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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Within Three-Quarters Of An Hour We Were Seated On The Mud Veranda
Of The Tembe Of Sultan Bin Ali, Who, Because Of His Age, His
Wealth, And Position - Being A Colonel In Seyd Burghash's Unlovely
Army - Is Looked Upon By His Countrymen, High And Low, As Referee
And Counsellor.
His boma or enclosure contains quite a village of
hive-shaped huts and square tembes.
From here, after being
presented with a cup of Mocha coffee, and some sherbet, we
directed our steps towards Khamis bin Abdullah's house, who had,
in anticipation of my coming, prepared a feast to which he had
invited his friends and neighbours. The group of stately Arabs
in their long white dresses, and jaunty caps, also of a snowy
white, who stood ready to welcome me to Tabora, produced
quite an effect on my mind. I was in time for a council of war
they were holding - and I was,requested to attend.
Khamis bin Abdullah, a bold and brave man, ever ready to stand up
for the privileges of the Arabs, and their rights to pass through
any countries for legitimate trade, is the man who, in Speke's
`Journal of the Discovery of the Source of the Nile,' is reported
to have shot Maula, an old chief who sided with Manwa Sera during
the wars of 1860; and who subsequently, after chasing his
relentless enemy for five years through Ugogo and Unyamwezi as far
as Ukonongo, had the satisfaction of beheading him, was now urging
the Arabs to assert their rights against a chief called Mirambo of
Uyoweh, in a crisis which was advancing.
This Mirambo of Uyoweh, it seems, had for the last few years been
in a state of chronic discontent with the policies of the
neighbouring chiefs. Formerly a pagazi for an Arab, he had now
assumed regal power, with the usual knack of unconscionable rascals
who care not by what means they step into power. When the
chief of Uyoweh died, Mirambo, who was head of a gang of robbers
infesting the forests of Wilyankuru, suddenly entered Uyoweh, and
constituted himself lord paramount by force. Some feats of
enterprise, which he performed to the enrichment of all those who
recognised his authority, established him firmly in his position.
This was but a beginning; he carried war through Ugara to Ukonongo,
through Usagozi to the borders of Uvinza, and after destroying
the populations over three degrees of latitude, he conceived a
grievance against Mkasiwa, and against the Arabs, because they
would not sustain him in his ambitious projects against their
ally and friend, with whom they were living in peace.
The first outrage which this audacious man committed against the
Arabs was the halting of an Ujiji-bound caravan, and the demand for
five kegs of gunpowder, five guns, and five bales of cloth. This
extraordinary demand, after expending more than a day in fierce
controversy, was paid; but the Arabs, if they were surprised at
the exorbitant black-mail demanded of them, were more than ever
surprised when they were told to return the way they came; and
that no Arab caravan should pass through his country to Ujiji
except over his dead body.
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