Page 176 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 176

IX.] TRAVELS IN OMAN. 137


           conducted, and they then supplied us with a
           hearty meal of dates, milk, and dried fruits.
              Shirazi contains about two hundred small

           houses, built around the commencement or

            head of a valley, which extends thence in a
            south south-east direction to the plains below.
            They are small, square, solid-looking edifices,

            and built expressly to withstand the showers
            and tempests which in those regions occa­

            sionally sweep over them. Narrow loopholes
            in the walls serve as windows, and the door

            also is very diminutive. None of these edi­
            fices have more than one story; and although

            for warmth and culinary purposes they are
            compelled constantly to have a fire within

            them, there is no chimney, nor any outlet for
            the smoke except by the door or window.

            The inconvenience is not however so great as
            might be imagined, since they manufacture

            large quantities of charcoal, which is most
            commonly used, together with a kind of peat,

            procured from some morasses in the lower
            part of the valleys. Whether it is owing to

            any peculiarity in their mode of preparing
            the former, I know not, but I could never

            learn that any accidents arise from its use.
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