The Throne of Solomon European fashion, all but a collar and the shoes, which were white cotton Persian givas. He had a pleasant, big-nosed face, with one wall eye, over which a shock of hair continually came drooping, and a mouth which seemed always on the edge of a smile in some secret amusement of its own. He questioned me capably, and diagnosed malaria and dysentery; " diseases we are used to," he remarked. " To-morrow, I will take you to my village, and get you well in a week," said he, while injecting camphor, emetine, and quinine in rapid succession, and in die most surprising quantities. " Now would you like a morphia injection to make you sleep?" His ideas on quinine ran to three times the maximum marked in my medical guide, and I thought that a similar experiment with morphia might have too permanent an effect altogether. I refused, and turned my attention to a bowl of a soup called harira, made of rice, almonds and milk. " Almonds," said the doctor, who had specially ordered this delicacy for me, " are most excellent for dysentery. They scrub one out like soap. Pepper is good also." He caught a dubious look, and begged me to have confidence. "We know more than your doctors do about these diseases," he said again. Supper was now brought and laid on a round mat on the floor by the head of my bed, where my host and the doctor sat down to it in the light of a small oil lamp. Having dis- patched it, they settled to the business of opium, handing the pipe to and fro over a small charcoal brazier, a scene of dissi- pation in the flickering light that made me think of the " Rake's Progress," which I used to wonder over at Madame Tussaud's in my childhood. Here it was all in action, so to say, and I myself, rather surprisingly, in the picture, with the opium smokers squatting at my bedside in the Assassins' valley. [262]