Page 287 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 287
248 TRAVELS IN OMAN. [CH.
the history of savage nations, some nobler
traits were mixed with their unrelenting fero
city. The persons and the virtue of females
were always respected, and the contrary be
haviour would have brought on them the
deepest disgrace and contempt with their
own tribes. An unresisting Mohammedan
victim, after being stripped and plundered,
they very generally spared ; but death, or the
immediate profession of their creed, awaited
the unbeliever. And it is further due to them
to acknowledge, that it was only when their
vengeance became excited by a defence which
cost the lives of many of their companions,
that they had recourse to the remorseless
measures which I have here described.
The most undaunted bravery was certainly
theirs: if taken, they submitted with resigna
tion to the fate they inflicted on others; and
when they fell into the hands of the Per
sians, or other nations by which they are sur
rounded, they were never spared. After the
destruction of one of their forts, several of
them were brought on board our ships as
prisoners. While uncertain of their fate, and
before their wounds were dressed, it was