
EGYPT (LA MORT DE PHILAE)
by Pierre Loti
CHAPTER I - A WINTER MIDNIGHT BEFORE THE GREAT SPHINX
CHAPTER II - THE PASSING OF CAIRO
CHAPTER III - THE MOSQUES OF CAIRO
CHAPTER IV - THE HALL OF THE MUMMIES
CHAPTER V - A CENTRE OF ISLAM
CHAPTER VI - IN THE TOMBS OF THE APIS
CHAPTER VII - THE OUTSKIRTS OF CAIRO
CHAPTER VIII - ARCHAIC CHRISTIANITY
A moonlit night drapes the desert in an uncanny rose‑hue, turning the ancient stone guardians into ghostly silhouettes. The Sphinx and its distant pyramids stand under a silver sky, their timeless eyes fixed on a world that has long since passed. The air is cold and misty, a strange chill that seems to veil the ages beneath a translucent gauze, heightening the sense that history itself is breathing quietly around the traveler.
Against this surreal backdrop, the narrator wanders among the dunes, observing tiny figures in white robes and black cloaks who dart like moths across the sand. Their whispered Arabic blends with the rustle of the night, hinting at a living culture that still circles these timeless monuments. The prose captures the hypnotic blend of awe, melancholy, and curiosity that arises when modern eyes meet the eternal mysteries of Egypt’s great symbols.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (312K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Dagny; John Bickers; David Widger
Release date
2006-04-13
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1850–1923
A French naval officer who turned his voyages into vivid, dreamlike fiction, he became one of the best-known travel-inspired novelists of his era. Writing as Pierre Loti, he brought distant ports, romances, and homesickness to life in a simple, haunting style.
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