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 Doctor Says, In Commenting Upon Musa's Conduct, That He Felt
Strongly Tempted To Shoot Musa And Another Ringleader, But Was,
Nevertheless, Glad That He Did Not Soil His Hands With Their Vile
Blood.
A day or two afterwards, another of his men - Simon Price by
name - came to the Doctor with the
Same tale about the Mazitu, but,
compelled by the scant number of his people to repress all such
tendencies to desertion and faint-heartedness, the Doctor silenced
him at once, and sternly forbade him to utter the name of the
Mazitu any more.
Had the natives not assisted him, he must have despaired of ever
being able to penetrate the wild and unexplored interior which he
was now about to tread. "Fortunately," as the Doctor says with
unction, "I was in a country now, after leaving the shores of
Nyassa, which the foot of the slave-trader has not trod; it was a
new and virgin land, and of course, as I have always found in such
cases, the natives were really good and hospitable, and for very
small portions of cloth my baggage was conveyed from village to
village by them." In many other ways the traveller, in his
extremity, was kindly treated by the yet unsophisticated and
innocent natives.
On leaving this hospitable region in the early part of December,
1866, the Doctor entered a country where the Mazitu had exercised
their customary marauding propensities. The land was swept clean
of provisions and cattle, and the people had emigrated to other
countries, beyond the bounds of those ferocious plunderers.
Again the Expedition was besieged by pinching hunger from which
they suffered; they had recourse to the wild fruits which some
parts of the country furnished.
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