On My Return To Szalt I Was Obliged To Remain There Several Days Longer,
For Want Of A Guide; For The Road To Kerek Is A Complete Desert, And
Much Exposed To The Inroads Of The Arabs.
At last I found a man who
engaged to serve me, but his demands were so exorbitant, that I was
several days in bargaining with him.
Mousa, (M. Seetzen), he said, had
paid his guide twenty-five piastres for the trip from hence to Kerek,
and he would not, therefore, go the same road for less than twenty-
three; this was an enormous sum for a journey of two days, in a country
where an Arab will toil for a fortnight without obtaining so great a
sum. My principal
MEKABBELY
[p.363] objection to paying so much was, that it would become known at
Kerek, which, besides other difficulties it might bring me into, would
have obliged me to pay all my future guides in the same proportion. My
landlord, however, removed this objection by making the guide take a
solemn oath that he would never confess to having received more than six
piastres for his trouble. There was no other proper guide to be got, and
I began to be tired of Szalt, for I saw that my landlord was very
earnest in his endeavours to get me away; I resolved therefore to trust
to my good fortune, and to set out with no other company than that of an
armed horseman.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 459 of 870
Words from 124330 to 124579
of 236498