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Travels in Arabia Deserta, Volume 1 Quotes

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Travels in Arabia Deserta, Volume 1 Travels in Arabia Deserta, Volume 1 by Charles M. Doughty
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Travels in Arabia Deserta, Volume 1 Quotes Showing 1-3 of 3
“In the ferment of our civil societies, from which the guardian angels seem to depart, we see many every moment sliding at the brink. What anguishes are rankling in the lees of the soul, the heart-nipping unkindness of a man's friends, his defeated endeavours ! betwixt the birth and death of the mind, what swallowing seas, and storms of mortal miseries ! And when the wildfire is in the heart and he is made mad, the incontinent hands would wreak the harm upon his own head, to blot out the abhorred illusion of the world and the desolate remembrance of himself. Succoured in the forsaken hour, when his courage swerved, with the perfume of human kindness, he might have been to-day alive. Many have looked for consolation, in the imbecility of their souls, who found perhaps hardness of face and contra-diction ; they perished untimely in default of our humanity.”
Charles M. Doughty, Travels in Arabia Deserta, Volume 1
“There is a saying, if any stranger enquire of the first met of Maan, were it even a child, “Who is here the sheykh?â€� he would answer him “I am he.”
Charles Montagu Doughty, Travels in Arabia Deserta, Volume 1
“A new voice haild me of an old friend when, first returned from the Peninsula, I paced again in that long street of Damascus which is called Straight; and suddenly taking me wondering by the hand, 'Tell me (said he), since thou art here again in the peace and assurance of Ullah, and whilst we walk, as in the former years, toward the new blossoming orchards, full of the sweet spring as the garden of God, what moved thee, or how couldst thou take such journeys into the fanatic Arabia?”
Charles Montagu Doughty, Travels in Arabia Deserta, Volume 1