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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A Feeling
Of Comfort And Perfect Contentment Took Possession Of Me, Such As
I Knew Not While Fretting At Unyanyembe, Wearing My Life Away In
Inactivity.
I talked with my people as to my friends and equals.
We argued with each other about our prospects in quite a
companionable, sociable vein.
When daylight was dying, and the sun was sinking down rapidly over
the western horizon, vividly painting the sky with the colours of
gold and silver, saffron, and opal, when its rays and gorgeous
tints were reflected upon the tops of the everlasting forest, with
the quiet and holy calm of heaven resting upon all around, and
infusing even into the untutored minds of those about me the
exquisite enjoyments of such a life as we were now leading in the
depths of a great expanse of forest, the only and sole human
occupants of it - this was the time, after our day's work was ended,
and the camp was in a state of perfect security, when we all would
produce our pipes, and could best enjoy the labors which we had
performed, and the contentment which follows a work well done.
Outside nothing is heard beyond the cry of a stray florican,
or guinea-fowl, which has lost her mate, or the hoarse croaking
of the frogs in the pool hard by, or the song of the crickets
which seems to lull the day to rest; inside our camp are heard
the gurgles of the gourd pipes as the men inhale the blue ether,
which I also love. I am contented and happy, stretched on my
carpet under the dome of living foliage, smoking my short
meerschaum, indulging in thoughts - despite the beauty of the still
grey light of the sky; and of the air of serenity which prevails
around - of home and friends in distant America, and these thoughts
soon change to my work - yet incomplete - to the man who to me is
yet a myth, who, for all I know, may be dead, or may be near or
far from me tramping through just such a forest, whose tops I
see bound the view outside my camp. We are both on the same soil,
perhaps in the same forest - who knows? - yet is he to me so far
removed that he might as well be in his own little cottage of Ulva.
Though I am even now ignorant of his very existence, yet I feel
a certain complacency, a certain satisfaction which would be
difficult to describe. Why is man so feeble, and weak, that he
must tramp, tramp hundreds of miles to satisfy the doubts his
impatient and uncurbed mind feels? Why cannot my form accompany
the bold flights of my mind and satisfy the craving I feel to
resolve the vexed question that ever rises to my lips - "Is he
alive?" O soul of mine, be patient, thou hast a felicitous
tranquillity, which other men might envy thee! Sufficient for
the hour is the consciousness thou hast that thy mission is a
holy one! Onward, and be hopeful!
Monday, the 2nd of October, found us traversing the forest and
plain that extends from the Ziwani to Manyara, which occupied us
six and a half hours. The sun was intensely hot; but the mtundu
and miombo trees grew at intervals, just enough to admit free
growth to each tree, while the blended foliage formed a grateful
shade. The path was clear and easy, the tamped and firm red soil
offered no obstructions. The only provocation we suffered was
from the attacks of the tsetse, or panga (sword) fly, which swarmed
here. We knew we were approaching an extensive habitat of game,
and we were constantly on the alert for any specimens that might
be inhabiting these forests.
While we were striding onward, at the rate of nearly three miles
an hour, the caravan I perceived sheered off from the road,
resuming it about fifty yards ahead of something on the road,
to which the attention of the men was directed. On coming up,
I found the object to be the dead body of a man, who had fallen
a victim to that fearful scourge of Africa, the small-pox.
He was one of Oseto's gang of marauders, or guerillas, in the
service of Mkasiwa of Unyanyembe, who were hunting these forests
for the guerillas of Mirambo. They had been returning from
Ukonongo from a raid they had instituted against the Sultan
of Mbogo, and they had left their comrade to perish in the road.
He had apparently been only one day dead.
Apropos of this, it was a frequent thing with us to discover a
skeleton or a skull on the roadside. Almost every day we saw
one, sometimes two, of these relics of dead, and forgotten
humanity.
Shortly after this we emerged from the forest, and entered a
mbuga, or plain, in which we saw a couple of giraffes, whose long
necks were seen towering above a bush they had been nibbling at.
This sight was greeted with a shout; for we now knew we had
entered the game country, and that near the Gombe creek, or river,
where we intended to halt, we should see plenty of these animals.
A walk of three hours over this hot plain brought us to the
cultivated fields of Manyara. Arriving before the village-gate,
we were forbidden to enter, as the country was throughout in a
state of war, and it behoved them to be very careful of admitting
any party, lest the villagers might be compromised. We were, however,
directed to a khambi to the right of the village, near some pools
of clear water, where we discovered some half dozen ruined huts,
which looked very uncomfortable to tired people.
After we had built our camp, the kirangozi was furnished with some
cloths to purchase food from the village for the transit of a
wilderness in front of us, which was said to extend nine marches,
or 135 miles.
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