors; their

electric dynamos maintain from morning till night a captivating

symphony。 It might be urged perhaps against these structures that they

resemble a little the washhouses on the Seine; but the Agencies;

desirous of restoring to them a certain local colour; have given them

names so notoriously Egyptian that one is reduced to silence。 They are

called Sesostris; Amenophis or Ramses the Great。



And finally there are the rowing boats; which carry passengers

incessantly backwards and forwards between the river…banks。 So long as

the season remains at its height they are bedecked with a number of

little flags of red cotton…cloth; or even of simple paper。 The rowers;

moreover; have been instructed to sing all the time the native songs

which are accompanied by a derboucca player seated in the prow。 Nay;

they have even learnt to utter that rousing; stimulating cry which

Anglo…Saxons use to express their enthusiasm or their joy: 〃Hip! Hip!

Hurrah!〃 and you cannot conceive how well it sounds; coming between

the Arab songs; which otherwise might be apt to grow monotonous。



*****



But the triumph of Assouan is its desert。 It begins at once without

transition as soon as you pass the close…cropped turf of the last

square。 A desert which; except for the railroad and the telegraph

poles; has all the charm of the real thing: the sand; the chaos of

overthrown stones; the empty horizonseverything; in short; save the

immensity and infinite solitude; the horror; in a word which formerly

made
返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0
未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!