Page 51 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 51
12 TRAVELS IN OMAN. [CH,
able state of repair. The largest, and most
commanding, are erected, on either side, at
the inner extremity of the cove; and within
that on the western side state prisoners are
confined. Two half-moon batteries also com
mand the entrance: the guns appear well
mounted, and the guard at all seasons on the
alert. The distance across, from fort to fort,
is only half a mile, so that an open attack in
the day-time would be very difficult, if these
were well served.
To persons arriving from seaward, Maskat
with its fort and contiguous hills, have an
extraordinary and romantic appearance. Not
a tree, shrub, or other trace of vegetation is
visible, and the whitened surface of the houses,
and turreted forts in the vicinity, contrast in
a singular manner with the burnt and cindery
aspect of the darkened masses of rock around.
Similar in its aspect to most eastern cities
when viewed from a distance, we first discern
the level roofs of the dwellings, the domes of
the mosques, their lofty minarets, and other
prominent features, and the view retains these
attractive features until we land, when the
illusion quickly disappears. Narrow crowded