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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I May Add That This Treatment Was Perfectly
Successful In My Case, And In All Others Which Occurred In My
Camp.
After the mukunguru had declared itself, there was no fear,
with such a treatment of it, of a second attack, until at least
some days afterwards.
On the third day the camp was visited by the ambassadors of
Her Highness the Sultana of Simbamwenni, who came as her
representatives to receive the tribute which she regards herself
as powerful enough to enforce. But they, as well as Madame
Simbamwenni, were informed, that as we knew it was their custom to
charge owners of caravans but one tribute, and as they remembered
the Musungu (Farquhar) had paid already, it was not fair that I
should have to pay again. The ambassadors replied with a "Ngema"
(very well), and promised to carry my answer back to their
mistress. Though it was by no means "very well " in fact, as it
will be seen in a subsequent chapter how the female Simbamwenni
took advantage of an adverse fortune which befell me to pay
herself. With this I close the chapter of incidents experienced
during our transit across the maritime region.
CHAPTER VI. TO UGOGO.
A valley of despond, and hot-bed of malaria. - Myriads of vermin. -
The Makata swamp. - A sorrowful experience catching a deserter. - A
far-embracing prospect. - Illness of William Farquhar.-Lake Ugombo. -
A land of promise. - The great Kisesa. - The plague of earwigs.
The distance from Bagamoyo to Simbamwenni we found to be 119 miles,
and was accomplished in fourteen marches. But these marches, owing
to difficulties arising from the Masika season, and more especially
to the lagging of the fourth caravan under Maganga, extended to
twenty-nine days, thus rendering our progress very slow indeed -
but a little more than four miles a-day. I infer, from what I have
seen of the travelling, that had I not been encumbered by the sick
Wanyamwezi porters, I could have accomplished the distance in
sixteen days. For it was not the donkeys that proved recreant to
my confidence; they, poor animals, carrying a weight of 150 lbs.
each, arrived at Simbamwenni in first-rate order; but it was
Maganga, composed of greed and laziness, and his weakly-bodied
tribe, who were ever falling sick. In dry weather the number of
marches might have been much reduced. Of the half-dozen of Arabs
or so who preceded this Expedition along this route, two
accomplished the entire distance in eight days. From the brief
descriptions given of the country, as it day by day expanded to
our view, enough may be gleaned to give readers a fair idea of it.
The elevation of Simbamwenni cannot be much over 1,000 feet above
the level, the rise of the land having been gradual. It being
the rainy season, about which so many ominous statements were
doled out to us by those ignorant of the character of the country,
we naturally saw it under its worst aspect; but, even in this
adverse phase of it, with all its depth of black mud, its
excessive dew, its dripping and chill grass, its density of rank
jungle, and its fevers, I look back upon the scene with pleasure,
for the wealth and prosperity it promises to some civilized nation,
which in some future time will come and take possession of it.
A railroad from Bagamoyo to Simbamwenni might be constructed with
as much ease and rapidity as, and at far less cost than the Union
Pacific Railway, whose rapid strides day by day towards completion
the world heard of and admired.
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