How I Found Livingstone Travels, Adventures And Discoveries In Central Africa Including Four Months Residence With Dr. Livingstone By Sir Henry M. Stanley
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Our First Night In Unyamwezi
Was Very Exciting Indeed.
The Musungu's camp was visited by two
crawling thieves, but they were soon made aware by the portentous
click of a trigger that the white man's camp was well guarded.
Hamed's camp was next visited; but here also the restlessness of
the owner frustrated their attempts, for he was pacing backwards
and forwards through his camp, with a loaded gun in his hand; and
the thieves were obliged to relinquish the chance of stealing any
of his bales. From Hamed's they proceeded to Hassan's camp (one
of the Arab servants), where they were successful enough to reach
and lay hold of a couple of bales; but, unfortunately, they made
a noise, which awoke the vigilant and quick-eared slave, who
snatched his loaded musket, and in a moment had shot one of them
through the heart. Such were our experiences of the Wakimbu of
Tura.
On the 18th the three caravans, Hamed's, Hassan's, and my own,
left Tura by a road which zig-zagged towards all points through
the tall matama fields. In an hour's time we had passed Tura
Perro, or Western Tura, and had entered the forest again, whence
the Wakimbu of Tura obtain their honey, and where they excavate
deep traps for the elephants with which the forest is said to
abound. An hour's march from Western Tura brought us to a ziwa,
or pond. There were two, situated in the midst of a small open
mbuga, or plain, which, even at this late season, was yet soft
from the water which overflows it during the rainy season.
After resting three hours, we started on the terekeza,
or afternoon march.
It was one and the same forest that we had entered soon after
leaving Western Tura, that we travelled through until we reached
the Kwala Mtoni, or, as Burton has misnamed it on his map, "Kwale."
The water of this mtoni is contained in large ponds, or deep
depressions in the wide and crooked gully of Kwala. In these
ponds a species of mud-fish, was found, off one of which I made
a meal, by no means to be despised by one who had not tasted fish
since leaving Bagamoyo. Probably, if I had my choice, being, when
occasion demands it, rather fastidious in my tastes, I would not
select the mud-fish.
From Tura to the Kwala Mtoni is seventeen and a half miles,
a distance which, however easy it may be traversed once a
fortnight, assumes a prodigious length when one has to travel
it almost every other day, at least, so my pagazis, soldiers,
and followers found it, and their murmurs were very loud when
I ordered the signal to be sounded on the march. Abdul Kader,
the tailor who had attached himself to me, as a man ready-handed
at all things, from mending a pair of pants, making a delicate
entremets, or shooting an elephant, but whom the interior proved
to be the weakliest of the weakly, unfit for anything except
eating and drinking - -almost succumbed on this march.
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