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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He Said,
"To Your Tembes, Wagogo - To Your Tembes!
Why, do you come to
trouble the Wakonongo:
What have you to do with them? To
your tembes: go! Each Mgogo found in the khambi without meal,
without cattle to sell, shall pay to the mtemi cloth or cows.
Away with you!" Saying which, he snatched up a stick and drove the
hundreds out of the khambi, who were as obedient to him as so many
children. During the two days we halted at Mukondoku we saw no
more of the mob, and there was peace.
The muhongo of the Sultan Swaruru was settled with few words. The
chief who acted for the Sultan as his prime minister having been
"made glad" with a doti of Rehani Ulyah from me, accepted the usual
tribute of six doti, only one of which was of first-class cloth.
There remained but one more sultan to whom muhongo must be paid
after Mukondoku, and this was the Sultan of Kiwyeh, whose
reputation was so bad that owners of property who had control over
their pagazis seldom passed by Kiwyeh, preferring the hardships of
long marches through the wilderness to the rudeness and exorbitant
demands of the chief of Kiwyeh. But the pagazis, on whom no burden
or responsibility fell save that of carrying their loads, who
could use their legs and show clean heels in the case of a hostile
outbreak, preferred the march to Kiwyeh to enduring thirst and the
fatigue of a terekeza.
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