JDJ1YJLJT JL X extra men over our evening meal. We also had other visitors, for 'Ali Jahman had gone off before we dismounted at Kharza to scour the surrounding country for Badawin encampments with the idea of buying a sheep for our dinner. He had only encountered a single family of the Shaiba sub- section of the Ghafran, his own group, but they had no animals worth purchasing. They had, however, scented the prospect of dinner and during the evening an old man and two lads came over to our camp to share our rice. That they did with a gusto suggesting that they had not had a square meal for some time. At sunset all eyes were riveted on the darkening western sky in search of the moon's young crescent, but our seeking was in vain and we turned to our dinner with the knowledge that we had been granted a day's respite from the fast. The official calendar, in the preparation of which I had played a modest part with the- assistance of the Nautical Almanac, had allowed only 29 days for Sha'ban, but the opening and ulti- mate breaking of the fast are inexorably dependent on the sighting of the moon, failing which the maximum tale of thirty days must be allowed to each month concerned. So Shtfban had automatically lengthened out to 30 days, and we thought optimistically that, by the general law of compensa- tion, we should only have to face 29 days of fasting. On the whole the day had passed off well enough and we had covered 20 miles. The proceedings had only been marred by a slight altercation arising out of an unauthorised adjust- ment of our loading arrangements. I had insisted on my boxes, full of instruments, bottles and other easily damage- able articles, being carried in a vertical position, but found that during the march they had been carelessly piled up, three to a camel instead of two, to facilitate a redistribution of the heavier loads of the commissariat animals. The intention had been laudable enough, but it was essential that everyone should understand that my possessions should not be exposed to any risk of dama/ge ; and my objection was received in a reasonable enough spirit of accommodation, though I felt that a vague undercurrent of irritation had been left behind by the incident. Fahad was indeed suborned to