Edith Wharton’s In Morocco is an account of her one month’s journey to Morocco during the French colonial period. In her description of the great suqs of Marrakesh starting with “the enchanted circle of Bahia”, getting into the bazaars where different merchants meet and trade with each other. Then, she describes the souks as being Dark, fierce and fanatical along with being overcrowded and that they are “mere mud lanes roofed with rushes”. Next, she describes the other “throngs” in the souks from fanatics in sheepskins to bare-legged Berber women. After that, she describes the back-waters of the bazaars in addition to the uses of the skins “to which the city gives its name”. Afterwards, she gets into the silk-spinners quarter then to the dyers turning to the metal-workers and armourers finishing the bazaars with the souk of ploughshares and the smiths. Edith Wharton is an incredible writer, but when it comes to travel writing at least after reading her account on the souks of Marrakesh I can say first, that some of her descriptions are slightly racist. For instance, referring to people as “Blacks” and “Negroes”. Moreover to that, the descriptions of the different people in the souks are shallow and demeaning. It’s true that Wharton wrote this in the early 1900’s but …show more content…
Dr. Robert Brown states that the globes as some stories are told that they were fixed by magic and guarded by the “djinns”. The globes (three in number, not four) were originally made of gold, exactly made of the Queen of Muley Abd al-Mumin’s jewels presented to her by the king and they weigh together 10 quintals, but later they got replaced by gilded facsimiles. The globes, in fact, are made of copper and everything said about them been made of gold is only a