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- Frontmatter
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- LETTER XVI
- LETTER XVII
- LETTER XVIII
- LETTER XVIII (Continued)
- LETTER XIX
- LETTER XX
- LETTER XXI
- LETTER XXII
- LETTER XXIII
- LETTER XXIV
- LETTER XXV
- LETTER XXV (Continued)
- LETTER XXVI
- NOTES ON PROTESTANT MISSIONS IN URMI
- LETTER XXVII
- FAREWELL IMPRESSIONS OF PERSIA
- LETTER XXVIII
- LETTER XXIX
- LETTER XXIX (Continued)
- LETTER XXX
- LETTER XXXI
- LETTER XXXII
- LETTER XXXIII
- LETTER XXXIV
- LETTER XXXV
- APPENDIX A
- APPENDIX B
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
Camp Gokun, July 6
A descent of 5000 feet brought us into the grand and narrow gorge of the Sahid stream, with willow, walnut, oak, maple, pear, and crab along its banks, knotted together by sprays of pink roses, with oaks higher up, and above them again overhanging mountains of naked rock, scorched, and radiating heat.
Quite suddenly, after a steep ascent, there is a view of a steep slope below, where a lateral ravine comes down on the Sahid, green with crops of wheat and barley, poplars, willows, and a grove of fine walnuts, and more wonderful still, with an imamzada in good repair, and a village, also named Sahid, in which people live all the year. The glen is magnificent, and is the one spot that I have seen in Persia which suggests Switzerland.
It is a steep and difficult descent through a walnut grove to the village, and before I knew it I was on the roof of a house. The village is built in ten steps up the steep hillside, the posts which support one projecting roof resting on the back of the roof below.
The people were timid and suspicious, gave untrue replies to questions at first, said we were “doing talisman to take their country,” and consulted in Aziz's and Mirza's hearing how they might rob us. It was even difficult to get them to bring fodder for the horses.
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- Journeys in Persia and KurdistanIncluding a Summer in the Upper Karun Region and a Visit to the Nestorian Rayahs, pp. 41 - 57Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1891