Page 451 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 451
412 NAKAB EL HAJAR. [CH.
I observed on one occasion a party of four or
five finish a skin holding as many gallons.
At eight hours we found the sun so op
pressive, that the Bedowins halted in a shal
low valley under the shade of some stunted
tamarisk trees. Their scanty foliage would,
however, have afforded but slight shelter from
the burning heat of the sun’s rays, if our
guides had not with their daggers dug up
or cut off the roots and lower branches, and
placed them at the top of the tree. Having
done so, they quietly took possession of the
most shady spots, and left us to shift the best
way we could. Within these burning hol
lows the sun’s rays are concentrated and
thrown off as from a mirror ; the herbs around
were scorched to a cindery blackness; not a
cloud obscured the firmament, and the breeze
which moaned past us was of a glowing heat,
like that escaping from the mouth of a fur
nace. Our guides dug hollows in the sand,
and thrust their blistered feet within them.
Although we were not long in availing our
selves of the practical lesson they had taught
us, I began to be far from pleased with their
churlish behaviour. Every approach I made