The Innocents Abroad


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to scenes that are pleasanter to remember. I think I will skip, any how.  
There is nothing about Tabor (except we concede that it was the scene of  
the Transfiguration,) but some gray old ruins, stacked up there in all  
ages of the world from the days of stout Gideon and parties that  
flourished thirty centuries ago to the fresh yesterday of Crusading  
times. It has its Greek Convent, and the coffee there is good, but never  
a splinter of the true cross or bone of a hallowed saint to arrest the  
idle thoughts of worldlings and turn them into graver channels.  
A Catholic church is nothing to me that has no relics.  
The plain of Esdraelon--"the battle-field of the nations"--only sets one  
to dreaming of Joshua, and Benhadad, and Saul, and Gideon; Tamerlane,  
Tancred, Coeur de Lion, and Saladin; the warrior Kings of Persia, Egypt's  
heroes, and Napoleon--for they all fought here. If the magic of the  
moonlight could summon from the graves of forgotten centuries and many  
lands the countless myriads that have battled on this wide, far-reaching  
floor, and array them in the thousand strange Costumes of their hundred  
nationalities, and send the vast host sweeping down the plain, splendid  
with plumes and banners and glittering lances, I could stay here an age  
to see the phantom pageant. But the magic of the moonlight is a vanity  
and a fraud; and whoso putteth his trust in it shall suffer sorrow and  
disappointment.  
Down at the foot of Tabor, and just at the edge of the storied Plain of  
Esdraelon, is the insignificant village of Deburieh, where Deborah,  
prophetess of Israel, lived. It is just like Magdala.  
594  


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