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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Donkeys Had
To Be Unloaded, Led Through A Torrent, And Loaded Again On The Other
Bank - An Operation Which Consumed A Full Hour.
Presently, after straggling through a wood clump, barring our
progress was another stream, swollen into a river.
The bridge
being swept away, we were obliged to swim and float our baggage
over, which delayed us two hours more. Leaving this second
river-bank, we splashed, waded, occasionally half-swimming, and
reeled through mire, water-dripping grass and matama stalks,
along the left bank of the Makata proper, until farther progress
was effectually prevented for that day by a deep bend of the
river, which we should be obliged to cross the next day.
Though but six miles were traversed during that miserable day, the
march occupied ten hours.
Half dead with fatigue, I yet could feel thankful that it was not
accompanied by fever, which it seemed a miracle to avoid; for if
ever a district was cursed with the ague, the Makata wilderness
ranks foremost of those afflicted. Surely the sight of the
dripping woods enveloped in opaque mist, of the inundated country
with lengthy swathes of tiger-grass laid low by the turbid flood,
of mounds of decaying trees and canes, of the swollen river and the
weeping sky, was enough to engender the mukunguru! The well-used
khambi, and the heaps of filth surrounding it, were enough to
create a cholera!
The Makata, a river whose breadth during the dry season is but
forty feet, in the Masika season assumes the breadth, depth, and
force of an important river. Should it happen to be an unusually
rainy season, it inundates the great plain which stretches on
either side, and converts it into a great lake. It is the main
feeder of the Wami river, which empties into the sea between the
ports of Saadani and Whinde. About ten miles north-east of the
Makata crossing, the Great Makata, the Little Makata, a nameless
creek, and the Rudewa river unite; and the river thus formed
becomes known as the Wami. Throughout Usagara the Wami is known
as the Mukondokwa. Three of these streams take their rise from
the crescent-like Usagara range, which bounds the Makata plain south
and south-westerly; while the Rudewa rises in the northern horn of
the same range.
So swift was the flow of the Makata, and so much did its unsteady
bridge, half buried in the water, imperil the safety of the
property, that its transfer from bank to bank occupied fully five
hours. No sooner had we landed every article on the other side,
undamaged by the water, than the rain poured down in torrents
that drenched them all, as if they had been dragged through the
river. To proceed through the swamp which an hour's rain had
formed was utterly out of the question. We were accordingly
compelled to camp in a place where every hour furnished its quota
of annoyance. One of the Wangwana soldiers engaged at Bagamoyo,
named Kingaru, improved an opportunity to desert with another
Mgwana's kit.
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