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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If Caravans Arrive Here, The Objective Point To Them Is The
District Of Pumburu, Situated South-Westerly One Day's Good
Marching, Or, Say, Thirty Statute Miles From Imrera; Or They
Make For Usowa, On The Tanganika, Via Pumburu, Katuma, Uyombeh,
And Ugarawah.
Usowa is quite an important district on the Tanganika,
populous and flourishing.
This was the road we had intended to
adopt after leaving Imrera, but the reports received at the latter
place forbade such a venture. For Mapunda, the Sultan of Usowa,
though a great friend to Arab traders, was at war with the colony
of the Wazavira, who we must remember were driven from Mpokwa
and vicinity in Utanda, and who were said to have settled between
Pumburu and Usowa.
It remained for us, like wise, prudent men, having charge of a
large and valuable Expedition on our hands, to decide what to do,
and what route to adopt, now that we had approached much nearer to
Ujiji than we were to Unyanyembe. I suggested that we should make
direct for the Tanganika by compass, trusting to no road or guide,
but to march direct west until we came to the Tanganika, and then
follow the lake shore on foot until we came to Ujiji. For it ever
haunted my mind, that, if Dr. Livingstone should hear of my coming,
which he might possibly do if I travelled along any known road, he
would leave, and that my search for him would consequently be a
"stern chase." But my principal men thought it better that we should
now boldly turn our faces north, and march for the Malagarazi, which
was said to be a large river flowing from the east to the Tanganika.
But none of my men knew the road to the Malagarazi, neither could
guides be hired from Sultan Imrera.
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