A Syrian Shepherd

 •  1 min. read  •  grade level: 14
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“Faduel Moghabghab,” said our guest, laughing as he leaned over the tea-table toward two little maids, vainly trying to beguile their willing and sweetly puckered lips into pronouncing his name.
“Faduel Moghabghab,” he repeated in syllables, pointing to the card he had passed to them. “Accent the u and drop those g’s which your little throats cannot manage,” he went on kindly, while the merriment sparkled in his dark eyes, and his milk-white teeth, seen through his black moustache as he laughed, added beauty to his delicate and vivacious face.
He was a man of winsome mind, this Syrian guest of ours, and the spirituality of his culture was as marked as the refinement of his manners. We shall long remember him for the tales told that evening of his home in Ainzehalta on the slope of the Syrian mountains, but longest of all for what he said out of the memories of his youth about a shepherd song.