
On a sun‑kissed rooftop overlooking Cairo, a group of slave‑girls pause from drying herbs to watch a lone crow circle the sky. Their leader, a strong‑armed woman with tinkling bracelets, invokes the bird in a whispered prayer, recalling an ancient tale of women’s secret pleas to the heavens. The girls exchange giggles and myths about Noah’s descendants, hinting at a hidden power that men have yet to grasp, while the young Circassian listens, her imagination already drifting toward dreams of multiple husbands.
Below, in the lavish house of Muhammad Pasha Salih, tension thickens as the Pasha’s son falls under the spell of an English governess. The women, bound to the household yet keen observers of its politics, whisper about the lady Fitnah’s fury and the strange allure of foreign influence. Their conversations weave together duty, desire, and the subtle rebellions that stir within the walls of this Egyptian elite’s home.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (416K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2018-06-09
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1875–1936
Remembered for a classic English rendering of the Qur'an, this English novelist and journalist led an unusually wide-ranging life that carried him from Victorian England to the Middle East and India. His writing blends sharp observation, religious seriousness, and a strong feel for the places and cultures he knew firsthand.
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