THE DEAD SEA. 
Tire Dead Sea lies in a deep Caldron, surrounded by cliffs of limestone rock, utterly 
naked, the whole giving the strongest look of sterility. The surrounding region too is 
a naked desert; it has an Egyptian climate, and from its exposure for seven or eight 
months of the year to the full power of the sun, it is obviously condemned to hopeless 
aridity . 1 The height of the surrounding cliffs so generally screens the Lake from the 
wind that it but seldom loses its smoothness of surface. Yet, though the utter solitude 
of its shores, especially in connexion with the history of the buried Cities, impresses 
the spectator with the idea that he is looking upon a mighty Sepulchre, the immediate 
aspect of the waters is bright and even sparkling; they lie like a vast mirror, reflecting 
with almost undiminislied lustre every colour and radiance of the bright sky above. 
Flocks of birds too, with their flight, and even with their songs, enliven the scene: yet 
under every aspect, it impresses the mind with a sense of the mysterious and monumental. 
The View is taken from one of the hills of Engedi, immediately above the Convent 
of St. Saba, and looking down on the “ Valley of Fire,” through which the Kidron 
winds . 2 
1 Biblical Researches, 1 . 219. 
Roberts s Journal. 
