friend and his companion order their horses, and buckle
their arms and accoutrements about them to depart;
my “brother” stands before me and loads
up his flintlock rifle; it is a fearful and wonderful
process; it takes him at least two minutes; he does
not seem to know on which particular part of his wonderful
paraphernalia to find the slugs, the powder, or the
patching, and he finishes by tearing a piece of rag
off a by-standing villager to place over the powder
in the pan. While he is doing all this, and
especially when ramming home the bullet, he looks at
me as though expecting me to come and pat him approvingly
on the shoulder. When they are gone, the third
traveller, who is going to remain over night, edges
up beside me, and pointing to his own imposing armory,
likewise announces himself as my brother; thus do
I unexpectedly acquire two brothers within the brief
space of an evening. The villagers scatter to
their respective quarters; quilts are provided for
me, and a ghostly light is maintained by means of
a cup of grease and a twisted rag. In one corner
of the room is a paunchy youngster of ten or twelve
summers, whom I noticed during the evening as being
without a single garment to cover his nakedness; he
has partly inserted himself into a largo, coarse, nose-bag,
and lies curled up in that ridiculous position, probably
imagining himself in quite comfortable quarters.
“Oh, wretched youth.” I mentally
exclaim, “what will you do when that nose-bag
has petered out?” and soon afterward I fall
asleep, in happy consciousness of perfect security
beneath the protecting shadow of brother number two
and his formidable armament of ancient weapons.
Ten miles of good ridable road from Houssenbegkhan,
and I again descend into the valley of the west fork
of the Euphrates, crossing the river on an ancient
stone bridge; I left Houssenbegkhan without breakfasting,
preferring to make my customary early start and trust
to luck. I am beginning to doubt the propriety
of having done so, and find myself casting involuntary
glances toward a Koordish camp that is visible some
miles to the north of my route, when, upon rounding
a mountain-spur jutting out into the valley, I descry
the minaret of Mamakhatoun in the distance ahead.
A minaret hereabout is a sure indication of a town
of sufficient importance to support a public eating-khan,
where, if not a very elegant, at least a substantial
meal is to be obtained. I obtain an acceptable
breakfast of kabobs and boiled sheeps’- trotters;
killing two birds with one stone by satisfying my own
appetite and at the same time giving a first-class
entertainment to a khan-full of wondering-eyed people,
by eating with the khan-jee’s carving-knife
and fork in preference to my fingers. Here, as
at Houssenbeg-khan, there is a splendid, large caravanserai;
here it is built chiefly of hewn stone, and almost
massive enough for a fortress; this is a mountainous,
elevated region, where the winters are stormy and severe,