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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Others were Wasawahili; and each of my visitors
had quite a retinue with him.
At Tabora they live quite luxuriously.
The plain on which the settlement is situated is exceedingly fertile,
though naked of trees; the rich pasturage it furnishes permits them
to keep large herds of cattle and goats, from which they have an
ample supply of milk, cream, butter, and ghee. Rice is grown
everywhere; sweet potatoes, yams, muhogo, holcus sorghum, maize,
or Indian corn, sesame, millet, field-peas, or vetches, called
choroko, are cheap, and always procurable. Around their tembes
the Arabs cultivate a little wheat for their own purposes, and
have planted orange, lemon, papaw, and mangoes, which thrive
here fairly well. Onions and garlic, chilies, cucumbers, tomatoes,
and brinjalls, may be procured by the white visitor from the more
important Arabs, who are undoubted epicureans in their way. Their
slaves convey to them from the coast, once a year at least, their
stores of tea, coffee sugar, spices, jellies, curries, wine,
brandy, biscuits, sardines, salmon, and such fine cloths and
articles as they require for their own personal use. Almost every
Arab of any eminence is able to show a wealth of Persian carpets,
and most luxurious bedding, complete tea and coffee-services, and
magnificently carved dishes of tinned copper and brass lavers.
Several of them sport gold watches and chains, mostly all a watch
and chain of some kind. And, as in Persia, Afghanistan, and
Turkey, the harems form an essential feature of every Arab's
household; the sensualism of the Mohammedans is as prominent here
as in the Orient.
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