Page 245 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
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206 TRAVELS IN OMAN. [cil.


                                      around its cheerful Hames, in those gay and
                                      sanguine anticipations of the future, which
                                      involuntarily arise when the mind, warped

                                      for a time by sickness, recovers its former
                                      tone and elasticity. I believe that, whilst

                                      under the influence of this peculiar reaction,
                                      any incident or adventure, however perilous
                                      and wild, provided it afforded an ample por­

                                      tion of excitement, would have been far from
                                       disagreeable to us.

                                         March 6th. After taking a hasty sketch
                                       of the entrance to this pass and the con­

                                       tiguous mountains, at 10-30 I continued my
                                      journey through the valley. There was no

                                       track except along the bed of the stream,
                                       which in some places was so deep and rapid
                                       that it nearly swept my horse from his legs.

                                       A few date groves, and an occasional cluster
                                       of huts, show themselves on either hand. At

                                       2 p.m. we struck off by a minor branch of the
                                       stream, along Wadi Thilah, to the westward.

                                       We had now penetrated beyond the lower
                                       ridges to the main branch of the mountains,

                                       which rose in steep precipices to the height
                                       of from three thousand to four thousand feet,
                                       terminating in abrupt and pointed forms.
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