2008-03-08

Window cling rear window sun shade

. Text?bli to?artir articles Oulad-Na?et Ramadan appeared in the Gallic one of the 11 and 25 ao?1881 and publi?ans the collection of voyage With the sun. Num?sation and setting form of it HTML (8 d?mbre 1997).: ... Les Alg?ens, truths inhabitants of Algiers do not know gu? of their country that the plain of Mitidja. besides... Ils did not see, in fact Arab, that the villainy of the south which grouille in the streets. In the CIF? one speaks about Laghouat, Bou-Saada, of Its? as if these countries?ient at the end of the world. It is m? enough rare that an officer knows the three provinces. It almost always remains in the m? ring until the moment o?l returns to France. ... Il is right to add that it becomes extremely difficult to travel d?qu' one ventures outside the roads known in the south. One can do it only with the support and kindnesses of the autorit?ilitaire. ... Mais, d?qu' one can pr?nter the least recommendation, one meets, on behalf of the officers of the Arab offices, all good the gr.? conceivable. Left with the pr?ntions which one g?ralement has in France against these offices, I returned with the id? most contrary. ... C' is gr.? ?lusieurs of these officers whom I could make a long excursion outside the known roads, energy of tribe in tribe. One?it anxious in the colony, because one feared a d?que insurrection g?rale would be finished this bus? mahom?n. ... En outside of this regulation, no Arab transgresses the law s?re of I?, absolute abstinence. Not to eat is not nothing but to abstain from drinking is horrible by these alarming heats. In this bus?, it is not exemption. ... Il is easy to include/understand which furious exaltation r?lte, for these brains born?et obstin? of this hard religious practice. All the day, these unhappy m?tent, the stomach tiraill?regardant to pass the roumis conqu?nts, which eat, drinks and smokes in front of them... Ces exceptions are infinitely rare. I could about it quote only one. Two of do the soldiers have refus?le troisi? r?ndit: .... - My lieutenant, I do not make the Ramadan. I am not a marabout, me, I am noble. ... Il?it, indeed, of large tent, wire of one of oldest and the most famous families of d?rt.... J' could assist, in large the mosqu?d' religious Algiers?a c?monie which opens the Ramadan. ... L'?fice is very simple, with its bleached walls?a lime and its covered ground of carpet?is. The Arabs enter highly, flip-flop, with their shoes?a hand. They will be placed by great files r?li?s, largely?ign? one of the other and more right-hand sides that rows of soldiers?' exercise. ... Dans this vault, the mufti officiates. Its old voice, soft, b?nte and tr?monotone, vagit esp? of sad song which one never forgets when once only one could hear it. And unceasingly all the assistance thus falls down and is rectified with a promptitude, a silence and r?larit?antastiques. One does not hear l?edans the crash of the chairs, coughs and the whispers of the catholic?ises. ... Une family of marabouts occupies a estrade and sings the r?ns with the m? intonation of T? donn?par the mufti. ... C' is during the evenings of the Ramadan which should be visited the Kasbah. Under this d?mination of Kasbah, which means citadel, one finished by d?gner the Arab city all enti?. Since one I? and that one sleeps the day, eats some and one saw the night. One goes on a journey in this country which cont?a sultana Sch?razade has us. On the thresholds, often of the men allong?mangent and drink. ]Parfois their groups vautr?occupent all the?oit passage. ... Et of the fanatics?' calm air go and come in the medium from these quiet drinkers, pr?ant the r?lte, annon?t the end of the constraint. ... C' is, says one, with the ksar (Arab village) of Boukhari that always the first sympt?s great insurrections occur. This village is on the road of Laghouat. ... Quand one looks at the Atlas, of the immense plain of Mitidja, one aper?t a gigantic cut which splits the mountain in the direction of the south. It is like if a blow of axe the e?ouverte. This trou?s' calls the throat of Chiffa. It is by l?ue passes the road of M?ah, Boukhrari and Laghouat. ... On enters the cut of the mount. one follows thin the rivi?, Chiffa. one is inserted in the throat?oite, savage and wood? The trees climb the walls?ic, cling everywhere, seem to assemble?' climbing. It is the Inn of the Brook-of-Monkeys. ... Devant the door, water sings in the r?rvoirs. it?nce, falls down, fills up this corner of fra?or, makes think of the calm Swiss small valleys. ... Il has?rmes of them there and of very small, hundreds, thousands can -?e. Wood is filled by it, peupl?fourmillant. Some, captiv?par the ma?es of the inn, are cherishing and quiet. A whole the young, taken other week, still remains a little wild. Sit?que one remains motionless, they approaches, watches for you, observes you. It would be said that the traveller is the great distraction of the inhabitants of this small valley. In certain days, however, one in aper?t not only one. If you knew as they is soft to?oir cascades, on this ground of Africa. Is the throat less deep, less wood? One still goes up, the mountain d?de little?eu. They are fields?r?nt. and, when one arrives at made, one meets ch?s, willows, the ormeaux ones, the trees of our countries. One lays down??ah, white small