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XII.] TRAVELS IN OMAN. 191
thing could have afforded him more satisfac
tion than this mark of our notice, and he was,
partly from this, and partly from his own
natural hospitality, most attentive to me dur
ing my stay.
Seyyid Hilal, a cousin of Seyyid S’aid’s, is
about thirty-five years of age, and in point of
character, he stands of all the chiefs of Omfm
next to that prince: his figure is tall and
commanding; he excels in all warlike exer
cises; is passionately attached to hunting and
other field sports; and though somewhat
spare in figure, is considered, in addition to
his extraordinary agility, the strongest man
of his nation : he is generous to profusion.
I have heard the Arabs in Maskat relate that
when upon a visit to the Imam, he has re
ceived from him a present of eight hundred
or a thousand dollars; in the course of a
couple of hours afterwards, he has bestowed
the whole of it in presents to his followers.
When the surveying vessels visited this
coast in 1828, a large portion of the sur
rounding country, including the extensive
groves of Kothra, and many towns on the
sea-coast, were tributary to this chief; but