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 Destruction Which A Herd Makes In A Forest
Is Simply Tremendous.
When the trees are young whole swathes may
be found uprooted and prostrate, which mark the track of the
elephants as they "trampled their path through wood and brake."
The boy Selim was so ill at this place that I was compelled to
halt the caravan for him for two days. He seemed to be affected
with a disease in the limbs, which caused him to sprawl, and
tremble most painfully, besides suffering from an attack of acute
dysentery. But constant attendance and care soon brought him round
again; and on the third day he was able to endure the fatigue of
riding.
I was able to shoot several animals during our stay at Mrera. The
forest outside of the cultivation teems with noble animals. Zebra,
giraffe, elephant, and rhinoceros are most common; ptarmigan and
guinea-fowl were also plentiful.
The warriors of Mrera are almost all armed with muskets, of which
they take great care. They were very importunate in their demands
for flints, bullets, and powder, which I always made it a point to
refuse, lest at any moment a fracas occurring they might use the
ammunition thus supplied to my own disadvantage. The men of this
village were an idle set, doing little but hunting, gaping,
gossiping, and playing like great boys. During the interval of
my stay at Mrera I employed a large portion of my time in mending
my shoes, and patching up the great rents in my clothes, which
the thorn species, during the late marches, had almost destroyed.
Westward, beyond Mrera, was a wilderness, the transit of which we
were warned would occupy nine days hence arose the necessity to
purchase a large supply of grain, which, ere attempting the great
uninhabited void in our front, was to be ground and sifted.
CHAPTER XI. THROUGH UKAWENDI, UVINZA, AND UHHA, TO UJIJI.
Happy auspices, - Ant-hills. - The water-shed of the Tanganika Lion.
- The king of Kasera. - The home of the lion and the leopard. -
A donkey frightens a leopard - Sublime scenes in Kawendi, - Starvation
imminent. - Amenities of travel in Africa. - Black-mailers. - The
stormy children of Uhha. - News of a white man. - Energetic
marches - Mionvu, chief of tribute-takers. - An escape at
midnight. - Toiling through the jungles. - The Lake Mountains. -
First view of the Tanganika. - Arrival at Ujiji, - The happy meeting
with Livingstone.
We bade farewell to Mrera on the 17th of October, to continue our
route north-westward. All the men and I were firm friends now;
all squabbling had long ceased. Bombay and I had forgotten our
quarrel; the kirangozi and myself were ready to embrace, so loving
and affectionate were the terms upon which we stood towards one
another. Confidence returned to all hearts - for now, as Mabruk
Unyanyembe said, "we could smell the fish of the Tanganika."
Unyanyembe, with all its disquietude, was far behind. We could
snap our fingers at that terrible Mirambo and his unscrupulous
followers, and by-and-by, perhaps, we may be able to laugh at
the timid seer who always prophesied portentous events - Sheikh,
the son of Nasib. We laughed joyously, as we glided in Indian
file through the young forest jungle beyond the clearing of Mrera,
and boasted of our prowess. Oh! we were truly brave that morning!
Emerging from the jungle, we entered a thin forest, where numerous
ant-hills were seen like so many sand-dunes. I imagine that these
ant-hills were formed during a remarkably wet season, when,
possibly, the forest-clad plain was inundated. I have seen the
ants at work by thousands, engaged in the work of erecting their
hills in other districts suffering from inundation. What a
wonderful system of cells these tiny insects construct! A perfect
labyrinth - cell within cell, room within room, hall within hall - an
exhibition of engineering talents and high architectural capacity - a
model city, cunningly contrived for safety and comfort!
Emerging after a short hour's march out of the forest, we welcome
the sight of a murmuring translucent stream, swiftly flowing
towards the north-west, which we regard with the pleasure which
only men who have for a long time sickened themselves with that
potable liquid of the foulest kind, found in salinas, mbugas,
pools, and puddle holes, can realize. Beyond this stream rises a
rugged and steep ridge, from the summit of which our eyes are
gladdened with scenes that are romantic, animated and picturesque.
They form an unusual feast to eyes sated with looking into the
depths of forests, at towering stems of trees, and at tufted crowns
of foliage. We have now before us scores of cones, dotting the
surface of a plain which extends across Southern Ukonongo to the
territory of the Wafipa, and which reaches as far as the Rikwa Plain.
The immense prospect before which we are suddenly ushered is most
varied; exclusive of conical hills and ambitious flat-topped and
isolated mountains, we are in view of the watersheds of the Rungwa
River, which empties into the Tanganika south of where we stand,
and of the Malagarazi River, which the Tanganika receives, a
degree or so north of this position. A single but lengthy
latitudinal ridge serves as a dividing line to the watershed of the
Rungwa and Malagarazi; and a score of miles or so further west of
this ridge rises another, which runs north and south.
We camped on this day in the jungle, close to a narrow ravine with
a marshy bottom, through the oozy, miry contents of which the
waters from the watershed of the Rungwa slowly trickled southward
towards the Rikwa Plain. This was only one of many ravines,
however, some of which were several hundred yards broad, others
were but a few yards in width, the bottoms of which were most
dangerous quagmires, overgrown with dense tall reeds and papyrus.
Over the surface of these great depths of mud were seen hundreds
of thin threads of slimy ochre-coloured water, which swarmed with
animalculae.
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