Page 450 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 450
XXV.] NAKAB EL HAJAR. 411
mit of which we obtained an extensive but
dreary view of the surrounding country. Our
route lay along a broad valley, either side
being formed by the roots or skirts of a lofty
range of mountains. As these extend to the
northward they gradually approach each other,
and the valley there assumes the aspect of
a narrow defile. But on the other hand, the
space between our present station and the sea
widened, and was crossed by a barrier about
thirty miles broad, forming a waste of low
sandy hillocks. So loosely is the soil here
piled, that the Bedowins assure me that they
change their outline, and even shift their
position with the prevailing storms. How
such enormous masses of moving sand, some
of which are based on extensive tracts of in
durated clay, could in their present situation
thus become heaped together, affords an ob
ject of curious inquiry. They rise in sharp
ridges, and are all of a horse-shoe form, their
convex side to seaward. Our camels found
the utmost difficulty in crossing, and the
Bedowins were so distressed that we were
obliged to stop repeatedly for them. The
quantity of water they drank was enormous.