Every
Now And Again, Also, We Caught Glimpses Of
Startled Bush-Buck And Water-Buck, While
Occasionally The Sound Of A Splash In The Water Told Of A
Wary Crocodile.
We had gone about half the
distance to the Sabaki when we came upon an
unexpected obstacle in the shape of a great ridge
of barren, rugged rock, about a hundred feet high,
which extended for about a mile or so on both
banks of the river.
The sides of this gorge went
sheer down into the water, and were quite
impossible to scale. I therefore determined to
make a detour round it, but Mahina was confident
that he could walk along in the river itself. I
hinted mildly at the possibility of there being
crocodiles under the rocky ledges. Mahina
declared, however, that there was no danger,
and making a bundle of his lower garments, he
tied it to his back and stepped into the water.
For a few minutes all went well. Then, in an
instant, he was lifted right off his feet by the
rush of the water and whirled away. The river
took a sharp bend in this gorge, and he was round
it and out of our sight in no time, the last glimpse
we caught of him showing him vainly trying to
catch hold of an overhanging branch. Although
we at once made all the haste we could to get
round the ridge of rocks, it took us nearly half an
hour to do it.
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