loo THE WEST SHORE. April, 1879. OUR KoKKIt.N CORRESPONDENCE. Ilii.ioroi i, "City of ti Sun," Egrpt. ij, ibt. ) 1" di Ton Wmr Siioiif: We trust it li .1 pardftnabJt ranlty thai prompti im Ii date this imumunicatioii al the site of (MM "I the oldest cities in the world. Away b.nk in (he ilim annals of time, almost thirty six centuries ago, this eity, then knOWfl as Off, flourished in :ill the magnificence of I'-Jf vpt's primitive glory. PmBMMi alike, in sacred and lassica! history, though its imposing temples have long since leen mingled with the dust 11I the earth, its name is embalmed fbftvei in the BTChfMlogy if the future. In the simplicity nf the world's early It was situated on the east side of the river Nile, about five miles ahove Grand Cairo. Nearly two thousand years go, when visited by Strabo, the place of the city w as marked only by I heap of magnificent ruins. Nothing remains now, however, to suggest its former grandeur but great dikes and mounds, from which may he dug fragment of marble, granite, bricks and pottery; a portion of a sphinx, and a tingle obelisk, which remains standing. This obelisk reaches about sixty feet above the ground, is six feet square at the bate, and covered on its four sides with the hieroglyphics common to such re mains. This monolith was hewn out of a block of reil granite, and, according interest. From Cairo to the site of ancient Thebes, on the right bank ot the Nile, and to a still greater distance on the left bank of that river, all such portion of the country as is covered by the annual inundations, is a land thickly strewn with crumbling monuments, pyramids, sphinxes, columns and tern pies; the smouldering debris of the world's glory, now long since passed into the blackness of oblivion. Pha raoh's Bed, a correct sketch of which is hereby annexed, is an isolated point of rare interest to the tourist abroad or the antiquarian at home. This country is full of the most impossible traditions and legends, which, while they may afford lodgment for some few grains hti latuic. ktOM talk us that, "Pharaoh called Josrph't name Zaphiuth Mancah, and he nc bun to wife .Wnath, the daughter of 1'uii phcrah, ' pthpl nf On," Qmmk li.. . Bp here wr an, upon the vci toil Hodden kjrjtatpk and Im htcthien, in the once goodly land ,,f i;,,hen, as-' signed by Phaiaoh to Jacob and his1 n. Centimes latct, this litv M known Avrn.and mi called by Eackiel; ler. emiah call, it .VaV..ra-.ff, the win-1 mon Uchicw name, while in cUsical '""I "t kavawu at HaUfjpalki All, these names wm hrU to it, at one tone ami auothn. on .mount ol its ng the piuuij.,.1 i ,1 i ,K irarafetf at the tun among the Egyptian. niARAOtn BED, mij: RIVER, BQVIT. , to a hasty calculation made on the weighs not less than one bundled and, twenty live t-ms. How this beautiful sh.ilt MM 1. lived to its present potition, is not the smallest curiosity which at taches to it. Indeed, thfl highest ex-, cellence of modern engineering skill would be sadly taxed to discover a practicable method of lowering it in safety to a prone condition, saying nothing about the work of quarrying, hewing, engraving, p..lihi,ig, and finally raising it lo its present nicely adjusted parnwilHuilii position upon a foundation that hat maintained its -i-. bility for a peri.! of four thousand yeais. But wc mut jmm. io oIlMg l,jccU of of truth, they are, in the main, but so many tittuet of the strangest and wild est superstition. The mass of ruins collectively styled "Pharaoh's Bed," i manifestly f later date than anything which is really contemporaneous with the hierarchy of ancient Egypt. But it were useless to particularize. The region we are now examining is especially rich in broken vases and time-w orn inscriptions. Within a scope of territory whose radius would be but few hours' travel, enough valuable mateiial might be collected to stock a hundred British museums. For nearly a week, we have been strolling over the fallow ground f departed great ness. Cautiouv and timidly wc have