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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Subsequently, Two Days
Afterwards, Having Ascended The Elevated Ridge Which Separates
Ugogo From Uyanzi, I Obtained A View Of This Immense Saline Plain,
Embracing Over A Hundred Square Miles.
I may have been deceived,
but I imagined I saw large expanses of greyish-blue water,
which causes me to believe that this salina is but a corner of a
great salt lake.
The Wahumba, who are numerous, from Nyambwa to
the Uyanzi border, informed my soldiers that there was a "Maji
Kuba" away to the north.
Mizanza, our next camp after Nyambwa, is situated in a grove of
palms, about thirteen miles from the latter place. Soon after
arriving I had to bury myself under blankets, plagued with the
same intermittent fever which first attacked me during the transit
of Marenga Mkali. Feeling certain that one day's halt, which would
enable me to take regular doses of the invaluable sulphate of
quinine, would cure me, I requested Sheikh Thani to tell Hamed to
halt on the morrow, as I should be utterly unable to continue thus
long, under repeated attacks of a virulent disease which was fast
reducing me into a mere frame of skin and bone. Hamed, in a hurry
to arrive at Unyanyembe in order to dispose of his cloth before
other caravans appeared in the market, replied at first that he
would not, that he could not, stop for the Musungu. Upon Thani's
reporting his answer to me, I requested him to inform Hamed that,
as the Musungu did not wish to detain him, or any other caravan,
it was his express wish that Hamed would march and leave him,
as he was quite strong enough in guns to march through Ugogo
alone.
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