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youngster f* and such like unfeeling expressions. The greater part of the unhappy people, of whom these were the remains, had formed the spoils of the sultan of Fezzan the year before. I was assured that they had left Bornou with not above a quarter’s allowance for each; and that more died from want than fatigue: they were marched off with chains round their necks and legs: the most robust only arrived in Fezzan in a very debilitated state, and were there fattened for the Tripoli slave market. Our camels did not come up until it was quite dark, and we bivouacked in the midst of these unearthed remains of the victims of persecution and avarice, after a long day’s journey of twenty-six miles, in the course of which, one of our party counted 107 of these skeletons. Dec. 19*.—Moved round a winding pass to the west, and after an ascent of three hundred feet descended a sandy steep to the east. This was rather a picturesque spot, looking back upon Thenea Our road lay over a long plain with a slight ridge. A fine naga (she- camel) lay down on the road this day, as I thought from fatigue. The Arabs crowded round, and commenced unloading her, when, upon inquiry, I found that she was suddenly taken in labour: about five minutes completed the operation,—a very fine little animal was literally dragged into light. I t was then thrown across another camel; and the mother, after being reloaded, followed quietly after * El-Wabr. The surface sandy till we approached the hills, then it changed to stony. The black hills with cones, peaks, and a coluninnr-looking cap, reminded us o f what we had seen before. Th e gloom o f these places in the dusk has something grand and awful. W e winded up, with the light o f a moon not a quarter old, and that lessened by a cloudy sky. Some sandy and pebbly beds, as o f a stream, and in one place high clayey banks, with iron ore underneath. Skeletons lay about, mangled in a shocking manner; here a leg, there an arm, fixed with their ligaments, at considerable distances from the trunk. What could have done this ? Man forced by hunger, or the camels ? The latter are very fond o f chewing dried bones, but whether they ever do so to those with dried flesh on them, I cannot say.—W ! O . her offspring. One of the skeletons we passed to-day had a very fresh appearance ; the beard Was still hanging to the skin of the face, and the features were still discernible, A merchant, travelling with the kafila, suddenly exclaimed, “ That was my slave! I left him behind four months ago, near this spot.”—it Make haste ! take him to the fsug” (market), said an Arab wag, “ for fear any body else should claim him.” We had no water, and a most fatiguing day. Dec. 20 was also a dreary day of most uninteresting country; and it was S. 80. when we arrived at the Hormut-el-Wahr. These were the highest hills we had seen since leaving Fezzan: the highest peak might be five or six hundred feet. They had a bold black appearance, and were a relief to the eye, after the long level we had quitted. We entered the pass, which is nearly two miles in width, and wound round some high hills to the south: the path was rugged and irregular in the extreme, and bordered by bold conical and table-topped detached hills. We blundered and stumbled on until ten at night, when we found the resting-place, after a toilsome and most distressing day. We were several times foiled in our attempt to find a path into the wadey, under these hills, by which the camels might move, and where the water was. Hillman was exceedingly ill this night, and Dr. Oudney too fatigued to render him any assistance. El-Wshr is a wadey of loose gravel, and has a well of good water. This was the eighth day since our camels had tasted water: they were weak and sore-footed, from the stony nature of the passes in these hills of El-Wahr. At night it blew a hurricane. I t is three miles from where we halted to the end of the wadey; where, to the west, there is a high hill called El-Baab. These hills extend away to the east, and form part of the range which axe found near Tibesty, where they become higher and bolder. We had now a stony plain, with low hills of sand and gravel, till we c 2


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