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Descending this steep ridge, we find ourselves at once in one of the pleasant
valleys, planted and cultivated, which render Nazareth the least desolate and
forsaken of all the towns of Palestine. Itself resting on a very steep slope, it
is encircled by hills on all sides, leaving an undulating saucer-shaped basin,
with many little valleys running into it on both sides and in front of the town.
. . . The enclosing sides are towards the south and east well cultivated,
corn-fields mingle with vineyards and fig-trees, and the occasional date palms,
which here reach their northern limit, are marked features in the home landscape
. . . (Source:
Picturesque Palestine, vol. 2, pp. 44-45.) |