Page 377 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 377

338 TRAVELS IN OMAN. [ch.



                      the towns within them are a proud, high-
                      minded race, less corrupted or degenerated

                      than those who, in other parts of Arabia, have
                      passed from the pastoral to the agricultural

                      state : their permanent residence and attach­

                      ment to the soil has indeed stripped them
                      of but few of those distinctive qualities which

                      are possessed by their brethren of the Desert.
                      They are hospitable, brave, and generous, but

                      at the same time vindictive, irascible, and in
                      a high degree susceptible of insult.

                         The most bloody affrays have originated

                      from causes the most trifling; and I will
                      mention, by way of proof, an incident to

                      which I became an eye-witness. A family
                      from a neighbouring tribe being on a visit to

                      another in Bedi’ah, the son, a boy about ten

                      years of age, while engaged in a struggle with
                      another lad belonging to the town, received

                      accidentally a cuff, which was intended by
                      the father of the latter, who had come to

                      separate them, for his own son. The former

                      went away crying to his family, who were
                      highly exasperated, and immediately took

                      their departure for their own tribe. On the

                      following morning, a deputation arrived at
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