Page:Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile - In the Years 1768, 1769, 1770, 1771, 1772, and 1773 volume 4.djvu/442

 * 414 TRAVELS TO DISCOVER

or robe, for himfelf. " He is a poor wretch, fays the Shekh of Beyla ; he has fpent two years of the king's revenues from Atbara, and nobody has fupported him except Shekh Adelan, whofe daughter he married, but he now has given him up fmce he has fully known him ; and, if our troubles do not follow quickly, I fuppofe one of thefe days I lliall have him here in his way to Sennaar, never to re- turn ; for everybody knows now that it was in hatred to him, and for the many faithlefs and bad adions he was guilty of, that the Arabs have deftroyed all that part of the country, though they have not burnt a flraw about Beyla."

We had again a large and plentiful dinner, and a quan- tity of bouza ; venifon of feveral different fpecies of the antelope or deer-kind, and Guinea-fowls, boiled with rice, the beft part of our fare, for the venifon fmelled and tail- ed ftrongly of mufk. This was the provifion made by the Shekh's two fons, boys about fourteen or fifteen years old, who had got each of them a gun with a match-lock and whofe favour I fecured to a very high degree, by giving them fome good gunpowder, and plenty of fmall leaden bullets.

In the afternoon we walked out to fee the village, which is a very pleafant pne, fituated upon the bottom of a hill, covered with wood, all the refl flat before it. Through this plain there are many large timber trees, planted in rows, and joined with high hedges, as in Eu- rope, forming inclofures for keeping cattle ; but of thefe we faw none, as they had been moved to the Dender for ifear of the flies. There is no water at Beyla but what is

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