Universitätsbibliothek HeidelbergUniversitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
Metadaten

Stephens, John Lloyd
Incidents of travel in Egypt, Arabia Petraea, and the Holy Land: with a map and angravings (Band 1) — 1837

DOI Page / Citation link:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.12664#0303
Overview
Facsimile
0.5
1 cm
facsimile
Scroll
OCR fulltext
286

INCIDENTS OF TRAVEL.

rock had in my eyes an interest scarcely less than
that which the rod of Moses gave it ? Three names
Were written on it: one of a German, the second
of an Englishman, and the third of my early friend,
the same which I had seen above the Cataracts of
the Nile. When, a few years since, he bade me
farewell in my native city, little did I think that
I afterward should trace him beyond the borders
of Egypt, and through the wilderness of Sinai, to
his grave in Jerusalem.

Again I wrote my name under his, and, returning
by the way I came, found the superior still sitting
under the fig-tree, and, moving on, we soon reached
the convent. He hurried away to his official du-
ties, and I retired to my room. I stayed there
three or four hours, poring over the scriptural ac-
count of the scenes that hallowed the wilderness of
Sinai, with an attention that no sound disturbed.
Indeed, the stillness of the convent was at all times
most extraordinary ; day or night not a sound was
to be heard but the tolling of the bell for prayers,
or occasionally the soft step of a monk stealing
through the cloisters.

In the afternoon I lounged around the interior of
the convent. The walls form an irregular quad-
rangle, of about one hundred and thirty paces on
each side, and, as I before remarked, it has the
appearance of a small city. The building was
erected by the Emperess Helena, the mother of the
first Christian emperor, and I might almost call her
the mother of the Holy Land. Her pious heart
sent her, with the same spirit which afterward
 
Annotationen