Page 357 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 357

318                TRAVELS IN OMaN.                     [ch.


                                   through the hands of the merchants at Mas-

                                   kat; and I have given in my account of that
                                   city all the necessary details. Its several
                                   branches at Sur, Burka, Sohar, and Sehi­

                                    nas, are of minor importance, being princi­
                                    pally confined to the exportation of dates, for
                                    which they receive in exchange grain, Indian

                                    cloth, and fire-wood. The existing state of
                                    learning, the arts, and manufactures, does not
                                    in Oman rise superior to the low ebb at which

                                    they are found in other parts of Arabia: in­
                                    deed, in all these respects, they are far infe­

                                    rior to their neighbours of Yemen. Though
                                    I purposely sought amidst the most intelligent
                                    persons, I found but one who had any know-

                                    lege of astronomy, or indeed of literature or
                                    of the sciences generally; nor do they pos­

                                    sess a wish to cultivate them. We must not,
                                    however, on this account conclude that there
                                    is any want of capacity or intellect. One

                                    individual in particular, named Sayyid Ibn
                                    Kalfan, who had been educated in Calcutta,

                                    was sufficiently versed in nautical astronomy
                                    to be able to take the sun with a sextant and

                                    artificial horizon, to calculate his observa­
                                    tions, and to rate chronometers. He had
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