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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Beyond The Third Mouth Of The Mugere A Bend Disclosed Itself, With
Groups Of Villages Beyond On Its Bank.
These were Mukamba's, and
in one of them lived Mukamba, the chief.
The natives had yet never
seen a white man, and, of course, as soon as we landed we were
surrounded by a large concourse, all armed with long spears - the
only weapon visible amongst them save a club-stick, and here and
there a hatchet.
We were shown into a hut, which the Doctor and I shared between
us. What followed on that day I have but a dim recollection,
having been struck down by fever - the first since leaving
Unyanyembe. I dimly recollect trying to make out what age Mukamba
might be, and noting that he was good-looking withal, and
kindly-disposed towards us. And during the intervals of agony and
unconsciousness, I saw, or fancied I saw, Livingstone's form moving
towards me, and felt, or fancied I felt, Livingstone's hand
tenderly feeling my hot head and limbs. I had suffered several
fevers between Bagamoyo and Unyanyembe, without anything or anybody
to relieve me of the tedious racking headache and pain, or to
illumine the dark and gloomy prospect which must necessarily
surround the bedside of the sick and solitary traveller. But
though this fever, having enjoyed immunity from it for three
months, was more severe than usual, I did not much regret its
occurrence, since I became the recipient of the very tender and
fatherly kindness of the good man whose companion I now found
myself.
The next morning, having recovered slightly from the fever, when
Mukamba came with a present of an ox, a sheep, and a goat, I was
able to attend to the answers which he gave to the questions about
the Rusizi River and the head of the lake. The ever cheerful and
enthusiastic Mgwana was there also, and he was not a whit abashed,
when, through him, the chief told us that the Rusizi, joined by
the Ruanda, or Luanda, at a distance of two days' journey by
water, or one day by land from the head of the lake, flowed INTO
the lake.
Thus our hopes, excited somewhat by the positive and repeated
assurances that the river flowed out away towards Karagwah,
collapsed as speedily as they were raised.
We paid Mukamba the honga, consisting of nine doti and nine fundo
of samsam, lunghio, muzurio n'zige. The printed handkerchiefs,
which I had in abundance at Unyanyembe, would have gone well here.
After receiving his present, the chief introduced his son, a tall
youth of eighteen or thereabouts, to the Doctor, as a would-be son
of the Doctor; but, with a good-natured laugh, the Doctor scouted
all such relationship with him, as it was instituted only for the
purpose of drawing more cloth out of him. Mukamba took it in good
part, and did not insist on getting more.
Our second evening at Mukamba's, Susi, the Doctor's servant, got
gloriously drunk, through the chief's liberal and profuse gifts
of pombe. Just at dawn neat morning I was awakened by hearing
several sharp, crack-like sounds. I listened, and I found the
noise was in our hut. It was caused by the Doctor, who, towards
midnight, had felt some one come and lie down by his side on the
same bed, and, thinking it was me, he had kindly made room, and
laid down on the edge of the bed. But in the morning, feeling
rather cold, he had been thoroughly awakened, and, on rising on
his elbow to see who his bed-fellow was, he discovered, to his
great astonishment, that it was no other than his black servant,
Susi, who taking possession of his blankets, and folding them about
himself most selfishly, was occupying almost the whole bed. The
Doctor, with that gentleness characteristic of him, instead of
taking a rod, had contented himself with slapping Susi on the back,
saying, "Get up, Susi, will you? You are in my bed. How dare you,
sir, get drunk in this way, after I have told you so often not to.
Get up. You won't? Take that, and that, and that." Still Susi
slept and grunted; so the slapping continued, until even Susi's
thick hide began to feel it, and he was thoroughly awakened to the
sense of his want of devotion and sympathy for his master in the
usurping of even his master's bed. Susi looked very much
crestfallen after this exposé of his infirmity before the "little
master," as I was called.
The next day at dusk - Mukamba having come to bid us good-bye, and
requested that as soon as we reached his brother Ruhinga, whose
country was at the head of the lake, we would send our canoe back
for him, and that in the meanwhile we should leave two of our men
with him, with their guns, to help defend him in case Warumashanya
should attack him as soon as we were gone - we embarked and pulled
across. In nine hours we had arrived at the head of the lake in
Mugihewa, the country of Ruhinga; Mukamba's elder brother. In
looking back to where we had come from we perceived that we had
made a diagonal cut across from south-east to north-west, instead
of having made a direct east and west course; or, in other words,
from Mugere - which was at least ten miles from the northernmost
point of the eastern shore - we had come to Mugihewa, situated at
the northernmost point of the western shore. Had we continued
along the eastern shore, and so round the northern side of the lake,
we should have passed by Mukanigi, the country of Warumashanya,
and Usumbura of Simveh, his ally and friend. But by making a
diagonal course, as just described, we had arrived at the extreme
head of the lake without any difficulty.
The country in which we now found ourselves, Mugihewa, is situated
in the delta of the Rusizi River.
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