Page 153 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 153
I 14 TRAVELS IN OMAN. [CH.
fifty to one hundred, being generally mounted
on swift camels. No warning is of course
given of their approach ; and after a foray
they retreat with equal celerity. They often
possess themselves of the African slaves be
longing to the town Arabs, which they bring
up in the same habits as themselves, and not
unfrequently marry their daughters to them.
Life is seldom taken in these affrays ; though
I saw a great number of people suffering from
sword and gun-shot wounds; the latter, it
occurs to me, are not unfrequently occasioned
by their own or their friends’ carelessness.
Every body on a journey carries a match
lighted, and no more care is taken of their
matchlock then, than when unloaded ; so that,
when these men clustered round upon our ap
proach to any suspicious spot, I always thought
there was more reason to dread danger from
my friends than foes. At 4-25 we arrived at
Tulhat, where there are two small forts erected
on the pinnacles of a hill rising over the town.
The town itself is walled round ; the date
groves in its vicinity are very extensive, and a
noble stream of water passes through it.
Hitherto I have avoided sleeping in these