Grey It Was That Morning, Almost As London Is Grey; But The Sounds
That Came Up Softly To My Ears Out Of The Mist Were Not The Sounds Of
London.
Those many minarets, almost like columns of fog rising above
the cupolas, spoke to me of the East even upon this sad and sunless
morning.
Once from where I was standing at the time appointed went
forth the call to prayer, and in the barren court beneath me there
were crowds of ardent worshippers. Stern men paced upon the huge
terrace just at my feet fingering their heads, and under that heavy
cupola were made the long ablutions of the faithful. But now no man
comes to this old place, no murmur to God disturbs the heavy silence.
And the silence, and the emptiness, and the greyness under the long
arcades, all seem to make a tremulous proclamation; all seem to
whisper, "I am very old, I am useless, I cumber the earth." Even the
mosque of Amru, which stands also on ground that looks gone to waste,
near dingy and squat houses built with grey bricks, seems less old
than this mosque of Ibn-Tulun. For its long façade is striped with
white and apricot, and there are lebbek-trees growing in its court
near the two columns between which if you can pass you are assured of
heaven. But the mosque of Ibn-Tulun, seen upon a sad day, makes a
powerful impression, and from the summit of its minaret you are
summoned by the many minarets of Cairo to make the pilgrimage of the
mosques, to pass from the "broken arches" of these Saracenic cloisters
to the "Blue Mosque," the "Red Mosque," the mosques of Mohammed Ali,
of Sultan Hassan, of Kait Bey, of El-Azhar, and so on to the Coptic
church that is the silent centre of "old Cairo." It is said that there
are over four hundred mosques in Cairo. As I looked down from the
minaret of Ibn-Tulun, they called me through the mist that blotted
completely out all the surrounding country, as if it would concentrate
my attention upon the places of prayer during these holy days when the
pilgrims were crowding in to depart with the Holy Carpet. And I went
down by the staircase of the house, and in the mist I made my
pilgrimage.
As every one who visits Rome goes to St. Peter's, so every one who
visits Cairo goes to the mosque of Mohammed Ali in the citadel, a
gorgeous building in a magnificent situation, the interior of which
always makes me think of Court functions, and of the pomp of life,
rather than of prayer and self-denial. More attractive to me is the
"Blue Mosque," to which I returned again and again, enticed almost as
by the fascination of the living blue of a summer day.
This mosque, which is the mosque of Ibrahim Aga, but which is
familiarly known to its lovers as the "Blue Mosque," lies to the left
of a ramshackle street, and from the outside does not look specially
inviting.
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