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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June we struck camp, and after travelling westward for
about three miles, passing several ponds of salt water, we headed
north by west, skirting the range of low hills which separates
Ugogo from Uyanzi.
After a three hours' march, we halted for a short time at Little
Mukondoku, to settle tribute with the brother of him who rules at
Mukondoku Proper. Three doti satisfied the Sultan, whose
district contains but two villages, mostly occupied by pastoral
Wahumba and renegade Wahehe. The Wahumba live in plastered
(cow-dung) cone huts, shaped like the tartar tents of Turkestan.
The Wahumba, so far as I have seen them, are a fine and well-formed
race. The men are positively handsome, tall, with small heads,
the posterior parts of which project considerably. One will look
in vain for a thick lip or a flat nose amongst them; on the
contrary, the mouth is exceedingly well cut, delicately small;
the nose is that of the Greeks, and so universal was the peculiar
feature, that I at once named them the Greeks of Africa. Their
lower limbs have not the heaviness of the Wagogo and other tribes,
but are long and shapely, clean as those of an antelope. Their
necks are long and slender, on which their small heads are poised
most gracefully. Athletes from their youth, shepherd bred, and
intermarrying among themselves, thus keeping the race pure, any
of them would form a fit subject for the sculptor who would wish
to immortalize in marble an Antinous, a Hylas, a Daphnis, or an
Apollo.
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