Wad 
‘A JOURNEY IN THE EAST, 271 
Girgeh, but at daybreak the steamer got under weigh again, 
and early in the morning we lay-to beside the large and 
beautiful palm-forest of the insignificant mud-built village of 
Beliane, where we had an opportunity of visiting one of the 
temples built by Rameses and of experiencing the magic 
charms of these monuments thousands of years old. 
While we were inspecting the halls and chambers of the 
temple, some vultures flew over from the neighbouring desert 
mountains and circled high above us. We immediately 
resolved to decoy these huge birds of prey, and the first thing 
to be done was to look out for a proper place on which to 
expose the bait. 
Behind the temple are some high heaps of ruins and rub- 
bish, from which there is an open view of the wide desert 
plains, which extend from the margin of the cultivated land 
up to the base of the barren mountains, with their beautiful 
forms and high precipices. This plain I now proceeded to 
explore, looking for a suitable place, and while so doing I 
found the remains of some old walls and half-ruined tombs, 
while a few hundred yards from the temple there was a 
regular field of the dead. 
In the days of the Roman emperors an entire legion had 
here fallen victims to famine and epidemics, and the unburied 
bodies of the Roman warriors are still lying about in wild 
confusion,—bodies one may literally say; for the African sun, 
the burning sand, and the purity of the air have preserved 
and turned them into natural mummies. I came across 
entire bodies and detached legs, arms, and hands to which the 
brown shrivelled fiesh still adhered, and I was especially im- 
pressed by a grinning skull with a scalp and dark lumps of 
flesh on the cheek-bones ; another, which was less repellent, 
I took with me as a memento. One had absolutely to wade 
through skeletons and the dust of bodies. 
It was a true desert scene, with the dazzling white plain, 
