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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Upon This Exhibition Of Most Ruthless Cheating I Waxed
Indignant, And Declared To Him That If He Did Not Run Over His Bill
And Correct It, He Should Go Without A Pice.
But before the bill could be put into proper shape, my words,
threats, and promises falling heedlessly on a stony brain, a man,
Kanjee by name, from the store of Tarya Topan, of Zanzibar, had to
come over, when the bill was finally reduced to $738.
Without any
disrespect to Tarya Topan, I am unable to decide which is the most
accomplished rascal, Kanjee, or young Soor Hadji Palloo; in the
words of a white man who knows them both, "there is not the
splitting of a straw between them." Kanjee is deep and sly, Soor
Hadji Palloo is bold and incorrigible. But peace be to them both,
may their shaven heads never be covered with the troublous crown
I wore at Bagamoyo!
My dear friendly reader, do not think, if I speak out my mind in
this or in any other chapter upon matters seemingly trivial and
unimportant, that seeming such they should be left unmentioned.
Every tittle related is a fact, and to knew facts is to receive
knowledge.
How could I ever recite my experience to you if I did not enter
upon these miserable details, which sorely distract the stranger
upon his first arrival? Had I been a Government official, I had
but wagged my finger and my quota of pagazis had been furnished
me within a week; but as an individual arriving without the graces
of official recognition, armed with no Government influence, I had
to be patient, bide my time, and chew the cud of irritation
quietly, but the bread I ate was not all sour, as this was.
The white men, Farquhar and Shaw, were kept steadily at work upon
water-proof tents of hemp canvas, for I perceived, by the
premonitory showers of rain that marked the approach of the Masika
that an ordinary tent of light cloth would subject myself to damp
and my goods to mildew, and while there was time to rectify all
errors that had crept into my plans through ignorance or over
haste, I thought it was not wise to permit things to rectify
themselves. Now that I have returned uninjured in health, though
I have suffered the attacks of twenty-three fevers within the short
space of thirteen months; I must confess I owe my life, first, to
the mercy of God; secondly, to the enthusiasm for my work, which
animated me from the beginning to the end; thirdly, to having
never ruined my constitution by indulgence in vice and
intemperance; fourthly, to the energy of my nature; fifthly, to
a native hopefulness which never died; and, sixthly, to having
furnished myself with a capacious water and damp proof canvas
house. And here, if my experience may be of value, I would
suggest that travellers, instead of submitting their better
judgment to the caprices of a tent-maker, who will endeavour to
pass off a handsomely made fabric of his own, which is unsuited
to all climes, to use his own judgment, and get the best and
strongest that money will buy.
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