Page 388 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 388

XXI.] TRAVELS IN OMAN. 349


           length, having a long handle, without any

           guard. The jambir, or dagger, is usually
           about ten inches in length, and the haft, with

           those who can afford it, richly ornamented
           with gold. Their shield measures about four­

           teen inches in diameter, and is usually at­
           tached by a leathern thong to the sword. The
           best kind, made from the skin of the hippo­

           potamus, are brought from Abyssinia. Those
           who accompany the Sheikh on horseback,

           carry with them a lance about fifteen feet in
           length, ornamented near the end with a tuft

           of feathers.
              In their diet the Sheikhs and superior

           classes partake of a great variety of dishes,
           which are cooked after the Persian mode.
           Kid, mutton, and camel’s flesh—all these

           are somewhat dear, and the cost of a Sheikh’s
           table, where hospitality is so freely dispensed,

           must be very considerable. In addition to
           these articles, rice, and large quantities of

           ghi or clarified butter, are principally con­
           sumed. The chief food of the poorer, and

           even the middle classes, consists of dates and
           fish; both so cheap and plentiful, that even

           their cattle are fed on them. The common
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