Page 56 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 56
IE] TRAVELS IN OMAN. 17
of the Imam with the Princess of Shiraz,
that order, with several other restrictions, has
been rescinded. Indeed, an offence com
mitted by a Persian, whether it be of a civil
or criminal nature, is permitted to go before
their own Cazi, and, according to his report,
they are punished or acquitted. The Per
sians at Maskat are mostly merchants, who
deal in India piece-goods, coffee, hookahs or
raleans, and rose-water. Others, from Bun
der, Abbas, Lar, and Menon, manufacture
swords and matchlocks, for which there is a
great demand in the interior.
From their mixed descent, and also from
the custom of intermarrying with their
Zansibar and Abyssinian slaves, the com
plexion of this portion of the inhabitants
varies very considerably; but the higher
orders, who have preserved untainted the
purity of their Arabian descent, retain, in
a remarkable degree, the peculiar character
istics of their race. In their persons they
are mostly spare, and their skins are of a
light, healthy brown colour. They rarely
suffer from fevers, although the climate of
Maskat is, in this respect especially, fatal to
vol. i. c