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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Khamis Bin Abdullah Descended To His House Saying, "Let Us Go To
Meet Him.
Arm yourselves, my friends, and come with me." His
friends advised him strongly sat to go out of his tembe; for so
long as each Arab kept to his tembe they were more than a match
for the Ruga Ruga and the Watuta together.
But Khamis broke out
impatiently with, "Would you advise us to stop in our tembes,
for fear of this Mshensi (pagan)? Who goes with me?" His little
protege, Khamis,, son of a dead friend, asked to be allowed to be
his gun-bearer;. Mohammed bin Abdulluh, Ibrahim bin Rashid, and
Sayf, the son of Ali, young Arabs of good families, who were
proud to live with the noble Khamis, also offered to go with him.
After hastily arming eighty of his slaves, contrary to the advice
of his prudent friends, he sallied out, and was soon face to face
with his cunning and determined enemy Mirambo. This chief, upon
seeing the Arabs advance towards him, gave orders to retreat slowly.
Khamis, deceived by this, rushed on with his friends after them.
Suddenly Mirambo ordered his men to advance upon them in a body,
and at the sight of the precipitate rush upon their party, Khamis's
slaves incontinently took to their heels, never even deigning to cast
a glance behind them, leaving their master to the fate which was now
overtaking him. The savages surrounded the five Arabs, and though
several of them fell before the Arabs' fire, continued to shoot at
the little party, until Khamis bin Abdullah received a bullet in
the leg, which brought him to his knees, and, for the first time,
to the knowledge that his slaves had deserted him. Though wounded,
the brave man continued shooting, but he soon afterwards received
a bullet through the heart. Little Khamis, upon seeing his adopted
father's fall, exclaimed: "My father Khamis is dead, I will die
with him," and continued fighting until he received, shortly
after, his death wound. In a few minutes there was not one Arab
left alive.
Late at night some more particulars arrived of this tragic scene.
I was told by people who saw the bodies, that the body of Khamis
bin Abdullah, who was a fine noble, brave, portly man, was found
with the skin of his forehead, the beard and skin of the lower part
of his face, the fore part of the nose, the fat over the stomach
and abdomen, and, lastly, a bit from each heel, cut off, by the
savage allies of Mirambo. And in the same condition were found
the bodies of his adopted son and fallen friends. The flesh and
skin thus taken from the bodies was taken, of course, by the
waganga or medicine men, to make what they deem to be the most
powerful potion of all to enable men to be strong against
their enemies. This potion is mixed up with their ugali and rice,
and is taken in this manner with the most perfect confidence in its
efficacy, as an invulnerable protection against bullets and
missiles of all descriptions.
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