The Good Shepherd - A Life of Christ for Children by Anonymous
page 13 of 62 (20%)
page 13 of 62 (20%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
fountain, where the women of Nazareth go to fetch water. Jesus must
often have gone with His mother to that fountain; and sometimes, when she was tired, He may have fetched the water for her Himself. [Illustration: Nazareth, from hill above.] Mary wore a long blue dress, tied round the waist, and a cap with pieces of money sewn round it, and a white cloth over her head and shoulders, just as the women of Nazareth do now; and Jesus was very likely dressed in a red cap, a bright tunic, a sash of many colours, and a little jacket of white or blue, just as the boys of Nazareth are dressed now. The houses of Nazareth are white. Grape vines grow over their walls, and doves sit and coo on the flat roofs. There is not much inside the houses: sometimes they have only one room. There is a lamp in the middle of the room, and round the walls there are waterpots. There are bright-coloured quilts on a shelf. People unroll these quilts at night and lie down upon them. There are mats and carpets in the house, and a bright-coloured box with treasures in it, and a painted wooden stool; and that is nearly all. [Illustration: Jewish women grinding corn.] When the people of the house want to eat, they put a tray of food on the wooden stool, and they sit round the tray on the floor, and eat with their hands. People in Palestine would not know what to do with tables and chairs, and knives and forks, like ours. The streets of Nazareth are long and narrow, and they are full of |
|