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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Traces Of The Force Of The Torrent Are Seen In
The Syenite And Basalt Boulders Which Encumber The Course.
Their
rugged angles are worn smooth, and deep basins are excavated where
the bed is of the rock, which in the dry season serve as reservoirs.
Though the water contained in them has a slimy and greenish
appearance, and is well populated with frogs, it is by no means
unpalatable.
At noon we resumed our march, the Wanyamwezi cheering, shouting,
and singing, the Wangwana soldiers, servants, and pagazis vieing
with them in volume of voice and noise-making the dim forest
through which we were now passing resonant with their voices.
The scenery was much more picturesque than any we had yet seen
since leaving Bagamoyo. The ground rose into grander waves - hills
cropped out here and there - great castles of syenite appeared,
giving a strange and weird appearance to the forest. From a
distance it would almost seem as if we were approaching a bit of
England as it must have appeared during feudalism; the rocks
assumed such strange fantastic shapes. Now they were round
boulders raised one above another, apparently susceptible to every
breath of wind; anon, they towered like blunt-pointed obelisks,
taller than the tallest trees; again they assumed the shape of
mighty waves, vitrified; here, they were a small heap of fractured
and riven rock; there, they rose to the grandeur of hills.
By 5 P.M. we had travelled twenty miles, and the signal was
sounded for a halt. At 1 A.M., the moon being up, Hamed's horn and
voice were heard throughout the silent camp awaking his pagazis for
the march. Evidently Sheikh Hamed was gone stark mad, otherwise
why should he be so frantic for the march at such an early hour?
The dew was falling heavily, and chilled one like frost; and an
ominous murmur of deep discontent responded to the early call on
all sides. Presuming, however, that he had obtained better
information than we had, Sheikh Thani and I resolved to be governed
as the events proved him to be right or wrong.
As all were discontented, this night, march was performed in deep
silence. The thermometer was at 53°, we being about 4,500 feet
above the level of the sea. The pagazis, almost naked, walked
quickly in order to keep warm, and by so doing many a sore foot
was made by stumbling against obtrusive roots and rocks, and
treading on thorns. At 3 A.M. we arrived at the village of
Unyambogi, where we threw ourselves down to rest and sleep until
dawn should reveal what else was in store for the hard-dealt-with
caravans.
It was broad daylight when I awoke; the sun was flaring his hot
beams in my face. Sheikh Thani came soon after to inform me that
Hamed had gone to Kiti two hours since; but he, when asked to
accompany him, positively refused, exclaiming against it as
folly, and utterly unnecessary.
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