Page 149 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 149
110 TRAVELS IN OMAN. [di.
meal, after the usual style, was sumptuous
and plentiful; but so strictly do the Arabs
regard the laws of hospitality, that it required
much entreaty to induce our host, a man of
high birth, to seat himself with us. This
originates in a prevalent belief that if he
partakes of the meal he will neither have
leisure nor opportunity to look after his
guests, and he, therefore, insisted upon wait
ing on us in the capacity of an attendant. It
was not until I told him that we would not
commence unless he did so, that he could be
prevailed on to join in, and then we per
ceived he could play his part as well as the
best of us. On returning to the tent I found,
as usual, a great crowd collected there, but
they were kept in tolerable order by a little
urchin about twelve years of age, whose
father, a man of great influence in these
parts, had, a few years before, been killed by
the Bedowins. He had taken complete pos
session of our tent, and allowed none of his
countrymen to enter but with his permission.
He carried a sword longer than himself, and
also a stick, with which he occasionally laid
about him. I was excessively amused at the