Page 374 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 374
XX.] TRAVELS IN OMAN. 335
intolerance towards those professing opposite
*
tenets; and a sort of monopoly of righteous
ness, cloaked beneath studied meekness and
assumed humility. However, notwithstand
ing these defects, his treatise certainly dis
plays great subtilty of argument, with ex
tensive theological as 'well as historical read-
ing. Like Hudibras,
He could a hair divide
Betwixt the south and south-west side.
And when considered in reference to the
notoriously contradictory tenets of Islamism,
it is an amusing specimen of that singular
aptitude, possessed by some men, for making
“ the worse appear the better cause.”
Ibn ’Abu Mihan resided in Maskat at the
time I left OmAn.
Its population must be classed under two
separate heads; those who reside perma
nently in the towns and oases, and the Be-
dowins, who inhabit the intermediate De
sert. The latter are the indigenous inhabit
ants of the country, retaining all the personal
characteristics of the true sons of Ishmael;
the former are fairer, and somewhat more
fleshy, although the difference is far less