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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Beyond The Ford, A Short
Half-Hour's March, We Came To Kiora.
At this filthy village of Kiora, which was well-grounded with
goat-dung, and peopled with a wonderful number
Of children for a
hamlet that did not number twenty families, with a hot sun pouring
on the limited open space, with a fury that exceeded 128 degrees
Fahrenheit; which swarmed with flies and insects of known and
unknown species; I found, as I had been previously informed, the
third caravan, which had started out of Bagamoyo so well fitted
and supplied. The leader, who was no other than the white man
Farquhar, was sick-a-bed with swollen legs (Bright's disease),
unable to move.
As he heard my voice, Farquhar staggered out of his tent, so
changed from my spruce mate who started from Bagamoyo, that I
hardly knew him at first. His legs were ponderous, elephantine,
since his leg-illness was of elephantiasis, or dropsy. His face
was of a deathly pallor, for he had not been out of his tent for
two weeks.
A breezy hill, overlooking the village of Kiora, was chosen by me
for my camping-ground, and as soon as the tents were pitched, the
animals attended to, and a boma made of thorn bushes, Farquhar was
carried up by four men into my tent. Upon being questioned as to
the cause of his illness, he said he did not know what had caused
it. He had no pain, he thought, anywhere. I asked, "Do you not
sometimes feel pain on the right side?" - "Yes, I think I do; but
I don't know." - " Nor over the left nipple sometimes - a quick
throbbing, with a shortness of breath?" - " Yes, I think I have.
I know I breathe quick sometimes." He said his only trouble was
in the legs, which were swollen to an immense size. Though he
had a sound appetite, he yet felt weak in the legs.
From the scant information of the disease and its peculiarities,
as given by Farquhar himself, I could only make out, by studying
a little medical book I had with me, that "a swelling of the legs,
and sometimes of the body, might result from either heart, liver,
or kidney disease." But I did not know to what to ascribe the
disease, unless it was to elephantiasis - a disease most common in
Zanzibar; nor did I know how to treat it in a man who, could not
tell me whether he felt pain in his head or in his back, in his
feet or in his chest.
It was therefore fortunate for me that I overtook him at Kiora;
though he was about to prove a sore incumbrance to me, for he was
not able to walk, and the donkey-carriage, after the rough
experience of the Makata valley, was failing. I could not possibly
leave him at Kiora, death would soon overtake him there; but how
long I could convey a man in such a state, through a country
devoid of carriage, was a question to be resolved by circumstances.
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