A Fonnigm in r*.w. i^urman were to see Luristan dressed and shaved, long hair being considered incompatible with a civilized appearance. To procure a city suit in five days in the wilds of Luristan, is a joke only fit for Punch or the Persian government: the tribesmen gazed in unhappy perplexity while the policeman expounded. " Do you think the Ferangi clothes keep rain and snow out as thoroughly as these felt coats?" I asked at last. " Oh no," said the policeman. " I should think the Pahlevi hat would not last long in this climate either?" " No time at all," the tribesmen said in chorus, with obvious The policeman put down my water-bottle. " It is an order from the Shah," he observed with dignity; and suggested that it might be time to move on. The passes, he explained, were not so dangerous as before lunch: he did not think I need be escorted. If I used the water-bottle myself he would not dream of depriving me: he had not seriously thought of suggesting it. And would I tell the Governor how pleased I was with his services? So we went on, keeping the Gatchkah and its hills well on our left, and making for the motor road, trodden, as far as one could see, only by the hooves of innumerable donkeys and mules. It is not yet completely finished, and the last and safest part of it, where cars do run between Kermenshah and Harsin, is apt to be raided now and then, and was so five days before I got there. Out here in the wilderness it seemed to sun itself in perfect peace, winding out of a rolling green country for sheep which rose to bolder hills and jungle patches in the south-western litde-known valleys of Dilfan. As we rode through the quiet light of the afternoon, we saw no trace of human beings except the heaps of stones by the road-