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">163, 249
love of freedom, 123, 344
loyalty, 263, 345
to the Sultan and Islam, 30, 32, 72
misunderstood by Bonaparte, 144
national character not yet formed, 312
naturally honest, 85
not always tactless, 104
not bigoted, 151
reticence, 301
self-control, 372, 380
undergoing change, 382
wrongly accused, 243
The, as an individual, 385
The, historian Gabarty,
see Gabarty
history, The most interesting century in, 13
Six great landmarks of, 25
Three periods of, 22
idea of civilisation, 195
idea of freedom and liberty, 123, 145, 344
ignorance of other countries, 34
indifference to the invasion of Syria, 205
standard of good and evil, 212
reasoning illustrated, 39
mosques monuments of shame, not of glory, 23
newspapers, 376, 382
opinion of England's duty in Egypt, 359
of Bonaparte's government, 184
of Bonaparte's proclamation, 69
of the French, 195
of English, how formed, 298, 300
Egyptians accustomed to free speech, 139
allied to Asiatic peoples, 18
Causes affecting the character of, 117, 378
and French after the revolt, 171
and the Boer War, 327
and their rulers, 73
ask for Mamaluks as officials, 133
begin to have a political existence, 28
compared with the Anglo-Saxons, 115
to Scotch Sabbatarians, 353
Condition of, compared with that of French and English, 116
their grievances under the Mamaluks, 145
in 1798 better than that of the English, 115
under the Arabs, 30
Mamaluks, 73, 78
favourable to freedom, 30
Fidelity of Egyptians to, 30, 33
inconsistent with radicalism, 379
Progressive thought natural to, 144
Democratic spirit of, 77
teaches self-respect, 200
Islamic ideals being approached by England, 196
spirit affects the Egyptians less than other peoples, 29
Ismail Pacha, 292
Jaffa, Massacre by the French at, 206
Jews, Character of the, 126
in Cairo, 249
join the Moslems in opposing French reforms, 158
Journalism of to-day, 323
Justice and Mercy, Eastern idea of, 253
Even-handed, 258
under the French and the Mamaluks, 198
Kasr el Aini Hospital, 48
Khedive, difficulty of his position, The, 391
Kleber succeeds Bonaparte, General, 220
Assassination of, 259
Knowledge in Egypt, Spread of, 356
Koran, the "Word of God," The, 77, 258
Korbag, its use in Egypt, 123
Laboratory at Cairo, French, 176
Law of retaliation, Moslem, 257
Leaders of the people, 252
Legislative Council of Egypt, 28
Liberty, Egyptian ideas of, 123, 145, 344
"Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity,", 130, 197, 243
of Press in Egypt, 330
Library at Cairo, French, 175
in Cairo founded by an Egyptian, 181
Lighting of London and Cairo in 1798, 131, 132
Links between the Egyptians of the present and past, 22
London, Safety in Cairo and in, 128
Lord Cromer and the Press, 330
Attack on, 376
a well-wisher of the people, 387
Egyptian Press on, 376
his devotion to the Egyptians, 395
his "pets,", 395
his resignation, 394
his work incomplete, 394
Loyalty of Mohamedans to the Sultan, 281
of Cairenes to their treaties, 235
Luther greater than Bonaparte, 178
Lying policy, The price of a, 285
Mahars and Mangs of India, 14
Mahomed Ali, an Arnout, 356

beneficial influence of, 357
Bonaparte's treatment of, 149
character of, 50
intercede for peace, 168
their relations to the people, 51
to the Mamaluks, 52
the term defined, 50
the true representatives of the people, 356
Ungrateful people, An, 259
Vice in Cairo under Consular protection, 128
Open, in Moslem lands under Christian protection, 269
Wine-shops in Cairo, 137
Zikrs, religious chanting so called, 141

UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED, THE GRESHAM PRESS, WOKING AND LONDON.


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Napoleon's Last Voyages.
Being the Diaries of Admiral Sir Thomas Usher, R.N., K.C.B. (on board the Undaunted) and John R. Glover, Secretary to Rear Admiral Cockburn (on board the Northumberland). New Edition, with Introduction and Notes by J. Holland Rose, Litt.D., Author of "Life of Napoleon I.," "Napoleonic Studies," &c. Illustrated.

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Readers with a taste for adventure will find this book a storehouse of good things, for in the course of various mineralogical expeditions the author has roughed it in many remote quarters of the globe, and a large share of strange and thrilling experiences has fallen to his lot. At the same time he possesses a literary skill with which few travellers are gifted.

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A Literary History of the
English People

BY J. J. JUSSERAND.
VOLUME I
From the Origins to the Renaissance
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English Wayfaring Life in the
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BY J. J. JUSSERAND.
Translated by Lucy A. Toulmin Smith.
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"The book is a translation and an amplification of one of those enchanting volumes which only Frenchmen have the gift of writing, ... a pleasure to handle, a joy to read, and bearing with it, when one gets to the end of it, a conviction that one has become a much more learned man than one was a week ago, for that somehow one has absorbed a great deal that the outer world knows little about. Pray do not order this volume at the library. Buy it if you are wise, and keep it as a joy for ever."—Dr. Augustus Jessopp in the Nineteenth Century.

"A mine of information regarding the roads, the travelling, and the travellers of the fourteenth century.... The book is crammed with curious information"—Spectator.

"The best and most picturesque account of English outdoor life in the period of Chaucer that our literature possesses."—Gentleman's Magazine.

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The Coming of the Friars
And other MediÆval Sketches
BY AUGUSTUS JESSOPP, D.D.
Fourteenth Impression.
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LONDON: T. FISHER UNWIN.

Transcriber's note:

Archaic spelling and variations in spelling and hyphenation have been retained except in obvious cases of typographical error.

Page 244: (And all this was done to "Our people" in virtue of the "Amnesty"). The closing quotation mark after 'people' has been supplied by the transcriber.

Page 405: Index item—Englishmen imperfectly understood by Egyptians, 361
in Egypt in 179 , 34.

There appears to be a digit missing after 179.





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