Page 139 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 139
100 TRAVELS IN OMAN. [CH.
The doors are also cased with brass, and have
rings and other massive ornaments of the same
metal.
A daily market for the sale of grain, fruit,
and vegetables is held here, to which the
Bedowins and inhabitants of the neighbour
ing villages resort in considerable numbers.
The stalls at which the venders take their
stand are only occupied during the hours of
business. They are small square buildings,
surrounded by a low wall, roofed over, open
in front, and have a floor raised about two
feet from the level of the street. Adjoining
to Ibrah, within about two hundred yards,
there is another small town, but the inhabit
ants are at feud with each other, and a crowd
which followed us from the former would not
enter within the precincts of the latter. On
the rugged and pinnacled heights in the
vicinity of this and the neighbouring towns
there are perched several round towers, which
serve as strongholds in intestine feuds or
against foreign invasion. In many of them
there are wells, and they are usually suffi
ciently stored with provisions ; so that in a
country where artillery is seldom used, they