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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Second, The Masika, Or Rainy Season, Would Soon Be On Me, Which, If
It Caught Me At Bagamoyo, Would Prevent
My departure until it was
over, which meant a delay of forty days, and exaggerated as the
rains were by
All men with whom I came in contact, it rained every
day for forty days without intermission. This I knew was a thing
to dread; for I had my memory stored with all kinds of rainy
unpleasantnesses. For instance, there was the rain of Virginia and
its concomitant horrors - wetness, mildew, agues, rheumatics,
and such like; then there were the English rains, a miserable drizzle
causing the blue devils; then the rainy season of Abyssinia with the
flood-gates of the firmament opened, and an universal down-pour of
rain, enough to submerge half a continent in a few hours; lastly,
there was the pelting monsoon of India, a steady shut-in-house
kind of rain. To which of these rains should I compare this
dreadful Masika of East Africa? Did not Burton write much about
black mud in Uzaramo? Well, a country whose surface soil is
called black mud in fine weather, what can it be called when forty
days' rain beat on it, and feet of pagazis and donkeys make paste
of it? These were natural reflections, induced by the circumstances
of the hour, and I found myself much exercised in mind in consequence.
Ali bin Salim, true to his promise, visited my camp on the morrow,
with a very important air, and after looking at the pile of cloth
bales, informed me that I must have them covered with mat-bags. He
said he would send a man to have them measured, but he enjoined me
not to make any bargain for the bags, as he would make it all
right.
While awaiting with commendable patience the 140 pagazis
promised by Ali bin Salim we were all employed upon everything
that thought could suggest needful for crossing the sickly
maritime region, so that we might make the transit before the
terrible fever could unnerve us, and make us joyless. A short
experience at Bagamoya showed us what we lacked, what was
superfluous, and what was necessary. We were visited one night
by a squall, accompanied by furious rain. I had $1,500 worth
of pagazi cloth in my tent. In the morning I looked and lo!
the drilling had let in rain like a sieve, and every yard of cloth
was wet. It occupied two days afterwards to dry the cloths, and
fold them again. The drill-tent was condemned, and a No. 5
hemp-canvas tent at onto prepared. After which I felt convinced
that my cloth bales, and one year's ammunition, were safe, and
that I could defy the Masika.
In the hurry of departure from Zanzibar, and in my ignorance of
how bales should be made, I had submitted to the better judgment
and ripe experience of one Jetta, a commission merchant, to prepare
my bales for carriage. Jetta did not weigh the bales as he made
them up, but piled the Merikani, Kaniki, Barsati, Jamdani, Joho,
Ismahili, in alternate layers, and roped the same into bales.
One or two pagazis came to my camp and began to chaffer; they
wished to see the bales first, before they would make a final
bargain. They tried to raise them up - ugh! ugh! it was of no use,
and withdrew. A fine Salter's spring balance was hung up, and a
bale suspended to the hook; the finger indicated 105 lbs. or
3 frasilah, which was just 35 lbs. or one frasilah overweight.
Upon putting all the bales to this test, I perceived that Jetta's
guess-work, with all his experience, had caused considerable
trouble to me.
The soldiers were set to work to reopen and repack, which latter
task is performed in the following manner: - We cut a doti, or four
yards of Merikani, ordinarily sold at Zanzibar for $2.75 the
piece of thirty yards, and spread out. We take a piece or bolt
of good Merikani, and instead of the double fold given it by the
Nashua and Salem mills, we fold it into three parts, by which the
folds have a breadth of a foot; this piece forms the first layer,
and will weigh nine pounds; the second layer consists of six pieces
of Kaniki, a blue stuff similar to the blouse stuff of France, and
th blue jeans of America, though much lighter; the third layer is
formed of the second piece of Merikani, the fourth of six more
pieces of Kaniki, the fifth of Merikani, the sixth of Kaniki as
before, and the seventh and last of Merikani. We have thus four
pieces of Merikani, which weigh 36 lbs., and 18 pieces of Kaniki
weighing also 36 lbs., making a total of 72 lbs., or a little
more than two frasilahs; the cloth is then folded singly over these
layers, each corner tied to another. A bundle of coir-rope is
then brought, and two men, provided with a wooden mallet for
beating and pressing the bale, proceed to tie it up with as much
nicety as sailors serve down rigging.
When complete, a bale is a solid mass three feet and a half long,
a foot deep, and a foot wide. Of these bales I had to convey
eighty-two to Unyanyembe, forty of which consisted solely of the
Merikani and Kaniki. The other forty-two contained the Merikani
and coloured cloths, which latter were to serve as honga or tribute
cloths, and to engage another set of pagazis from Unyanyembe to
Ujiji, and from Ujiji to the regions beyond.
The fifteenth day asked of me by Ali bin Salim for the procuring
of the pagazis passed by, and there was not the ghost of a pagazi
in my camp. I sent Mabruki the Bullheaded to Ali bin Salim, to
convey my salaams and express a hope that he had kept his word.
In half an hour's time Mabruki returned with the reply of the
Arab, that in a few days he would be able to collect them all;
but, added Mabruki, slyly, "Bana, I don't believe him.
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