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By Far Euphrates; A Tale

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Publisher: London: Hodder and Stoughton Publication date: 1897 Notes: This is an OCR reprint. There may be typos or missing text. There are no illustrations or indexes. When you buy the General Books edition of this book you get free trial access to Million-Books.com where you can select from more than a million books for free. You can also preview the book there.

146 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2002

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About the author

Deborah Alcock

127 books5 followers
Deborah Alcock (1835 – 1913) is best known as a late Victorian author of historical fiction focused on religious, evangelical themes.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Hannah.
2,821 reviews1,436 followers
December 29, 2016
How many people recall the days when Turkey was Armenia, a Christian nation? This is the heartbreaking tale of the Armenian defeat in the late 1800s.
The author was so passionate about the desire to write this story, based on true events and people, that she irrevocably broke her health in the writing of it and died not long after. Everyone should read this book.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
67 reviews5 followers
July 11, 2008
This book is certainly a tale of blood and tears. I had never heard or read about the horrors that were committed against the Armenian Christians. The book was written to imform, in the words of the author, "to strenghten our own faith and quicken our own love. It is told also to stir our own heart to help and save..." The book was written a hundred years ago, when children still lived who had been orphaned for Christ. Alcock writes, "Where it [the passion of cruelty] really exists, where men kill and torture -- not for rage or hate, or greed, or fear -- but for the joy they have in doing it, it is as a demon possessing the soul. It lives, it grows, it thirsts, it craves sacrifices even greater and more ingenious. It develops a horrible, a Satanic sublety. It inspires deeds at the mere recital of which humanity shudders. We may not tell, we may not even think of them. Involuntarily we close our eyes, we stop our ears,. But ought we not sometimes to remember that our brothers and our sisters have endured them all?"

The book opens with two Englishmen, a father and son, touring Armenia. They go through the tall grass to see the famous river Euphrates, and are dissapointed by its black color. They watch as the sun set, casting its rays over the water. "So the dark river turns to gold," is the comment of the father. Malaria strikes father and son. Jack, the son, has a nightmare in his fever. He cries out abut the river, and his father's last words to him were an echo of those spoken earlier, "the dark river turns to gold." When Jack comes to himself, he is living with the Armenians, remembering nothing of his past. One day an event triggers a recolection in England in his mind. He asked about his father and was told, "You know you have been ill... You recovered, your father did not." The post office is not reliable for communicating with his relatives in England, so he remains with the Armenians. He sees their way of life, how they are misused by the Kourds and the Turks because they refuse to convert to Islam. He knows their constant fear and expectation of death. He understands what it is to live "in the shadow of the grave." He lives through the terrible Armenian massacres, when the Turks sweep down and annihilate villages. And he knows there are worse things than death. In all the cruelty and horror, he questions God.

I should not give the whole plot away, but those who are being killed are given the option of converting to Allah, "only lift one finger and we will spare you." The response is the reason for the bloodshed and the reason for the book. "We will not deny Christ." Somewhere in the book, Jack reflects on what the English read in their papers about all those people killing each other over there. How it would seem so unimportant and distant and impossible to those sitting in their comfortable homes, surrounded by their loved ones, safe from fear. This is a book for today. For Christians who read this book in their easy chair to know that our redemption is a gift, but it is not free. It cost the son of God a cruel death on a cross, and it cost his disciples countless horrors here to affirm that we indeed have eternal life through the blood of Christ. Christians are being killed even today because they count Christ, eternal life, of more value than their mortal lives on earth. The author states, "This is no fiction; it is literal truth." And it is a truth we need to hear.

This tale is a true account; the author spent a great deal of time with people who were there. Each account of martyrdom is precisely factual. Most of the people in the book are real people, although their names have been changed, and what is related about them is accurate.

This is not a book for young children. The terrible things are for more mature readers. Although this book chronicles the Armenian massacres, it is "clean." There is nothing that is unfit to tell or read, it is just unsuitable for young ones.
Profile Image for Faith.
101 reviews33 followers
November 9, 2019
Heartwrenching tale of the persecuted Christian Armenians. Oh, how sometimes I wished I had lived in that time to help give them hope, healing, love!
But now, each one of them has more of those things than you or i could ever give them. They are in the presence of their Saviour, and they see His face always.
Let us strive to be faithful like they, to not deny their Lord!!
58 reviews
September 21, 2023
I couldn't finish this one. I picked it up again after letting it sit for a few months but I just don't want to finish it. 2 stars because I don't feel like it's a worthless book, just really not for me.

The story is interesting. A young Englishman becomes orphaned and is taken in by an Armenian family. He grows up, marries one of the young ladies and stands by them all during their trials.

So why couldn't I finish it? The fact that there was no depth to any of the characters besides the main character, the way the "hero" just started shooting Turks without a care in the world once he got the chance despite the teachings his foster family had tried to share with him, the "Hero Englishman" trope, the clinging vine wife who was, of course, more beautiful than any other woman alive and was a paragon of perfection.

I appreciate the obvious care and love that the author had towards the Armenian people, but it just wasn't enough to make the book worthwhile to me.
9 reviews
October 15, 2020
Very Moving and Inspirational

Armenia is a forgotten nation, but one whom every human longs for as they unknowingly long for Eden. But as Eden has fallen, so has Armenia. Pray for this nation, that the Lord would revive her once again and bring her dead in Christ to life.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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