Capitolo 7
entirely imperceptible to some way to the agenda of observation; and the great one
region of rainless, accordingly in Africa and Asia it is, as it appears
the traveller, a plan enormous thousand miles wide and five thousand
miles along, with only a considerable interruption to the dead monotony
what kingdoms, with that exception every where on the immense expanse
of silence and the loneliness. The solo interval of the fruitfulness and the life it is
the valley of the Nile.
There is however, in fact, three interruptions to the continuity of
this plan, although only one of them constitute some considerable
interruption to his/her sterility. They is all of their valleys, while extending
from south north and false side from side. The more Oriental of these
valleys are so deep that the waters of the ocean flow in him from the
south, forming a long inlet and tightened call the Red Sea. As this inlet
it freely communicates with the ocean, it is almost always of the same
levels, and as the evaporation from him it is not enough to produce rain,
it doesn't also enrich his/her his/her own beaches. Its presence varies the
dark scenery of the panorama, is true giving rippling us waters,
to look above instead of driving sands; but this is everything. With the
exception of the show of a steamboat to pass English, to tired
intervals, on his/her dark expanse and of the moldering he/she remains of
ancient city on its oriental beach, allows him as soon as some indications
of the life. Ago very small, therefore, to assuage the monotonous one
aspect of the loneliness and the devastation in which you/they reign on the region
what you/he/she is thrusted in.
The more than west of the three valleys to which we have alluded is only
a disdains depression of the surface of the earth marked by a line of
_oases_. The depression is not enough to admit the waters of the
Mediterranean, neither it is there on some rains some portion of the valley
what enough form to manufacture him the bed of a brook. Springs publican,
however, here and there, in many places, from the earth and,