Sand and Canvas: Narrative of adventures in Egypt with a sojourn among the artists in Rome
THE CERVARO CAVES.
NARRATIVE OF ADVENTURES IN EGYPT,
WITH A SOJOURN
AMONG THE ARTISTS IN ROME.
By SAMUEL BEVAN.
LONDON: CHARLES GILPIN, 5, BISHOPSGATE STREET, WITHOUT.
MDCCCXLIX.
LONDON: RICHARD BARRETT, PRINTER, MARK LANE.
TO THOMAS WAGHORN, Lieut. R.N., WHO BY HIS OWN ENERGY, AND INDEFATIGABLE EXERTIONS, SUCCEEDED IN ESTABLISHING THE PRACTICABILITY OF THE OVERLAND ROUTE TO INDIA; SACRIFICING HIS TIME AND FORTUNE IN DIVESTING THE EGYPTIAN PORTION OF THAT ROUTE OF ITS VARIED DISCOMFORTS; FACILITATING BY THE AID OF STEAM THE PASSAGE OF THE MAHMOUDIEH AND THE NILE; AND RENDERING SAFE, AND EVEN AGREEABLE, THE ONCE DREADED DESERT, THESE SKETCHES ARE MOST RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED.
The matter contained in the following pages has been gathered from a diary, in which the incidents of each successive day had been regularly noted down, not with any intention of subsequently submitting them to the public, but from a belief that the practice, if not actually instructive, is at least sure to repay the little trouble it occasions.
As the writer had not been attracted either to Egypt or Italy, by any of the usual inducements which influence the generality of travellers, but had been suddenly transplanted, by a somewhat singular chain of circumstances, from the yellow fogs of the great Metropolis, to the bracing air and cloudless skies of the Desert, it was suggested that a relation of his experiences, might possibly present something new, even upon those countries, without encroaching upon themes already exhausted by able and experienced travellers. He has not therefore, carried the reader into the midst of scenes with which he is already well acquainted, nor are his pages filled with elaborate descriptions of churches, temples, and palaces—he has not indulged in rhapsodies upon the pleasant prospects which greeted him, as well as his predecessors, in a ramble through the garden of Italy, neither does he seek to parade his own opinions upon the many glorious works of art, it has been his good fortune to fall in with. All that awaits the reader, is a simple narrative of adventures during a few months’ active employment in Egypt, and a description of such places and things, in Rome and other Italian cities, as are more immediately connected with modern Art and its numerous votaries.
Samuel Bevan
---
SAND AND CANVAS;
PREFACE.
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I.
CHAPTER II.
CHAPTER III.
CHAPTER IV.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER V.
CHAPTER VI.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER VII.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER VIII.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER IX.
CHAPTER X.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XI.
CHAPTER XII.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XIII.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XIV.
CHAPTER XV.
CHAPTER XVI.
CHAPTER XVII.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XVIII.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XIX.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XX.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XXI.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XXII.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XXIII.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XXIV.
CHAPTER XXV.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XXVI.
Transcriber’s Notes