Page 214 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
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XI.] TRAVELS IN OMAN. 175


          was beautifully clear, and in some places
          twenty feet across, with an irregular chain of

          pools six or eight feet in depth, and a line of

          date groves extending on either hand. We
          next ascended a small eminence, and beheld
          the sea ; and continuing our journey over the

          maritime plain, at 3.50 arrived at Sib, where
          we took up our quarters in a small round fort,

          near the sea-beach. This rude tenement was,
          however, so infested with cats, rats, and other

          vermin, that I shifted our quarters to my tent,
          which, in order to enjoy the delicious coolness

          and freshness of the sea-breeze, we pitched
          beneath some trees near the beach. The

          climate of Sib had not been exaggerated, for
          after recovering from the immediate fatigue of

           the journey, the whole of the party rapidly
          recovered. To insure ourselves against the

           possibility of a relapse, which in these fevers
           is more to be dreaded than the original dis­

           ease, I delayed my intention of moving until
           the 20th; and finding we were all then suf­

           ficiently recovered, wrote to the Imam at
           Maskat, requesting he would furnish a guide

           to conduct me to Bireimah, the frontier sta­
           tion of the Wahhabis. From hence, though
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