Page 405 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 405

366 TRAVELS IN OMAN. [cil,


                                     they sprang; and during the sojourn of Be-
                                     dowins in Maskat or other towns, they are
                                     usually lodged with, and fed by such rela­

                                     tives.
                                        Such are the principal tribes in OmAn. I

                                     made myself acquainted with the names,
                                     number, &c., of upwards of a hundred others,

                                     but as they only vary in these respects, it
                                     would prove neither interesting nor amusing
                                     to give the mere catalogue.

                                        Each of these tribes being governed, in a
                                     measure, by its own ruler, acts on ordinary

                                     occasions as a civil community independent
                                     of its neighbours; but the smaller are com­

                                     monly under the influence of the larger
                                     tribes. Yet this alliance hangs by so slight
                                     a thread that the veriest trifle is sufficient to

                                     sever it. If dissatisfied with their Sheikh, or
                                     they think they can better themselves, they

                                     quit his protection and obtain that of another,
                                     very possibly a rival. Thus, their numbers

                                     and strength are constantly changing, and
                                     the mal-administration of a single individual

                                     may reduce his rule' over a powerful tribe to
                                     that over its mere skeleton. This is one of
                                     the principal features in the Sheikh govern­
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