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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The Sultan Of Bihawana, Though His Subjects Were Evil-Disposed, And
Ready-Handed At Theft And Murder, Contented Himself With Three Doti
As Honga.
From this chief I received news of my fourth caravan,
which had distinguished itself in a fight with some
Outlawed
subjects of his; my soldiers had killed two who had attempted,
after waylaying a couple of my pagazis, to carry away a bale of
cloth and a bag of beads; coming up in time, the soldiers
decisively frustrated the attempt. The Sultan thought that if all
caravans were as well guarded as mine were, there would be less
depredations committed on them while on the road; with which I
heartily agreed.
The next sultan's tembe through whose territory we marched, this
being on the 30th May, was at Kididimo, but four miles from Bihawna.
The road led through a flat elongated plain, lying between two
lengthy hilly ridges, thickly dotted with the giant forms of the
baobab. Kididimo is exceedingly bleak in aspect. Even the faces
of the Wagogo seemed to have contracted a bleak hue from the general
bleakness around. The water of the pits obtained in the
neighbourhood had an execrable flavor, and two donkeys sickened and
died in less than an hour from its effects. Man suffered nausea
and a general irritability of the system, and accordingly revenged
himself by cursing the country and its imbecile ruler most heartily.
The climax came, however, when Bombay reported, after an attempt to
settle the Muhongo, that the chief's head had grown big since he
heard that the Musungu had come, and that its "bigness" could not
be reduced unless he could extract ten doti as tribute.
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