How I Found Livingstone Travels, Adventures And Discoveries In Central Africa Including Four Months Residence With Dr. Livingstone By Sir Henry M. Stanley
- Page 22 of 160 - First - Home
Especially Did I Wish To Try The Effect Of Its Bark
On The Mighty Wagogo, Who, I Was Told By
Certain Arabs, would
lift the door of the tent and enter whether you wished them or not;
who would chuckle
At the fear they inspired, and say to you,
"Hi, hi, white man, I never saw the like of you before; are there
many more like you? where do you come from?" Also would they
take hold of your watch and ask you with a cheerful curiosity,
"What is this for, white man?" to which you of course would reply
that it was to tell you the hour and minute. But the Mgogo, proud
of his prowess, and more unmannerly than a brute, would answer you
with a snort of insult. I thought of a watch-dog, and procured a
good one at Bombay not only as a faithful companion, but to
threaten the heels of just such gentry.
But soon after our arrival at Rosako it was found that the dog,
whose name was "Omar," given him from his Turkish origin, was
missing; he had strayed away from the soldiers during a
rain-squall and had got lost. I despatched Mabruki Burton back to
Kikoka to search for him. On the following morning, just as we
were about to leave Rosako, the faithful fellow returned with the
lost dog, having found him at Kikoka.
Previous to our departure on the morning after this, Maganga, chief
of the fourth caravan, brought me the unhappy report that three of
his pagazis were sick, and he would like to have some "dowa" -
medicine. Though not a doctor, or in any way connected with the
profession, I had a well-supplied medicine chest - without which no
traveller in Africa could live - for just such a contingency as was
now present. On visiting Maganga's sick men, I found one suffering
from inflammation of the lungs, another from the mukunguru (African
intermittent). They all imagined themselves about to die, and
called loudly for "Mama!" "Mama!" though they were all grown men.
It was evident that the fourth caravan could not stir that day, so
leaving word with Magauga to hurry after me as soon as possible, I
issued orders for the march of my own.
Excepting in the neighbourhood of the villages which we have passed
there were no traces of cultivation. The country extending
between the several stations is as much a wilderness as the desert
of Sahara, though it possesses a far more pleasing aspect. Indeed,
had the first man at the time of the Creation gazed at his world
and perceived it of the beauty which belongs to this part of
Africa, he would have had no cause of complaint. In the deep
thickets, set like islets amid a sea of grassy verdure, he would
have found shelter from the noonday heat, and a safe retirement
for himself and spouse during the awesome darkness. In the morning
he could have walked forth on the sloping sward, enjoyed its
freshness, and performed his ablutions in one of the many small
streams flowing at its foot. His garden of fruit-trees is all that
is required; the noble forests, deep and cool, are round about
him, and in their shade walk as many animals as one can desire.
For days and days let a man walk in any direction, north, south,
east, and west, and he will behold the same scene.
Earnestly as I wished to hurry on to Unyanyembe, still a
heart-felt anxiety about the arrival of my goods carried by the
fourth caravan, served as a drag upon me and before my caravan
had marched nine miles my anxiety had risen to the highest pitch,
and caused me to order a camp there and then. The place selected
for it was near a long straggling sluice, having an abundance of
water during the rainy season, draining as it does two extensive
slopes. No sooner had we pitched our camp, built a boma of
thorny acacia, and other tree branches, by stacking them round
our camp, and driven our animals to grass; than we were made aware
of the formidable number and variety of the insect tribe, which
for a time was another source of anxiety, until a diligent
examination of the several species dispelled it.
As it was a most interesting hunt which I instituted for the
several specimens of the insects, I here append the record of it
for what it is worth. My object in obtaining these specimens was
to determine whether the genus _Glossina morsitans_ of the
naturalist, or the tsetse (sometimes called setse) of Livingstone,
Vardon, and Gumming, said to be deadly to horses, was amongst
them. Up to this date I had been nearly two months in East
Africa, and had as yet seen no tsetse; and my horses, instead of
becoming emaciated - for such is one of the symptoms of a tsetse
bite - had considerably improved in condition. There were three
different species of flies which sought shelter in my tent, which,
unitedly, kept up a continual chorus of sounds - one performed the
basso profondo, another a tenor, and the third a weak contralto.
The first emanated from a voracious and fierce fly, an inch long,
having a ventral capacity for blood quite astonishing.
This larger fly was the one chosen for the first inspection,
which was of the intensest. I permitted one to alight on my
flannel pyjamas, which I wore while en deshabille in camp.
No sooner had he alighted than his posterior was raised, his
head lowered, and his weapons, consisting of four hair-like
styles, unsheathed from the proboscis-like bag which concealed
them, and immediately I felt pain like that caused by a dexterous
lancet-cut or the probe of a fine needle. I permitted him to
gorge himself, though my patience and naturalistic interest were
sorely tried. I saw his abdominal parts distend with the plenitude
of the repast until it had swollen to three times its former
shrunken girth, when he flew away of his own accord laden with blood.
On rolling up my flannel pyjamas to see the fountain whence the
fly had drawn the fluid, I discovered it to be a little above the
left knee, by a crimson bead resting over the incision.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 22 of 160
Words from 21550 to 22607
of 163520