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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This Larger Fly Was The One Chosen For The First Inspection,
Which Was Of The Intensest.
I permitted one to alight on my
flannel pyjamas, which I wore while en deshabille in camp.
No sooner
Had he alighted than his posterior was raised, his
head lowered, and his weapons, consisting of four hair-like
styles, unsheathed from the proboscis-like bag which concealed
them, and immediately I felt pain like that caused by a dexterous
lancet-cut or the probe of a fine needle. I permitted him to
gorge himself, though my patience and naturalistic interest were
sorely tried. I saw his abdominal parts distend with the plenitude
of the repast until it had swollen to three times its former
shrunken girth, when he flew away of his own accord laden with blood.
On rolling up my flannel pyjamas to see the fountain whence the
fly had drawn the fluid, I discovered it to be a little above the
left knee, by a crimson bead resting over the incision. After
wiping the blood the wound was similar to that caused by a deep
thrust of a fine needle, but all pain had vanished with the
departure of the fly.
Having caught a specimen of this fly, I next proceeded to institute
a comparison between it and the tsetse, as described by Dr.
Livingstone on pp. 56-57, `Missionary Travels and Researches in
South Africa' (Murray's edition of 1868). The points of
disagreement are many, and such as to make it entirely improbable
that this fly is the true tsetse, though my men unanimously
stated that its bite was fatal to horses as well as to donkeys.
A descriptive abstract of the tsetse would read thus:
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