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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We Had
Good Cause To Be Suspicious; It Is Not Customary For People (At
Least, Between Ujiji And Zanzibar) To
Be about visiting and
saluting after dark, under any pretence; it is not permitted to
persons to prowl about camp
After dark without being shot at; and
this going backward and forward, this ostentatious exuberance of
joy at the arrival of a small party of Wangwana, which in many
parts of Urundi would be regarded as a very common event, was
altogether very suspicious. While the Doctor and I were arriving
at the conclusion that these movements were preliminary to or
significant of hostility, a fourth body, very boisterous and loud,
came and visited us. Our supper had been by this time despatched,
and we thought it high time to act. The fourth party having gone
with extravagant manifestations of delight, the men were hurried
into the canoe, and, when all were seated, and the look-outs embarked,
we quietly pushed off, but not a moment too soon. As the canoe
was gliding from the darkened light that surrounded us, I called
the Doctor's attention to several dark forms; some of whom were
crouching behind the rocks on our right, and others scrambling
over them to obtain good or better positions; at the same time
people were approaching from the left of our position, in the
same suspicious way; and directly a voice hailed us from the
top of the clay bank overhanging the sandy shelf where we had
lately been resting. "Neatly done," cried the Doctor, as we
were shooting through the water, leaving the discomfited
would-be robbers behind us. Here, again, my hand was stayed from
planting a couple of good shots, as a warning to them in future
from molesting strangers, by the more presence of the Doctor,
who, as I thought, if it were actually necessary, would not
hesitate to give the word.
After pulling six hours more, during which we had rounded Cape
Sentakeyi, we stopped at the small fishing village of Mugeyo, where
we were permitted to sleep unmolested. At dawn we continued our
journey, and about 8 A.M. arrived at the village of the friendly
Mutware of Magala. We had pulled for eighteen hours at a stretch,
which, at the rate of two miles and a half per hour, would make
forty-five miles. Taking bearings from our camp at Cape Magala,
one of the most prominent points in travelling north from Ujiji, we
found that the large island of Muzimu, which had been in sight ever
since rounding Cape Bangwe, near Ujiji Bunder, bore about
south-south-west, and that the western shore had considerably
approached to the eastern; the breadth of the lake being at this
point about eight or ten miles. We had a good view of the western
highlands, which seemed to be of an average height, about 3,000
feet above the lake. Luhanga Peak, rising a little to the north of
west from Magala, might be about 500 feet higher; and Sumburizi, a
little north of Luhanga, where lived Mruta, Sultan of Uvira, the
country opposite to this part of Urundi, about 300 feet higher
than the neighbouring heights.
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