we passed each other as if we had passed in Bond Street.
Our attendants, however, were not to be cheated of
the delight that they felt in speaking to new listeners
and hearing fresh voices once more. The masters,
therefore, had no sooner passed each other than their
respective servants quietly stopped and entered into
conversation. As soon as my camel found that
her companions were not following her she caught the
social feeling and refused to go on. I felt
the absurdity of the situation, and determined to
accost the stranger if only to avoid the awkwardness
of remaining stuck fast in the Desert whilst our servants
were amusing themselves. When with this intent
I turned round my camel I found that the gallant officer
who had passed me by about thirty or forty yards was
exactly in the same predicament as myself. I
put my now willing camel in motion and rode up towards
the stranger, who seeing this followed my example
and came forward to meet me. He was the first
to speak. He was much too courteous to address
me as if he admitted the possibility of my wishing
to accost him from any feeling of mere sociability
or civilian-like love of vain talk. On the contrary,
he at once attributed my advances to a laudable wish
of acquiring statistical information, and accordingly,
when we got within speaking distance, he said, “I
dare say you wish to know how the plague is going on
at Cairo?” And then he went on to say, he regretted
that his information did not enable him to give me
in numbers a perfectly accurate statement of the daily
deaths. He afterwards talked pleasantly enough
upon other and less ghastly subjects. I thought
him manly and intelligent, a worthy one of the few
thousand strong Englishmen to whom the empire of India
is committed.
The night after the meeting with the people of the
caravan, Dthemetri, alarmed by their warnings, took
upon himself to keep watch all night in the tent.
No robbers came except a jackal, that poked his nose
into my tent from some motive of rational curiosity.
Dthemetri did not shoot him for fear of waking me.
These brutes swarm in every part of Syria, and there
were many of them even in the midst of the void sands,
that would seem to give such poor promise of food.
I can hardly tell what prey they could be hoping
for, unless it were that they might find now and then
the carcass of some camel that had died on the journey.
They do not marshal themselves into great packs like
the wild dogs of Eastern cities, but follow their
prey in families, like the place-hunters of Europe.
Their voices are frightfully like to the shouts and
cries of human beings. If you lie awake in your
tent at night you are almost continually hearing some
hungry family as it sweeps along in full cry.
You hear the exulting scream with which the sagacious
dam first winds the carrion, and the shrill response
of the unanimous cubs as they sniff the tainted air,
“Wha! wha! wha! wha! wha! wha! Whose gift
is it in, mamma?”