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The Mentor: The Mediterranean, Vol. 1, Num. 39, Serial No. 39, November 10, 1913

Dwight Elmendorf

Dwight L. Elmendorf

The Mentor: The Mediterranean, Vol. 1, Num. 39, Serial No. 39, November 10, 1913

THE MEDITERRANEAN

BY

DWIGHT L. ELMENDORF

Lecturer and Traveler

ALGIERS В· THE RIVIERA В· MONTE CARLO В· NICE В· GENOA В· NAPLES

Across the straits from Gibraltar is another and very different world. Start with Tangier (tahn-jeerВґ) and wander along the Barbary coast, and you will find yourself in such contrasting conditions, and in a civilization so different from those north of you in Spain and in France, that it will be hard for you to believe that you are separated from those countries by distances varying from the narrow straits of Gibraltar to a mere matter of two or three hundred miles.

You will seem to have been transported to the other side of the world. No traveler can find greater variety in scene and life, in language and habit, in climate and condition, than he gets in the course of a full Mediterranean tour. Few travelers make the whole circuit of the Mediterranean. This great inland sea is usually visited only in parts, and while the traveler is in transit from one point to another. There is no general description that can apply to the whole of this interesting body of water. On every shore there is something that is new and different, and somewhere on these shores there is something to delight each one. If scenery is desired, the French and Italian Riviera (ree-vee-ayВґ-rah) will draw one irresistibly. A life full of gaiety will hold him there. If historic associations interest him, he will turn naturally to the shores of Italy and Greece, and he will spend months pleasantly in the Adriatic or Г†gean Sea. There is in those countries an endless amount to learn and a wealth of natural beauty. When you have cruised through the Г†gean (ee-jeeВґ-an), visit the coast of Greece, and of Asia Minor. There you will know the feelings that stirred Lord Byron when he wrote:

“Fair clime! where every season smiles

Benignant o’er those blessed isles,

Which seen from far Colonna’s height,

Make glad the heart that hails the sight,

And lend to loneliness, delight.”

The Mediterranean has been the arena of the world’s history for several thousand years.

THE MEDITERRANEAN TRIP

As your eye traces the coast line on the map and you note the countries whose shores are washed by the Mediterranean, you realize what a trip throughout that sea must mean in instruction as well as in delights of travel. Besides the countries I have named, there are Turkey, Asia Minor, Palestine, and Egypt, to say nothing of the great stretch on the African coast. The shore line is so extended, and the life and customs at different points vary so, that we think of the Mediterranean as not one thing, but many things. What is usually called a “Mediterranean trip” rarely comprises more than ten or fifteen points. With limited time, the traveler naturally selects the points of which he has heard most.

ALGIERS

A Mediterranean trip to many travelers means Algiers (al-jeerzВґ), as far as the African coast is concerned, and the Riviera, with all the points on that beautiful north shore line. Then they must see Naples, of course, and after passing down the Italian coast they are likely to go straight on to Egypt. After passing through the straits of Gibraltar the attention of the traveler is soon centered on Algiers.

From the entrance to the harbor Algiers appears like a white diamond set in a circle of emeralds. The town consists of two parts, the French and the Arab quarters. To the visitor from the west Algiers is most interesting; for there he meets characters of all kinds, European peoples mixing with those of North Africa. The French quarters show that the Frenchman, when compelled to live in another country, takes a bit of Paris with him; for there is found the typical French cafГ©, with its little tables on the sidewalk, contrasting with the Arab cafГ© where nat