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[Page 43]

The palms looked so stately and grand – Sixty to eighty feet high they stand, slender, slim, and dusky-stemmed and high up at the top of the trees stretch the glorious fern like fronds of foliage.

I saw the Egyptians plowing: they still scratch up the flats with the same old stile of wooden plow that was used 5000 years ago.

At Kafr Zayat, a great native centre we got our first view of the Nile; the railway crossing is on a high iron bridge.

Tantah, which is about half way to Cairo is a large and important native city.

A famous and holy saint, Seyyid Ahmed el-Bedawi, is buried here, and pilgrims come from all over the Moslem world to visit his tomb.

There are three annual fairs to his honor, of which the most important is in this month, August, to commemorate his birthday.

Benha, is the next large place, the junction of the railway to Port Said and Suez.

After leaving Benha, all eyes are looking for the Pyramids, which, though seven miles beyond Cairo, loom up presenting on the horizon to the left of the railway line.

Within a few moments the main station is reached – in the

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