Travels in Morocco, Volume 1. by James Richardson
page 42 of 182 (23%)
page 42 of 182 (23%)
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the departed saint with his own peculiar sanctity. So contagious is this
species of superstition, that Romish Christians, long resident in Barbary, assisted by the inventive monks, at last discover the Moorish or Jewish to be a Christian saint. The Jewesses brought our Oriental rabbi, declaring him to know everything, and that his garments smelt of the Holy City. Benoliel, or Ben, as the English called him, protested to me that he did not believe in charms; he only allowed the rabbi to write them to please the women. But I have found, during my travels in the Mediterranean, many persons of education, who pretended they did not believe this or that superstition of their church, whilst they were at heart great cowards, having no courage to reject a popular falsehood, and quite as superstitious as those who never doubt the excrescent dogmas or traditionary fables of their religion. The paper amulets, however, operated favourably on Mrs. Benoliel. She was delivered of a fine child; and received the congratulations of her neighbours. The child was named Sultana; [9] and the people were all as merry as if a princess had been born in Israel. I received a visit from a Moorish taleb, to whom I read some portions of my journal, as also the Arabic Testament: _Taleb_.--"The English read Arabic because they are the friends of Mussulmans. For this reason, God gives them wit to understand the language of the Koran." _Traveller_.--"We wish to study all languages, and to know all people." _Taleb_.--"Now, as you have become so wise in our country, and read Arabic, where next are you going? Why not be quiet and return home, and live a marabout? Where next are you going?" |
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