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
Odour Emitted From Its Fell Plants Was So Rank, So Pungently Acrid,
And The Miasma From Its Decayed Vegetation So Dense, That I Expected
Every Moment To See Myself And Men Drop Down In Paroxysms Of Acute
Fever.
Happily this evil was not added to that of loading and
unloading the frequently falling packs.
Seven soldiers to attend
seventeen laden donkeys were entirely too small a number while passing
through a jungle; for while the path is but a foot wide, with a
wall of thorny plants and creepers bristling on each side, and
projecting branches darting across it, with knots of spikey twigs
stiff as spike-nails, ready to catch and hold anything above four
feet in height, it is but reasonable to suppose that donkeys
standing four feet high, with loads measuring across from bale to
bale four feet, would come to grief. This grief was of frequent
recurrence here, causing us to pause every few minutes for
re-arrangements. So often had this task to be performed, that the
men got perfectly discouraged, and had to bespoken to sharply
before they set to work. By the time I reached Msuwa there was
nobody with me and the ten donkeys I drove but Mabruk the Little,
who, though generally stolid, stood to his work like a man.
Bombay and Uledi were far behind, with the most jaded donkeys.
Shaw was in charge of the cart, and his experiences were most
bitter, as he informed me he had expended a whole vocabulary of
stormy abuse known to sailors, and a new one which he had invented
ex tempore. He did not arrive until two o'clock next morning, and
was completely worn out.
Another halt was fixed at Msuwa, that we and our animals might
recuperate. The chief of the village, a white man in everything
but colour, sent me and mine the fattest broad-tailed sheep of his
flock, with five measures of matama grain. The mutton was
excellent, unapproachable. For his timely and needful present
I gave him two doti, and amused him with an exhibition of the
wonderful mechanism of the Winchester rifle, and my breechloading
revolvers.
He and his people were intelligent enough to comprehend the utility
of these weapons at an emergency, and illustrated in expressive
pantomime the powers they possessed against numbers of people
armed only with spears and bows, by extending their arms with an
imaginary gun and describing a clear circle. "Verily," said
they, "the Wasungu are far wiser than the Washensi. What heads
they have! What wonderful things they make! Look at their
tents, their guns, their time-pieces, their clothes, and that
little rolling thing (the cart) which carries more than five
men, - -que!"
On the 10th, recovered from the excessive strain of the last march,
the caravan marched out of Msuwa, accompanied by the hospitable
villagers as far as their stake defence, receiving their unanimous
"Kwaheris." Outside the village the march promised to be less
arduous than between Imbiki and Msuwa.
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