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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The Robbers Did Not
Dispute The Claim For The Pagazi, Goats, Tent, Or Any Other
Valuable Found With Him, But Intimated That They Deserved A Reward
For Apprehending Him.
The demand being considered just, a reward
to the extent of two doti and a fundo, or ten necklaces of beads,
was given.
Khamisi, for his desertion and attempted robbery, could not be
pardoned without first suffering punishment. He had asked at
Bagamoyo, before enlisting in my service, an advance of $5 in
money, and had received it, and a load of Bubu beads, no heavier
than a pagazis load, had been given him to carry; he had,
therefore, no excuse for desertion. Lest I should overstep
prudence, however, in punishing him, I convened a court of eight
pagazis and four soldiers to sit in judgment, and asked them to
give me their decision as to what should be done. Their unanimous
verdict was that he was guilty of a crime almost unknown among the
Wanyamwezi pagazis, and as it was likely to give bad repute to the
Wanyamwezi carriers, they therefore sentenced him to be flogged
with the "Great Master's" donkey whip, which was accordingly
carried out, to poor Khamisi's crying sorrow.
On the 12th the caravan reached Mussoudi, on the Ungerengeri river.
Happily for our patient donkeys this march was free from all the
annoying troubles of the jungle. Happily for ourselves also, for
we had no more the care of the packs and the anxiety about
arriving at camp before night. The packs once put firmly on the
backs of our good donkeys, they marched into camp - the road being
excellent - without a single displacement or cause for one impatient
word, soon after leaving Kisemo. A beautiful prospect, glorious in
its wild nature, fragrant with its numerous flowers and variety of
sweetly-smelling shrubs, among which I recognised the wild sage,
the indigo plant, &c., terminated only at the foot of Kira Peak
and sister cones, which mark the boundaries between Udoe and Ukami,
yet distant twenty miles. Those distant mountains formed a not
unfit background to this magnificent picture of open plain, forest
patches, and sloping lawns - there was enough of picturesqueness and
sublimity in the blue mountains to render it one complete whole.
Suppose a Byron saw some of these scenes, he would be inclined to
poetize in this manner:
Morn dawns, and with it stern Udoe's hills,
Dark Urrugum's rocks, and Kira's peak,
Robed half in mist, bedewed with various rills,
Arrayed in many a dun and purple streak.
When drawing near the valley of Ungerengeri, granite knobs and
protuberances of dazzling quartz showed their heads above the
reddish soil. Descending the ridge where these rocks were
prominent, we found ourselves in the sable loam deposit of the
Ungerengeri, and in the midst of teeming fields of sugar-cane and
matama, Indian corn, muhogo, and gardens of curry, egg, and
cucumber plants. On the banks of the Ungerengeri flourished the
banana, and overtopping it by seventy feet and more, shot up the
stately mparamusi, the rival in beauty of the Persian chenar and
Abyssinian plane. Its trunk is straight and comely enough for the
mainmast of a first, class frigate, while its expanding crown of
leafage is distinguished from all others by its density and vivid
greenness. There were a score of varieties of the larger kind of
trees, whose far-extending branches embraced across the narrow but
swift river. The depressions of the valley and the immediate
neighbourhood of the river were choked with young forests of
tiger-grass and stiff reeds.
Mussoudi is situated on a higher elevation than the average level
of the village, and consequently looks down upon its neighbours,
which number a hundred and more. It is the western extremity of
Ukwere. On the western bank of the Ungerengeri the territory of
the Wakami commences. We had to halt one day at Mussoudi because
the poverty of the people prevented us from procuring the needful
amount of grain. The cause of this scantiness in such a fertile
and populous valley was, that the numerous caravans which had
preceded us had drawn heavily for their stores for the upmarches.
On the 14th we crossed the Ungerengeri, which here flows southerly
to the southern extremity of the valley, where it bends easterly
as far as Kisemo. After crossing the river here, fordable at all
times and only twenty yards in breadth, we had another mile of
the valley with its excessively moist soil and rank growth of
grass. It then ascended into a higher elevation, and led through
a forest of mparamusi, tamarind, tamarisk, acacia, and the blooming
mimosa. This ascent was continued for two hours, when we stood
upon the spine of the largest ridge, where we could obtain free
views of the wooded plain below and the distant ridges of Kisemo,
which we had but lately left. A descent of a few hundred feet
terminated in a deep but dry mtoni with a sandy bed, on the other
side of which we had to regain the elevation we had lost, and a
similar country opened into view until we found a newly-made boma
with well-built huts of grass rear a pool of water, which we at
once occupied as a halting-place for the night. The cart gave us
considerable trouble; not even our strongest donkey, though it
carried with ease on its back 196 lbs., could draw the cart with
a load of only 225 lbs. weight.
Early on the morning of the 15th we broke camp and started for
Mikeseh. By 8.30 A.M. we were ascending the southern face of the
Kira Peak. When we had gained the height of two hundred feet above
the level of the surrounding country, we were gratified with a
magnificent view of a land whose soil knows no Sabbath.
After travelling the spine of a ridge abutting against the southern
slope of Kira we again descended into the little valley of
Kiwrima, the first settlement we meet in Udoe, where there is
always an abundant supply of water.
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