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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But These Marches, Owing
To Difficulties Arising From The Masika Season, And More Especially
To The Lagging Of The Fourth Caravan Under Maganga, Extended To
Twenty-Nine Days, Thus Rendering Our Progress Very Slow Indeed -
But A Little More Than Four Miles A-Day.
I infer, from what I have
seen of the travelling, that had I not been encumbered by the sick
Wanyamwezi porters, I could have accomplished the distance in
sixteen days.
For it was not the donkeys that proved recreant to
my confidence; they, poor animals, carrying a weight of 150 lbs.
each, arrived at Simbamwenni in first-rate order; but it was
Maganga, composed of greed and laziness, and his weakly-bodied
tribe, who were ever falling sick. In dry weather the number of
marches might have been much reduced. Of the half-dozen of Arabs
or so who preceded this Expedition along this route, two
accomplished the entire distance in eight days. From the brief
descriptions given of the country, as it day by day expanded to
our view, enough may be gleaned to give readers a fair idea of it.
The elevation of Simbamwenni cannot be much over 1,000 feet above
the level, the rise of the land having been gradual. It being
the rainy season, about which so many ominous statements were
doled out to us by those ignorant of the character of the country,
we naturally saw it under its worst aspect; but, even in this
adverse phase of it, with all its depth of black mud, its
excessive dew, its dripping and chill grass, its density of rank
jungle, and its fevers, I look back upon the scene with pleasure,
for the wealth and prosperity it promises to some civilized nation,
which in some future time will come and take possession of it.
A railroad from Bagamoyo to Simbamwenni might be constructed with
as much ease and rapidity as, and at far less cost than the Union
Pacific Railway, whose rapid strides day by day towards completion
the world heard of and admired. A residence in this part of Africa,
after a thorough system of drainage had been carried out, would not
be attended with more discomfort than generally follows upon the
occupation of new land. The temperature at this season during the
day never exceeded 85 degrees Fahrenheit. The nights were pleasant -
too cold without a pair of blankets for covering; and, as far as
Simbamwenni, they were without that pest which is so dreadful on
the Nebraska and Kansas prairies, the mosquito. The only annoyances
I know of that would tell hard on the settler is the determined
ferocity of the mabungu, or horse-fly; the chufwa, &c., already
described, which, until the dense forests and jungles were cleared,
would be certain to render the keeping of domestic cattle
unremunerative.
Contrary to expectation the Expedition was not able to start at
the end of two days; the third and the fourth days were passed
miserably enough in the desponding valley of Ungerengeri. This
river, small as it is in the dry seasons, becomes of considerable
volume and power during the Masika, as we experienced to our
sorrow. It serves as a drain to a score of peaks and two long
ranges of mountains; winding along their base, it is the recipient
of the cascades seen flashing during the few intervals of sunlight,
of all the nullahs and ravines which render the lengthy frontage
of the mountain slopes so rugged and irregular, until it glides
into the valley of Simbamwenni a formidable body of water,
opposing a serious obstacle to caravans without means to build
bridges; added to which was an incessant downfall of rain - such a
rain as shuts people in-doors and renders them miserable and
unamiable - a real London rain - an eternal drizzle accompanied
with mist and fog. When the sun shone it appeared but a pale
image of itself, and old pagazis, wise in their traditions
as old whaling captains, shook their heads ominously at the
dull spectre, and declared it was doubtful if the rain would cease
for three weeks yet.
The site of the caravan camp on the hither side of the Ungerengeri
was a hot-bed of malaria, unpleasant to witness - an abomination to
memory. The filth of generations of pagazis had gathered
innumerable hosts of creeping things. Armies of black, white, and
red ants infest the stricken soil; centipedes, like worms, of
every hue, clamber over shrubs and plants; hanging to the
undergrowth are the honey-combed nests of yellow-headed wasps with
stings as harmful as scorpions; enormous beetles, as large as
full-grown mice, roll dunghills over the ground; of all sorts,
shapes, sizes, and hues are the myriad-fold vermin with which the
ground teems; in short, the richest entomological collection could
not vie in variety and numbers with the species which the four
walls of my tent enclosed from morning until night.
On the fifth morning, or the 23rd April, the rain gave us a few
hours' respite, during which we managed to wade through the
Stygian quagmire reeking with noisomeness to the inundated
river-bank. The soldiers commenced at 5 A.M. to convey the
baggage across from bank to bank over a bridge which was the most
rustic of the rustic kind. Only an ignorant African would have
been satisfied with its small utility as a means to cross a deep
and rapid body of water. Even for light-footed Wanyamwezi pagazis
it was anything but comfortable to traverse. Only a professional
tight-rope performer could have carried a load across with ease.
To travel over an African bridge requires, first, a long leap
from land to the limb of a tree (which may or may not be covered
by water), followed by a long jump ashore. With 70 lbs. weight on
his back, the carrier finds it difficult enough. Sometimes he is
assisted by ropes extemporized from the long convolvuli which hang
from almost every tree, but not always, these being deemed
superfluities by the Washensi.
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