Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: May 31, 2025
Burton resolved philanthropically to send her back to Syria, "in order that she might get married and settled in life." So Khamoor was put on board a ship going to Beyrout, with nine boxes of clothes and a purse of gold. "It was to me," says Mrs. Burton, "a great wrench."
At Miss Ellen Wilson's Protestant Mission in Anti-Lebanon she saw just her ideal a lissom, good-looking Syrian maid, named Khamoor, or "The Moon." She was seventeen "just the time of life when a girl requires careful guiding." So Mrs.
In these circumstances prudence would have suggested leaving such a cipher as Khamoor in Syria, but that seems not to have occurred to her. It is probable, however, that the spendthrift was not she but her husband, for when she came to be a widow she not only proved herself an astute business woman, but accumulated wealth. On reaching London she found Burton "in one room in a very small hotel."
Burton, who had returned to Damascus "to pay and pack," now arrived in England, bringing with her very imprudently her Syrian maid Khamoor. The £16,000 left by Burton's father, the £300 Mrs. Burton took out with her, and the Damascus £1,200 a year, all had been spent. Indeed, Mrs. Burton possessed no more than the few pounds she carried about her person.
Word Of The Day
Others Looking