Page 329 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 329
292 TRAVELS IN OMAN. [CH.
swiftness. Nejd is equally the nursery of the
camel as of the horse ; but the Omany in all
ages is celebrated in the songs of the Arabs
as the fleetest; their legs are more slender
and straight, their eyes more prominent and
sparkling, and their whole appearance denotes
them of higher lineage than the ordinary
breed of the animal. Anecdotes are told of
two which the Imam formerly possessed, that
appear almost incredible. I have heard it
asserted by those on whose testimony I should
place every reliance, that one of these favour
ite dromedaries carried a courier from Sib to
Sohar, an ordinary journey of six days, in
thirty-six hours. Considering such frequent
mention has been made of the camel from the
earliest period, it is singular we possess no
correct or even detailed information respect
ing its habits, character, or general appear
ance. I am not acquainted with a single
illustrated zoological work which affords even
a tolerable representation of one.
The silence of travellers, in reference to an
animal to which all have been so much in
debted, may be accounted for on the suppo
sition that each individual conceived the sub