Page 478 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 478
437
NAKAB EL HAJAR.
XXVI.]
though several of the villages had more than
one mosque, and three or four Sheikhs
tombs.
More attention appears to be paid within
this district to agricultural pursuits, than in
any other part of Arabia which I have hi
therto seen. The fields are ploughed in
furrows, which for neatness and regularity
would not shame an English peasant. They
carefully free the soil from the few stones
strewn over it, and water the whole plenti
fully morning and evening, from numerous
wells. The water is drawn up by camels,
(this is a most unusual circumstance, for
they are rarely used as draught animals in
any part of the East,) and distributed over
the face of the country along high embank
ments. A considerable supply is also re
tained within these wherever the stream fills
its bed. Trees and sometimes even houses are
then washed away, but any damage it does is
amply compensated by the mud deposited,
which, although of a lighter colour and of a
harder nature, is yet almost equally pro
ductive with that left by the Nile in Egypt.
But beyond what I have noticed no other
niits or grain are grown.