Page 148 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 148

VIII.] TRAVELS IN OMAN. 109


            lias assumed the native dress, but I still re­
                                        .
            tain that of England *
               Thursday, December \lth. We visited the
            Sheikh’s dwelling, on an invitation to break­

            fast. It was a large fort, very strongly built
            with the same material as the houses. The

            rooms are spacious and lofty, but destitute of
            any furniture. Suspended on pegs, protrud­

            ing about two feet from the wall, are the
             saddles, cloths, and trappings of their horses

             and camels. The ceilings are painted in
            various devices, but the floors are of mud,

             and only partially covered with mats. The
             windows, in place of the usual ornamental

             wood-work, are crossed by transversed iron
             bars; and at night, in order to protect the

             inmates from the keenness of the winds, they
             are wholly closed by wooden shutters. Lamps

             formed of shells, a species of murex, are sus­

             pended by lines from the ceiling, and the
             whole was essentially different from what I
             have seen in other parts of Arabia. Our


               * Lieutenant Whitelock’s route from Maskat is laid down on
             the map. It led along a narrow road, through a wilderness of
             broken mountains. He passed a few spots where there were date
             plantations, but the country was generally barren, and destitute of
             water.
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