A Zealous Attachment

Created: 2013-01-28 06:03 Updated: 2013-01-28 06:34 Notebook: Notebook Stack/Manners and Customs
The chapter summarizes the events and circumstances of his life that would have significantly contributed to his decision to travel to Egypt:

  • Disenchantment with college life, 
    • Bad impression (drinking), his older brother is quoted as having "ruined" him. 
    • Waste of his time (excelling in the University's mathematics papers)
  • Visiting the Egyptian hall in Picadilly Circus
  • Seeing the Rosetta stone in the British Museum
  • Discovered of Napoleon's Description of Egypt while working as an engraver
  • Meeting Ibrahim Salame who may have taught him Egyptian Arabic
  • Doctor's orders to move to a warmer climate after a Typhus attack that nearly killed him.
  • Lord Bexley, shadowy figure who may have financed the trip.

The chapter quotes a passage from Lane's Description of Egypt as evidence of his motives for going to Egypt:

A zealous attachment to the study of oriental literature, and a particular desire to render myself familiar with the language of the Arabs, and with their manners and customs, induced me to visit Egypt.  But these were not my only motives.  I had long entertained a wish to examine the antiquities of that most interesting country; and as I felt even before I commenced my travels, that there was a probability of my publishing the observations that I might make: I purposed to execute a series of sketches of all the most remarkable objects that I might see; well convinces that a drawing, in many cases, is worth many pages of description: and to ensure the utmost accuracy in these.  I determined to make use of the Camera Lucida.


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