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females in one line, the males in another, and are covered oyer with sacking until morning. February 12th. Thermometer 30° below 0°.—Water frozen, and the poor. Negroes in great distress from the cold. A t 8. 20. loaded and proceeded along the edge of the Wadey. Belford walked for a time, and his camel appeared much swelled about the foot. Course north 75° east; Wadey about one mile in breadth, bounded on each side by the Desert. At one P. M. we stopped at Ghroodwa, having made twelve miles. Here is a fine Mosque and a tomb (which is kept constantly white-washed) over the grave of the third brother of Sidi Besheer, the Maraboot of whom I have before spoken. I bought a fine sheep for a dollar and a half. February 12th. Thermometer 2° SO'.—At eight proceeded along the Wadey; at 9. SO. arrived at the end of it, and found a well called Bir el Whishki, or well of the palm bushes. We were joined here by a chowse of the Bashaw of Tripoli, who had just come from thence with thirty camels’ load of grain; he said it was reported that the English Consul was coming to meet me at Benioleed. On leaving the well we entered again on a stony desert, and at 6. 15. descended a rugged pass called Taneia, to a plain hemmed in on every side by conical-shaped hills. At 6. 40. we stopped for the night, having travelled north 33° east twenty-six miles. A large Kaffle of natives of the Wadey Shiati, , / ja ^ aI,, passed us on their way to Morzouk, with grain, and to compliment the Sultan on his son’s return. We had many Arab games while sitting with the camel-men round our fires; and I now began to be well acquainted with these people, having occasionally been under the necessity of honouring one or two of them with a box on the ear. We were all very merry, and one of my people, Ibrahim el Fetaima, an Arab of Hoon, told us some very amusing stories.


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