TRIPOLY TO BENGAZI. 
81 
CHAPTER V. 
Arrival at Zeliten— Description of the Village and District of that name— Harbour of Zeliten— 
Remains in its neighbourhood probably those of the Cisternae Oppidum of Ptolemy — Tomb 
of the Mardbut Sidy Abd el Saldm — Respect shewn to it by our party in passing before it 
General appearance of these Structures— Arab credulity and superstition— Leave Zeliten— 
Remains between it and Selin— Arrive at Selin, the Orir, apparently, of Signor Della Celia 
—Proceed to Zouia— Ports called by the Arabs Mersa Gusser and Mersa Zoraig— Arrive at 
Mesurata, the Western Boundary of the Greater Syrtis— Description of the Town and District 
of Mesurata— Account of them by Leo Africanus— Visit from the Shekh of Mesurata— 
Splendid Costume and Equipage of the Shekh compared with that of our Bedouin Guide, 
Shekh Mahommed el Dhbbah — Allusion to the report mentioned at the end of the Third 
Chapter— Great demand for Medicine at Mesurata— Considerate conduct of Mr. Campbell- 
Speedy success of his treatment in many difficult cases— Miraculous cure of a young Arab 
woman by an itinerant Sherif and Mardbut— Detention of the party at Mesurata — Observa- 
tions on Cape Mesurata, considered as the Cephalas Promontorium of Strabo — Remarks of 
Signor Della Celia on this subject — Alterations proposed by that gentleman in the punctua- 
tion of a passage in Strabo descriptive of the Promontory — Actual appearance of the Pro- 
montory sufficiently consistent with the account of Strabo — ^Well-founded Remarks of Signor 
Della Celia on the extension of the Gharian Chain, &c.— Extensive View from the Sand-hills 
at the back of Mesurata — Singular contrast presented by the view over the dreary wastes of 
the Syrtis compared with that over the plain of Mesurata — Hot wind, and swarm of locusts 
accompanying it — Alarm of the Arabs of Mesurata — Precautions adopted by them on the 
occasion — Destructive consequences (mentioned by Shaw) resulting from the visit of a flight 
of Locusts which he witnessed — Remarks of Pliny on the same subject — Arrival of the 
Camels, and departure from Mesurata. 
On our arrival at Zeliten, we found barley and oil in abundance, and 
much cheaper than in the neighbourhood of Tripoly ; we availed our- 
selves, accordingly, of the favourable state of the market, to replenish 
our supply of these articles with the produce of the district of Cinyps. 
Herodotus thought it necessary to observe, in describing the fortu- 
M 
