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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Sir Roderick, Also, Is Well, And
Expresses A Hope That He Will Soon See Me.
You have brought me
quite a budget."
The man was not an apparition, then, and yesterday's scenes were
not the result of a dream! and I gazed on him intently, for thus
I was assured he had not run away, which was the great fear that
constantly haunted me as I was journeying to Ujiji.
"Now, Doctor," said I, "you are, probably, wondering why I came
here?"
"It is true," said he; "I have been wondering. I thought you,
at first, an emissary of the French Government, in the place of
Lieutenant Le Saint, who died a few miles above Gondokoro. I heard
you had boats, plenty of men, and stores, and I really believed
you were some French officer, until I saw the American flag; and,
to tell you the truth, I was rather glad it was so, because I could
not have talked to him in French; and if he did not know English,
we had been a pretty pair of white men in Ujiji! I did not like
to ask you yesterday, because I thought it was none of my business."
Well," said I, laughing, "for your sake I am glad that I am an
American, and not a Frenchman, and that we can understand each
other perfectly without an interpreter. I see that the Arabs are
wondering that you, an Englishman, and I, an American, understand
each other. We must take care not to tell them that the English
and Americans have fought, and that there are `Alabama' claims left
unsettled, and that we have such people as Fenians in America, who
hate you.
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