
Source: Picturesque Palestine, vol. 3, p. 210. |
’Ain El Weibeh, on
the Border of Edom |
|
The camel is
fitly called “the ship of the desert.” It is
admirably adapted for its use on the boundless
ocean of sand from the Nile to the Euphrates.
It has needed no repair since the days of
Abraham, and could not be improved by any
invention in navigation. It would be as
impossible to cross the waterless desert
without this wonderful animal as to cross the
ocean without a ship. No horse or donkey would
answer the purpose. The camel has the
reputation of patient endurance and passive
submission, which some, however, deny, or
regard as mere stupidity . . . .It can travel
five (some say nine, or even fifteen) days in
scorching heat without water, and resorts to
its inside tank or cistern, which, at the
sacrifice of its own life, has saved the life
of many a traveller . . . .It supplies its
master with milk, fuel, sandals, and garments;
and, having done its duty, it leaves its
bleached skeleton in the arid waste as a
landmark to future travellers (Source: Picturesque Palestine, vol. 2, p. 181). |