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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Then A Bale Of Cloth Was Opened, And Each Carrier Was
Rewarded According To His Merits, That Each Of Them Might Proceed
Home To His Friends And Neighbours, And Tell Them How Much Better
The White Man Behaved Than The Arabs.
The reports of the leaders of the first, second, and fourth
caravans were then received, their separate stores inspected, and
the details and events of their marches heard.
The first caravan
had been engaged in a war at Kirurumo, and had come out of the
fight successful, and had reached Unyanyembe without loss of
anything. The second had shot a thief in the forest between
Pembera Pereh and Kididimo; the fourth had lost a bale in the
jungle of Marenga Mkali, and the porter who carried it had received
a "very sore head" from a knob stick wielded by one of the
thieves, who prowl about the jungle near the frontier of Ugogo.
I was delighted to find that their misfortunes were no more, and
each leader was then and there rewarded with one handsome cloth,
and five doti of Merikani.
Just as I began to feel hungry again, came several slaves in
succession, bearing trays full of good things from the Arabs;
first an enormous dish of rice, with a bowlful of curried chicken,
another with a dozen huge wheaten cakes, another with a plateful of
smoking hot crullers, another with papaws, another with pomegranates
and lemons; after these came men driving five fat hump backed oxen,
eight sheep, and ten goats, and another man with a dozen chickens,
and a dozen fresh eggs. This was real, practical, noble courtesy,
munificent hospitality, which quite took my gratitude by storm.
My people, now reduced to twenty-five, were as delighted at the
prodigal plenitude visible on my tables and in my yard, as I was
myself. And as I saw their eyes light up at the unctuous
anticipations presented to them by their riotous fancies,
I ordered a bullock to be slaughtered and distributed.
The second day of the arrival of the Expedition in the country
which I now looked upon as classic ground, since Capts. Burton,
Speke, and Grant years ago had visited it, and described it, came
the Arab magnates from Tabora to congratulate me.
Tabora* is the principal Arab settlement in Central Africa. It
contains over a thousand huts and tembes, and one may safely
estimate the population, Arabs, Wangwana, and natives, at five
thousand people. Between Tabora and the next settlement, Kwihara,
rise two rugged hill ridges, separated from each other by a low
saddle, over the top of which Tabora is always visible from
Kwihara.
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* There is no such recognised place as Kazeh.
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They were a fine, handsome body of men, these Arabs. They mostly
hailed from Oman: others were Wasawahili; and each of my visitors
had quite a retinue with him. At Tabora they live quite luxuriously.
The plain on which the settlement is situated is exceedingly fertile,
though naked of trees; the rich pasturage it furnishes permits them
to keep large herds of cattle and goats, from which they have an
ample supply of milk, cream, butter, and ghee.
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