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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Where The Jungle Was Dense The Colour Was Green,
Alternating With Dark Brown; Where The Plain Appeared Denuded Of
Bush And Brake It Had A Whity-Brown Appearance, On Which The
Passing Clouds Now And Again Cast Their Deep Shadows.
Altogether
this side of the picture was not inviting; it exhibited too
plainly the true wilderness in its sternest
Aspect; but perhaps
the knowledge that in the bosom of the vast plain before me there
was not one drop of water but was bitter as nitre, and undrinkable
as urine, prejudiced me against it, The hunter might consider it
a paradise, for in its depths were all kinds of game to attract his
keenest instincts; but to the mere traveller it had a stern outlook.
Nearer, however, to the base of the Mpwapwa the aspect of the plain
altered. At first the jungle thinned, openings in the wood
appeared, then wide and naked clearings, then extensive fields of
the hardy holcus, Indian corn, and maweri or bajri, with here and
there a square tembe or village. Still nearer ran thin lines of
fresh young grass, great trees surrounded a patch of alluvial
meadow. A broad river-bed, containing several rivulets of water,
ran through the thirsty fields, conveying the vivifying element
which in this part of Usagara was so scarce and precious. Down
to the river-bed sloped the Mpwapwa, roughened in some places by
great boulders of basalt, or by rock masses, which had parted from
a precipitous scarp, where clung the kolquall with a sure hold,
drawing nourishment where every other green thing failed; clad in
others by the hardy mimosa, which rose like a sloping bank of
green verdure almost to the summit.
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