Coveted Lands, by Arnold Henry
Savage Landor
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Title: Across Coveted Lands or a Journey from Flushing (Holland) to
Calcutta Overland
Author: Arnold Henry Savage Landor
Release Date: July 22, 2007 [EBook #22117]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ACROSS
COVETED LANDS ***
Produced by Michael Ciesielski and the Online Distributed
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[Illustration: His Majesty the Shah of Persia.]
ACROSS COVETED LANDS
OR
A JOURNEY FROM FLUSHING (HOLLAND) TO CALCUTTA,
OVERLAND
BY
A. HENRY SAVAGE LANDOR
WITH 175 ILLUSTRATIONS, DIAGRAMS, PLANS AND MAPS BY
AUTHOR
IN TWO VOLUMES VOL. I
London MACMILLAN AND CO., Limited 1902
All rights reserved
Richard Clay and Sons, Limited, LONDON AND BUNGAY
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
To face page His Majesty the Shah of Persia Frontispiece The Baku Oil
Wells 20 The Amir of Bokhara leaving Baku to return to his Country
26 Persian Wrestling 38 Fourgons on the Russian Road between Resht
and Teheran 50 Making a Kanat 74 The Murderer of Nasr-ed-din Shah
90 Persian Cossacks (Teheran) Drilled by Russian Officers 100 The
Eftetahié College, supported by Meftah-el-Mulk 102 H. E.
Mushir-ed-Doulet, Minister of Foreign Affairs 106 Persian
Soldiers--The Band 112 Recruits learning Music 112 The Arrival of a
Caravan of Silver at the Imperial Bank of Persia 126 The Imperial
Bank of Persia Decorated on the Shah's Birthday 134 A Typical Persian
Window. (Mr. Rabino's House, Teheran.) 140 The First Position in
Persian Wrestling 158 Palawans, or Strong Men giving a Display of
Feats of Strength 158 Iman Jumeh. Head Priest of Teheran, and Official
Sayer of Prayers to the Shah 170 Sahib Divan, who was at various
periods Governor of Shiraz and Khorassan 190 Persian Woman and
Child 206 A Picturesque Beggar Girl 206 Ruku Sultaneh, Brother of
the present Shah 218 The Shah in his Automobile 224 The Sadrazam's
(Prime Minister's) Residence, Teheran 224 In the Shah's Palace
Grounds, Teheran 230 The Shah and his Suite 240 Rock Sculpture near
Shah-Abdul-Azim 244 Author's Diligence between Teheran and Kum
244 The Track along the Kohrut Dam 270 Between Gyabrabad and
Kohrut 270 The Interior of Chappar Khana at Kohrut 272
Chapparing--the Author's post horses 278 Persian Escort firing at
Brigands 278 Jewish Girls, Isfahan 292 An Isfahan Jew 292 The
Square, Isfahan 298 The Palace Gate, Isfahan 304 Boys Weaving a
Carpet 314 Cotton Cleaners 314 Handsome Doorway in the Madrassah,
Isfahan 322 One of Zil-es-Sultan's Eunuchs 326 The "Hall of Forty
Columns," Isfahan 326 The Quivering Minarets near Isfahan 330
H.R.H. Zil-es-Sultan, Governor of Isfahan 350 Agriculture and Pigeon
Towers near Isfahan 352 Persian Spinning Wheels and Weaving Looms
366 Halting at a Caravanserai 380 A Street in Yezd, showing High
Badjirs or Ventilating Shafts 380 Ardeshir Meheban Irani and the
Leading Members of the Anguman-i-Nasseri (Parsee National
Assembly), Yezd 394 Parsee Priests of Yezd Officiating during
Ceremony in their Fire Temple 400 Interior of Old Caravanserai with
Central Water Tank 410 Typical Caravanserai and Mud Fort in the
Desert between Yezd and Kerman 414 A Trade Caravanserai, Kerman
414 H. E. Ala-el-Mulk, Governor of Kerman, in his Palace 432 Tiled
Walls and Picturesque Windows in the Madrassah, Kerman 438 Sirkar
Agha's Son, the Head of the Sheikhi Sect, Kerman 438 The Interior of a
Hammam or Bath--First Room 442 The Hot Room in a Persian Bath
444 The Kala-i-Dukhtar or Virgin Fort 444 Graveyard and
Kala-i-Dukhtar or Virgin Fort, Kerman 446 Ruined Houses of Farmitan
450 Plan of House at Farmitan 450 A Steep Rock Climb, Kerman 454
A View of the Kerman Plain from the "Ya Ali" Inscription 458 Wives
Returning from the Pilgrimage for Sterile Women 458 Map at the End
of Volume.
ACROSS COVETED LANDS
CHAPTER I
The start--The terrors of the Russian Custom-house--An amusing
incident at the Russian frontier--Politeness of Russian
officials--Warsaw: its sights; its lovely women--The talented
Pole--People who know how to travel by train--A ludicrous scene.
"First single to Baku," I requested when my turn came at the window of
the ticket office at Victoria Station.
"Baku?--where is that?" queried the ticket man.
"In Southern Russia."
"Oh, I see! Well, we cannot book further than Warsaw for Russia."
"Warsaw will do. . . . . How much? . . . Thank you."
My baggage having next been duly registered direct for the capital of
Poland, off I set to Queenborough, crossed over by the night boat to
Flushing, and continued the following morning by express to Berlin.
Once in the
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