Page 275 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 275

230               TRAVELS IN OMAN.                     [CH.


                                    come more numerous and more irregular in
                                    their outline as they approach the Cape.

                                    This indentation is also continued on the
                                    western side of the promontory, and a narrow

                                    ridge, five hundred yards in width, is all that
                                    separates Kasab Bay on one side, and Goobut
                                     Gurei’yah on the other. There are probably

                                     few parts of the world presenting an outline
                                     so tortuous and irregular as the space in­

                                     cluded between this isthmus and the Cape.
                                       A succession of villages and date-groves
                                    extend from Sehinas to Dibha, where the

                                     maritime plain (Batna of the Map) com­
                                     mences. At Dibha the Imam has a fort,

                                     and he formerly drew from the village a small
                                     annual revenue of four thousand dollars.

                                     Water, vegetables, and cattle, all good in
                                     their several kinds, may be obtained here.
                                     It has a few boats, which are employed in

                                     bringing grain from the Persian shore. The
                                     intermediate parts of Khdrfakan and Kh6r

                                     Kulba are similar in size and in the produc­
                                     tions they afford to Dibha.

                                        From Dibha to the northward, a range of
                                     mountains rise up directly from the sea, ex­
                                     hibiting in many places the most romantic
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