Page 228 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 228

XII.] TRAVELS IN OMAN. 189


             have a saying that a traveller may proceed
             the whole distance without ever losing their

             shade. Dates form the principal export from
             Oman, large quantities being taken to India,

             where a considerable share is consumed in
             making the government arrack. The middle
             classes of the Mussulman and Hindoo popu­

             lation are very partial to them. The best
             are brought from Basrah and Bahrein, those

             from Oman being classed next in excellence.
             There are several methods of preserving

             them; some are simply dried, and then
             strung on lines ; others, which is the usual

             plan, are packed in baskets. Notwithstand­
             ing their great number, every tree has its
             separate owner, and disputes between the

             relations of those who die intestate are, in
             consequence, very frequent. Towards noon

             we left our encampment, and continued
             along the beach, passing numerous hamlets
             and villages. Firewood seems very plentiful

             here; it is packed in large stacks, ranged

             along the beach, so that boats in passing run
             in, purchase, and load at once. From thence
             we passed the skeleton of a whale, a large

             quantity of roots of trees, and other drift­
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