Page:Algeria from Within.pdf/91
LIFE AMONG THE ARABS
ordered for five A. M. They have somehow vaguely
wakened me at four-forty-five, and at four-fifty-five
my companions have appeared, all dressed, to ask why
I wasn't ready! And my reply has always been the
same:
"Because I have a strange and curious habit of undressing when I go to bed and of shaving when I rise." And it is considered a strange and curious habit. But that does not mean that these Arabs are dirty in their persons-far from it. Before and after meals they wash their hands and faces, before their prayers they do the same; sometimes they take a bath. Regularly once a week they go to the hammam, or steam bath, where there is an unlimited quantity of hot water, and where they wash from head to foot, and there is nothing cleaner than washing in a Turkish bath. Moreover, there are first-rate masseurs who for a moderate fee take pounds of fat off the patient in an hour.
What I have never been able to discover is how often the average Arab changes his underclothing. The exterior dress is often sent to the laundry and I have an idea that in many cases the change is made four times a year, at the various seasons. Speaking of clothes, it may perhaps interest the reader to know of what an Arab's garments consist:
Next to the skin there is a shirt; there are socks, there are sometimes drawers, a pair of baggy trousers and leather slippers, rather like unfinished pumps and not embroidered as may be supposed. Embroidery on shoes is considered effeminate and can only be worn on the long red boots used for riding. Over the shirt is usually a sweater and over that a jacket; it may be a smart embroidered affair with many buttons, or it may be a simple tunic, or it may be a European coat, but it does not matter much as it is entirely covered
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