very similar city?ne under-pr?cture France. ... C' is apr?M?ah which start again it, f?ces devastations of the sun. One crosses one for?pourtant, but a for?maigre, pel? showing the skin br?nte everywhere ground bient?vaincue. Then more nothing alive around us. ... Sur my left a small valley opens, arid and red, without a grass. it?nd with far, similar the?ne cellar of sand. But suddenly a great shade, slowly, crosses it, It passes from an end?' other, reducing spot which slips on the naked ground. It is, this shade, the true one, only living of this dull and dead place. It seems y r?er, like a myst?eux and disastrous g?e. ... Quand one goes down towards Boukhrari, one d?uvre?erte of sight, interminable the vall?du Ch?f. It is, in all its hideousness, put?, put yellow? ground. This time it very overcame, all d?r?tout pulv?s?tout calcin?ce fire which replaces the air, fills up the horizon. ... Quelque thing passes to you on the face: elsewhere it would be wind, here it is fire. Something floats l?as on the stony cr?s: elsewhere it would be a fog, here it is fire, or plut?de visible heat. If ground?it not D? calcin?usqu' with the bones, this?ange bu?rappellerait small the fum?qui?ve flesh sharp br?es with red iron. ... Point of insects in this poussi? of ground. The thousand small?es that one sees on our premises could not live in this furnace. In certain torrid days, the flies they-m?s die, as with the return of the cold weather in North. It is?eine if?ver of hens can. They are seen, the poor b?s, which walk, the open nozzle and the wings soulev?, of F? lamentable and comic. ... Depuis three years, the derni?s sources tare. And the all-powerful sun seems glorious of its immense. ... Cependant, here some trees, some poor trees. It is Boghar?roite, at the top of a powdery mount. ... Au foot of C? of poussi? who carries this vast Arab village, some houses are cach? in the movement of the hill they form the mixed commune. The ksar of Boukhrari is one of the more consid?bles Arab villages of Alg?e. It is just on the fronti? does South, a little with-del?u Tell, the zone of transition enters the countries europ?is?et large the d?rt. Aussi always have? pulse of the insurrections. It is l?u' arrives the watchword, it is of l?u' it sets out again. Tribes more?ign? send their people to know what occurs?oukhrari. There is the eye on this point of all the parts of Alg?e. ... L' administration fran?se only, is not occupied of what is woven?oukhrari. The come Arabs imports o?euvent to circulate, cause, intrigue?or own way without?e g?s of nothing. He cannot empi?r on attributions of the mayor, his neighbor. ... En face, on the mountain, is Boghar, o?abite the commander sup?or of the military circle. It has between the hands the most active means of action, but it cannot anything in the ksar, commune of full exercise. However, the ksar is not habit?ue by the Arabs. It is the dangerous point that one respects, while one supervises carefully the surroundings. One looks after the evil in his effects and not in his cause. Do the commander and the administrator, when they mean, organize a kind of secret police? ?' knowledge of the mayor, and stains?e inform?myst?eusement. ... Dans the mixed commune one finds an inn. I spent there the night, one night of?ve. Did the air seem Br? by the flame of the last day. It did not stir up any more, like if it E?? fig?ar heat. ... Aux premi?s gleams of the dawn, I rose. The sun appeared, acharn?ans its work of flamer. In front of my fen?e open on the horizon D? torrid and silencer a small diligence d?l?attendait. One read on the yellow panel: "did Mail of the South One thus go even more to the south in this terrible month of ao? L?as, to North, one says, while speaking about the countries ti?s: "South". I looked at this so short syllable which appeared to me surprising as if I had never read it. I d?uvrais some, seemed to me it, the myst?eux direction. The d?rt, nomads, the grounds inexplor? and then n?es, a whole new world, something like the beginning of a universe. Does the South as that become?rgic on the fronti? from the Sahara. In the apr?midi, I went to visit Ksar. ... Boukhrari is the first village o?' one meets Oulad-Na? One is seized by stup?ction?' aspect of these courtesans of the d?rt.... Les populeuses streets are full with Arabs couch?en through doors, across the road, squatted, causing?oix low or sleeping. Everywhere their v?ments floating and white seems to increase the plain whiteness of the houses. ... Elle wears a long red dress?atante. Its arms and its ankles are cercl?de bracelets?ncelants. and its figure with the straight lines is blue armadillo?iles. They always carry diad?s of which some are extremely rich. Some of these girls have yet only thin bracelets. The others, the old ones, show on them sometimes for ten or fifteen thousand franks of jewels. I saw of them one of which the collar?it form?e eight row? of pi?s of twenty franks. They keep thus their fortune, their?nomies laboriously gagn?. The rings of their ankles are out of solid silver and of a surprising weight. The diad?s which crown them are obtained m? F?. ... Leur monumental hairstyle, emm?ment erudite and compliqu?e braids entortill?, ask almost a working day and incredible a quantit?' oil. It is the evening that they should be seen, when they dance with