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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Towards The
South, Above The Sea Line Of The Horizon, There Appeared The Naked
Masts Of Several Large Ships, And To The East Of These A Dense Mass
Of White, Flat-Topped Houses.
This was Zanzibar, the capital of the
island; - which soon resolved itself into a pretty large and compact
city, with all the characteristics of Arab architecture.
Above
some of the largest houses lining the bay front of the city
streamed the blood-red banner of the Sultan, Seyd Burghash, and the
flags of the American, English, North German Confederation, and
French Consulates. In the harbor were thirteen large ships, four
Zanzibar men-of-war, one English man-of-war - the `Nymphe,' two
American, one French, one Portuguese, two English, and two German
merchantmen, besides numerous dhows hailing from Johanna and
Mayotte of the Comoro Islands, dhows from Muscat and Cutch - traders
between India, the Persian Gulf, and Zanzibar.
It was with the spirit of true hospitality and courtesy that
Capt. Francis R. Webb, United States Consul, (formerly of the
United States Navy), received me. Had this gentleman not rendered
me such needful service, I must have condescended to take board and
lodging at a house known as "Charley's," called after the
proprietor, a Frenchman, who has won considerable local notoriety
for harboring penniless itinerants, and manifesting a kindly
spirit always, though hidden under such a rugged front; or I
should have been obliged to pitch my double-clothed American drill
tent on the sandbeach of this tropical island, which was by no
means a desirable thing.
But Capt. Webb's opportune proposal to make his commodious and
comfortable house my own; to enjoy myself, with the request that
I would call for whatever I might require, obviated all unpleasant
alternatives.
One day's life at Zanzibar made me thoroughly conscious of my
ignorance respecting African people and things in general. I
imagined I had read Burton and Speke through, fairly well, and
that consequently I had penetrated the meaning, the full
importance and grandeur, of the work I was about to be engaged upon.
But my estimates, for instance, based upon book information,
were simply ridiculous, fanciful images of African attractions
were soon dissipated, anticipated pleasures vanished, and all
crude ideas began to resolve themselves into shape.
I strolled through the city. My general impressions are of
crooked, narrow lanes, white-washed houses, mortar-plastered
streets, in the clean quarter; - of seeing alcoves on each side,
with deep recesses, with a fore-ground of red-turbaned Banyans,
and a back-ground of flimsy cottons, prints, calicoes, domestics
and what not; or of floors crowded with ivory tusks; or of dark
corners with a pile of unginned and loose cotton; or of stores of
crockery, nails, cheap Brummagem ware, tools, &c., in what I call
the Banyan quarter; - of streets smelling very strong - in fact,
exceedingly, malodorous, with steaming yellow and black bodies, and
woolly heads, sitting at the doors of miserable huts, chatting,
laughing, bargaining, scolding, with a compound smell of hides,
tar, filth, and vegetable refuse, in the negro quarter; - of streets
lined with tall, solid-looking houses, flat roofed, of great carved
doors with large brass knockers, with baabs sitting cross-legged
watching the dark entrance to their masters' houses; of a shallow
sea-inlet, with some dhows, canoes, boats, an odd steam-tub or two,
leaning over on their sides in a sea of mud which the tide has just
left behind it; of a place called "M'nazi-Moya," "One Cocoa-tree,"
whither Europeans wend on evenings with most languid steps, to
inhale the sweet air that glides over the sea, while the day is
dying and the red sun is sinking westward; of a few graves of
dead sailors, who paid the forfeit of their lives upon arrival
in this land; of a tall house wherein lives Dr. Tozer, "Missionary
Bishop of Central Africa," and his school of little Africans; and
of many other things, which got together into such a tangle, that
I had to go to sleep, lest I should never be able to separate
the moving images, the Arab from the African; the African from
the Banyan; the Banyan from the Hindi; the Hindi from the European,
&c.
Zanzibar is the Bagdad, the Ispahan, the Stamboul, if you like, of
East Africa. It is the great mart which invites the ivory traders
from the African interior. To this market come the gum-copal, the
hides, the orchilla weed, the timber, and the black slaves from
Africa. Bagdad had great silk bazaars, Zanzibar has her ivory
bazaars; Bagdad once traded in jewels, Zanzibar trades in
gum-copal; Stamboul imported Circassian and Georgian slaves;
Zanzibar imports black beauties from Uhiyow, Ugindo, Ugogo,
Unyamwezi and Galla.
The same mode of commerce obtains here as in all Mohammedan
countries - nay, the mode was in vogue long before Moses was born.
The Arab never changes. He brought the custom of his forefathers
with him when he came to live on this island. He is as much of an
Arab here as at Muscat or Bagdad; wherever he goes to live he
carries with him his harem, his religion, his long robe, his shirt,
his slippers, and his dagger. If he penetrates Africa, not all the
ridicule of the negroes can make him change his modes of life. Yet
the land has not become Oriental; the Arab has not been able to
change the atmosphere. The land is semi-African in aspect; the
city is but semi-Arabian.
To a new-comer into Africa, the Muscat Arabs of Zanzibar are
studies. There is a certain empressement about them which we must
admire. They are mostly all travellers. There are but few of
them who have not been in many dangerous positions, as they
penetrated Central Africa in search of the precious ivory; and
their various experiences have given their features a certain
unmistakable air of-self-reliance, or of self-sufficiency; there
is a calm, resolute, defiant, independent air about them, which
wins unconsciously one's respect.
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