Excursions to Cairo, Jerusalem, Damascus, and Balbec From the United States Ship Delaware, During Her Recent Cruise / With an Attempt to Discriminate Between Truth and Error in Regard to the Sacred Places of the Holy City

WITH AN ATTEMPT TO DISCRIMINATE BETWEEN TRUTH AND ERROR IN REGARD TO THE SACRED PLACES OF THE HOLY CITY.
BY GEORGE JONES, A. M. CHAPLAIN U. S. NAVY; AUTHOR OF SKETCHES OF NAVAL LIFE.
NEW-YORK: VAN NOSTRAND AND DWIGHT. 1836.
Entered according to the Act of Congress of the United States of America, in the year 1836, by Van Nostrand and Dwight, in the Clerk’s Office of the Southern District of New-York.
SCATCHERD AND ADAMS, PRINTERS, 38 Gold Street .
TO COMMODORE D. T. PATTERSON, U. S. NAVY, THIS MEMORIAL OF SOME INCIDENTS IN A VERY AGREEABLE CRUISE UNDER HIS COMMAND, IS INSCRIBED, WITH THE RESPECTFUL AND GRATEFUL REGARDS OF THE AUTHOR.

The Author had no intention during the cruise of writing such a book. His reasons for now engaging in it are, in addition to those common on such occasions, a belief that the public take a very deep interest in the countries which he has visited, and would be pleased to have further means of information respecting them. The circumstances under which his excursions into Egypt and Syria were made, though limiting his observations to a few cities, gave him some unusual advantages in examining those to which he was allowed access.
The reader, he believes, will be surprised to see the changes which the energetic government of Mohammed Ali has wrought in Egypt and Syria; and these are only the beginning of changes. The whole East seems destined before long to a wonderful revolution, if not political, at least mental and moral. It is pleasing to see the present dawnings of light upon two countries the most celebrated in the world; the one for its ancient science, the other for its religion. The night appears to be past, and the day-spring at hand.
The author, for reasons not necessary to be stated here, kept no journal during this cruise; but the events and scenes occurring in these visits made an impression so deep that the memory has kept a record of them sufficiently faithful. At the commencement of his attempt to put them on paper, he wrote to Commodore Patterson to ascertain whether such a design would meet with his approbation; and the Commodore, in a very kind letter in reply, was good enough to offer him the use of his own private journal and of his official letters. From these he has drawn much valuable statistical matter as well as hints on other subjects; and he takes this mode of publicly making his acknowledgments for the favor.

George Jones
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Язык

Английский

Год издания

2019-06-08

Темы

Middle East -- Description and travel

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