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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Mpwapwa - So Called By The Arabs, Who Have Managed To Corrupt Almost
Every Native Word - Is Called "Mbambwa" By The Wasagara.
It is a
mountain range rising over 6,000 feet above the sea, bounding on
the north the extensive plain which commences at Ugombo lake, and
on the east that part of the plain which is called Marenga Mkali,
which stretches away beyond the borders of Uhumba.
Opposite
Mpwapwa, at the distance of thirty miles or so, rises the Anak
peak of Rubeho, with several other ambitious and tall brethren
cresting long lines of rectilinear scarps, which ascend from the
plain of Ugombo and Marenga Mkali as regularly as if they had
been chiselled out by the hands of generations of masons and
stonecutters.
Upon looking at Mpwapwa's greenly-tinted slopes, dark with many
a densely-foliaged tree; its many rills flowing sweet and clear,
nourishing besides thick patches of gum and thorn bush, giant
sycamore and parachute-topped mimosa, and permitting my
imagination to picture sweet views behind the tall cones above,
I was tempted to brave the fatigue of an ascent to the summit.
Nor was my love for the picturesque disappointed. One sweep of the
eyes embraced hundreds of square miles of plain and mountain, from
Ugombo Peak away to distant Ugogo, and from Rubeho and Ugogo to
the dim and purple pasture lands of the wild, untamable Wahumba.
The plain of Ugombo and its neighbour of Marenga Mkali, apparently
level as a sea, was dotted here and there with "hillocks dropt in
Nature's careless haste," which appeared like islands amid the dun
and green expanse.
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