caf?aure. White forms lie?ndues along the houses. ... Au-dedans, of the files of?es motionless and white sitting on boards, along the white walls, under a roof tr?bas. Then, to sit us, and according to the use, one seizes the Arabs, one hustles them, one rejects them of their bench and they from go away, impassive. Others are packed to make them place. ... Alors, two Oulad-Na?se l?nt, will place at the extr?t?de space laiss?ibre between the benches and they put?anser. Their dance is a soft walk that rate/rhythm a blow of heel making sound the rings of the feet. ... Elles go thus, one towards the other. They fr?nt, cambr? in arri?, like p?es in a pretty movement of doves in love. The large veil beats like a wing. Then, redress? suddenly, become again impassive, they are s?rent. and each one continues until?a line of the spectators his slip slow and boitillant. ... Toutes are not pretty but all are singuli?ment?anges. And can nothing give to the id?de these Arabs squatted to the medium of which pass, of their calm pace and scand? these covered girls of blazing gold and?ffes. ... Quelquefois, they vary a little the gestures of their dance. ... Ces prostitu? came formerly from only one tribe, Oulad-Na? They piled up their dowry thus and then turned over to marry at them, apr?fortune made. One did not estimate them less in their tribe it?it the use. ... Le propri?anger of the caf??lles are shown and are offered is always a n?e. And it?blissement goes?ravers its while playing f?cement of its fl? savage, showing with obstinacy the currency of which it is armadillo to invite the visitor?ui to offer as much of it. ... Elles have, like the girls of France, of the guards who live their tirednesses. Sometimes one finds in the morning one of them at the bottom of a ravine, the open throat of a blow of knife, d?uill?de all his jewels. A man whom she loved disappeared. and it is never re-examined. ... Le housing o?lles re?vent is a?oite room with the ground walls. In are the oases, the ceiling simply made reeds tass?les ones on the others and o?ivent ARM? scorpions. They drink and eat in the?ve, and modify the use of the couches of rest. ... Cette question of manners me amndt? ?n prone difficult good. ... On meets here?haque step these loves anti-natural between?es of the m? sex what recommended Socrate, the friend of Alcibiade. But are these examples all the more however only exceptions remarqu? that they are rather rare. ... Oserai I to quote some r?nts examples and quite caract?stic of the power of this passion at the Arab. The hammam had, in its d?ts, among the gar?s of the baths, small a n?e of Alg?e. Apr?un s?ur of some time?aris, this young man returned to Africa. ... toute the contr?pour its practices in love which made in Oulad-Na?une d?yale competition. Its fr?s him reproch?nt several times, not its manners, but its v?lit?Comme it did not change of anything its practices, they him donn?nt eight days to give up?on trade. It did not hold account of this warning. ... Le neuvi? did day, in the morning, one find it dead?angl?le naked body and T? voil? in the medium of the cimeti? Arabic. When one d?uvrit the figure, one aper? one pi? of currency violently incrust? of a blow of heel, in the flesh of the face, and, on this pi?, a small black stone. ... Un officer of spahis sought an ordinance in vain. All the soldiers whom it did employ?ient habill badly? not very careful, impossible?arder. One morning, a young Arab pr?nte, extremely beautiful rider, intelligent, of fine pace. It?it a lucky find, a gar? credit, clean, quiet, full with attention and address. All went well during eight days. The neuvi? day in the morning, as the lieutenant did return of his daily walk, it aper? in front of its door an old man spahi waxing its boots. It passed in the hall. another spahi swept. In the room, a troisi? made the bed. A quatri?, with far, sang in the?rie, while the v?table ordinance, the Mohammed young person, smoked of the cigarettes, couch?ur a carpet. ... Stup?it, the lieutenant called one of these rempla?ts unexpected, and, showing him his/her comrades:. .... - Is my lieutenant, it the lieutenant indig? who has us envoy? (is Each lieutenant fran?s, indeed, doubl?' an officer indig? who is to him subordonn?.... - My lieutenant, it said to us: "Let us go away in the lieutenant and make me all the work of Mohammed. Mohammed it must nothing make, because it is the woman of the lieutenant. ... Cette attention d?cate Co? moreover?' officer two months of arr?. Are Sils numerous, the infortun?eut to die?a continuation of this torment of volupt?... Quand justice is appel??onstater an assassination, it as extremely often notes as the corpse has? viol?apr?la died, by the murderer. ... Il is still of other extremely common and so wretched facts that I then to bring them back here. They had the air of divinit?sauvages dominating people prostern?... Tous had the eyes fix?sur the fort of Boghar, l?as, on large C? opposite, on the other pouring of the vall?poudreuse one. All?ient motionless, attentive as if they had waited some?nement surprising. All still held?a hand a virgin cigarette and which they had just rolled. It?it the gun fran?s annon?t with overcome the term of the daily abstinence. Copyright. 1998, 1999 ATHENA/SELVA - Pierre Perroud.

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