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shows that the modern word Huleh is derived from an ancient form, of which unfortunately the original has not come down to us. [Illustration 014b.jpg LAKE OF GENESARATH] At this point the Jordan reaches the level of the Mediterranean, but instead of maintaining it, the river makes a sudden drop on leaving the lake, cutting for itself a deeply grooved channel. It has a fall of some 300 feet before reaching the Lake of Grenesareth, where it is only momentarily arrested, as if to gather fresh strength for its headlong career southwards. [Illustration: 017.jpg ONE OF THE REACHES OF THE JORDAN] Drawn by Boudier, from several photographs brought back by Lortet. Here and there it makes furious assaults on its right and left banks, as if to escape from its bed, but the rocky escarpments which hem it in present an insurmountable barrier to it; from rapid to rapid it descends with such capricious windings that it covers a course of more than 62 miles before reaching, the Dead Sea, nearly 1300 feet below the level of the Mediterranean.* * The exact figures are: the Lake of Huleh 7 feet above the Mediterranean; the Lake of Genesareth 68245 feet, and the Dead Sea 1292 feet below the sea-level; to the south of the Dead Sea, towards the water-parting of the Akabah, the ground is over 720 feet higher than the level of the Red Sea. [Illustration: 018.jpg THE DEAD SEA AND THE MOUNTAINS OF MOAB, SEEN FKOM THE HEIGHTS OF ENGEDI] Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph by the Duc de Luynes. Nothing could offer more striking contrasts than the country on either bank. On the east, the ground rises abruptly to a height of about 3000 feet, resembling a natural rampart flanked with towers and bastions: behind this extends an immense table-land, slightly undulating and intersected in all directions by the affluents of the Jordan and the Dead Sea--the Yarmuk,* the Jabbok,** and the Arnon.*** * The Yarmuk does not occur in the Bible, but we meet with its name in the Talmud, and the Greeks adopted it under the form Hieromax. ** _Gen._ xxxii. 22; Numb, xxi. 24. The name has been Grecized under the forms lobacchos, labacchos, Iambykes. It is the present Nahr Zerqa. *** _Numb._ xxi. 13-26; Beut. ii. 24; the present Wady Mojib. [Shephelah = "low country," plain (Josh. xi. 16). With the article it means the plain along the Mediter
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