4. On the road from Beroa to Edessa 4048 adjoining the
high-way is a waste over which the Saracens roam to and fro without having any
fixed abode. Through fear of them travellers in those parts assemble in
numbers, so that by mutual assistance they may escape impending danger. There
were in my company men, women, old men, youths, children, altogether about
seventy persons. All of a sudden the Ishmaelites on
horses and camels made an assault upon us, with their flowing hair bound with
fillets, their bodies half-naked, with their broad military boots, their cloaks
streaming behind them, and their quivers slung upon the shoulders. They carried
their bows unstrung and brandished their long spears; for they had come not to
fight, but to plunder. We were seized, dispersed, and carried in different
directions. I, meanwhile, repenting too late of the step I had taken, and far
indeed from gaining possession of my inheritance, was assigned, along with
another poor sufferer, a woman, to the service of one and the same owner. We
were led, or rather carried, high upon the camel’s
back through a desert waste, every moment expecting destruction, and suspended,
I may say, rather than seated. Flesh half raw was our food, camel’s
milk our drink.
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