This photograph of a young Afghan girl is from an album of rare
historical photographs depicting people and places associated with the
Second Anglo-Afghan War. The girl’s head is covered with a patterned
scarf tied behind her head and full-body chador (a large cloth
worn as a combination head covering and shawl), and her long braided
hair hangs down below her waist. The caption supplied by the
photographer sheds little light on the girl’s identity or circumstances
but may derive from her melancholy expression and the British saying “to
be down in the dumps,” meaning to be depressed.
Credit: Library of Congress
Credit: Library of Congress
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