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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When My Advice Was Asked By
Thani, I Voted The Whole Thing As Sheer Nonsense; And, In Turn,
Asked Him What A Terekeza Was For?
Was it not an afternoon march
to enable caravans to reach water and food?
Thani replied than it
was. I then asked him if there was no water or food to be obtained
in Unyambogi. Thani replied that he had not taken pains to
inquire, but was told by the villagers that there was an abundance
of matamia, hindi, maweri, sheep; goats, and chickens in their
village at cheap prices, such as were not known in Ugogo.
"Well, then," said I, "if Hamed wants to be a fool, and kill his
pagazis, why should we? I have as much cause for haste as Sheikh
Hamed; but Unyanyembe is far yet, and I am not going to endanger
my property by playing the madman."
As Thani had reported, we found an abundance of provisions at the
village, and good sweet water from some pits close by. A sheep
cost one chukka; six chickens were also purchased at that price;
six measures of matama, maweri, or hindi, were procurable for the
same sum; in short, we were coming, at last, into the land of
plenty.
On the 10th June we arrived at Kiti after a journey of four hours
and a half, where we found the irrepressible Hamed halted in sore
trouble. He who would be a Caesar, proved to be an irresolute
Antony. He had to sorrow over the death of a favourite slave girl,
the loss of five dish-dashes (Arab shirts), silvered-sleeve and
gold-embroidered jackets, with which he had thought to enter
Unyanyembe in state, as became a merchant of his standing, which
had disappeared with three absconding servants, besides copper
trays, rice, and pilau dishes, and two bales of cloth with runaway
Wangwana pagazis. Selim, my Arab servant, asked him, "What are
you doing here, Sheikh Hamed? I thought you were well on the road
to Unyanyembe." Said he, "Could I leave Thani, my friend, behind?"
Kiti abounded in cattle and grain, and we were able to obtain food
at easy rates. The Wakimbu, emigrants from Ukimbu, near Urori,
are a quiet race, preferring the peaceful arts of agriculture to
war; of tending their flocks to conquest. At the least rumor of
war they remove their property and family, and emigrate to the
distant wilderness, where they begin to clear the land, and to
hunt the elephant for his ivory. Yet we found them to be a fine
race, and well armed, and seemingly capable, by their numbers and
arms, to compete with any tribe. But here, as elsewhere, disunion
makes them weak. They are mere small colonies, each colony ruled
by its own chief; whereas, were they united, they might make a
very respectable front before an enemy.
Our next destination was Msalalo, distant fifteen miles from Kiti.
Hamed, after vainly searching for his runaways and the valuable
property he had lost, followed us, and tried once more, when he
saw us encamped at Msalalo, to pass us; but his pagazis failed him,
the march having been so long.
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