[The Innocents Abroad<br> Part 6 of 6 by Mark Twain]@TWC D-Link book
The Innocents Abroad
Part 6 of 6

CHAPTER LVIII
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However, an hour's acquaintance with this cheerful custom reconciled the pilgrims to it, and then it ceased to occasion remark.

Thus easily do even the most startling novelties grow tame and spiritless to these sight-surfeited wanderers.
Arrived at Old Cairo, the camp-followers took up the donkeys and tumbled them bodily aboard a small boat with a lateen sail, and we followed and got under way.

The deck was closely packed with donkeys and men; the two sailors had to climb over and under and through the wedged mass to work the sails, and the steersman had to crowd four or five donkeys out of the way when he wished to swing his tiller and put his helm hard-down.

But what were their troubles to us?
We had nothing to do; nothing to do but enjoy the trip; nothing to do but shove the donkeys off our corns and look at the charming scenery of the Nile.
On the island at our right was the machine they call the Nilometer, a stone-column whose business it is to mark the rise of the river and prophecy whether it will reach only thirty-two feet and produce a famine, or whether it will properly flood the land at forty and produce plenty, or whether it will rise to forty-three and bring death and destruction to flocks and crops--but how it does all this they could not explain to us so that we could understand.

On the same island is still shown the spot where Pharaoh's daughter found Moses in the bulrushes.


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