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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What A
Wonderful System Of Cells These Tiny Insects Construct!
A perfect
labyrinth - cell within cell, room within room, hall within hall - an
exhibition of engineering talents and high architectural capacity - a
model city, cunningly contrived for safety and comfort!
Emerging after a short hour's march out of the forest, we welcome
the sight of a murmuring translucent stream, swiftly flowing
towards the north-west, which we regard with the pleasure which
only men who have for a long time sickened themselves with that
potable liquid of the foulest kind, found in salinas, mbugas,
pools, and puddle holes, can realize. Beyond this stream rises a
rugged and steep ridge, from the summit of which our eyes are
gladdened with scenes that are romantic, animated and picturesque.
They form an unusual feast to eyes sated with looking into the
depths of forests, at towering stems of trees, and at tufted crowns
of foliage. We have now before us scores of cones, dotting the
surface of a plain which extends across Southern Ukonongo to the
territory of the Wafipa, and which reaches as far as the Rikwa Plain.
The immense prospect before which we are suddenly ushered is most
varied; exclusive of conical hills and ambitious flat-topped and
isolated mountains, we are in view of the watersheds of the Rungwa
River, which empties into the Tanganika south of where we stand,
and of the Malagarazi River, which the Tanganika receives, a
degree or so north of this position. A single but lengthy
latitudinal ridge serves as a dividing line to the watershed of the
Rungwa and Malagarazi; and a score of miles or so further west of
this ridge rises another, which runs north and south.
We camped on this day in the jungle, close to a narrow ravine with
a marshy bottom, through the oozy, miry contents of which the
waters from the watershed of the Rungwa slowly trickled southward
towards the Rikwa Plain. This was only one of many ravines,
however, some of which were several hundred yards broad, others
were but a few yards in width, the bottoms of which were most
dangerous quagmires, overgrown with dense tall reeds and papyrus.
Over the surface of these great depths of mud were seen hundreds
of thin threads of slimy ochre-coloured water, which swarmed with
animalculae. By-and-by, a few miles south of the base of this
ridge (which I call Kasera, from the country which it cuts in
halves), these several ravines converge and debouch into the broad,
[marshy?], oozy, spongy "river" of Usense, which trends in a
south-easterly direction; after which, gathering the contents of
the watercourses from the north and northeast into its own broader
channel, it soon becomes a stream of some breadth and consequence,
and meets a river flowing from the east, from the direction of
Urori, with which it conflows in the Rikwa Plain, and empties about
sixty rectilineal miles further west into the Tanganika Lake. The
Rungwa River, I am informed, is considered as a boundary line
between the country of Usowa on the north, and Ufipa on the south.
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