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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On
Each Flank Of A Large Body Which Issued From The Principal Village,
And Which Came At A Uniform Swinging
Double-quick, the ankle and
knee bells all chiming in admirable unison, were a cloud of
skirmishers, consisting of the
Most enthusiastic, who exercised
themselves in mimic war as they sped along. Column after column,
companies, and groups from every village hurried on past our camp
until, probably, there were nearly a thousand soldiers gone to the
war. This scene gave me a better idea than anything else of the
weakness of even the largest caravans which travelled between
Zanzibar and Unyanyembe.
At night the warriors returned from the forest; the alarm proved
to be without foundation. At first it was generally reported that
the invaders were Wahehe, or the Wadirigo, as that tribe are
scornfully called from their thieving propensities. The Wahehe
frequently make a foray upon the fat cattle of Ugogo. They travel
from their own country in the south-east, and advance through the
jungle, and when about to approach the herds, stoop down, covering
their bodies with their shields of bull-hide. Having arrived
between the cattle and the herdsmen, they suddenly rise up and
begin to switch the cattle heartily, and, having started them off
into the jungle in the care of men already detailed for the work,
they turn about, and plant their shields before them, to fight
the aroused shepherds.
On the 30th we arrived at Khonze, which is remarkable for the
mighty globes of foliage which the giant sycamores and baobabs put
forth above the plain.
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