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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When Complete, A Bale Is A Solid Mass Three Feet And A Half Long,
A Foot Deep, And A Foot Wide.
Of these bales I had to convey
eighty-two to Unyanyembe, forty of which consisted solely of the
Merikani and Kaniki.
The other forty-two contained the Merikani
and coloured cloths, which latter were to serve as honga or tribute
cloths, and to engage another set of pagazis from Unyanyembe to
Ujiji, and from Ujiji to the regions beyond.
The fifteenth day asked of me by Ali bin Salim for the procuring
of the pagazis passed by, and there was not the ghost of a pagazi
in my camp. I sent Mabruki the Bullheaded to Ali bin Salim, to
convey my salaams and express a hope that he had kept his word.
In half an hour's time Mabruki returned with the reply of the
Arab, that in a few days he would be able to collect them all;
but, added Mabruki, slyly, "Bana, I don't believe him. He said
aloud to himself, in my hearing, `Why should I get the Musungu
pagazis? Seyd Burghash did not send a letter to me, but to the
Jemadar. Why should I trouble myself about him? Let Seyd
Burghash write me a letter to that purpose, and I will procure
them within two days."'
To my mind this was a time for action: Ali bin Salim should see
that it was ill trifling with a white man in earnest to start.
I rode down to his house to ask him what he meant.
His reply was, Mabruki had told a lie as black as his face. He
had never said anything approaching to such a thing. He was
willing to become my slave - to become a pagazi himself. But here I
stopped the voluble Ali, and informed him that I could not think of
employing him in the capacity of a pagazi, neither could I find it
in my heart to trouble Seyd Burghash to write a direct letter to
him, or to require of a man who had deceived me once, as Ali bin
Salim had, any service of any nature whatsoever. It would be
better, therefore, if Ali bin Salim would stay away from my
camp, and not enter it either in person or by proxy.
I had lost fifteen days, for Jemadar Sadur, at Kaole, had never
stirred from his fortified house in that village in my service,
save to pay a visit, after the receipt of the Sultan's letter.
Naranji, custom-house agent at Kaoie, solely under the thumb of
the great Ludha Damji, had not responded to Ludha's worded request
that he would procure pagazis, except with winks, nods, and
promises, and it is but just stated how I fared at the hands of Ali
bin Salim. In this extremity I remembered the promise made to me
by the great merchant of Zanzibar - Tarya Topan - a Mohammedan
Hindi - that he would furnish me with a letter to a young man named
Soor Hadji Palloo, who was said to be the best man in Bagamoyo to
procure a supply of pagazis.
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