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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But Livingstone Will Have Much To Say
About His Reception At This Court, And About This Interesting King
And Queen; And Who Can So Well Relate The Scenes He Witnessed, And
Which Belong Exclusively To Him, As He Himself?
Soon after his arrival in the country of Lunda, or Londa, and
before he had entered the district ruled over by Cazembe, he had
crossed a river called the Chambezi, which was quite an important
stream.
The similarity of the name with that large and noble
river south, which will be for ever connected with his name, misled
Livingstone at that time, and he, accordingly, did not pay to it
the attention it deserved, believing that the Chambezi was but the
head-waters of the Zambezi, and consequently had no bearing or
connection with the sources of the river of Egypt, of which he was
in search. His fault was in relying too implicitly upon the
correctness of Portuguese information. This error it cost him
many months of tedious labour and travel to rectify.
From the beginning of 1867 - the time of his arrival at Cazembe's -
till the middle of March, 1869 - the time of his arrival at Ujiji -
he was mostly engaged in correcting the errors and misrepresentations
of the Portuguese travellers. The Portuguese, in speaking of the
River Chambezi, invariably spoke of it as "our own Zambezi," -
that is, the Zambezi which flows through the Portuguese
possessions of the Mozambique. "In going to Cazembe from
Nyassa," said they, "you will cross our own Zambezi." Such
positive and reiterated information - given not only orally, but
in their books and maps - was naturally confusing. When the Doctor
perceived that what he saw and what they described were at
variance, out of a sincere wish to be correct, and lest he might
have been mistaken himself, he started to retravel the ground he
had travelled before. Over and over again he traversed the several
countries watered by the several rivers of the complicated water
system, like an uneasy spirit. Over and over again he asked the
same questions from the different peoples he met, until he was
obliged to desist, lest they might say, "The man is mad; he has
got water on the brain!"
But his travels and tedious labours in Lunda and the adjacent
countries have established beyond doubt - first, that the Chambezi
is a totally distinct river from the Zambezi of the Portuguese;
and, secondly, that the Chambezi, starting from about latitude
11 degrees south, is no other than the most southerly feeder of
the great Nile; thus giving that famous river a length of over
2,000 miles of direct latitude; making it, second to the
Mississippi, the longest river in the world. The real and true
name of the Zambezi is Dombazi. When Lacerda and his Portuguese
successors, coming to Cazembe, crossed the Chambezi, and heard
its name, they very naturally set it down as "our own Zambezi,"
and, without further inquiry, sketched it as running in that
direction.
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