Page 263 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 263

224 TRAVELS IN OMAN. [di.


                                Sehinas, to cross over to Bire'imah. I had
                                letters to the Wahhabi chief, and if I could
                                only reach him, I had little doubt but that I
                                might in safety continue on to the former

                                 town.
                                    Obri is one of the largest and most popu­
                                 lous towns in Oman. Few of its inhabitants,

                                 who are of the Yaknah tribe, engage in mer­
                                 cantile pursuits of any kind, confining their
                                 bartering to the mere necessaries of life, and
                                 living on the produce of their date groves and

                                 corn fields. Agricultural pursuits have in
                                 other parts of the world a tendency to hu­
                                 manize and soften the character of a people.

                                 There they produce no such effects, and
                                 where the husbandman endeavours, by an
                                 assumed ferocity, to stifle or suppress any
                                 softer feeling. I imagine they are urged to

                                 this by a desire, when they mix with their
                                 Bedowin neighbours, to make up by such
                                 display, for the low estimation in which that

                                 people not unfrequently regard all those who
                                 follow occupations more peaceful than their
                                 own.
                                    Indigo, dates, and sugar are their exports,

                                 and rice, spices, and white cotton cloth, sent
   258   259   260   261   262   263   264   265   266   267   268