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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Now, For A Voyage And Land Journey Of Four Months, The Nile Is
Known, In Addition To The Part F The Stream That Is In Egypt; For,
Upon Computation, So Many Months Are Known To Be Spent By A
Person Who Travels From Elephantine To The Automoli.
This river
flows from the west and the setting of the sun; but beyond this no
one is able to speak with certainty, for the rest of the country
is desert by reason of the excessive heat.
But I have heard the
following account from certain Cyrenaeans, who say that they went
to the oracle of Ammon, and had a conversation with Etearchus, King
of the Ammonians, and that, among other subjects, they happened to
discourse about the Nile - that nobody knew its sources; whereupon
Etearchus said that certain Nasamonians once came to him - this
nation is Lybian, and inhabits the Syrtis, and the country for no
great distance eastward of the Syrtis - and that when these
Nasamonians arrived, and were asked if they could give any
further formation touching the deserts of Libya, they answered,
that there were some daring youths amongst them, sons of powerful
men; and that they, having reached man's estate, formed many
other extravagant plans, and, moreover, chose five of their number
by lot to explore the deserts of Libya, to see if they could make
any further discovery than those who had penetrated the farthest.
(For, as respects the parts of Libya along the Northern Sea,
beginning from Egypt to the promontory of Solois, where is the
extremity of Libya, Libyans and various nations of Libyans reach
all along it, except those parts which are occupied by Grecians
and Phoenicians; but as respects the parts above the sea, and
those nations which reach down to the sea, in the upper parts
Libya is infested by wild beasts; and all beyond that is sand,
dreadfully short of water, and utterly desolate.) They further
related, "that when the young men deputed by their companions
set out, well furnished with water and provisions, they passed
first through the inhabited country; and having traversed this,
they came to the region infested by wild beasts; and after this
they crossed the desert, making their way towards the west; and
when they had traversed much sandy ground, during a journey of
many days, they at length saw some trees growing in a plain; and
that they approached and began to gather the fruit that grew on
the trees; and while they were gathering, some diminutive men,
less than men of middle stature, came up, and having seized them
carried them away; and that the Nasamonians did not at all understand
their language, nor those who carried them off the language of
the Nasamonians. However, they conducted them through vast
morasses, and when they had passed these, they came to a city in
which all the inhabitants were of the same size as their conductors,
and black in colour: and by the city flowed a great river, running
from the west to the east, and that crocodiles were seen in it."
Thus far I have set forth the account of Etearchus the Ammonian;
to which may be added, as the Cyrenaeans assured me, "that he said
the Nasamonians all returned safe to their own country, and that
the men whom they came to were all necromancers." Etearchus also
conjectured that this river, which flows by their city, is the Nile;
and reason so evinces: for the Nile flows from Libya, and intersects
it in the middle; and (as I conjecture, inferring things unknown
from things known) it sets out from a point corresponding with the
Ister. For the Ister, beginning from the Celts, and the city of
Pyrene, divides Europe in its course; but the Celts are beyond
the pillars of Hercules, and border on the territories of the
Cynesians, who lie in the extremity of Europe to the westward;
and the Ister terminates by flowing through all Europe into the
Euxine Sea, where a Milesian colony is settled in Istria. Now
the Ister, as it flows through a well-peopled country, is generally
known; but no one is able to speak about the sources of the Nile,
because Libya, through which it flows, is uninhabited and desolate.
Respecting this stream, therefore, as far as I was able to reach by
inquiry, I have already spoken. It however discharges itself into
Egypt; and Egypt lies, as near as may be, opposite to the
mountains of Cilicia; from whence to Sinope, on the Euxine Sea,
is a five days' journey in a straight line to an active man; and
Sinope is opposite to the Ister, where it discharges itself into
the sea. So I think that the Nile, traversing the whole of Libya,
may be properly compared with the Ister. Such, then, is the
account that I am able to give respecting the Nile.
***
2. Webb's River must be traced to its connection with some portion
of the old Nile.
When these two things have been accomplished, then, and not till
then, can the mystery of the Nile be explained. The two countries
through which the marvellous lacustrine river, the Lualaba, flows,
with its manifold lakes and broad expanse of water, are Rua (the
Uruwwa of Speke) and Manyuema. For the first time Europe is made
aware that between the Tanganika and the known sources of the Congo
there exist teeming millions of the negro race, who never saw, or
heard of the white people who make such a noisy and busy stir
outside of Africa. Upon the minds of those who had the good
fortune to see the first specimen of these remarkable white races
in Dr. Livingstone, he seems to have made a favourable impression,
though, through misunderstanding his object, and coupling him with
the Arabs, who make horrible work there, his life was sought after
more than once. These two extensive countries, Rua and Manyuema,
are populated by true heathens, governed, not as the sovereignties
of Karagwah, Urundi, and Uganda, by despotic kings, but each
village by its own sultan or lord.
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