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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This Valley, Or Line Of Drainage, While It Does Not Receive The
Kassai And The Kwango, Receives Rivers Flowing From
A great
distance west, for instance, the important tributaries Lufira
and Lomami, and large rivers from the east, such as
The Lindi
and Luamo; and, while the most intelligent Portuguese travellers
and traders state that the Kassai, the Kwango, and Lubilash are
the head waters of the Congo River, no one has yet started the
supposition that the grand river flowing north, and known by
the natives as the Lualaba, is the Congo.
This river may be the Congo, or, perhaps, the Niger. If the
Lualaba is only 2,000 feet above the sea, and the Albert N'Yanza
2,700 feet, the Lualaba cannot enter that lake. If the Bahr Ghazal
does not extend by an arm for eight degrees above Gondokoro, then
the Lualaba cannot be the Nile. But it would be premature to
dogmatise on the subject. Livingstone will clear up the point
himself; and if he finds it to be the Congo, will be the first to
admit his error.
Livingstone admits the Nile sources have not been found, though he
has traced the Lualaba through seven degrees of latitude flowing
north; and, though he has not a particle of doubt of its being the
Nile, not yet can the Nile question be said to be resolved and
ended. For two reasons:
1. He has heard of the existence of four fountains, two of which
gave birth to a river flowing north, Webb's River, or the Lualaba,
and to a river flowing south, which is the Zambezi. He has
repeatedly heard of these fountains from the natives. Several
times he has been within 100 and 200 miles from them, but something
always interposed to prevent his going to see them. According to
those who have seen them, they rise on either side of a mound or
level, which contains no stones. Some have called it an ant-hill.
One of these fountains is said to be so large that a man, standing
on one side, cannot be seen from the other. These fountains must
be discovered, and their position taken. The Doctor does not suppose
them to be south of the feeders of Lake Bangweolo. In his letter to
the 'Herald' he says "These four full-grown gushing fountains,
rising so near each other, and giving origin to four large rivers,
answer in a certain degree to the description given of the
unfathomable fountains of the Nile, by the secretary of Minerva,
in the city of Sais, in Egypt, to the father of all travellers -
Herodotus."
For the information of such readers as may not have the original
at hand, I append the following from Cary's translation of
Herodotus:
***
With respect to the sources of the Nile, no man of all the
Egyptians, Libyans, or Grecians, with whom I have conversed,
ever pretended to know anything, except the registrar* of Minerva's
<*the secretary of the treasury of the goddess Neith, or Athena
as Herodotus calls her:
ho grammatiste:s to:n hiro:n xre:mato:n te:s Athe:naie:s>
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