Travels in the Atlas and Southern Morocco, a narrative of exploration . angement of our little caravan were going on, weoccasionally tried to forget our cares and worries byexploratory strolls through the town. There was littleto be seen worthy of our attention. To say that Saffiis extremely irregularly built in a compact mass ofwhitewashed prison-like houses intersected by a complexlabyrinth of short narrow lanes ; that to the strangerit is remarkable for the filth and garbage which dis-figure it, and the flies and pariah dogs which infest itsevery corner, is only to recount what are more or


Travels in the Atlas and Southern Morocco, a narrative of exploration . angement of our little caravan were going on, weoccasionally tried to forget our cares and worries byexploratory strolls through the town. There was littleto be seen worthy of our attention. To say that Saffiis extremely irregularly built in a compact mass ofwhitewashed prison-like houses intersected by a complexlabyrinth of short narrow lanes ; that to the strangerit is remarkable for the filth and garbage which dis-figure it, and the flies and pariah dogs which infest itsevery corner, is only to recount what are more or lessthe familiar features of most Moorish towns. The one sight which Saffi possesses worth seeing isthe old palace of Mulai bin Abdullah, a Sultan whoreigned in the middle of last century, and made him-self memorable by marrying an Irishwoman, by whomhe had a son called Mulai Ishmael, the bloodthirstyNero of Morocco. The palace occupies a commanding site on the hillshoulder, overlooking the town and near the easterngate. Outside it presents the appearance of an enor-. SAFFI TO THE CITY OF MOROCCO. 5 mous ngly windowless prison, forming a quadrangle ofplain unornamented and unbroken walls. Inside, how-ever, ifc offers more varied and picturesque are long vaulted and dimly-lighted corridors,opening into all sorts of unexpected nooks and myste-rious rooms; there, grassy courts where fountainshave splashed among beds of roses. Here are still to


Size: 1182px × 2113px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., boo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookidtravelsinatlass00thom