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 Road Led On This Day Over Immense Sheets Of Sandstone And Iron
Ore.
The water was abominable, and scarce, and famine began to
stare us in the face.
We travelled for six hours, and had yet seen
no sign of cultivation anywhere. According to my map we were yet
two long marches from the Malagarazi - if Captain Burton had correctly
laid down the position of the river; according to the natives'
account, we should have arrived at the Malagarazi on this day.
On the 29th we left our camp, and after a few minutes, we were in
view of the sublimest, but ruggedest, scenes we had yet beheld in
Africa. The country was cut up in all directions by deep, wild,
and narrow ravines trending in all directions, but generally
toward the north-west, while on either side rose enormous square
masses of naked rock (sandstone), sometimes towering, and rounded,
sometimes pyramidal, sometimes in truncated cones, sometimes in
circular ridges, with sharp, rugged, naked backs, with but little
vegetation anywhere visible, except it obtained a precarious tenure
in the fissured crown of some gigantic hill-top, whither some soil
had fallen, or at the base of the reddish ochre scarps which
everywhere lifted their fronts to our view.
A long series of descents down rocky gullies, wherein we were
environed by threatening masses of disintegrated rock, brought us
to a dry, stony ravine, with mountain heights looming above us a
thousand feet high. This ravine we followed, winding around in all
directions, but which gradually widened, however, into a broad
plain, with a western trend. The road, leaving this, struck across
a low ridge to the north; and we were in view of deserted
settlements where the villages were built on frowning castellated
masses of rock. Near an upright mass of rock over seventy feet
high, and about fifty yards in diameter, which dwarfed the gigantic
sycamore close to it, we made our camp, after five hours and thirty
minutes' continuous and rapid marching.
The people were very hungry; they had eaten every scrap of meat,
and every grain they possessed, twenty hours before, and there was
no immediate prospect of food. I had but a pound and a half of flour
left, and this would not have sufficed to begin to feed a force of
over forty-five people; but I had something like thirty pounds of
tea, and twenty pounds of sugar left, and I at once, as soon as we
arrived at camp, ordered every kettle to be filled and placed on
the fire, and then made tea for all; giving each man a quart of a
hot, grateful beverage; well sweetened. Parties stole out also
into the depths: of the jungle to search for wild fruit, and soon
returned laden with baskets of the wood-peach and tamarind fruit,
which though it did not satisfy, relieved them. That night, before
going to sleep, the Wangwana set up a loud prayer to "Allah" to
give them food.
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