A Popular Account Of Dr. Livingstone's Expedition To The Zambesi By David Livingston
































































 -   His Excellency
meanwhile, being a disciple of Raspail, had taken nothing for the
fever but a little camphor, and after - Page 24
A Popular Account Of Dr. Livingstone's Expedition To The Zambesi By David Livingston - Page 24 of 505 - First - Home

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His Excellency Meanwhile, Being A Disciple Of Raspail, Had Taken Nothing For The Fever But A Little Camphor, And After He Was Taken To Shupanga Became Comatose.

More potent remedies were administered to him, to his intense disgust, and he soon recovered.

The Colonel in attendance, whom he never afterwards forgave, encouraged the treatment. "Give what is right; never mind him; he is very (muito) impertinent:" and all night long, with every draught of water the Colonel gave a quantity of quinine: the consequence was, next morning the patient was cinchonized and better.

For sixty or seventy miles before reaching Mazaro, the scenery is tame and uninteresting. On either hand is a dreary uninhabited expanse, of the same level grassy plains, with merely a few trees to relieve the painful monotony. The round green top of the stately palm-tree looks at a distance, when its grey trunk cannot be seen, as though hung in mid-air. Many flocks of busy sand-martins, which here, and as far south as the Orange River, do not migrate, have perforated the banks two or three feet horizontally, in order to place their nests at the ends, and are now chasing on restless wing the myriads of tropical insects. The broad river has many low islands, on which are seen various kinds of waterfowl, such as geese, spoonbills, herons, and flamingoes. Repulsive crocodiles, as with open jaws they sleep and bask in the sun on the low banks, soon catch the sound of the revolving paddles and glide quietly into the stream. The hippopotamus, having selected some still reach of the river to spend the day, rises out of the bottom, where he has been enjoying his morning bath after the labours of the night on shore, blows a puff of spray from his nostrils, shakes the water out of his ears, puts his enormous snout up straight and yawns, sounding a loud alarm to the rest of the herd, with notes as of a monster bassoon.

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