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 Same Mode Of Commerce Obtains Here As In All Mohammedan
Countries - Nay, The Mode Was In Vogue Long Before Moses Was Born.
The Arab Never Changes.
He brought the custom of his forefathers
with him when he came to live on this island.
He is as much of an
Arab here as at Muscat or Bagdad; wherever he goes to live he
carries with him his harem, his religion, his long robe, his shirt,
his slippers, and his dagger. If he penetrates Africa, not all the
ridicule of the negroes can make him change his modes of life. Yet
the land has not become Oriental; the Arab has not been able to
change the atmosphere. The land is semi-African in aspect; the
city is but semi-Arabian.
To a new-comer into Africa, the Muscat Arabs of Zanzibar are
studies. There is a certain empressement about them which we must
admire. They are mostly all travellers. There are but few of
them who have not been in many dangerous positions, as they
penetrated Central Africa in search of the precious ivory; and
their various experiences have given their features a certain
unmistakable air of-self-reliance, or of self-sufficiency; there
is a calm, resolute, defiant, independent air about them, which
wins unconsciously one's respect. The stories that some of these
men could tell, I have often thought, would fill many a book of
thrilling adventures.
For the half-castes I have great contempt. They are neither
black nor white, neither good nor bad, neither to be admired nor
hated. They are all things, at all times; they are always
fawning on the great Arabs, and always cruel to those unfortunates
brought under their yoke. If I saw a miserable, half-starved
negro, I was always sure to be told he belonged to a half-caste.
Cringing and hypocritical, cowardly and debased, treacherous and
mean, I have always found him. He seems to be for ever ready to
fall down and worship a rich Arab, but is relentless to a poor
black slave. When he swears most, you may be sure he lies most,
and yet this is the breed which is multiplied most at Zanzibar.
The Banyan is a born trader, the beau-ideal of a sharp money-making
man. Money flows to his pockets as naturally as water down a
steep. No pang of conscience will prevent him from cheating his
fellow man. He excels a Jew, and his only rival in a market is a
Parsee; an Arab is a babe to him. It is worth money to see him
labor with all his energy, soul and body, to get advantage by the
smallest fraction of a coin over a native. Possibly the native
has a tusk, and it may weigh a couple of frasilahs, but, though
the scales indicate the weight, and the native declares solemnly
that it must be more than two frasilahs, yet our Banyan will
asseverate and vow that the native knows nothing whatever about it,
and that the scales are wrong; he musters up courage to lift it - it
is a mere song, not much more than a frasilah.
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