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    4- The Jewish Physician - Page 2

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    one of the most considerable families
    in the city. My father was the eldest of ten brothers, who were
    all alive and married when my grandfather died. All the brothers
    were childless, except my father; and he had no child but me. He
    took particular care of my education; and made me learn every
    thing proper for my rank.

    When I was grown up, and began to enter into the world, I
    happened one Friday to be at noon-prayers with my father and my
    uncles in the great mosque of Moussol. After prayers were over,
    the rest of the company going away, my father and my uncles
    continued sitting upon the best carpet in the mosque; and I sat
    down by them. They discoursed of several things, but the
    conversation fell insensibly, I know not how, upon the subject of
    travelling. They extolled the beauties and peculiar rarities of
    some kingdoms, and of their principal cities. But one of my
    uncles said, that according to the uniform report of an infinite
    number of voyagers, there was not in the world a pleasanter
    country than Egypt, on account of the Nile; and the description
    he gave infused into me such high admiration, that from that
    moment I had a desire to travel thither. Whatever my other uncles
    said, by way of preference to Bagdad and the Tigris, in calling
    Bagdad the residence of the Mussulmaun religion, and the
    metropolis of all the cities of the earth, made no impression
    upon me. My father joined in opinion with those of his brothers
    who had spoken in favour of Egypt; which filled me with joy. "Say
    what you will," said he, "the man that has not seen Egypt has not
    seen the greatest rarity in the world. All the land there is
    golden; I mean, it is so fertile, that it enriches its
    inhabitants. All the women of that country charm you by their
    beauty and their agreeable carriage. If you speak of the Nile,
    where is there a more wonderful river? What water was ever
    lighter or more delicious? The very slime it carries along in its
    overflowing fattens the fields, which produce a thousand times
    more than other countries that are cultivated with the greatest
    labour. Observe what a poet said of the Egyptians, when he was
    obliged to depart from Egypt: ‘Your Nile loads you with blessings
    every day; it is for you only that it runs from such a distance.

    Alas! in removing from you, my tears will flow as abundantly as
    its waters; you are to continue in the enjoyment of its
    sweetnesses, while I am condemned to deprive myself of them
    against my will.'

    "If you look," added my father, "towards the island that is
    formed by the two greatest branches of the Nile, what variety of
    verdure! What enamel of all sorts of flowers! What a prodigious
    number of cities, villages, canals, and a
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