Hagop and Garabet live at the foot of Mount Ararat in a small village.
Their father is very poor and cannot afford to build a house, so they live in a hut, built of mud, with walls three feet thick.
The inside of the house is plastered with chopped straw and mud mixed together. The mud roof is flat and is kept smooth by rolling it often with a stone, or treading it with bare feet. Hagop and Garabet think it is great fun to go up on the roof after it rains and tread the soft mud with their bare feet. Then their father rolls it with a big round stone until it is smooth and firm.
There are many huts like this in Armenia, and they are often half under ground, with the earth that has been dug out piled up around them. A village of such dwellings looks a good deal like a village of huge ant-hills.
There is only one door for the people and animals.decoration101decoration Animals? Yes, animals. For in winter the poor people let the animals come into the room with them, and almost every family has at least a few goats.
There is a fireplace in the middle of the earth floor for cooking, but there is no chimney, and the room is very smoky.
The mother makes big thin sheets of blanket bread and bakes it before the fire. Sometimes she makes little cakes of the bread and spreads them with thick cream.
The children drink goats’ milk with their bread, and once in a long while they have a few raisins.
There are no windows in the hut, instead there are a few holes for light; and there are no tables, no chairs, no beds, no bureaus. In fac............