A Narrative Of Captivity In Abyssinia With Some Account Of The Late Emperor Theodore, His Country And People By Henry Blanc
- Page 21 of 373 - First - Home
A Long Hippopotamus Whip.]
To Teach Him Another Time Not To Go Near The Queen's Tent." Evidently,
Theodore, With A
Large experience of the beau sexe of his
country, was profoundly convinced that his precautions were necessary.
On one of
His visits to Magdala, one of the chiefs of that amba
made a complaint to him against one of the officers of the Imperial
household, whom he had caught some time before in his lady's
apartment.
Theodore laughed, and said to him, "You are a fool. Do I not look
after my wife? and I am a king."
Theodore was always an early riser; indeed, he indulged in sleep
but very little. Sometimes at two o'clock, at the latest before
four, he would issue from his tent and give judgment on any case
brought before him. Of late his temper was such that litigants kept
out of his way; he nevertheless retained his former habits, and
might be seen, long before daybreak, sitting solitary on a stone,
in deep meditation or in silent prayer. He was also very abstemious
in his food, and never indulged in excesses of the table. He rarely
partook of more than one meal a day; which was composed of injera
[Footnote: The pancake loaves made of the small seed of the teff.]
and red pepper, during fast days; of wat, a kind of curry made of
fish, fowl, or mutton, on ordinary occasions. On feast days he
generally gave large dinners to his officers, and sometimes to the
whole army.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 21 of 373
Words from 5396 to 5650
of 102802