[A Visit to the Holy Land by Ida Pfeiffer]@TWC D-Link book
A Visit to the Holy Land

CHAPTER IV
26/28

Not only in Constantinople, but almost in every Oriental town, vast numbers of these creatures run about in a wild state.
Here, as every where, some degree of bustle is to be found in the bazaars, particularly in those which are covered in.

Beautiful and durable silk stuffs, the most valuable of which are kept in warehouses under lock and key, form the chief article of traffic.
In the public bazaar we found nothing exposed for sale except provisions.

Among these I remarked some small, very unpalatable cherries.

Asia Minor is the fatherland of this fruit, but I did not find it in any degree of perfection either here or at Smyrna.
Brussa is peculiarly rich in cold springs, clear as crystal, which burst forth from Mount Olympus.

The town is intersected in all directions by subterranean canals; in many streets, the ripple of the waters below can be distinctly heard, and every house is provided with wells and stone basins of the limpid element; in some of the bazaars we find a similar arrangement.
On a nearer approach, the appearance of Mount Olympus is not nearly so grand as when viewed from a distance.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books