Page 446 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 446

XXV.] NAKAB EL HAJAR. 407


           at once to place myself under their protection

            and proceed with them. Accordingly, I de­
            spatched my boat to the vessel, with an inti­

            mation that I hoped at the expiration of
            three days, to be at the village of ’Ain, on

            the sea-coast, where it could again be sent for
            me. Having filled our water-skins, at three

            p.m., accompanied by an ill-looking fellow
            (styling himself the brother of Hamed) and

            another Bedowin, we mounted our camels and
            set forward. The road, after leaving Ba-’l-

            haff, extends along the shore to the westward.
            On the beach we saw a great variety of

            shells; among them the Pinna fragilis, the
            Solen, the Voluta musica, and several varieties

            of Olives were the most common. Fragments
            of red tubular coral, and the branch kind of

            the white, were also very numerous. Under
            a dark barn-shaped hill, which we passed to

            the right, our guides pointed out the remains
            of an old tower, but as we were told there
            were no inscriptions, and as its appearance

            from the ship indicated its being of Arab

             construction, we did not stay to examine it.
               At 4 o0 we passed a small fishing village,

             called Jilleh, consisting of about twenty huts,
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