The song of our Syrian guest . [39l Hutbor8 JVotcQ. Hutbors J^otes Ainzehalta on the slope oj the Syrianmountains. — Pace 14. When the little train has crawled up therack and pinion railway which zigzags fromBeyrout and its expanse of sea over the snow-topped Lebanons toward Damascus, one ofthe small stations at which it halts among theheights is Ain Sofar. The traveler will therenotice a carriage road running road would soon lead to a spot where aflat-roofed village some ten miles from AinSofar could be seen across a mountain is Ainzehaita. An excellent water-colord


The song of our Syrian guest . [39l Hutbor8 JVotcQ. Hutbors J^otes Ainzehalta on the slope oj the Syrianmountains. — Pace 14. When the little train has crawled up therack and pinion railway which zigzags fromBeyrout and its expanse of sea over the snow-topped Lebanons toward Damascus, one ofthe small stations at which it halts among theheights is Ain Sofar. The traveler will therenotice a carriage road running road would soon lead to a spot where aflat-roofed village some ten miles from AinSofar could be seen across a mountain is Ainzehaita. An excellent water-colordrawing of this village, with the best descrip-tion of scenery and life thereabout known tome, may be found in the first ten chapters ofInchbolds Under The Syrian Sun. [43 J6C30W:5^ You of the Western world, notiiOi^vVr* knowing these things as they *WVCSl °-^^ often misunderstand what is written. — Pace 15. One of many misconceptions of this sortmay serve to illustrate. Only a western view-point could have made the; words laid himin a manger


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublisherb, booksubjectbible