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
































































 -   We spent the night where we
were, and next morning, declining Nkomo's entreaty to go and kill
elephants, took our - Page 474
A Popular Account Of Dr. Livingstone's Expedition To The Zambesi By David Livingston - Page 474 of 505 - First - Home

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We Spent The Night Where We Were, And Next Morning, Declining Nkomo's Entreaty To Go And Kill Elephants, Took Our Course Along The Shores Of The Lake Southwards.

We have only been at the Lake at one season of the year:

Then the wind blows strongly from the east, and indeed this is its prevailing direction hence to the Orange River; a north or a south wind is rare, and seldom lasts more than three days. As the breeze now blew over a large body of water, towards us, it was delightful; but when facing it on the table-land it was so strong as materially to impede our progress, and added considerably to the labour of travelling. Here it brought large quantities of the plant (Vallisneriae), from which the natives extract salt by burning, and which, if chewed, at once shows its saline properties by the taste. Clouds of the kungo, or edible midges, floated on the Lake, and many rested on the bushes on land.

The reeds along the shores of the Lake were still crowded with fugitives, and a great loss of life must since have taken place; for, after the corn they had brought with them was expended, famine would ensue. Even now we passed many women and children digging up the roots, about the size of peas, of an aromatic grass; and their wasted forms showed that this poor hard fare was to allay, if possible, the pangs of hunger. The babies at the breast crowed to us as we passed, their mothers kneeling and grubbing for the roots; the poor little things still drawing nourishment from the natural fountain were unconscious of that sinking of heart which their parents must have felt in knowing that the supply for the little ones must soon fail. No one would sell a bit of food to us:

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