On this page
-
Text (1)
-
Visit to the Great Oasisof the Libyan De...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Visit To The Great Oasis Of The Libyan D...
foul , flat , state , and unprofitable . But do see , now , how our friend Hoskins takes not only all " the shine" out of the idea , but all the charm , refreshment , and sense of Elysian rest in a green shade within the sound of music and fountains .
" The distance from the summit of the mountain into the valley of the Oasis , is about three miles . On account of the extreme roughness of the road , we were obliged to descend it on foot . It took us two hours to reach the plain , which would seem to indicate that the
mountain is higher than I have stated ; but it must be taken into consideration , that the path for half of the way was level , sometimes even slightly ascending , and that the descent when rapid was zigzag . I regret that none of us had a barometer . The variation of the
thermometer upon the higher and lower ground was seven degrees ; from which we must deduct the usual increase of heat between ten o ' clock and noon .
" We arrived by four o clock at a brook of water which runs at a short distance below a range of hills , in the centre of the valley , called el Gern . We there encamped for the night . " It was interesting to see the _delio-ht which our Arabs and
animals exhibited , each in his particular way , on arriving at the water . Without being urged , the camels , from experience or instinct , quickened their pace , as we approached the stream : and without waiting- to the stream ; and without waiting to
be unloaded , rushed to the water and took a hearty draught . They were all very much annoyed with a disgusting kind of vermis , about the size of a caterpillar , that had lodged in their nostrils ; but by
Visit To The Great Oasis Of The Libyan D...
means of the water , blowing at the same time through their noses , and shaking their heads , they managed to throw off most of their
tormentors . I could not prevail upon the owners of the camels to clear them away . The Arabs nourish their camels as cheaply as they can ., rejoice when there are a few thorns and bushes to save the
expense of giving them better food , and otherwise bestow no care or trouble upon them . " Our men ran to the water as eagerly as the camels ; and , from the quantity they drank , I thought
they would have made themselves ill . They afterwards performed their ablutions for their comfort , if not for their religion ' s sake ; and many of them , by way of giving themselves a thorough soaking , bathed in the stream . We also
were glad to have the luxury of an unlimited supply for our tubs , as in the desert we could not , of course , spare many bottles of our valuable water for that purpose . I indeed
occasionally followed the advice of Mahomet , who tells his followers to use sand when they have no water for their ablutions ; but I must confess I found it a very poor substitute . "
Very likely—but amidst all this plunging , and splashing , and diving * , and wading , and floating , and drinking during each buoyant evolution , there
was surely much to have excited the feelings to a high degree of blessedness after such a jour ney . " Not so , " quoth our hard-hearted traveller . And
now lor his reduction of our ideas of an Oasis . " The traveller in the fruitful , but dreary _, naked plains of Bohe-
Visit To The Great Oasisof The Libyan De...
Visit to the Great Oasisof the Libyan Desert . 68
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), July 1, 1837, page 63, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/mrp_01071837/page/61/
-